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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-01-31 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa·' • • SF . • • Ie •Trading (;all Girl Sta01ps ~ Bing DAILY PILOT FRIDAY AFTERNOON, JANUARY 31, 1969 I VOL. U.. HC. 21, 4 SECTIONS, Joi PAGIS Star-s pangled Salute r " ' UP'I T ........ NIXON AT PENTAGON -'Minus overcoat or hat despite chilly weather, Chief Executive stands at attention during playing of na~ tional anthem while visiting Pentagon today. With President are De-- fense Secretary ~felvin Laird and Gen. Earle Wheeler, chainnan of Joint Chiefs of Staff. Nixon Ur ge s Pentngon Sta ff to Air Vi ews Fully WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon told the Pentagon's general~ and admirals today that he wants them lo air their views to him full7, particularly if there are -policy differences involved. "I want to bear those differences ex- prts.'ed," Nlxon declared during a visit to the Defense Department where he spoke to 200 officlab and mllnary leaders arter the second round of top-level con- ferences of the week there. Tbe President praised U.S. military leaders for their general and speCi<H skilla. then added: "I want lG hear what they have to say. I want to take that into ainsideration in developing my polld.es. .. He deplored what ,he described as a tendency to consider the Defense and State departments at odds wilh each other wiUt the President having to play the role of peace negotiator. "I don't coosider It that way al all," Nixon said. "We will have our dif- ferences . There are differences within Ute State department as to what our policy should be. There are differencea within the Defense de~t. .• "But oo the other harKf, while those differences do exist, 1 believe that we are all working together toward tM same end." Nil:on said he would rely on Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird 8nd Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, "to bring to me and the National Security Council tbe view- (See NIXON,' Page !) . I Harbor Area Teen Burglar Used LSD .During Thefts By JORN VALTERZA said. "Be told us he stole a diamond Of ,.. °"" '""' ""' rlQg worth at least '3.000 from a Udo nit Harbor Atea.'1 17-year-ald "Robin Isle home and traded It for a day's Hood'• burglar ls a habitual LSD user~su y rl LSD oo a street comer in Newport Beach police said today. ta Ana." omcen: sakl the youth admlUed That'• the w11 the youth worked, ac.. mitllng several of Ole tt6 lhdta coruJQg to police. His loot, totallni at is cUl'ged with while under tlJo lnllueoce least $11,11!1 In Newport. bu d!Nppearod of the drug, officers added. -as gifts to girls, male friendl ot The "clean~t" teenager, who in re-just spent. rent days led Newport and Colla Mesa Campbell said the burglar "Liked detectiv .. to _... ol burglary locaU-. mooey the best, but In lhll clly he reportedly confessed to at least • took jewelry. cameras, or anything e1ae burglariel ln Newport alone. that could be easlly told." AbOtrt 80 were reported tn Costa Me&&. Tbe IUIJ)eOl, Campbell said, comes Pol~ aped to clear up more. from a respected Santa Ana famHy. "I'd call bJm a huVJ me.kl user," "I'd aay he wu abovt aver•ce 1n in· Newpc:rl Detective Arbara Campbell (See TBEi IS, Pap !) ~ f ~ ' . :.:. !. ' '· U.S. Forces . . Seize Huge Enemy Base SAIGON (AP) -Sweeping Into the enemy's back yard, U.S. air cavalrymen have seized agalmt little resistance whit is believed to he the largest North Viet- namese base found 80 far in the war. Engineers have begun blowing up bunkers at the base spread over foar square miles. U.S. officers said Friday they believed it was being enlarged in preparation for an enemy offensive. The cmnplex was found ~ mil~ northwest of Saigon and 14 mile. from Cambodia's bonier. It incladed a large underground hospital, dining ballil, a command pos4 and mmdreds of .bunkers. U.S. officers estimated. 1~ could ac- commodate 5,000 or DlCl'e men. The lira! lnllma!ion that a big hue might be in this old enemy stronghold .came last week when 400 soldiers of the U.S. 1st Air cavalry Division flew in by helicopters. AF. S. Sgt. Jimmy M. McCurry, Hum- boldt, Tenn..,.-put it : "It didn't look like anytbing at first. Then we in- vestigated and began to see how big it was." After uncovering various bunkers, the air cavalrymeo made their largest Onda Wednelday and 'l'bursday. In a week, (See VIETNAM, Page II Call Girl Ring With Trading ' Sta mps Crac ked SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Police broke up a high class prostitution opera- tion Thursday in which the girls cb4rged $30 and thtt1 ~am gave away trJdlng stamps as a l'OmJR. Vice squad officera . mested rive women and a man when they raidld an apartment ln Pad.fie Heights -one of San Francisco's most exclusive neighborhoods. There were six te1ephones in the plu!h apartment lo handle appoinlmenla, poll<e said, as well as a "trick book" with lhe names ol more than 100 customcn -IOll10 al them very promlneal -· "W!Ut a tall lri<k, they'd give Blue Chip lltaup," Wd inspector Rick Gam- ble. Arrested were Marlene "Brandy" llamws-21, the alleged madam, and her :rl·YW .. ld bulband, R-11. who WM charged with conspiracy, Police alto am:tted four young women l.S.ntUled u the workllll 11aU. 'Ibey w.,.. Mlcllelle~ 21, Chellea BankJ, JI, Wlnilred phi, 17, and Cindy Roberta, D. • • • ase e1ze ' •Bennie Batter~· P ·ill Plant Busted:· SI Million Seized ' J "' !leach Queen Christy Mikels, 18, Ila• been named l..4guna Beach's "Miss Winter Festival of 19611." She will be ' <1fficia1' hostess for 10 days of activitle~ Feb. 21 through March 2. Events range from art and craft shows to boat races. Only 2 County Roads Still Shut Roadblocks In floocl<'lfltled SUYOl'8do and ModJ>tkll -...,.. lifted Thunday by lhe CalUornia Highway P1trol. Only two Orange Coun1y roadwl.)'I re- main ckleed becluse of last week'• 1tonn. They are MacArthur ll«llevord al C.mpua Drive where part of a bridp wu wuhed out and the ()rangewoOd brldfe In Anaheim. • , .f · . ' Scorpion Loss Remains Puzzle W,\SHINGTON (UPI) - A nayy ,court ol inquiry bu been unable lo determine what cauted the lo1t1 ol the nuclear. submarine Sccrplon. Jt wu learned to- day'. ' However, the court, after an inteml.ve 11-week review1 ruJed out foul play ,or sabotage. 1t concluded tbere was no evidence that tbe•veaael's nuclear reactor plant was involved. The .submarine . wa1 lost la'st May in the •AUanUc Ocean, 400 miles southwest ' 'Bennie', Miier: Couple Arr esed; Big Cache Se ize d PLA YA DEL REY -Police Thursday stirred up a batch of trou!lle for a Highland Park couple who they allege were using a cement miler to blend batter for black markd balblluraloo. Officeni who raJded the bfune aaid they also seized more than $1 mfillon worth of a~phetamines and commented that "There 'Was enough stuff f In there to gel everydhe in Loi Ang"~fea County high." A!Jo confiscated In the 1'1id wen two electrically operated m8chlnea capable of turning our "bermlel'' at the rite of l2n pllll per minute, polfce npoi lid. : • JaJl'ed · were Jack Duby Blair; llO, and Ranlolia del JUo, 45,IWho, ......ting tO police, bad oel up tl>etr - labora.tory lo the fallhlooable area of Ptaya dtl Rey. ' ' ' · Poll<e at... adzed 20 pounds (If pun1 amphetamine, I to pounds o f am.- pbetamlnet mlzed with a c:tllubl bOD- dlng •gent and 1,000 JIOWllfl of lddlllooal cellolooe. They said d the mllra quantity had· been made ln °bennlet," It would ha .. netted I llttet Ille (If llmOlt fl mUUon: Pakistan Ript'Quelled DA!p, Paltlstan (UPI) -Pollbe' ar- realed more ll\111 1,000 peraoos In East Patlllan Tburidlj' ntcht In In 1u.mp1 to cruah 1111u...,,,enweot t1fillnc !Mt hu lollen Sf ll•eo In Ille pall two weka, covenunent apok<llllei! wd lo- da). of Ole Azores. It diaappeared In 10,000 feet of water. A summary of · findlngJ by the naval court of Inquiry wu ready for releue by Ole Def .... Departmen~ ' The ni.yy WieJ . conclUl!elf: "Tbe .,.,.. lain call!e ol ljie loss of, SC<iroloo <l!M be a~ from apy e~nce now avai18ble." · ' lt f6und ~100 evideace that collillm'. withi anOtber' submarine or ship cauaecf Scorpiou'l•losa." . It further said there WU 11no, IU, mountain in the area of the Scorpjon'1 loss with wtllch . the . submarine ml&ht: hate,colllded." AM it declared "no evidence of any ki~ to ~est .foW. play or aabota1• was found bY the court... ' The N~yy sald It is CO!lthiuJnc Ill !nvtsUpllon of llle May i'I diaasler in which 99 died. • The doep41vlng submmlble Trleala n, will be ......i early tbia year - the West Coul to the AlfanUc to laD addJUonaf pflotqp'apbs ud make ....0.. 1J101. oblervaUon of port1oo& of the s.:.c,. pilJI\'• lliIL The Navy IJlllOWlCOIL,onlj Oct. II that Ole hull appamilly bail been localed. ' o r .. ge Weadler Guela what f No .rain tb1a week- end -0< al ·~ thll'1 what the --&aya. lnalead loot lo< IWUIY, cool .si!es Wlthd,~• -rqtnc from • 17 tD a downrig!it cold 40. INSm E TODAY Ma%imum and mhaimum dl- fll<NioRI ..-3J.J .llftd 16.! /or boall It\ tM .........: ol tllc ~fptoft C.p •""""'v• nil:•• ill llarch in San l>Mfo. PaQ< J6. . . =. = ....... Cl•-=• --- .. .. • -i: • II ............. ....,, .. ,,, ... tt.a .,..... 011 "'" C'llll • :t:T:;r • 1~ -. -.. a.-ll -., ..... c..r .. ·-.... --·:i -,. .............. =::-:i -. ........... ~ • •• t 1 % DA!l.Y Pl10T s Judge Sumner Rap·s Co-unty Bool{ Ban From Page l VIETNAM ... they reporled tJDin& aboul 50 North Vietname9e soldiers. But only th~ enemy solcllen were killed "'hen the compler was uncovered . ' J1n'tnllt CcKut Judge Brut"e \\'. Sumnrr ...,. aillcia!d tbe ~· Counly Scllool Boord lor baoniog boots bocaust ol the pobUcaJ point cl '"'"" ol one board -· 81 reft'm'd to Or. Dale Rallisoo, coun- ty ICbool trostee "'bo is • membtt of 0.: John Birch Society and bas fcnned hil own private boot Tt\liew committee At Ral..lisoa's urging, lhe county school boml last week remo\'ed: four books. trdndinc PuUtmtr Prue winner John -·· "Hinllbimo," !tom tbe library list !er a aew ooanly juvellJle lodlily. Judge Sumner said be is concerned and (eels all citizens of the county should be ea t be·watchful alert "when the B-B Vandals Hit, Damage Valley School Vandals with S..8 gun1 destro)led about $2,00I wd of property 'lbursday 11 Fulkla School in Foumaln Valley. indlvimab: entered the school sometime Fauntalo Vllley police aald unidentified between midnight and 6:30 a.m. nm. day and stole tv.·o tape recorders, a phonograpll and a small amount of money, then wreaked havoc on the school property. Police said plal< glass windows, flood lamps, televislona and fish aquariums were llhot up and nnasbod by s.B ...,.. The vandala apparmtly enl<red the school building by lnaklng a window, then unlocking tbe door, police said. Eslimal<d damage lo school lftP"IY was $2,000. 'l11e stolen itemJ were va1ued at about $200. None C1f the rtSl.dent.s in the area reported hearing or seeing any activity at the school, police said. From Page l NIXON ... points of the Defeme department and even those minority viewpoints that may exist here." It was Nixon's second visit to the Pentqon in a week. He received full military honors on his arrival, including a 21-gun salute. Before going lo the Pentagon, the president visited the Negro ghetto of Washington and viewed the rubble still remaining from riots last April. . "Washington is our national city and we want to make it a beautiful city in every way," Nixon declared during hls unannounced appearance in the rub- ble-stre~·n sector. At one point during his brief tour, ooe of the residents of the area called out a "soul brother" greeting to him. . The President shook hands with residents of the area and talked to them of their problems. Later in the day, he unveila an an· licrime package aimed at curbing crime in the nation's capital. The area visited by Nixon was along '7th Street between S and T streets, N.W., which were hard hlt ln the out- break of violence and looting alter the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King. ln the area, construction cranes were tearing down fire-damaged shells of buildingJ lo clear the way for a park and playground. The park is to be named for Herman L. Clifford, assistant prin- cipal of a nearby high school who was slain recently while chasing some youtN who had held up the school bank. Nixon said the park project symbolized cooperation between the federal govern- ment, tbe city and local property owners. On the rebuilding needed in the area, Nixon commented: "It was determined we'd have to act immediately on the problem. Something more than sym· bolism was nttded." He was accompanied on the tour by the city's mayor, Walter E. Washington. and George Romney, secretary of bous· ing and urban de,·elopment. DAILY PILOT New,•ff ._. H• ........ Inc• ....... ._. P:-MW , .. ..,. c ......... CALIP:OINIA '011.li'fGE COAST f'Ult.15.lot!N!< COMl'ANY R,l.trt N. 'W••4 l",.>•Hlll '"" P<;t>h""r Tl>•"''' A. M•rpl.i"' ........ .i .... [d!lllf r11wl Nl111111 ...._ ........ 0.rKICll" °""" Calli""""~ '-11 WHI ltJ' Slrr"I' N~•I kK~ Jl ll #"I Doi-"°"''"°' .. lt_. l•k~. UJ F-ll •-N""I'"'~ a.ten, )If $111 SitMt OAU.Y Pit.Of, '""" lloflldl II UIMtllr.HI h ............... " """'"""' ••"• ••<-' ,.,..... dn ill _,.."' ''"'""" .., 1..-•Hdlo N~ ....... Cool• -U. HlrfltJntfM ... _. -'°"'"'•"' V•l.Jry, ·-w•lfl 11 ,.. • .,... dllloft, o. ..... (NII P'\lblllfl ..... ~ "'""lfi9 111•1'1i '" 11t h!I W"I 11ot111N l!W-kl'""llOfl aMCll. -"" &JI Wllf I" Strl'rl, (Mlt Mnll. Tal.c::•• t7141 Ml ... lJI ' a Mi•nlll•I Ml·l671 (......... ltU, Ort,, .. C-.M ,... ....... ~ ,. ...... l-· ....... ~ ...-1111 -Iliff ... ... ..... ..,_.,.., ~lot -• ..,_.. ... .. _. \IO!JCllll "" onttl•• • -wlll'lt -" ...... tllltt ,_ .... "" 111 "-* hWI .... Cl'\111 MtN. C11llt.,11i.. ~111o!'-at, uniH 11.7' -11111'1 ... ,...11 ")0 _ ... ,,., ""'llUorT ~''""-'-.i.n ,,_.,,,.,, •'.•'?!!IN ------"""-'. - reason for removal of b o o t s ls n o t based oo their Uterary merit or content, bul because ol a political point ol view held by a member ol the sd>ool board. "In schools. ol all places, alJ poinll of \'it'• sbouk1 be. eumined and discm,s.. ed." be Aid. Tb e sup<rlor judge, a Lquoa Beacb rwident, said he fell coo.st.rained to corn· 1nent since a.s presiding juvmile judge be has juri.!Jd.ictioo Ol'tt the new school for juveniles on probation. Dr. Rallison. a San1a Aoa dentist, charged that "Hiroshima" praenta a one-ckled view of U>t IMS atom bombing of the Japanese city. He said the book tells o n I y ol the horror and I ails to mtnUon the import.ant fact l h a t t.housanda of American livea Wert saved by makin& a cosily mllllary lovaalon unnecessary. In his bool:, Heney reports on the aftermath or the bombing a.s Stt.11 tbrou.gh the eyes of the Japanese people on t be ground.. He makes no comment oo th e war fl on t b e advi.sibiUty of dropping the bomb. Rallison's cooiention was lhat the book gives support lo baa lbe b o m b movements. He said. "We b a v e demonstrations by peacenlb because we have allowed ao much material ol. th!! .kind in our libraries." Scbool board JX"esidenl Clay Pltitcbell, DAILY l'ILOT Sl11tt Pllele ALL WRAPPED UP -Bill Villarino, sales manager of Pacific Tele- phone Co., local marketing department, is all wrapped up in paper tape his Dataspeed machine produces at CommuniCarnival. But he can be forgiven for being distracted by host of hostesses from DAILY PILOT exhibit. They're Orange Coast College stewardess students. Hundreds Visit Pilot's CommuniCarnival Slww Hundnlda ol vlsllon lo lhe DAILY PCLOT4 Paclfic Tel!phone Co. Communi4 Carnival at South Coast Plaza signed up for free prizes Thursday on opening day of the "carnival of communicaUons." In addlUon to the prizes, the carnival -open today from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday from 1 p.m. to a p.m. -oUen: visitors opportunities to win loog dis· ~ telephone calls, to play games with electro-telephonic equipment and to see the "12-minute miracle" which re- pnxl.uces final stock market reports fast enough ror the DAILY PlLOT to publish today's closing stocks prices in today·, newspaper. Stewardess students: from Orange Coast College are hostesses at the DATLY PILOT display, working with Pacific Telephone representatives who demon- strate the Dalaapeed transmitter and re- ceiver -machlnes: which "talk" to each other at 1,050 words per minute. Included in the list of prizes the DAILY PTLOT will give away at the close of the show on Carousel Court at South Coast Plaza are: Two abarea ol stock in Ford Molor Co. (valued at about $103), furnished by Aeronutron1c Division, Philco-Ford Corp.; 10 shares ol stock In Bridgford Foods Corp. (valued at approximately $100) selecl<d and furnished by Crullen- den & Co., Inc., Newport Beach stock- brokers; a full page In the DAILY PILOT to be filled with material select- ed by the wiMer (commercial value: $674.24 ); a private tour of 20th Century Fox Studio, including "lunch with the stars," provided by TV WEEK. FamUy Weekly. newest add.Uion to the DAILY PILOT's family ol fealum has provided 1 16-volume encyclopedia, tw~volume dlcUonary, two-volume hi.s- tory of man and deluxe world atlas for the prize list. The tour prlus are valued at a total of $200. Also, all 20 winners or prizes will each receive a free IG-Une DAILY PILOT classified "want ad" to run six Uates, valued al '24.30. Winners need not be present to win the prizes when winners are selected at 6 p.m. Saturday, Lagunans House Hunting For Nixon-Just in Case Lar!na Buch Chamber of Commere! oflic1.als aren't taking any chances today on the possibility that President Richard M. Nixon might want a summer White House We.st In the Art Colony. They're already doing some volunteer house-hunting for Mr. Nizon. "U there la 1ve.n a UtUe btt of Interest, we don't want to overlook it," Chambfr Pres1dent Jfany Lawrence declared t~ d•y. Lawrence made no claims to having rece.ived any house-hunting orders lrom I.he new Administration. "We're just acUng Informally on pubUshtd reports Sllgielling l h c President's Interest in a Laguna Beach aummer place,'' Lawrence expl1ined. "It Would be wonderful for Laguna, llO J've asked our Chamber directors U any of them know of a suitable place for the President." U Mr. Nixon ahoold e.xperience some d.lrncuJty In ftndlng a summ'r v1c1Uon spot ic Lagun.11. ht woutdn't be the flrtt tourist IO fruWated during the he!iht of the Art Colony'a aunny ....... Indefd, Lawrence rtporttd that :!I() far, the ChAmbf:r'1 house huntina: expeditions haven't tumtd up anythlnR considered accept.a.be for the President of the ' -'---- United States. "From what t undmtand, the Presi- dent must have at least eight to JO bedrooms in a house along the ocean y,·hich provides good security," the Chamber chlel noted. Since t.tr. Nixon took ornce. rumors have persl!ted that he wW aeek a sum. mer White Hoose west to toolpliment the two homes he !ltcUrft! for $127,000 each in Florida -summer White House east. Area11 mentioned as possibiUIJes have included Laguna , Newport Beach and San Diego's ~fission Bay area. Nixon aides have be-en reported to ha ve loo ked at Laguna's historic 64-room Pyne Castle on Hillcrest Drive bul it Yi'as rumored they consldertd the place unsatisfactory for White House purpoaa.. DuJles Rites Slated ~'ASHINGTON fAP) -fun er a 1 aervlc:ea for Allen W, Oulle1, the principal l rthlfect of pcr.;twar U.S. Intelligence, wlll be at 11 a.m. Saturday at Georgetown Pnsbyterian Church. Burial will be In Grttnmounl Cemetery in Balt imorr. I of South Laguna, said of llerse.y's book : .. While I bavtn'l read the book, I haven't approved ol all this critici!m ol America • the bomb." Be suggested, "The~'s been too mucb criticwn o( what we ~ to do alter we were forced into lbe war by a sneak attack." Other boob dropped from tbe Ubrary t l 1 l Rallison criliciz.ed becauJe of t b e auth«s' alleged lack of understanding of lbe nature of comnwniam. Judge Sumner aaid be does not deny lhe Blllborily ol the ICbool boanl lo make such a dedskm.. H~ aaid it is the reason for the removal -because ol. a board member's polltic:al point of view -that gives him more ap- prehension than the rttnoval itself. .. A !tee IGCiety II pndicoled Oil l b e unob!lruCted now af kltas," Judge Sumner s a i d. "T h e succesa ol t b i s republic has, in a large part, been due lo the tolerance of our citizms for the free expression of lhou&bls which dlUer from our own. "The ability of our nation to maintain this tolerance and to r~ that new ideu a.Dd differing points ol view are not an example of lack of patriotism or aubver!lion has caused our country to grow to be the world leader it ill today." Suicide Suspected Newport Beach Woman Latest Drowning Victim The body of a woman that washed up on the llhore of West Newport Beach 1'hundly morning WU that of Virginja Mowry, ~ who walked away from Pat4 ton State Hospital in San Bernardino the day before. The woman , a Newport resident, was an apparent suicide victim, according to Newport Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson. He aaid all evidence indicated. aulclde by drowning. Marine Dies In Freeway Auto Crash El Toro Marine Alan V. Rustvold was trued early today when he was thrown frmn I.be car in which he was riding OD the. Sant.a Ana Freeway and his body nan over by a Laguna Beach motorist. California Highway Patrol office.rs said Rustvold, 21, of Great Falls, MonL , was a passenger in an auto driven by another 116! Counly Traffic 1961 %8 Deatb Toll IS Marine. Ronnie Brandon, 22, of El Toro. Brandon's car, officers said,, hit a center divider fence on the freeway s "ti u t h or Red Hill Road. Rustvold was ejected and laOOed in trainc lanes. Another auto driven by Earl L. McClain, 41, of 220 Clilf Drive, Laguna Beach, ran over the victim's body, ac- cording to the CHP report. Both can were southbound on the freeway. Bran· don suffered only minor injuries. McClain was not cited or held. , Miss Mowry's body was dlscoverecl by a city e.mploye clearing tbe debris· choked beach with a skip loader. He found the dead woman lying near the water line about 100 feet south ol the Santa Ana River jetty at about a: 45 a.m. She was fully clothed, Her Wt address in Newport Beach was 14.f.1 Galaxy Drive. Thompson said lbe woman bad been a menla1 patient for several years. Services are pending at BaJtz Corona del Mar Mortuary. Two bodies were discovered in less than 2.4 hours on the waterline of Newport Beach this week. Wednesday, the body of William Dischner, 16, Santa Ana, "'as discovered by a woman walking on the beach south of the pier. Dischner drowned in the Santa Ana JUver two days before. He and three companions rode ralt! over a small waterfall. The three other boys survived. Bw·n Victim Remains Critical Burn victim Mrs. Sylvia Neal of Hun· tington Beach rem~ln critical con- dition and under intensive care today at the Orange Coun'y Medical Center, hospital officials said this morning. Mrs. Ne a I, of 310 W. 15th SL. w a a severely burned WedneJ<lay morning when her bathrobe caught fire while cleaning something on her patio with paint thinner, said Fire Capt. James Hunt. She was taken first to the emergency r o o m of Huntington lntercommunity 1-lospital, then~lranslerred later in the day to Orange County Medical Center: a 29 q 5 Lt. Col Frank Henry, f'rani:lin, N.C., f'ldmated there may be as many N 1.000 bunkers in lhe area and added: "They've been doing a kit of wort on this complex In the past mOlllh. We think they were preparinJ for lbe coming offensive down soutb." He refetnd to e:spected enemy attacks on military installations north of Saigon and possibly on the capital it.sell. A company commanded by CapL 1-fenry A. Colavita of Arlington, Va., found tilt North Vietnamese command post, bunkers with three feet of earth covering them and connected with tun· nels. "One oI the bunkers had curtains In It," Colavlta said. •·ft must have beta some wheel's bunker.'' Engineers blowing up the bunkers aod tunnels said the job might lake weeks. Officers eslimaled the underground hospital cou.Jd accommodate about 3,0DO patients, medics and troops. There Were five operating rooms aod sir wards holding IS to 13 patients each. Quantities or medicaJ supplies were found. "Our side bu never operated ~ott ln this terrain over an at.ended period of time,'' said the division spokesman. "and the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong have used this area for ye.ara. lt Ls their bad: yard." The lull in ground fighting continued but 36 U.S. B51 bombers unloaded more than 1,000 tons of erploai.ves in the pa!t 24 boun on all8peeted enemy troop concentratiom near Can Tbo. the big nerve ~nter for military operatiom soulh of Saigon in lhe Mekong Delta. Fliers on one raid reported setting off II secondary explosions, indicating hits on ammunition stores. From Page l THEFfS ... telligence and relatively clean cut. He's very cooperative." The youth told Campbell that he "got ln with tile wrong crowd." He's on probation on a marijuana charge at presenL The youtb related a bizarre story to Newport detectives about dropping LSD, then going on burglary forays in several coast and inland communities, then com-- ing out of his "higb" lo discover his car filled with loot. ''He said he never remembered exactly where he hit when he was high," Campbell said. The detective termed the youth's ease "amati.ng." The youth was "on loan" to tbe Newport department from Costa Mesa Thursday. Police in Huntington Beach and other coast citieJ also expect to quesUon the boy. Supersonic Study Set WASHINGTON (UP I) -President Nixon has ordered a fresh study of "all aspects'• or the controversial supersonic airliner program. HENREDON'S WARWICK COLLECTION [rnertalnlng's Ml rnldt mare p c1ous when the rtfmhments are right in the mid die ofthlnp. With this bNutiful cocktail chest from Henredon'• Warwidc collection, you 'njoy funalon with flair. A lovely piiec• of furnJtutt, wperbty 1ryled, 1h~1 does double duty as a convenl,nt bar 24.wldt,.17" dttp, and ir high. Come &et It naw . ' '~ Henredon !"' You'll sit right down and write a letter, If you c.an use a desk 1riywh.~ In yuur home yau won't be able lo mist this oo' from H'nfflfon;s Warwick collection. A lllbtrb repres,ntaUon of the QU!',n Anne mlnntr, be1utlfuUy fonn,d In rich Alrlan m1hogany, U1ht~d with lnlald bord,n of maple. and w1lnut Yenfft1. Graciou5 and 1nc.eful, bl11,nou1h for you( needs,. smart enou1h to 10 an)"Nh'rt.. Come in and pvll up a d\ait, Stltct.d Groups of Orexel-Htnredon-Heritage on Sale Through Februery. Henredon Uphol1tery 15•;, off. H1rit1g1 Uphol1t1ry 20°/o Off EXCLUSIVE DEALERS FO"' HENREDOM -DREXEL -HERITAGE 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGER TEltMS AVAILABLE ON APPROVED CREDIT INTERIORS NIWl'ORT BIACH 1ro W.tcltff Or"f 642·2050 Of'IM NIDAY 'TU, f Profeulonal lnt.tlor O..igners Avellebl~IO-NSID LAGUNA llACH 345 North Coaet Hwy. 4M4551 Ol'U ralDAT 'Tll ' I • ) ' I • I " " I I ' I • • • D~niU.gtoB Bea~h EDITION *""''·* ~OL 62, NO. 27, 4 SECTIONS, 31 PAGES •. Huge· Enemy Base Seized V.S. Air Cavalrymen · Meet Little·Resistance ·· SAIGON (AP) -Sweeping ln!o the enemy's back yard, U.S. air cavalrymen have Jelzed aaainst little rea1atanct what is believed to be the largest North Vie~ namese base found so far in the war. Engineers have begun blowing up bunkers at the base spread over four square milea. U.S. officers sa1d Friday they believed it was being enlar&ed in pteparation for an enemy offensive. The comple• was found 53 miles New Major Huntington Hospital Due Conversion ~ the Huntington Beacr Convalescent Hospital Into the city's se- con<I major hospital is expecteci to begin within four months, officials of the JIB}! Corp. announced today. The convalescent hospital, owned by Robert Zinngrabe, is at 18792 Delaware St., and was originally built sev'Ul )'ears ago to full hospital standards, according to the owner. Planned is an 80-bed first phase and later construction of a three story tower which would bring the total capacity to about 224 beds, said officials of the corporation which is to own the facility. The planned hospital complex would include a medical office buikHng now under construction at Main Street and Delaware Street, the new acute hospital and eventually a new convalescent hospital adjacent to tne present con· valescent facility. The HRH Corp. 11 compoeed of ''• large number of doctors in the area wbo !eel Ille ....r l<>r a IJ<!COllCl boopllal In lhmtinatoo-Beach," ~bl uw. The entire comples, -l<d lo be worth 1bout M mlllloo when completed. will be name(l Paci!iea Hospital ood eventually include most of lhe area between Delaware Street aod Stang Lane and Main Street and Garfield Avenue. Construction on the hospital conversion ls e:rpected to begin in about four months and the facility is e:rpected to be open and in operation by January, 1970, ac· cording to lhe corporate officers. No opposition to the facility has been annouriced publicly by owners of the Huntington Intercommunity Hospital on Beach Boulevard, a little over a mile away from the planned Pacifica Hospital, but a protest could be filed when the Pacific plan goes before tbe Hospital Planning Committee group or with the city if there have betn any irregularities in securing proper zoning and use permits. Zinngrabe said he has approved zoning ror the hospital proposal and has pro- cessed through the routine of the Plan- ning Department and is "ready to go." While the •matter may have been resolved as a routine one by the city departments, it could yet come to the city council. Severa] of the councilmen are understood to be cauUOU.! why the matter slipped. While the· matter may have been re10Jved officially through the city deP.lrtments, several councilmen are uni:lerstood to be interested in why a major project wu approved without tlf- ficial notice to the council. In addition. there is a fear that if the Pacifica Hospital is built, the larger hospital comple:1 on Beach Boulevard belonging to Power Inc., of Westminster. on Beach Boulevard might not be able to complete expansion plans. BB Guli-arnied Y an£!.als Destroy School Property . Vandals \\'ilh S..B guna destroyed about $2,000 worth ol property Thursday at Fulton School in Fountain Valley. individuals entered the school sometime Fountain Valley polk:e said unidentified between midnight and 6:30 a.m. Thur&- day and stole two tape recordcn, a phonograph and a small amount of money, then wreaked havoc on the school property. Police said plate glass wlndo'ft, Oood lamps. televisions and Dsh aquariums were shot up and smashed by 8-BiUflS. ~ vandals apparenUy entered the ocbool bullding by breaking a -· then unlocking the door, police uid. Estimated damage lo adlool .,._ty wu P,000. 1be stolen items were valued at about $200. None or Ille mlclent> to the area reported bearing or seeing any activity 8t the school, police said. nortbwe3t of Saigon and 14 miles from Cambodia'• border. ll included a large Ullde'lfOund hospital, dining halls, a com.niand post, and hundreds of bunkers. U.S. oU:icU's estimated It could ac- commodate 5,000 or more men. The Orsi lntlma.,. that a big base might be In Olis olcl "1emy strongholcl came Jast week when fOO soldiers of the U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division flew in by helicopters. As S. S~. Jimmy M. McCurry, Hurn· boldt, Tenn., put it : "It didn't look like anything at first. Then we ln- Vestigated and began to see how big it was." After uncovering various bunkers, the air cavalrymen made their largest finds Wednesday and Thursday. In a · week, they reported killing about 50 North Vietnamese soldiers. But only Ulree eoemy soldiers were killed when the compleJ:: wu uncovered. Lt. Cot Frank Henry, Franklin, N.C .. estllnated there may be as many as 1,000 bunkers In the area and added : "They've beeo doing a tot ol work on th1s comple1: In 'ilie put month. We tftlnk Ibey ,..,. preparing !or Ibo comtna offenllve down IOUth." He rO!emd to upe<ted enemy attacks on military lnsjallatlons north ol 5a1ion and possibly on the capital ti.ell. Sunset Beach ! l Study Asked ' , ' ~ F~~ HuntingWn VPIT ......... . NIXON AT PENTAGON -Minus overcoat or hat despite chilly weather, Chief Execulive stands at attentibn during playilig of na· tional anthem While mllng Pentagon !Oday. With President are o .. fense Secretarr Melvin Laird and Gen. Earle Wheeler, chairman of Joint Chiefs o(Staff. Nixon Urges Pentagon Staff to Air Views Fully WASlllNGTON (UPI) -President Nil:on told the Pentagon's generals and admirals today that be wants them to air their views to hlJn fully I partieliJarJy iI there are policy cllffett:oceJ involved. ''l•want to hear tliose dl!ferences ex- pressed," Nimn declared during a visit to the Defense Department where he spoke to 200 ofHcials and military leaders after the 9eCOnd round of top-level con· ferences of the week the.re. The President praised U.S. military Lane Quits Planning Conrmission to Move Planning Commissioner . Charles H. Lane ha,, reolgned from Ille C<llllllliJoion effective Saturday becatise he ls leaving the city and state, he informed the Huntington Beach City Council I.Oday. Lane or 9112 Mahalo Drive has been active in the homeowner groups for several years and was appointed to the commission in October, 1967. Councilmen are expected to invite application:!: for tbe position, leaders for their general and special skills, then added : "I want to Mar what they have to say. I want to take · Ouit into consideratiorr"in developing my policies." He deplored what he described as a terxlenc;y to comider the D6fense and State depaJ1ments at odds with .each other with the President having lo play tbe role cf peace negotiator. "I don't cqnsider it that way at all." Ni.ion said. "We will have our dif· ferences. There arc d.ilterences within the Slate department as to what our · policy should be. There are differences within the Defense department .. "But on the other hand, while those differencei do exist, I believe that we are all working together toward the same end." Nixon saJd he would rely on Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chainnau of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, "to briJm to me and the Natiooal. Security eoUnci1 the view· points of the Defense· department and even tbose minority viewpoints that may exist here .·· It was Nixon's second visit to the (See MXON, Pap Zl An "action...tudy'' program to llll'Vey the problema of Sunset Beach and to develop a muter plan at land use to ~ In correction ol any ulsting problem and to ~ pn>per luture development will be lslied Monday ol the Huntington Beacb City Council. In addition thj: city 1taff will ask the council for Penrus..ion to request the county planning comml.Won to delay final bearings oo a pn>posal lo build a string of : apartments on a strip or railroad land through the tiny. beach community. Councilmen meet in council chambers of Memorial Hall, Stb Stred. and Pecan Avenue at 4:30 p.m. Monday. Rtsidents ol Suzltot BOlll!I have u}<d annezatioo to. Hunllngton Beach ocf tfle «111dllkio.N a.-~ coOllt ·be worked out that would insure develop- ment of t.be are• u the residents would' like It to deftlop. . Jt WU the plannlng c.Wnmfstbi11 unanimous 'dec1Jim to ffi»lmnen4 that ••a posjUve approach 'be taken ·tn the development al an acUon·study pro- gram." the city, working in close cooperation with the Sunset Beach community leaders, would identify problems and offer alternative solutions concerning the area and lo propose annexation, said the planners. Next a workable master plan mutually acceptable should be developed accordin& to Planning Director Kenneth A • lteynold11. Reynolds Also suggested a program of pre-zoning the ent,lre atta before mo nexation in order to uaure resident.I that the intent af the muter plan developed in cooperation with the local residents would be adopted and the agreed upon zoning applied to each parcel. On Feb. 13 the county planning com· mission is to hold final hearing on an •apartment development · on about one mile of the Pacific Electric right of way. The council has already taken action opposing high density development of the . railroad strip in favor of more public use such as parking faciijtiel for those who use the nearby county beach. City Adminilllartor Doyle Miller will a!k the coundl Monday to request tbe county planning commis.sion to postpone final action on tbe right of way develop- ment until the Local Agency Formation Commission has either refused the re- quest of Hun\ingtorl Beach regardin~ annexation of Sunset Beach or unUI a responsibility for tt:vlewing develop- ment proposals Is placed ln city hands by an annexation election. City Gives Harbor Pitch Newport Takes Starid on Dissoluti.on of District Representatives of 11 Orange County cities met Thursday night to further dilcm possible dlssoluUoo ol the Orange County Harbor District and beard Newport Beach artJculate Its position on lhe proposal. So far, nine munlclpalillea within the Orange County Chapter of the League or California CU.Jes have passed rtsolu. tio"s favoring dillmembennent of t h e 33-year~ld speciaJ dblrict. But Newport Beach -... 1 ol the county's largest 9leuure boat barbot -isri 'l amonc them. Former Newport mayor aoo present Councllman Paul J. Gruber spelled out lJlJ ctty'1 position In detail at the cttles leque ..,., .. In Frledemanli Rill, Qr. ange. • · 1. ln brief~ Newport city government has lauded the leagut for Its ltudy of the Harbor District problem. But Newport has also pointed out \hat Its city taxpayers shouldn't be expected to-bear COits ot Newport Harbor opera· tions which are of benefit to the entire c.ouot,y as a regional aquatic playgrwnd. In addition to Gruber, Councilman Ed Hirth was pruent to represent Newport al the session. Hirth noted today: ''Councilman Gruber offend a lull and detailed explaMUon ol Newport's pooltton on Ole Harbor Dis.net. J WU very pleased at the reaction of La Habra M11}'l)r Dean Shaw (league praideat) wbo octnowled&ed Newpqrt'"role In ol- ferlng a county.wide recrettional facility, "Shaw suggested that to the extent l • that Newport Harbor I• ,.gional In naturt, costa should be given reitonal support." WbJle nine Orange County ciUu have passed resoluUons fav(J'lng dluoluUon of the Harbor Distrtct, Hirth noted lhat Newport la taking a ''wait and see" position. Notabl)'. what Newport II wailinl lo see ls how much l110llef support it will get lrom O,qe County In operalloc harbor arxl beachu fO< Ille binellt ol Ille entire ""!DlY population. Hlrtb explained. "'Ille /Int atop -dluolulion ol Ille Harbor DlJlrid will be lo get Ille majorilJ' ol ctU.S ( IJ of 211 to bad the actloo. Then o ...,. mlttte must work out fundamental coo- (See BARBOR, Pip I) f -. N. Y. Stoeks ; ... ·-•• JEN CENTS l . " DAI\. Y PILOT IMlf ,._ DISCUSSING THEIR EXPEDITION TO MEXICO Amateur Archa.ologists Johnson (left), Nackos f Brokel1 bits or potlar)' atoog Ille baoU •r ,a nearby site. ol Ille COatzacoalcoo ar:r In MeJ!i:o Go!lll with Nactoo w!ll be ~ m l6od ,..,,. e • .-,i, ...,.lJlaraNn wa1ter J-r ...i...oJocJsto arx1 l ll1end to """' M-a COiia Ml!la, losurlnce .-t;· H>l.rilJini ·flods In tbe-llattwo,-t Dean WtlliamJ, a COiia MOil wboleaaJo The five men Jeave t.oday for I two-~airy representaUve, and' Roger, J:abbl, week river expedition in Vera Cruz pro-an electronJcs technician from Santa vince, southern Mexico. . Maria. ... · They hope to lind remnantll of ancient All are amateur arcbaealogists and Indian civilization in the ju.ogle are.aa explorers. Willi1m11 and Jabbe went with of the Coatzacoalcos River, and report Nackos on the same trip last year. their discoveries to Bri&ham Young Nackos runa Mayan Tours and Ex~ University and National Geographic pedilions in Costa Mesa, and m&ku Maguine. hil living by leading other parties Into Louis Nackoa of Costa Mesa, leader the ju.ogle areas of Mexico and on the of the expedition, said broken piece! beaches of Yucatan. of pottery that can be 1potttd from NackoS poin\ed ·out that on bis tripl. the rim-are usually the fint· indJcallons the men are not alloftd to do , any clif.~;. only looking !or lllrlace ob- jects," be said, "the Mulcan govern- ment b very strict aliwt Issuing permlla to ei:cavate on their territory." . Beach Woman Asks Volunteers For Glendora On this trip the five men will tra~l the river in a ~root motor power dutOQt; canoe. They will be led by a Me:r:icu guide. 11Most of the natives along this river, .. said Nackos, "are Spanlab-Jndlan mature Able bodied men 1a and ove:r wilh and there really isn't much danger a~ trucks and tools aie needed to ald in cePt for snakea." clearing the Glendora area of the mud, Nackos has already collected eeveraJ trees and rocks left u the result of pieces of pottery from tbe uu wblcb recent heavy rains, Mr•. Robert Buzan dates back to 800 B.C. ol Huntington Beach said l<>day. The primary cultun In the ana.. he She a.ad her faIQily are callbtg f<M'" e:1plained was known u Obnec wbkb volunteers .to aid in the.clearanct pro-means "people ol ~ rubber land". gram a n d empbulzed the n e e d Rubber planta abound in the area. for the volunt'een with ~lr own Cosl of . the-upedtUon ii $S80 per tran1[!0rtatiM and tool! parliculatly· r pel'!OO which lncl\ldt.s, travel, food arxl four-Wheeled truck11. ' equipment. The men u;Md 1 to retum The BUWI family lives at 6282 Briar home Feb. 16. CUU Drtve, and full information on. their For. t.b.e ,replalnder or ~ Yef/. Nackol efforll trUlY be ·o&ained bY calling 897·, hopes to conduct a boot ~ven. mort trf'p1 7557. Jnto the area or ln the rea;Son ot Yucatan. Information on other ways Joel.I residents can aid flood victims Jll.lY be obtained by calling the volunlttr aid station In tbe area at (213) 963-1707. Burn Victim Remains Critical Bum vicUm Mn:. Sylvia Neal1 of. Hun- tington Beach remainl In critkal -· dlUon and updel: ll!teoalve ....., ~ at the Orange County Medical Center •i hospital ol!ldal! said tblo mc><n1q; Mn. Ne a 1.-ol" 1(0 W. 15th st., •-•· severely burned w~ mornlnl when btr1 bathrobe caU&ht .fire wbDe t cleaning llOll\elbing on lier , patlo with paint thinner, _laid Fire ~ James Hunt. , _ She WU la~ fltst to the ...... ,_ r o • m ol Huntqtall ~ Hoopltal, .Jhen. tr.,.,.r~, !Ater .In tbe day lo OraJlll! COantJ ""*"l .Oeolar. l(P YQRK cmm -Stoc11 -adva11oeuuw1mbered dlCllnel todaJ bul ,,,,..1 P<'"ftekend ....... up ........ nmowed the, upalde marttlo. !ffadlna .... brlat. (See quolatlona, JI" .... IS-11). • \ Orange WeatJaer .Guess what?. No rafn thla w~-. erld -or at least ttiit'• whit the weatherqum says.• Iftlle*I look for su\my, cool •kies , wttb I~ lures ranging lrom a cllll4' $1 to a downright colct 411. INSWE TODAY Ma.timMm ·ond ,,.,,..._vm dJ.. ..._ . .,.. SS.S 0!1d H .I ·for b0ati in th .. TtMwt.Jl Of· tM' Lipton cup choUinge me•• iJ\ March I~ s .. l>l<gq. Png< 16. • .. • ,.......,_. II --., --· l. ::::. ""' = :: ............. 0 -D -. -' --.. ,,... I -.. I J DAii. v Pll or H Judge Sumner Rap·s County Book Ban BY WILLIAM REED Juvtrille Court Jucf&e Bruce W. Sumner -1 crit1cbed Ibo Onllp °""""' -.8oud for hlMing boMt beca.Ull of the pollllcal point of view ol one board member. lie referred to er. Dale Rallison, coon· ty acbool tnlslee who ls a member ol lbe John Bin:h Society and has formed his own private book review commllltt. At Ralllson'a urging, the county school board lut week removed four boob. lncludlnc Plllllw:r Prbe winner John HentJ'I "fliro&hbril," from the l1brary list fer a,,... COUDty Juv..U. laclllty. Jqe -Aid II< Is coocemed and f'"1s all clthens of the county should be ca. t b t waldlful altJ1 "w b • a tbe 35 on Faculty At UCl ·Seek Trio~s Return Students are not the only oot1 setting reinltatement of three fired UC Irvine asaistant professors. A group that in- cludes SS young facully m<mbers Is making the same demand. The group. SS proleuon and 30 graduate students, calls ilM:lf the New University Conference. Spokesman ls Assistant Professor of Physica George Reiter. Reiter says it ls their polltion that firings of Stephen Shapiro and Donald Brannan should be resclnded and the recommendaUon for firing or George Kent be retracted, miW inequities can be taken out of the present review and tenure system. He cltu three ln<quiUea: -There iJ no provision for 1'Vfew of • department's rec:ommendatl.oo against junior proleuors. -=-QnJy tenured members are appointed to -.i1y committees which Is agllmt the common law notion of jury by one's peers. -Evaluation is done In aecret by an anonymom committee with bo chance for the person being evaluated to be present. Reiter said the New University Con· ference is not yet sure what can be done about these inequities, but indicated the group proba~ly will work through the academic senate. He said they also don't know yet If the changes could be implemented locally or if they would have to be worked out for the Univeralty of California system as a whole. l'rom Pege l NIXON ... Pentagon in a week. He rectived full military honors on hia arrival, lnclu~ a 21-cun aalute. ~ Before going to the Pentagon. the president visited the Negro ghetto of Washington and viewed the rubble at.!11 remaining from riots last April. "Washington is our naUonaJ city and we want to make it a beautiM city in every way,'' Nixon declared during hb: unannounced appearance ln the rub- ble-strewn sector. At one point dW"lng his brief tour, one of the residents of the area called out a "soul brother" greeting to him. The President :ihook hands with TeSidents or the area and talked to them of their problems. Later in the day, he unveils an an· ticrlme packaie almed at curbing crime in the nation's capital. The area visited by Nixon was along '1th Street between S and T streets, N.W., which were hard hit in the out- break of violence and looting after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King. In the area, construction cranes were tearing down fire-damaged shells of b_uildings to clear the way for a park and playground. The park Ls to be named for Herman L. Clifford, assistant prin- cipal of a nearby high school who was slain recenUy while cbasi.ng some youths who had he.ld up the school bank. DAILY PllOl OlltANGE Cl»5t .. UBlllf<llNG COMH.)l't R•b•rf N. 'Wtt1' ............. ,,., ...... u.,,., Jt<I. •. C•dty Y•<t "•n•"1 '"" G•rw•tl N-1'11yr T~'"''' ti;:,,.;r ··~ y._,,..,, A ..... ,,.~;~, 111"""'9 "''* All"'' W, a1 11~ W.llitM Rtt.I ..,,_..... ti ...... ....-..... " l t•"' c.1., !l••w Htttl.,... lt«li Of'flu lOt 5t~ Strett M1ili119 M.l•eu: ,.0. le• 7tO, tJ,41 --Nt_.i lt«ll: HI! WHI a.lbN ............ CM••_,.: DI'°"'' •• ., S'"'11 lftlll'* •~' m ,_ • ...._ Co\11.Y ll'ILOf, '°'II" ... lcfrr ~ t~ 11'111 -.....,..,.,,... " .,.lt>ll""" dtl!• t•cnot ....._ .... 111 -""' t'll!t ... IW l•""" Mt ell,, N~-1 lit~ (tlft MfM. H..,.11,.._ .. 11(1\ t'llll ,_,_ Vtll\IJ, •~-•itll I •rt l.,...tl f'dll ...... Dr•-c .. ,, "'*•ll"'t c~"'11o11"' .,1111i.,. "''"'' •n •• nu W••• BMbo.t at .... ,, ..,_, •t.><~. '"" Slll WtH lt"I' ''""'• Cello IMw. Toi;' s Cf141 M2·4l21 ,.,_ ..... I •• ~ l4t.112t C•IM•• ,.....,,1 ... , 642-U7' c-i.t'lf, ,..._ °'-c ... 1 "1411•ellrt "-""· ... -,, ...... '"" ........ ~ ... """9fi.. ,..... .,. -"-1·-ftl'l Mttlll _, .. , .... ~ M-J -•II Mr .. tUlll! .. C-1'11M ......,. ---c ................ :. tt H._.-i ... .., C.111 1MM. Cf ......... Slll>te•1tt1., ... ~ 11.n .....,,., .., JMH u '° """'M'' Miii!.,., MtllMl*'-11,tf "'°"'~!•. ------- .....,. f0< romoval of books ii nof buld oo their lltervy melt or ...,lmt, bid -of • po11UC11 po1n1 o1 m b<idbyarneml>erofthelChool~ "I.a IChooil. of 111 pl-. all polnta of view atrJuld be examined and dl.scus&- ed." he said. Th e superior Judie, a Lquna Beach resident, aaid he felt COt1Strained to com- ment since as presiding juvenUe 11.Klae be bu jurlad.lctlon over the new IChool foe juvenllea on probation. Dr. Rallison. • Santa Ano dentist. charged that "Klrosbima.. pttMDta • one-Cided view of. tbe lMS atom bombing ol the Japaneao dty. He said. the - t.111 o n I y of the horror and fails to mentfon the lmJ>Qrlllll !act I b 1 I f.bo11aada of Amtrlcan Uvea were Aved !!l~ I ~ llll!lil!Y hl•ukla ~k, Heraey ,.porta Gia the aft.ermath of the bombing aa seen through the eyes of the Japanese people on t h e ground. He makes no comment on t h e war or on t h e advisiblllly of dropping the bomb. Ralllson's contention was that lhe book gives support to ban the b o m b movements. He said, "We h a v e demonstrallons by peacenib becauee we have allowtd JO much material of lhla kind In our libraries." School board president Clay lt1itchell, License Reminder Deadline for getting 1969 auto license tags is next Tuesday and Sally Kennedy of Newport Beach is smiling because she has all of hers. Department of Motor Vehicles says motorist who don't get theirs by deadline won't be smiling - a 10 percent fee penalty goes into ef· feet for first 30 days alter deadline. Alter that, penalty jumps to 100 percent. Huntington High Cla.sses Donnte Items to Nursery Two classes , In woodworking and architectural drawing at Huntington Beach High School Thursday donated three scaled-down kitchen appliances to I the nursery program of the Huntington Community Action Center. The students, under the direction of shop teacher Noel Bigler, had been work- ing on the project since last November. Bigler said the drafting class designed and drew the plans while his woodwork· ing II class did the construction. ''Some of the wood and hardware used was donated by individuals." Bigler ad· ded, "while the students donated paint and other accessories." Mrs. Alice Medina, director of the center, said the same items in the creative playthings catalogue c o s l between $75 • $100. The project began with the help of Mrs. James May, a volunteer worker at the center, who menUoned to Bigler the need of the youngsters in the nursery program. Bigler said he was pleased to do 2 Higli Schools Plan to Help Dimes Campaign the wort, and hoped more people In the community could also conlribute to the center's activities. Market Holdup Action Planned Court action was being scheduled today against a Santa Ana youth accused of being one of I wo men who robbed the S~n-Oo market in Westminster Tues- day night. Held in Orange County jail is William Russell Carrey, 19. Police are searching for his accomplice in the market holdup . Carrey was arrested at the Newland ~tote!, 14041 Newland St., and was said by police to have a small black toy gun and rolls of cobu in his possession. Officers said Carrey and his companion forced the store clerk into the freer.er ·while they escaped from the market. Carrey faces charges of kidnap and armed robbery. From Page 1 HARBOR ... cepts -who takes what burden in costs -then present the idea. The March or Dimes effort will receive "In Newport, we would like to see a fair solution regarding who actually a boost from Marina and Huntington palrols the harbor _ shares the costs Beach hi&h schools Saturday night In -. '·""· benents from 8 regional opera. the fonn of lhree: benefit athletic con-t ts lion. ,, es · So far , no Orange County cities have At 7 p.m. In the Marina gym the passed a resolution opposing the death two 11cboob' freshman basketball turns of the Harbor District. will match atilb to begin the night's La Habra City Councilman Hal Sims events. told league members the proj«t was Follawing that will be another bull:et-ahtad of ~ule with the entire monlh ball game featuring membcn: of the two of February ahead before a petition student councUs. must be filed with the Local Agency Faculty members will Laite over In Formation Commlssjon (LAFC). tbe third event1 a volleyba.11 match To date, La Habra, Santa Ana, Yorba between the rivai schools. Linda, Tustln. CypreM, Placentia, Hun. The pubUc la invited lo all three con-Ungton Beach, Los AlamltM and tests. A.dmisalon ii St for adults and Westminster city councils have approvtd students without A.noctated St~nt Body a resolution reducing I.he harbor district cards and 50 centa for students with to an Integrated county department of A&B canb. harbors, beaches and parks. After the last game, there "Ill b4! Sims said only • majority or 13 of a sock hop ln the IY'" for 1tudtnU the county's 25 cities wu needed lO only. forward the project. Students with ASB card• may enter Publk: htarings will be held on the the dance for 50 C'.'ttlll, studtnl!! without Issue 1£ approved by the LAFC and ASS cards mmt pay $1. the Board of Supervisors. All proceed11 from both evenls wlU ~ lime table calb for 1 q>ecial ro to the M•rch ol Dtmt$. / countytA·lde elect.ion in June. ' I ol Soulb Lquol, lald of Hersey"s book: 1'Wbllt I bava't rad &be book, I btven't •PJl""ed of all Ibis crtllclnn of America Ulln.B the bomb." He IU.gated, 1'TMre's been too mucb . criticwn of what we had to do alt.e.r we were forced. lnto the war by a sneak attack." Other books dropped from the library I i s t Rallison criticized because of t h e authors' alleged lack or understanding of the nature or conunun.iJm. Judge Swnntr said he does not deny the •ulborily of the ocbool boanf to make such a decision. He &aid it is the reason for the removal -becau:se of a board member's polilica1 point of view -that &ives tllm more ap- prelit111ion than the removal ltatll. ''A free society is predicated on the unobstructed flow of ideas," Judae Sumner s a I d. "T h e succe.ss of t h I s republic has, ln a large part, been due tq the tolerance of our citizens for the free expression of thoughts which differ from our own. "The ability of our nation to maintain this tolerance and to recognize that new ideu and d.llfering poi.Db of view are not an example of lack of patriot.ism or subversion has cauaed our counlry to grow to be the world leader it is today." Wife Warned With Hubby She's Headed, for Jail ''I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen,. is a ballad that had better not appear in Rodney Storum'11 repertoire. If the convicted dope user does even- tually win back hi! wife she'll go to jail. He already it there -serving 72 days for possession of marijuana. Kathleen, 21, of 17662 Jacquelyn Lane, Huntington Beach, got that warning from Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner Thursday after she condemned her absent husband as a "lnuse and a creep." She was placed on three years conditiori- al probation. Pleading guilty to narcoUcs charges, she told lhe judge that much of her present trouble stemmed from her bus· band and his persistent use or l!Ue.it drugs. She intended to divorce hlm, she said, but didn 't seem to know in court just how or when. That's when Judge Gardner took over. i'The only way you'll make it is by getting rid or him," the judge warned Kathleen. "If you don't have lho guts lo do it. I'll do it for you. "In other words, iI he moves back in. you move into jail." The Storuma were arrested last August by Huntington Beach police and narcotics mots. Storum has been described by officers as a "bard doper who uses his wife as a front to serve himself." Storum must serve thrte years pro- baUon on completion of his jail tum .. Suicide Suspeeted Newport Beach Woman Latest Drowning Victim The body or a woman that washed up on the shore of 'Vest Newport Beach Thursday morning was that of Virgini;i Mowry, 41 , who walked away .from Pat· ton State Hospital in San Bernardino the day before. The woman, a Newport resident, was an apparent suicide victim, acc<irtling to Newport Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson. He :said all evidence indicated suicide by drowning. r-.liss MO\':ry's body was discovered by a city employe clearing the debris· choked beach wilb a sk.ip loader. He round the dead woman lying near the water line about 100 feet south of the Santa Ana River jetty at about 8:45 a.m. She "'as fully clothed. Her last addres:; in was 1441 Galaxy Drive. Newport Beach Thompson said the woman had been a mental patient for several years. Services are pending at Baltz Corona del Mar Mortu~y. Two bodies Were discovered in less than 24 hours on the wa(erline of Newport Beach this week. Wednesday, ~ body of William Dischner, 16, Santa Ana, was discovered by a "·on1an "'aiking on lhe beach south of the pier. Dischner dro"l\·ncd in the Sanla Ana ruver two days before . He and three companion.~ rode raf!s over a small waterfall. The three other boys survi\·ed. Reeds ••• In the Wind That short session Tuesday night of the governing board ol the ~ sc~I district -on1y 36 minutes -1s bt1ng called a "mini-session" by the schoOI officials. I certainly hope that this is not a record which will stand very long and that in the future we will look back at this meeting .and wonder why i~ took so long. Other governing boards could do well by adopting the same idea and perhaps "mini-sessions" could become as popular as miniskirts, or is that asking too much~ * ll is taking much longer for an answer to develop from the discussions on plac- ing the civic center on the waterfront in the blighted downt own area. . One councilman has suggested placing the center on the waterfront rather than inland by Huntington Beach High School and although the idea has considerable merit , it is a multi-sided problem. For instance, all agree that the waterfront is potentially the best pro- perly in the city and e\•enlually the most valuable. Should the city not then reserve this land for development as combination high rise commercia l :- ()ffice -~ent developments In order to prod~e highest tax rev~nue? * On the other hand, it is argued that the city is in fierce competition with other cities for private investment and by building its civic center on this strip could show to the world that the city has enough faith in the waterfront to invest some $6 million. As far as service to the public is concerned. the high school site and the proposed downtown location would have about equal access from all over due to freeways and major streets. The choice of the councilmen cannot be based on the immediale cost factors either because it could be that investing $400.000 more in the high school site could aid that area in developing unex· peeled office and commercial ventures which might bring annually to the city more i" tax money than the additional cost of a site. * This is one of those problems which makes one wish he were more we of the things he absolutely knows. Supersonic Study Set WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon has ordered a fresh study of ''a!' aspects" of the controversial supersonic airliner program . , n a a "' I HENREDON'S WARWICK COLLECTION [M,1taJn1nr1 t0 much ITIOfe gr1~ cious when the reftuhmenu ire righ1 in the mlddleoflhlngi. With 1h1s be•utiful codctall chest from. HtnrMon'1 W•rwrck rolltt1ion, you 'njoy fund)on with n.1r. ,., lov,ly piece of furn I tu re, su~rbly 1ty!ed, tNl does double duty 111 conwnlent bar 24' wide, 17' deep, and 17" hlah-Come "" II now. '~ Henredon I-~ You'll sil right down •nd write a leller. If voo c•n use 1 d!Mli: 1nywhtr' !f'I vnur hom,, you won·1 be 1ble to resi!ot 1hi, IJ!'I' from H'"''don'~ W•rwicli: ..:olltd1on. A. ~uberb r'p~~nl•lion of the Q~rn Anne m•nner, be1utifully formed in rich ,.,fric1n rNh091ny, light,ned with lnl~id bon:trn of m1p1,, ind w1lnut vtnHrL Gr1ciou1 and gr•i;tlul, big ff!Ough for your l'lffds. smart enou1h to 10 1nywhere. Com, i., tnd pull up 1 ch1lr. S.1.ct.d Groups of Orex•l-Henr.don-Htrlt-v-on Sa~ Through F.bruary. Henr.don Upholttery 15% off. Heritage Upholstery 20-k Off EXCLUSIVE D!ALlllS fOR: H&NREDON-DlllXEL-HERITAGE 90 DAYS NO INTEREST-LONGEll TERMS AVAILAILI ON APPROVED CREDIT NEWl'ORT BEACH 1727 WMtCllff Or., 642-2050 Of'DI NllAT 1"1l t INTERIORS Pro....,onel lnt.r~r Dool9nen Availebl..-Al~ID LAGUNA BEACH S4.5 North eo..t Hwy. 4t44.SSI Ofllll NIDA T "m. t ' Dental Health Wee k Projects Brushed Up DenW Hoalth Week, Feb. s-a, ls a 1pecial lime for mem· ben of the Womeo'1 AuxllWy to tho Oraqe C<Junty Dental Society. Membe" will be boarding a bus 1t 9:30 a.m. on Wed- nesday, Feb. 5 at Fashion Square Jn Santa Ana and will proceed to the Loo Angeles Cooaty Muewn of Art for • tour and Juncbeon. Mn. J. Parker Hart ol Tustin. pro- gram chairman. has aJTanged the event. The dental auD!iary hos traditionally directed its et- farts toward projects deslg!Jed and brushes In the bandl ol each school nurse to llllst in the tuch1ng of proper oral hygiene. In lt68, 10% models Wl!n! placed In Oraqe Cowrty schools. Continuing projects Include the distribution of a primer on dental health for lbe lb.th grade level; dlstribuUon of hospital pamphlets to maWnl- ty sectloos containing ii> farmaUon on the care ol children's teeth; pnivldJns scholarshiJI" to dental students and students In d e n t a I hygiene; speaking to MuJcan. American chlldn!n In Head Start programs, IUld -ting puppet lbaws under the direction of the Mines. James lokElenney ol Oranp ud Paul w. Johnson of 'f\Jstin. Mn. John M. Aschieris of Santa Ana. second vice pni.ti- dent, Is dental h • a It b chainnan for the y e a r . Although tho aJDiliary la a component of the American Dental Association, moll of their funds IUld efforts go toward betler dental health eduution wllhln Orange c..u.. ly. to provide dental h. a lib ~-----------------­ -These projects ii> elude achool children, tbeir parents IUld teachers, from kindergarten through b i g b achool In public. private IUld parocblal schools and Head Start programs. Wedd ings, Troths Pilot's Deadlines To help !JU requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, fonns are avail· able in all of the DAILY PILOT oUices. Further questions will be answered by Social Noles staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. To avoid disappointment, pros~tive brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glos.!J photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart. ment prior to or within one week after the wedding. MR . AND MRS. W. E. RICHES Canary lsl•nds Honeymoon One of the most successful projects bas be<n tho speak«• pane1 which provides a talk on basic oral bygieoe and nutrition geared lo the second grade level. The 15-20 minute presentation, first given in 1965, now Js available coun- tywide on a request basis to schools and youth groups. In 1961, 45 members partk:ipated, vislllng %10 scbools and speak· ing to approximately 30,900 second graders. More than 50 requests have been received from school nurses and teachers for members of the auxiliary to present the pro- gram during Dental Health Week. Chairman of the panel For engagement announcements it is suggested that the story, also accompanied by a black and while glossy p I c t u re. be submitted early. U the betrothal announce- ment and wedding date are siI weeks or le~ apart, only the wedding photo will be ac· cepted. is Mrs. Robert E. Huntington of Sant.a Ana. Another project is the dental health education 11 b r a r y , 18th Cen tury Church England Setting For Marriage which consists of resource '--------------------' material and teaching aids for prlmaty grades through high acbooL Included are boob, pamphlets, posters, records, film strips, games, fingerplays and tooth models. The library is located in the Orange Coun- ty Dental Society building at 295 S. Flower St., Orange and Horoscope Leo: Buy Gift Our Lady Help of Christians .and St. Denis Church in Tor· quay, South Devon, England, was the noon setting for the wedding service uniting in marriage Jennifer Ganderton .and William Ernest Riches. f nd the is open to anyone interested derlon ° Devon a son in the fleld of dental health SATURDAY to CANCER-born persons. You of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene A. education. are presented wi t h in-- Riches ol Newport Beach. Materials may be checked FE~RUARY I rormaUon ol value. Discuss Tbe bride, given in marriage t f t k period By SYDNEY OMA.RR finaDCe!I with mate, .... ...tner. by ber father, selected a Door OU or a wo-wee . ., ..... , length ivory satin gown with Of special interest arc ARIES (March 11-April 19): AQUARIUS (Jan. 26-Feb. re-embroidered aleocon lace. materia1s in Spanish and Timing is sharp. Personal 18): Be aware of contractual An ivory satin pillboJ: caught Braille. Also on file are dental magnetism is high. Opposite obligations. You seek greater ber elbow length veiling and school catalogues to assist In se.z: finds you especially at-freedom. But act wit b l n MARJORI E HIGGS CdM Teacher Summer Wedding Planned DAILY '!LOT JJ La un ch Navy W ive s Recru iting Coffees Jt...ulllng are llllllllben ol Loo Alamitos 11•'7 Wives' Club. They wtD -pro-apecLI 10 a coffee a& 10 a.m.. T\Jesdq, Feb. 4, In the H""' llngton Beach -· ol Mn. Tommy Stewart, membenhip cbalrman. This will be tho !Int In • IUiel of toclall to introduce all n e w and prospective member• to the organilltiao. Navy Wtve.s• ClublS o f America Is a national literary Buffs Read favori tes orpnlutlon wUh -all over tho world. A thn&lold Jll'Ofll'IDI of wllfare, education and recreaUon are «fend to wlvts ol N1vy. Coaat Guard and Marina C<rpo "'1llted mm, active, tfla"l!t and rellffil. Mrt. Kenneth 'l'raeldiJe, Jft'ident of the aru club, wut 1pe.alt en the wcwt the or&anllalion bu dme abd .coo- tinuea within the commu.nJty • Meetings take placa al 7,311 p.m. the fll'll IUld 1hIM Wedneaday of eadl JllOlliII al tbe Loe Aiam1tol Naval Air Statton. A potpourri of nierary se1ec-Love Seen tions was presented b y member. ol Laguna Beach ' Eben Club'• Literary s.cuon By Chapter during a gathering booted by M~JefucJ~ bits ol Interpretation ol Lo,. la the whimsy, • Churchill fable, program pisnn<d for the next turn.of·tho century bonsehold me<tlng of the Gamma AJpha hints for the bride, original Nu chapter, Beta -Sigma Phi, of at 8 p.m. Monday. Feb. 11 in poetry • .segments limited the Hwitlngton Beach home ~~ns, and Tennyson pro-of Mrs. Gunnar RollefseQ. .--es. reported Mn. Ed-It will be preoeJJ!ed \'tt J.lnr. Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. ::ber~an De~n. section ~~~ 4!r = J: Pool~ Higgs ol Santa Ana hosted Following tbe program of Refreshments; wved by an alternoon open bouae when readings, luncheon was served Mrs. Rex McDonald, 1'ill ear .. they announced the engage.. by Mn. Ropp with the ry out \be meeting's Valentine ment of their daughter, Mar-as.Wltance of co-bostesse! the theme, and each member bas jorle Higgs of Balboa Island Mmes. Robert Tu r n e r , been requested to fashion a to Paul W. Hebert Jr., son William Hlnwood and Jack valentine for bet secret alstu ()f Mr. and Mrs. Paul W. Stewart. Mrs. Wallace. Scott which w:lll be distributed by Hebert of San Diego. is section chainnan. the hostess. The couple b 1 v e select.ed•';ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"ii Aug. %1 for their weddlngil in the First Methodist Qwrch In Santa Ana. SPECIAL! t.iiss Higgs, a teacher at Harbor View ScbooJ In Corona THRU FEBRUARY del Mar, received her BA ~m~~meg~Ji;:i,eo~~ 100/o OFf; Au.,":.:;i,=: College al Long Beach. She was a member ol Delta Zeta 0.,. ~ l / /l /t · sorority. 1 0 ,..,., _:)wi ch Lra t •w= The beoedid-elect is an alumnus of SDSC and af· COIFFURES filiated with A1pba Tau Omega.~---1=09=1 ~Bo=k~or~,-C,est'a=Ma=u~,-54~!Ml3-34,,I_._~ traterruty. I~ Group Meets Marcel Bllstene, offJcl.a! lec- turer from the Paris Alliance, will speak m Cocteau. Poet of tbe Screen and abow a film during the Feb. 14 :neeUng of Alliance Franca.be de la Riviera Callfarnlenne. PIANOS• ORGANS FAMOUS BRANDS COMPETITIVE PRICES we'll meet all RENT A PIANO CAREFULLY No time limit! No RECONDITIONED nbllgation to buy. • • USED credit if you do. PIANOS The Rev. Hugh Martin performed the single ring nup- tials for the daughter of hlr. and Mrs. Vivian Ottaway Gan- she carried a bouquet o( pink career planning and questions tractive. bounds o f respomibility, '°"'andstepbaootls. oo careers In dentistry and TAURUS(April2'>May%0)' PISCF.s(Feb.lf.Marcb%0): ANKRUM'S Miss SaDy Gray, the bride'• related fields. Get to wort on solid projects. SpoWgbt on wort whlcb bas Nearly Everyone 206l~"! MAIN -SANTA ANA • u~oo ~in Crom Totqaay, was ttie 'lbt auxiliary also ls trying Means leave s e be me 1 , been neglected. Avoid e1· attendant. She dcmled 1 long to place an oversiz.e jaw model daydreams r 0 r others. Fix tremea -keep steady pace. , 701 S. HARBOR -FULLERTON • 171-4326 red peau de sole I01'1I and things around tbe house. jLa~ter~n~Ja~x~wl~th~C011=g=eru=·a1::__':Lis:f:e:OS~f=O~La=nd:e:rs~~~~~~l~l~Y~IA~l~S~IN~SA~NT~A~AH~A~~~~ matching headpiece. Best man first Nighters Check safety measures. people, JWOclates. was Daniel Holloway of El GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Separates Segundo while ushering duties d Accent on versatility, travel, were assumed by Midlael and Greet lea er relations with neighbors. Short Barney Bettesworth of Tor· journey may be necessary. quay. Mrs. Harriet Mc Connell, Check directions, Instructions. Graham Lawson was the who just returned from CANCER (June 21-July 22): ()rganist for the st. Denis choir Cleveland, will call to order Be alert for money op- bo the monthly meeting ()f First portwUty. Utilize facts, in-ys. h f f Red and white carnations Nig ten •. an auxiliary to the onnation. Day e a t u re ' and greenery decorated the Laguna Players, at 10:30 a.m. chance !or financial gain. 18th CenbJry church. Speclal Tuesday, Feb. 4, In the Study Income potential guests w..e Torquay Mayor Laguna Beach home of Mrs. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Cy- and Mrs. A. L. Goodrich, tho ZaclJary Malaby. cle high. Be • .. u..iarier IUld bridegroom's parents, Miss The open mttting will take go-getter. Your sense o f ""-Spa r T J c·1y place following an executive showmanshJp comes to fore. ,.,_.., wr 0 emp e 1 ._ _ _, .,..., .. ;00 --·-~·Jed at 10 Excellent for ... _.~ ..... of lu1-and the best man. LIUO.lu .,..._. ai.:ueuu .,...._......,.. The Gandertons' heme, the a.m. ury item, meaningful gilt. Wmd.sor Hotel, was the recep-Mrs. Mc Connell has just VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): ttin returned. from a spec i a J Emphasis on theater, eo-lion se g. Raylton Gray, the =-~ th ·~·'nment wi'thin gr 0 up b ·d • · the b 'dal engagement Ww• e u::i ....... n e s cousm, gave n Cleveland Playhouse where framework. G<Xid for club ac-- loatak st. ~ sec:oooF receptb i<l!l wthill she appeared as the mother tivily. Charity event finds you e pace 1n e ruary m e in "Ab, Wilderness." playing feature role. bridegroom's parents home. 1 LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl 22)·. M th 60 I f · nd lier husband, the ate Mr. ore an c ose ne s Frederic Mc Connell, was Spotlight on p I e a s u r e ' and relativts will fete the cru-romance, friendshl,... Y o u I d · th cham formerly director of th e "" P e urmg e pagne par-and Th d •-· possess air of authority. What 1 Cleve! eat.er an u=1gn YThe r~ Miss Ganderton consultant for the Laguna· you do today turns to definite attended Leweston Manor, Moulton Playhouse now under ad;fu°i:J~o (Ocl 23-Nov. 21)' Sh~--U · 1 construction. 1:1uuwuc, and the mven -You can get points acrOS!i to ty of Eftter, Devon. important person. Seek Her husband is • graduate Boa rd Meets alliance hrth L 1 B R A in- of Newport Hartxr mgb divtdnal Spread Jnfiuence. Ex. School and attended Orange The Executive Board <i the pand area cl. interests. Don't C',oast Colltge and the California Federation o f be limited. University o{ Arizona. Cur· Women's Clubs wilJ convene SAGrnARWS (Nov. 22- A new Jc:nit suit that will rently be is flying with Flying in Sacramento on Feb. 4, S Dec. 21): Accent on long win favor for Spring -has Tiger Lines and his bride was and 6. journeys, travel activities. raglan sleeves, flare skirt. a stewardess for Western A visit to the capital. Plan ahead. Study SCORPIO Spring is the season of Airlines. meetings with women in the message. T a t e iniUaLive. surprise luncheon s. t r ips , The new I y weds hooey· legislature, and a wies or Don't waJt for others to set meeting people. Be prepared, mooned on the Canary IslanM actlvity report.1 will highlight policy. ' knit fashionable suit of sport and are mating their home the three-day session at the CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. yam. Pattern 7399: sizes 32-38 ,. ".;n:":Cos::=;tar,;iM-:es'iat=. ==;;r;;;;;;;;:;=:jSena~t:jor;:;H;;o;te:;;J.::;:::;:;;=;;;=;;;:i::;l;;9J;:';:Be:=;recer,ip-:t;'ive;==-:especl=tt=a'tllcyl in~F'J'Y CENTS (coin s) '".1~<=2~..___..!!ll(~W~:Wj;~~·e\'1(-'~4 {\•k'<>~] each pattern - add 15 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling ; otherwise thin:l-claS! delivery will take three weeks or more. • Seod to Alice. Brooks the DAI- LY PILOT, 105 Needlecraft Depl, Bos: 183, Okf Chelsea Stat.imti New Yort, N.Y.10011. Prtnt !Name, Addrnt, Zip, P1Uem NRmber. Giant, new lllt Needlecraft C.Wloc - over 200 desigrui to choose, 3 rrec patterns prlnted inside . Send 50 centl!I now. NEW! "50 IN STANT GIFTS" -fabulous fashlons, toys. decorator accessories. r.1ake it today, give it tomor· row! ldeal for all occasions. '° cent.. 4'11 Jiffy Rup'' to knit , crochet, weave, sew, book. 50 cent.. Boot of IJ Prtu Al&twu . AT JOSEPH'S RI NG SHOP A NEW SYSTEM OF EARRINGS DERIVED FROM tl!E /IJff OF ANOENT ECYl't IITTERCllANGEABLE PROM DWCAlli TO DRAMATIC. AU HANDMADE IN l.CKOR 181<. FREE PIER O NG BY APPOINTM ENT'. JmSO.COASTILVD. l.AQR«A lt.AOl.lAL.11. 17141 fM40!iO $0 cent!. llarplnl QQTII Dool< I bu ~'-:---...,-----.,.,~~-----<>-16 bt1uWuJ patterns. so cent.a. ""'---'-'------A='-""iiii...W. TOMORROW, SAVE 1/3 TO 1/2 OFF DURING THE SECOND DAY OF BUFFUMS' MONTH END CLEARANCE If you a.ildn't lfiap 9llfJnn' hie llClltll md c1 .. a 1Dday, 111111111 have 11 qipmm11y., aw Sallrday , •• QJllB earlyf ALL BUFFUMS' STORES WILL CLOSE AT 4:00 P. M:. SATURDAY FOR INVENTORY ~ I . '. rl Fallim Island • 644'2200 • lbl., 11m., Fd.10:00 6119:30 Oller days ~ti ll 531 \ • • -... -· .. -.. -· JJ DAllY Pll.OT H • ' ' • • • • • • • ' • ' • ' ' I • ' ( ( ! ' ' l ' ' ' ' ' ' ( ( ( < l l ' < < < • • • • ' • • • • • • I • • I I • • I ( I ., I ... • I • • • I • I • • • I • I I ' • Friday's Closing Prices -Co~plete ~ew Yor~ Stock Exchange List ~;;;~~~ illi:f& I Stock Exchange List l J4 DAllY PILOT Gu ney Chases 6th River·side Win Saturday UPIT ....... COASTAL SHOT -Charlie Sifford tees off in the Andy Williams San Diego golf tournament 'Thursday at Torrey Pines as a U.S. Navy ship cruises off shore. He turned in a 35-37-72 card for his first round in the $150,000 evect. Sports in Brief Bruins. Freeze Kings; Keep Streak ( 16) Alive LOS ANGELES -For about 13 ntlnutes, it looked as though the Lo s Angeles Kings might achiev• what no other National Hockey League club tlad done 1n lS games -beat the Boston Bruins.· Then the Kings' defense, Gerry Des- }ardin's masterful goaltendJng a n d everything else but the roof fell in. Less th.an 21 minutes later the Bruins, front-runners in the East Division, 15kated <1£f with a 7-S victory and their 16th r;tralght game without a loss. Wood Nears Title SEA1TLE -Tim Wood of Detroi~ the defending champion, wa1 upected to wrap op the United States !ellior men's figurt &katlng title here tonight. Gauchos Beat COD by 62-60; Start Marathon By JOEL SCHWARZ OI' n. Deltr P'll•I Staff Saddlebad: College turned back C.OUege of the Desert, 6UO, Thuraday night at Mlsdon Viejo High School to start another one of the grueling periods on the Gaocbo schedule which Sttl them play siJ: games ln eight days. Randy Lawrence's layup with 38 seconds remaining enabled Saddleback to avenge an earlier 'iS-71 defeat Desert bad tnructed on the Gauchos and capped two courageous comebacks by the ~1ission Viejo school. Tbe Gaut'hos ,,·ere outscored 11-4 in the opening minutes of the game but regained the lead 11,ith. a I 7 • 5 spurt mid\\·ay throu gh the f1r~t .half. Saddlebark, behind the brilliant all· around play of Bill Noon led, .36-31, at halftime and 47-41 with 12 minutes left tn the game. College of Uie Desert bounced back Wood scored 781.3 ThursdaY. In the compulsory figures which ac~unt for 50 percent of the acore. He was far in front of Gary Visconti, also of Detroit. who scored 749.7. Laker• Host Burk• INGLEWOOD -Tbe Los Angeles Lakers, fattening their lead at the ex- pense of Nat.ional Basketball Association expansion clubs, tonight meet the Milwaukee Bucks at the Forum. The La.kers will be without the aervices of their star guard, Jerry West, who is out for at least a week with a palled hamstring muscle in bJs left leg. · Chirago Rolls, 12..fJ The ChicagD Black Hawks were due to explode but they must have been as stunned as the poor Philadelphia Flyers al that 12-0 score. Falling ooly thrtt goals sOOrt o[ the most lopsided victory in National Hockey l..eague history, the Black Hawks scored six goals in the first period and three each in the second and third periods Thursday night to overwhelm the Flyers. ludiau Red Wh11 LOS ANGELES -Indian Red l.Alpei o( Los Angeles scored the biggest win 0£ his career Thursday night when he knocked out Raul Soriano of Mexico in I he ninth mmd ol their scheduled U.mmd well<rwelgbl elimlnaUoo bout. Victory projected l.Alpez up to the position of leading cootender for the tiUe held by Curtis Cokes and reversed hi1 ddeat by Soriano last spring at Mexicali, Mexico. Rirhey I• Victor OMAHA, Neb. -Cliff Richey, the scrambler from San Angelo, Tei .. came out of the Omaha International Indoor Tennis Tournament Thursday night with the singles championship and a share of the doubles. Richey earned the singles crown a~ ho baWed past Joaquin Loyo.Mayo of Mexico 1-4, 1-3. Washed Out 500 Fkld to Roll at Last RIVERSIDE -Dan Gurney will be sbootlng for h1I mtb win in teve.n tries 5alurday when lilt 1100,IOO Motor Trend 500-mlle auto race finally gets under way. The evmt bu been postponed twice because of rain. Gurney, from Corona del Mar, will be up against 43 other enlrle& Ooe cl those who will e<mpete ls NASCAR <J>amp DaYld Peartoo. Suffering from a cold and nasal J.n.. fection, Pearson bad returned home to Spartanburg, S.C., for medical treatmenl He now has clearance for the race. Pearson faces such other established stars as Gurney, Cale Yarborough, Richard PeUy, Lee Rey Yarbrough. Al Unser, A. J. Foyt, Marlo Andretti, Parnel.ll Jonea and Bobby Isaac. Fon!a, Chevrolets, Dodges, Mercurys, Plymouth!, PonUacs, OldllnobWes and Buick.s are entend tn ~ 500-mile test during wblcb the cars can reech speeds up to IM> mph. 'Ibey'll run over a 2.7 mile coune In the first compeUlive teat of J98t modelJ and leading off the new year for the National Association ol Stock Car Auto Racing (NASCAR). Raceway President Les Richter said Rustlers Play Potent MSAC, Fullerton lilt heavy ra1na dldn1 do 1111 laallllll damage to u.. track and tt wm ... rtady fer the raC"e, "Fortunately," he obserVed, .. we ha._.. sustained no tlgnifi-dAmal• to lilt course or to the spectator (adllties. .. Crews and heavy equlpmeol worbd nearly a net tp the track end parking ll'W mu for Saturdll''• event. Crucial Weekend Opens for GWC By 10:30 S.lurday night Eaolero Coo- fereoee bastetball fans will know if the circuit race will be over at the end of the first rwod or if Golden West's challenge for the lead Is serioos enoogh to make It a horse race. Coach Dick Strictlin's Golden West crew faces a pair of vital game1 tonight and Saturday and the Rustlers must win both. Thi! evening tbe Rustlers (S.2:) travel to Walnut to taJte on Mt. San Antonio College (4-t) and then return to tbe Orange C:O..t gym 5alurday night for an 1:15 showdown with Fullerton (t-o). Tonight's game will get under way at a o'clock. Golden West's perfOl'Dlance in coo· Nicklaus Mter First Victory Since '67 Tour .. SAN DIEGO (AP) -The years have been scarce and far between when Jack Nicklaus didn't win a major golf cham· piomhip. The year 1968 was one of them. The 29--year-old NicklaU!I hopes to rec- tify the situation in 1969. The leader going Into the second rouod of tbe $150,000 Andy Williatn!-San Diego Open today, with an Initial four-under par 68, the big and friendly bear from Columbus., Ohio, made a few revelations. F o r one, he has begun his training program weeks earlier than usual. He used to delay perfecting his game until the Masters at Augusta, Ga., loomed ahead. "I played a lot of golf starting Dec. 27 in Florida," said Jack or a period in which he used to reJax and fish. "I didn't win a major tournament last year and naturally my objective is to win one of them this year." He referred to the U.S. Open, the Masters, the PGA and the British Open, the crowns of which he has won at leas tonce in his: brilliant career. Immediate tars.et, of course, ls the tournament here and Its $30,000 top money. Last Monday, in bis first tourna-. ment of the year, he finished just four strokes back of the winner, George Archer, In Bing Crosby's affair. ''I thought I played well up there," NickJaus observed. His 61 Thursday left him one stroke ahead of Do w Finsterwald, formerly a tour regular who limits tournament play now to 18 or so events a year and spends much of his time as a club pro in Colorado Springs. Colo. "I don't play quite as well or as often as I used to;· Finsterwald noted after his 69 round. But, the 38-year-old pro added that he plans to continue several more years in big league com· petition. Billy Casper, the local hero and biggest mooey winner in golf last year, was In the heavily popa]ated 72 bracket as on1y eight players bro"ke par 36-36-72 on the 1,144-yard Torrey Pine! Municipal course. Cage Results 1-61,. Lemovnt <NYl 511 G_...,_ (DC) 62. F1"""'11h Dkto.1-tO Pl"O\lldtna IJ, Dl-Ptul Q "IYU IG. L,t1vert. 115 ~1re11 16. 01111....esne 66 Wk!'llt1 $11h: 71. Ml!!'nPhll Sltl~ •• MtnNft 11, EnlPm K..,,lllCl<v n V!f'91nlt 11. Mi'tvllnd 11 Vlf"9lnl1 Mlllhlry n. Wlftl ..... ,,,, M••v 11 Nolr• 01me n. Goootil!1 Tee:!'! 52 Mltml (Olllol .0, :Xiv~ !Ciiio) 4S C*lllMlm1 City ... Crritllll:ln '' """"' TtJlt Sitt. 111. Or1U tt e.-1.,,.m YOU!t9 ll:J. ui.~ St11>t • Or-Shtt> U. Portltnll '9 St, Fr1ncll c•e.I "' Mont-n ference action has been spotly. The Rustlers have played well on occasions but have balanced that out with some rather sloppy performances. Stricklin doesn't think his club is in· consistent, but plays according lo the . caliber of the opposition. "We've played our better games against the tougher teams and our poor· est against the weakest ones," he said. If the pattern continues, the Rustlers will be playing a good brand of ball the next two nights---Or at least they'd bet- ter if they want to stay in the Eastern Conference race. Mt. SAC gave Fullerton two of its strongest games this year. The Mounties Jost lo the Hornets twice, by fwo and five points. In the conference battle, Fullerton. won, 61-56, but only afler ML SAC's Pat Ford injured an ankle in the final three minutes. "Mt. SAC plays excellent defense, doeso't throw the ball away, goes to the boards well and plays good $0Wld ba.11- kelball," Stricklin said. "They work very well as a CQmplete team." ~11. SAC's coach, Gene Victor, is an optimist and still thinks his club is in the race for the conference title. "It will take a miracle for us to win the title and I believe in miracles. "We can still win this thing but Fullerton is going tG have to find trouble. All wt need is 12 win! in a row and that's possible." . . Victor will send a starting lineup of Ford (&-S) and Morrie Sherman (&.5) at forwards, center Tame.k stremel (1-6) and guards Mark Ramsey (S-0) and Rick Kelly (5--11) agaiDSt the Bu!Uen. Golden West probably will count;er with Brian Ambrozicb and A11an Robin- son at forwards, Dave Harding at ctnter and Ollie Martin and Mark Miller at guards. However. Stricldin said be is contem- plating several possible cbanges-restor· ing center Dave Prather and guard Mark Campbell back into h~ startine lineup. FENOER BENOER -Driver Bill Campbell isn't holding hi! head because it's broken -he's just amazed that be emerged without a scratch after a mishap Thursday at Daytona Speedway in Flor~ IJPI T ..... 119 .. ida. His Formula Vee racer struck the wall during a qualifying heat. He was a Formu1a Vee national chainp in 1966-67. Daytona Field Will Chase College Student DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Four Americans, headed by a 21-year-old Auburn University student, started ahead of the vaunted European drivers today in the 250-m i I e World Championship formula vee race opening Speed Week s at Daytona International Speedawy. St.eve Peiper of Alexandria, Va., earned the pole with victory in the fastest of four qualliytng sprints Thursday. He averaged 87.M> m1le3 per hour, barely nosing out Cecil Hanis Jr. of Houston, and Bill Scott or Washlngton D.C., as they came across the finish line abreast. James Car of Chattanooga. Tenn., Eckhard Stenzel of Germany, and Peter Peter ol Austria were close behind in the same six-lap sprint over a 3.81-mile road and track course. European champion Werner Reid! of Austria won his sprint easily, at a speed oI 86.030 m.p.h., which earned him the seventh starting place. Jim McDaniels of A1exandria. Va., who won a third sprint. got ninth starting spot in the grid. A field of 75 cars qualified from 114 entrants representing 14 countries in the richest Fonnull Vee ract ever run. The winner gets $8,000. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Golfers' Dilemma British Add to Miseries By Seeking Smal"ler Ball NEW YORK (AP) -As U the can- tankerous golf ball Isn't hard enough to hit now, the powers of the game are planning to make it smaller. However, you should be able lo belt It farther off the lee and lt ought lo be more fun to play. says Keith Mackenzie, secretary of the Royal and Ancient Club of St. Andrews -but he can't guarantee it Mackenzie stopped off in New York Thursday to talk with offidals of the U. S. Golf Association about two subject! close to his heart -the BriUsh Open and the golf ball. ''Our aim is to arrive at a ball that is more pleasurable for the average goUer to play," Mackeniie, a typical Scotsman with a thin mustache and a brogue that walks on edge, said. ''He are not concerned about the Arnold Palmer.! and Bili Csspers. We a~ con- cerned about the millions of golf~ -70 percent or all of them. In fact -who have handicaps of 17 and above. ''Our purpose Is not to Improve the score -the players must do that themselves. It is; to improve I.he en- joyment of the game." The British and Americans, wtme rules are accepted all around the world. play a different size ball. The Americans specify thal a ban cannol be lea than l.!fl Inches lo diameter, The R&A code bolds that Iha minimwo diameter shall be l.6Z lncbts. The weight of the twD balls ii tht same -l.62 ouncts. Now the two countries are trying to arrive at a uni!otm ball, the onJy area in which their rules do not agree The British have come up with a ball 1.~ inches in diameter -.03 larger than the present British ball, "l sincerely hope that we arrive at a compromise ball,'' Mackeniie said. "Not for our own sakes, but for the sake of the rest of the world. There Is a golf explosion, and other countries must be confused." • ad tn a three-minute stretch jumped ahead, 52AS, ouL..roring the Gauchos ll·l u llharpcboollng Binny H•-pumped tn nlnl of RDadrunners' point'i. After SaddJeback evened the count al lkll. the score was lied or ch.an~ hods sis times until Lawrence's w1nrung Bruins, Trojans Face Pac-8 Action The R&:A aecretary said Brit.aln hid sent doz.ens of the compromise baill to this C"'1nlry foe uperience. He bas not had a full report. Meanwhile, rtprt&elltatives of the two countr:ies will meet in Milwaukee prior to the Walttr Cup matches thfa .,....... in an effort to get a solution. i>U<U\. Tbe Roadrunners had three mort shots at tvenin« the score, but missed twice and bad oot basket nulli£ied by a travel- !oR call. fiom led the Gaucho scoring ettack wllb 19 points while Harper SCQttd 23 for O..Crt. ~"WM~~WI "",t'• lfJj'l 1 ' J 11 1 • I J 1 J I 11 I I I O •• 1 • \ .......... (01 "",t .. 6o'f"d ' I ' I l-JJ ,11 Hird• ' 2 J 10 Ml!rrlll , 0 1 ' ........ I I $ 1 Noon 711 1' s-11 • 5 ,..._ 1,,, Ttf1la H "11 ti Tot... 2i 11 ,, 41 """""" .... lfclodltbllc:ll. .... Gollt ....... -·· By Uailed Preis lateniational Lew AJclndor beads down t h e homestretch toolgbt toward a possible million dollar pro basketball contract. For unbeaten UCLA , 14-& this &eason , the real drive for another NCAA tourna- ment tiUe and national college basketball championship starta with tonight's re- !iUDlpt.lon of a U.game Pacific_, schedule that winds \lp the regular seuon slate for the Bruins. California provides the opposlUon for UCLA, J.-0 in league play. Sollthenl Cal~omla (t-1) will bosL Siar> ford and CaWcxnl1 to roond oot the remainder of P~ games thil weekend. The Trojans meet Stanford tonight and tangle with the Bears Saturday. Jn a nm-conlerence game tonight , \Vashington ~·ill no.st. Montana, Slturd~ action will have Montana SI.ate at \Vashington, Portland at Oregon St.ate and Gonzaga at W;lShington State. An undefeated se11soo :ilso enhances Alclndor"s chances of becomi.n& the highut priced athlete ln professional spo~. not that he needs any additional buildupe after two All-American lt8.900S. Tba fledgllnf Am<rlcan Butelbap AMOC:ialion's very emtenct may depend upon the ABA securing Alcindor. The million dollars would exceed the $600,000 commanded by Donny Anderson f r o m the Green Bay Packers and the $750,000 that O.J. Simpson is asking from the Buffalo Biiis. The ADA would provide Alcindor with his million dollars th.rough a package deal calling for a $100,000 assessmC'nl from each team in the league. The National 81J(llketba.JI Association Indicated lt wouldn't go that high. but If AJclndor Joins the NBA the remuner- ation would be COMiderable. Alcindor currently i! the ninth leading scorer in major college circles wtth 373 points and a 21.1 average. UCLA would ruin California's hopes for a title by winning t.anlghL The Bears are 2·1. St.nfQl'd, the Bruins' Saturday night opponent, is a I~ ca!.W with an G-3 record. Neil weekend will be the real test for Alclndor and company when they take on Washington and Washington State. I.he c1rcuit runnersup with f.1 records. The differeoce in size of the aou balls long has been a source ol. con- troversy between players of t h e two countries. In international matches, use Is OP- tional. Americans, competing I n the B•itl>h Open and Ryde' Cup matches, always use the smaller British b 1 l t because thty say they can hit it 20 to ~ yard! farther off the tee. In matcbel in this country, the Brttiah prefer the American ball. They contend they can rmesse and putt II better. "l thlnk we will find 1 &ln.gSe ball we can play -lf not lh9 l .5.l CIOC, then we'll b'y 1.145," Mackemie said. ...--. I,,,..,_ •. Fountain • • • N.Y. Steeb VOL. 62, NO. 27, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES •1l 1 l l •.1~., ..... 1.l••·••ll ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ••• 1.1l • i 11 ... -1 ••• J. ........ •" .. . ' -.... FRIDAY, JANUARY 31, 1969 JEN CE"ITS Huge Enemy Base Seized V~S. Air Cavalrymen Me·et Little Resi-Stance SAIGON (AP) -Sweeping into tbe enemy's back yard, U.S. air cavalrymen have seized against little resistance what ls believed to be the largest North ·viet· namese base found so far in the war. Engineers have begun blowing up bunkers at the base spread over four .quare miles. U.S. officers said Friday they beli~ved it was be.ing enlarged in preparaUon for an enemy offensive. The complex was found 53 miles New Major Huntington Hospital Due c00version of the Huntington Beach Convalescent Hospital into the city's se- cond major hospital is expecteri to begin within four months, officials of the HBH Corp. announced today. The convalescent hospita~ owned by Robert Zlnngrabe, is at 18792 Delaware St., and was originally built seven years ago to full hospital standards, according to the owner. Planned is an 80-bed first phase and later construcilon of a three story tower which would bring the total capacity to about 224 beds, said officials of the corporation which is to qwn the facllity. The planned hospital comple1 would Include a m<dlcal office building now under construction at Main Street and Delaware Street, the new acute boSRital and .eventually a new convalescent hospital adjactnt to the present ctmo valescent facility. northwest of Saigon and 14 miles from Cambodia's border~ It included a large undergi:ound b0spita1, dining halls.. a command post, and hundreds of bunkers. U.S. officers estimated it could ac- commodate 5,000 or more men. The first intimation lbat a big base might be in this old enemy stronghold came last week when 400 soldiers of the U.S. 1st Air Cava'lry Division flew in by helicopters. • As S. Sgt Jimmy· M. McCurry, Hum· boldt, Tenn., put it: "It didn't look like anything at first. Then we in- vestigated and began to see how big il was." After uncovering various bunke~. the air cavalrymen made their largest finds Wednesday and Thursda"". In a week, they reported killing a ut 50 North Vietnamese soldiers. But only three enemy soldiers were killed when the . ~i \!lll!J"4 f • :. ;>< , UPI Tt""*9 The HBH Corp. is comJ!Osed of "a lare:e nwnber of doctors in the area who feel the need !or a second hospital in Huntingt.On Beach," Zinngrabe said. The entire complex, estimated to be worth about $4 million when completed, will be named Pacifica Hospital and eventually include most of the area between Delaware Street and Stang Lane and Main Street and Garfield Avenue. NIXON AT PENTAGON -Minus overcoat or hat despite chilly weather, Chief Executive stands at att~ntion during playing of na~ tional anthem while visiting Pentagcin'today. With President are De- fense Secretary Me1vin Laird and Gen. Earle Wheeler, chairman of Joint Chiefs of Staff. · Construction on lbe hospital conversion Is expected to begin in about four months and lbe facilily is expected to be open and in operation by January, 1970, ac- cording to the corporate officers. No opposition to the facility has been announced publicly by owners of the Huntington lntercommunity Hospital on Beach Boulevard, a little over a mile away from the planned Pacifica Hospital, but a protest could be filed when the Nixon Urges Pentagon Staff to Air Views Fully Pacific plan goes before the .HoSpitai · · WASHINGTON ·(UPI) -Preside"t Plllllning Committee group or with the Nlxon told the Pentagon's generals and · cify if there have been any irregulariUes admirals today that he wanis them to in securing proper zoning and use air .their views to him fuJJy, particularly pennils. if there are policy differences involved. Zlnngrabe said he has approved zoning "I want to bear those differences ex· for the hospital proposal and has pro-pressed," Nixon declared during a visit cessed lhrough the routine of the Plan· to the Defwe Department wJieQ? he ning Department and is "ready to go." spoke to 200 officials and militai'y leaders While the matter may have been after the second round of to~level con· resolved as a routine one by the city ferences of the week there. departments, it could yet come to the The President praised U.S. military city council. Several of the councilmen are understood to be ca:vtious why tbe matter slipped, While the matter may have been resolved otnclally through the city departments, several councilmen are wwlerstood to be interested in why a major project was approved without of. ficial notice to the council. In addition, there is a fear that if the Pacifica Hospital is built, the larger hospital complex on Beach Boulevard belonging to Power Inc., of Westminster, on Beach Boulevard might not be able to complete expansion plans. Lane Qnits Planning Commission to l\love Planning Commissloner Charles H. Lane has resigned from the commission eUect!ve Saturday because he ls leaving the city and state, he informed the Huntington Beach City Council today. Lane of 9ll2 Mahalo Drive has been active in the homeowner groups for several years and was appointed to the commission in October, 1967. Councilmen are expected to invite applications for the position. le8ders fer ·their ·general and special skills, 'then added: ·"I want to hear what they have to saY. ·1 WaDt ·t<)t8ke· that into consideration in developing my policies." He deplored what be described as a tendency to consider lbe Defense and Slate dewt.Jnents at odds with each other with the President having to play the role of peace negotiator. "I don 't consider it that Way at 'all ,"' Nixon said . "We will have our dif· fereoces. There are difierertes within the State department as to what our policy should be. There are differences within the Defense department. .