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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-02-18 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa. • • ---' • • • ' 1 2nd Oil ~@~61 ,Sp~;ng . . . . . . ' . ' . . ~~ooo· Gall•'-" .. ,. -Duy .. . ' --• . '" .. ' • 'i •• > • ·* .. ' . ~ } Girl SaysShe~$1W' Sirhan Shoot RFK ' ":!l#pp~'.IJJgmb· Tbt great bllmpjack ol 1959, lttempted · at the city of.. Carson Monday night on the outskirts of Long Beach, never got off the ground. A hippie-like youll'., armed with a guitar and mysteriOllll olack box, at· tempted to hijack the giant Goodyear blimp Columbia for a free ride to Aspen, Colo. The . would-be blimpjacker was ap- parenUy inspired by the 8 e a t l e s animated movie "Yellow Submarine" w:berein the singers journeyed to the land of the ·''Blue Meanies" in a ·con- trapUon resembling a blimp. So it developed the bllmpjacking youth, about 20, would identify himself only as "George'Baltjson of the Beatles." E~b' Monday night, the youth sprinted across the blimp grounds and leaped aboard the gondola. Here Come Tlw Brides Orange blOssoms soon will be here and plans for the June wedding_already are beginning to bloom. The DAll.. Y PILOT today offers an eight-page see· tlon crammed with features, photo.. and ads designed to help this year's brides find the assistance. goods and services she needs to make the weddlng "pC!r· feet." Bridal fashions, tips on how lo plan the ceremony, even a guide to how to shop for the right apartmenC are in- cluded ln the Brides Section o( toda#s DAILY PILOT. It's a cllp-and-save feature for every bride-to-be. Weatller The drizzle will be short lived, the weatherman promlaa:, wilh skies clearing Wednelday while temPf!l'&tures cling lo the upper 50's along the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY . l ~ta~ Sffl!th, f""f!'T Paiad<M HiQll baal<tbaU •tar and now ~ hottut player In amat<ur • tenpi.s, ii the fauorite to cop the 1tngl<1 chmnpioolhtp of tM Bal- boa Bay Clubla invitational tou,,..,,..nl ittirtlftg TltuhifaV. s .. s"poii., Page 2Z. .... . ·-. C'11111, .. ~ -Jf.tt -" C__., II --. -. hltlNf ..... I ......... i..n11 I II ,.._. llWI :Iii""' • .....:-·· ~: ·-· l.lillMn ,, -' ==" ,: --. --" t:>rlllM c.witr I Sldal """" ,,,,. :Marll ... =: T-" -" -. ..... WlllM tt --" . "i , ·Polka Dot 'Li ve-in' ' . ' . . . . I r . i · , , , • ~ 1'uf'fu· d~t ·ro~:B~·1'r~fi··-·;:ftii{li9 .-~ .. ~C311ed.:;(Jft "I wanl a ride, 1J18.D," be toJd JJm Genet, a company crewman 1'hD worb on tbe Goodyear blhJ>.p b1 day .00 takes turns workihg a nearby iuard shack by night. . . "Ir not, I'll blow the thing up," Genet quoted lhe youlh aa saflng. Genet called for help. For the nei:t . hour and a hall, about 30 armed officers surrounded \he big gas bag and walled patiently. Said one -''just in case he really did have a bomb." Finally, Sherlll'1 SIL Arthur lll<.Q. and the J>omb squad arrlftd. lli<:b - ed boldly ....... Ibo 'OJ>ll" grWy field and opened the tiny door of the gondola banging under the dirigible'• plump belly. "Are you the pilot?*' the bair1 occupant asked Hieb_ "I want to to, to Aspen, Colorado for a jazz fesUvaL" · The youth, without waiting for an answer, pushed a "button" on his black box. fficb wall<d Tir an · uplollon. Instead be _.. a blMt ol roct muaic fr:om t¥ tad1s tiny black ~anststor radio. Mier Karchini lilm, Hicks helped" him out. En ropte to a hospital where be wu admltled. -still unldenUfied -for obaervaUon, the bearded youth explained that ·bjo -~11ed · to slip by the guard 1'beca111e I'm invlaible."1 . "He ·Dever woqld ' '.11.ave made it to Aspen." ... Aid RalPh, ~. another crewman ol the llMoOI bllmp used by the rubber company fot • advert!llng -. ,''The. bllq bat a maximum "lllnc ol 3,5b0 feet lni! Aspen h about 13,000 feet .hl8h. Be.ic{es, its . maximum fuel load allow• oofy ·JO houri in the air." ·Too bad. The baby 1young man bad bfoulhl alolli bl& toothbrush. At Irvine By JOHN VALTERZA OI tM 0.ltr Pllft 11111 , Dis&ident Students at UC.Irvine decided 1\-londay •f4!moon to P;OSlpone anolher live-Jn· protest on camPus and to wait until Tburldiy to see II lhey concur With faculty recommendaUons lo end the current campus-sb:ife. Meeting ,in a r•Uy on campus the students, to~ no more than 350, heard of pJS:M ,for special tiail funds and threats of ' suSpenslon or arrest if their live-ln ls resumed in the English Department'• WrlUng Center. A similar protest there ended last Friday. " · .. ws-,ANh~: (U~I) T v a le·r la ~le: • !'!'I t.......i blodde, ~ at lbe .murde< trial Qf.Slrhanill· Slrhan today that she saw him extend his arm, aiid shoot "Sen. 'Robe'r&! F. KenaeCly; M~s Schulte, II, wu uJe ~ g1r11n the po11ta·do(-·wbo·IWJJc- urejl promtneii~y ' tn the •in...aptlcia . ' . but who bad ~ ta tic with tho shooting excepl ta 'be :. wt6-." . 1be attract!ve girl, who today wore a white dress. wtth a'recl and blue~ had been head ol. KomiedT• headquartm In Goleta and had ...,. the Ambwador Hotel tllat night fir tho victory 1celebratibn. She waa on'cru\Cbel at .the time u a risult of a U:linc accident. .J -1 • ~ • • , 17 Christ Teens Arrested They also heard of proposals by an Interim committee of three proressora and three students, who have suggested that a morat&rium be established retroactively to Jan. 1 enabling officials to 1tudy the firing of two UCI professors, ;1 • •• , •UPI,........ TELLS 0~ TESTIMONY Si rhan Wlfniss Unruh The girl'~ test1mony ·"'fas interrupted. afler she· bad bee1L on the Stand le9I than 10 minutes, ... . Superior Coor! Judge Herbert V. 'Yalker called a recess.wbtn. a sbefih:'s deputy Jn the cOurtroom w~ ta (See UVE IN, Pqe II For Preaching at Schools ) him that-be heard · a clieking' liolio w~lch see111ed to emanate from.bl&-. . . 0 ,The courtroom WU ·Cleared .by .Judle New Lea k Pout s 2,00 :::~'!.ia~::1:1n::.i:it· By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .. Dellr ,.,.. .... Hymns of cooiage and falth In ad- versity rang through the Costa Meta Ctty Jail Monday nlgbt, as police booked the biggest crowd since lut summer 's celebrated Hessian motorcyclt eang roundup. Plane Carrying 5 Crashes Onto Catalliia Island • • ... ' ~ A U.S. Navy"plane out ol 1-Beach. carrying a crew of five, cralhed. ear.IJ today on catallna 111~. Navy llW'Ch planes spo\ted the wrecka1• Jq a remote -of· the island but said there were 'no signl of irurvi.or.. • . . T!>e twln,enaine craft ria-;w-. taklne olf trOm the Lon&· ~d 514 . carrier Kearaara•. lt1acbecl'. lo' .. . airborne early w1J11h>r lqoadiio -at Noc:tb la!and Navat Air Stau<a; Tbe Navy Aid tho plane toot oil . ,_, Ula -..,.1 ., ....... and WU ta have Jailllad at Nor1ll Island 45.mlnut<a later. Wl!Ckqe WU ttported·-tlered Offr ,a wide area DUf tbe llllnd'I well end cllffs. Tbe NIVJ dld not dlacloet the· nama ol -aboard the Navy ElB lralner. Thi cruh oceurred on. a mountain at,JJ>e northwtst -of tbe llland arid a aherllra poaoe -ln•eatlptlne • Afttr takeolf, ndlT contact WU foal almolthmneiftattly. telephone on 1.t.be deptity'1 desk ·:hldfa 1Wuaa1 to obey ordm after heln1 • fluttering ·relay .¥ a rautt ol. ai tell warned once led to the maa arrtl& by ~ utility company, r of 17 ""-ol H""""n"" n., Gall f o •i • s It was indkatlve ol the tensenea. ol mem~·--.. -. -c~·· ons 0 .. "'n ea the )rial that the sllgbtltsl aiispfclon T1en1 f.,, Christ, l<lud!y evangelizlnc at I-' " · , · there wu an electronic listening ar two adjacent ochool campliles. recording .device ""'1d lead the judge ta P"owds ol ch!!dren Wbo bad beeD !Imn-burrledly· -the ,,...-tr.>qm. Ing to the self-atyled. Christian revolu~ SANTA BARBARA (AP) - A new the lkatAben~th the ocean bed lo seal Miss:· Schulte:..tiad ~ to . Court Uonariea preach jem'ed a team Of·poUc.i leak at Its offShore well site may be the. leak. · ' , · ' , the dress she "91'e that t and ahe olflcen commanded by · SIL Bo> Ball· pouring as much as 2,000 gallons of Hlckel.order,ed all·clrllll_ng <In th~ chan-held it up 80 the Jury · see JC, 'it" ingera1themWtant.&wereledaw.,,. tn the P cifl ~ •• th nelball~--·"·thei dlw•··. , , was liJhe green Wlih~ J)olU·crou. "ll llablninl atrlkel, we'll know . we oil a day to a . c ~" e ~ ~--and the girl •mlled brJPllY as she .U.: were wroq:," Aid· LL AusUa w, Smilh Union Oil Co. bas dilclosed. Iri· Wuhingtoo; Hicktl· tsaued a new · played il , · 1 • , 11 he abovtled tbnJqb ·a b1iDan1 ot The first leak ~ed nion than l30,000 reguli_ . UOii Monday. Wlllth aald, , , 1 "U Ille In her brief tallmoOf, she said· ibo pa-wwk '*' tbe. watch . eomandor'• ·r· liod ne..r knoim 8btiU 111111 time ud ~ ruultJn& from llle·roundup. . iallonl, c:reotin& I atlck ~-6--: ·.lfalm •ol· the Ha·•are'poO-<by Ille hid nol IalWed lo bllil Gll'tbe nlPC G( A llahl rata fell ciutaide, but no rumbl·~ e<I' !® iNiuare mlie'i. diJI!lnc, or pijldiktion oplralfC!ni, ol" the lhootln(. • " • . • of -could he bunhnd the depart. Tb• new leak bas formed a sllck hOld<n of. .ledefal J.eaRo , ta ,clrll_!liia In lajlmoo,y, lio!l!l4J, -.. · pro· men! was still -~ when be wont two milet toni and 30"ta 40 fee) wide, rlB!ilf, "th( ~trol and:"""°l'~-l!!·.~,,., f~,.llM:klo. . . olf duty, early !Gilai. · , leaving kelp beds oil Gavta1aand·RO!uito WUulon!f,lllil(1<1'iM .(11ioi:~ l!fl.~~-. 'I1M1 five girl& and U men -four .:---Ches northwest of Santa Barbara the lessMC~: ·.' •. ' \~, 1'~ :·:~.;~'-·· ~··' i.~~. ·, ·I of them actuaD ltlllortee In ~ .. ' ~ ~ ' . • . 1 ~~:;;~,. • ' •-•edy ~. aol,..,.all, b'•ctened by 1ma!I patches of heavy , ,.., • t• 1,.t' ,' ·' '~ ,,,.,, f • ·~ :.•r . 1 • -were ~ on 1uap&&.:10D • ~ • ·r ' . ·" ~ ·•· · , ~ . 11;.,. ,. or combliiatlon -of two penal code ..t· oll. /"< _ ·~ t ' M. 1-~.,. • • . • klll>ft"" 'P · i-a04-,... ~ codi vlolatJoo; • It wu feared that aouthwut winds ~\DJ W tlD · ,:' •-i-,IWllf 1 . "'lllethlnethal' ..... ,.opi.Jlillrtlule mlcht pulh the new 'allck qalnst the .-• ·'' .,;· : • •'' "'"·' J ~--tho· ., to~ia.tbatwe .'if"Jl'tarmtb;Je coutt~ne.alOOru~-1'orkedtoclU:R fu~' ~~,,-~ l·~1.:l.. ~·· 1.~1:•. / ;I'·" ~ f1• U-panpl4 lot ~ ot picletJnl." UV prevtOusly otI-gmm'ned beache. and . ~;·~: l' ~ " ! .. •' Pollce-Ollef Jl9Ctr Netb-'d todlJ. ~ra ID Santa Barber• and VeDtura . · ~ J. 1 ~·•· : • -,\.': ~f , ~ ;1 i• • ,. -. v ,..,,,.,..· . i : .. ,Relllaaf ta" clllpaljli; :,Plllul . and ' cilantl..: . , -~ -.,5,,~; ;;o;·.'lrftin'" ......... malicious obltnJcUoo ot ~ ll!orouP.far• Union oQ announced Ill ntw estimate .,...u:~.:n•..., f!Jillr -~ till btm" -doddinc In thal -• and willlul•and unJawtUI ~e ol of'thi leak'a die Monday but UnltJb FljllF.lo<'·~· hl8 ~ ~,-~: <f. pancle-thal lllen -aat a public ~.w¥'·1M !l!'f!lk\ ~. ~· ~,.!¥1ey ~ Jio~.'· MUcJar near York, Ala:, ir~ .the~, ·tb;:t' 00 ~ ~~~-• wt~:..~J""':'J:rs. Da\.J; , ~lh'in~~-=oi.i · Jet crailiecboo:a '.""'tine lrlinlJll ·l!IPI, UJl!Uh,. Den~llc leader 1n 'tbo S\itet lntennedlata ~ lllO · Arllnltoa a'daJ ~ lrom the ne1r leat. ~':. the nava~ ·~ statlao-~t ~. Asoemblf who h upeclod ta run~ . ilr1•e, Cid c;i.ta. ii-ijIP Sobool, Alf bough the well \thlcb 1lll)<asbed ....:r 'JM , dead pllota irft ldentlfW U · ::i:.... ~ ·~.::.. ':i • Falrflew lload, lnclade. bl& slkk bu been piuaed, men • Ll (jg) Lal1')' s..SWyer,)$, o1 ~ 6>mi<" 1"" ""iltlot Jlanll 111or' ..,1 ledJ T. artoolM, II, ol ttC <lftlll d~=ft~:=":J::: and J.t. (jjj•Junea tB. M~;M,, 4olor . the .aOi!ll( '.II ;the ·~~ AH., llllltinglol\ Badl. oil jbrooglt 'ocun bed fllaom Union ot Roanoke, Va., the ~piJOI,'<. ' \~ ~u Olla1!1 ... -a.._. Collacs!t. 11, ol aild'. ' · ~-"'1dthllT-Mllwcjooye • u • IJll("'*""ler~. 1110.-An.,Hml!npiolleach. Union Ill<! it bad asked foi: and ri-tralnir [Cl~l at inldi!lorntr>t •'111«11• .-la .,the'. il\linla Csatu '" N. ,_,IOI, It, ol JIO cevled pennlnlon from SecretarJ of the t1i:.i!OJ111'ot Ycflr pll .U,..._,. ln!alY. ~~ •!"If wa, ' Ocean Me., llsmttnitaD Beach. Interior Walter J. Hickel to u.. anQlher Hi ~7l,4" ~ .. llra. fllld!jt')laf '.' ~IJl!I '~ wlsili .llio -~u • Md1loec.-,.,11,ol ·llO(lcean !'l'll,'ll""lolsoly drlll<d at the 11tr,.to • W~at, of )'dlf, -~'l'i'P"llll •·· •(~:"ltt.~.~·~.~j <lot TliZ!'fl. Pap 11 1.,... tlqlkljlvee des\giseil to mrranae p11J111,, '1llillll·-'!'; .,., ~ ''~'"" •aHf;......,tl • • • • . ---:-Y.. ,. ,., ••• <I ~\'\i~·' · :'\"i"•.~ .:·~·,,' \ " "•' • •l ,.Y' .. <i.:J'.' ~1 ~ • -./ • ' ,~ , .. , • ~It:_ • t• •.:.,.. " !"')' J!fl.,:,../ ' .. ~· ' I ,,.,..., '""'""··-' "'ff. . --' • • • DM.Y PILOT s Tuudq, FebtuM\' 18, 1969 STEPPING DOWN GOP'• Ray ltln Israeli Jet Fired on At Zurich ··- C ZURICH. Switzerland (UPJ) -Uniden- f tified gunmr.n in 1 Votknagea. opened fire with submlcblne guns on an El Al Iarael jet airliner today as the Boeing 7U1 wu preparlq to tate off, airport oll!clsls reported. A person aboard the plane, apparenUJ a crewman, returned the fire and one of the four assailants was killed, eyewitness reports said. The other three men not immediately identified were seized by Swiss police. The incident was similar to an incident at Albenl Jntemational Airport Dec. 26 when two AtaQ guerrillu attacked an • 1 Israeli airllner with a machine gun and grenades:. One passenger was killed and Israel staged a massive raid against Beirut A1rpart in revenge. Police withheld immediate official in· Jormation on the four men reported lnvolved in Jut night's attack. Eyewitness r e p o r t s · said the Volkswagen raced along the tarmac of Kklten International Airport toward the lsra,eli plaoe, with tbe submachine guns blazing. Someone in the cockpit of the Plane-lired back, tilling one ol the aaallant.. " It was not immediately known ·U an1 of the plane's crew and passengers were wounded. . Io the .Alhens attack a 1 SO.ye~,o\d New York construcUon engmeer, Leon j Shirdan, was killed and a stewardess was seriously wounded. The Popular Front of the Liberalion 9f. Palestine, one of the two main Arab perrilla organisations with headquarters tn Beirut, claimed responsibility for the ittack. J Israel retaliated two days later with a helicopter-borne commando attack on r Beirut lnlernaUonal Airport. They blew up 13 Arab planes in the attack. The United NaUons Security Council con- demned Israel for the retaliatory raid. ' 'Silver Lining' j: Seen Wednesday A silver llning behind today's grim looking clouds was promisel:! for Wed- ) nesday, with clearing skies and drier conditions on the way. The new rain front, which moved in overnight from the coast off Northern ¢alifornla, was expected lo drop from t 1 quarler lo a hall inch of preclpltaUon t on the Orange Coast before moving on. " However. clearing wu expected for i ~ ~ I l I I I! • • I Jate afternoon with chilly aJr keeping ~ maximum temperature below the 60-degree mark. DAILY PILOT N1wpert '-'" H1111tl•tt-• a.Miii LepH 1H11i h•et• Yell"° Cnt• M- CAl.lfOINIA Oll4NGf: COAST P\Jl\..UHING COMPANY A•lt•rl N. °W••4 Pre1i<kftl •M P.,..111ttt J1,1i A. Curr,., 't'kt Pmi.rni -~ .. "'-"' ri.•111•• ic ..... a ltlltt Th1M111 A. Mvrphi~• l .... M91"' E•llef" 1'1ul Nino11 "'"'''"'!"' Dlrf<*" -COlll Mtll ! Jl' Wnl 11' St,_.1 llf-1 k9<11' 1111 #•II OlltlM b"VI'• L..,_ •••"1 ,,, --" Aw-"lll'lh!Oll """' lit 5111 Sl>rt" OAILY Pl'-OT• ......... ldll k ~ ... ...... 40,_ II ~JllH •1ll'y tJCC•I SW.. • ~, 1111 _.,."' .... ~ .... \..-hfCI\. ~ .. ~. C:10• ,...,._, l'N!llJl>t- lt1d1 ~ l'-1•111 Vflle'1, 11'1nt W•lf!t. ·I rflielUI llll•litro. 0..Mtt c.... '"'*""'"'• c-•'""''"' "'"'" '" ,, n11 """' •lltN 91\'C., ht_. ~. .... Jll Wt.If '"" .., ..... ,,,,, """"· .' Tal11t .. 1 11141 MJ..4Jll 0 ms• .W11rtl•1 '41°1671 CwwltM. '"" Or""9 C&Mt """''.,,_ C-"' NI -· tNtlM, """'''Nffo" ~ ...... .,, ~-" "-""' -· "' ~, .. Mill(:.. • • .,.... """'.. "" . .,.,.... .. cwrtlllll twf'M, ...... ti.N M'ttM Nlif •I Ntw-i 9ff<I! .... C-1• * ... , ..... fl ... ~·1-•looo w ""~ "·" -""'""' .., fMI! ll ,. ,,.1111r1 "'~""' fttl1-t...._ 11.n """'"'""· I Chotiner Next GOP Ch.airman? • • Rumor.s Say Bl~s W.ill Quit in, Favor of Newport Attor.ney rwdlo la.st night," Chotintr d.laclalmtd, ~ng off on an old quote Jrom. WW Rogers. "Until an announcement b madt, It Id be presumpluoul of me t0 mike aay statement. ' ~·u any vacancy Is occurring, the OOP National Committee must cal[ a ~ting. Committee melll~ ~ rQake the decision and the Appc>lotmeat." -The announcement 'Was made today by tbe Whlte House. !I'he Newport Beach attorney, who was a campllp ~'la put Nbalil lloi> lions, is now working in the offices of Republican National Headquarters here in Wasqington at 1624 I St. NW. His lamily remlll•I' In Ne,wporl Beach and won't join him unW June. Bu&i, choaenJo bqld Ille GOP JJaional ' eam;mu.e '!iller Ille flM ~1111 •lec:lloo, ~ hit lntenUon In a 'ener to President NlJ:on. A ronner Ohio 5tate Republican com- . mittee chalrman, Bllsa wu a com- promls< candidate lo< Ille rw!l-1 jll!ll and Is <redli.d wllll; mucll-·al, Ibo rfibullding of his party .,foliOwing the 19M presidential election. During his tenure as national cbaif.. --GOP :)llcbd U,. -U In -the House and Senate and increased it.s hold on gubernatorial chairs to the point w~ the Republican Party now has ii pyenlon to Ille Democrala' It. ' ' I· , ' ' •• ' -.~~~~~~,.-~~·~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...-~~~~~~~~....,.~~ Bllu, wbo deaJgnated himself as a "••II and llcllls" mu - a I>Oll~ ld:tinldan -di expected lo be IUcc:eec!ed .1 1 a cbalnmn by a more attned televialoa and plaUonn performer. Reports llhorUy alter lhe November e1ecUon that Bllll ~ he replaced .U,w, widllprud P"'teilt:' lrom GOP of· ' 1 ~ wb> hld1 1!_«ked wilh him I the local IeveL Republican governors, meeting In CalUornla in December, praised bis -hllhl1· Friends sald Bliss Intends to retire from political activity and will return to Ohio, wbere he heads an insurance • -~· ' POSSIBLE SUCCESSQR? -~ Nf:wport"s 'Chotiner .~ E~-Germans Shut Paris in the Winter • Young Parisians stage snowball fight jn shadow of famed Eiffel Tower in French capital Heavy snow fell Monday and worst weather of winter :contin- ues its firm grip on the Continent. From Page ,I CHRIST TEENS ARRESTED • • • Ave., Huntington Beach. Jotep~ N. Langford, 18, of 6051h 10th St., Huntington Beach. Panl B. Bers, 21, of 605!.A 10th st., Huntington Beach, son of the Teens for Christ spiritual advisor and ecclesiastical guru, the Rev. Dave Berg, 49, who is known to h1J flock as Uncle. Daniel P. WelP, 22, af 116 Main ·St.1 Huntington Beach. Howard E. Bnialus, 19, of Klttaning, Pa: Michael G. Barboar, 19, of 116 Main St., HunUngton Beach. Bruct A. Greu, 18, of 3591 Howard Ave., LOs Afamltos. Richard C. La Brll1, 19, of 2261 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa. Ralph K. Baker, 18, of 116 Main St., Huntington Beach. James Ballesteros, 22, of 6051/a Main St.. Huntington Beach. Ra1ph Dolph Ahern, 19, of cathedral City. . Police said the 16 adults -including the four older girls tranferre<! to Orange County Jail -would be arraigned today; but a 17-year-old girl was soon released to her parents. STREAMLINE PAPERWORK Records clerks trying to h c l P streamline the massive flow o r paperwork finally made photocopies . of a basic master sheet of facts, wilh indlviduat data lo be filled in. Virtually all of the Teens for Christ members gave their occupations u Minister. but La Brill gave his title as Missionary Q/. Ute Gospel and Gregg settled for Servant of the Lord. JUgb ·school Prioclpa1 William J. itoody, who was busy supervise the hectic scene. CROSS EVIDENCE helping t~ lnvestigaj.ors took· Into evidence a wooden crbss spattered will: blood-like stains and bung with tinkling bell!, al!o locking a number of Bibles into property rooms for safekeeping. · The series of arrests Monday anernbon was the largest so far in the continuing campaign oI the Teens for Christ group, who are no strangers lo jail, just as were their forebears. 0 Thls problem has been in existence at local schools for more or less a week," said Lt. Smith, "last week they had a six-year-old boy down on his knees, blessing him." Not since 28 Hessians motorcycle club members were rounded up for Investiga- tion after a vicious assault case last August has the Costa Mesa City Jal! been so full. "This thing pretty well shot our wh11e shift," Lt. Smith said, "they were singing and chanting back there earlier, but I guess they've quieted down." He then leaned back in his chair and ·said a few things about con- temporary religion and police work, compared to the way it used to be. Gas Truck Overtm·ns COMMERCE CAP) -About one mile of the southbound Santa Ana Freeway was clO!ed to traffic early today when a gasoline tanker true\ ·ov!rtumed and spilled fuel over a lart9 leC'Uon of the roadway, the blgbway paitrol &a.Id. There were no reports ot IDjurles. .. ' From Page I LIVE-IN ••• whose dismissal spawned the student protest. The two professors whose firing started the controversy are Stephen Shapiro and Donald Brannan. : The moratorium has been referred by Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. to the Academic Senate, which meets in special session Thurfjdi.y afternoon. After the half-hour rally Monday the student group split up with about half filing through the campus' dipping lawn area to the English Writing Center. Anxious lo avoid disruption of acUvities in tlie center student leaders Monday told the group to wait outside until a class meeting in the center had ended. Once inside the students jammed the room and th.e hallway outside to determine their plans for Thursday. The students agreed to a faculty member 's suggestion that they sit in and acUvely partlclpate in discussions at the Academic Senate meeting, theo leave regular representatives behind and v.