• "But on the other hand, while those differences do e.i:ist, I believe that we are all working together toward the same end." Nixon said be would rely on Defense ~~l/l'Y MeMn R. Laird and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, ;,to bring to me and the National Security Council the View- points of the Defense department and even those minority viewpoints that may .. exist here." ' It was Nixon's second visit to the (See NIXON, Pl(' II complex was uncovered. Lt. Cot. Frank.Henry, Franklin, N.C., estimat,ed there may be as many as 1,000 bunkers in the area and added: "They've been doing a lot of work on this complex in the put. month. We thipl: they Wwe preparing for the c0mlng offensi~ .down 'south.'' He referred to expected enemy attacks on milllary jn!tallalions oorth of Saigon aDd possibly on the capital itaelf. · Sunset Beach Study Asked For Huntington An "action.study" program to survey the · problems of Sunset Beach and to develop a master plan of land use to aid in correction of any existing problem and to insure proper future development will be asked Monday of the Huntington Beach City Council. In addition the city staff will ask the council for permission to request the county planning commission to delay final hearings on a proposal to build a string of apartments on a strip of railroad land through the Uny beach community. Councilmen meet in council chambers of Memorial Hall, 5th Street and Pecan 4.,..·~·;,Jl...,....MO!lday. ,,.', Residents of Sunset Beach have asked annei:aUc:m (o Huntington Beach on the condlllon that a master plen could be worked out that would iMure develop- ment of the area as the residents would like it to develop. It was the planning commission's unanimous decision to recommend that "a positive approach be taken in the development of an action-study pro- gram.''. . The city, working In clo~e cooperation with the Sunset Beach community leaders; would idenWy problems and offer alternative solutions concerning the area and to propose anneiation, said the planners. Next a workable master plan mutually acceptable should be developed according to Planning Director Kenneth A • Reynolds. Reynolds also suggested a program . of .P.r~:Z9ni.i;l& tl)e ~t.jre ar~a . ~~re ~·. nexation in order to assure residents that the intent of the master plan deveJoped in cooperation with the local residents would be adopted and the agreed upon zoning applied to each parcel. On Feb. 13 lbe county planning com· mission is to hold final hearing on an apartment development on about one mile of the Pacific Electric right of way. The council has already taken action opposing high density develapment of the railroad strip in favor of more public use such as parking faciUUes for those who use the nearby county beach. City Administartor Doyle Miller will ask the council Monday to reque3t the county planning commission to postpone final action on the right of way develo~ ment until the LocaJ Agency Formation Commission has either refused the r~ quest of Huntin~ Beach regardin~ annexation or Sunset Beach or until a responsibility for reviewing develop- ment proposals is placed in city hands by an anne:ration election. BB Gun-arnied Vandals Destroy Scliool Property City Gives Harbor Pitch Vandals with B-8 guns destroyed about $2,000 worth of property Thursday .at Fulton School in Fountain Valley. individuals ent.ePect the school sometime Fountain Valley police said unidentified between midnight and 6:30 a.m. Thlll'&- d.r and stole two tape recorders, a phonograph and a small amount of money. then wreaked havoc on the achool property. Police said plate glass windows. Oood lamps. televblons and fl11h aquariums wt.rt shot up and smashed by B-8 guns. The vandals apparently entered Ule school building by brta.klng 1 window, then unlocttn& the door, police 18.id. Estimated damage to school property wu $1,000'. The stolen items were valued at •boul $200. None of the rtstdents fn the area reported heiring or &ttlng any activity at Ute school, police said. Newport Takes Stand on Dissolution of District Representatives of 1& Orange County cities met Thunday night to further discuss possible ~lution of the Orange County Harbor District and heard Newport Beach articulate it.'l position on the proposal. So far, DiM municlpallties wiUUn the °""'' Coontr Cbllpler of !bi Lague of callfomla Cities have passed resolu- tions favoring dismemberment of t h e 33-year-old special di.ltricl But Newport Beach -11eat of the county's largest pleasure boat harbor -lsn 't amdn&-._them. Former Ne~ mayor and present Councilman Pau1 J. Gruber spelled out h1I clty'1 poalUon in detail at the cllie' lealu• 1USion In Frifdemann Hall, 0.. ange. In brief, Newport city government has lauded the league for its study of the Harbor Di1lrict problem. But Newport has also pointed out that ill city ,tupayers shouldn't be expec:'ted to bear co9t.s of Newport Harbor opera· Uon& which are of benefit to the entire county as a regional aquatic playgrbund. ln tddltlon to Gruber, Councilman Ed Hirth was present to represent Newport at the session. Hirth noted tot:ay: "Councllman Gruber offered a full and det.alled explanation of Newport's pollUon on the Harbor District. I was vet} pleased at the reaction of La Habra Mayor Dean Shaw (league )ftsidenl ) who acknowledged Newpdrt'1 role In of· ferin1 a county-wide recreational facility, "Shaw 1JUggested that to the utent I that Newport Jlarbor Ls regional In nature, costs should be given regional support." While nine Orange County ci ties have passed resolutJons favoring dWoluUon of the Harbor District, Hirth noted that Newport is taJting a "wait and see'' position. Notably, what Newport Ls walUng to see is how much money support it will get from Orange County tn operating harbor and beaches for the benefit of the entire county population. Hirth erplalned, ''Th'! flnl mp toward diseolution of lhe Ratbor DiJtrict will be to get the majority of cltla (13 of 2Sl to back tbe action. Then a c:cm· mittee must work out fundamental con-- (See HARBOR, Page I) '!!., • DAILY PILOT $1"' """' DISCUSSING THEIR EXPEDITION TO MEXICO Am1teur Archaeologists Johnson (Ith), Nackos .Pi~tory · ·Haut· . 4 County ArchaeologUts Head South Broken bils of pottery along the banks of the Coalzacoalcos River in Mexico may lead four Orange Co U.n t y archaeologilts and a friend to some interesting finds in the next two Wtek!. The five men leave today for a two- week river expedition In Vera Cruz pro-- vince, southern Mexico. . They hope to find remnant.a of ancient Indian civlliiation · in the jungle areas of the Coatzacoalcos River, and report their discoveries to Brigham Young University and Na11onal Geographic Magazine. Louis Nackos of Costa Mesa, leader of the expediUon, said broken pieces of pottery that can be spotted from the river are Usually the first •indicatiOM Beach . Woman Asks Voluntee1·s For Glendora Able bodied men 18 and over with . trucks and tools are needed to aid in clearing the Glendora area of tht ·mud, trees and rocks left as the result of recent heavy rains, Mrs. Robert Buzan ol Huntinl(ton Beach·oald l<>day. She .and her family are . calliqg . for volunleers , to aid in lhe , clearance gr9" gram a.n d emphasized the n' e e d for the volunteers wi"lh their own transportatjon and tooi,, -particularly· - £our-wheeled trucks. The Buzan family lives at 6282 Briaz Cliff Drive, and•full information on their efforts IJlllY be obtained by calllng WT·. 7557. . Information on other ways local residents can aid Oood ivictiml may be obtained by calling the volunteer aid station in the area at (213} 963-1707 •• Burn Victim Remains Critical Bum victim ?,ks. Sylvia Neal1of Hun- tington Beach remains· In · criUcal .con- dlllon and under · Intensive can l<>day at !be' Orange C<iun'Y 'Medical Center., hospital ofncw. said !bl• mom1n&: Mrs. N ea I, of 310, WJ Ulh SI,. w ~ •· severely burned W~ JllOml!!i when her, bathrobe . caUgbt .flri! wblle · cleaning sometblng ."on her ,'patio .wilb. paint thinner, aid Fii'e ·C.pt, James llunl. .. • . • Sbe wu taken rm .to lhl ·emen:·ency, r o o m of HUnUnatoni ·tntercom1nUnlty Hosp!tal, theo !randmed .tater In Ibo day to Orange COonty Medical c.nter. NEW YORK (\JP.I) -Slock market' advances outnwnberecl'dedl"'8 todlJ but usual pro-wtelttnd evening ap _..., narrowed the upside marsJn. · Trading was brt.k. (See quotations, P-ll-11). ?,: • ol a nearby aite. Going with Nackos will be Huntlnglon Beach librarian Walter Jolwoo; Robert Monson, a Costa MB insurance agent; Dean Wllllams, a Costa Mesa wboJesale daiey representaUve, and ;,Roger Jabbl, an electronica tee~ from Santa Mari8. ' ·All are amaieur archaeologists ·and eoiplDren. 'willlaJns and Ja~ba went.with Nackos on the ~e.trip last year. Nac);Ds runs Mayan Tours and E .. pedlllona In Costa Mesa, and makes his livln by IOJdlng Ojher parties Into the jun~e areas, cl. MeJ.lcp end on the beaches of Yucatan. Nackos polntect'out U..t on his .lt:lpo, ttte men are not allowed to do · IDY dlgg!n,. ' ~ "We re· only· looking for surface ob- jects;" he said; "the Mexican govern- ment is very strict about issuing permlta to excavate on their territory." On ·thfa trip the five men will travel the river in a 3>foot motor pc>wer dugout canoe. They will be led by •· Mexica:n guide. "Molt of the naUves along thls·rlver," said Nackoa, "are Spanish-Indian miztutli and there really isn't much danger e:r~ cept for snakes." Nackos has already collected several pieces of pottery from the area wbkh dates back to 800 B.C. Tbe primary culture In the. area, be explained wu known as Olnlec 1tbicb means "people of the rubber .Jand". Rubber plants abound in the aiea. Cost of ~ ...,..UUi>n la $680 per person which ·Jncludel, tr•vtl, food and equipment. The· men eexped to return home Feb. 16. · For. lhe ·....,.;ncter .of .th!> YOJr. N~ hopes to conduct about 11even. more trips Into the area or in.tile region Of Yucatan. Oraage Weatller puess wbat?, No·r~tbia '~­ erid -or er least ttilt•s wbal the · weathennan tll)'I. 1 In.stead look for suhny, c00I atteS' with tm\pera! tures ranging from a chilly 57 to a downrlghl cold 40. INSWE TODAY MG%imum ·mid mftiimum O ~ .,.,.J$;S Cl!ld 86.B for b0au1 i.n ."'tM .rf'M\OOI ' oJ Oi't~ 1 1 ·~ LIJ)lon '. CUp • c:MUlftgc roccs· In · ll[oriih In S<m DNgo.' 1'1111• 16. ' 1 ==" .. --~-= __ .. --. ·-.... =· .. :::. ............. -· . -. -. ---.. Wiltl 11 tN) --~-----------------------------------~---· -----·~---------~--------~ --. --------------~----------""-------. - / .f DA!I. V PILOT H Judge Sumner Rap ·s County Book Ban BY WILLIAM REED Juvenile Court Jud&e Bruce W. Sumner tod.11 c:rlUcbed Ille Or111p County School Board fO< bonnlng -bec.IUll of the political polnt of view ol one board member. He referred to Dr. Dale Ralli!On , coun- ty school trustee who ls a member of the John Birch Society and has formed his own private book review committee. At Rallison'• urging, the county school board last week removed four books, including Pulitzer Prtse winner John Hersey's "Hirosbima," from the library list for a new county juvenile facility. Judge Sumner nld he is coocmied and 'feels all cltiu:m of. the county ahou1d be on t b e watchful alert "w b e n tbe . l 35 on F acuity At UCI Seek Trio's Return Studenla are not the only ones seeting reinstatement of three fired UC Irvine aS&l.stant prol'e830rs. A group that in- cludea 3$ young faculty members ls making the aame demand. The JIJ'OUP, 3S pn>(..,... and 30 graduate sludenta, cal1I ltaelf the New University Confertnet:. Spokesman i.! Assistant Professor of Physics George Reiter. . Reiter says It is their position that firings of Stephen Shapiro and Dona1d Brannan lhouJd be rescinded and lbe recommendaUon for firing of George Kent be retracted, unW inequities can be taken out of the present review and tenure system. He cit.el three lnequlties: -There la no provi&l.oo for rtview of a department'• recommendaUoa against junior professon. -Only tenured membera are appointed to faculty com.miltfJu: which la against the common la w noUon of jury by orie'1 peer1. -EvaluaUoo Is done in secret by an anonymous committee with ho chance for the person being evaluated to be present. Reiter said the New University Con· ference iii not yet sure what can be done about these inequitles, but Indicated the group probably will work through the academic senate. He said they also don't know yet tr the changes could be implemented locally or if they would have lo be worked out for the University of California system as a whole. From Pase 1 NIXON ••• ' Pentagon in a week. He received fun military bonon on his arrival, including a 21-gun aalute. Before going to the Pentagon, the president vlslttd the Negro ghetto of Washington and viewed the rubble still remaining from riots la.st April. "Washington is our naUonal city and we want lo make It a beauutul city in every way," Nixon declared during his unannounced appearar>Cf: in the rutr ble·slreWn sector. At one polnt during his brief tour, one of the residenta of the area called out a "soul brother" greeting to him. The President shook hands with residents of the area and talked lo them of their problems. Later in the day, he unveils an an- ticrime package aimed at curbing crime in the natlon's capital. The area visited by Nixon was along 7th Street between S and T streets, N.W., which were hard hit in the out· break or violence and looting after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King. Jn the area, construction cranes were tearing down fire-damaged shells of buildings to clear the way for a park and playground. The park is to be named for Herman L. Clifford, assistant prin- cipal of a nearby high school who was slain recently while chasing some youths who had held up the school bank, DAILY PILOT (lll:ANGE C(),lr,'T f'Utl~l"'G COM"''°'"'"' llelt••I N. 'W••' f'•l'~~l..,.. f'ulllo/Wf J eclr II. C••'•1 \':U f'ffl ......... ..., Ctf'Mr•I .......... , l~•"''' !(,,~ii Edllw T~""''' A. l.fu•f'hi~• ,,., ......... l •! ... A11 11t W. Iii•• Witli1"' l e•il _..,'11<,.!t t1.,..!,.,.IOIO lltKll Ea•IO" C•1r Efltor " ........... .._. Offke )Ot Ith Stt11 1 M•ili'"f >4•1•01 P.O. I•• 1•0, '1641 _.,..... H....,,..n 9Hdl: 1111 w,.,1 lfltlea ........... c-.1, Mew: DI Wf'\I •• , ,.,...., ' ' reason for removal of b o o k s ls n o & based on their literary mer.It or content, bot becaUIO of a polllleal point of Yl'1f beld by a member of the achoo! .....,., "In ICboob, of all pl .... , all points of view should be eJamlned and dlscuu. ed ," he said. The superior judge, a Laguna Beach resident, said he felt constrained to com· ment since as presiding juvenile judge be has jurlsd.lction over the new iSChool for juveniles on probation. Dr. Rlllison, a Santa Ana denU.St, charged that "•Uroshlma" presents a one-tided view of tbe 1945 atom bombing of the Japanese city. He said the book tells o n I y of the horror and fails to mentl"'-Ulo Important tact l h el l.houland. of American Uves were saved ~~.' wily mW1W7 lnvulon ln ,his book, HttMy roporta on Ille aftermath of tbe bombing as .seen through the eyes of the Japanese people on t h e ground. He makes no comment on t h e war or on t h e advlslbillty of dropping the bomb. llalllson 's contention was lhat the book gives support to ban the bomb movements. He asJd, "We have demonstrations by peaceni.ka becauae we have allowed so much material of this kind in our libraries," School board president Clay t-.11tchell, License Retninder Deadline for getting 1969 auto license tags is next Tuesday and SaUy Kennedy of Newport Beach is smiling because she has all of hers. Department of Motor Vehicles says motorist who don't get theirs by deadline won't be smiling - a 10 percent fee penalty goes into ef- fect for first 30 days after deadline. After that, penalty jumps to 100 percent. Huntington High Classes Donate ·Items to Nursery Two classes In woodworking and architectural dra'ft·ing at Huntington Buch High School Thursday donated three sca1ed-down kitche n appliances lo the nursery program of tbe Huntington Community Action Center. The students, under the direction of shop teacher Noel Bigler, had been work- ing on the project since last November. Bigler said the drafting class designed and drew the plans while his woOOwork· ing JI class did the construction. "Some of the wood and hardware used ~·as donated by ind ividuals," Bigler ad- ded, "while the students donated paint and other accessories." Mrs. Alice Medina, director center, said the same items creative playthings calalogue between $75 . $100. of the in the c 0 s l The project began with the help of Mrs. James Mey, a volunteer worker at the center, who mentioned to Bigler the need of thj youngsters in the nursery program. Bigler said he was pleased to do 2 Hi~h Scliools Plan to Help Dimes Ca1npaign The March of Dimes effort will receive a boost from Marina and Huntington Beach hich schools Saturday nlahl In the form of lhrff benefit •tll1eUc con-- t.e.sts. At 7 p.m. in the Marina gym the two schools' fr~hman basketball teams will match skills lo begin the night's even ls. Followint that will be another ha!ket- b&ll game featurlnc members of the two atu<tent councils. Fi("Ufty members will take over In the third event, a volleyball match between the rival schools. 1'be public is invited to au three con· testl. AdmlssJon i! $1 for adults 11nd atudents without Associated Student Body carda and 50 ctnt.s for student.! with ASB cards. Aft.tr the last game, there vdll be a sock hop in the gym for rtuden~ only. StudenU •Ith ASB card! may enter the dance for 60 centi, students wllhou t ASB cards must pay $1. All procted1 from both events will go tn the March of Di~s. the work, and hoped more people In the community could also contribute to the center's activities. Market Holdup Action Planned Court action was being scheduled today against a Santa Ana youth accused of • being one or t~·o men \Vho robbed the Stop-n-Go market in Westminster Tues- day night. Held In Orange County jail is 'Villiam Russell Carrey, 19. Poliet are searching for his accomplice in the market holdup. Carrey was arrested at the Newland Motel, 14041 Newland St., and was said by police lo have a small black toy gun and rolls of coins In his possession. Officers said Carrey and his companion forced ~!erk Into the freezer while they esca~ from the market. Carrey faces charges of kidnap and armed robbery. From Pase l HARBOR ... cepts -who takes what burden in costs -then present the idea. "In Newport, ,.,.e would like to i;ec a fair solution regarding who actually patrols the harbor -sham the coats -aod benefits trom a regional opera- tion." So far, no Orange County cities have passed a resolution opposing the death of the Harbor DI.strict. La Habra City Councilman Hal Sinus told league members the project wu ahtad of schedule with the entire month of February ahead before a peUUM must be filed with the Local A&ency Formation Commission CL.AFC). To date, La Habra, Santa Ana, Yorba Linda, Tw!Un, Cypress, PlacenUa, Hun- tington Beach, Los Alamitos and Westminster city councils have approved a Te!!Olullon reducing the harbor d.l.sttict to an integrated county department of harbors, beaches and parks. Sims said only a majority or 13 or the county's 25 cltleti was needed to forward the proJffi., Public ~arings will be helO ,';;;; lhe tmie If approvtd by the LAFC and the Board or Supervlsort. The time tah1e calls tor 1 sped11 countywide elect!~ In June. ol Soulh l,quna, said of H.,.,..y's book : "Whfle I haven'\ read the book, J haven't approved of all th1a crtUclsm of America U11n1 the bomb." He suqe.ted, "There's been too much crlUc1sm of what we had to do alter we were forced into the war by a sneak attack." Other books dropped from the library 11 s t RalHson criticized because of I h e authors' alleged lack of understanding of the nature of communism. Judge Sumner said he does not deny the .:iuthorUy of the school board to make such a decWon . He said it is the reason for the removal -because of a board member's politlcal point of view -that &ives him more ap- pr<heDllon than lbe romoval llaelf. "A free s0tlety la predicated on t h e unobstructed flow of ideas," Judge Sumner s a i d. • 'T h e success of l h l s republic has, in a large part, been due to the tolerance of our citizens for the free e1presS1on or lhoughta which dilfer from our own. "The ability or our nation lo maintain this tolerance and to recognize that new ideas and differing points of view are not an example of tack of patriotism or subversion bas caused our country to grow to be the world leader it is today ." Wife Warned Witli Hubby She's Headed for Jail ''I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen" is a ballad lhat had better not appear in Rodney Storum 's repertoire. If the convicted dope user does even· tually win back his wife she'll go to jail. He already it: there -serving 72 days for possession of marijuana. Kathleen, 21, of 17662 Jacquelyn Lane, Hunt.lnglon Beach, got that warning from Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner Thursday after she condemned her absent husband as a "louse and a creep." She wu ptaC'ed on three yean condition- al probation. Pleading guilty to narcotics charges, she told the judge that much of her present trouble stemmed from her bus· band and his persistent use of illicit drugs. She Intended to divorce him, she said, but didn 't seem to know in court just how or when. Thal's when Judge Gardner took over. "'The only way you'll make It is by getting rld of him," the judge "°'arned Kathleen. "Jf you don't have the guts to do it, I'll do it for you. "In other words, if he moves back in. you move into jail." The Storunu were arrested last August by Huntington Beach police and narcotics agents. Storum has been described by officers as a "hard doper who uses his wife as a front to serve him.self." Storum must serve three yean pro- bation on compleUon of his jail term'. Suicide Suspected Newport Beach Woman Latest Drowning Victin1 The body of a woman that washed up on the shore of West Newport Beach Thursday morning was that of Virginia Mowry, 41, who walked away from Pat· ton Stale Hospital in San Bernardino the day before. The woman, a Newport resident, was an apparent suiclde victim, according to Newport Police DetecUvc Sgt. Ken Thompson. He said all evidence indicated suicide by drowning. ~tiss Mov:'ry's body was discovertd by a city employe clearing the debris- choked beach with a ski p loader. He found the dead woman lying near the ~·ater line about 100 feet south of the Santa Ana River jetty at about 8:45 a.m. , She was fully clothed. Her last addr~s:; in was 1441 Galaxy Drive. Newport Beach Thompson said the woman ha~ be(:n a mental patient for several years. Services are pending at Baltz Corona del Mar Mortuary. Two bodies we r.e discovered in less than 24 hours on the waterline of Newport Beach this week. Wednesday, ~e li&df of 1 Wi lliam Dischne r, 111, Santa Ana, was discovered hy a v.·on1an walking on the be<1ch south rif the pier Dischner drov•i•ed in thr Sanla Ana River two days before. lie and three con1panio11~ rodr. rafts ove r a small waterfall. The three other boys survived . a • Reeds ••• In the Wind That short sess1on Tuesda y night or the governing board of the hig~ school district - only 36 minutes -is being called a "mini·session'' by the school officials. J certainly hope that this is not a record which wtll stand very long and that in the future we will look back at this meeting and wonder wlly It took so long. Other governing boards could do v.·ell by adopting the same idea and perhaps "mini·sessions" could become as popular as miniskirts, or is that asking loo much? * It is taking much longer for an answer lo develop from the discussions on plac- ing the civic center on the waterfront in the blighted downtown area. . One councilman has suggested placing the center on the waterfront rather than inland by Huntington Beach High School and although the idea has considera ble merit, it is a multi·sided problem. For instance. all agree that the "°'aterfront is potentially the best pr o- perty in the city and eventually the most valuable. Should the city not then reserve this land for development as , combination high rise commercial - -0ffice -. apartment developments In order to produce the highest tax revenue'/ * On the other hand, .it is argued that the city is in fierce competition with other cities for private investment and by building Its civic center on this strip could show to the world that the city has enough faith in the waterfront to invest some $6 million. As far as service to the public ls concerned, the high school site and the proposed downtown location would have about equal access from all over due lo freeways and major streets. The choice of the councilmen cannot be based on the immediate cost factors either because it could be that investing $400,000 more in the high school site could aid that area in developing unex- pected office and commercial ventures which might bring aMually to the city more i" tax money than the addltional cost of a sile. * This is one of those problems which makes one \fish he were more sure of the things he absolutely knows. Supersonic Study Se t "'ASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon has ordered a fresh study of "al' aspects" of the controversial supersonic airliner prog ram. I HENREDON'S WARWICK COLLECTION ' , Henredon l"t~ Enterttlnln1'• 10 much moN gra- cious whtn the refrahments ire righl In ttM mkldleofthlnp. WUh this belutiful cod:tiill chest from. Hennedon'1 Warwick coltKtlon, you tn/oy function wilh fl;i11. A lovely pi en of furniture. 1upe1blv 11yled, that does double duty •s • conveni•nt bllr 2"4'wldt, 1r dHP. ind 17' hl&h.. tom. H • ii now. ~ Henredon i"~ ' You'll sit right down and write a letter. If you a n UM 1 dek 1nywhtre In your t'iome, you won't be able to raht this one from Hl!<'lrtdon'J W1rwlclc cotlKtion. A 1ube1b ff'pteientation of 1/'le Qut"rn Anne m1nner, beautifully formed in rich African maho11ny, lightened with in!1ld borders or maple, •nd w•lnut wneen. Gr•clous and gractful, big •noush lor vour need$, tm1rt enou1h to 10 anywhere. Come In tnd pyll up a ch1ir, S.IKted Group• of Dru•I H.,-w-Non-H.rit-ve CM-. Sil• Through Febrvary. Henr..:lon Upho11t•ry 15% off. H..-itefe Upholmry 20% Off EXCLUSIV£ DEALERS FOJ!, HENRIE:DON -DREXEL -HERITAGE tD DAYS NO INTEREST -LONGl<R TlltMI AVAIL.AILE OH APPROVED CREDIT NEWPORT HACH 1727 W•tcllff Dr-. '42·2050 OPIH N IDA T 'l1l f INllRIORS Pro,._1..,•I lnt•rl•r O..ltMn Avallabl-.-AID-NSID LAGUNA IEACH W -~ c-st Hwy. 4M-45SI ONN NllAT TIL f I I l If .I ] l 1 t { I Laguna Beaeh EDITION • N.Y. s..-.· • ' .. , .VOL. 62, NO. 27, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,' CAtlr'ollNIA' ' TEN C91TS • . Laguna's Judge Sumner Blasts Book BaB. Juvenile Court Judge Bruce W, Sumner today criticized the Orange County School Bdard for banning books because of Ill e political point of view of one board member. He referred to Dr. Dale Rallison, coun· ty school trustee who is a member of the iohn Birch Society and has formed Ilia own private book review committee. At Ralllson 's urging, the county school board last week removed four books, including Pulitzer Priie winner John Hersey's ''Hiroshima," from the library list for a new county juvenile facility. Judge Sumner said he is concerned and feds all citizens of the county should be on t b e watchful alert "w h e n tbe reason for removal o( b o o ks ls n o t based on their literary merit or content, but because . of a political point of view held by a member of the school board. "In schools, of all places, all points of view should be examined and discuss- ed," be said. • Th e superior judge, a Laguna Beach re!ldent, said he felt constrained to com- ment aince as prestding juvenile judge he has jurisdiction ·over the new school for juveniles oo probation. Dr. R8lllson, a Santa Ana dentist, charged that "Hiroshima" presents a one-sided view of the 1945 atom bombing of the Japanese. city. He, said the book tellS a n I y of. the horror and Calls to mention the important fact th a t thousands of American lives were saved • , by maklllf a <OSl!y rnllllary Invasion unneceaary. In bis book, Hersey reports on the aitermath ol the bombing as seen lluoogh lhe eyes of the Japanese people on th e ground. He makes no comment on t h e war or on t h e advisibllity of dropping tJ>e bomb. Ralllson.'1 contention was that the book gives 8Upport to •ban the b om b movements. He said, "We have demanstraUons by-peacenlb because we have allowed IO much matertil of thtl tind in our libraries." School boml pruldenl a., Mlldlell, or Sootb Laguna. said ol Hmey'1 _, "Whlle I haytn't read the book, l haven't approved of Ill tbls crllicilln ol America using the bomb." He suggested, ''There'• been too mi,teb. critictsm of what we had to do after we were farted into the war by a snea'k attack." Other boob dropped lrom the library u e • Ie ase • New Library Planners Near Site Decision • The marathon controversy over future Jocatioo of Laguna Beach Library is expected to clear lhe city planning com- misslon hurdle Monday night. Planners are expected to make a site recommendation to city councilmen. The city's general plan consultant, Danie11 Mann. Johnson &: Mendenhall, bu 'l"'mmended agaimt upansi<IJ at the present aite. The con.mltants have recommended, in this ocder o f pttf'erence, the water dlstrlct pipe yard on 11lW Street near city hall, anot.ber nearby Third Street slit or the l<hool More Delay In Hotel Zoning Due Another delay for Laguna's proposed Commercial-Hotel zone was forecast. to- day by city Planning Director Al Autry. The measure, up for il.s second public hearing Monday before the city Planning Commission, will probably be held over to Feb. 17 because of unfinished editing of the ordinance, he said. Ordinarily, only two public hearings are held on an ordinance afler whic.h the planning commisslon makes a recom- mendation to the City Council. The polishing or oUJcial language and Incorporation of several changes brought about by staff discussion this week just could not be finished by the MoOOay, Autry said . The ordinance which would create a 1 uniform standard of zoning for hoteli I end other commercial acti"1Ues in an area beQveen Cleo and Lagwia streets, I b now in its fifth draft. Presently the property in the 'area ls zoned in three ways. The split-zoning is C-2 (commercial): R-3, R·l (com· mercial, mulU-resideoce and aingle r~idence); and C-1, R-3, and R-1 . "This split r.oning does oot promote \lnifonn development standards," Autry ta.id. "The C-H zone is responsive to a 11eed that this community has for hotel· motel and tourist-oriented facilities . "ft will provide a focal point for such (See ZONE, Page 2) Seiva.ge Forces Closure of Capo Beacli Raw sewage washed up onto Orange Coast beaches Thursd1y, forcing quaran· tines from Huntington Beach to S a n Juan Capistrano. Orange County Health Officer Dr. J. R. Philp said the beaches would remain closed f o r at least one week. perhaps f•·c. -Philp reported that Doheny Slate Park beach in San Juan Capistrano wu shut down after sections or sewer l1net in lbe Mission City burst, contaminating S a n Juan Creek. Thf damage will take •bout three da}'5 to repair, he estimated. Also e!Oled by quarantine were beach- es along West Newport 111d Huntlogton BeJCh after sewage washed up onto the 11ndl from the Santa Ana River. PhUp aald tl)I beaches would remain cl08ed (OI' ll kaat ont week and paulb11 two. property at Blumont Street and Park Avenue. w.i;a. 1' PUT lt!'f' ,.... The Citizens' Town Planning Associa- tion has criticized the consultant's report and filed its own report favoring ex- pansion at the existing site. LEAPIN' SOUTH AMERICAN LIZARD RUNS AFOUL OF CIVILIZATION IN LAGUNA ALLEY Find•r Thought Elongat9d IUptll• Allv• tnd Pr•hlstoric -At First Librarian Clifford Cave ha! filed still another report favoring the Uistlng aite. However, Cave a1lo atated the pipe yard or Third Street slte1 are fairly good locations and acceptlble if It "1JI enCI "the cootrovenJ amooe patrons aod friendl of the library." •Leapin; Liaards" I • ln other business, plannen will : -Consider a home occupation permit for woodcarver Mogena Abel. Creature Found in Laguna B~ach }iist Pet''<, -Take .up again.· street improvements required of Allen Oldsmobile-Cadlllac, 1102 S. Coast Highway, and consider recommending to the council revocation of a used car lot variance if the work is not under way. -Receive infonnation on lbe appeal of South Coast Ford, 303 Brdadway, of planning commission denial of the proposed sign program . -Receive informaUon of the appeal to council by Donald IL Jennings , 424-04 High Drive. He has two lots but com· missioners would only approve one building site since access is gained by private easement. Leapin' Llzards. You just never can tell what will turn 11p in Laguna Beach. A 27-inch lizard found in a Laguna Beach alJey ThW'ldsy was believed by finder George "Peanuts" Larson of 1024 Catalina, to be a prehistoric species. It's likely, however, to be only a lost South American pet. The Tego Lizard, native to the warm climates of the southern countries, was idenWled by Mike Bayless, a Laguna Beadi HlgJ! School student. Larson had taken the dead liiard to the high school's biology class after "capturing" it with the assistance or a mailman and a fishnet. Larson said be 1aw the repUle while he was putting out the trash. Believing it to be alive, he enlisted the aid of the passing mailman and together they spread the fishnet over the lizard. Several schools of thqht were ad- van~d for the lizard's demise. Larson felt it was the victim of pesticides ar¥1 insecticide~ Biology teacher Tom Chesney, noted following a partiaJ autopsy that the rep- tile's stomach was empty. "That would show that it hadn't eaten for a couple oC days,'! he said. COid Water District La11ds Founder J. R. Jahraus . 35 on UCIFaculty Seeking Rehiring of 2 Professors ·Directors of Laguna Beach County Students are not the only ones seeking Water District this week adopted a reinstatement of three fired UC Irvlne resoluUon extolling the late Joseph R. assistant professors. A group that in· Jahraus, who helped found the district eludes 35 -young faculty memben is and served as its first president. making the same demand. Mf. Jahraus, who had come to Laguna in 1904 when it bad 11 famJlles, died The group, 35 professors and 30 Jan. 18 He served on the water board graduate studentl, calls itself the New for 10 years and was president from University Conference. Spokesman i(I 1925 to 19'l9 .. His son Richard I.I curnnUy Assistant ProLessor a! Physics George a board member. Reiter. The resolution credits the arnlor ~ Reiter says lt is their poait.ion that Jabraus with being largely responsible Cirinp of Stephen Shapiro and Donald for successlul development of lbe district Brann&n should be rescinded and the and havi"g a major role in the purclwe recommendaUon for firing of George of property by the district In the Hun· Kent be retracted, uni.ii lnequiUes can tington Beach. be laken out of the present review The property produced tremendous and tenure system. earnings and benefits to the district He cites three inequities: over the years, the resolution 15tates. -There is no provialon for review Hunti119 House for Hint or a department's recommendation against junior professors. -Only tenured members are appointed to faculty committees which ls again.It the common law notion of jury by one's peers. -Evaluation Is done in secret by an anony'mous committee with ho chance for 'the pe.non belng evaluated to be present. . Reiter said the New Univenlty Con- ference is not yet sure what can be done about these Inequities, but indicated the group probably will work through the academic senate. He said they also don't know yet if the cbange1 could .be implemented locally or if they would have to be worked out for the University of California system as a whole. Laguna Still Wants Nixon Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce officials aren't taking any c:hanca today on thi! polllibWty Utat PrMiderit Richard M. Nixon might want a 1UOURer White House West in lht Art Coklny. They're already 4otaa eome volu.nleer hoUMllunUng I« Mr. lfl•on: • "U therti Is t'fen 1 little bit tt lnlertlt, We don't want to overlook It," Chamber President Harry Lawrtnce declared to- day. Lawrmce made no claJm1 to havlng received 1ny houle-huntlni orden from tbe new Administration. "l'ie'NI just acting Informally on publ!Ahtd rep<IN IUQ<lll"i I b e ~'I lni....st In I Laruna Bead> • summer place, .. Lawrence explained. "It would be wooderful for Laguna, IO I've asked our Chamber directors iJ any of them know pf a suitable place for the President." If Mr. Niioo should experieACe some difficulty in flnding a summer vacation 'pot ln Laguna, he wouldn't be lhe fint. touri!it ao frustrated during the height of the Art Colon1's sunny season: · lndeftt, LIM'tnee reported that so far, lhe Chamber'• bous< hunting expedltlon1 haven't turned up anything considered acctpta.be for I.he President of tbe Unlltd States. "From what J UDdentaod, tht Preiii- dent must taave at least eight to 10 I bedrooms ln a house l1ong the ·ocean which provides good IWJCWity," the Chamber chief noted. Since Mr. Nixon took. olilce, rumon have p@rsisted thlt he will ltti: a aum- mer White House west to compliment the two homes he secured for f127.000 each tn Florida -summer White Howie ... 1. Area8 mention~ a!I po&.slblUUes haw Included Laguna, Nowpon Beacb and San Diego'• Miss.Ion Bay are1. NI"°" aides have lieon reparled to have looked at Laguna '• historic &koom Pyne Culle on Hlllcrtlt Dr!vt bot It was IUltlOl'Od tbq COlllldered the p1 ... unaatllfactaz !or Wbll.Hooae ptllJlOltS. blooded animals can't live Jong· wltboul eating, he explained. Reptile buff Bayless sunnlied tliat the cold Laguna night had ldlltd It. Bayless thougl\t the' lllat.I must have ....., · ....... ~ pet .that' escaped. · The -ll!ard ..... belnl kepi In the biolOIY clasa rtfrlgerator. No one see.mp to know just . WRat w~I be done wit.b It now. . Lagtma Beach city olflcilllf COl\lacted today said that no dty permk had been issued r... the UW'd, as r<qulred by Jaw, so hope of flndlni the owner ~ ' remote... Et Toro Marine Thrown From Car, Run Over El Toro Marine Alan V. Ru.stvold wa1 killed early today when be wu thrown from the car in which he was rklini on the Santa Ana Freeway and his body run over by a Laguna ·Beach motorist. Callfornla Highway Patrol officers said Rustvold, 21, of Great F.U. • ."Mont., wu 1 pallenfer 1n an auto drfv;n by ~ •• C.017 rnfflo lla lO Deo~ Toll 11 Marine, Roonle Brandoll, 22, of El Toro. , Brandon's car, oHlcers aald,, h l t • center divider fence on the freewQ s o u t h of Red HUI Road. R.Ultvold was · ejecltd and landed In trofrlo lanes. Another auto drlvtn by Earl L. McClain, 41, or 2%0 Cl1U Drlte, Laauna BeaCh, ran over the victim's body. ae. cordltlf to tbe CHI' roporL Botb cart were southbound on the freeway. Bran- don sulfered only minor lnJurlea. Mc:Claln was not cited or held. 12 Year Laguna Resident . Dies John Sldner ~hreo, 1 ,Lapria llacb resident for U ye.arl, d1ed ~ It Long Beach Memorial lloopltal. Ht WU 61. . Mr. Alwen, 3M Olk S~, hid been an employe of the PoUery ~k ror 11 )'Cl'rl. Funeral eervlcta wUI be held at JG a.m. Moody In Ibo Qllpel o1 Laguna Beach Mor1ulry. C-DNlllao -will offidllt. InltrnWlll wtD lla-aiflle. Stlrvlwn litchlde Ibo..-, l'.erlj'Ude: two IOlll. ~. S .. Jr. ol ~ fillch,, Arthur D. of Loa 0.1111: rl doti1Ji12r, Allcla Deroy ~boenll. AIU.: • liat<r, Mra. Amle Hecbl ol 8eatlla ud II lf&l>dcblldrs. l • 11 I t RalliJoo criticized because ol t b • aathon' alltged JllCk ol und<ntandin( of lhe nature of communism. Judge SUJnner aaJd be does not de01 the autborlty of the school ' boml . to make aucb a dedsloll. He said R It the reason for the removal -becaUM of a board member'• poUUcal polnt al view -• lb.at gives blm more •P' preh<nston t11an.the r<mova1 t11e11. •·A free society ls predicated oo. t b e (See 8UMNEB, Pap. JI 5,000Men Could Use ' Big Complex ' SAIGON (AP),--._Sweeplng Into Ibo enemy'• back· yird, U. , air C1Vah:ymen hav. oeiud agalnst UtU -wbtt 11 believed to be the I est North \'lei.., name9e base found IO f 1n the w·11. ~ have . lllow1DC up bunien at the bue over fOW" oquare miles. U.S. ofllcln llld Fridl7 they believ.d It w• bttng el!laqecl In preparation for an enemy offtnil.ve. Tbe compla WU found II miles ~.:'J:r~..,= undergroond boopltal, dinll!f balll, I cOl!lllllnd pool, and hundr<ds lit- U.1. ·elllcen · ~ • oould llc- Mt4"''11dlte s,Ooi ot mare men. = • Tbe lint lnllmatlotl' tltal • bl& - mlgbt be lo flllt old -ltroaflhold c:allie last ~ when jlO IO!dlen of tbe U.S. J.t Air Cavalry Dlvilloo n ... In' by bellcopltrl. A1J S. Sgt. Jimmy M. Mc:Ci!rrY, Jlum. bold!, Tenn., put u, "'It dldB't . - Iii<• anytblng at llnt. ~ ... ' Jn. vestlgated and began to Rt! bow b1C it Was." After uncoveriq various bunien, the air C1Valrymen made their largest find& Wedniesday and 'Ihlnday. Jn a week, Ibey reported killing about 50 North Vietnam<se aoldien. Bui only tbree enemy , 11>ldiera w.-e t1Ued when tba comple1 was unoovered. LC Col Frmlk llebry, Franklin, N.C., estfmaW~maybeUmotlfU l ,000 ·bwikers in .the area and ldded:- "'lbey've ....., doing a lot ol wart on Ibis' comple1 In tbe put fllGlltb, W• tblnlc llley wm inparlng for the comlnC offensive down aouth." lie ,..., 1«1 to ezpected .... .,,,. auactt on rn!lltary !nstallatlonl north of Salp and poulbly on the capital llaell. A company commanded by Capt. (See VIE'mAM,. Pap I) OnJy 2 County Roads Still Shot Roadblocks lh flood-ravaged SUverado and Modjeska canyons wen Wted Thunday hy the Calilomla· ll!PwlJ. Patrol Only two Oratll• Cotmt;y .....,. ,., main clooed becat• ol ~ WMl<'o llorm. 'Ibey· are MaeArtlmr • BooleYlrd at Campus D'rtve wllele part' ol • brldp WU wuhed cul and the· OnttpwoOd bridge i.n Anaheim. Oraage w ........ Gueu what?' No nln thil week· end -« at ltaal tbat'I wbol the W..lhennan ._ w1 ... Mo.t 1<rr IWllly, cool -wllb templr'A- -rualnl ll'om • ChlllJ" 17 to I downrtcbl cold to, INSmll TOD.\\' Mcuimum nd m&Umvm di- -.... .,. U.1 alid $~.I /cw boota In !he rf1U1DQI of tM Lipton C1'J> c""""'rl< ,..., m I lfon:h m S... l>Wgo. ~< If. -=-._ -Oeaac • -- .. M • ..... ' .. II -.. ·:m ... I,..: -.... --. =q··"· ·~ -' I =-:: ·--u __ ., --.. ........ ~ .... .... "'' -.... ---T ........... -. ..... . =""' -~·1 --~-------------~----·-·----~~ ... -- I ' :t OAI\. Y l'!\.O r L FOt11Pr.1 Out Scorpion Loss Remains Puzzle WASHINGTON (UPI) -A navy coor1 of Inquiry has been unable to determine what caused tht loll of the nuclear submarine SOOrplon, It was learned to- day. However, the court, after an intensive 11-week review, ruled oul foul play or sabotage. It concluded there was no evidence lhat the veMel's nuclear reactor plant was involved. The submarine was lost last May ln the AUanUc Ocean, tOO miles southwest No Automatic Tax Reduction For Preserves Automatic reduct io n of tax a525Sments on property a p p r o v e d Wednesday for agricultural preserve status is not likely, County Tax Assessor Andrew J. Hinshaw said Thursday. Hin.shaw said no logical esUmat.e could ht made of reducUons until the agreements for the preserves are signed. The cowtl.Y planning department had estimated that tuea for the Irvine Ranch and Raocbo Mission Viejo would be redue<d by $!.! million. "If agreements permit only pure farm use the planning department estimates would be correct," Hlnahaw said. "A wide number of permitted uses on the other hand might nuUlfy the whole purpose of the agreement." He pointed out that much of the land included ln the preserves ls not producing anything of value. Hinshaw said it would take 24 aJ>- pratsers from his stafr, working three months, to revalue the land which he now assesses on lb potential use. The supervisors approved preserve status for 56,000 acres of Irvine land and 32,944 of Rancho Mission Viejo. From Pagfl J ZONE ... uses and conveniences for the public. Jf it were continued Wlder the present variance procedure, you would only bave a defusion of these uses throughout the commwUty in a manner unrelated to public services (utilities and roads)," he said. Thb W<d<'s work In the propooed stan- dard would just make t.hinga clearer, Autry said. "Change3 were made to clarify the Oexlbllity permitl<d Wider the planned commercial development procedure and specifically the fle.xib!Uty 81 related to yards and open space.'' he said. The concept of a hotel ione goes back to the general plan of 1959, Autry sald. The plan at that lime referred t.o the Cleo-Laguna area as a Hotel Di.ltrlct, he said. During the years following, there was 1n attempt made to develop a C-H zone. It is not at all what we presently have. "Development within the community since that time-has pointed out needs for development that is reflected in the (proposed) zone," he said. The present belter·skelter zoning of the area is bad from a planning point of view, Autry said. He noted that permitted devek>pmenl In the areas made on a variance basis generally fluctuates from planning c:ommiss.ion to planning commission. The proposed ordinance would help prevent that In lhe future, he said. OAllY PllOl l':e\otrf H. W114 ,.,,.;o.:111 • ...-,. ...... 1 ...... J•<~ •. c •. 1 • ., \l>(f Prl'1o•<le'll •na c;.,,..,., Mtnttt• r~ ........... ;1 . llil9r T~ ..... , A. Mw•p~; ... Me~•lnt t•nor ~i(f.114 "· Ni ll '•wl N;u.~ L•_. a..c;,,. •otn•1 1,,~, c;17 lll• Ol•"Cl11t w,. .. hftlll Oflk• Ill Fo1111 A••· M•ili•f M4••u: ,.o. ••• ,, •. '2••1 --'""'' ~· UC Wft1 It, ltrPt H~ lff<llr )J11 Wftl l•ltll<o ...,..,..,. .,u.i11111t111 ...,,! lOI 11~ s"'" 04ft.Y PILOT. w4tll -~ k _.. .. ~ N ... _. '°f-t. """'°"" 1111¥ '''"' ..... .. .. --""""-... l .. 11'\1 9ffcfl. ~ k.o.. (oll1 Mlll. Mtl"lllfoe! ... Mu _.. "-'•Iii v1t•y. ...... •ilfl • ~ -"• ()ttn.. (MO! 1><*4'\;.of c-.......... ,.i.m, .,, ,, nu W••' ..._ ""'"· ,..._.. IH<~. '""' J)t Wl"N ler .,_ Cftll ,,..,. T 0 Jf J• (J14J 494 °9466 Q1J ....... Ml-4)J1 C-••llM. 1-0r.... ,.... '""""""~ ~. Ne _, 1tilllfot. 111.,..!•t !ltlllt. ......... , -""" • .....,,....~1, ....... , .. _, bt -~ -""'*' ""'1:111 ... ... .......... ..w• -'· """ dMI, Mai-Nill Af ,.._.., ktt ll .... C.19 ..... C.•...,.,11 • ......,..,!!.., b,. urrlt• 11.n ~' ..., ,,._. It.JI -1111.1 .-Vloi'1' *'tlM""'"" .,,,. ......... ". of the Azores. It disappeared in 10,<m feet of water. A summary of findings by the naval court of inquiry was ready ror release by the Odense Department Tbe· navy panel concluded: "The cer· tain cause of the loss of Scorpion cannol be ascertained from 8.ny evidence no available." It found "no evidence that collision with another submarine or ship caused Scorpion's loss." It further said there was "no sea mowilain in the area or the Scorplon's loss with which the submarine mlaht have collided." And it declared "no evidence of any kind to suggest foul play or sabotage was found by the court.'' The Navy said It Is conUnulng tis Investigation of the May 27 disaster in which 99 died. The deep-diving submersible Trieste JI, will be moved e.arly this year from the West CoMl to the Atlantic to lai.e additional photographs and make on.-the- spot observaUon of portiona of lhe Scor- pioo's hull. The Navy armounced only Oct. 31 that the hull apparently had been located . Fro1n Pagti J VIETNAM ... Henry A. Colavlta of Arlington, Va., fouod the North Vietnamese command post. bwtkera with three feet of earth covering them and connecl<d with lun· nel!. "One of the bunl<en had curtain! In it," Cola vita said. "Jt must have been some wheel's bunker." Englneeni blowing up the bunkers and tunnels oald the job might take week!. Officers esUmated the underground hospital could accommodate about 3,000 patienta, medics aod troops. 'Ibere were five operating room.s Ind six wardJ holding 15 to 18 patienta each. QuanllUes of medical aupplies were found. Chamber Slates Bylaw Clianges Vote on Feb. 19 ~fembership of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce will vote Feb. 19 on a series or bylaw changes which has been endorsed by the chamber board. The proposed cbang" will he malled to memben Feb. 5. The voting is to take place at the Hotel Laguna at 9 a.m. Feb. 19. The changes will limit the maximum term ror the president to two years. However, this could be waived for a third term by a majority vote of the board. The modified bylaw11 would also add the immediate past president to the board's execuUve committee as an ex-o(. ficio member. It would provide for earlier annual election of new direct.ors so they could attend meetings and be familiar with budget proposals before taking office. TO REIGN IN LAGUNA Christy Mikels, 11 Christy Mikels Named Winter Festival Queen Christy Mikels, Laguna Beach High School homecoming queen, will reign as Miss Winter Festival during the up- coming community celebration. The IS..year-old serlior is the daughter or Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. P.1ikels, 427 High Drive. Dates for the sixth annual \\'inter Festival are Feb. 21 through March 2. Invitations will be sent to President Nli:on and Gov. Reagan as the art colony puts its best foot forward for 10 days. The 1969 event is expected to involve more than 500 participants and more than 5,000 attendance. Eventa will include a &idewalk art show, a craftsmen's fair, the opening day reception, a play, the patriots day parade, a volleyball tournament, a backstage tour of Pageant of the Masters, an old fashioned ice cream social, a pancake breakfast and a wine tasting party. Also, an art show and auction, gounnet dinners at four restaurants, strolling troubadors , a la\vn bowling tournament, a travel film festival, a gala luau , a flower show, a surfing contest, catamaran racing, a youth s1rett dance, the Artists' Ball, a ballet premiere and a flea market. Harbor AreaTee11Burgla1· Used LSD During Thefts By JOHN VALTERZA 01 11M Oally Plitt Slaff The Harbor Area's 17-year-old "Robin Hood" burglar Is a habitual LSD user, Newport Beach police 11aid t.oclay. Officers said the youth admitted com· mitUn1 several of the 140 thefts he is charaed with while under the Influence of the drug, offil"!rl added . The "clean-cul" tetnager, who In re- cent days led Newport and Co.."";ta Mesa d,tecuves to scores of burglar)' locaUona.. reportedly confessed to at lea.at llO burglaries In Newport alone. About 80 were reported in Costa Mesa. Police expect to clear up more. "I'd call him a heavy acid u1tr,'' Newport Detective Arbara Campbell said. "He told us he stole a diamond ring worth at leaal $3,000 from a Udo Isle home and traded It for a day'11 supply ()f LSD nn a street comer In Santa Ans." That's the way the youth worked, at- cording to police. Hls loot, tolallng at least '24.COI In Newport, has disappeared -as glltl to glrl1, male friend.I or just spenL Campbell 11ld the burglar "liked money the beat, bot in this city he took jewtlry, camerq, or anything else thot could be e .. uy llOld." The suspect, Campbell said, come1 from 1 retpeCted Santa Ana famJly . "J'd say he was above 1verq:e in in- telll1mce ind rtllUvely clean cut. He's very cooptraUve .'' The youth told Clmpbdl lhlt he "1ot ln wtth the wnmg crowd." He's on problUon on 1 rnaryuana ch314e at pmonl The youth nl1ttd a blurre story to Newport. detttUves about dropplng LSD U'ltn going on burglary lorays in 11ever•I ' coast and inland commun\Ues, then corn- ing out of his "high" t.o discover hill: car filled with loot. "He said he never remembered exactly where he hit when he was high,'' Campbell said. Tbe detective termed the youth's cue "amazing.·• The youth was "on loan'' to the Newport department from Costa 1'1esa Thursday. Pollce in Huntington Beach and other coast cities also expect to question the boy . Vacation Village Thefts Reported Thrtt burglaries, two from vehicles and one from 8 room, were reporte-d Thursday at VacaUon Vlllage 147 S. Coast Highway. Visitor David L. Whitfield, 40, of Wyoming. told Laguna ~ach pollet that perMmal clothing and goods worth $185 were taken from hls car sometime belween Tuesday and early Thursday, Anothtr c•r belonglna to Wl1liam H•rold Weingartner, 70, was broken Into during \tie same period but lhc ba.ndlt took only the car's papers. Supersonic Study Set WASHINGTON (UP I) -President Nhton has Otdtted a freJh study of ''all arptcla" f of UM: controver&lal !'iUpt.rsonic airlirxi:r program . Military Views Sought Air Differences, Nixon Tells Pentagon Chiefs WASHINGTON !UPI) -Pre•ident Nixon told the Peotagoo'11 gel)erals and admlrals today that he wants them to alr lhelr views to hbn ful.ly, particularly if there are policy differences involved. ''I want t.o bear those differences e1- pressed," Nixon declared during a visit to the Defenae Depertment where he apoke to ZOO olflclala llld mjlitary leaden after the second round of to~Jevel con- ferences of the week there. The President praised U.S. military leaders for their general and special skills, then added : "I want t.o hear wbal they have to say. I want to lake th.It Into C1>nslderaUon ln developing my policies." He deplored what he deacrlbed 81 a tendency to consider the Defense and State departmenta at odds with each other wlth the President having to pt1y the role of peace negot11tor. "I don't consider it that way at aU," Nixon said. "We will have our dU- ferences. There arc differences within the State department as to what our Capo Seeks Bids On New City Hall Slated by 1970 The City of San Juen Capistrano is calling for bids on a new city hall it plans to build sometime before June 15, 1970. The city must ,·acate its present leased facilltits by the end of .June 1970 and , eouncllmen aay they are looking for a five to s.fx..acre s.lte on which to build permanent municipal offices. According t.o buJldlng specifications, the new facilities would be designed to house administrative offices and meeting rooms, plus police, fire, court, library •nd recreational facilities. Jn addition , specifications going out to potentlal bidders ask that thought be given to plans for a civil defense structure, poss.lbly In a basement area. From Poge I SUMNER ... unobstructed flo\v of idC'as." Judge Sumner s a Id. "Th e success of t h is republic has, in a large part, been due to the tolerance of our citizens for U1e free expression of thoughts which differ from our own. "The ability of our nation lo maintain this tolerance and to recognize that new ideas and differing points of view are not an example of lack of patriotism or subversion has caused our country to grow to be the world leader it is today." , policy should be. There are differences within the Defense department. •. "But on the other hand, while thoae d.iffereM:eJ do exist, I believe that we are all working together toward the same end." Nixon said he would rely on Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird and Gen. Earle G. Wheeler, chalrmau of the Joint Chiefs: of Staff, "to bring to me and the National Security Council the view- points or the Defense department and even those minority viewpoints that may exist here." ll was Nixon's second visit to the Pentagon in a week. He received full military honors on his arrlv1J, including a Zl·gun salute. Before aoing to the Pentagon , the president • vi.ailed the Negro ghetto of Washington and viewed the rubble still remalning from riota last April. "Wuhlngton Is our national city and we want to make it a beautiful city in every way," Nlxon declared during his unannounced appearance 1n the rub- ble-strewn secior. At one point during his brief tour, one of lhe residents ~~ the area called out a •·soul brother greeting to him. . The President shook hands w1lh residents of the area and talked to them of their problems. Later in the day, he unveils an an- llc:rime pack.age aimed at curbing crin1e in the nation's capital . The area visited by Nixon was along 7th Street between ~ and T streets, N.\V., which were hard hit in thtout- break. of violence and looting aft r Lhe assassinaUon of Dr. Martin Luther 'ng. ln the area, construction cranes were tearing down fire-damaged shells of buildings to clear the way for a park and playground. The park is t~ be nam~ for Herman L. Clifford, assistant prui-- cipal or a nearby high school who wa5 slain recently while chasing some youths who h.ad held up the school bank. Nixon said the park project symbolized cooperation between the federal govern· me.nt, the city and local property owners. Hundreds Visit Pilot's CommuniCarnival · Show llundreds o( visitors to the DAILY PfLOT-Pacific Telephone Co. Communi· Carnival at South Coast Plaza signed up for free prizes Thursday on opening day of the "carnival of communications." In addition to the prizes, the carni\'al -open lod.ay from 1 p.m. to 9 p.m. and Saturday from 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. -offers visitors opportunities to win long dis- tance telephone calls, to play games with electr<rtelephonic equipment and to see the '' 12-minute miracle" which re- produ ces final stock market reports fut enoughJ or the DAILY PILOT lo publish today 's closing stocks prices in today's newspaper. Stewardess students from Orange Coast College are hostesses at the DAILY PILOT display. working with Pacific Telephone representatives who demon- str~1le the Dalaspeed transmitter and re- ceiver -machines which "talk" to each olher at 1,050 words per minute. ,lncluded in the Ii.st of prizes the DAILY PILOT will give awey al the close of the show on Carousel Court al South Coast Plaz.a are : , T"·o sheres of stock in Ford Mot.or Co. (velued at about $103), furnished by Aeronutronic Division. Philco-Ford Corp.; 10 shares of stock In Bridgford Foods Corp. (valued al approximately $100) selected and furni shed by Crultcn- den & Co., Inc., Ne\.,.porl 3('ach stoch· brokers ; a full page in !he DAILY PILOT to be filled with material selcrl· a z ed by the winner (commercial value: $674.24 ): a private tou r of 20th ~entury Fox Studio, including "lunch with the stars," provided by TV WEEK ... Family Weekly. newest addition to the DAILY PILOT's family of features has provided a 16·\·olume encyclopedia, two-volwne dictionary, two-volwne his- tory of man and deluxe world atlas for the prize list. The four prizes are valued at a total of $200. Also , all 2Q winners o[ prizes will each receive a free 10·\ine DAILY PILOT classified ';want ad" lo run six times. valued al $24.30. WlMers need not be present to win the prizes when winners are selected at 6 p.m. Saturday. Lagunan Given Award by CSEA An award for superior aod outstanding service has been given to Rav Lawson, director of Operations, f\1.a1nlenance and Transportation for the Laguna Beach lJpified School District by the California School Employ~s Association (CSEA). CSEA 's regional ~1erit noted that "Ray's ser\•ice has benefited c.la ssified school employees and the public school system of California.'' La wso n has been with the local district for 16 years and ha s risen to his present position from that of a bus dri\'er. He has been acti\'e in the CSEA since 195&. HENREDON'S WARWICK COLLECTION £nteru1n1nr1 eo much rnof9 .,... doue when the refrethrnenh.,. right in the middle ofthlnp. With thit betutiful cockt1il chat from Henredon·1 W•rwick collection. you enjoy funct!On wi!h f\.i1. A lovely piece of fumltuttr, irupetbly tty\ed, 11\a( dcMI dou~ duty IJ • ~le"' bar 24'wide, 17'" dttp, •nd 1r h!sh, ColM 1419 It now. ~ Henredon f'" You'll sit right down and write a letter. H vou un UM a desk anywhert 11'1 'fOl.lr ~m .. , you won't be 1b!e to res~ this one from Hen""dofl's Warwick coli.ctlon. A 1ube1b ttp1et en111 1on of the Queer\ Anne m•nnef, bt'lutifully formed il'I rich Afriun makofany, llthtened wit h Inlaid bord.-11 ol m1plt, i nd 'Wl ll'IUI Yenfff'I. Gt1clou1 and111ctful, bi1 el\Oul h for your ,..m. smart enough lo 10 •~rL Come 1n and l>Ull up a chair, Se)octod c;-po of Droxol-Menrodon-Herit-on Solo Through Fobrvory. Hon.Won Upholstery 15% off. Heritogo Upholslory 20'(. Off EXCLUSIVE DIALIU l"Ofl, HENREOON -DllXIL-HERITAGE to nAYS NO tNTllEST-LONGIR TlltMS AVAILAaLI ON APPROVED CREDIT • NIWl'OlT alACH t72:7 W•tcliff Dr., 642·2050 Of'IM PltaAT 'fft.' INTEllORS Pro,..lonal Interior o..i,..,. A'f'allt>blo-AID-HSID """" T• ,... M..r //II 0...,. LAGUNA I EACH :14$ North ~ Hwy. Of'DI NltAt ,,L t e..., Mf.11U 4M.4SS1 l Freeway Problena Many Vi ews of Rol e In Future of State EDITOll'I tfOTl!t Ptm..is the two cl• .. lc: m1111Ualttlonl ol POP- ul1llool pr1•...,. In C1lltoml1 '" !tie tr-tr Md ""°"· The'i .,, DIKUIMd 111 lllll flMI 1nlcle Ill 1 wrlu "" C.Ufomll'•· .nwlrvn--•· By BILL STALL SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Freeway. It is viewed by some as a monumental achieve- ment; condemned by olhers as a self-perpetuating monster. The freeway system has changed lhe face of California, led to creation of entirely new cities, and established pat· terns of living for millions. What should be t be freeway's role in establishing California's future"! What has been wrong in the past? SOME VIEWS Here are some views: -William Bronson, con- servationist • author, writes:. "Park.lands have been tom, cities have been shattered and agricultural lands have been invaded in the process of building the widely heralded and anxiously awaited 12,500- mile California f r e e w a y system ... without doubt the largest boon-doggle in history." -The State Chamber of Commerce's Freeway Support Committee believes that "as a malter of individual freedom, Calilomians must be provided. with, and are willing to pay for, a system of free· flowing freeways which will permit them to use private automotive transportation if and when they ch~ to do so." -The new State Develop- ment Plan Program says, ''California's highway building record is truly spectacular. However, it has not ac· companied this remarkable record with a rorresponding advance in its ability, , , to use highway expenditures as a means of positively in· rtuencing or guiding the use of land to improve the con- ditions of urban life." -"From Sea to Shining See," the report of the President's Council on Recrea- tion and Natural Beauty, notes that "strip development of the land adjoining highways is perhaps the most obvious ex· ample of man's disregard of urban and rural beauty." NEW CHALLENGE POST CRITICAL The state's l eg i s l a t ive analyst, A. Alan P o s t , criticizes the legislature far failing to develop a general s t at e w id e transportation policy. ' ' T b e fundamental pro- blem," Post says, "ls to reconcile the conflict between transportation needs and rom- mtmity values." The state registers more than 12 million motor vehicles, including some 10 million passenger cars. The fumes they spew mingle w i t h calilomia's fabled sunshine to produce an infamous California product: photo. chemical smog. As it has pioneered in freeways and creation of smog, so California h a s pioneered in smog control, beginning with a statewide law in 1960 for control devices on vehicles. But again a California problem h a d blossomed virtually out of ron- trol before it could be dealt with effectively. SMOG CHIEF John Maga, the slate's smog rontrol chief, describes the situation this way: "I think the problem isn't getting any worse. We've leveled off." The 1969 legislature adopted the nation's strictest controls California's resources agen- cy chief, Norman B. Livermore Jr. -whose pet peeve is billboards -says California faces "a tremen· dous challenge" in con· structlon of the new Interstate 5, the Westside Freeway, down the western San Joaquin Valley. Due for romplelion by 1972, the 237 miles of road will cost roughly $210 million and eventually carry most of the San Francisro -Los Angeles traffic. The 1963 legislature foresaw ;:===========J FAVORITES possible strip development, considered it undesirable, and directed the counties to zone the land along the right of way to preserve the natural beauty o[ the area. Fresno Counly has zoned a mile.wide strip on each side N1tion1I ind loe1I r11d1t• ,hip polls prov1 th• DAILY PILOT e1rri11 tol'l'l1 of th• l'l'IOJt popul1r eolum111 111d f11tur11 1v1il1bl1 to 111y 111w1p1p1r in th1 U11it1d St1t11. Easy to do ... just call or come in. ~ ~m llOAJf ... "-* mdi 4 JJ{~ettrtU MUTUAL SAVINGS ANO LO AN A••O C I A TION 2867 [11t Coast Hil!liway • Corot11 Del Mir, Calif. 92625 ' Telephone 675·5010 MUD Ol'TICC • l'llADl1IA 1..,1 ~ l COlM4001!-'l'V· • ~m'*°. tallf'. 11 tt., .. ~-• ML -n· 21.3 cu. ft. c. ,,?. Whirlpool:.."':":":-· Gbnt19.3 c:a.A.•• .. ., ......... ·- "'"" 32'4"-l llodel!wtlnl-• ._226-lb. 1.-. °"'"'"-·-Jol.Qild ....... humkmJ •llld I i 2 Ne~ • .rpWthlt 1111111 11 •--:9J $38995 -----· ------· fr._,, ......,, 31, lt(,q DAILY PILDT ~ Jtlove too Sf.owlg -Educ~tionBoards Foul Up Schools ~· Whm.pool ~.....,.._--4 cycles, -~·•tic ~dispMl:MI', duU swinl· "Pradmtor _ _,.. ___ lor __ ..... _ ........ ·- T_ft" ......... ---...,. bJ' CClllllJllW a "'•' Help Slla!p Oii -DDlolol ... olllll•nL For only At ... FOSTER'S T ••• APPLIANc~ " Whirlpool LAUNDRY SPECIALS Automatic washer has 3 ~ sele ctims, 2 speeds, superSURGILATOR agilator, exclusiwe Maaic>Mix filter. Matching 5-eycle dryer f'a3 drJing heats, 1ast drying system and extra largB drUll. Both have special cooklown care for P9rnianent Press fallrics. Buy now and_, _, __ Whirlpool Dfl !IJE PElllNIEJIT PREIS PAIR ~Ml 1111CJcWasherlm5C)deul1 tblr,e• I& 'n Magic ao.e • ..... 1111or.3llwl-"'"""· MllcN!og ~d.,.,_TU!llblaPnlSCllattcl.611111 ,_ speclal cooklowll Car9forPtt11-Pmstlllrlcs. ' Special val .. -S....-1Washer,1.Sfo.7800; Dlyer, LSE·7800 ' • .. -... .-·,.., .. .., .... _ ......... ft atnpffwi.t1112'ill•lhMJ 'hznpe1ilfl\W•• FREE DELIVERY AND NORMAL INSTALLATION ON ALL WHIRLPOOL APfl.IAN FOS·TER'S TV • ------------------- ' ' ;;, I l • • • .. • ,., .. .•.. ... .. .. . ' " • ---- I DJ\D.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I Decide on Library Site Although lhe battlements continue to bristle over lo- cation of Leguna's future library, one thought does seem to be crystallizing on both $Ides of the issue; "Let's get on with it." The planning consultant's report giving lhree alter- natives is now on band and many feel that the city ahould wrap up a firm recommendation to the county in time for the new fiscal budget. They support this with the contention that a lost place in the county budget will mean more delays, re· quiring Jibrary--0riented Lag unans to continue with a long inadequate library facility. Since the report by planning consultants Daniel, Mann, Johnson & f\1endenhall (DMJM), t\vo n1ore have appeared. Both take iss ue \vith the DMJM material and conclusions. The Citizens' Town Planning Association <CTPA) emphatically recommends expansion at the present lcr cation. The DMJM report recommends against this. The DMJM report indicates expansion at the pre· M!nt site would be too costly and inadvisable because future arterial expansion might cut through the present site or otherwise render it infeasible. The CTPA, quarrels \Vith the cost figures, and ar· gues that another proposed arterial route (the Wilbur Smith report) might make the Third Street sites an un- likely choice because of a possible expressway along the hills to the canyon mouth . The CTPA report maintains that the planning co n· sultants did not have adequate time for a proper study and in eff&:t says DMJM didn't do such a whiz-bang )jbrary study. Librarian Clifford Cave feeds in additional inleres- ting lnlonnaUon in a IS.page report and opts for the present site. l·Iowever, he also recommends that if groundwork for the existing site -an\f it would be considerable - couldn't be carried out in a few weeks, then the city and county shou.Jd forget it and acquire one of the Third Street sites. Cave apparenUy feel s it would be better to have the Third Street plan in hand and underway rather than have continued contention and uncertainty about the library'& future. City planners and councilmen will hpve a good deal of information to sift in making their important library site decisions but it does seem we had best get to tho!)e decisions quickly. Here We Go Again Hold on Lagunans. Here we go again. The sixth annual Winter Festival is coming up Feb. 21 through March 2. The community celebration has become a time \vhen Lagunans put their busiest foot forward. They have to. The 10-day swirl packs in more than SO events. There's ballet, a parade, gourmet dinners, a travel filin festival, surfing competition, arts and crafts di;; • plays, stage productions, catamaran racing, street dan· cing, a flower show. lawn bowling, a luau. an artists' ball and more. The Winter F'estival not only brings economic benr· fit to the comn1unity, it is a catalyst toward \Vorking to· gether and ·sharing the fun of a better community. -~ • ..... 1· ' ~~~~ (Ll . . " "MA~BE '{OO'RE C0,11.~D(S IN MO)(l)'llJ Bvf yo~i~t COSSA(K) IN PRAl>Vf •• !Draft Reform : ··- 4gain Before i~ongress ~$/ : WASHINGTON -One or Lyndon B. :Johnson's fi na l legislative legacies to Congress was a proposal for revision ·"Of the military draft Jaw. ; AJ he promised in his State.of-the· "Union message, the outgoing President '.ronnally renewed his request for a lot- ·:terY·like random selection plan lo ..determine the order of call for draft -dgibles. His proposa l cleared the Budget )lureau and went to Congress on January : 17 -the Friday before the Monday ~uguratlon . .. Random selection is a concept which :;has been strongly supported by some .aitics of the present draft machinery. 'They can be excused if they now com-~plain that Mr. Johnson shou1d have been :much less dilatory in urging draft refonn .-on a reluctant Congress. • " THE PRESIDENT'S last-minute plan, :catted Fair and Impartial Random sele<:- Yli.on (FAIR ), was first recommended )n 1967 by a special presidential study ~mission. President Johnson endorsed ~t then and sent it on to Congress. · Random selection was envisioned as "'lb~ selection process in a system under . which young men would face a year #of maximum draft vulnerability at age ~9 (or on completion of a trade or ··college education). The Pentagon, pleas-!e<f with the prospect of younger draftees, "1upported the plan. • Even Gen. Lew is B. Hershey, director • af selective service, who had been no ~fan of selection by Jot, was brought .. around to support of the random selection ~process. The Senate approved a draft .reform bill which wou ld have allowed ~the President to institute such a pro- Mcedure along with other arart revisions. ! THE HOUSE OF Representatives, ~however, ba lked. On grounds that no :random selection plan bad been 1pelled :out in law, the Hou1e Armed Servlcu .· CommiUee refused to abandon the oldat-- • • • Dear Gloomy Gus: Why can't the sign pointing to South Coast Hospital be at least half as large as the neon liquor store and drive-in cafe signs near- by? Someone's IUe may be at stake one day. It's too easy to drive past the hospital. -C. J. f~le ffthlN ,.ftecTI ,. ... ,..; Ylft• llOI lllC ..... I" tMt11 .t I ... news•t1Mr. S. ... "~' "' ,_ t. Ol•mr Ga. O-llr Plltt. first system by which local draft boards had been se lecting amq men cluslfled as eligible for service. The finally approved 1981 compromise bill did not authorize random 1elecllon. Instead, Congress invited the President to make a speci£1c leaWaUve reque1t if he still wanted to 1n1tttute such a plan. Johnson did not do IQ. until 72 hours before he v;as to leave tie Whlte Hou1e. Nor did he revise the 1electlon proceu so as to tap the reservolr of 19-Ytar-oldi first. THE DRAFT REVISION, prepared at Selective Service headquartera and Hnt to COlljrt!I, would let the Pruldtnt set up a fair and impartial random selection system under rules which he would prescribe. The bill would also make changes to assure an orderly transition to calling 19-year-olds first Details of a random selection plan were sent to Congrt1s too. A pamphlet accompanying the draft bill spelled out a system under which a draft board would first determine "by lot" a se- quence or all 368 pouible birthdays ror a liven year. Then, also by klt, two alphabetic&! sequences \\•ould bl' determined, for initials or lasl and first names. Under the plan, lhe date sequenr.:e "'·ould be used to determine the order in which eligibles were drafted in that year. The other two sequences would be uaed, when necmary, to select among men with the 11m1 birth date1. •1 Robert S. Allen ud l'eb A. Gold1mllh ' > ' • • Unjust Two~thirds Rule • • Califcnll VO(en were more rectpUve :1o £Cbool financing meuuru In tho !Ml· •68 school year than ln I.ht pniv1ou.1 •year. Tbat's the ruult of a survey !made by the Callfomia Teachers Allocla· "lion and the ca11rornla .Auocl•tlon of ;School Admtnlltraton. • The trend I& favorable, if not ovtr· :whelmingly so .. t The survey revealed a 12.S percent 'gain in successful achoo! tax elecUons :and a 4 percent 11in In auc~ssful bond •t.Jections. Even 90, to e.xamine the darker ;.Ide of these statistics. only 65 percent ..al the tax proposals were passed and :only 4S percent of the bond.-;. • • PERHAPS THE MOST striking part :« the report is it.s comment that U ~tclll bond Wues required only a simple )4ajority, u prtvails with st.ate bond ~W.O.. 112 percent of llle 19&7.Q ~I bondl: would have been approved. ! .J;ays Dr. Gaylord G, Gordon, CTA ".11llei:r'Cb eucuuv~. "The will or the :rdaJorify to approvr school bonrfs has ,been thwarted b7 a minori1y due to rule state's archaic Jaw requiring a two- :Wrds vote.·· • ; AMEN TO mAT. Tbt twC>--thirds rule 'Oii' local bond iut.lts ii a 19th ctnlury •encrmtatton in the Ute cooatirulloo. :it was adopted became in those days )lojMl}I wu held by a comparatl" • .mo did not W1lll tilt -..on folk I~ blithely encumbor th<lr propeny ···~ ·~ -. ' . • wUh bond debt.I. 1bt picture ha5 chang(•d wltb t.oday 01 mau home o"·nership. 11ie Con11tltution Re vision Commi~!!ion mttts in February to co:isider the third phase or ii.$ work. The local two-thirrl.~ rule lurks In 1hat part of lht Constltullon to be studitd. The commission ~hould remove it and substitute the fairer simple majority requirement. San Francl1ce Examiner Shorts Job• D1y, Ore.. Blue l\fouatalo Eq·Je: "The turbulence on American college c1mpuses has upsflt a lot of people, but It seems unfashionable to- day to attribute It to CommurU~ts a speaker at a ,,OUtical convf!ntlon In New York ... said there II.rt! Com- muniltl on moil of the major cant· pulfll In this country and that these coinmunista bad been Involved in the 1tudent protest&. 'the speakerr Gus IWJ. 1•nerlll •e<:$J'Y of I h e American Communis;t Parly ·• -~ At Dospftab: Stark Drama at Any Hour . Trend to Separate ·Coronary Care By NORMAN NIXON, M. D. In thfl intensive care unit or a ,modern hospital you can see stark drama any hour of the day or rU&ht. Here men and women face life or death ·'crlsea with the help of doctors, nurse11 and technicians who have the most sophisticated equipment available to deal with nearly every medical and surgical emeraeney. Intensive care unita vary in aiu:. Some are old wards remodeled for this purpose with bedl, separated by 1tua partitions or ceiling-~Ooor curtains to provide 90me privacy, Unlna both l1de1. In newer, smaller untta, lhe ume atmolpbere pr1:va11s -acJtement, noise, ap- prehen1lon, people scurrying t>ack and forth, even thou.ah efforta are made ·~e:~:.1" dlsturblna and depr~sslng EVERY PATIENT ·knows he ls critically Ill. conttant J n t r 1 v e no u s therapy la carried out on almost everyone: some mu1t have oxy1en. others lndwelfln& cathetus. ArUflel1l kidney, heart-lung machines, and other :>1ran ge, somewhat foreboding equipment may be in use for some patients. Nurses keep watch, often by remote television. but check lht vital signs hourly or more olten, lnvarlab{y wakin& every sleeping paUent. Although A heart patient usually cannot see his own electrocardlographic trac- ings, be may watch the monitor hook!!<I up lo his neighbor in a nearby cubicle. SomeUmu the alarm sounds, indicating cardiac arrest or other compllcaUona, but the nUrte11 immediate response ls reauurlna to those who witness the emergency, or when other Ufwavlnc procedures ani performed. NEARLY AU. patients in tbe intenalv~ care unit use denial. a psychological mechanism. to re pudiate what is going on so as to allay fear and anxiety. So on discharge some stale they felt no fear at any time during their stay ; others admit they were frightened even though initially they denied having any fear. But many patients: say frankly they were scared the entire time. In most intensive care uruli" the in· cidenee of delirium, hysteria, depression and other psychiatric symptoms is suf- ficiently high to cause concern. Often the doctor-patient relationship plays an important part since lhe critically ill patient sees the physician as his lifeline 10 the living world . WHAT TJJE DOCTOR says and how he skys it arc of enormous importance. For grave illness makes the patient overly dependent and vulnerable to suspicions and uncertainties. Unfor- tunately, s o m e doctors are uneasy in the alck room when questions about prognosis are put to them. Further, slnce intensive care units are manned primarily by nurses and technicians, with doctors serving as rrn1ote control generals of the technical aspects of the patients' care, the all·important doctor· patient relationship is diffused. Because heart cases. particularly cor· onaries, represent at least 75 percent of those in intensive care. tl1e trend now is toward separate coronary care uni ts with less noise. turmoil, bright lights and confusion. Although the threat of sudden death is still present, there are fewer panic reactions and other psychiatric symptoms. TllE INTENSIVE care unit. regarcl- less of the excitement, drama and tur· bulence, represents a tremendous ad· vancement in providing , emergency treatment for desperately tll patients in a setting where personnel and equip· / merit are always avail<-.b!e. Neverthe-t less, palients with a diagnosis of myo-r cardial infraction can be treated far more effectively and with fewer psy• chological hazards in a special coronary care unit than in the hectic environment of the recovery room or the intensive care unit. 'Lucky to Have Dan Aldrich at UCI' To the Editor: Several people have uktd U the Mua Verde Homeowner• meetmi lhey at- tended Thurtday nlaht wu the same ... that WU repOrted In Frldl)''I DAILY PlLOT (Homeowner• Grill Chancellor, Jan. 24). It 10 -w1 al1 aeemed to 1niss the atmo.!lphtire ot holtlllty and i:riticism described by youi' reporter, In lhrer years of :ittending association rneetings, I've never hearrl anyone receive such sincere and endurini; ap- plause . BUT FOR ONE exception. the ques- tions put to Dr. Aldrich were honest expressions of concern for a matter that is on the minds of everyone. Such concern ls healthy; it's to be expected and the chancellor seemed to wele11me the opportunity lo personally explain how "bualnesa ii conducted.1' on the Irvine campus. His answers were articulaft, forthright and, though not everyone • agreed with every answer, there did appear to be a consensus that '>l'e're dam lucky to heve Dan Aldrich at UCL CONSIDERABLE credit must be glvtn to the fact that a confrontation has not occurred on the Irvine campUs. This 111 the real test of a present day chan- cc11or or university president. 011n Aldrich h11' to be one of the best 111 tht business. Doors of co1nm11niratlon arr open. l1c·s admired and respected h~· hi~ :iturlt.nt!'. they kno1v fhl' rules anrl they obey lh1nn, THE DAILY Pit.OT would do '"r!l lo at'<'t'nl th\or.; p~silh·c note and qu 11 breeding confusloff py referring 1(1 :i chancellor's "po.'!sible" reactions in a •·possible:·• riot as the sole mea:rurt: of U1r man. There Isn't going to be a riot if he d()('s hi s job "'ell. Local rtsidents a}lould makt" C\"Cry .. ffort to he11r this man speak -in ..----811 George ~--, Ue8I George Don 't you feel rethcr !.Jlly in a bus1nc!'~ ordtn8rily Inhabited by laclie~ only~ S.D ()('ar S.O.: If women can be jockeys:, mr:n c;:in be advice columnists. (Hm. llow Jona befqre the rirst topless Jockry1) ,. ' . '·'."\'\~ . \. .... ' ~ ' . . -. ·i I • I 'I :°t' ! ' ' ~· 'rt;' • . ....... ol!J... ''>;!;.'' ' .., ,. ..,. r ~....... I ~ • 1x:rson: He'a areal ! JIM WOOD Past President Mesa Verde Homeowners Association These line1 are from the story: "Jl1ost of the que.stion.t asked of the chancellor had hostile overtones. 'I'hose cuking question1, however, may not havs bee1t representative of all 125 per1on1 pre.!ent; when Aldrich t~as finished "• was 1pontaneo1uly npplaudrd." -Editor ~load J\'ot Hostile To the Editor : Somtone told me once, ''Don't ~lievr. C'verythlng you read In the newspapers." Yet. what other way is there to kt>ep 1n rormed, I \\'ondcr. I really. dig your µap{'r -read It through as often as possible. So. U I had not been to the i\l{'".fl Verde Homeowners' meeting ~·hen Dr Aldrich spoke last \\"Cck, I probably \1"0llld havr accepted your reporter'ii v.•rltten word that the mood wa~ "hu.~tllc ." L'i NO \\'AV could that ~~ ll was True Picture Pllot·Tribune, Storm Lake, Iowa : ''For yean the ltussian Conlmuni.N have been p1dntlng tht United States ea the Im· perlallstle villain. The U.S., so they con· tend. i1 trying to dominate the world. rnnking 20th century colonies out of smollrr countries. Now the RuS1ians ha vr lo!!t this phase or dJ? argume:nt which wns questionable in lhe first pla<.'f:. Ilus.~1a's ~trong·arn1 invasion of Ciecboslova.kia give.'! a true picture of thr 'benefit.a' 't>eY wish to brin& to tho world·• an ·lnlereiting meeting, with the audience ver.y intensely absorbing the remarks made by the Chancellor. The questions asked were simply the type that in· terested persons do ask -and they were beautifully ha ndled by Dr. Aldrich \l.'ho should be complimented on his sincerity and straightforwardness in ans1\·ering them. \Vish your reporter. who by the way has done bell er, had told it like it was. BARBARA CAf.1PBELL Seporoth19 8011•· Glrlr To the f;ditor ; I wish Sidney Harris "''ould not \\Tile such nOllsense as yesterday's column (Jan. 28) in which he advocated separale schools for girls and boys in order to solve the race problem. There's just a chance many might lake him seriously. The race problem wouJd no longer be with us ir some people didn't persist in ma&nl fying differences between groups of people while. ignoring the far ,more iiuportant similarities. such aJ the wide spectrurr. of differences among in- dividuals in any group. Why trade a prob!e1n having to do with 10 percent or ~o of the population for one Involving SO ~rccnt1 Y .. KERSEY Aftrr ritinp dista.~te for mi3Ct'Q't -. Quotes NatlonRI Education Altodadon, on mtrlt.1 of year-round 1cltool1 -"Ad~ lion or 11.n extended r.chool year hr.! not been widespread. desplte enthualum by Its advocates. Several schools have txperln1ented with a lona:er school ytar <ind dropped the idta. Survey1 1how the e11ncepl Is not re«ived favorably by teacher!!. administrators 1 n·r1 f!Drents " lh1ruld lfowe It, U. S. Commlsslflner of t;ducadoa -"1 would aicrett ... that eacb yw, starting Immediately anrl u.'ilng 'combination of federtJ, atatr and local tuoul't'tl. 10 percent of the nation's eltmentary and seconda r y leathers -llOl1lt 20,000 men and \vomen -aT\Dually be given the opportuniiy lo improve lheir pro(es.rion1l 1kll11 " nation as being at the u·11conscio11.~ root of ail racism, a11d describing 1t as irrational, or sub-rational, Harris soid there are good ed-i1cation. reasons for separating boys and girls (11ot b!J race) rn the tower grades. Ile believe.t teaching should be ad1usted to tl1f. realities of gender. a11d of tltc malur· ationaL developmtflL -11nt "to soltir the race pr11blcn1 .. -£'d1tor H>'/1i1e Paint To the Editor : In the DA ILY PILOT nf Jan. 2•, \Villiam P. Bo'>l•er asks the question. "They don't really believe, do they, thal God gave them alone the y.•isdom to know what is good for all of us?'' (Referring to various persons con1· plain ing of certain speakers appearin~ on the UCI campus.) I want Mr. Bo.,..·er lo know thal "Cod" certainly did give those persons thi~ "wisdom ." I'm nol exactly su re \vhich god -there are so many of thtn1 -but my guess is it is the one lhat passes out the ammunition to all comeri::. The one whosr color has disappearrd under layer after layer of white paint and had a Y.1hole civilization namerl afl<'r him has disappeared , too, for the time being .. r~e ~·hitc paint is arounU, though, and v1s1ble to the naked ev<' and 1s now the medium and the message an1°l the source of current ··\\'tS:dom ·• floating about. I think . FREDA f\1 VOSS -~-- Fr 1 day, January 31. 1969 The tdi!.oria1 JXlfle o/ tht Dnil11 Pilot 1reks to inform end .slim- "lott traders by present1np thil ncw1~r·s opinion$ a,1d com- l'l'ltntoru on topics or 1n1crr1t QJtd fiOnificottet, by prov1rln1g a forum for the t .tprl'ssion of ou,. traders' op111ion1. and b11 pr-tst11tin9 Ott drntr!Jc vrcw- noints of informed obstrv,.r1 attd 1pokesmtn on toJ'1 c.s of th« d4 y. Robert N. \V eed. Puh!ishcr Bingo Bo()sts Laguna Beach League, Orange County Society of Crippl<!cl ·Chil- dren and Adults, a relatively new group, has thought up a new way of raising money and getting acquainted with worn~ in the area. Members will stage a bingo coffee ifroln 10 a.m. to .noon Tuesday, Feb. 11, in the Mystic Pait: home of Mrs. Caro! Sturm. MPs. Jooeph Petrash, president (cmter) is very lucky-at bingo. Also practicing Agents .Subject Reports of espionage and sabotage will be uncovered before Monday Morning Club of Laguna Beach Monday, Feb. 10, by Harvey G. Wolfe, .a-lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Military Intelligence Reserve. ' His talk. the Red Netwock, will take place in the Hotel Laguna where women wil! eoo,grqate for an · 11 a.m. IOCia1 boor followed b y ludcheon at 11 :30. 1 . Wolfe, a veteran speaker, has talked on espionage. and sabotage b e l o r e audiences 1 around the world for the past I 20 years. \~ He has been engaged in I counter-intelligehce 3nd es- ' pionage for many years and was an· instructor on the , techniques of s~et service . , His glamorous background ;~.also includes time as a liaison , officer to Scotland Y·ard and a correspondent to the Il- , Justrated News. He a 1 s o • authored many. articles deal· ~, , Ing w i t h espionage for 1 magazines in Eu\·ope and the United States. • In addition ·to field ex- , perience, he haS to his credit 1 several doctorates in Jaw and ; jurisprudence and is a , graduat'e of several special in· telligence schools. Ebe/ls Have a r • · !or the game are (left) Mrs. Thor;nas:o•Brien, treasurer,and Mrs. James Davison, secretary. PrOcee,u !fill' go to the:, 1ocl~'s re- habilitation center in Orange, Furilier'lnformat!<11 alioUt tile group and re<ervalioos may be obtalned·J>YUUlDg Mrs. Jalnes.Davison, 494-6883:Thepublic is invited tft.a~~ \ · I j • ~ • ·~".:! 'i" .. ~ . . . ~, I •'' •.I """' -·' ·~ .. ·' Heart - , " A highlight of his appear- ance Will be a question period following the lecture. Mrs. Pearl David w i 11 preside over the business por- Oon of the meeting. Laguna Beach Ebell Club will bring St. Valentine's merriment into a ward in Fairview State Hoopital with a party Tuesday evening, Feb. 11. Decorations, singing, refreshments and card making are some o( the attractions planned for the women patients in the ward. Gettini in a hearts and floW'trs sp!Jj.t for' ~•party ~re (Jell to·rigllt)·the·Mrneo. Joltn Mudge; WaJI.ace Scott and RlcharCI Racich. ... .. ' • • .. . ,,.., ........ '"' L. ... ' JEAN COX, 494-9466 The LDguna Line ' ,f.I. Ric,hmans Dinner · Hosts ' Sina> Frederick I. Richman happens to be an espen bunter, Mrs. Richman'• freezer Is usuaily crammed with more game than she and her family could ever hope to eat. · To,solve this problem, the Rlchmans had about 60 llf·thelr friends over to their Skyline Drive home last evening for a festive dinner pariy. ·. '11le main course was pheasant, which Richman gatller1'd during several huoliog expeditions in oortllern California. Lagunans attending the party were the Messrs. and Mmes. Richard Goldberg, Charlton Boyd, Baird CoHin, McClellan Cole, Leooard Davis, Rich· ard K. Grant, Willem H. Lambourne, Ricllard P. Nau, J01eph O'SUlllvan and John W. Solomon. Guests from Laguna HUis Included the Messrs. and Mmes. Fred S. Hilpert, Paul K. Justus, Wilson W. Kline and Harry H. Rannard. Others attending included Mrs. G. H. Ernsber· ger of· Three Arch Bay, Dr, and Mrs, La Verne F1etcher of Three Arch Bay and the Messrs. and Mmes. Page E. Golsan of Laguna Niguel, C. Sid- ney Johnston Jr. of Monarch Bay and John B. Lawson of Laguna Niguel. Also present were the Messrs. and Mmes. Ber- nard Syfan and Vernon Spitaleri of Emerald Bay, C.' Stewart Tinsman of Three Arch Bay, William F,. Wenke ot Santa Ana and Mrs. DeWitt West of South' Laguna. ' Friends from st. Louis, Mo. attendlng the gath- ering. Included Mr. and Mrs. E. K. Hagemann and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schlooser. Also coming to Laguna Beach for the occasion were Dr. and Mrs. Robert Helms of Loog Beach, Dr. and Mrs. B. W. Justus of Fullertoo, Mr. and Mrs. Michael K. Mc- Enlry ot Newport Beach and Mr. and Mrs. Louis · Schertmer of'indlan Wells. I ,,. Dessert Served Laguna Greeks Study Iranians Iranians and their country will be dis- cussed by Mrs. linday Cooper before Laguna Beach Panhellenic members meeting in the Laguna Niguel home of Mrs. William Beatty Wednesday, Feb. 5. All members of national sororities are invited to attend the gathering and listen to Mn. Cooper, who lived in Iran from llJ6&.67. Mrs. Coop~r was acting, curator of the AJ!at!c department, W\llf~~ Nelson. Gallery of Art in Kansa! City, :) In addi· tion she.served as an associate o the 0. T. Loo,Gallery of chinese Art in New York City. Jt The· speaker, a graduate of the Univers- ity of Missouri, is affiliated with Delta GID!Dl8 IOrority, ~ · Mti. .Colin W, Timmons, chairman of the day., will ·•erve the 1 ll'm, desiet!, and Mrs.· · W. 'L. 'Dooley, prograni chalrmlm, will brtr . , duce tb• speaker. Assilllng Mrs. Timmoos will be. the Mmes. Paid M. Davis, Robert H. Offley and L. T. Rooser. FUrtber laformalion about the Ji':P and mervatlonl maY'be obtained by c g Mrs. Mildred SW.trop, 491-3877. • 'Exceed-drin' Headache No. 5 Why Arn I a W1allfl~~er?-. •••• , . :• D'EAR ANN LANDEBS : I'm a girl, ,tl,)Krt beauUru1 but better than awr~ge Jooking. Everyone uys I have: a nice personality. The trouble is I don't get asled out beca~ I live in a dump. ~ nelghborhood ls !Kl crummy you caitl believe ii.. Several guy1 at school seem to like me but lhe minute I give them my fddre:ss they disappear forever. Mom lnd Dad are divorced and we have IJ'<iablo paying the rent. '° ple&S< don't tell me l"e should move. 1 know we 1hould but we can't afford to. Just tell mt _.ba~ a girl is supposed le do wbeo Ohe =·t get ilalel becaon she Uvu In a alum. -CHfCKEN POX I/EAR CIUCKEN: Muy 1 pl who· Um 11 1 JWan.ky auhRrb hat &Jvu ANN LANDERS [fl ' lier addrtu to a My and never Marci 1 .. m lllm apb. Bo:11 .,. In-led .. ,.... coaqJlay ud lkJ'D ,. .. , ,1~ to date 1 girl no 11 appra!hla. Tiie pnljlefft II yog, Tooll, aot 1'"' addtus. Take Inventory and find ovl wbal'1 mlula1. OBAR ANN LANDERS: il've been, daUng Ja,ce for si1 weeks. Shell at,.. tracUve, not educated. but she really know• how to make a guy feel lmportanl On our third date Joyct told me she had been in 1 detenUoo home for picking up Jtems In • deparlmeot store. Lui weet we vllited my brother In a hospital. The next day the nurse called to ast if I hid taken Hal'1·•atdl "!Or u1-,. Ing. •t It '"' oli ID nlahl table' and -!lier""' fiod It. • Lui night when I sot I{,,,,, from a date with Joy«, my wallet was ml&&- Do J"OU reel m at eue • • • - o1 Ill II mqbo<b' b&Yin& 1 pocl 111111 but yoo! Wrtta for Ann~-~ "The KfY In Popularity," tneloolng '!'Ith ywr requen ·:15 ~nls lft colft , and 1 long, sell-addressed, stamped envelope. Ann· Landen wiD be glad to Jlelp 100 wllb your Pt'oblem1. -tbtm to bt~ in ~ ol the DAij, Y • ~IW1'1 enclosing • 11ampec1, .eu..._ envelope. ' I r · I ' , •• Mexico Via Well Heeled ~~~ .. ~~~'°"ill Forecast Pumps Openness IT'S IN THE CARDS -Trophy winners o! Harbor Senior Citizens' Friday Bridge Group ar, (left to rlibt) Virgil Kimple, fint; Mn. Peg Todd, third, • · Card Players 'Score' With Bridge T rQ.Phies Mm tlwl 100 arid con! playen cooiralulated three wbmen of Harbor Senlor- atlzelll' Friday Bridge Group. Every Friday prizes "" anrded Ont, oecond and third hlifl acoron and II the m1 " NCh m-moath period three trvpblls .... ~ lo the thfee players with the b!cbelt fCCUb!Dl•ted IC)(ftj, New 1ni!J1>1 w!Jmen are Vh1U Kimple al Coota M- llnt; Leo Delmoad " Coota -. -lllCI .Mn. p .. Todd aJJd Roy J-. group manager, are past first place - The bride• lfOOll f*lllm eacb Fridal' In the &mlor Clllunl Recrulloo cenw 11 11 a.m. Jame11 Sa.Wfer, preal· deDI, WI be called ti 14&-tiso !or lurlber - 1be travel -" lbe c111b II plsmlq a Im trip lo Deat1I V.U., on hb. la.II and -jallrDey lo lbe Senta Anita -.. hb. •• _., lo Klmple, put clllb -· the -on the cJubb""' II belnr -Funds ..... nfled by members o! the Zonia Club o! Newport Harl>or. Missions Council T epic SL Cltherine's Cauod1 of Catholic Women wlil WO In m Mlalona Around the World d1lrlllg the poup'1 11 rs t meeting ol the new year nerl Toesday at 1 :30 p.m. in Laguna Buch Woman' I Clubboul<. Speaker, the Rev. Lawrence O'Leary, assl!tant director, PcaWical M1alon Societies of the Lot Aqeles Arcbdloce ... will &!ft .. l1lllltntacl lt!C- lurt on the 111bjtcl. MW Ann Reilly, JftSldOnl, will conduct • lhorl bo8IM m..iing which will lealurt a l1nlDc1al rep<rt: on a 111c- -.i CllrlllmU party and canl party. Mn. J .J. Kmmy, program cbalrmln, wlil Introduce the speaktr, and Mrs. A n n Della.u, hosplWlty chalrmln, 1s 1n cblrl• or the spring i.a whldl wlil conclode the ..-.,. be shown to Divorce Anon Club. members oo Ftb. U, II I p.m. In the Lincoln Sav· tap•Lou.sutaAllL ,......,. -m.ludt • Valeallae polluck dinner and ctaoce, a trip lo the Data ra11ni 1n Indio, .-db> ... -.. c::-lllPI and a 19"'7 _, ewnlnc In a member'• bomt. 'l'bl clllb ..