•ait outside while the faculty reaches a decision on the moratorium. The dissidents emphasized that they might not necessarily abide by the decision or tile faculty, and that after the met!Ling lhe protesters w 111 themselves meet "to decide a plan or action if necessary." Chancellor AldrlcJ; cancelled 1 schedul- ed bu!inesa trip to San Franciaco because of the campus development!. The proposed moratorium c a 11 s specifically for review back lo Jan. 1 of all firings of faculty, all suspensions and fallures to renew contracts. • .·'J}lt~r.lin · Highway • ·'t ' - ' BERLIN c'twll-Eaat Germany today cloNil the 'main hlcb:way from west • t -~ • ~)', to Berl.ill for Jn hour &ad SO nlinJteS"and slowed traffic to a crawl. Trucks were backed up for miles. Th.is toughest crackdown yet appeared lo be a dress rehearsal for future harass- ment if West Germany goes ahead wlth its presl~enUal election in West Berlin March 5. - J'~e ,Soviet a:overnment newspaper ~ warned the three Western allies tdday of possible "di5astr0us con-. sequences" if , the elections are held. It did not spell out what the cons@quences mighl be. Tiie unexplaine<t Communist move, which could prove a test far President Nixon, demonstrated the grip the Com- munists have on the 110-mile highway leading from Berlin through East Gennany to the Wt.at. NI.Jon will visit Berlin Feb. 27. Both the East Germans and the Soviet Union have warned of serious con· sequences if Bonn holds its election here. Only Monday East Gennan Communist leader Walter Ulbricht con£erred In Moscow with Soviet party leader Leonid Brezhnev. The current crisis began blowing up when East Germany announced jt would block highway or rail travel for the West German electors although Similar elections have been held three times in the past with no backlash. Since then the Communist bloc nations have condemned the West German plans as a provocation by "revenge-seeking" German militarists aimed at creating a crisis almOlphere in Europe. West Berlin police said the main 'checkpoint at Babelsberg was cJORd at 10 a.m. without explanation and reopened at 11 :50 a.m. At the same time slowdown inspection backlogged trucks and automobiles for !everal miles at East-West Gennan checkpoints. Some waited five hours for clearance. West German government spokesman Conrad Ahlers told a news conference in Bonn it was unknown whether the hla:hway slowdowns were the result of Communist harassment or weather. Drivers arriving in west Berlin said the highway was "fa irly clear" o( snow and that the slowdown could not be blamed on that. It appeared officials were trying to play down the high,vay situation so as not to worry West Berliners. West Berlin customs and police of· ficlals discounted the weather angle and said, "We probably can expect more of this sort of thing through the March 5 election." There was no military traffic heading In either direction during the-.morning holdup. , Ai the height of the slowdown between 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. The East Germans cleared only one vehicle an hour and trucks waited as Jong as five hours for clearance. Western officials said the full-throated East German and Moscow denunciation of the electoral college session possibly stemmed from a desire to see how firm was Nixon's desire to preserve Western authority iD Berlin. Red China Silent on Fate . ' Of Captured Laguna Man Silence was the official Red China response today to diplomatic feelers about fate of three captured boats, quietly bobbing In a Mainland harbor, one owned and skippered by a Laguna Beach man. Cr.ewmen aboa~d Chine.M: junks cruis-- lng the broad Pearl River estuary said the tbtee yachts are moored at Gav Chau, a fishing village a few miles from the Portuguese lsland colony of Afacao. No word has betn heard of what happened to Simeon Baldwin, 56, of 1359 Cliff Drive, Laguna, nor any of the other 14. persons aboard the boats eei:z.ed Sunday by machine gun-moun~ motor launches. Mrs. Marjorie Baldwin. the mlM!ng aircraft parts distributor's wife, said Monday she bas heard nothing from the U.S. State Department. , The missing man's brother, DeForrest, of Los Angeles, has reportedly been in contact wlth Washington about the cue, Mrs. Baldwin l&ldlMonday. Diplomats from several countries are trying to secure re.lease of the three Hong Kong Royal Yacht Club vessels, among a flotilla of others allowed to pass after mere harassment Sunday. Boaters had been warned again st mak· ing the 45-mile holiday cruise from Hong Kong to Macao, since the Chinese ae celebrating the new lunar Year of the Rooster, and aroused by bad government relations. Peking authorities, stinging in ncent months Ov~r imprisonment of Com- munists blamed for 1965 anti-British violence in Hona: Kong, were expected lo seek an incident. Portuguese authorilies with Communist China contacts say the three yac:hls, whose passengers include si.1. Americans -three of \hem young" girls -are being detained for invesUgaUon, Vaoghn· and junior hish school Prlnclpal Werner J. Carlson had warned the gospel~P'?uting firebrands aboul 2 p.m. before'c'1llng for poUct asslstanct. Wanled also by investigating officer-. the alp<arrylng. Blble-<iuoting ycuth continued to preach to their flocks. S~alah Project Suspended The Morasum, owned by Baldwin, the · Reverie, owned by Swedish-born Chri5" tlan Von Sydow, and the Uni-Na-Mare, owned by BrlU!her Hector H. Ross, were apparently in 12-mile offshore seas. Red Cllina claims 12-mile territorial waters and seized the three yachts after allowing three others -one decorated with portraits, of Mao in the cabin - to pass on to Mac:ao. MAKING ARRESTS Police. a~ that point began making f S • :!':.."':in~~ ~J~"',~w:j~ Doctors Seek Answer to ~hy Aquanaut Su fered eizure Besides tl'le Americans aboard, lhc three yachts carried a Swede, two Britons, oae Frenchman, an Australian girl and four Hong: Kong Chinese. o-m to obstruct Arlington Drive, LONG BEACH. CalU. (AP) - A 110· as ~u-u.creaJtng •disturbance. million Navy program to train men for PlaCarda and picket slgns proclaiming undersea living has been suspended while that Chrtat Ja the only answer and the doctors try lo learn why M aquanaul question WQn't tit asted very much had a fatal heart selrure ClO feet dawn longer •eN, Conllsc:ated -about 20 of .......on Mondi)'. lhtm -u evidence. -Sealab 3, the. ltaklnl underwater dwell- PtllJct lllmod Ille lncldanl on vldeohlpe 1n1 unll which Berry L. cannon, SS, lo use as evldence In ~ action. was attempUng to repair "hen stricken, 'Ibrongs of school children who was ordered haultd up from lbe ocean gatbertd to Wit.nest the roundup of the Ooor near San Clemente llland. proftsetd witoeasu for the Mailer lend· A delay or weeks seemed lll:ely for ed to BOme cw1 to regard lhe Pollet the trouble-plagued project, whJch called as Phlllt:tlnes~ for fivt: nlne--man teams \o spend 12 One gttl of about 7 uttered 1 eomment diys each living tnd . working at the dllUDctly contr1dlctory to lhe teachings bottom of tht·eea. ot meelmeu, one which would 10und The other eight mtmbera of C.nnon's rather punaent and scorching even from team bea1n a six-day period of decom- the Up1 of 1 17-year-old. presslon, a gradual proceu In which "Whit 1 lino thing lor 1 lilt!• atrl their body IWuel beaime accus1"med to be saylns," said Patr~ Capt. Robert again lo surface pr~ru. Uke Cannon, __.. --------- they had betn conditioned lo pressures 19 times nonnal to withstand the weiaht of the ocean at the Sealab'1 depth. The body of Cannon, a civilian with three children, was Oown to lLth Naval District headquarters at San Diego, for an autopsy. Deputy County Coroner W. T. Souza said preliminary teati were Inconclusive . The depth was not unusoal for ex- perimental descents and spokesmen said all divers in the program had been ltsted at lhat prtUUre in compression chambers without m1sh1p . The project, dell1yed aint't last Jul1 by equipment problems, aot under way Saturday whtrl the 57·by-ll foot. steel cylinder was lowered by crane to lhe ocean Uoor . No diver 11et foot In ll, how1ver. Prelim1na.ry checks Sunday showed the I helium-oxygen breatbin1 mixtvre 1'1th which It 1'U pressurized was leaking slowly at place.a where powtfl and com- municatiorui lines entered lhe unit. Cannon, an electronics engineer, and three othen of hit team were terit down tn a diving bell lo investia:ale Sill!day oiJb1 and again Monday ~. On the second d I Y e, Cannon suffered a seizure which Navy docton termed a cardl1c arrest, or heart stoppage. Cannon. of Panamt City, Fla., ind Navy CWO Robert Barth, II. had 1Wum 20 feet lrom the dlvlng hell to Ille dwellins Will SuddtDly Barth notlced Carmon WIS in trouble Ind helped him back lo the bc!ll. All (our mtn were returned quickly 1" a prwun chamber oo tl1e IUpporl lhlp, the USS Ell< River, direct.ly overhead. but CUmc:n WU dud when they arrived. f· --~ "'""''U,'.,!J. • Authorities said Monday_immediately after the capture, that 1'5ey did not view the iticldent as anU-Amerlcan In nature, due to the smolderin1 altuaUon be"'een Peking: and Hong Kona:. The yachtsmen hid been warned aaainst making the lunar ntw ytar boli· day cru1se which hu a:one unmolested in past years, but they ~ lo ignofl! lhe suggestion or trouble at sea. • Contacts have reportedly been made to C&nton, capital of K w a n gt u n I Provtace, which bordtrs !long Kona and' Macao, beside• the New China News Agency, unofficial liai$Oll wllh Ptting. Baldwin la pruident of Air Stocks Lid .. a Hons Kona·bllsed firm aupplylna parts lo v1rlout 1irllnt companies 111 the Far East and rattly visit.a lhe U.S., to which hi• family rt:tumed eight yur• 110. ' - 1! • t I , • ,, . ' -''-n~-"gio~·Bearh •ot# I -• ED 1-T I 0 N ....,.. ..... • ,. N.Y.--St•'*• Yor. 62, NO. '42, 3 SECTIONS, 30 .. PAGES ~Y. FEBRUARY 'II, 196' • . '. ' I~ ' ' :Couiicil ,_ .., I ' Orders Navy Jet Cr;,lshe~ ~-.· . ·neach --Land Buy ·wreckage Spotted onCatali~-5~~ BJ JOHN VALTEllZA ot ....... Nlt ..... appeared to be five · bodia"• ~over -a widely scatterm area of SU~ F~k. Tbe .mounlain b local<d oo .~!l~'s . west side OW' Iron ~,Bay., 45 minute. later. -By"WILLI:Ul"REED Of .. O.llY ,..,...,. An asreeme.bt to purchase land !or a new· civic center in Huntington Beach wu ordered drawn Monc;iay night by lhe-city-eeuncll, but councilmen said no.- money will be paid until the first part ol May. n•1 n6t thit the city does not have the fr!Olley . to buy the site . at Maip Street and Mansion Avenue, it's just that the council Is not sure where it ,..ants to buHd its new cl vie center. The city is agreeing to pay $360,000 for about 10 acres of ,land across Main Street from Huntington Beach High School. The owner is · the Huntington Tick F"lootb Sunset Beach, Homes, Roads By TERRY COVILLE Of 1M ~HY 'I"' Sllff • One or the highest tides in Su~et Beach history swept over the beach and flooded out several blocks of houses and streets south of BroadWay at IO a.m. today. Pacific Coast Highway from Warner 'Avenue to Broadway in Sunset Beach was covered with water and debris. Residents of Sunset . Beach were surprised by the sudden f]ooding. Several saltl they had never s~ such a high tide. Water . seei)ed into homes and ~ ~d flowed ,in , rivers across Ille~ P~ic Ele<ldc Jlailro,id N1>t-of- wa1 .,,,., ... ·~'-<:;ast lll&hway. A cu main. was brokJD in one area and tllm were signs of widespread erosion throughout the: beach strip. Huntington Beach lifeiiiards this morn- ing said the heavy flooding conditions In Sunset Beach were : caused by a high tide of 5.7 feet combined with a four-to 8ii:.foot surf which is sweeping over the sands. Bill Richardson, HunUngton Beach lifeguard, saki the heavy f]ooding lo Sunset Beach stems, in part, from beach erosJOn in ·tbe area over the past five years. Richardson said sand has been steadily drawn away !rom Sunset Beach and formed a ledge which causes hlgher brukini surf. He added that · Sun!<t Bead>.ba,l.l!>.!t.aljout 100 yards of beach in die list year and a haU. Here Come The Brides Ora.nee bio.uoms soon w111 be here and plana for the Jwie wedding already are beginning :o bloom. The DAILY PILOT today offers an :eight,-page·~ tlon crammed with features, pllolos and ads designed to help this year's bri'des find the asslatuce, goods and services sbe needJ to make the wedding "per· feel" Bridal fashions, tips on how to plan the ceremony, even a guide to how to ahop for the right apartment are in· eluded in the Brldes $ection of today's DAILY ·PILOT. It's a clip-and-save feature for every bride:to-bt. Weadler -The driu!e will be short lived, the weatberman promises, With akies clearing Wednesday while lemperatures cling to • the Upper : IO'a alOlll the Orange Coast. INSWE TODAY Beach Company. OrafUng ol. the agreement was ordered unanimously, but Councilmen J act Gteen, ·Jen-y-Matney and DoolJd 'D", Slilpley voted againsi a .move by Coon· -cibiian· Henry Kaufman to delay aclual purChase of the land. Dr. Kaufman said the city ahOuld wait unUI a plan he has under slud.f for placing the center In a highrlse bulldlng overlooking the ocean on Pacific Coll!i\ Highway is either declared financially Ceasible or discarded for financial reasons. "We need our collectlve bet.di ex- amined if we don't -get with Jt on the civic center," said Shipley. Dr. Kaufman said be agreed that the price ls right for the land, but 0 we could save this amount of money and more if we use the Parting Authority to get the property on the waterfront." "Thia city bu been waJUng ao years this very night for a new civic center," said Shipley, pointing out th&t Mooday was the city's 60th birthday. Coun~ Jerry Matney, pointing~ a conversaUon with county Supervisor David L. Baker, said there b: a possibility that someday the city could be in line for return of some court facilities. "It would be folly to put courts on the IQU) fioor of a building on the beach. We Jost them (the facilities of West Orange County Municipal Court) in the past bec~use of this type of indecision," said Matney. Councilman George McCracken noted that the city is paying an economic research firm to make a s t u d y of the downtown and called for the council to withhold buying the Main Street site "unUI the facts are in." Key to the decision to hold up payment for the site -was Mayor Alvin M. COf.11 Who sided with Dr. Janfman . ''1-lli f Un ii thal • .lhiiold extend 'lMr,;t!: '\-te-~t.;d<v"°"' ment of new data.· 1'm. atUl corivfDctd that the high acbool 1ile ii the best of the four wt were aiven, but we were not offered a choice of a beach site Wlien the high school lite was chosen," said Shipley. "All I'm asking is 60 d~ys," said Dr. Kaufman. The 60-day delay · was granted on a 4-3 split vote. Under study is a plan to allow the city's Parking Authority to buy a strip from 5th Street to Lake Street about one block deep and build a parking lot. Fees from users would pay for the projed, Dr. Kaufman beU.Ves. A civic center coold be built above the lot by leasin& air rlghll. Council Okays ··. ,,,, $100,000 .Police ~nex Facility . . . An $11,000 a.nniez to the ~ff office bullclinl of the Huntlillloo Beach Poll<e Department wal al'fl<O\"d Monday night by the City Council. • • In 'addiUon, lmprovementa at the city jail were promised by City Adminl!trator Doyle Miller. . The detectives have been using a building built in 190 to ~OU!t nine persons for a two-year period. There are now 19 persons worklna In the building. . Miller told the councl1 that the addJUon would be portable and <OUld be-.mlled when the civic center and · new -police facility ii bllilt In two to five 7ean. Jail conditiooa bad come 1o the al· tenUcia of the COW1cil after NGrman Coatney ol Loo Alaml!Dii .... arrated oo a murder dlarge and ]ailed. for lour days In the 1ocaf jail befon beinc dured ol the crime and releued. · He told Council-Jerry Matney of not bejng allowed to abower or abave for three days and livlnc In "vt'l'J poor condiUoM." Matney ,bad promlJed to ,.. 11\at the lmprovementa were made at, the jail as soon u · poaalble. .... _ TELCS OF l'l!STIMONY Sf-WllMH """"' A U.S. Navy plane out ol Long Beach, carrying a crew ol five, crashed Wly tod17 on Catallna Jalud, kllllng all aboard. N_ivy -~ lpoltod the wrec°" la ,a -'<' -ol the lllancl but tllc Ille CGOlld Otlly be rucbed by. around lurch party. ' Hampered by muddled roida, a Los ~ ~ty te~an rescue party, augmen1ed by fire department penoonel, reacbeol the wrecllage late thla morning. They reported all aboud dead' Slte Of the cruh was a remote peak on the island, Sherill's Sgt. Jack Vaughan said that the crtwa,,llampered by rain ud .muddy roads found the wreckage and ''wbal Vaughan uld ·th&~ It w¥:W-Ior8'st plane crish In memory otl.ljle, lalanif. 'l1>r<e lllel 1rom the A.vallol 'IUbllali<>n ""\ four "!""tr nr,i.a. ~·.a, fOIJ!'· wMeJ.dtlve·trUck ICl'Oll 1Uflpery,:r01Jib dirt roadl to the eraah·- . Tbe t.,in..nglne craft er~· lifter taking · off from t!\11 Lo.,. ~ach-based cafrler KWA119,., a\\lcbed " to an alrbocoe · earb' 'latDlnt t!liiaditm' at ·North lsland.!lavaf >Jratatliii. • • Tbe Navy .,,ici. .. llli \~.·tool: olf 1rom the K>.-;a1 a:•·•.in. anc1 WU, to bavt' 1iodecl aL;.itortb:'.Jiland .. . ~ ·-' Teens for Polka Dot Dress . Girl Tells Jury Slie Saw Shooting Arrested by Mesa LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Va I er la Schulte, a long tressed blonde testified at the murder trial of Sirhan B. Slrhan today that she .saw him e.z:tend his arm and shoot Sen. Robert F. Keruiedy. Miss ·Schulte, 2Z, was the mysterious gU:l. in th" polka do( dress who has na:- ured prominently in the lnveatlgatlon bu! who had notblnC. to do with tbe •Y?~t._...~~minee..11 ., The' attractJ.v'e c1rl. wbo today wore •,white 4jroll..willl •,rid and)>fue tear!, bad beea Iiud ol-.Kemiedy's .._iin headquartm In Goleta and had gone to the Ambassador Hotel that night for the victory celebration. She was· on crutches at the time as a result of a stung accident. · Tile girl's test1mony was interrupttd after she had been on the stand less than 10 minutes. SUperior Court Judge Herbert v. Walker called a recess when a sheriffs deputy in the courtroom whispered to him that he beard a clicking noise which seemed to emanate from his desk. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1111 Deltr ,, ...... Hymns of. courage and faith in ad· verslty rang through the Costa Mesa City Jail Monday night, as police booked the biggest crowd since lut summer'• celebrated Hessian motorcycle gang roundup. Refusal lo obey orders aft.er being warned ·once led to the maU. ant!st of 17 memben of Hunlinattn &acb's THQI for Cbril;I, .1-= .. li•ln• at t~ .alijacd fCliOQ'1 ~ ~~ "' Crowds o1· children who bid been llJ(fo· In1 to the "11-tttled. CllrlalWI .nvolu· tlonarles preach jeered.• team of police officers 'commanded by Sgt. Bob Ball- inger as ~e mWtants were led away. ' "I! lightning strikes, we'll know we were wron&.," said ht. Austin W. Smith as he s}\ove.led · through a blizzard ol paperwork on the watch com&nder's desk, res4lting from · the roundup. ·A light rain fell out.side; bl.it nO rumbles of thunder could be heard ·and the depart· ment was still st.anding. when he went ofl duty early today. The five girls and 12 men -four of them actually seniorteens in a aenae -were booked on susplcfon of • all, or comblnaUon of, two peql code of. ftnses and one education code violation. "The thing that 1ome people just refuse to Wlder~tand la that we aren't arresting thele people f_or preacbirik or ptck:eUDc," Police Chief Roger Neth 1aid today. · Refusal to disperse, wl!Uul and malicious ob~trl,lcUon 9l a thoroughfare and' willful and unlawful disturbance of i ·public' schOol are thi apiciflc chai'ges, with fl90 ball set jor each pq500. ln~Jl'\a."rot'* ... ll<lve," and Coota, M,.. IDll> Scl!oo!; ~ J'alr.vlel' ROid, Icid~i , . ~ " iio.$1 J. Cluittlleb, ll, ti 110 Ocean Ave., HunUngton,llt!"l!: . ClroUH 8 •. "Buiale" t;allac;.ott, 19, of1 llO pc,.. ~ve., H'l"linJWtl ~h.. . . Coa1tance N .. ~e1uier1ut,. 19, o( 110. Ocean ·Ave.~ HunUOBton.Beil!h.' · Madelbie C. OC:nDe'UY,' 19, of 110 Ocean , Ave~, Huntington-Beach. · Josepb N. Lin,rord, 18, Of 6051h lotb St.1 Huntington. Beach. Paul B. Befg, "2h of eo51,.l . lotb St., . (See T~S, Pa1e J) Tbe courtroOm was cleared by Juilj!e Walker and a few minutes later trial was l"eSumed when it was found the telephone on the deputy's desk , had ·a nu~ reJay as a result of a test b1 lbe uUHty' ctnnpany. Cheers Greet Huntington It was indicative of the tenseoesa oC the ·trial that the slightest suspicion there was an electronic ll!terltng or recording device could lead the judge to hWTiedly empty the courtroom. 