-.. IOClal ' GOU.ta l!'i _,pon!omblp fer di-er llpll1 _.tad -lllla- and ..... .at cirpnlatloo. Further Information may be oblalned bJ wrltlll( DI"'"'° A-, P.O. Boz U. Tustin. and Lee Desmond, 1eccad. During each six-month period, awards are preaented to the three players with the hi&hest accumulated sco~. Rome Honeymoon Rebekah~ View Film Meu ll<bekah Lode• wlil meet on Feb. I, II I p.m. 1o .iew a mm lhowlne the oeven clan(m' allJla]I o I cancer. • Durlnr the 1alberlng plans will IMi lormulatad fer the DI> comm, lnldatlm. Furtber tn-· formation ..., be r-1nd bJ calllq 111n. R a a t t f.oddoma, Noblt Grand, at llf. Gii, er 111n. Donp 11.._ publld1J cbllr'IDlll, lll-ll!I. Suzanne· Haas Marri~s Mlt. AND Mll PITllt A. BANASZAK Spring Rush Scheduled 8prlne ruah !er the 10 IOClal IOl'Orltles at Calllornla State COllqe at Looi Beach will lake pllct Feb, &-t. Ooedl. pltnnln1 to atl<nd dllrlnc the IPl'lnl __ , on br9lted lo obtain an ap. =U~ the Sludent Af. 1be -"" Alpha Omkml Pl, Alpha EpolJon Phi, Dalla Dalla Delta, Delta -. Delta Zeta. Gcnma Pill Bell, Ripa Gomma Rllo, = ~ and Zeta Tiu 111~r1~ ..... In lllaml ..... --Hui al Miami 8prlnp, dlll""8' " Mr. and 1lln. Jolla H. Hui al Newport Belch, and Petar A. llana>- W, ... " Mr. and .Mn. ~ drew Baa•n•k d. ertvtts. Wis. ~:;,e~~ f~ the noon ceremony in SL Mary'1 Catholic Chun:h In Crivitz. Bouquets of whlt'e gladloll and c:hryaanlhemums adorned the allar. G._ In marriage by her Wiler, the bride sel«tad a lqwllltaaalln:5:wlth -lmltll ...pi ... --...... beld a .......... bollquet " -bab1 .... MlK ~ Bammt. U. l'er " the br1desr«mi. - maid " --1lln. Damll llcKlnla, tllt brldt'• . alals -Ooll.i Mm, - -.... 'l'btJ --.... --nlnl ...... wttb lbort m1tchtnc ftl1I beld bJ-Oat-l>owa. -carried a bouquet of r>d -. pine ....... and hollJr --lo be belt 111111 .... Tom Keatlnll " OUland. Ulhm wm JtrrJ Daaoen al DePwo, Wll., -- aak " emu., the -· COlllln, and Dlclr; -eld al Crivtll. MIA Doaolla Wiii, arpnlat, perfonntd -1lln. Jot &bmtJtll!' "' MtrmeapiJW. aunt al 'the brldolnom. wu thelOlollt. Followtne the double rlnl e e r • m o n 1 the newl;,wedl wmt coogratulatad by 100 ...... aJJd rtlallvtt In SW. llfr'I ballroom, Cririll. OU~ ol·town IUeltl arrived from s-St. Louis, Chlcaro, Gntn !lay, Detroit aJJ<f Lin' coin, Neb. The former Mia HUI II a lfadutta al Newport Harl>or flip Bcbool and F\lllortoo Junior Colle(e. Hor hwhtnd II ID almnma of Qirib IDllt 8c:bool aad the 11ll1"'1111 "' Mllml. e. lo a ......... " tbl O.kl1nd RUdln fcdblll tum. Attitudes Explored Concerning Retarded Two public lectures will u - plore the problem of society's acceptance of the mentally nlaldedpmoowbobasbetn 1ftpand to Uve Jn the oal!lde -14. The lectures wlil be part of the UCI E:rtenlion stries, Thi MllllatlJ Rolanled: Qr. -Prob1tml lllCI -· Plamini fer the Plilln whlcll II glveo on Tueodayl tt 1:111 p.m. In Room IOI! at Falrvtrw State llotpltal. relarded YOWllStlrt at home and in ICbool without neglec- Ung other children. How pll'lntl can htlp tb~ir l"llarded cblldron ltac1 beJlP7' llleful llN; bow nlatlWa, lrlendl, -aad olber profwiooall can help parenls with thll ta.!k wl1I be -ed In the Feb. 11 1tclan Parental ~ lllld N-. The opttbr wlil be Fred Jtrauae, 111eatJv1 lecr.tary of the calllorala Council for Retarded Otlldrlll. lAc:Wr• ticl:eU: will bl told at the door. Emblem Club Uniform Appeal for 'Thdt Girl' Mtro11 Marlo 'n>omal ol "Tbat Girl" telnlll~ modelo th• new Air ~ blut unllorm. Dlll1Ded by Han)' Gllbert of th M. Born Ccmpa111 cC ' aiiu,., K will be.=, eqalpmllll for (.' 1• 11 a a•bardlnt ventm Falrvlrw chief al poycbololY lrvtor R. S-will dllcuu Pr<>bfem1 ol Adjullmmt lo and In SocCety Faced bJ th• ll<tarded and How lo Dovtlop Tbtlr P-llall. In bla Ftb. t ta!• hi WW dllcull wbalher °' not the -aad the hamt art nel1y dtvtloplq the 11111 potaolla! " the -tallJr rotanltd and I • t 1101111111011 for .... with !hi...-"~ Gatberiq !or b u I I a a u ·-aad-ort .-ban al Ntwport Harllcr Emblem Club the llCOOd ,_, al • p.m. In the Elli of UM Air Fon:e & luo grq thall 111 tho .pd. Lodp, N...,..n -· ' RE·'LIDN' ON COMFORT -Tbat'a what women are doing when they wear th.,e kicky young cbarmera called Leo Ille Lion by Penaljo. One of tile lln9ll dellgu In day ah0et, they are made for c:om!ortable walking. Shoes may be found at Robln- IOD't Faahion Jaland. A llT OF A HEEL -And just a bit, II a feature ol thll shoe otyle called Tropic. The flippant, ro- mantic lltUe aboe 11 carved down to the bare mini· mum and Is shown In mellow ostrich printed leath· er with a baby doll toe. PAOINO l'EMININITY -Page, tht Dllll8 of thll ullrafemlnlne 1andal, calla on ID alrJ loot 4.,1gned especially for fall. It carrt .. 111 faablOll meoaage for clay wear In butter 1oft otlrlch printed leather with bared toe and heel and the Important loot of otraps. PUF, OF B!AUTY -These Utile beaut111 show bow under statement Is in this !all. Called Puff, thll otyle come. in cuddly IOll os!t1cb printed leath- er and fetturn th• new broadened toe and trim- med clown lld11 with an anUqued b'°""' omament. 1be new footwear collec:liOll ' from Penaijo 11 designed lo be acU•• with an flltra empbull on !""'fort. The ,....,., tu~ lool: with I dainty otrilp In Mirich prlntad lealber i< fa!111on'• newest ravortu. Coldn nop from tndltkwllo lo the unique antique hue. Strips bf,ve new lnl<rell 1beJ are geWn& hlgbtr aad aet back. Deflnll<l1 fuh!oo """' to-day 11 the printed leather IOOk wllh bared tpe and heel The up-frmt loot II in a slnmC po1ltlon And buckles a 1 everyone tnowl are in the beadlinel tllil lelSOn.. The new femlnine trend is towards lofbJesl, Broadened toe and trimmed oldu and lllocky heel ""' pro- viding ........ and, ri. """""· comfort from tbe old-fashloo- ed polntad toe and spiked heel. Pumps will increase I n poplliarlty beclw"" ol t h I 1 -heel and toe Interest. The shelled-out pump is particular· ty atyllab. New Babies 'Showered' Many new babies w 111 benefit from lllfts brought to a layette baby ahower which will lake place next Monda1 evenfni Jn the Mission Viejo home of. Mn. Don Clarence. The shower ls b e 1 n I 1ponaored by A111danla Allx· illary, ailldren'• Home Socl· ety, and lllfts wtll be used for the many babies adopted through the aoclety. Associate members of the auxiU.0, will be apecial guest.I at the event, where a talk by a . foster mother will be a special feature. Mrs. Robert Lt.Ster ls chairman of th1 ahower. The soclety, which offers ttl tel'Vice to both the adoptive and natural parents place many babies in new homes. Physician Addresses Women Dr. Ralph Byron, chit!! surgeon at City or Hope Hospital In Doarte will be the guest speaker at the Tuesday, Feb. 4 meetil'lg of the Chrl&- tlan Wcmen'1 Club. The physician will pretent his talk at the noon luncheon meeting in the Newporter Inn in Newport Beach. Guert vocalist will be Mrs. Byron and a fashion parade wUI be presented by Laguna Beach ahops. ReservaUOlll' a n d can- cellatiom are necessary and WI be callecl to Mn. Lml Mutz at &IS-1%11 er Mn. lltrOld F'llcher at llJ.1129. N"""7 _..111om allo ant neceuary. Golf, Bridge On Calendar For Rivierans Golf and bridge actlvtt.le1 are being planned for Riviera Club me.mben 1eekln1 ph)'llcal and mental exerclle nert wett. Brldj> II ICbedolld In Laguna Beach Country Club next Tuesday. Luncbeoo will be aerved at noon In Ben Brown'• restaurant followiq a soclal bour. Reservauon, may be ob- "I tained by calling Mr11. JO!lflph Nemecek by Saturday at 499- 2178. Golf section member$ wilt meet at 9 a.m. ne1t We~ nesday at the San Juan Hllh1 Country Club where they wlll enjoy a luncheo!l following the JS-hole play. Carts are available and reserv1Uons may be obla1ned by carun, Mn. Charles E. Morrbon. MMf14 or Mn. Russell M. N~ l!INOIL Painters Elect Slate South Coast China Patnttra St.lie Fedl!raUon of Clllfornla have elected their of1lcer1 far the commr year, HeadlnJ the or1anluU. wOI be the Mme1. HlllTJ Fqan, pre1ldent; Roy Oswald, nr1t vice prnld&lt ; Donald Schoerunehl, -vice prealdont; Howanl NO!' rett, """'lal'J; N. W. Love, lttuuret, and Roy Fidler, • hlJtorlan. I I I ' I · I i I I ' I I I I I < • I I I I ( < • I I I I I I < ( < 1 I < I I ( • < [ '· • . Newport Barbor N.Y. Stoeh VOL. 62, NO. 27, 4 SECTIONS; 38 PA~ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JANUARY ll, 1969 JEN COOS . . Emcee Gardner Judged City 'Man of Year' ·· Surprised Juris~ Joins l.1ongmoor in~Ann1ial CofC HoJJ,ors By JEROJ\.IE F. COLLINS 0t IM D.tl\' ~llet St.tf Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- merce Manager Jack Barnett beforehand had promised a "surprise" at Thursday night's "Mano( the Year" banquet. lie was right. And the most surprised man of all 'Y8S the honoree -Superior Judge · !Jobert Gardner. Gardner was master or ceremonies for tbe annual aft.air, attended by 400 Judge Su1nner Blasts School Book Banning Juvenile Court Judge Bruce W. Sumner today criticized the Orange County School Board for banning books bec8use of the political point of view of one board member. He referred lo Dr. Dale Rallison, COIHJ.· ty school trustee who is a member of the John Birch Society and has formed his own private book review committee. At Rallison 's urglng, the county school · board last week ·removed four books, including Pulitzer Prize winner John Hersey's "HirMhima," from the library list for a new county juvenile facility. Judge Sumner said he is concerned and feels all citizens of the county should be on the watchful alert "w h e n the ruson for removal of b o o k s ·is n o t based on their .literary merit or content, but beCause of a political point of · view held by a ·member of the school bQard. "In schOo~. of all p)i'cd, ·m JlOlnts or view sboWd be examined ·and dilcu.u· ed." be said, Th e superior judge, a Laguna Beach resident, said he felt CGNtrained to com- ment llnce aB pr..wq jll>eiille jUdp ht has-jurisdict.i.on Ovf;t the new school for juveniles on prnbaUoo. Dr. Rallisoo, a Santa Ana dentist, charged that "Hiroshima" presents a one-sided view of the 1945 atom bombing cif lhe Japan~ city. He said the book tells on I y o( the horror and falls to mention the important fact th a t thousands of American lives were saved by making a costly military invasion unnecessary. ln his book, Herse1 reports on the aftermath of the bOmbing as seen through the eyes of the Japanese people on t h e ground. He makes no comment on t h e war or on t h e advisibility of dropping the bomb. Rallison's contention was that lhe book ctves support to ban the b o m b movements. He said, "We h ave demonslraLions by peaceniks because we have allowed so ·much material of this kind in our libraries." School board president Clay Mitchell, of South Laguna, said of Hersey's book: .. While I haven 't read the boot, I haven't approved of all this criticism of America using the bomb." He suggested, "There's been too much criticism of what we had to do after we were forced into the war by a sneak attack." Only 2 County Roads Still S_hut Roadblocks in Oood-ravaged SUverado and Modjeska canyons were lifted 'nrunday by the California Highway Patrol. Only two Orange County roadways re- main closed because of last week's storm. They are Mac:Arlbur Boulevard at Campus Drive where part of a bridge was washed out and the Orangewood bridge in Anaheim. at the Balboa Bay Club. His astonishment was total ; the 58- year-old jurist, a popular emcee because of his glib, articulate wit, had to grope for the right words. "I'm seldom speechless," he . fin any said ·sofUy, plalnly moved by City Coun- cilman Rol;>ert Shelton's presentation of the awar.d. "All I oan say Js that l am deeply, deeply honored and bumbl· ed." Suspect Says So The huge banquet hall filled with wq applause. Moments earlier, a similar standing ovation had 'been given Walter Longmoor, former long-time Orange Coast College trustee. He was named 1968's "Citizen of the 111Year." It was only the second time in the 21-year history of the annual event that the Chamber had hc~')red two Newport citizens for 4Jstinguished community service. .. Judge Gardner made (he presentatioo toLonfim , "It's a honor that is •long overdue," sald G , citing lbe aceompllshplent.s of lhe under-owner of Western Camiers, ttie city's last cannery. "After his graduation from USC - which be attende4 with admirable foresight -he began an active and outstanding career as a buslnessm.an," (See BANQUET, P.•1• Z) • "Robbing Hood' LSD User By JOHN VALTERZA Of ,,.. O.lly 1'1191 '"" The Harbor Area's 17·year-old "Robin I-food" burglar ls a habitual LSD user, Newport Beach-police said today. Officers said lhe youlh admitted com- mitting several of the 140 thefts he is charged with while under the influence of the drug, officers added. .The "clean-cut" teenager, who in r~ cent days led N:ewport and Costa Mesa detectives to scores of burglary locations, reportedly confessed to at least 60 burglaries in Newport alone. About 80 were reported in Costa Mesa. Police ezpect to· clear up more. "I'd call h.im a heavy acid user," Newport Detective Arbara Cawpbell said. "He tokl us he stole a dlil:mond ring worth at least $3,000 "from a Lido . Isle home and traded It for a day's supply of LSD on a street comer in Santa Ana." Tha,t's lht way tl\e youth worked, ac- cording to polie<O?. )Us loot, ~ing at least $2,i,000 in Newport, has disappeared -as gifts to girls, male friends or just spent. Campbell said the burglar "liked money the be.!t, but In this city he took jewelry, cameras, or anything else that coul~ be easily sold." , DAILY PILOl Miff ...... ·Tax Cut Not Automatic The si.lspecl, Campbell, sli.ld, comes £rom a r~pected Santa Ana family. "I'd say be \lQ above average in in· telligence and relatively clean cul. He'li very cooperative." TRIUMPHANT TRIO -These three Newport Beach men were hon· ored at chamber banque.t Thursday ni~t. From left are Walter R. • Longmoor, Ne~rt Harbor Chamber's "Citizen of the Year;" Wil- liam C. Ringj winner of Newport Junior Chamber's "Distinguished Service Award," and Judge Robert Gardner, Newport Harbor Cham- ber's "Man of the Year.'' For New Preserve Areas The youth told Campbell that he "got In with ""the wrong crow~." He's on probation on a marijuana charge at AutoniaUc reduction or lax nses!menl! on 1JiroPtrty a p ~r o-v e d Wed.D_e~ay for agrlcu~~ . preser-1' status is not likely, County Tax Assessor 'Bennie' Mixer Couple Arrested; Big Cache Seized PLAYA DEL REY -Police Thursday stirred up a batch of trouble for a Highland Part couple who they allege were using' a cement mixer to blend batter for black market barbiturat~. Officers who raided the home said they also seized more than $1 million worth of amphetamines and commented that "There was enough stuff in there to get evefyone in Los Angeles County high." Also confiscated in the raid were two electrically operated machines capab'te ol. turning out "bennies'' at the rate of 120 pill& per minute, police reported. i Jailed were lack Darby Blair, 50, and Ramona del Rio, 45, who, according to police, had set up their clandestille labor•Wrr ln the fashionable area er PhrytWJel Rey. PoJife also {lieized 20 pounds of pure ampbetanilne~ l 140 pounds of am- phetamines nui:ed with a cellulose bon- ding agent and 1,000 pounds of addiUonal cellulose."They said lf the enUre quiintlty had been made in "bennies,'' It would have netted a street sale of almost $1 million. Stock Market. NEW YORK (UPI) -.siock market advances outmmbered decllnea today but UJual Pre-weekend evening up preaure narrowed the upside margin. Trading was brisk. (See quotationst Pages 12-13). present. .;J . ~ The youlh rela~ a bl...J.L"'°"~ Andrew J. Hinshaw saif!Tbursday. . New~ detecUves ~bout H~nsha.w said no logl~ e.stim1te could ;;.fQ~~:t~ ... be• made of redwtions unlit tJt • ~19Jftgb" to"Vdfi' agreemenli'for the preserves are signed, ca; $.ll6cl'.wttlri .. loot. .·. w,te-f Confli~ts· ~ ~.Prisom;. Director Asks '« • " System 'Understanding' The "9U'\1Y· plarDlng department had ;:11e.~'lild,beblnever iemein~ ~µr, estimated that taxes for the Irvine Ranch wgefe e .!' when he wu ; 'bJllli, · . Campbell oald. t and Rancho MJ.s&on Viejo would be The detective termed the youth's case reduced by $1JI million.· "amaz.ing.'' "ll agreements permit only pure farm The youth wu "oo loan" to the use the planning department estimates Newport dep?Jiment from Costa Mesa ould be t ., u1w~'-~ "d "A 1'hursday. w correc • ~1.1:1w sat • PoUce ·in Huntingtoo Beach and other wide number of pemutted uses on the coast cl~ ·also upect to quesUon the other band might nulli!y the w_hole boy. purpose of the agreement." He pointed out that much of the land included in the preserves ls not producing anything of value. • Hinshaw said it would take 24 ap- pralsers from his staff, working three months, to revalue the land which he now a,:sesses on ij.s f)otenUal use. The supervisors appro\·ed preserve status for 56,000 acres of Irvine land and 32,944 of Rancho Mission Viejo. IQ Tests· Banned In Schools ·of Li\. Los Angeles city school system Thurs- day baMed IQ tests In gJ"J'des one through three in an attempt to prevent children from being erroneously labeled unintelllgent . . Recent studies that have shown classroom performance ls often based on the eipectalions of teachers were behind the board or education's unanimous action. DlfficulUes with JQ tests are. ex- perienced most often by Span!Jb-speaking youngsters who have trouble with the EogJish.lanluage tests. Th e F.ducaUonal Is:sue Coordinating Ccmmlttee, a group of M e x I c a n - AIM:rlcans from eaat&!de Los A.Qgeles where the student walkouta occurred last spring. brought the I.uue to a head. Call Girl Ring Witli Trading Stamps Cracked SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Police broke up a high class prostituUon opera- tion Thursday in which the girls charged .$30 and the madam .gave away trading stamps as a t>onus. Vice aquad oWcen arrested rive women and a man when they raided an apartment in Pacific Heights -one of San Francisco's most exclusive neighborhoods. There were six telephones in the plush ar.artment to handle appointments, police sltid, as well a:s a "trick book" with th' names of more than 100 customers -some of them very prominent bu!itlessmen. "Witt\, a $.10 trick, they'd giYe Blue Cbip stamps," said inspect.or Rick Gam- ble. Arre'sted were Marlene ''Brandy'' Rasmus, 26, the alleged madam, and her 37-year-Old hUSband, Russell. who was charged with conspiracy. Police alao arreflt.ed four young women identified ~ the working staff. They were Michelle Long, 21~ Chelsea Banb, 21, Winifred Landolphi, 27. and Candy Roberts, .22. ' The m~ ·'fh° runs Califor_nia's 27,000- ifunale.-. prioon system Thursday night pleaded for 11o.nderstanding" of state rehabilitation programs in a talk before 400 Newport Beach community leader! at the Balboa Baj: Clu~. Ray M. Procunior, director of the Department .of Corrections, c I t e d furniture-making by Inmates as an ex- ample of the problem. He said the products of the training are sold to1 other state agencies, and thts1 has respited tn ••ronnlct" with the lumltute IndiJBtry. The alternative· to using the lrmates' · furniture' to good purposea, he said, would be to · destroy It. "And il that were dOQe 1 It· >YoWd ·destroi the Wtiativt of tbe .men being trained to. return to a ~ful occupation on their release." ''We have to be realistic,'' be said, "and must, 'with the public's cooperation and understanding, take every o~ portunlty to make the correctional System ·work." Procunior emphash:ed he didn't intend to "isolate the furniture business.'' "But we keep running Into this reac- tion, people say we' understand the pro- blem, we 're with you, bul just cet ou& . of my bUl!lineSS." He said not all of the slate's pri&ooers are salvageable. "We . do have peoOle wbo . ahould never be, in touCh -wilb''the world again." But hl'.s big concern was with -ool beyond ~· • "The last . thior you aboulil · do for IOll1eOflO In trou\;le Is ·to 'feel tonY for him. Then you get bogged down in the lrouble togethet. You have to help blln, by provjdl!ill • reaIIstlc cllmBto in whl'ch he can grow and learn. $15 Million Bond Vote . i !f:'1~ Achieve. Two Goa~. lly THOMAS roRTUNE the 2$.l"'r life of .. Jhe bands. , ot ""' .,..... '*'* tt.tt 'nle 1 bond · propoa.al l!mphislza two A question of keeplna: pace wllh <>tie It to •get. 1hadentl· aftJdouble tre>-j '4You, as employers and clvlc leaden. lhrougb understandlng can belp ,praridt this opportwllty for him to make a:ood agaln." * * * Newport Jaycees Honor Bill Ring . ' As Top . (J.tizen Yoathlul Corona del Mar Realtor William C. "BUI" Ring 'l'bundlj', allht received tbe Newport. Harbor· Juntor Chamber of. Commerce's first anou.al ''Distinguished SerTlce'' Award. Rh!g, 31, was ·halled by Oakley-Froet. Jay~ award cb~an. for having "con- tributed the most to' hit community and to his profession in lhis and ~ yean." The honoree, a partner 'in H8rbor Investment Co., la past presldedL of the local Board or Realtors, past p\'<11- dent .of the Corona de1 Mar Cb.amber of. Commerce, past president of the Newport Harbor C h a m b e r • s Com- modqte 's Club ·and once· served on tbe dty'S Board or Zoalng-Adjustmenll. Frost mentioned several other com- munify organisations to wbi'ch Ririe lw contributed hit time end · -ates, ...S .observed: ·~1·1 qu!1e •·ilot ol dvlc l\(XO!!lplishments fora -wllo Is only 31." ·•The presentiitlon wo , made 11 Ibo .Newport Harbor Qwn);>er's annuat awards banquet al the Bolboa Bay. CIUb. Orange Weatlt'r· Gu... wba!? ~o ra\11 tllll. week· e'l'i -.'" at IWI ~·. ·Wlial fllo weatherman soys. lnlload loOk 10< lllll11Y, «11>1 . aldea Mith' . ltm;lera- tures ra0gf111 from a dllll1' 57 to a downriglJI cold 40. INSmE TODAY growth will race Harbor ArM v.-'1on! by -fall. lbll woui.t be dona by purchase ol 40 por1'able du&rooms. when they go to the palls Feb. U to (School offtials aa71 Portables are , vote on a flS.9 million Newport-Mesa sub&tantlll classroom building& which are Ma.z:tmu,,. and minimum di· mtmlo!\I are 81.3 cmd 36.B for boals In the rmewal oi. Ill< Upton Cup cho1"nge mets in MMch in San Diego. Paoc JS. Unified School District bond Issue. not deiigned to be fl'oquently moved, bu~ The hood ~measure i3 designed to take nevertheless, are 1'loc11t.able. Tbty re- youngstera off double sessions by next quire a foundation and uUllty t~lns.). tall and to meet anticipated enrollJnent The second goal Is to -converi tw~year jacreases for the next four yean. AlmMt Intermediate ICbools to three-year mid- all or the money would go for new dle tcbools. School aulhor\Uts aay a daurq;ims. • mlh lhrough eijhih grade ocboOI Is Thetl are 53,561 rerl!tered vot.ers ell· prererable froin •ri educational stana- gible ID vote. Two-th"lrm approval is point. Deeded-for tbe bands lo pus. 'f'bOy ""1' lh.,. aJao !lo a dollan and Sdlool authorlllea estlnlate bond pass-cenll rtuon for the charige. Elemen- D!f.l'L.T PILOT lttfr,,_.. '""" .. r.=,. ': c-..,,.. tj..Jt -.. ·-" --.. -' .. ............. ' .......... lMt ...... ...,. , .. _ .. -... .. ---= ................. ., --.. --.... """" -... ,, --"""..,... •n -. -.. -. FIFTlf GRADERS ASSEMBLE OUTlIOE PORTABLE CLASSROOM AT PAULARINO SCtfcioL 1p' wwld eo11111e """"' o1 a ~.ooo 1ary ICboolJ .could absorb 1-1n1 borne an e1tr1 1$.75 In ..... -)'W', enn>Umenl .il Ille aii!h arada . .,.. • 1-Ina (o a muimum ol 117.25 In "movod. G<"'3~ II m caoUy to -" .. .._ ' -. --.. .... ( MoMy f'""'t"-11 hM lfa<!la!t Wouhl P .. for 40 Now 0noa ) ~ )leln, ~ .. .., !1lertalter for IS.. h&• Z) ti I I I I' ,.--· " Foul Play Out Scorpion Loss Remains Puzzle WASlllNGTON (UPI) -A navy court of inquiry hi.I been unable to dettrrnJne what caused lhe los1 of the nuclear subm.arlne Scorpion, It was learned to- day. llowever, the court, after an intensive ll·•ffk review, ruled out foul play or Abatact. It concluded there was no evldlnce that the vessel's nuclear reactor plant wu lnvolved. The submarine WIS lost la.at May ln t.be AU&ntlc Ocean, fOO miles 500thwest of the Azoroa. It diaappeared In 10,000 feet of water. A llDl1DW')' of findinis by the naval court of inquiry wu ready !or release b]' Ille lld..,.. Department. Tbe Dl'IJ panel coocluded : 1'Tbe cer-tain cause ci the Jou of Scorpion cannot be uca1a1Ded from any evidence now available. 0 It found ''no evidence Utill collisio n with another rubmarlne or ship caused Scol'P..ion's 1085. '' It hlrtber said there was "no sea mountain 1n the area of ti1' Scorpion's loss with which the .submarine might have collided." And It declared "no evidence of any kind to suggest foql play or sabota&t WU found by lhe court." 11te Navy said It Is continuing its lnve.stlgaUon of the May 27 dlsaster in which 99 died. The deep-dlvlng submersible Trieste 11, will be moved early this year from the WeSt Coast to the AUanUc to take addlUonal photographs and make OD-th~ spot observation of portions of the Scor· ploo't bull. The Navy announced only Ocl 31 that the hull apparonlly had been located. 35 on UCI Fac~ty Seeking ,. Rehiring of 2 Professors Silldenll .,. nqt the only ones seetin& r<loJlallmeot of three fired UC !nine asdatant professors. A eroup that in· eludes 3$ young faculty memberS is mating the wne demand. Tbe croup, IS prole"'°"' a!ld !O graduate students, calls Itself the New Unlveralty Conference. Spokesman is Auistallt Profe.eor of Physics George Relllr. Reiter says it ls their position that firings of Stephen Shapiro and Donald Brannan should be rescind~ and the retommendaUon for firing of George Kent be retracted, unW inequities can be taken out of the prt.sent review and tenure system. He cites three inequities: -There is no provision for review of a department's recommenda~on againsi jlUl.ior professors. -Only tenured members are appointed to faculty committees which Is against the common law notion of jury by one's pe<rs. -Evaluallon is done In secret by an anonymous committee with ho chance tor the person being evaluated to be present. Reiter said the New University Con- ference is not yet sure wh at can be done about these inequities, but Indicated the group probably will work through the academic senate. He said they also don't know yet lf lhe changes could be implemented locally or if they would have to be worked out for the UnJversity of California system as a whole. Frona Page 1 BANQUET. • • aaid Gardner. "His public service is limitless. He ts a past president or the Chamber or Commerce, served on the city Planning Commission from 11H5 to 1959, and that's a thankless position, and served nn the Coast College board from 1948 to 1968." RECEIVED PLAQUE After Longmoor received the plaque with a quiet word of thanks, Gardner tum~ the microphone over to Coun- cilman Shelton, who was one of only a f\andful -including Mrs. Gardner -who knew the identity 0£ the "Man of tbe Year." Shelton ~on(essed his job was a tnugh one: keeping the name of the honoree a secret until the very la.st minute. But he was equal to the task. "Jack," he began, "may I have the envelope please." Barnett hand~ him a huge sealed manila envelope. "It seems," said Shelton, with Gardner seated beside him, ''that the recipient hasn't arrived yet." Shelton then told a few jokes. "As a councilman,'' he explained, "I'm an expert al stalling." Barnett, after peering at the hick of the room , fi nally gave Shelton an elaborate signal to go ahead. GAVE ENVELOP E "Well," 81.id Shelton, "he's here at last." Then he gave the envelope to Gardner. He opened it. It was empty. When tbe chuckles subsided, Shelton rt.ached into hi& pocket and pulled out his notes. "Our recipient." he said, "was once a ticket-tater at the Rendezvoos DAllY PILOT Oll:AHGC COA1T PUI Lt'"tJIO COU•MIY .......... w,,., •rnlffl'll •"" ,.~1.,,.. lhtnu' Kt•••I f.•111< lho"''' A. ~w11tl>int M&~hl"" [tl1or J1••"'• F. C1Ui .. 1 ,,~1 Niu•~ H~w-1 ltKll •a•.,!:11.,, (II>' l!t!'-< 01•...:l<.f Ne.,,..t ...... Offlt • 2111 w,,, ••'"'' ,,.,, .. ,,., Mtili•t A.1.111n: r.o. ••• 1e1s, ,1,,, 0--Cott• .IMM: lJI "'"' 111' S"•"' Li..-t.ecf' t11 ,.,... • .1..- """''"'''.., k«~ lit ith 5,.,,, 0Atl., PILOT, •1111 -"IC11 It < .......... n,. -'""""'· ....... iww. ... My t«..-t ...... 41,., ill ~·I• .. ..,,, ..... W LH-MK!\, '""'--' .,«II. (Mio AVH. l'tu<'lf~ ~l(h ..... ,_II•~ Vtl~t. •-wllfl • H ....... ('II•'-· Of-( .. ,, "lltllltf>WI• C_..,. ~Mtlflt •'""'• Alt OI 1711 Wiii aaltlN II,,., Ntw-1 l,t<ll, Mii J. w •• , •• , '"""· (lilf ~ .. , ... ,.. •• 1114) "42·4Jll CIHllAH ,llftrtW1111 MJ.J611 c-·•·· ,..._ °'-,.,.., • .....,..,.. ,.......... Ne -,...... ·-"·'~ Mllcwif.I ""'""° fll .-f!Kt-"'' fllt'flll .... , ... ·~ '"'"'"'" ,_,.. ~ ""''""' .. ~-,_,_ """'"" ..... -· "'1111 H• ................ ,,... Cea!• !NM. Q !illll'MI· w-•i.t""' ff U"°"1 11.n .......,,, .... lfltll U -"""I ll"lllWI' ......... ! ....... llJt "'°"' Ballroom. He has been almost a life-Ume resident of Newport and won the Bronze Star as a Navy Commander in World War 11 • "In 1931, he was a deputy district attorney, in 1939 be became a city judge" -at this point, Judge Gardner's face r eddened. He, along with everybody else, knew Shelton's "secret." Shelton conUnued , noting that, at 35, the "Man nf the Year" became Orange County's youngest Superior Judge and in the years since had contributed mightl· ly to the understanding of law en· Iorcement problems, especially juvenile problems, through• speeches and articles published naUonally. "Ladies and Gentleman," said Shelton, ''heah come de judge - a man with deeprooted fondness for his community, who has given support to every worthwhile cause and through it all has shared his sense of balance and humor with all of us -Robert Gardner!" Several minutes after the beaming Gardner almost speechlessly accepted the award, he closed the program with these words: "l still can't get over the shock. I know when I was standing here a few moments agn I blushed. And I haven't blushed that much since officer Baldwin caught me alter l had stolen the Balboa Island ferry!" A roar from the crowd ended the , evening. Chamber Head Stevens Lauds 'Tomorrow' Goal Newly lnst.alled Newport Harbor Cham· ber oI Commerce president Richard S. Steve.ns Thursday night pledged the organization's full cooperation with Ne111·port Tnmorrow, the city-citizens long-range goals study, "One of the great ta sks fa cing us," lie told an audience of 400 at the Balbo~ Bay Club. "is the translation of Newport Tnmorro,v ·~ gener~I principles into specific aclions. This will be nne of our major g011ls." He called the ambitious stud,y project, re.$ult.11 of which will be presented to the City Council by mid-year. "an np- porlunity for us to mold our own futu~. ·• StevtnS, who succeeded 1968 Chamber pre.s.i.dent Leon Meeks, &Cflred the lack of area planning in the past, citing as examples U)t city's frttwJy and airport problems. The 38-year-old Balboa Bay Club e.x- tcUUve atw vowed to •ltempl to "bring the newcomer" into the Chamber. "We want to Involve these people, whn have lits only with the towns they've left, In our 1ctivlUts." He said such an effort 15 vitally Im- port.ant in view or the city's currently explosive population g"°"'th. Supersonic Study Se t W ASHlNGTOri <UPI) -Pr.,ldtnl Nixon has ordertd a fresh study of "all aspects" of \lf controver!lal superlOILic airliner prot'lm. F,..111 P .. e J . BONDS •.• expand eWllng llCbools than lo bulld new ooea. J NEW &a!OOLS The bond luue provides !or QON!ruc-Uon of llne 111W ocboolt-tn olemen- llry IChool In Eutblufl, and Wakeham and Pallsade1 middle schools. The iichool district already owns the two middle 5chool Eilts: $400.000 would be ~ lo purchase the Eastbluff elementiry site from the Irvine Company. School district enrollment ls projected to increase by 4,700 students over the present 26,446 in the next four years. Existing school buildings already a~ filled beyond capa .. ity, aceordi.ng to school officials. There are I,300 students on double session now, and they say there will be 2,100 next September lf the bond issue fails. For every new student enrolled, two go on double sessions. The present double sessioning -use of a classroom by a morning class and an afternoon class -~bortens the period of instruction by one-half hour each day. The Joss per day is equivalent of one and one-half years In 12 years ol schooling, authorities point out. All bul about three percent of the bond request is for new classroom11, e1panalon or alterations and 1 I t e purchase to handle lhe growing enroll· ment. BUILD F ACILJTIES A little over one percent is to cnn- solidate bu.s garages and build warehouse fa cilities now being leased. School of- ficials see this as an economy mnve in the long run. lt also would make room for Newport Harbor lligh expanaion by removing buses from that campus. Not Included in lhe bond i'81.1e which were in the one 16 mnnths ago are purchase of school buses, libraries for elementary schools and an admlnistraUon building. School officials say they arrived at their estimates oi cost to build cla!srooms for the growing student population by consuJUng with architects, Including Kermit Darius, W l r 11 a m Blurock, William Hench, Danie I Carmichael, and Richard x,mp, and with school consult.ant Jerry Resnick. PARED ESTIMATES School board members pared the architects' estimated $17.5 million sum to meet building needs for fnur years to $15.9 million, Trustees said they are hopeful ·a longer high school day with staggered schedules can be worked out to accommodate more students in the same number of classrooms and that way pick up the slack. School authorities say the bond mnney would last four years but because of the time it takes to plan and build school facilities another bond iuue pro- bably would be called in two and one-half years. ll probably wnuld be for a filth high school, another intermediate school and further high school expansions. W I -· Here is how the bond money would be spent: New Classrooms (40 portable, 175 pennanent) , .... , ...... $131096,000 Eastblulf Site ... , . . . . . . . . .. • • · 400,000 Middle School Alterations .. • 1,500,000 High School Alterations . . . . . • 500,000 Warehouse and Bus Garage . . 172,500 New Equipment, Planning and Bond Costs . .. ..• . . . .. . 231,500 Total . _ ............ _ $15,900,000 r -.. ~ .... Zllml'MllO'aW"'11UlDlU- tr tr tr Mayor Marshall Urging Support In Scl1ool Bonds Newport Beach r.taynr D o r e c. n Marshall Thursday night lssued a personal, and public, plea £or support of the Feb. 11 Newport-Mesa school bond issue. She made the unusual pitch -for ! municipal executive -in a brief talk to 400 members of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce at a Balboa Bay Club banquet. "Population growth has ex er I e d tremendous pressures on <lnr school system, as well as on SiJ:Y government," she said. "The $tS.9 mi llion bond issut is being proposed to corrtet these defl· ciencies. Both the City Council and your chamber have endorsed it. "These endorsements renect t h e recognition that a tnp quality educalional system is e!sential to the soclal. economic and po\ltical well being of our community " Ne'v Filibuster Figl1ter Propose d WASHINGTON (AP) -DemocraUc le1der Miie Mansfield, nf Montana. of. fered today a proposed constituUonal am~dmrnt to make it easier for the Stnate to cut off filibuster!. Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.), the assistant majority leader, announced his support of Mansfield's propasal. It 'llo'ould limit debate by a vote of thret- flflhs of those voting. rat.Mr tht1n the prtsent requirement or t"o-thlrds ap- pro\'al. Asian Flu on Waue; Death Toll Now 5,828 ATLANTA !UPI) -The Asian llu epidemic that has killed at least $,8211 per.sons since il began in the Unltei States lasl fall is lingering tn the SOuth, Northwtst and Far west but •ppe1r1 to h a v t ptakQd a n d is on the wane e!M!whtrt. ' Harbor Stand Detailed Newport Tells Cities League Need for Aid RepresentaUve1 nt lG Orange County cities met Thursday night to further dlscun pnsslble dl.ssolutlon of the Orange County Harbor District and beard Newport Beach arUculate Its posiUon on the proposal. So far, n1ne n'IUnicipallUes within the Orange CoWlty Clulpter of the League of California Cities have passed reso1u- t!O"S favoring dlsmembennent of the 33-year-old special di.strict. Bi.:t Newport Beach -seat of the county's largest pleasure boat harbor -isn't among them. Former Newport mayor and present Councilman Paul J . Cruber spelled out hls city's position in detail at the cities league session in Friedemann Hall, Or- ange. In brief. Newport city government has lauded the league for Its study of the Harbor District problem. of the Harbor District, Hirth noted th.at Newport is taking a "wait and see" position. Notably, what Newport Is wiiUng to see Is how much money support It will get from Orange County In operaUn,g harbor and beaches for the benefit of lhe entire eounty population. Hirth explalned, "The first step toward dislolutlon of the Harbor DllU1ct will be to get the majority of clues (13 of 25) to back the action. Then a com- mittee must work oot fundamental con- cepts -who takes what burden in costs -then present the Idea.. ''In Newport, we would like to see a fair solullon regarding who acwally patrnl! the harbor -shares the costs -and benellts from a regional opera· tlon." So far, no Orange County c\Ues have passed a resolution oppc>Sing the dealh of the Harbor District. La Ila.bra City Councilmon llal Sims told league members the proj£:Ct was ahead of schedule with the entire month of February ahead be.fore a peUtion 1nust be filed with the Local Agency Formatinn Commissinn (LAFC). Tn date, La Habra, Sant.a Ana, Yorba Llnda, Tu!tin, Cypress, Placentia, }lun· tington Beach, Los Alamitos a n d Westminster city councils have approved a resolutinn reducing the harbor district lo an integrated county department or ~ harbors, beaches and parks. Sims said on1y a majority or 13 of the county's 25 cities was needed to forward the project. Public hearings will be held on the issue if approved by the LAFC and the Board of Supervisors. The time table call, for a special countywide elecUon in June. But Newport haa also poinled out that ll.l city taxpayers shouldn't De expected to bear costs of Newport Harbor opera· lions which are of benefit to the entire county as a regional aquatic playground. Suicide Suspected In add!Uon to Gruber, Councilman Ed Hirth was present to represent Newport at the session. Hirth noted tO<iay: Newport Beach Woman "Councilman Gruber offered a full and detailt'd explanation nf Newport's posltion nn the Harbor District. l was very pleased at the reaction nf La Habra Mayor Dean Shaw (league president) who acknowledged Newport's rote in of· fering a county-wide recreational facility. Latest Drowning Victim "Shaw suggested that tn the extent that Newport Harbor is regional in nature, cnsts should be given regional support." ~le nine Orange County citie! bave passed resoluUons favoring dissolution Real Estate Man Sued on Eviction The body of a woman that washed up on the shore of West Newport Beach Thursday morning was that of Virgini a Mowry, 41, who walk~ away horn Pat- ton Slate Hospital in San Bernardino the day before. The woman, a Newport resident, was an apparent suicide victim, according to Newport Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompsnn. He sald all evidence indicated suicide by drowning. Miss Mov:ry's body was discovered by a city employe clearing the debris· choked beach with a skip loader. lie found the dead woman lying near the water line about 100 feet south of the Santa Ana River jetty at about 8:45 a.m. She was fully clothed. Her last address in Newport Beach was 1441 Galaxy Drive. Thompson said the woman had been a mental patient for several years. Services are pending at Baltz Corona del Mar Mortuary. A Newport Beach re al estate man has ·been sued for $28,640 by a woman customer who alleges that he forced her to leave her ocean front home Jnng before she was required to and that liis actions were a "conscious, deliberate intent to injure and damage" her. Wife Warned Robert V. Brose, 4509 West Coast J~ighway is named as defendant in the With Hubby Site's H,eaded for Jail Superior Court t omplaint filed by ... I'll Take You Hnme Again, Kathleen'' Dorothy F. ~litchell. Mrs. Mitchell states ~s a ballad that had better not appear that Broae acted fnr her a year ago in ..Rbdney Storum's reput.oire. when she sold her home at 4816 Seashore -1"r the convicted dope user doe& even· Drive but insisted on her moving out ~ually win back his wife she'll go to before escrow had closed. Jail. He already i?: there -serving Mrs. Mitchell alleges that Brose was 72 days for possession of marijuana. aware lhat she was ignorant o( her Ka~een, 21, of 17662 Jacqullyn t.ane,:' rights to retain possession until escrow Huntington Beach, got that W"arning from' had completed. She states that she was Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner forced to move into a temporary apart· Thursday after she condemned her ment and that she had to move her absent husband as a "louse and a creep.'' "sick and bed-ridden 12-year-old daughter She was placed on three years condition· in the rain." al probation. Mrs. Mitchell further sta tes that she Pleading guilty to narcnUcs charges, lost her job as a result of the in-she told the judge that much of her convenience created and had to place present trouble stemmed Crom her huir her furniture in storage. band and his persistent use of illicit drugs. She intended to divorct! him, she said, but didn't seem to know in court just how or when. That's when Judge Gardner took over. "nte only way you'll make it is by getting rid of him ,'' the judge wamed ~Utlff.11. "If Y~~ don't have the guts tOCto"it'; 1'11 dO fffjfyou. ~ "In other wor.d!:, if he moves back in, you move into jail." The Storums were arrested last Augu st by Huntingtnn Beach police and narcotics agents. Storum has been described by officers as a "hard doper who uses his wife as a front to serve himself." Storum must serve three years pro· bation on comp letion of his jail term. ~~,_ ..... , .................. _2 .. ~JlllJZ~,.. ........ ll!!! .. 0 .. .... HENREDON'S WARWICK COLLECTION £ntert1Jnlnt1 IO much ft'IOf9 lft" ciout when the refrtduntntt ire right In the mktdl• of lhlnp. With lhl• bft.utlfl.ll coch&n chts1 from Hernedon'1 W1rwldt· colledlon, you enP/ fvnctlon wtch fT1lr. A lowly piece of fumltuN, tttperbly styled, that doll doubali duty tt a ~blr24"Wtd..17'~ •nd 1~ MJh. c... .. Jl now. ~ Henredon f- You11 sit right down and write a letter. If Vol' can Ulll I clak 1nywhere ln your homl" you won'I be 1blt to NSIH this on• from Hentedon;1 W1rwlc:lt collectk:ln. I\ w!Mrb ~nt .. uon of th• Queen Anne tnanMr, be1utlfully formtd in rich Aftlc:an mahopny llshttntd with. Jnlald botdtts of mcplP. and w.lnut WflMtS. GrM:kM and 1r1ceful, bis en6Ush fOf rout ~ strw1 f!nOUch to 10 ~r-. Com• In ind p.ill up a dl1fr. S.IO<lod Groupo of ~--Horii• en S.lo Tltrovgh Fobru1rv Honroclo<i Upt,ol......, 15% off. Horii ... Upl!oldory 20% Off NEWPORT BRACH 1n1 w_,cllff Dr., 642·2090 °"" ,. ..... ., 'm. ' ....... , ......... " 0..,. c....., '*"11tJ • ,- ' I 1-----------------------...,.-:-----...-~--~--=,=-=-.... -.. "'"==·=-==="'"""--~·ill! i Frl41J, -, ll, IM •J ----------DAILY PILOJ ;;s_ •• l Freewau Problem Jflove t.oo Slotvl9 : _, Many Views of Role ML ~ducationBoar~ Ft;>ul Up Sclwols g - In Future of State Bf JAMES BOW memberl, and for the Calllllmla St•te and co11q.. have cont!nuod to 11'11 AP EncaUo. Wrikr Colleges Board ol Trusteel, tl members. for their own weUart, and tbelr ftlln SACRAMENTO (AP) -Calllomla's Since the 19111 Century, regenla have salary proposab. ;;_ t<tucallon atabliJluneol 11 a lanJle of exercised brood eoosuluUooal powers llEPUILICAH8 GAIN • ~OtTOlt'I MOTE1 ,.,...,._ 1hl ,.,,. d...UC manl'-t•Oont o1 --u1111Dn ,.,......,,,.. Ill C1lllomll ,,.. ~ ,,,_,.,. ll'd -· TIIW ''' l lit;uf.lfd In 11111 flN1 l r\ki. In • -i. Ill C.llJorllW• trl\<ll"Olt-_ .. By BILL STALL SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Freeway. It b viewed by some as a monumental achieve- ment; condemned by others as a eelf-perpetuating monster. The freeway system has changed the face ol California, led to creation of entirely new citie!, and established pat-· terns of living for millions. What sbou}d be t b e freeway's role in establishing California's future? What bas been wrong in the past'? SOME VIEWS Here are some vleWs: -William Bronson, con- servationist -author, writes: "Park.lands have been torn, cities have been shattered and agricultural lands have been invaded in the process of building the widely heralded and anxiously awa ited 12,500- mi!e California freeway system ... without doubt the largest boon -doggle in history." -The State Chamber of Commerce's Freeway Supf>ort Committee believes that "as a matter of individual freedom, Californians must be provided with, and are willing to pay for, a system of free· flowing freeways which will permit them to use private automotive transportation if and when they choose to do so." -The new State Develop- ment Plan Program says, "California's highway building record is truJy spectacular. However, it has not ac· companied this remarkable record with a corresponding advance in its ability. . • to use highway expenditures as a means of positively in· fluencing or guiding the use of land to improve the con· ditions of urban life." -"From Sea to Shining See," the report of the President's Council on Recrea- tion and Natural Beauty, notes that "strip development of the land adjoining highways is perhaps the most obvious ei:· ample of man's disregard of urban and rural beauty,'1 NEW CHALLENGE boanll and eommllslono, movin& ,.... over the unl..,.lty, tis ochoob and col-• ' i olo!lly lhan mllllant llllldenla demand I'll" and fees. Ila memben serve IS. Republlcuo """ ue gaining ·ill · strictly for farm use, with but •••••••• fm« lhan monv -·y year terms. nwnben -lndlvlclllllt in char,. ' --.... ~ ·-of Callfornla ed~ The jaaJor .... ' no billboard.!. It limlts com-re.allle. 1be muter plan authorir.ed the collee;e i-es• &OYsnia.I board members an eh mercial dev~nt to Uie If no revisioqs art made ln the next trustees, but they don't have the ume ..,. .fed bv C:C.V w Utt area arou.nd'tw~ ol the dozen 20 yws, a cbUd entering klodergarten powen as regents to allocate money "~ by • R :f:' tiecauee interchanges planned in the thb winter who later altendl junior granted by the legislature aod tllo ~ w~crui:.,. ~ ~ti.;, ~ county. college and finishes postgraduate school governor. In the recent controversy ovtt a M maJmitJ' ct. Req:an appointft$ will have nearly as many governing Gov, Reagan's propoaal for higher educ.a-plus RtpubUcan Mu Ra.fferif, atite MAKE CHANGES board members .u teacWs OV1!rseeing Uon tuition, regents had the pcwer to superintendent of public instructJon.:"9TI But even before the higbwaf his 9Cboolln&. reject Cl' approve the plan. But trusteee exofficlo member. _,,. and i n t e r c b a n g e s are The school district which runs ~:. would have to have l•'"'•'aUve annrnval -.. -rr· • The Boanl of Regenia includes eld>I: completed pressures are being kindergarten must rely heavily on state U they want to lmpose tuition. ex-officio members : Reagan, Lt. ~ brought oo cowity ofliclala to aid and, by law, oo policies of the New proposa.18 in the legialalure would FA Reinecke, .Republlcan Assembly .Mf.· make change! and excep~ IO-member State Board of EducaUon, reduce the powers el U:.e regents, short.--jority Leader Robert T. Monagan zr says Donald, "Gouge, an appointed by the governor. The chief ening their ~ to eight years, as Tracy, Rafferty, UC President ChariM associate cqu.nty planner. He administrator of those policies Is the trustees now serve. J: Httch, UC alwnnl president Rofgt said some other ~ties are state superintendent of public instruction, LlN!S OF POWER C. Pettitt ol. Los Angeles, ll*: not liv~ µp "'-to th 11 elected in a statewide vote every four The lines of power t'UMing between agriculture board president Allan Grjflt legislature s niandate. years. the State Capitol and educalion governing and James Q. BreU, president of &he "One thing is certain," OTHER BOARDS boards also are tangled. The IOVtrnor San Francisco Mecbanlcs ln.1tltute. 'J'tie.t Gouge said, "'the real inteut "'flf The junior college sWdent also b su~ technically is preaident of both the serve by virtue of the positions they of the legislature ts not being ject to a local gov.,.rung board. But regents' and trustees' board!:. But their held. • carried out ••. There w.., a aince last year, a new law bas sanctioned meetings are run by a chalrman, one The 19UH:enttiry reason fpr lncludµi.g sort of vacant threat in the a statewide 22·member Board o f of the member• appointed by the the posts now held by Grant and Brett-· . law. The state's bluU bu been over 1 mo g -P 1 o_d u c i DI )Jave 1ncrea.sin& industrial ac-GovemOn for the Community Colleges. governor. was to have repreantaUves of bQlll called and notblng hu been emissions from all types ol. Uvity." The new board already bas begun plans The master plan also created the agriculture and industry l>D the Board done about It." mot.or vehicles. Such problem.! lnvO:lving the to supervlae junior college curriculum. Coordinating Council for Higher Educa~ or Regen ti, ,.. In hls-controversial book, Still, Maga says, "There's state's natural resourcu are 1be community college overseers tlon, an ad\'i!ory group to the governor, BROWN uHow to Kill a Golden state," no way to bring about a quick extremely complex. There are already have tangled with local boards the university, t.ke state colleges and Of the remaining appointed r,genUi, author Bronson predict s , solution to this thing." no easy solutions. and with the State Education Department the junior College!. Some lnd.Jvidual col-five were. appoln~ by form~ r "there will be no sentimental By Isa:!, the smog produced But author Bronson argues, over jurbdJction.. tege or university proposals, such u Republican Gov. GoodWi!J 1. '.KDJght, ballad written for Interstate by each auto will be only "Nothing is impossible; if we The Master Plan.for Higher F.ducation, salary raises, are submitted to the coun-seven by fonner Democra~ Gj>v. Ed- 5... a [raction of today's levels. can go to the moon we can enacted by the legiBlature nine years · cijl· mund G. Brown and fom by Reagan. _ •. While planning experts But, he adds, "We'll ha ve recru.te a decent en-ago, spells out powers for the University But the councll'1 power ls limited. In addlUon Reagan appointed Gnmt speak of the need for alternate _m_ore __ m_o_1or __ v_ehi_._cl_es_._w_e_•1_1 _v_iro_nm_e_n_t._" _______ 01_c_.iu_orrua __ · _Board ___ of __ 11e_g_en_1a_,_1_1 __ Aod __ in_the __ 1e_g1s1_· _•_lure __ • both __ the_uru_·v_"'1_1y __ and __ n._ineck __ e_lo_llielr __ 1u11_11me __ <>_ffices __ .-'.'_,;.· forms of transportation - primarily urban rapid transit -most Californians have fail- ed to agree on· a way to pay for them. The San Fran· cisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District is having trouble finishing Its 7Hnile system -short of mooey. Los Angeles area voters rejected a $2.5 billion rapid transit bond issue last Nov. 5. POST CRmCAL The state's leg isl a ti ve analyst, A. Alan Post, criticizes the legislature for failing to develop a general s t a t e w i d e transportation policy. • ' T h e fundamental pro- blem," Post says, "is to reconcile the conflict between traru;:portation need.1 and com- munity values." The state re;isters more than 12 million motor vehicles, including some 10 million passenger cars. The fumes they spew mingle w i th California's fabled sunmine to produce an infamot!S California product: photo· chemlcal smog. As it has pioneered In freeways and creation of smog, so California h a s pioneered in smog control, beginning with a statewide law in 1960 for control devices on vehicles. But again a California problem h a d blossomed virtually out of con- trol before it could be dealt with effectively, SftfOG cmEF John Maga, the state's smog control chief, describes the situalion this way: "I think the problem isn't getting any worse. We've leveled off." The 1969 legislature adopted the nation's strictest controls At ..• FOSTER'S AND APPlfAN~:s lAUNDR'f SPECIALS Automatic washer llas3 cycle sekJictions, 2 51lee~ super SURGUATOR agilalor, m:ltisiwl Magic>Mix filter. Matdling ~ . dryer hasl ctr,ilig heats,tast drying system . and eJdl'll lqa a-Bo!h have special cool-down an tor Pwmanent Press fablics. a,, llllW llld -· California's resources agen- cy chief, Norman B. Llvermore Jr. -whose pet peeve is billboards -says California faces "a tremen- dous challenge" i n con· structlon of the new Interstate 5, the Westside Freeway, down the western San Joaquin Valley. Due for completion by 1972, the 2J7 miles of road will cost roughly $210 million and eventually carry most of the San Francisco -Los Angeles traffic. The 1963 legislature foresaw ;::o==========:.I possible strip development, considered it undesirable, and direcled the counties to zone the land along the right of way to preserve the natural beauty of the area. Fresno County has zoned s mile-wide strip on each side FAVORITES Easy to do ... just call or come in. ~ ~-AO»t. :. JofJ niJi Cl tlJ/~e..tttti'"" MUTUAL SAVINGS AND LOAN A••OCIATIO ... 2867 Easl Coast High'#ay • CorOM Del Mir, C.llf. 92625 Telephone 675·5010 MIO onlCI • "9IODIA ~u r. cotowio M.'IO. • .~£._ CAI.tr, t 1 11~. ' -a-1u-. .. c. a "Whirlpool !:!"'.ti*' Giant 19.3 ... ft.• ... ., ... ...,..__ only32l4"..illodol-·-· ..... 226-lh. 1-.~---Jol-O>ld-­b~: c I ........ ..----:9J S38995 ............... v ............... ......... IWtlftlllN•NI; 111 'tjf1"'"'*' M lki PW••-wlllo4c,dal. auti1mli:~dilpii-,ct.-9iae­..,,_.,._._..,_,..._fl>r ..,... • ...,dllhrr hll•••c...,._, T_ll" .. I ..... -....... bJ' Cati I llf AV'•I Help SbllP Olt ..... DISt 7 '"" Foronly $20995 STNl S.Wf lmlfltktW ...... tas&qde Ill :•km.••• ?ua Ml8lc a1a' lflk:I• u:inJI ... ,,_.. _.,' : 1oi. ...,..2-ei-I c1o,. ...... Tllllblel'lwConlN. Balli ,__.,, ctJCl.dowr1 caratorf'lir:•m Plasflllltcs. Spoc:lal Ylkle-S-_, w. .... LSA-7800; """"· l.SE-7800 FREE DELIVERY AND NORMAL INSTALLATION ON ALL WHIR~L APPLIANCES FOSTER'S TV 17185 BROOKHURST ol WAINO 968-1234 s::::·.:.= 546-2606 - • ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-=___J ' • j I I l ' •• I DAU.Y ·~ EDITORIAL PAGE I • • • Marina-Hard Decision •. No doobt to tbe .surprise of some) Newport Beach city councilmen did not reject out of hand advertising executive Stephen C. Auld'i grand dream of a 3,900- boat, breekwateNnclosed marina off West Newport. ... Councilmen instead agreed to give It further study. The propo<al, which includes a Huntington Harbour type marina-reeidenU.al development behind Newport Shores, will receive that further study on Feb. 24. There are three elements of the plan that especially intrigue municipal officials. .. First is tile breakwater -an. obvious, it would seem, solution to the recurring beach erosion problen1 in West Newport. Al pr,esent, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers i:i experimentin g with another solution, the installatioo of a field of groins. The steel structures. of course, aren't very attractive. But they might well be prelerable to a surf-silencing breakwater, if they work . . I\ second element of considerable inter~st to cou.n· cilmen is the ''Genoa Bay" inland marina proposal. If that can be worked out without the offshore structures, breakwater included, the city would be delighted. But it seems unlikely that one can be accomplished without the other. The third elemept arises from the first two-reve· nue, lats of it, for the city. It would come from property taxes, sales taxes and marina fees. So far though, this product of one man's imagina· tion is j4st one big bubble. A preliminary engineering feasibility study by the .o\rmy Corps of Engineers might quite quickly burst that bubble. On Feb. 24, councilmen will have to decide \Yhcthl'r to go that far with it. Their deci sions likely \'.1111 rest on the views of the city staff and on more informalion from Mr. Auld. It may also be greatly influenced by political pres· • Draft Reform '. ~gain Before ... Pongress • ~WASHINGTON -One of Lyndon B. ~'s final legislative legacies to Congress was a proposal [or revision m the military draft law. • A1' he promised in his State-Of-the· dnton mes.sage, the outgoing President formally renewed his request for a lot· tiry·like random selection plan to ~ine the order of call for draft e)igibles. H1s proposat.c!eared the Budget Bureau and went to Congress on January 1' -the Friday before the Monday laauguratioo. :Random selection Is a concept which hu been strongly supported by some qilics of the present draft machinery. 'ihey can be excused if they now com- ftain lbat A1r. Johnson should have been rnuch less dilatory in urging draft refonn q:i a reluctaut Congress. :THE PRESIDENT'S last-minute plan. called Fair and Impartial Random seltc· tlon (FAIR ), was first recommended in 1967 by a special presidential study ~mmission. President Johnson endorsed i~ then and sent it on to Congress. : Random selection was envisioned as the selection process in a system under Wtdth young men would face a year of maximum dralt vulnerability at age 1' (or on completioo of a trade or oollege education). The Pentagon, pleas-- di with the prospect of younger draftees, BUPPOrt.ed the plan. ·Even Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director ~ sel~tive service, who had been no J)n cl. selection by lot, was brought around to support of the random selecUon ~s. The Senate approved a draft Worm bill which would have allowed the President lo institute such a pro- Oedure along 11io·1th other aran revisions. : 11!E HOUSE OF Representatives , however, balked. On grounds thal no ~om !election plan bid bHn apelled eut. in law, the Home Armed 8erT1ces (;cmunittee -lo abaodoo lht -· Dear Gloo1ny Gus: Do lbe stockholders of Ole cable TV company opening those unpre- dictably • placed, gaping llUle ''Great Divides" in Newport Beach streets also own substantial sharts of Firestone and Goodyear? -N. M. flt. Tiii• fMhl"' rtfll<" Nil•trr v\"o ne1 -Uri!f tll9M .. !Ill! n .. ._."'' $t~f .,_. W -ti 01..,.,, Gn. 0.HJ flll91, first system by which local draft board! had been selecting amone men classified . as eligible fer service. The finally approved 1N7 compromise bill did not authoril:e random selection. Instead, eorwess invlied the President tG make a specirie 1t.11111Uve request ' if 1\e still wanted to lnsUtute such a plan. • Johnson did not do 10 unlil n houn before he wu to leave the White Hwae . Nor did ht revise the ltlecUon proctlS so as to tap the reservoir ol lt-yetrw0lds first. - THE DRAFT REVISION, prepared at Selective Service headquarters and tent to Con&ress. would let the President set up a falr and impartial random seJectlon system under rules which he would prescribe. The bill would· also make changes lo assure an orderly transition to calling lt-year-olds finL Detaila of a random selection plan were sent to Congrea too. A pamphlet accompanying the draft bill spelled out a eyrtem under . •hich a draft board would flrst determine "by lot" a se- quence of all 366 posalble birthdays for a given year. Then. also by lot, two atpfiabetical sequences v.•ould b r determined, for initials of last and first names. Under the plan, the date sequence would be used to determ ine the order in which eligibles were draf\ed in that year. Thi other two 5equences would be uaed, WJ:len nectuary, to 5elect among men with tbe ume birth datu. 111 Roblrt S. Allen aid Jda A. Otldsmllb ! Unjust Two-thirds Rule : Calilcrnla \'~UI •ere more rtCi8pllve (o J1Chool .financing measum In the IW/· II sd>OOI year than In the lft'loul tw. Tbat's the rsull ol. a IUJ'ft1 pde by the Caltfornia Teachers AuoCi.- tion and the CtlUOrnia Auoclttloo ol School Administrators. : The trend ls favorable, it not over· .. helmingly ... • The. su rvey r'vuled a ll.$ petoenl lain in successful IC:bool (U eledioot ind a 4 percent pin ln aucceatul bond •lections. Even so. to eumlne the darktr CMla ol lhtSf statiatics, only '5 percent ti the tax proposals were P'ssed and flab' 45 percent ol the bonds. • • PERHAPS TllE MOST striking part If ,.the report is il!) comment that ir IDciaI bond ls.wes required onlJ a simple l"Jority, 35 prevails wilh st.ate ~ ~!lions, 92 percent of the 1987.U ~I bonds would ht1ve. been 1pproved. • Soys Or. G1ylord t: Gordon. CfA ~ uecullve, ''The will of Ult l>IJorit')' lo approve school bonds tw MID thwancd by a mln«'ity due to !JI Ute's archaic law requlrlna a t~ laiodl vOCt " • • ! AM.EN TO THAT. The two-thirds rule loctiJ bood issues is a 111.h ctnlury in the sta.te con1tJMIOB. tdopCod bccau.. lo U-da1I """ beJd by a ccimporaU.e did not Wini Ille foll! thel1 mtUmber the~peny wltb bond dab~ Tbt plcture.tiu changed with today'a D\UI home ownership. l1le eon.titullon RevislGn Commission meets in February to consider the third phase ol its work. The local two-third!t rule lurb in thlt part of the Ccmstitution lo be studied. The commission should remove ll and substitute the f1irer simple majority requirement. S.11 Fnadlco Examiner Shorts JoU Oliy, Ort.. Bloc ~fountain Eatle: '"The. turbulence on American college campuses h.11 upset ~ lot of people, but It seem. unfashtonable 10- day lo attribute it to Commuoi$ts . . a .speaker .wt • political convention In New Yark .•• 1ald lhere are C-Om· munllts oa moat of the major cam- puses In thlt country and that these CommunJrts bad ~en involved m the 1tµdtnt ~tls. The speaker! Gus Hall, ~ .-r ol the AmeTic:an Commun\s~l'arl y ·· sure& now mounting for and against lhe plan. Many homeowners in We&t Newport , particularly those with residences along the beachfront, say they don't want any breakwater or marina in their neighbor~ hood. They want the surf and shoreline left alone. But others, few of whom own homes on the beach· front, are all for the idea. They see It as a sure way to upgrade their neighborhood and, hence, property val· ues. The proposal -or elements of it -or offshoots fl)Clp it -coutd generate some tough problems for the cOl]litil. · Bul they \\•ere elected to make tough decisions - after cautious, responsible consideration. Doryme11's Heresy Last 'veek. D:\.ILY PILOT reporter John Valterza accompanied doryman Mel Fleener on hls daily trip out to sea. They left at 2 a.m. They returned at 11 a.in . -nine hours later. The reporter went home to bed, exhausted. Fleener continued working, cleaning and selling his day's catch. At 6 p.m., he went home to bed. That's a 11)..hour working day. And Mel Fleener netted $18. Some days, of course. are better. But we suspect not a great deal better. (n any case, it's something to think about the next time you're down by the dory fleet. hard by the Ne\\·· port Pier. There. at least, you \Vill find men \\•ho still believe that enjoying what you do for a living is 1nore impor- tant th an ho'v much money you gel for it. In these times, that's real heresy. At Hospitals: Stark Drama at Any Bour ' Trend t<;l .. S~parate · Coronary Care . ' By NORMAN NIXON, M. D, In lhe lnten1lve care unit of t modem h01pltaJ .,w can aee ltl.ri. drama any ; hour ol lbe day ,.. nJahl. Here moo and women liqe Ille ,.. death c111et with the help Of doctors, nurRa and technicians who have the mos 1 sophisticated equipment available to deal wilh nearly every medical and surgical emergency. lntenslve care units vary ln size. Some - are old wardt re.modeled for th1s purpose with beds, separated by glass partition,, or ceiling-to-floor curtains \p provide seme privacy, lining both sides.In newer, Stlllller unlta1 · lbe ..ame itmospheie prevllll • -eJcltement. noise, ap- prehension, people, scurrying back and forth, even though efforts are made to mlnimlu: diaturbfng and depresslnc .elements. . ' EVERY PATIENT knows he Is crlUcally ill. Constant J n t r a v e n o u s ther1py Js carried out on alm08t everyone; some mull have oxygen, other• lndwelllng catheters. Artificial kidney, he.art-lung machines, and other strange, semewhat foreboding equipment may be Jn use for some patient.s. Nurses keep watch, often by re.mote television, but check thr vital signs hourly or more often, invariably waking every sleeping. patient. Although A heart patient usually caMot s~ ~ own e.lectrocardiograpbic trac- tngs, he may watch the monitor hooked '· up to his '"1ghbor In ~ nearby cubic!,. SOmeUm~ the allrtn aounds, indicating cardiac arresl or other compllcaliDns,. but the nurau' immediate response I~ reassuring to thole wlio wltoeu t~ emergency, or when other llfe-aavfng proc:eduft1 are perfonned. NEARLY ALL patient. in lhe intensive CINI unit use denial. a psychological mechanism, to repudiate what is going on IO as to allay fear and anxiety. So on discharge some stale they felt no fear al any time during their stay; otben admit they were frightened even though initially they denied having any fear. But many patients say frankly they were scared the entire time . Jn rnost intensive care units the in· cidence of delirium, hysteria, depression and other psychiatric symptoms Is suf- ficiently high to cause concern. Often the doctor.patient relaUonshlp plays an important part since the critically ill patient see.11 thP "'lysician as1lia lifeline · lo lhe living world:" WHAT TIIB. DOCT'OR says and haw he says It are of enormous importance. For grave illness makes the patient overly dependent and vulnetable to 51i8plclons and uncertainties. Unfor- l\!Jlately, s o me doctors are uneasy -th the lick room when questions about prognoa!J are put to them. Further, since lntensi"e care unils are manned primarily by nun;es and technicians, with doctors serving a.~ remote control generals of the techniral aspects of the patients' care. the all·important doclor· patient relationship is diffused. Because heart cases. particularly cor· onarie.s, represent aL least 75 percent of those in intensive care, the trend now is toward separate coronary care units with Jess noise, turmoil , bright lights and confusion. Although the threat of sudden death is still present, there are fewer panic reactions and other psychiatric symptoms. THE INTENSIVE care unit, regard- less of the e:icitement, drama and tur- bulence, represents a tremendous ad- vancement in providing emergency treatment for de.!lperately ill patients in a setting wher!i. personnel and equip. ment are alwayk avai!;.ble. Neverthr· less, patients with a diagnosis of myo. cardial infraction can be treated far more effectively and with fe"·er psy. chological hazards in a special coronar.v care unit than in the hectic environment of the recovery room or the intensive care unit. 'Lucky to Have Dan Aldrich at UCI' To the Editor: Several people hav'e aated U the MeH Verde Homeowners meeUnc ~they at- tended 'Ibunday nleht wu th1 ume one that WU reported in Friaay'• DAIL y PILOT (Homeowners Grlll Chanctllor, Jan. 24). If so -we. aU •med to 1niss the atmosphere of holUUty and crit icism described by -your reporter. In three years of attending as~ociatlon meetings, I've never heard anyone receive such s1nrere and enduring ap- plause. BUT FOR ONE exception, the que!i- tions put to Dr. Aldrich were hone.st expressions of concern for 1 matter that is on the minds of everyone. Such concern Is healthy ; it's tG be e.zpected and the chancellor seemed to welcome the opportunity to personally e:iplaln how "buatneea i1 conducted" on the Irvine campus. Hill answers were articulate, forthright and, though not . everyone agreed with every answer, there did appear to be a consensus that we're dam lucky lo have Dan Aldrich at UCI. CONSIDERABLE credit mtLSt be gl\'en to the ract that a confrontation has not occurred on the Irvine campus. This Is the real test of a present day chan- ctllor or university preaident. Dan Aldrich has to be one of the best in lhe busintss. Doors of communica tion are open: he's admired and respected by tiis students: they know the rules and they obey lhem. TllE DAO.. Y PlLOT would do v.•ell to accent lhi!t fi0$illvc note and qu it breeding confusion by referring to a. chancellor's ''possible" reactions in a •·pos.~ible" riot as the aoJe measure of the man. There isn't liloing to be a riot if tie docs his job well. l.ocal resldeoUI should mekt C\'trv effort lo hear lhlti mart speak -ln B!I George De.tr Grorgf' Don 't you fetl ralher silly in a huslness ord1nnrily inhabited hy Indies only? s u. ~ar S 0 H "'on11>11 c;1n !Jr jockeys, mtn can be: advice columnisu. <Hm. llow lon& btfort the first topics~ jockey'\ + ' . . ~ -. " ' . . . . per.son'. He'a l(f'eat! JlM WOOD Past President Me.sa Verde Homeowners Association These lines are from tlu story: "fl1ost of the questions asked of trie chancellor had hostile overtones. Those asking qiustion.s, however, may not hat11 been repreie-ntotive of all 125 perso1u present; when Aldrich iuas finUhed he wcu spontaneously applow:ltd. '' -Edilor llfeod Nol llo•lll.e To the Editor : Someone told me once, '·Don't beli<'\'e everything you read In the newspapers." Yet. what other wa:y LS there to keep informed, I wonder. J really dig your paper -read it through a.s often <is ~ible. So, 11 1 had not been to the P.tesa Verde Homeowners' meeting when Dr. Aldrich spoke last week, I probably v.·ould have accepted your reporter's \\-rilten word that the mood v.·as "hostile" IN NO WAY could U1at be '. It was an interesting meeUng., with the audiel'!(:c 1 ery intensely abaorblllj the rtmnr).;s 1nadc by lhe Chinccllor. The qutstion~ :iskcd were simply the type lhal in- terested per500s do as.I --and lhty 11io·ere beaullfully handled by Or. Aldri cn "'ho ihould be compUmented on his stnctrity and stralghtforwardntss In t1nswtrlng them. Wlsh your rtporter. \\'ho by th(' v.·ay hns dont better, had told lt like H \\'rt~. BARBARA CA~1PFH·:LI. Sepurolh19 8011•· (,;iris ' 1'o Lbe F4Jtor : t wish S!&iey Harris would not wntt such nonsense as yesterday's column (Jan. 21) in which he advocal.ed separate school& for girls and boys in order to -solve the race problem. There 's just a chance many might take hlm serioosly. The race problem would no longer be with us if some people didn't persist in magnifying differences between groups of people while ignoring the far more important similarities, such as the wide 5pectrurr. of differences among in- dividuals in any group. \Vhy trade a problen1 having to do wilh 10 percent or so of the population for one in volving 50 percent~ Y. KERSEY After cit111g distaste for miscege. nation as being at the u·nco11scious root of alt racism, and describing 1t a1 imztio11al, or sub-rational, Harris 11aid thert: are good education reasons for separating boyi and girli (not by race J tn the Lower gradet. He believer teaching should be adju.1ted to the realities of gender, ond of the matu,.. ctio11.ol development -not "to solve lht race problem." -Editor H'hlle Puh1t To the Editor : ln lht DAILY PILOT of Jan. 27, \Villiam P. BGwer asks the question, "They don't really belleve, do they, that God gave them alone the wisdom t.o know what is good for all of us~" I Referring to various persons com. plaining of certain speakers appearlnc on the UCI campus.) I want Mr. Bower to know that "God'' crrtainly did give those persons this "wisdom." l'm not exactly sure whleh god -there are so many of them -bul my guess i! it is the one that passes out tl}C! ammunition to all comers. The one wbo9e color has dlsappeartd under layer after layer of whJte palnt and had a whole civ11izalk>n named after him hAs disappeared, too, for the tiftlC belna. The white paint is around, UIO'Jgh, snd vlslble to the. naked eye and ls now !he medium and the mewige and thr source of curreot 1<wi5dom" rlo:.tlng 11bciul . I think. FREDA M. VO$ Hilk• lo B111tu11der• Tn tllf Editor· \\11:11 right docs a police officer havr to race down the !idestreets of Balboa peninsula at 70 miles per hour? Wbat logic dictates that he should fire a gun three limes at a fleeing suspect in an area as crowded with people as rbc Peninsula? Monday the DAILY PILOT carried this story : A motorcyclist driving without lights had nearly hit an auto near the \Vedge. He wouldo'l stop and police ga\'e chase at speeds "which at limes reached 70 miles per hour." When the cyclist ran into two officers on loot at a road block, they fired on him as he r;_K·ed a~·ay, A IHOTORCYCLIST driving without his headlight is a danger to no one but himselL Any pedestrian could hear him far away. and he wouldn 't have a prayer against any automobile that didn't see him. For his own protection . he should be stopped and cited. But why propel a 4,000 pound SQuad car through the narrow streets at 70 miles per hour to make an errant 400 pound motorcycle slow down~ wtu.., THEY ca ptured their man. Art they proud of their heroics, or do they now wish lhey had let hin1 go? What would they think if they harl crashed into so1neone or shot a bystander ? R S. HOWLAND --~-- Fl'iday, January 31. 1969 Tht edJtorlal J)(1Qf O/ lhe Dailt1 Pilot see-ks 10 inform and sti~ ulate rrader1 by prtstntrnQ th ia ne1Drpaptr'1 oprnlon1 and C01'1\o mtntory on 1op1rs ot tn ltTtst end tignt/1oance. by pro1:id1ng a forum for lhe f'.rprcssion t>f our readers' opinions, and by pres,.1Uing th1 d1vtr1t view- points ol iuformt ri ob.!trvfTI a'ld spohr.ttne-n on topics of th• da11 Robert N \\'ccd. Publisher • ti !<1 Pl " ,, Cl m ad " In '" •h tel dn •h u. ' r ' I • 6Cl<IJ .. ,...,, J_,, Jt, ,,., .. ,..,. ' BEA ANDERSON, EDITOR Hunters Bag Game The name of the game for Hunter Chapter of the ·Auxiliary, Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyter· ian is "bagging" funds. Offering a 0 bargain day" . as an enticement, 1-funters are searching for women who are "game" to help the cause. • . For the price of $2.50, each guest will be served a homemade lunch, may play bridge all afternoon and win prizes including a money tree. The occasion is the group's fourth annual bridge luncheon, and will be presented.at noon Wednesday, Feb.12, in the Hospital Cooference Center. Tickets may be reserved by calling either Mrs. Dorothy Stanwood at 644-1488 or Mrs. Charles Hol· liiter. 673-9391. ' . The · chapter was .establishe4 in 1956 with the major purpose being to "bunt" for ways to help the hospital. One of the first duties was to pµrchase, and staff the Gift Cart, which was the predecessor of the Gift Box. . . Members now have extended-1.heir activities to . many other volonteer services. ~year alone, the 34 workers devoted 3,351 'Ursenfce hours to the hos- pital. - Their main project is supplying the Pediatrics Ward with handmade puppefs which are given to. the )'Ollllg patients. At Christmas time IM Santa puppets were distributed. Darin{ <Jther -s. puppets, resembling bears, bunllies and see. •er- pents, are given. Puppeti are. made'during monthly sewing bees in1he center. ~. HUNTERS'.:SE~fi OPENS -And the game to be bagged by · Hoag Hunters wlJJ i>e funds for the hospital. Searching in every nook end cranny and even under• bushes for bidden treasures which will be offered for prizes are (left to right) ¥rs. y • Stanwood and Mrs. Stanley Statia. while they are hunting, they also will turn up many willing supporters of their annual bridge luncbeoo, to be given Feb. 12. Provisionals Honored Procedures Outlined · ior Costa Mesa Auxiliary New provisional• and their husband• will ba booored during a supper Sunday, Feb. 9, by Las Reinas Auxiliary of th~ Newport Beach Assistance League in the leag)!!> room. A valentine moW bas been selected for table decor which Is bi>- Plans and procedures for the coming year are being discussed by new officers or the Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital Auxiliary. Leading the group will be Mrs. Alexander MacGillivray. Ready to start carrying out their duti es are (left to right) the Mmes. Michael Giddings, Clyde McCall and Warren Atherton. The group meets on the second Monday of each month in the hospital con- ference room, with the next session scheduled for 9:30 a .m. Feb. 10. High on th~ new agenda is organizing a Junior Auxiliary. ,yihg arranged by provisionals (left to rlght),"ihe Mmes. Warren_ Wilson, Rob' ert Lang and P. D. Endsley. Las·Reinas help staff the league thrilt sbop at 505 32nd St., Newport Beach, and funds support the Children's Dental Health Cen- ter which last year toot care of more than 200 families. - 'Exceed-drin' Headache No. 5 ••• . Why Ani I a Wallflower? DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a pl, tS. not beautiful but better than averqe looting. Everyone 1171 l have a nice personality. The trooble ii I· don't get asked out because I live in a dump. This neighborhood Ls 80 crummy JOG can't believe it. ANN LANDERS ril Several guys al schOOI seem to like ber addrm &t a bty ud never tteard me but the minute I give them my address they disappear forever. Mom from lllm ....... BoJS m iii~ aod Dad are divorced aod we have la I* ctmpa1 ud .dteJ'D. p 01 trouble paying the rent, so please don't place tt tlate 1 Jb1 wht It appealbls. tell me we should move. I know we ne pnbleaa II yoa, Ttott, Ht yocrr sbould but we can't afford to. Just lddreu. 1'ab ine:Nry ... flld eat tell me what • girl is supposed.. to wUl'1 m1al..q •• do wbln she can't get dates ~•use she li~ in a alum. -ClOCKEN POX DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've been DEAR llHICUNr MuJ a pl .... dalinl Joyce lor m . -U. i!lle'1 a~ u ... la • mu, -· ........ -... not ~ hut 1lh& ""111 -. j ~ inow1 bow to make a py fee.I impc>rtant. On oar third date Joyce told me sbe bad been in a detention home for picking up Items in a department store. Last week"" v!lilod my brotlleT In a hospital . The next day IJ:Je nur11 called to uk U I had taken Hal's watcb "far safeteep. 1,.... It "" bo his ru,hl table ODC1 now they can't fiod it. Lut. Q10I -I IOI home llQlll a dalO 'llfth,,,,.., l11°ftllel WU lllill- f Ing. I'm not ~ alioui lhe $40. . . ' ll'• lhe a(Odit <¥<11'"1"1 drivel'• - 1 need. · I cook! fall In love wiUI JO)'CO U J let myself go. So far we"Ve juat Qr changed a few kisses •. I hate to thlnt wha"t rm thinking. ·Anf~ advice? '!.. NO I. D. DEAR NO: If J01i1vt beell ftcUtcbt& tis.., wl\fl 11111' p! I 1..,..t 700 cout your te<lli. Joyce II elllter. a tlep. IOmulac or • Wei ....... blJ ... latter, ~ kleptom•'•cs 1ita1 Uem1 they luive • ue fw. Befon )'Oii propoee, l J9o11t r• wtD eouWer wW Dre ""Id ..... , .... -...... --11·-. .. -.• llEAll. Ai'IN· lf'NDERS: I llD IS lllCI a~ M~. ICY aunl &IVM me her n!Ce.cidlies "'* * pta U.... "U-. In the laJt blllcll WU I beautiful eocklail neate. 1 look <ilf the beadl lllCI It loob great.. The col7 lhinl II, Ann, the aweater 11 cut IOr1 of low. 11'1 not loo Ugbt and 1 am can!ul DOI to bend Oftl'. but like I I at d. It WU 1 low neckline . I wore the sweater to se,J:iool list wttk and two of my bat .fritndl sald ii looked "cheap." 1 don' know if they are jealOUI or if they Nld it for my own &ood. 11'1 I ...., orpeMlft ..... ler and I'd like IO te<p wearlJI& It, bot I don't want to wreck Dl1 repulaUon. .. c •• cu.,.. -mer -JACEl'OT um: OEAll~: •-·•1illt91oia ........ ,_.., .. ,..,.._ .. able Jo -mr U 1"-to..._ 1Kt11oe1 ... ao1.,,...11e r .. -. Do ""' feel m at .... • • • .. ol HI la ·everybody ba'1ng a ... - bot )'OUT Wltlt for Anll Landen' ...._. ''The Key to Popularity," enclosing wllh yoor request 35 C011ts In Coin ·II!'! I" 1ooa. seu~, s1ampe<1 .. ..i.;.. Ann Land<rs will be 11ad Iota. )'OU with yoor probl""3. Send . lo her In care GI the Dt\IL Y · tneloling I lta.rnpeCI, ltlf ..tddi ! It 1 I e11ve1bpe. .. .l ... ( • ' I • .. ~ -..... .. ~ Mexico Via Well Heeled ' =.:.~a r will Forecast Pumps Openness be -to Allon Club Feb. IJ, '•"'°""" ' ·:.: :· Ill ::m. ~ llaY· • IT'S IN TIIE CARDS -Trophy winners o( Harbor Senlor Cltlzem' Friday Bridge Group are (left w rllbtl Virgil Kimple, llrst; Mrs. Peg Todd, third, Card Players 'Score' With Bridge Trophies lltJn -100 avid card pllY'fO coqrallllat.d tbree -o( -Senior Qllllm' Friday Bridge Groop. E'fV1 Friday prizes are nanl<d nm. """"'1 aod third blib """"" and at the end o( eocb all·IDOllth period -tropblea .... .,.....tat to the tbree players with the blgbest amnnnI•ted IC«'eS. llew trophy wlnnen are Vlqll Xlmple o( Coota 111- llnt: Lee ll<omond o( Coota 11Jesa, -and Mrs. Pes Todd-and Roy Jooes, l""P manopr, are put !Int place - The bridge lf'l\IP galhm eoeb Friday In the SenlGr Cltlzem Recrutlon Center at 11 a.m. James Sawyer, ~ den~ can be called at MHSIO for further lnfonnaUon. The travel -ol the club II plaJmlni a bul trip to Death Valley oa Feb. 11-Jl and another jcomey to the Santa Anita Races on Feb. 26. According to Kimple, put club manager, the eatendon on the clubbowe is belni siarted. Funds were raised C:t members of the 1.onla of Newport Harbor. . Missions Council Topic a. Colberlne'• Coundl o( Mia Ann Rollly, pr-, Q!Udlc WCllllOll will """' In will COlldact I altorl ba- lm -Around the WCll'!d meellq wblch will feature a durfnl the l""P'I II rat !Inanclal roport on I ...,. ....... o( the -,... next 'c"""1 CbrlltmU party and ''l'llM!a1 at 1:11 p.m. In .'card party. Lqtma Beach Woman• 1 .P Mrs. J.J. Kmmy, proe1am Qnbl!mle, chairman, will ln!roduce the Speaker, the Rev. La"""ce speaker, and 111n. An D O'Leary, aalatant -· -u ••• bo-"·'"--'·'-·-pq.u11ca1 llllam Socletlel o1 ~. ,.,......, ~ ........ the Los A11gek1 An:Mw:ne II In charge of the aprlq wm &In .. llhlltrat.d !ec'. ... wblch will coocJode the tare on the mbjed. meellq. Uniform Appeal for 'That Girl' and Lee De0mond, second. During each stx-mooth period, awards are pmented w the three players with the highest accumulated llCOl'es. Rome Honeymoon f ..-Include a Valentino polluck dltmw and clance\ • bip to the Dal< r..uva1.1n lndJo, .-clln- -dance, • -and card . nl&bl and • dllc:ualjaa OVf!t'! Tbunday ...m., In • member'• boml. The club provlda llOClal -and _.-ip far dlftn:ad ar lepllJ _.tat -llla•-and . llOOpn>llt orpol:a-r.i1ber lnl...,,iloa 11111 be -117 wrillnl -Anoo, P.O. Ila ii, Tustin. Rebekah~ View Film 111111 Rebebh Lodge will meet CG Ftb. 4, at I p.m. to Ylew a film lhowl!lg the aeven dan1er llpala o I cancer. Durllll the l•therlnJ plans will be lmnalate:t far the ui>- coming lnUWi«L Further ln- f ormaUon may be received b7 caDJ.nc Mra. R a n I e 7.gldem•, Noble Grand. al 5!9-f «t, ar llJra. Daallal lllargan, piblldlJ cbalrmu; Ml-1131. Suzanne Haas Marries MR. AND MRS. PETER A. BANASZAK Married ht W11comln Spring Rush. Sc~eduled s~(rush far the 10 l<JCll1 ......tUes at Calllorn!a Slala College at Long Beach will take place Feb. M . Coed•m~ to atlaod during the · aemester are lnvt obtain an •!>' pllcaUon from the Student A1· fain Offlc.. The sororities are Alpha Omicron Pl, Alpha EpllJon Phi, Della Delia Den.. Della Gamma, Della Zeta, Gamma Phi Bela, Sigma Gamma Rho, Sigma Kappa and Zda Tau Alpha. Boceymoonlng In Rome, It. aly, befort1 m a k i n g their heme In Miami were Suzanne Hau of Miami Springs, dau&bta' d. Mt. and Mrs. John IL Hau of Newport., ~ and Peter A. Ban~! zak, aon of lllr. and lllrs. An- dmf Buamk of CriVUz. Wll. The Rev. Franl: Banuuk, uncle o! the bridegroom, per- formed the noon ceremony in Sl Mary's Catholic Church in Crivitz. Bouquets of wbl(e g1adloll and chrysanthemums adorned the altar. Giftll In marriage by bu falber, the bride selec:ted • 1.., --"""' wtth sho<dder length velllJll causirt to a wblle aatlll bow. She bold a cucadl111 bouquet of white baby,__ Mllt Map BaMint, • ler o( the brldeirocm. WU maid o( honor wh1le llln. Detmll lllclClnley, the bride'• lllter from Co<la llleu, WU bridolmald. They wore IOllJ winter green velvet gowns with lhort matching velll beld by wide na1 velvet bowl. Each carried a bouquet of red J"OR.S, pine sreens and holly berries. Asked to be best man was Tom KeaUng of Oakland. Uahen were Jerry Daanen of DePert, Wll., Elmer Banaa-- zak of Crivitz, the benedld'• cousin, and Did< Tomuuw· lkl of Crivitz. Miu Dooelle Wit!, orgl!l!st, performed while Mrs. Joe Sdtmeltw ol lllbmeapolll, aunt ol the brldesro<m, .... the IOlo!st. Followlni the double ring ceremony tbe uewl1wttis were conaratulated by soo IUesll anc! relatives In SteJ. ner'1 ballro<m, Crivitz. Out.- of ·town gueata: arrived from Spokane, st. Loul!I. Chicago, Green Bay, Detroit' and Lin- coln, Neb. The former Miss Hau is a graduate ol Newport Harbor Hiib School and rullerton Junior Colles•. Her balbaod 15 .. -of cmtta mp Sc:bool and the Unlnnib' o! Miami. Ho II a -o( the Oaklaod Raiden !ooi>an team. Attitudes Explored Concerning Retarded Two public lectures will ex· retarded youna1ters at home plore the problem of society's and In school without neglce- aeceptance of the mentally Ling other children. retarded pt:rlOfl who hu been How pare.nll can help tbti.r )ft-pared to Uve In the oouid• --lead happy, id. uaefu1 llYeS; how rtlattves, 1be lecturta wt1J be part friends, teachers arxl other of the UCI Enemion aeries, profe!l!onall can help plmlla The Meniall1 Rdarded: Cllf'o with thll Iaat will be - rent Pnlbleml and Effective ed In the Feb. 11 - Planlllng for the Futuro whlcb Parenlal C<mlderallamr and la pven mt 'l'lleldayB at 7: 30 Needs. The gpeabr wlD be p.m. in Room 1017 at Fairview Frtd Krat19e, e 1' e c 11t1 T • Slala Boopllal. leCl'elary ol the Callfmlla r11rv1,.. clilel of psycbololl' Council for Retarded Children. Irvin.< R. Slooe will dllcuaa Lecture tlcnla will be IO!d Prob fems of Adjustment to at the door. and In Socie(t Faced b1 the ~ Emblem Club Adrea Marlo Tbomaa o( "That Girl" televlllon series models the new Air r-blue uniform. DellgJled by Barry Gilbert oi tho M. Born Compeny of Odct(o. K will be ltandard equlpmenl for Ill WAF1. It I• a gaban!IDO versloo Ill' the Air Force Super Blue, lea f18Y than bl Iha put. Relarded and How to Develop 11".eir Potentials. In hll Feb. 4 !all; be will d!llCllll wbetber or nol the 9Chools aod the home are reallY developlnf the lull potential ol the llltt>- lally -and tkt poafb!lttf,. for coi>iD( wtth the l"'blema of m<ntally Gathtrlna for b u 1 I n e 1 1 RS11lona and programs are momben ol Newport Harl>or Emblem Club the IM!C:<IOd Tuesday at I p.m. Ill the Elka Lodre, 11ewpc1<1 Buell. ' • •.I .. RE-'LION' ON COMFORT -That's what women are doing when they wear these kicky young charmers called Leo the Lion by Penaljo. One of tho finest. designs In day sboes, they are made for c<>mfor1able walking. Shoes !ll11Y be found at R<>bin- son's Fashion Island. A BIT OF A HEEL ..:. And just a bit, Is a feature of this sboe style called Tropic. Tbe filppant, ro- mantic little sboe Is carved down w the bare mini· mum and is sbown In mellow ostrich printed leath· er. with a baby doll we. PAGING FEMININITY -Page, the name of this ultnfem!nlne saadal, calll oo an airy look designed espedally fur fall It carrtes Ill fa•blon m....,ge tor day wear In butter soft ootrlcb prinlAld leather with bared we and heel and the lmportmit look of straps. '!be new footwear co~ from Penaijo ts dellgned to be ad.Ive with an utra empjlasia oo comfort. . 'I1Je ,ouog, flippant loot with a dainty .strap in Ol!tricb printed leather L!I falhion'• newest fav(J'i&e. Colors range from tradltfonall to the unique anlique hue. Straps have new interest. 1bey are 1ettinr higher and aet hack. Definitely fashion newt to- day is the printed leather look with hared toe and heel. Tbe ui>-!ront look is in a Itron& 1>95ition. And buckles a 1 eVeryooe knows are in the bead.lines thi& season. The new feminine trend is towards softness. Broadened toe and trimmed !Ides 'and stocky heel are pro- viding elegaDC!: and, of course, comfort: from tbe old-fashion- ed pointed toe and spiked bteL Pumps will increase i n pqpular~y because of th I 1 new heel and toe lnt.tresl 'Ibe shelled-out pump 11 particular· ly sty!illl. New Babies 'Showered' ?,!any new babies w 111 benefit from gifts brought to a layette baby shower wblcb will take place next Mooday evening in the Mission Viejo home of Mrs. Don Clare~. The ahower Is b e I n C sponsored by Ayudantes AIIX1o Uiary, Children's Home Soct. ety, and gifts will be used ror the many babies adopted through the society. Associate member! of the auxiliary will be special guests at the event, where a talk by a roster mother will be a special feature. Mrs. Robert Lester is chairman of the ahawer. The society, which offers Its service to both the adoptive and natural parents place many babies in new bomei. Physician Addresses Women Dr. llalpb Byron, chief llU?ge<m at City of Hope Hospital In Duarte will be the guest !pelll:er at the Tuesday, Feb. 4 m.etlng of the Chris- tian Women'• Club . The physician wW present his talk at the noon ~ meeting in the Newp<rter 1nn tn Newport Beach. Guest vocalist will be Mrs. Byrm and a fashion parade WW. be presented by Lasuna Buch abops. Reservations a n d can- cellatiOlll are ntttsW'Y and can be called to Mn. Lewia Mertz at m.1J%1 ,_ Mn. Harold Fischer at 1112-U29. Nun<ry _,..alloos also are necessary. Golf, Bridge On Calendar For Rivierans Golf and bridge activiUes are being planned for Riviera Club members s e e k I n f pbya1cal and mental oercise next week. Brid&e ls lcheduled I n Laguna Beach Cowltry Club -Tuesday. Luncheon will be served at nooo tn Ben Brown's restaurant following a social hour. fl.eservatlons may be ob- ta.ified by calling Mn. Joseph Nemecek by Saturday at 4ft.. 21711. Golf seclion members will meet at 9 a.m. next Wed· nesday at the San Juan Hill~ Country Club where they will enjoy a luncheon following the 13-hole play. Carts are available and f!Rr'Vatiom may be obtained br calling Mn. 0iar1es E. Morrison. 644-4274 or Mn. Russell Ill. Nel!on, m.IO:IL Painters Elect Slate South Coa!t China Painters State Federation of CaJifornia havt elected their o!Ocen for the coming year. Head.Ing the organtuuon will be the Mmes. Harry Fagan, president; Roy Oswald, first vie. pre.!!ldent; Donlld Schoenmehl, eec:ond vloe !ft'ldei)l: Howanl M"" rett. llCl"!lary; N. W. Love, treuur.r, and Roy F'*. hJsUrian . " h' is ru b• " I\ p: n• ' k l 1 ti B u n t! 0 b b II ~ Ii a b ~ b b h 0 e r '1 TI h f, c 0 0 t r l t l ' t < ' ( f l - .. f;osta Mesa • • i • EDITION VOL. 62, NO. 27, 4 SECTIONS. 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, ~AllFORNiA ' I • • FRIDAY, JANUARY 3 f,,1969 · Huge Enemy Base Seized U.S. Air Cavalrymen Meet Little Resistance SAIGON (AP) -Sweeping into the enemy's back yard, U.S. air cavalrymen have seized against little resistance what Is beli~ved to be the largest North Viet- namese base found so far in the war. Engineers have begun blowing up bunkers at the base spread over four square miles. U.S. officers said Friday tbey belleved it wasiJJing enlarged in pref:laration for an enemy offensive. 1'he complex was fOUDd 53 miles northwest of Saigon and 14 miles from School Book Ba11 Blasted By Sumner Juvenile Court Judge Bruce W. Sumner today criticized the Orange County School Board for banning books because of the political point of view or one bc.ard member. He rtferred to Dr. Dale Rallison, coun· ty school trustee who is a member of the John Birch Society and has formed his own private book review committee. Cambodh1's bordtr. It included a large underground hospital, dining halls, a conunand post, and hundreds of bunkers. U.S. officers estimated it could · ac- comm{>date S,000 or more men. The first intimation that a big base 1night be in this old enemy stronghold came last week when 400 soldiers of the U.S. Isl Air Cavalry Division new in by helicopters. As.;;. Sgt. Jiauny M. McCurry, Hum· boldt, Tenn., put it : "It didn't look Suspect Says So like anything at first. Then v.·e in· vesligated and began to see haw big it was." After uncovering various bunkers, the air cavalrymen made their largest fims Wednesday and Thursday. In a week, they reported killing about 50 North. Vietnamese soldiers. But only three enemy soldiers were killed when the complex was uncovered. Lt. Col. Frank Henry, Franklin, N.C., estimated there may be as many as 1,000 bunters in the area and added: "They'\>e been doing a lot of work On ttds comple1 ln the pa1t month. We think lhey were prepatlng for the coming oHenalve down south'." He rtferred to el'pected enemy attacks on military installations north of Saigon and possibly on lhe capital itseH. A company commanded by Capt. Henry A. Colavlta of ArP,ngton, Va., found the North Vietnamese command \ (See VIETNAM, Page Z) 'Robbing Hood' LSD User By JOI-IN VALTERZA Of HM ~llr "lltt 51•11 The Harbor Area 's 17-year-old "Robin llood" burglar is a habitual LSD user, Newport Beach police said today. Officers said the youth admitted Com- mitting several of the 140 thefl8 he is charged with while under the Influence of the drug, officers added. The "clean-cut" teenager, who in re- cent days led Newport and Costa Mesa detectives to scores of burglary locations. reportedly confeMed to at least 60 bi.rglaries in Newport alone. About 80 wete reported. in Costa Mesa. Police expect to clear up more. ".I'd call him a heavy acid user,'' Newport Detective Arbara Campbell said. "He told us he stole a diamond ring worth at least $3,000 from a Lido Mesa United Fund Raises Isle home and traded It for a day'! supply of L.5D on a street corner in Santa Ana." That's the way the youth workeel, ac- cording to poll~. His loot, totaling at least $24,<m in Newport, has disappeared -u gifl8 to girls, male friends or just spent. Campbell said the burglar "liked money the best, bul In this city he look jewelry, cameras, or anything else that could be ea&:ily sold ." '\ • • Today's Fl-t . . • TEN CENTS ' , ' •• OAIL Y PILOT S'-fl' ...... At Rallison's urglng, the county School board last week removed four books, including Pulitzer Prize winner John Hersey's "Hiroshima," from the library list for a new county juvenile facility. Judge Sumner said he is concerned and feels all citizens of the county should be on t h e watchful alert "w h e n the reason for removal of b o o k s is n o t based on their literary merit or content, but because of a political point of Vi~w held by a momb<r ot the ~l board. The suspect, Campbell said, comes Crom a respected Santa Ana family. "I'd say be was above average in in- telligence and relatively clean cut. He's very cooper;stive." $181 000 Ill-'68 Camero·~ 1. T~1~"":!. to!;l,o~~~~d~~t ~: .... gi~ DISCUSSING THEIR EXPEDITION TO MEXICO Amateur Arch1eologi1ts Johnson (left), N1ckot "In schools, of all places, all )>Olnts of view shoo.ld be examined and discuss- ed ," he said. 'l' h e superior judge, a Laguna Buch resW:ient, said he felt constrained to com- ment since as presiding juvenile judge he has jurisdiction over the new school for juveniles on probation. Dr. Rallison, a Santa Ana dentist. charged that "Hiroshima'' presents a one-sided view of the 1945 atom bombing of the Japanese city. He said the book tells on I y of the horror and fails to mention the important fact th a t thousands of American lives were. saved by making a costly military invasion unnecessary. Jn his book, Hersey reports on the aftermath of the bombing as see!) through the eyes of the Japanese people on t h e ground. Re makes no comment on t h e war or on t h e advisibility of dropping the bomb. Rallison's contention was that the book gives support lo ban the b o m b (See SUMNER. Page %) Police H1mting Bad Customers Costa Mesa police today were looking for two "customers" of a Harbor Shop- ping Cenler jewelry store -a fast-talk- ing one and a sticky-fingered one. -'-~~ward D. Subnick, manae:er of Kirks ~elers, 2300 Harbor Blvd., told police one of the men kept him talking while the other perused the display case Thurs- !laY morning. • When they had left, Subnick reported, fpe display case was missing three rings, collecUvely valued at $%.000. The rings were described as a round, 1~~ carat diamond, worth $1 ,400, and a white g o I d engagement and wedding rjng set listed at $600. • , probaUon\ on a man1uana chirge at ..t ~ present. A total of more than $181,000 wu raised-by the United · IPdml Gf Costa Mesa in its 1968-69 campaign, chairman Glenn V. Back amiounced Thursday. BY eotnpArison, $165,990 was collected during the prior year, Back reported 'Bennie' Mixer Couple Arrested; Big Cache Seized PLA YA DEL REY -Police Thursday stirred up a batch. of trouble for a Highland Park couple who they allege were using a cement mixer to blend batter far black market barbiturates. Officers who raided the home said they also seized more than $1 million worth of amphetamines and commented that "There was enough stuff in ther e to get everyone In Los Angele! County high." Also confiscated in the raid were two eleatrlcally' operated machines capable of turning out "bennies" at the rate of 120 pills per minute, police reported. Jailed were Jack Darby Blair, SO, and Ramona del Rio, 45, who, according to police, had set up their clandestine laboratory in the rashitmable area or Playa del Rey. Police also . seized 20 pounds of pure amphetamine, 140 pounds of am- phetamines mixed with a cellulose bon· dins agent and 1.000 pounds of additional cellulose. Tbey said if the entire quantity had been made in "bennies,'' it would have netted a street sale or almost $1 million. • . ' . .f The ypulh relateit a bi7.J!T< .llprr lo to Uoi~'Colm~"mbers diUlnc Nowport detec\\ve1 ~l ~ UD, • u.N" . lunch<on. ··~!r1 ... tflf. Allobotlorul ol -·· w.,. madc •to .Ing out <f ·bi! "bigh" to dlacover his local U~ber .a~es to help in carJiU,_ed with I~ the year's operating costs, while $3,000 "He aald he never remembere( ~ctly . . where h.e hit wh.en. he was hJgh '' was earmarked r.or other argan1zattons. c~mpbell said. ' Lale cor,itribubons and some possible The detective termed the youth's case expense trimmings could provide funds "amazing.'' for additional grants but operating ex-The ,yooth was "on loan" to the penses account ror the difference in Newport department from Costa Mesa f Thursday. 