'No' on Harbour ReqUest· ·Miss Schulte had brouaht to court l:he dress she wore that nlght and she A packed house at P.londay night 's held it up so the jury could se:e it. It wu lime green with yellow polka dots meeting of the Huntington Beach City and the girl smiled "brightly u she ,dis-Council cheered lou,dly when the council played It. · denied a plan by Huntington Harbour In her brief testimony, she s8ld she Corp. for reZonI.ng about nine acres from had never known Sirhan at any time. and single to multlpii family residential. ~ sb°c!o~ed to him on t~ night of The denial by uMi Q>uncil on a 6-1 Jn te1timony Monday, ma.sSive pro vote, with Councilman Henry Kaufman football tackle Roosevelt Grier told of siding "with the corporation viewpoint, how he beat back people trying to tear came shortly after midnight ln a meeUng Sirhan apart ·moments after the staying. that was delayed due to the apparent Grier, a Negro, six-feet-five, 290 heart attack suffered by a spectator. pounds, idolized Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. The land in question ill located on But he knocked one man back and Christiana Bay at the southwest comer kicked another away as Bobby lay gasp-of Humboldt Drive and Saybrook Lane. ing for life on the floor and the Uny Ron Moatgomery arrued for the com- Skhan struggled to escape. pany; polntlJjg out that the land had Jess Unruh, the most p o w e r f u l been zoned for apartments, but was Democrat in California, 1tood on a steam changed to 1ingle family residential at table sbouling 0 Don't till him, don't a time when the e<rporation planned till him" -·cleddlnc >ln .th•t·molilenf a .permanent model home dllpla7 on ol pandemonium that there m1,1st not the property· be another Lee Harvey Oswald.Jack ReaJdents of the area argued that Ruby stain on America11·~lstory.. llW!y baa been sold ptoperty with the Unruh, Demotratic,!Uder ln the State Ullderltandl!'g th&t.the bfY would rimaln Assembly .who la Ul!<ded to nm agairist u a Iurnlnj buln. Ronald Reagan for governor in 1970, In addition, the residents near the was doing the yellJng but Grier, lhe aru of when the apartments were ptan. fonnei: .Los Angelea . Rams .1tar, was ned, .&id they feared th& multip" f~ doing •the acting as the .flve-fooH!'lll: e· ·would crowd the"lflJ!'>It". '.. JU.pound Silbwt wcia fmalb' aubduecil;.. 0 d '"91bla'• what fhey· ..... that lhe strip along what he con- sidered to be a narrow channel be re- tained as single family and the red of the parcel allowed for mul~Jll faqilly. The suggeation brought groaM frornL the audience. ' Wreckage wu feported acatieml •ovtt a Wide area near the -Jafind'1 mt end cWf~ Tiie Navy did not dllclolo the .names .of those . aboa!'d .the Na ElB trainer. , . / · The crash occwTed on a ' moUnf.atn. at the northwest corner'fof the ~ and a shertff'a pi>ue "'t' flWe!tliotin& After takeoff, rid~ 'contacf'''wl.s ·iosf almost immediately. · ~ . The Navy, launcbe<r •tw;o."hell~ and three alrcr&rl, ~a· the COUt Guard launched . ooe hellcoptu, A N a.v 1. helicopter discovered the ~eckage. . The plane was on. Its "'.•Y to 1Nort.ti Islaricr after completing carrier qualilica-u.o le!ta. L~gutµI 1'(an: Fails in Bli,RP, 'Hijack' Try The grtat blimpjack of 1989, attempted at the city of Carson Monday night on the outskirts of Long Beach, never got off the ground. A Laguna Beach youth, armed with a guitar and mysteriow: t>tack boJ:, at~ tempted to hijack the giant Goodyear tilimp Columbia for a free ride to Aspen. €olo. · . · The hippie:like youth was .later ideilU. fled as James. Harrison. The. ,would·Iie . bllmpjacker w.,. l!P, parently inspired by the B.e ,_ t l e I artimated D\OVle° "Yellow · ~~ "btreln !ht. ,._. ~'"' 'IP .... land of the "Blue MWiitl''~ln a . .;;;j; traption resembling a.bljmp. · · $1.R dev~the bUJUpj"ifi~':Jou" &en :1o a1 JlnfliliriN . .J; la .. am;,,· Jtartl.SOn OE the Beaues." . Early Mon~ay night, theyouth tprlhtod ~cross the ·~uq1p' grQ_ul)ds and · 1eaped ~boant"the gondola. "J , Want a ride,· m~. "' he ~Id Jim Gertel, ·a 'company c·rewman Who w6r~ on the Goodyear bllmp by day and takes turns· working a nearby guard shack by night. • "U not, -1·11 blow the thing .up,i" Genet quoted .tb:e·youth u .aaying. Genet called for help. For the nest hour and a half, about ·30 armed offlciri surrounded the bt1 gu big ud ,wallW paUently. Said one -"just til CUI be really did have a bomb." . Finally, Sberill'a Sgt. Arthur Hidal and the bomb squad.urlved! l:Ucta·waHto ed. boldly ....... the open, grUI)'. field and opened the tiny door of the gQDdola hanging under the dlrtlible'a pl1Dnp l!dJ1. "Are you the pilot?" the hairy occUput. asked Hieb. "I want to go to "- Colorado for a jazz fesUvaL" Harrison, wilhout waiting for _an; answer, pushed a "button" on his. black' box. :mets waited for an ezp(~ ~d lie heard a ·blut of -rock D11111c1 from the lad's tiny black ,traniiltot ridlo. (See BLIMP;Pap I) '. Sia" Smith, former Pa.tadtna . '1 ·lligh··bolk<tball··.rlor and '101D . . :::11~·:11.r~ ~ ·~. Unrub.w·· mana er for · · ·, ~ ~f •~-. '1aci! :~ nedy in U!• ' ' •· !{'!!f'\11&1~··~1"'° .··:'. .'~ ·~' .. · \ru o ", ._ .. ~~a&ld.~=~ · .. !f. i<\)"• ' -Rt:d'at Keniled)'' aiid''lhm .. -.~ r • ¥-c;c;,i. ~td.;Jll" .lillgkt '"""'~ U.. Bol-l>Oo Ba11 Ciab'• • hwitationbl U>Urft4fMnt 1tartfna Thuf'1dav. Set Sparta, Paoe 22. ..... • Mtl .. lr • -' _ ... • ,_ ,.~ -" _ .. .. --" ·-..i.. " --•• -" • --• -• ... .. -1'·11 _... .... • -... ............. , " J'-11 .......... ,, ·-..,, T.......... "It --• -" .... -" ·-• -" ...... n -...-.. " --... awa t1ee~.·P•'' ... ; ·. f:t':'°•t ··~-~ ~U'E S. • L HoYabwa, Glam Duo>Joa and -,, ,!;'\* 1ln l4!0l<j>1ace,:fif;• . -un1"'""' uc1 collere -SORRY ~oo·ur ~,. ,Iii'.! It "!<li'fl:?"'v.,.t;,;;;J~ ton .....iv.cl a boolt MooclaJ from the 4 ,\ ;~~~' ""1--;-"'1c , · , . ~ :1'e1t~the o1 .. ::;, THAT, 'MOM' ';li~·~-s;~~r. \~~rUU . .. . strife.lon> ---The Chamber'• boanl o( .ur.cton voted to· support a taoluUOn com- IDfJIC!lnl the educaton for abowtnll retistmlce to peraons wbo b ave "Overstepped Jt1allty'' in C I m p U I dis&ent. • Dkecton agi:eed ·with the right to diaent within l'tl•I Plnlta. O\I' apolQlies to "Mom" of the Ci!( Hotel Jn HwiUngton Beach. · She was lncomctly ldenUlled u Audrey Baker In a leablre 1Iory In Mon- day'• ed!Uqo <it the DAILY PILOT . To Mt tbe record i~t. "Mom's" correct name.Ia .Audrey Jlennell. - NEW YORK (~) -Tbe stOc:t marlltt d-lower today In a --u"' ol Ille sharp ciowntum 1larW MoodaJ. (See quotations. Paget I0-11) • The decline WU no( II m~cb u the pmloul day In whidl Ihe Dow J .... -al average ~ mch than H polntl. .. • E119w fl...,.ed • • ' New Eagle Scout David McGlamery, 17, ,(rtgbl) rocelv-. plaque .marlr.lng l!i• achievement In refChl•~-Stout1D1'• highest pinnacle from fellow. Boy Scout Brad Cocllnn, 6, who made the plaque: Bollf boys are -Fountain Valley rea;aenls and attend.Fountaln.Valler ~ School. * • t ' IJ 1 I . ' ' \. ' __ --- ~ ' ' I • I ---"----T°f'i"" ( ,........, 'II. net · · lis Chief Post STEPPING Q0WN GOP'1 R1y 81111 •• Israeli Jet Fired on At Zurich ZURICH, Swiherland (UPI) -Unldor tilled gunmen in a Volkswagen openecl lire with submachine guns on an E! Al lsrat:I jet airliner today as the Boeing 707 was preparing to take off, airport officials reported. -~ peraon aboard the plane, apparenUJ a crewman, returned the fire and one of the four assailants was tilled, eyewitaea reporll said. The other three men not tmmediateJy ldenWled were seized by Swiss poll~. The incident l'&.S·similar tG an -incident at Athens InternaUooal Airport Dec. 2S when two Arab guerrillas attacked an lsraell airliner with a machine gun and grenades. One passen1er was killed and .Israel staged a massive raid against Beirut Airport in revenge. . Police withheld immediate official ln- formaUon on the four men reported lnvolved in Jut nigtu's attack. · Eyewitness r e po r t 11 said the -VGlbwagen raced along the tannae of Kloten International Airport tc>wud the Iraell plane, with the 111bmachine guns blazing. Someone In the cockpit of the plane fired back, killing one of the . iJU!l1nl1. ' It was net immediately known lf any of the plane'• crew and puaengers were wounded. In the Athens attack a 51)-year-old f1ew York construction qineer, Leon 6hlrda.n, wu killed and a stewardess ff&a aerlouaJy WOWlded. , The Popular Front of the Liberation lit Palestine, one of the two main Arab guerrilla oraanIJAUons with headquarters in Beirut, claimed reapona!blllty for the attack. Newport Youth l\f ugged, Robbed A Newport Beach youth waa mUQed and robbed of hill empty wallet about 6:30 p.m. Ptlonday in t,he bluff area of Pacific Coast Highway in HwiUngtan Beach. Gary Wintle, 11, 2411 E. 16th St., Newport, tGld police he was hitchhiking south on Pacific Cc>ast Highway when a car with h•G men and a woman picked him up. After traveling a short dlstane, the driver stopped the car, both men got out and pulled Wintle with them, then beat him up and took hls wallet, police 1ald. Wintle said there was no money in the wallet, but he lost all or his idcn· tiflcalloa papers. OAllY PllOT • OM.NO! COiUT ,UILJ~IN• CCMll'ANV lt,,Mrt N. WH4 "'-lttlnl 11'1111 li'llbllthW J1ck It C•'''J . Vice 11',_ldft Mf 0.-MIMltl 1"M1t 1 ... 11 -Th•Mlt ;.,. M•rHl11• ' MllllltlnelfliW . • )J.,_. W. ht.t Wlllla• l114 ---... ,.,. cny ·~ .. ' ............... OM.- • ' '" Ith ..... . ,i.f.1n ... ~,,,.,II P.O •••• no, t1'MI --......., '"'911 an Wtat ..... ...,.....,. C.19 MIMI .. W.I a.,. .,,.... L..-~1 m11.,..,...,.. ' ' • . ··.Ru~r• ~ut Newport'' Chotiner~ !lun,UnJ -~- . :M ••@INOll rlllJlp lljle '111111." ad ! II;~ ..,. ... , )oil~~ June. BU.., who d....,ated himself as . ot ""o.11r """ 'lttt taJrJnc off on an ofd CjUote froJQ W l BU.as, chostn to bud tbe GOP NaUonal "nuts and bolts" man -a political WASHING TON -Rly Blba reslgncd Rogers. CommiUee after the 19&4 pruidentlal technician -Is expected to be succeeded today •• Republican ll•Uonal ch.alnnan "Unfil an announcement is made, It elecUon, announced his intention ln a as chairman by a more skilled television effeclivt , ln mid·Ap~ll and Newport =~J:l!:~::.u~ptuous of me to make 'et'ltr to Pte1ldent Nixon. and platform performer. ~ attorpey Murray Chotlner, long a "If ' any vacancy is OCCIU'ring, the A former Ohio atate Republican com· Reports shortly after the November eonfldant Of President Nixon. might be GOP .National Committee mu.at call a iftlttee chalrman. BliU waa a um-election that Bliss would be replaced • • Jiaroed the Bliss suc~r. meeUng. Committee members would promise candidate (or the naUOllll post drew widespread protests from GOP of· And to all this, ChoUner, In an In· make tbt decision and the appointment '1 and b credited• with much ol tbe ficials who had worked with him at t.erview With the DAILY PILOT today , The announcement was made today by rebulldlng of bil party followinc tbe the local level. declared that the weather in Washington the White House. 19" {ll"Uldenllal election. Republican governors, meeting in is invigorating these days -crisp and Tbe Newport Beach attorney, who wu During his tenure u naUonal cllalJI. California in December, praised his cool. a "'JDpal&n DW>'ler Is put Nixon eJeo. man, 1he GOP picked up sull In !>0th re<ord hlghly, · "Authoritative sources" were being tlons, is now working in the offi~s tht House and Senile and !ncrtued Us Friends said Bliss Intends to retire quoted around the capital as indicating of Republican National Headquarters bold en ~ dlain to the point from poUtlcal activity and will return that Bliss will resign April 15. here in WaShlngtoo at 1824 I St. NW. wben the Republlcln Part)' rnow bU tG OhlG, where he heads an insurance .. All I know ts what I heard Gn Qi• His family remains in Newport Beach :Sl pv~ to the Democrat&,' 19. agency. Dress Rehearsal? POSSIBLE SUCCESSOR NewpQrt't Chotiner E. Germans Shut Paris in· the Winter Young Parisians stage snowball fight in shadow of famed Eiffel Tower in French capital. Heavy snow fell Monday and worst weather of winter contin· ues its firm grip on the Continent. From Pug., J 4 tCounty Parks To Be Funded By State Bond CHRIST TEENS ARRESTED ' ••• Huntington Beach, son of the Teens for Christ spiritual advisor and ecclesiastical guru, the Rev. Dave Berg, 49, who is known to hts flock aa Uncle. Daniel P. Welsh, 22, of Ill Main St ., HuntingtGn Beach. Howard E. Broslaa, 19, Gf K.lttaning, Pa. Michlel G. Barbour, 19, of 111 Main St.. Huntington Beach. Bruct A. Gregg, 18, or 3591 l·Joward Ave., Los Alamitos. Richard C. La Brill, 19, ol 226t Santa Ana Ave., Costa Me.aa. Ralph Jt. Batu, 18, of 111 Pttain St.1 Huntington Beach. James Ballesteros, 22, o[ 6051.li r.tain St.. Huntington Beaoh. Ralph Dolpll Ahem, 19, of Cathedral Cily. . . . Police said the 16 adults -1nclud1ng the four older girls. tranferret! to Orange County Jail - would be arraigned today; but a 17-year-old girl was soon re.leased to her parents. STREAMLINE . PAP!:RWORK Records clerks trying to help streamline the massive flo\v o r paperwork finally made phGtocopies . of a basic master sheet of facts, with individual data to be filled in. Virtually all of the Tee?ll for Chri~t members gave their occupatioru a" Minister, but La Brill gave his titlt• as Missionary of the Gospel and Greg!; settled !or Servant of ttte Lord. High school Prlndpal William J. VaU(hn and jualor hlalt IChool Principal Werner J. Carlson bad warned the goopekpoutlna flrebl'andJ about 2 p.m. beloto calllqlor pollce uaillan<e. Warned aloo b)' ln.,.clptlq alllcm, Iha ~. ~ ,...,, OOllthlued lo pnach lo their flocb, MUING..uuuillTll Pl>llct at !hat ~Int bq.. mating Iha amatl, 'lYlnC tba T"bl for Christ ,.... ~ualni tho mlllln& crowds of °*'"''' lo o111truc1 Arllnlton Drive, aa INJ!.aa -Ung a dlaturbance. PlaCordt and plcht alpa proclalmlng that •Cbltit II the ooly antWer and the quel'IJQQ won't be '11ked nry much ~ ,,_ COllfllcatecl -about II of tW ............... ·Niel flllMd tho Incident on videotape lo • M .-In court a<tloo. . · 'ftnlp ol ldM>ol chlldrea who ......... lo wl-tho n>Ulldup ol the ....... wlIDoa. I« tho Mule' tond· lifla -.. .... to ..,.an1 tho police •Nwtnes. !)Ill cirl of aboUt 7 utterod a commtnl 74 Rio R~velers Die RIO DE JANEIRO (UPI) -Browts, ex CUil Ve revelry and the 1 heat wve blam<d today for the deatlu of 71 persons durinc 1Uo'• annual aimlval. Another 8,000 persons were trtattd for various Injuries, hospitals reported . ( distinctly contradictory to the teachings or meekness, one which would sound rather pungent and scorching even !rGm the lips of a 17-fear-old. "What a fine thing for a little girl to be saying," said Patrol Capt. Robert Moody, who was 5iisy helping t. supervise the becUc scene. CROSS EVIDENCE Investigators took into evidence a wooden cross spattered wilt: blood-like stains and hung with tinkling bells, also lockin& a number oI Bibles into property rooms fGr saf~eeplng. The series of arrests ~1onday afternoo :1 was the largest so far in lhe continuing campaign of the Tee.ns for Christ group, who art no atrangers to jail, juat as were their forebears. "This problem has been in existence at local schools for more or Jess a week," said Lt. Smith, "last week they had a ail-year-old boy down oo his knees, blesalng him." Not since 28 Hessians motorcycle club members were rounded up for lnvestlga· tlon after a vicious assault case last A\li~l has the Costa Mesa City Jail been so full. "This thing pretty wfll shot our wht•e shift," Lt. Smith said, "they were singing and chant!ng back there earlier, but I guess they've quieted down." He then leaned back in his chair and saJd a fe,¥ things about con· temporary religion and police work, compartd to the way It used to be: Funds to continue development of four Orange County regional parks will be provided from the 1964 State Park Bond Act It was announced in Sacramento Monday. State officials said $529,000 was alloted tG the Orange County project!. Mlle Square Regional Park in Fountain Valley will get $212,500 for second phase development. A golf course and club· house are now under construction there in the first phase. University Regional Park, near UC, Irvine will get "$212,500 in state funds lo develop 50 acres In the see<>nd stage plan for that facility. Fullerton Dam Regional Park of 116 acres gets $75,000 lot development. Fourth park to get stale money is Laguna NlgUel ReglGnal Park -$29,000. The 1overnor's of rice said a· total of $7.2 million L9 being released for 53 parks thrGughout California. The projects approved add up to $37.6 million Gf the f40 million that was prGvided for local projects in the 1964 act. Gas '!'ruck ,Overturns COM1'1ERCE (AP) -About one mile of lhe southbound Santa Ana Freeway was c!Gsed to traffic early today whel\ a gasoline tanker truck overturned and spilled fuel over a large · seet!Gn Gf the roadway, the highway p111trol said. There were no ~ports ol injuries. New Leak Pours 2,000 Gallons of Oil in Sea SANT A BARBAR>. (AP) -A new leak at il! offshore well site may be pouring u much 11 J,00> galloru of oil a day into the PaclOe Ocean, the Union OU Co. hu cllsclooed. The first leak spewed more than l:I0,000 pllona, crtallng a alict that once reach- ed IOO aqua.re miles . The new leak bas fcnn.ed a aUck two miles loog and II lo tO feet wide, leaving kelp beds off Gavloll and RefU(lo beaches northwest of SantA Barbara blackened by small patches of heavy oil . It was feared that southwest winds might puib the new alick qainst the coast even u 800 nien worked to clean up prtvloual,y oll·gwnmed beaches and harbors In Sant.a Barblra and Vtntur1 counUes. Union oil announced ltl new estimate of the Juk'1 aize Mooday but Union President ~ HarUey !xpreqed hope it soon would be "reduced or eliminated." .. I The flrm prtvlously reparted 200 gallons a day nowlng from the new te.ak. Although the well which unleashed the big slick has been plugged, m<>re crude oU was escaping nearby becaU5t pre:Bsute deep beneath the ocean floor wu Corclna oil throuah ocean bed fissures, Union aald. Union II.id It had uked for and re- cevied penniS3ion from Secreary of the Jnterior Walter J. Hick.el to use another well, previously drilled at the slit, lo IGwer explosives del.lped l'.G rearraq:e the strata beneath the ocean bed to seal th~ leak . Hickel ordered all drilling in the chan- nel halted after the disaster. In \Vashlngton, Hickel Issued a new rtgulaUon Monday which sala. "U the waters of lhe sea are polluted by the drllllna or producUon operaUons or" holder• of federal leases to drtlling rights, "the conlrol and removal of the pollutant &hall be at lht expen&e of the lessee." Berlin Highway BERLIN (UPl)-East Germany today c1osed the main hlghway from Wes~ Germany lG Berlin for an hour and 50 minutes and slowed traffic tG a crawl. Trucks were backed up fGr miles. This toughest crackdown yet appeared tG be a dreu -rehearsal for future harass· ment if West Germany ge>es ahead with lb: presidential election in West Berlin March 5. The $oviet government newspaper Izvesti a "'arned the three We.stem allies today of possible "disastrol!i con· sequences'' if the eleclions are held. It dfd not spell out what the consequences rni'!'ht be. T:~e unexplained Communist move, which could prove a te.~t for President Nixon\ demonstrated the grip the Com· munis s have on the 110-mlle hlghway leading from Berlin through East Germany tG the West. Nixon will visit Berlin Feb. rl. Both the East Germans and the Soviet Union have warned or serious con· sequences if Bonn holds ii! election here . Only Monday East German Communist leader Welter Ulbricht conferred in Moscow with 'Soviet party leader Leonid Brezhne\'. · The current cri.!.I~ bt>ga.n blowing up "'hen East Gern1any <'nnou nccd it 11·c:i'd block highway or rail tr~\·et fer the West German electo rs a1!ltough s;in ilar elections have been held 1~1 ri:c times in the past with no backlash. Since then the Commu nist bloc nation~ have condemned the West Gcrm:'n p'an . as a provocation by "reveng:?·~cz!dn:;" German militarists aimed at crcatin;; a crisis atmosphere in Europe. West Berlin police said the main checkpoint at Babelsberg \\'2~ closcrl at 10 a.m. without explanalicn and reopened at 11:50 a.m. At the same time slo11o•do11o•n inspection backlogged trucks and a ~1tomobilcs ror several miles at Ea st-\Vesl German checkpoints. Some waited five hours fer clearance. West German government spokesmen Conrad Ahlers told a news conference in BGnn It wu unknown whether the highway slowdowns were the result of Communist harassment or weather. Drivers arriving in \Vest Berlin said the highway was "fairly clear" of snow and that the slowdown could not be blamed on that. It appeared officials were trying to play down the highway s.ituation so as not to worry West Berliners. West Berlin customs and police of· ficials discounted the weather angl e and said, "We probably can expect more cf this sort of thing through the Marcil 5 election." There was no military traffic heading Jn either direction during the morning holdup. At the height of the s!Gwdown between 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. The East Germans cleared only one vehlcle an hour and trucks walled as loog as five houri fGr clear8.Dce. Western officials said the full-throated East German and Mosco\v denunciation ot the electoral college session possibly: stemmed from a de.sire to see how firm was Nixon's desire to preserve Western authority Jn Berlin. Frotra Pag., 1 BLIMP • • • Arter searchin g him, Hicks helped him out. En route to a hospital where he was admitted -still unidentified -for observation, the bearded youth explained that he managed to slip by the guard '·because I'm invisible." '"He never would have made it to Aspen.~ said Ralph Reed, another crewman of the 16G-foot blimp used by the rubber company for advertislnl purposes. "Tbe blimp has a maximum celling of 3,500 feet and Aspen is about 13,000 feet high. Besides, its maximum fuel load allo11o·s only 20 hours in the air." Too bad. The hairy young man had brought along his toothbrush. DAll..Y PILOT ileft ... Spectator Strike•• City aides rush to side or Forest Bell. 47, or 114'h Grand Canal, Bal· boa Island, following his cotJapse during 1.