1gure.s.. . Poliei! in Huntington Beach and other , Retiring UF President Ellis F. Gardner coast cities also expect to question the introduced 1969 officers during the boy. luncheon Thursday. The of ricers and their affiliations are : --Glenn V. Back, president, Crocker- CiUzens National Bank manager. -Dr. Anthony N. Toto , first vice presi- dent, superintendent and medical direc· tor, Fairview Stale Hospital. -Jack R. Curley, ·second vice presi- dent, DAILY Pnm general manager. . -Charles Cringle, treasurer, certified public accountant. Mrs. James Schaler, secretary. Jewelry Burglar Suspect Nabbed A would-be jewel thief was captured early this morning by Santa Ana police after a silent alarm tipped them to his presence in Ewert's Jewelers, 113 W. 4th St., Santa Am.. Police said three officers, Harold Causey, John Johnson and Clay Cotton, responded to the alarm. They found the front door or the jewelry store 1mB.!hed and the suspect, Bradford C. Clymer, 20, of the U. S. Naval Station, Long Beach, hiding behind a counter. They knocked the remaining glass out of the door and captured Clymer after a short chase 1hrougb the .store. Call Girl Ring Witli Trading Stamps Cracked SAN •FRANCISCO (UPI) -Police broke up a high class prostitution opera· lion Thursday in which the girls charged $30 and the madam gave away trading stamps as a t>onus. Vice squad officers arrested five women and a man when they raided an apartment in Pacific Heights -one of San Francisco's most exclusiv'e neighborhoods. There were six telephones in the plush arartment to handle appointments, police said, as well as a "trick book" with the names of more than JOO customers -some of them very prominent businessmen. "With a S3a trick, they'd give Blue Chip stamps," said inspector ruck Gam- ble. Arrested "'ere Marlene "Brandy" Rasmus, 26, lhe alleged madam, and her 37-year-old husband, Russell, who "'as charged with conspiracy. ' :·His tor Hant .. . .. . ... ~ . .., I ~ ·~.. '' 4., County ,.frcb~ologists Head So th Broken bits ot pottery aloni lhe bank.I of the Coatzacoalcos River In Mexico may lead four Orange Co u n t y archaeologists and a friend to some inleresting finds In the next two week.!1. The .five men leave today for a two- week river e.z:pedition ln Vft'a ·Cruz pro- vince, southern Mexico. They hope to find remnanta of ancient Indian civilization in the jungle areas of the Coatiacoalcos · River, and report their discoveries to Bri&ham Young Unive rsity and Naiional Geographic Magarin2. Louis Nackoa of Costa ~fesa, leader of the expedi.Uon, said broker. pieces or pottery that can be spotted from the river are usually the first lndlcatiorui or a nearby s.lte. Going with Nackos will be Huntington Beach librartan·Walter Johnson; Robert Monson, a Coata Meaa lnaurance agent; Dean Williams, a Costa Mesa wholesale dairy representative, and Roger Jabbl, an electronics technician from Santa Maria. All are amateur archaeologists and explorers. Williams and Jabbs went with • Nackos on the same trip last year. Nackos runs Mayan Tours and Ex· ped!Uons in Costa Mesa, and maku his living by leading other partiC.!1 into the jungle areas of Mexico and on the beachC.!1 of Yucatan. Nack09 pointed out thal on his tripe, Stock Marken NEW YORK (UPI) -Stock market advances outnumbered declines today bl.it usual pre-weekend evening up pre.ssure narro'tred tbe upside margin. Trading was brisk. (See quotatiom, Pa&H 12-13), t"' men are not allowed lo IR)' digging. "We're only looking for surfa Jects," he said. "the M'xlcan go ment ls very strict about issuing permi to excavate on theit'terrilory." On this trip the five men will trav'l the river in a 35-foot motor power dua:put canoe. They will be led by a MeJican guide. · ''Most or lhe native. along this river," sai\i NackOs, "areSpahlsh-Ind1iio mllture and tllere really isn't much danger ex.~ cept for snakes.'' 1 Nackos has already collected several pieces of pottery from the area w~cb dal:! bact to IOO B.C. The .. ptialary culture "' the """'be explained waa · known as Olmec ·Which . means "people of tbe rubber land" • Rubber plants abound In the area. • Coal, ol lhe upedilloo ls l6IO per person wbich include.a, travel, food lild equipment. The men exi>ect to retw'o home Feb. 16. For the remainder of the year Nactol hopes to conduct ilbout seven m<n trips into the area or in the region of Yucatan. Car Stereo Burglars Move Over Mesa Car stereo butglan, who 1eneran1 prowl tbe parking lot a\ Orange Coast College, moved inlo Costa Mesa'• residential area Tbunda,. Norris Lee !Wgbl, :14, ol -Ballow Lane told police iomeone removed a stereo rig and FM tuner lrom hla:parbd auto outside his home. Haight atimat.ed hls loss at 1180. Orange $15,9 Million Bond Vote PA•l v rn.;oT "'!' """ FIFTH GRADERS ASSEMBLE OUTSIDE PORTABLE CLASSROOM AT PAULARINO SCHOOL Money from Fob. 11 Bond Elect Ion WO<lld Poy for • Now On.. ' f ~ May Achieve Two Goa'(s By THOMAS FORTUNE 01 11M °"" "1191 11.tf A question of keeping pace wlth growth will face Harbor Area voters when they go to the poll.!I Feb. 11 to vote on a $1.5.9 million Newport.Mesa UnUled School otstricl ·bond issue. The bond meuurc is designed to lake younpten oU double aessionll by next fall and to meet .mtlcipated enrollment irJCteases for the nerl four years, Almost all of 1he money would go for new claasrooms. There are 53,561 re.il>tered voters eli· glble to vote. Two-thirds approval ii needed for the bonds to pus. School •ulhorltles esllmate hood P""' age would cost the owner of a p:l,000 home an extra $4. 7$ In ll.xes Dell year, lncrr.ulng t'o a maximum ot fil .25' In thrNi )"eiltl, decreasing thereafter for f the ~yaar life or the bondt. ' The bond proposal empha.slzet two One is to get students off double se8- sions by next lall. This would be dooe by purchMe ot 40 pon'.able clUSl'OOll\ll. (School olficiaix IJ)'I porlabla ¥" substantial classrOGm bulJdll\P "hlch are not designed fo be rrequeiitl1 ......,. bill, neverthelea, are ~· iilii), . ..,. quire • loon<lallon stid ·lllllky llt-liii.) Tbe aecond SOil ix lo COllM°hri>'J••" Intermediate ectiOols to \hr'ee • 1.mw: die .!IChools. School autborttlei 111 a sixlh thrould! e]lllth grllde IChool ·ix preferable -rrom · 1111 educatlonl1 stand- point. They say there also ts a dolltn artd cents ......., ,.,. Ibo cb,ange. El"'!'"' tary l!Choolt <OUld absorb lacreulng enrol)mtnl JI the lbth ~ are rtm0ved, Gonerolly, II It lep ciiOlly to (Seo BONDS, Pqe 1) f j t " I J ( --- I z OAIL.Y PILOT c • Ranch Tax ~:~i itary Views Sought Cuts Not ·~ .)(-ir, Jjifferenees;· NiiO"'·· ~·zu. .. r,-enmg~n~OH.~f s } .J ... • ,, -' Automatic reduction o! tax asstuments on property a p p r o v e d 'Vednesday for agricultural preser•1e status la not likely, County Taz Aueasor A~ J. Rlnahaw .said Thursday. Hlnlhaw Aid llO lotlcal.e~Umate could be made ol reductions until the agreement& for the preaervea are aigned. ~ The cou.nt1 plar:nlng department had estimated that tu:e1 for the lrvlne Ranch and Rancho Miulon Viejo would_ be re<luced by IU mJIUon. "U acreeme.nll permit only pure farm u5e the ~ department estimates would be Correct," Hinshaw said. "A wide number of permitted uses on the otht.r hand might nullify the whole purpoae ot the agreement." He polnted out that much o( the land included ln the pre.serves Is not producing anythlnc of value. Hinshaw said ii would take 24 ap- praisers from his staff, working three months, to revalue the land which he now assesses on it.a potentlal use. The supervisors appro\'ed pre!erve statu.s for 56,000 acres of Irvine land and 32,9'4 of Rancho Miaslon Viejo. From Page l SUMNER. • • rnovemenb. He said, "We h a v e demOll!lraUons by peacenllts becall!e we have allowed so mucb material of this kind in our Ubrarie.s." School board president Clay Mitchell, of South Laguna, sald of Hersey's book : "While I haven't re.ad the book, I haven't approved of all this crltJciam of America using the bomb." He auggeated, "There's been too much crltJciam of what we bad to do after \\'e were fotted into the war by a 5neak attack." Other books dror,ped from lhe libr1ry 1 I a t Rallison crlt clied because of t h e authors' alleged lack of understanding of the nature of communism. Judie Sumner said he does not deny the authority of the school board to make such a decision. He said it is the reason for the removal -because of a board member's political point of \•iew -that gives ·hJm more ap- prehension than the removal itself. "A free society is predicated on t h e unobstructed flow of Ideas," Judge Sumner s a i d. "T h e suecess of t h i s republic has , in a large part, been due to the tolerance of our citizens for the free expression of thoughts which differ from our own. "The ability of our nation to maintain this tolerance and to recognize that nc• ideas and differing points of view are not an exam ple of lack of patrioUsm or subversion has caused our country to arow tp be the world leader it is today." Supersonic Study Set WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon has ordered a fresh study of "'al' aspects" of the controversial supe rsonic airliner program. DAILY PILOT Slaff Plltfe ALL WRAPPED UP -Bill Villarino, sales manager of Pacific Tele- phone Co., local marketing department, is all wrapped up in paper tape his Dataspeed machine produces at CommuniCarnival. But he can be forgiven fo r being distracted by host of hostesses from DAILY PILOT exhibit. They're Orange Coast College stev•ardess students. Hundreds -Visit Pilot's CommliniCarnival Show Hundreds of visitors to the DAILY Foods Corp. (Valued at approximately PILOT·Paciflc Telephone Co. Commun!· $100) selected and furni~ed by Crutten- Camival al South Coast Plaza slgncd up den & Co., Inc., Newport Beach stock- for free prizes Thursday on opening day brokers : a full page in lhe DAILY of the ·•carnival of communications.'' PILOT to be filled with matertal select· ln addition to the prizes, lhe carnival ed by the 11·inner (commercial value: -open today from I p.m. to 9 p.m. and $674.24); a private lour of 20th Century Saturday from I p.m. lo 6 p.m. -offc_rs Fox Studio, including "lunch with the visitors opportunities to win long dis· tance telephone calls, to play games stars,'' provided by 1'V \VEEK. with electro-telephonic equipment and lo Family Weekly, newest addition lo see the "12-minute miracle" ~'hich rt· the DAILY PlLOT's family of features produces final stock market reports fast has provided a J6.volumc encyclopedia, enough for the DAII.Y PILOT lo publish two-volume dictionary, two-volume his-~::~:;~~ng stocks prices in today's tory of rnan and deluxe world atlas for Stewardess students from Orange the prize list. The four prizes are valucrl coast Coll ege are hoi>tesses al the DAIL X <-it a tot.al of $200. Also, all 20 winners uf PILOT display, working 1vith Pacific pr1zes will each recci\"e ~ free l~!inc Telephone representatives who demon· 1 , DAIL"!. PILOT classified want ad to slrate the Dataspeed transmitter and re· run six times, va lued at $24.30. . ceiver _machines which "talk" to each ~ .. Winners need not be present lo wm other at 1.050 words per minute. the prizes when winners are selected at liicluded in the list of prizes the 6 p.m. Saturday. DAILY PD.m will give away at the close of the show On Carousel Court al South Coast Plaza are : Newpo1·t Beach Two shares of stock in Ford Moler C-0. fvalued at about $103). furnished by Aeronulronic Division. Philco-Ford Womail Latest Corp.; 10 shares of stock in Bridcford 35 on UCIFaculty Seel{ing Drowning Victim The body of a 1voman that washed up on the shore of \Vest Newport Beach Thursday morning was that of Virjinia r-.towry, 41, ·.vho walked away ftom Pat- ton State Hospital in San Bernardino the day before. Rehiring of Professors Studenla. are not the only ones seeking reinstatement ot three fired UC Irvine assistant professors. A group that in· eludes 3& young faculty members is making the same demand. The group, 3S professors and 30 graduate sludent.s, calls itself the New Uni\·ersity Conference, Spokesman is Assistant Professor of Physics George Reiter, DAllV PllOI 0-ANG[ (0.t.ll l'l,ll~llMINC. (QMll.t.'<'I' -alitd N. w •• d J 1t k ~ Cutl •v \/luo l'ruoa•~• INI C.•n"tl ,...,.,, .. , l h•111•• 1e ••• :1 Ell•ltt Them11 A. Murph:., Mt .... lnt r.i1..- '•~I N<n1 .. Alv~rll1l"'t Oor•t!Of" c-t. MeM Olfk• l JO W1.+ l1y S1t1•t M1lli"'t .A..t.traut P.O. ltl 1560, ,1,16 O*<OflkH ,....._., 1#.ul· )111 Wt•I l1llot1 lli<olt•l 'I UI-ll•K" 1U ~ .. UI l .. "llt HY11t"'11 ... l•M" )tt ,,., !l'tf! Re.lier says It ls their position that firing!l""'Of Stephen Shapiro and Donald Brannan should be rescinded and the recommendation for firlng of George Kent be retracted, until inequities can be taken out or the prrsent re\•icw and tenure syslem. He cites three inequities: -There is no pro vision for review of a department's recommendation against junior professors. -Only tenured members are appointed to faculty commillees \Vh!ch is against the common Jaw notion of jury by onc·s peers. -Evaluation is done in secret by an anonymous committee with ho chance for the person being evaluated lo be presenl Reiter said the New University Con· ference is not yet sure ~·hat can be done about these lnequ1lies, but indicated the group probably will work throu.gh the academic senate. lie said they also don't know yet if the changes could be. lmple1nentc1I locally or if they \vould have lo tw worked out for the University ol California system as a whole. Some Valuables In Lost Items To whomever it may roncem, the Costa Mesa ~olice Department 1s holding a quantity of lost itenu collected in reeco\ months al the 111ay Co. store in Soulh C-Oul Plaza. Someone should ct.rtalnly be conctmed wlth one item among those turned O\'tr to Patrolman Jamet Farlrv by May Co. shortage c:ontroller \Ylllh1m G. Hnrden. who is in charRe of lhf' Jost and found. Included in the box of lo:oi:I proprrty are 12 wallets. .slx krychaln11 \\'llh numerous ktya, lhr~ pairs of glasst,, two bMkbooks. a nail 'lie, a C.:il St1itt. Long Bf.:ich studtnl body <'Brd -and one upper plnte of ral))e tt·cth The woman, B Ne1vport rf'sident. was an apparent sui cide victim, according to Newporl Police Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson. He said all evidence indicated suicide by drowning. r-.11ss Mor:ry's body was discovered hy a city employc clearing the debri s· cho ked beach ~·Ith a skip loader. •le found the dead woman lying near the \\'&ler line about 100 feet south of the Sa nta Ana River jetty at about S·45 a.m. She \\'as fully clothed. lier : last addres; in Newport Beach \\•as lf<ll Galaxy Drive. Thompson said the woman had been a mental patient ror several years. Services are pending at Ballz Corona rlel !\-far Mortuary, From Page 1 VIETNAM. • • post. bunkers u·it.h thrre feet of earth rovering thctn and connected with tun· nels. "One of the bunkers had curtains In It.'' Colavita snid. "It must have been some "·hee\"s bunker." J:ngincrrs blo~'1ng up lhe bunkers and lunnrls said the job might take weeks. Officers cstin1ated the underground hospital could accommodate about 3.000 patients. medics and troops. There were fi\•e operating rooms and six •anls holding 15 to 18 patients each. QuanliUu of medical suppl!~ were found. ··our 5.lde has never operated before in this terrain over an extended period of Ume," said tht dlvlsk>n 1pQtesman, ··and the North Vietnamese and Viet Cong have used lhi!I area for years. 11 Is lh<!lr back yard." Thr lull 1n ground fiahtln,q continued but 36 U.S. 852 bombers unloaded more lh-!ln 1,000 tons of explosives In thfl past 24 hour!! on suspected enemy troop C'Oncenlralion!I nt:ar Can Tho, the big nerve center for military oper1tlon1 south or Saigon In the Mekong Delta. F"lier~ on one raid reported settlne otf 11 ~ttondary explo~lons, indicating hits on t1n11nun1tl<tt stores. , WbKJNO'roN (UP I) -Presidt'ftt pollcy should . There are t.Hffcre.pces Nixon told the. Pentqon'1 general.8 and within the Defense department .. admirals today that he wants them to "But on the olher hand, while those air their view a to him fully, particularly differences do exiat, 1 believe that we if there are policy differences involved. are all working together toward the "I want to hear those difference.. tx· same end." pressed," Nixon declared during a vi.sit Nixon said he \VOUld rely on Defense to the Defense Department where he Secretary Mtlvin R. Laird and Gen. spoke .to ZOO officials and millt.ary leaders Earle G. Wheeler, ch&innau of the Joint after the second round of top-level con-Chiefs .of Staff, "to bring lo me and ferences of the week there. the NalionaJ Security Council the view· The President praised U.S. military Points of the Defense department and leaders for their general and special even those minority viewpoinli that may sk.ills, then added: "I want to hear exist here ." what they have to say. I want to take It was Nixon's second visit to the that into consideration in developing my Pentagon In a \veelc. He received full policies.'' military honors on his arrival, including He deplored what he described as a 21-gun salute. a tendency to consider the Defense and Before going lo the Penlagon. the State departments at odds with each pres.ident visited the Negro ghetto of other with the President having to play Washington and viewed the rubble sUJ..J the role of peace negotiator. remaining fTOm riots la&t April . "I don't consider it thst way at all.'' "Wuhington is our national cily and Nixon said. "We will have our dif· we want to make it a beautiful city ferences. There arc differences within in every way," Nixon declared during the State department as to what our his unannounced appearance in the rub- Fron• Page I ble-strewn sector. Al one (Xlint during "'his brief tour one or the re111dcnts of ' .. the area called out a "soul brother greeting to him . . The President shook hands with residents of the area and talked to them of their problems. Later in lhe day, be unveils an an· ticrime package aimed al curbing crime in the nation's capital The area visited by Nixon was along 7th Street between S and T slreets. N.W., which were hard hit in the out· break of violence and looting after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King. In the area, construction cranes wer r tearing dO\\'n fire--da1nagcd shells Of buildings to clear the way for a par!;: and playground. The park is lo be named for Hermao L. Clifford, assistant pr1n· cipal of a nearby high school who was slain recently while chasing some youths who had held up the school bank. Nixon said the park project symbolized coqperation between the federal govern· meht, the city and local property ownerf. BOND ISSUE MAY ACHIEVE 2 GOALS • • • expand existing schools than to build new ones. The bond Issue provides for construe· lion of three new schools-an elemen- tary school in Eastbluff, and Wakeham and Palisades middle schools. The school district already owns the two middle school sites; $400,000 would be used to purchase the Eastbluff elementary site fron1 the Irvine Company. School district enrollment is projected lo increase by 4,700 students over the present 26,446 in the next four years. Existing school buildings already are filled beyond capacity, according to school officials. There are 1,300 students nn double session now. and they say there '~rill be 2.100 next September if the bont1 issue fails. For every new student enrolied, two go on double sessions. The present d{;ublc sessioning -use of a classroom bv :'I morning class and ;in afternoon C'hl.'~ -<ihortens the period of instruc~io:1 hv one·halr hour eac h day. The loss per day ls equivalent of one .!Ind one·half years in 12 years of schooling. ::iuthoritics point out. All but about three pcrCC'll ' nr t' :! bond request is for ne1v c!a~sroo1ns, expansion or <-'lerations and s i le purchase to handle the growing enroll· men\. A little over one percent is to con· solidale bus garages and build ~·arehousc facilities now being leased . School of- ficials see this as an economy move in the Jong run. ll also would make roo1n for Newport Harbor High expansion bv rcmovin~ buses from that campus. ·Not included in the bond issue which 1vere in the one 16 months ago are purchase of school buses, libraries for elementary schools and an administration building. School officials say !hey arrived at their estimates of cost to build , a classrooms for the growing student population by con£ulting with architects, including KennJt Doriu.s, W J 11 i a m Blurock, William Hench, D a n i e I Cannicbael, and Richard Kemp, and with school consultant Jerry Remick. School board members pared the architects' estimated $17.S million sum to meet building needs for four year~ to $15.9 million. Trustees said they are hoperul a longer high school day with staggered schedules can be worked out to accommodate more students in the same number of classrooms and that way pick up the slack. School author!Ues aay the bond money wouhJ last four years but because of the time it takes to plan and build school facilities another bond Ulsue pro- bably would be called in two and one·ha!" years. It probably would be for a fifth high achoo!, another intermediate school and further high school expansions. Here is how the bond money would b::! spent: New Classrooms (40 portable, 175 pennanentl .. $13,096,00'l Eastbluff Site . 400,000 h1iddle School Alterations .. 1.500,000 High School Alterations . . 500,000 Warehouse and Bus Garage . . 172;500 New Equipment, Planning and Bond Costs . . . . . . . . . . . . 231,500 Total ............ 115,900,000 Wife Warned With Hubb y She's Heuded for Jail '"l'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen" is a ballad that had beUer not appear in Rodney Storum'a repertoire. Jf the convicted dope user does even· tually win back his wife she'll go to jail. He already i~ there -serving 72 days for poS11ession of marijuana. Kathleen . 21, of 17662 Jacquelyn Lane, Huntington Beach, got that warnil'lg frotn Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner Thursday after she condrmncd her ~bsenl hu!-"ban:I ;1~ . '"lou~r ond ri. creep." She was plticcd on thrcr years conc!ition· al probation . Pleading guilty lo nal'cot!t·s charges. she told the judge that 11'C':li O[ h~r present trouble stemmed lronl her hus· band and his persistent use of Illicit a a z drugs. She intended to divorce him, she _ said, but didn't seem to k~w in court' just how or when. That's when Judge Gardner tool< over. "The only way you'll make it is by getting rid of him," the judge warned Kat.hleeo . "lf you don't have the guts to ·do it, I'll do -it.tor you. "In other w~ if he moves bac'( in, you move into jail." The Storums wert arrested last Augusl by Hunting ton Beach police and narcotics agents. Storum has been described by officers as a "hard doper who uses his wife as a front tu serve himself." Storum must serve three years pro· batlon on completion of his jail term. I 7 HENREDON'S WARWICK COLLECTION ' ~ Henredon \'<!-~ You'll sit right down and write a letter. If you CM WI• dnk 1n~ere In your home, you woni bt ablt N rwht thll Dl'll ftom Hen'9don't Wlrwfck c:oOtc:Uon. A tuberb rfpmentt.Uon of 1he Que*'! Anne rMMet, bee~ formed In rkh Afrlan m1oho11ny. llsh with lnlald botd.11 of rn1p1 .. and walnul ........,, Crte'°"' and 1rac:elul, b11 tn0u1h for VtK!f ....,, 1mart •nouth 10 •o anywh1r.. Come In and pull up a dlalr. Stltcted Groups of Druef-.H1nretlon-Htritap Mt Sale Throvgh F9brutry. Honrodon Upl1oloto<y 15% off. Hwtt.,. Upliol1ta.., 20% Off EXCLUSIVI DIALIU flOtls HINa--. -DlllXIL-HlflfTAOI 90 DAYS NO INTlllUT-LOHClll TlllMS AVAILAal.I ON AP'ltOYID CUDIT NIWflOllT llACH 1 m W•tcllff Dr .. 642-1050 Of'IM NllA T '11L t INTllUOU l"Ma--.1 ,....,..... Dool_. Anllabl ....... 10-ffSID LAGUNA llACH J4J Nonll C:...I HwY. 494-4551 ornt PllDAT 'T1L. t I ,1 •• I I --..... •• ••• -~ ~· • • ·~ -DAILY PILOT 'i Freeway Prof>leua -..... fMI l1UHOI .,.., Mov~ too Slotclf/ .. -Ed~atio~Boards Foul .,V p Sc1wo'ls Many Views of Role MR. ::: .~ :: i -I By JAMES BOW members, and lot the California State and colleges have continued to pr0$ · 1 In Future of State AP EdRC&tloa Wrtttr CoJleget Board ol Trustees, 11 mtmbus, for their own welfare, and their ... SACRAMENTO (IJ') -Calllornla'• Since lhe 19th Century, r<genta have salary proposals. '.: education establlabment la a tangle ol exercised broad conslltullonJl powers REPUBUCANS GAIN ~ boards and cmnmlaaion!, moving more over the university, Its school! and col-Re b'~--· ·n1 1 • IEDITOll?'S NOTI: """"" ltl1 lwg ci.Nlc; m.nlttilflioiw of _. 11lallo!I OBAUl'9 111 Ctlflllnlll 1'9 l'lle Ir-I'>' Ind ll!IOll. TMv 1r1 llll(llllld In 11111 n11111 erTkll 111 1 -1• on C1llforni.•1 .. vlrOlt- slowly than milltant students demand leges and feet. I~ members serve l&-pu ~· DOW are &Ill ng · A strictly for farm use., with but ••• ~ •• 1-~--,.__ year temu. numbers among: individuahl in chat&~ " c.~'6..... aa1.c1 wai.1 many may of California educaUon. The junior «*· no billboards. It limits com· reaJlie, The muter plan authorized lhe college Iegea' governing board niemberl all w.;e merclal development to the U no revl.slons are made ln the next trustees, but they don't have the same appointed by Gov. Reagan, because Ate area around two of the dozen 2G year•, a child entertng kindergarten powen as ngents lo allocate money board wQ created only last year. "' : t., interchanges planned in the this winter who later attends junior granted by the leg.Lslature and the The Sfate °Board of Education Lai , -" By BllL STALL SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Freeway. It is viewed by some as a monumental achieve- ment;~ condemned by others as a self-perpetuating county. college and (inWles postgraduate school governor. In the recent controversy over a M majority of Reagan appolntm ~ .. ¥~ ~·~GES wW have nearly as many governing Gov. Reagan's proposal for higher educa-plus Republican Max Rafferty, a&,lle uuu:.. "u.n.a' board members as teachers overseeing lion tuition, regenta bad the power to pertntendent f publi in.strueli But even before lhe highway his schooJlng. reject or approve the plan. But trwitees ~ memi:r c on,~ and i n ! e r ch a n g e s are The IChool district wblcb runs his would have to have leglslaUve approval The Board of Regents includes etif;t e-0mpleted pressures are being 1 kindergarten muat rely heavily on state if they want to impose tuition. ex-officio memben: Reagan, Ll G;6Y. brought on county officials to aid and, by law, on policies of the New proposals in the leglalat~ would Ed Reinecke, Republican Asaembly Ma- monster. The freeway system has changed the face of California, led to creation of entirely new cities, and establlshtd pat- terns of living for millions. make cllJnges and exceptions, IO-member Slate Board of Education. redUCi! the powers of the regents, abort-jority Leader Robert T. Monagan Ql says Donald Gouge, 8 n appointed by the governor. The chief ening their tenns to eight yean, as Tracy, Rafferty, UC President Charles : associate counly planner. He admlnlstrator of those policies is the trustees now serve. J. Hitch, uc alumni president Roetr ".l said some pther counties are state superintendent of public instruction, LINES OF POWER C. Pettitt of. Los Angele!, staW not living up to t b e elected in a atatewide vote every four The lines of power running between ap:rlculture board president Allan Gra;t ,.. legislature's mandate. -A,*"• years. lheStatecapttolandeducaUongoveming and James Q. Brett, president of~ What should be t b e freeway's role in establishing California's fut~? What has been wrong in the past? SOME VIEWS Here are some views: -William Bronson, con- servationist -author, writes: ''One t h•l n g is certain," ~ OTHER BOAl\m boards also arc tangled. The governor San Fraoci.sco Mechanics lnl;titute. ~ Gouge said, ·'1he .re81 Intent 1'Atfif The junior college student also ls su~ technically la preaident of both the serve by virtue of the positions lhiY of the legislature Is not being ject. to a local governing board. But regents' and trustees' boards. ,But their held. carried out:· • .'11\ere was a since last year, a new law has sanctioned meetings are run by . a chairman, one The 19th-century reaaon for lncludibg sort of vacant threat in the a statewide Z2-member Board o f of the members appointed by the the posts oow held by Grant and Brett law. The stale'! bluH bas .been over 1 m o g -pr o d u c in g have increasing induslrial ac-Governors for. the CommWllty Colleges. governor. was to have representatlves of tljl1' called and nothing has been emissions from all types of tivity." The new boarrl already has begun plam The master plan also created the agriculture and industry on the Board done about it." motor vehicles. Such problems involving the to supervise junior college curriculum. Coordinating Councl! for Higher Educa-of Regents. ::.; In his controversial book, Slill, Maga says, "There's state's natura1 resource!! are The community college overseers tlon, an advisory group to the governor, BROWN "How to Kill a Golden State,, no way to bring about a quick extremely complex. There are already have tangled with local boards the university, the state colleges and 0{ the remaining appointed rtgent&, author Bronson pr e d I c t ~ , solution to thiS thing." no easy solutions. and with the State Education Deparbnent the junior colleges. Some Individual col· five were appointed by f or m &T "Parklands have been torn, cities have been shattered and agricultural lands have been invaded in the process of building the widely heralded and anxiously awaited 12,500- mile California f r e e w a y system ..• without doubt the largest boon-doggle in "there will be 00 sentimental By 1980, the smog produced But author Bronson argues, over jurisdictlon. lege or university proposals, such as Republican Gov. Good.win J. Kn1iUf, ba\lad written for Interstate by each auto will be only "Nothing is impossible; U we The Muter Plan for Higher Education, salary raises, are submitted to the coun-seven by former Democratic Gov. Ed-,' s.:• a fraction of today's levels. can go to the moon we can enacted by the legislature nine years cil. mwxl G. Brown and four by Reagan. . .... While planning experts But, he adds, "We'll have recreate a decent en-ago, spells out powers for the Universily But the council'• power Js limited. In addiUon Reagan appointed Grant speak of the need for alternate _m_ore __ m_o_in_r_v_eh_i_cl_es_._w_e_'I_l _vuo_· _run_::e;_n_t._" _______ o1_c_,._I_ifomi __ a_Boan1 ___ o1 __ Re_:gc.en_ts,...:.._24 __ And __ in_lhe __ Ie..:gtalac.__ture_:..' bolh __ lhe_unI_v_enlty_:__llld __ Re_lnec __ k_e·_inc.t_be_lr_cfull=::tlme=:.,•;_ffkes_·-'.-".:,· ;·::...· bi.story." -The State Chamber of Commerce's Freeway Support Committee believes that "as a matter of individual freedom, Californians must be provided with, and are willing to pay for, a system of free· flowing freeways which will permit them to use private automotive transportation if and when they choose to do so." -The new State Develop- ment Plan Program says, "California's highway building record is truly spectacular. However, it has not ac· companied this remarkable record with a corresponding advance in its ability ... to use highway expenditures as a means of positively in· fluencing or guiding the use of land to improve the con- ditions of urban life." -"From Sea to Shining See," the report of the President's Council on Recrea- tion and Natural Beauty, notes that "strip development of the Jand adjoining highways is perhaps the most obvious ex· ample of man's disregard of urban and rural beauty.'' NEW CHALLENGE forms of transportation - primarily urban rapid transit -most Calilornians have faiJ. ed to agree on a way to pay for them. The San Fran- cisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District is having trouble finishing its 75-mile system -short of money. Los Angeles area voters rejected a $2.5 billion rapid transit bond issue last Nov. 5. POST CRITICAL The state's 1eg1 s I at iv e analyst, A. Alan P o s t , criticizes the legislature for failing to develop a general s t a t e w i de transportation policy. ' ' T h e fundamental pro. blem," Post says, "is to reconcile the conflict between transportation needs and com· munity values." The state registers more than 12 million motor vehicles, including some 10 million passenger cars. The fumes they spew mingle w l t b California's fabled sumhlne to produce an infamous California product: p b o to • chemical smog. As it has pioneered In freeways and creation of smog, so California h a s pioneered in smog control, beginning with a statewide law in 1960 for control devices en vehicles. But again a California problem h a d blossomed virtually out of con- trol before it could be dealt with effectively. SMOG CDlEF John Maga, the state's smog control chief, describes the situation this way: "I think the problem isn't getting any worse. We've leveled off." The 1969 legislature adopted the nation's strictest controls California's resources agen· cy chief; Norman B. Livermore Jr. -whose pet peeve is billboards -says California faces "a tremen- dous challenge" in con· structlon of the new Interstate 5, the Westside Freeway, down the western San Joaquin Valley. Due for completion by 1972, the 237 miles of road will cost roughly $210 million and eventually carry most of the San Francisco -Los Angeles traffic. The 1963 legislature foresaw ;===========.I FAVORITES possible strip development, considered it undesirable, and directed the counties to zone the land along the right of way to preserve the natural beauty of the area. Fresno Counly has zoned a mile-wide strip on each side N1tion1I 111d loc1I r11d1r- d1ip poll1 prov• tht DAILY Pl LOT c1rri11 1om1 of th1 mod popul1r col11mn1 111d f11h1t•t 1v11!1bl1 to '"'i' n1wsp1ptr in th1 United St1t11. Easy to do ... just call or come in. ~ ~-IJOA)f ••• tlof.6 mdi citlJl,~• MUTUAL SAVINGS ... ND LOAN A••oc t ... TIO"" 2867 [all Coast Highway • Coron• Del Mar, Calif. 92625 Telephone 675·5010 -a-JU&ILQ: I CT Whirlpool :..w:... ·1r Giant 19.3 a1. ft.~ Nfrlpa*"'o.fimr - oniy32l4 • -f llo-11-. IMJll 226-lb. 1.-. Doluu fm-lncludo.let.COld-- humld11J·100led--crispor, ldJ-- _BiC .. lue! ET1>-19J .. -.. t· ............. ,.... a UJl.:9innnJ !#I I ss ft .un.apuu.a. ' i I E Slft.l.ooll: _llc ,_. __ .4cyclu. -·-dlspeo-.dUll....,,. up-tor--s.W ..... flowlea!lnf<>< --wlllit-horl1nmlnc."- Toudl Ir Mii dolnlaeflllw, Rotld hip.t bJ GOii., .......... , Help Stmp Oat Miii DDlllll ... •;;111111 .... .,L For oni, S2Q995 .At •.• FOSTER'S •ND APPL.IAN~:s LAUNDRY SP£aALS Alilni 0 atic washer has 3 cyde se6octions, 2 speeds, SllPll' SURGILATOR agilata, 8lldusM! Magio-Mix filter. Matching 5-eyde dryoer has 3 drying heats, ·fast drying sy,tem and extra large drun. Both have special ~-b' Pa 11ianent Press fabrics . eu,-llld-' , SuprO!ne -nolic Washerhos ~•soh """- MagicCleln9 ~-.~-•1:tot . Mat.cllin&24!Jlld W,.,-• Tumble Pless Qxllral, Bolh -'!JOCiolad<loll!ICll9 for l'lii11•MntPlwWllb. Speclol ..... -5-.ow lWahlr, LSA-7800;°""", ISE-7100 FREE DEUVERY AND NORMAL INSTALLATION ON All WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES FOSTER'S TV + .. 17185 BROOKHURST ol WAINU 968 .. 1234 ~A·~.~= 546•2606 • --• • • • • ' • ( ' { • ., • , I . I I I ~ • • • • ,_ ,. ... .. .. . . '' .. . .. --~ -- /DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I Impact of Freeway \Vhat's red and blue, runs 4.5 mile~ without stopping and can wipe out 5f.5 Costa ~1esa dwellings! Answer: The Red-Blue Line, one among four New- port Freeway route alternates to be discussed in Feb. 18 public bearing at the Orange County Fairgrounds, prior to the final decision . Whichever freeway is chosen, or if the Newport Boulevard route designated 24 years ago remains the pick., the cost will still be $50 million-plus. A minimum of 94 -or up to 174 commercial and industrial buildings will be eliminated. Unavoidabl e construction headaches will plague us up to 24 months. Over a 2()..year period. however $100 million in fuel, time and other consumer savings might be reflected. compared to the ex.istin~ Newport Botilevard surface route. Somewhere through to\\'n, another !rce,vay is in· evilable. Costa Mesa officials hosted a public meeting Wed· ne.sday at which facts and factors were reviewed, but a handful of about 10 citizens showed up to hear possible impacts of the big issue. 1'1aybe time will be cheaper at the hearing in three week s. A Perplexing Phenomenon Surprised lawmen see1n to be discovering a ne\V phenomenon -both alarming and perplexing -in Citizen John Doe's seeming relu~tance about getting in· volved. Not someone else, as the classic example of a screaming Kitty Genovese being slashed to death on a Brooklyn Street, but Citizen Doe himself is the victim of this odd, new dodge of his responsibility. Citizen Doe -often criticized as too materialistic- apparenUy doesn't give a hoot in the Harbor Area about his personal possessionf-anymore. It seems to be a complete contradiction in human nature. Some citizens apparently don't care, based on in· vcstigation of a teenage burglar's free-wheeling forays through central Orange County. Roanling quiet neigh· borhoods, the amateur looted hundreds of spots, taking thousands of dollars. ·'But," said a detective. 1'and I think we should :stress this: 25 to 30 percent of the people he victimized have never reported the cases." This naturally puzzles a policeman, whose job is protection of the lives and property of taxpayers. Consider some of the possibilities if one of those dozens of silent victims had properly filed a crime l't'· po11, or refused to listen to pleas for sympathy after catching the boy in lhe act. (They did listen in some tases.) -Fingerprints or other clues in that one . isolated case might have more,. quickly led detectives to the guilty party. -Many persons might not then have become his later victims. -Methods of rehabilitation _could have been ap· plied sooned in an effort to help the boy, \vho told or being a drug.user. -Committing a subsequent job -hi s count \Vas up lo 22 by today -he might have aroused someone he assumed to be away and been shot to death. -Or. under panic circumstances, 1night not he hiinself have killed ? Embarrassment over a police visit would be y,rar~ ranted for some, since the majority of 17·year-old's jobs occurred where unlocked doors gave a carte blanche invitation to continue his one-boy crime wave . But the mystery remains. Why wouldn'.t a person want help in getting back his own stolen, personal items? · • . . tCJ Draft Reform Dear Gloomy Gw: 'At B~,spitals: Stark Branin at Atay Hout• ... . . ~gain Before ~ngress . .. ~ .. : 'CAsHINGTON -One of Lyndon B. lobnson's final legislative legacies to Coogres:s was a proposal for revision el the military draft law. ::A.B he promised in his State-(lf-the- lJnioo message, the outgoing President fOtinaDy renewed his request ror a Jot· lel"y·like random selection plan to Determine the order of call for dran eligibles. His proposal cleared the Budget lktreau and went to Congress en January i7. -the Friday before lhe Monday O:Jaaguration. = Jtandom selection is a concept which pa been strongly supported by some critics of the present draft maclUnery. 'ftley can be excused if they now com-Plain that Mr. Johnson should have been [nl1ch Jess dilatory in urging draft reform vn a reluctaot Congress. . • THE PRESIDENT'S last-minute plan. Called Fair and Im partial Random selec- tioo (FAIR), was first recommended In 1967 by a special presidential study eotnmission. President Johnson endorsed 11 then and sent it on to Conireu. • Random $61.ection was envisie>Md as (he selectioo process in a system under 'Which young men would face a year ONnaximum draft vulnerability at age i!J-(or on compleljon of 8 trade or tollege education). The Pentagon. pleas-ed with the prospect of younger draftees, fUpportt'd the pJan. • Even Gen. Lewis B. Hershey, director ftf selective service, who bad been no Lan or selecUon by lot, was tmJught e:roand to support of the random Mleetton f>rocess. The Sen1te approved a drart reform hilt which would have allou•ed lbe President to institute such a pro- ~edure along with other aran revisions. : THE llOUSE OF Representath:es, ~owevcr, balked. On grounds thaL oo random aelection plan hid bt9\ epeUed l;>ill in law, tile Houae Annld ltnlcto Committ• rt!UMd to •blndoa llll lidlll-• Please tell R.F.C. (Gus, Jin. 3) that Costa Mesa city oiliclals are constantly fighting for sidewalks. ThQ.Se who have the say are prop- erty owners who won't pay for them. Would R.F.C. want his taxes to pay for sidc\\•alks in "n1ost of Costa Jl.1esa"? -C. A. J . fllb ~•lutt tt'llC,.. •11fe,,· v!tW1 .,., -Utll~ Tllt11 ti IM "9WUl1Nr, Se"d W'tW HI ,...,. " 01 ... •11 Ou$. 0111' Plltf, first system by which local draft bolrdl had been selecting amona men cl111lhed as eligible for service. The finally approved IM7 comproml1e bill did not authorize random 1tl1cUon. instead. Congress invittd the Pl'llldent to make a specific Je111l1Uve 1'9qUllt if he still wanted to lnltltute auch a plan. Johnson did not do so unUl n houri before he was to leave tht White House .. Nor did he revise the Hltcllon prootn so as to tap the reservoir of 1 .. y11ro0ld1 first. · THE DRAFi REVISION, prtparld 1t Selective Service headquartert Ind Hnt to Conp'UI, would let the Prt1ld1nt set up a fair and impartial random selection sy1tem under rµles which ht would prescribe. The bill would alao make changes to assure an orderly lransltion to calling 19-year-olds first. Details o( a random selection Plan were sent to Congres1 too. A pamphltl accompanying the draft bill spelled out a system under which a draft board would first determine "by lot" a SC· quence of all 366 possible birthdays for a liven · )'tit. Then , also by Int. !\\'Cl alpliabetical sequences would be determined, for initials of la st and first names. Und~r the plan. thr date sequen Ct' would be used to determine the order in which eligibles were drafted in that year. The other two HQUences would bl Ulld, when ~ to Mlect among min with tht 11m1 data. 1 Ribar! f , Allen 111111 Jolla A. Ooldsmilb Trend· to S~parate ' Coronary Care By NORMAN NllON, M. D. . ' ' . In the lnleDlive con unit of a modern bolpltal yau 'Clh .. ., llll'k drama any h0\11 ol tile day •or n)Cltl. Here men and women face r '1111 ar de&lh criaes with the help of dOC'tors, nurses and IC'chnicians who have the most sophisticated equipment available to deal with nearly every medical and surgical emercency. tnt.tnalve oare unlLI vary In Ille. Some art old warda remodelld !or tllla -with blda, 11par1ted b)' l1ua parUUOl!J or otlllnJ·to-Door eurta!N lo provide 10me privacy, Untna both 1k1u. In ntwer, mialler unltt, tile oame atm01pbere pra•al~ -axcltamenl, nolll, ap. pl'lhenalon, peopl1 IClll'fllll!i blok and forth, even lhoUlh 1(fortl are m•dt to minimize dl1turblna and depre-.in1 fltmenll. EVERY PATIENT. know• he ,, crltlc:ally ill. Conltant l n t r 1 v e n c1 u 1 therapy 11 e1rrlld out on 1lmoet evety0ne: .ome mutt hav4 oxyaen, others lndWellln1 c1th1ter1. ArUflclal • iJ .... -~. ;¥ > r ... : ~,..: ·, :. ~ ,_,~ . f-\ ·J. ·~' ., . " kidney, hearl·lung machlnes, and olhcr strange, somewhat foreboding equipment may be in use for some patients. Nurses keep Watch, often by remote television, bu\ check the vital signs hourly or mote oft.en, ll'lv1rl1b1y wakin11: every 1l1tpln1 pa~I. AIUioup fl blati patient uaually carinot 11e hll own electrocltdJoaraphlc trlc· 1na1. he ,may watch lhe monitor hooked up to hla nel1hbor In 1 nearby cubicle. Som1Um11 "" alarm IOllndt, lndlc1Un1 cardiac arrHt or olhtr compllcatlon1, but the nW'ltt' lrnmtdl1t.e re1pon1e 111 rewurtna to thole who wltne11 the emeraency, or when other Ufe·nvlna procedures .•re performed . l!lllARLY ALL paUentl In th• tnten11Ve cm ·ynlt Use denial, a psychological mechanism, to repudiate what is going on IO as to allay fear and anxiety. So on discharge some state they felt no rear at any time during their stay; others admit they were frightened even though initially they denied having any fear . But niany patients say frankly they were scared the entire time. In n10Sl intensive care units the in- cidence of delirium. hysteria, depression and other psychiatric symptoms is suf. ficiently high to cause concern. Often the doctor·patient relationship plays an important part since the critically ill paUtnt ~e~ the physician as his lifeline t~ the Ufliig world. WHAT' THE DOCI'Oft says and ho1v he ny1 it are of enormous importance. For it1ve illness makes the patient overly de pendent and vulnerable to tUlplCIOTll and uncertainties. Unfor· lunately, s o m e doctors are uneasy tn thi l!i:k room when questions about proanoalA, arc put to them. Further. 1lnc1 tn\tnsive care units are manned pr1¢arJ.bl by nurses and technicians, with doctors serving as remote control generals of the technical aspects of the patients' care, the all·importanl doctor. patient relationship is diffused . Because heart cases, particularly cor- onaries, represent at least 75 percent of those in intensive care. the trend now is toward separate coronary care units with less noise, turmoil, bright lights and confusion. Although the threat of sudden death is still present, there are fewer panic reactions and other psychiatric symptoms. THE INTENSIVE care unit, regard- less of t~ excitement, drama and tur- bulence, represents a tremendous a<f.. vancement in providing emergency treatment for desperately ill patients in a setting where personnel and equip- ment are always avaih.ble . Neverthe- less, patients with a diagnosis of myo- cardial infraction can be treated far more effectively and 1yith fewer psy· chological hazards in a special coronar_v care unit than in the hectic environment or the recovery room or the intensiv!' care unit. 'Lucky to: Have D~n Aldrich at UCI' To lho Edi fut ' S1v1ral people 'have 11k.ed 'If lhe Me11 Verde Homeowner• meettnc U'ley ll· tended Thurtdey nl1ht wu the ume ont Iha! WU roported In Prldafa DAIL y PILO'I' (llornaownera Ortll Chanoallor. .Jan. 24) tr so -we all ·aeemed to miss the almosph~l't! of holUllty and t'filicisn1 described by your f'f!porttr . ln three years of attending assoClatlon n1c('lings. I've ne\·er heard anyone rc<:eive such sincere and enduring ;ip- plause. person ~ lte·~ areal ! JIM WOOO Past President Mesa Verde Homeowners Association an lnterettlng meeting, with the audience. . vtry intensely absorbing the remarks ,rrlade' by' the Chancellor. The questions "a~kei! wire simply the type that in- terested persons do ask -and they were beautifully handled by Dr. Aldricn who should be complimented on his sincerity and slraighUorwardness in ans\vering them. Wish your reporter, who by the way has done better, had tol(I it like it \Yas. BARBARA CAMPBELL Scparo1b19 Bog•, Girl< To the Editor: nation as bei11g at the uiiconscious root of ail racism. and describing it as irrational, or sub·ratio1ial, Harris said there are good educatio11 reasons for separating boys a11d girls (not b11 race) tn the lower grades. He believes teaching slwuld be adj~ted to tlte realities of gender, and of the niatur· ational development -not •''to solvr the race prob1e111 ." While Point To the Editor : ; Unjust Two-thirds Rule BUT FOR ONE exception, the ques· lions put to Dr. Aldrich were honest expressions of concern for a matter that is on the minds of everyone. Such concern is healthy : It's to be expected •nd the chancellor seemed to welcome the opportunity to personally explain how "bUJlnea 11 conducted" on tht Irvine campus. His answen wt«! articulate. forthright and, though not everyone agreed with every answer, there did ap-peor to be a consensus that we·re darn lucky to have Dan Aldrich at UCL Tlle.te U11es are from the stor11: ··.~10.tt oj tile questions asked of the cltance!tor had hostile overtones. 'J'hose askfng qutstiom, however. moy 11ot have been representative of all 12.S person.f present; when Aldric/1 tfn.~ flni~IJrd ht wa.f sponta neously 11pplauded." -Editor J wish Sidney Harris would not write suah nonsense as yesterday's column (Jan. 28) in which he advocated separate schools for girls and boys in order to solve the race problem. There's just a chance many might lake him seriously, The race problem would no longer be with us if some people didn't persist in magnifying differences between groups of people \\'hile ignoring the far more important si milarities, such as tho wide spectrurr. of differe nces among in· dlviduals ln aoy group. In the DAILY PILOT of Jan. 27, William P_ Bower asks the question, "They don 't really believe, do they, that God gave them alone the wisdom to know what is good for all of us?" (Referring to various persons com- plaining of certain speakers appearin& on the UC I ~ampus.) I want Mr. Bower to know tha! "God" ce rtainly did gh·e those persons this "wisdo1n." l '1n nol exactly sure which god -there are so many of thc1n -but my guess is it ls the one that passes out the ammunition to all comers. The one whose color has disappeared under layer after layer of white paint and had a whole civilization named alter him has disappeared, too, for the time being. The white paint is around, though, and villble to the naked eye and is now the medium and the message and lhe sour~ of current "wisdom" floating about. I think. I• Califol'l\l1 vou-r1 wire moll l'tctttlvt o school llnlf\Olns m1uut11 In the 1tl7· eJ school year thin In tJW prtYICAll )ear. Tblt'I the rtll,l.)t Of I IUl'Vf¥ made by Ille Calllomla l'llabara Alloilll- lion and thl Callloml1 A-l•tlon of lichool A41nlA!ltraton. : The trend ll l1YOt1ble, If not ovtr· Wbelmingly IO. • The survey rt\IUltd a 11.1 Pll"Otft\ lain in succeutul IChDot i:.1 "ildJOM end a 4 percent 11\n ln RCCltllfUI bond flections . Even 90, to etamlne the darker 1ide of lhese statistics. only 65 pereent ti( the I.ax proposals v.•cre pa.sst'd and enly 4$ percent of the bonds. ; PERJIAPS TUF. MOST !Jtriking parl 9f I.he report 1~ iLs conunent that If IJCl.l bond issues required only a simple ~ity, as prevails with stale bond tllifpositioos, 9'l perceot of the 1987.& icliool boods woold haV< been appn,.ecl. • "1J Dr. Gaylord G. Cordon, CTA ~ execuUve. "The will ol U.. ilijl:a l(y to npprovc school bcndJ W llllil Uurarted by a minority dut to lli,.ltate's archa.11· law requi ring a two- --•lrdl •ote " ·~ !· JNEN TO l'llAT. The two-thirds rule fl ·Jocal bond 1s~ues i~ a Jtlh century WllOrmtali(lft In the slate comtiaJtlon. a ... adopted because in thole days lrolllrtY WM beld by a comparative w • did not ...,,! the """"""' folk t> 1111Ulelt ..,...nib<r tho;r property ' ' " wlUl ~ dtb&a. ni.Jloturt h11s changed W1tb ~.a lflall 1\Mne ownership. Tbl ODMtltutlon Revision Commission m1tb' In February to consider the third phase ol Its work. The local two-thirds rule Jurb In that part of the Constitution to be studied. The commission :o1houl<l remove it and ~ub!titute tht fai r('r sin1ple majority requirement. San Francisco Ex11n1incr Shorts CONSIDERABLE credit must be given to the fact that a confrol\tation has not occurred on the Irvine campus: This 111 the real test of a present day chan- tcllor or university pn:isktent. Dan Aldrich has to be one of the best in the business. Doors of communicatlon :ire open: he's admired and respected by his' students: they know the rule~ and they obey them . -TJ{E DAIL,. r11.0T ll'OU!(I c!o \l'C'll to act.'tnt th is 1>0s1ti1·1' note and qui! hr('etlh1~ ('Onh1sl0n bv r<'ferrhig lo :1 l'hanrellor's "rosi;iblc" reaction.<: in :t •·p1.1ss1blt'" n ut as the, sole measure or 1hr 1n11n. '!here l::;n'l J.(Qing-to be ~ r1nt 1f hr: does hi!! job well. Vxal rt'lltltnts should makr cvrry cHort to !\ear th!~ man ~ak -in Joh• Day. Ott.. Blue 1\1ountaln..._ Eacle: "The turbulence on American ~--Bt1 George cotleae campuses has up5el a lot of people, but it teems unfashionable 11>- dty to attribute' it to Communists , a speaker at a polltlcal convenllvn in New York ... Jald there are Com· munist& on moat Of the major cam· pu1eG in this country and that thf'se COmmunitlll had been involved ln the 1tudeot protests. The speuer? Gus Hall. poerll •ecreWJ or 1 b • American Communist Part)'." • Dear George · Don't you feel rather !lilly 111 1 buslnt!is ord1narlly inhribiled by tadlc s only" SD. Oc11r S D. lf women can be. iockcyb. men can ~ advice columnists. (llrn. How Iona. before tbc flrsl &.op less Jockty?l 1 1Uood .l\'ol llo•llle To the Editor · Someone told me once. "Don 't belie\'e everything you read in the newaJ)lpers." Yet. what other way ls there to keep i,rlformed, I wooder . I really dig your paper -read it through as often a$ possible. So, It I had not been t.o the Mesa Verde Homeowners' meeting when Dr. Aldrich spoke last \VCck. I probably "''01ild ha\'C Actepted your reporter·.~ ••ri11en \l'Qrrl th3t th" moor! wa~ "hu.~l ilr." I:'\ NO \\'A\' could th(!! br' It l'.'3S True Pict.h·c Pllot·Trlhune, Slorm Lake , towa : "For years lhe Ru511ian Communi1ll have bten painting tht' United States u the Im. perialistie villain. The U.S .. so they con- tend, is trylti(: to dominate the world, m11king 2Q1h century colonles nut of ~muller ('Ollntrl('S. Now the Russians hRvc lflsl this ph:lst of the argument 1vh1ch \l'l:IS que~lion:ible in the first place. Hu:;sla 's :;trn11g·11rrn inv11.sion of Cteeho .. ~lo\~ak1a give!' :i tr1.1e picture of !hr 'blndlta' UM!y wish to brine to the! world.'' Why tr11.<lc a problen1 having to do with 10 percent or so of the population for one involving 50 percent'! Y. KERSEY Af~cr citi11g disto.ttc for milc1ge· Quotes ,\111llon11l t~ch1c1tlon As1&clatlon, on nirrlli of y<:ar-round school• -"Adop- t ion of an extended SC'hool yur has not been widespread, despite enlhu$ia1m by il, advocaleli. several schools have exper1menled wtth a longer school year <ind dropped the ldca. Surveys show the concept is not received favorably by teachers, Rdminislrators and parents." llnr11ld llnwe ll, U. S. Comml11iOM.r of t-:duc11tio• -"I would suueat . . that rach ~nr, starting lmmedlatf:ly sod usiog a combination of federal . statr ant! local re!OOrccs. 10 percent of tM nation's rlemt:ntary an<l second a r y teachers -some 20,000 men and women -annually be given the opportunity to improve lheir professfrfnal !kill5." FREDA M. VOSS -~-t.!I 1.-riday. January :Jl. 1969 Tht' editorial page of the Dai/11 Pilot reekJ to inform and stim- 1datc rtadert b11 pnsenting tJu.1 ntioipopn"t opi1'lfons and com~ mmiory on topics of intertsl ond sfgnfficonce, by providing a fOrUm for t.lit' ,..rprtssion ot our rr.adtr.~· opituuns. aru1 b11 prl's~11tfno tht dttier·.te v1t'tl'- J)(11111s of 1rifor111tt1 obser1.•1;rtr at1d spoktsrn.tn on rorn cs of tht doy. Robert N. \Vecd , Publisher I I 'I ' • I ' I I I • I -('- -------___ .. _.,..._ ,W... Jaoua., '1, l '69 ( S) DAIL V "LOT 3 After the Flood~ lt"s ~ongh Being a eow NEW TWIST ON OLD WEST: NOW IT'S MARINES TO RESCUE INSTEAD OF CAVALRY Capt. Beyma's Helicopter Moves. Mired Cow as Ranch Hands Prepare Next Sling TRANQUILIZED AND SOMEWHAT PUZZLED, AIRBORNE COW HEADS FOR SOLID GROUND Crew Chief Loftin Observes Liftoff From Site of Rescue Operation Helicopter Rescues Cattle From Mud SWINGING ALONG lN WILD BLUE YONDER View of Flying Cow from Helicopter Hatch THE FINAL INDIGNITY -A YANK ON THE TAIL For Health's Sake, R'4ncher Wants Cow on Feet '- l'vtarines and their giant \vhlrlybirds pruved eq ual 'l'hursday to lhe task ol res- t·uing about a dozen head of cattle stranded by s to r n1 \Valers impounded be h i n d Prado Dam near the Orange- Riverside County line. The cattle, all Herefords from the Reynolds Ranch near Corona, had been stranded by high water since last weekend. Earlier, Marine helicopters from the Santa Ana Air Facili- ty were used to drop feed to the isolated cattle. However, the white faces merely used the hay to stand on in an effort to get out or the icy ooze.. Most of the cattle stood knee-deep in the stuff. Others were completely immobilized, mired up to their shoulders. After several days, so me were beginning to die. Another distress call from ranc h hand s brought Thursday's rescue mission. A huge, twin-rotor Sea Knight helicopter piloted by Capt. Dennis "Doc" Beyma, 29, Tustin, was dispatched to the scene where Beyma, his co-pilot, Capt. Rocky E • !Jarger, 26, Santa Ana, and his crew chief, Cpl. Kreig M. Lof- lin, 21, Bakersfield, airlifted the cattle to higher ground. Several ranch hands and a ve terinarian accompanied the crew from the Third 11arine Aircraft \Ying. Each cow was shot \Vith tranquilizers. loaded into a sl ing beneath the helicopter and transported to higher ground . One calf rode as a "firs t class passenger" in the cabin of the aircraft. The first animal bad sunk into lhe ooze up to her sheulders. A sling was fixed in place and Capt. Beyma lilted off. The cow didn't budge. Beyma applied m o r e power. Slowly the cow began to pull free. "! had 6,000 pounds of lift on that cow before the mud let her go." said the pilot. "She must be a few inches longer $100,000 Suit Filed in Wreck Damages of $100,000 are being claimed in Superior Court by the father of a Westminster girl who was seriously In- jured in a traff ic accident last Sept. JO in thal city. Marvin .T. Smith, 58Z2 Vallecito Drive, names ft{axwell F. Fritz of Garden Grove as the defendant. He claims that Fritz's negligent operation of an automobile led to a collision in which his daughter, Susan, 18, was badly hurt -injuries which, he adds, may prove to be permanent. Miss Smith was a passenger In a ca r which was allegedly 11truck by Frlll.'1 auto at th e intersection or Sprtngdale and Jroquoi11 atrffb. She ha11 been unable to work since the accident, the complaint :1rl1ts it Photographs and ~lory by Lee Payne Of the Daily Pilot Staff endured a three-ton n e c k stretch and a flight through the air with a sling around her stomach. no\v thp.n she was when \Ve started." When she finally did touch dry ground alter a flight of several hundred yards, the old girl did, indeed, look a bit ill. Who wou ldn't? 40 STORES TO SERVE YOU Z.300 HARBOR BLVD. AT WILSON She had been buried up to her shoulders in ice cold mud and water for three days, then shot full of tranquilizers - enough to knock her out for at least two hours, according to the vet -and then she had As if that we re n ' t enough. a final indignity came when she landed. Her owner came up to her and. wtlhout a word o f greeting, gave her a yank on the tail and told her to stop lying around. It's not easy being a cow. !Tomorrow) SATURDAY FEBRUARY 1st RAINED OUT LAST SAT. BUT NOT SOLD OUT. JUST GAVE US AN EXTRA WEEK TO DIG UP MORE FANTASTIC BAR- GAINS FOR YOU • • • DON'T FORGET THE KIDS PONY RIDESONLY..10¢ COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS! HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA [ I ! 4 DAil y Pll.OT Television star Art C•rnoy Isn't interested in attending a sewage disposal plant dedication in Chand- ler, Ariz. Carney, who bu played uwer worker Ed Norton on the J • c k I • GIMson Honeymooners show for 10 years, turned clown the invitation from Mayor Gool'IJO N.der because be .. wants to dispel his association with the sewennan image." The mayor bad even of· fered to engrave Camey's 11$mC on all the manhole covers in th·e city. • lf there is a shortage of base· balls when the cry "play ball" sig· nals the start of the coming sea· son, blame it on the New York dock strike. lt seems the Tober Baseball Co. in Rockville, Conn., is running out of its stock of base- balls because it is unable to ship the cores and cut leathers to Puerto Rico where they are sewn together. • TIOo gunmtn turned a Loi Angele1 Democratic Club meet- ing mto a 1urprise ~aising affair when they htld up the gatMring ond Jl<d with more than noo. • The Truro County divorce court Ocean Well Ert1pts Oil Slick Threat To State Wildlife SANTA BAlUlAllA (AP) -Beaches, wild.Ute and tisb were lhreatened today as oil bubbled !orth from a leaking ocean-noor well at a rate ol 11,000 gallom ·~· Tbe blaclt aJlct covtrtd 200 square mlles of Padlic Ooeon, u pUola prepartd chemical air drops to dlsper1e the on am! underwater cmn wcrted to aea1 the leak. A team of experu wu c!Upa~ from Wa.shiJllloo, D.C.. b)' Secretary of Interior Walter J. HlcUI and Gov. Ronald Jle>gllQ IOld ol the tluut of "major pollution to our coast." "It is imperative that everything be done that can be done," said lUckeL He is considering tighter rtgulaUoos on offshore drilling, he said, as a reml.L The Wldersea well, )>eing drilled five and a half miles offshore by Union All-volunteer Army Pushed By Presid~nt WASHINGTON (UPI) -Despite whll could be fonnldable oppcwlflon, Preli-- dent Nlxoo bu llUn preliminary st.po toward replacing the draft witb an all- volunteer army, as soon u Vietnam spending is "substantially reduced. n Congress probably would have to ap- prove any scrapping of the draft. The current selective servict Jaw .e~res · · In 1971. • .. Oil Co. of Callfomla bl<1f out 1\Jtlday. With the mlgrau..' of gray wbala at Its height, Stale Fl!h and Game ofliclall e1presaed !ear IOI' safety of the mammall which must come to the surface to breathe. TbeJr route . WU through the oil slick. Many bln!s ,..... struggling oo the beacbeJ, lhdr feathen stlcily witb oil Stat. marine blalogista said chemicals used to dtsper,. the al!ck may harm bolton><fwdllq flol1 and planktoo. The Coast Gulli'd warned ships to atsy at least five miles from tbe drlllinl platform from which oil workers aougbt to seal the leak. The well wa.s drilled 3,000 feet below the ocean floor. Lop were lashed together Into floaUng barricades in an effort to trap the oil before it apread·lnto barbora. The oil wu surging to the IUl'face Jn two major bubbles Thursday night about 800 feet from the drillirig platrorm. There may be other smaller flows as well, an oil company spokesman said. In ad.dWon. natural gu was leaking near the rig. Crews WU'ked to force mud into the well, stopping the .,......,..... Worker> from the Red Adair fire Fighting Co. arrived to help. A raolutioa was introduced Into the Calilornia Senate calling for atsto ln- apectiClll of an off-oil operation outside the. llfto-mll• lbnlt of atste 1uriadJdlon. ltupn ..i.t. be aupporta the l)lOYt. , '" After dlspatd>Jng Illa team Including Dewey Acu!f, aoaistant chlel of tlie·con-'""'tion dimkln of the t[.S. GeoJog!col SUrvey' Hickel Aid .... woold decide "whether ltepl lhould be taan•to Impose 1trlct.er regulations" on. federal lease oil drillinJ:. The unlon on well was drilled wider a competitive lease. OIL ERUPTS FROM RIG OFF SANTA BARBARA Rig EvacuatN After Attempts to Cap Flow Were Stymied 'Guerrilla Warfare' SF State Students Throw Bricks, Bottles at Firemen SAN ':1RANCISCO (UPI) -Militant demonstrators at San Francisco State College f>'llled fire alarms and then hurl- ed brlcU and bottles at resp:tnding fire equlpmeat Thursday In another outbru.11: of violence at the beleaguered achoo!. "They hit us with everything but the kitchen sink," said one bitter fireman. Iraq Radio Reports Spy Deaths Due By UaHecl Prna hterudoal Israeli Preinler Levi Eshkol plt.dged today to spare no effort to eue the plight of Jews livJng in Iraq and other Arab lands. Hi.I Jerusalem statement followed a Baghdad ridio report more •11plel" are to be executm. '111e execution ·in Baghdad Monday of 14 persons accused ol espi.onage, nine of them Jews, touched oH a worldwide funn. Official Baghdad radio Tbursday n1gbt angrily attacked the Arab states for failing to take Iraq's side a1ainst the worldwide condemnation. At the same time Iraqi Minlster of Information Abdullah Salloum Al-Samar· rai said there was a "possibility'' an American couple held on spy charges would be released soon. The couple are Mr. and Mrs. Paul T. Bail, formerly of Houston, Texas. He ~d Bail may be released "in a few days" and that Iraq could afford to be lenient, having demonstrated the strength of its position. Baghdad radio attacked what it called "Arab progrtsSive forces" for failing to support Iraq In the campaign being waged against it and told the Arab press to "get ready" because other spies were upected to me« the same fate u those Monday. Arab newspapers and radiGS have been muted in their tttabnent of the public hangings. Arab I e a d e r a expressed the private belief the hangings may have dealt a savage blow to tattered Arab prestige which rose after the laraeli · attack on Beirut Airport In Pemmporth, England granted Mrs. 011• Lewis, 84:, a divorce on the eve of her 41st wedding an· nlversary. Mrs. Lewis, who lives at the Perrau Bay Home for the Aged, bad asked the divorce .pro- ceedings be speeded UP. so she could marry an unidentified man she met at the home. During congressional hearings In 1M'T. the Pentagon oppo6ed the concept of. an all-volunteer army, claiming it was fm.. practical and would cost $10 billloo to $15 billion to boost military wages to lhe pet or attracting enough men an 1 career ~is.· . Co~ional supporters said the Pentagon had inflated the cosl estimate. other congressmen, however, have op- posed the idea of an all-volunteer, "mercenary"-like army. Allies Expect Hanoi OK On Secret Talks in Paris A force of 350 policemen, including 18 mounted officers, came under a similar barrage when they charged into about 200 screaming college and tugh school students at an intersection ad· jace.nt to the main entrance of the cam· pus. "Thls is guerrilla warfare," shouted one of the demonstrators as he fled ahead of mounted police. "Use anything at your disposal" Israeli officials in JerusaJem said Pope Paul VI has intervened with the govern- ment of Jordan for clemency for a number of residents or Bethlehem arrested by the Jordanian government on charges they spied for lsraeJ. The number under atrest was not'known. The Pope had appealed llllSUCCesafully with the Baghdad government to spare the lives of the men banged last Mcmday. Another Airliner Skyjacked; 63 Persons Aboard • Mr. Charlie, a nearsighted 120. pound poodle ii ~ i'n Berkeley with ht.! ham own.er Harold Nwh afkr ~ing taken bt1 dogna.pers three week3 ago toh.en he went out with· out his glasses. Nwh had the dog fitted with gl&ses after ht noticed Mr. Charlie kept bumping into ob- jectl. • Mrs. Cor4 L. Smith billed Pitts- field, Mass. !or fll.15 because mud flowed •to her washer after a city waler "'1na1n broke leaving her laundry a mess. 11 1 ngme the city owes me for the cost of the soap, 50 cents of depreciation on my washer and three hours' labor at $L25 an boor," Mrs. Smith said. During his campaign Nixon said he fa· vored ending the draft "when the war in Vietnam is over." But in his directivt to the Defense Department Thursday, he moved the timetable up W "after the e:rpenditures for Vietnam are aubltan- tially reduced." . • White House Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler told reporters the directive was not to be interpreted as a final decision. The directive, addressed io Def'ense Secretary Melvin R. Laird, said: "The secretary of defense WBl!!I ad· vised of the President's conviction that an all-volunteer armed force be estab- lished after the expendit"ure! for Viel· nam are substantially reduced and was requested io plan a special commission to develop a detailed plan of action for ending the draft." ln response to questions Ziegler uld it was fair to say that Nil:on was "mo•· ing ahead" of ~ pledge to end the draft and that he was "aware" of a recent poll which said iwo out of three Amer· ica11,1 oppose the concept of an all-volun-- teer anny. · Four Businesses Awarded Riot Damage HACKENSACK, N.J. (AP) -Four Englewood businesa firms have been awarded $24,000 in what are believed the first court awards in New Jersey for riot damages. The judgments for property damages and thefts during racial disorders in thP summer of 1967 were made on the basis of an 1877 5tatute providing th1t a municipality ls liable for damage by a mob er riot PARIS (UPI) -Allied diplomats said today they expect Nori!> Vleloam and the Viet Cong to agree to _..t contacts 10011 to bruit up the curreiit deadlocl: State Abortion Law Used Less Than Expected BERKELEY (AP) -California's 15- montb-old therapeutic abortion law has been used less than expected, Dr. Louis P. Saylor, st.ate health director, said to- day in a report prepared for the legis- latun. Twenty-three counties did not report a single legal abortion. The law, effective Nov. 8, 1967 provides that abortions approved by medical com· mittees may be performed in accredited hospitals. The committees base their judgment on mental or physical beaJth, or becauae of rape or incest. The beaJth department said there were 4,291 applications through September 1!168 and 91 percent were approved by medical commlltees. More than half the women receiving abortions were unmarried, nearly all were California residents, and hall of the abortions tenninated first pregnancies, Ule department said. Saylor Aid the law appeared to have been used witb respoll!iblllly and restraint., accounting for the Jower·thaD- 1ntlclpakd ratio. He said the anticipated rate was based on population ratios. Rains Flood Central U.S. Caribou Buried Under 30 Inches of New England Snow «:.ilfonola ---r• 11.s. Sum,,..rtf "'''"" t4"'-~ ..-IW•Prftd fleodl"f folUy Kl'OM 11'19 111111111'1 mid- """"· Tht r1lne Mve ~ Ill ,..,. Ollie V •llfv •!Id Mvto 11-" oll' 11'>._tl mott -Ol•I,. b111 K.tlll'rM ..,,_,, tontlnv«I ftllm "" Ttlf111 t-1 tw 1M Clnlll\es. A {Ali.I lf'Oillt 111"'*11 ....... T, ... Info "'"" t ... llNI ~1 ... t m l .. 111'9 (II ,.1n, -.... N'tlllns l'llifl. ,...,.. """"-fl .,_ ftll 11 C.rillcJll, Melflt, dllrl"' IN: N•lv """""'-lloun tw"in. I"' lhe lol•I on ""' 1/'0Ul'ld to • ·-· Tre1'91fn' ""'""' ...... "'""' llorw ... "'"""' ,.,..... ,,, ... ~ ~ Ol•IR ,,., •"--~ =-.,.,. ................ '". Temperat11res Hit!! Ltw l"rlc. . " Albu1111tr..ue A.-.et\ol'I" A!ltMe 8alte'1n.1o:t l!ll1mtrtlt ··~ Im ... Clllccttie C111tl11Nlt (l.witnil ...... On Malntt ....... f:w~• l"ort Werth ·-Hdtf'll ---·~ Ktru.tf (lty L .. v ... , Liii Aft9Pltt Ml.,..I ht<tl Ml~M Ml!lnttPOllt ~ 0ri.. .... NIW YoA. ........ -· ... .,, lllabttt .... """t ... i. ........ !. Pl"'burtll """' .... lttPld CllV Red ll\lff ·-s.a-1 ..... 11!0 SI. loul, S1lmai hll t..._, CllY lt11 Olttil '-" r-.. nC'latt '-"'' ltrtleft ....... --· """"" I " ' 1'11 SJ .'n •• ,1 .112 ·' .,, " " }<I J.J .Q 1• n Tr S1 S4 .U ~ "' .. . " " ' n " .1• '5 JJ .II g • .u J1 _., 11 ., •• ti 11 .,. Jo( .lot " " " " " '' n " ~ " '2' .u ,. " 0 ,, .ti .. ,. " . . " .. .tt • ·" ~ " JJ lo! .n " n .o Jl It " ,. .01 " " . " . " M n . " u ~ • • • " .. .. p a Tr ': ~ :: u • over f>oW to negotiate a peace agree-- meot on Vietnam. American delegates under chief nego- tiator Henry Cabot Lodge ~were._ describ- ed by lnfDl'mants as bellli'conlld<nt tbat lbe Communlsl delogatloro will enter into the backstage bargaining after they achieve a breakthrough ln the well pub- licized plenary sessions. American officials today denied wide- spread Freneh radio and newspaper re- ports that Allied and Communist offi. cials held a private meeting in the final parts of Thursday's 7-1h hour marathon session, t h e second weekly meeting of the expanded Vietnam talks. The North Vietnamese and Viet C o n g said they wanted the Americans a n d South Vietnamese to bring up their pro- posals in the regular sessioM. But they appeared to have left the door open for early private talks, presumably on l y if the Allied side were represented by the Americans. The next ~sion of the conference will take place Thursday. Informants said that ii an agreement on such secret talks would be struck wtth the Communist side the latter would be represented by Hanoi only. Apollo 9 Shot Key to Timetable Of Moon Landing WASHINGTON (AP) -The space agency said today It may attempt to land • man on the moon in May if its Apollo t space shot next montb is suc-- cessful. "After we have il5seSsed 1he results of Apollo t we may want to make the next mission more amiblUous or less ambblUous than now planned," Apollo 9 M i s s I o n Olrector George H. Hage explained. Apollo 9, due for launching Feb. 28 from Cape Kennedy, is designed to or· bit the earth with, for the first time, the full complemen( of equipment need· ed for a manned lunar landing. ''We have built In enough flexibility so that we can react quick1y to difficul- ties or to successes," Hage Wd. "Thett- for we cannot rule out the possibility of a lunar landing by Apollo 10." Mothers Protest Ra\V Milk Ban LOS ANGELES (AP) -County health officials. who banned the sale of raw milk In Loa Angeles County, have drawn the wrath of mot.htra who aay the.lr children thrive on IL The ban wu ordered after laborat.orJ tem showed the presence of gt.rms c~using Q feV!:r and salmonella In the raw milk produtm by four county dairies. In t~ tw:alth department's tw<>-hour hearina: Thursday, several mothers said thefr youn1ster1 thrive on raw milk bul bt!cofn"' UI wllh pasteurl.z.ed milk. O&htrs aald raw milk cured varioua Ulne.uts. .. 11ie window of ooe fire truck was smashed by a brick. Police chased the fleeing yooths for 1everal bloct.&., but only two 81Testl were made. Four .!J~r persons were picked up on warrants iJSUed for previous ac.. tlvities, tiut police m a d e no attempt, to repeat • the mass arrest of last w~ when nearly 500 per.ions were taken lntd custody for participating in an illegal campus rally. Thursday's disturbance was expected to be the last for nearly three weeks · on the campus, where the fall semester end~ today. The spring semester begins Feb. 17. * * * Pickets Resume Minus Leaders BERKELEY (AP) -Striking students at the University or California returned ta the picket line! today minus two leaders arrested Thursday w b e n demonstrators blocked c a m p u s en- trances. They faced continued "restrained use of police" -as a university ad· ministration statement late Thursday night put it. This is the seventh day of their strike to back up demands for an autonomous minority studies col· lege with expanded admissions and aid for minority studenls. The first two arrested in the current strike were Jim Nabors, last year's chairman of the A!~American Student Uni~n, and ~Albert Wesley, a Negro SOCIOiogy major. Campus police reinforced by aberiff't deputies made two sallies during the day to clear campus entrances whue student pickets were blocking the w1y. Swingin' MIAMI (AP) -A NatiOllal Airlines Des with 63 persons aboard -including a stewardess who felt a hijacker'• 1un against her neck last March -was dlv~ to Cuba today by a pistol pack· ing sky pirate. Flight ff from San Francisco to Miami with a stop scijedu]ed at Tampa, was off the Louisiana coast when Capt. Charles Leeds radioed the news. The plane, 11th rl. the year to be sent to Cuba, landed in Havana at 1:58 a.m. EST. Aboard were 55 passengen and a. crew of tight, including stewardess Donna Goldinher, who wa.s grabbed by a hi· jacker last March 11 and forced to march to the cockpit with a gun at her neck. Three Cuban refugees later were charged. When Leeds reported the hijacking today he aaid the plane was being hi· jacked by a "man with a gun at the bud of the stewardess." It was not known whether the stewardess again was Miss Goldlnber, a pretty, 26-year-old brunette. "I am diverting to Havana; I have been hijacked," said Leeds. Al the time his plane was about 67 miles southwest of Grand Isle, La, Other members of the crew were First 0£ficer Wallace Pawley, Flight Engineer Clyde Roper and stewardessu Thelma Tarleton, Leanna J. Anderson, Pamela Klinger and Miss Goldinber. Also aboard was William D. Stevens., an air traffic control specialist for the Federal Aviation Administration sta- tioned at St. Petersburg. An NAL spokesman said Willlarru: was aboard oo a routine assignment to observ. route procedure. Semeste1• Lovemaking on Curriculum COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI) -Students· and ttachers ot the University of Sooth Carolina sbouldn't he bored during the spring semester. 1n addition to the required courses offered in the llDMnity catalorue, " stu<ients and ttacben will illlve lhdr pick of sbort counes oo lovanlklng, wild1cnf~ aldJemy, Jll'O'lllarital -, bartending and COllllOiogy. "Some people think the whole thing's a jote,'' said Scotde Bilrnea, a sopbomor< political science major from Columbia who heads the atudeat com- mittee running the pnigrom • "Ulvemaking ls the most popular course so far," a&kt me stolknl' ''Tbert: woo't be any labs thou&h, just theory, but T imagine they'll h.ave to' hold the class in Carolina Coliaeum to accommodate everybody who wanu Lo get ln." The courses, 101 in an, require no entrance fee, no exama, no grades and no credit It'll all part of a new university pnigram In which ttudentl select.. their own COW'!le!, and telChen pick out what they would lite te ttach. Brochuns U.Unc the counes were malled out earner th.ls wttk to aome., 15,000 .-ts ond faculty memben along wttb CU'dl to be returned lndlcaU1111 course pre!-. A blanll space on the cord olhn dilgnmtlod otudftlb ., chaoce to U>t any oddltlooal """""' they'd Uh to tak•. 1 1'he cla.uroom topics n.ngt .trom .. bow to Ult the llbr•ry," ''publlo: speaking," "art apprecl1Uon'' and "undentandirl( law" to such unconven,.. Uonal topics as "yoga," "bortendln&1" "extra.terrestrial life,'' "South Caro--p Jina history of regreJ.Slon and st.ii,gnaUon" and "the racist sodt:ty." ' i.i Deadlint: for re1lstering Is Ftb. 7 and Barnes Is hopinl: cla.aes can be ,. started one week laltr. ( / Freeway Probfena ,,,,.,..,.,....,.. .. MR. ----· •• •• ·- ~ •• Frldar, .,_.,, ll, 1969 DAll.Y PIL9l;: Jflove too s1ou;r,, -· -~ •• Education Boards Foul Up,. Sclwo"ls . • • J •• .. ~ -.. •• .. • j Many Views of Role In Future of State By JAMU BOW members, and ror the California State and colleges hive <.'Olltinued to prw AP EdllCIUol Wrtttr Colleges Board cl Trustees, 21 members. for lheir owo weJlare, and their Gib , SACRAMENTO fAI') -California's ~ the !11th Cenlury, regents have uJary ~-•. • EDITOR'S NOTl: PtrT\Ap' the ,_ ('-»le: IN!lifnf•llMI of --v11tbl ~rt 'Ill Ctllton'l!t trl: ..... _., .... ~. ni..,. .,. •IKVIHd In lhll flflll tl'l!c .. In I .... !. QI! Ctlllof'llle"• WlVlnln--·· By BILL STAIJ. educaUori establlabmeot ii a tangle of exercised broad constitutiooal powers REPVBIJC00 GAIN• .~ ·· boards and com~, moving more over tbe university. Jta: schools and col-0 .._,.,11,..... . . M &lowly th'an mllifinlatuttents demand leges and fees. Its memben serve 11-n~;;;.,.~~v:fuala B~. strictly lot tarm use, wilh but chan&ina laster than many may year terms. of CalifQlJlla education. ~ junior <-61· no billboaf'!IS. It limlts COO!-realize. f • The master plan aulhorized the college Iegil' 1,overnln.i board members all wem mercial development. to the . If no t.evlslons are made in the ned: trustee8, but they don't have lbe aame appolnted by C:O.. Reagan, because ~ area around two of the dozen 20 yeara, a cblld entering tlndergarten powers u regent.a to allocate money tioarowa.; cfee.ted ·ordy last year. __ interchanges planned in the Ulia winter who later attends jOnior granted by the legislature and the The Stale ·Board of Education has county. college and finiahes postgraduate acbool @:overnor. In the recent controversy over a $-4 majority of Reagan appoint$ ft AKE CHANGES wlll have nearly as many governing Gov. Reagan's proposal for hlgher educa-plus Republican Max Rafferty, state t board members as teacben overseelng ti-On tuition, regent.a bad the power to superintendent of public inst.ruction. .IQ But even bef&re lhe highway his schooling. rejeet or approve the plan. But trustees exofficio member. ., • and i n t er c h a n g e s are The school district which 1'UDS bis would have to have legislative approval The Board of Regents includes el.fil1t completed pressures are being kindergarten must rtly heavily on state if they want to impose tuition. ei~fticio members: Reagan, Lt. 00¥. SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Freeway. It i.s viewed by some as a monumental achieve- ment; condemned by others as a se lf-p erpetuating monster. The freeway system has changed the face of California, led to creation of entirely new cities, and established pat· terns of living for millions. brought on county: officials to ald and, by law, on policies ol Uie New proposals in the legislature weuld F..d Reinecke, Republican Assembly Mli- ..,make changf11 8.nd exceptions, l~member State Board of Education, reduce the powers of the regents, short-jority Leader Robert T. Monagan .of • says r>on,1d_ Gouge, an appointed by the governor. The chief ening their tenm to eight years, as Tracy, Rafferty, UC Presidept ChadeS associate county pl~r •. He administrator of tho8t policies is the trustees now serve. J. Hitch, UC alumni president Roger ~ said some Ot6er counties are state superintendent of public instrucllon, LINES OF POWER C. PetUtt of Los Angeles, 1ti!Je not living up to the eJected in • statewide vote every four The lines of power running between agriculture board president Allan Grant legislature's mandate. -a, l'I. years. the State Capitol and education governing and James Q. Brett, president of. ~ • "One th l n g is certain," ~ CYI'BER BOARDS boards also are tangled. The governor San Francisco Mechanics InsUtute. They What should be t he freeway's role In establishing California's future? What h¥ been wroog in the past1 G~ge said, .;the real intent ~======::::'±!.'.:::=:~::~=:±~::'.11<:¢:'~ The jll;lllor ooUege student also is sub-technically is president o! both the serve by virtue of the positions lhey • of lhe legislature is not being -ject to a local governlng board. But regents' and trustees' boards. But their held. • carried out. .. There was a since last year. a new law haa sanctioned meetings are run by a chairman, one The 19th-century reason for lnclading ~ sort of vacapt threat. in the a statewide 22-member Board o f of the members appointed by the the posts now held by Grant and Brett • SOME VIEWS Here are some views: -William Brons o n, con- servationist • author, writes: "Parklands have been torn, cities have been shattered and agricultural lands have been invaded in the process of building the widely heralded and cuuiously awaited 12,flOO. -mile California f r e e w a y system ••• without doubt the largest boon·d oggle in history." -The State Cham~r of Commerce's Freeway Support Committee believes that "as a matter or individual freedom, Californians must be provided with, and are willing to pay for, a system of free- flowing freeways which will permit them to use private automotive transportation if and when lhey choose to do so." law. The state's bluff bas. "'-·-over 5 m 0 & -Pr 0 du Cl n g have Increasing industrial ac-GGvemors for the Community Colleges. governor. was to have representatives of both called and hothlng has b:; emissions from all types of tivity." The new board already has begun plans The master plan also created the agriculture anQ indUSlry on the Boar(! done about it." motor vebicles. Such problems involving the to supervise junior college curriculum. Coordinating Council for Wgber E:duca· of Regents. In his cOntroversial book, Still, Maga says, "There's state's natural resources are The community college overseers tion, an advisory group to.the governor, BROWN "How to Kill a Golden State," no way to bring about a quick extremely comple1. There are already have tangled with local boards lhe university, the !late colleges and or the remaining appointed regent:!J, author Bronson p r e d i c t s , solution to this thing." no easy solutions. and with tbe Stale Education Department the junior colleges. Some individual col-fi ve were appointed by r o r m 8 r "lhere will be no sentimental By 1980, the smog produced But author Bronson argues, over jurisdiction. lege or university proposals, such as Republican Gov. Goodwin J. Knithl, ballad written for Interstate by each auto will be only "Nothing is impossible; if we The Master Plan for Higher Education. salary raises, are submitted t.o the coun· seven by former Democratic Gov. "td- S." a fraction of today's levels. can get to the moon we can enacted by the l~ature nine years cil. mund G. Brown and four by Reagan. •• While planning experts But, he adds, "We'll have recreate a de c e o t en-q:o, apelll out powers for the University But the councll's pcwer Is limited. In addition Reagan appointed Gtan: speak of the need for alternate _m_o_.,_m_o_to_r_v_ehlc_:_les_._w_e_·_u_v_iro_:::nm::.._en_t.:..'_' _______ o1c.....:.C.;.:alll_ornla_.:..__Board.:.._ __ o1 __ Re_:g:.en_tsc.' _24 __ And __ in_lhe_I_e:.gi.!_l_a_1ur_e_;,_both __ lh_e_uru_·_vers1 _ _;1yc__and __ Re_1nec_t_e_to_thelr __ 1u1_1_11_m_e_o_ff_ice_s._ forms of transportation - primarily urban rapid transit -most Californians have fail- ed to agree on a way to pay for them. The San Fran· cisco Bay Area Rapid Transit District is having trouble finishing Its 75--mile system -short of money. Los Angeles area voters rejected a $2.5 billion rapid transit bond issue last Nov.·5~ POST CRITICAL The state's I e g Is I at iv e analyst, A. Alan P o s t , criticizes the legislatare for failing to develop a general s t a t e w i d e transportation policy. FOSTER'S .... APPt.IAN~°is i I .. .. j , • -The new State Develop- ment Plan Program says, "California's highway building record is truly spectacular. However, It has not ac- companied this remarkable record with a corresponding advance in its ability ... to use highway expenditures as a means of positively in- fluencing or guiding the use of land to improve the con· ditions of urban life." · ' T h e fundamental pro- blem," Post says, "is to reconcile the conflict between transportation needs and com· munity values.'1 .. -"From Sea to Shining See," the repOrt ~ tho President's Council on Recrea- tiOll and Natural Beauty, notes that "strip development of the land adjoining hlghwa,ys is perhaps the most obvious e1· ample of man's disregard of urban and rural beauty." NEW CHALLENGE The state registers more than 12 million motor vehicles, including some IO million passenger cars: The fumes llief . spew mingle w It h 'California's fabled sunshine to produce an i nf amous California product: p h o t o • chemical smog. As it has pioneered In freeways and creation of smog, so California h as Pioneered in smog control, begiMing with a slatewide law in 1960 for control devices on vehicles. But again a California • problem had blossome'tt virtually out of con· trol before it could be dealt , with effectively. SlttOG ClflEF John Maga, the state's smog control chief, describes the situation this way: "I think the problem isn 't getting any worse. We've leveled oU." The 1969 legislature adopted the nation's strictest controls California's resources agen· cy chief, Nor rn an B. Livermore Jr. -whose pet peeve is billboards -,says California faces "a tft'men- dous challenge" in con- st.ruction of the new Interstate 5, the Westside Freeway, down the western San Joaquin Valley. Due for completion by 1972, the 237 miles of road will cost roughly $210 million and eventually carry most of the San Francisco -Las Angeles traffic. The 1963 legislature foresaw~==========.! possible strip development, considered it undesirable, and directed the counties to zone the land along the right of , way to preserve the natural beauty of the area. Fresno County has zoned -a mile-wide strip on each side FAVORITES Nation•I tnd Ioctl r•1d1r- 1hip poll1 provt tht DAILY PILOT (trri11 1omt of the moil popultr column1 tnd f11tutt• t>'1il1bl1 to tny ntw•p•p•r in the United SttlR•. ~~~~ ~OUA mmtfAf 1 •ill Easy to do ... just call or come in. ~ ~-IXJIH ••• tlof.t ~ ctJJ/~tJl­ MUTUAL SAVINGS A NC ~OA.N A•SOCIATIO"' 2867 [1st Coast Highway • Coron• Dtl Mal', Calif. 92625 Telephone 675 5010 MUD Of'flC( • NMDf•A u sr.totD!t•DOll'lll.•l',ISADr 1.CAllr IH!t'-. . . _,,_ 11.J& .. C'41 £11 Whirlpool =v:.~~ Glant19.3w.ft.._,ity111itpo11Do ~ •- only32l4•wtdof NodoltullflllW, ..... ~ ,,__ Delu>ot hiotu!M ___ - humidity-sealed vcg;tal*a11pw, ........ ~ ,,_ec .. 1ue1 $38995 ETD·19J --olak .......... ... ....,. ..... talldli•'Nrte 11 22 ............. . ,,,,,,,, "' """""---4qdos, Whidpool l.MJNDRY SPEaAl.S flmkmratic washer has3 eyde sete ~ 2 speeds, saper SURGll.ATOR agilator, .. eidJsM! Magic-Mix filter. Matching~ dryer has 3 drying heats; fast drying system and extra large dnm. Both have speclai · a>oklown care tor F"1I Ulllllellt Press fabrics. Buy now and-I --dll!*w.-..,q. l1El.llllE l'ElllAICEJfl' PRESS PAIR ..,-w--..wa;.,._1or · ----lllTIOlllllC-.._ SUprwneAlltu•llcwasf• hass.c,d< !!l!Clians,tlldllsiw9 T_ft" ...... qtllr.-11111*! ' "'-_.ti•• MagicCl<ian99111-dooninafll1«,3-le>iel-se1«1cr. Htip 8*ip out Malo Dislll•lilorL Matchine2---1 dryoti.tures Tumble Press Control. Both $ 2 0995 -special oookbm carelor~Press fabrics. Fo1 oii11 . S1NO Sjleclolwalut-SM,_IWastw.LSA.7800;D!ler,l.SE·7800 FREE DWVERY AND NORllAL INSTAllATION ON ALL WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES FOSTER'S TV 17185 BlOOKHURST .. WAlNEl 968· 1234 S::.\"'..:::; 546·2606 . ' . . • .' • • • ' I -• • • ·- ' . ' -.. ..... ..• .. ,, '. ' . '. .. . ' . . - I DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE I Jail Reform Is Urgent A man llCCUSed wrongfully ol a tenible murder and held In Huntlngton Beach City Jail for three nighl· marish days and n!ihls has turned what could have been bitterness into 8n impassioned plea for 8 flC\V jail and better treatment for inmates. Norman Coatney spent three days lo lhe jail which he d~ribecl as "a pig sty." Some cells are withouL water, Qtben have inadequate mattress covers and all apparent!)• unawept and generally unfit for humans. "'Ibis jail needs to be cleaned up and the treatment improved. for those human beings ~ccused or e~en the most vile of crimes," be said shortly after being ab- solved ol all connection with the murder. Coatney bas enlisted the aid of Councilman Jerry Matney in trying to correct the problems with the local jail and the treatment of prisoners. lt1atney has promis· ed to do all he can. It may not be possible to build a new j~~ right now . but there is no reason at all why the conditions cannot be irDproved. One accusation made by Coatney has not been explained and there seems to be no real reason why the man was refused permission to shower and shave for the three days. • Ironically, on the same night Coatney was first re- fused a shower Police Chief John Seltzer was delivering t. report to the City Council askiQ.g for better jail fa cili· ties. I-le pointed out that the present jail was built in 1927 to se rve a city with a total population of 2,500. In 1968 three times that number o! persons were processed through the jail. Before a new civic cen:ter can be built ~ere will be about 14,000 persons going through the jail each year. Chief Seltzer pointed out that "because of crowded conditions it sometimes is necessary to band.cuff prison· ers to door knobs, desks and other locatioDJ in view of the public." the accused in the local jail robs them of whatever human dignity they might have left , making future re· habilitation that much more diHicuJt. Coatney makes his point strongly that he is not talk· 1ng about coddling prisoners, but just decent treatment as humans. It i.s seldom tbat a man who has gone through jail would care to lead a crusade against the condltiona ln· side the facility. His action lends weight to the accUJ a· tions he makes. He has leveled serious charges \Yhich city officials cannot answer. immediate action lo alleviate the condi• tions is required to insure that tho se \vh o are not of such sterling character receive just treat1nent at the hands or the law . No one disagrees that the jail problen1 must be in· vestigated by the City Council at once. The matter prob· ably would be a fine area for investigation by the county grand jury not only in Huntington Beach, but in other citi es as well. After all, innocent persons sometimes are locked up In these jails, too. Coatney was. No Good Reason Fountain VaJley City Council appears ready to rein- stitute the study session formerly held on the day before regular council meetings. These sessions on two successive nights mean that the average citizen must eitl1er invest twice as much time in observing his municipal government, or miss half of the action. Missing half the action might be just fine \Vith a councilman il he feared that the public will find out \vhat really happens in council meetings. - l He emphasizes that this does the police image no good and com the wpayers more in the long run. He might also have painted out that the treatment given to \Vitb the relatively small amount of business coin- ing before the council, there appears lo be no legitimate reason why a council meeting requires two days to com· plele. I • ($) Draft Reform At Hospitals: Stark Drut1au ut Atay Bour . ' . ~gain Before • • wngress • • . -· .. ·'ji-·,' ' ' . .. ' -,.,._ ...... ,)It., . : ~ . ' ~ • • ' -",~ ~ :.... ,Jo,.: ...... : .... ' . • WASlllNGTON -One ol Lyndon B. ~·s final legislative legacies lo tangres.1 was a proposal for revision. Of the military draft law. • As be promised in hi! Stat.e-of-the--lJnioo message, the outgoing President hmaity renewed bis l'flQuesl for • Jot· ~e random selection plan lo iel«mlao the onler ol call for drift eHllble& IDs pn>pOOal cleared lht Budget llaieeu and went to Congress on January ~°:m~ay before the Monday • Bandom ae.Jectioa .Is • eo11ctpt which ... been strongly !Upporled by 10me ~ of the present draft machinery. '1aey-can be exCU5Cd if they now com- flaln tha.t Mr. JohMOD should have been lnucb ls dilatory in urging draft re!onn to a reluctant Congrtss. • ; THE PRESIDENT'S Jut-minute plan, ailed Fair and Impartial Random Idec· lloo (FAIR), was !irsl ft<OIDlllOl1dtd m. 1987 by a special presjdentiaJ Jtudy t'J:mfsskin. Presldut Johmoo CDdlned then and sent it on to CoagrCJ1- • Random aelect.lon wu envilklMd as ~ pructlll In a system under wbich )'O'llll men would face • year ii maximum draft vulnerability at qe 1' (or on completion of • trade or i:olltge education). The 1"'1\apl, pleas- td with the pmspect of yoonger clralttts, ~ed Ibo plan. • Even Gen; Lewil B. Henhey' dil'Jdor k &elective terVlce, who hid blen no tan of seltcliOo by Joi, wu broulhl ~ lo support of Ibo random llleclion Jll'OOCSS· The Senate approved a draft )'dorm bill which would have allowed 4be President to institute such a pro- )::edure along with other aran revisions. "" THE HOUSE OF Represenlativ~. -_.,..., baited. On ~ lhal no )'alldom Rledicla plan bad boon speJ1td out In In, tlio -Annod -J>xnmlllee-toa_ tlio_ Dear Gloomy Gm: Why do they allow the public alleys in HunUnJl.on. Beach to be UKd to store old trucks and trash bamls? We don't need the rodents they attract! -E. L. L. nu tuteni NMnt ""'rr vttwt ... 