-fonday night's session of Huntington Beach City Council. Beu, who suffered an apparent heart attack In midst of meeting, was taken to Hoag Memoriol Hospltal In Newport Beach where he was listed in fair condition tdd ay. Bell was sitting in audience when he was stricken. i -. •• ., , ' Fountain VOL:. 62, NO. '42, l SECTIQ,NS, lo 'PAGES · For Clclc Cettier Council Orders Beach ·Land Buy By WIWAM REED Of .. Dllltf '"" ttatt An agreement to purchase land for a new civic center in Huntington Beach wu ordered drawn Monday night by the city council, but councilmen said no meoey will be paid until the first part ol May. . It't not--. that the city does not have t~ money to buy the site at Main Street and Mansion Avenue, it's just that the council is not sure where it wants to build its new civic center. The city is agreeing to pay $360,000 for about IO acres of land across MaiD Street from Htmtlngton Beach High School. The owner is the Hwiting loo Tide Floods Sunset Beach, Homes, Roads By TERRY COVILLE Of tlMI DllllY Pl• ltmft One of the highest tides in Sut.set Beach. history swept over the .>eacb and flooded out several blocks of houses and streets south of Broadway at 10 a.m. today. Pacific c.oast Highway from Warner 'Avenue to Broadway in Sunset Beacb ;was covered with water and debris. Residents of Sunset Beacb were ropri!ed by the sudden flooding. Sev=I said they had never seen such a high tide. Water seeped, into homes and Iara&~ and fiowed in rivers across the old Padnc~ ~ ~r­ way ind spread acron Pacific COast Highway. A pa main was broken in one area and there were signs or wldesptead ~rosion throughout the beach &trip. Huntington Beach Weguards this morn- ing said the heavy flooding conditions in Sunset Beach were catl!ed by a high tide Ct S. 7 feet combined with a lour-to tix-foot surf wh.ich is sweeping over the sands. BW Richardson, Huntington Beach nreguard, Said the heavy fioodilll in Sunset Beach stems, in part, frOm beach erosion in the area ·over the past five years. Richardson said saodJw been steadily Drawn away from Sunlet Beach and formed a ledge which causes higher breaking surr. He added that Sunset Beach has lost about 100 yards of beach in t.be last year and a half. Here Come The 'Brides Orange bl......, soon will be here ·and pllllB lo< the June wedcllng already ore beginning ,!o blocm. =AILY PILOT today cilf.,. aa eight-e ,.._ lion crainmed with features, and ads deslped to help !bis year's brides . find the assistance, IOOds and services e:be needs to mate lhe wedding "per· feet." Bridal fashions, tips on how to plan the cenmony, even a guide to how to shop for the right apartment are In- cluded in the Brides Section of· too.y11 DAILY Pnm. It'• i clip4nd-aave fealure lot every br'kiHo-be. ·c.u& Weadier Tb• drizzle will be ol1ort lived, the ·weatherman promlseo, with sides clearing Wednelday while temperatures cling to the upper IO'a U.., the Orange Coast. INSIDE nJDA T Beach Company. Drafting of the agrument wu ordered unanimously, but COuncllmen J a Ck Green. .Jercy Mltnoy and Donald · D. Shipley voted against a mave ·~ COun- clhruut'Hinry Kaufmu to-dday ctual purchase or the land. Dr. Kaufman said lite city shoul\I, wait until a plan he . bu under ·stud:J for placing the center in a higfui.se bullding overlooking the ocean on Pacific Coast Highway is eiQier declared financially feasible or discarded for financial reasons. , "We need our colleCtive heads ex· amined i! we don't get with it-on the civic center," said Sh.ipley. Dr. Kaufman said he agreed thal the price is right for the lafw:j, but "we could save this IQll.ounl of money and more ii we use the Parking Aulbority to get tbe property on the waterfront." "This city hos been Wlltlol .,, ,..... this Vf!r'/ nigh1 for a new clvfc center." said Sbii>ley, po1nt1q out U..t MoodaJI was the city's IOth birthday. Councilman Jony Matney, ,pointing to a coovenatlnn with county SupervlJO< David·L: Bater, said there Is a poalblllty that someday the city could be· in line for return ol some caurl facUlti.,_ "It would be folly to put courts on the loth Door of a building on Ui:e beach. We lost them (the ·facilities of Weal Orange County Municipal Court) in the paat becauae ol this type ol indecision," said Mitney. CXiuncllman George McCracken noted that the city is paying an economlc research fll'Dl ~to make a •·tu d y ol ~e~=~-=~~·~~ ''until the facts 1 are ib., ", • L , ', Key to. the dec:istoo to bo!d1'P paJ!Dtnl For ~ iite was ~ Alvin M,, Coen ~W:iilt~"'i'{~ every reasonable opportunHy for devt10p- ment of new data. J'm IUD coovlnced that the blgb lcbool alto. II the belt ot the four we were Civim, but• 'We were not offered a choice of 1 beach site when the bJgh scbool site wu cboaen," aald Shipley. "All I'm asking ls 80 dly1," said Dr. Kaufman. The 60-day delay was granted on a H spilt vote. : Under study is a plan to allow the city's Parking Authority to buy a atrlp from 5th Street to ·i.an Street •bout one block deep and build a po,tlng lot. Fee.s from men would P'1 for tbe project, Dr. Kaufman believes. A civic cent.er could be built above the Jot by Jeasin& air rlpll. Council Okays $100,000 Police Annex Facility . An 111,000 llllMl'to the detectl,. office bullcllng . ol the Huntington \l<Bdl Police Department was aP!W"ved Monday nlgllt by the City Council. • • Jn 1ddiUon, improvements &t!the city jail were promiaed by City Admlnlltr~lor Doyle Miller. The· detectives have been mini a building built in 1911 to house nine persons for a two-year ' pti:tod. There are now It persons workfna in the building. Miller told the c:ouncll \bit the addili1'n "ould be poNblo and could be nmecl when the cl;ic ceo!et and" -pollct . facillfy·ll lli!Dl tn .... to ft"_.. Jail '.condlflolll l8ld -.. lbe ·~ l«!tloo ; of II\' .....u --llGnnan Coatney of ·Loo 'AlamllA>o -... -.., a -·dlart• and jaued· ler ,.., da}'I bl Ille ~ Jall boltn belnc "cloand ol lbe·crline and ··-· . He IAlld c;oanctma.JllrlJ Matney of not ~ allowed · to -.. ot lhave for Uiree da11 1and Uvm, in 11very poor coodlllolll." Matney bod pmnlaed to ,.. tbal the Improvements ,,... ·made ·al the jail u llOOll .. poalble. . Besen Chamber Stai&·SmltA, I"""" P.- Rillh r.a.MUloll -mid "°'° 1M Jlotiat pr.~ i• CllllCdrilr ' = ~~~~ ~::: 8°';_ Backs Hayakawa • boo •-· Club's flwitotimlal .,.,. S. I. lllpbwa., Glem Damte and ~ 1tonl1t!I Th•ndau. other wdwenll) aool coflep --.. Sn·Bf)<lf'li. Pogc 2%. ion recelved a --, !ram )be i. . .o -. • Hurrtingtoll -Chamber of Com- 1 ~ • 1 ~ ' merce for their efforts on the nation's • ••; :· .. '!. ,~ a ~ ...., __ c..M rlf es .J!, .. -. ~ of ~~-.... _. • '' ,,... l.UI; . ""--· ')I•. . . • • ~ =-·-: -..: .......... ""•' .-' . . -~ ........... ' =-!'!! .. ......... '' -· ................... 1• --. = " ..,,.._.,, n .._ .... ,: :=:rv-1. ,, r. ~ ! .. I . 1\1 ~ . . .. , .,.,...... ·TELLS.'OF ~IMONY · S~ WI-. Unruh : • Polka Dot · Dress . . . Girl TellS Jury Site Saw Shooting LOS ANGELES -(UPI) -Va le r I a Schulte, a Jong tressed blonde testHied al'Uie"•mufder trial of Sirhan B. Sirhan today that she saw him extend his arm arid ' !boot Sen. Robert F. Kenned)'. ~fiss ··Schulte, 2!, was· the mySterious ~!"~~y~~·=S!.; ~ ""°"""* do}-~ sho!'tini" "l'ctJit to be a witne'u. Tilt. ~ lid. who today ..... a ..i/;,. ..._, Wilb I _, ..i bW. .• " llad·:i;e;~ " ~. ...,. htadquamn· llr GOieta ·and lild ~ the Ambusador Hotel that nl.ght far the victory·ceJebraUoil. She wu on C'J'Utchel. at the: time 11 1 result of a stllQI accident. ~ · The girl's tesWnony was interrupted after, • had been m. the stand letl than. :I~. IJ$~leS. . , . .superior Court Judge Herbert V. Walk'er"called a recess when a·aherif{'s deprty tn. the courtroom wblsperecf, Ill Him that ht heard a cllcki'!f{ nolie wbjch seemed to emanate from hls desk. The courtroom was deared "by. JUd!Je Walker ud _a few minutes ll:t'tr ·.trial W&1/ resufued wbin it WU found the: ti!lepbooe on· 1be "depujy's desk hid a fbdtmng relay as a· 'result of 1 test by the utUlty company. It was indicative of the tenseness of the trial that the sligbtost ""1)rcton there was an electronic Hsterilng or noording device could lead the judge to hurriedly empty the courtroom. Miss Schulte bad llroull"! to caurl the dress she wOre that rught and she held it up so the 1urY coufd see W. It was lime green wiUr yell6w polka dots and the' girl smlledJ>rlghUy as she dJ>. played It. .,.-- In her brief le!timony, she ~ald she had never known Sirban·at any time and llad not talked to him on the night of 'the shooting. In testimony Monday, massive pro footbaD tackle Roosevelt . Grttt told of bow be beat back people ·trying to tear Sirl)an apart moments all« tbe slaying. GrJer, a Negro, six-feel.five, 2SIO pounds, idolized Sen. Roberl F. Kennedy. But he knocked one-man back and kicked another away as Bobby lay gasp. Ing for life on the floor and the tiny Sirhan struggled to escape. Jess Unruh, the most power! Ull Democrat in California, stood on • ate.ht table sbouting' "Don't°( ldll .him, ~'t till hlia" ~ .declc!IDl.\ln1 that -of pandemonium that there must nOt be another Lee Harvey Oswa!chJack Ruby stain on American history . '1 Unruh., DemocraUc leader in the Slate As!embly wllo II 6pect.d· to run agabl.t Ronald Reagan for governor In 19'10, was doing the yelling but Grier,· the former . Los Angeles , ~s . s~ar ,, w.u doing tl!e a~Upg as Uie flve-!Ool~our llJ.P,lllJld'S!rbajl WU ~ aubduOd.' Unlub was -~manager lorll:eo- ned}', tn .,t!te -~ -~~"!~ ~~·:.:::~1.2 He iboted at • Kenn«IJI ' and then' .... ·-(~IJlllllAN·..,.. •) SORRY A.BOUT THAT, 'MOM' ' . ·- • .· . ._.., ' • -. I·~ .,JI f' • J . ""?'-(. . Nll:vy Jet .· Crashe ' ! ' ' I Wreckage Spotted oJJCatalina,$D~ By JOHN VALTEllZA Of -DMl't ... .,.., A U.S. Navy jllane oul ol Long Beach, carryJni a crew Pf-f!Ve; crulied wly today on Catallfta llland, · tlllJng all aboard.. • . NayY IWcb _planea lpo!lild the WreCtac• Ill ~ -· .... _ ol the lslancl-birt,the lite COUid Ollly be reached by a·ilfOul)d IWcb·partr. - Hampered by muddled· r;oaifs; a• LoJ An&<1a Counly ,.......,.. rescue J>1111, augmented by fire department peraonnd, reached the wreckage.late this,mornlng. They reported all abotnl dead. . Site ol the craah w.a& i. 'remote · peak on the island. -- Sberilf's•Sgt. J~ck.Yaughan ·sald that the crews, hampered by rain and muddy roadi found tbe wreckage and ''What Teens . . appeared to be Ove ~,, . over a widely , ,.attefed ..... ,~ .~!FI ~~· Tllo_ lllOWltain II located oo U... lalind'• west &Ide OW' Iron ~-J}IY •• "7"",-· · · Yaupan aald• that ft ,,.111t:luiat plane.c:ruh UM\le!Dor, ..,:u.elalaaif.' . Three -me <fiom· ti. Avalonliubitauon and. '°"" ' county drel""" )OOk a four· -,,heei-drfH' b:'!ct a"'l"I!'• }Uppery, rOugh dirt roads tci the crUh .Hene. ' The twl.n.enelne craft.;' ~ arter taking olf ·1ro1n u.:t, Loii( ·llelc!t-based carfltt ·KearuiJe~ ~ lO 0'lan airborne earlr WarplDI ..-•t North ·Island Naval :Al< Slalliio. ' The Nary Aid , the ·pJW toot •• o(f 1rom~ the ·xearsarae ~at S·:•'~a.m. l(»d WU lo' bavo landed al· flatlll-IJland •. Arrested ·· by ·Mesa By ARTHl)R R. VINSEL Of ... Dellrl'li.tSWI Hymns of courq;e and faith in ad· versity rang through the Costa ?i,tesa City Jail Monday night, as police booked the biggest crowd since last sumrqer's celebrated Hessian motorcycle gang· roundup. . . , · nefusal to obey orde'rs alter being warned once led to the mm .arrest "! \, Wl"J!,f.,._ oj Bu~~~ ~·1, Ttt11S for i.;nrm, "'Joudly ·evangelliing at t ... adjaceot odiool call)J>U>e3. Crowds ol ~ w:bo.llldboett lill"tll• l~g to .the ~ ~ t1volu- t1onaries pre1eb jeered a team of police olli<:ers COmm\Ulded by Sil. fJdJ Ball· inger aS the ritilltants were led away. "'11 llghtnli1g strikes, We'll 'know we were wrong." said Lt. Austin w, Smith 11:s he lihoveled .'through a bliu.ard ol pa~ork on the watch comander"s desk, ~sulUng fro~ the, roundup. · •A Ught rain ftll•outside, but no rumbles or thunder could be beard ah<Mhe depaft-. ment was atilt , standing when be went off duty' early today. The five glrll ·arid iZ •men -four of them actually senlorteens · in 1 ·sense -.were bOoked on suspklon. of all, or comblnaUon of, two ~ code ,of· lenses and dfte education ·code vlolaUon. "The tblng that some people just refuse to understand ia that we aren't arresUng t!Mffe'pl!Pplt for preachln& or .piekeUnc/• Po1tce Ohief-Roger•Neth·H.id;today .. • · .Refusal to disperse, willful and ma'liclous Obstruction of a. t1.t9rooghfare a.ni:Fwllllul and 'untawtul .diatUrbance of a. Pufilrc-S<:ftQbl are-~~~-arps. ~ w!th$lltll·~ &et b:' · , ·-Arr~fllcked up al M.1ude B. Pavis lnl~ale &hocir. 1~, •• Arttncton =tr~~~;lf: Ar"' . Betty J. OtUlHeb, SI, or 110 Ocean Ave., Huntington ,Be.,:h. CaroUH· B. "Bpuie" Collacott, 19, ol. llU Ocean Ave., Huntington Be8ch. c0a1la0ct N. ,Pudercl~t, 19, 'of 110 ocean .Ave:, Hwitliijion ~Jell. · · 1 P.tli.:lelln·e ·c. Don.en;',. ti, 1of 110 Ocerui Ave., Huntinifon Beacb. · · Jolepfi N: Luglotd, IJ, of' llM\i !Otb St.,.ffWltlnlWJt,Beii.ch. . . . • · Paul B. !!erg. 21. o(. 80!\I lotb SI., (See TEENS, Pag'e I) Che·ers Greet Huntington 'No' on Harbom· Request ~ A packed holl6e at Monday1 nighl'a meeting of the Huntington Beach City Council cheered loudly when the council del,lled a plan by Huntington ·Harbour Corp. for rezo"nln,g' about nine acres from single lo multiple family residential. The denial by the council on a 6-1 vote, with Councilman Henry Kaufman siding y.olth the corporaUon viewpoint, came shortly 'after. midriight' in a meeting that wu delayed due to tfle apparent heart attack suffered py a spectator. The land in question is located on Chrtstl.ana Bay al the southwest corner ol Humboldt Drive ,Ill<( Saybrook Lane. Ron llloo1&0mery atgued !or the com- pany; poliiUng out · that the' land · had been zoned for apartments, but was changed to •lllflle family residential •• I Ume W~ the cin>olallao; planMd a permanent model l'lioriie • dJspla; <!l> the property. llesldenls of the area argued that many bad been 10id prol[Ol'.ty with ,the Utidentand!ng that lbe,baY "!'Ukf,remiln .. a turnlDI basin-. • in addlUon, the resldenta near the area ol wllere the apartments were plan-- ned. a,ici thef feared the multlpja family resktence.'wOuld crowd tbe' scbpotS. ' • CclUncllmOn, ' nollng wbot . tbeY' . - 1idered a! nllTOW channel at one place akJnC the J>l'OPOO'd ·~t-~l<!P' men!, ~ lhey ·felt ·the .. addlllonal-boal lllpt would a'owd the cbamtd. ' Myo rAJvtn .Ill. Coeri oblerved, jusl bdcite cuttng 'tul vote agaillll'.tbe pro' Ject,. that· •on tho. surface ·tbla ll'P."" to be an.JdealJ>!ace for a~ bul It II• bid <!orner.~ , CouncllmU ..rerr7 . ""'"~ , . I , , 9 St.ek '.llfwfceU ' . . . ... . . ... lin·:relOO t\i>~..J'lfle.-cli'1µ1<1IOr tloied . . ( . tn • cGottniialloo ti lhe '· •i-=.., \~ ~I (llee·~ .p ....... 11) ' ' . 1 The" decline ..... noc u much .• , tbeo clay In -lfiet l)ooo. .J& . ··-'"""""41\""'"" lhaii• t..w.~ • l. ~'· l • i . . • . • >l~~li,...·~: • ,., •. I • .t.l''t . ':,jJ..'rJ;}'f • r ,.,. t;,~T ~//;:·~I ;:,.~i •• .... ·tSi "'' • l\!1: -~'j-. ...... ,z .... f•. ' t; T that ~ strip along what he· con- sidered to be a narrow channel be re- tained as single family and the rest of the parcel ~lowed for muUlple family. The sugge~Uon brought groans Crom tbe audience.' ' ' ti minutes· Iller.· Wreckage' waa reported 1e1t&ered ~ a. Wide-area neat the ' lSlini:l's-Wbt' end clills. The Navy did not dbcloM the names IJ.f those •bNrd lbe Nll'J:. ElB trainer.. . .. " . The crish occurred On I modntatn ' at the northwest corner . of the' 'MW· and a sheriff's posse was' In~ After takeoff, radar·· coniact-wis'.,JO$&' almost inunediately. . \ . ~ The Navy llUllebed two. bellcoptan and three aiTcran, 8nd ttJ CoaSt d'uard launched one helicopter. A.. N,1 "' belicoptef discovered the wreckage. Tbe ptBne was on 'its Wa1· to• Nertb lslarMt :after completing carrier qualillea· tiori .tests. . ' L,uguna· Mari : Fails in Bli'.mp 'Hijack' Try The greal blimp jack of 11169, ·•!templed al the cjty of Carson Mondly night on the outsklr~ of Long Beach, never got oflthe,ground. A Laguna Beaeh youth, armed with a guitar an~ myslerioud . 01ack box, at· t.e.nipted · to hiiitck the ,giant Goodyear blimp C.Olumbia for a free.ride to Aspen. Colo.• · · ' , The 'hippie-like yootlt'~wu .later· ~nu. Geil u . .ta~i ijarrif9n.1 , • : 1 Tfl•fw911l!l·be, blimp!&<~"' was . ap. paren y insplrO\I by ~ I!ie B e a p t 1 anima IMY1e "Yellow· Subrittrinl .. wberoin. lbo.fiflflers jourpeyeit to tbt ~the· '"lllqe MeirifH_.ID 1 1 coo- ;u".;'~~~~~..,, ~ Ji.iii :.! ' ljlentlfled 1ltn)telf O!lil1 fs"";1Gt0fge Harri.son of tbe ~" ~ Ear.ry MMday jllgh!, the youth~· •c;/oes the 'bllipp' ,iiounds and •IUjiiil aboard the ..,ndola. • . . . . :-i'f~want ~I ride, m1411,'1 he lMd Jim Genet, a company <?rewmaft wilo worki oa. the Goodyear blimp b1 day anil , takes turns working a nearby guard Sba<k by night. . "U ~. 1~, . .b.low the t1¥P1.up1'' Qc:zi,t quoted the youth u saylngo • Genet called ·for help. For the next hoUr @If a ball; about Ill armed ofllcon surio.md8cl the hie gas bar anlt;waited paUenUy. Said one -"just in cue J:le· really did have a bomb." • Flnally, SberWl1 1Sgl. ArthlU' Hieb aod·the bOmh-lllUld arrived. Hfpka.walk~ eel boldly-aorpss-tbe op<:n, graay field and opened tbe tiny door or the gondola hanging under the ·dirigible's plump.belly. "Are you the pllot?" the hairy oca&pant asked Hieb. "I want to go to, Aspen, Colorado for a jazz festival." · Harrison, without ' waiting {~ an answer, pushed a "button" on· bii. black box. ·rucks waited for an eiplollOo. Instead he heard a blast of roet m.uslC froni the lad'S tiny black transl!tor radio. (See BLIMP, Page II · • .. . ; --·---" -~---~__..;_, ---.o.l,o-··tt .. , .. ........ . , = ··=···e ,. 'Ii·• 8, ..., .... .,. m ,,, . .,, ... , ! -----·r ----··--------·-~ -·-.-=-====-------=----------------':'.:'."'.""'." ... -----::::::-:::-:--==~::-:::=============-.------------------=:--:=== - STEPPING DOWN GOP'• Ray llits Israeli Jet Fired on At Zurich ZURICH, Switzerland (UPI} -Uniden· lified gunmen in a Volkswagen opene fire with submachine guns on an E! Al Jsrat:l jet airliner today as the Boeing 707 was preparing to take off, airport officials reported. A person aboard the plane, apparently a crewman, returned the ftre and one cf the four assailants was killed, eyewitness tePor1.s saJd. The other three men not immediately idenUfled were l!ieized by Swiss police. The incident was similar to an Jnclderit at Athens lnternational Airport Dec. 2$ when two Arab guerrillas attacked an Israeli airliner with a machine gun and grenades. One passenger W8' killed and Israel staged a massive raid against Beirut Airport in revenge. ' Police withheld immediate offi cial In- formation on the four men reported Involved in last nigbfs attack. Eyewitness r e p o r t s Wd the Volkswagen raced along the tarmac of looten International Airport toward th!!: Israeli plane, with lhe submachine guns blarJng. Someone In the cockpit of the plane fired back, killing one of the auallanbi. It was not immedialely 'known tr any of the plane's crew and passengers were wounded. Jn the Athens auack a ~year-old New York construction engineer, Leon z;hlrda:n, wu killed and a stewardess "u aeriously wounded. , 'l1ae Popular Front of the LiberaUon of Palestine, ooe of the two main Arab perrUla organizations with headquarters In Beirut., claimed responsibility tor the attack. Newport Youth Mugged, Robbed A Newport Beach youth waa mugged and robbed or his empty wallet about 6:30 p.m. Monday in the bluff area of Pacific Coast Highway In Huntington Beach. Gary Wintle, 18, 2411 E. 16th St .. Newport, told police he was hHchhlldng IOUlh on Pacific Coast Highway when a car with two men and a woman picked him up. After traveling a short dlstane, the driver stopped the car, both men got out and pulled WlnUe with them, then beat him up and took his wallet, police said. Wintle said there was no money in the wallet, but he lost all or his iden- tification papers. DAILY PILOT Oii.ANOE COAST PUllr&HING COMPANY ltob.rt N. W114 l"mldenl •IMI l'vtlll"*' J•cli R. Curl1y Vke l"r.lcllftt Ind Gentrll IMMIMt Tll1M1• K11,11 ..... Tho'"'' A. Murplth11 MIM91111 £dllw AIMrt W. let.• Wllll•'" It••' ..... " HW!tlnelo!I hlcll l!dl191' ,,,.. ldllw H• ........ leecll°""9 JOt Ith $tr.et M11n,.. A44,.,u ,,o. ••• n~, t2'41 --H"""'1 ... dll ttll Wiit ..... h.llWI,. I C..te ,._1 'DI Wt1t a.y ....... ~•••'" m ,..... ... _ Quits, GQP Chief Post • • Ru~rs f!ut fyew,Jori'~ Choti·~~-in ·R~nning as Succes~r · B7 EVIL YN llDJ\1fooi> ndlo lall 1111111." <Jiolloor dloclalinool, 'llld ,..., join blm 1111111 June. -BU.., who dUllJ!aled himJ;elf as • oi .,.. 0.1" P111e , .. ., tlkl.ne oit on an old quote from Will BU.., ch01en lo bead tbe GOP National "nuts and bolts'' man - a pollUcal WASl!INGTON -Ray Bllu resigned Rocers. Committee after the 1964 pre1ldentlal technician -is es:pected J.o be succeeded today as Republican national chairman effective in mid-April and Newport Beach attorney Munay Chotiner , long a confidant of President Nixcn, might be named the Bliss successor. And to all this, Chot iner, in an In- terview with the DAILY PILOT toda y, declared lhal the weather in Washington is invigoraUng these days -crisp and cool. '·Authoritalive sources" were being quoted around the capital as indicating that Bliss will resign April 15. "All 1 know is what l heard on the "Until an announcement ls made, it would be presumptuous of me to make any statement. ''If any vacancy ii occurring, the GOP RaUonal Committee must call a meeting. Committee members ~'OUld mai.e the decision and the appointment'' The announcement was made today by the \\'hite House. The Ne ' rt Beach attorney, who was • campaign anager ii past Nixon elec- tions, is no working In the offices of &epublic National Headquarters here in Was njton at 11124 I St NW. His family r ain! in Newport Beach Paris in the Winter electipn, announced his lntenUon in a 'otter to President Nh<on •• A lonner ·O!llo mfe Republlcu com- mittee chalrman, Bllu wu a ~ . promile cWldldate for the national poal and II ·crec111ed wllh mud! ol the r<bulldinr of hl.s party following the 1114 presidential election. During hll tenure as n1Uonal cha!"" T!WI, the GOP picked up aeab in both the H-and Senate and lncr<ued Its hold oo gubernatorial 'chain to the point where the Republican Party now has 31 governors to the Democrats' 11. Young Parisians stage snowball fight in shadow of famed Eiffel Tower in French capital. Heavy snow fell Monday and worst weather of winter contin- ues ·its firm grip on the Continent. E'rona Page 1 4 Comity Parks To Be Funded By State Bond CHRIST TEENS ARRESTED • • • Huntington Beach, son or the Teens for Christ spiritual advisor and ecclesiastical guru, the Rev. Dave Berg, 49, who is known to his Oock a&-Uncle. Daniel P. Wellll, 22, of 118 Main St, Huntington Beach. Howard E. eroshu, 19, of Kittaning, Pa. MJcllael G. Barbour, 19, of 116 ?i1ain St. Huntington Beach. Bruce A. Grtgg, 18, of 3591 Howard Ave., Los Alamitos. Richard C. La Brill, 19, of 2261 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Meaa. Ralph K. Baker, 18, of 116 Main St., Hunlinglon Beach. James Ball esteros, 22, of 60:>1 ~ Main St., Huntington Beach. Ral ph Dolpb Ahem. 19, of Cathedral City . Police said the 16 adults -including the four older girls tranferreC to Orange C.ounty Jail -would be arraigned today; but a 17-year-old glrl was soon _released to her parents. STREAMLINE PAPERWORK Records clerks trying to h e l p streamline the massive !low o r paperwork finally made photocopies of a basic master sheet of facts, \\'ith individual datp to be filled in. Virtually an of the Teens for Chri~t members gave their occupations as Minister, but La Brill gave hi..s title as Missionary of the Gospel and Gregg settled for Servant of the Lord. Hlgh school Principal William J. Vaughn and junior high •chool Prlnclpal Werner J. earl.son had 'warned the gospel·spoullng firebrands about I p.m. belOre .calllni for police usl.atuce. Warned also by investlgallng officers, the ~ll'f1inr. Bthle-quollng youlh contiJ!U<d to pr<ach to their Doeks. 1'4AKING AIUIESTS Poll~ al that point began mai.lng the arrezu, saylnr the Teelll for Chrlsl were -causlni: the mUllng crowds of observers to obstruct. ArlJnaton Drive, u well u creating a d.lsturbance. Pla<mtz and picket llp proclaiming that Clirlat u the CllllY answer and tile quesdaa won1· be uked vtry much 1..,,.. wen coolllcated -abolrt IO ol them -u evldtnce. Police lllmed the incident M videotape to t11e u evkklnce in court acUon. Tbronp ol lcl>ool chlldren who p.lbered to wJtaea: the· roundup of the p<oft&led wltnwea for the Master tend· ed ln some cuea to re1ard the police a1 Phlllatlne1. One girl of about 7 uttered a comment 74 Rio Revelers Di e RIO DE JANEIRO (UPI) -Bnwl1, excessive revelry and the he.at were blamed today tor the dulhs or 7, penons during Rio'• annual carnival. Another 8,000 peraonS were treated [or VarlOUJ lnjurl ... hosplul1 reported. distinctly contradiclory to the teachings of meekness, one which would sound rather pungent and scorching even from the lips of a 17-year~ld. "What a fine thing for a little girl to be saying," said Patrol Capt. Robert Moody, who wa1 busy helping t1 supervise the beetle scene. CROSS EVIDENCE Investigators took into evidence a ""'ooden cross spattered will': blood-like slains and hung with tinkling bells, also locking a number of Bibles into property rooms for safekeeping. The series of arrests Monday arternoon was the largest so rar in the continuing campaign of the Teens for Christ group, who are no strangers to jall, just as were their forebears. "This problem has been in existence at local schools for more or less a week," said Lt Smith, "last week they had a six-year-old boy down on his knees, blessing hlm ." Not since 28 Hessians motorcycle club members were rounded up for investlg1· tlon after a vicious assault case last August has the Costa Mesa City Jail been so full. "This thing pretty well shot our whl!e shift," Lt. Smith said, "they were singing and chanting back there ear Iler, but I guess they've quieted down." He then leaned back in his chair and said 1 few things about con· temporary religion and police work, c:ompared to the way it used to be. Funds to continue development of tour Orange County regional parks will be provlded from the 1964 State Park Bond Act it was announced in Sacramento Monday. State officials said $529,000 was alloted to the Orange County projects. Mlle Square Regional Park In Fountain Valley will get '212,500 for second phase development. A golf course and club· house are now under construction there in the first phase. Unive rsity Regional Park, near UC, Irvine wlll get $212,500 in state funds to develop 50 acres in the second stage plan for that racllity. Fullerton Dam Regional Park or 126 acres gets $75,000 for development. Fourth park to get slate money is Laguna Niguel Regional Park -'29,000. The governor's offict said a tot.al of $7.2 million ls being released for 53 parks throughout California. The projects approved add up to $37.6 million ot the $40 million that was provided for iocal projects In the 1964 act. Gas Truck Overtw·ns COMMERCE (AP) -About one mile or the southbound Santa Ana Freeway was closed to traUic early today when a gasoline tanker truck overturned and spilled fuel over a large section of the roadway, the ht1hway 'patrol said. There were no reports of injuries. New Leak Pours 2,000 Gallons of Oil in Sea SANT A BARBARA (AP) -A now leak at its offshore •·en lite may be poorlng as much u 1,000 gallons ol oil a day into the PacWc Ocean, the Union OU Co. has disclosed. The first leak spewed more than 230,000 gallons, crtatlng a slick that once ruch- ed 800 squart miles. The new leak has fonned a sllck two miles long and 30 to 40 feet wide, leaving kelp beds off Gaviota and Refugio beaches northwest or Santa Barbara blackened by small pt;tches of heavy oil. It w11 feared that aouthwett winds might push the new aliclr: •&alnat the coa1l evtn I! a:JO n1en wotked to cltian up prevloua!y oil-gummed beacbu and harbors In Santa Barbalra and Ventura counue:1. Union oJI announced lt• new eaUmate of the lw'o olu Mooday but Union Prctldent Fred Hartley exprtsaed hope it soon would be "reduced or tllmlnated." The firm prevlowly reported 200 gallons a day nowing from the new leak. Althoujh the well which unleashed the big slick has been plugged, more crude oil wu eacaplng nearby because pressure deep beneath the ocean noor was forcing oil throu.eh OC!an bed fissures, Union said. Union said It had asked for and re- cevled permission from Stcretary of the Interior Walter J. lflckel to use another well , previously drilled at the lite, to lo\•ier explosives designed (o rearrange the strata beneath the ocean btd to stat th:! leak. Hickel ordered all drill ing In the chan- nel halted after lhe dlsa3ter. Jn Washington, HickeJ issued 1 new regulation Monday which said. "U thei .waten of the sea are polluted by the drllllng or producUon operaUona of' holders of federal leeses to drllllng rlghL-i, "the control and removal of the pollutant &ban be al the eBP<"'' ol the lessee." t.. as chairman by a more skilled television and platform performer. Reports shortly after the November election that Bliss would be replaced drew widCipread protests from GOP of- ficials who had worked wtth him at the local level. Republican governors, meeting In California in December, praised his r~ord higbly. Friends said Blisa Intends to retire from poUUcal activity and will return to Ohio, where he heads an insurance agency, Dre•• Rehear•al1 POSSIBLE SUCCESSOR Newport's Chotiner E. Germans Shut Berlin Highway BERLIN Cl!Pl)-Ell.ll Germany today cl.oeed lbe ~ain highway from West Germany to 'Berlin for an hour and 50 minutes and slowed·trafflc to a crawl. Trucks were backed up' for miles. Th!s tou'ghest crackdown yet appeared to be a dreu rehearsal tor future hara&s-ment it Wr.st Germany goes ahead with its presldehtial election in West Berlin March 5. · The Soviet government newspaper I;i:vestia warned the three We.stern allies today of possible '"disastrous con- sequences'' if the electlona ·are held. It dld not spell out what the consequences mlghl be. The Unexplained Communist move, which could prove a test for President Nixon, demonstrated lhe grip the Com- munlsts have on the 110.mile highway leading from Berlin through East Germany to the West. Nixon will visit Berlin Feb. 27. Both the Eut Germans and the Soviet Union have warned of serious con- sequences if Bonn holds its election here. Only Mol'}Clay ~'t German Communist leader Walter · Ulbricht conferred in Moscow with Soviet party leader Leonid Brezhnev. The current crisis began blowing up when East Germany announced it would block highway or rail travel for the West German electors although similar elections have been held three times in lhe past with no backlash . Since then the Communist bloc nations have condemned the West German plans as a provocation by "revenge-seeking" German militarists aimed at creating a crisis atmosphere in Europe. .. West Berlin police said lhe main checkpoint at Babelsberg was closed at 10 a.m. without explanation and reopened at 11 :50 a.m. At the sAme time slowdown inspection backlogged trucks and automobiles for several miles at East-West German checkpoints. Some waited rive hours for clearance. West German government spokesman Conrad Ahlers told a news con(erence in Bonn it was unknown whether the Spectator S'ttifren highway slowdowns were the result of Communist harassment or weather. Drivers arriving in 'Vest Berlin said the highway was "fairly clear" of snow and that the slowdown could ·not be blamed on that. It appeared officials were trying to play down the hlghway situation so as not to worry West Berliners. West Berlin cust.oms and police of· ficials discounted lhe weather angle and said, "We probably can expect more or this sort or thing through the ~!arch S election." There was no military traffic heading in either direction during the mornina:· holdup. At the height of the slowdo\vn between 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. The East Germans cleared only one vehicle an hour and trucks waited as long as five hours for clearance. Western ofricials said the full-throated East German and Moscow denunciation of the electoral colle1e session possibly, stemmed from a desire to see how firm was Nixon's desire to preserve Western authority in Berlin. Fron• Page 1 BLIMP • • • After searching him, Hicks helped. him out. En route to a hospital where he wa11 admitted -still unidentified -for observation, the bearded youth explained that he managed to slip by the guard "be<:ause I'm invisible." "He never would have made it to Aspen," said Ralph R~erl, another crewman of the 160-foot blimp used by the rubber company for advertiJing purposes. "The bllmp has a maximum celling of 3,500 feet and Aspen is about 13,000 (ect high. Besides, its maximum fuel load allows only 20 hours in the air," Too bad . The hairy young n1an had brought along his toothbrush. O•U\. T ,ILOt Sllfl ,,... City aides rush to side o! Forest Beil, 47, o! 114~ Grand Canal, Bal· boa Island, following his coilap1e during Monday night's session of Huntington Beach City Council. Bell, who suUered an apparent heart attack Jn midst o! m .. ung, was 'taken to Hoag Memorial Hospllal in Nowport Beach where be was listed In fair condition today. Bell wal sitting in audience when he '''as stricken. <./, t, I l Laguna voe ·62, NO. ~2. l SE.CTIONS, 30 PAGES .. ~ ,. . ORANGE COU"fTY, CALIFORNIA • • TedaY'• Fl••I • N.V. Stoeks 1UESOA '{, :RIRUA Y 11, ·1969 TEN CENT$ Red .. Chinese Silent on Lagµ.na Sailor's Fate Sileoce was lfie Orflc1a1 "Red China reaporwe today to diplomatic feelers about rale or three captured boats, quieUy bobbing in a mainland harbor, ooe owned and skippered by a Laguna Beach man. Crewmen aboard Chinese junks cruis· Ing the broad Pearl River estuary said Uie three yachts are moored at Gav Chau, a fishing village a few miles from the Portuguese Island colony of Macao. • No ·word has been heard ol what happened lo Simeon Baldwin, 51, of l:llt Cliff Drive, La.gnna, nor any ol the. other 14 persons aboard the boats seized Sunday by machine gun-mount~ motor launches. - Mrs. Marjorie Baldwin, the mls!ing aircraft parts distributor'• wUe,. said Monday she has heard nothin1 from the U.S. State Department. The missing man's brother', Del'orrut, or Los An&eles, has ' reportedly been In conlact With Washington about the cise, Mrs. Baldwin said Monday. Diplomats from several countries art tryin1 to secure release of tbe three Hong Kong Royal Yacht Club vw.h, am"" .. OoWla or othon allowed to pass after mere harassment Sunday~ Boaters bod been "71rned against mak- ing the 4.5-mile bollday ci'ui.R from Hong Kong to Macao, since the Chinese ae ·celebrating the new lunar Year of the Roost.tr, and aroused by bad government relaUons. Peklng authorlUea, 11tinging ln recerit months OVtt imprisonment of C0m· muniats blamed for lMS anti-British violence ln Hong Kong, Wert · upected to seek an incldenl Portuguese authorities with Communist Ollna contacts say lhe thr<e yachta , whose passengers include six Americans -three of them young IJitls · -are being detained ror investigation. The Moruum, owned· by Baldwin, the Reverie. owned by Sndilh-bom Chti• Uan Von Sydow, and the Uoi-Na·Mara, owned by Brllllher Heel« H. Rois, were appamiU, in 11-mll~ oHabore 1eu. Red China c1a1mJ li.mlle territorial walen and leized lhe tbr<e yachll alter allowing tbree othm --docqnled wllh portralta ol Mao lil lhe· cabin · - to pus on to-Macao: Besides the Americans aboard, the three yachts carrlftd a .s~. two Brllom, one Frtocimlan, .. Auatralle ane ..........ras ·CS on Girl Tells I Of Sirhan Ii I RFI{ Shots ~ LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Va I er i a Schulte, a long tressed blonde testified at the murder trial of Sirhan B. Sirhan today that she saw him utend his arm and shoot Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Mlsl Schulle, 2%, was lhe myslerious girl ID lhe polka dot c1reg who bas fig· ured prom..menUy in the investigation but who hod nollilng lo do wllli .lhe 111oo1•--~,f. to be a wl._. ... Tho~ : .. pt,,. tedQ - a .wiih'o -with I tM and blue aearf, had been bead of K"""'1Y'1 campolrn beadqdarlerl In Gdeta mid bod -~ lhe A1Vbassador Hom that night for 1hO ¥ictory celebration. She was on crutches at the time as a result of a skiing accident. The girl's testimony was interrupted after she had been on the stand less than 10 minutes. Superior Court Judge llerbert V. Walker called a recess when a sheriff's deputy in the courtroom whispered to him lhat he heard a clicking noise which seemed to emanate from his desk. The courtroom was cleared by Judge Walker and a few minutes later trial was resumed when it was found the te1 ephone on the deputy's desk had a Outtering relay as a result of a test by the utility company. It was indicative of the tenseness of d'le trial that the slightest suspicion there was an electronic listening or recording device could lead the judge to hurriedly empty the courtroom. Miss Schulte had brought to court the dress she wore that night and she held It up so the jury could see it. It was lime gree n with yellow polka dots and the girl smiled brightly as she dis- played IL Jn her brier testimony, she said she had never known Sirhan at any time and bad not talked to him on the night of the shooting. Jn testimony Monday, massive pro football tackle R~evelt Grier told of how he beat ·back people trying to tear Sirhan apart moments after the slaying. Grier, a Negro, slx·feet-five, 290 pounds. idolized Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. But he knocked one man back and kicked another away as Bobby lay gasp- lnj for life on the noor and the tiny Sirhan struggled lo escape. Jess Unruh, the most p ow e r f u I Deinocrat in California, stood on a steam table shouting "Don't kill him, don't kill· him" -deciding in lhat moment of , pandemonium that there must not be ·another Lee Harvey Oswald-Jack Ruby stain on American history. Unruh. Democratic leader in the Slate Assembly who is expected to run against Ronald Reagan for governor in 197'0, was doing the yelling but Grier, th e former Los Angeles Rams star, was doing the •,acting u the rive-foot·four IlS.pound Sll'han was finally subdued . Unruh fta.catnpllgn manager fpr K~· ned.f In the California PresklenUal Primary ·victory and was following beblnd bliu' when the senator wp sbol HI looted ~t Kennedy ind then saw (Seo SIRHAN, Pqe 4) Oil Merger Halted By Federal Judge _ , ' '" .. , .......... ~;" ~l:W YORK (APl<:':M .~~i j!lllj< • q., enjoiroed the '3.1 bjft1on merger of the Atlantic Richfield Co. and Sinclair Oil Corp. ponding a court trial of tlle goftmment's contenUon of antitrust violation. Jud,:e Frederick vanPelt Bryan, in grantJna: a Justice Department request lot a prtllmlnary lnjuncUon Monday, uidi.. ''TIMf ulUm at.e merit.a. remain fully opt.D ror determlnaUoa at trial" Lagunan· Fails in 'Blimpjack' The great bllmpjack of 1969, attempted at the city of Car&on · Monday night on the outskirts of Long Beach, never got oU the ground. I \ THIRD I~ , .~ A Laguna Beach youth, anned with a guitar and mysteriow; otack box, at· tempted to hijack the giant Goodyear blin\p Columbia for a free ride to Aspen, Colo. SECOND ST//EET 'lbe hipPle-Uke youth was later identi- fM!d ".J-~ ' '!lie · 1ninkl·be llDiipJad:er wu •Po pamlli ...,.,.. by· !ht Be all 11 animated movie ''Yellotr Submarine" wberelo Ibo ~ J-peyed lo lhe land Of tbe "Blue Meanie&" 1n a con~ lraplion reaembllng 1 blimp. ~~ I~· ~~ I ~ So II developed the bllmpjacklng youth, about 20, at fint identified himself only aa: "George Harrilon of the BeaUes." GlENNEYRE STllEEr /\ Ul!I ,...., ..... Early Monday night. the youth spriated across the blimp grounds and leaped aboard the gondola. \ " TELLS OF TESTIMONY Sirhan Witness Unruh Laguna Board 'Village' Owner "I want a ride, man," he told Jim Genet, a company crewman who works on the Goodyear blimp by day and takes turns working a nearby guard shack by night. "If not, I 'll blow the thing up," Genet quoted the 1outh SJ saying. LIBRARY SITE -Shaded parcels on Third Street indicate site for ne\v Laguna Beach uqrary. Shaded area at corner or Glenneyre Street and Park Avenue is site·of exi.tting library. City ls consider-- ing acquisition of additional parcels on Third Street so ne w library \voul d have room for expansion. . . ' See Eye-to-Eye Laguna Beach Planning Commissloners and Vacation Village Owner Loren Haneline saw eye-to-eye Mooday and the result was commission approval of a walkway roof between The Beachbouse lnn kitchen and walk·ln refrigerators. Genet called for help. For the next hour and a half, about 30 armed officers surrounded the big gas bag arxl: waited patientlyl Said «1e -"just in case lie really did have a bomb." · Flbally, Sberlll's Sgt. Arthur !Ilcks apd the bomb squad anived. Hicks waJk- ed boldly across 1he open, grusy ileld and opened the Uny door of the gondola hanging under !he dlrig;ble's plump belly. "Are you the pilot?" the hairy occupant asked Hicks. "I want to go to Aspen, Colorado for a jazz festival." Council Eyes Non-profit Venture for New Library flaneline withdrew a previous irequest ta the commission for a canopy a n d glass wall extension for an outdoor servi ce bar. The roof, which had been installed for some time by order of the couuty health department, needed Lquna's of- ficial stamp of approval. Haneline, who developed bis Vacation Village through several variances on aplit zoned property, has been a s&e.ldJ parUcipanl In PlanninJI <;ommluloo meetings. His last two requerts, for building variancta bad been denied. . . Stoefc lllarfceu NEW YORK (AP) -The lloclt marl<et closed lower ioda1 in a eon°"Wion of lhe sharp ~turn started Monda1. (See quotations, P .... »II). HarrisOn, wjthout waiting for an answer, pushed'""'a "buUon" on his black box. Hicks waited for an explosion. Instead he beard a blast of rock music from the lad's Uny black transistor radio. After searching him, Hicks helped him Olli. En route to a hospital when! he was admitted -still unidentified -for observation, the bearded youth explained that be managed to slip by the 1uard "because I'm invisible." "He never would have made It to Aspen." said Ralpb Reed, anolher erewman of the llMoot blimp uaed by the rubber company for adverti.ling -· -''Tho blimp bas 1 mnimum cdllng ol 3,IOO feel and Aspen is abool IS,000 feel bJgh. Baldes, lta muimum luol load allows only :Ill boun In, tho air." Too bad. Tbe hairy YOlllll man. bad brought along his toothbrush. Council to Hear Proposal I To Expau~:llecreation Councilmen 'Vednesday will take up the procedural steps for forming a non· profit corporation to finance a new Laguna Beach Llbrary. City Manager James D. \Vheaton has readied a report to the council on forma- tion of the non-profit corporation thal ~·ould act ror the city. Wheaton has also secured a Jetter of commitment from Boettcher and Com· · pany of Denver to puchase up to $700,000 In bonds to finance the structure and land acquisition. • The city manager will also submit a proposal from George Hamilton. ?