1 ~ fMiM 9f 1t19 """''"'· St111 .... HI ,_ tt •tw"'' Q.ua. DIM' Plllt. first s)'!ltm by which local draft boards had ht<n ltlecting al11l"I men clusl!led u elfaible for ltl'Vice. The finally approved lll1 compromllt hW did not a~ random oelecllon. Instead. Congress Invited Ibo Pruidtnl to make 1 specific leglslaUve request if he still wanted to l.natitute auch a plan. Johnson did not. do ao until 72 hours before he was lo leave the White HOUie. Nor did ht revile the refec:Uon proce.sa so as to tap the reservoir of lt-year-olds first. THE DRAFT REVISION, prepared al Selective Service headquarter• and sent to Coogrus, woold let the Prtlidtnt set up • fair and impartial random aelectioa system under rules which he would prescribe. 1be bill would also make chmga to assure an orderly transition to callln& 19-year-olds first. Details of a random selection plan Were seot to Cancrea too. A pamphlet accompanying the draft bill spelled out a l)'ltem under which • draft board would Ont determine "by lot" a se· quence of all llt possible birthdays for a lt.vea year. Then, also by lot, tv.·o alphabeUcal sequences would b e determined, fl'.lr initials of last and f;rsl names. Under the plan, the dale sequence would be UJed to detennine the order in "which ellgiblai were drafted in that year. The other two 5equences would be uaed, when necetllr11 to aelect among men with tbt lllDll blrlh da\Q. JlyllollortS. Allea ... 1 ... A. Cloldllllitll • • ' • • Separating Boys, Girls .. To U. Bdttor: • I wlsb Sidney illltia .wld aot wtila ·-h-u~'l­~Jan. ZI) la which bl~ ~ for llrla and bo7I II -lo .oolve tho net problem. 'ntOn'a J1111 'a chance IDOIQ' ml(bl lab 111111 ISloallJ. : The ,..., problem -....... 1Je with us U -J*11>11 dlcla' perwlll Jn magnllylnl dl!ftttoc•lllll .., -~ people whlle lplrlac tho far "'°" :im;.rtanl 8lmllarlllu, ouch as the wide ~m of dlfferenctS amon1 lo· ;.o.tduabl in any group. ~ WbJ trade 1 problem tiavinj to do ~ JO ptt<e11l or ., of the population ~one involvi111 !iO ptretnt~ • , Y. KERSEY , •After citino dilta.rtt for ml1c101· .. N.don a.t being at tht vnconidoua ~ of oil nidlm. and dtscribing it ;., ~ or .sub-rational, Harri.I ".pi ..,,.. ,.., OO<Jd tdlk;o.tion Tt<UON ~ ... ~ bor> and gfril (Ml bW • ...,.) 11o 111< i.-grade~ lie li«U...r Z~ 11wtdd be odjuttd to f.M 'f'Nlidu of ~, and of tht motur-~ deoclopm.ent -t10t "to 1olvt :t.v. mot problem." • • • • ... '•!be~: 1In the DAILY PILOT 11 Jan. 27. William P. Bower asks tilt qut11tion, ''Tbey don'\ really btlieve. do they, that God gaye them a!Ollfl the wisdom to blow whal ls good ·for all of us""' CRefming to various perSOM com- pl&ininc of certain speakers appearing on°" UCJ campus.) t want Mt. Bower to know that "God'' ctrta1nl)' did Jive those persons thi~ "wildom." I'm act e11ctly sure which Cod -there are ao many of llltm -but my 1Uf:U is It la the one th1t paues out tbe ammunlUon to all comtrL Tbe °"" -color lw disappeared adder 1-fer afW laytr of white palnl ind hid a whole dvUlAUon named after him i.t dlaappoarod, ·too, 10< the Ume httnc. 'Iba whlt.e ,.mt i• around, though, and vbible to lht naked eyr and Is now tbe mtdlu.m and the rntwge and tbe IOUTCt ol current "wisdom'' Uoetin, •bout. r think, "r JVREOA M. VOSS Trend· to Se:parate, Coronary Care , By NORMAN NIXON, M. D. In tbe lnt.enllve Cll'e unit of 1 mod.era hoopllal )'OU can aee atarll clnnia .., hour cl the day " ol(bl. lltn men and \romeo face Ille oi death <riat<I with the help of doclors, nurws and technicians wbo have the m o • t sophisticated equipment availlble to deal with nearly every medical and 1U1 .. icat emergency. intemive cart u.o.it.s vary .In lbe. 6omc are old wardl remodeled for Ulll ~ wtlh btdl, separated hy glaa partitfoM "' toillng·tcHloor curtainl lo pmidt IOIJMOprlvaey, llninl hotll sides. In newer, ,mailer units, the aame at~ t>rtvalls -es:dtement, nobe. ap- P!'htmlon; people scurrying back and forth, even though eflorb. are made lo mlnhnlze dlslurblng and depreS&ing elements. EVERY PATIENT knows he is critll1&llY ill. Constant I 'n t r a v e q o u s therapy la carried out on almost everyone; some must hive oxygen. others indwelling calheter1. Artificial kidney , heart-lung machinrs, and other strange, somewhat foreboding equipment may be in use ror some patients. Nurses ketp watch, oft<!n by remote television, but cbeck the vital signs hourly or ll*'e en., invariably waking e~ery lleeplq palieol. AltbouCh I heart _paUtnt usually caanot see h1I own eledr~ardiographic trac- lnga, be 'may watch the monitor hooked up to hiJ neighbor iD a. nearby cubicle. SomeUmea the alarin sounds, indlcatil'lg cardia<: arrest 'Dr olher complications, but the nurses' immediate response is re~uring to those~ who witnt&s the emergency, or wQen other . Ufe--savirig proceduru are perfonned. NEARLY AU. patients 1n the intensive ~ unit Ute denial, a psychological mechanism, to repudiate what is going on 'IO as to allay fear and anxiety. So on discharge some state they felt no fear at any time during their stay : others admit they were frightened even though initially they denied having any fear. But many patients say frankly they \Vere scared the entire time. In most intensive care units the in- cidence of delirium. hysteria. depression and other psychiatric symptoms is suf. ficiently high to cause concern. Ofte.n the doctor-patient relatiOn$hi p plays an important part since the critically ill patient sees the physician as his lifeline to the living world. WHAT THE DdcTOR says and how he says It are of enormous importance. For ' graVe illness m11kes the patient overly dependent and vulnerable to suspicions and uncertrunties. Unfor· t1111ateJy, s o m e doctors are uneasy in the sick room when questions about pr~ls arc put to them. Further, !ioce intensive care units are manned primarUy by nurses and technicians, with doctors serving as remote control generals of the technical aspects of the patients' care, the all-important doctor· patient relationship is diffused. Because heart cases, particularly cor· onaries, repre sent at least 75 percent of those in intensive care, the trend now is toward separate coronary care units y,·ith less noise. tu rmoil. bright lights and confusion . .Although the threat of sudden death is sti ll present, there are fewer panic reactions and other psychiatric symptoms. THE INTENSJVE care unit, regard · less of the excitement, drama and tur· bulence, represents a tremendous ad· vancement in providing emergency treatment for desperately ill patients in a setting where personnel and equip- ment are always ava il&ble. Neverthe- less, patients with a diagnosis Qf myo· cardial infraction can be treated far more effectively and with fewer psy- chological hazards in a special coronary care unit than in the heclic environment of the recovery room or the intensive care unit. Ani-inating the Citizen to His Duty ' . . With incr11&1ng trequency' In the past two decadei, a~vernment agencies baVt turned to private Jl'OUR' for stl:ldles ol current problems. An outstanding ex- ample wu the wideeprtad' private partlclpaUon ln the Hoover Commission on OrganluUoa of the EJecutive Branch or the Govemmmt. and in the lone educaUonal campaign' eJP.lalnln& the Commission's findings anil proposal.I. This salutary effort was followed by the establishment of "Little Hoover Com- missions" in nea rly all lhe states, almost invariabl y with the help of citiien organi- zations. AtORE RECDll'TLY, a deepening con- cern over rising federal power, coupled with reapportionment of the legislatures l'flQuired by Supreme Court declaioos, hu turned citiun attention. to a new problem: how to improve the. procedures, power, and prestige ol the stale legialatures. Reform of lqillaturea Is an uphill struggle and poUUcally risky, but tht involvement of ciUten organlza- Uons and their rteQgn.ition of the need to mobilize public opinion behind their propogals, is encouraging. CITIZEN PARTICIPATION in govern- ment policy-making (and execution) also has had an upsurge in the growing participation of businessmen at tht state and local govemment levels, and in the formation or privately financed f{roups (some with the blessing of thr federal government) to de.al · with the newer urban and conununity problems. Civic groups, labor and bll3ines.~ organhatlons, and others are invol\'ed. The involvement itself contribut9 to a broader view or the problem and tM: application of many forcts to lti!i solution PROPOSAU ltttENTLY \\·ere put for.,·ant in Congress to create a ne\1 bipartisan Governmtnt Program E\•alua lion Commi~loo, all of whost 12 B11 Georfe ---, Dear Georgt : Don 't you Itel rather ~Hly in a buaints., ordinarily inhAbited by ladies only? s 1.1 If 111)1nr11 can tx· jockeyll, men can ti'P adl'iCt columnists. ~ Hm How Iona be.lore the first toplCl-'i jockey") memben would be frOm private life. Tbe need fOr 1 ltudy_ by 1uch an in· de~ent, hlgb-level body 1s clear, in \ht light of the fl'liOl'I than a hundred new federal domestic 1pend.lng programs inaugurated a1nct 196&. Recent ex perience oUetl little hope that the urgently needed program-evalua- tions can or will be achieved through existing channels within either the ex- ecuUve or legislative branches. History suggeit.s that the findings and recom· mendatlons of such a commission outside the governml:!nl can and will generate national attention and action. FAR ?ttORE THAN any other forms of government, democracies place great demands on the individual clUzen for making his own evaluatlons of govern- ment problems and proposed solutions. Many voices would and do lell us how much is \Vrong with our system. Fortunately, the democralic process has displayed a sturdiness in the past thal provides some reassurance for the future. Even then, there remeins the t.ask of animating the citi zen lo his duty lo participale in the democratic process of which he is the heart. !\tOST PEOPLE DO NOT feel that they can individually cope with the larger problems of our complex society. But if we accept the proposition that the people n1ust be able to lmpot;e I.heir ideas on government and be its master, not the reverse, then we must subscribe to Thomas Jefferson's credo : "I know no safe depository or the ultimate powers of society but the people themselves and if we think them not enlightened enough lo exercise lheir con· trol 'A'ilh a wholesome discretion, the remedy is not to take it from them, but to inform their discretion by educa- tion." -Letter to \V. C. Jarvis, Sept. 28, 1820. -Tai: FoundaUon·a Tu Re\·Jew 'People': Yourself and One Other Tbougbtl •t Large : Our favorite phrase is "People must be ... " and supplying \vhatever predk:ate we want lo prescribe people lo be<:ome -"educ1ted" or "less self ish" or "more law-ab!dlng"; but "people" are simply yoanel.f 19d one otller, so that all such injunctions have kl ' begin 'A'ilh one's atlitude lOward one.self and one's treat- ment or the other. • • • The U.S. is so proud of I t s ··progres.sh'lsm,"' but the fact is that we wtre the last Western nation to begin national health insuranct, are in 15th p\aee in lnfont mort&llty , and in 10th plec! In deaths under fi ve. • • • A truth wt hove not yet fu lly rccognir.· ed in our drivers tests ~·111 enunciated 30 years ago by Buckmin.'lter Fuller, when he observed : "The traffic manners and elhics of people while driving reveal lht.ir character as a whole far more re1dUy Lh1n would·tbe!r culUv1ted man- nerisms and behavior while walking or talking." • • • !low can wr havt any kind (If "p11rtlcipatory dcmocr:tcy" 'A"ht':n in cre11sln8lY the imPQrt11nt t1rrision!' ti) be m11dc by govcrn1ncnl nrr Jn \,H• mlllb1ry-&cientific field , \\ h~·rt• S!K'C"1;ih. r·J <end ufiu111ly rlsiisifiC'rl l knowlcdgr 1s req•'1red -and the votert ire less and ltss ~ 10 judge ror themselv<!!I the wlsdocn or virtue oL.s.uch de<:lslons? . . ...... The mnst important and (ar-reachl11g change in our economic viewpoint during the past generation has been the shift from regarding federal taxation simply as a means of raising money for 110.,ern- ment needs to the realization that tuea are lhe chief instrument for ··st1bilWD1'' the whole economy , much a! a gyros tablliter count.tractl th! rolling of an ocean liner • • • \Vhen you fail kl gel .something you destrve, \he best w1y to curb raen\mC.nt is to rtcall the times you got lhinp you dJdJl't deserve. • • • Of the thousand or so reader! who replied to my word-quiz., about 80 pe:n:tnt submJ tltd the right word: "ortliotplst," rneaning one who practices the art of pronooncing words correctly; for these 111~1 ~1rrs, htrt's a hardtr one -what 1,..; the adjecUve for 90mclhing "lendinJ: to makt' cool''"' (No prize this tin1t, Just :.elf-saUsfacllon.) • • If ~be aim of colltges were not In lun1 out graduates wllh .. n1arkctablr skills," but to produce humane and cultivated citizens with a ration~I hierarchy or values. 9S percent of the disturbances on campuses would aubaldc without a murmur. (As Robert Maynard Hutchins has been pointing out, futllely, for more than three decade!!. I • • • What makes a man feel middle.aged these days ls having hi~ child look up from reading a book and ask, "Daddy . what's a blotter~ .. --··--];'rsday . .January :n , 1909 the editorial JXtrl« <'/ tht Doav Pilot .!ttk.s to inform and rtlm.- 11latc rtadm by prcrentnt17 tilt, nNspaptt'a optniom and com- mtntarv on tOJ)ks of fntti't1C and tignificoncc, by providing a forum for the trpTt.S.tion of Otlr rt~dtr.s' oJMnlon1, and by pt't'.Sf'"llh'1!J the dfVCTlt Vit1D- po111t' o' '"'rrrmrd ob.strvtrs m"tl ,""~·r.•ri-1 .. 11 nn topicJ of !he dri11 Robert N \\ ccd . Pu hl1~h<'r • 11 l • CHECKING •UP• What Does Girl Do In "This Case? By L. M. BOYD STATISTICS SHOW that state wherein second mar- riages are least apt to work out well is Iowa ... QUOTH Ed H\:lwe : "A woman is as old as she looks before breakfast." , .. AM TOLD THERE'S a gentleman named Ten Million in Seattle, but I've never met him . . . SEN. EDWARD KENNEDY ts now said to be the third most admired man in the country •.. A.ti,ST. LOUIS · MEDICO conlend.s a tables- JXIOnful of honey is a better morning eyeopener than a cup of coffee. WHAT DOES A YOUNG LADY do when she gets stood up? I mean usually. That's what our Love and War man wants to know. He is trying to figure out whether the reac- tion of a girl in Fairbanks, Alaska, is typica1. Aft er w.:-iUng two hours for her gentleman friend to show up, she says, "I became so bitter that I turned out all the lights, took off all my clothes, and jumped up and down in the living room, ye! Ii n g 'Stinker! Stinker! Stinker!'" FEELING PRETTY PERSNICKETY, our Language. man today insists the.re's no such thing as an epidemic of hoof and mouth disease. uWhen such an ail· ment spre.ads among animals, not humans," he says, "il's an epizootic," and don't forget it." . . . NUMEROUS CLIENTS contradict the claim that blue-eyed parents never have brown-eyed children. All right, some blue eyes have Oecks of brown in them. And parents with such e y e s sometimes do have brown.. eyed children. But if botll parents have true blue eyes, they don't have brown-eyed children, ever. DIDN'T I MAKE IT CLEAR I'm no good on problems? Thought so. Nonetheless, a customer bas me cornered again the following minor mathematical matter: ''Bruno is 24 years old. He Is twice as old as his lobster was when Bruno was as old as his lobster is now. How old is Bruno's lobster?" CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q. "HOW long did the great San Francisco earthquake last?" A. 48 seconds , . . Q. "I REMEMBER you, buddy. You got in trouble in the army onc.e, didn't you?" A. You must have me mixed up wilh a couple of o.1her guys, mister. Never got in any military trouble. Well, almost never. A major bawled me out one time for asking him a que,s. lion. 0 Now really, Boyd," he said, "in civilian life, would you come to me with a trivial thing like that'!" And I said, "No, sir, J'd send for you." Tllen he got kind of huffy. Don't blame tum much. I was sort of a twirp ... Q. "NAME THE PATRON SAINT of military men, please." A. St. Sebastian. CERTAINLY LITERARY . HOTSHOTS contend no good writer should ever stoop so low as to pay for the publica- tion of his own work. That's just vanity, they say. and those publishing firms, known as vanity houses, which solicit suc h business, rarely do much for the writer. True enough. Still. many is the literary genius who got hls start by paying for the printing of hls own stuff. Rudyard Kipling, for instance. Also, Robert Burns. And Edward Fitzger- ald likewise went that route to get his "Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" between covers after half the publishers in London laughed him out of their offices. RAPID REPLY: Ye.s, sir, J. Edgar Hoover has served under eight Presi.denta and 16 attorney generals. Your queation.s mid com· ments are welcomtd and will be med wMrevtT pos- sible in "Checking Up." Address mail to L. M. Boyd, in care of the DAILY PJLOT, Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92663 New Probe Of Pueblo Ordered WASHINGTON (AP) -The new Pueblo study ordered by Secret.try of Defense Melvin R. Laird will range beyond tile cue of the espionage vessel lo probe "thoroughly all existing policies and pro- cedures related to such in· tel\lgence efforts." The wide-ranging charter was spelled out in a memoran- dum from Laird to his deput y, David Packard, setting the study in motion. The briel memo was made available after Laird an- nounced Thursday at his first news conference as secretafy of defense that he had assign· · ed Packard the job. The Nixon administration's Pentagon chief also handed Packard the huge task or reviewing in depth t h e Johnson administration's $79 billion Defense budget for the coming fiscal year. These actions strengthened the impression that Packard \Viii shoulder much of the detailed Pentagon work, leav- ing Laird free for "big pic- ture" thinking and advising President Nixon. Laird said objectives of the Pueblo review, which may take weeks, are these: -To study "the whole mat- ter of the role of this kind of craft ... and the protection of this kind of ship if such a role is necessary at any time in the future so that we will not have these in - cidents again." -To make sure that "the rights of all ,.individuals are protected at all times, and to see that they are and have been in this case." The defense secretary voic- ed no cr!Ucism of a Navy court of inquiry now taking testimony in the capture of the intelligence ship Pueblo by North Korea a year ago. He said he believes the in- quiry proceedings are necessary and are being handled "in a very fair way," but that he had ordered the Packard study because of the widespread interest in the matter. Some critics ln CongreS!J and elsewhere have charged that the Navy is out to make Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, skip. per of the Pueblo, a scapegoat -a charge denied by Adm. TllomllS H. Moorer, t he Navy's chief. * * * Hearing on Pueblo Recessed CORONADO (UPI) -The officer in charge of the USS Pueblo's virtually autonomous intelligence unit testified in secret Thursday before the five admirals investigating the seizure of the ship by Nonh Korea. Lt. Stephen R. I~arris, 31, Melrose, Mass., answered questions concerning his p~t in the mission and operation of the spy ship. He was not warned he was suspected of violating naval regulatlons, Capt. Vincent Thomas, public information officer for the court, told a oews conference. The court recessed untll Monday morning at which time Harris will resume tes· timony on classi!ied material. He will be called later to tes· tify in open court. Harris has not yet testified about the ship's seizure and the capture of some securitf. equipment under his contro . There was a possibility that when the testimony enters this phase he could be warned, Did Soviet Soldier Fire Shots at Cosmonauts? as was the ship's skipper, Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher. Buche.r testified ·earlier that Harris had worked out pro- cedur ~ for the destruction of classified equipment and pa· pers under his control. Harris was in charge of the research space, a special area aboard the Pueblo which was the nerve center for g8ther· ing intelligence information about activltiea of Soviet ships off the Korean coast. Bucher had the oyerall responsibility of 'lhe ship _but Harris had virtually ~pendent control of his own operation, accord- ing to earlier testimony. Bucher testified last week that he surpriaingly came across two mattress covers filled with classified infonna· tion in Harris' area during a tour of the ship after its cat>" lure. He had thought the it.ems were dropped over- board when the Pueblo WM attacked. P.'IR.Y PILOT 7 225 Chicago Students Hold Building, .Want Prof Rehired UfilTI ......... POLICE SEEK 'HOMICIDAL MANIAC' LA Police Rtl•••ed Thi1 Sketch of Wanted M•n LA Holdup Man Kills Five in 3 Robberies LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The man won't take "yes" for an answer. He points the pistol, and asks for money. People give il to him and he shoots them through the head. He's done it five times. His ;•execution'' robberies of small businesses have made him the terror of South-Cen- De Gaulle Visit Brings Fighting lral Los Angeles , a largely Negro district. Beered up details or patrol· men and detectives prowled the area t o d a y, carrying an artist's composite drawing of a goateed Negro in his late 20s or early 30s. He is slightly over six feet tall with a medium build. Described by police as a "homicidal maniac," the man is blamed for the slaylngs of two persons in a liquor store robbery Tuesday night, and the deaths of a couple who operated a "mom-and- pop'' restaurant Wednesday. He also is believed to have killed a liquor store employe In the nearby city .of Com- merce on Jan. 16. Athletes Throw Out Leftists OVERWEIGHTI REDUCE UNDER MEDICAL SUPERVISION WITHOUT "PILLS." W. D. ALBERT, M.D • 1827 WESTCLIFF DR. NEWPORT BEACH PHONE' 64U25f, RENNES, France (AP) - Opponents and supporters of Charles de Gaulle came to blows in front of city hall here today as the president began a tour of Britanny, a hotbed of separatist activity. The three holdups a r e believed to have netted him about $2,250. LONDON (AP) -The ath-11 !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; .. ~ 1etes went into action against I• De Gaulle was insi~e city hall when the brawling began an;iid shouts of "Vive de Gaulle" and "Free Brittany." One man was Injured in the fighting. De Gaulle arrived from Paris this afternoon. He ig- nored catcalls to plunge into the crowd to shake outstretch- ed hands. 'lie came to Rennes as the first stop of a two-day tour of Brittany, an economically backward province in western France where the separatist agitation has led to isolated bombings. Kiesinger Stormed At Concert The last~ two occurred at businesses operated by non- Negroes in a mostly Negro area. The victims of the three stickups include two white people, two Japane se · Americans and a Negro. Victim of the Jan. 16 rob- bery was David Munoz, 30, a clerk in the Commerce ll· quor store. Tuesday night, Los Angeles liquor store owner B e n Dresltin, 53, was shot in tht neck just after Dreskin ut- tered hls: last words to the store's clerk: "Give him anything be wants." The gunman then shot a customer who was standing in a corner sipping a soft drink. O. B. Hunt, 46, a Negro, Q.ied the next day. The clerk, Samuel Hahn, 56, warded oil a bullet aimed at his head with a steel chair. He was wihurt. the leftlsts at two English un- iversities Thursday night, and the athletes won. Moderate students at Cam· bridge forced 400 leftists to abandon a sit-in supporting re- bellious students locked out of the U:>ndon School of ~ nomlcs. Jn London, rugby players, oarsmen and other students threw 50 rnllltant lef- tists out of the student union building at London Universi- ty. That slt-ln also was in su~ port of the l.SE rebels. "This is a _:victory for the moderate. and the majority of Brltl!1h students," said Ro- ger Bingham, chairman or London University's student council. Earlier In the night about 2,000 students marched in a torchlight parade to the School of Economics, demanded its reopening and protested a court Injunction forbidding 13 of thelr leaders from entering the school without permission. Wedneeday night the robber sipped coffee at Rozy'1 a small remuranl run by Ryozo Guide for All Devinna, 53, and his wUe, Misao, 56. Other customers STOCKHOLM (UPI) -The finished and left. A few government said today lt was minutes later the Devinnas preparing a sex guide for lm- BONN (UPI) -Cllancellor were found dead on the fioor migranll to be published In Kurt Georg Kiesinger today with "their cash register em~ Flnn1sh, German, Serbo-Croa-returned from a battle in the r Streets 01 Franklur' and ty. tian, Greek, Italian, Span!ah, Th.y had been 'hot '" lhe'• T h C h F ch d h ed 'h t t .. , .. urkls, :i:ec, ren an gat er wit 11 s a " faces from point blank range. E li h premiers to map action, i";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;i;;i;;;;;i;;in~g;';;;;;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i against anti-governme ntll demoruitrators. Hundred s of young demonstrators in Frankfurt Thursday night attacked with sticks, stones and "sieg heil" Nazi. shouts a benefit concert attended by Kie.singer, former Chancellor Ludwig Erhard and other West German leaders. Wet demonst.rators dodged police water cannon and club charges, broke windows in the U.S. Consulate General and the America House Cultural Center and raged at a pre-cC1n- cert hotel banquet while K.ies- inger, obvi.ously angered, told reporters he would take action against these "scandalous in- cidents." LARGE 23'' COLOR Old World Mediterranean Spanish Furnitllre Received cencellatlon ot $22,000.00 Spanish •ncl Medlterr•nean Furniture All New T•p 9Hllty hH Na11191 Dec.,..., DtMM H ... 01 DllJf'lrt . Items as follows: Georgeous 8 ft. custom quilted sofa with separate loose \)illows with ... ·, heavy oak trim decor and matching chair, 3 matching oak occasional tables, (2) 58" tall .... decorator lamps, banging chain swag lamps in wrought iron, an 8 piece king size muter " ·· bedroom suite in pecan panelled Mediterran- ean style with top quality 15 yr. warranty · ' king size mattress & box springs. Spanish decor dinin2 set. etc. Wl•le ... Mhtl wa 199111•~ $1521.00 ~:~~~1.1.'.1~'. $698.00': Any Piece Can Be Purchased lndlvldu1lly ·• : Term• Av•ll•ble -Newcomers to Calif. Credit Approved lmmtdl11tly -•. ,....""' Furnitare At Harbor Blvd. ... " .. ; .. 1844 Newport Blvd. Costa M.a only ~ E......, nlgilt 'Ill 9 -Wod., Sat. & Sun. 'Iii 6 •. .. .., ... . " ... PRICI INCLUDES' I Year Peril Warr1nly ,. 2 Year Pic:tur• Tube Warranty 90 Day Home Strvic• ·- .~ .. , WASHINGTON (AP) -V.,. allowed him to shoo onlookers Soviet Army lieutenant who out of the way and clear the borrowed a p o 11 c e m a n ' s range for his shots. uniform fired th~ shots at l!l.--"--------------------------------11 Full Zenith Quetoty through end throughl - Beoutiful color. Contempor•ry styled compact console. 6" .. oval twin<on1 motorcade carrying govern- ment leaders and cosmonaul" Ia1t week, then died almost Immediately, the Washington Post said today. The Post, in a dispatch from Moscow by Anatole Shub, identified the man as a Lt. Ilyin of the Soviet Army Engineers. based at Len· lngrad. 1t &aid he took poison and was slugged by Kremlin guards who foiled l he assassination attempt Inside the Kremlin's Borovltsky Gate Jan. 22. "Usually reliable sources'' told the Post Ilyin ld'l his assigned post in Leningrad on Monday Jan. 20 without reporllng back to b.ll unit ta rel.um bi• pistol. A nationwide seerch began the nut morn- ina. On Tut.lday, It rtporlfd, he arrived in Moscow and stayed with an urlldentifled rel1;Uve, a mlllUa, or police, captain. Wednesday, the day oI the parade, he asked to borrow the mlliUt unllonn uylng he wal'l\ed to be able to watch the parade more closely. Jt • FREE SAFE DEPOSIT BOX FOR MAINTAINING $500 SAVINGS ACCOUNT. Hours1 9:30 •.m. to 9:30 p.m.; S•t. 10 1.m. to 6 p.m. •• Modal 29liW ... speaker. Built 11 o~ly ·: Zenith would build ill -· -. "' AUTHORIZED: ZENITH FAaORY SERYla . . STOI£ HOURS DARY 9 TO 9 SAT t TO I HARBOR CENTER -m HAllOR ILVD. J . • I • ' • • • • • • •• .. -· ' •• ... _, ., ,, .. ..• . .. ... .. '. .. .. " .. .. .. .. Jj A ~ I frldlJ', J.a.11Ull"f 31, 1969 . Ao Naturel? .Nudes -Paratk on Sunset l!OLL YWOOI> (AP) -''The man has a beard and the woman bas a flower on her breast," said the e•clted caller. '1But they don't Nve a .Ulch on -my,coodntss!" Police, pushing through a crowd. p u t a atop Thursday lo the halJ·bo~ nude march GI a man, a woman and two children. The man ld(.!Dtified a ~ Anthony Angelucci, 2l, and the woman, jailed llS Fanlta Jef· tenon. 26, were booked an suspicion of endangering the lives or children. Timmy, 4, a girl. and Quincy, an IS. month-old boy, were laken w juvenile hall. Police said the chlldrtn'• health was en· daniered in d.e 5$.degree weather. The incident took place along busy Sunatt Boulevard, orf the SUnset Strip. Police ...td tbe couple kepi osklng bystanders to "lake off your clothes and join us to await the Lord." Sacran1ento Feels 'Pay Raise' Feve1· SACRAMENTO fAP) -A much-discussed and widely publicized subject in Washington has filtered rrom Capitol Hill to California's State Capitol : legislative pay r-aises. issue. Republican Speaker Robert T. f.1onagan or Tracy said, "I personally -if lhe house here is willing to sup-- port it -an1 \\•ll ling to do so."' UPIT•...,_N What's Your Hatagup? An unsuspecting motorist, Ray Evans of Sange~. Calif., parked bis car next to a seemingly sedate oak tree only to find it hung up a few hours late"r. Hi gh winds and soggy earth combined to topple the tree and a root caught the front of the car, --------------------- St1t. Murphy Opposes LBJ Judge Nominee Reagan Says Tax Trim Due MORAGA (AP) -Gov. 2 Miilion ' State Colleges Say Money 'Late' Reagan aaya he is goina to ask the Calllornla Leg!Jlature SACRAMENTO (AP) -A racully and prepare facillUe• to t.rim~ boUt ~ state's pr~ key Assembly committee bas to accommodate e 1 t r a 1 I and , voted to allocate $2 million .~tudents." per Y meome las:es. so state coUeges won't have ~ d G Speaking Thursday before to turn away thousands of Some Democrats sai <\"· the St. Mary's College 12th students this spring, but cuJ.. Reasan could have provided J annual ei:ecutJves symposium, F lege officials say delay 111 pr~ the necessary funds Jong agoJ the governor declared that "aS res no pair Viding the money has created -and Witho~t legislation. 1 new problerrui. If the bill is passed -it ' a retult of two years of Off H The Assembly Ways and must go before the full ecooomy in government, we e1• ftIDe Means Committee unanimous-Assembly -Weinberger have some money, so, we art Jy approved the allocation reluctantly said he woW.d - going to cut up the melon T 0 h Thursday to provide facilities recommend Gov· Reagan sign and give it back to the people 0 rp ans to handle the 5,000 to 10,500 the measure. of C4Ufornia. the stockholders student applicants in danger College officials had plrumed of this state." MADERA, Calif. (UPI) -of being refused admission to to turn away thousands of~ During his two years as Ten orphaned brothers and state schools. students from the colJege governor, he said, "We have sisters who lost their parents But college officials and system's 19 campuses, which pulled tbe government back in an automobile accident last some legislators were far now enroll more than 167,000. from the brink of insolvency." July are moving to Fresno from overjoyed at the com-S C~leg:s• C~~~ello~fGle~d Because of economies to live with new guardians. mittee's generosity. · um e an 18 s sa1• Mr·. and Mrs. A n d re w School administrators said they would have t r o u b e started already, taxpayers can llin U lif.ed a~ B Ibey may not be able to pro-enro g a qua 1 t' save up to $150 million a year, auer, who said they always 1· ls · 1 h liUle vide for all new students at p 1can now, w 1 so he added. wanted a large family, were 1· The governor is scheduled awarded custody of t h e this late date, even with the _:.P'_':.pa_r_a_i_on_. _____ _ to make public his 1969-70 children Thursday by Madera money. . budget message on Tuesday. County Superior Judge Jack And Assemblyman Charles Reagan also touched on Hammerberg. Warren, (D-Los Angele$), told education and efforts to com-The children, ranging in age State Finance Director Caspar bal poverty. from 3 to 17 had orig·nally Weinberger: • 1 "By your failure to act, you "We cannot p e r m i t been awarded to an aunt, Mrs. Nearly Everyone 'Listens' to Landers anarchists and insolent and Gloria Graves of Concord. have made it impossible for jpvenile guerrillas to tear The children lived with Mrs.'°;lb;;e;;sla;;le;;c;o;ll;eg~esiiiiiimtoj;h;:ir;;e;;;;;ljiiiiijjiliiiiiii;tl'-'~ "Clown our institutions," he said Graves and her husband, I I President Nixon 's salary was just doubled to $200,000 a year despite press and jiublie criticism. Congress is also considering a boost in the salaries of senators and representatives from $30.000 t'I $50,000 annually. However, he altered his stand after newsmen told him Assembly Democratic Leader Jesse M, Unruh of Inglewood had said: .. My inclination is not to support this until we first pass confliet-o[·interest and campaign di scl osu r e legislation.'' after referring to education Stanley, since August, but the WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. expire without action at the as a key weapon against couple recently requested that George Murphy (R.Calif.), close oI the 90th Congress. poverty. the children be relocated. The Assemblyman Leo J, Ryan, &lruck by the "timeliness" of progress on the federal front. reeently sent a confidential letter to his fellow lawmakers urging them to do something about raising the $16,000 an- nual salary in the legislature. Though Monagan said the two isues were not related, be then told new s men : says he is about ready to MU.rphy said Johnson's The governor did not say Graves stated in a letter to propose nominees for three renomination of Poole Jan. 10, how large a cut in taxes he Judge Hammerberg they "Without Mr. Unruh's une- quivocal support for a pay raise, I won 't support iL" 10 days before he lert office, will ask but he did say the wanled to give the children federal judges hi P s in was "typical Johnson." relief would be "sizable." up for "personal reasons." California -and Cecil Poole-------------------------------- The voters were responsible foi boosting the saJary of California's lawmakers from $SwOOO to $16,000 a year in 1* when they overwhelm· lngly approved Prop. 1-a, w.ltich biggered pa$8.ge of a pay raise bill. 'Jbe bill contains a provision for. up to five percent annua l raises to take care of cost-of- liVing increases -but the ll!Jlblem is that the legislators ~e to give the raises to themselves. by a two-thirds vote in each house. As Senate Republican Leade,i: Do.nald L. Grunsky of ·~ville put it: "If the increases had been I e f t alltomatic, it would have been simple. The problem is, they weren't." Grunsky said he would op- . pose an increase at th is time because ''it's just not . polilically wise." Asked about Ryan'e claim that this is the ycr to pass an increase, Grunsky replied: ''This is the be s t time of all bad times ·but it's never a good time ·for legislators to vote an in· crease in salary." ·His counterpart, S e n a t e Democratic Leader George R. Moscone of San Francisco, en- c;torsed the pay hike without hesitation and said he would be "delighted to author it" if · legislators with m o r e Een1ority don't take the lead. With a smile, Moscone said: "You show me an underpaid legislator and I 'll show you a lousy one." ·Assembly leaders seemed to be moving cauliously <1n the Legislature At Work Blacks Rap Santa Cruz Ethnic Plan SANTA CRUZ (UPI) - Chancellor Dean McHenry of the University of California at Santa Cruz recommended Thursday that a new college to be opened in 1972 be devoted to the study of minori- ty problems. He said the new college, the seventh on the Santa Cruz campus, should concentrate on both the Mexican-American and Afro-American cultures. The Black Liberation Move· ment at Santa Cruz objected, demanding that the college be named "Malcolm X College," that it be designed by a black architect, staffed solely by b I a c k instructors a n d concentrate entirely on "th e black experience." McHenry's recommendation was made in respome to a report by the cam'pus' Aca- demic Senate, whlch he h a d asked to ·1tudy the problem. It brought an immediate pro- test from William Moore, Black Liberal.ion leader. "Where's Malcolm? The col· lege must be named Malcolm X," said Moore, referring to the slain Black Nationalist. will nol be one of them. Poole, Negro U.S. Attorney for the Northern California district in $an Francisco, was nominated twice by former President Johnson to be a federal district judge in San Francisco. His name was withdrawn, along with four o t h e r Johnson judgeship nominees, by Preside'n t Nixon. Murphy continues to brand as utterly fa:se charges that he personally blocked Poole's confirmation by the Senate when it was first submitted to the Senate last May. ..1 never objected to Poole," Murphy said in an interview. He said he did not, within the first week, return to the Senate Judiciary Committee the "blue form" on which the committee notifies senators of nominations for appointments within their states and solicits their opinions. The form, he noted, says on its face that if it is not returned within seven days it will be assumed there is no objection to the nomination. Later, he said , he returned the form with the notation that he had received con- stituent objections to Poole. Some o( them, he said then, related to Poole's release o( five Oakland draft demonstrators arrested in December 1967 by U . S . marshals. The judiciary committee allowed Poole's nomination to Trophy Seekers Steal Africa U.S.A. Animals SAUGUS, Calif. (UPI) -' Gary Swanson, a local taJ:- Big game trophy fanciers ldermist and big game hunter, seeking bargain heads were told deputies : "One of those lions was blamed today for stealing the nearly 10 feet long from head carcasses of three . lions, two to tail and was a better lr n.. A1MC111w .,..u tigers, a jaguar and a bear specimen than the one J spent T11un.11r. Jan. • r ·1d1·r d u 000 to hoo I . • Two •uembfyman upoet bv 1,,.. rom a WI I e compoun . .-.. s t ast year JQ c:,_Md "'119 u* .,,,.,~ 1ut1ui111~ The animals were among Africa.'' :'::i;"..;1111c•:~ ':;o111=. ie.111111"" lhose put to death last Sunday He said whoever beheaded A1ern111~m1n lN Rv111, t•kint 1 when floodwaters threatened the Hoos apparenUy took the n.e fr"llf"I' Pr~ 1'1!1•1•11"9 PIV • lb . h d tr hi bee ••IM!S In wamin111cn. u•g" S•c•a· to rue over etr cages at ea s as op es ause the _,,,,, ••-ktn to "° tomelhi..e Africa U.S.A., home of several pelts, considerably more NlauJ r•lll"9 !Mir Ml1ri.1. a] bl THI! Assl!MILY movie performers. v ua e, were destroyed in e1us l•trMucM T h e decapitated bodies (If the process . c.tflld -ll:l!<lul"" Ptibllc "l•cl"'· ll .,,.. .,, J101u1c11 con1r11>1.J11...,1 1...., the three black·maned ons A spokesman for Africa __..., 11nanc11r 11o1.,11111 11v 111 were found in a gravel pit U.S.A. said somebody made ~teded •nd IJIPOl~!fd 11..Wmm ... I offfc:la11 """ t"Htrlctl aCQu,1111..., °' Thursday in Yucaipa. Calif., off with the carcasses Tuesday ~·i. lh.lru1 Al ns. Unruh. O· about ~miles away. nigh,1. ·-· 11~--;i;;;--------;-------~1 . S......_ -lt•lllHI tl>e m••lmvm tfllOll'!I I retired IMc""r mav earn full 4-oly nylon cord General Safety.Jet unG_,,,rs conv,,,,ient AUTO-CHARGE nomon6ydown molJfMtopry $ 95 FOR COMPACT CARS phis $U1 Fff.. Ex. nr, sini·l.50 it'u t1"ieleH l>l1Kli:-.U • Foar ac,_. .,._ CCft Jlhl help e. SAfETT...JET .,. cool. Pft*cl ........ d s-oua ~ • PW""" ..... ._.. ... 1 I ilt Oii ._. roM1. ............ _.. ........ ..... •Al•ll•ll la ltlz••JOGca Mii•~ ---• 01 11 11'1 M IM11 ..._ bllJ:d, Dlltqsc•, "'" long. • a&lla he Mlle919 , / CHECK YOUR T/RE SIZE V CHECK YOUR SALE PRICE WHEEL BALANCE Our 1,.clall1ts preclsl°" balance both front w•eels to ossure nen tire wear aad safe steerh•9· $2~~Whool MOST CARS • Don't Take Chances! 1st 9uallty-67·A6 No. 20 The tire made for all imported and sports cars. The pr0¥1t11 rodiol for ...,.. ond dry weother. VP ~ twiqi; .the .Weo~ · twice the troction, twice tlw comfOft, . For Svstained Speeds of O.er 110 mph Continental Radials Offe e Increased freed fife, up to twice the rnilee9 e Shorter braking d istance, up to 25 •;. e Improved gas mileage, up to 5 % • Increased lateral stebility, up to 15 "/: e More P:ositive steerin9 · eStebilixCtd treed elements Trade Porsche 600x15 165x15 Black- in Prices MustanCJ Comet Chevy II $.51 6F~ 2.16 195x14-750x14-Whitewall Chev. Buick Olds 205x14 $58 2~ 2.64 825x14-WhitewaU ...._._ WIDE OVALS ..... , •• .,,. ·~ """ • u.... I See by Today's Al m McC•rthv, 0-S... Francis.co. Ttl -Pl'!;!Ylde1 IM <:rMlt •or Ml' w -------------------------·· S.Cond• e Rod Lino -1 t•l! ··-'!°" '°' ""'"""'' e•· ant Ads ~ from pUbl!(: ICl>ool 111otod1nor •~ •l.....,lr1t 1n .a::...,,,111!" pr1~1'9 '"';;!loll DI fll_..,. educalkw\1 • lt•l"UtJerlon. ' ~ktM -A.Odt r1!1!nt1 lllt' center ~. _11'wY!IY of • ~ki. 'fo un .. 1e1v ... ·"" """"'°" ~ •labl!!t~ to dtf\nltlclif• of ••-... ('.O!llfltklfl" Ulfd M~~lf-. Midi m.tte It unl1wful to _,..fe I wfllcla fll Ill Uft .. lt COl'I· flllon1 Al m. F-. o-o.kl1nd. ... ltt -Pr'Otllblfl I~ t"1lllov• ll1llJ!ilt a"'1'1CY from c:111,..1,.. 111 11>- 'lllfll:lwlt • f1!f: 111 """11""9 1ttu1Uom1 'Al Jtf. •Mlit"', •·NfWf>Ort Ile.ct>. ,...... -lt-J .... dllltlet bNrd °' : .......... """" ........ dlllly •"-'" .. ..,. --"' -'Cet)y * ....... ;..., to Mllll 1n ellctl"" ----.... -"· to •l•b-"" .. t11•o1al Clll!ll'l'IVftffy -~ Me,., Aa nt, a. G-. IKtt ~a1a•AT• . --........ -~ c.tftllld•~ ,,,, .... """'" ·~ ,MlllOr c.I'"' ...,.. "' ... ...... «c:V!Hf'-Oft .....,.., Al 221, llitnifr, 0-~ - e Little F P e I Palterlng Soon 7 Then you'll need ihis baby crib and n1at- tress, both for only $12, used only 1 year. Great bargain for tht' Uflt'X1>ect· <'Cl anivaJ. • Duocan Phyfe Ate Here: Well, at ltut ht made Uie table: a dining room set, large table and 6 chairs. •Vector Theory: You'll ridt faster and smoother on lhesc Heed Skis. model 190. with bindings and pol. f'S, in Ytt,Y good condition, only s~ • Opening a Nt'w Otnce" 1-lere'a a good buy on 11. 6 c......,..... A• • ,.-month old walnut Execo· ,,_ y..,. -AMtw .._. ..--1 tive desk. wtth a hfeh pres- .., ... Mldtfttltl ~I KA •• SUI'@ plu:Ho top. rn walnut. ~ :::...:."':=.. for only $75. Two walnut ...... -"*' ...,._ • •-and black upholstered ann ...... _._ """"' ~ .,. _. chatni, for $75. ,-::-Uk'· ---W.. ~ ._ __________ * _________ , YOUR CHOICE LOW MILEAGE USED$ TIRES e Whlto Lino E70x14 F70x14 PHONE 646-5033 ·•· II 540-5710 ,. Pd9W. ~ ... ffitf s ..... t JODl!AN HASTINGS, 642-4321 Community l:ias a Ball Dollning their prettiest party dresses and anticipating a dellghl- ful evening with their husbands are members of the Fountain Valley Woman's Club. While they are dancing to the music of the Hi Lites Saturday, Feb. 8 in the Mesa Verde Country Club, Costa Mesa, they will have the eddtttonal satisfaction of knowing the pleasant evening Is helping in the continuing campaign against birth deleclll of newborn infants. They will be attending the filth annual community March of Dimes Ball which will take place between 8:30 p.m. and 1:30 a.m., and tickets for the benefl:t ·now are on sale at $4 per persoo. The public is invited to~ the hall, and area civic and social organizations have been con~cted with requests for their support, according to Mrs. Vailce Derington, ball chairman. Serving as master of ceremonies will be Bruce Gossett, kick· ing specialist for the Los Angeles Rams, and Sound Plus, a collegiate vocal group sp0nsored by the elty'• Chamber ·<JI. Commerce, will pro- vide entertainment. Among the invited guests are Mrs. Dorothy Sutherland, execu· tive director, Orange County March of Dimes: Arthur McKenzie, coonty director; the Mm ... Mildred Black, petlent care coordinator; Harriet Beemus, repreoeJ!lallve, Mothers' March and Norman Wat- son, chairman, volunteer services. Others include Mtl . .run Kanno, organizer of the first Fountain Valley ball, and Mayor and ~-Robert Schwerdtfeger. Tickets will be available at the door or from mepibero, or addi- tional information may he obtained 'by calling Mrs. Charles Askin, ticket chairman, 8311-11!65. . Others on the ball'committee lnclude the Mmes. Elmer Maisio, Edwin Booth, W"Jlliam Cunmng!>aqt and Jam.., Grundy. In addition to the ba!I,. the· el\Jb also sponS«s the Mothers' March which concludes today. Mn. Ronald Murphy was chairman of the march. American Abroad Brazi 1 · 'Home' Of FY Student It's already tbe middle of summer for Lorraine Setera. Tho daughter of Mr. and Mn. Joseph A. Sekera of Fountain Valley has amved In Rio de Janeiro, Brul~ following her ldectlm I! an Americans -r.pruen- taUve in the American Field Service program. The 17-year-old Fountain Valley lligb School junior will live f<r a year with the family of Augusta de Fllva Tellel. One of 10 -berwolf, she feels abe will have mud! in commoa w1tb the 10 Telles children. Mbs Sekera studied Fmicb and Latin in blgb school and while in Brazil will ttudy Portuguese, native language of her host country. On March 3 abe will enroll in the Colegio Santo Amaro, a coeducational C a t b o 11 c school. In addWon t 0 Portuguese she will coollnue her -in Engl!tb, Fmicb and Latin. Other --will Include blstory, geogr~. phiJoooi>h1. nllglon, art and lDllSlc durll!g achool boun between 7 a.m and noon. • DANCING FOR DIMES -Mrs. Vance Derington, Mrs. !Wnald Murphy and Mrs. James Grundy (left to right) will he joined by other members of the Fountain Valley. Woman's Club and their husbands when the community's rutb annual.Mar<J1 of Dimes New Board Blossoms for Las Flores ' • Ball takes place Saturday, Feb. 8, In the Mesa Verde Country Club, Costa Mesa, All proceeds from the cooperative effort will be used in the continuing fight against birth defects being waged by the Na- tional Foundation. Surf Sounds . In Hawaii Too? By JODEAN HASTINGS Of t11t O.Uy f"llDt llMf VERY UNUSUAL weether for Southern Cali- fornia? Don't try Hawaii -it isn't much betta over there, according to Phil and Peg F1eschner who have just returned from the Kona Coaat. Be- fore they left it bad rained for six days and the "1"'...,L,: temperature dropped to 52 degrees -coolest In the islands' history. 'The F1eschners had to keep a fire burning in the fireplace every night just to keep wann. SEEKING OUT far-away places are Mick and Julie Hoffman who will be honored at a hon voy..,. paf!y hosted by Dal and Joanne Moran Sunday. f The Hoffmans take off next week for a two. month trip which will span half the world. Aflllr llWpping In Tahiti they plan to visit Fiji and cruise the reefs before touring both North and South Islands in New Zeeland. In Australia they wfil browse through Sidney, Melbourne and Canberra -which, Mick has heard, ll as quiet as Santa Ana after 8 p.m. -and then off to Mauritius, a tlny Island in the middle of the Indian Ocean. South Africa and a photo safari In Kenya Is next on the Itinerary, and Italy and Portugal will be their last llWps before returning home. Just back from thell-first Inauguration, both Hoffmans described It as a beauti!ul and moving nperlence. "You get a big lump In your 1hr9at over everything that's said," claimed Julie. 110f coune the weather was terrible there, too . . . " A CHECK for $l!iOO has been mailed to the Orange County PbilharmOd!c Society as a result of the Huntington Harbour Philharmonic Committee'• sixth annual boat parade and !int Christmas Crnlse Her lllernoom will Include private lessons In ballet, pain- ting and swimming. When ahe returns In Fountain Valley nut December ahe w I I I recdve her blg!t 1e b o o I diploma f<M" wblch she olready hu mmpleted the necessary c:nd!U. Telles, Miu Sekera'• foster father, Is .. ---abet aerves u • university ....,_,. Mn. Tollel tucbos During a candlelight ceremony in the borne of out· going president Mrs. Robert Salamon, new officers of Las F1ores Women's Club of Hunµngton Beach were Installed. Comprising the board of the social and philanthropic club will be (left lo right) Joseph Valinsky, treasurer; Frank Pellkofer, secretary; Joe Neumann, president, and James Long, parlia- mentarian. One of the projects planned for the com-, of Llghlll. Members are so eothuslastic over the succetkl of their lint venture they already are woit:- ing to Iron oot any kinks and plan to continue the cruises as an annual funding project. Members from Admiralty, Marina and Island- er groups wbo ·all·donated many hourt toward the success of the cruises agree special . ll!anks go to Betty Silver, Lynne Erickson and Margo ThomJ>IOll for their seemingly-llr<l.Ss efforts.' • · IN RIO lorr•IM Sebr• twice • weet in a aecondlry school. ing year will be the-donation of $350 to Huntington Beach High School for its acbolarsblp fund. ' I , 'Ex~eed-drin' Headache No. S ~ .... Why Am I a Wallflower? ." DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm • pt, i& not beauUful but better than aWnge btioc. Everyooe l&)'I I bav~ .a Diioe persmal!ty. The lnloble b I dolll pt asked out beca""" I ti" In a dump. 1'b!s nelghhoitlood Is .. CllllDlllJ ,.. -cn't believe Jl ·~"""at -..... to lb fllO but the mlnul<> I sln them rt11 --tbe1 dlallppear f.....,. -and DH are dtvGn:ed and · wt bave lroull!e paying the ren~ "' pleo• doo't -11 me we should move. I kDQlt wt llbotlld : but we can't afford to. Jwrt l<D me "bat • girl la wppooed "' do -.ahe ... , get dales - ahe !Ml in a 1lom. -CIUCKEN POX DEAB cma<Ph Moy a pl ... .n-1a a ..._., -..., .,,_ ANN LANDERS ril __ ... .._, ... _.......,. ,,_ ....... ..,. .. "1'1 1£1. la... I 3 ... ..,, .. P ""1 ....... -."" ..... _ .... ,,. ,..,, ..... ,.., ,..., Mt Yf//St ......... ,.... ll'flllli) ... fllllll •t wllat'1 """""· It DIW\· ANN LANDESS: !'ye been dllln( Jf11<0 for m weeb. She'• "" lnclift, not educaled, bat ~ rully -. how 1n man a &UY feel Important On our third date Joyce told me abe hod bleo In a detenUon home for plctinc up ltelnl In a department store. Lui -k ... vlllted my brother In • hosp!J.11. ne next day the nurse called lo uk ii I Nd taken Hal's watch "for ufeteep. lng," It W.1 "'l Jn. night I.Ible ind. now they cin'l-fhid1t. · Last night Wbm I got home !tom I date wltb J.,.-, Ill)' W~ WU mi,,_ Ing.' I'm not concerned about the $40 . lt'a the cred.lt cards and driver's license I need. I could fall in Jove wilh Joyce il I let myalf go. So far we've just ,._ changed a few ~ I bate to think what I'm thlnkinl-Any advice! -NO I. D. ' DEAR NO, II ,...,,e .... m;lioactor tian wtlll 111!1 prt I '"-' ,.. eoul ywr lffdt. Joyce 11 either • klep- tomaaltic or 1 dtld, probebly &ht latter, 1lnce llleptoal1al.IC1 1teal lie.mi Ibey llave ao ... for. Before yOI prGpHe, f llope ,.. will ,..older wllat Wt •""" be ftke f" Ille ldddlel w ... lllelr mt4Mr h la Ille -- DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am LI and already •14-1 My aunt lives me her nlco clothes when ahe gets tired ol lhem. In tbe Jut batdl wu a beautiful cocktail swealer. I tool! off the boac!s-md " looD .,..l The ooly w., ... Ann, the sweater la cut m ol low. It's DOI loo light and I am carelUJ DOI In bend onr. bot like 1 N lcl, II was a low neckline . I wore the swe.ater to 1ehool last week and two of my best friends Aid it looked "cheap." I don'l know if they are jealoua or if they laid it for my own good. lt's a very upeoatve neater and I'd like In keep wearing II, bot I dool want " wreck IDJ repu"llan. ' . Can yoa lldv!R mel -'-JACKPOI' JAii! .. DEAR JACKPOT,-W-a - -........ --,..'II_ .. Uletobeadneru,.._.._.,,...... ............... .,,...,..... ....... ' I IT'S IN THE CARDS -Trophy winners of Harbor Senior CitizellJ' Friday Bridge Group are (left to right) Virgil Kimple, first; Mrs. Peg Todd, third, and Lee Desmaod, second. During each six-mooth period, awards are presented to the three players with the highest accumulated scores. Rome Honeymoon ' ~ebekah ~ View Film Mesa Rebekah Lodge will meet on Feb. 4, at 8 p.m. to view a film showini the aeven danger signals o f cancer. 1JuriDC tbe gathering plans will be formulated for the u~ coming lDWatioo. Further iD- formatioa may be received by calllng Mrs. R a n I e Zuidema, Noble Grand, at 539- 4211, or lln. lloogW Morgan, publlclty chairman, 541-1938. Well Hee/eel . ~ . : / New Babies 'Showered' Card Players 'Score' With Bridge Trophies Suzanne Haas Marries RE-'LION' ON COMFORT -That's what women are doing when they wear these kicky young charmers called Leo ttie Lion by Penaljo. One of the finest designs in day shoes, they are made ~or comfortable walking. Shoes may be found at Robm- son's Fashion Island. "' Many new babies w i 11 benefit from gi!tS brought to a layette baby shower which will take place next Monday evening in the Mission Viejo home of Mrs. Don Clarence. The shower is b e i n g sponsored by Ayudantes Aux- iliary, Children's Home Soci- ety, and gilts will be used for the many babies adopted through the society. More than 100 avid card playen congratulated three wUmen or Harbor Senior Citizens' Friday Bridge Gn>up. Every Friday prius are awarded first. aecond and third high scoren and Ii the end cl. each siI-mooth period three trophie! are Jl!"'Olli.d to the three playrn wit:h tbe highest acaunulated acores. New trophy winners art • Virgil Kimple of Costa Mesa, fin!; Lee Desmood of Costa Mesa, secood, and Mn. Peg Tcxid and Roy Janes, group manager, are past first place wimlen. 'Ille bridge group galhen each Friday In the - Cltlzem -Center al 11 Lm. James Sawyer, prem.. deal can be called at - for further information. 'Ille travel section of the club is planning a bus trip to Death VJllley on Feb. 13-10 and soother journey to the Santa Anita Raceo on Feb. 2'. According to Kimple, past club manager'" the eJ1msion on the clubbOuse is being sia.rted. Funds were raised by members of the Zonta Club of Newport Harbor. Missions Council Topic ill Catherine's CoollCll of Catholic Women will zero in oo MW.ions Around the World dming the group's f Ir 1 t meeting of the new yW'.llexl Tuesday at 1:30 p.~. in Laguna Beach W o m a n ' s Clubhouse. Speaker, the Rev. Lawrence O'Leary, assist.ant director, Pootifical Mission Societies of the Loe: Angeles Archdiocese, will give an · illustrated lee· turt OD the subject. itm Ann Reilly, preSidtnt, will conduct a short business meeting which will feature a f1nancial report on a sue· eessful Christmas party and card party. Mrs. J.J. Kunny, program chairman, will introduce the speaker, and Mn. "'Ann Dellaso, hospitality chairman, ls io charge of tha spring tea which win conclude the meeting. MR. AND MRS. PETER A. BANASZAK Mlrrled In Wisconsi n Spring Rush Schedu led Spring rush for the 10 social sc:rorltles at California Slate College at Long Beach will take place Feb. 6-9. Coeds planning to att'1ld during the spring semester are invited to obtain an a~ plication from the Student Af. fain Office. The sororities are Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Epsilon Phi, Delta Delta Delta, Delta Gamma, Delta Zeta, Gamma Phi Beta. Sigma Gamma Rho, Sigma Kappa and Zeta Tau Alpha. Har.eymooning in Ron1e. Tl· aly, before m a k i n g their heme in Mlami were Suzanne Hau of Miami Springs, daughter cl. Mr. and Mrs. John H. Haas of Newport Beach, and Petu A. Banas.- r..aj,;, son of Mr. and Mrs. An- drew Banasiak of Crivitz, Wis. 'Ille Rev. Frank Barum.ak, uncle ol the bridegroom, per- formed the noon ceremony in Sl Mary's Catholic Oturcb in CriviU. Bouquets of whiLe gladioli and chrysanthemums adorned tbe altar. Given io marriage by her father, Iha bride selec:ted • long white aaUn _gown wttb.11 sboolder leogtb velllng <aught to a white 11.tln bow. She held • -tog bouquet ol white baby ...... ML!:: Marge BaNszak, at. t:.r of the bridegroom, was maid of honor wblle Mn. Denni! MclOnley, the bride'• A BIT OF A HEEL -And just a bit, is a feature sister from Costa Mesa, was of this shoe style called Tropic. The filppant, ro- bridesmaid. 'Ibey wore Ioag mantic litue shoe is carved down to the bare mini- wintu green velvet gowns mum and is shown in meUow ostrich printed leath· with short matching veils held by wide flat velvet ban. er with a baby doll toe. Each carried a bouquet of red "".!'!'~or. 10Se$, pine greens and holly L berries. Asked to be best man was Tom Keating of Oakland. Ushers were Jerry Da.anen of De.Pe.re, Wis., Elmer Banas- zak of Crivitz, tbe benedlct'a cousin, and Dick Tomasuw· &ki of Crivitz.. Miss Donelle Wiii, orpnist, performed whlle Mn. Joe Schmeltur of Mlnneapolil, aunt of the bridegroom, was the soloist. Following tbe doohle ring ceremony the newlyweds were congratulated by 500 guests and relaUves in Stei- ne.r's ballroom. ~vltz. Out. of-town guests arrived from Spokane. SL Loul!, Oli<ago, Green Bay, Detroit and Lin- coln, Neb. 1be fonnu Mlss Haas ii a graduate ol Newport ilart>or Jllgb School and Fullerton Junior Collqe. Her husband I! an a1unmua ol Crivitz Jllgb School and tbe University of Miami. He is a member of the Oakland Raiden footl>all tum. Associate members 0£ the auxiliary will be special guesL!I at the event, where a talk by a foster mother will be a special feature. Mrs. Robert Lester is chairman of tb t !bower. The society, which offers Jts service to both the adoptive and natural parents place many babies io new bome.s. Physic ian Addresses Women Dr. Ralph Byroo, chief surgeon at City of Hope Hospital fn Duarte will be the guest speaker at the Tuesday, Feb. 4 meeting or the Cll'is- lian Women's Club. The physician will present his talk at the noon luncheon meeting in the Newporter Inn io Newport Beach. Guest vocalist will be Mrs. Byron and a fashion parade will be presented by Laguna Beach shops. Reservations a n d can· cellations are necessary and can be called to Mn. Lewis Mertz at 833-1221 or Mn.. Harold Fischer at !&1129. Nunery reservations abo are_ necessary. Golf, Bridge On Calendar For Riv iera ns Goll and bridge activities are being planned for Rivlenl Club members 1 e e t l n C physical and mental exercise next week. Attitudes Explored Retarded Concerning Bridge i> scheduled I n Laguna Beach Country Club next Tuesday. Luncbeon will be served at noon ln Ben Brown's restaurant following a social boor. Reservations may be ob- tained by <ailing Mrs. J osepb Nem«ek by Saturday at 419- ~.~~J~t 2178. Golf section members wiR meet at 9 a.m. ne.xt Wed- nesday at the San Juan Hills Country Club where they will enjoy a luncheon following the JS.hole play. PAGING FEMININITY -Page, the name of this ultrafeminine sandal, calls on an airy look designed especially for fall. It carrtes its fashlon message fur day wear in butter soft ostrich printed leather mth bared toe and heel and the important look of straps. UQifo rm Appeal for 'That Gir l' Actrea1 Marlo Thomas of 11That Girl" television series models the new Air Force blue unllotm. Designed by Harry Gilbert of the M. Born Company of 1Chlcago, tt will be atallil.vd equipment for all WAF1. It ii a eabardine version :JI the Air Force Super~. lOls gray than in the pasLI' Two public lectures will ,,. plore the problem of society's acceptance of the mentally retarded person who has been prepared to live .in the outside world. The lectures will be part of the UCI ExtensiOll series, 1be Mentally Retarded: Olf'. rent Problems and Effecliv' PlaMing for the Future which ls given Oil Tue.ldaya 1t 7:J'.I p.m. in Room 1017 at Fairview State HoopiW. Falrvitw chief of psychology Irving R. Stoot will dlscusa Problems or Adjustment to and In Society Faced by the RetaTded and How to Develop n.elr Potential!. In hi.a Feb. 4 talk be will discuss whether or nol the tchools and the home are really developlnc the luD potential of tbe men- Wly ..tarded and the po15ibililies for copiJll, with the pt0blem1 of mentally retarded youngsters at home and in school without neglec- Ung other children. How parents can htlp their retarded. childru lead happy I useful lives ; how relaUves, friends, teachers and other prof~i0fl8is can help parents with this task will be dbcuss- ed In I.be Feb. 11 lecture Parental ComddenliODI and Needs. The speaker w1D be Fred Krause, e:recutl•e secretary of lhe CaWomta Council '" Retarded Children. Ledm'e Ucketa wW be 10k1 It the door. Emblem Club G1lherlng for bu 11 n ti a seaiooa and Jl'OCl'l.ffil are memben of Newport Harbor Emblem Club the leCOOd Tuesday at ...... In the Elks Lodge, Newpirt Buch. PUFF OF BEAUTY -These Utile beauties show bow under statement 11 in this fall. C,.""d PuH, this style comes in cuddly son oslrlcil printed leath· er and. feat~e new broadened toe and trUrr med down side~ilh an antiqued bronze ornament Carts are available and 1 reservaUons may be obtained by <ailing Mrs. Charle> E. Morrison. 644--4274 or Mn. Russell M. Nelson, 4\!0.3031. Pa inters Elect Sla te Sooth Coast China PalnWs State Federation m Califll'lli.a have elected their afficen for lhe coming year. Headinj: the organbaUm will be Ibo Mmes. ila1T}' Fagan, president ; Rot Oswald, first vice president: Donald Schoenmehl, second vice president; Howard M~ rett, secrttary; N. W. Lew, treasurer, and Roy Fi4r, historian. -------··----------------------------------------------------- I .I MR. AND MRS. W. E. RIOIES Canary Islands Honeymoon 18th Century Church England Setting For Marriage OUr Lady Help of Christians and St. Denis Church in Tor· quay, South Devon, England, was the noon setting for the wedding service uniting in marriage Jennifer Ganderton and William Ernest Riches. 'J'be Rev. Hugh i1artin -performed the single ring nup- tials for the daughter of Mr. and Mn. Vivian Ottoway Gan· Separates derton ofDevon and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene A. Riches of Newport Beach. The bride, given in marriage by her father, selected a floor length ivory satin gown with re-embroidered. alencoa lace. An ivory satin pillbox caught her elbow . Jengtb veiling and she carried a bouqu~t o~ pink roses and stephanotis. Miss salty Gray, the bride's cousin from Torqu~y. was the altendant. Sbe donned a long red peau de sole gown and matching headpiece. Best man was Daniel Holloway or El Segundo while ushering duUes were assumed by Michael and Barney Bettesworth 0£ Tor· quay, Graham Lawson was the organist for the St. Denis choir boys. Red and white carnations and greenery decorated the 18lb Century chmch. Special guests wef'e Torquay Mayor and Mrs. A. L. Goodrich, the bridegroom's parents, Miss Mary Spawr of Temple City and the best man. The Gandertons' home, the Windsor Hotel, was the recep- tion setting. Raylton Gray, the bride's cousin, gave the bridal toast. A second reception will take plae.e in February in the bridegroom's parenl3 home. ~lore than 60 close friends and relatives wilt fete the cou· pie during the champagne par· ly, The former Miss Gande.rton attended Leweston Manor, Sherboume, and the Universi- ,.ty of Exeter, Devon. ( Her husband is a graduate \.of Newport Harbor High School and attended Orange Coast College and t h e Universi ty of Ariwna. Cur· A new knit suil that will rent.ly he I.! flying with Flying win favor for Spring -has Tiger Lines and his bride was raglan sleeves, flare skirt. a stewardess for Westen} Spring \s the season of Airlines. JWl)rise luncheons, t r i p s , The n e w I y w e d s booey- meetlng people. Be prepared. mooned qn the Canary Islands knit fashionable suit of sport and are making their home ~arn. Pattern 7399: sizes 32-38 -=in=Costa===~M,=esa~·==r=;;; incl I' '• -O.IJL Y PILOT J J Dental Health Week Launch Wives Recruiting Coffees Navy Projects Brushed Up 11ecru1t1nc ""' members o1 Los Alomitoo Navy Wlvu' Club. They will welcome pn>o speeta to a colfee at 18 a.m. Tueaday, Feb. t. la the Bun- llngton Beach home of Mrs. Tommy Stewart. membttablp chairman. organhallon wl1h cluho all over the world. A ~fold program of welfare, educ•tioa and rocreaUoa. are offered to wives of Navy, Cout Guarcf and l411lne Corps -men, active, J'ilse?\'e and rellttd. Denlal Health Week. Feb. U, is a special time for mem- ben ol the Women'• Auxiliary to the Orani!• County Dental Society. Members will be boarding a bus at 9:30 a.m. on Wed· nesday, Feb. 5 ai Fashion Square in Santa Ana and will proceed to the Los Angeles Couaty Museum of Art for a tour and hmcheon.' Mn. J. Parker Hart of Tu.stin, pro- gram chai.nnan, bas arranged the event. The dental auxiliary has traditionally directed it! ef • lorts Iowan! project. designed and brushes in the bandJ or each school nurse to assist in the teaching of proptr oral hygiene. In 1968, 102 models wert placed in Orange County schools. Continuing projects include Lbt distribution of a primer on dental hea1th for the sixth grade level; distribution of hospital pa.mpbleta to maternl· ty sectlon.s conlaining in- formation on the care of dilidren's teeth: providing scholarships to dental students and students in d e n t a I hygiene; speaking to Mexican· American children ln Head St.Ir! progrlll111, and ......... ling puppet &bows uoder the direction of the Mmes. James McElenney of Orange and Paul W. Johnson of 'l\istin. Mrs. John M. Aschleris of Santa Ana, second vice presi- dent, 13 dental b e a 1 t b chairman for the y e a r • Although lhe auxiliary ts a component of the American Dental AMociaUon, most of lhelr funds and efforts go toward better dental health educatioo wilhlo Orangfl Coun- ty. Thi.! will be tile first in a series of ~ts to lntroduce all n e w and proe:pectlve member& lo the organization. Navy Wlves' CJubs o t America i! a national Mrs. K-lh Trueadale, (ftSidenl .al. th• aru club, will speak ao the wort the organization has dooe and COD' tinues wilhln the commamlty. Meetinga late place al T:30 p.m. the fJnt and 1lllrd Wednesday ol each month at the Loo Aiamitoo Naval Air Station. to provide dent.al he a I l h ,..--------------------• education. These project> in-MARJORIE HIGGS CdM THchor Literary Buffs Read favorites A polpoorri of ni.rary selec-Love Seen tloiis was presented b y clude school children, their parents and teachers, from kindergarten through h l g h school in public, private and parochial and Head Start progr One of the projects has th speakers panel which pro i a talk on basic oral h glene and nutrition geared to the second grade level. The 15-ZO minute presentation, first given in 1965, now is available coon· tywide on a request basis to schools and youth groups. In 1968, 45 members participated, vi.siting 210 schools and speak- ing lo approximately 30,900 second graders. More than 50 requests have been received from school nurses a n d teachers for members of lhe auxiliary to present the pro- gram during De.ntal Health Week. Chairman of the panel is Mrs. Robert E. Huntington of Santa Ana. Weddings, Troths Pilot's Deadlines To help fill requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories, forms are avail- able in all of the DAILY PU.OT offices. Further questions will be answered by Social Notes staff members at 642-4321 or 494·9466, . To avoid .disappolntment, prospective brides are rerrunded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Society Depart- ment prior to or within one week after the wedding. For engagement announcements it is suggested that the story, also accompanled by a black and white glossy p i c t u r e, be submitted early. U the betrothal announce- ment and wedding date are six weeks or less apart, only the wedding photo will be ac- cepted. Summer Wedding Planned members or Laguna Beach Eben club's Literary Section By Chapter during a gathering hosted by M~l~~~J:i bila of lnterprei.tUcn of Love Is lhe whimsy, a Churchill fabl• program planned for tht next ~ meeting of the Gamma Alpha tum-of·the century household Nu chopter, Bela Sigma Phi, hints for the bride, original at a p.m. Monday, Feb. S. in poetry, segments of limited the Huntington Beach home edUloo!, and Tennyson pro. of Mrs. Gunnar Rolle!sen. phesies, reported Mn. Ed· 11 wtJ1 be pnsenled by Mrs. M mund Van Deusen, 3e<:Uon R i c b a r d Rube with the r: and Mrs. Charles E. member. assistance of Mrs.. JOl!!l POOiey. Hips of Santa Ana hosted Following lhe program of Refreshments1 sened h1 an afternoon open house wMn readin-, luncheon was served .... _ n-M Donald ~" lhey announced tbe engage-"~ wu~. nc.... c , .. w car• ment of their daughter, Mar-by Mrs. Ropp wilh the ry out the meeting's Va.lenUne ass.IMance of co-hostesses the the e and each --~ •-· jorie Higgs of Ba1boa Island m , u.IC'.uWC& ~ to P uJ Mmes. Robert Tu r n e r , been requested to fashion a a W. Hebert Jr., son William Hinwood aod Jack valentine for her .ecret ailta' of Mr. and Mrs. Paul W, Stewart. Mrs. Wallace Scott hi h Ill "-.. : .... n .. d--i by Hebert of San Diego. ls 9ed:ion chairman. ~ ~w. LllC Ulolt" ...... _ The couple b ave selectedlli";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;""i Aug. 24 fC1f' their weddlng ll in the First MelhodiA Cburcli In Sanla Ana. Miss Higgs, a teacher at Harbor View School in Corona def Mar, rea:lved her BA SPECIAL! THRU FEBRUARY Another project is the dental hea!Lb education I i b r a r y , which consists of resource 1-------------------....l material and teaching ai~ for from San Diego Slala College 1 ""''o OF"'-AU. NIMANINTS and MA from California State u-1c ri • FIOSllH5S College at Long Beach. She was a member of Delt.1 Zei. 0 ,., (? l / // fi primary grades through high school. Included are books. pamphlets, posters, records. film strips, games, fingerplays and tooth models. The library is located in the Orange Coun- ty Dental Society building at 295 S, Flower St., Orange and is open to anyone interested in the field of dental health education. P.taterial.s may be checked out for a two-week period. Of special interest a re malerials in Spanish and Bnille. Also oo fJ.le are dental school catalogues to assist in career planning and questions on careers in dentistry and related fields. The auxiliary also is trying to place an over.;ize jaw model first Nighters Greet Leader Mrs. Harriet Mc Connell, who just returned f r o m Cleveland, wil1 call to order the monthly meeting of First Nig)lters. an auxiliary to the Laguna Players, at 10 :30 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 4, in the Laguna Beach borne of Mrs. Zacllary Malaby. The open meeting will take place following an o:ecutive board session scheduled at IO a.m. Mrs. Mc Connell bas just returned from a 1 p e c i a I engagement with the Cleveland Playhou!e where she appeared as the mother ln •j Ah, Wilderness." Her husband, the late Mr. Frederic Mc Connell, was formerly director of t h e Cleveland Thu.tet and design C<1nsultant for the Laguna- Moulton Playhouse now under construction. Board Meets The Executive Board or the California Federation o f Women's Clubs will convene in Sacramento on Feb. 4, 5 and'· A visit to the capital, meetings with women in the Jegislature, and a series or activity reports will highlight the three-day session at the Senator Hotel. Horoscope Leo: Buy Gift SA TU RDA'( to CANCER· born perso"' You are presented w i l h in-FEBRUARY I formation o1 value. Di!euss By SYDNEY OMARR fina nces with mate, partner, RIES h ·1 AQUARIUS (Jan. ii»'eb. A (Marc 21-Apri 19): lB): Be awan! of contractual Timing is sharp. Personal magnetism ls high. Opposite obUg•Uons. You seek greater sex finds you especially at-freedom. But act w i t b I n sorority. 1 D,. ... , Jwi ch Lra l •VI::;.~~ The benecUct-elect ls an alumnus of SDSC and al· COIFFURES fillaled wtlh Alpha Tau omep11==~109-l=B.t=k~er~,=Coot=•==M·1~11j, -~---:14~1 ==i lralernity. I l Group Meets Marcel Bllstene, official lec- turer from the Paris Alliance, will speak on Cocteau, Poet of the Screen and show a film during tho Feb. 14 :neetlng of Alliance Francalae de la Rivie-a CallfornJenne. PIANOS• ORGANS FAMOUS BRANDS COMPETITIVE PRICES we'll meet all pri.,..!) RENT A PIANO CAREFULLY No time limit! No RECONDITIONED obligation to buy •• , USED credit If Y"" do. 11 PIANOS tractive. bounds of responsibility. TAURUS (April 20-May 20); PISCES (Feb. l!>Mareh 20)' N I E AN KR UM f S G s Ui h• k bich ·--e•r y veryone Nrw · uno el to work on solid projects. po g on wor w -u 2064 S. MAIN -SANTA ANA • 546 4100 Means leave s f hemes, been neglected. Avoid ex· daydreams f 0 r others. Fix tremes -keep .sttadl pace. 701 S. HARBOR -FULLERTON e 871-4326 things around the house. -~La~ter~r~e~li,l-~-wi~th~~=~g=em=·a=1-'~L=iS:le:n:S_' ~10:._:L:a:nd:e:r~SJ~~~~~fl~YIA~R~l~l~N~l~A~HT~A~A~N~A~~~~~ Check safety measures. people, associate!: GEMINI (May 21.Jwie 20): Accent on versatility, travel, relations with neighbors. Short journey may be necessary. Check directions, instructions. CANCER (June 21.July 22)' Be alert for money op- portunity. Utilize facts, in· formation. Day f e a t u r e s chance for financial gain . Study income potential. LEO (July 23-Aag. 22); Cy- cle high. Be a self-starter and g~getter. Your sense of 6howmanship comes to fore . Excellent for purchase of luI· ury item, meaningful gift. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Emphasis on theater, en· tertainment within g r o u p framework. Good for club ac· tivity. Charity event finds you playing feature role. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22); Spotlight on pleasure , romance, friendships. Y o u possess air of authority. What you do today turns to definite advantage. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You can get points across to important person. S e e k alliance iwth LIBRA in. dividual. Spread influence. Ex· pand area of interests. Don't be limited. SAGI'ITARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): Accent on long journeys, travel activities. Plan ahead. Study SCORPIO message. T a k e initiative. Don 'l wait for others to set policy. ' CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Be receptive -especially TOMORROW, SAVE 1/3 TO 1/2 OFF DURING THE SECOND DAY OF , BUFFUMS' . MONTH END CLEARANCE FIFI'Y CENTS (coins) for1~;;;;:=--'L!..:.::.IL--"W.:U:C each pattern -add IS cents for each pattern for first-class malling and special handling; otherwise third-class delivery If yilu eculdn't ~ BuffUlllS' ~211111181 end clearance today, yue sti'll have an opportqiity to S3't'll Satmday,. , cme early! wUl lake three weeks or more. • ANEWSYSTEM OF EARRINGS OERJYED ALL BUFFUMS' STORES ·WILL CLOSE AT 4:00 P. M;. SATURDAY FOR.INVENTORY Send to Alice Brooks !be DAI· LY PllDT, 10$ Needlecraft Dept., Bo1: 113, Old Chel~a Stali1n, New York , N.Y. 10011. Prlat Name, Addreu, Zip, Pluen Numbr:r. Giant, new pit Ne<dlttnll C1la lo1 - ovtr 20D designs to C'hoosc, J tree patterns printed inside. Send 50 cent.II now. NEW! "SO IN ST ANT GIFTS" -fabulous fashions, toys, decorator a~. lth.ke lt today, give il Ulmot- rowl Ideal for all occ11s!CJM. 50 c<nlJ. AT JOSEPH'S RING SHOP FROM THE ART OF ANOENT EGYPt INTEROIANGEABLE FROM DELICATE TO DRAMATIC. ALL HANDMADE IN l 4KOR 1eK.· FREE PIERCING BY APPOIJllThlENT. --- "11 Jltty Rues·• to knit. crocht:t. weave, ~w, hook. 50 ..,, ... Boot ol 11 Prlu Al pans. $0 cents. B111atnt Qalll Boole I hu ti beautiful patlerns. 50 centa. ""L--LI~----..A ..,=..,.i.IJir.. 1.USIO COASTIK.VD. LAOJNAllL\otCALIP, [11 tl ,'H-5De0.. ..,.._ .. • I !~ r • ... . . , . .. Thursday's Closing . . =-... -c.:r; ... Steamship Merger Off SAN P'llANCISCO (AP) - llllteod d l1lfl'llnl Ha -ltumt:ltlp c OJn pan I ea, Natomu Co. tays it wlD operate tbem jointly. The f1nnJ llt the Amerieu. Pr..iclents Linet, .i'••lfic P'or Eut Line and American Mai.I Line, all cootrollod by Natomu, a hoJdfnccompany. Natomu made lt1 an- nouncement Monday, notlnt that the Ninth Circuit Court d Appea!J hid ruled Dec. II that Fed<nl Mlritlmo Commlllloll approval d the meraer wu Invalid becauae the merpr plans wen not su!HeleoUy spocllle. Tho court nmanded the plan to the commtuton for lurtber prooeedlnp but llalpli K. Da'11, N-.S bom1 chalrmb, aalil that nuld ..... delay and -"" ateld "' the joint -•lloa wbkh will ba mrlod out by CGotolldate Martine, Inc:, ' San FraDd"" buod mm -by the tllrte ateamlblp nn-.. l;:EiH.: Market . SgnafJob York Stock Stock i -·-• "'"•"-) I. ) DAILV ,ILDT List Exchange List . - .- -' • • . . .. • I I l I I • 14 D/.lloY Pn.OT rrlday, .ittuvy !!. ~ Gurney Chases 6th Riverside ,.Win · SatUtday \ ! COASTAL SHOT -Charlie &fiord tees off in the Andy Williams San Diego golf tournament Thursday at Torrey Pines aJ a U.S. Navy ship cruises off shore. He turned !n e 85-37-72 card for his first round ill the '150,000 event. Sports in Brief Bruins Freeze l(ings; Keep Streak ( 16) Alive LOS ANGELES -For about 13 minutes, it looked as though the J, o s Angeles Kings might achieve what no other National Hockey League club had done in 15 games -beat the Boston Bruins. Then tbe Kings' defense, Gerry [)ei:;. jardin'1 masterful goaltending and everything else but the root.fell In. Less than 27 minules later the Bruins, front-runners in the Easl Division, skated off with a 7.5 victory and their 16th 6traight game without a loss. Wood Nears Tille SEA'ITLE -Tim Wood of Detroit, the defending champion, was expected to wrap up the United States &enior men's figure skating tiUe be.re tonight. Gauchos Beat COD by 62-60~ Start Marathon By JOEL SCHWARZ Of .... 0.llY ,.1191 Stall Sadd.leback College turned back College of the Desert, 6%-60. Thunday night At Mission Viejo High School to star\ another one or the grueling periods on the Gaucho schedule which sees them play six games in eight day!I. . Randy LawrenC1!.'s layup with 38 second! remaining enabled Saddlebact to avenge an earlier 79-77 defeat Desert bad inflicted on the Gauchos and capped two courageous comeback.!! by the Mission Viejo school. The Gauchos were outscored 11_. In Ute opening minutes of the game but regained the lead wilh. a 1 7 • 5- sp.irt midway through the first hair. Saddleback, behind the brilliant all· around play of Blll Noon led, 36--31 , 3t halftime and 47-41 with 12. minutes left in the game. Wood scored 786.3 Thursday in the compulsory figures which account ror 50 percent of the score. He was far in front of Gary Visconti, also of Detroit, who scored 749.7. Lakers Bo•t Barks INGLEWOOD -The Lo! Angele! Lakers, fattening their lead at the ex· pense of National Basketball Association expansion clubs, tonight meet the t.tilwaukee Bucks at the Forum. The Lakers will be without the services of their star guard, Jerry West, who is out for at least a week with a pulled hamstring muacle in his left leg. Chirago Rolls, 12-0 Tbt Otlcago Bladt HawU were due to explode but they must have been u stunned as the poor Philadelphia Flyers at that 1%--0 score. Falling only three goals short of the most lopsided victory in National Hocke1 League history, Ule Black Hawks !ICOl"ed six goals in the first period and three each in the second and third periods Thursday night to overwhelm the F1yers. Indian Red Wins LOS ANGELES -Indian Red Lopez of Los Ange1es scored the biggest win of bis career Thursday night when he knocked out Raul Soriano ot Medco In I h • ninth round ol their !dleduled L2-nJund welterweight elimination bout Vtctory projected Lopes up to the position of leading conteoder for the tiUe held by Curtis Cokes and reve:ned his defeat by Soriano last spring al Mexicali, Mexico. Rlrhe11 I• l'irtor OMAHA, Neb. -Cliff Richey, the scrambler from San Angelo. Tei:., came out or the Omaha International Indoor Tennis Tournament Thursday night with the singles championship and a sh.art of the doubles. Richey earned lbe singles crown as he batUed past Joaquin Loyo-Ma,yo of Mexico 6-4, 6-!. Washed Out 500 Fie"ld to Roll at Last ' RIVERS!Dt -Dan Gurney will be aboot.i.q fer bis ai:dh wln Jn aeven tries Saturdly when the $100,IOO llfdor Trend 500-m.lle 111to r•ct nnany gets under way. The """I bas been pootponed twice becauae d. rain. Gurney, from Corona deJ Mar I will be Up against Q other entries. Ono of those who wW compete is • NASCAR dwnp David Pearson. SuHerlng from a cold and nasal tn.. fectlon, p..,..,. had returned home lo Spartanbur1, S.C., for medical treatmenL He now bu clearance for the race. Peanon lace1 IUCh other --1lan u Gurney, Cale Yarboroqb, Richard Petty, Lee Roy Yar!Jrwih, Al u-. A. J. Foy!, Marlo AndreUI, Parnell! ,..,.. and Bobby ilaac. • P'ar.ll, C!Jevrolell, Dod&es. Mercorys. Plymoutha, Pooliacl, Olcbmobillea and Bulcb are entued ln the 500-mlle tat during which the can CID 1'"Ch apeeds up to lat mph. They 'll nm over a 2.7 mile count In the ftrst ampetltive test or 19St model& and leodlng off the .... ,.... for the National AaociaUon of Stock Car Auto Racing (NAliCAll). Raceway Presidenl Les Richltt llid Rustl.ers Play Potent MSAC, Fullerton the bea-.y nlnl didn' do any lulfnc damqe I• the track and It wlD lie rudy for the race. "Forb.mlt.t]y," be cbaerved, "we have IUSlalned no lignlllcalt damai• lo the count or to the spectator ladllliea. n Cnw1 and hea'l' equlpmenl - nearly a -i: lo keep the tract and partial .,.. -for Salurdl1'• evenL Crucial Weekend Opens for GWC By 10:30 Saturday nlgbt Eastern Coo· ference baD.etba.11 fans will know If the circuit nee will be over at the end of the first round or if Golden West's challeap for the lead is serious enough to Dllte It a horse race. Coach Dick Slricklln's Golden w .. t crew face1 1 pair of vital games tonight and Saturday and tbe RusUm must win both. This evening the Rustlers (~2) lnvtl to Walmt to take OD Mt. San ADtonio College (4-4) and then rtlUfD to 1he9 Orange Coa.<I gym Saturday night for an 1:15 abowdown with Fullertoo (t.o). Tonight's game will get under way at a o'clock. Golden West's perlonrumce ln COii- Nicklaus Mter First Victory - Since '67 Tour ... SAN DIEGO (AP) -The yun hlvt been acarce and far between when Jack Nicklaus didn't win a major golf cham- pionship. The year 1961 was one of them. The 29-year-old Nicklaus hopes to rec· lily the situation in 1969. The leader going lnlo the secood rvund of the '150,000 Andy WilllllDl-San Diego Open loday, with an inittal four-under par 611, the big and friendly bear from Ciolwnbul, Ohio, made a few n!velatiom. F o r ooe, he has begun his training program weeks earlier than usual. He used to delay perfecting his game until the Masters at Augusta, Ga., loomed ahead. "I played a lot of golf starting Dec. 'El In Florida," aald Jack of a period in which he used to relai: and fish. "l didn't win a major tournament last year and naturally my objecllve is to win one of them thill year.'' He referred to the U.S. Open, the Masters, the PGA and the British Open, the crowns of which be has won at leas tonce in his brilliant career. Immediate target, of course, is the tournament here and its $30,000 top money. Last Monday, lo his rtrst lourm· ment of the year, he finished just four strokes back of the winner, Gtorge Archer, In Bing Crosby'i affair. ''I t.bou,gbt I played well up there," Nicklaus observed. His 61 'Ibunday left him one stroke ahead of D o w Finslerwald, form~ly 1 tour regular who limits tournament play now to 1& or so events a year and spends much or his Ume u a club pro in Colorado Springs, Colo. "I don't play quite as we11 or as often as I used to," Fi.nsterwald noted after bis '9 round. But. the 38-year-old pro added that he plans to continue several more years tn big league com- petition. Billy Casper, the local hero and biggtSI money winner in golf last year, was in the beavlly populated 7% bracket as only eight players broke par 3&S-72 on the l,144-yard Torrey Pints Municipal coune. Cage Results I-k l-(NY) 5' 0-"filGOOh IOCI 61. f'•lt1 ..... Oldll-.. ~rovldolrlot u. o.#•111 a NYU eo. Uf1'"'1e '5 Ottnll '" °""""""9 " WkM• s1m n, -....ii. "',. " M...WI 11, E_,.rn K~ 1' v1.....,i. n. MerMrtll n v1..,1n11 Mnw.,., n, wuu..., 1nd Mt,-., II Nol~ DlllM 71, GMlrt'll Ttdl 51 Mlpml !Ohio! '°" )ltvt.f (Olil9J 4$ OltJellome CllY tt. C'""""'°"' .. Mortt! Ttxu -"-Hl. Or•ke '9 .... ,.,...,, y-111. Vf911 1!1'9 • 0.-••• ,. u. ~!"".'(I ff I I. 1" .. 111:11 l~t.) H. Mont-1' fettnet action has been spotty. The Rustlen have played well on occasions but have balanced that oat with some rather sloppy performances. strlck1ln doesn' lhlnlc bis club b ln- considl!nt, but plays accordinl to the caliber of the opposition. "We'Ve played our better games against the tougher teams and our poor- est against the weakest ooes," he said. If the pattern ~ the Rustlers will be playing a good brand of ball the next two nights--« at least they'd btt- ter if they want to stay in the Eastern Conference race. Ml SAC gave Fullerton two of its strongest games this year. The Mounties Jost to the Hornets twice, by two and five points. In the conference batUe, Fullerton won, 11-M, but only aft.r ML SAC'1 Pat Ford injured an ankle in the final three minutes. "Mt. SAC plays ei:Wlent defense, doesn't throw the ball away, goes to Ille boards wen and play!I good sound ba• tetball," Slriclclln uid. "They -t very well as a complete team." Ml. SAC's coach, Geoe Victoi', ls an optimist and still thinks his club is in the race for the conference title. "It will take a miracle for m to win the title and I believe in miracles. "We can !till win this thing but Fullerton ls going to hive to find trouble. AU wt need is U. wim in a. row and that'• possiblf.'' · Vlclor will send a stanlng lln<ll? ol Ford (H) and Morrie Sherman (H) al fOf'WIJ'Ck, center Tamet Stremel (M) and guards Mart Ramoey (H) and Rick Kelly (~II) against the Ruslkrs. Golden \Vest probably will counter with Brian Ambrozicb Ind Allan Robin- son at forwards, Dave Harding at center and (){lie Martin and Mark Miller at guards. ~-·"-said ·-. ·--However, Su.iu.uu lll: ts COlh.ClJI• plating several possible changes-rest.or· ing center Dave Prather and guard Mart Campbell back Into his llarliot lineup. UPITt ...... ida. lfis Fonnula Vee racer struck the wall during a qualifying heal He was a Formula Vee national champ !n 1966-67. FENDER BENOER -Driver Bill Campbell isn't holding bu head because it'• broken -he's just amaud that he emerged withool a scra!ch after a mishap Thursday at Daytona Speedway in Flor-~_:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Daytona l!eld Will Chase College Student DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Four Americans, headed by a 21-year-old Auburn University student, started ahead of the vaunted European drivers today in t h e 250-m i 1 e World Championship formula vee race opening Speed Weeks at Daytona lnternaUooal Speedawy. Steve Peiper of Alexandria, Va., earned the pole with victory in the faste.!lt or rour qualifying sprints Thursday. He averaged 87.080 miles per hour, barely nosing out Cecil Harri.! Jr. or Houston, and Bill S<olt of Wuhingloa D.C .. as they came a~ the finish line abreast. Jami!!: Cor of Chattanooga, Tenn., Eckhard Stenzel of Germany, and Peter Peter of Austria were ck>se behind in the same alx.J.ap sprint over a 3.ll·mile road and track coune. European champion Werner Reid! of Almtrla won hi! sprint easRy, at a speed <>f M.030 m.p.b., wJUch earned him the seventh starting place. Jlm McOaniels of Alexandria, Va ., who won a third sprint, got ninth starting spot In the grid. A field of 7S cars qualified from 114 entrants represent.Ing 14 countries in the richest Fannula Vee race ever run . The winner gel:I $8,000. Golfers' Dilemma British Add to Miseries By Seeking Smaller Ball NEW YORK (AP) -As if the can· tanke.rous golf ball Isn't hard enough to hit now, the powers of the game are planning to mate lt smaller. However, you should be able to belt it farther off the tee and It ought to be more fun to play, says Keith Mackenzie, secretary of the Royal and Ancient Club of SL Andrews -but he can't guarantee iL Mackenzie stopped off in New York Thursday to talk with officials of the U. S. Golf Association about two subjects close to his heart -the British Open • and the golf ball. "Our aim is to arrive at a ball that i,:; men pleasurable for the average golfer to play,., Mactemle, a typical Scotsman with a thin mustache and a brogue that walks on edge, said. "He are not coocemed about the Arnold Palmers and Bill Caspers. We are con- cerned about the mlUI~ of golfers -70 percent of au of them, in f~ -who have handicaps or 17 and above. "Our purpose ls not to Improve the score -tbe players mu.st do that themselves. It is to improve the en- joyment of the game." The British and Americam, whose rules are aceepted all around t~ world. play a different size ball The Amer:icaru: specify that a ball cannot be less than l .68 Inches fn diameter. The R&tA code bolds that thl minimum diameter shall be 1.62 lncbes. The weight or the two balls II t.ht same -1.62 ounces. Now the two countries are t:ying to arrl\'e at a uniform ball. the only area in .1!hlch their rules do not q.ree. 'I1le Bntwi b1ve come up with a ball t.U inches in diameter -.03 larger than the prestnl British ball. "I !lincerely hope that we amve •t a compromise ball," Mackenzie aald "Not for our own sakes, but for u,; sake of the rut of the world There is a golf e1plosion, and other ~bies must be confused." College of the Desert bounCed back a n d in 1 three-minute stretch jumped ahead, 52-48, out.scoring the Gaucbol ll-1 :as lharp-sbooting Binny HJJ"Pf1' JlllD1Jltd tn nine of Roadrunners' point&. Alt.er Saddleback t vened Ute mml at 54-all. the ICflre was tied ~ chan~ hands gix times until L.awrtnee'5 winning bucket. Bruins, Trojans Face Pac-8 Action The R&A secretary said Britain hid sent do1en1 of the C'OmpromfJe halls ID thla <OOn1ry for aperlence. Ht bas not had a fuD repori. Meanwhile, reprt9elltativea 0( the two coontries will meet in Milwaukee prior to lbe Walker Cup m1tmes th1s IUDUMI' in an effort to get a aolutioo. 1be Roadrunners had three more shot! at evening Uw 5rore, but miaed twice and had ant basket nulW1tcl by a tr avel· In( call. Nooa ltd tht Gaucho acorlng att.ack with lJ point.I y,·hile Harper ICOttd Z3 fee llel<rt. C.-. • .. OM«1 Ctfl S lfl ' di (IT! "'" .. '• """',. tfJS7Jllo¥0 •l•I 1 •Jlll•..,.-.# )JtU ,,,,~ .. dv .,,,, 111 17/1'1 .... lll ,,,. 1 111w,,.,., 11J1 11 -0N!Ml'I 1'1lf S'Olt'll!l" 1 I C I H"'""' 1171 T..... UlllJ • TOl•lt 7!1tl1 •t .......... I~ •. t.llHll:fll"°P ...... By Uniled PrtU Jflten.atlnal Lew Alcindor head.!l down t h e home.stretch tonight toward a possible million dollar pro basketball contracl Far unbeaten UCLA, JM this seuon. the ttal drive for another NCAA &ouma· menl tiUe and national college bukttba.11 championship starU with tonight"• r .. aumption ot a U..game Paclflc-1 schedule that wind!! up the regular sea!'JOn slate (or lhe Bruins. Ca!Uomia provide!! the oppo&Uon for UCLA , 2.f in league play . Southern California (1-1) will host Stan· ford and Callfomia to round out the ~ --·-· .... __ remainder of Pac-3 games this we«end. The ~•Jans me<t Stanlonl tDn!iht and tangle "'th the ae .. Saturday. In a noo--coofertnee a: a m e tonight. Waablnglon will nost Montana. Saturday acUon will have Mcatana State at WashJnclon, Portland al °"""' Slat• and Gonup al Wublntllon Slat.. An undefeated seu:in allo enhances Alcindor's cha.nets ol becoming tbl!I hl&heot priced alhltt< ill proftalonal sporu. not. that he needs any addltlonal buildups arter two AU-American seQOfl.1. The Oedililll American llaJkethall ' I A.s.'IOcialion's very e.xtstena may depend upon the ABA securinc Alcindor. The milUon dollars woukl ei:ceed the $800,000 commanded by Donny Andtf"IOl'.I f r o m the G._ Bay Pachn and the fllQ,000 that 0.J. Sim-It aakin1 Imm the Buffalo Bills. The ABA would provide Aldndor with his mllllon doDan tbrDup • packl(e deal calling for a $100,000 assessment from each ttam in the league. The NaUon1I B1sketball ASIGCiation lndicatf!d It wouldn't go that high, but if Alclndor Joins the NBA the remuntr·- .( atioa woutd be ~lderable.. Alcindor currentb' ii the ninth ltading scorer in major coUe1e circles with m pointJ and a 21.f ave:rage. UCLA would n1in Calilornla '1 bopu for a till• by wlnnlnc loolglll 'Ille Boan •re i-1. Sionlord. the llfulnl' Saturday night opponent, ii a kl$l cawe wtth an W record. Nest weekend will be the real tut ror Alcindor and coml)Any when they taltt on Washington 8nd Wuhlngton State, the circuit nmner1t1p wllh t-1 records. 1 The difference in site of the aoU balls long has been a source or con. troveny belwttn playen of t b e two coontrles. In international mltchea, UR \I • u ... 1. Amfrlcona, -petinc 1 n 1111 Btlllsh Open and Ryder Cup mald>ti, ahn)'I use the mallu Briliah b a II because they say they can hit It • lo 30 yards farther off the i... In matches tn this country. Ult Brt~ prder the American ball. They caot.nd they CAn fmeue ind putt 11 better. "I think \ft wiU llnd a single ball we can play -if not the I.II Ont. then we11 try l.'8.'' Mackenzie aid . Be. Leil ers Fo r ] Thir• themf. moved names numbe Wbd corner becanl since · Brook! !f.y of the ID thli have 11 yea Dodi ..... as 101 signal Thlr more GilliaJ: peara1 left fc Maurl • Thlr ~seb; d'urin~ peoplE ago ti al the ·so ·I onem -at Cil thal ~ ferent learn. Jim openir ~1!<:00• the f• throu1 Ope ~ince Gray, Davis Jobn ttwict Wal this i: the D sLraig seven Limes lier ill! Doo n.... 1911 llod&t !Ml TOMI ASPR ST Ml :Mi retun lll)'Oll llli I three Th• the 8 • 0th at lei x ., . . Best. of the Rangers Leif Wemeid (in whife) makes it look easy as he zips through defend- ers in a recent game for the Coast Rangers soccer team. Werneid and For Dodgers Turnover at Hot Corner Reads Like Parade List -Third basemen have consistently been 1911 (6) -T. DaVls, DARYL the men-in-motion ever since the Dodgers SPENCER, Smith, Lillie, G l 111 am , moved to Los Angeles in 1958. New Aspromonte. · names an~ races keep popping up lilte 196% (5) -Spencer, LEE WAUS, numbers m a Las Vqas Keno game: · quuam,· ANDY CAREY, T. DaVis. When Bill Sudakis moved into the hot · i96.J (I) -K.£N .McMUU.EN, Walls, comer ~ Sept 3 at Philadelphia, b,e SpeU::cq, GllUBmt ~URY WIUS, Zim· becanle the 36lh man to pl.3.y the posilioil .mer, T'. Divis, MARV lJllEEDING, BILL since ' .the clU,b . came out here· from SK.OWRON. . Brooklyn. ' , ' ' 11164 (?)-JOHN WERB~s. Wi!JJ, DU;_K ,IJ. yf11i ainfuler the Jact .that\ oome , 'IRAC~Kl, Gilliam, JIA1!T SlllllLEY, nf these 38: inen 1 ha••· been assigned · DERRELU GRIFfl'tI'B1 McMalleft. to third baSe ·triore. than· once,· th~ 191$, (5) -JOHN KENNEDY, Gllllam have been a total of 68 changes· in l>ON LE JOHN, Tracewskl, JORN 11 years at this on'e position. . . R~EBORO. . Dodger third basemeo do oot ·stay put 1966 (Tl -. JIM LEFEl!yRE, Wills, T. Daor.s. ltennedy, BWJam.1 IDCK SCHOFIJ!LD, NATE O!JVER, MAXWELL STILES Styles In Sports ••••••••******" as long as a red light In a traffic ::;ignal. They just blink. Third base at Doger Stadium has had more purges than tile Kremlin. Jim Gilliam has made more farewell ap- pearances on this little stage along the left foul-line than Sir Harry Lauder or Maurice Chevalier. . · Third base with the Dodgers is 1*seball's answer to the swinging. door d'uring a rush hour. They get so many pe<>p\e on UUs base that a few years ago they even had three runners there at the same time. 