\ewporl Beach appraiser, on cost of appraising the site. Tbe: city ls exj>ected to acquire either !11 or nine lots on Third Street depending on cost and arrati&ementa that may be worked out wllb lhecounly.- IJ'he loll, whlCJi have residences on !hem are Jiil' -of lhe Tblrd Slnet medl~ cenler aad flnllb oul • lhe ea1t ,.,. of !he block to Mermaid Street. 'TJi.ma1n1ng to be'• wol'Ud. out la lh• amount lbe county l'Oul<fchidoi W1ill for !he .. ly branch llbrlJl' •.. U lii'eemenl la ruched, tile clly'WOOld Here ComP. .,. n .. !f/J~-' ,.._ ;.:.-.:IJf.!..!:JI'...:. .. , Long.awalled -.... IClloolcllaCrlt:la!!adr-~ '"< ~' [·~.' ; ,: ._' . erpanded recreation program far i..-to atta ~ .. .nt.o& ,.._ ' ·. '· )'s\l , · r, l'' >) ,.\' . S.ach will go lo Cll, """"111Mn W& ··;i~-.<:il.. '' ., V.-~~ifrliiile.bl-io<\C Wljl ·be nm nead>f ''\;!'~' · '' ,,..,,,,_ · 'i\ld ~,Sor the Juno.~ alrtadJ TMi-i.~~.O~UAf,..• · · : ool waru to , .'!ii' bt~l• :0 • bloom.. 1'a ,DAIL\' ....O.illon'p/ognm ...t1uD· !'<""•· 11 1 "rully fJnl rale program." •' ~· PU.00: today' off en •I\_ ••glll~ liOn dlreclor 11thoworkol1 joln'1><>fth Tbi1 would lncludt 1 fJnl rale, ru(s;~• iltn crainmed l'1tll I~~ ·"'l"""iJ:'! ad hoc commlltoe. . Ume recr<aUon dlrec!Or and 1 broad.nij • ~dll dell~ to help, ,...,., '.':~ Vice Mayor J""tlh O'Sullinn, 1 program that mliJlt •lnclude lhe edud,l>''!l: ~'f!,':i ~-1il( "per'' member ol tho ftYHIWI comm\\leo. tJonal upocta ol recrution, he said. ; , (i<I... • . · • declined lo spell oul !he mecbaJllci o1 The sallry, O'Sullivan said, 11 ope:b.n. 1 Brtdai rastiloos tips on ho!r. to ~aft:. 1he roport unW Wednetday nl&l>I-01her commlUH mtmbers I .iii.• cemnony ·tten' 1 plde -., how lo However, he did say lhe pwp _hos Councilman Roy Holm, school trua • lhoo for !he • rlllhl af)lrllileat are h> looked Into the poulblllt)' ol a jOlnt Dr. Norman Browne and Robert Turnu eluded 1n the eildes Section of today'• powers 1gteemen1 -..0 city llid and MJu HOU, dli'eclor ol the BbY,' DAILY PIWI'. 11'1 a clip.and-save school dlllrfct. O'Sulllv ... noted lhll lhe Club. -faalilrl lot CVtrJ llrtde-to-bt., ·' finance the library through Its non·prorit corporation and su~let the facility to the county. City residents pay a county library tax. Formation of a non-profit corporation for the library project ii the same method used by the city for acquisition or the Main Beach and fer construction of the two new fire department su~sta· lions. The council also ls to take up a resoluUon drafted by C o u n c i l m a n Charlton Boyd to eannark the ei:isUng library proptrly for future park and recreation use. Boyd's resolution also calls for rezoning tlle property thal prt..,,Uy boP"' bolh library and chamber from commercial to recreational use. The action wu sought by those who had favored enlarcement of the library at its present 11lte or in lieu or J.his preservation of It for future community use. ' ' Jail ·Bteak~r:: · I ' • • Diaz Sentelicea :: i 1 •1 ' r• • -, . "· • , I t ---·-··· ..... ------~-------------·-·-- girl and four Hong Kong Cblnue. Authorities said Monday, lmlntdlaldy af1<r lhe capture, that !hey did nol view the lncldent u anU-Amertcan la nalurt, due lo lhe amolderlng s!toatloo betweai Peking and Hong Koog. Tbe · yaeht.Smen had been warned against making .~ lunar new JUr bol). day crulte wbich bas 1000 ~ In post yean, but they chose lo .iporj (See YACHT, P11e I) Navy Crew Of 5 Perislf. In Crackup ., By JOHN VALTERZA or "" DellJ •1i.t ''"' A U.S: Navy plane out of Long Beach, carrying a crew of five, cruhed earl1 today on Catalina Island, killing all aboard. Navy search planes spotted the wreckage in a remote aecUoo of the island but the site could only be reached by a ground search perty. Hampered by muddled roada,. a Los Ang_el~ County seven-man racue ;,rty, aligmenled by fire deparlm•nl peraamiel, reached the wreckage late lhll morning. · TbOJ, rePorled all aboard dud. Stt.i of the cruh WIJ a remote pell on. the Island. · SherUrs Sgt. Jack Vaugban said that the crews, hampered by rain and muddy roads found tbe wreckage and "whit appeared to be five bodies" over a ¥.1!dely scattered area or Sliver Peak. The mountain is located on the Island 's west side near Iron Bound Bay. Vaughan said that it was the largest plane crash in memory on the Jsl1od. Three mt : from the Avalon l\lhtlation and four county firemen toot a rour· ~~~l~~~t:kc:;~os::~:,pery, rouP The -twin-engine craft crashed after taking off from the Lo111 Beach-based carrier Kearsarge, attached to an airborn! early warning squadrm at North Island Naval Air Station. The Navy said the p~ne took off rrom the Kearsarge at 2:30 a.m. and was to have 1anded at North Island 4S minutes later. Wreckage was reported scattered over a wide area near the island's west end cliffs. The Navy did not diaclose the names oI those aboard the N1v1 ElB trainer. The crash occurred on a mountain at the northwest corner of the island and a sherilr'a posse was inveaUgaUng. Alter -takeoff, radar contact was lost aimo8t immediately. The Navy ·launched two helicopter• and three aircraft, and the Coast c;;uard launched one helicopter. A Na v )' helicopter dlsCovered the wreckage .• The plane. w11 on ill way . to Nortb Island after corrtpleUng carritr qualifica· tion tests. Orange Weadaer The driuJe· will 'be abort Uvid, the weatherman promllet, with skies clearing 1 WedneldQ" while temperatures. ding , to the upper j)•a i!Orig lhe Orartgt Coisl. · • • INSIDE TODAY ~ • I • l .st4J '!'!"lh; former PF!;l ,,,. • "'"~ball ..... ~· .,_1g., ..... ~ .... , . •• . .u..'.-liatltl~ .-jolt ... ,. ... leTiftll, "'Ill• failoril< to cop Ill• singk~ cllOmpionshl, of lh< Bal- ' boa ' s., ,, Club's ·mvltott...i ' tovrMm1nt rtarl'htg Thvradq. S<t sporl!, Page 22 . • ""'' ' .. c...... j ' c...... ... c.ika' , It 1 ~ •. ~II . .,..... 'JMiftc.t~ • -' .......... ..... ' .......,.._, ,, ,...... .. ,, '"' C•llt I .... ..,...., u ~ ll ... ,_ ', _.,. -.. --. .............. --' lkltf ,._ '"'' --... ---T......... ,. -. ·-. ·--.. --.. 1 • I I I I DAILY PILOT L Bliss . Quits; GOP Eyes Coas.t Man 87 EVELYN SHEJIWOOD ot "" C.ltr ,.,.., ...,. WASlllNGTON -1111' ~ rulgned today u llepubli<an natloaal chairman effective In mid-April and Nrwporl Buch attorney Murray Chotlner. tong a confidant of Prtsldent Nixon, might be named the Bllu aueceaaor. And lo all thil, Cholinet, In ah Jn. tervlew with the DAILY PILOr tod,ly, declared that the weather In W uhlnat<>n la lnv)loralilll lhele days -alap and cool. ••Authoritative IOUrCM" were bting qooted around the capital u lndlcalilll thal Biia will ru)ln April II. "AU I Jmow la what I bean! Oii the radio last night," ChoUner disclaimed, taking off on an old quote from Will Rogers. ''UnUI an announcement is made, it would be preaumptuous of me to ~e .any statement. "If any vacancy is occurrlJlg, the GOP Natlooal Committee muit call a meelinf. Committee members would make the declaioo and the appointment." The announcement was made today by the White Houoe. The Newport Beach attorney, who WU a campalln manqer b put Nbicm eleo- tions, is now working in the offlcu of Republlcan NaUonal Headquamrs here In Washlngtoo at 11121 I SL NW. 11i1 lamUy remalna In Newport Beach and ..... , join him anW June. Bllas, cholen to head the GOP National Committee after the 1964 presidential election, aM~ his intenUon in a ~tter to Pre!ident Nixon. A former Ohio otate Republican com· mittee chairman, Bliss was a com· promise candidate for the national post and is credited with much of the rebuilding of his party following the lM4 presidential elecUon. During his tenure u national chair· man, tht GOP picked up seats in both the HOlll< and Senate and lncreaaed it.s bold on JIUbernalorial chairs lo the point where tile Republican Party now has 31 govemon to the Democrats' 19. Bliu. who designated bimHlf u a "nuta and bolts" man -a political Udmlclan -b expected lo be sue<eedtd u cbalrman by a ..... &killed lelevillon and platlcnn per!..-. Reporta lbortly after the November •lecllCll that Biia would be replaced d"w widespread proteata from GOP of· flclala wbo had womd .with bllo at the local levil. • · Republican governors, meeting in Calllonlia in D<cember, praised bb reccrd bllbly. . Frlanda nld Bllaa Intend& lo retire fn>m pOuUcal acUvlty and will return · to Ohio. where be buds an insurance agency. Laguna Election Deadline Nears Tbunday will be the last day !0< reold-ol the Laguna Beach UnUled School Dlatrlcl lo reglsltt lo vote In the April 15 school board member elec· lion. Residents who failed lo vote in the November Gener1I Etec:Uon or changed their addresses must reregister on or before Thursday. To be eligible, 1 ruldent must have resided in the state for one year, in the county for at I e a s t 90 days, and in the precinct for at least 54 days prior to the election d1te. A deputy reglatrar of voters will be at the Llsuna Beach Chamber of Com· meree, and the Laguna Federal Savings and Lo1n A.s!oclaUon. Monday through 'I'hln'ldly durin& the regular working boun. I DAil Y PllOI .,._,, N. w., .. "'t•!<kftl •no! J>u'U""'' J•dt a. c •• 1,, V•ct "'f)llkftl •"11 Gt"I'••• M•n••" 1~•"''' IC••~il .... Tht"'•• A. M••t1>hi11e ~1:111* a:tli•·' r. N,11 L-• l ff<l'I· (11'1' '""" i..,... ._. Offlle 221 f.,,,t A••· ,_.,;r;~f M4•••11 1.0. I•• 6•4. t16SZ --C•I• ,,_.,., lJO Wnl l•'t SI""! "'~' ltlltll: '111 Wnl ............ "" .... HVllllfitJOll lt.cfl: liOt ~II $Wt" i .............. ·' ., """ """" .... • ---·-·· Ho~el Zone Over Hump ' . . ' ; Pl.qnners Ask Council ·for Favorable ,Actio-,i Ir .Mat CllAPPEU. Of ... 'otrtf , •• ll•lt 'a's a Hotel Dislrlot. I ' , During the ytars that followed, at- permiled by veious procedure1 m~ change wllh lhe changes ln plannm, commlssiOllfl'I, . . -· The Commerclal·llot.el zone proposed for a secUon of Laguna Beach cleared Lie lint hurdle Monday when city plan- ning commissioners gave the measure unanimous approval ind sent it on the City Council with a favorable recom· mendation. The planning commission a c t i .) n culminates years of discussion o.a a hote l zone and months of work on the fifth draft of the propoaed ordinance, The meuure would crut.e a uniform slandard of zoning for hotels and other commercial aellvitil!s in 1n area between Cleo Stl'e:et and Laguna A v e D u e • Pre5'Dtly, the property there b IODed in a variety of ways. tempb were made to de velop a C.H zone which failed. Since then , development wi\hin the community ha!! pointed out the need:s which are allowed for In the present measure, Al Autry, city planner said. He ooled that the present helter·skelter zoning of the area is bad from a plan· ning point of view and that developmen~ The propoeed ordinance ls dealgned to prevent that, he said. EJ:lsting development 11uch as the Surf . and Sands . Towers would be allowed under the new ordinance: with only minor chacges such 'al the lowering of the partlna structure sllpUy, Autry said. Office Building Planned; Parking Underground Irish Comedy Opening At Playhouse Tonight Under tho law, builders could build multi-story hotels or .m~tels as 'long as lhey followed a fonnula dictating the slie of front and sideyards. HEIGHT DETERMINED Height of buildings is determined by taking one half the width of the fronting road plus the-'distance the building iJ to be set back from the front property line. Sldeyard! are determined tiy taking 25 percent or the height of the building and requiring that amount of o~n space on the sides of the building. An office building with 7 ,000 square feet of floor !pace and underground parking for 14 cars Is to be constructed on the triangle of property behind the \Vbite House Restaurant in Laguna Beach. The structure, with room for 32 stock brokers, is to be built by Beach Const~uc.­ . ti on Co. as the new Laguna offices of Goodbody & Co. Jack Dalbey, local manager of Goodbody, will manage the enlarged operation. represented both parties. The new office structure will be design- ed by Richard H. Dodd, Newport Beach architect. He designed the building vn Forest A venue which houses the DAU. Y PILOT and Cellar Restaurant and also designed the spectacular Gaede residence _which is cantilevered on the ocean at Abalone Point. Lagunana will be treated to a bit of Irish wry when "°Philadelphia, Here I Come!" operu Wednesday at the Laguna Playhouse for a three-week run. The comedy by Brian Friel, was first produced on Broadway by David Mer· rick. It ran 328 performances. Pblladelphla is directed by Broadway veltran Bertram Tanrwell. It stars Bob Andersen and Michael Speer as the rplit penonalilies o( the leading character, Gar O'Donnell. The young Irishman casts a wry gl1nce at the 1Urroundings, his family and friends that he will be leaving behind Truck Overturns On SD Freeway At San Clemente Southbound traffic on the San Diego Freeway near San Clemente was restricted to ofie lane this morning when a paint-laden trailer truck overturned near the El Camino Rt.al offramp. California Highway patrolmen didn't wait for rain to wash off more than two Lons of paint thinner that spilled ciitd tbe freewaf. Firemeq were aalled out to hose away the flammable liquid. Officers said the accident occurred when a car driven by George Leonard Pomon Jr., 22, of 148 W. Escalones, 6an Clemente, collided with the truck shortlylafter the car entered the freeway at El Camino Real. Pomon told patrolmen that he was ovutaJdng the slowly moving truck - an engine and two trailers -when he lost control of hi1 auto ln the drifting rain and alld Into the front l!lecilon of the huge rig. Pbmon's car finished upside down in the center divider and the truck overturned and b!Ocked the two outer lanes of the free.way just south of the county line. A small tortign car driven by Gary Gene Sullivan, 19, of Llkewood then smashed Into a secUon of the overturned truck and in turn overturned in the outer lane of the freeway . Officers said it was "a miracle'' that the four men involved in the Incident "''ere not killed or seriously hurt. The only man injured was Sullivan who was taken to Camp PendJeton Naval Hospital with cuts and bruises and a sprained knee. Pomon and his passenger, Marine Robert D. Green, 21, of Camp Pendleton were unhurt, of£lcers saJd. The truck driver Herbert Lee McCarson, 45, o! Norwalk, suffered only a "shiiklng up", patrolmen said. Officers said It waa hoped lo have the freeway clear by 11 a.m. 'Silver Lining' Seen W ednesda; A silver lining behind today'a gri.•. looking clouds· was prornist4! for Wed· nesdly, with clurinl skies and drier conditions on lhe way. The new rain front , which moved J. overnight from the coast oU Northern California, wu espec:\ed to drop from a quarter to a hilt Inch of prieclpltallon on the Orlfl&e Coaat before moving oo. However, cle.arlna: wa1 expected for late afternoon with chilly air keeping the muimum temperature below tbe so.degree mark. From Pqe I YACHT •.. the SUQestlOO of trouble Jt Kl. Contacta have reportedly been made to Canton. capjlal of K w a n 1 t u n g Province. which bordera Hong Kon, and Macao, besides the Ntw China News A(ency, W>Ofllclal llaboo .,1th Pddnl. Baldwin b .,..~dfnt ol Air Slockl Lid., a Hooe Kooc-bued !Inn supplying parts to various airline compan.fu iQ Iha Far Eaal and rarely vlalll the U.S., to which hla family returned eight yeart ago. when he departs for Philadelphia the next day. Andersen is O'Donnell's "public face" while Speer plays the "private face,'' alter-ego. As such, Speer is neither seen nor heard by the other characters - he communicates O'DoMell's inner thoughU only to the audience. Also appearing in the cast of HPhiladelphia, Here I Come!" are fl number of Lagunans including David Rosen and Swsie Scott. They play O'Dp~ nell's father and their faithful house. keeper, respectively. Other Laguna Beach cast members are Betsy Paul and Ed Van Deusen, O'Donnell's aunt and uncle from the USA; Larry Lyons, his old teacher; and Charles Colgan, the canon. The role of young O'Donnell's fiancee ls played by Sally Hayton (Corona del Mar), and Bill Shilhan (San Clemente) appears as her father. Douglas Pannen· tier (Ne wport Beach) is the American friend of O'Donnell's Phi 1 ad e Ip h i a relatives. And the lad's three con· temporaries are played by Jon Law and Ken Korn\veibel (both of Laguna) and John Wigton (\Vcstmimter). Paul Toft is technical dire~lor and Debra Trudgen stage manager~ Ticket reservations for "Philadelphia, Here I Come!". playing-W-ednesdays through Saturdays, 8:30 p.m. until ?ilarch a and Playhouse membership information are both a\'ailable (rom the Laguna Pl8yhouse box~ officif, 319 Ocean A1·r , telephone 494-8061. Laguna's Toomey Heads Indoor Decathlon Field Laguna Beach Oiympic decathlon champion Bill Too mey Monday was selected to head the field for the first demi-dcalhlon event in history of in· door track at the U.S. Olympic Invila· tional meet Friday in New York. Toomey 1vill face challenges from Olympic teammates Dr. Tom \Vaddell. Rick Sloan and Dave Thoreson for the five-event special event at ~1adison Square Garden. 'Jlie demi-decathlon parallels the fi rst day's Olympic competition and the events are the shot put, 55-metcr dash, long jump, high jun1p and the 400-met.cr run. The shot put wiH be held Friday af· ternoo n at NYU while the 55 meters replaces the regular Olympic sprint distance of 100 meters. Other Olympic competitors expected include gold medal winners Bob Beamon, Bob Seagren and Willie Davenport Under that formula, a building con- structed 100 feet above street level along Pacific Coast Highway would set back 60 feet from the front property line and would have 25 fool sideyards. LUKEWARM OPPOSITON Lukewarm opposition to sections or the sweeping proposal was voi~ during the second planning commission publlc haerlng. The City Council is now due to gel the measure and will hold public its own hearings. 1ifuch discussion centered on the ques- tion of whether including efficiency kitchens lhot plate. refrigerator and sink) in some rootns v.'ould require an additlonal allotment or 2'.lO feet per room in the buildng are;i, • Commissioners decided lhat if the un it had only one room, the allotment would not be necessary. but with more lhan th~t the unit would become a d1\·elling unit and would have to ba\'e the ex1ra footage. A'IiACKED PROVISION Opponents also attacked some pro· visions dealing with parking, and the hel~ht permitted for parking structures. Commissioners, however, unanimously voted approval of the measure after expressing some doubts. "\Ve know this isn't perfect, but what law ever Is,'' Con1misslon Chairman Fred Briggs said. "It can be changed from lime to time," he !aid . . CommJssioner Howard Holden said, t•we didin't just pick this thing up tonight. there's nothing new. Its time we get out of the multiple zoning." The concept of a hotel zone goes back to the Laguna Beach General Plan of 1959. At that time, the plan referred to the Cleo Street-Laguna Avenue area 4 County Parks To Be Funded Funds to conlinue development of four Orange County regional parks will be provided from the 1964 State Park Bond Act it was announced in Sacramento lilonday. State officials said $529,000 was alloted to the Orange County projects. Mlle Square Regional Park in Fountain Valley will get $212.500 for second phase development. A golf course and club· house are now under construction there in the first phase. University Regional Park, near UC, Irvine wJll get $212 ,500 in state funds to develop 50 acres in the second stage plan for that fa cility. Paris in tlae Winter The land has been purchased by James Schmitz and ruchard Burt, local con- tractors and developers, from Hulen C. Callaway, a Los Angeles resident. William Lambourne of Coast Really Police .Hunt 2 In Slayings of UCLA Pantlters LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two of five persons secretly indicted last week in the Jan. 17 slayings of two Black Pan~ thers on the University of California at Los Angeles were being sought today by police. The five, desctlbed aa members of an organiz.ation in rivalry with the Panthers, were charged with one count each of conspiracy to commit murder and two of murder after a two-day Grand Jury bearing. The men were reported to be members of US, a Negro nationalist group. All used Swahll: names. John J. Huggins and Alprenlice "Bunchy" Ca rter, both Panther leaders, were killed at the end of a m"eeling in ·a UCLA ca'.eteria 1rhere Negro students had discu~sct.I qurllficalions of a director for the school's biack studies program . Po\Jce said the two l11cv ~eel; arc Claude "Churchessa'' ll ubcrl, 21 , ,.nrl Harold ''Tuwaia" Jones. I~. Donald "Stodi" Hawkins, ID. 11as <ir· rested Monday on the UCLA cn111p1::;. George "All Sultan!'' Stiner. 2'.l, ;.r·I his brother Larry "Sakia," 21. 1•."H! arrested separately several 1l<1ys n{ct:r the shootings. Right Wing Students Want ROTC Re turned STANFORD (UPI ) -Thirty Stanford University students, i d en ti f yin g them selves as a "community of the right." have asked for retention of ROTC academic credit, more conservative pro· fessors, and suspension of students who disrupt campus judicial proceedings. The school's Academic Senate Council last week voled to end ROTC credit starting in 1970. The students made their requests o! school President Kenneth Pitzer Monday and also distrlbuted blue lapel buttons as part of a statewide Young Americans for Freedom cam· paign. ",., .......... Young Parisians stage snowball light In shadow ol famed Eiffel Towor In French capital. Heavy snow fell Monday and worst weather o! wlnter contin· ues its firm grip on the Continent. I .. The total inVestmerit will exceed $250,000, ii was announced. Construction is to start about April J. ' ' Winter Guest "'Canadian Consul General· J. Gear McEntyre and his wife 1\'ill be honored guests at Fri· day's opening day reception, side\valk art sho\Y and tea for Laguna Beach Winter Festi· vaJ. Ceremonies begin at 2 p.m. at Chamber oC Com· merce. Funeral Held For Mrs. Morrin, Lagunan 8 Years Funeral services ll'ere held today for Elizab!th Frances Morrin, 93, a resident of Laguna Beach for (lght years. r.frs. liforrin died Saturday at Lagun~ Beach Nursing Home "'-"here she had lived for the past seven years. Services were conducted by the Rev. Robert L. Cornelison at St. ?ifary·s Episcopal Church. Mrs. Morrin had been a member of the church . She was also a n:ember of the Golden State Chapter of Eastern Star in Los Angeles for many years. Born in Shenandoah, Pa . Jan. 21, 1876 Mrs. Morrin came to California in 1912. She had also been a resident of Cripple Creek'; Colo. · She was the widow of Charles Mordn and mother of the late Frances Morrill, a Hollywood screen au.gazirie writer. Her brother, retired attorney George Clark. 1 long-time resident of South Laguna died Dec. 28 . Interment was in Pacific V i f w Memorial Park. Sun'ivors are a daughter, Mrs. Maxln~ Boggio and son-in-law Tony Boggio,. of South Lapna. Newport Youth · Mugged, Robbed A Newport Beach youth was muped and robbed of his empty wallet abi.Mlt 6:30 p..m. Mood1y .in the blurr lfl:• of PocUk Cout ltlghway In Huntlnllon Beach. Gary Wintle. 18, 2411 E. l'lb St., Newport, told Pollet be was hitchhlktng .south on Pactrk Coast Highway wben a car with tffo mt11 and a wornu. picked him up. After traveling a short , dlstane:-· the driver stopped the car, both men .soi out and pulled Wintle with thtm, then beat him up and took his wallet, Police said. Wintle said there was no money In the w•llet, but he 1~1 an of his lden- tlflcaUon paper!. I , "' ed Jy "' ry •· th on ,y " ce at ed '" " 11 I ,. ,d '· ·s n n • '8 !. :e " '• •• h • ' d 1t • n .. g ' • • ,, n • • • • ... _ • I \\ (L) DAILY Pll.Of 3 '/dve.in' f Called Off , SEALAB Ill HABITAT E. Germans Close Road ' ' 'Dress Rehearsal' for Nixon's Berlin Visit? At Irvine By JOUN VALTERZA ot .... 0.11'.-f'lllt Sltff Dissident Students at UC trvine decided Monday afternoon to postpone another live.in protest on campus and to wait unUI Thursday to see i1 they l.'Oncur with facu lty recommendations to end the current campus strife. Meeting: in a rally· on campus tho students. tot:allng no more ' than· 350, heard of plans ror special bail funds and threats of suspension or arrest if their live-in is resumed in the English Deparltnent's Writing Center. A similar protest there ended last Friday. . They also heard of proposals by an Interim committee of three professors and three students. who have suggested that a moratorium be establlabed retroactively to Jan. 1 enabling officla1s to .study the firing of two UCI professors, whose dismissal spawned the student protest. The two professors whose firing started the controversy are Stephen Shapiro and Donald Brannan. The moratorium has been referred by Chancellor Daniel C.. Aldrich Jr. to th e Academic Senate, which meets in special session Thur~day afterpoon . Arter the half-hour rally Monday the student group split uP with about half filing through the campus' dipping lawn area to the English Writing Center. Anzious 'to avoid disnJ,ption of .acUvities in the center student' leaders Monday told the group to wait OIJ1Side.. until a class meeting in the center had en~d. Once inside the st~ts ja~.;_the room and the hallway outside -lo detenirine their plans for Thursday. The students agreed lo a fa~y member's suggestion that they sit Jn and actively participate in discussions at-the 'Academic Senate meeting, then leave regufar representatives behind ~d wait outside while the faculty reaches a decision on the moratoriu m. The dissidents emphasized that they might not necessarily abide by the decision of the faculty, and that alter the meeting the protesters w i 11 themselves meet "to decid e a plan of action if necessary." Chancellor Aldrich cancelled a scbedul- M business trip to San Francisco because or the campus developments. The prOposed moratorium c a 11 ~ specifically for review back to Ja'.1--1 of a}l1 firings o[ faculty, alJ~~SpellSIOnS and. failures to renew contrac~. 'tr.· .J /, .,.-',t "l • ' ·;. v ,: "; .. ' COunty M'~il'Die~ ' I In Jet Air Crash ·. A U.S. Navy flight instructor from Fullerton and his student were killed Monday near York, Ala., when their jet crashed on a routin~. training .n~ght from the naval air station at Mer1d1an, Miss. ·. . . The dead pilots were 1denttf1ed as LL (jg) Larry S. Swyer, 25, of Fu·nerton and Lt. (jg) James B. McLandon , 24, of Roanoke, Va., tlie student pilot. Navy spokesmen said the T-2A Buckeye trainer crashed at mid-morning about three miles north of York off Alabama Highway 17. A witness, Mi's. Addie May Weatherly Of York, said she saw the plane fall while trailing smoke. Mayor Faces Arrest On Raw Milk Sales LOS ANGELES (UPIJ -A bench \Varrant w a s out today for the arrest of Harold Stueve, mayor of Monrovia, part owner of a dairy and staunch defender of the benefits of drinking raw milk. The warrant was issued Monday by Superior Court Judge Richard Schauer after dairy inspectors reported Stueve's Alta-Dena dairy was distributing raw milk despite a restraining order. .. ... : . .-... ..• :• ... '!~;. ..... .. «If ~ '"'~ ~ "' Navy's Sealab This is a drawing of Sealab III, the U.S. Navy's underwater labora· tory. An aquanaut identified as Berry L. C~nnon. 33, a civilian engi- neer with the Navy D'efense Laboratory, died of an apparent heart seizure Monday wh,ile swimming with team-members 600 feet deep near the Sealab off-San Clemente Island. The tragedy came as the Navy was attempt.ihg to get the Sealab experiment'tHJder \vay. Sea Urchin·s,. Sewage Pose Double Threat to ·Kelp Sewage dumpelf into the sea -allied with the hea,rty appetite of the' spi07 sea urchin -Poses a· ihrea_t to valuable kelp bed s of£ the "Orange County coastline, sayS an Orange Coast marine biologist. Sea urchins, explains Dr. Wheeler North of the Californla Institute of 'J'echnology 's Kerckhofl Laboratory in Corona del Mar, thrive on waste materials cast into the sea by man. Jn turn, he adds, the urcbins devour kelp which serves lo harbor and spur the breeding of fish. ln fact , says Dr. North, sea urchinp. highly prolific near sewage ouUalls, already have decimated once lush kelp beds and now are eating young plants so fast the beds cannot restore themselves naturally even though kelp can grow several feet in a single day. The problem, says the scientist, is of much longer range than the current dumping of thousands of gallons of raw sewage into the sea as a result of storm-damaged sewer lines. Of more concern to him, is what he describes as man's continuing abuse of coastal waters throµgh construction of riew sewage treatment plants which empty into the sea . Dr. North currently is engaged in an effort to restore nature's balancr: by replanting kelp in coastaJ waters ()f f Corona del Mar. He shudders at the possibility o( another sewage plan t being built between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach to serve future lnco1ue Rises Slightly WASHINGTON (AP) -Labor disputes and tax increases were cited as con- tributing factor s by the Commerce Department today as it reported the smallest monthyl rise in personal income in more than a year. Personal income climbed during January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $715 billion. a $1.6 billion increaSC. The rise from November to December bad been $5.5 billion. residential developments In that area. "U another &ewage pianl is built, those keJp beds along the shore will be in definite danger," he says. The urchins, which can derive a quarter of their daily nourishment from amino acids associated with sewage, take five years to develop into a sizeable, kelp-threatening group, Dr. North said. ''Therefore the raw sewage currently coming ()Ut ()f the Santa Ana River wouldn't affect the sea urchiru, or the nearest kelp. which is miles away in Corona del Mar," he said. REPLANTING .PROGRAM For the past few years, since the sea urchin theory was pn1ven, the biologist has developed a kelp replanting program aloni with a project involvin& the dumping of quicklime into sea urchin beds to kilI the small, spiny creatures. "Even when there is no kelp to eat, Dr. North said, the urchins can survive on the amino acids from sewage alone. Although tbe quicklime technique Js effective over small areas, research is continuing into wide-scale techniques to eliminate lhe urcblns to a rate where their numbers are safe for kelp. Among Dr. North 's techniques for maintaining the balance are an undersea nursery where he and bis staff arow and nurture baby kelp plants. He also has been experimenting with new species of kelp from W8J'IT\er climates that can live in the colder coastal waters with the benefit Of water warmed .by electrical power generating stations. NATURAL BALANCES Digressing to the Santa Barbara oil slick and problems it poses to natural balances in the sea, the researcher said that the slick could kill kelp beds if enough oil fouled the plants. He expressed concern over the ruining by the oil of several projects undertaken by biologists at the. University of California at Santa Barbara. Dr. North's res<!llldl Is llJKllllOfed by the Federal Wat.er Pollution Control Administration. BEllLJN (UPl)-Eul GmlWly i.day -e1ooec1 Ille main ~wl)' .<rom Weot G'"'1111f lo Berlin lot on boor and so m1nut.el and slowed traffic to a crawl 'l'nlcts -. bacted \Jp !Or miles.-- This tbagb..t crackdown yet a~ to be a fir• rehearsal for future hirlJ!.. ment lf·Wut Germany goes ahead with ils presidential election In We11t Berlin March 5. The Soviet 'goverttnient ,newapa~r lzvesUa warned the three Westem1allies today of posalble "dlWtrobs "°"' sequences" if the elections are held. It did not spell out what the consequences might be. The unexplained Communist move. which could prove a teat for President N!son, demonstrated Ille glp the Com- munlstil have on the 110.mlle hJCbway leadlng from Berlin throulh East Gennany lo lhe WOii. Nbcon wm visit Berlin Feb. 2'1. Both the East Germans and the Soviet Union have warned of JerlOUJ con· sequences .II Bonn holdJ !ti election l!eu- O!lly Monday East Gennan Communlal Israeli Jet Fired On At Zurich ZURICH, Swilzerl1nd (UPI) -Uniden• tllled gunmen in a \'olbwqen opened fire with submachine J11111S on an El Al !Jrael jet airliner today H lhe Boeing 7111 was._.., lo like olf, airport officials reported. ' A person aboard the plane, apparenUy a crewman. returned the fire 100 one of the four assallantl was tilled, eyewitness reports said. 11Wl other thtte men not immediately Identified were seized by Swiss police. The incident was similar to an incident at Athens IntemaUonal_Airport Dec. 26 when two Arab guerrillas attacked an Israeli airliner with a machine gun and grenade!. One passen1er was killed and 1srael staged a massive raid against Beirut Airport in revenge. Police withheld immediate oflicial In- formation on tbe four men reported invo1Vtld ' iD last night'• attack. Eyewitness r e p or t s said the Vo~ag~ ra_ced along the tarmac ,~ Kloten International Airport toward lht Israeli plane, with the submachine runs blazing. Someone in the cockpit of the plane fired back, killing one of the assailanlli. It was not immediately known. if any of the plane's crew and passengers were wounded. Jn the Athens attack a ~year.old New York construction engineer, Leon Shirdan, was kiUed and a atewardess was seriOUlly wounded.· • The Popular Front of the LiberatiGn of Palestine, one of the two main Arab guerrilla organizations with headquarters in Beirut, claimed responsibility for the attack. Pakistani Crisis Solution Falls Apart KARACHI (UPI) -President Moh.am· mad Ayub Khan'• effo~s. lo so_l~e Pakistan's worsening politi<!al cns1s began falling apart today. The threat of violence waa high and authorities im- posed 24-hour curfews on the main cities of Karachi and Dacca. Two key leflw'ing leaders announced they would boycott a crisb confennce Wednesday called by Ayub to end the bloodshed that bas taken 49 lives in three months and made such citiea as Karachi and D&cca the scene of violent rioting and clashes between police and demoostralors. Murphy Urges Protection For Tuna Boats Off Peru • W ASffiNGTON (UPI) -Pre!ldent Nixon wu ur&ed again Monday to pro· vide naval ()r other proteetion to Americ.,i fishing vessels operatinc on the high seas off Peru and Ec:µador. 'lbe new r:eqlttSt wu made in separate telegams bl' Sen. ~I• Murphy (Jl. cam.) and ·Rtp. 'l'llOmu M.' Pelly (R- Wash.l 1loth o! whom mad< r1m1Jar ,.. q...Ulutweet. Murphy, in a telegram to Nixon, said there WI$ a "threat lo American Uva and property" and that the situation was "obviously etploslve." PelJy, in calling for naval protecti<>!l• sald American filhennen were 1n "danger o1 injury or even death at the hands of gun-happy Lat i'n Americans." port of Salinas, Ecuador, to let U.S. of1icials view the damage. Instead, the ~11lators were told, the captain had been den ied clearance and fired on when he went to his vessel after U.S. officials lelt lhe seen<. ~·suCh oUtrageous affronts to American ript.s and dlgnlty musl end and "90· aequf!lttly Immediate. action , •• I~ im· peraUve1" Murphy !l&ld tn his telegram lo Ille Pre!ldent. The Calllomia &pubUcan said ste~ should be taken 11to provide necesnry protecllon. military or otherwise, for United States fishing vewl1. , . " TUNA BOAT SAN JUAN BEFORE PERUVIAN ATTACK Solon Wants Protection for Fither!'ft•n The renewed demands were insplrtd by reports that the Sin Juan, one of two American tUM boatl attacked by PtrVVian gunboat.a last week, had been promlted ii-could enter and clear the · 1be San Juan was one of two vw;els reportedly attacked by Peruvian IUO-- boats more then 20 miles at Sea In waters considered international by the United Stata: and mo&l ·countries but which Peru claims 11 itl territorial ••· The other veuel, the Martntr. was taken into a Peruvian port .. The San Juan fled into wat<n claimed by E<uador. ' Jeadee Walter \J)brlcht CQl!leered ·in "'*'°" ""'h Soviet party leader Leoold Brelbnev·.r -: . '!be current crWs bepn ~towi., up wbtn East Gtrmany annouDCed it would block hi&hway ri rall \liVtl 'lo? 1he W..t German .el~ altJtouilf limilar elecU0113 have been' held three time. In the past with no backlash. Sinct then the Communist bloc nations have condemned the West Gennan plans 84 a provocation by "revenge-seeking" German militarists 'aimed at creating a crisis 'tmo&pbtre Jn Europe. • West Berlin police aald the main checkpoint al Babelsberg wu closed at 10 .a.m. without explanation and reopened. at 11:50 a.m. At the aame time slowdown lru:peclion backloaed tructs and automobllu for several mllu at East-West Gwman chectpoinls. Some waited. five houri for clearance. West German government spokuman Conrad Ahlers told a new1 CDfl~nce 1n Boon it was unknown wbetbt!t--the biihway slowdowns 'were the reault of All RepubUeans Commu.nilt harusment ar wealhu, Drlv .... ~iYitl('ln Will BerlJn d the .~W&Y WIS ''.fllrly Clear" of - and that the alowdOl'n could not be blamed on that.-!t a_.w olJiclalt were tr)'inc to play down lbe hfahway situation so as not to worry West Berliners. West Berlin customs and police ()f- flcials discounted the weal.her anale and· said, "We probably can e1pect more of this sort of thl111 through the March s election.'' There was no military ltaffic beading· 1n either direction during the morning holdup . At tbe height of the slowdown between· 7 a.m. and 10 a.m. The Ea.rt Germans cleared ooly one vehicle an bour and trucks waited aa Iona: as five hours for clearance. Western officials sald lhe full-lbroaled EU\ Geml.. and Moscow denunclatlon· ol the electoral eollege "salon ~bit stemmed from a desire to tee how firm was Niion11 desire to preserve Western authority in Berlin. Reagan Appoints Three , To Board at Fairview A. 1Cbo9.l admln!slrator from Newport Bea<h, t '"lelCher from Seal Beach and a Garden Gi'O\re housewife were ap. pointed Monday by Governor Ronald R<!agan lo Ille Board of DlreCtors ot Fairview State llollpltal in C:O.ta lol<A. Each of Ille four.year appointees tue- ceed! a board member whose Wm is expiring, according to Dr. Anthony M. Toto, superintendent and medical direc- tor. All three are RepublicaM. , Charles Palmer, 48, of 1701 Kings Road, Newport Beach, assistant superintendent in charge of business af- fairs: for the Huntington Beach City School District is one appointee. He succeeds Dr. Demetrius S. Stylianou, of 1923 Westwood Ave .. Santa Ana. Thomas E. Blackman, 36, of 421 Daryl Covt Way, Seal Beach, is the second Refgan appointee to the five-man ad· vlsory board. Blac.,kman is an Instruct.or in the Lona Beacb Unllted school Diltrlcl. , He succeeds ,Dr, Norman J. Meyer, 2981 Ceylon Qrive, Costa Mesa, who · Is also a dlr<!Clor of Ille 3Zl1d Acricultura!c Dls1rlct's Orange County Fair Board. The thlrd appointee• 1.-Gard<n Grove ' housewife Mrs. Emma J. Ballard, who' takes the seat vacated by Ven Fahrney/ of Loa Alamitos. pr. Toto explained Mqrlday that the1 Fairview State Hospital Board of Direc· tors reports to the state Director of Mental Hygiene and works in an advisory'. capacity. ~ The post includes payment of e11:pense8 incurred in the course of duty, but the title does not carry the power one· might expect of the same job in a business firm. Directors do ·not establish hospitaf policy, but have the right of visitation at the facility 's various tnncbea and' its memben advise Dr. ·Toto about various aspects of the operation. 11 ' Witness Says 'No Doubt', Holdup Suspect Shot Him ~- Prosecution witnesses today continued testimony in the Superior O>urt trial of the Stiner brothers with one witnen repeating an urller statement that -George Stiner was the man who shot him In the stomach during a bar room holdup. Charle.s Bisigano, 24, of Santa Ana, told the court "there wu no posalble doubt". that th'e elder Stiner was the man who shot him as he entered tile bar from the restroom. Under close questioning by defenst attorney Frank Evans, be recalled for the third time how he recognized Stiner through the stocking masli worn by his assail ant. "[ knew it ' was George," he said. ''I could see him through the mask. But all I know about the othe( two is that they were also Negrpes." It has been the only positive iden· tificaUon of any member of the trio thus far in the trial. In earlier testimony, the owner of the Halladay Inn and a barmaid described in detail the·events of March I, 1961 but neither could link the two accused men with the holdup. George, 22, and Larry Stiner, 21, are accused of attempted murder. anned robbery and bur11ary. It is alleged that they are two of the three bandits wbo took 14,000 from tbe popular Senta ' Ana 2 Women Killed As Ca~ Skids, Strikes Truck Two women were killed 1nstantly today when their skidding car amasbed into a pirked truck-trailer on the rain-slicked San Diego Freeway near San Juan Capjstrano. . , California Highway patrolmen ldenUied the pair u Dorothy Louise Viera, 43, t• C-1)' Tnlllc 1111 If 0..111 Toll IS of Compton, and Mory JI'. Rou, about eo. of Chino. Both womtn were in a cir heading south at the time of the accident. Olficm uld !be Paclllc Motor Truck· Inc transport was parked at the aide of the freeway alter !ti tnJlne stalled while running through what the drlvtr described as detp pools o( water. The car containing the two women skidded on the tlippery surface and smashed tnto the front portion ot the truClr, off1cer1 said. OIUcers said the truck driver Robert John Schmit.I, 31, Of Lo:! Angeles, ft'U unhurt. The accident occurTed nur OW! cane Juanita offramp ol the freeway • j, bar. The brothers, both membul of. the Negro nationalist orglnizaUoo US {lta credo Is "Them Not Us") a\19 face murder charges in Los Angeles. ~ They are fccused there of sbooUng two members of the Black . Panther ()rganiution on the UCLA campus last Jan. 18. 11le slaying of Alprenlice Carter. 1', and John J. Hugglna, l3, followed a dJspule about who wu to be named director of an Af~American stDdy center on the Westwood campus. Lottery System For Draft Near? WASHINGTON (UPI) -Defen" Secretary Melvin R. Laird laid today a lottery system may be adopted for the draft while the Vietnam War con- tinues. He told a news cooference that h& baa set , a deadline of March 15 ori a study of draft problems, in lhe bope that the Selective Service Act can be changed during the current session oC Congress. Lai.rd commented · after.:_ d~ man- power ezpert.s presented chart.s showing that coUege graduates soon may con- stitute 30 percent of all draftees, com· pared to only 5 percent in 1968 . The experts said this would be as unfair as the former altllation in .which they said college graduates were con· trib uting less than their fair proportion. $622,704 Bill For SF State SAN FRANCISCO (UPJ) -The ,..1 ol pollcln& Ille san Francis<o Slate CoUege campus from Nov. & to Jan. 17 wu '822,'IOf, Mayor Jo- &eph Alioto said Mood&Y. Alioto set the flgure In a letter lo the city'• lobbyist, John Shelley, who wa1 dlrtcted to attempt to 1et reimbursement from the ttate . About hall the cost repm'"t<d ~, 729 mal>boun $J!Onl by ollJl:ers during their re111tar duty periods and $141,391 was given as the valu• of :111,000 m ... ltoorl apent by police from neipboring )urildi .. Uons. The only cash .outlay was $111.