'So ·far, they haven't tried more than one man at a time on defense. When the club opens the 1969 season at Cincinnati on April 7 it is probable that Sudak.is will become the 11th dif· lerent opening.day lhird sacker for the team. Jim Lefebvre has been the only openin.goday repeater. Jim, the regu~ar second baseman in 1965, opened at third the following year and held the spot through the first part o( 196_7. Opening -day Dodger _third -basefT!en t1ince 1958 have been (tn order) Dick Gray, Jim Bax€'1>, Jim Gilliam, Tommy Davis, Daryl Spe.ncer, Ken McMullPn, John Werhas, John Kennedy, Lefebvre (twice) and Bob Balley. Walt.er Alston had nine men playing this position in 1963, the year in which the Dodgers won the World Series four straight over the Yankees. He's used seven men three times, six men three times, including 1968. * * * llere'' the log, new men In <'Hps: USS (7) -Dkk Gray, Jim Gilliam. Don Zimmer, Gil llodges, £et Wee Reese, Randy Jacklon, Earl .Robinson. 1151 (l) -JIM BAX.ES, Gray, Zimmer, llodgn, Gilliam. . tl60 Ill -Gllliam, BQB ULLIE, TOMMY DA VIS, CHARLIE ~!ITO, BOB ASPROMONTE, Hodges. ST. PAUL HOST S MONARCH CAGERS :Aneelus League basketball teams return to action tonight after a week layoff with Maw !lei High School seek· i"i to extend ita loop win streak to three. at I.he expeme of St. Paul. The Mon:.Jrchs travtl to St. Paul for the 8 o'clock encounter. ~ Other league test! l.nclllde Bishop Amat 11t league-leading St. Anthony and Pius· :x ilt Servile. 1M7 (5) -LdebVNI, S<belleld, ~ BAILEY, JIM mCKMAN, RON BUNT. 1968 (6) -Bailey, LUIS ALCAR , PAUL POPOVICH, KEN BOYER, Lefeb- vre, BILL SUDAKJS. * * * "We won tw<rthirds of our September games and I.hat was the best record for that month in the National League,'' says Alston in reviewing the 1968 season. "And that tells an important part of our story. "In September we plugged up our two biggest weaknesses -third and short -with Bill Sudakis and Paul Popovich and only then did we play the sort of baseball think our club was capable of playing. "In 1969 we start with those two men as the prime candidates for those positions although I'm going to take a Jong look at Billy Grabarkewitz at short. "This kid suffered a broken ankle when he was hitting .308 (and stealing :n bases) at Albuquerque. If he's sound -and our doctors say he'll be ready by spring -he'll get a goOO shot, too, which would throw Popovich and Jim Lefebvre into a battle for sec- ond base. Crestview Title Picture Could Clear A clearer picture of the race for the Crestview League basketball chanr pionship could unfold tonight. Foothill defeated Tustin Thursday night, Sl.-43, to extend its lead to I 1h games over a trio of contenders in second place. Villa Park and Mission Viejo meet tonight at the fonner'a gym to settle lw<rthirds of the issue for seeond place. Bolh sport 4--2 marks heading into the finaJ game o( the first round . San Clemente, the othtr quintet with a 4-2 slate, rolls: into Laguna Beach for a showdown with the last-place Artims. M.iss.ioo Viejo duels the Spartang in the role of underdog as the Oiablos face a toogb, tis&-breakin.g, well balanct'd offense. Coach P11-t Roberts uyll his club's biggrst problems are the overall baWice of Villa Park and tbe iptfld and height advanlllge the Spartans stand to pol'IRSS over his team. San Clc.mente'll move into Laguna could well turn \ntG disaster. The TritoM of coach JoM Baker love to run and gun but. Laguna Beach, despite its shoddy 1-5 record, usually se~ the tempo every game with It• 1loWdown tactics. • his mates will 'meet Southeast United Sunday at Bell Gardens Park, oeeking ID preserve Pacific League lead. Action starts at 2:30. GLENN WHITE Sports Editor · • ' Oiler-Lion Duel Featured In Sunset Will the pressure of a winning streak make its toll felt on the rampaging Huntington Beac.h basketball team during the seCQnd round or Sunset League prep action? That question might well be answered tonight when the Oilers invade the den of Westminster's Lions to open second round competition after w r e c k t n g everything in sight the first time around for a flawless 7--0 league mark. The Oile rs of coach Elmer Combs, have now won 34 straight Jelgue contests and their last 11 in a row oVer the present campaign. Other Sunset League tests tonJght have surprising Newport Harbor playing host lo Santa Ana Valley, a team that pulled an upset of its own over Newpon in first round activity. Aod, Marina travels to Anaheim where the Colonists are still smarting from the S9-37 shellacking by Newport. All games are slated for 8 o'clock rollowing a preliminary junior varsity game. Westminster looms as a forct to reckon with for Huntington, having won four of it.a l&St five st.ara in Sun.set bosUlllies. Leading the Llons attack in Jeff Powers, who has scored at a 21.7 _POint· per-game in league acUon. Huntingt(ln counters with Mike Coalrtras (20.0 per game. . Coach Lute Olson of Marina, whlle watchlng Newport Harbor take Anaheim apart Tuesday night, remarked, ''Only one thing i! bad about thiA -we have to play Anaheim next." The Colony confines aJone with the towering front line would appear to be enough to contain Marina. Wlth the added incenUve tbe invading Vlkings are clear cut underdogs. Orange Coast Hosts Winless Owls Tonight Where the basketball may wind up tonight when Orange Coast College plays host to Citrus College at 8 o'clock in an Eastern Conference game \ s anybody's guess. Deft ball handling certainly hasn't been one of Orange Coast stronger points during a current three-game losing streak and the winless . Owls have been averaging more than 25 turnovers a game in conference play. Orange Coast, now_ 3-5 in conference action, can't afford to take Citrus to lightly, despite the Owls' 0-9 record. "They're not as bad as their record indicates,'.' said Pirate coach Bob Wetzel, echoing remarks of several conference mentors, "They work the ball well and are dogged in getting under the basket for easy short shots. Jim James, one of their forwards, is one of the best in the conference!' We t.zel's ma.in concern about his club is its ball handling. The Pirates turned it over 29 times against Chaffey Tue3day night, their sloppiest performance of the year, and Wetzel is looking for a sharp improvement tonight. Citrus coach Don Edwards sums up his club's problems simply, "We 're just doing too many things wrong.'' The Owls cut down their erratic ball· handling a tittle against Golde n West Tuesday night but their 20 turnovers helped the RusUen considerably. "We're not getting our share of re. bounds and our shooting perctntage has dropped because we are taking poor shots. In short we ju.st aren't playing good basketball," Edwards complained. sun, the Owb aren't that bad. Citrus nearly batt1ed Golden West to a standoff this week and the scbool has a pair of dangerous shooters in ' James and Keith Shumaker James was in a scoring slump earlier in the conference sea.son, but against Golden West he was particularly effective using the" backboard to bank in 18 points. Shumaker ls the second best scorer in the conference with an average of 23 . points a game. He matched his average against the RusUers, scoring most of his points on layups run off the Owls pattern attack. Joining tbe!ll in Citrus' slarting lineup will be forward. Pit Lee and guards Tim Meza and Leonard Markham. Wetul will counter with a starting five of center Rich Stlckelmaier, forward,, Phil Jordan and Steve Jacobsen and guards Tim SaJyer and Mike Flaher· ty. F'rlday, January 31, 1969 DAil Y PILOT 1_5 For Cage -Scoring San Clemente Ace On \Vay to Record Eric Cbristens<n or Sao Clemente 111g1t School stands to ·be the greatest tcorio( guard in Orange County hiltory li the 5--10 senJor can con.time bis record.aet-: ting pa"', The Triton bat racked up 4T1 point.! In 17 games oo lit field goals .and 8> free throws to completely outdlatance Orange Coa>t area perlonnen in the scoring department. His current 26.3 per game average la overshadowed ooJy by Weodell Kallen- berger'• (Randlo Alamitoll l mark of 27.S and John Vallely's (Corooa del Mart 11.7 from Oranle County. The latter front line duo ael thoee marks in 1918. COITA MIU P.10 • ... fJT TP' It 101 ji fU i~ ~ ~ m lf 37 • 1(12 lf 31 11 70 lS ~ u i!ll 11 11 '' " 1: J 11 •••,•,• . . ' CORONA D•L 'T" ".tl1 .. T " "' ·~ rl u ll " '' 51 lt '5 •1 14 11 1t 17 11 I' ... 'I " " I I I 1 ST ANClA L"ltt ... t'T lt 101 ... ,. "' ,, lt '1 ltll l~ ~ ,, " • ., . 14 ' • ·1 ' 10 11 10 ' . . ' . . lllOUMTAIM VAL'l,•T (~1:) l'T )0 11• ... " .... n s• 31 ?O St to '' .. ,. It l6 i 11 19 lt '' n • ' n s 3 11 , ; ~ : MUMTINOTON 1a:cM ,1:1J·tll'T (l!!l!nr1i lt Bl U Miiier lt 17 7l wane" 16 -16 ..0 Wl!lttleld 11 51 lt a.onw~ll 1 t ..S 21 Nl(!'IOI' 12 36 11 :r:: It # 1J Prl<lc!V t 11 11 Sn•d•r t It • •orrln~tOll t J ' W1l~~r 100 1> l J•tk.on U.OUNA •IA~H (J..~J' l'T l' Sl SS li " ll lj :n ,, ,, 34 2J 14 1t B 10 If lS ' 10 4 ' . . ' ' ' , ' . MAltlNA l~M) t'O l'T 1• " n '' 110 "" If 16 31 i: H lJ " ,. 10 21 . ' . ' ' 1 I 1 I t • I m !i I: • ,.. ·~U lH ll rl • ' " "' "' ir. "' n " " " " 'l " ., "' "' m m ll ~ " " .. • • .. "' .,, •• .. .. " " " ' • " 11,J , .. "' " " .. " ' • ' 1 MAT•lt D"JIMIPO l'T Tl" Cl!tn<IOI ••• Wltk~r Glbe-rl NOffl!!I MC,...nlnln titllon "'""" Frl!z ltYtM\le ltrVCl!t 10 12' " ~. " .. . .. , ,. ,. " ,,,, 11 .. .. ?O U2'2Sll l t ll :ao tt 14 13 ' n 'I l 1 l~ ' I I ' < I ' Mllltolt YllUD (TI·ll e "G l'T T,. ,, 101 u In It !I : ,: 1• 5' 11 ltt 1• J2 It ltJ tt1111 t1110lt l ' ' 16 l , 1 Ji I I 0 ] Nftl"otlT HAll:IOt. ( .. UJ G "G t'T 11 110 ts II '1 Jl " a il " u l1 If I " ~ 'l . " lS \6 • • ' 1 ' l l ~ SAN CL8MINT• (1141 0 PO l'T 17 111 ·.1 " " 11 • 11 •1 ll 22 17 ;tt 11 IS I• \1 'l 1t 11 ' . . • • • j 1 i WllTMINITIR U•tl . ... ,., JS lOI t1 1• ts .a 1f JI .ai; :: i ft ii n f~ 14J 7~ ~ l l f l l : CdM,Eagles Head Irvine Hoop Agenda By ROGERC~N Of ""' OllllY l'u.t Staff " ll~ "' "' " " " ~ .. • ' • .. .,, l" " !I ll .. " • • ' .. "' m :n q • • i TradiUonal rivalries are the order for the Irvine League's final basketball tests of the first round tooigbt with Corooa del Mar and Estancia heading the bill. In other Irvine batUes, Fountain VaUey is at Costa Mesa and Magnolia invades Loara. All games are at 8 o'clock. Corona deJ Mar, with an 11-game win- • ning streak in Irvine competition and a 4.0 mark during the 1969 campaign, is favored to extend both streaks against the host Eagles. A packed house is expected al the Eagles' confines for the game. Estancia backers have been waitin1 for some time to even the score after two humiliating defeats last year to the power-laden Irvine champs. Corona romped, 76-36, and tJ9..Sa, with the help of Phil Jordan, John Yule, Steve Leech and Co. This time around coach Bill Metzel and his Estancia qu intet is faced with another Irvine power in Corona, but not at quite the same strength with Leach and Mike McWilllams the only returning starters. Despite heavy graduation 1 o s s e s , Corona again has come on strong, however, defeating favored Magnolia Wednesday night with a convincing li>M5 tally to take undisputed first place in the dri~ for the title. Golf Action, Basketball Fill Weekend TV Menu ~he 1150,000 Andy Williams Open from" Torrey Pines in Sa.n Diego will be teie<:ast Saturday beginning at S:ltl p.m. over Channel 7. The Wllliams event is one of three golf shows on the tube Saturday af- tmoon. The CBS Golf Clas.!lc pitting Gamer Dickinson and Sam Snead against Tom Weiskopf and Tony Jacklin starts at 2:30 on Ch&nnel 2. NBC'• World ol Goll show (5 p.m., chanoet 4) featur<t Dan Sikes, Al Gelber· ger and Peter Allis from the Mauna Kea Beach course at Kamuela, Hawaii. Also Saturday: . KNBC's high school game or the week is the North Torrance-West Torrance confrontation at noon. The college games pit caJ and USC on Channel 5 at 2:30 p.m., and Pacific and Seattle at 3 on Channel 13. The Stanford·UCLA game will be a delayed tape telecast ·at 10:30 p.m. on Channel s. The Lakers play San Francisco at the Oakland Arena on Channel 5 al B. Sunday'• 11port& menu starts off with New York and Boaton ln an NBA feature on Channel 7 and 11 a.m. The Andy Wllliams telecast st.arts at 2 p.m. Sid fans are offered a report on how the U.S. ski team fared ln Europe prior to tbe Olympics on Channel 9 at I p.m. The menu : UCI Can Still Make Playoffs By EARL GUSTlCEV Of "" 0.Jlf '*" Si.ff UCl's 8M6 pummeling in Fresno Tuea- day night didn't do the Ant.eaten' chances for an !nvit•Uon to the NCAA playoffs any goOO but it didn't t:nock them ouOil the nmnbti, either. The way coach Die\ Davis looM at I~ UC! is IU mid U alt goes u upecl<d through the rest of Irvine's eight games, the AnlA!aters ahouid still find themlelvea In an tnfi•ble position. Four 11-lara• West CoHt -will be telected for the collqte ctlvislon rtglooa!1 the weekend of ~arch 7-3, probably at the las Vegas 0-"venllon Ce:nter. "I'm almblt l\D't they will select a Southero Calltornia team fgr the r.giooall," Davia .., •. "Pueet Sound Jn W uhington has a good reconl and the Unlvmily of Nevada at Lat Vegas (formerly Nev ad a Southern) b a cblCb. We baven•t lost to anyooe wbo ls In compeUUon .wltb ua for • berth. "1 can't thtok of anyone in CaUfornia who merits more oonsldirattoo now than we do. Alter aU, UC Davis made tt last year and they ""'F. 111-9." UCI will not play a. team as talent~ as Frr:sno during the duration of lt.s schedttle. The Ante:aten play bolt to C&i Sta!f'(Futlerton) Saturd1y and then hit the road for gamu at UC San Diego, Loyolo, Olapmmi, UC Rlvmlde and West.moot. '!be final two appolnbnenta are bome games, with Sao Diego State (Feb. U) and TIMe Paradlle !Feb. •I· Last year the NCM cotle .. ctlvision pl•r,off ae.ledioo committee wu com- pel ed to utend bldl to the CCAA and Jl'ar Westt:m Coftfettnce wlnnen, wbkh were San Otego State aod UC Davia. Thi• year, U~re are no automailc9 -a sHuaUon tftat lends great comfort for Davis' team. ·~ I l DAILY PILOT Newport, Corona del Mar Add to County Upset Wavi Tbls writer was all aet lo say a thing or two about the nmarkable effort Troy High School put In against Suony Hills last week when the former upset the Lancers, 6M6, In Fre<way Leap action. But before I could open my mouth or wiggle my fingers, Newport Harbor stepped tn and shook up the picture with its rollick· Ing 59-37 upset of highly-regarded Anaheim. It's been said alJ along that the Sailors d Newport had 1 fine squad but after ,,,,,,,.,,,,,,, ROGER CARLSON .. , ....... , ... . &truggling through five straight league losses the Tar cootingent didn't figure to 5el. the wcrld on fitt. And Anaheim, with a lS-! mark, had the credentials and the talent to establish itself as a heavy favorite. When Anaheim come froln behind al the half with a quick eight points to lie it at ZS..2.8, one observer commented, "It's all over now," meaning the Colony was well on its way to accomplishing the ex- pected. However, it was the une1pected that prevailed. They say upsets 1n ~ketball are a dime a dozen. But !hockers like the Newport.4 Anaheim battle come at a sUgbtly higher premiwn. * * * And now, btfere the iAk b dry, Coroa• del Mar bums Maptilia iA an Irvlne Lelgae 1lwmer, 54-4$. lt would bt bard to flDd anyone wlM &l.lp-eed that Bill Bloom of Connll hu -• remublll<I job la keeplq Ille Seo It.p' wbnll:l1 1treak t. kape acdoti (JI) ..... CAnu, wldtout a peat deal of offen1lv1 punch, lives by defense. It Is one belt diac:iplined teum fa the county. * * * of tbe An excellent source from the area of Edison ·High says the colors and nickname most kicked around by involved students are green and gold and "Chargers". Doug Cuty, the ex.Corona del Mar athlete of the year, ls out of action for wrestll.ng at &be Univenlty of Washington. Casey 1uffettd • concuslou ln football durbrig... the fall and 11 being lleld out of wrestn.1 for tbe upcoming football uason. He.'1 .-Brat frubman io Bu1ky football hiJt6ry to eara • pirple lldmet. And he captaiDtd bis frosh team lhne Umes In the five-game season. Don't be turpriHd to see Casey In the starting JlnH.p u a 1opbomore at defeDJlvr guard tbla fall. Br Wu JM 11 a IMior at Corona gainlng: tbt 171-Jb. CIF championship In wrestling. * * * Charlea Ruffin, the basketball coach at Bishop Amat. is screaming "I want back in the Santa Fe League," these days. Seems the Lancers' coach is one who expect& bwlkelball games to produce scoring. To date in the Angelus League after three games, his club l.s o.-3 with the last setback a 32-%8 decision to Pius X. If that BCC>re is bulging him, what's going to happen when he faces SL Anthony~ The Saints started off the circuit with a prodigious 3.l-27 verdict over Mater Dei, hold a 38-30 decision over St. PauJ and Je1d the league with a 3-0 mark. The other tally'? A ~20 wbomper over Pius X. * * * Jack Btohamer. u-Hutln.gloll Bead! WI' baseball •ce, will be pl1ylng a& ReM In A dustflcaU.. at....., dl1J )"tllr. 6,1 • leCODd bueman, be bit .171 111 the Califonrla loop •nd .m hi Uie Western carollaa Leape lut year. Prep Wrestling Rsults Lipton Cup l\:.latch • Slated for March 30 The hoqstr Thoma& Up- Jm CUp wW be lip for grllbl qalo com.e ~ 30. San Diego Yacht Club, pre.sent holder ot the famed yachting trophy announced II bU accepted the challenge of Southwestern Yacht Club of San Diego, Uws opening the door fer otber coveters of the !$-year old prlu. Southwestern Yacht Club baa cballqod -the Kel- tenberg-<l sloop Molaro owned by lllcbanl DUtaell. 'l'be bciat rates SS.S feet tmdtt the Crulto Ing CJub ot America measure- ment rule. San Diego Yad!t Club bu: accepled the cbaDenge and will defend with the ~..u 1100,1 Hallelujah owned by Marty Gleicb. The Hallelujah rates 36.S. Under the rula of the Up- loo Trephraudilen death race theJe two ritings mart tbe bigb·and the low under wbicb other boata JD8Y eater. Subse- quent challengers must rate between 33.3 and 36.8. The Lipton race is sailed on a boat-for.float basi! with no handicap. It is one or the OAILY ,llOT hltl W ...... Valtwu On Sunday Af~ou • f.IG41. NOllCS most popular yachting con-Shields Class sloop Alert stands up to a brisk breeze LEGAL NOTICE l!L1:CT10N ol'l'ICl!•s ""o tests in Southern California as she ploys through Newport Jetty during early P0t.L1NO .. ucas and can be counted on to OltlGINAL "NOTICE OF DEFAULT'' MOTJCE IS HEREIY GIVEN that, stages of windstorm and rain that swept Newport Rw.orded Jinuarv :n. 1"'· Fl1t-No. 1t "'' "'9el11 ci.trkt BKt1on "' tie draw a large spectator fleet. Harbor and put 8 ball to -·ch ,pestirnes. 131,1, In eook MSl.. p1111 1.21 in Office Mid 1n Emer11d a.,. s.rv1c1 0111r1ct SDYC olliCJ. ah said the --------------"-"-'----------·I°' Recorder ot 0••"8• Counf't', C.lllornla. "" Tl.IHdltY, ""' ,,.., dn ol Flbrv.9rv, NOTICIE 01' Dl!l'AULT AND lNt, there Wit bl -wllnt ~ rating spread would allow all lt:LIECTIDN TO Sl!LL con1l1""9 ol ... 1'99Ular Md1o!I Pl'KI-• UHDl!R Dl!l!O DI' TRUST a1t1b1tll>ed f!:lr" tM Plold... ol St1N but two of the Cal-40s to enter. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN: ind Courrty 1!Kllon51 tll* JIOHl .. PllA Entries must be made by a Oltj p b F d THAT HOME FEOEltAL SAVINGS 1cr Mid precincts w~ ._ the . FIRE Ower oat eu AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF SAN HOUSE klu'*I wllt.ln fhl Chtrlct. yacht club with a boat t b a t . DIEGO. C.lltorni1, • ~11on, Thi ,.,_ 11e ... 1n.tter NrMll htw I ed b be Th 11 '""'"" unMr • Dt..i or Trvst bffn .-lnl.t offlart ol 111cttcwt fw B <nm y a mem r. e '".J..b ! Wbslltuted In plf(I ol HOME DEED .. Id YOtll'llil P•Klnd. skipper and crew must all I & ESCROW co. OF SAH D1Er;o, 1 Vot1nv Pl'IC:lnd 1, -rt•I"' .... u11r be -•mbers of the challengm' g T 'R ' s dn '-'"'''°" u.11a1111C1 bv CAMILLE ,._ 11ect1on •rKI~ No. A-no .,... N.. •-q e es .......... .n atur y· GARNIER. I mel'flllCI 1Y11n d1ted MIY ().IJ1: yacht clu~. ,'·,' • Ull~ '"'· 1"' -'Ill ,.--.. ~ 11, 1NJ, Polllre ,i.e.: Fir• Hou• The K 'l Molaro Is the 19611 FU• No. '""' ,.,. c:w, Boo11C w~ •MHCtor: .iici!Nflnt M. ....,.. -. ot Ofllc:lal R-U In the OffQ If JUOlll: etMll ll. SY1'1111 h ' f th S p· lfll RICOnler of 1M County el Oralltf! Clffll: P1trldl ... MI- C ampion ° e an iego Bob-Nordskog of Van Nuys, alon for the event's final 44 si.tw of c.11foni11. •nd 11wn to llCV•~ c1ert1: B•rblr1 s. 5'-,,. Handicap Fleet, based on a boa .. Yr'Mflf of 1 """"'"""' "°"' few T1'll "111 w111 ..., ~ ~ Se,;,, raced throughout the t r acing's aggressive miles at IO a.m. Sunday m.coo.Ot, dilM Mey ,, t"3. ,..,..,. hou~ °' 1::io 1.m. *"' 1:oe ,.m. grandfather, renews his rac· . ' with 1n1vn1 ~ " !Mrllln -llNd. 01t11C1: J .... 11rv 20, '"'· year. It is a fiberglass sloop travel west to Ship Rock Off 111 f1vor ol HOME f"EOERAL SAVINGS MERL.IN L. DAKIE, ing feud with BUI Cooper of . ANO L~N ASSOCIATION 01" SAM Secrllll'Y designed and built by Ket· Marina del Rey this weekend the lslhmus and then tum for ~GO, 111orn11, • c1tlfOl"rt1a Clll1MW'• :;:;:.1c1 0~~ tenburg Marine of San Diego. in the first Long Beach to Cal· home to Long Beach for a Th.t • brwdt ., tM ci11i1tat1«1 tor ,ubl lshld 0r-co..1 ~u., l'11et, The Redline-41 is a relative-allna cnd.se, the-nation's first trophy presentation at Long wn1c11 Mid De11C1 ot Trv1t ••• ,......, ~,., .>1. 1Mt 1!Mf ly new racing..cruising sloop offsho~ tpowerboat race of Beech Yacht Club ::,~ ...,=.,,.-:=-...! .::1 ,,:;: -LEGAL NOTICE from the design board of 1969 • _,. "°' Plld Wfltfl .,., '"" s11a ------=c=:------ Canadian designers, eorge The race is expected to al· op es or lnltlni-rt °' •1'nc:i...I ...i c••Til'lc.t.T• °" •usniau G . Tr hi I leading finish-= """' -'"' Ind -kli TIM f'4Dlt , Cuthbert.son and G e or g e tract as many ., ~.0 d,..,..... ers on the first day's race wlll 1n ..,. • MIHlmDlr 20ftl. 1N1. Ind l'tCT1Tious MAM• C . Th _,,..,...__ •-..: """"'' wbs-....t lntflll ........... ~. ,,... ~ ... ctrftff' .. -ass1an. e p • ......,,.,.yc was boats in three classes and be presented by the Avalon ~ 01Clllrt,. ""' a1t1n "'1M•• c.ldudllw • 11u11 ... at-.••-°"""" the famed Red Jacket which will serve as a shakedown of Chamber of Commerce Satur-::,.i.;:. ., .. :-~:_~ ~"= :,. A":"'~°':;::;"' :"':; won the 1968 Southern Ocean new gear in preparation for day ru'ghl at a dinner at the octebl• '°"" ,,., at ~ r•tw of CAJIPETS •Y SERVAIS w .,.. .. Id RBclng Circuit he M ,.,., .,,. llt9 dM,.. .. 911 fwftl firm 11 -......i If ftll ,.,,...... --· · t arch 22 Long Beach to El Galleon Restaurant in in Mid ..,. "' trwt. l!ld ,,,...,... ..._ -ifl "'" .,. .,._ tt This year will mark the 57th Ensenada race and the Aug. w1t11 '"" """ 111 ....,.. MV•nnct "" ,...1c1enc1 .,, .. to11ow1: d r of th Li~-Troph Avalon. !hi IM!Mfkloll'V o.oSlf' ""' ttm11 •nd Genw1 A. Ind a...n. T ... ,.....," e ense e t'""" Y 23 Hennessy Cup classic. -i.1o111 o1 .. Id .... °' """'· 1nd 2001 c.n1111a P11c1, N..._.. ...ui. which was fll'st dedicated to Nordskog, SS. ,·, 8 marrn' e For all except Nordskog and c1111 .... utnt 11xn. 1UHUT*lts •nd 11'1--c1nfDrrl111 97UCI · y ht Cl b · 1903 1111r111C1 Pl'9!ftfum1, 11 •n~. O.hd J1n11MY f, ,..,, San Otego ac u Jn · products manulacturer who Coop& the event. will be as Tl'll1 tfr" , ... _, ""'"°'' "" unc1er1o9Mcl. C111r1er. T. s..v.i. Through the years it has been won a pair of West Coast much an experimentatlon and :i"":r::,11.~~nd .. '!1..!!::: '1atl of ~;:,."ii,, s;::, c.eu...-1 won by every major yacht races last year in his familiar later race preparation as on to 111d '""'" • "'1tten 11ec111 ... t1o" °" Jan~•rv t. '"'· ""'°"' ~· • I b · So them Califom1·8 · N dsk d ro-of def1u11 •nd dlmand tor Mii, •nd Not11T Publk '" •nd fer ... tt1tr., cu in U ' bright orange Jlolocaust. thts race. or og an ~ n.. iwrrll!OlrllCI to uld 1r111111 said ""°"""" ._.,.... o.ntYll ,A. 1nd but in recent years it has Cooper, presi'den' of the pe.r~ose personal friends-..... v1 tru11 '"" •II docum...,,. wioe ... Chan. T. St>rvell ·•-"' -,., bee d ' led b S Di • I cl119 obllo1l1on1 t1CUrllCI tll•reby, •!Id tr. It'll WIORI wtloM ~ .. •..-,U.. n omma Y an ego Cooper Lumber Co. was a lit· manage te> forget that re • 1111 dlc1aret1 •nd o:1o11 Nr.o-t wci.rt lld to tM w11t11n *""""'*"' _, Yacht Club. tie more consisienl. He won tionship once the starting in -..m. MCUr.t .,,.,.... lmmHletelY tcknDW11c1$11d thtY u:llC'.lllld"" ....... The S o u th e r n California . na1 . b . ted du• •nd ....,at111, •nd "-• •ledld •nd toFFIClAL SEAL) . 1 t. . the Casale Trophy of the Pa· sigN ds~k 0~ ·tr dit' 1. t ::ri=:w1n'i.:!1c1 .. :::::' ;-~ = ~iiti1~'1.11tem&. Yachting Assoc a ton is cific Offshore Powerboat Rae· or og ts a a iona is . w .old ta .. ttlff ,.,. otin1111ot11 ~rec1 Pr1ne1 .. 1 Offlee"' present custodian of the · Ass · · b .,. Holocaust is a 28-foot Thun-ti.r...t>v. or•"9• coo.intY h d lh 1ng oc1at1on y pi 1ng up derblrd hull pushed by 1 pa;,. oi1e<:1 JimHrv 20th. 1M. M" eontm•• E-. ..,... 11, trop Y an sponsors e an· the year's highest number of , ... L.ot 1, llloc:k 1, T••ct •2•, •• mow" 1m1 nual race in the home waters points _ e v e n though his of 439-cubic-inch Nordskog en-on • M9fJ rKOrdllCI In Boak '°· Publls~ecr °""" Cont 011tr !"!lot. Or the defender. . """ .0 '""' JI ol MIKlllll.-J.,iuarv 10. 17, lot. 11, 1"' 45-49 Spooky Too didn't win a race. gines. 1M1>11. Boat Show Nearing End The 13th Southern ·California Boat Show closes its ltkiay run Sunday. Show manager Ed Nichols said the attendance this year set new records despite bad weather that prevailed during the first three days. The S o u t b e r n California Marine Association sponsored eiposiUon is ZS percent larger than in previous years, mak- ing it the largest all-marine show Utls side of New York, according to show officials. The show is being held at the Pan Pacific Auditoriwn, 7600 Beverly Blvd. in Los Angeles. Show hours will be noon to 11 p.m. Saturday and noon to 7 p.m. Sunday. Houseboat OK Also expected to compete in . Cooper is somewhat of an ~~~cf ... E,?~~:&~.;;::iNNGI LEGAL NO'l1CE the featured offshore class _ nmovator who hall enraged oF SAN 01eGo boats of at least 20 feet in Florid~ offshore racers by in· ~~~ !::~· Melin!. c1aT11'10;~ •US1Man length under the rules of the troducmg smaller, outboard· Bv: Judlttt A. wm1ar, "'CT1T1ous tu.Ml American Powerboat Assoc.ia· po~ered e~gines of frequently J'>ubl~111c,~~~:.":, o111v Ptklt. ~1~-::': ''~ J:.i! lion-are Maury Fortney of danng design when he has J1,....rv n •nd Fe0r ... rv 1, '' 21. w.,.. CO.ti Mtu, c11ltof'MI, lll'llllf' "" peted th Ifft 1..._.. fldfllOUs firm ,,..,,.,. ol HIClfOLS AO. Newport Beach with his Zenor com ere. VA.NCEO VEHICLE S'PTEMS ... ...., Zippe and Dave Puckett of LEGAL NOTICE LEG,U. NOTICE ~""...,:.. c:a;::;:-:111c °'111~ tnc1...,~ Seattle with 01' Whatserface. •A1t-im o1 re.111w1ce 1s 11 to1-.: Th · j HOTICI! 0, eULK SALi!' Don Nldlols. 1122 G-r1nvlll A"-'lf•• e cnnser c ass for larger SUPl!RIOR COUllT OP THI!' TO THE CAEOITOll5 OF MARTIN J. P1lol v .... E1hlel. C.llloml1, family.olyle boatS capable of STATE OF CALl,.ORHIA POil PETEll:50N, JR., AND THE ESTATE 0111d J1nU1ry n. ,..,, THE CO~Nr:: .. c:.:ltANQE OF MARTIN J. PETERSON. SR.. Oon Nldloll .• 20 miles per hour or more, NOTICE 01" H:i.RINO 0" .. l!TITtOM OECEASEO. DOING BUSINESS AS Still ef C1111o!'nl1, Ori"" Cou"f't': and the de"eiopmenl cl as for M R. P 's c Lo T H E s L. 1 N E , °"' J1nU1rv ll, Ifft, lbe'lort ""' • • S f'Olt ,RO.AT• OF WILL TR ... NSl"ERORS· Not1ry Public In 1nd for .. hi Slife of at .least 18 feet have been 01' t.:~E=~· T~~~°...~i:TAll:Y PLEASE TAKE NOTICE thll YOU. Pl!nonlll1 -••ftl Pon Nld'wlll ...........: organized this season by POP· E•llte o1 LIL.LIE w.v JEFFERS, :~ ,:t,1:, ;~~e "~~='::, i"o,..,=~ ~ ::.:i~ ,!"-0,~"';::';,,1.:"'::,,..,'::'J BRA . to . encoura.1;e greater o'tr'~~~E IS HERE!IY GIVEN Tlla! Cade, ••• ller.t>1 nolllled ., tallow>: 1nd 1dtMWled9td IM lllK\lt.d "" ....,.. p~rtic1pat1on . and interest in ALLEN JEFFERS ... , llled herein • P~TERT:riN. ';=~·'~~"·"" "i:~~l~':: o~ {OFFlc;:.L.rvSi~~ th1$ chai1eng1ng Sport. Pl!!lllon lor FroOlll• of Wiii Ind tor MARTIN J, PETERSON, SR .. OECEA.S. Not1rv Publlc.C.llfonill Th I C •-1· 'IJ lnv•n<e of L.etten Tntimenhlry lo EC ••• 1boul fo "'"'"'' hi the un. Prlncl111I Offlc1 In e tUn () 8wi 1na Wl Pttlll-r, r-'erenoJ hi wt.Id! 11 mlCll ell '1 ned U.ll:AH STEWART 1" boJlll Or1119r CavnlY slan' off Long Beach's Bel· for furttie.-P•rtlC11llll'I. •nd "''' "" ~11g1io...:1 . ' ' MY· Cllltlmlttklll E..ires time and 11llcr o1 M•rln1 fhl .. ~ 0 ""· N '" ttn mont Shore Pier Saturday at h11 bMn ~ for Fearu1rv 21, lfft, " K.,.,"'°,.. ••.ll01n. 12 lb. cioecn" Put>!~· °''"'" Cold Dil~ , .... lo Th f at f •ll 1 m' In Ille _,,.,._,,, 01 1 ges drv...,,, A rv m1~e •• . a.m. e course calls or Otoirfn-1' N~. 3 o1 uld cou•'· ,1 '••k'r 11111er1, rnoe111 n• J1111111"V 2<1. 31 end Fotiru1rv 1. ,.., t h e fleet to roar out of t h e ,.. w. Etehtti strNt, '" 11>e c1rv o1 1 w1ttt ,,.,.,, ''°'"'· -v•L 1,,.. T1Mt Lo B h B ak t I Santa An1, C1lftomf1. CIHCllV ng cac re wa er o D•led Jinuiry 19, 1Mt. 1 Gold Med•I '°"" venc111H1 unit LEGAL NOO'ICE the west end of Catalina w. e. sT JOHN, 1 co1,, di1n<1t•. Nlkokl-br1na h . ' Countv Cler1t ' drv cle1n!"' counNn ClrRTl,lCATI ot' •UllN•st l ence down the lee side of J...,._ •· Eft•rd• 4 toldlM ttblet 'ICTITIOUS MAM• t the island and around the eas' •u u . l1Kllll ,,.,.., n ~11111c ct111n n. llf'llhtlll9ned .,.. ~rfflY Ill' "' d A I . I A .. 1191m, Clllf. ""2 l •KWk>I m1dil111 condud!,. 1 bUlr-., .,__. llffdi, en to va on-a dlStaoce o Ttl: m.1....a • i.undry "'" c1111orn11, unmr ...,. fklltSoo.n. r1"" _ 60 miles A--irw l'ltlfll-' l 10 •••• "'"' ainll!lllft cf "SERYICEI UNLIMITED~ '"" ,,., ' . Pllbl!lMl:I Ot~nM Cc.11! 011rv PllQI, 1 Ml11111n bolnl, l • S uld fl"" 11 c:orn..mllCI f1f f1W ..,....,_ The raceN will depart Av· J111111ry .>1 ,,.., Flbtvlrv i." n•t ,,....., 1 •lttl. 1 • s. '"°""'ft! 11111 1M111 _._,, ~ -1n "'" lfMll •'- ",_;OiiOii0ii0iiOiiOii0ii0ii;;;;OiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOii0ii;;jl ,.... of'-'~ Is H fo.llrlwl• 11 ti 111 Ill! 1ubsl1ntl1ltv 11! II -lnllwlllll, THOMAS H, SAFFER. lm t- DELTA SUPER QUALITY 1.-lln, merdll!ldl1t, """""""'' flllflll'n modorl ll:Olllo H-9 e 1 1c.J1 , 1nd o!IMr lnwnlorv ol uld tr1nrilron Cilltornla '26'1 ,_ loc•lld 11 J:ll Mein Streit. Seti Deled "-rv 30.. ,..., T• c t L I BNdl, C1llfarnl1, wllldl mlY bl IMPldld THOMAS H. SAl"l"Elt I res OS ess. II .n ,.._b-19 """" •• llll Main Shfl cf C1llfrwflll, Dr•-Countv· KEY SISCA YNE, Fla. (AP) strwt. SMI hldl. c.ntoml•. °"' J__, JO. lM, blfor9 -· -The houseboat President • COMf'l.fTI UNI AYAILAIU • ,,.!;_.'"" .:dO:-:im": :r :i:-1"~!i,: !.::.!~ p=..:. ·~nd to• .. : '~~ N'-on som tim' es u··· when WIDI DYALI -SUP•• •1t•MIUM -POLY'ISTEll: Ind ""hnsferH .... , FER 1(-to ,..,. bl ""·.....,, u. e .,...., •ADIAL IPOllTJ -SAMD IUGQY -CAMPI• Trtnlflror1 -JJI Mlln SlrH'I. Sl•I wtios ....... Is subset bed .. tM ,,,,.,, he is in South Florida is sale. • ... CIALS -& ALL. SllE TRUCk Tlll:lil. B~,;.~lfor~I 111 • 12111 51,..i, ln,tr!n,..,, Ind K*-ltdiHcl Ill~ The Coast Guard h'as issued IAfrflAMlllCAlD MASltl CHAlGI $ell Bndl. C11!fwnl• Ille ........ k I ""II o-. w.1,,.11 111ri.H i!ld ld!:l'*'Wll (OFFICIAL Sl!ALI ·-....... M..-tit) (fl A~tiWIM • \illt¥W W llK. Jo!INOfl (NHll IM 14'-$rlvOlr (!)IMC. hult !Mll 11•1 111-lrlllf ill *°C. Pl'ISfWl:IM (M)I '" • safety lnspecUon stlc., or BERG'S lJELTA TIRES '"' " .. ·--.... ~" = ;:.~ ....... the ·40-(oot vessel. C. G. 111rw1 y-., "° -.r " --" the ,rtnciM, Oft'lcl in !~· c•ir INH! '1"""" ..,.,,., fAJi Rebozo, a loogtime Nixon ""':!i.';i,~W.....11,.., m M.1111 "'"'' ~~ I!.,. friend and his neighbor on 141 E 17th St Costa M--64"2010 '"1 e..dl. c.ilfiDnlllo. J._ 11 ..,,. 1• I~ (MH) *<.. Mato•-(Al 1 , ... ,,J Cc 11 (MHI OM. Film-(Air , .. 1.....o'JWlllll ~NHI 1!!111111 C1l•10• Ct.JI ti• ,.......,........., OIHI OK. TvmH l""l: •• 11t-,...... INHI pl-M<1•u1~ CAll 1:• IA Hlisi-IM IHHI 111nnt!d W~lch ~ <Wfl ~ ,. __ _ tAl1 •M ID 11$1 ... (A) .. L.MOri.... !~Hh ?:, Ow<1d; ('61 4K, D\11.tNMh ..., l•fl&d -UJ ... Our1lll'I !JIM}1 H I ..... ,.. fMH) .......... CWrtlllll !Alt ~ ...... (tlHI ..,.,.. IMl'I!~ (Ah ~ ..... ,.,,Ml ....... • ... fl} ,.._., ..._. (M)J ~ fMI eK. IDIOJ4 IMl1 r.J.....1191. Cf) .. Artlfll 1.Mll "'t 1~ ....... I.El.,,_. y_,,. IMll ~ I OK. 1: .. 11 (Ml' '"' U. tll'M• ~,_)-. Tidd 1111 11•1 u. .C.ttM 00 ... k.""4Nlll ,.,, .. , ....... 1....... fl) ... ArrNt""'9 F ,., ... *"""' ,.J IN-McCtMllM IMI .iowiM AW/1 (()I ,,,. HY-11!:1"'"°""' fill "'"""'° Wllll-IM)> I ·°' •1~1•1 !SI ... ~ -WooOt !EM) l!illnld ~ (5CJ; J;• 10.....S!ocutn ISM) ,.,...,.. MetO!I ISCI: l;TI' 11~~ ff.Jiii ......... !Wrlbu" ISC); J.411 11'-Hol• CEMJ *C. tll ...... (5Cl1 1U IJl.-.Skotwn cEMI ......,... v .... i.11111 !SC.II l :Jot U6 K"""""*r !Kl OK. HorlOfl (£¥)J 74 lJl-WOOlry lhli) OiK.. • ,..,.,,. ...... (K)I IW 1~._ fKI *-CtlMwlct !llolH t-1 15'-R-..,. CtMl OC. ....,......,. (SC)I M • 1'*-Colvlrt 11!11111 OiK.. s-(S(JI •• 1"-lh·ltt (IE~) l'lnNlil 1-r•-(SC11 ''" 1'4-""•"" (EMt dK. C~ ($()1 •• HV-H•-!EM) 01c. Stllnlll llC)I "' -·-N....-..... t•o(n ........... ~IN-lNH dtC. t41mlllon CAlr ,._1 ttt-<:u•rlt tJtlO "''"'*' Aubrfl'lllll IA)1 t ·U 11,......,_r_ (JIH) -. .llldt (A.ll .. ........... (HHJ -.., '°"'" 11'--Ttobk., fAI Ne. EllM fMHl1 I h • • • ,.._ • .... 2, TIM loCl!lofl ...-......,., .... 1.... ,,._ "'---~ .. ,c ..... .... Key Biscayne, owns e 81 ,... _..., .. 111 ,,._..,,.... 11 ... ..._. .__.... .... • hou boa' --... ley 11 ~ ..,._ 11111 ii IOCl'-11 et '-'° :n IM ~ 1, 14., n , 1J1~1Ul'mkt !NHI Or ... KfllM IA)ll_'.=S:e'..::::·:,.,C'-:7:-:--:----~"'"'"'"'"'~~"'"'~"'"'"""'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'~'l»l Mein ltf'lllt .... I hKfl. Cillfwnlll. lW 1111Mf H 4. n., llull "'-""" 11 19 119 an-1.....0rhaflltM fNll l d9c. cooii:, < ... l1 •.••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••\••; 1umm.1fl4I .i :a1 Mlllll s'"". .... LEGAL NcrrICE l•O llffdl, C1llfltMt. Oii w '""'"'° Mlrdl'l---°"'=:=:-:==,,,-=--::0~-INHI 11"_, S•uclrld9• : NOW THRU FEB. 2-INANAHEIM : lt.o!'f..·0:~21.1.... ~:::'::J.!'f::,.=:,:;:: 16l-Owlflt !NH\ ~ Llvl1v 1""11 • 1 .v..rtfll J. ,....._, Jr, TM• <'OUNT'I' 01' OR:AJM• ., • w."..,n l r•vt1 Fil"' IS.1111t\on•I Hi9h Dive l"to I M111y F11t11r1 Oi1pl•71 ,, • Tr........ .... ......,.. :~~--IMHI llr'c. Port!" : f1itiv1I Winn1n ;, S"'"9• plu1 ellitr 'Ch1,,,pion' Fhhi"9 T1t.f1, C1"'"i"•• : J:.::~. ,r:.-"-' Dlll'r = ~·..:: .... ~~~-.,~t ::rr: 19~ !Nttl 11,..... Habit IA). 1 Co11tin1n;1ut Showi,,9 S+1,1 I W•l•r Ach 1t <I I IP'"' Gt,,,,. R11or+a, V1c1tlem • L•TTllU 01' ADMIMIS'1'1t.ATIOllll 1·1 • ,,. .... ~~]~]....... WIT~TICR-WILWM••x•o HV....0.telY fNHl ~ (All • SEE TIE • ---...... "' R.Oll:l!MCE E. LANNOM. 2!• -..... • ~. •11-i. 0:1> (II NOTtC~ ll Hl!RIEIY GfVEN ,._ ~,\Ml -.:. k"'"" tEh H •• 'SPORTS a ...... ~-MIMittl .. ...._ \M -,...,. ..,..... :l.::,.1 ~~~111c.k=.:::: . VACATiDN SHOW ~=· -liil c ....... 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Complete Guide ••• Where to go • ••• W/J .at to do • •• Weekend Highlights • I j . r ; ' ,, l 4 ' DOG CART RlDE-..:.Postponed from la.st weekend , the special event will be held this Saturday from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the mall at Faatuon Island, Newport Beach. The 50 cents donation, whlch will be deposited in th~keg worn b}'\."Stormy", a St. Bernard dog, will go to the March' of Dimes birth defecls program. MlJSICAL FARE -Music lovers have a bard choice to make t.hi.s Sunday when two concerts are scheduJed in the Orange Coast area. The Orange County Philharmonic Society will present the Los An- geles' Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of Pierre Boulei at 8:30 p.m. in the Orange Coast College auditoriwn and, on the sam~ night the Laguna Beach Chamber Music Society will present the Borochn Quartet in the Laguna Beach High School auditoriu1n at 8 p.m. JOHNNY CARSON -"Doc'' Severinseq, famous trumpeter and leJider ol the orchestra on the Johnny Carson "Tonight Show," will join Carson at the Melodyland Theatre in Anahe.im, Feb. 1-!. Appearing with them. will be singer Phyllis McGuire and dance team Bud and CiCi Rob- inson. This is Jobony's second appearance at Melodyland. Ser Guide to Fun, Page 18 INTERMISSION ~ vw By TOM TITUS lt w~ getting to. th~ point wh~e ~Jy Crowley Was beg111nmg to realize JW!t WHY there's no business like show bust· ness. Sally Is the director ol the We:stmin· ster Community Theater's current attrac· tlon. ''NJ.glit of January 16th," f' show that has taken m<lre backstage twists and turns than the plot Of the play itsell. Yet, in spite of injury, illness and the Irascible elements, die show has been a solid hit, and is being extended an addi· tional weekend. That's quite a re- ward for a produc- tion which, in the words of its weary director, has been jinxed from the start. "First of all, there was the problem of rehearsing over 'the holidays," she re· calls, "Then came A1tv•o MALN.v. the Hong Kong flu. Only two or three cast members weren't affe.cted by the flu to the point where they had to miss some 7ehearsals." · Things got a -bit stickier the week be· fore the show opened when Nancy Wells, who plays the leading role o( the defend· ant in the courtroom drama, was called back east beeause of a death in her fami· ly. Sally summoned Doris Allen to under· study Nancy's role, and she did so well she was given two perfonnanets last w~kend. Then, like all good dramas, the climax came late in the story. Arvid Malnaa, who plays an important role in the second ~ct, fell from a two-story building, break!ng his ' jaw, just four days before ope~ Right. Sally and company started looking around for panic buttons to push. TllEY NEEDN'T BA VE worried. Mal· naa showed up that night, bis jaw wired shut and his ann in a cast, after he left the hospit.al. And that's the way he per· formed the first two weekends of the play-exceptionally, it might be added. Then the black cloud moved ever the 'backstage crew : makeup girl Janel Eth· ridge came down wilh pneumonia, and Joan Hagerty, who was to assist with the show had to change her plans when her hush~ was iojuted in an auto accident.. WEEKENDER INSWE FEATURES Orange County is. ~live '1{lth a -wide variety of acuv1ty goir\g on in all areas. Before you make your final weekend entertalnmenl plans be sure to check the Guide to Fun on Page 18. You'll find the events listed for your conven- ient reference. World Tnvel Pa1e 11 Art Elblblts Page II Gulde to Fon Pare 11 Uve Thea~r Page 18 oc Pbllbarmonlc Concert Page II Out 'N' About Pages l"'to Happy Jm Band Page ZI Movi e News Paga Zl-tt Queenie Page !l Comics Pa1e IS TV Vie"-' Pa1e t.1 Trlevfllon Page %3 Nevertheless, the show went on. 'lben. on tbe first Saturday, the set was torn down to tnake room for a wedding recep- tion-with ·a.performance scheduled that evening. Then the rains came, making the theater's outdoor ''jury room" infea· sible-the jurors had to de1iberate back· ·'Stage. The following Monday, the cast of the next show arrived at the theater fOf' re- hearsal to find the fioor covered with water; mops and buckets were hurriedly dispatched. During last Thursday's pickup rehearsal, actress Greta Smith slipped on the water and wrenched her sbouJder. "The rain really fouled wi up good,'' Sally says. "Last Saturday night one man in the audience had quite a lime dodging ~e drips from the ceiling." One thing the rain didn 't do, however, was cul down attendance appretiably. Even at the height of the two weekend stonns, there was only a handful of empty seats-hence the holdover through next weekend. All in all, it's been an interesting time of it. As Sally Crowley says, "It got to the point where I was afraid to say 'break a leg' to anyone." * HISTORY SOMETIMES serves as the basis for the dramaUst's art, such as in plays like "Inherit the Wind," '"The Mir· acle Worker" and a good many others. But now, it seems, Americans have themselves a front row seat for a real· life drama which has curious parallels in the theater. In the play "Time Limit" by Henry Denker and Ralph Berkley, an American major captured durin,g the Korean war is accused of treason for signing "confes- sions'' while in caplivity, and turning against his COWJlry. In the coorse of the play, it comes to light that the reason he acted as be did was beca~ the North Koreans had threatened to kill his men if he did not. For dramatic purposes, the major keeps th.is informatioo to hiu'l:self until a climac· tic peak in the play. The similarity between, the actions cf the ficticlou.s Major Cargill aod Cdmr. Lloyd Bucher of the Pueblo, who "admit· ted" he strayed into North Korean waters to protect bis 12 crewmen is striking. But therti appears to be more dramatic poten- tial in the Pueblo case than "Time Limit" ever produced. NB Musicman Scoring Theme David Rose, who spends most of his non-working time in Newport Beach., checked in wlth producer Stanley Rubin and 20th Century-Fox music director Uooel Newman this week to begin scor· ing the main Utle theme and other music which he com~ for the studio's "Bracken'• World'' pilot ftr NBC television. -·-"'· Eleanor Parker, Dennis Cole, .t!.lizapeth Allen and Peter J1askt11 lopU.. the hoor- loni projected serle:I about the movie industry which was written and created by Dorothy Kingsley and directed by WaJter Doniget. Linda llarrlion, Laraine Stephen!. Jtsren Jensen, Stephen Oliver, Carl Re.lndel, Madlyn Rhue, Jeanne Cooper, &le England, Gary l)ubin and Angus Duncu allo 1tar. Hollywood Back Stage By BOB THOMAS -...iaMC Pr$ Wrfftr HOU. YWOOD -France has given us crepes suzettes, vintage wine, De Gaulle jokes, a rough Ume in NATO, Lafayette and, most fortullious of all, Mrs. Andy Williams. She is Claudine Longet professionally. Claudine sings, dances and acts. But first and foremost she is Frenrb, the aort ofgallic delight that most Americans thought typical cf French women before Ute jet age. Now a trip to France proves that Claudine is the e1ceptiOQ rather than the rule for French femmes. She is pet· ite, chic, -beautiful and channing. Not in the French pastry OI' Simooe Simon style, nor the earthy peaaant •lock ol s;. mone Slgooret. One can &Im~ be grateful she is not named Simone at &JI. CUUOl!\111 LOltQIT CHRISTOPHER LEE AS VAMPIRE IN "DRACULA HAS RISEN FROM GRAVE" Claudine's specialty, a&fde from being delecti.bly French. is singing. She re- cenUy completed her fourth album. "Cot.. ours," for Herb Alpert's A&: M Record&. Weekend Movie Guide In her first three albums one could barely distinguish the whlspery Jyr1cs u Claudine aang such goodies as "Love is Blue." (Editor's Note: Thi.t movie guide is prepared by the films committee of Harbor Council PT A. Mrs. Robert So- rensen is president and Mrs. Hart Sweeney is committee chairman. l t is intended as a reference in determin- ing suitable f i l ms for certain age groups and will appear weekly. Your views are solicited. Mail them to Mo- vie Guide, care of the DAILY PILOT.) ADULTS A Man and a Woman: A poignant French romance centers on the conflict between a woman 's brooding love for her dead husband and her new love for a man who wantsJo marry her in this mas- terpi«e of mood photography. Jean-Louis Trintlgnant and Anouk Aimee. Coogan'1 Bluff (SMA): A r I z o n a sheriff, Clint Eastwood, is sent to New York City to bring back an escaped kill- er held by the police and gets drawn in· to group of drug addicts before he com· pletes his mission. Marat/Sade: The Royal Shakespeare Company stars in this film which is a play within a play about the persecution and assassination of Marat as written by Sade for his fellow inmates to perform at the asylum in 1808. Prudence and 1be Pill: Impudent , friv- olous British farce about the pitfalls and advantages of the pill. Tt peeks 'nto the private lives of five co Jes nd turns into a comedy of e r ich upsets conventional rnor attitudes. David Niven and Debor Kerr . The Thomas Crown Affair: Faye Dun- away and Steve McQueen star in tlili. sophisticated film about a crack insur· ance sleuth who becomes an intimate companion of a thrill-seeking millionaire whom she suspects of masterminding a bank robbery. MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS The Boston Stran,!er fSMA): This film traces the events leading to the arrest of the Psychotic, who bas never been tried, for the mutilation and murder of 13 women, and the probe of a diseased per· sonality follows. Tony Curtis and Henry Fonda. The Charge of th• Ught Brigid<: A searing and lusty film describing social conditions in the 1850s that led to Eog· land's military defeat ln the Crime~, where a crack calvary troop was ann1· halated through the ineptness of those in command. Animated political cartoons of that period are used . David H«:m· mings, Trevor Howard, and John Giel· gud are lbe stars. Deadfall: An unsavory suspense drama about ~-international jewel thief, Mi· chael uune, who enlists a husband-wife team ·~Portman and Giovanna Ral· li, to' • While living lUIUl'iously in Spain, ntrlcate story of larceny and low f~d!, leading to the destruc- tlofi of . Rot MUUoas: Peter Ustinov, as an amusing crook, prof"ams computer of large company to grind wt payments to his non-cxi!tent companies, then exlta to Brazil. Hia loving wife, Maggie Smith springs a few financial surprises ol h<r own ill thia bright, sly comedy aaUre. n .,1m,..11ble Yem: (G): David N~ . • l-Icr new recording, however, sounds like a different vocalist behind the mi· crophone. And actording to Claudine, !ihe owes It all to a glass of wine and a wedge of cheese. "I was terrilied the first three times I recorded," she e:r:plained ln what has to be the niost Intimate Frencb accent In history. "This Ume I came to the studio and just had oome wine and cheese with Ron Elliott, who plays the guitar. He told me to, ah ••• hang loose. Relax. "Then after some wine be began play. ing so loud I gained courage and aang cut the way I pleased. AfJ.er IOlllf. more wine and cheese I relaxed enc. lii to aing with a bal>s, piano and a ,guitar. Later they brought in the crcbeStra for the taping." The wine bad done its work and doubt· less it was a French vintage. "When Andy heard the record for the first time he &aid be didn't know I had all those muscles in my voice," Claudine 1aid. It was also t.be first time Claudine hadn't been locked In • ll<JWld.pnlol booth with earphcnes oc.; her bead tinging by hersell. "All I could hear Jn that booth was the beating of m,y own heart, and my knees were shaking. AJ a result I sang iD a very small voice. I was frightened. "It was agony because the music was already recorded and I just had lo sing along and hope it turned out welL .. Well enough lo sell lbow!andl of al· bums. But Claudine, and perbapl the recording company br888, will never know h<lw many penoos purchased he.r plaUen just for the delight of hearing a beautiful French girl in her 20I pur- ring popular sonp. FRANK AND RAQUEL WELCH IN "LADY IN CEMENT" The French balance of payments would be in the black and the franc solid as Gibraltar J} DeGaulle bad 1 stockpile or Claudine Longeta to eiport. ven stars as a professor of psychol<igy who specializes in problems of adolesc- ence and discovers the con£usion teen- agers can inflict eveD on tbe mo.st en- llghlened parenls. Dr. Zldvq:o: Story nf a young Russian doctor and poet caugbl in bis: country's revolutionary upheaval wltb which be aould not Jdentify because of an intense be1ief in the rights and privUeges of the individual. Omar Sharif, Geraldine Chap- lin, Julie Christie. TEENS AND ADULTS Attack on the Iron Coast: A commando unit based in England during World War n attacb a Nui naval stronghold on the French coasl The llJUll rivalry be- tween the Anny and Navy la finally ov· ercome and a tenslon-lllled ending Jn. cludel explosion. destruction and hero- ism. Starring Lloyd Briages, Andrew Ke.it and Sue Lloyd. ' Canieltt: Lavish, romanUc, and dra· matically moving screen version of Lcr· ner and Loewe musical retelling the he· roic le&end of Kin& Arthur and the Knighl! of. the Roundtable. Richard Har- ris, VaneMa Redgnw llld Franco Nuo. (Conllnuecl ff Pep 11) t FAMILY FIJN TBJP Go Down to See Ships There Is bound lo be something exclllng f0< every member of the family in a drive along Los AngeJes Harbor's main channel. Ships C!Ot'Qo ing and,going all over the world may be seen in the main channel and there are plenty of stopping plactS where ene can get a fine view <JI them pa,.;ng under the Vincent Thomas brld(e. AIO!Ji the edge of the channel, just before the commerdaJ flahln1 area, Is the enChanUng Porta 0' Call Vlllage. One can opend a whole day br'owting here among the shops where items from around the 1rel'ld are for 1&le. Everything fronl clothing lo curlol msy be ~ An old rive< boat, ptrmanmtly docked here In the dwmel, provider an tnte.. ..ting visit wbeno orliJnal hardware and wood may be lnlpected. To reach Porta 0' Call VIiiage from <>ranee County, take the S4ll Diego Freeway to the Harber Fretway. Turn en the San hdro 1aoes al lhe Harbor ~"•f and follow It lo the end where It -.iea Paelllc Ave. A few blocks beyond the street curves to the left and becomes Front SI. (by Jhe sign which reads '.cltalJna Terminal). Follow Froot St. untD you find a spot where you Wish to stop. tt may be a restaurant, a loot· OUI point or tho Village. 11lett Is muoh lo ,.. Jn a lhort dHve li'om lbe Orange Coast. 1 .. ! I I I ·~ -------- JI IWLY l'ILOt World Travel .. ---witlt 5hi! !Wtplone---"' slflMOD4 WAN -·At the end ol the lzu Penllllu», Ill ·• poYO belklt !be ... ,. is where our lint cUploqlll. to J_apu, 'l'OWn.lend ttarris, met up with O.KlcU, lbl· ~ fmtwle qiokie. 'Ibey ·are tliO'l!li llfM!M In wax in the temple wll-. ·be l1ted. He •PJ*rt a proper Bostonian, mullAlll cbOp whlabrl · llllll br1s\ling with indigna· Uon at mixed balblng. 0-Klcbi stands beside him, Pd and sorrowful It is one of Japan's legends. The lovely geisha sacrificed to the first man in vegetarian Japan to slaughter a cow and ~at it. (It cawed a stir as U a Red Chinese Ambassador came to Washington and began to eat people.) * IT'S AN HOUR'S drive along the sea. An Utr paved, bunlpy road. LltUe fishing villages where Japanese women dive for seaweed. Shimoda town is famed for its sex museum, and interesting exhibit Of ingenuity in the days of the samurai. There's a monument to the slaughtered beef, too. Put up by the butchers ol Tokyo wbo owe their jobs to Harris-san's appetite. The legend says 0-Klchi !ell in lo.., with Har· ris-san. (Another verslcn is that Harris-san employed her as a scrub lady and threw her out when she suggested she smib him. Somebody's a!Wllya knock· Ing the story.) ' * Suy at seaside Atami, a swinging town where everybody stays in !be bot balbtub. I stay at !be Klunkalru whose name translates RWng Clouds Mansion. 'Ille owner is Mr. Brilliant Mooriligbt And lbere's one hotel called "The Sery Tnurist Villa." I must try !bat sometime. * "Whit we can do In Tokyo during two wMkt? This is an EXPENSIVE city. Bring money. A dozen luxury hotels. Some 50,000 nightclubs, cab- areta and mama-san bars -and the cash register is a.s ob9olete as the samurai sword. Jafanese don't like to handle raw money or talk abou it. So your bill ii always a surprise. Whatever the management feels lllte. * How do the Japanese afford it? They don'L All the swingers at !be Copacabana and the Astor and the fancy clubs are on expense accounts. Entertain· lng the customers. The biggest face you can have ls to wallc out without paying. With a wave of !be hand. (!'bey send a hostess over with the bill on !be lint of the month.) * DIFFICULT FOR the tourist with wile since Japanese don't takelheir wiYes to the evening spots. U you do, the bill iS apt to stagger you. You''!'e sup. posed to sit with a hostess at $3 to $5 per hour. And they don't wan't c.ompetition. It's like bringing your paper bag lunch to a restaurant. The hotels cater to tourist couples. And usually there's one night club who will go for that kind of action. (They change so ask your hotel desk.) * "Could we stay in typictl Japanese inns?" You can. The Japanese tourist office bu a list of theoe ryokans. But !bey aren't so good in Tokyo. The language barrier for getting taxis is difficult. * The place to slay in Japanese inns is in the country towns. They are better than Western-style holels. And cheaper. Your meals go with it. Meals are served in your room. There is no lobby because Japanese like privacy. Your maid serves you, makes up your room, draws your bath. * "Do they re•lly have mixed bathing? Or c•n we have a private blth?" They do. But since you are Westerners, they'll probably give you a private hath. The Japanese bath with spacious room, sunken tub and a picture win- dow of a gardEn is something you'll wish you could take home with you. rWIW!Mi!W j .w .............. .....,..., ART EXHIBITS l.B. ART AMOCIATION--3m Clill Driv., Laguna Bead>. AD media membership art show is on ublblt In the Main Gallery noon to 5 p.m. daily. No admi.sslon charge for mem- bers. Othen 50 cent!. NAVY ART EXHIBIT -Huntington C<nter, Tm F.ctin- ger Ave., Huntington Beach. The Navy's Combat Art Exhibit. depicting Navy life and battles diying W<rld War U, KDrea and Vietnam wars, is cunently 'on display during regular business hours. No admission charge. SO. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L BANK -17lD Beach Blvd .. Huntington Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, oil paintings by Bubara Fieberg. NJL ART MUSEUM-Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main St., Bal· boa. Cum:nUy on exhibit. retrosped.ive abow of palnt- lnp: and graphic works by Paul Brach and Miriam Schapiro. Hours : Wed. through Sun ., 1 to S p.m.; Mon. I to I p.m. No admissioo charge. CIVIC CENTER ART GALLERY -3300 W. Newport Blvd., Newport Buch. Hours: Mon. through Fri., 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Currently on ethibit paintings and sculpture by Robert Krieger, C. Bruce Piner, Donna Sharkey, Edward Baker, Ralph Tarzian and Michael A. Niel, faculty o( the Orange Coast College Art Department. MARINER~ LIBRARY -2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach. Mlt:ed media folk art by Mencl Schonlal is current· Jy on ablblt daring regulsr library boun. NEWPORT NAnONAL BANK -1000 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach. Currently oo uhlbit during regular business houn, mhed media painti.nga and drawlnp by John Hack· lortb. UCJ GAU.ERY -Floe Arts Building, 7601 Irvine Ave. Irvine. Hoon: I to 5 p.m. Tum. lhrcugh SUn., closed Mon. CurrenUy on uhibit, a one-man exhibit of gtometric 11CUI~ turt coru:lnlcUons by Tony DeLap from 1963 to 1968. There b: oo admi&!ion charge. C.M. ART LEAGUE GALLERY -511 C<nter SL, Cosla Mf:IL Soun: Sal and Sun. 1 to S p.m. Continuous exhibit' af art wort in various media bJ Art Leaiue members. No acW•Mion charge. 000 ART GALLERY -Oranre CoMt C41l<ce, 2701 Flir· rilW Bold, Cotta Mesa. Hoon : I 1.m. to 4 p.m., Mon. tllrallb l"rl., 1 IA> to p.m. Wed. evening•. On exhlbll btlin- llla& rel>. I, abotnct oil palntinp by Walter Aikin. awuZll BOWERS MU8EUAI -2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hourt: Tua. lhn>ugh Sat., 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m .. San. l to i p.m.: Wed and Thurs. evenings, 7 to t p.m. No edrniulm charge. CUrrt'n~ on exhibit, "Wilshlft' Boole-.-;d: Arcblllctural SludyW PboWgraptu·• by Stu Shaffer =------ ' Affectionate Your Guide to Fun JANUA.RY 11 • FEllJUJARY J SPORTS AND RECll.EA TIONAL VEllla.B SHOW -Tbe combined Soulhcm California Sports and Vacation Show and !be S.Ulhem Calllornia RecreaUonal Vehlcle Show wtD be ht1d lhnlugh Feb. % In the Arena and Exhibition Hall ol. tbe Anaheim COnvenUon tenter, 800 W. Ka1e1Ja Ave., Mao helm. Houn: Fri., 2 io 10 p,m.; Sat. noon to 10 p.m.; Sun. noon IA> I p. m. Tickell, 11. n !or adulb. II !tr cbl!dren, &-12 f .. l'I old ; (14U !reel, on sale at tho door. Phone 1-. JANUARY ll ART FILMS -"The Kinetic Art," new short art films will be shown Jan. 31 at 8:30 p.rn. in the Scltnoe Lecture ·Ball at UCI, 780J Irvine Ave., Irvine. Admission, fl.50. JANUARY 31 • FEBRUARY Z BOAT SllOW -The 13th anuual Soulhero CalUornia Boat Show will be held through: Feb. 2 at the Pan Paci- fic Auditorium. 1800 Beverly Blvd., Los Angeles. It is the largest all-marine exhibition in the west. More ll'.an 400 boats wW be oo diaplay. Pbooe J.(%13) 938-J456. JANUARY 11 • APIUL 9 HORSE RA~ --'lborougbbred horse racing at Santa Anita Park, 285 W. Huntington Dr., Arcadia. First Post time , Tues. throuCb Sat., 11,30 p.m. Phone J.(213) «1·211l. Sal, Feb. 1, $100,000 Charles H. Strubs Stakes. FEBRUARY 1 • 3 F£¥tWIY I UCI BA8KETBALL -UC' lrvlne VL Cal -rwiortCa Sat., Feb. l al a,15 p.m. In Cl'lwford llall at UC!, 71111 If' vine Ave., Irvlne. FEBIU/ilY i -. I 0CC BASKErBAlL -0..,,.. Coul Col!'lt VI CitrUI, l"rl., Jan. 31; Mt San Antaalo Sal, Feb. 1, and Rio Hondo Sit., Feb. a in the Orange Coast College gymna&ium, 2701 Fair- view Road, Costa Mesa. Game time, 8 p.m. FEBRUARY% Cl:tAMBER MUSIC -The Laguna Beach Chamber Muaic Society presents the Borodin Quartet in concert Sun., Feb. J a t the Laguna Beach High School Auditorium, 625 Park Ave .• Laguna Beach. A concert preview will be held at 7:30, per-mance begins at a p.m. ncktt!, $3.50 for adult!, $2 for stu- dents. Phone 49t-6282. 0. C. PHIUIARMONIC CONCERT -The Orange County Phllhanncmic wW present the Los Angeles Philhannonic Orchestra under the direction of Pierre Boulez In concert Sun., Feb. 2 at 8:30 p.m. in the Orange Coast College Audi- torium, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Tickets. $4 for adult.a, $1.'TS for stuaenls, OD sale at the Society's office, 201 W. Coast Highway, NewpoR'Aeacb and if available, at the door. Phone 646-64.11. FEBRUARY I · t Roger Parker and Carol Krelzer share a tender moment from the raucous comedy "The Incredible Reign of Good King Ubu," current attraction at South Coast Repertory in Costa Mesa. "Ubu" is on stage Thursdays through Sundays. HERE'S JOHNNY -Johnny C&non with singer Phyllis Mc· Gulte, dance team Bud and Clct Robinson and trumpeter "Dot'' S.Verlnsen perform at the Melodyland Theatre 10 Freedman Way, Anahefm oo Feb., 1, 2 and 3. PerfonnaJM'.:es · Sat., Feli 1 at 7 and ~ p.m.; Sun. at 5 and 8:30 p.m., and Mon. at 8:30 p.m. Tickets, $3.60 to $8.50, on sale at I.be bo1· office. Phone t-778-7460. FEBRUARY l • Z GEM SHOW -The Orange Coast Mineral and Lapidary Society wW bold its 22nd annual Gem and Mineral Show Feb. 1 and S at the Oranae County Fairgrounds, 88 Fair Drive , Costa Mesa. One tundred casa of precious and semi-preci- ous germ and minerals plua machinery used for lapidary work wUl be on ullplay. Exhibit is open 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Sat. and 10 a.m. to I p.m. SUn., Feb. 2. There is no admission charge. JIM1ttY DEAN SHOW -Singer Jimmy Dean with guest stars, The Clinger Sisters and a new gospel quartet, The Imperials. entertain at the Melodyland Theatre, 10 Freed· man Way, Anaheim. Performances Feb. 4 through I : Tues. through Fri. at 8:30 p.m.; Sat. at 7 and 10 p.m., and Sun. at 5 and 8:30 p.m. Ticket!, $3.50 to ftl.50, on sale at the b01. office. Phone 1·776-7460. FEBRUARY 5 YOUTH CONCERT -~e Spurrlowa, a yowig adult choral group, will present a concert in the Arena of the Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Katella Ave., Anaht:im at 7:30 p.m. on Feb. 5. The program will also include a talk by David Wilkerson, author of "The Cross and the Swilchblad~." Tickets available at no cost from the Christian Center Church of Anaheim, sponsors of program. Phone 1-776-8890. Servant's Song Inspired Bartok Boulez Conducting Philharmonic FEBRUARY 6 NOON CONCERT -Gipsy songs, music by Brahms, Dvorak and Sarasate will be performed by soprano Judy Ecfgerley, pianist Connie Laing and violinist Roger Hickman Feb. 6 at noon in room 178 of the Fine Arts Building at UCI, 7601 Irvine Ave., Irvine. There is no admission charge. Opening Johnny carson brings so m e of his "Tonight Show" sparkle and hum· or to Orange County for the second lime, when he opens at Melodyland Theatre for a three day run tomorrow night. Live Theatre "'Tbe lllcredlble Relp Of King Ubu" The world premiere of a ragtime musical s a t i r e employing mixed m e a I a • Thllr9days through Sundays, closing Feb. I at South Coast Repertory's Third S t e p Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa. Reservations - 6'6-1363. '"lbe Besl ~u'' A drama of political intrigue at a party convention where two men seek the presidential nomination. Fridays a n rl Saturdays, through Feb. 9 at the Hun tington Beach Playhouse. 2110 Main St., Hun- tington Beach. Reservations - 847-1631. 1 "Tbe Nia.ht of January 16th" A courtroom drama in which audieoce m e m b e r !I comprise the jury in a murder trial. Runs Fridays a n d Saturdays through Feb. 8 al the Westminster Community Theater, 6569 Westminster Ave. at Golden \\·est Street, Westminster. Reservations - ~43. "Gtnrratlon" A comec:y about the youth· age confrontation. Runs Fri· days aod S11turdays through Feb. t at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse, west gate of Orange County Fairgrounds. ReservaUons-334-5303. "Biography" An English. drawing room comedy, ''Biography" will be staged Jan. 3t through Feb. 15 on Fridays and Saturdays at the Players Tht'atcr. 1020 \V. 8th St., Santa Ana. Reser· ..... !IOM -541·2188. "Artistically, I was born anew," claimed Bela Bartoli: oc as the result of a chance overhearing of a servant girl's FEBRUARY & GLOBETROM'ERS -The Harlem Globetrotters, known for their comical basketball showmanship, will play the New York Nationals Thurs., Feb. 6 at 8 p.m. in the Arena of the Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Katella Ave., Anaheim. Tickets on sale at the Center's box office are priced from $2 lo $4.50. Phooe 1.Q5..5000. singing as she cleaned his apartment in 1905. This event was the turning point in the famed composer's life. He asked the peasant girl wh erf' she had learned the haunting melodies for the in· tense, uninhibited music was virtually unknown to him, "~fy mother taught me. There are many sangs like these.'' Compelled to expand 'his musical knowledge and driven by the passionate and barbaric melodies, Bartok asked where she was Crom. She told him of her small village !n Transylvania, an area where Hungary, Roma· nia and Slavic elements merge. He spent the next eight years in Transylvania, in fas- cinating areas remote from city life, where he recorded more than 6,000 folksongs on paper and wax cylinder re- cordings. The music of Bartok, based on these authentic songs, dif· fers in style and technique from gypsy music, which is generally thought typical of this area. It is patterned after the inflection of the intense Hungarian speech. Through his efforts, he brought to the world more than 1,000 years of Hungarian musical cul- ture. Eleven ol the folksongs will l'e included in the Bach, Brahms and Bartok concert of tbe Los Angeles Master Cho- rale, conducted by Roger Wagner, on Sunday, Febru· ary 9 in the Pavilion of the MUBIC Center at 7:30 p.m. On lhe same proeram will be Bae.h's Motet No. 3 "Jesu, meine Freude," and Brahms "Llebeslieder Waltzes." Good seats are available now at the box office, by mail and at all agencies. For In- formation phone (213) 626-7211 . The Orange County Philharmonic Society w i 11 present its third concert of the season Sunday, Feb. 2 with the Los Angele s Philhatmonic Orchestra coo- ducted by the great and g r e a t I y controversial coo- ducto r. pianist, serialist com· poser and critic, P i err e Boulet. The 8:30 p.m. coocert, to be held in the Orange Coast College Auditorium, wi!l include Anton von Webern's Passacaglia, Debussy's After· noon of a Faun, Alban Berg's Three Orchestral Pieces. Op. 6, and Schumann's Symphony No. 3 in E flat major ("Rhenish"). Director-composer Boulcz, considered by many to be one of the most significant creative personalities of our AT OCC SUNDAY Pierre Bouler FEBRUARY 6 • 16 MUSICAL -The Long Be:ach Civic Light Opera Associa- tion presents: Rodgers and Hammerstein's musical comedy, "otlaboma" Feb. 6 through 16 in the Association's conetrt hall, 511 E. Fourth St., Long Beach. Tickets, $1 to $5, phone J.(21!)..m.'1926. FEBRUARY 7 CONCERT -Music from the-courts and counttyaide of Europe popular during the Medieval, Rennalssance and Baroque eras will be performed by the New York Pro Musica in a Feb. 7 concert beginning at 8:30 p.m. in Crawford Hall at UCI, 7601 Irvine Ave., Irvine. Tickets, $3.50, are on sale at the UCI Flne Arts box office. Phone 833-6617. FEBRUARY 1 OCC JA'Cl F~T -High school and college jazz ensembles rrom Orange County wlll compete ,in a festival sponsored~ by the Orange Coast College music department Feb. 7. The' day-long event will be held in the OCC Auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Tbert: is no admission charge. time, is a dark, intense, £ast-moving and blunt militant of Philharmonic Society office, FEBRUARY a the new music. He is one 201 \V. Coast Hi g h w a Y, UC( CONCERT -The University Orchestra of UC Jrvine f •-If,. Newport Beach, 92660, phone under tht: directio11 of Peter Odegard, will present 1 concert' o a uo. "'ozen or so com-646-6411. Tickets for the five posers whose work has ex· Sat., Feb. 8 al 8:30 p.m. in the Science Lecture Hall at erted germinal influence on remaining concerts are $21.00, UCI, 7601 Irvine Ave., Irvine. Program includes work! by avant-garde developments in single tickets $4.00 and student Schubert, Gates, Bach and Schoenberg. There is no adrnis- music over the past 20 years. ;;;;tic:;k;;-c~ts?,. :'1~·1;,5·~:'.~;;;;'i(iijisi.on ... char_g_e,. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Born in Montbrison, Loire, ( 42 yeaf! ago. Boul" began SOUTH SEAS studying the fundamentals of modern music at the Pads TROPICAL FISH Conservatory at age 1 6 . Following the style o f Schoenberg and his disciples' School of Vienna . he turned Largest Selection of Tropical Fi.sh & Supplies in the area. Now 2 Location JllW. WIU-ON, COSTA MESA *Newport Harbor Cruise* Daily CrulH-2 p.m. FUN ZONE BOAT COMPANY * Balb--673-0240 * to twleve-tone music which seemed to offer him greater freedom in terms of transformation and variatioao in musical material than did tonal music. ;\:~~~iiiii~~~~iii;g==~===~~~=======::::::! The avant-garde Boulez has ~""T~· been in world-wide demand ~ (off Falrv~ Rd ., ,.....l'HI ln·G, Rlverilclt Dr. -MtwPOM lltac:ll ll>el'llna 111e l'osl Olfl~t! ~ ~~:la~~t~~1i,;i;: :~-;:.:.i~~~ WE'RE HAPPY WE'RE IN ORANGE COUNTY ! have been recognized. He is Our customers make u.s th•nkful for choosing this •r••, our customers er• currently on tour of the United gracious, most comp~ment1ry, and we love all of you! Thats why we "Knock States and has been invltl':d b to conduct the orchestras of our rains out" every morning •t 2 1.m. I getting you the finest produce •v•il· New York, Boston, Chicago, able 1t th1 lowest prices in the county!. We'll guarantee this,,. Look at the•• Los Angeles and Cleveland t ypical low price specials. this season. f Tickets for the Feb. 2 ~ performance are on sale at J the Orang e Coun ty fl -CLIP THESE MONEY SAVING COUPONS! - ~·········:·········:·········· a Org•nlc:•lly Grown a T•aty Medium 5110 a LONG, GREIN • • JUICY • DELICIOUS • PRllH • $ INCOME TAX $ KEEP YOUR COOL • LEMONS • • • APPLES • • Cucumbers• • : 6C1b. : 8 lb~ $1°0 : • • • • • • • Limit 5 Pound• • Limit I Peund1 • Limit ' • Let us prepare your return now ••. for an early refund ••• or for the time needed to budget any additionel expense. WE'RE HERE 12 MONTHS OF THE YEAR Newport Business Services -OUR NEW OFFICE LOCATION- 2209 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport kh. I......,.• ,.,.!ft H-'...,. W tM Derr, PDet Offtcel 615.2473 -673-4715 ' a with thit coupon • with thl1 <ovpen • with thl1 c....,.R • -····························= COUPONS EXP!U FEIRUARY 5th The•• restaur1nts demand tht fine1t for their cu•tomers, thet'1 why they a nd 01<er 200 oth1rs buy their produc• from NIWPOIT PRODUCE. Tite Arc.HI. lrYlnos, lurter Pantry, Womy's,, Dl""-'s. P•troni1e them! PHONE: 673-8715 HOW ABOUT YOU CALLING US? NEWPORT PRODUCE _ ... --·-----------. "" I r ' t ' I I t ' c ( ' t SI ( t Ft1417, J....., 51, lM !WI. y I'll.OT I 9 . OUT 'N' WEEKENDER ABOUT Dy NOBM STANLEY i ORANGE COUNTY'S Busy Month Ahead A flip of the calendar tomorrow br!Dgs on February and one on the year'& record months for commemorative dates. Each offen a perfect excuse -if any is necessary -for out •n• abouten to hit a pet •ip 'n sup stop. · , Starting with Ground .Hog Day next SUndar. we move to Lincoln's Birthday, St. Valentine 1 Day, Chinese New Year, Mardi Gras and Washlogton's Birthday. BIRTHDAY OBSERVANCE Or for the less illustrtOU. observing birtbd&ys too once February's flower and stone -viofet and amethyst -have been presented as gifts, dinner and drinks at a bistro of the celebrant's choice is a necessary next. Come to think of it, might as well get an early start on the shortest month bf heading out this evening and staying beyond midnight. Sheraton-Beach Inn Huntington Beach, more noted in so~e quarters for surfing, oil wells and expansive beaches than table d' hote, is fast beconung one of Southern California's most reputable dining out cities. A host of first-rate restaurants have operyed their doors here in recent years, most offenng a wealth of food and entertainment not ordinarily associated with a sun tan or petroleum setting. CARIBE ROOM One contributing in very large measure to Huntington Beach's ascendancy among prime out 'n' about towns is the Caribe Room of the Sheraton- Beach Inn. A mere sea gull's dip from the Pacific Shoreline, it's located at 21112 Ocean Ave., (Coast Highway). Enter the Inn's lobby and steer a course left -or simply look for the sign -to the convivial maitre d' whose friendly welcome will set the NOW OPEN IN NEWPORT'S NEWEST HIGH RISE LOOKING DOWN ON THE BAY FEATURING SEA FOOD AND LIVE MAINE LOBSTER LUNCH -DINNER SUNDAY BRUNCH ~CROSS FROM THE ARCHES AND NEXT DOOR TO VILLA NOVA 642-4291 Friday· Saturday • Sunday SPENCER STEAK 2''1 Newpcwt 11•4. Costa Mtta llZO ldl-A•"' Saohl Aoo RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE tone of service for your entire stay. Once aealed you'll be fllllY abaorbed by the taaWUI decor thal augg .. ts a Caribbean locale wortllY of Porku· ~ or Montego Bay. But open the dinner menu and you're con- lronteil' with major decision making. WW It be something from the broiler? Or fowl, sea food, roast, dinner du jnnr or the olgbtly spectal ! TEMPTING CHOICES In the first category tliere a.re auch temptations u New York cut sirloin pepper steak, lrith julienne of peppers, mmhrooms and onions, '6.25; at.eat tertYaki, petite filet marinated In soy aauce lrith brown sugar and 2!nfer, $4.95; ham steak. center cu~ fruit sauce, -$4)5; combioatlon petite filet mignon and Australian lobster tall, $6.25. From Sheraton SJ>eCial dlnnen, one can make a choice in fowl be!ween breast of chicken a la Kiev, boneless, stuffed with lemon butter, lllUllhrooms and herbs, lightly aeaJOned, $4.25; or rout Long Island ducldiog, with apple ralsio drel3• ing, $4.50. Random sea food and roast offerings include abalone Monterey, amandine; $4.50; prime rib of beef au jus, creamed horseradish, $5.50; pan fried halibut, $3.95; le chateaubriand bouquetiere, $14.50 (for two); broiled swordfish, deep sea scallops or fried jumbo shrimp, $3.95 each. Dinner du 1our spotlights veal parmigiana or filet of veal Oscar, $4.75 each; and grenadine of beef au bearnaise or beef en brochette, $4.50 each. SOUP OR SALAD All of these st>OCW dinners a.re served with choice of soup du 1our or French onion soup or cri&p green salad with choice of dresalng, bread and butter, choice of baked potato, rtce pilaf! or sliced tomatoes. · Touchlog on the, specials of the week -all dinners served with soup du jour or salad, bread 540. 3641 OPEN FOR LUNCH -:=:-,.:· 11 :30 to 2 p.m. DINNERS "---'.,(,' ~ 0 to 10 p.m. 1a1cl RENCH RESTAURANT CetMtef ...... ,. ....... C... ..... THE MARINE RESTAURANT and butter and priced uollonnly at $3.95 -Sunday features Italian fettucch\• and sausage; Tuesday. broiled Iowa pork chops; TbundaY, breast of capon Marco Polo; Saturday, baby beef fiver aauteed. FOR THE YOUNGSTERS Yowigaters haven't been forgotten either with a special children's dinner tor those under 12 years of age. Entree selections are ground sirloin steak, $1.95; ham steak. $2.25; petite filet mignon, $3.45 ; fried shrimp, $1.95; prime rtb, $2.95. All are served wiUt choice of soup or salad, potato or rtce pilaf!, milk or Coca Cola, sherbet or ice cream. Dorymen Do It Again Startlni off the new year by introducing a new menu Item, Th' Dorymen, localed at the foot of Newport Beach pier, 2100 W. Oceanfron~ has come up wits a dish that may soon rival their renowned fish 'n chips. And a tasty commodity it is too, which they've lllgged Newport style chicken 'n chips. Only those hailing from the old South will prob- ably have any familiarity with its method of pre- paration. But western Yankees hereabouts should lake to thia chicken like Johnny Rebs. FROM THE SOUTH Following a procedure that originated below the .a.fason-Dixon, the chicken is boiled before it's dip-- ped in batter and fried. Tbis, according to Tb' Dory. men proprietors, assures the meat's fu11 retention of all moisture. There'll be no disputing their contention either, because the result produces chicken as tender as you'll ever find. The process also allows serving in a record four and one-half minutes from the time an order is placed. one can savor these chiJ: 'n chips at the restaur- ant or, like all other house apeclalties, order them to go. Bucket rates prevail at ·ii.es for three per- sons, $3.95 for four and $4.95 for five. JULIUS CAESAR - "Paulum Romanum Duabas Preaeipu.e Rebus Annon et SptctccuUs" "Romans art abrorbed by two thlnQ1, Feast Q'lld ShotD." Here at VILLA ROMA, we really put out a Feast and we'll show 11ou a dinner of which Julius Caesar 1.001.dd have been proud. " Try us nett time and uou'tl agree! -65 delectable entrees and we're open frortl 4 p.m. dailtJ. Closed Tuesda11s. VILLA ROMA 445 North Newpcwt 11'11, Nowport lffclr, '4M'2t * Excellent Menu * Fine Service LUNCHEONS AND DINNE•S from 11 :JO A.M. _;~;··········;,;~ Reservations rec:omrMnded 644-1700, Ext. 445 MUSIC Pelt YOUA llSTENIN& AND DANCIN& P\.lASUAl Nl•HTLY, flOM 1100 P.M, IN TBE UDO WVNGE • • • • • • • • • • CONTINENTAL CUISINE • • CARIBE ROOM NIGHTLY • NOW APPEARING • • JOHNNY VANELLI: PHONI QWlll JIJ ocu.M AYL MUNnN•TON 11\ACM AND THE JACK LAWRENCE TRIO OVIUOOICIN&' THI! PACIFIC OClAN AT T11£ rtl .. DON JOSE' --·--Hayden Cawey Trio HAYDIN CAUSEY. CHARLES MURCHISON JOSEl'HINI COUllREOES -~ wttlt n. O.C.•tr• Sfthnl ~l>A&TACO ......... $1.30 C~O-l!NCHILADA .. $1.45 \._ .,..,..., .........-"""rk!:~· ............... ~ e COCKTAILS e ton I. AAl•m• (If"'""'""'' Hunt. llot<h '62°7911 • • • The chips are the same favored variety they've always served here with fish, ahrtmp 'n dams. If you've missed aoy, try 'om an. Why Not Ask? THE SCENE: One ol Newport's prestige spots. THE PLAYERS: A man and a woman in the next booth. THE STORYLINE: Onleriog an entree will>- out full knowledge of what Ille waiter will bring, Out ,.'N' Abouter doesn't make a ·practlee ol eavesdropping but this convenalicn cooldn:t be tuned out. DIALOGUE SHE: 11Gee, since I ordered the medal!~ ot beef, bearnalse, I wisb I knew wbat beernaise la." HE: 0 It's some kind. of a sauce Isn't It?" SHE: 14I don't know. I can n~ver remember those things." He: "Well I'm sure it11 be good, whatever tt is." Now this kind of nonsense has no excuse. Any uncertainties should be cl'"'red up with the wmter It's part of hls job to clarify doubts and he isn•i going to regard anyone as a rube for Inquiring. MANY RE·PLA YS Some variation of the foregoing playlet occurs all too often, so maybe it's time to 1tart a refresh- er -or beginner's, as the case may be -course ~n some of these matters. So Out 'N' About ·hereby inaugurates a series on those sauces and food em- bellishments creating the befuddlement. . 1 Be~aise ~auce looks 1:il'e a good place to start. ~1 The mgred1ents are wine or tarragon vinegar. chopped parsley, chopped tarragon, egg yolks soft unsalted butter, lemon juice and salt. ' HERE'S HOW Jn making the sauce, the finely chopped berbs are boiled in the vinegar in the top part ol a double boiler until the vinegar is rednced about a fourth. Removed from the fire, the egg yolks and a small amount of hot water are whisked in. Next, Continued on P1110 20 Table Service 11olck Slaht TOP SllLOIN WlhoS.~-~~., ......... -WC.,., Ph-842-6151 L-"-._... 11:•• ..... , ..... ..111. 5874 !dlll<Jor ••• Hut!ottoo ..... -tllfnttr •"" .............. Cocktails • Luncheon •• Dinner DANCING AND ~ ENTERTAINMENT JNN NIGHTLY TINY GROVES TRIO Prinae Rib Petite l'llet or Steak & Lobster Cambo Complete Dinner Mon. thru Sat. $3.95 1 B582 IHCh at Ells Oring• County Headqu•rttrs For All Olympl< Boxlnt TlcU11l BILLIARD ROOM LADIES WELCOME DANCING •••••• •••••• OR LISTENING TONY LOBO TRIO NIGHn Y FROM l:JO P .M. CLOSID MONDAY 'Tufrsltlif R••TAURAN'I' 2241 II'. c-R;.1-r N_,,,,, ,_,, (714, Ul-J(IS'f • • ·fridl>. J ...... 31, 1'69 ll OPOIS TU!S., FIB. 4 ~ . 1 WEEl OllLT , JIMMY DEAN WI<• THE IMPERIALS SPKW GlolQtl THE CLINGERS Mu sical Director JOHN llAllllN llltS.. WM., l\ln., Fri .tl:lO • Sat. 1171 II• S.. It 5 11=- ..... IJ.le, $4.5t, -..... SEATS NOW •• 8GI Off'ICI •nd .. 111 Tlct.t Alendlt.,,.,,. (714) .,,..7220 lunches from 11 :30 Daily •xcept Sunday Dinner from 4:30 Nightly ENTERTAINMENT Ni-ghtly except Sunday TONY FLORES His Songs and Guitar 2607 W. C-Hfg......, -Newport -646-0201 This Week's Dining Highlights COO AU VIN • • • • 3.7 5 YUL CUTlETS, Cordon Bleu • 4.50 PRIME RIBS OF BEEf, Au Jus 4.95 SEAfOOD TREASURE CllST (for two) • 10.00 AUO NIGHn Y SPECIALS All served with r-'ish tr•1. soup or salH, vegetable, c:holC'I of potato or rke pilatf. Facilities for Banquets and Pt-ivate Parties Entertainment -Dancing Clooed Mond•y 1045 BAYSIDE DR., NEWPORT47~200 :___)/; ,/ .--·<... ~ ---------.1 ~~T£AK Li~SKiDS! ... and kids like Mr Steak, tao One;• th•J~• h11n ill1r1, you won't find the 1m1ll frt dra99in9 th1ir h11l1 when yo~ m1ntion h1.,in9 di11n 1r (or lu11ch l ,, Mr . s1 •• k. They'll h .... th.it OWfl 1p1ci•I m•nw th1t they c111 p11nch out to m1k1 1 Mr. St11k m11k, lt'1 f11n for tll1m 111d their lilll• h111d1 will be bll i'f' whilt they'•• w1itin9. A curiou• tkin9, "'"t ,_,..fth le1 .. 1 M1. Steik feelin9 !hit iheir wit 01111 bro119kt tt. .. out to 1tt! lncid1nt1lly, wt don't 1er>'e liquor. LITTLE JACK HORNER STEAK Child\,;,, 1l•tk 1••~ed witk Rinck Hou•• Toti!, frtnck fritd pot1!0•1. CHICKEN LITTLE Tll•ll piettl of cllicken It thiqh 111d two wi119 dru'"..tt•1 I, P91ch 91rni1'1, Renell Hou11 lo•1I, French fri•cl pol1to11. SNOW WHITE AND THE 3 SHRIMP Thr•• ltt.,. Shrimp. R.1nd1 Hou11 To11!, F•1ncl1 fried pol•lo11. HUMPTY DUMPTY BURGER Mr. St.1k 1"1mbur91r 11r .. 1d ... ah 91n1r1u1 portien of fr•11clt fri" tnd h1mbur91H 91 rni1h . SPAGHETTI & MEAT BALL One m11f NII. ••thitti, rill a '""''· 1.29 99¢ We Selle Portions For Grownups, Tool OPEN 11 AMto9PM EVERYDAY 226 7 Fairview Costa Mesa i. I ' c;o.\tJ.n~ '""" ~ ... f• the pan is placed over simmering water and the butter is added, bit by bit, with con.tan! ·stirring. The sauce itself must never boil. Tbe Iast..step of j>reparatlbrl'calls for·seasdning with salt and ·lemon· jliice. Bearna'ise sallce)i~ us for broiled meats, eggs or "fish. • · One also wll!lder~ .. if .the la4Y knew at a medallion -·in 1his case -is a small cir War cut of ' meat and that it can · s~Wen. London in Costa Mesa • Still turning out th.ose incredibly delicious Eng· lish meat pies to go, Oberhansli's of London,. 270 E. 17th St., Hillgren Square, Costa Mesa, also has added an impressive line of imported British, Scottisb and Irish foods. It's now a bit like stepping into some shop right off Trafalgar Square. Once in.side you'll encounter items, like tea, porridge, parsley and thyme stuff- ing, . Yorkshire pudding mix, chutney, smoked ki~ pered herrings, plum· pudding, marmalade and jams, shortbread and biscuits. TRIP TO 'JOLLY OLD' Or move to the cheese section and look over English classics like Cheshire, Caerphilly, Lan- cashire and SWlon bleu. In the meat department there's such standards as blood pudding, suet, Aberdeen kippers, smoked Scotch salmon and pork sausages. And under no ci~umstances bypass the Scot· tisb cakes. scones and crumpets. But most of all, if you haven't as yet, take on one or more of Basil Oberbansli's meat pies -beef st~ and mushroom or regular beef, beef kidney, chicken, veal, ham and egg, pork, Cornish pasties and sausage rolls. For the complete anglophile, Oberbansli even makes it possible to purchase an English-made teapot, teacups and saucers, or stock up on British cigarettes, magazines and newspapers. FAIULOUS NEW USTAUlANT Al th• lofUftCI a.odt C. C. u........... .Sp,oco.ltf Di"-o..n.1_.,t_, c...""'8h , ... CMf do C..i1l--A.r11 • s-..it '°""'* .....i .,_ ...i ... '-i11'"9 ,. llO fOI llSllVATIONf.-CAU 1714) ......... • Villl-ill• c-t NwJ., Se. ........ Real Cantonese Food e1t here or take home. STAG CHIU WINO 111 21st pl., Newport Beech ORlolo 3·9S60 o,.. YMr Rt.1M DollJ 12-IZ -frt. on4 Sert. 'ti J e ..... -~-- ' ' UT 'N · ABOUT ' We G~t Letters In a note jointly signed by two charming ladies from Costa Mesa, Ursula Ebrendt and itarion Cbipperfelld, comes a recommendation bas- ed on heritage as well as experience. . * "We got together to write you our observa- tions about the Five Crowns -our favorite restaurant. Having dined there enough times over the past few years, we feel qualified to give an opimon on food and service. We feel they excel in both. "Being from Europe and knowing dining IXTR9IQ. y W« SToeK • hellillp 'tll lt Continental Cuisine Cocktails Serving · Luncheon and Dinner Monday through Saturdav. Closed Sundays Open for Private Parties Onlv W• •r• located next to the May ~Co. in South Coa5t Plata . 3311 s. lrbtol Celht Mao S-40·3140 -. Relax and enjoy the sight and aound of the sea in the loveliest setting in Laguna Beach - a perfect setting for memorab]e dining. CUI Dri•• tt Co.t HiaJnrl-1 Lagua1 Beith-49f..04.77 Ope D"'1 LCllldieba-Dlllllll? -COcktalll IO'Vtd in the Grand Manner • 511 S. MAIN, ORANGE Loert-: S42-3S9S (a-I Sundoy) The DAILY PILOT" 'Stocks it to You' The Tops Trio . Ben Brown's Laguna Beach Country Club is presenting a favorite mu- sical group of the Laguna area. Playing Friday and Saturday nights for danc- ing is the Tops Trio with Joe Nutter on bass, sax and clarinet, Ernie Ra- bon at the piano and Jack Candelori on the drums. This aggregation provides a lot of music from 8:30 p.m., weekends. habits, plus cuisine over there, we would especlally i.U:e to mention the midday menu on Sunday. Since this is the way we live in most European countries, it brings on a touch of pleasant nostalgia. "We would like especially to mention our favorites : the crepes and the steak and kidney pie. "We are always very impressed by the way those serving 'wenches' carry on. They seem to do their job like it was pleasure and not at all hard work. "In closing, we can only say 'Guten Appetit'.11 * Sound observations, ladies. They've been t choed several times in thil column in recent months. What can you do but "Enjay Your Meal" at the Five Crownt. BALBOA BAY FRONT DINING STEAKS -SEAFOOD -RACK OF LAMB Roo Cameron at th Plano a... Wed.·Sua. Jlmrnj V•t1 Tri• fMturlnt Jack Lynde M ~~ Men. and Tua. ,_ ,•··- OPEN DAILY 11 :30 •.m. fo 2:00 •·m~ 2601 W. Coast Hiway, N•wporf Betch-5-48-1166 ~ GRAND OPENING SPECIAL~~ ~ SAVE PRESENT THIS AD ~ ~ $ AND RECEIVE $1.00 OFF ~ ON ANY ORDER $3.00 DR OVER. c:::;:.. 1500 Adams Avenue g 0 Costa ~ J40-19J7 b ~ V•Of Mow. t11rw Tllw. ~ ~ OOOD UNTIL FEBRUARY 17, 1fft ,2 ~'ff{ff!(f ~ - Il G - I I fridaJ, Jan..,, 31, 1'169 ~ Due on Farm No Parking Lot 'YOUU ENJOY OUR MIDDAY FAER SUNDAY Coast Jazz Band Seeking New Win I-man War Set To Save Theatre 12 P.M.TO 4 P.M. The .. Happy Jazz Band'\ a group of eight young m~I~ clans from Orange C.oast College and Newport Harbor High School, will enter the semM!nell lo the-Knoll's Ber- ry Farm's F5ival ol Sounds on Sunday, February 2. Performances are bekl at Knott's famed ~ To.wn lFM~ fine Di11i11g Sirn:e 1965 3801 f.AsT OMsi' liJCHWAY C.ORONA Df,L MAR, 0.UFORNIA PHONE! (71<) 67S-1374 lR011al Englith fish &Chi;j TAKE HOME ,... 0.ly $1.00 PER ORDER THE "ROI.LS ROYCE" SUN.•THUlS. 11 A.M •• f P.M. OF FISH & CHIPS s.tecmt lceJ.-4lc M"9fhl 488 E. 17TH STREET (at Irvine) COSTA MESA Pll..SAl. 11 A.M.0 11 P.M. IN THE LIDO LOUNGE Continuous music from 5:00 P.M. BY The Herb-Joe Trio and The Bill McClure - Ton Lobo Duo Mid • ni9ht of it -Din• in tli• be•utiful MARINE RESTAURANT 644-1700, Ext. 445 for reserv•tion1 Wag.on Camp, Buena Park. Winning one of t b e FesUval's weekly competitions In mid-January put the "Hap- py Jan Band" in the running for addiUonil honors, an<f a handsome ''small group•• cash prize d $150. The members of the band Jo: from Newport Harbor High r School are Randy Woltz, drums; and Terry Levitt, piano. From Orange Coast College are Laurence Wright, sax ; Tat Thomas, clarinet ; Larry Duke, trumpet; Richard Chapman, banjo, and Lance Brown, trombone. Brown originated the grquQ. several years ago, "just for the run or playing Dixieland music," and since then they have appeared together in Showmanship The Los Angeles Youth ...-nled Wedntlda7 tlJrouah Theater's Producel"-Dlrector, Sa\'W'day evenings, fat two Gerald Gotdoo, II !lghtll\I weelca ooly, and 1Ubleripllon back. Gonion. for smral rates are available, gl9lof the yean the moving force behind tbeate-troer a subltantlaf UY.. a little theater at 115t No. tnp from the box..a!ce nlff Laa Palmu, the Hollywood for lllDgle performa-. Center Theater, bas done Gordon, who will prodace great th1np In the oldest Ill the plays and dlrecl .lour leglUmate 00-In Hollywood. hlmsell, will be Joined by Thia theater, originally built· Jonathan Daly and 8tepbea to house the "Writer'• Club," Bbnmons, both ot wbom will bas been tbe scene, over the cltrect, u wet! 11 aas1st past thlrty years, of more Gonion In the producllom. dnmattc fitats than moot 'oil> This 11 quite a formidable . er lecal !healers, Uvhlg and<Jr. · Uno-up of stage v-le1, but dead. Gordon, as his five-~ run In on6 final effort to pfevtnt ' ot "The .FantasUci:s" lw ln- llollyliood from obtaining yet dlcated, b a formlll'!bl;~talent. another parking lot (not the most glittering end for a theater> Gordon ls'ln the pro-Movie Gulde · cess of presenting n i n e brilliant and well-known playL (Conthiaed f,... Page 17) !:,~~(~pots~chJ u ~~ Harlem Globetrotters Freddie Neal, left, and Medowlark Lemon practise the recently, Dr. c bar I e 5 skills they will ·display on Feb. 6 at 8 p. m. when they play the New York Nation-- Rutherford of Orange Coast als in the Arena of the Anaheim Convention Center. The comical basketball College asked them to go on showmanship of the Globetrotters promises an evening of fine entertainment. Opening the ta week season FAMILY on Feb. 5, he will offer the The Yellow Su.bmartae (G): brash and. brittle comedy, SparkJlng anim.ated cartoon "Come Blow Your Horn," featuring the special humor. followed on Feb. 19 with the and muaic of the Beatles who play made famous by Shirley are the heroes in a fight to Booth "Come Back Uttle save Pepperland from the tour with the college dance------------------------------band in March. Sheba'." ' Blue Meanies. The Festival ol Sounds pro- vides a weekly showcase for K:rk Douglas t a I e n t e d young non-pro-., fessionals. Qualilied judges at- tend all perfonnances, and T • 1 _ Th t winners receive cash award, ripre rea plus the chance to return for periodic play-offs. The Festival will continue through June 8, when semi-fln3lists will perform in the final com- petition. Title Changed HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Universal 's "Willie Boy" has been retitled "Tell Them Willie Boy ls Here," starring Robert Redford and Katharine Ross. LOCAL Kirk Douglas has a sort of triple image in "The Ar- rangement" but he won't be playing all three parts. Jim Halferty will play Douglas at age 18, making the second age-group casting for the star. ~t age 12, Douglas will be Portrayed by Steve Bontl. "The Lonely Passion of Judith Hearne," a Jerome Hellman-Irvin Ker g h n er Production based on Brian Moore's novel, is expected to No otli•r "'w•p•p•r t.111 you go before the cameras next The 'Velvet Fog' On March 5 the mystery-Arou.od the World In IO thriller, "Walt Until Dark," Day1: Adventurous Londoner and then from the masterful wagers he can circle the earth pens of 'Kaufman and Hart, in 80 days ~ this delighUul "The Man Who Came to Din-fantasy classic. He resoun:e-- ner" bows 00 March 19. fully meets adventu~. m.184 Wants to Write That most bwnan of drama, hap and obstacle. David .N1v- "The Diary of Anne Frank," en, CantinOm, and Shirley will be seen beginning April MacLalne. By VERNON SCOTT .HOLLYWOOD (UPf) -Mel Tonne, in an effort to lose his reputatioo as a singer, has taken to writing television and movie scripts that just happen to have roles in them that fit an actor named Mel Torme. It's not that Tonne·s voice has cracked. People just aren't tearing down music stores to buy bis records. 2, and on April 16, Noel Paper Uoa: Humor~ s~a multUaceted talents. Coward's ubiquetous but of George Plimpton 8 ~Ip T to th ld th t I . ed .. B 11 t h through the Detroit Lions o prove e wor a a 'Y~Y~, en1oy e training camp thinly disguis- he was more than a crooner, S~1r1t. On April 30, Gordon ed as 8 Harvard grid great in Mel wrote episodes for "The will present yet another com· Nier to write his experie~ Virginian" and '~RWl for Your ed.y .• "The Show Off," recently first band for 8 National mag. Lile" television series. He revived by the AP A with azine. With Alan Alda. played top parts in both. Helen Hayes, and then a The letter immtdiatrly Payment for the scripts did drama, "Thef, Kne'!¥ What after the titlt' indicates the not make Torm e in-i:ey Wanted, operung May rating given the picture b11 dependently wealthy , The final .play is that most The Motion Picture COO. But be did get his face delect.able of farces "Room And Rating Proaram mat1 on the screen 1n dramatic Service," premiering' on May be. found on th1 motion roles, proving, he hoped, that he could act as well as warble.,,..28 ... .., .. E .. •c .. h..,piila;;;iy.., .. w .. m.., .. b .. •..,P'iiciitiiur"e"pag""""..,..,..,.., ... mor•, .... ,ry d111y, 111bout wli111t'1 September on location in 1107 J b Rd N rt Bellcli . gof119 on in tlie Gre111t•r 0'111"9' Ireland, with Kershner direc-am oree ., ewpo Co••• th111n th111 DAtlY PILOT. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::~~==================::4:~tm~g~.===============;! Mel has turned to acting but producers and other in- tellectuals continue to think o( him as a singer. Tunnel vision. That's what Torme is fighting. How many producers were glued to their vldeo sets fascinated by the tra.ns!orma- tion lll not known, GRAND REOPENING • • • DDllllG ROOM Costa Mesa Golf & C.C. ONE Of ORANGE COUNTY'S TWO GREAT RESTAURANTS 1Bob 18urt\$ lik• Roast lon9 111 .. nd Cuclc -Tournados of Filet Mignon? -Veal Oscar? -Rainbow Trout? -Well, who doesn't!!! Th•s• '1nd many oth•r .~ing •ntrees are s•rved 1ev•n nights • week at Bob Burns Rest· 1urant. located in Fashion lslanc;I, Bob 8urns is more than just " "Steak and lobster" restau- rant. A selection of twenty carefully prepared entre•• -accompani•d by Bob Burns famous Cream Caesar Salad -will satisfy th• mo st discriminatingJ>late. Open every night, Bob Burns doe' honor t•lephon• reservations for people "on the 90." For those of you who are out for • l•isu rely evening, loun9e ent•rtainment is prov i d e d nightly. I 37 ~SHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER • .._.. •llff'-• .. .,..,. .... A~p .. Paf'IU11e . ft-•11-\ •MC-2030• FAMILY STEAK HOUSES HUNTINGTON IEACH I COSTA MESA HILLGflEN 5QVAAE TOWN a COUNTll.Y 9£HINO TEXACO IT.UlOM ,_ ~ .,.,.. NJ.Jfll ...,c •. 11"1 ...... """ SPECIAL SIZZLER BROCHETTE ...... ,. HD °' llCI '1.39 ..... IOU-41U'nll •••••••••••.•••••••• TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ...... $1 .39 NEW YORK STEAK ....... $1.59 lrtd114M l•~111d « fftn<h f d•d P.t111fH1, Roll & lutt•r. CHIL.DllN'S POITION'Vi PllCI CU .... 12 l..-.1 MAD MONDAY NllHT TOUI JAMILT Nl&HT TOP SIRLOIN STEAK Only 'lo' l11cllltl•t la••lli Of fl•11ch ftlad Pot.tlo••, Roll I l11tt•r. CHILDRIM'S POlTION Ya n1c1 tu.-. 11 , ..... , ..----Luncheon Specials---, 11:00 A.M. TO 5:00 P.M. = :!!",.::. ~~ .. s~N.~.l~~ •.•• 79f. ..,.,... .. s....w -TO GO ORDERS - .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. fvancois' CONTINENTAL CUISINE Famous For FLAMING DUCK Open 11 :00 A.M. -Clo1•d Monday HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA 18151 BEACH BLVD. 842-1919 ••• ••• Oie5u~~~ .. • COCKTAIL LOUNGI ·• e LUNCHEON e DI NNER • 5UNOAV liltUNCH e LAlE SUPPER OtNING South C011t't newest1 most elegant oce1nfront dining, atop Towers Wing of Surf end Send Hotel 1555 South Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach, California • Basil W. Oberhansli 0 of London," well known Harbor Area Chef has pleasure in announcing the opening of his Authentic British Pie Shop! All Foods lo Go -Including Sand- wiches, Salads, etc. :#e also cater for all occasions. Canapes, Birthday & Anniversary Cakes as well as dinners! For Your ''TAKE-OUT" Order• , .. THE ORIGINAL 645·2252 OBERHANSLl'S Of LONDON 270 E. 17th St., Hillgren Squire I Nnt hi tM Slnt., I CMte ..... With This Coupon Buy One TASTEE BURGER Receive Another FREE A Money Savino ''Two-for-one" Offer that double• your 49t. T ASTEE BURGER ...• ~ ............... .. ......... ....i "'"· rM· .... _, ....... , ••• 1 •• ...,....,...,,. ...... Oh..,.... M-4 1, 1t6t 1900 Balboe Blvd. Nawport Boach PHONE ORDERS 675-2981 .. " :: .. .. .. .. .. .. " u 1: "There is an element in Hollywood that puts everyone in pigeon boles," Tonne said. "They aren't aware that performers don't 11 mi t themselves to a single catego- ry. He mentioned Peter Ustinov, Jose Ferrer, Steve Allen, Jerry Lewis and Orson Welles as examples o f Your Brand of Orange County Music! The Colorful Sound of RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM From Fashion Island Newport Beach T Evidently not many. Mel baa gone back to the typewriter. He has completed two stories: ''The Uttle -Guy" and "The Glory Hunters." Guess who would star ln "The Little Guy"? Well. put It this way, Mel is about 5- feet-7. FEBRUARY 14-15°16 VALUE DINING TUUDAY nn SUNDAT-l:JO • 10 P.M. SUNDA. Y BRUNCH CHAMPA•NI IUfFIT 11:JO • 2:JO P.M. 1701 Golf Course Dr. Colf1 M.H Behind Felrvi•w Hospital 540-7200 Tonne hopes to sell bothl""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!.-.... -,... .... -...,..,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ properties a 8 movieHor-OPEN SUNDAYS television and then have them --------· spin orf as series. Such an eventually would insure him employment for a long tlme -as an actor. ''Once the · producers recognize the fact a perfonner can do more than one thing, you have to start thlnklng about public reaction," Mel said. "Sometimes it confuses the public. Audiences betome ac· cus tomed to certain perfdrmers doing a speeialty, and It throw! them If they branch out in a different capacity." Dan'l Boone Takes to Air When 2 0 th Centilrv-Fox Televll!lon's "Daniel Boone's" filth production season comes to a cloae next Sprling, the series star, Fesa Parker, will fly hit private twbenglne airplane lo Various state fairs and rodeos throughout the country where Lhe tall Te1an will be the stellar attraction. Harlan Carraher, who stars as Jonathan Muir in NBC.TV 's "The Gli.ost ani:f Mrs. Muir," Jearoed to read at age three becaUJe he wanted to read the comic strips. Versailles' Room " •. We uercile 'fOUt right.- In 1110klnt deductfont, ond reducfnt yovr kmll ~ COUM llOCIC bew1 ta.. lm.kl...oul, w.1l 111oie IUf9 )'OV vet 9""l' l.ghlmote deduct~ .aximu!'I 1aYll'l9tl Our aervlc• la flUlck. C:Oll'l•llMnf 9flCI In-......... IOTH flDEW AND STATI TRIM THE FAT OUT OF COSTA MESA, 1875 Harbor Blvd., 642-6940 NEWPORT BEACH, 410 W. Coeat Hwy., 642.7842 CORONA de! MAR, 2435 E. Coe1t Hwy., 675-0362 W ... Do.,. t e .... •t p ... : lat., Stl•. t •·••·IP·•· A...tui's 1-tftt T• Servkie wfttl CMr llOO Offkeol NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Starlita Theatre PHYWS-DILLEH JACK CAlllBI . ·1ow FRAN JEFFBIES ', I HOTEL/SHOW ~ESERVA'TIONS • PHOflE YOUR TU m AGENT .. • l...~l:.;~~ .... ____ ...., _____ .. - •• Frldo7, .i.n...., 31, l'lff ~~~'The Damned' ·Now Filming '!be mulll-miUlolMlollar pro-family and hll own lack ol ---. '-rbt Dam'*91" l.«hlno v-·· Wm dnma for Warner-...,._ Arla, Bolbn, oolerw 113 lloal ]1hase cl l11mlnr thll lllOll!h. DANDY 'CANDY' WITH PRODUCER Ewe Aulln, 11, With Christlen Merqu•nd Sexy Little Candy Finally on Screen "Candy," the film vers.ion o{ Terry SOOl.hem-Mason Hof· fenberg's best-selling novel, currently showing e1clus.lvely at Pacific's Beverly Hills Theatre, bad been up for translatioo into celluloid and sound by every major studJO at one time, but because of its sensational content, prD- ducers were loathe to attempt. A group of &bowmen headed by Selig J. Seligman saw it as a poteJJUally hilarious vehi· cle, given the rigbt cast and trealment. and from lbis start in t• has come one of the most applaaded and con- troverslal filiruJ: of the year. With Ewa Aulin, JJ.year-old blonde Swedish unknown in the title role, and ro-stars Richard Burton, J a m e s Coburn, Charles Amavour, Marlon Brando, A c a d e in y Award winner, Walter Mat- thau, John Astin and <1thers, "Candy" is alrtady in it1 6th week, drawing rerord au· diences. Co-produced by Peter Zoref and Robert Haggiag, and directed by Christian Mar- quand, the rum, f r om Cinerama Re I easing Cor- poration, deals with th e misadventures of a teenage girl involved In a series of bizarre interludes. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 42 Ont who can~ l Type of not volt 4) lflltlkt .... !: 44 Cry L Cica Ix 45 ProtttUng lo Bulle call 47 Ont taking 14 Fu ly IO"'J Slf1)S developed S1 -bent 15 If not 5Z Manster1 16 Rugby's In Gr. river 111ytholOfY 17 Joctry 54 Not beyond 11 Dlplo11acy SI Constll· l9Cltyof 1111'" Euro pl' 59 Cootlrtg 20 lf•'s name drinks l/llAt 2Z Kind of 61 Southern tntploz:1nt: U.S. city 10 kind of 39 Clfllln 2wor 62 Lab«er fabric Can. 2C One absent 6)-ofduty design pollUclans without M Puckish 11 Sldntep A1liodo Levy and Ew:r 11ag. &lq ""' produdn( t b • Pei..,..l'raelldeDIFl!mlpro. duelion in c o I o r and widescreen. ductlon. tbe up of a Gen:nan hwnan morals. Cb a r Io l t e .,.. 1 .. e1• ..... •' munltlons dynuty. 1s be1os Rampling 1s the c.rm.n girl Good King Ubu" starrlnc Dirk llo(arde. logr1d Thulin, Belmul Griem, and Helmut Berger, with Charlotte Rampllng and Florluda dlrect.d by VilcooU from the who marri.,, Into the "•• ,,._ screenplay be wrote with degenerate farnlly and then '"" , ... -nu•o na, TH•ATll -con• 1ro11u. Nicol! Badalucco and Enrico lries to ucape ib evil fn. tM•LD••WI ~.~~_;;..'!:1:!1 H1t1rt.., ..... Mecfiolt. tcmational influences. o.. ,,_,,. w _ 1 ... ' ....... In!Ual tcenea for "'lbe Dam· Also featured in the large•I!::=====::::~::::::::::::::::=======::! ned" wue filmed on location international cast are Florinda'--;::;;:;:=====::;;:::::----------::--, in the Austrian town of Bolkan, Rene Ko 11 d e ho f • !I Hollywood Cools Road Show IGck UnteracllAmAll<neeandlbe Umberto OrsinJ, Albert l!ril.!J!@L I DO 1! AT THE ENTRANCE German towDJ ol Essen and SchoellAl!s, Renaud Verlay TO LIOO ISLE OberhaU&en. ProduCUon i .s and Nora Rlccl. Phone 673.8350 now being concluded Jn Rome Armando N1Muu:i, director •llff'OIT 1ucw • ot.MJ50' and the nearby town of Tern.I. or photography for "The Dam- Bogarde portrays "a ned ," is the Italian veteran modern Mae beth'' who <lf such films as VlsconU's ruthlessly gains control of a "Sandra" (Vaghe Stelle road show. And with good steel empire during Hitler's dell'Orsa), "IL Bell'Antonto," By BOB 1110MAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) _ A reason: The company has had rite to power, while Miss "II Campagoo di D 0 n the most profitable ones. Com-'I1lulin depi~ B 0 I• rd e's Camillo," "L'Incompreso" glance at the movie release equally ruthless and even d p d schedule for !969 indicates 1ng up for 1969 is "Justine," more detested wlfe. an "II a re di Famiglia." based La Durell., After completion of "The that the llbn """"""'"";,..• ru1-.. on wrence Top ~--.. actor Helmut ... .,..,,__ ,..-uww Damned," director Visconti •. ,.. •or road-•-attractlo"" novels. "Hello, Dolly!" is also Griem plays a leader of ,, 0&M1W ..., will go to Vienna to direct ls cooliDg. a hopeful entry, provided an H1Uer'1 SA troops, whose a presentation for the Austrian 'lbe n:serveckeat movie arrangement can be worked pow~bblng scbemes end National Opera House. out with David Merrick, who when ls slaughtered by• I liiiii;;;;o;;;~i;;;;;;j;;p~il became popular wllb movie Bogan!< and SS troops In at firms after the historic ac-controls the release dale. spectacular re-creation of the compllshment of "1be Sound Paramount, currenlly pro-infamous "Night of the Long spering with "Romeo and Knives." <1f Mua.ic," which pushed 1~--Juliet," h:as two big musicals V-.""'1U's new discovery, through the $100 million bar-ready for 1969: "Paint Your Helmut Berger, portrays the rier during Ill senaational Wagon" and "Darling Lili." flamboyanUy decadent scion three-year NIL lbat prompted Also lhe Harold Robbi.n3 saga, domlllated by his corrupt the companies to seek other "The Adventurers." c~11t co.&n & me n. attractions that could be Warner Brothers has high ..... shown at advanced prictS in hopes for the a 11 • s t a r a single theater for long "Madwoman of Chaillot." The , J _,..,.•.J periods. new year may also bring the But it wasn't that easy. No made-in-Russia "Tschaikov- other film has come along sky," then again, maybe not. to combine the m a g i c United Artists is bringing elements of "Sound of Music," out two made-in-Europe and millions have been lost roadshows: Stanley Kramer's in trying. The economic "The Secret of Santa Vittoria" reality: Thoogh you can earn and the war film, "The Battle fantastic profits on a road of Britain.'' show, you can also lose Columbia is offering a large· enormously, because of the size Western, "McKenna's high cost of producing and Gold," and a space epic, exhibiting such film!. "Marooned." Universal has a -.!,.._, ___ _ ~e. ---............ ALSO ... "PAPER LION" Teel 1 l.t.1' ::· llmlerl llr l1 .t Only about one in three road Shirley MacLaine musical, shows appears to score, and "Sweet Charity," and tbe all· there are appanmUy no rules star "Airport." Even the new for success. It med to be network-bacted companies are that the presence or Julie getting into th e act; CBSl':::=:=;::±:=:=:=:=:=='.I Andrews imured a hit -Films i.!I sponsoring '''Ibelr witness "Sound of Music " Royal Hunt of the Sun.'' "Hawall,"'' Thor o u Cb l 0 y MGM, prospering once more Modem Millie." But even she with "Gone with the Wind," is fallible, as demonstrated hopes that "Ben Hur" will by the disappointing returns have similar success on its Fox~~ SMD;.pf_,ll...,• M6--ml for "Star!" reissue this year. Also coming OPEN 6:45 HELD OVER Big names and rave review$ from MGM : a musicalized aren't necessary. The no-name "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" and the "2001 : A Space Odyssey" drew epic "Alfred the Great.•• =-~ many poor reviews, yet it has' ;::=========:JI ~-~ .. ~!"" caught <10 with the yn1mn cims IE ~ WTOll generation. But the all"\!tar 11'11U1W"" "Shoes of the Flsherman" is •Ulm) doing only fair business. cm 'ACT. ''1be Graduate.'' ''Bmnie -~·'"' and CI yd e, •' "Rosemary's "A Ma• a A W•IMll" -11IE Baby" and "The Odd Couple" pin proved that pictures don't "P'ntdtlte9 •ntl tM PHI.. BOSTON have to be road shows to with Dtbor•h K•rr-o • .,,icl NJ.,,•n S'l1IANGLEI 111.-comm.ndM For •~~1"1 .ft111 lroWll e COLOl e "llOT'"" "NIGKT OF THE LIVING DUD" .._w_., ,_,, . 147·191 R1Qom..,..nc114 l'or A~vllsl J-0~n As.hlt r e COLOR • ,.IRIDES OP ILOOD" Chrl$tol>htr l tt • COLOll. e "ILOOD FIEND" llllat'j I Ritcam .... l>dfll I'« Adlilhl Tony Curll1 Henry Fond• ''l'HE IOSTON STU.NGLEl" 9COLOR• Mkl!a-1 C8Jne • COL(IR e .. DU.Df.ALL" --..! I'M SURE GLAD WE WENT - SHOW HOURS1 wma>AYS.t.11 P.M. SATUIDA.YS, 12~10n,...14 ......... 12MOONT07'..14 B sow JAN. 24-FEB. 2 ~lsslon LS Room for lZ-de 26 ctsslon linen: Var. terre: llll!lllbet 66 -watrr Potato 27 Cultlvattd 67 J(lnd or fight 1l UnplUDll 40 Elr,loslve 4ZA a-43 Stasanbly 44 Makin\:!, "°"' attract monumental grosses. Collflll••n Sot. •H S111. -c-.. o.-.._, , In fact, such hl!s constitutedl';~~~-~~·,.~·~~~~ll ,.....,._ bett" inves1ment.. because or r; DEBORAH KERR DAYID N1YE11 lower coot and faster playoff. Pe~Pi& ,_,,, ... ·--PAH PACIRC·llllrlr w. flitlr, LI. AOULIS i 1.,0 • C\.iHDftN UNDft 12, 7$ C~H f$ • UNOfl 6 flff ,31 Penlltnllary resident: DOWN n:pttulaa 21 Nelthtr't saued Slm1g 32 Jtwl$h priest's VtStnltnt 33 Sb.ick 111 the mud 35 Ont with dtspolle !:'" 38 gi of '"""' 39 Had fond· ness for .CO Wint In Italy. 41 Football player tfllnp ''""" C6 Dl"lg tlong l Vehicles 23 l1llr:td on Cl Scfflh;: 2 Direct 2S Fruit .... ll:'"'atl"' 27 Entertain Ct Tossed 3 o~llsht<I 28 !h~ algn 49-llOttlS 4 LI tfln 29 Fl SO Housthold Eng •d JO Grtlll• ;.:11 .. ce S Scatttrtd te1ptr's 53 orwatd around cone em SS ltapon 6 Put In 34 Kind of r• ~ ..... TV progr111 56 11\tatlon: 1 ud nolst 35 ltallan Abbr. 8 Show busl· ilrl's name 57 Navigator ness group: 36 nusual .. ,, Abbr. person: Colu111bus 'ltnl back SI:::/' 60 Salt water .,., 37 Kin of boat body FocoortWSOUTH COAST -.. LAZA THEATRE SM Diteo F'""'y at Bristol • se6-2712 2 PERF. ON SATURDAY AT 12:30·2:30 SUNDAY ONLY AT 12:30 ' AU SU,TS SOc ' Twentieth Century-Fox con. Unues to place failb In lbe THE MOTION PICTURE CODE AND RATING PROGRAM Th• Molio11 Picltn1 c.,J, 111d R1tl11t Admi11l1trttio11 1ppli11 lht fo!lowi"t t~lin91 to films di1trib11ttcl In th1 U.S.A. Pie· f11rt1 r•ftd G, M or R qualify for fht Coclt 5111, ~ Plclutt1 r1!1d X clo l\faf r1c1i¥t I St1I, fh1 ttfi119J lpply to pictuNI r•l••••d 1H1r No¥•m· b1r I, 1•61, Pict11rt1 r1l111•d b1for• th1t d1lt •r• clt1crlb. .d •• ptt¥iq111ly { ~ •"d/or SMAJ. (W-Sun"tQ for CllNllAL eucll111c11, 1MJ-So99•1t.d for MATUll 1uclit11c•• I P•r111l•I di1. 1rttl111 1cl.,,it•cl I. mJ-llSTllCTID -Ptt10111 uncltr 16 not 1cl111itt11f, 1111l1t1 1ccomp1ni.J by pMtnt •r •clult 9111rcl. i111. @~·-...., 16 ••t .. """94. n.1. .,. • •. •hlctlon "''Y bt hf9h1, 111 c•tfain ...... Chick th••*'-or 1chrtrtilf"t· Tr1vor How1rd v 1111111 A..clp~ .... -ALSO PLAY!NG- "ATTACKED ON IRON COAST" with Lloyd lricl911 Show Tues., Fob, 4 Ono Night Only ... ----..;Ol,.Oft .. Cloil.la• \.HTtOAIJTllfl IXCl.USIY! SHOWING ONE Nl~HT ONLY TUISDAY, Fii. 4HI SHOWING ., 1 l t fl•'"· A Wf!l.HJ,RPER RDlUCTDI • r.ob" lrf llll Im ------SMA BALBOA 673-40-48 o ... 6:45 ,., .. ._ "'* ""91n..tl ·--Med Fer """'11 Now ¥011 u n '1110'\' It Ir! E!"lll!llll! "A MAN AND A WOMAN" llhcnd1 F!9"1111t e COlOR e "RUN FOi YOUI WTFI" NOW SHOWING OPEN AT 7:15' SHORT SUIJ!CTS 7:JO FEATUll 1:00 -One Showiflg 011ly- Held Over 5th & Final Week! IT IS LIFI ITSELF ...RAW BEAUTY IN AU ITS AWAKENING! ~ tl1e-rnesa T·.~1·1 ·F :·~v~;..,,.:,n··t ·it·_, Nf\'/PORT AND HARBOR tN (DSTA f'.~ESA 'TELEPHONE 541·1552 FOR INFORMATION HELD OVER ANOTHER HAPPY WEEK This is 1 picture of the "I.. IL' perfect "THE IMPOSSIBLE YEARS" DAVID NIVEN LOLA ALBRIGHT ' embezzler! ' Perer USti1ov. Maggie Srrllh Kari Malden ,.Hot Mllllon•" .... .... CMlflM ,.,..... ~ ,._,., -TWO FIRST RUN SLEEPERS=-- r-... S.... S...... J P.M. Co'""°•' ht. "'"' S.11. he111 2 P.M', Positively Ends 1 luesday-Held Over 1 THE MOST I BEAUTIFUL 1 MUBJCAL 1 LOVE i aTORY EVER! waw•ls ~.theunco11111011 · -•JA LV!IRNEl!·-•JOOllllAUIWI TECHNICOLOR" .. MNAVISION9 FROM WARNER BROS,SEVEN.lf1T11 ' • • ...... CAlnl .. --- .' ~ ..... "i:u:. .lffiin I MUMTINOTON •IACH • M7·el01 '""""""""' "A BEAUTIFUL FILM"-7hoNew_Yorlre~ CRANO PRIZE \\1NN£R 1966 CANNES FILM .FESTIVAL ., QIY[S llEWlQI{( U HIOllRS...10 GD our OF TOWllt ! cunr Easrwooo r2-1 •n"COOGan'S BLUff" S IN COLDA•A UNIV9A-..U.. PIC1'UAa "FROGMEN" -All Sean 50c SPECIAL SATURD .... P.T .A. MATJNEE-12:30 .I< • l 1 I l ''°'Ulllo .. -(C) (IOJ 7:DOIDM•. -(C) Dunphy. 1'.2lll)lhe Ut Db..,,..._ (C) !L_ ... .., (C) (!O) ,,.1-........ cci ........ (C) (10) lilOft c.p. Pnfllll Sa I, ht HtrrlnllOft, -Joh11 8Jn•, MMitll Ult Mall. If Mitur1tr T1ly1 fltfTO allll Qirbtl111 JDrln· __..., i. Uotttioa (C) lift JUISt, ,,, .. __ (C) UTHE SIX O'CLOCK MOVIE L-0011 ~--(CJ * "Gqhi1 Khan" -Part II ~!l/l::.'it> OMAR SHARIF -COLOR! .... \\: -UM (C) D t11 O'a.t lllodl: (CJ~ ~~=.:.~"TM C.rd1· lilll"' P«l II (ICMnturt) &.>-. nit" and "HJdt Part ~Ir" On11t Shri', l«MI Muon. ' 11 ... ~0l) UOU9 (ij• ,_.,, .... I•• ..... (30)' Ml' i1iC -· (30)....... u U"'(C) -·--IPLll -(C) £2> !lo:"' ... (C) DR. KILDARE • ~ SAIO HYST?RICAL SUH0- 1'1!55 CANE ANO M'NT PEffNOIHG ~ 'THE EMO'TICHS --WELL, MttE 51iW11.Y WENT. I •.. l THINK I ACNED :SO TO 5EE YOUR FACE;l W1U.tO MY V1510W IU\Q(, • \ ... ao 1 i.ieo. OUT OF FfAllt. -~-1 ueo TO >tXJ, JIM. R:lRGIV! •.• f'l:.!A!SE.~ Fr'-• January ,1, 1969 DAILY PILOT 13 B Phil rnr.fanill . " "''•-. .. (C) (!llj (-";"!' .. ~ . =';rtOJ"., -" ., jlj"'.n:::; u.1oo. r.:.P.:E=RK::· l:::N::S ___________________ _:B:rY_:·~loh~n.:.M=:l~les~l 1r-----------:::::::"i tm n. Abmd Arb (30) .,Ablard e bc11i1a DIEi (CJ """ d ""''":' ,....B 9 Cil m-(C) QIHll w m ai -CCl 0 ....,. ·-,.,,... <""'· 7:00 11 cu &.kif ._ (t) (30) td)') '32 -al.. D1"1k:fl, C.ry W.llw Cromlta. Gtatit. 1 ........ ""' (C) (30) I@ rJl m-... (C) -(C) (30) ""'Li lioN (C) llilltc .. lllOll II M•hrrftJ Sa,._. 'hllllr9 :.:.:.."'="' ........ ,~ ... '"I ..... 11· =-(C) a,,.. • ~ (C) : m B111n1 Splits (C) 1:SOUJi! sac~r•Th, H= ~ '.~~"~~&(~ t...i ...._. Q~ dl9'1l•J -and '!hi Decision of Chnatupltw ltlllr bullllb.rl Siii• aftd c:ourt Ill• Blib. ~=:.!::::..!3.~-------=:-.----------------------JI tlCll Ill • .,t. Wld lllllrlllnmenl Im 1--. ;'&\,.. -(C) (IO) 10 ' 008,fll;: :w .. 1~ JUDGE PARKER ~-----~::::-::::-:~-::--~1...,,.-:::'::By~Ha-=::::-rol:::=d,,;Le-..=,Do.::.ux=-.. D ..... " -(C) (IO) ~ • .: ~ (C).. • .. • 111111--lllll:i91l""'""'""'""'IIl;!l .,,,, .... """'5E ... ""' A " fJ fil' (l)Ef)°"""'· Eatlrtlln (,;....,) '57~'.... 4 ar F1W MUllJ1'E5= I WAWT TO IUllt (C) (60) Ed Am• hom fro~ Dtrlk, Jotln Smith,.. Adami, Johir HAVE A. WC>KP wmt U.U:V! Ptnucolt P'lml Air station, f11. ffl Patin flt t.M11 Q Mlllill $ MoN! "'Crlw*lt ftvr" £E1 Ln btnlla J UJtld (blOIJtphy) '6l -Ben Qw:1r1, § Stuart Whitman, Rod Stli1er, S.m· 10:301 (I) BitaN11t/Super•11 (C) ~-J •---~ p · • (j) m Ulldrdot (C) rrrt ...,.... r .. •'""""' nu. orit: "CitJ ._... (myiltry) m ma; • c.c..qimca <C> (JO) · -G•~ ~· ~ SJdl'llY'-m...,...., 1 .. 1 -~~·-"•CC> m.c.m. •a..., t!o> a--. l!)U. Alpl" ti Ftn11 II l:OllGI ,._. (C) (30) 11:GOfgJa~M!ti.~, .._.. fl! -Q'"" (IO) U ~<II ll'J ..... <I .. Joo. GI ..... &trlno & l~nl 1'111rr. "Riot Jn Junnllt l':IO II 9 (I) hlMI' PJll (C) (JO) PnlOft." BIDril !DN•., ~"' ''"'ll:IOO€CIJ 111o -CCI (C) (iO)~ln at GIOUnd Ztro." Q @ @CUMllMd Wttld (C) e Acrw a. Swt!t s... (t) (30) Phil rvt. ~@lllm-- u JUNGLE IAW BRINGS &) """' "Tllo ,_ ,.,. <-· * FELONY SQUAD lo JUDD •ml .,._...,.., "'""""'· Dor· . TOGETHER IN TV EVENT othJ M11one, NMll1 Brand. Utnlllllll-""' CCl [1 <30>~• In •rid Ort!« 81u•.-~ Patt l ... . . • m -.._ CCl <"11 W10 u a ~::-.7 .... CCl QI laol .. °"' (Cl (30) B Hljlo --" ~.oo • <11 m ca '""" """" CCl ,. w .. CC> "'i"ail ii,_.. (mutla~ '66--m Im , ...... Anll-Mlqnt. U1d1 Jounkin, Rlchtrd &) llllrdlf ..,._ ""'""·"""-'°'' ""'""· l~IOUQJ())--(C) B ...,.,., An. Dirt; (C) (60) B Mwtlc "II..,, HI ..,... BUI CDlllJ, ltlJt hw. Bm Mtd!rJ (comtdy-~ '.(5--frtd MIC· cuelt. Shtf Sil'ftrttein, Tht B!os-Murr~ ~rjofit Mtln. aoms_ Thi lmt1 ButttrflJ, tnd Rtv· ·-·•.'!.ii-=l(C)(t) lf!nd Mtlcolm Boyd alto 1vest ;tS 11111 RM.n n..trt· 1111 Mtn 0 (ftJ (]) E!J 0. Rlctils IC) (30) I Manitd." • GJ .. fw Tw Litt (C) ,(60) l ·OO IJ 9 (J) llloby Olct (C) fJlt lplClllllloft (GO) "Adverll1ln1-' 0 Mn "'Dkl••o•• WOIUI" ""' ".,. ur "'"::/. ''"-n; ,_...., ·"""('~ l:JOIJUJ)CJ)Cllll Cu11 ti WIU Q CllnfW' jiiiliil lQ (Jo) -rt1H'a End."' (d11m1) '57--'tomJll Rory. mm u.st. hlbtlltll c ... D"-(C) (Q Ted .. .,.,. (Cj TtPI o1 tflt second 1nn11&1 IO:OO~apj!f:!.! ... (<) (!O) g,m:..., -· m .. ..., llrlftl (C) om-l'1 <IOJ l:!O§QJ(l)no ... "''"<CJ 5'ilriiy Doublt fllturl: "I'm U JUDD TANGLES WITH 1 """ ""''"'"Pillow 1o ,.._. * FELONY SQUAD SGT. 2:00 If"" .,. "°"' CCl IN UNIQUE TV EVENT ('t'; 1Hl <II m"' ...,..,. 1 .. n tm_ro m Joodl 1w .. ... ~..,,.. -""" "'" \ Iii• jQ,_!60) "Ille LAw Ind Cnlw O.kotA" 111!,llL Co!Klu.ion. m twldQ ·--(30) "'°I~ ........... (C) !JI""' -(C) (30) .,........ CIJ ....... -(C) tioll fl °""'11." rtlta MorlllO 1nd · Tlllll {'C) Dr. Hln'J ClnlllflM pllt. .. UM .... -(IO) .. ,,,,._ '"'l!Ws Grollnd Tt1,..wt. • • ....... (C) Ul!lvlnily or P• 11111.m ...... c 1c vs. s..tt1e. lO'JaCilllllllr (C) ~ M• Tt... l!Dntino 11 Clorll .....-(drtfllf) ·s1--Clfy &r.nt. m 11...t "' ~ QI-CCl (30) ,,.~ ..... ... '-" 1 , Ktstorl• till Cil m MtJ W1111e1111 s.1 -COl1 -,ou,.._I (C) ll:OOIJBUllllll-CC> m•~ "- ltllt:lA -(C) (! h•) ''""-(C) oo.A Bnlln• n. ear1 Goldtn 8tf(1. 4:0D 6 wn: "kth stitioM" <•d-m lllrl' a. (C) wtnturt) '5'-Rlcllttd Boone, Ill .. "'ft1111W'1 tlM NI#' ·--(t:OllltdJ) '55--Drlrid ltl\ltft, W1p Tnb1 (C) at !1l m -•-•=JO ll:JtlJM.-"Miit .. Cftr _.. DlnllAlltl lact(t) TM $100,· (lll)'OJ) '56--Dltll Andf'N, }de to) C111r1• H. Strub St•_._ l uplflO. In. ChitdMMI•• (C) CJ ID (j) m TMfdrl .... (C) Flltln (C) "Winier 017.• U 1Hl Ill QI"" -CCI • .., "'" IDl'-""1 ---CCl. 1~oomn -~ ~-oopJ>,llJJl'Ji'(\;!, ~ lZ:UIJllltiM: •1tnla• 1111•111• \m7ltll7) "53-ewp ll'lllt. 1%"..JI • Adi. ........ "Cit and Moult ... 1:00au-CCl ·-..... •••-loo('rf' ( c ... 1ltY) '42 -...... tnr. J. "'""' .. ... GellMfltr •IHI PM Alllt mtt1 ft th1 Mtun. K1t heh tldtll liol Cour11 In Klmuela, Htw1ll. R ""·-""'"' <Cl :t ~:---•=-..:(R) ··-....... -... (C) 1:311 u ....... (C) (R) l :ll ................ c- ...... (~ '41 -Mllott I - • JOB PRINTING • ~ .... (C) lany $ul- 11'an .... "All Aautw c-. .. (C) m ... r .... lhldl(t) m lllc:MaW• ,..., m '• ,,...,., ... rri • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS Q1111llty Prf11fh19 1n4 D1,.nd1bl1 Stnri'• flf' 1t1•,.. tt.111 • Q.,.rt., •f 1 C111t11ry, 1:111 wm IALIOA ILn. NIWPOIT' IUCH ·-~--- MOON MULLINS TUMBLEWEEDS MUTT AND JEFF J&FF, SIJ:IN UPI COPS ARE FOLl.OWIHG US/ 1°H(6 l'UCE IS LOADED WITH COl>S AND RADAA TRAPS~ GORDO MISS PEACH eur ~ COUOSE, F~ ' By Ferd Johnson Oii, Ut>Y P. f CAN 'lbtl . J'M·UP! COM!< H•Rfi'> PL!1.4SE? By Tom K. Ryan By Al Smith O.K.PAUL: REVERE, 'PULL OVER/ TELEVISION VIEWS Good Movies Holding Up By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -One of the nicest things about television is that it gives movie butts a cltance to delennlne which old films hold up best over the years. and why. What becomes increasingly obvious in watch- ing the reruns is that the motion pictures attach· ed to a tim~contemporary theme of a given. moment are se that date the fastest, and fall to hold up. FOR EXAMPLE, there seems little doubt that the current rub of movies about homooexuallty and lesbianism will date particularly fast -If one ts talking about the American films about these subjects. For while the themes are universal and tlme- le.ss, the contents and attitudes expressed in these American films are geared pretty much to satisfy• Ing the sudden new freedom of audiences and creators. In short, exploitation of an explosive, au~ den escape from the puritanism of the past. It may, by the way, seem odd to refer to ex· P.ioratlona of sexual themes as contemporary. Yet Jt is the Amerianc nature -and films are no dif. ferent -to treat sex as though it were just dlacov· ered yesterday; particularly the forms of sex that are generally considered unnatural. AND THIS JUVENILE expk>itatlon of the sub- ject is going lo make many youngsters who are growing up today, wi&er than ever, wonder In just a few years what all the excitement waa about concerning these primitive American sex epics. As seen to this viewer from television, the movies that seem to hold up best are frank period. pieces or "genre" films -that is, those of a apeci· fie type, In which the style of the motion picture is virtually everything, and the content not very Im· portant. Gangster films, for instance, and Westerns. THE PERIOD PIECE need make no excmes for its lack of relevance to our particular place and time -for it ls, frankly, of a special period, and we can plunge in wholly without having to tblnt too bard about it. whys and wherefores. We either accept it on its own terms, or reject it. 1be clooeat we can come to it Is if it has a 'aolJdly unlvenal theme. The genre film, In the days of the big studio schedules, was the bread-and-butter stulf, and any- thing that ls stylish alwaY"' holds up. If not for thil kind of movie, the video reruns would be pretty ohort in supply, and pretty dismal too,. THE C .. NNEL SWIM1 A report on alrplanes hijacked to Cuba will be presented on CBS-TV's "60 Minutes" Tuesday ••• same day, an official of tho International Pilots Association will discuss the hi- jackings on NBC.TV's "Today" program ••• "Danger! Mines !", a ball-hour opectal focu&lng on co!ll mine accidents in West Virginia and Pennsyl· vania. is set for CBS-TV Feb. 11 ... Fonner CSS. TV President James Aubrey is tallting a comedy series deal with NBC-TV. Karl Hess, who was Barry Goldwater's chief speechwriter In the 11164 prHidentlal campaign and now calls himself an "unabashed anarchl!t, 11 is Interviewed pn NBC-TV's magazine of tho air "First Tuesday," next week. ' Dettnis the Menace 1 l I •• ~· I I • For The Record .Divorce• tl'Y .. Clt Ptt.ID c.11 "'illll• MJlll< VI "l•"'C' M MIH .. ttrllle Olrtt• vt 1,....,.. ~._~ a .. "" DIJlie e. MkMll \'t lt"'9rt I . MIC"'ll .._. I , ,......,, YI 0.<•111 lKIOll I_,.. IY•ll ( .... , Jr. VI Ll..O. Let ""' Ptlwl .. W1m1"' ltO'l(t1!1r \II Dl1111 ..... ~11(11111 0.Nlll A, H.,_tllt VI Hllff11rff t, H-111 lowl-Hlllc.mtl VI Wlltltm llol'4n'• Atlflli OW. V. l.. 01111 Olllt •• "'-'!e!IMll YI 01\'llle L. Mw. -Jllflflf Alllle t-11 "' lllli. J" -ltfll'lflil ltllbN Vt (INIW. 1111~ .... P'tlrltle Glll6tll "'' Jllllfl l',•Oll•lti ·-0t11i. !.It T~.-.i vi l.41111 Not• ""'"'"°"'""' Jklfllfl C11el IW \II Ot,,tl! 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I l l•19r, JbtHll9 .. ltlNI, lfrll-1~, l•tll,._.,., t PM, 11 l"'9 T11m1M;H MWl\lfll¥ (MMI, N!Golrnlolllll. llllflOl1, Oilft¥ INIM1to Hllfl!IMtwn \'1li.r """'llllrw, &0·1111, l11Mrll"I tlr~ ·~ TlllftlON BMttlt Mt! 111111111. 4tM lll!t II, """'Meltft ,.,~. °"" ..... Ill. ,, ... '"'' "· ....... , ....... h ,.,.,. .. '*'""· Mn, 1111111!1 Plrlll, CMl1 fMu, ,,.. Mn, ,,, '""""· HIHlll119llrl ,,,_t "" 1rlf\lldlllllrt11 tilt IWO ,,.,,, ,..,.._lllfrtfll. ltrviu .. MIMIJy, '"' """' I. II "-M, Wt11t!IH (llil!tl, I"' tMMlfll, 1'1~1111. \lltw ""'""Ill "'''· OINCIM tno w .. 1111H C"-l Mwt .... ' ,,.,,........, STONE ...... I'. ,,_ "' Mlllfl 11 ..... . 0, C•lt M-. l1rvl¥ff ri h11W1 ... . ._ .....,ktt .... ! ......... ,.... WI¥ Mlltvlrr, I It l 111 ..... 1r, C.•11 ,,.,,, TURNER Mfll!ltW T\111191'. Mt I' Aw"ltlt I• 1111i., l.11'11111 Hllll, •urvl.,.. 11¥ wl11, l illl1n1 ....,. 11\llllltr., Mn, Dltrit 011"'9111, l.11111\i l .. rlll Mrt, Jllllll &hull!', Wlllllllr, ltf'flf••• lftvrltr. 1 l'M. l'etllll: \lltw (.lltMI, 11111r ... ftllolll, M1111•11101 .. ''°" l'tclllt, Oll'telll Irr l'M!tlt \'ltw Mwt111rr. BALTI MORTUAl\IU Cvo1a ••I Mu OR ,_ ONta Men Ml Mm BELL IROAOWA'f MOllT\JARY Ill ~. CMta N ... u i.sm DIUIA ~ BR0'111ERI Hull ..... V.U.7 M.mar, 11111 lloada ~ RullallM ... ~ au.mt PACIFIC vmw NENo&W.PAU Ot•...., .......... ., a.,..i -..-Vlt• °"'" Nlr• ........... ca.a.-....,,.. l'lll&l'AMILY CQIAINIU. fUNEllAI. -......... • 2 2? ... SWliNi IPOll'IVUl ..... . ~·=- Fire. Calls ••• )II \11lltf I !I • ni, fflllfMlr, Cir !IN, Nl'I Wtl'ftlr Al'f, .......... .,,. '·"'· lPllll'•r. "r ~--. Ill .... lttll "· • ... ··"" ,.,,...,, 1!~1«11 .itll1, * C.lrlML .._ .. '·'' ''"'' ltwrMlly, 1!rll'Cll<,,_ fll'I, ..,,,_ 7111 ,,r11., ttt9 111-llNl!tfto 1IOU la.ell ....... J:M •·"'" rolt!llUI 1141, "471 W•t'llL11- 1111r Aw. ..... ''"'" 11"""" .. ""· ""' Jfflftlle:~ I 1•t •·"'-l'rlclty, l'l'l<HHttl •It. lllMI , .... PlloC Visitor• • UJL1Mtt .. C.. .... 1••1ol gCtlliW,C.ll. . e •N4t a..... .ht.• 11 •t I•' I If' 111 i Cllfao, •·•· e tU1 Q••• ""·• ... alt " 0: sr C...,. "-. •·•· • t4MW ................ lt. •a Sh e...,s.A. Taiipou ................ , 45c Kotex 3i$J . . .... , • ._,, ... _........_..~D MTTllUB Batteries 12tor$1 -· p 5 Stwknts on Floating Campus e 11'M W~lt,1!11,..............C...,P.Y. • ._.., .., H•lqlez,...Ms;l sC...H.I. .!Ill ..... _ .......... C....e.M. el11J1 .... IW.•~H.I. &II .......... _~---~..,.--.. S.UUTK iwuaH ilnlclS HIDAY• 1:11 P.M. &Mr -~ ...... ., .. TlllllM' ...... Doll' ..... -........... Ill -OM9 SNll9t CALL: 6'46-5552 or 548-1432 • 1ll22•111* ....... I M -~c....G.5. e"11ww1, , ........ w ...... · ,. e 11961 .,...., ._ • ct1s A ...... , ... ,._,, 5 .5. ......... - s159 hcedrin $J .... 7t"'O r! ~. I ..,.,._ ... 7tc ... Curad 2:si •1 Crew or Dreu 92" Yalu11 Deluxe 39' ea. Jumbo Ceramic 2. 1 ifich Child's Reg. $7.77 4 Shelf · .. Plasticware Mugs or hwls Tri ng Pants Meri's Soc~ .. Metal Bookcase •NQt!W ., I '" s1· 5=51 =~. :s3 ·iUt.--~··~·w I s5 :6 .r$1:~. == · ..... ,.,w ......... Hlah-Demntioe ~1 •:::::~w .. ..,., .. Gold lmla: fifl .. ~$1.11 I ioh f191!1CS com· ,,_, .. •14t::~"" ~U-.r ailored ... .. • kc d. C'D&llld t 11'1 r u;o-i Nft' oit\1111 i.r., ~ AD lap HIDd_I, deaio!td cmmic ~ 1cr1tc!t. • f= -· ,, -~ a"'!l....-z~ ·~ 7-la. bowll for IOUf, Ml.Id Ill' lhd.-rt. Snltdy, ..... , .. , Stora91 Chelf• $) -4 :lj" tNdi .,C..• I 't: .,.... . war. .&.-.....-~ Oiolc& al~~ ••• Jtriper,. fruit _. delipl ii A~ riJid, easr-~ •.. an Med - ltnKtioa.. Wt!A111: ot A"'OC&da °*"'-~,,.,., .. •. --· Ut1•tr.W....W. elastic wallt for -rort. J®" nrloii .... Int mln.l-rillo ~ SI• t•J., .C-1. 7·10--' lJ·1'. $2.91 A $2.49 Valuo Girl's Jumpers & Turtleneck Tops Your Cholc.1 Slec-vf"ll'Ss 1nini ju1n(X'r with t-oordlnatrd loll.lo! slcevl' knit top to mix .l match. A.'lSort- ed strl~s and solids for tM jumpt"r \\'Ith turtlrn«'ks in n\atchlnJ,r eo.lors. 'l"Yolltl ...... 40" ·45 RPM Records ~~r.:~' 1o:s1 ltll '" lh • }fllOdndi ol tltlts, Ii-..& ol .trtistl. Mlllkf•-reatir. fnlldiaHlhllln •1.9ls.tllll111 .. _ ... pa __ __ ....... ..._ $1 .. _eptial ~ a.. '* . ""' ""'"'"--" "'---·-$) Gold, Hot PW1 ........ ~ ...... s..w. .. .... •1At , ... hwillttr .... ... , ..... , ..... ... •3"-iedles' Acetate Print Pant Tops s300 .... 59'.Cliomlat• DellJ ... , ... Mlllt Pattl11 ..,, .. _., .. """ ......... 2 '$1 =.~.=1;: 0 --. .... 91'.72d7'' hly UMd Draperl11 ..,........... . __ ,,. 2'$1 :::i,__._ I ,Modd.-436-) 49:. ~. -. Cutex . " Lipstick or Nail Polish !:i~Cholco4: SJ -tit I. Cuemi111 C.Olon UP'tid: -1 Frosted l« Nail Pulish in Joodr -IPriDJ llhldcil. SpccilJ. lot tlU llJe ! 794 -CllrllJ. Pk. of 275 Cottoll Balls ............. Soho~ ••• ..... ·-·-2•$1 -u..t e.i.-.. 0 Specill Dolkt 0., a ,...., 91' lathe '•' Glow 2 or. lath Oil n:, , .. c.ter's ~J.6t.Platlc 11 IMll 29' ... Pllhdl Dlstlllln CWce Typtowriter mllw .TY~~ Tliltt Du .. 1 hw 16 ""'' 1112••• "'-... a~. ~-::.n 2•'$1. ::.:1.-::.=4•$5 -..":!:=~5.'n =:.. 3:sms .-.'t":!t;t.'--I ~~~~·G.w~ : =----. ..• Sllllss.:.:~~- '""''""" ............... oiiiiiiiiiiii .......... -tii-----------........... iiioii ....... . '141 Yol.Pup1,.llo .,.... "" ...... .......... ~ .. 68 ;'!"~-~ c ,., .... ~--­......... ... -...... ••••• MH's itos •t.16Y .. Pk.lf4 Prl•t•• llbli a1111s 'MtY•r. ii WIHTllllSMll ---dif b , ..... .... -9idi ... ,_ ..-.SllCJ ~ .... ,. a.kii • .,. 6. - '27" I.I. Soltl .... All/HI CllCl ltl• ~-...... ... ,,_ r ..., ___ *23•" ----- 59'_, .... , DwlUlfllhlSllHr .,1_, ... ,,, .............. 3 .. $1 ~:!j'~bm--:r • ...... nlm. I ,., U.I• T Sl.H h cSl.11 AHCIN Clllr Enamel Cookware 'Cl<'"""" S111ct Pia. Double Boo'kr, 2 pc. s.uoe Pm. • Set and W'moi- !-..r pot. ... ..,, .... .......... Shampoos .... 3'$) ... .... $1,'7 I ~,,,~ ..... _ .. ..;:.:= -. SllMYll.111 . lllllrm Yuperlnr ::;::: . .....:: sa .mdifia',,.. 1 ~Clf*ilT • lO ·U k .-... ,,......"' 41 at. l -·--'---------------------- . " I DAILY ~T , -• r HAS 'EM • • • THE CAR . OF THE Y£AR! I ........................ : New '69 VALIANT ~l=!~~!ILE ·:-COMPACT • ! ·AUTOMOBILE i O@ 519 : e , DOWlt Per Mo. e :-. ................................ , AMERICA'S RNEST PRESTIGE STATION WAGON -' ' :·~}.!URI OUS 1969 CH RYSL ER Town & Country S'ation Wagon INCLUDU All THIS 19UlflMINTr Power 1tterlnt, pew-r tli.c br1k•1, t•il 9•t• 1cuff cl••n, 1f1p p•d, '"t•m•- tic lt1n1fftl11i•n. tl"t'll ,.,J11chlii•ld, r1"'1t1 c•11trol mirror, h1•t•r, 01111 brakint 11Ylf•111, ~d1I llll1Ji, cl~e l r1'1' 11f1ty tilft1, f'O•chld• w1rnin9 f111h1r1, 111t belt-· front t lld rt1r, 11f1ty tloor lock, electric wi11d1hleld wipt tl end '!Wt lht rt. btcbp ll9hh, d11el 1111111!119 tail 9ate, retlio a11d l .ll•I 5 ,.hite 1W1 well tlr9;1. lll'l"'1di1t1 delivery. CP456•C I •6a 16 ~419 5 ... .,: ' . ONLY $299' DOWN $134:1'1 P,r mo.~• 36 mos. 0 .A.C. ' • RAY VINES HAS THE LARGEST STOCK IN THE AREA! t••························· .. •••••••• • {":: . : -t\ DOWN • CAS" or TRADE WILL I SAVE UP .TO '64 CHEVY . 4-speed, radio and heater, Lie. QZV 363, ~5 ' .., ' -'64 IMPERIAL Crown 2-0oor bardtpP, full and complete power, fact air cond., radio & heater, leather inl.erior, Lie, WQS953. $11 !i '66 MUSTANG VB, automatic 'transmission, ra- dio and heater, power steering, power brakes, Lie. SLE859, $15 9 1 • - ' ON NEW 1968 PL YMOUTHS CHRYSLERS '66 CHEVY Bel Air, 4-door, va. automatic transmission, radio and heater, ra:wer steering & brakes, . wsw, · ctory air cond. ·Lie. SBW089. ' .. -r .!"' \' ..;··" f .... $Ii~ '63 IMPALA Chevrolet 2 Dr. Hardtop. Auto- matic transmission, power steer· ing, radio, heate~ factory air conditioned. Llc. J Y-626. . -·-' ~ .... ~ J ( ' I J, / '64 RAMBLER Station wagon, VB, radio & heat· er, automatic transmission , Lie. IIN953. ' . , -. ' I••)) ~ '" •AIOVI! CAllS PLUS TAX a. LIC. '67 COUGAR Auto. transmi.55ion, radio &: heat- er, power steering & brkes, wsw, burgundy, vinyl bucket seats. Lie, UUT882, ., f;2 95 '66 CHEVY 4-dr sedan, V8, ·automatic trans, R&H, pwr steering, pwr brakes, white aidewalls, Lie, SZU310 s, rtnr v •..sr '66 T-BIRD Landau top, full . power, eleclric seals, Lie, SAA042 ~2395 19 WAYS TO ft NANCI ............... , .. Wptl IOACI : ~~) ~ ~J DELIVER ANY NEW CAR t · -e ' •• .' PWS TAX AND LICENSE • e ON APPROVED CREDrT! , e-· ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• , . '65 Chrysler '380' 2 DOOR HARDTOP. Full power, plu.s air co nditioning, Lie NQW 000. ~149~ '66 FORD Falcon Futura, 2 do o r Hardtop, VS, stick Shift, rad to, heater. No. 5101, P. ~1~5 '56 PLYMOUTH 4-door, automatic transmission, radio and heater, Lie. FTll206. $~ t1 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 1:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M. 7301 '64 PONTIAC '62'CONTINEITAL .- GRAND PRIX. Automatic trans-Fu n and complete £ow er, facto Ty mission, radio, beater, full and complete power, factory air. Llc. air conditioning, ll leather in· No, SPS 529, ' ':!rior, Lie, UX840. s1095 $ ' 1095 ' , '65 CONTINENTAL '61 NEW . YOR'ltER Full power, factory air condition-2-0oor hardtop, full power, fao- torj air conditioninf, r;adio and ing, fi.111 leather interior, very heater, balance of actory war- sharp! Lie. NGN953, ranty, Lie, IK373. $2295 $2895 '68 VALIANT '55 RAMBLER 4 Door. Automatic transmission, Station wagon, radio and hear.er. radio, heater, white walls. Bal· ance of factory warranty. Lie. Lie, PQN742. UHS-904 52095 $99 RAY VINES ___,4201 WILLOW LONG BEACH PACIFIC ·t -----·----·----. •• t ' § ~ •• ~ • ) I • • : l}uccofa ~ Gngfi4i Uffage B/B Waterfront! Pier & Slip B/B 16th & Tustin -Costa -. • Ezcellenl location, near schoob, &bopping and beoch Only a few lefl Buy now while in· terat rates are only - -- 7'f. with 20% down -7V..% with 10% Dn. no W -no peHnh -29 yn on blil1nce Exclual v• ~t p. a. palmer incorporated 3377 VIA LIDO From L.A. Coll MA ~34 · MONEY MAKERS NEWPORT near Be a c h, aime ocean viN-"". 3 UNITS. 2. 2 BRs -' guest apt Dbl pr. $34,500. EASTSIDE C.~.. 2 homes mi. comer lot. 2 BR &: 3 BR Live in one. rent one. $32.950 EASI'SIDE C.hl. 8 units 1 BR la. Excellent rentals. In. come $fi60 mo. $59,500 Last of the Small Spenders Newport Heights area aOO °*' to everythiiig: Eut 17th St. ancl Westdiff shop. pine, all 9d100ls and lb! new Costa Mesa park. 3 large bedrooms or 2 and • CQfJYUtab&e den. 1% baths, forced air heating and • complete buiU·in Jritdlm. Deep R.-2 )ot with alley ac- cess with room for an in- come unl1 or extra pe.rkin&. You small sperxlers, it's on1y iis.soo. Just listed! Well built borne! 2 extra large bedrooms anp 2 baths. Hardwood floors Spacious living room with ample dining area . Oversized double garage -room to expand, Owner will finance. . $7,5-00 down-Full price · $59,500. Shown by appointment only 645-2000 Eves. 548-6966 Newport Shores Fint Time Offered! 3 bedroom 2 story home with lots of charm, delightfully colorful kitchen. Only $28,500. 645-2000 Eves. 5484810 Newport Shora A-frame, 2 I a r g e bedrootnB, dining room spacious living room with stone fireplace. Many extras including additional 600 sq ft -$32,5-00. Might exclumge equity for larger home in Orange County plu.s some cash. 645-2000 Eves. 548-6966 Vacant R· 1 Lot--View of Bay Balboa. Price of $25,000 incu(les plans for 2 or 3 bedroom home. 645-2000 Eves. 548·6966 Oceanfront! New! Balboa Penn! 4 BR & Den, many extras. Asking $98,500. OPEN DAILY 1 . 5 P.M. 1354 East 0c .. nfront Eves: 548-6966 Colesworlhy & Cc. 645-2000 ~ NB Post Ofc. 64&-W.4 1904 Harbor Blvd. BUCH llKOtil CM. 642.1m Open Eves. __ 5 lob to the beach. Oldtt • ................. .._ .... ...., "Clean Spanii;h architecture 1111'· """"""' by modem. l unli. & Sharp" In need 01 a face li~. DPLEX fn R-3 ZONE o.ner says Kil oz trade for 1149 W. Balboa Blvd. income. $52,000 Crom" 12th St.I 2 Bedroom Rear l Bedroom Front Nowport at Victoria 646-8111 3 car ~ ma.d for aoother Unit Wll1 RU J\lmilhed. Few steps to 8!ach -1 block to Bay -By appt. Mr. Robinson D•vis Re•lty 642-7000 1000 Gentr•I 1000 ·_· Coldwell, Banker OFFERS: Private Oc9Gn Cove Spacious 5 BDRM b o m e in one ol the toast's most dramatic coves. Beautifully lands<aped w /pool overlooking ocean & rugged clilu . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $189,500 Mrs. Harvey Cameo Slians-Watetfrollt Pict~e view of ocean, channel, & boats. Large 3 Brs • formal dining rm., in- ner patio. Room for pool Best rmidential area . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $159,000. Airs. Raulston Udo llayfnint $89,000 ... Lido duplea w/lge 3 Bl\.2 Ba owner apt. up w/sweeping bay liew. 3 BR 2 Ba rental down way under mkt. Owner says sell. 1oe Clarkson , Oc-flont Moc1en 3 BR. Lge . fam or billiard rm · excellent veiw of Cat.alina i. ~ Crom lg pictnre win· dows and balcony • will lease or sell low down . . . . . . . . . . . . $68.500 \Vatter ~laase Udo Isle-Room to Add Best buy on Lido. 2 BR home on 53' Lot. Corner Strada Priced oea.r lot value. Owner .-. "' sell. . . . . ............ $51,500 Mrs. Raulston Wntcliff OPEN SATURDAY 1 • 5 1300 CAMBRIDGE LANE Cape Cod · 3 BR. 2 ba with conv den. Frpk. covered patio, copper plumbing, gar door · opener. newly deconl•d ........ $42.500 Greg Wohl l'rice Reduced $3250 Exceptional beach duplex with 26 x 23 LR. All Bui!J..lns, 3 BR 2 Baths each in best location. Kay nmt upper -'49,l.OO with Low~ '.Waller Haase • Are Ya A l.anJe Family? This Is your Home. SPanlltl CWtom 6 BR. · 4 I> bltlll, Ba;rcrest l"onoal Din nn. Huge lam rm, plltl pme rm, 3 fireplaoes. s~ down Ur rm, unique patios. 31> tar (&rage. Mary Lou Marion A Magnificent Home ~ View with pktur""lue 1wlm- mlllg_pool. 3 BR & convert den, 3 ba, for· mil dlDin& rm, IUnken living rm, 3 car gar· 8"e.A rm.find ••........ '84.500 -, tau Marion COU>WIU. IAHKEJl & CO. 2200 E. COAST HIGHWAY NEWl'OaT BEACH KIJafl Last Ofte Available! NEW DUPLEX! Upper has 3 bedrooms and den, lower has 2 bedrooms and den. Lush carpeting, all electric built-ins, fireplace, dbl gar with electric openers. Inquire at OceQD{ront Open House for details. $77 ,500 1354 E. Oct1nfr ont Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. 901 Dover Drive, Suite 221 , Newport 8e1ch 645-200.. ' "Beautiful Newport Hts" 405 HOLMWOOD OPEN HOUSE • SUNDAY 1-4 ?mttt family home in be!;t ara :s bdrm. 2 batb d!li&ht· ful·kitchln open up to Lana.I • Patio uu. Dinhlc room It plasb lMng nxm compli- mmtl thl.a well maintained homr. $&3.500 -Jim time listed for sale. REOCJRll' REALTORS 4 Bedr~2 B1th lmmHl1te Po1M11ion to Vets wilh m dov.·n pay· mentir; or FHA terms. This gorgeous DEANE HOME with all electric built iM, cozy brick FIREPLACE. PLUSH SllAG CARPETS & DRAPES throughout ~1UITT BE SOLD NOW! Located on quiet street in EXCELI.ENT AREA. 3 Blocks to shopping and near paroch1a.l school. This immaculate home is oUered at a LOW, LOW $23.500- 2790 Harbor Blvd. 56-9491 Open tiU 9 P~t Custom Charm From !he shingle roof lo the brick entry patio UU. F..ast· 5ide beauty will please. Dou· ble detached garage with aJ. ley aceess, country kitchen with breakfast area, formal dining room, large wood paflf'.Ued living rno1n, 2 lat'l1! bedrooms with storage pl- ore. PricOO for the wecula- tor at a low S22. 750. Colesworlhy & Co. 1904 Harbor Blvd. CM. 642·7777 Open Ewes. 2 BR DUPLEX Large 900 aq rt unitl with ~ <:I~ garqes A: lo noel· lent condition. Cl:ner Joca. Uon l1HI' a<:hooll & shop. ping. °""" ...... $24,000 Pacnftter, f, bedroom. tulJ ~. 2 tile S.:Jwttl nc:w c.~t. cltw lo the country club MESA VERDE EASf SIDE COSTA ME.SA NEWPORT l!GTS. AREA ALL nns AND ru S25.SOO 01.8.nnilllt 3 bedroom or 2 bedroom I< den. 1 %. batlul, lireplace. carpets &. drapes. built·in II forced air beaL This well landscaped ~ can be·foulld on 1 bl.Ip' R2 lot with a very large fenc- ed back yard, with room tor a boat, camper, er build a ~tal unit! It has a paved alley entrance tor easy ac- orss. l.ocation b just about perfect, 1% blks to Newport grade school, and only 2 bile! to new cily park. East 17th street and Weztclill sboJr ping and t~·o other 8Cbools within walJ<in& distance. For appointment to see. write:. Private Party Box P6U Danv PUot VA NO DOWN Lo\I.· closing cost to financial· ly qualified buyer. 2 BR. prime Eastside location. 1!6 xl43' lot room for expansion A< addili'111a..1 unit with vari· ancc-. Don't miss this one! Terms offered subject lo bank approval A CRV. $21,500 Newport •• Victori1 646-8811 Open DAl~Y- 613 Plumer, C.M. 6 BEDROOMS Potential rest home. Sin&le ~tory on large lot. !luge fnm. ily room with fittplace + dining an"a. Bl.t -in&, FA heat, good Costa ?o.1e&a area, J block to shopptng. Only S26.500. Good terms. Rltr. 64&3928 or 642-0135 *LACHENMYER 3 Bedroo m Home + Vacant R-2 lot Beaut1fuJ 3 b<:droom 2 balh home. -East.side CostJi liolesa. + larp separate parct"I zont'd for 5 units, RD. er very anxious, Dll1ne your terms. B o I h properties Sl.'J,(Q). ORA NG E COUNTY'S LARGEST . 29l E. 17th St. 6#-44M Mou Verde VETERANS TAKE NOTE! No down peymt:nt oa lharp 3 .l famijy room. .Dtlte A Coll'gft'Jvt ~-Walldrc distance lo major shopplrlli(. llwn' now/ llOUSES FOR SALE Gener1I 1000 - f=INER HOMES LIN DA ISLE -One of the best Bayfrnnt Buys in Newport Beach. 4 Bedrooms (or 3 & den) plus large activity room. Concrete pier & slip. A beautiful new 2·story Bay Fronl OPEN SAT & SUN. 101 Linda Isle . Pete Barrell Rea/41 8/B · VBAY & VBEACH vrsE II ER VBUYS · .. pre:Jetib VIEW -new Op.en Howe - 3 BR & A1aid's rm, 3 'h baths large living rm dining rm, family room. Breakfast room, 2 Fireplaces, atrium . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $95,000 OPEN DAILY -1374 Galuy Dr. BAYCREST -One year old 4 Bedroom with 3 batlis, famil1 rm, dining rm, larg.\ living rm, all elec/kitcben. Beautiful brick e.atry, wet bat. Landscaped by Newton. Perfect NEEDS YOUR FLAIRll -but what possibilities in this spaciot11 3 bdrm 2 bath home. Great family room, outstanding kitchen, bug e lanai overlooking ooe pl the loveliest pools in Newpad.! Fine area near Dover Shore.s. Priced at $42,750. Irvine VlllCIC)e 3 Bedrooms + Fa.mill' Room 21,S Baths. Fireplace. Kitch. B!t·ins. Sniale story TOWD Howe. Sacrifice $27.250. Univenity Park condition ............ · .......... $79,000 Call B2'bara Aune MAKE OFFER. Owner anxious to sell charming 3 bdrm family room &/or dining room. Many glass walls overlooking sparkling pool. Will lease option. Model home. ~t <:ondi- tion. 3 spacious Bedrm.s. Fam. Rm. Wet Bat. Fire- place. C.orner Lot. $37.500 Corona Highlands DOVER SHORES -A magntfinent custom home on prime View k>t. 3 Bedrooms, 21h: baths, fqrmal ~g rm, Island kitchen w/2 ovens (self cleauing). Huge family rm, 3,000 1000 Noltl"IJh•m · Open Sun. 1 ·S View of canyon & Mtn.1. 2400 sq. ft. home. 4 BdnnA + Fam. Rm. 21,S Bath. Huge fireplace. 75x.110 lot • You Own the Land. Room for house or boat t:rallu. $46,950 OFFICE OPEN sq It. Priced .................... $87,500 Call Jeanette Peart for appt. LUXURIOUS-Custom home on Mesa Verde golf course. 4 BR, 3 baths, family rm plus activity rm, all elec-kitchen, lavish use of marble and costly wallpaper. Walnut panel- ling, 2 !/places. Shown by appt only $116,500 Call Eileen Hudson Saturdays & Sundays 1605 WESTCLIFF DRIVE View! View! View! Newport Beach 642-5200 BlufI side of Ocean Blvd. 3 Bedrooms + Den. 2 Baths. Jluge Living Room. Split Level. Every R o o m has spectacular picture window vil!:w! Sll0,00'.l. THANK YOU DOVER SHORES -Just listed.A beautiful 2-story executive home. 3 bednns, 31h baths, family rm, den, formal dining rm. Upstairs siting rm with fireplace (1 of 3 fireplaces) 3500 sq ft. ..................... $84 ,000 Mr. Davenport for letting WI handle the sale of your lovely home. And whoever reads thUi ad & calls us to see your sharp home is really in for a !Ur· prise. We know you've eD- joyed lhc spacious 3 BRs, & tbe 2 balhs \•1ere very con- venient. As you said, many pleasant hours "'ere spent in front of your fireplace with your family. \Ve also know moving from there ~·ill not be happy for you but duty calls. Are you s~ o n l y $22,750 is not too low a price for your home? And bes.ides, almost anyone can qualify fur the monthly payments. Can Elaine Svedeen !or appt. SPANISH -4 Bedroom home, large 26xl7 family rm_, ~amed ceiling, formal living rm. formal d1n1ng rm, breakfast area, hit-in vacuum system. 11-!ove-in condition. Asking ......................... $52,500 OPEN SAT & SUN. 2138 Tllstin Ave. john macnab REAL TY COMPANY 881 Oov•r Dr., Suite 101 Macco Realty Co. Bldg. 642·8235 r..:+www:e ~.....-•• -........ Jfi-.. COATS ~WA~CE REALTORS ---S46-4141- 10pen Evenings) PARENT'S PRIVATE WORLD in a spacious muter 'suite with view at the Bay, yet only. mp through impolblc double door to join the fam- ily. The children'• wing has 3 more bedrooms & 2 baths. Thia brand new IVAN \VELLS' home must be seen to appreciate the ease or en. tertaining in the vie"··side living rom & 14' high enclos- ed atrium with \vet Oar. ~ children have their own tam. ily room. Call today to see this brand nt>w beauty. Roy J. W1rd Co. (H11ycrcst Olli~~ 1842 Santiago Dr. 646-1550 Ocean Front Lot !Irvine Cove) 180 front feet! overlooks private sandy beach wU8 gently rollirw surf last Ocfoan l.ront lot available in this e'<clusivoe area "'5.000 Call· Jim Cohb Res. fi73-18Gt "Estate Sale" Corner dupitc<x-2 bdrm each. upper furn. and view of ~l, lower fenced patio -dbl garage. shopping, Ocean I: park steps a way. S37,~ ls a marketable \'lll- us for this property. 1-·ec simplr. leautiful Sunsets and'""iso· ocean view, seclud- ed patio and pool This small estate -located on two fee simple lots • has 4 bedrooms. 3 bath.I + p!lt apt Twol '""!"'""'~~'"'!""'""'"" .,,...,,.,.,, 2 dbl. ..,....., Near The Beach and a roef pnlen. $97,500. Open S\m. 429 babolla Tel'-$25, 950 raoe, C.d.M. 4 + F AMIL y ROOM artist Excellent Condition This well planned custom built split level home, ollen apece arxl country atm05- phere. 4 bedrooms. panelled recreational r o o m, lower declc and upper balcony oY· e.rlook canyon. S42,500. Adjacent To Dover Shores. Plans are available to build on this beautiful fee simple lot $37,500. home. Very unmual. 4 bed- rooms, terrific master bed· room with loads ol closets and private bath. Family room plus utility or se\l.ing room. Large living room with brick tirepla~. plush wall to ~·aU carpets and drapes. Dream kitchen with built ins. SpacloUB dining area. 2 encl06ed yards • ran.. tastic financing. Take over large SX %loan -Low down payment • Jus1 listed, dan't wait, Call Ml.fil14 FOREST E. OLSON, INC. ./ lfASE 'EM Corona del Mar Rates quoted • 24 mo. lease Vacant view Joi. '69 r.fustang V-8, air SS!I. mo ·13 Camaro V18, air $89. mo Your D;r '" Cad Coe de Vlllo. "'· '"" pwr, 11,IXXI ml •. $149.60 mo Ho '67 Cad Sedan de Ville, air, !las JUSI been list This 28,000 mi · ••·· •· • $125.00 mo two bedroom and den or '64 C1d CdV 43,000 mi S89 nio third bedroom horn(! i!oi in •67 T·Bird, air, 17,IXXI ml. .• hke new condition. Many · ·· .. · · •· · · •· .. •· • $94.72 mo elrtra.s such as a new alum-Call : Harry ll.'illian1s inum covered palio. Even So. Coast Cir Leising the price is a dn:oan1 al 300 \V. Cst Hwy, NB &a.>2182 S21.950. SPARKLING JEAN SMITH, Reiiltor 3 bedroc>m home, large lot 400 East 17th. Cosla ?-.Iesa garage plus ~'Orkshop. boot 714/~ ent.ry. all appl..iances includ- Who l ikH Ch ildren? erl. Po~Mion -NO\\'. $19,500 Nearly everyone. So if your future ia tied to the kid s canvenience, It. pro!l.'Ction, here's a 3 bedroom home on eastslde Costa ~fesa, only 1'1 bib to Newport Heights grade school. Large feOCl'd beck yard wilh alley eD- trance. Ftreplare, built-ins. cpts & dni..peg. 1% ha.tbs. For MATOIAM 55 appointment 10 see phone \VESTCLIFF O\\'NER 642-4980. Reduced Vacant and lonesome ready to $25,500. for imn1Nilate occupancy. , Spacious living room with Quiet Cul.de-Sac ing har(hvood Ooors, ard 1-:asblde CM. 7138 Aster Otrpeted and d r a p e d , R E A L T Y Place. Lovely 4 BR dining Owner ha., uio\,-ed out of 2025 W, BAiboa Blvd., N.B. &. rumpus room, fil'l'place. mte and b1 anxious to seH. 675-6000 buill·ln&. 2% baths, heated $40.~ _ 1or;; do>A'n. The "):llZ pool, 2 patio&, stor9ge house Real F.staters 5 4 6-2 3 l l I! ,\ SO many extru. Asking 66-TITI Baycrest Area $37,'60. CALL GLEN!l-~D~~l ~W~-~~.d~-S.11 L /Op · QUEEN 540-1151 (open eves) up e x -·•• • or .... t 1on \\•ri••-•-a1 ~-• ..,_ 2 bedrooms e.d\. Llke new. Bcautitul 4 BR. 3 bath home ~ .._~ no: LAI.ft .......,. .. , __ ,_ _ .. _ 1-0iiiiii .... iiiiiiiiiiii ... iiiiiil vr..: IJl.,.;oo. lo ,...,pp,.,.. '••. 1-0ca•o<1 "" '""' • ...,,,.. 4 BR plus pool $23,soo street -W1'LI land&caped with outdoor lighting on timer. 2955 Maul Place H ome & Bu.ineu Loe. Sprinkler system all new · M~ Verde ExceUent f or accountant, larze outdoor BBQ • all new MUS"l' SEU. • pr\crd under buuty Jakin, anOqun. etc. a"ptl: A drapes -el~ blt-in coet. J1ome Include• 4 BR 2 bath&. ldtc~n-d~ &rea-1 BR ·~.,...,., 1 ~ d .,_ ---·"""' • on y 10'"; ,..,..... ou......, prqe ...... --....,...., from living quar. DOVER REAL TY Gl:NCO REALTY 642...n ~perfect lot in-la"· J.Ak. 61'5-fi.lf,J 628 W. 19th Strttt, C.M. ""' 149.SOO. c.n to "'· _ _ 4 BEDROOM-$23,750 CH IL T ROB INETT ""'"' DOWN PAYMfNT REALTOR 645-0)28 Wat rfr nt •• -0 to, G.l. low 00.·" aU othen. A-SSUME 5',-FH--Newport Shores 2 """'· "'""''"'"'"'room. ,4 A gpoo ... 1y lmma<Uiote. C... Nt~AT .\ ATTRACTIVE lmm11c 4 BR, fam nn. pe!Nt, m!ltty addf'!I teatuttt Co REDlJCJo:t) !!) J.17.~ zy 2 BR nn lg. Jol A5k· for your comfort ~1720 Ing $19.~. Pyn'"'" f138. ftChfthlre Real E1t1te TAA.IEll 2955 Harbor DAVIDSON R9Glty , ..... .,.. .. = ...... 1 M .. • .. •• .. " .. ' .... '.,".,' "' !>-16-MGO Ew-:. 549-1008 \l."hHI" Elephants! Always a Go-en! EXECUTIVE MANSION Open swi. Bay & Beach RNlty, In<. 24a7 E. Coast Hwy., CdM 675.JOOO 3,200 square feet of gracious country gentlemen living. 4 Large bedrooms, 3 batlul, family room, dining room and den, plus huge secluded lot "'Ith mammoth swim- ming pool aixl plenty ot room left over for croquet, ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~! badminton. or ~'hat have you! You will like the East- ern Flavor of architectutt, the lowering trees that pro- vide that .. country reeling" as ~·ell as privacy and se- clusion. T h I s exceptional home is on land you O\VN in the city of Newport Beach, and unusually good value at only $52,00'.l. SU~ mil your smaller home on our iuarantee aale plan. 3 bcdrootnll, close to shopping with big airy rooms, numerous built- in features & dandy fenced yard. See this for a bargain. Asking $26,500 ')1~.·.s ~i.\ ~ r~\ ')\i .1 I ·ti, 546-5990 .. 20'3 'VEITTU..lFF DRIVE THE -QUICKER YOU CAU.. 646-rru Open Eves. THE QUICKER YOU SELL Open Houses THIS WEEKEND K•p thll h•ndY dlrectery with Jff thl1 week· encl as you 10 ttou...hunttnt-AJI th• loc•tlont llltM ~--are tleterlW In ~t•r d.t•ll ~y •dwertlllnt elMWhw'e Jn hUy'.1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. -showlno --fw Ml• er to mrt IN .,,.... ,. list 111eh lnt.rm.- tlon In this coh1ntn MCh fricbiy. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedroom & Family or Den) *624 Ramona (Irvine Terr.) CdM 675-5930 (Sat & Sun) (3 Bedroo m) 403 Feliz tThe Blu!fs) NB 644-0525 (Sat & Sun Aft 2) 405 Holmwood (Newport Heights) NB 675-6000 (Sun 1-4) *160l Bonnie Doone (Irvine Terr.) CdM 642-6472 Eves: 673-3468 (Sun Aft/noon) 234 Palmer, CO'Sta Mesa 642-4980 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 457 Morning oanyon Rd .. CdM 673-5420 (Sun 1·5) ' (3 Bedroom & Fa may or Den} 2043 Calvert Ave. (Mesa Verde) CM 548-3081 (Daily) 3246 New York Ave. (Mesa Verde) CM 546-1170 (Sat & Sun 1·5) **105 Linda Isle Dr. (Lin<la Isle) NB 675-5930 (Sat & Sun) 1363 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB (714) 642-11235 (Sat & Sun) **103 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB 675-5930 iSat & Sun) 1374 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB (714) 642·8235 (Daily) * 1000 Nottingham (Westcl!lf) NB 642-5200 (Sun 1·5) 1300 Cambridge Lane (Westcl!lf) NB 675-2000 (Sat 1·5) 9131 Kahului. Huntington Beach 54().1720 (Sat & Sun 1·5) (4 Bedroom & Family or Den) 2138 Tustin Ave., Newport Beoch C714) 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) ** 101 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB (714) 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 441 Windward Lane, Newport Beach 6411-1646 (Sal & Sun 11·5) *1842 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 648-1550 (Daily 10·5) *429 Isabella Terr. or 407 Mend<na Terr. CdM 646-32&5 (Sun 1·5) I CONDOMINIUMS> (3 Bedroom) 2141 Vista Entrada (Bhil!a) NB 644-2370 (Dally) !DUPLEXES FOR SALE> 1701 W. &!boa-Blvd., Newport Beach 644-0266 (Dally) -. I • • FrtUy1 Janu1r1 31, 14169 DAILY PlLOT •'"""°"' , IOOOGonen l 1000Goneral 1000 HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUS ES FOR SALi :;;:;.ii;i;iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;iiii;i;::;.;;;.:;. ____ ~.iiiiiiiiio--;;;;;;;;;;i;;i.'"'Jlll-Gon;;::':.:'.:r•:';l:--'"..;cc."-"~l;:OOO:;;;:Go;;:n::•:,.:':1 '-'---';l';:OOO::;; o.n. ... 1 lOOO'*ie,.I 1000 Gonerel HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE tlOUSES FOR SALE 11;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;; ...--..~ Re ' OOPS!! --:-----SulTs R'ANCHQ LA CUESTA at Brookhurst & At-lanta In HunUngton Beach. We thought we .f> A l'•p had all our new homes sold but one of our q Uc, buyers bas tieen transferred & we muat .. u ' New Custom Spanish. with mla$1on tile 1000 Go ....... -FOR ' "THE BEAUTIFUL PEOPLE" ' <· • • i1 24 YfARS OF t\tit.l this home lmmedlately. This San Ml~el C, • b"/>i. q_ 2'tt model Is a beautilul 2 story home featunng: q.q; ·Al . Ci 4 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, formal dining ~~qlf...11 •• room, family room with a real fireplace, elec- root. 4 Bedroom, 2\41 baths, formal din· lng room, famUy room, wet bar. CW:tom carpets & spanisb tile !loon. Partially dr&J>ed. Large lot, oversized garage, electric opener, etc. (and their Boats J Exclusive Uncla Isle Priced from $98,000 . • \ . RE~L ~· -a.-w Jff lrlc built-in kitchen, luxurious green shag ~. RU carpets throughout. Tbe outside Includes shake roof & concrete driveway. Gracious liVinJ: for only $31,800 with 10% down. Jm. mediate OC<lllpancy. Call 968-2929 or 968- Open Houso Sat & Sun 11 ·5 441 Windward Lane (Nter 22nd & Tustin AYO.) OPEN HOUSE SATUROAY I. SUNDAY 103 -105 Linda lale Drive, Newport Be.1ch Shown by t ppolntment .. ' . ESTATE lQl A EXPERIENCE~, r,:lr~U~ .. P.W.C.'s BIG 6 ••• Immediate Financin9 Is Yours: Y oura: When you list your home with Paul-White-Car- nahan, \\'e will advance you up to $5,000 on your equity with low cost and monthly payments. Use the money to buy another home and pay your equity-loan when the old home sells. Multiple Listin9: We are members of the Oosta Mesa-Newport Beach ?\-1ultiple Listing Associa· lion. This means your prop- erty is put into. the hands of virtually ·.:ivery broker· salesman in your area to help sell your home. State Wide Referral System: W11en a job transfer OC· curs or orelocation is desir· ed, yout home ls immedi- , .. -ttely exposed to over 40 )eading state reaitors for quick action and sale. n.e p.w.c Trade-In Plan : Select the Home or your choice! Put your present home on the market • . . if it does not sell in the re- quired t i n1 e . , . we will guarantee to buy yo ur prop-- erty so you may complete the purchase of your new home. Ask youT P-\V-C Agent to give you the de- tails on t h i s modern ap· proach to selling y o u r home. Tailored Financin9: Paul-White-Ca111ahan has direct loan affiliations with 6 major Savings and Loan Associations and 3 We Jn. surance Companies, with complete F.H.A. and G.t. fi nancing to better help you merchandise your prop- erty to its best advantage. Professional Advertlsin9 Pro<Jram: Our newspaper advertising program is designed to- ward getting the most pos· sible inquiries from all ·cate· gories oJ_ "home-buyers.'' ' 6 SELECTIVE PROPERTIES ••• SPECTACULAR 180 DEGREE VIEW of Catalina Channel, Ocean and Bay. Designed to de· ligh t and hltilbto endure- is this 5 BDii-most u pusual mansion in Corona del Mar. Impossible to repro- duce at this price. Radiant heating - 3 car garage - 31h baths -sliding glass dQors recessed into the wall. Perfect home for hi.e:h e e 1 entertaining. Specially esigned \Vet-bar -2 pati s. Over 4600 sq. feet. Pric $139,500. Call for appoin ent. TOUCH OF SPAIN 3 Bdrm. and Family Raom ~Iany fine features in this 3 yr. old home. So near to all schools and St. Johns Parish. 2 baths -spacious livinJ! room with Spanish fireplace -all electric kitc}le n with built-in ove n. range and dishwasher. Tiled entry-quality carpets and drapes -sprinklers front and rear. Top condition. Price $30,950, EZ terms, $1175 DOWN VA owned. Vacant 3 BR home all newly painted. Payments of $157/mo pays all. Lg frn:d yard. Good loc. Only $17,950. LOW, LOW PRICE MESA DEL MAR 3 BR &·family room home. High pjle w/w 1 year old carpet, 1 % bat!h.s, step-saver kitchen has distiwasher. Ideal convenient location, near all schoolS. See this today at only $26,950. HARD TO FIND so you had better act fast. This 3 BR vacant, complete- ly redecorated home with all new w/w carpets won't last long. Move right in. 2 bat h s. Well landscaped. 'Owner will sell VA/IBA if desired. Look at t.his low price of $22,500. OVERSIZED! TOO BIG! Attractive 5 BDR -2 story home, ideal for that large family. 2% baths -extra Jarge rooms -2 brick fire- places. Quality construction and very functional. Im- n1aculate condition -ne\\'· ly painted. All electric built· in kitchen + dishwasher. Vacant -Move in today. Will sell at $34,950 with VA or FHA financing. Call DO\\'. By Builder 6-46-1844 B 0 YD R E ALTY 1338 any day from 10 to 6. ---...-.....-..-3629 E. Cotlt Hwy., CdM Three Wishes If peace, cotnlort &: IOC6tion are Important to you look this over. Convenient to Newport Height 11 grade school, and all shopping. 2 : blks to new park. Only ' flS.500; and all these "plus" : features. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, fireplace, cpts. and drapes, double garage, con- c:rete drive, large fenced back yard on 50xl30 FT. R-2 LOT. There is not to much available in this part of eastskle C.M. Hurry. OWN- ER. 6424980. View-View-View Newer 3 bedroom home on tree lined street with a view of ocean. Master bed- room with private bath & dressing room. Palos: Verde fireplace. Fantastic built in kitchen, cozy family room with enclosed court yard. Und('r $35,000. 4 BR 2V1 bath + FRPL . -$108/mo. Assume existing loan, or $500 lotal to vets. Minimunt down Jo'HA. Honie has built-in&, double garage, block wall fence, central heating sys- tem + oversized kit; At $23,950 this one won't last! ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 293 E. 17th St. 6-46-4494 -Juat reduced $1200 East.side 2 BR + den or din- ing roon1, dble garage on alley. Now only $22,750. 143 Broadway 6-45-0111 Ev". 6-42-8453 6-46-4579 6°/o FINANCING 3 BR Home on 2 View Jots- top CdM location. 6% loan can be assumed without change, charge, or pe.nally, $69,500. OPEN SAT & SUN 1-5 215 Marigold, CdM CLAUDE SHIFFER Realtor 675-0473 OPEN SUN AFT /NOON 1601 Bonnie Doone, 7682 Edinger 8424455 Ol' 5'0-5140 Open daily til 8:30 EASTSIDE CHARMER Charming cu11tom 3 bedroom and dining room in a pic- turesque eastside seiting. Open beam ceilings, gleanr- ing hardwood floors, and used brick fireplace give• the living room a "copper Kettle" style, $26,500 - Terms are rasy -1be ReaJ Estaters ~2l13 646-TI71 Hu9e Rumpus Raom 4 BR home, l %. baths, hard- wood noons, double garage. $25,l:XXL Wellt-McCardlt, Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 548-~ Eves, 6440684 ''A'' Frame LOOK-4 BEDROOM $21,9SO 2 baths. Family room. Ele- gant fireplaCt?. I...atyc rear yard with covered patio. Boa I acceu.. N t a r all schoolll, Best 4 bedroom buy in area. 540-1720 TARBELL 2955 H1rl>or BAYCREST 10 UNITS PRESl'lGE on 3 lots. Adjac~t to Ocea,n. Beautiful 4 Bedroom plus front. $155,000. spacious bonus room· B1lboa Reil E1tlte Co. forn1al dining, 2 fireplaCt?s 700 E. Balboa Blvd., Balboa • new· carpets & drape&. 6134140 Newly painted inside-and ""'"""""""!!!'!'!!!!!'!~""""""' exterior. $65.000 -l\faybe VACANT purcllased c o m p I e le l y f u r n i s h e d . The Real Good Costa Mesa area. 3 BR Estaters 646-7ln S46-23l3 -all panel den, l~t ba, all bit-ins, cpt! thruout. FHA MESA VERDE-$25,950 loan 5* % payable $156 incl. King sized bedrooms. 2 baths. taxes & ins. Family room. Exquisite fire. Total price $23,300 place. Homemakers dream MIZELL REALTY 54S-2208 kitchen "'ilh finest built-ins: Lovely large screened & 21h ACRES-M-f glassed patio. Year round For sale or II'Bde, C.M. 5 fun & entertaining. B e s t min to ocean, low dn, owner area. 540-17'20 1 cany, Kermit Riggs, Agt. TARBELL 2955 Her1>or ~ n... 546-'75> Mua V..-de 1110 OWNER -Must Sell, lmmed :.:.c=..;..;;;..;;;;..... ___ _ OCEANVIEW posse~ion. 3 BR, 1~£ ba, 4 BR. tam/din nn, lrplc, a11 carpeted, immac" eond. 2 Ba. w/ cpti, drps, 1950 Me11tt Vrrde. $25,500 10 % sq It: Panl. Owntt. Asllume down. Owner/Bkr. 646-2629 FHA 6%. &low mrkt. 2 BR, 2 Ba, 1 block to beach, $29,500 George Willl1m1on Realtor 545-87;,4 Eves. 673-1564 PLACE )'Oil!' want ad where they are 1ooki.n1 -DAJL Y Pn.or dallllied &C-5618 For Daily Pilot Want Ad&. Dial 642-5678 General 1 OOOGentr•I 1000Gtner1I 1000 S@\\~}A-~t.~s· Solve a Simpl< Scmmbled Word l'uzm for a Chucklt II j j j' Womon •''"' 1.,,ry, It's tho ';:;·~=·:::~· =·=:· ..., oge when she 1topt patting r hemlf on the bock and be- 1 PEL HUD lglna -the -. 1·31 ... _••1r--r1..-· "Tl-rl-.rl'-1_ ~fi~z~S., 0 r:i\':.~"° I' r r I' I' I' I; 11 r I I I I I I lnul -I H I. I I-·-..... --~ ... B1ycre1t 1223 Corona del Mar ! ..... ,_ _____ _ 1250 We have two • 4 BR houses with pools, Ii~ine Terrace wiU1 exceJJent Jlnanclng. Bayview Condominium Sal' I Owner moving back lo L.A. tsbury Rea ty 3 BR, 21Ai BA. drpd & crptd. 315 Marine Ave. 6%.% Transferable"loan. BAiboa lale. 673-6900 $56,000 Owner 644-2370 e , e "LINDA" 3 BR 2 battui. On major grttn belt. Shown by appointment, 644-1198 INCOJ\1E 3 BR. 2 BA. Sundeck. Liv, Din Rm. Patio. ~~ Blk to ocean & Bay, bltn k:it. Cor. tot 15th & Balboa. Rear Apt. rented. J.Iu11t sell by O\vner. Prine. only. 673-8718 -PANORAMA VIEW of Corona del !\.far and !he Ocean sre plus features of this spacious street-to-street custom-bit estate. ImrnaculD.te interior with beamed c<'illngs, carpeted wood Iloors, and 3 BR's. ' For the handy man 50xl25 FT Deeded View Lot. a basement v•ork shop. Neat as a ••• ••• Swedish Kitchen Corona HighlandH home, 3 BR, 1~ Ba, and an Ocean View that just \\'on'! quit! ,. Best o"f all 10',f,. down pay-• tnt'nt will buy !his bo"me. Full price $39,500. •1 OPENSUNl.5 · l 457 Morning Canyon Rd. ' Corooa.del.Mar. . _:;. , LLOYD BARNETT' :-' REALTOR 67l-M20 I 2333 E. Coast Hwy, CdM · MOVING FEBRUARY ht lo: 3355 Via Lido, Suite 200 LIDO BUil.DING -aboM. (Blue Dolphin Restaurant),: R. C. GREER, Realty 813-9300 Bayfront Duplexes $105,000 • 2-three BR's $ll5,000 - 3 BR & Two BR's with Fireplaces Walker Realty 33.16· Via Lldo 675- KATELLA .. RHlty ia NOW PAYING up to 80% Commission Cell 847-6061 I. Hk for HAL MORR C.Ontemporary houll(', Stone, Owner will finafK'e at glass, mahogany, Suitable 6~~~-! $52,995 $14,250 for 2 or 3 people. Enclosed (113-CI $2500 move . in, 00 clO&ing patio. $49,500. 2928 Cliff Drlvt, Newport Beach. ~ ~'0$ls. 3 BR 1% baths, fen<> PROPERTIES WEST ed 62xla;-lot. Built-in range 3 BDRi\f & den, pool &: patio. & oven, dishwasher, garbage 16 t d (714) 11754 131 LR 32 x . crp s. rps, dl11posal, carpets, drapes. beaut lancbcaped It treH, 1023 Bayaide Dri..,.. drapes, waahet, C:ryer. Pa- secluded. Fee title. Reas. ){.,,port Buch, Calif. 92662' tic with huge nreplace + . 77&-8568 [t .'1 patio fumituN". Double Pl"-' 3 BR Wattrtront No, 62 age \\•Ith boat door. Pay-~ 6 0 0 BOYD'S BEST BUYS menl11 less than renl • n59 Balboa Coves. $ O • O ' """ mo.,th tncludlna tax•& Prefer trade for acreage or , will co~ditr other. s.u.m1 OPEN HOUSE l f mr:T!I lflEIJ !' 3 BR, 2 &. beam/ceiling, SAT & SUN i6tUJ11. ~-!; fill! l"XC opportunity, $22,500 -624 RAMONA ~ Owner/ Agl. 642-3615 l!ves I • T CdM or wk-ends' 1'1•n• err•ce. 2 T IR H LaMl llvl .. ·troplcal S<tUnt" • WO OllHS ' * BAY VIEW F~ lot 85' Plus Pool, 2 &. drn ... $.'j2,IXXI Plus extra 5(bd84 ft R-2 lot l " 195' ''' plans. SM.900. DUPLEXES-DUPLEXES loc.ated jolt 11 storie'11 throw ~ Owntt 548-ntS, M8--00T ··435 C1rn1tlon, CdM from !ht! Dtw Hospital ·'I.On-t GREAT BUY . Countr:v cluum plus SOUTif td tor a total or 9 Unilll I Beaut 4 Bdnn, 214 Ba. lge of IM llJWAY . convtnl~nt. C".orxl inVt:Stmtnl pogibillt- , pool. $53,!m.' M&-8616 Bu'. It now, and watch your ics. Flnanc\fli open. Total j 1210 val606"'' 1MArowR.G .. U .. E .. Rl,T39E0500 price s29'500" N:.·; •_!'.;po;•t;;;;H;•;lg;ht;';;;;;;;;[ LLOYD BARNE TT ; • SUPER DUPER • 2 plWI 2 REAL TOR 673-SGO 1 Rusnc STY' "' .,.., °"""" ttvlnr '"" 2.133 E. eo..t lllway. ~M """ for oacb Unit. WOULO YOU ""'""""""~""'~!!!' !!!!II """' with pool 2 BR A d•n ~ $l l 500 lli both. kltchon ,.,.,.,. Bl>LIEVE ••• •• •• • • '44.~ • M•"'"" brick trplc. SEE IOYD '"'' .... , fli>tl --1 Tiits at $28,500. REALTY fn(Jl'e, Oldtr home for l"l'tl,. ' ""' ,.,. E. °'"" Hlway. COM "'· lt~ltod income """"' I .:. L m.'"311 ,.,. •••· ....... R. D. SLATES, R.ltr, Nnr NB Poet .,c. 646-2414 nmr SOuriiCi• wiD · M TU& QU1<¥ER roU • -, A L r v rs TOUR Ao '" CJ.ASSt· 847~19 Evn.11 "-~SC~R~A~M~·~L~ET'.:S'....:A::N~S~W~ER~S~IN~C~LA::S~S~IFl'..'.:C::f!.:T:.:.IO=N_9'..::0::00:'._C"""'""""'"""'"""'""" ... 1·~-~~ ... !:..!'·~0lal~-~~ THE QUICKER YOU .1 L-..~~~~~~~---~~ . . . ' --- ~··. 1" ~ Pjl.01'-'. 1 F~dl)I, '!lno&IY ll, 1969 •, H!>llSH FOil -Lli , ~•NTAU -,.. RENTALS ... RENTALS f{ RENTALS r REAL ESTAT• BUSINESS alld H-Unfumhh..t _Apta. F"'"ls"" """" Pvml"*' . ,.. UftfvrnlohM "-'al FINANCIAL ANNOUNCEME!'1S and NOTICES ti'\11... .. • ., nn1 ... 1ne 1231 . = i;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jF~;;;;;;;;;;;J!N~!1!'.!!Et"~rt:!.,!llo~•~ch~...J32~00~ Coota M•• 4100 Cooto Mou 511111 S.nfa Ana 5620 Offk:o R1nl1I .070 lluo. OpportvntllM 6300 -"·lURnE ROCK HILLS ""5: 2 BR. 1 .. u, """"' NEW l mt. Adwts ...... Moving FoJ>. 2n4 V);:R't' Oean 2 s.. 2 Ba. 1 LAGUNA BEACH !Mt '401 SIAMESE Male cat. Seal Point, Vic. Belltngtt Dr, H. e. Reward. 80-3623 /ON THE IRVINE RANCH yacd; g.r.. w/w, bl.,., Encl ..,.. $1bO ,...-. 2 BR. w/pr. le<· fl>cd yd. ..,.,.,... Apts. p., ,..uo. Air Condit......, Broker M4-6980 22'.l>·.Eldm. 645-!Zl, ' Pa~;, water pd. 'locaUona '.POOL N.lce Into.~'' ON J'OREl'l AVENUE Are now offering for sale, their award win· nlng single Ii· split • level 3 & 4 bedroom lt1£1DEL HOMES. .. Thtre model homes are magnlficenlly ap- pointed wi1h ·the ·,ery finest of carpets-- drapes -wall ~s; plus every model is , ~~ona'Uy l dscaped, special walkway s 1•1r··pitios prev!I •)one with swimming pool. fhese homes are placed on quite large & ; very private Jots that may be either leased or PJl'cbased with a want deed:!<>. tuil land owtlershlp. Follow the signs to TURTLE ROCK ll!LLS· ~e East of the University of Da1iforrua ~ "\t Irvine-; just Off the intersection of Campus Drive & Culver Drive. Tire~ il.3-1102 ' For FurtMr Information 3 BR. 2 Ba., frpl., cp~ BEAUT. I~. 2 Br. 1% b&. 2ZU. P'9.~ Apt D $1.lS l ...... Deli: 1P1ct1 ava.n.bh tn drapes; 1~2 bllcs. to ~acb. atudlo, pool, prlv, paUo. $Ul5 2176 l'lat:eatta, Apt. C $ll5 =;=rD• l..ch ~05 M1IJfllt. U&e buUdiD&: a1 Y•ariy. S200 Mo..,,,_ 23JlJ Sonia Ana 64s= •. ~120 e · 100 CLIPF DllVE ..-1oeatton to"°"""""' WELL !um 2 bdrm &Ill. all 2 B1lllM •~lo. o,,i., -LIJXURY nJRN/UNl'URN Lquna Beocb. Air coadl-Coron• d•I Mar 32JO ~275 MO )'early ·tcue, 2 Bedroom hon'it. N e w J y redecorated. 1..atic yard. \Valk ttJ beacL &' sboppine. Water I.:. gardener po.id. Adult..! preleh'ed. Ca 11 6'73-7055 llefore 10 a.m. or after 5 p.n\. Agent 613-3012 Shoro Clllf Homo ~1th swimming pool Vacant. l BR, plus ianl rm, l % ba., pool rnaint l ind rt1ob1lily rental $.18.5. Uoyd Barnett, #tea!tOr. 673-5420 TwWn /fve., $145. Wat.r le blt·ins. p,rigt, Adlts, rel.I.' Yflll11 t.ea.. 1 6 2 Bdnna. tkmed, carpeted. -~ aa8 pd. 833--00'lO or 54~ no pelt. $135. 1S7l C Wallace ate111 to Shen 6 ~ ~=:a T •o: • 1 BR. POOL. * Avt. ' Cleunview from every Apt. fcnlt Afe., rear le.U to Adlllta only. nu; mo 2 SR u.nturn, cpta, m,:.. from $150 mo up. leau MWK:lpal p&ri&b)a lotl. sso 313 11th Plett. C.M. bltns,, wall paneq, 1 Child .JM.UC9 Pft" month f« II*&-nalc Newport Booe~ 4200 ~is, min to bch. $12:!. Riif_L ES 1 TATE ;;::,:.a1n~a~~ "'--'---'------...;..., -neri strvlee availl.ble f<it' "" VIEW apt. ~ room; 2861 .MENDOZA; 3 Br. 2 - fireplace; nl.oely furndhed, Ba. unturn. uspta\n apt. Rtnt•lt W.anttcf 5990 ~-'"~tiff paid except fltll"lin. $155. inc uUlltles L Yn. le~ $150 Mo. wi".,._.e. '!.-::~::-. • • 540-2493 itr lee Mar. Apt..-A. WANTED: 4 bedroom or 3 DAILY PlLO? Call attftr g p.m. SCS.-23&f BR with den. Rent or take 222 FOREST AVDlUE OCEANt'RONT 3 BR. Frplc, AVOCADO Moya.I; 2 Ir. Br., over payments. G46--0197 LAGUNA BEAQI gar, Avail Feb 7~ June 7. cpts, drps; p:iol, pr. No after 5 PM or before 9 _,. Reas! 673-4041 children or ,pets. Nice area P?il. Desperate! 2 BDRM, ' CrpU°"" blw. nr. •hopping. 64UOl2 REfil>ONSIBLE, pennanont * Modem Offices Carport, P,75. per mo. l BDRM, w/w crpte, drpg, family oL three who •till Sing]~ or swtea. Air ~ NEAR new 3 Ddrm, 2 bath, ~9 all elec. Private patio. no beli~ in miracles wilh to Won~, parking, sec~tarial S I l ~s Refrigerator It stove in-1 BROM -·--• ..... ""' children or petll, SUO. rent $300. house/apt in r.n.• aervice, central location. Dupl•xes For a e ~, cJ .. d·' ••~ mo. y, I y. · on ..,.,,...,; "~ 548-1322 ........... C Robert N ttre Realt .. = .,,.,.,,, yrly. cut & last\ u~ tor $200. 6'13-3210 • a 85 or Huntington Belch 1400 NEW DUPLEX Sal~oory Rlly. 6'B-G900 . paid. Ad>llls. 67J.<702 BAO!EU)R 1·2'1 bdrm ap~. EMPLO 230 E. 11th S ..... t MEA. k"WS HOME !'========~ turn •-unturn. 998 El YEO Lady needs 1 C.osta Me,,a, 00-1485 ...v Gold M·'·'" D LOVELY 2 BR, bit • ms. a " 8R u·•·-•·t b<ach ·-•· t1fu1 4 bed '111 Deluxe t:Uallion u-1175 C d u. 0 Ca !no -... ~•1 ..,. ...... ""'' .... ""• SMALL Olli ...... Lll DC&U room. -n 2 S . 3 BR. U itr; carpets. drapes, mo. oron1 el nMr m ...,,-, ~ to $1l0. C&rport or lance ce: su1...........,, e :~ 1amilY room home' <ln pl/Vex: • ~~ & Bay~% yrly. Newport Beach RI()'. 2 BDRM, pvt patio, crpts, nee. 642-0086 att/S p.m. Clnsurance, 1'.lutual . fund, , __ comer. Built-ins, car-w 1ew o an· · 675-1642 BACHELOR quarttts, So. of drpl! ..,40 725-A West !8th on tr actor, Diatlibutor, ~5'" l>a.los Verdes &tQ~ finuCing; great tenM 1=========' I H 1 g h way. Bay v le w St. 6'-THsiJ .or 548-0084 BUSINESS man translerred. U t j I, air -conditioned, li~vy sbake rpoJ. l'Z07 W. Balboa Blvd. NB Huntington IMch 3400 f Ire place, gar a I e Wanta 3-4 BR by Mar. 1st. furniture included, $70 mo. * ca'.n 644-0266 * washer/dryer, 1 Pentm. 2 BR. &rdn apt. fpJ, cpta, CM arae preferred. 836-4821 19028 Brookhurst St. HD WOOD .. WARD RENTALS FREE RENTAL BOOK 1135 1,.,., 67J.<298 drpo, bltns. patio, pool. e LANDLORDS e 540-2529 · Ad1tll, no pets. $145. S(g..5lfil ]~=====~== •.-~ ES1'ATE HOVMI Fumllhld Drop in and Browse NICE Private 2 room + FREE RENTAL SERVICE NE\VPORT CIVIC CENTER Nf Ada'riiS, J-luntington Bch 1----------13 Bedroom •.. 2 ~th. Duuble ba, sep. ent. $95. lease. ref. o~;;:x ;1.,, BCallr.; af3 ~ 4 Broker 5.14.6982 Offices suitable for Com- • 962-3343 Rtnt1l1 to 'Share 2005 Garage. L<lvely carpet& le 615-0621 after 1 pm, o:uuo.uWl,Y .,........, er 1000-1500 SQ F7. Indust:riaJ mercial, Medical O!ntal. OPEN . SAT/SUN 19552 C1nberr• Lane , ,,;!,~RY !POOL _ffOME ~ <Separat~ .family room. 'top quality carPets. Best buy jn town at $31,SOO.Only $?300 down & assume FtlA loan. ) Paul JOnts Realty 14'7-1266 . Eves. 536-1124 ;.;.;._..;... _______ I drapes. Huge yard for kida. 5 &: "l-'etlr:end11, 531-8282 bldr f<lr FibeJ'glaa B<laU. Air-cond., 1..Tpl!I, ;ievatDr ANO'IlfER straight young Nice clean home. $189 per SMALL Studk> apt. close to 1 BR garden apt, utilities. C.M. <lr NB area. 549-0655 From' $70 man 24-32 looking for 11ame mo. Possible <lption: ocean with pool iitOlmo. Quiet. Mature adults. Rets. =====-====::::,I 541-5032 OR 675-2464 to iihare home in Newport Walker & Lee util pd. Lease. 536-9933 $l.30. 2633 Orange, C.M. Rooms far Rent 5995 AT'fORNEY~5 aep rooms, Shores Alt. 6 p.m. 642-4623 B2A~., /::• utilbe':~·~· * LARGE 2 BR, patio, BACHELOR Apt In 0 ,.___ lobby, 3 secretarial rooms, • Stan. 7682 Edinger · " nr. e .....,.... garage. Quiet. Adults.. m ''""""" bltns. 2 re11troow, at- WORJONG girl to share 842-4455 or 540-5140 675-3153 Mt 5 PM pell. 245l Elden. 646-2768 home, sep entr, newly dee, tractive. Good location C.M. fu U ·~1y p!•· Home furnished. 1 blk from l'Zlh 54• ~si .m.th nlv-c•o ... s4&.am 3 BR. Small tncd yd. U40 81lbo1 4300 NICE 2 Br ttudio apt, near &. Irvine, C.M. 64~~ 1-~~=·~~~~~~- '111 . same. ays, ' yrly. Lease. 3 Child. OK OCC. 984 E. Camino, C.M. LRG. Master BR. iutt~ 1 COMMEkC, -:.JO Sq. 1L WORKING PARTNER Attlvl!. with $15,<0J cub. to LOST: man'• blk. wallet, pa.rtlctplte tn Wp cbain v1c. M·Mart. Market Buket, operation bei!W utabllAhed CM. REW.ARD. ~ lb So. cal. Prior experience REWARD. 14 yr old tl&er not DCCellUY, will train '~ rnak> cat, north encl La&una cere ptrty. StarUne aaluy Beach. 4M-t802 . ~Wk. kt Yr. income1-~--~-~~~ lbalild ex~ e ~ d $30,IXXI. LOST bllllold at Vala Shop- 121-5.l'ZD (10-4 PMI p1na'. Center, C.M. Reward. '43-8745 BEA.UTY SALON Penon•ll 6405 r...tabliabed, 6 Ullit.t. 11rie5t 1---------1 t.aguna --a.ot equip-LICENSED ment. Xlnt OJent:ele, Spirltual rtadhlp, e.dvlt":e .f9t.99'l2 Eves. f9t..8619 oc all ·ma.Ura.. 180 S. El ~~!!!'!!!!" ... ~~!!!!" lcamtno Real. San Oemente. ASSOClA TE needed for pro. C9Ul36. 10 AM " lG PM ductlon I Wea. New plastic PACIFIC Sinl)es: Whtre you proddd. Active or inactive. can meet single adults, ages fu\f secured inv. rt q. 21-60. 545-1534, !>-9 Eve. 10-8 644-2902 knd -~~~~~~~~1.w __ ,_. ______ _ 1'>cal ORANGE JULIU~ e Selective Singles e Sacrifice $69511 • A I • <l What type <lf oompanion ani delicatetsen $14,500. CAIJ.. you seeking? Call AL BLACK 540-1151 Copen 60-9676 Noon lo 8 PM eve s) Htrttaie Real Eatate 1 Am no longer respnnslble GE'ITING MARRIED: WDI Lor any debts other than sell business in C.M. tor my own. Charles Kelly $1000 complete pr i c e , 540-2106 aft 5 pm wkdays, ALCOHOUl!i Anoo;ymous anytime wknds. Pbooe 5U-i21T or write to P .0. &x 1223 Costa Mesa.. I AM no longer respo111111ble for any debts other than my own. Dennis Ferrlngton NEED $-1500 to start pro- duction: 14' Sai l boats. Particulars on r e q u f! s t , Write Daily Pilot Box ~-310 lnvfttment Oppor. 6310 HAWAII Announcements 6410 ATTENTION EX-NAVYMEN Qean out the old eea-bq and help out 1. 1ood call.fii~. Giv~ your <lid unilorm1 (Oft. icen &: Enlist~) to the Sea- Scouts. Need blues, whites, sea-bag:&, etc. £t2..5'Z6$ .. 5 BR/2 Yrs New evenings 833-l.53L Nr. Beach Blv &. Slater CLEAN Bachelor Apts. $14;). 962-5050. Avail now? w / ~Jc p . •• kit prlv 1 INDUS!. -800 aq.1t. \VILL Share my 2 BR 2 842-7823 All util incl $75 up .. !' • nv, ...._, . . e M&-7130 e BA apt. with working iu-1 1 3 7654 BDRMv ... ,II"" .. " •· drp 315 E. Balboa mvd. NE, ARBA. OCC81..;_ W.cp~-2 ~~· !?1°11e&ev ~ ~~;~ (iris, I-==='====== -===-====== of. student. N.B. area. ' .. crp..., 8' BALBOA 673-9945 i.=, .-.... '°l'"• ,. Cll8. eiue. ................ Industrial Rerttll 6090 -- Kailua-Kona, at \Vhite Sands Beach. Approx 6 acres w/access to beach, fuUy improved, all utilities. Prin. cipals only, for irnmed sale, contact Mt-. Seiersen. TIIE BLACKBURN COMPANY, Ownen. 646-0231, ()f aft 5, im.1356 Flamenco Oancf! Classes Group <lr Pvt, Mons. 'Z:JD 384 Legio"i Laguna Beach !l''iict attvantage of !ow 6JA % ~tntn'est while it .lasts, suJ:>. :wt· down, formal dioing, 642 8971 garden llCt"VICe, .walk , to $155 per mo. 540-0336 I 'c"'o"1"'1"'E"G"E,-,o"r"'wo-ridng,.,--,.,..,ir1, Monty to L01n 6320 =±-==--=--:-:I beach. $215 Mo. 962-8046 $150, 2 BR, private beach. live on Bal Js. KiL in N'PT Bch M-1, warchooacs 1-=========~I EMFILOYED woman to 4 BDRM 2 i.. .. new ....,..ts Ideal Balboa Bay locatiori. Newport Batch 5200 tec/nn Incl.·, ~c:c: Mo. 11p·, 4:;o...1,000 sq. ft. tor con-RETIRED COUPLE F 6412 Yetta 494-2661, 49'.7446 (9.1,~/drps. """' """"· "'" ,,,.;.. pleasant · home · ._, . ~ ... • \\'inter. """" "118 1--"--------H to l -• on •-• untrals WI··-. •= M 0 -. th, $185 •• Mo. <lr will lease .,,......, with mea.Ls $125. 675-3613 tract<lrs. Reas. owner (all) as mcmey Cuu ""'' w I ;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;'I -....... ..,., " / tio to i.. .... 6b-71'l8 2 .BR. nr. beaches & shops. ELEGANT apt. vi cw; 9411368 2nd mortgag~. Call I 1 548-6072 d•vs~ . w op n OJUJI• ., fireplace ; split le v e 1 ; COMF. Kitchen prlv. TV, -n-...... 547-''~ • ..., $160 Per mo., yrly. Util. ~ · 3000 SQ f ~ ••• •· ftice ~~.. -LADY \l'/2 children, 12 & 3 BDRM, 2 Ba, SW?·, r..tu· 1arage; washer -"ner. phone, linen $50. Board xe-t ware~,_. .... o !.:======== 16, desire O!Nlian 'roman ~1551! after 3 pm or paid. 546-3811: 615-5810 se-2394 after 6 p.m. ,_ tra if d~d. U 8-8207 + 6000 sq ft pa.ved & fm:ed . Rul Ettlfe Lunt 6340 lO share home in N.B. 542-8305 Ask f<:;it Glep. l BR I~ FR03NTBR t"''"' UPPER Duplex, 2 Br. Jllill; IDEAL For mature man, <ln yRdacd.(71 1855 1 .~~· Ca.nyo(7l<n) 6(2...2812 _.._ "Mlo.I 1 yr. Jeue. Adults, no ·pea. day ahift: O:iata Mesa: dose · 4 .,............ or HOME LOANS ~. I bedrooms-. Cose, to , GIRLS want....:i :1hare be8.ch L•9un1 Nigutl -:r707 U~ included. 6'll-4'Z2-4 See by app't. <lnly. . . in: $12.50 Wk. 548-7969 540-7680 l\fONEY AVAILABLE scb:iols I-Shopp~ iipt. 3 bd;;J_ z ha, llUle l BDRM, fam rm,.2,L ,__ Miss White Tl2-9150 ROOM W1th private bl.th 1n NO\V ~ING-New .M-1 Call for detail!: on today's AllO R •. --111•0 n1 n ..-. L1do lift 4351 GOLD M·'-"~-2 .... 2 8 ... .,-n Bch -·· flll; Industrial .. 1150 1q ft. ra.tea for 1st ~ 2nd TDs. · r~ I.: beaut. $65. 613-Qi95 frplc, patio. g•--.!.sblt-ins. ""llllJUI' DI-.............. ~--, HAFFDAL REALTY __ ,, n .• Cp•· •-• bl••· cl weekly,'-•-.... ,. $155/rno. A.cent Hl-1-485 Scrvinr Orange County for :..-. Crpts &. drp&, $ mo. ~. ..., "'1'"" ..... ; en · ...:>0--• 18 years. flUQ. Warner 842-44iS N-rt IMch 2200 Phone Loog "Beach GA FURNISHED Lido A.pl 2 garage. Adults, no pets. I..se : IMMEDIATE SALE 2-8056 story 3 bdnn 2 bath, fire. ;165. 673-23'10; 646-871i6 Gunt Homes 5991 Lott 6100 Sattler Mortgage en. Inc. 2 hdnn 2 -..,:::::-~-----place, South patio, 2 car 336 E, 17th St. Large 9 tno old Deane-Gar-NEARL'Y new ' R'ENTALS parkt"". $275/mo short term PRIVATE ROOM with TV SACRIFICE 100' x 165' lt-3 642-1171 54;)-0611 , den liome. CUI-d~sac lot. ba, furn. Baytront home for ''6 E11t Bluff 5242 I ""'~ ~ Ix! , .. (J lease. $350. Boot slip avail. Apf'I. Fuml1hed or $350 yearly. Adults. Ask for ambulatory lady or ol North Shore Buch Eves. 673-7865 642-1157 ''~ walls,.. nn. -· for Mn. Grunaky. • l • gentleman. Good food, home Esta~s. Salton Sea, $3500 w/sunken tub), atrium, w/w 536-3'l43 General 4000 Pet• Bar,rttt Rfflty Prestige ocation like atm<lsphere, large yard hill price -10% down. Mort91f91, T.D.'t 6345 l!fi{A"~l:A'R"'ii~'~y UiJ;~l Eves. 541-2442 liUUME 5114% l~ WESTMINSTER MEMORIAL PARK Mortuary & Cemetery Complete fun1r1l1 from $245 Cemetery lots from $150 Includes Endowment CIJ'e Everythins in one be1utiful place mMM Jess C'Olt. No traffic p-oblems. 14801 Beach, Westminster !!31-1725 i 893-2421 crpt&, trptc. dbl rarage. Nr 642-SXQ &. patio. Li~nscd home. Owner 546--'Z843 bel,:b & new~ 96S-3194 Huntington Beach 2400 RENT For lease, dclux~ 1888 sq. ft, Avail now. 548-5225 $35,000 lit ·TD CemeferY. Lott 6411 t SB.. l Ba. c.ondo. 5% % SHARE ha1f of bungalow 3 Rooms Fumiture h ••-•d BR., 21Ai ba. ,_Apt. Frplt .. ~~· :::::======== l~creage 6200 on new Commercial mdg. I-'.....;-'-';;..:.-"=--';.:.;~ I tnt. Cpta_ drp8. bltM. Patio, about $80 a month. 536-<3647 Huntl1:1gton Be1c -rapes, carpi!~, we .,..., Misc. Rentils 59991,::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;. Laculla Beach,, payab!e.$350 2 CEMETERY Jots, Pacific -.,,. °"""'· $2.2t112 b<fn,.. 7 p.m. daily $25 Month U LI IES PAID Pri•. bakonieo; dbl...,..., --------INVESTMENT mo. Incl 7% doe 5,.,._ Hacd i.~oa1':'.'~ Puk, N.B. FULL OPI'lON TO BUY' Tl T <lff kitch. Dishwasher. dbl. OOUBLE Garage L <l r rent money note from subst,a.Q. i --------- Liguna Be1ch 2705 CR.elrigerators Available) ~ ~..\~~.~i ~~g-~hoo~~~~ for St<ltaJ:e, Coll!!ge Park POTENTIAL tial profitable Electronica -•I• Volley• 1410 No deposit o.a.c. 29 "--. area. 641-3683 ~ In firm & assigned with l't'- BY OWNER_ 1 BR. 3 blockt to beach. H.F.R.C. e 536-14 e uvu =========!Approximately 30 Acres course ot oWilll!t, 10% d.i&- 1 b~::"'.'. TRANSFERRED Adults <lnly; $145 m<l. Furniture Rtntalt 1 BLOCK from ClCetn. l I: ONL y $325 MONTH Income Property 6000 North,ern Oranlyg:;, in thble c<lUDt. 833-2935 SERVICE DIRECTORY Bobysilllng 6550 4 BR, 2 BA. cpts, dtps, * 497-1686 * 517 W, l9th, CM. S4S.J481 2 BR aptll., heated pool 835 AMIGOS WAY .;.c;.c.;.;.o..,..."-""'-'"--"'-'1 couny; near a.u usea e 24 HOUR child care, 7 days fp.I. Xlnt cone!. 4V. yr <lld. RENTALS 1568 w. Lncln, Anhm 774-2800 bit-ins, rec room. Int.er<0m Newport Beach "lllne11 Forces Sale" &: ready for developinr. 20% DISCOUNT wk:. SOc hr per child. 2 · music "'"" 5J6..88'14 u... A t 9 22 ... ,., mot·• (7 ""i'· \vith $16,500 Per acre; Lor more $1385 2ncl TD at 120 mo. Incl adult sitters, '"" thel'O at 5"' '1'.t FHA can ~ asmd. Hou-Unfumiahed HOLIDAY p• ...... • "6"' , .. ,.r. P • .... ,..... -·"" W ti J 11 A...-1 f.25.«0. 962-1452 UXE. S--~":""1 n~-1 BEDROOM beach houlle. kitchens), center ol (mt.a: orma on P ea.ec ca 8% all due in 3 yean on all times. All m!'!als in- • -'"'--------General 3000 ~. apt. fii5'Pi~~tii: Avail Feb 1st. Sl'ZS U<>. Corona dtl Mar 5250 Mesa Grossing $51,000. Nice GE'',"k"hThooflm&P"'A"••"'oc.th., Inc. Ocean View lot • clud'ed, fenced backyard, -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;I 6'18-2880 apartment Lor <lwner. Only Beach. Can Owner supervised play. Overni;ht lt:aauna BMch 1705 • Heated pool. Ample parking 9 )"ars old. completely 1818 W. Oiapm9.!1 Ave.. 497-1210 <lr wknd children welcome. ~ -YEARLY RENTALS No ·children-N<l pets L1gun1 Beach 4705 .. -equipped. s220.ooo . only Orange, Calif. 540-1870 NOW AVAILABLE 1965 Pomona, CM 642-5858 !1,.~ $40,000 dO\\'ll. TDs coru;.ider-541-2621, Eves·\\·lmds 538-01'11 Mo W od ••50 .RESPON-c;:m1.Ji: housewife & Lldo 3 BR·············· $390 $130; l·Bdrm., pool 2 BR. spectacular view, ad· 6"• ed. HURRY! Wally McCoy nty int -1ll<lther~p small baby Balboa C.oves 3 BR · ... l450 Nicely furnilhed jacent 1.1ain Beach, util pd, Rily 642-6487, 545-4112 eves. Resort Property 6205 $30,000 IM working mother. My 0 -•a Mesa Townhouses Broker 534-S980 .,,""" til J .. -15 ("3) o TEN ACRES ho d M ~ •"" mo ...... · .... N 30 UNITS 1st 1'0 <ln 60M coi!t, 10% int. me 8.)'11, esa de! ?i1ar. 2 BR · ...... · .......... $225 $150: 2 BR. 4-plex; '11/w, 349-ID40 <lr see Sat at 259 1 le 2 BR. Fum le: Unfum SALE OR EXCHANGE FOR RENT 1''urn Mam<luth 1 Year due dat~ + pre.pay. 546-5543 WINTER· RENTALS built-ins, d1ildft.n O.K. Lower Cliff Dr. Frplcs I Pri / Patios I 6~; times gross. Owner needs }.f <l u n ta in Condominium 540-0643 or 846-0438 EXP="E"RIEN==CE=o=-"' .. ....,.by-.,~t~i.·,I AVAILABLE NOW Broker 534-6980 Pools. Tennis· Contnt'l Bk· ne\v larger tax base. Good llieeps 8. 540-2'130 _ tor working mothers, day From St6S • $300 RENTALS • fsl 9 hole ?utVGrten. condition. No children ex-ANNOUNCEM~NTS <lr night shift, Wilson & • RED CARPO • c_ .. _,._,._ .. _. ___ 4_100_ Aptt. Unfurn11htcf m Sea Lene, CdM 644-2611 cellent income history. Only Mount. & O...rt 6210 and NOTICES Pomona, C.M. 6 4 2-19 40. e INTRODUCCNG e Gen.er1I 5000 {MacArthur nr. Co911t Hwy) $295,000. . 5 A NR Hemet. Xlnt view. · 6"6-l097 EMERALD BAY • OCEAN REALTY Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Walker & Lee Mr. LeVllle 2800' el. Wtr, game. $5500 Feuncl (FrH Adt) 6400 BABYSITI'ING, my home, =..:n ~e~l:~J. <H>. (25~ wolli. ·sc"alboato "n"'1 .. d' .• '0N".'s. fl / t C7' ~ VEN DOME Deluxe Apts Income t;,;;~cnt Dept. $55 dn . 633-mD 8-10 a.m. qt, FOUND: .Yellow k \Vhltr. any hours. 38 yrs old iteady .. u • Va eLJ "1~re young cat: vi c. Baker & &: reliable. Play area, $15 fieent l'!urf & coastal views, 673-3663 3 BR, 2 baths, carpeta, dra~ MONEY MAKER R. E. Wanted 6240 Harbor, Costa Mesa. Call week, $18 w Im ea l 1. 4 bednns, formal dtning rm, Oran~ County'• Bea\lllfUl es, frplc, blt·in kitchen. pr, --aft 6 645-1634 , party nu w/wet bar, seclud-LUXURIOUS 3 Br. 2 Ba, NE\\' Adult livin&: complex U.-ll-IACULATE APTS! lease $2'15 monthly, Immed/ EASTSIDE C.1'-1. 8 uniU 1 WANTED to Buy, Home <lf at r:A:::c~~lG p.m. & wkerxb.1.,-==;,,--..,,.,,,.--;---_, & A:....~ •-'A IMMED. OCCUPANCY .....,..,pancy. BR ea. Excellent rentals. le••t 2200 ., tt. 4 BR. , •• ~ *LOVING care f()r pre-""' spa.....,.... rear g .... -u.,n home, tam -. htd pool. CUlt<lm furn or unfurn. AMlLY ~· ~ hool G i lb lov ~"500 ...... ADULT It F Income •""11. mo •.-.a 500 Cl BOYS bike, s.·-Model, ac er. amee a to 1' e • '¥-ely trees • .,.._ · Childrn's play a r it a. Singles -1 Bdrm. 2 Bcinna SECTIONS AVAILABLE CORBIN-MARTIN -• ..,..., guna to San em!!nte area. ...... "'&!ks fun. Malw'e Moth~ I ·: '·, Gardener &. pool service. • C<lntempora.ry Cultom Ciote to Shopping, Pirk REALTORS 675-1662 GrGham Rlty SCailubst:~~'Z~own, princ<loly. ~~;~~icHB Y~~-w;93~ Nunery Sch Exp. $6. day ~E COVE· An architec. 962-4915 Design • Spacious 3 Br'i, 2 Ba 3036 E. Coast Hwy., CdM N~ar Post Ole., NB 64&-2414 • Pl .d tlfy Mesa Verde. 546-9142 1*Jtaj triumph! Dram,atic $135; 2 BR., l~i b a . e LU."<uriOWI Gardens e 2 Bedrooms '!"!~!!!!!!!""'~!".' ... ""'l"'!!!!J!!!!!!!J!!!~~~~""'!"""IWANTED To Buy. 3 ease I en ~ BABYSITIING, My home: contemporary home with townhou!lt". w/w: redee., eBubbling1prircA:brook •Swim Pool, PuVgreen 2 BR. new deCCJraled, crpls, R'ENTING' BR./Den. E-tildc ?·M· FOUND 1125/69 Grey playmate f()I' my 3 yr. <lid ..daJ;sic navor. Extra high ch ildren OK. • 42' Pool & thcra~ bath • Frpl, lndlv/lndry fac'ls drps, utils pd, gar. Immed • Hrd\\'d firs, trplc, ..? car female Persian, San Diego girl. \Vkd'""'', Ea.st CM ~cllili.ngs throughout, radiant Broker 534~980 •Activity room/billiards 1845 Anaheim Ave. occupancy. Mr. Forney, gar. Principals 0 n 1 y. .f'nl'Y near Fairview ott-S43-283& ..,,~ ·!Jfiat even in patio, marble e Sauna Bath Realtor. 540-3862 Save on re.nt & build equii)' 646-7624 rnmp. ~1369 ====~~~--n;.:... .. en+-•, dirung· rm f<lr 12, e Puo+1.-~en COSTA ?i-tESA 642•2824 in thia TLC trlplex. Excel-I---------BABYSITl'ER-~liab\e, <x· ~~ "3 ..... 1& •· -2 BR. rent or least-. Newly FOUNO: s!'!t of keya. vie. leak cabinets in kilch'en, Cotti Mn. 3100 e Outsid!'! Gas BBQ1 FOR SALE OR U::ASE red.cc. $l'ZS Mo. incl. util. lent rental attL By appnint· BUSINESS and Meyer &: Wil!On, Costa perlenced. Weekdays. Age la.rp tiunily rm w/FP, 3 •Encl. garages le storage Ch1nn'1I RHI Adults. Refs. 646-4095 ment only. FINANCIAL Mesa. Call k identify. 6 months to , 4 yean. ~. 3 baths, 3 car car-FINE 3 BR. 2 BA Mm~ CENTER ot town ~ between MARTIN R.E. S48-6'.>32 6f.2-6408 642-4294 • Jfi!t. beautiful views of in be11t area; near Westclitf Bay 4 Ford/Harbor & New. PenthouH Apt1. BRAND new 3 br. 2 ba..: 16,12010 Bus. Opportunities ~3~1 ;;:==~c------:- \lftch &::: surf • S1S5.00l. Plaza & sch!&. Lrg fam pnrt $55f per mo. to reliable par-cpts, drpg, bltns. beain ceil. FOUND: Boxer pup • "ic. TURNER ASSOCIATES rm \\'/frplc. Fncd yrd, 2 2<W Parsons. Qd' 64U670 ties on I y. Chet Salisbury Yrly. $235 Mo. 673-6904 NET RETURN FOR SALE BY O\VNER Pallu.dc.s & Tustin ttr. . 682 N Coat 81 t car """ Lease $220 mo od .. ••c: Realtor. 6~ Fully oceupied 4 plexes ln Small machine shop; lllneu Orange Co. Airport. ,., .... o. s vc. •-· ' LARGE room a th ...,... •--h 5400 ~7922 t.quna Beach (TI4) 494-U77 'vater pd. 833--0228 smaller room at $60 POOL $115: 1 BR., w/w, drapes, Huntington -c center <lf HuntllJKfon Beach. forces sale. I..ngan screw • 2 BR. H ..,. -'"'• '...,. paid ••• •~1 -"'~cor. Child O.K. 6'11 % linancini, far further cu!ting lathe \\'/heavy 6 ft. DACHSHUND Vic •· Handyman Snacials ouse ~ ...... utilities • ~ •=n:: ,... pool. Maintenance included. ---~~~~--, Broker SUS98D EXCLUSIVE details, call Bill Goodall. 'vood bench. .~ w i I c h, Goldcn\\·est HB. Call after --Income Unih l..l'g fncd yrd. Crpts, drps, u.a:TOIAM 9 .-, -962-7016, agent. counter-shaft &: reversible 6 pm. to Identity 84'Z...Q90 CHILD care, my homl'. Ex- perienced. Lunches furnish- ~. Nr. Newport Hts. FJ • School. M8-rol6 e BABYsrmNG in your ho~ C.M. by the Wttk. y 00 furnish the trans. W.1407 ~ on Oct-Wlde ot Hwy, stove. relr'ig & trPezer. $200 ~ __,., Coste Mull 5100 ON-THE•BEACH CLOSE in corner, 'Z8x132' Ci· motor. loaded w/extras FOUND: Girls bicycle, vie. •ll!lll' )'di from Beach. 4 Ige mo. 642-4422 15$ R.chtlhr C.M. 3 llod A 1 ty of Oran-. 4 rental unit•. Incl. prcicsion ct-lucks I: BABYSnTING my home ,.L unib:, needs paint &: 2 & room P 1• •-clr;1w-in collets. Dun1<lre P.lesa Del Mar atta. Call ~ genera.I clellllup. PO-3 BR. l Ba.: comp. redccor. 646 4137 Excellent, park • like sur-Luxury Uvi.n; to pleue the flTi.50 per mo. inc. $2'1,500. J>recision sensitive d r 111 It identify. 56-4471 dto"",·.· NXlcotWhun,.,_ ?ro-~tsCM.l% G F-~ -··yd M ~ t dul" -•· t di _ _._,.,.,,,..... ...._ cash. Oh yes! It's C 2·zotlt'!d. ,,. ... ,..,., INC 0 ME EX· arage. '"-"'· .,..... • ' roundingt or • •"'4,.,... U\<lS 8',;•·a.u•u-u.'4· "v~ p r<' s s, 2 5 , O O O R p P.f. PARAKEET 10und vie. Car-5G--O!!'Z3 Cli;EDING $10,000 ANNUAi,, & Jut mo's. rent, cleanup ing peace A quieL available at ~\~· O\\'llf'rs As::ent. Cr11ftsman drill press, ona del Mar. Wednesday, I'==~---~-- ' -LY. Price $69,950. .deposit. nso Mo. 2065 Discrimiaa.tlve TcnllDlJI "'e Hunlillfll"n l'f'rtrsible ,~HP m()t<lr, foot Call & Identify. 548-0433 ~~=iY::itd:nme.ll~B.ic MJSSION REALTY .49'!-0731 Marion \\'ay. 538-530t eves SEA LARK 1, 2 & 3 BDRM. APT8. \II 1111\• \VA/'ll'TED tD Buy : Duplex lo iswitch. 8' \\'Ork benct"r, ~ ta.bb"t ' .-885 So. Coast. ~n.a NEAT t BR t. den. l" -y POOL.. NO OilLDREN 8 plex.. Laguna lo San ae-drills, ''." to No. 80. Other -m. 1 ' gry Days/eve 962~452 MOTEL \v · o il p; "' ean .: • Vic, 600 blk Arcbitected Gem. BA. Walle to all shoppina. . MARTINIQUE p JffC ~ me:nte art•. ntc • Y • cxlras. Grinder bench. 2 I. J(I Ann. C.M. 642-ss.6 BABYSITIING, my home . J.e\'ela. Dramatic 16' $150 mo. 436 Berna.rd. WEEKL y RATES GARDEN Am. IC lot Box At-800. dbl. "nd grinders, drill CALICO Kitten w/wht hoots. 81.lboa Island. 1 or 2 chldrn I' 2 Br 2 Ba Big &73-6882 sharpener, <llher extra:;. 2 pref. Mon-Fri. 673-8920 ..... eouiline vi cw. 2 BR. pr patio C1"Pts. drpi;. 2301 Newport llYcl., CM 18.th & Sant.a Ana, C.M. 111 Ocean AVP;., lt.IJ I i R t 6060 }.lachinista 1ool. chests. Ml\', Red lcatMr collar w/belL BABYSlTrING m.y home. ;~. Owiier. '494-9821 sto~. rdri. Tn)plcal BCt: • 646.7445 • 0.11 Mrs. llendll'IOa Mj..»f2 (TI4) 536-148'1 UI ntu enta Sc11.lc'>. calipers, h.o I e Vic Sol vt~tn. H.B .. S4U89'.I week days, have-3 )T old iia:e::= ting. Jo ... <ll' •dults. l htk. to $25 Wk. Up 1m Santa A.na, Apt US. C.M. CORONA dcJ 1\tar Beauty 1su~s. d('p1h & au g c". SILVER C'barm bracelet. Vic daua-htu. C.M. am. 549-21¥ .L,aeuna Niguel 1707 ahnps. S160 mo. 56-4'Z80 • Studio &. Bach apts. VACANT immed possessi<ln Shop in busy 1 <l c a t i 0 n. ttam<'-1'11, end mills. etc. 1pt complex. Harbor Blvd. DEPENDABLE day <: are. n-·-" 2 BR 1 baths. w I w Fonner beauty shop moved Parts filin11; cabinets, 1nostly Call Ir. M:k!ntify. 540-6109 Pref. -1 .. O!i.tJXE 3 Br. 2 Ba.: pro.-3 5BAR lH ~ht. 20202 111 ~5 ,·· C'W e Ind Utils a: Phont aetv. NEW GARDEN APTS, carpcUrc. draperies. built· to larger quart , r s. new, Elt'r-. mtrs., gears, • .. ~ care ot 2"" yrs. ' 1iea lndi;qxl • dtcorated: · • e..,; .1. m 0 ' • Maid Servi~ • TV avail. 1 & 2 BR. l>ltodem ldtchlm w/ Ina It refrig. S140fmo. RcMOnablc rent. ca 11 bearings. scrc1\'l>i &adge!)<, Lost 6401 Lie. ftrbr/ Baku. 546-JS39 a:dud Mooatch Bay R.eaJtor MI l--2222 Avail. • New Ckfe & Bar rangt' &-ovc:n. dllhwaaher, TRADEWINDS Rt.TY. trutche!ln. 714: 8JS.6lll mrtal c;IC1Cks. cuttina: oil,' --------'-.C..: otlLD acre in my home, ~ w ; February 5 2376 Ne•<port Blvd. w..si.>!i cir. 714 496-5476 e~s. BOXER. brown f e n1 •I tl, experie:nccd. New po ri I ~filWIM GCefl;n view: 1.ulo. I~==~=..,,.._,== i ~-~,o-----= t'tc. Enclo!Nd gar. 0Jyrnple MU:iOtl 842-5012 ;,,~ S:-.lALL Reasonably priCl"d " bi k'·-·~ pl U ' ~ tofttnrr I tlec. pr. 3 BDRM e:utaide, quiet loca· CHATEAU LI POINTE sizt' pool. 8-B-Que & lallndry Wint Privacy? Nowl Ston! Buildi.,,,.,. in busy v.• tt mar u._, .. n.o;u as c HeJahte AftL M2-830ll l ..... 1 )IT' new tw500 tlon, $140. month. Oilldren lac. ~ec £ v.·at~r pd. From .... v FRIGIDAIRE Oe:a colJar. Twnor on hind • t " ~ Ownu' (l) 1 =o==··=· "°= .. ="='=64>->===1=4l==:ILove.J.y furn. 2 BR apts. OU· Sl.35 mo up. Adults only. ON'E BR'it NEAR OCEAN Corona del ~lar location. lej;, aom<>tlmes 11 mp a. Irick, Muenry, llfc. 1. &tre-et parkina, carporta. Htd 211 \Yil~n. c .M, &U-a40l SI~ rnn (Sl47 Furn) 1araic Call Hutchens, 714: 838-&jll JET ACTION Re\\'ard. ~S 6560 Mesa Verde 3110 pool. AdujU, no pc"-i1so. 2CCl • 14th. 536-1319 673-1784 SHOPS lkRuUful ttnelved Laundry, YELLOW male urer cat ' 1941 POMONA. AVE C.M 2 BEDROOM. eaaWde, bull! N•. "e·-~,, 28 \Vllshel"I. U dry~n:, J) lb. Btnl.l> Rtmodd 'D-'-t --M;t 1730 . ·· · lr kitchen. new w/w carpet, 2 I J BR, 2 hlth.r.. ptlv. • 1~ .. ...,. • ,., with turquoile: collar kilt • • "'""l'"Ul $US/tno. ~•la' pa111. Nice 2 BR. New furn, cpts. dl'Pf. drapes, prtvate pat\o. c1oaed patio: beatt>d pool. Rib'. fi73.0S60 washer. $18,000 yr, '""'* vie. 22nd Ii: Elden, Of Bride, block, con c r• t •' N '.liAILY. 12 to 3 3 BR. Al•aiJ Feb. U.t. 8Nm ~Uina. blt-tna, pool. Kii.rag,.. Nr.ar mtjor ~ 962-899-t BLDG. 50 x 100, in heart Inc. Flnd out bow easy it is 642-7001 crptJtty, m job too Jmall I ~-.2.2"'0., pool. 642.-1922 Adult•. $155. 2212 M1ple SL pin11; adults only, No pctJI, 2 Oft 2 baths, built-lnll, w/w <lf downtown Costa ~,eSL to own: BLK male pupJIY flhort 1 •'=Llc=Cb=nfr=·=~===== Ll!k"la,._,·Z251 MIJn. Newport lelch 2200 642Alm; 541J.6566 $140 tx"r nlOllth. Bkr. drps. frtahly pain1ed StA-3401 543-mO EvtA. Coin-0-Matic hair\, no ro. Vk'. 111:i,,1·C..-,.nterini 6590 ....... °" ... ..,. -ATin. l BR •pt.. 2 ha., 642-9% SIJS/n'IO. Mir. 5.1&-037& Equipment. Inc-. \V. Balboa Blvd NB. ms. •M·~---=-----1 INiiiiAi. ~ Ja&. View. 3 BR. l Mi bath eoodomlhlurn w/w carp., drp&., altr. yd. LUXUIUOUS 2 Bl\., JI~ bll., 2 BR. Duplex. Prv yard. Offtc-e Rant•I 60,0 2334\.4 \V. V~lenci~i'IS3 tr.h53G> A.1 I,;~. SIP» dni\: Bluff• Plazn., ~mo. AVllU MS-34&1: M!).(1154; &l(t..(;922 all t':IC"t" .. cpts, dl1\~, t,;.F.. patio, crpt1'. d~. Pool. ---------1Fullcrton 1 4: SILVER Ota.rm Bractht. Carpentry, any s.ire Jobi ~, .. t .. *1 .. flO'W. &H-Ull. E'-e, 644--0505 1 BR. htd JIC)l'll, no ptls or kl!., paUo, pl,._. tret's; hll:l. Sll;i. 342-1~ COOD Cd~1 lor., office • WA~"TED: Oft.sale liquor Vie H.8 . or C.N. Gtt11t Call Gordon 8f'717U f: Dlflr Piiot waMI. .!tr'· chlldrtn, l¥1!. UtJI pd. 1801 il.r., nr. bua. $140 .\!Ju.It~. 1'1f!ch. apl • fum. $96. mo. lteense kJI' Orange County ~ntlmcnt.al \'111, ''~'ard! OAn.Y PILOT WANT ADS 1 l[;Zi I0"7I Id Jt.F.iUl,TS di\RGE )'001' want •d now. Whittier st. 64&-622'2 120 1-:. 11'.lth, c.9 \\'J\ite J::lt('l'lants! lea$<'. rel. 67S-062l a.ft l Clt.U: 642-81~ I S47-J!i13 I RR.ING ™TS! j . I I / Frldot, J""""' 31, 19M llAU.Y ,llOT • ----------------------,~ri-·*:--~*~-~!'--~-~~~S:!l!llV~l!£C~l-~D~lll~li~CT~O~ll!.YI .IOIS & EM,LOY-•nl JOM~ a i.Mt'LOYMUO JOU a llMP&.0 • T 'It" 'It" ~ " i..nctx.plnt 6110 Kolp W•ntld, Mon 7200 Kolp W..,tM, Mon 7200 "':.::'9" ' · • I Deily Pilol Cleuified .CLASSIFIED INDEX AlfnrtlMn may plaot tMlr •ft~ teltpl'IOM. Pho11n Are Open 8:00 a.m.; 5:30 p.m. 9 to Noon S•turd.y--Closed sUnd•y DIAL DIRECT 642-56 78 SPRINKLERS . I -.:==:..--..:7;::::; 'Sod;'~•*-* BROIUR COOK '·.;,,,.., ~ VINYL wall covertn1 llDldallat -1c1t. ... btlbr. Ka&uial • labor. Eat UT-1"'9 -· -e lNT -EXT, J.NY SIZE EXPEIUl:NCE PREl'EIU\ED F\JU. ma: EVEN!l<GS APPi. Y TN PERSON TO MGR. I TO 5 P.M. Newport Beoch H.u full tim~ openinJ , .. *BUFFERS* ---Jll!'ncl 1r1 au p11ue1 pre-. ITT JAISCf KEYPUNCH Ol'lllATOlt ·-l ~ } IBM Alp"' • numcrt. I cal. Vmty and aom• m. lated cl«rlcal duUN. WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540-1220 ~._...:, Wont? Whad~1 Ootr JOO. Xlnl wwti. -tree •-• . eot. JIM. -~O SP&<;IAL C~SIFICATI N FOR PAPER HANGING REU8BI E. W STERllWJIEEUI lttred. ()mqletaHv• "'" ea. outatandlnr bmC!tita ---· Goed ••rte•"' ~ ! condttloM and -1111 •\ I EQUAL OPPORTUNIT1( , Huntington Buch 540.1220 Laguna INCh 4'4-9466 NAT\IRAL llORN SWAPPERS PAINTING APPLY 1N Pl!:RSON Spoc:lal Roi. ._ • CLAallFIED COUNTERI .,.. '""Uid •• followtt 5 Ll!':'e;: 5.J': ~~UD~~k· VET'S Bonded pat ft t l 111. 151.!~,.:' :.~ct;:t•r ,,11 W ..... - ...... -.. - ..._.. JJI w.. ......... c.... ..... Jot 1-WIYI ...., ...... lo frtM. '-W'Mt l'MI -Ill "' trt•. F'ree est. lie. u.. Small Mon • Frt la am to 5 pm EMPIDYER • J. C. PBllY CO. -~YOUR .....,. tM/6' ~.. ..._, ... fll Mffrtllll\fl. joha wtlcomt:, fG..om ffftti Strwt. "'""....,__....._ m,.,. .&..-. ~ a..L 1:11..a..a.-as""'· 1..r., s.a. s.-NOTHtNo F01t sALe -T111Aot:s oNLvt * TOP EARNINGS * I PHONE 642·5671 Paper -'5 _, 24 Fuhlon loland .,.....,..,....""'"' «!m~)W 1415 OALE WAY • ' Coata Meq, C.W:. 1282111 ' 545-1251 M•ll..Ui..-: .. x 1m ".-pert a..Ofl. cant. To Plaee Your Trader's P1radlM Ad experience. Call Fred! •-•~-* 50-4903 * ~ ... ' HOun--Reguletion1-Deedlin~1 HAVE 6+ '""''"' caroo. TOWNHOUSE'"'· 211 ba. p AlNTING, mttr.-extmor Representative 1e1 Thtr, Covina. at $Lfl(l 3'Q. BeauL 1.ppt'd. Prtv. pat» State He •• bonded. Free OP9ftlnt for •nrtQive ...... ............... -1· ERRORS: Adv1rtfMl9 Ibo••~ Clfieotr: tbllr .-fall)' elld Nport lmm1C11lat1l1 •r,._ ft., ell!~ zoned fol' 1'8 apts. pool, cioee 1o 111¥. Val ..ttmat~ 60-C3I men with eJCC91 .. nt fu. 01' mltcl&MlfiotUMI. THI DAILY ,,LOT ......... llabilltJ ,., .,,.,.. .,,,,. t• Want incame prop.;Broker, $32,()(1), low dn. or T.0 •• 1.0:========= lture & Rwanc:ement JANITOR Rll's-LYll~s tn• extent of ,ublkhlnil U.. •dWrt,_t ootTtetlJ en• time. Mr. Irwin, 6t6-96Cl . Car or ! Owntr-MM654 Plastering, R•ir 6180 ponlbllltles. C\EADLINEFORCDPYANOKILLl;1:3CJP.M.tMda}'Hfonipubllcatlon,txUptfer~:rwan1:1.!:Us;~ Palm Desert Cimd. tum.. PAT'S Plut.uinc. All EXPERIENCED Alcles -~ :] Sunltte Coloni1I · ·: Wttk•nd Edition and Monday Mdlon1 wtlen clOlh'I ti,,... le 1 :30 l',M. Frtday. ~.:. 1te':lli0c ~. gd. beJO:ru,t .~ ~~ly~ ~~Free estlmate. ca1J Must le u-.._ ~... .,,.. _,........., Neat It wllllna; to work YOU MUST HAVE KILL NUMBER I When kllllng an •d he•-. of 41ulck ,..ulu, area, priced at )and val good tot OC' Jobi in ~1:::::::;:=;=======·1 For inttrVlew. ~nt Exceltent Employ• Banollh be aure to make a NOord of the kill number ;lven you by }'O\lr ad Uker • Spendable. 675-5901 e\ti. ILI"ea. Details call &-2M9 Plumblnt 6890 Call Mr. Pl.yne verification of y.,ur Olll. Have bear wbeel. alignment 539-1106 ' APPLY Personnel Office Thin! Floor , I ConY1lescent HosiL ~ Oear R-2 Dar. Poi n t PLUMBING :U ~ Every effort It mil de tt klll er correct • new ad that ha• been order.ct, but W9 can-machine, Uke new. Cost View lot. Trade tor Income ..... Rl"Y. or 646-7300 not au11rante• to do eo untU th• ad haa appeared In th• p11per. $4200. Will trade Jor dn property. Corona dd Mu-Work auar. Lie., lnBur.; Naw Ownership & Mo.; ~ •-nt. Tap ll•rtlnt l OIME-A-LINE Ad• •r• etrlctly c;a1h In advance by mall or at any on• •four oft'le•., pymt on income property Newport Beach-Costa Mesa. re.model, repair, rooter MV., NO phone orctera. or ? 549-2044 Corbin-Martin fiT.>-1662 ~53l'-=-~'IS66===~=~~-LINE MECHANIC The Broadwiy Pay. All Shiite. • ' ,: Th• DAILV PILOT reeervee the right ta cla•lfy, •dlt, centor er nifu• •ny adv•r-Trade 17 ft Performer out-PLUMBING REPAIR tl1em•nt. and to ohaiige tt1 rate• and regulatlone without ,rlar notic1t. board, (fiberglass) for tun Ocean view, :.i acres, Im-No job too small NEWPORT BEACH 47 c..,rts of Fashion FASlllON ISLAND Newport BNch An Equal Opportunity 13f.0440 11 HOUSES FOR SALE •aNallAL I• COITA M•SA 1111 MaiA OIL MA• 1119 MlliA YlllDI 111f COLLaCll l'AltK 1111 Nf:Wl'G•T aaM:M Ult NIWl'OaT NIUellTS 1111 IALIOA COVIS 12U lllW'l'OaT INOllll Ult IAYCRUT 1m 1AY11to111s nu oovat lllOIU ID1 waSTCLll'I' lut MARIOR N .. NLANOS IUf UNrtatSITY PA•• 1nl IRYlNI! IDll IAC:I( t•Y IM l!AITILUl'I' IXI lltVIM• TlaltACI' 1149 CORONA oaL MAit 1Hf •ALaOA l'aNIMIU L• "" llACON aAY 1:115 l•Y ISLANOI Int LIOO ISLll UJI SALaOA ISLANO UU HUNTINGTON llACll UM HUNTINGTON H_..11101 , ... S l'OUNTAIN YALLIY 1111 l•,1.L •IACM 14H SUNll!T •UCH IUS CIAallaN ClltOYI. 1411 LOtila aaACN IMI U.K•wooo UH o•ANlll COUNTY '* OUT OP COUNTY 1611 OUT OP STATa ... 1TANTOlt 1611 Wl.STMtNn•11 !alt MIDWAY CITY 111, U.NTA ANA 16211 SANTA ANA HGlS lilt OltANOI: l'U ruSTIN 11-4• NOltlM TUSTl"I IUS 11.NAHarM l'M llLValtAOO CANYOI'< W.SS LAOUNA HILLS 11M U.eUNA 11.•cH IHIJ LAGUNA HIOUEL 11tJ SAN CLl!MINTa 1111 SM JUAll Ul'ISTaANO Int CAP'IS'TllANO llACN 17U DANA "°"" 11.)t tAll:Ull,ll 11 .. OCIANSllll UM SAM 01aoo 1m a1v111s10• COUNTY ·-Nousas TO •• MOYID '"' CONDOMINIUM IHI DUl'l.llXfS rroa SALi lfJS 1,l"AltTAl•HTI POa IALa H• RENTALS Houses Furnished GllNllt•L llENTALS TO SHAiia COSTA MESA MESA lll!L M•it MESA YllabE COLLEGa l'AltlC NaWl'OltT llACN NIWl'OltT NOTS.. NEWl'OltT SHOalS SAYIMOltl'S DOYEa SMOllES WISTtL l,1' UNIYllltSITY l'Altl( ltlVllill: IACIC llAY I.UT ILUl'I' lltVIN• TlltltA CI CORONA OeL MAii IALIOA IAY ISLANDS LIDO !ILi! aAL&OA ISUll'O HUNTINGTON allACH l'OUNTAIN YALLl'I' SIAL aaACH LONCJ llACH OllANGa COUNTY SAMTA ANA walTMIMtT•1t MIDWAY CITY IANTA ANA Ml!IGHn COASTAL LAGUNA llACN LAOllMA NIOUIL SAN CLaMIHTI S,111' JUAH CAl'ISTltANO CA,ISTltANO alACH DANA POINT ltlYlltSIOa COUNT\" VACATION ltt:NTALS CONOOMINIUM OU,Ll:Xl!S l'UltN. RENTALS -, ... "" "" llll lllf "" "" "" '"' m• "" "" "" ,,. "" "" "" , .. "" '"' '"' , .. 141• "" "" , .. 1611 HU HH •• "" ,,. "'' 1111 1JH ,,. "" , .. -"" ... HouSH Unfurnished lllNl'ltAL COSTA MnA MaSA Dl!L MAa MIU V••llll COLL&Oa l'AaK N•WP'O•T aaACH lll!Wl"OIT NGTS. NIWl'OltT SMOltal IAYM1oa1s OOYl!I IHO•as WISTCLIP' UNIYllSITY 'AltK !.ltYINa •ACK •AT aUT •LUl'I' lltYllll TlllllACf: COAONA Ol!L MAii 1.\LIOA IAY ISLAllOS LIDO ISLa IALaOA ISUlltD !tEWl"OaT Wl!ST ;llNTINOTO!t laACl't HUNTINGTON HAaaoua ~llHT•O<I V.l.lllY tl!AL alACM OAltOIN aaOY• LONG llACN 01t,1•GI COUNTT IA .. TA ANA wnTMINSTllt lllllOWAY CITT U.flllTA ANA HllOlll l COMfAL U.IUNA eUCN LA.UNA fllllOUal SAN CL•MalllTI! CAPll,._...,NO CA'tlTlt.U.O 11.t.rM OAN• l"OlllfT CONDOMINIUM OUl'L.alCal UNPUllll. RENTALS Apts. Fumithad taNIUL COITA MnA ""°" n•o• -.... ... 111• 11U "" ... "" "" "" •• "" "" ... •• •• ... -"" "" ... •• .... ... . ,, •• •• "" -•• ... ... ... .. ... "" ... ... "" •• •• "" --•• NliWl'O&T •UCM NaWl"OaT N• .. MTI NaWl'OaT INn11•1 WllTCLl,JJ UNIYatllTY JJAlll IACK U.T 1 proved. M-1 zone, incl, •P-• 6CZ-3l2a e ~ oll.t.l'TIN• 1a1:vtca Ml1 or part payment on carpe • prox. $20,000 nW'Sl!ry tnv. I========== a11 IUC'f1tl(AL "* drapes, landscaping, fenc- tm aou11'MaMT 1aMTALt .,..KM ing or ! ! 642-4980 aft 7 pm Value $65,000; for local ill-lllemodel., Repair, 6940 EXPERIENCED e COMMEllCIAL TELLER ' • •:· .l ._ f'aMCIN• come. ~lm, ~1898 eve.j:O::.::.:::.:;;:...:c:.;::.:;;;.:....;;;:..;,;; I GM experle~ nettl8&1')'. :: ==• •••Ai1ti, iric.. !r. '58 Mtrt:ury Wagon . IF You need ft1'l0lieltnc, Apply: . ' ~ llUT •LUl'I' COllONA OIL MAI ...... 08 ,UaNITU•• aa1Toa1N1 Clean, for yard v.·ork , HAVE: 1..'>ft Ac. clear m palntinc or 1 O&in. Call ALLEN .. .. •••1lllSNIN• UH hide.a-bed, bonda or ! Calif. $300 per Ac. WANT: Dick. 643-17"- Employer • UNITED CALIFOltNI.\ •: IAY ISLANOI .. tAAD•N1"• ~ ,. _ _. u· Harbor area or pa Im Oldamoblle--Cadlllac .. • ....... L •••YICU -........... transporta on. FULL TIME BANK ; LIDO UU U.UOA llUoflllO NUllTINOTOll auc .. l'OUJfTAlll Y~Y I~ auc:M ......... ou.NH CDUfllln' OARO•M ellO'n WSITMlfllll'Tall ._ euotN• 01sc11i1a u. Call eves-494-0386 Springs -home or income. Roofing 6950 1150 So. O>ut HJahway ..... •LAii "" Matchem Realty 646-4837 Lquna Beach * 04-lDM COOK ' .: -.• H••• TNUMa 6Ht 2 San Oemente lots zoned Aak tor Mike Sa. -. ..._ .UM IMOf' '"• f J 'ta Trad for N TRADE my exec. home in ROOFING REPAIR, un .. ,,. .. ..__ .. , .... 1-• .. ,, .,. or uru -e ew. ,_ .. 1Do __ ,., oL5Z McArthur Blvd. N""°" llftcb 540-4424 • • M,.UJ.M -,111 port/Costa Mesa, Income/ smog ftte Yucaipa for aim· no _., MU&Y. • MW19CLUMHll ,,. Commercial. $24,500 equity. ilar in beac'1 area. Value ••2362* I • . . 4'tf ltfft•IOll HCOllATIN• I'm W ~mo 150 nnn ...,, •""" nnn Trad "AREER .. ,, ._. TAX 6,.1 Properties est vt.............., ,uuu; ~., .w,uuu. e S.wi .~. "' •• , .,,. "' or dn. (1) 797-9432 "I -' ; Equal opportunity emplo)w • 1 llDWAY crrr U.ltTA ANA IAllfTA ANA MllGI'' TUITIN =~ :::;.C:-1 ' 1 " •c.. USI FOUR UNITS -Anaheim -~~;:,;;;,~;;:,;.;::;,__,,.J'':'::"-"--::--::-7',;;.;; OPPORTUNITY! ..-'"''-LATIN• •7U 3 bedroo1ns 2 baths -DONT JU.,, WIS}! for e Dreurnakina·A.1tu&6ons Coco's #10 ! ~M-AN=A-G~E~R~TRAIN==~EE=-I\ COAITM. LACIUMA IE&C" LAGUNA llteUeL 5A" CLl:il'ENTI. DAMA POlltf Tall'L•X. 9'<. CONOOMINIUM :;: ::~~~;:-.._\1Nll. OW.CNvt :: TRADE for Costa Mesa or I something to tumish your Speclal on Hems J~n t~a~ h~~I .,. JAHtTa-IAL '"' 8 each Units or hou~ home .... find great buys * 6f6.6446 * pro ess M· utu ••es 2131 , 1 l"f N 8 1m 1aw1LaY ••,A•ll. ''" .... 516,000 t'<!Uity. Ownr 644--0547 In todays CJauitied Ads. Alter•tiont--642-5145 No experi~ neeeitsary-.. es c" ' · ' 1111 u.NDSCAl'ING .aM We train • full or part time Auto Mechanic Unusual opportunity to be ; in on the beginnina: of new division of old establ~ .1 1 Co. 11 :you ,.,.,,, """"" with 1aqe numben c:il llt'Omen, ~ Ml! II~ 1 A ambll:iou.I; call ga.:,.. j !: ~~~';'::4 ••ucic ::: * * * * * * Neat. accurate, 20 yrs. exp. Mutual Fund AdvllOrt, Busy Toyota shop in HunL tt• MOYtN• a •ToR.AGf .... Inc. Beach needs Import line RENTALS Apts. Unf" OINIUL COSTA M•IA MaSA Yl!to• HAWl'Olt'T a•.tcN NllWPOaf Nltl01f'T$ Nl!W'l'OltT SMOllES W•STCLI,, UlUValt5lTY PAii:& IACK aAY •MT ILU,..,. COltottA DaL MA• IALIOA ' •AY ISL.AMOS LIDO ISL• NUNTINGTOft &IU/ ~ l'CKINTAIM VALL.ST UL•OA ISLAllO SIAL lllACN LONG alACM OIU.NG• COUNTY aAUSM •aOVS Wnt'MINITI• MIDWAY CITY SMTA •NA SAltTA &MA N~IGHlS TUSTIN COASTAL LAOUNA al'ACM LAGUNA NIOUliL l.IM CLaMINTI' SAN JUAN CAl'ISTl•No DANA "°INT REAL ESTATE , General -"" ... "" "'' "" "" "" '"' •• "" "" ... ... .... "" ... .... --"" "" "" •• "" -"" .. "" mo "" "" T1111'L•X. .ic. fflt CONDOMINIUM HM ll!NTAUI WANT•D '*" ltOOMI FO)t lll!NT .stfS ROOM a IOIJl:O '"' MOTl!U. TUtu• cou1:n tm GUl!IT MOMIS SfM Mii<:. aeNTMU ntt lftCOM• l'ltO~T'I' ... •USIH•ss l'ltOPa•T'I' ... TUJLll. PAati:t ... •llSINass ltlNTAI.. .... Ofl,tCa •INTAL HJI INDUSTRIAL l'IOl'laTy 6tlf COMMaltCIAL 6M1 INDUSTRIAL 1ta1tTAL ... LOTI 61• ltANCM•S •UI c1Taus aaovn tin AC.IAOI! OMI I.Ml! l!UIHOltl! 6Jn lbOltf PROl'l!R'J'Y •Ill OIANOE CO. l'ltO,.lllTY atJ OUT Of ITATI l'aOI'. tltl MOLINO.IN .. D•s••T •n• IUIDIYISION LANO alt 1t•AL •STAT• sal:Ytcl •111 II.I. l!XCNANOa 62111 It. •· WANffO tMI BUSINESS ind FINANCIAL OUl1NEU Ol'l'OltTUNITI•• IUS INESI WANTIO lllYaSTMfMT 011119'1wolltlu INVaSTMENT WANTIO MONIY TO LO.JM 1'•1t10"'AL LOANI llWaLaY LOANS COLLATIR.AL LOANS llOAL lnAT• lOUS MOaTeMIS, TNlt DtMt MC*IY WANTl!D ANNOUNCEMENTS end NOTICES "" .... '"' '"' "" .... ... .... .... .... ... POUND CP1" Md .. '"°" ... l'laSOIU.ll ~ ....NOUHCl:MINTI MH alaTNS 1411 l'UHt:llAU f.tlt l'AID OOIT\IAllY 4otlJ l'UNlaAL Dll'ICTOll• 661( l'LOat"S 6411 Ul:O 01' TMANICI f'I' IM MllMOlllAflll "" CmMSTl•T LOTS Mll taMSTl:•Y caYl'T, Mlf Cfl.aMATO•tal ... M&MOfllAL PAlltl fOI AVCTtCINS '4>11 AVIATION n•vic• 64' TltAV•L .... All TllANSl'OIT•T'to"' ... AUTO Tl.Aflllll"OltTATlO,. ... L•OAL NOTICas ..,. •••MAH .. TUToa1111• ... SERVICE DIRECTORY ACCOUllfTtWe .... ANS•lltlll• l•IYfCI 4115 APl'LllMrl llll'AfllS. 1'11111 lfll Al'PIAISIN• '"' ASl"ttALl, oa. tdlH AUTO lll'Alltl ... AUTO, SW1 hfh, """· EiC. ..._ aA•YIITTINO .... aOAT MAINT'&IUM<lt .a •alClt. MA$Ollla'I", ~ ... aus11i1as1 uaYIClS ...,. IUIL.D.:U tm c.t.Tlaltl9 .Ul'I CAlllllaTMAk111a tM CAl:,..MT&lt~· .... CllflUNT, C-... ... CtOLO CAltl, L.k9-11&1' ........,... ... c.&.ll'n. C\.llAMI... ... U,.f'n LAYlfllle a ••PAI& ,.,. ....,...,., ... .,_,,.,. - •a11i1T1Ne. ,....,,,."•' , '* !II! TILE, Ceramic 6974 hani.c Will train PAINTING. '""' ...,'.u SERVICE DIRECTORY )t::K~l\.l: Ull(~~ iORY Npt B. 1600 Wtttcliff 642-Gm mee • man l'ATIOS * V·-..... _ ...,,_ Man * s A. 1 "'" N B--....... with sood ®mntlc apen. l'N01'09 .... l'NY "" 6590 ~-rd • ... ... _ ""''""' ........ ~.... . ~ . ~ ........... _, nc for _..... .In),, wttb PLAITl•t•• ""'t~. ••••tr mr Carpentering ...., 1n1n1 -CU.t \IVOl'k, Install A: repairs. 5'7.mt e e a ...-.-,,_ PLUMllN• "" No job too small. Pluter monthly auarantee. }laid bol- l'OOOL.a •1tOOM1111• '"' ANTHONY'S patch. Leakhlg sh 0 w • r idaya, pUd insurulce, pUI =i:•;:_~~1N1 ~~ CARPENTRY G•rden Service repair. 847-l95Tt846-0200 MESSENGER vacation, 5 day week. OJI l'UM' t•l:v1c1 ,,. MINOR REPAIRS. No Job 64~ 1948 for Art 847-8555 aOOf'ING ... 1 . L-990 DISPATCH DEPT UDlO, a.,.1n. ak. ... Too Smalt Cabine Ul gar-BUDGET LANDSCAPING Upnvlstery 6 · Sl?,000 PLUS REGULAR RIMODllL1No a 1t••A11t '"' qes & o t be r cabinets. Prune ... Plant .•. Prep.ttt :;.:;o;,;o;;.:o,:.... ___ ;;,;..;.: Young man. atnaJe, drMr's CJ.SH BONUS for man ovtt :::::.:~ KITCN•NI = 545-8175, U no ansv.tt leave ?.lontbly Maintenanct CZ Y K 0 SK 1 ' S CUstom license, U. Thni with 81i'-, 40 in Beach Qties area. s11W1Ne '"" msg al 64G-237'J, II. 0. Exp. Horticulturist Upholstery, Europe• n vice obllptionl. Opportun. Take lhort auto trips tn ~ i..w. :~:·LYN · J 3 to 11 • 11 to 7 Shlfts- New Convalucent hospital to open 2nd week ln Febo I I tllll')'. '. I APPLY IN PERSON l 393 Hospital Rd., N.B. ' a.w11>1• llt\ACM1"• ••••1•• "" AndeMKJn MOWING, Ed"'-odd ,. . ..._ Cr at t 1 mans hip. 100% lty fur advancement Com-lact customers. Air Mail B. 11PTtc TNot:s. ..._., 11c. 6"5 , .,._ -Flnanc. Furn boa le pany ~fita. Astlstant < Acrou trom Hoar Hoej,.) j TAILOllM• tf1•1---------and light movin&. Ill(. . ts D. crawford, Prea .. Panther CASHIER. ~·~OL ~~QUALITY Rtpairl -Alter1': 548-6955 auto'•· ~1454. l i 3] Stt Mr, Rich 1-l PM Clerrrlcal ea .. Inc., Box 52, I .........._ & JMl"M9 6'1S .:.n N 1 b -Biif&~'d;;-;;;;;;;;--oo;;;;;;il2N~•~wpo~~rt~B~l~vd~ .. ~C~.M~.--DAILY Pil.m' 1',ortWorth,Texu7fil01. Pre1er some Brokerqe : TILL -.--uuns -ew cons • Y etrr • _.._e lawn -mp! -~-. A-~ In -· Taa• SllVICC ,,. Ol' C.Ontract 646-3442 "'.i.l!i ....., 330 West Bay, Caeta Mesa sERV ~A. eo•• ..,....,n;oo,,, ....._ • .,......,. .......,. .....--TIU:YdtoM. ._.... ltc. .,. ~,=~=~· '""'""~== service. Lie. 546-5261 eves JOBS & EMPLOYMENT • ... ~~. aon: Mn. Hadland , ~•Y ::: REPAIRSE:fs ALAny~T!-~NS .._weekend& STUCCO WIRE MEN Man to work full time, GOODIODY & CO ..... I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT CABIN , sue JO • Cut&: Edit IA.wn Jolt Wanted, Lacly 7020 Work in ColwnbW!, Ohlo I: rarveyard ihift from ll z: 2tO S. CMlt Hwy . JO• wun:D, .._ ,... 25 yrs. exper. 548-67!3 Maintenance. Llcenled lndlanap:ilic, Ind. putUnr 'l .m. See Qyde, LlfUn• leech ' J09 w.unan. ._ 1,. MASTER carpenter, $4. per 548-4808/66-2DO &ft 4 'iOUNG unwed expectant wire on by the roll. Fumlab Newport Blvd., C.M. --=:!!::::~:=~--! ~o: .. ':.a:~~-m1 hour. Remodeling· Repairs. AL'S Gardenlnc s e r v I ce :o~~~:a.~ t:1li":e ~ own too1J. Will pay Sl5. per 1$41 PER hr. Full or part WAfTltlSS.ES -~ DOM•ITIC "'"" ml 642-6409 or 536-3900 Lawn maintenance, pnler>-& ba~-,·tti"•· Wrll• Daily roll. Win! over board, No time, Xlnt Ales poeition w/ P/ttme. Exp, over 'J'I Cosed AOIMCllS. Mell 11• ".1° "6 li . 0 p p 0 r t II n 11 y for ad· ._...... -11i1-.;;;; MILP WANTID, Mttl n•·i----------ing &: clean ups. 146-362!t Pilot Box M 312. ne wtre or paper. Write, vancement. can Mr. Crain ...... ......,. I: Jfuuu.y•. . " .t.••NCllS. w-, .. c c 6600 Milton Lewin, 6129 Qilfla. Apply in Penon ::.L:...;::T:ow-:=-:: ement, oncrete General Services 6612 Du Tc H I ad y want a berry, Columbus, Ohio, Glll at (714) ftU-5697 att 6 p.m. KRAMERS AOINCl•S. MM a .._,, mt * CONCRETE work. Bonded -hous@Claenlng. S8 a day. MEN Wanted CJJ, part tlm•. TAILORS. Fitters and FoJ'o CX>LONIAL KITCliEN • KHOOLI .. INSTRUCTION , ... "Licensed C.oncrete sawi"" HEATING I· Air Cond. Serv $2.25 hr. Brings 3 yr old to ave--2 '--... _ .. , tor mans. Apply Sllverwoods, 512 w. 19th St. J09 l'llll'AltATIOfl ,.. • .... "-. -·-w ·-• ....... 646-5719 ·-~ .... ....... w N 8 ----.. ___ • TNaATl.lt:AL '* Phillips Cement. 54s-6380 « reprur, ......., IJln"r 1=-='·:;;;~===== early morninr newwpaper No. 4S Fuhlon e, · · o..u111It1 .,_ j MERCHANDISE FOR e CUSTOM PATIOSe ~{23f:1~7~1hr aerv. Domestic Help 7035 delivery to homes in EXPERIENCED Flberglu e 2 ND COOk 'e ~ SALE AND TRADE concrete sawing le removal Newport Be a ch. S200. TOUCH-UP Men. 16 3 2 Mutrt have rood experience I :=~ir' .. 'u•nlTV•• ::: state Llc. e 842-1010 HAULING. Cleanup garages, George Allen Byland Agency •~rage per mo. MU1t have Placentia Ave., Costa Meu with soup A llUC'el. W , ~PICI •DU•M•NT MH CEMENT wurk no job too odd jobs etc. Free esL Jim Employer Paya FM late mode.I CIJ' and be -bCJlun Mon. tbru Fl'L • .. l ll'Ollt• ••USPMlltf •• , ' 548-5325, anytime 106-B E. 16th, SA 54.l-0395 dependahle. Cat LA Tlrnea 1----• CA••· ••sTAUllMT •u amall, reuonable. Free 642-4800 A .. nclH, Wemen 7aoo 4:30. Call Mrs • ' ~~~~Mii~. = ~tim. H. Stufiidt. 548-&i15 H•ullng 0730 Chinese .. -• ..:i"~I. I;'..:...~ 133-0DJ Ext 2mC-~ ........... -•BESTINCONCRETE --~-----... -~ -~·-·~~ • RNISHED • KEYPUNCH. SEWING MACH'.~; ~~rz=:. AUCTtoM ~= Walks, pco1 decks, floors. TR~i. hedge, n:ees.1 b&Gea. Far F.a.st Agency &C-8'1tl3 CARPENTERS OPERATORS OPERA'I'QRS. Expd. , ' NllTtQUU ftlt Patios. Phone 64.2-8514 clean-up, name ll! ul,1----------· I ttitcher or sportswear, ~ s1w1 ... MACMIMAI 11• reasonable 642-4030 • PLUMBERS Experienced Alpha. I Num. pl JAY , .. • CORP .MUSICAL INITJtUM•N' 11s Thoryk Concrete, na job · Agenclu, Men 7100 Loni term a.ssignments, y; • .,UU\o • 'PU.NOi a OfllANI 11• to i:mall. Free estimates. CLEAN lot.s-garageir. etc, Islander Motor itmms Inc. d•-. l.o"i •·--•·-a. --S. Oak, S&nta Ana I ~:e:.,ION :: • 646-1234 . tret' temov, dump s.kip FACTORY HELP 806 E. WubiJVton st. ~· " oc-. ......... ;c"J=:: 3 Pl'\I ·-~. ...... , a n11:ao a1• CONCRETE--'· an,.,...,.,, backhoe, nu grade. 962.-8745 Trainees I< inexperienced. -Senta Ana K""""ELLY•· SERVICES INC. e IUCK 'ltESSlit'-921'. TAl'a l:•C0110a1tl a. wui.., •.rt""-u' n.--" CUtalAI • IOUIPMINT .,. Pool decks "' custom. Call LITE Hauling I: cleanup. skilled: A!semblers, CWl<,:ll SALESMEN Needed t 0 r 230 E. 3nl Street Experienced in ~~ MolaY SUPl'Ll9S .. Mi-1324 Reasonable. Any area. Pren Oper, Turret Lathe, sales in Land 1 cap in I Lon& Beach, callt. Apply tPO•TINI eOoDI .... Call 642-2657 Grinders, Extruden. Call F " PooJ. y (213) cum. JAY-MAR, JNC. ..·1 a1Nocuu•s, KOf'al\ "4t Phil, 548-77'96 encea • ouna, 290! So ~· •--, MllCILLAN•OU• ... LIGIIT HAULING progrt>uive company, High Equal opportunity em:>lo)'er . ..,... .-..ta Ana. MISC. WArrr•o ' ""Child Care 6610 545.••90 ARGUS AGENCIES potential earninp, Apply (3 to 3 PM) 1 MACHIN••Y• •k. .,.. .,.______ ~ LUMeat 11• ,..,n. ,.. ho •t ====-~-=--;===' 11869 C Newport Blvd., C.M. 7123 NeWpOrt Blvd. C.M. See Betly Bruce at 'SALESGIRL-Exp. 0 n J ,,. STORA•• ms ~ care my me, "esa M 81 8 10 ' eutLOtN• MATlfllAL1 11'9 Verde area. week I y, HounclNnln1 6735 M•n19ar Tr•hwe1 r. rch, am to am l ladle1 wear, good llllary IWAl'S ..,.. reasonable rates. 546-9956. -----Have clienlll who will train _w~"-k_d_•~Y-'------m• day wk., Fri. O!' Sat. ·ana: PETS and LIVESTOCK * API'. CLEANING * career minded grads in Fin-YOUNG Man -full or part ttJ~ XeC Mn. Kuntin 10055 . . . PaTS. e11111••L ... ContrHtort 6620 Fast & thorou&h 642-8164 ance, I1t1, Factol')', Salee. time, mature, able to WOl'k Aiency for Career Girh Ave., at Brookhunt • · •' , :: :: . WlLLlA.MS Oeanlni Serv. Call Mr Andenon, 548-179& with adult youth leaden. In 410 W. Coast Hwy., N. 8. VIKKI'S Com Mtaa is Joti! MOllllS .. REMODELING, Additi0ns; ARGUS AGENCIES or out ot college, with In· By appoint. stS.3939 inr for eharp, deperldl.ld LJVQTOCI( .. lie. &: insured, Los Padres, _1n_. ____ T_"'-·---~ 1g&q c Newport Blvd., C.M. terest 111 yoUth p~ bannaid. Full or put ttiti«. CALIFORNIA Ll~ING CooSI. Cor>taet YMCA 49<-!Mn tor Sharp c1,_, GiJO Apply 10..,...., w ...... ;, ~rt!:~~~'"°u :: 491•1665 or 494-4151 eve• BE A Satisfied Olent with!----------l ~ap=p=I.==~==~~~ 6. l79l% Newport BlYd. • ~ • t9U Harri.I Tax Service. 9th )T. HelD Wint_., Men 7200 Secth. Gt.I 1'rkt"11, Recptl, - ::Ji':as. 1n1 Additions * RemodeLl~ locally. Avail. U mos. 3ll7 CUSTODIAN WORK. Stea.ly Bldr:pn. Offtee Tralnef:s. BABYSl1TER ·' YICAiTIONS .,. Fred H. Gerwic:k, ic. R 0 0 1 eve J t Way, CM. • COOK • mt:n eap9ble of clearWJc or-Keypunch Open, Med. Ir er, active year old baby b:w) TRANSPORTATION ~1 * 54~2170 "Mack'' 540-2971 fice buUdtnr 1: bank in their dental ant., RNa 1: Nunes Permanent. Northern H.B'.i NATI & YACNn ... * 7'nt YEAR * leiruft houn. Write !'lflme, Aides, Call Dorta, 548-7796 area. 893-7445 aft. PM. .: =:"~ui•••• :: C•rpet Cle1ning 6625 and pt,.. cumber to Box ARGUS AGENCIES ~ A-1 Sl'ENO MUST BE 18 OR OVER u -n...1k. ...,,~ DONUT Shop work. ll'aaD-SKJ •011TI ... cl . R SHOP G CNTR .. _ _....,,. rUU\ 1889 C Newport mvd.. C.M. •OAT TIIAIL••• Mn CARPET " Furn. eantng; HARBO ' . --AM. No np nee. Ap :::~ ~Jrc:~::c• ::: for 1 day service & quality eveJwkend by appt. S6-8820 • APPLY IN PERSON • FRY cook, YoWW man exp. He~ Wanted MR. DONUT 135 E. l~ MMIM• •CHiii'. ... V.'Ork, call Sterling fur PROFESSIONAL who dta.:a: p 0 a It j 0 n 7.1-St CM. •oAT •'-•"· Moo111N• "..,)f brl&htness! 642-8520 EDUCATORS Snack Shop '#' 9 w/Mve. ht lntrvw, Mr. emen _. uou~~~ .O..T 111t¥1C•1 Sch~. Mlater Steak, --~ .... .., • x P a r • J llOAT a•NTAU t411t NO Gtmicsi Best expert cpt TAX SERVICE 3446 E C.O..t H CdM 2:JS7 Fabvlew CM. 6C-0'1l2 PHONE S01JCITING ~. req. Uve-tn. Md M•T atA•T•~ = & furn clng. at lov.·est • 968-3403 • · wy., No eixperience ~. ltke chil~. 541-&327 A.fl ::'1~t'r::' *' prices. 546-1486, 64&-ZT17 PERSONALIZED, t'Xpcrt ·'SAW MAN SERV. S'l'A. SALESMEN. Holiday HH.lth Spa 2300 I IOAT IT01tA1• ... r-..-y ~ I y Youna: men. work eve11 A Harbo!", Costa Me .. ae»TI WANTIO ,.. WAu.. TO WAIL _,l"'t Tax aerv. ear rou • ..., o c., wk end1. Muat be neat In MAIDS. Pleuant )'l!f. Altc .... " •t• CI ea n Ing l: ex Pert reaa. &16-8712 experienced , ....... uction ha-'--fl"&· •-· Clydo, ...,.,. JlOUSEKEEPER -Live in, resort, steady, p&iit -f'LY!Ne LISSONI tlM · 64&-3780 '"" ,...,..,,., " ''''"' ...,~ •--rt MO•tL• HOMfS t1• upholstery cleaning. RESPONSIBLE Income Tax cabinet ahop. Newport Blvd., C.1'1. 1tiol~M home. N. B . tion, etc. =~~1~8 m: CARPET & furniture clean. Service. For app't 642-6204 Islander Motor llomt!s Inc. I =SE=M~1.-,.~,~,,.,.'-,--d~ratt.'"""-.,.,.--.1~or •l'ff, 2 chldrn ares 14 A: Laauna Riviera $1191·' aLa<:T•1c u11 ,,. In&, J.a,ying &: repair. Call 10M1-6'PM. 545-1398 Eve ~ E. Wuhi.Qrton St. part to Ml time drafline 16, Pttf 11/-40. 5ll·l450 EXPER.fENCED De n-i. ::io:~~~\.1 = Girouard Carpet. 64.2-9656 INCOME Tues prepamt S..nta Ana in North HunUncton Bl!ach, EXP. walb<ea, owr 21. Tbe Aui.tant for put tiirM MOTOflKOOTau .,.. )'OW' home, ior1' tonn com-• INSJ'RUCI'ORS _ Full &U-4481 • Ft)1nc BuUtr, 3101 N"'J)Ol't tl'O!'k. Write Dail¥ P0ot 8C11 AUTO 1aav1ea1 • ' •• l"':.-rdonl-~•• 15 ~ .,22 ..::::cc:::....______ Blvd NB --p 311 AUTO TUDLI • aOUll' ... -_ .. ;:...._______ bined, s . "'""'" or/and part time. NMt ap. FULL " part ti.me help .• . . 0•-11 • ~-::t::-1. "=L = ;cur-&: Edge, maint. etc. • ltOME SERVICE e pearance. Must be able to wanted. Top wa&ea. chance BARMAIDS: Mamick, HOUSEKEEPER. tor ~ CAMP'e111;1 ::: NB. CM onty. Llc, reas. F'EDERAL A STATE meet and deal with the f.or advancement 1128 Newport Blv., C.M. ladJ, full ttme. Uw in. rn r:~• ,111 &46-aiJ, 54&-~l 5.ll-«JOO public, &ood tipre. Apply METRO CAR WASJ( Apply bef. S:~ PM nn. and bath. §1&.«iet , °"" auoe111 "fU • .. , G d Gordon N. W•rren, p .-in penon, HoUday Real th 2950 Harbor Blvd CM. an.LO care -Ute: hou.Je~ CASHIER. Car Wub.. ~ 1MP01tTlo •uTos ... JAP ....... ESE • r en tr· "" Spa 2300 Harbor Blvd Shorfs. lll'OftT cut "'11 c:omplete St r vice . Ex· 18th year, Appt. liila-3345 c .a.f.. " PERM. PART TIME COOK. ~I .,~!·.,~~I Ume or~..!!'-:~. ~as. C\.ASI K' ",..11 perienced. Rehable. &t?-CSS --~=~==---non-tmOker. Pn!vklis la-""'•· .............., .. ~ pra. • ....u _ ...... ltAdl uas., aoos 6755 NITE SHIFI' W 1:..--1 .._1-.1 ..... .. ••• ~ &l/l'O nam tilll JAPANESE ~nine. Prof froni~-------I • Mold«!n • u.___ expe_r ·~ .... -1 DaJU. l..qwla Jteef Motel, WAJl'RESSES needed, kloct • ... ~1!.A,""• .,,._ u-•-. La " d ' c • P i " • not acc. Call !'>4&-:12Z3 JOl()l S. o.Jt MW)' • CllCttallt. n. Bl.qe Beet. -.. nuaw' lRONING done ln my l'lcmwl. • A.uemblen * -* -M1TO u.uBM ..,, Oeanup. 637..f951 • F £XP'D Medwdo w/ own :;:;;:;;;,=...,.-~-~J VIM can ... Expert wmt.. Reuc11•ble. oremen ........_ .,._ly -~ a•-, 0 __ ., .~-I ;;,, Cl ~ "" ~6 A~-In......., -r~ ~-~ •• ~·-·-or ~ALIFISD hit. Doc. wt !------------------------YARD ean11p1 • ••== Phone _.ltu Mlll!G.,....,,. y-~t "--A.uto ~Ir. 1747 A!11bf:im .wtrlt In HuntJrwte ....,. ..., katlOn. N.1 HAVE YOU LOOKED FOR THE HIDDEN DOLLARS IN YOUR HOME LATELY? •N.:it:", MW &Wba , 1-1-l:aJl~Uonl r'tpll' -~ """''t'• A ,..._,. .....__.. ...._,,_._ aprlnlderl. rototill. M6-6SG J;;"~ 1 ~l\lft'f lSli5 Babt-ock ="'..,"'--=---.--:-.,..--"""' --..at • ~ •usmn ............. • -..,...,,, Com ,._ FULL ..... -· 5 ..... Dm?AL -...,Y, -... co':o~llP~loN=ION~j~::= town. The OA.ll.Y f'll.O'I' FULL ttme bftltb IP' at· a """""-no .. Umlf. AA>l1 ~ onlf. ODilta U... ara ~ Ldlure Wcri.t. Oed«W ~ Saw IRON'ING lk pc, You BrirW tend.ant, 40 hr Wttk. opeD Dfm'landt, N\). S Fubk1n OR. s..1Jt1 WlitJow, 6CJ...2130 tlmQ, WM A .aon. i.ooll tuu'l&'ffS. ~ '4M3ll . u.lary. For-appt. C' a I I =-,.,;,=· ,.N~.e,.. --.-,,- no..1 ! ! 548-2211 ext '170. Mr. Alo. WANTED C&ean cvt mllilwe rur. ~'lm KEVER ~ETS "" Cllaififltf'a action puwer. F'<r 11:1 ad to sen •round tJ1e clrick. dlaJ 642~. , L1ndac1pln9 6110 ander student with own car W COMMERCIAL II tt11dc!nlial BUS boy .l kitchen helper part tlmC! evenU.: dirllver, ~nkntna A. Landlcaplrc. part time. Tht BJut: Beet. work. 500 W. Cout llwy. JOP Corrf.l 962-41&1 m-9904 I _.....c\V_:::;hil:.e .;:EJ:;-;;:::;':.":._' - I DEtrJIAL uatatant .. dll1r -· "'-" -Cl>/Colta Mtaln,cUce. 6415-Cll MAN1CURIST UDO SHOP . .,._ . i " I • ' A'.:m !;oy l:'"i:•i:ff·· ... p ...... ~---------.... ~ . ' .. ' I ·' ' .. ' • • .. .. I ... ;::_-~ ·~W> 1-· ' 1 '•1r I: .... ~ •"··~ , ..... '~ , ' .. ,cl-· ' • ' ., . • • . ~;. : I·~ . : • • ~j ' .. ' ... ·p: . -~ .. ·-. I• ', .. ,. ' . ~ ... ' ---· I --' I ' ' I ,.._ :". . . 11 " L ! <· .. ·:' ""· 1-~·:·i •.ii •.. 'i .. --. I .~ .. .... -. I .... ... ·: I ;.1 • !~ I ~ 41 ! '.• I· ..... I;< •; , .... ,.i~- 1~··· ,, r;. . r ..... I I•-· ' ;~. . 1 .. ~ • • 0 ... ' '. i ~: I .. • I;~'"---· .... ,. 0 -::-:.-: ,: .. : I -· -·---, ~ . l • r • • •• WITH Don't iust SIT there! · Grah hold of the BIG action today! Dial Direct: 642-5678 Just say: ''CHARGE IT!" (North County, 540· 1220, toll free I 1.--, ·~. •·I.• .., :''• • ;"t ;• .. _ .~ •'\ •, ' . . ' I ~ -' • T ' IT'S EASY ro · PINCH PENNIES-EVEN DOLLARS ' . . . ,_ ; ·: -· ' ' . . ..:· ···-~ :·· ; . . . . .. ''• . ' . ' . ' PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS . . . ' . .-~--------------------~, NEW-LOW-RATE ., 3 LINES l TIMES $2.00 IN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS! Furniture 8000 Pianos & Org1ns Office Furniture 8010 Radio Office Equipment 8011 Television Store Equipment 8011 Hi -Fi & Stereo Cafe, Rntaur1·nt 8014 Bir Equipment 8015 Tape: Recorders Household GoOds 8020 Cameras & Equipmen Applimces 8100 Hobby Supplies Antiqun 8110 SJ)orting Goods Sewing Mlchines 8110 Binoculars, Scopes Mu1lc1I Instruments 8115 Miscellaneous e EACH ITEM MUST BE PRICED e e NO ITEM OVER $50 e NO COMMERCIAL FIRMS e e NO COPY CHANGES e NO ABBREVIATIONS e 1130 8100 8105 8110 8110 8300 1400 8500 8550 8600 Let PILOT PENNY PINCHER Want Ads Work for YOU! g_ ..... . . ' T ' . . , • JOU.& IMPLOYMlllT HolpW1n!M ~ 7400 • Hu,_ for ., • r.tdq, -Jl, 1169 DAILV ~ILOT JON & IMl'LOYMINt .ION.& IMl'l:OYMINT MlltCHAllDlll l'Olt MEICHANDlll l'Olt MIRCHANDISE l'OR MlltCHAHDISI PO .~':'~. M&t1CHANDIS• -v !" , _.;;SA.;.;L;;i;•.-AH.--D_TIAD"T""'l._.:;SA;.;;L;;.:I;..;' AlfD;.:;.::::..T°"l;;..J;;;.0;;.1_ 1-...;SA=Ll::..::AN:.:D::....;.T;:AA;::D:.:l!:..._.:;SA;::L;:lc.::AN=Dc.TltA:..:::;::=;DI:_ SALi AND TllADI SALi AND TUDI lobe M9n, W~ 7500Jtbe ~, WOfft.-7500 1-;;c i , fvmlh!ro ·~umllvro ~ PvmllUro IOOOl'umllUro IOOO fUf!lllUro IOOO"'mllurt IOOO FREE BBQ '~~~D!,!1D~J~!~~~ . + . SANOWT. NITI, "roll·~ 7 ~-L'1cu"'D!.~"··,2.s1:3d PM, * HO$TISS/ M11M1 'HOME a-•R£ -tin OPIH 1nl ..,.,. ~-' UN. 9-9 CASHIER*' .._ ..-1u IVll MU.a; We ln>tte )'Oil~ come'Ufty lrll,aJ lat.e-Bought Manvfwctvr•r'• 1 '69 Show"'°m Saiftpl• t• tiain u Ullltant m•n-SUNDAoY.IEI. 2 II 12 NOON pro.i.tr ourlllilil -HI< q"'!"!l!>mi. 'We have "" 111 our O>llee Shop. Jle. • • • """· l)eaJ: new 1114 111t1qu11 tiO cboooe from All_..,.., __ _ «nt.--..,.1n F0\111 S~ H!IMIS --all ilJ)il1 S~nlll\'Veil., M'abiigany, Mod· all ....... ol food _.,,, c .... '""'""""""' ' "'"'"""' . ' .... Maple ..... ---bran&. 8' Wood carved arm divan, t;. man's cbalr or love ,.at. $ Pc Octagon darlr. oak din .. t w/bi.ct o~ avocado tra111ed c~; 8 Pc BR set. 9-df Mr. & Mrs. clrtaaer, II mirror, 2 -0om1J1odes, decorative beadbomfln Sp&lllsb oak ~gii With matching bo• apt!Dp, mat- " nqulrod. OompetaUve H I hKlt . ~ -.,.. -· -· .,.....,,.._ -I ';!!~~~~~~F~~~~!!!!!!!!! 1 .~!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!v!!!nt"""""~"''!!!!!!!:!!!!!!. !!!!!!!!' !!. '!!· !!!! I SOUTllLAND'li ,LAAGrSr f"l/RNl'1\JllE 1oc1,.i1nr -t -I' 1> -.-AND ~CE AUC110N Holp W1ntld . Jollo Min, W-.•1500 f""'llvro 1000 Fvmllllre . _,,_ _____ ... ._ _______ ~/ Apply in penan 10 A.M. to ~ P.M. Mond<Y ttuu f\1day tress & fnm9-> ,lttint Sold ln41vl""'lly w...... 7400 • EXQUISITE MORE Fu!H :&.~!..~':~~~~~~1ai:'~ :T-..l~l CtE1tK DAY BU~ ~Y · · SPllllftl PAID F ers & etc. J C PENIKf (0. ~ * ~¥C {Six..Deys A WMk) anun f • 75 new & near new couches • Joveseata • • • "' ' ~::-.:. 111,::: . ' . . !,lrll ure cectlona14 • hiQ&a-bed • (new fabrics " d& 24 F h. I '·"" · --~ ~" WA' lnll:tri! MfD11C11RWll •1-s). • beau"'ul occasional chAlnl • 45 Shop A_,,..-Betor. you buy -USI VALUE $1095.95-FULL PRICE $529.95 or t•rn\I n low a1 $4.66 per week Ute Our Store Charge Plan or'Bank FlmllClng No Fancy Front -BUT Quality ValuM inllid1 " oon •~ Pf ·-·· ~~ • llllU~ llUI . Col.,.I TV'o, Pion• ..... '" ~ An equat o~. ·pooaood ~ ,.,....,. , ApP,llanc•, Anllquoo diMttes • 8 pc. gr'3Tn dee1'n dinett · 21 ~ . .'Wtllr fho pu1o11c and ol'I• CExporlencocl) RETURNED0FROM 1 p•-~ or dining room sets 'e · 18 • buffets le!'\'• :."" • ~ Gf[·ft&I estate MODEL H MES ...... en•~ •1ianos •custom m inu-1----.~-:.,.,,.0 -'-_,~ =~ ol I:_~ 111!1-l:· .. IB A~~~...:~ HouSefull sive nanie bran bedroomaeta.• box ali. *"Ke-111q·* M •-~....;d:; . ~-.. '.!'!°'!" --. •. beautiful 1 Du S I It I allsii .. •coflee&endtahl.Siogo !ball APPROVED FURNITURE 2159 HARBOR. COSTA MESA . 12 Years same location -aame owners D•lly 9-9 e Sund1y 10..S e 548.- 0 ,::..-..,._ O;• ~~~·. 1Jll.\~Hltf!woy Tpo.didlw.....,.,chlnat. " ~0• Y trends•baro&stools•desks•t 'ters r_,.,.,, " .. ~·~Oii! Mr •• il.i., Newport .... ch . bufili, ....... quolltod ,.. 2• HOUR SERVICE e lampo e mirrors e' mal\Y dee. llemo. • ,. 1 -·-t..-. .... · ' • • tu &: love .. ts. double dooC liM.tl-Good 1500 Mlscell1neous aW toopel'&telBMK.,..W>Ch ~ ....,...._., ' ............... -·..,.. BUYER'O:I DUTY I DAYS Near new color TV -also black/,,hlt'e-. ;r.:;:.:.:··· • .....,. and --""'" ,.. ~ 613-UIO ' '~ PRINTiD=ClllCUIT .... """""'(all·-MOVlNG.. I.. Early Stereos-Combos -all sty!.. ' HEAD Vee•" Sida 190, SACRIFICE year uperleJ'lc. Requires Glen ... _.-' BOARDS IHd) w1l1 .. ~. Sen all Arnerlcal'I: cwst htad--brd. 1D w/btndtnp &: po!H, very I will u.crillce all or paJ1 ~ decrtt of accuracy. ...w • SILK SCREENER ar put. Tums 1)1'1 rood Cl'fld. pin!. White twin b:lrm .• t Special _ we are reall)' proud of ,our' Victor--IQOtl cond. $1'5. 833-~T. of JD3' near new Meditftl. Good trirQl:e benefita P1113 Fecl9ral sirvlngs 1·2 yean: uperienee. It. w/•pri.np • mattreua. fan handmade reproductlom • coucbel · • ranean furn. 8' Sota A k>ve pt<>Ot """""" plan. 2333 1; CoHt Hwy. •, "PLA•·-T~--AOK WAREHOUSE D,. choot • mlm>•. °"' chairs • love seat • marble !<Ip •ame ·set MlocoU.noova l600 ... ~ den tum, kin& "'° J ...... ..,.....,. .... ,""" LOCATED AT • plDe dbl bt'd W/~ Ir o bedroom set .i.., twin. MAmR SPECIALTIES CO. 1640 Monrevl1 AvL Coot1MIN 642-2427 AnoqualoppoMunity omployor RH's " ICU Immediate, epenings for experlenctcl IN'a, full ti... Ind port time. Wiii train lnex- porftncod. All ohlfts 1vail1ble. Excellent employee hlneflts. Coll Nuraln9 Offlct Martin Luther Hospital, Anaheim 722.1200 Ext. 272 HUNTINGTON SEA CUFF Country Club 3000· Palm Ave. Huntington Beach 536-8166 Part Time • • • • . . Weekends and Holidays GENERAL OFFICE Experienced on]y. Unique Opportunity ,., • EXEC SECRETARY Must hive good 1ppea r- anee, excellent typing & shorthand aklllL Pl11H apply In person. UNION BANK 2743 E. C111t Hlghw1y Corono dtl Mor 1 Equal opportunity employer RN or LYN N-port -h Cu., Ni., Au. Sii/Pb., Rh. 7122 Guden G...,,. BM., ma-. .... Hotpoinl Wt Fln1nc1wlth goodcNclli-.looMosttrChorp PROFESSIONAL Hidw.obed, oce Chain. eol. An ~P=nuntlY :!~.,.,.. GG. % blocl<WHttmn tJie =·~,..,a.:~"'"= · AOK COMMISSION GALLERY N~~~1':,.1A!!!._ :;-,.~ ~';1.~~du. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR TRANSICOM ~';.!,"."""·81"4,nesr· sltln ... cond.pricedr1&!1~ 7U2 Gonion Grove Blvd. in& lev;I, "ARROYO", COLDSPOT,..frio/mu, '51 W. lSth SL, C.M. Open 10 to 9 SW> 1o.6 Sat A SUn. 614-2117. -'h Block Wttt of 80 .. h Blvd., off GG Frwy, met&! ..... .,,., bauwood, avocado "' 1 yr old, 3 ,... *DRIVERS* SPANISHFURNJTURl: 'l'ui'nttutereturnedfrom~ • · elec~c.llybonded, ll&ftd· gu.&r. Kenmore •~. f · ' RETURNED FROM DIA>' otudiof. model bomet, • ed ""°'th. 8tronc oted tilt. bumo•, ouO> time•. cle°"' No Ex-rlenc• o EL H~ G -.,.,,...u.11on. G s 1 I022 Pl & o 1130 ""....,, tilts "' """ ... ,.. 1111. '69 Magnovox """"nr., e PACKERS r--~ D 80%. -...~~~~ Spanl9b a Medt~.m.nean etc arage 1 • 1"°' rgins -.. or bM otter. 536-0tal. owoed 3 wk.I, .ell % ~ • INSPECTORS .... ~ ~-~~~!, __ ,_ ootaAlovu,.~3ooklivlng RD FURNITURE GARAGE Sal~ Sat • ~· THEY'RE HERE 11-11 ra••~w~·••HOUSE price. 1215. Holld.,. Heal iu\Pi• ..... ..._.. ~..... room tables 2 living room 1144· N rt Bl d CM Mt.c Houaebold. 6'f3..3597 • ~~·-•T "'~ Spa, 3> ft\O contract far in Ceramic industry drivtnc nt;ord. Apply lamps 1r sPuwt palntina" ewpo • ., 642 :Ramona Dr.. CdM 'New CulbraNen Pacemak:er . ~t1-2ndf.1tou Enda :;;, S3Z. ~2793 YELLOW· CAI co. El .,. ... ., .. kl••···· w.:"~LTi\: ?til I (lrvlne Ternce) '°"''"' willl rhythm oection' ,,,..,..... .. ,..... .. ,.,,... * AUCTION *' AW!Y Indw;trial Clay Products lrl65 Fiber Gla.Bs Rd. Huntington Beach, Calif. 186 E. lfith-st. bedroom suite, oak triple ·• ' GARAG~Sile: Sat.lat. SUn 4 p1ano .............. $1395 1rom! ~eato.IA&low. Cmita· Mt!aa dreuer & mirror, king CONTEMPORARY, perfect 2nd. 10 am. ta g pm. 8252 Used Hammonds, Thomas, ~: l;lf-' J.tn. Mon-Fri., U YoU will RU or bu:1. JM MED 1 ATE dpenlng headboard,.,_ 2 cotnIDodq, condition! ·CUrved sectional Malloy Dr •• Huntington Bch. Wurlitzer, Magnavmc. Kini-~t 10.2 p.m. live WlDdy a try · JarrltDrial Route in Hun-~ mattress & box (cost $850) $l50 or best of· •h• man 1tarting at •••••• l395 1753 S. IUtchey, Santa Ana A\ICUona Friday 7:30 p.ra.., tiilatan Beach area, 1prings, 2 boudoir lamps. fer; bookcase, end table~ GA,N\QE ~: Dlne.tte ' • Also Leslie Speakers. ~ . Windy11 Auction ra,., e 5-.-.....u e E\W'a.nteed income $600 + 6 piece Spanish wrought do_uble doon; uphol chain: !n~~m~ ~icycle, New American made pianos ~ Bthlnd Tony's IDda. Nat1 •-•• -· J per Mo. lot husband &: wife, iron db1l.n& set Only $467. decorator lamps; btdroom · from ••••••••• , , • , ••• , . $ S.SO UPHOLSTEIUJ'lG • $'79.5Q. 2 20m6 Newport, CM 646-ali8I Heavy typirw, Ute Neeption-no QP n e c: e 11 a r y, in-$3) down ~ $lSO ·weekly set: single bed; deak; '9xll MOVING Sale! Must Sell! ELECTRIC pc. (EUropean c:llaf'timen) ' ist work. varied office du-vestment required. Apply 11ell 11eparate13. Euy credit rug; china; many item.a. All Household Furnlshinp Free set, de]., pklup. 215 17 CU ft freex•r. ties. Reliable person wbo'• 'l3U Canop. Ave. eaqa HAMILTON FURNttURE 546-<£25 1725 Pomona. CM Sat-Sun. or-ORGAN Main. HB '~' 53IMt05 KJnc-o-Lawn Mower, Kina-1tte.....,..,.. be deponded Park be-• 11 ..... l 5918 WestmlnsW Av ••• FACTORY """"'" -ASSOCIATES LARGE, Low --().Lawn &lctt. vacu1a .... ,...._ Ol!lce locatod near pm Monday thnl >'lid•>" W ....... ter. 894-4434 da1l.Y oiled ..-t tables, '-Appllancn 1100 P<ll "°"""' ---Hold-35 mm V<?tlander ~ Oranre Col.mty Airport. 10 a.m. to 9 ~ sat. lelection 01 cocktaU, lamp -383 E. 17th. Costa Mea ~ Mlle: 't t • m•. 1 aew 4 neon tiibt. 1 Startinc ll&lary $390 per mo. Real Estate S.IM 10 a.m. to 6 P·ll'l4 &In. .t~encl tables. ·Priced to ldl • SPEX::IAL .PURCHASE • 6'6-4033 M8--?322 aft 5 p.m. . darlnet w/cue, alm AIPI Pleue: call {tt4)' HMHI. be-. Men & .women 1t p.m: 1b'S p;m. ' -f.Ut. Far below wbolesale Refriet'rgton, • u t 0 m • t l c Ctn back of Pancab HOUR) 3 PC SEX::'!' $15,. 'Danllb :!:: ~I: ICf'ftD. tweftl 10 am & 4 pm. l:Qlnd''W acain. OUice # RfPOC'C'EC'fll'lllC' price. KENNY BR 0 W N = :,, otht~ it •P. ONCE-A· YEAR ~m chatr ~ .ctd'a s • J 1 .... ~) ,,.. i ~ce:::S:n ~~ ~ olANIYIU Furniture. Mta:. U1 E. 16th at fantu~m di.co:nlll mr: ALL FLOOR MODELS 'P bike ll(). 60 o.ev. nHdJ POOL ,,.,.·~ ... i stant income I: traininc· Mt -st. C.M. 646'1'15 Down. We eervice. ~at: , Conn• WUttltser • Knabe wark $50. M2-8917 aft 5:30 C .-.. ' -~.~· Sp•ina•Roalt>, In ~t :"°"; :-KROEHLER ,,,.... • piece FOSTER'S Pl~OS and DROANS NEWPORT Beaob T•nnls TABLES .... ....._.... new. l '° a • Jl'll,tched set. BS .. aora plui 1rl'as Brookhunt, Ftn Valley ''One-of--aKind" Club Membership for Sale. Expe~ Pr.at i sALEsPEOP~ Neat. =·~3se':tf79~·s: .~seatandclWr.QuU~ (&>.otWarfterl 968-1234 YOUR ~HOJCE • BIAY below cost.~ fftWeiate$695VllNaw$2915 AP,L Y ..... ....,..,.,.. 0ue ., .,,,. .. oet '"· s pc,,.__ !?."'~ ='!::""' ...=~ WATER heaie. ,. p1s. iJ! to 10 Vo off 547...., •• E-. 613-6131•, ::an.iooela,. -i..m $$ SuftOte new expansion set ·$89, box sprz It matts r-v" •'"' ~ for amaI1tr home ar SHOP EARL YI nREWOOD FOR SALE ~ up.' 213: 69UU7, 692..Jti Newport' Harbor Holiday He1lth Spa Call mes) $10 ea. Kin, liJe I 10 rental 642-3526 after 5 or Fine Chriatmas Trade-inl Walnut It Eucalyptus. $47.50 IDDE-A·BED never u..a, Convalncent Hospital need• salupeople, we train, $25 ea. Sell all or any part. Office Furnltu'! 0 weekend&. from $388 crd, S25 1i> crd. Delivered. $100. S bdrm aetl, ttJi, •• '"'7164 noexp. nte.•Applyin·per-Terms. EXECUTIVE.. '--'·Imo old LARG'E Fri1\datre N •-e'li"•-· &:ttaek'dfree.(1)688.(J848:· tun A twl.n sizes. 8' -a 2300 Harbo mvct c:M: AOK w AREHOUSE QCIU\ • 0 UllWll .._ tetml --SEAMSTRESS son, r ·• · LOCATED AT watnut wood w J 4 2 x T g re~t.or w h t t e , ex. e Delivery e BRAIDED rug w/pad, 12 1: low seal Den tumituzi LAllllNATORS needed for matcb!"'! walnut Volned oellent CO!Mlltlon. $3 5 • Gould M I C • 20, .... a>nd. $35. Call eoa.e A end -°"""' Must be experienced worlcine production paru:, no ex· Tm Garden Grove Blvd., high pressure plutlc !DJ!. 545-3508 UI c ompany 5f6-6628 aft 5 pm. .eba1n. Many. otba' ,tltms. with nauaahyde boat cualr perience net4f~ will train. G.G. % Block1 Be chW•8 11 1v<lfrom"'lhe" fl5. 2 arm chairs ot walnut WESTINGHOUSE ttteur. 12 ~. :-~~. ~= &' DEEP Freeze. Good con-. _Muat mell everyth!nc! OrJI¥ ions. App,.· in porson .... ~" c u Tri -•o-• o a -~ • '"· old All "~'-JobanSe': It Chrii!ltensen $1.65 to .......... a . ..,. .. ""' ·• It black upb>lltery, $25. cu. ft. Self • de!tolter. Door Mon a: J'rl 'tit 9 SUn u.s dition. $35. Lawn.weeper • mon ... .,. · ·~ 898 W. tGth, N.B. "it~~;· 541~00. Aft 6, Mr. ~~ ~·9 p.m. Sun. lo.6 M9-0507. = White. $15 o. Yamaha $65. u 8-3365 aft. 4. 1 • Very reu. '1l4: ~1592 Corner oI Monrovia & 16th · Pltnot & Org1ns ELF.c Ori'er, Hom"lite XL121 ·~html Tnnsml' tter A ·~ VERSA11LE . younj· I ad Y REAL ESI'ATE .. Shouldn't HIDE-A·BED never used. Office Equfpment 8011 GIBSON Refrigtrator. Good See them now at chain saw, Qrl.ld'• XI.15. . Anlaphone, ad· with iOOd typing J1dll for :ia be H:~ ~~~ ~oo. 1: 3 :.1ze':.'\ ~ PROPEsS10N~ condl~ $50. • Coast Music 54M7DZ after s: 30 · ~'1: c ~~· : r ~ ! ~ \~ ~ intereatirig, ~duties in VillageRealEltate962-Mtt Ir: low seat. Den furniture, DRAFTING TABLE 548-9419 1139 Newport Blvd CM MICKEY Mouse Watc.b l>t@Ucator, "-ton ~ c i r cu I a ti o n dept. of or 546-8103 cofftt tc end tables. Occas New llx42·\ adjuats ta stand· 17 CU FI'. Upright 646•0271 ' ~e=-ol:m concrete saw. Very ~I publishing m. Call Bea UNLIMITED Eaming poten-chain. Many other itena. Ing I eve L "ARROYO", p:e!~~: =l M6-9013. ~1831 Prettyman 546-t370 ftJJSt tell everythifll! Only metal edp, IOUd basswood. NTIQUES a•~ 2nd INCOME? Earn while tial part or full time.N• 2 montm old, All Medit· electronically bonded, l&Jld. Kenmore Gu Dryer. Tell'Vltlon 8205 A (Butcher -..-: I ~ Vand tionat Orpniza.tion. CaJl Mr Ve..., reu. 714: 870-1592 ed --•" --,·-·• tilt. Excellent condition •Ao: -FREE TO YOU lee box, trunJm, etc.) HO .. you earn to """ • a Hllne at 833-0362 after 6 pm. •J ... U<.Jll'UL. .,......... ~ .p.r. N u · FURNS (refrl&', 1tove. IOIV9 Beaut,y Counselo!'. ''The DESIGNER'S SOFA Ing arcll, tilt. to any ana;Je. * 847-8115 * A N Al ORCANIC Fertllbet, aged eeat, couch. •tc.) CLOmU ::: .. FrieNi • Fa:~ ':1;1;, oJ!:vers~";: ~~~ll~t !.:t:C~ ~~ ;;~· 0:,e:;.,~ Ke=~e~tu=~~ ~~· SALE ~ ~~u:vm:_mb~ ~~ i!n~ ~ ~ ~1765 OR Call: 83H900 direct li&htin& In corner sec-mechanism, $7S; 4 drawer e M'l-8115 e ' mulch. 833.a:m or Hawall, c:all 82&--Dil Jar SAWYER HOME need• MANAGER required for 13, tion. Can be ueed tqrether steel file cab. $40; card betw 8 & appt. . mature w 0 me n f 0 r 1 BR Adult units with pool. or separate. In xtnt cond. Index file S2: 9 drawer steel Antlqutt 8110 Color TV's & Sttreos Fri. KHITTfD FABRICS houlekeepinf, pr act t ca I · 642-2020 Original (l()lt SUSO. Sell for ufil. cab. $5. Equip. 6 mo& PRIVATE _ _, t.a:--}d 23" Motorola. wal cablpet, NEED ho M nunJ.n&. "6-6tt6. 2619 "-" & $285.ormakeoUer.646--3469 old.54&-8543After5PM ,,...v ...... 0 rq. $6!!0, apecial ·•••• $495 to train a very frightened Orange Av. C.M. AaenW cl•, . 7550 HiDE a bed never used $100 pistol, palntinp, clau. and 21" Zenith '69 model skittish, 4 mas. old kitten'. MA.TUR£, n.liable woman ontef!_ 8' Med .,~ love seat. col: Houuhold Goeda I020 ~2488p a 1 n t e d cltlna. rea;. '5'19, ipecial ...... $469 Beautiful, Jang ha Ired wanted care S-yr eld lirl. HSERVlNl!'FOR 39 YEARS" ftt &: ·enct tbla, lamps, 5 Zenith •tereo, low boy 8 b'klise shcll. SfG..6183. Call 11-4 wkdys. ~Ill req. Sal Wt Cin Find The pc dinette 1et, king 11 KIRB~ Vacuum· Reem-VAST tlock Arnl!r tc Eur speakeni, pecan tln1ab. u ta 3 2/1 open. HB. Write Daily Pilot Rl..a. S F y Spanbh Br aet, 1eu than dltioned. Guaranteed. Like turn a: cloclcl. Larr 1 reg. $379, special ...... S249 =·,,,..,:-.,.-..,.----'- - P ""1 ..,.t pot or °" 2 moo old. MWJt eell this new wf1.ttaclunents. F .P. Morpn Antiques. 2 4 2 8 Many other TV'1 i: Stereoe CUTE Tmier dog, one year NEEDED FULL TIME _, "It's Not Luck" -$5 ~· ~·1 N -ru·-c ... to cbooR from. old, family dog, eoac1 with , Apply e;:.*~~~ Sec.-~~~~?,~1650 ~;,3 ;J~ ;;:;.: :.r:. :: ~~ I022 s.:;·Mo:~,;.:~ 1120 STEVENS TV G~?i:: ',:~':.:!i l'POR ~LE Reamants, aanlpleo A llQll endl Sat Only • a..m. tO. t p .... 9'l9 l!Wr, Coo!111._ KIRBY Vacuum cleuer· II attachm<nl3. OziclDaD¥ ~ for over $D>. Take ovS muill .,,..,., .. $19.60- Credlt dept. 53&-1'289 • WATER beater 3:> pls $15. good for unaUer bomt er- l'Mtal. ~ after I • weekends. ' · Sunlit• N-port Hoo1io• Convalescent H11pltal 646-7764 d&yl a wk. 646-6701 Bookkeeper •..••••••••• $675 Dbl BR Rt comp), 2 nite REF'l-CROSS tops $35-$45-1968 SINGER, li&·za&', touch-1953 Newport Blvd. SPA YEO female Boxer; all GIRL o/18 w/CM to care Proff Operator •••••••• $375 1tanda. dbl dresser $125. $5.5. White naup.hyde couch, omatlc, com pl wt walnut C.osta Mesa 548-3493 vacc. Good family q. 2941 for 2 boys aft ICbl. 3-6:30 Factory ••·•····•·•·••·• $346 Reblt G.E. ~frit $75. •mall bum bole $ :J 2, cont0le. Repo-envlce man 8 FT OILED Wahrut TV, E. Coast Highway Corona pm. ~1381 dayt, 646-8.146 Credit Qerk •••••• •tut $477 Table 4 4 c:hn $10. 2 mo Wuber, dryer mmb. $35. leaving area. Will aacrlfice AM• FM stetto comb. 0.. del Mar, 9 to 5 evn. Dental Front Office •••• $51» old bike $30. 536-4681 19 inch port. T.V. $45. far $39.97 cuh or auumt Ing front doon. Made by STRIPED Ginger eat male -===~=~-·lst'ITER For 3 Frla. 2:30 Med.~t ........ to$400 BEDROOM 1ulte: Double Complete bedJ $15. (beat $4.'l7mo.Buttonbole1,bllnd Curtis Malhifl. Must Sffl Name Charlie Bro~~ COUNTER. GIRL to 5.30 5 day Wttk. Mesa MALE DIVISION dreaaer, che1t, 2 af draweni & vanity with helm:,~ etc. No at-$125.·54(M622 aood borne. Call aft &,p.m. Mutt have srtll nperienct! or Verde 'School area, CM Engineer Civil •••••• ta $1000 nightstands. Antique white mirror I: bench $23. Chest tacb needed. ·J?taltt OK's NEAR new Philco portable 6'l5-423S 1131 cubing experience. Wark· 540-535'7 • • Accountant Cost •••• to $7S8 S1DO or will 1ell ll!:p&rat:ely. of drawers SlO &: $8. :n ruarantee. Call 528-6616 TV. w a Jn u t finiah, roll TERRIER type male dos. i!ti' houn Mon thru Fri I Installer -·Telephone •· $563 Mz..ll55 inch CoMDle T.V. $14. Rat· 1967 SINGER w/cablnet, around 1tand, paid $165, Rll All ahoti. l..ows eh!Mftn. to 4:30. CAil Mn: Pennine-GENERAL Office; 10 key Credit ~Trnee .... ta $600 Quality Klna:-stze Bed. tan living room set, needl doel eYel')'th1na wtthOut at. for $85. ~ 1 male long hair J-' Sil.mete ton. 833-0000 Ext 2a36. add. ma.ch., lt. typ .. Door Sheet Metal ··~········· $303 beau6ful qullttd mattreu. covering $22. End &: oolfee tach. $36.fi6 Full price or RENT TV $10 caL ••• -l/31 Quality Klno-5bo 8'd:" beautiful quilted ......... 1pllt foundation,. blt.ln ll'ome. ......, """'° 191, W«lhUOO.- WEDDING rinll' 13 olonil In unique 11ttting, beautifui c:nnd. -14 ~·. ,.....,,., * WAITRESSES * ~e•:.,.~,attr. N~~ "We have many &ood jobt split fOundallon. blt·in tables $1 to $4. Aqua $1.50 wk. Guaranlffd. Call N< De-it . Free Dell-LIFE".:'"°d,.·-th! •--"'-••• Experienced only-Full time. ....,p. <)a.I. open. ~~ wailin& lar.yau'' frame. Nt'vet Uled. $9S. nauga)lyde couch, cuatdons 523-4915 """' ·~·J ._ u.Jv•uu: uui.- APP4' in penion bet 9 am SNACK BAR WAITRESS SOME FREE Worth$250. 842-6538 need cowrln&: $12. 4 apetrdJ=========-534-0471 or Trl-9110 2 yr Cnclcer &: Dall9hund. PLAYHOUSE 4X6, windowS ~::i:rt #iJ!a~ laland, %J4 i-::-·i: Bch M=~s ANTIQUE vittorian pump := ~ ~::C::: Muslcal IMt. 11u ':fl·f' 1 Ste,.. nlo ~th okter chtldre:i ~-$1~ nm See Mr. RichatdlOn UlUIAftl Orpn; French Bed Ir. port 1. b 1 e typewirter, ex· ELECTRIC aultar • n d YR o =BAB=Y~crt~b~ .. -.,.-._--Ulld- MATURE Woman want!Pd. PE' llfftuua Oock. c:t:llent $3!S. 1550 ~ ampl.Wer with cue. $XO. BEAUTIFUL 6' AM.FM 4 w prtd. Dachahund. l I: .f $12. Room. board Ir. Kma11 u.1ary MESSENGER doctor'• office, IUVnn 675--lOll 646-9US 540-'1839 rtereo with mu It Ip I ex m. altered. Good adU « yr ~ .._71 eookina: li piclrup, miac. officf! usilt· Ave., C.M. Gfrud chana:er, w ll l n u t older child pet. 546-8589 v .. _, ::~=or for e~ uce. MUil have ear. 319 zoo, ~~~ve TRESTLE Dininl: r 0 0 m DUNCAN Phyfe dining room TROMBONE -Qmn, mod. cabinet, 1torage area tar after 2 r .M. 1/31 ====~==:::;-;( 3nl St 1 ... n.... .,,.,.,.,J table, ptaft. Oriental rup. table set; larp table with 6H $100. Xlnt condition Call lots of --~,, all -"' (TWOI 7 month old .. ,. • Misc. Wanted 1610 widow: Balboa 1 s land. ·• ..._ . .....,... Cornn-17th I: Irvine Tape recorder. Elect. Ad!et 6 .. _,_ ,...,_ -'-lnet A ... A _,,., '""""" ........,. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I 6'73-5703 BABYSITI'ER In my NB ~ Beach 968-28« Cn•11 .... "'11116 ......, -·~ atate lno tube•) like new ,brother and .uter. Railed 1.,;;~""'==~~R~E~:l:=e;p bame. 2 &hit 4 I 5. 1':30-6 Ottlcell in all al typewriter. hutch. Pilot Hi-Fl with AM· WHITE Fender Mu•t1.na: at about 113 orllirlal cost IDgetheJ'. Need lood Mme. e w•.....,D ... SECRETARY/ ~ pm. Mon-Fri 6'J3-.3397 aft Orana:e County S' DEACONS bench; 2 Capt. FM tuner. Double bed. box GulW' w/~. XInt cond, Will ,.crlfioe $%4. Phane 540-6183.11to3 only 1/31 11tin15 ~~I:!'..t •:_~ 6 645-2T'lU eta; Tmtll tbie (painted, aprinp. mllttrea at: be~ tnUlt aen wo. S3&--S005 546--TlM BLACK Wnlle cat. ~ l'urnltu,. e App111.,.. ....._ Co __ pert for -'1tiquinr;) $60 board. S1eep\6e baa. -STEJUX) 1968 SoHd: state Sfame1le 4 ma n t h • • Color TVs e Pla,._ m•nt !Inn, v•• -~·HOUSEKEEPER.Own RESTAURANT ~ Inlier hlleh. Ma"Y olhe'Plon01&0rtons 1130 4 IPd j -·~· ,..,.; -· 1131 ETC .. ..., lfta.5f0.-0940or64).6333 room, 1V. 2 tebool age Manacer 1'ftlttl. Coakl, G'~o• hid L-1 well --' i-.ou.thokl • ·~ • DIETARY -.... exp. """""' .. tulJ dutiH. •om• Soul"""-""" Wal-NAU ~· ~ •• ~ , ..... ;.!';.;&Bupm.! WT o•rs1 II -In ................ kitty, 111 .... old; ..... Cash 111. '12 hour 11:38 to I PM, Colt1. Meta Erwlish pttfel'ftd. 548-4441 et (food a. cocktail). Top $50, A Recllna chair $40. 3009 Zell Prive A Le:ft on lay •WQ-· Pl1 pt'c:ttna'' Coad bouM pel 541-4$31 Memarial Hospital. J7l Vic-ruu. Time hautekttptt I pe.y, Xlnt k>c. Ca I J Phil. 6'4-23&9 Lquna Buch '94·2!5611 bal&nce ot $'79 cub.,!'!' low 615-02SO S.11'!!'!"''!'"'!!'!"'!!!'~!1!!!!!'1 tolra Strttt. ~ ext MS-1796 MOVING-MUST SELL! Hieber pr1ce• an comu.& -pymnt..Wa.rehatme. _....7289 ==,,_-..,,--,,.,.-.,-i; ehlldnre. Rd. Sa1at')'open ARGUS •AGENCIES Nice homehokl furnW.\np. MOVING,. oversea•. but wt:.,. •till dltcountlna: 2 AR.J mahol •ttir•o FRENOI poodle. Malt. w A N J E D 330. vie C.M. MS-368J. 1866 C ?-; • 1 Blvd CM 281·D Delmar C.M. '461119 ,EverytbinJ m U at IO· all piaJJOI It orpne: in the apWtrr ablriet w/C'Xlt'ft-~N~ U10 W. ~ A~j,t- SITT'ER, C4J'e tor P1 9, OPERATORS Blind lltMch • ewpoa .. . . TV'a port. 1:-coruiole. Red House~d tum,. eppl, dlvin; 1ut dayt ol tbe pu.t Mov-ponrnbl: $DI. MllK', '1M-2'{9T • -• We Dted .fllW!b' (DI) ~ bay u. my home, l-5:30, haJld flnbben • Gument r-L--1 I ~·di 7600-__._ ....... , ttk'& chr, 3 -etar. SChock ubllt, uud Inc Sale. It .,.m coat )'00 BLK LABRADOR mix ~) hmlan. eolor awn trans. mature, fat'tof7exper.642-2G96N.B. .-nvu .. n•wrv on _ ~ ... "'" r-l.u:in.Ul1W Bay Ave. towalt.'SbapAbl.Q' pbPplc1, a ~b d ~ .,........ Brlslol-P.,.larlno, 549,0!40 HOUSEKEEPER. .U ve ·In Tho Newport oec1·1. eod tbb. '4M39$ NB f\i/Sat on1y.° 67$-6386 :::-:. " , • C-•• & E'ulp. ~ clc!;G3-ts;IO ' ~ ~ ~ = COUNTER Gtrt. _..,., _... .. -· Saluy. School "...,.,_ r EARLY -.= BEDS. ''''""""" • h 0 t 0 WARD'S BALDWtN BrUDIO -Kodalc -7 Mm "'Dotsy'' doe. -TOF CW! 1N JO llllnaloof ..,._ Ke-Frl•d ........ Wotld.&n-<1111 HAS A GUARANTEED .... $00. Early A equip., ..... ,...,. -llllllf-.•CM.·-......,. .. ,..-.i:;o -sii-1212 * 19341115 °'""""" m s.. a... CUllll1CllLilM ro au• dlak "'-646-Tm -.. """· s.t ...... IWIMONJ>. ~ Y• ·-• va atl'hNG Silfti' om low H-.1-l!W:b. ==~:;.,: SU(USSl R .,'!~~=-':;_ :.--'"' °'" NJl.mol>a·l>twA_......, --· fWllT,....(11;_..,... .... fllee.Dollaro·Ji.1'. TEACHER ....... ~ Jl.111 ......... -,' an ~r °'~-"·'· .. iD ~ -"""'In SportlntGcoodo asoo -·~ ,.. --WO ..... Oom I to 12 1111o -'""" 646.1115' -· !31-onJ GARAGE 9"lo Su...,., bedl. So. Cllll. <lPI -· --COSTA COINS SIT W. • .... own -iO.-IJVE.lN -bor'• bttper. In FINE Tndltlonal -I u-rn, clolhl,.., •"-118 SCHMIDT MUSIC co. GRl!ll( SURFIOAltD l-MONTll.,:M ,.!"PPY Oo ~ 'St., CM. -HS after 3. -, ~ klr nn. I bcmd, Jl!edme Gift. ~ dinlna: table mt cbain. ~ oU Paularlno. 1!1111' N. Main,-T 1" "MAUI", o:ceUent. $80. ' • _..._ .,,. ......... --,.,_n. rl'I ........ O'llldren, pandehUdrtn. Of no....-..,AA _t_ c•• ·--~-.. ' •uo•--=-="-.,-,•"'""-=···--=r'"·-----··· ........ WANTED' 84bysitkr, .... ~---· ~·-··~-,.....w. Individually tu-c~~ -~·· ~ -·~ -... -•~ ~·-"~w ~-Meehl lie. .,.., home. 118 ""'· 6 pm-11 e IJOOl(l(EEPER e tom! O>ll<ool 10 .._,. loY..,Adla-~T GIGANTIC Ntloh ....... RAMMONpORGAN,......, Uttlo-1/0 Puppy. -113 MIT• ~ i,.a,tld a 1'1-117-4ll7 hrt time, f\111 charp. Good -1Cboo1. lli Del 'Mor, -wfll l>o -lor 1V11' ..... lfl1ll !ante Ano 2 nllftUOj: w.JftQt. Ext<llent 1'1N°NOR 1'e<I ll!O. CHARGE l"'lr WIOI Id now. !!O TON --11"4 Whlte fttphalltlt DtmH-line a1ar7, Call m.m CM, S48-2.859 tt. Dial 6Gec1'I Aw .• Sat./Sun. '46-2932 cond.IUott. f71.4171 * SM-8831 • DtaJ. ta.am: ror RESULTS condlttoo. ...-&fttr t:a I l \ I ----------------~~-----~---~ TltANSPOllTATION • TltANSl'OlTA1'10N TUNSPOllTATION TllANSPOllTATION TltANSPOllTATIOtt PRICH • ARI LOWI HOO -can flOO-C:.n flOO ·BRAND NEW lf69: 2-D'OOR SEDAN! ~ ... ~ ~.I-0 M ~ ' il111, Cl'l'lh, lt11t1r i nti f11lt f1ct°"Y 1qulpm1nt i"· c:huf1i!I. ltJ50Yl21100l. IWliit.w1!1 n,., end wh11f Cft'lrt •l'fllnel.J FASTIACK or 2 DR. HARDTOP + Tix I: Lie: .... NEW '69 MUSTANG W1 '~11¥1 • h11g1 .. IKN" ,of Mu1t1•,. with •ptiff•I •<11111'· """' i11 riocli: fo, l1111n.cUit1 tl1li.1ry. Stltl Amerlc:1'1 H•. I ull· i~I 1port1 co1r. G.t yovr l1t9Ci•I 01111!111 t1:1t tN1,1 BRAND NEW CLUB COUPE! 1969! FALCON 2-Door ~'Tc.~fu~f.~!:~t•:11~·,::•;:1:d~ $ 2 0 88 1111 t..ut1r, tl1frolt1r, court11y li1htin9, c;ompl 1t1 t 1f1t, f11h.r11. •fc . t•KIOUl1t717l whit1w1ll ti1 M •"" ;::;;;,;,v•,. •ption1I. 1 ... _ TREMENDOUS "BELOW BOOK" DISCOUNTS ON GUARANTEED USED CARS ! I '48 MONTH RNANCING AVAILABLE '65 FORD CU>t. 500 '66 THUNDERBIRD '64. THUNDERBIRD '66 RAMBLER Amb. '67 IMPALA 2-0r. HT '65 FALCON Futur• '64 COU'TY. SQUIRE 2-4r., ll2, V-1, 1uto., RIH, v.a •••• .. R&H, f.11 .....,.., V•I, •wfo., R&H, full pwr,, 990. 2 Jr. H.T., V·f, 1uto., V.1, 1uto., R&H, P'S, fie. 1ir, Convt. V·I, 1uto. RIH, -· f·p1t1. v.1, 1uto., R&H. PS, PS, WW tir11. Lie. N•. SVH -tir • ., ... ;"'' 10,, ti11tecl f1d, 1U-, wwt. Lie. H1. OOT JJ2. 9111 .. Uc. VCK tl2. RIH, PS, f•ct, 1ir, -•· Lie. -•. ti"t..t 91111, Lie. Ne. ltl11 I f1mil' w1go". Lie. No. 477. No. SIY 173. UOK 576. Lie. No. HOS tl9. OSC 7Dt. ' 0. ..,,, •••• .... _ $895 $1895 $1495 $1595 $1995 $1195 $895 COlll.- 2240 So. Main a.t Warner e ·Santa Ana ond LIVISTOCK Boots lo Yachts 9000 Mobll1 Homea 9200 Motorcyclea ==-=='-----'-" 9300 Camporo 9520 Cost1 Mna'1 Y11r Round Mobllo Homo Show 16'·20'·2'2'·24' le 34 wides From $6995 12 WIDES 40' -4.l' -45' .00' ~· -80' -64' From""' You can pay more but you can't buy better Parka a vallable in all areu. Bay Harbor Mobllo Homo Show 1425 Baker SL % block Eut of Harbor mvd. 2 HONDA trail 90's, 600 CAMPER SHELl..S miles each. Like new cone!. & sleepers, 24'' to 52" hl&h. $275 & $295. 546-0750 No down payment o.a.c. HONDA TRAU.. 90. $150 HATTON CAMPER SALES plus lie, 1805 milt&.. 22'l W. Wilson CM 548-0343 546--4807 '64 vw -Camper I stereo, tapes Awning, utru, full- Tr1ller, Tr1vel 9425 mech. records n650. """"" NORTHWESI' t'OAOI '68.l========I 16', like new! Cost tl595, Dune Bugglft 9525 sell ru~. &n-SSM aft 4· pm. I--'-~'-----I 1'66 Trucks 9500 DUNE BUGGY New Cars SI HAILA ESPANOL ''WHERE THE DEALS ARE!" 'Open 8:30 A.M.·9 P.M. Mon.·fri. • Sal. lo S P.M. 546-7070 OPEN SUNDAY Used Cars 10:00 to 5:00 USE THIS HANDY POSTAGE PAID DAILY PILOT WANT AD ORDER BLANK AND REA...:H THE ORANGE COAST'S BIGGEST MARKET "" Baku Costa Mesa ln4) S:40-!M70 *SPDRTSMENS VAN* * TRUCKS ' * They Aro All Horo At F1nt1itlc Discounts RHdy to Go ------------------~----~4l:::'-·--------I SEE the Dual Wkte ~ WIRE Fm Tim-Mr pup&, EXCAIJBUR ~ ALMOSI' liner Pan Americu, Puai- ·nWer, champk>O qUality, NEW. MANY EXTRAS!! mount, Dite and Central .AKC. IOa8 $6950. mobile bomet: now at .. _ to famU> esu.mte Dual Wide Salts ·YlleliJ!t!t dtlldrm. cood LIDO 14, No. 1922 w:ltb (ha~ Mobile Homet Ille. ·1ia1m oab'. $25. S.-1'34. CO'Vft', tniler, North saila. 520 N. H1rbor, $.A. Ready tor immediate delivery ' TlMD • TlMD 7 TlMD 11 TlMD pO(jDLi ~ male, 6 blue Ir: white. Llke new. 531.a571 t.'eeb. bu pa~ -"-'-_.,,.=~--=~~ b:47' wl.tb b30' porch' 16.555 Beach· Blvd., (Hwy, 39) $4.50 $6.IO $10.65 $15.90 80-5126 -2:1' KEEL Sloop In N.8 . .Up, covered. Set up Coast Hwy. 540-2fi60 S49·0JOJ~7J·1190 ~" BEACH CITY DODGE AKC""~ ... ~.~lrb11'"'"""'S<""'tttr-, °"'10 $6!1(), or oHer. 64U759 or lmmed occupancy, Chl1dttn llunUncton Beach ·1970 HAllOI ILYD. $5.10 $1.21 $13.10 $20.10 wta. Webqn Un!. 3 females 642-2623 OK. $2500. Can finance. '6.'.; GMC 2T 4001. Cab-COSTA MISA .)dt. M&-1731 536-9(19 or 5J6..1098 cha.sllls. Ps/b. S 8 5 0 . BEST Jookin&: in Orange $6.00 $9.76 $15.SS $24.30 WIRE fax tenitl' pupplel:, Sp~!~ !kl IHta 9030 ---------I Servboft 506 llit SL NB. C.Ounty. Top, side curiain11,l----"----"--...__...._ ___ .._ ___ ._ __ _. ___ ..._"'-----'----I AKC. ahota. small, HQ' to 1965 1S FT HAVOC 1ki boaL Motor Homes . 9215 673--6020 1£00 CC eng. The Work!! handle. $'75. 131).2780 Mttcury 1000 motor, man,y ==-;.._'"'-----'&: FORD ~ t.on PU. Excel.,, ____ 673-4 __ 11_0 __ _ ntru. Must Sell! Sa.aillc-BY owner '67, 23' A¥Jus; heavy duty, mll."lt sell Mov.1'·-------- ltANSPORTATION ""' at .... 1oa !tr $1015. 8,000 mi.; load<d, Incl. ""'1o Aluka. 545--0733 JHps 9510 See to appreciate! s.o-4622 generator. $8.750. 892-3165 '62 CHEV. % ton plck-up:l-~-------a-ts & Yechtl 9000 RAH. bvy. sprinp Ir: tires; BRONt'O lllSS-V-8. 4 \YD . Boat M.lnt.nance 9033 Mini Blkn 9275 can aft. 5 PM 494-4151 Cust int. roll bar. Sp * SPECIAL * ~·-"-_ ~--~k .51 DIVCO ··-I -·ck, ., Slllpension. CB ndkl, 1100 '~'-' ~·,-MINl·BIKE 3.5 HP ~-"" ~ ""' & rim>. 61>-5"7 all :: -~~~-·~-~ .. ~;.s:: by~~ soo. ~ ton.S~~~tt:. 6pm. -ALSC)- 31' Trojan "' no "" "" ..,. Marino Equip. j 9035 Moto-••• 9300 .,_..Owner muat ll!D! I""'"-'-·-~·-------· -Sl"Tanlkine, nee crua ISoc:f>. 11164 h T P/U, f'OR.'O. $850 * 842-6486 * lmport9CI Autoa PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 '11b li1h flf, •.•••••• , "'''' i11gln11lr1t •••• , 1 •••••••• , ••••••• , •••••• , • , Cl1uiflc1tlon •••••• , •••• ,, •• ,, •• •• •• •••••••••••• , ••••••••••••• ,., N•m• , • , • , , , , , , • , • •• •• , •••• • •• • • • • •• •• •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •, A.clclr•u • •• •• •• • • •• •. •• •• •• •• •• • ••• •• • • ••• • •• •••• •• •• •• • ••• •• ••' • Cit, •••• , •••• , •• , ••••• , ••••• , • • • Plie111 ••• , , ••• , •• , ••••• , •••••• TO FllUU COSl Put eftl' en1 wlfcl 111 •1t.li IPICI lb•'l'I. lt1cl•J1 Y•lll' 1tfilltlM •t phO"I flllllll>lf. The c1ri •f your 1tl b 1t th• '"d ef th1 llt11 1ft whlcJi th• list worcl 1f , •• , •ti h writ- t1n. Add $2.00 1irtr1 If , •• J1tir1 w11 1f DAILY 'ILOT 101 11,...ic• wiffl 1111ll1tl , .. •li11. ,......,, °"" "'ih..'1::.""' '4' ~.:..(. li:l.,':"'' ...... ~ .. ~.~ .. Sl:.~ l RAY Jetfenon 500 Depth Meter. New, still in box, $85. 1 Apelco Dtrection nndtt, Model Dnt-«I, $85. 1 Honda E No. 111-300 port. pnen.tor, $125. 1 PrHto ...... .i..._ range, 115. All aint-CMd. -alter 6 • HONDA • MINI BIKES 1950 FORD % Ton Pick Up, e Spot Cub fllr' Imporb will M"ll for $200, or belt We pay more tor ~ 1mpor1 offer. C&ll ew 962-4764 ~prdleu ot year, make '62 FORD Ecomline, 3 spd., or coodlUon. 1 ry ua bdcn bii I.ndys, clean thruout; you RlJ.. ELMO R El-----------CUT Hiii -PAITI ON YOUI INYILOPI ----------- Kl..-en.mo. ~xtra pert!!.. $1(0}. 642-4222 MOTORS, 1.5Dl Be1cb Blvd. Wettminster. ~ "-"' """" ready! -31' Block hland ~-... .,..i -baal Q!!11'r ...... ...,.,., 1l3.Q;O ""' ..,_.,,, c_._mJ>0-"--"~-~~9-5,2'-01--~~~---1 DATSUN • ' ' " bAVID L. FUSElt CalJ: Qwck Awry -Vlo Oporto, NA C1H2$l 1r -..i6 Ewa. AM-LETS ANSWEIS T • ------- 1961 Tr1umpb -:.GO CC. Immaculate! -ma7 • Aft '69 M ... 1 N-...... S1.-1 1lrit'1 S •" •11r Truck• C1111p1r Prlc1t. l ·•·I I ff. M.d1h, Ch1tti1 Mod1l1, Self C.ftt1in1d U~ih, A.II C1111p1r Ac c1t- 1ori1t I~ St•c•. CAMPll CLIAU.NCI of 1961 El D.,1i1, F1•r Wi~Ji, Scoh-" incl Geld· fifll "'"•" •• • l ie. DISCOUNTS * I Y11r A"l"Ciltf Oii ,.,.,,. ...... Ct-Mit W4PfR REITAlS .,.... .............. ... ,... ........ ....,, THEODORE Robins ford 2060 MA.RIOR ILVD. COSTA. MESA _ '42'4tll REPOSSESSION •59 DATSUN PICh"UP 4 !'pd, WSW, dlr, 1ky blue \\i lh malchlna Int. 3.00J Actual miles, under factory "'arr. $85 Cash <leis or t&ke trade, preffor f0tt\cn. Will fine pnrt prty. LB 035013, 491-ml. """'34 '67~ 0..b!Un, 1600 Sport model. Whlte, lib M\lo'! Low mil". ~!1232 DAILY PnDt D~A· lJNES. Yoa cm -ahn for 1'llt pelmlm • dl7, Dial "'2"611 DAILY PILOT DIJ:IE.A· UNES. You can u.. them for just pwi.1111 a day. Dial -~·--- Clalllflod Dopt. IUSINESS REPLY MAIL Ant 0-htWf Noe II, c..lt W.., C."'-""' -------------------------------------~-~--------·-~---·· ·--.. ------· . ------- ' i . <i•Egad! another , OPEN EVENINGS AND Sl/NDAYS I I • one~s gone!~~ BRAND NEW 1969 $428862 OLDS "98" 4-dr. Tow" S1d1n, Air cond., 11110, fr11u., pow•r br1k11, pewit 1!11r., d1l11•1 r1dio w/ r11r 1p11k1r, ~11t1r, whit1 1itil1waU tlr11, tint1cl t l•n 1tc. S1rial """''"' ll4699MZ12· PLUS TAX & LICENSE St2. Sp1ci1lly pri,1d 1t . , . • 1 0LDSMOBILE /--------------------- u N I v E R s I T v ,- ' I I ,. I ' ........... -, -'-.. -......... ...... _ . -~-~----------~ Lpoking for a Car ? v Check the One Stop Marketplace · v v DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED To Keep Abreast of the Fast Moving Auto Market READ . DAILY PILOT CLASS I Fl ED EVERY1 DAY, '~: ~: ~-l, l • ' • • • l • • ; ! I· I: •' l ! •• l• •' . ' . ' .. . ' 1. i: 1: .. ;: . ' . ' ... 1: " .. l· ,, . " i' i. !· I: '· l. t; :1 -ii ... . Used Cars 9900 Ulld Cars 9900Usod Cars 9900UNd Cars 9900U•d Cars 9900Usod Cars 9900Uoocl Cars 9900Uoocl Cars · 9900Ulld Cars 9900 ·· 1 ~~~~~~~iiiiiimii~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I -.. I~ ... CONNELL · CHEVROLET'S USED CAR CENTER SPECIALS CHEVROLET . '67 8" Flr<!L'\id(' Pickup. Glenwood grttn. St~p bumprr, R&H, factory warranty. Lie. No. Q74364 $1695 '66 CHEV. l/2-Ton Pickup. V-8 eng., auto. trans., fact?rY air cond .. radio & heater, extra ruce. Lie. No. U-11818 $1995 '65 PLYMOUTH Sport Jo'ury convertible. V8, automatic, power steer .. radio, heater. (NBV894) '65 INTERNATIONAL PICKUP -V-8. standard shift. Lie. No. S31l94 '67 PONTIAC Bonnrville H.T. CouPf'! A.T., P.S., fac. tory air C{)ndilion, RlH. Blue with black Landeau roof. Uc. No. TXUS51 '63 CHEVY II Wa~ Radio, heater, Goth i e 1old. (Q ) 5595 '63 DART G.T. He.rdtof-.coupe. 6 cylinder, automaµc. radi~ ttt, medium blue with lilue vinYI trim. $895 '63 CHEVROLET Btl·Air 4 Door. VS, automatic, power steerinr. radio, heater. <TEZ010) .. s495 '66 RIVIERA Custom coupe. Full power and factory &Ir conditioning. Radio and heater. '$3295 ., •••••••••••••• e ORANGE COUNTY'S .. :SAVINGS: : HEADQUARTERS : e '58 CADILLAC e •• Sedan DeVIUe. Full _powtt, factory air. •. Tuxedo black. (KBZ2.521 : s395 : • • : '66 CUSTOM : • 327 VS, A.T., P.S., Factory sir cond., • R&H. Bucket seats, Ermin(' white with • red interior. Lie No. 1'530Jfi • : 52195 : • • e '68 CORVETTE e •. Stingray fastback. 427 VS, 4 spd., Ai\I· •. F?i-1, factory air, Indy tires, l\1ai.t wheels, • P-windo\.\'S, imme.c. cond. Sold new by • '66 DODGE Polara 4 Door. Automatic, alr cond., Power...ateerln£, radio, heater, ~Id with beiie inter. Below wholesale. SIN486 I $1395 '61 TOYOTA Land Cruiser. 4 wheel drlvr, exC1'1lrnt condition, 1011.• mileage. {TRJ019) $1995 DUNE BUGGY Sharp with peppy V\V engine and trans- mission. Meta11ic blue. <DDU388l 51395 • Connell Oiev .. (XSP1731 ... ---------. •· MUST SEE e '68 VOLKSWAGEN Bug. Radio and heater. undt'r 5,000 orl· rtnal mi!C!!. F'orrt'st gr('('n. : . '64 EL CAMINO ; • V-8, A.T., al< rood, P.S .. RlH. E,m;oo • $1895 white with turquoise interior. Lie. No. :-.no $1495 ! ....._ ___ ....,. -•,6•5•D•A•T•S•UN--.: '67 CUSTOM : • V-8, A.T .. P.S., RI.ff. Willow g:rttn \.\'ith • '65 RAMBLER 770 4 Door. V8, auoomauc, power steering,. radio, heater, white w/ereen trim. IFBBSll) Pickup. R&dlo, Hetler. Lie. No. NMW-452 ,,.. '67 IMPALA S1101·l Coupe ~27 V-8. AT, PS, factory air condilion, R&lf. J\iaroon \vith black lnlC'rior. Lie. No. TUX459 $2195 '68 DODGE l)(oluxr 4 door slation wagon, V8, auto- motil', JIO\l'rr :"1C'rring, radio, h('ftter, $2495 . '67 DATSUN Deluxe 4 Door. AT, R&H, Ivory with red interior. Llkr fl('',\'. Lir. No. VE:lJOJ7 s1495 '64 CHRYSLER 300 f[ardtop Coup!'. Autn. trans., power sl~r., factory air cnnd. 1W1gr \v1th parchment in- t.t-rir.lr. Lie .. No. XEV9J l $1495 '66 MUSTANG 11.T. Cou!M'. Stftndard shift, radio, heater, l'rmfn1• 11.·hitr with rt)d .inlrrior, . 51495 $795 I !~".~52395 .r w•iu-i ...___~················ CHEVROLEI 2828 HARBO~ BLVD., COSTA MESA s795 \ ) I\ • . . • ~:i~ 546·1203 c~ 546•1200 . .·. . .... . -. .· t • ' • . r .... U DAllY PllOT Fridar, -SI, 116'1 FERRARI A ~ d DKW FERRARI ~l. Of' 2 0. H&nHop. """' rood • N•wport Im ...... Url. Qr. .... II ,.s Real Sharp ange Coun!Y's only author· ..... ...Jf'P NEWPORru MOTORS ~:~=ii!',~~ '\J• Newport Beach S4t-Ol OJ--47J-1 1 tO DKW 2005 Harbor Blvd. 642-~ 540-176( -~t70 HAllOll I LYD. 5U..5294 548-35.11 Authoriud MG Dealer COST A MESA TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD I '6J RDJAULT Dauphint, xlnt cond.: see to ap- All Models fr. Sino Lfmi4 preciate. Low mileage. $500. YOTA-VOLVO ="'-=======~I J.!1611 -· C.M. 616-!l1<!3 SUBARU TOYOTA 1969 SUBARU HEADQUARTERS from $1297; 66 MPG ELMORE C.mple!e foreign ca.r ""'"" - For Daily Pilot Wont ML Kosta Kustom Kais 15300 s..c:11 -·· w11mn1tr Dial 642-5678 1980 Harbor Blvd. 646-:>484 PbcDe -=. FINEST SELECTION • OF PREVIOUSLY OWNED '68 CADILLACS IN SO. CALIFORNIA 4 DOOR - 2 DOOR • El Dorados • Calais NewCers 9IOON9WCars 9800New Cers 9800 N_•_w_c_.,. ___ 9_a_oo_N_•w_c_._ .. ___ 9,;.;900-'-,N"'"•'""'w-'c.c;;rs-"---9;...:800c;;;...:N...;;•..;.w""c.rs;;..;... ___ 9_aoo_1 • Coupe de . Villes • Sedan de VIUes UNLESS YOU'VE GOT SOMETHING AGAINST SAVING A BUCK! • GRAND PRIX! Beautiful Midoi9ht Green with matching interior hardtop is fully equipped with oir con· ditioning, turbo·hydramotic: tronsmission, power steerin9, power disc: brakes, pushbutton radio ond heater, 400 c:u· bic: inch en9ine ( 350 h.p. that is I, shoulder horness, head rests, hidden windshield antenna, re m o t e control outside mirror, front floor mots, white side wall tires ·and all the standard deluxe Grand Prix accessories. Serial Number 27659P217917. Look at Ifie car we've advertised here. ' ••• Know somethin9? The price is hi9h· er than that of some Grond Prixs adver· tised elsewhere. There's a reason: Look at the equipment on our c:or. And ••• our car is in stock & reody to 90! It is not o stripped down m o d e I that you would have to or de r. In keepin9 with our policy, this ts the way we advertise cars • • , equipped, and ready to go! '67 PONTIAC G.T.O. 1 Or. H.T. VI, hydr1m1lic, pow1r 1t11ri"'il I br1~~•. r1dio, li1at1r, WSW, f1th"y ,;., .,inyl top. tlt4 mil11, ont owner, !UOGl41l $2977 '67 FIREBIRD 400 VI •n9ino, 4 •p••d tr1n1mi11ion, ,.dio ond li11ltr, rid li111 li1•1 $2777 '64 PONTIAC G.T.O. Conw•,+iblo. VI, hydr1m1lie, power 1!11ri n9, r1di1 i nd h11I. 1•, whilt 1id1 wi ll tir11. l'Al2111 $1377 '65 CHEVROLET lmp1\1 S~. VI, 111io"11lie, pow1f li•1ri119, rtdi1, h11!1r, WSW, winy! 11~. 26475 mil11. !NOY!ll) $1777 '69 PONTIAC G.T.O. C1nw1rtibl1. VI, 4 1pe1d, pow1• olee ri n9, r1dio, h11ltt, rid lino lir11, 111••• •• , •. IYNG2 17J R1lly II whotli. $3577 GRAND PRIX! ROY CARVER'S SERVICE DEPARTMENT IS OPEN MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY FROM 7:30 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M. • THE SALES DEPARTMENT IS OPEN 8:00 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. SEVEN DAYS A WEEK. EACH AND EVERY "CARVER ·CARE· CAR" CARRIES OUR EX· CLUSIVE 100°/o WARRANTY ON MECHANICAL PAttTS. '67 CHEVROLET CAPRICE '68 CHEVROLET l Ooor "••dlop. VI, 1ulom1lic, pow•t sl11rin9 I br1k11, r1dio, h11!1r, WSW, vinyl lop, f•clory 1ir, I S.745 mil11, l\IGX5ll ) $2677 '6 7 OLDSMOBILE Vi1!1 Cr<1i11r. VI, t ulornofie, powtr 1t11rin9 I br1 ~11, rtdio, h11l1r, WSW, f1ctory 1ir. (U0Ct71 l $2977 '68 CHRYSLER Np!. 2 dr, H.T. VI, owlomolie, r1dio, 111~!•'· pow1r 1l•1rin9, w1w, 1.716 "';111, yellow with block winyl top. 101)~1 Fie· lor'j' t i• $3577 '66 RIVIERA VI, \iydr~n'lllic pow1r 1't•rin9, powtr br 1~1 .. r1dio. 1111+1,, whit1 ,;d1 woll lir11, l1dor'j' ,;, c1ndilionin9, 1ilw1r w/bl1ck interiof I SIN525 I $3177 '63 VOLKSWAGEN l;I Cimino J'1• S.S. VI, 4 1p1.d, pow1r 1l11ri119, r1dio, h11I· 1r, R~d Lin t lir11, c;1mp1r 11!11!, 15,175 mi111, l 1nd111 lop, buck1t •••h. IS5i80A l $3277' '65 FORD F1irl1n1 500 w19on. \II, 1ulom1lic, powtr ll11rin9, rt dio, h11l1•, whil1 1iclt wtll t ir11, ll,61$ mil•1. IP1 45A I $1477" '66 CHEVROLET F1 "'ily woqon. 6 cylind1r1 tulo"'1tie, ,1dio, h1tl•r, ctmp1r 111vipp•d !111000) $1677 '67 BUICK GS 400 VI, hyd•1m1lit, power 1+•1ri119 I h r•li•t, 1H i•, h11!1r, WSW, l1c +o•y 1i<, winyl top. tlPYSl•I $2677 • '66 PONTIAC lo.,n1will1 conwt.+ibl•. VI pow•r 1'11ri119 I bt1k•1, rodio, h11!1r, foclory 1ir, WSW, power windowi, bl•cl w/bloc~ tip. I RZA 45 I> $2377 ALL PRICES IN THIS AD ARE, OF COUR SE, PLUS LICEN SE & TAX. 0 PRICED FROM $4995 All Corry New Car 5 Year or 50,000 mile Warranty ALLEN OLDSMOBILE -CADILLAC 1150 SOUTH COAST HIGHWAY LAGUNA BEACH 494-1084 • 547-3103 9900 Uaod Cira 9900 JANUARY CLEARANCE Th• prices below show th1t we mun bust. ne11. Must cle1r these c1r1 out for Febru- 1ry'1 new crop. '62 Comet Custom $488 Station wagon . 6 eyl, auto, R/H. PUF098 '64 Buick Spec:iol $788 4 dr , VS, auto, PS, RH,Sl. 4243B '64 Chev. 4 Dr. $888 Malibu 6 eyl auto, RH. OML769 '62 Mere:. Colany Park $888 Park Stati«I Wagon Fae air & power. F JM592 '63 T-Bird H.T. Co upe . $988 Fae air, full power. IYE437 '64 Chev lmpola $1088 H.T. Coupe Fae air & power. KIZ745 '64 Mere Montc:la1r H.T. Coupe $1088 Fae air & power 10Xl67 '64 Pont Cotalino Convert, auto, PS, PB, RH. OLE917 $1088 '65 Chev lmpolo SS Coupe. Fae air & power. $1488 NPA468 '65 Chev Impala $1488 SS Convert fac air & power OYZl25 '66 Comet Capri $1488 4 dr. Fae air & power. RRY522 '66 Ford FL 500 H.T. Coupe. Fae air & power SUN396 $1488 '64 Unc:oln Cont Town Sedan $1688 Fae air & full power. IOZ637 '65 Mercury Colony Park Wagoo Fae air & power. HON348 $1788 '65 O lds 98 4 dr H.T. $1788 Fae air & full power. NBR792 '6• Mere: Parklane 4 Dr. H.T. $2088 Fae air & lull power. XSS516 '68 Chev Impala H.T. Coupe $2488 Fae air & power. VPX867 JOHNSON I & SON , 1t41 HARBOR BOULEVARD COSTA MESA 642·7050 Give to Your Un ited Fund ' 1 ·1 ' ' I ' 'I l " RANSPORTATION • . TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION . . . --'--1-==.c.;;.;.;..;.;~.:..:.:-TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION m~ AutOI 9600 Avtoo Wonted 9700 Used C>r1 9900 U.Md Cars 9900 u...i C:.n 9900 ;Uc:csad;.;;..C.=re=----'-9900= 1 !--'": •. --"'~~·-.. -· WE p"c·is·H .. ' -'6.1 TR .C, extras, txal.leot $lZO I ~=ii*'l'--~;:;t:o=·==-1 t« -.,.,,I & ....... just VOLKSWAGEN can"' 1orll.e-..i •. GROTH CllMOIET vw ' Ask for Sales Ma.na&er Price Speci1l1· .~~~:;! 60 8'.l& • • • • .. • .. • • " • $399 KI 9-333:1. 61 BUSS " .. • • •: • • • • " 1499 "'""7-iaii=-'fi\i :':.;Y=:;CJ'"=:UH::-:---- 63 Buss • • • • • · · · · · • • · • S599 n "' I' 61 Bu. ... " " • • • • • • • • • 1999 '61 Sunbeam Alpine Rdstl' ro· · R OUR W Excdk"'· """""' .. $1... • Tra111pOrtatlon CAR SALES FULL PRICE '61 Olds 115 • . • .. • • • • • $99. '59 Pontiac ••.••••••••• $99. '57 Buick • , , •••. , •• , • , • $99. '£l T-Bird ............ $199. BUICK '61 lNVICTA 4 Or. HT. Full power, tac air. Prv prty. $.100. w.mi Pltl3 many other fine can. c . .,==8.,""'1ar=k.::, w:.,hl.::to.::, ~36000=-mi, We have financlnc available. We e&"'"" our own oontr:acts. garage serv, pwr str. $995. •• ~ 493-3349 D&na Pt. BLUE CHIP '66 BUICK Rlvien. tully CHIYROL!T CHEVROLET '68 EL CAMINO 321, atan- dard tnnaniaaion, I o w mlleqe, Good condition. 64>-1193 CHRYSLER -CilRYSLER 1961. e s ta t e sale. Air conditlonlnc, PIS. P/W, PIB." xbtt c:ond. $400. ~ S)WIC, Mr. l<aaJ•y. AUTO SALES "'uipped. lUlmacuJa1e ,.... dition. Call 644-2448 A 2145 HIUW B!v<I. ..ONT11'4ENTAL Costa Mesa FOR Sale 1966 BWck RMera 'Sf EL Camlm. autD tram. ·-'-- party. 548-Q806 S'n-1398 8 AM to 12 PM Air conditloni'tw. Leather ~~~~-~~~~= i~xl~nt~coOO.~~lo~-=~~pvt pwr •trs. $1095. Call 'fJS CONTINmrAL Sedan.: CONN BARRACUDA -uhpolatery, v1.,.1 "'•·Po"'" ELL CADILLAC '66 QIEVEI,LE --..... """" "" mu ..... p,;,.,. !" ~ C:HEVROLET '6• BARRACUDA ~V-8qUy.•l!Pd ........ 1.""""==·=W15.==613-8233=====1 ~ '2828 Harbor mvtt. • 1968 CADUJ..AC Sedan De bucRt aeat&. Immaculate O.t& Mesa M~UOO VS . Sh Ville. 13,000 mi. Whito t"""'Pout slMo63 CORYAJI 1--.M"'it,;;;=::-;=;;;::=--engine, arp. wlblue inl Fully equip. ======----1 ~------- . RTS W~ $799 "~ Private --''5 CHEV. :h>r., 6 cyl.,_ttrea OORVAIR Moma lll6I. ~m. 'OnnpTOP I -B .. ~ ~· .....,r.sv· <ood, "1ck ohllt: rood Need& ....,., """'-c;;;;;, ··-Blue Chip Auto 5alH .... vt"oV 1145 Harbor Blvd. '59 CADl.U.AC. Seda.b de l'tlttb. oond. SZSO. 963-2858· paint. 64&-0fei 14t·OlOJ-..67J.11tO ~ 18881=s:cla i?lOTA Costa Mesa Ville, full pwr &: air. Good '62 IMPALA 4 door, low 1t70 llAllOI ILYD, lL Beach. Pb. ... 7..s555 .:===-="'=== condition. $400. 9 6 2-7 3 5 2 ~age. orig1nal owner. --;C:;:O~R~V;;t;:;l:;l;:t-• COSTA. lilUA "' alter 5:30. • 642-4715 * __ _ '·66 vw SQ<bck. ""'""'l Auto Luslnt 9810 BUICK "' EL CAMINO. Or'.ginal '62 CORVETTE AM/FM, chrome whls. krw,1-,.-.,---"--..;..:.;,.o I________ CHEVROLET owner. Local car. Stick Black beauty black bucket mi. Xlnl $1750. '62 Ran· *AUJO lfASING* '63 BUICK Wildcat 4 Dr.1--------shilt. Sacrifice! 548--0894 seats, plush' int: dlr. Car DRIVE TO LAGUNA FOR THE CLEANEST USED CARS '66 Gl\LAXIE 500 HT coupe r & i.. pwr str auto tnna, air,cond. Ltc #SVFUB .. $199~ '66 RAMIL!R 'AmbU.ador 4 Door sedan v.a, r ·& b; wto trans: Lte #Tl'VB03 $1795 '66 CHEV -Caprice Station Wagon , r & h, air cond, ps, aulo trans. Ltc #RYS676 .. $1995 '67 FORD LTD HT coupe, r & b, auto trans, ps, pb. Ltc #PVTe74 .............. $2$95 '66 CHEV caprice HT Coupe, r & h auto trans, ps, air cond, bucket eeall. Ltc #RYS. 411 ............................. $2395 '68 CHEV Impala HT Coupe, r & b auto trans, pwr strg, air cond. !Jc # WA388 ................................ $2695 '60 FORD FaJcon Ranchero1 r &: h, auto trans Lie #HMV849 .................... $89S '62 ~ORD (F250) Pi~kup Ltc. #M95S46 ................. , •• $795 '64 THUNDERBIRD full pwr, air, Lie #ORE- 527 .......... ' ............... ' .. $1695 '68 VW KOMBl·CAMPER, fully equipped . Stock # 9-076-1 .................. $3295 chero, r&h, auto, very clean pwr. steer, & brks., good '63 BEL AIR • Factory air '&i FJ CAMINO 4 11pd, 327 ha.I had exeepttonally good s h c ' $600. 968-4768 ' , ALL MAKES cond. $775. 6 7 5-2 4 9 2: cond. Rad i 0 I Heat I! r cu in. posJ, chnn rims, care. $100 CUh dels, will out oast Motors ).53 V.W. J.>;ug, competition ./ COMPETETIVE PRICES , 675-2677 646-9223 ·Ev~ wlcends R/H, Nw tn. 642-0513 11ac prvt prty. Pymnts $44.00 yellow, l mo. new tires, Cort fox Auto .... ,,Ing '66 BUICK Wildcat Sedan. '58 OlEVY, R/H, tach, 1960 CHEV station wagon. mo. QOB 223. cau 494-9773 F 0 RD • MER CUR y \chrome. whls, reblt en& by 224 W. Coa&t Highway Air cooditioning, Sacrifice chrm whls, auto. $100. 1005 8 cyl. •uto, pwr steerllli. or 545-Qi34. • • ! prof. with 6 mo guar, DOW Ney.>port BeM:h 642-3440 for f.1.SS5. 673-9233 E. Balboa, Balboa excel cond. 64&-2842 OIARGE yoor Wlllt ad now. 303 BROADWAY, LAGUNA BEACH 7 wks old. New tra.nsalC.el. ' 9 · i I Xlnt buy at $800. 494-047? UMd Con 9900U1od Co,. 9900 Used C1tr 9900 U...i Co,. 9900Usad Coro 9900 4 4-ISl5 .549-3 51 ' CASH FOR OLD vw·s ..___ - 'NEWPORTER MOTORS 2035 Harbor Blvd. 548.-5294 548-8511 '66 VW Deluxe Bus. ~. 4 New Radial tires.· Exhaust system. White-maroon. Xlnt cond. $1695 tirm •. ~1.80 alt 6. ·s.1 VW Chassis. Xlnt cond. Ready tor Dune Buggy, trans. worked on $350 or trade. Also Dirt Bike $65. !U-2590 CAMPER '63 VW, extra clean. R & H, all glass tinted. Big motor, good rub- ber. A aeauty! 642-3003 '65VWKOMBI ONE OWNER. MANY EX· 1'RAS!' .:~·· Fibreglas VW Buggy. Street Legal. EXTRAS. '31-4856 '68 VW. Lo mileage. Xlnt , cond. Ex~. '69 tags. $t1";il * 646-1003 1969 VW. W'.:M, radio, pop out wndws. Straight slide, Blue. 5000 mi $1975. 644-4059 VW '63. Xlnt cond. 44.000 ml. ll'lO· ?.rv Prty. ,,..... dtf 8tt '6 pm. 644-2'117 . VW Bus w/Rtbuilt '62 eog. Good tires, xlnt cond. $500. ~ WfilL Kept '6.5 VW Convt. Must see to believe! 545--1411 ·es vw squareback Station Wagon. New tires, xlnt cond. $1395. 842-3019 * '59 VOLKSWAGEN *· $200 under Blue Book . 962-8956 'C: V\V reblt engine. Good fues, radio, good shape. $650 cash. 546-41.28 aft 6 · '6f VW Bus. Xlnt cond. Wk days S.5 PM 545-1.00 Aft I It wk ends 673-7190 VW llX> eng., trans. New pa.lnt; tires, radio. '69 Tq3, $'150. 962-8603 '68 VW 7 pllS!lengcr bus. nep.v in June, 11,000 + mi 1 es AM/FM. 675-2345 '56 VW. Donn't run. MAKE OFFER. 524-5486 VOLVO VOLVO! All Model• Fr. $2695 eu 11mu IHl'OR'TS TOYOTA·YOLYO Ul66 Harbor,. C.M. 646-9303 * New Yolvo1 * GETA BETTER DEAL Herb Friedlander 13150 .Beechplvd. (Hwy 39) 2 blks So. G.G. Fwy. 893-754:i6 537-6824 '65 IZI S Immaculate. AMI FM radio, 8 track 11eteo, white walls, mint cond. $1.450. 545-6788 (Cl.n )"telp finance) '57 VOLVO $350 * 54!>-2547 * Antlqua, Cl1ules 9615 fe2!l MODEL A Coupe ')V/rumble aeat, primed, all ,flew chrome, rrrig engint, hins good. Belt ofter over 1$800 takes. ~ d.ys; ..,., 64>-4959 Auto. Wonted 9700 , WiH Buy four Volbwqei or Pantbt ........ -...Paldfor or not. CID blpll 673-1190 ~ANT To bey Pontiac Star Chief Safltl sts.UOn wqon Will pay cub pleue phone ,Bob~ Jr. 63&-2500 i.u.Ny W(H)iii'UL (jjl: 1 POJmllm'IJ:S .... -dbcoNiid ID ete•M Mt. 1'um t.dc to .,.. •• _ Op- oortunltiM'' NOW? Now it Lincoln is easier for you to buy a ·Continental or Mercury g re ate r harbor area. the • 1.n JOHNSON & SON INVITES :.YOU TO THEIR GRAND OPENING OPEN ~:HOUSE! . . ON SAT, & SUN.-FEB 1st & ·2nd. Be sure to attend the first open house in our beaut if ul~w facilities. Join us for coffee and doughnuts then let us show you the dealership that was built for you! LINCOLN • MERCURY ' ~ A' A'. -· ... 2121 HA90I avo. Johnson.son [!,ll rnl©@[!, rnJ ©@rnJ·'ii"Ilrnl·~ rnl'ii' £[!, a 1£00~ m a ~.ffifm©l!Dtm\'f ~' non@&lil? I ~626 HARIOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MES~ I ~it®·~®~@ ' .. ;, . . ,, •• : DID YOU ·: • KNOW : • :THAT YOU: : CAN BE : : DRIVING : ! A BRAND: NEW : • • : 1969 : I : POOLE BUICK : • for n Uttt. • • : s2444: I • • : YOU CAN!: I • •' ~ f ' I I • BUICK 1 • ' I : SPECIAm : I I ' ' • 2 DOOR ' SEDAN-: ., ' • • I • I :1 --• tf•.._ JJUJ I • $199 ' •,: I • I ., ' ' • ., •R•dio, "••t•r,. '"*°" lP.s .. • ! •f•clory eir, tTAX l56. • 1 • $29951 .; • ; , •I • '63 BUICK sltytjn • I •H.T. Cpt. A11to1Mtlc,\rtd·• 1 •io, httftr, pow•• .t.+-t,• •ftctory t ir lFXC949\ • l • $1195: .1 • '67 OPll. : : I •$pf. Coupe, R1dl' 1i,1kt •• f •" ·~•d. I 1w11•r,. CUOf. ! IOI)' ' I • • $1495· •. • I • + • "67 CHEY~•( • •• R1dl1, M1t1r, 111to., .S., ~ •P.8. IMll'UICU!~t· C611~iti•"·· ': • $2295-•. • • • '62 MIRC.'M"'-• ,. Auto;;;:•lic, t lr clfWi •• Jew· I !" ·~"$"695~' ~ ' • '65 OLDS Cutlou !Ii ' •H.T, Cp1. RIH, 1ut.;. fS, • ••ir cond. IP6Pttll . I • $1595 • • • '65 BUICK Skylork • •H.T. Cp1. R&H, •,.I•.;, PS.1 1 P.wl11dow .. elr cofttll I lttPDY2491 • $1695 :; : '64 IUICll_ ..,..... • ' A11to111•llc, pewtt'l"*""t• I •rMio, ht•ltr. 1~1~791 I • $79$. ' : • 67 OLD'S St&.~ ... • IAut1111•lic, •ir cW .. P·I ••'••ting I bra1••· 'fCL·. 0721 • : $3195 • • ; ) . '• . • '6' DODGE .M-• '4 Dr. H.T, Riff;( ....... IPS, 1lr cond. rl"P~OJJI I • $1995 • • • • • ......... : JAGU•I • • HEADQUDS • •Compl•f• S1'-t • S•rv·• l ie• end Partr"°'p•rt·I •m•nt for-JAGU~RS. 1 '-. I S.1 TM belt-. I 196t J.,.,,,,9'., )••••r·= : 234 E..11~. : • S48~'t1'6S• • Moft.Ft.I l:JO om 1 • I to 9 pn;l,1 I • 51tvrd1y t::io 0m • • , to 6 ,.,. • t Sullcl•V• 10 om • • to 6 pjlf' I f/J~sU ICK "I I '" '-f • • r COSTA MES A • I' I :Jf DAILY PILOT Frkil)', .4au117 31, 196, , ... ·..OR'tA flON TRANSPORT.A.TIOH TllAflSPORT.A.TION TRANSPOllTATION ;....;-..;...;:c.::.:::,..:::.:.:.::::..._,....::oo=N.:: .. ::...:c.=,.==;.....-,'"'IOO"""-Nl"'.,-'--c-.,.---""'.,::-:IOO ""' Cora TRANSPORT.A.TION "°°""'Cl" TRANSPORTATION 9100-Clrs TRANSPORTATION HOON-Clrs TRANSPORTATION 9800 .... ,.,. TRANSPORTATION \ 9800 New c,,. -. CADILLAC f~r NINETEEN S.IXTY-1'1NE JANUARY SALE 1964 CADILLAC 4 o.., h1rdlop li11id11d iri Roy1l1 l lu1 1rl1ri0t with m1id1i119 Dlue c:loth j11t1ri.,. He1 111 011 popul1r C1dill1.: power 11li1b l1"lo6i119 p•w1r 1t.erin9, power br1k11, power window1, AM.FM r1di o, crui•• eo11tr1/ 0114 muc:h, muc+. "'o••· !VHU89tl SALE s1444 PRICI 1963 CADILLAC Tllo p•pu11r S.0111 01Villo fini1h1d in or111i11e whi11 ••l•rior with eon. tr1sti119 bluo cloth 1n4 le1 lher intorior. H11 111 the popul1r C14l111.c pow· ., 1ui1h iclu4i119 al11rin9" Dr1k1s. widow1, •••!, AM·FM r1411 and c.;;11,.·, '••~• "~:~E'" $1;1'1'1":::•E 1967 CADILLAC This fo.,1ly Co11p1 01 Viii• his 111 pow1r 111i1h l11clud in9 pow1r 1l11rl119, br1ke1, win 4ow1, 1111 i nd C1dill1c'1 f1mo111 f1 clory 1ir eon· ditioni11 t, 1!1r10 AM·FM, tilt wheel, twilight sent., Pr1111i11m Ooubl1 Eoolo 1;,., l•'"=~~"'s3999·•::::E IVAX710I 1966 BUICK Cu1+0111 leSebr1 4 Door h1rdlop. Sp1r•lin9 1111 bl111 with 1111°lchin9 i11t1r• for. f1ctory 1ir c111ditio11in9, 1ufotn1tie tr1n1111i11ion, pow1r 1l11rin9, pow1r ~····· r1dio, h11ter, 1tc. r,.,,., • fin• 1ulomobil1 th1t mu1t b1 111n 1114 driw111 to 1ppr1ci1t1 ih fina w1 lu1! ISIW499! SALE s2222 PRICE 1966 CHEVROLET ! A l11utiful C1pri c1 sl1fio11 w19on. Low1ly 1lpin1 whit1 ••+etior with 1i1r111l1ted woo4.p1n1lin9, 111 1ed winyl interior, Fully eq11ipf>td with pow1r 1l1orin9, po-IJ11ke1, powl t t1il 91!1 windows, elim1t1 control 1ir con· 6itio11i119, ••h-fic tr1n1rniuion, premium tir11 and much mor1. Thi1 i1 , local I -er, 24,000 11til1 111lornobil1 th1f i1 1b1olut1ly exq ui•i .. , tV6J021 ) SALE PRICED 1967 CADILLAC D1Vi1l1 co11.,11 1ib!1. l11utifu1 C1m10 b1i91 with m1 tchi119 lop i nd l11thor l11t1rior. This low mil1191 cir i1 exc•plion1lly •quipp•d with f1ctory 1ir conditioni11g. Pl;>'I' 1te1rin9, pow1t br•••1. pow•r 1e1h , pa,,.•r windows, tilt 111il t1lo1copie wh11I, AM·FM radio. fXSP~q2f SALE s3999 PRICE 1968 TRIUMPH Gr111 Turi•imo e1up1. This lovely littla f11tb1c~ h11 4 1p1ed tr1111mi11ion, wir1 wh11l1 i nd i1 1b1olut1ly Ii•• br1nd n1w with only 9,000 ,..;1, •• Stu11- .iin9 •unbur1f yellow 11lerio1 with D1ack 111 wi11yl interior. l1c1I I ownlt •ulornobil1 sh-1 ouht1ndi119 e•r• by prewiou1 ow11er. T1k1 ii for a 1hor+ drive 111d y•w'll fall i11 low1 with it. IWVP400) SALE s2999 PRICE .. • A Masterpiece from ... ... The Master Crc;1ftsmen On Display and Ready for Delivery Today! ORDER YOUR 1969 CADILLAC NOW! LEASE DIRECT • FAST DELIVERY FAST SERVICE LARGEST SELECTION OF LA TE MODEL PREVIOUSLY OWNED CADILLACS IN ORANGE COUNTY Tli1 '"'r popular El Dor1do. Fl11i1h1d I,. b11e~u1 t•W wlfti Nlii• p1 .. 4141 11of 11ul 9014 inll1iat, Jilt wh11J, pow1r d11ri119, pow1r l>r1•e1, ,,__ -~ ,..._. ... t, p1w1' 'rant wind1 ... 1, pow1r trwn• li4 r1lo111, St1r11 AM-FM ltt4i•, 1..J ...., ..,.. ........, ,.w., f.•h1t1s i11clu4in'I C14ill 1c factory 111 conditionin9. litter 911 IMt-e f.,..t • iik .. ....,. IVTLJ67 1 1 6444 • ~ 1967 El ·~i~~~~=tr ~;~4mi#JiJ Sedan De Ville Thi1 10.,1ly Sed111 01Vill1 h11 111 popul1r ,. .. ,.. •ui1tt i..w"'I ,_., riMrl11t, pow1r b11k11. power window1, pow1r •••+ 1116 C1olill1c't fa.....i• fM..., •lr c•"4ifle11htt. TI!ft l111ut iful auto. mobil• hit b-1n •ory c111fully .,,;,.,,. 1114 .i, • ..,. •My tt. ffft.tt •I ClfO l.y 11'1 1Jfl'l'ieu1 ow11111 . !444SI 5 3999 SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN 8:30 A.M . to 9:00 P.M. MONDAY thru FRIDAY 9:00 A.M . to 6:00 P.M. SATURDAY ond SUNDAY SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE .. THROUGH TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 19b9 JANUARY • I SALE 1966 CADILLAC S'4111 D1Vil11 th1t is 1b1olul1ly 9or91ou1, Fi11i1h1d in S111ni1h Silver w1lh m1tchi119 cloth I le1th1r i11!1riot, fully pow1r 1cc111!14 ""ith power 1¥1r- i119-br1•••·wi11dowl•s11t-doar loc•1, AM.FM radio, 1Mlo cr11i11 co11trol, , ...... .>;,, ,;;,s:~~fo·s3111·;· ·:~di;::·;,, IRGN1'71 1966 THUNDERBIRD Thi tporty 2 4oor h11dtop 11 fully 1q11ipp14 with pow1r 1!11rin9, power br1ko1, pow1t win dowi, pow1r 1111 i nd f ord'1 f1mou1 f1clory 1ir con. dillonin9. A laaulifu l 11tin 1ilwer erl1rio r with bl1 ck vinyl int1rior. Musi b1 1e111 I driw1n to f11Hy •ppr1ei1l1l IRTUJ J9 1. SALE s2222 PRICE · . 1965 THUNDERBIRD l1nd1u h1rdlo19. A b11~tiful 11pphir1 b/111 T·l 1fll with th1 whit1 l1 nd1Y roof, 111 vinyl i11t1rior, Full power 1quipm111t i,.d, pow1r br1•el, power 1l11ri11g, pow•r window1, power 111t i nd l1clory ,;, eo11ditionin9. Aw out1t1ndin9 cl• 1i ouhl1ndi119 11wing1. IMPP t 11 i SALE $1666 PRICE 1967 BROUGHAM Fl11lwood l 10119!.1m. M1 j11lic r191I 1ilw1r with bl1c• p1dd1d lop •nd bl1eli t11p91 lry i nd l11fh1r int1rior. All pow1r includin9 1l111in9 b11~t1, win4ow1, ¥ent wi11dow1, trunk lid r1f111e. St1r1a r1dio, tilt ind t1l11copic 1l11rin9 wh11I pl111 f1 etory 1ir conditio11i119. (UKV-2191 SALE s4555PRICE 1965 CADILLAC Th i popula r 11d1n 01Vill1, Finish1d 111 l1roque 9old ••l1rior with m1tch· int 9old l11lher a nd cloth int1ricr. H11 111 the popular C1dill1c lu•ury f11lur11 includi119 powtr d 111i119, pow11 br1k11, pow1r window1, pow1r 111h, 1i9n1I s11kin9 radio 111d of co11ri1 C1ditl1c f1clory air conditio11in9. 17122 1 SALE $2666 PRICE 1962 CADILLAC Coupe 01Vill1. This rn1 j11tie t u1r1do bl1c• C1dill1c -With whit• l11th1r int1riar h11 1lmo1e 111 of lh1 deluxe f11 !11r11 th1t C1dill1c is f1 mo11s for including pow1r 1'e1tin9, power br1 ~11, pow1r 1.,1h 1n4 pow1r window1. Also h11 C1dill1c F1clory 1ir condilionin9. You mu1I d1i ... thii 0111, (Jll.HSl2l SALE PRICE 1968 CADILl..AC S1d111 D1Vil11 wlftt ... roq111 9old e1terio1 i nd bl1ck p1dd1d lop with m1tchin9 black cloth ind l11lher inl1rior. Ab1olut1 ly lo1ded with powir 1!11rinf, pow1r braktl, powl r win dOWI, pOW l l 1111, r .... r fr1111k fj4 ti•. 11111, AM-FM 114io, pr1mi11m Vo9u1 Tyr~1 i nd af eou"• f1 ctory 1i1 con • ditionin9. Th1r• i re IS ·~1·1 to 11 l1cl from riqhl now 11 N1ber1 C1dill1e bo>h "''' OoVISA[E OoVPRICED Your Factory Authorized Cadillac Dealer Serving The Orange Coast Harbor Area NABERS CADILLAC ' FlllWAY G.OSI FlOM AN'fWMllf ~ IN OUHGl COUNTY i 1 MILi SOUTH Of SAN DllGO FWY. ON HAllOl llYD. 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 Used ·ears 9900 Used Cairs 9900 Und Co1r1 9900 Used Cers 9900 Used Ca.., 9900 -------CORVETTE FORD FORD MUlJANG MUSTANG 1!& EXPERIMENTAL Cor· vctte. Original. Xlnt condl· lion throout S1200 firm. 61·:-?.611 FORD '67 C.OUntr,y Squire 10 passenger Station Wagon. Factory air, full pov1er, 390 engine. All UeLuxe extras. Beautiful lime gold and i111· COUGAR macula!e. Must Sell! Bcsl 1---------1 oUer over $2,500 this week. '6B COUGAR Privato Part.Y-s«HX>l5 Ume with black padded top. '37 FORD Panel. Raf"f'; good Loaded and air conditioning. condition. Set up for Chevy; $2950. M. Stotts 842-5581, flathead included; hydraulic Eves. 962-7Cfi6 brakes. many s p a r e s . .. STEAL JT .. iri ce d! DODGE ,.,..,,, '64 POLAR.A 4<1oor, bi&; v.s. •uto. fU1l PD'"''ft', AM/Ft.t. N~ lie: $825. 646-4650 ** 1965 FORD Coun1ry Squirt \V&20n. Lo a d e d ! Xlnt Sl900. 675-3210 or I 6T'..-7176 FALCON llEWWTU MOTORS 63 FORD Falcon \Vagon. Auto. tn.ns. New w/w llre8. R/H, Xlnt c:ond. S79S. 642-4124 NB SALE -1966 FRirlafll!: Squire 21..., u-rbor Blvd. Sta \\1ag, VS, p/a. auto 'P" n-!rang. iur-c:ood. 3 rd aeaL ' .... i:;..11 -962-3'85 'W hJicon Wqon '63 Ford Country Squitt QGMail ·• •• • • • • • • • • ·• ·· · S399 \Vaeon, kiaded. X1nL --~"'~2-4666-~---I $USO. • 6Th-3124 ._. RED ~,FalcoD. Good con-FO ·•··'· ..... di.._ s -a. MAKE or. ·a RD G............,, 1"""' -....,.. R/H. I«>. Xlnt com. """ 1'D. ,..,,.. aft 6· Urn etc. S0-3m 'SI r.Al.CXl'f st.don wqon; '6'2 FORD Wagon. 6 cyl, DIW~ l'1 bnkt'I. $400 stick. rebuilt engine, ~. 4 • ar.H1'9 • m.o$'9 flOID '54 FORD 2 dr stk lhlft. CUstom &tr. whl.. Gd cond. Sl>. Pvt. pl¥. 962-WG DAILY PIUlT WAltl' ADS BRING RESULD I ' , '66 fAIRl..ANE. 500. R/H. P\\T. ~teer. Air, tinted glass: 289 eng. New tires. Sl500. Org owner. 962-7995 'fi6 CONVERT. V·8, red l967 MUSTANG. Aqua & \V/\\hlle top· auto R&H White vinyl. Wide t11'l'~, C."<t. pwr. steer. sir.oo. 54:j.2'28j ' Decor. auto trat:..~. l-<iwncr. - S1595 quick ~Ir! 675-1453 65 t.1USTANG coov. V-8; au1o., n1agi;. ;111111 cond. S\600. 675-5847 EvC's. '65 MUSTANG, 4 spd, V-8, Sl250 or best ollcr. 494-9914 '54 t'ORD. 4 dr. NE\V bat- tery. '69 lit.'1:!!\St'. $1lll. ~~1989 alter 5. 1----------0LDSMOBILE Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 arn~a~ ELMORE MOTORS 15300 IEACH ILYD. WESTMINSTER 194-3322 4 1/2% l1n\ fi111nei119 1w1i!1bl1 011 ~· 1pprow1I of ctffit. FREE· FREE Las Veqas Vacation 3 OAYS & 2 NIGHTS · FOR lWO No 'u"h"t N1t e•••.Y 15300 Beach Blvd. Wesfminsler 894-3322 OPEN 7 D.A.YS UNIVERSITY SALES & SERVICE OLDSMOBllf '..!850 Harbor Blvd. Costa t.ft?sa ~9640 Used Cars 54{1..8881 '63 OLDS. Dynamir 88: ~.000 ong. m1.. ha v e re('(ln!~. Xlnt cond. S975. 837-2219 1965 OLDS'"'"~c~,~11-,.-,-. =-=p~,, p/b. air-..cond. Sll:IO .. 546-1~ .. .. ~,=, -o=L~o=s~Starftrr·-:o=.="'=.,-=.,. Buck<'t seacs; 4 b.1ml 4641 $275. 96'2-20.15 PLYMOUTH '66 BARRACUDA .( 11peett, V8, radio and heat''· vrrv sharp, blllance or fe.<-toi). 11·amlnt,y. Sl375. win tiik .. trade for old Pil'kup. Phone 871-3416 aftf'r 5 pm '69 ROADRUNNER, 1 i k ,. bnnd l'le'W, GOO milts, '""""""!!!''"""""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'""""'~"'-Ulm.,.._,,.. ' i. Used C•rs 9900 Used Cers ---------1 PLYMOUTH '57 BELEVEDERE Sports Cpc. Gd. transp. htake of· ft•r Call aft 5 p.m. 892-3843 PONTIAC 196.l CATALINA Wagon by 01l'ner. air, radio, PIS, P/8. xlnr rond. $1~ above 11'hoh.'!!3le, S\550. 54S-8660 PONTIAC '67 PONTIAC FIREBIRD Convt. Lo mi. New Michelin radials, P IS, 400 packa,ge, console. Auto S2500. 644-4059 RAMBLER '62 RAMBLER Classic 4 Dr. good mech., not .. pretty". Makes into bed. 540-8430 9900 Used C•rs RAMBLER NE\V 'Gi Rambler. Full snc ron1pacl. S2043 + tax and lie. 642-6023 f RAMBLER NEWCASru MOTORS 2186 Harbor Blvd. Cost.1 Mtu 'SJ Ran1blrr orum .. S399 642-4666 '59 RAMBLER • dr., slick, II l'yl .. R&H: good tning. Sl2:5. 6Th-6983 ew/wkend!f. STUDEBAKER '62 STUDE Gran Tourissimo ~lick. buckets. Sacrifice. - T·BIRD ·so T • BIRD ConvertlbJe ixMitlful lirTM' b-o!;t grttn v.ilh black lop. P/S. P/B. aulo, P/\Y, PfSeats, It R/11. R('{"f'n! val~ job & tunr. new tnlns.. Full prier $600.00 64.2-705~' "'--- NEWCAmE MOTORS 2186 H1rbor Blvd . Costa Mata '61 T·Bird LVD'38 •••. $400 642~666 '65 T·BIRO, low mil~. full p:iv.-er, air. rttllnlnc seata. Pl!rfttt mtch. rond. lmma.c thnKllll. 548-U54 b ' f o r e l'i:l'.I.~ '!iii T·Slfili Sl~k ..,,/0.0 . Nt'll' rrvilk". nrw pe..int Sa(' for S6SO M7-9D ' • --·-·---------------·,.,.-----~---::---...,....-------------------­i' ... " -· '' t.f,\ERICA.'S . 11011£St co~PA.ct No. Vl21-~9E-12\9l7 I Vs down. ryrnt. N'""' . nd '"''"''· al\''""' \1t. • Nar....t Mo di:M'n •• H Y"*"t f>ICludH I~ '"""· llcente •od ln!tr .. I, $ .t. f1nl1sHc t•• it l1n11s1~ uvlna kr. No. PE2J-FPC).1161.111 FREE 5 DAY TRIAL . EXCHANGE ON ANY OF THESE USED CARS PURCHASBI THIS WE£KEND ONLY '&1 DODGE Dari • '64 FORD 9 Passenger COlln. I 5"1111,. -llOn. 111.Nkl, tiulef', l~lo., _. t1Hrl"9o - •1-a, 1lr ~lllanlllll. COOT DI 51088 '66 PLYIOUTH Sal1llH1 2 Dr. H.T. Spert "9. V-1, l"ldlil. l'IMtw. avts, tr-.. -....._ • ''Wiii" wMllt. 11u011t -ti • ~·HOH Ml. rr141y, b11<wJ n. 1969 DAILY PllOT :J7 ' -. I • • • ABSOLmLY THE LOWEST PRICES • , , AS ALWAYS, ATLAS BRllBS YOU THE BEST BUYS . ·AT THE GREATEST SAYllG$ ••• JUDGE FOR YOURSELF! '66 DODGE Dari Co1v. •1188 '66 CHEY. Monza Ope. •1088 '63 POITIAC Grall4 Prix ar,.ie. /r'*• w1orn1tk "--11--.. fie.,,.., •Ir, ON .;.,_ . . .. ' 1188 ' '63 BUICK Skylark CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH IMPERIAL r • ' I (' I • 1 W'llh Ille Options You Wan~ attbe Price You Want! GET RED HOT SAVINGS ON SPECIALLY EQUIPPED . MUSTANGS * FAIRLANES * GALAXIE 500'S 'llltse unique '69's were specially built to save you money on the lllO$t wanted 1969 eJ111cii! Come in, SH the amaling savings we're offering on s u c h optional equip- .... as air condltion.ing, E-28 whitewalls, vinyl roofs, deluxe wheel coven, tape stripes, body mouldings, etc., etc. -. LIMITED QUANTITIES! HURRY WHILE THEY LAST! SPORTSMEN'S SPECI~ ,1"'k·Awoy cam,... Te!H<opk with '66 CHEVROLET PICKUP SIMPt 2, ''°"• nfrlvlrttor, &Ink, dlflll'ftt. s16fs1~Jr:M554~:: · FULL PRICE 30 Months · '65 Ford Galax le $32 :.:.: , ''4 Chevrolet Malibu Wag. lt-'lOo ttMttt, p:iwtl' .... nn .. !OMJ n11. 20,., down "' ""' '• "95 PULL $29 '" JO ';'I . PIJCI Mo1111tt. · MU$t ANG SALE 11..::1111' ,.., •l bledl = lo ln!erlor Wire wheels. (VZU· tsl)~99""5" or PULL .• s36 ,., JG PRICI Mo1tb '68 CO.RVmE A 1Dttd, I PK •• whHll, MW wide ov1t1. 2 tops. 16.llOCI rnllH, •rtllc lhue wl!l'I bi.ct ln1erlor. POWtr wl~. .-f4. ·-"' .~.,, •• ;.,. ,,_, •• ,, ~ • -· ~ Ol IEST hr 36 595 OFFER $124 M•"'" '63 Chevrolet Impala 1 Ooor HardtoP, v.1. •u!ama!lc, ra~lo, n~a"', p0w.1r steering. (KFl9lll. :IO"o dow~ or lr.tde. 7 to choo1• from. J .door 111Cf 4 d9or mod1l11 H1rdtop1 111d l1nd1u1. AU with 1ir conditioni119 111d full pow1r. Some wit+. 1t1r10 t1p11 'b) thru 'b1 Mod1l1. EXAMPLE '67 -Bird Landau R1dio, li1at1r, ilt wh11I, 1utom1tic, f.OW· Ir 1t11rin9 • b 1k1! • wiMow1 • 11tt, ! 1ir cond., f1ctory tt'lnty. I VCKl 121. 20 '!. down or tr1d1. $2995 FULL $79 Pll 3' PRICf MONTHS '65 THUNDERBIRD 'l. I I . :1 •• ' • ii ' . l THEODORE ROBJftS FO•D~ ~UNIE~ CQUIJY'S ·' ONLY SHELBY .AMERICAN DEAL'ER'~ PROUDLY ' PRESENTS l'~ :ALL ·NEW SHELBY "GT FOR~_ 1969! ·~ •. TWICE AS EXCITING AS ANY PICTURE! IN OUR SHOWROOMS THIS · WEEKEND! FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY Thi• I• the one you've waited forl America'• moat exciting, UNCOMMON high performance sports earl f;INAL CLEARANCE .OF 1968 GT·350's GT-500's NEW-EXEC. CARS LESS THAN A DOZEN " LEFT · . AT THE GR~ATEST SHELBY ·AMERICAN DISCOUNTS IN OUR · HISTORY! '67 Ambassador 990 H.T. Lew mtlMte, lull -·· •lr condltlonlnt. CUEX 431 $f"89'5 ~~~. $49 z.:.: '64 Mere. Wagon 10 Pass. COiony Perl(. Fllll pa~r. •Ir. (JZV nu. '°"" dawn ()( $1095 ~~t~. $38 :.:.: VI. eulcl, R .. H, PS, f1ct. 1lr. (VCl6:19l ~ "$19 95 :~.~. AVA ILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE DELIV:ER·Y ! . . . . ~t' ~-1. ENGLISH FORD CLEARANCE ORANGE COUNTY'S U.RGUT INVENTORY' NOW AT ••• SAVINGS YOU Will LOVE! DELUXE 2 & 4 DOOR · SE"DANS GT 2 & 4 DOOR SEDANS STATION WAGONS IN YOOR CHOICE OF 4 SPD. or AUTO. TRANS. SAVE TODAY! • e 100 MILES PER HOUR e 32 MILES PER GALLON e DISC BRAKES e fULL 5 PASS. SIZE II to choo .. frolft, ., .. • "I" cylind1n, <4 1ptff'< 11lomotic. $01111 ..,ith power "1toorl119 ortd tlr condltlo11l19. 1965 thru 1967 modol., con.vorliblo1, coupe!,. ind $895 ~~~~. $30 :::.:..: F11ll llOWW, !•dory •lr. (HPC1t:n '°"' down er tr..it. 8 0 to ff IN 12.1 SECONDS e LUXURY QUALITY IOTH 1+2 f11tbock1. llAMPU · ltt!S MUSTANG Hordlop Coupe. Fiilty oquipp1d IWXS-$89'" ·down or. tr1d1. 5 PULt "$31 ... " , . PllCI Mo11ths ' , . TAX REFUND DUE? WHY WAIT? 8UY NOW-PAY LATER EASY FINANCING AVAILABLE $1595 :~~~ $61 ~= '64 Chevrolet Sedan ~-Air ('Ondlllon!llfl. tOXO ll'f5) 20"llo do""' Qf lr•dt. $595 ~~~. $27 ~-=.:~ '64 . FORD SALE 11 TO CHOOSE FROM 2 Oocn, ' Door1, SNfo,., Han:lltlPI, Canwrtlblel. W.,.,,_, IGfl'le wlll'I ell' and POMr 1tKrkl9. EXAMPLE' ''4 fOID GALAXll 500 4 DOOi V ... 11Jfvmflk:, tully e<NIPSoed. ITWR '311. """ -"'"-· ~09!1 Full Price. $23 per 30 mos. , USEO CAR SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE 72 HOURS UNLESS PREVIOUSLY SOLD. ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED ON APPROVEO CREDIT .. • . • INllDI AND OUT • • SPORT CAR FAMILY CAR BUDGET CAR •