- IIO, the cosl1>f police overlhne ltld some damage to fqllfplnent • ' , 4 DAil y ri.oT ' -Pueblo Officer Beaten Into Conf essio Lt. Murphy '!ells Court· of Torture by North Koeran Jailers l ., ' (c.i.IM ... -°""' , ... lltfO WlllJ•m Horm•nd la no dwruny, but tJy •to tell llult to a computer. CORONADO , (UPI) -Wben LI. · alto ·told. the K ....... whol they knew Edward II. J(urJ>ily Jr. wect to olllcer oJmidi -that the Pueblo had been candld>te edlool, · the Navy llld an enpre,t In .elPionare. American ptllooer . ol war rnu•r tell ,,.. romlat COUrt of lilqalry by • the -GOl1 bis name, rllllk one! board ol five ldmlrall Into the Pueblo'• .. rial nwnbor. capture JUL 13, 11168, continued toda1 When Murphy aroH 10< the llfth tlrn• w~ ~ by two mm Pueblo from a Korun loll floor allct with olll<on. his own blood; he bd leomed IOIDething Murphj "u the leadolC wlbleol lor else ; when' peoplt hurt you bodly enougb the lldrd phoso ol the Pueblo Inquiry, they can mate you ~· . deolilli with the cooducl or the 82 oflic<n Murphy, 11, MonclaY told. Navy Court and .... during their It mootha ol of Inquiry Into the coptm-e of the USS roptlflty In Nonh Korea. other pllaaes Pueblo that oiler two vlclool beotlngs have deoll with the ship'• mlMlon and by North K.,..., IO!dierw he pve a capbn. . · lal>e <Onl...ton the "" ahip had Intruded Neo; tbe <Ollclusjon of biJJ te.slimony, into North Korean watert. Murphy WU asked hls opinion of t1'e Murphy, the Pueblo'• wcuUve officer, Code ol Conduct lot Americon military Reds Assault men, laid down In the 19505 durln.i the controversy over "'btabrwaabins"·cl U.S. prlllonen. in the Koreu War. "1 think the unde111inl prlaclple must be maintained -loyalty to one11 COUD- try," Murphy said. •'Howevt1\ the ttate· or tha or! bu diangecl since the code wa1 written. Whit we have MW is a psyeholog.lcal warfare environment. 1 think the Cclclo ol Cooduct doei DOI apply well In suCb an envirmment. '' Murphy's onleol took pil<e the nfiht of Jan. 29, ua. six days after the Pueblo's capture. 1be vessel's skipper, Cmdr. Lloyd M. Bucher, already had dictated a con- fesslon to the Koreans after beatinfll and threats-that his crew woilld be lllol ooe by one~ he dlda't 10 aloog. Murphy .... •lrlJ>l*I to bla shorts In a room open lO lhe freezin& Korean winter and lorced to aiiuot'wilh • stick wedlld balllnd his ' l1neea to cul off blooil clreulatlon. wllin he wovered· or fell, Koreon IOldlers id<ted him and battered hll race with their fliU. Murphy said he loll consclousoess fi ve Umes, apd was . bleediq: from slashes d. the mouth and ear. After be regained conldowmeu a firth Ume, he said he wa.s ready to "confea11." But the Koreans knocked him out again belol'f: afC')>Ung the ol!er. Wheo he wu led before the j>rl!on commander, Murphy's mouth w a s partlaJly paralyzed and he coold only answer quesUons by 1es or no. "I had -~ to ut myllll, why 1 -Id flghi tbt war slll(lehandod when others bad surrendend," Murp~ said. ti Murphy said he had heard a ta~ recorded confealoo by a voict he bellev est wa.s Bucher'•, bµt, admitted UJH;!erJ quest!onlrur he bad no ny of ~ certain. lfe aakl ht knew two otheeJ officers had given in, but the testimor13'7 did "" mate U clear bow be kn.,. this. 'Of Bucher'• oumnder of )be . Pueblojl },furpby said U he had been commondlnC the vtssel biJJ decision would bave been' "essentially the aame." * * * Pueblo Men Harmand trans!erred from the New York State University of Bui· falo to Syracuse University 1 .. t September. A computer at the Bui· falo •chool marked blrn absent from classes In five subjecl.\ and computed. an "F" average for blin In each subject for the fall term. Harmand la an honor student at Syracuse. • Garrison in Mekong Delta ~ Mocked Reds, ·S A ~ew world record was claimed in Graz, Amtria after a Volk$Wagtn traveled more than five ~nil with. 57 pas· 1enocn. IMdt were 18, t10o in tht luggage compartnwit and the f'tmainder hanging on out- sidt. • Several months ago a local Penn- 1ylvania educaUonal television •tallon ran a program on the birth. of a child and It's a good thing the Rev. Robert P•yson was watching. The Rev. Payson, using the know- ledge gained from viewing the show, delivered the baby of one of his parishioners, Mrs. Robert G•1t, Jn her own home. 'I1le· mother and her ·a pound, 10 ounce daughter, \vere reported doing well at a Lan· CBlter hospital, •• SAIGON (UPI) -Firing machine guni and rocket grenades, Communilt per· rlllu lllllUhed over barbed Wire and Into • South VietaoJMM outpo&I In the Mek;ong Delta and mauled lta 70-man garrison, military spokesmen said today. U.S. beli~f1t1~;;, gumhlps whirled to the reacue, u of the hundr<ds ol atlad<en. '!be ml ol the 1Ulrrlllu fle<!. The. defenders suffered. 11il: men killed, se-veu men wounded and 28 mlaing. Tbe bolUe erupt..i Mondly night IO rnlJes IOllthWesl of Saicon at • bale oet up five days ogo to c:onYioce Delto residents to •wine away from tbe COin· rnun!N. In Salgon, military spokesmen said the Viet Cong .and North Vletnameae violated a 24-bour Tet holiday truce a record 21rumes. In a delayed report, they also said the battleship New Jersey shelled North Vietnam Friday for the first time this year and wiped out an antiaircraft site that had fired at a U.S. scoot plane. Uf'IT•~ In the ·delta, allied troops today swept through the area a.round the village of Gia Due where the two-hoot battle erupled Monday night They seized 25 weapons Including madllae guna and rocket grenade launchers, enough bel\'l :weaPoM for a 200-man Viet Cong unit Oil Goes Vp in S1noke Tbe nwnber of defenders f1sted u miaaing indl<ated they moy have been canied away as prisoners by the guer· rillas or simply fled in the tnteme Workmen from the Parlin Fork Conservation Camp at Carpinteria Beach burn oil-soaked straw collect· ed on the shorelines near the site where a Union Oil Co. offshore drilling rig ruptured three weeks ago. Authorities said the .flow of oil ts slowly de- creasing. Attn complaining in a rtc.nt column that the fJ.ambotlcnt prers agent o/ 11etterdaV ii no mon, Vernon Scott, UPI HoUvuiood corre~t. Ula! 1urprllied to find the Warmr Broth,. ns 1tudio pub!tcittt dtpmtm.ent'1 rife siu fibergfal1 dummy of ''TM IUtr ,;trated mizn" (Rod Sttigtr) fn hf1 of· f ice. TM fiberglass dummy cost the studio $10,000 and will travel as ad- vance man for tM film to New York, London, Paris, Tokyo and other world capitals'. • The Connect.icut Legislature's CorrecUons Committee needed 6om.e correction Itself when it met 1.his week in Hartford. A sign on the door of the room where the committee was holding public hearings said: 11Corrctions." Nation fighting. - In Saigon, military 11poi:esme.n llicl the Ccxnmunlst vlolatlOlll of the alllea' 6 p.m. SUDday to 6 p.m. Monday truce triggered fighting that killed eight Americarus and at 1east 151 penillas. Another 94 U.S. troops suffered wound1. 'l'be Americans toot the bnmt of the violations, 198 Cf them: Another S,, were directed against the South Vietnamese wbo suffertd five men wounded. Cong Turn Down Coalition Rule, Vow to Fight PARIS (UPl)-Viet Cong · nego.Uaton today. ruled out any possible coalition government wltb the CWTtnt South Vietnamese regime, rejected an lmml· nent cease-fire and vmnd to continue to fight. A Viet Cong 11~kesman said the Saigon government s refusal to match the Viet Cong's Feb. 15-D truce, and the resumption of American air airikes minutes alter a 24-hour allied truce ended ahowed the "bellicose attitude" of the Saigon regime. "No coalition is -possible with these people," the apokelman. said. His state- ment came two days ah'er a aimllar statement in SaJgon by Prealdent Nauyen Van 'Jb.ieu rullng out any 1Dcluslon of Viet Cong In biJJ cabinet. SIRHAN ... (Continued From Page 1) the struggle surrounding Sirhan. "I became terribly aware we c o u 1 d have a repetition of the Oswald situation and terribly aware that it was important that it must not happen again,'' Unruh said. "This man had to bt kept alive and , with the eyes of the world on us, that he not be subject to mob action. "I climbed up on a table and shouted 'Don't till him, don't kill him -We've got to keep him alive!'" Grier spoke 50£Uy as he told of Ken· nedy jumping off a platfonn alter a victory speech and his helping Ethel Kennedy down. Barry helped, too. "I escorted Mrs. Kennedy into the pantry," Grier said. "I could see tbe senator ahead. Son\ebody pushed her and I steadied her. The I heard pops like firecrackers . . • and I realized it was gunfirt. "I pushed her down .and someone else carried her to the floor. I went bthind a big tray and came around and saw this guy there and people around there . "He still had control of the gun so I put his leg in an arm lock and took my other hand and got the gun 0 People kept coming at him and so I hit one guy and kicked another on my rif;ht and they got the idea we were trying to .save the guy ao they stopped.'' 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" "' )I Tr ., . ST 4' ,II " " M 4 n • .... " .. n ., ., . SF State's Spring Term Off to Stormy ·Opening SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The spring semester got off to a stormy start at San Francisco State College Monday after a two-week mid-semester break tbat included lwo tiomb attacks on the beleaguered campus. The first day . of the new swion was highlighted by the following develop- ments: -Striking students and f a c u I t y members attended class for the first time this year to circumvent a new enrollment cheek which would have ellminated course1 not being iaught. -Acting Pre.11ldent S.I. Hayakawa suspended two Negro faculty members for their part in a disrupt.ion at a facu lty program where Hayakawa was speaking la st week .. -The 11tate attorney general's office won a restraining order against the school's elected student officers, active supporters of the strikes, on grounds they violated trust and spent student body money for unauthorized purposes. Hayakawa said the amount may reach lt00,000. -Mllltants read "Quotations From Chairman Mao" and shouted for 20 minutes to break up a paUUcal science class taught by Dr. John Bunzel, a * * * Berkeley Rioters Using Tear Gas BERKELEV (AP) -Striking students at the University of California are using tear gas to disrupt the campuli. They drove out 200 diners and most or the employes al the Golden Bear cafeteria Monday by toMing a gas canister Into the Student Union bulldlng. R!Jlng fumes also droVe 100 penona rrom • clfeteria on the floor above. Demonstrators set o£f four cherry bombs and shattered a few windows during marches about t h 1 campus. Damage wu "ported minor. Santa Down * Barbara Sit-in to 20 Students SANTA BARBARA (AP)-Ltss than 20 studenls rem1 lned early t.odly out of aboul MIO who marched Monday into the student union building at the Univmlty of California 1t Santa Barbara and vowed to star. lndtfinitely. They identified themselves u mem- be.r1 of the Students for a Democratic Society. Black Students Union and U n I t e d Mexican-American Studenta •. When they occupied the bulldlnf. U..y declared It a "student liberated IOOl'I." publlc critic of black nationalism . -Detectives continued t h e i r In· vestigation of Sunday's pre-dawn ex· plosion which shattered 18 windows in the campus admlni!tratlon building. It was the second bomb blast of the mid· semester break. -Mayor Joseph Alioto said it cost 1he city $622,704 to police the campus from Nov. 6, when the st udent strike be1an, through Jan. 17. • Spacemen In future Apollo mis- sions wW wear tbls ezlra- vehlcular acUviUeo suit. '!'lie equlpmen~ welghfng approx!· mately 60 pounds, consists of extravehicular v I s or a n d gloves, lunar overshoes and a cover which fits over umbilical connectloria on the ftonl of lbe suit. ~en al10 wlD~n' tegrated thermal meteoroid garment weighing about 19 pounds. Says Murphy CORONADO (UPI) -The enlisted men of the USS Pueblo mocked and subverted thelr Commwli5t jailers the entire 11 months they were in North Korea, the ship's execuUve officer said M"onday. They plotted jailbreaks. They rmed their letters home with ridiculous state- ments, knowing these would be read by Communist censors. They made oblcene gestures when their plctum: were taken. And they alway• h~ an American rescue mllllon · woul~ .. swoop down in helicoeters to liberate them. That was the testimony m U. Edward Murphy, ext<:Utlve officer of the Pueblo, Y-onday at a court of inquiry into the vessel's capture by North Korea. "Did you ever see anyone get special consideration in return for cooperation vi'ith the Nor\h Korean&?" Murphy was asked. "No., nobody," wu his answer. During four hours of interrogation, Murphy told how two Pueblo enllaled men tried to build a r a d i o receiver so the captured ship 's company could get news from the outside world. Murphy said the radio was deaiped by Radioman 2.C. Leroy Hayes, 281 Colwnbus, Ohio. It was built with 1tolen material.! by CommurUcaUcm Technician 1.C. Angelo Strano, 2S, Hartford, CoM. When the Pueblo crew wa1 freed, all that was needed to p.i.t the radio in operation was a set of earphones. The crew hatl been trying to steal them with-· oot success. Murphy ga]d Fireman 2.C. Norman W. Spear, 26, Portland, Maine. with whom he roomed for a few days ju.st after the vessel's capture, suffered a ''iolent beating at the hands of North Korean lnterrogitors. Spear wore engine room work clothes 0<Jt the time of his capture. Milrphy said this apparenUy suggested to the }{oreans that Spear was a civilian. "He came back to our room stunned -unable to move, .. Murphy said. "1 think they tried to get him to conreu he was a CIA agent. He was only an engineman -be had no knowledge ot our mission." Murphy said the enlisted men were quartered separately from the offlctrs. They were housed six to a rom. Korean j a i I e r s regularly appointed "petty officers" for each r o o m and Just a.s regularly fired them when they failed to produce cooperalion from the prisoners. W.:urphy mentioned three who lost such jobs because they were "so good from the American point of vie"'·,·• They were Quartermaster 1.C. Charles Law , 21. Chehalis, ·Wash.; Marine Sgt. Robert J. Hammond, 27, Fort Mead, Md.; and Communlcatla'n~ Technician 1.C. Francis J. Ginther, 25, Pottsville, Pa. Ht did not disclose what acts led to their dismisaal by the Koreans. Murphy said the Americans never were allowed to coot their own food . It was brought to them in bucket!. frequently covered with flies. He aald dyse:ntery and stomach cramps were common ailments. The Americans were forced to bow their heads when they walked through the corridon of the jaU or addressed Koreans. Dumke Confirms Reagan Charges On Dissidents SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A group ol "black dlaident lludent.I" forced a dean of ldmisst<oa It a state collece to enii>ll a nwnber of studenls by threatenlng him with bocilly !Wnf, state Collqe Cboncellcr Glaui S. Dumb said MondaY. Dwnke coofJrmed • char,. mod< tit. day by Gov. Ronald Reqan in two apeechu In Newport Bath that 'the college official approved the admla:lon of 40 students arttr SS other students threatened him. When Wed about Reagan's chargt. Dumke rtplled: "lt did happen In Lhe sense 1 iroup of black dissident studtnts exerted pregsures on •n admlnlstraUv• olllclal thal he al(Tffd to admit certau1 atudents." Dumke 11id the indjcent octUrred "somt Ume aa:o" at a campus which J1e would pot ldenuty. But he .. 1d lholla .. Involved denied that the students threatened the admlnlstrator by holding switch-blade knives to bis throat. a,, reported bJ Reagan. - 1 • • " if!J .,, "' rt , t •• d d ,. h d d • y , . •• n n d " ' ,1 n ' '· d r d d I, n n '· 11 n • I-· n It ~ a h • y e d I s y • • '· n y • d • • 0 .. " I. I. n • .. d • ·' y y • • h d •f n ~ ' • '· 1. 0 • n s '· • ' • II d h • ' g • ... . --: -. .. ' • • • ·~· .. .., • • .. HOSPITAL 'liENEFIT _;.A glittering crowd mingled in the Newporter Inn ·Jast Friday-night _for the 10th annual Valentine l3all spopsored by Silver and GOid Chiipt~r, South Coast C~mmunity Hcispital ~uxiliary, to· raise hospital funds., Getting ready·to join Couples on the dance floor are (above le{\, Jeft.to ,tig.qt) Jose Rosan o!'San.Juan CaP.istrano who is a hospital board membe'ry~.Mrs. Rosan, l\1rs. Vincent Carroll and Dr. Catr01T of Laguna Beach, chief Qf the hospital 's ffiedtcat ·sWC: Gathe'red' Wr diJijler (above, seated, left to right) are concert harpist Mrs. Mf!d· • ••• . ~ " · recJ Dilling, MrS. Dbnald Teetor' of :Emerald Bay and M!s. C~l~~ \ Brewer .from Chicago,· and (standing, Jeft to right) C9r.qna del1.Mar residents Mrs. J. W. ·~ern ·and Crtl.dr. · (ret.). Kem' a~ ·Mrs . and Mr. Robert M. Thomas. ·Dancing are' (at.left, left to Tight) Mr!. \!lclor Andrews of ·Emerald Bay and her. husband·;. Ch3.irinal) :6f:f!ie' ihosPtta,l board'and Mrsi Floyd L .. Wergeland of \,agu.~a Niguel and_ Dr. Wetge-· land, medical.dirtl<~r, o( Leisure .War!~ .Medical C~oter.· H~lpwg,llls wile with -her . --;~i'P , ()ielow,. at .J~I))~ P.~.·~ Y qung-of L~gw)a:Beacti. John '·Weld (below,. center), master ·6.f ce~o~ies and bQar~ ,Pt~s~detJti discusses ·ms·duUes with Mrs. Henttersl)ot.t~ Denison of~ew.[l!j_rt Bead), ball chaimian. ·Relaxing (below, at right, ie1t•to right)' are the ,John .B,. LawsOns ,of Lagtina Niguel 'and the" Robert Cases. · . ·. ' T11tld11, ftbni•l'J Ji, l.'~' . L ,.~ 11 " ... ~·· .. .. l . Y-isit a Docto.r B·efo·re You Scr·atch Him Off · Yo·ur li st ' EAi ANN LANDERS: II it p'.>S!ible surrounded by ~· of widows, !ti my bOylrlend Ii allergic to me? · --~lvorcee•-and 1!lilden !Idles·-all just -DEAR ANN • llon 't c~ the diseussibn ly'when we 4tt tosether he breaks I 1' and •··•-~• r· 'ed on widows without ad in• ... r_ ,. .. ! 1·•1 Inf.a h'.111 and starts to itch like as one Y -.. .. ~ rom marr1 .... i.iWJ .... ,., -'·' .. _'II "te whil ·• 'II thought. h. a w1'dow, ' •!!I' a~··tomed . ~e.ft'.me, thiJ can ruin a ~ peopn: · u snc • "' r a .1 e ~·~ 1 \l<,;l.llj moiilent. resian heraeff to the truth -it is to being left Out of things' by old t ti}st I thought It .might )>e my .\)etter to go to tbe theater or a movi e "friends." But I get fliriOU8 when w.ives w I S,f'ealer, but the same 'thing hap.. other than clothf.111Jt 1uch 11 makeup, ~ith fno'tber lonely woman than to &it whisk their husbands1 away from me ~ ~wben I wore silk and_· .cotton hafr spray or perfume. He sholilld go DEAR ANN LANDERS : Your rtplf home in a bathrobe. ' at cocl..tail parties and civic hffictlons d~es. One day, as an expenment, at on~ to an aller(iit wbo wW tdl to the widow who translated a forme r I hope the widow who wrote to you as if I were a scheming hussy with I · k almost everything off and he b:lm wbal to brllr la fir lediat:· . , .. ,, will Uk herself, "How many widows evil deSignS. · ' i worat.'than ever: Dbes this mean u &k leltl reveal ae al~ •ltd friend I, sympathy note as, Get lost, did I include in my social life when Most of the old goats have hearing w ~·l gd. iunied! Pleuf check tbo ticldng penllts. 1te ,_..-CCllllWer could only have been written ~Y. a woman my hullband was , allye?" Jt's a good aids, emphysema and are loaded wilJt rib J1!Ut ~~ts· and get some word tbe .e-JbWty &llat ,aM. nU is cautd· such. as you -one who is happily , question tor ll':arried women t~ ask llver spou. Who'd ~ant them anyway? b~i: ~ me 'immediately. It yt>u .sar .,..,._ .emodaaal .mnll• .. Be ,.mtpt and ufeJy married. .;tbemlelye11 too. God alone knows whose There are mort' Had marriages around i,; gojlllo i ~-,be 'hos. P.<"Omiaod ·1oe-''ttelbc'' to:set....., .... may . 'Youlllidan intero•;.. d fen .dcnr bllsband lrill beJlUI.-WASH ., D.C. than 1ood •one1. and oobO<!)l •tpawa this that wtll ;,O.!l'ballk ~111i.I-~ ol morrlalt•~ltUiaa"to .. . ,-.. an 1 ''" . DEAJ!,.DC.: y., lel!er b ;we 10 , better!)tan.Ann Landers. My~!'&" help i1o 4ii re' 111. -WO '\ u;-..., thtf1e. lB,""1. -be ....r,it ·nql •ooly hanp on to her old fr\!Ddl . JOdl tli' ~ ........ ~a·d Jot . "'J ni>t-ao y,ery f!OOClj one btlt f 1\ep1 -. • wldt c._ npa-11. Boller..,, w bot makes new ones. YO\I are partly •• tloe ~ti-.. Pleise ,.oc1 d!e .ml\ moulh shut apd nevtr.Jtl on lb I from mise'!'ble. The· tut •tbj,ng I want Is fO g~I marriild aPfn .. ·s., tell ·- smug . women to slop-worlying. They are aate. -DUSK I l , DEAR DUSK: I' doe't •""\ to ' ·ted thein, Honey, YOU did.· Aid · l ... you~ i ' ' ' Unsure of :yourself o dates? Whal'• right? Wh'at's wrooj1 ShoWd yout S"""1dn'L yool •Send !ck Ann Land~ booklet ~·oaung Dos and DoA~." enetoe- ing with your ttQ.uest 35--centa•ln toin lnd a long, ,elf.lddfmed, ~ en"IOIJ'. . , " I • • Dl!All WBNDY: Y_ ...,ht...I ll!!Pt YOO mtpt ...r ap wltll aa ~ ~ She'll make new friends allrJcbl. -·!odor. 11.coold be yow Iaup for anyone. _Of eourJe 11 am lonely, but 1 lie lllerjk IO~ yoo ar. wear1JIC prolllem. ' U site bn1 earelul she'll ' find henOl.l tile day. I also am reasonably coo~nt and lar Ahn Landers• wil\ Ile ~ ilo belp you· with . JO<l • fltOl>Iemi.-"Stod ._ lo ber in -.ol 1be JlAllir"EDm enc1os1rc • .,11---. 111amp«1 ~nveJope. L. l_ , • I ' ' I· I I ( • ! • . , i ' • . ' ) • ' ' ' f . ... _ " • . • _JI DAILY PILOT FAMOUS TROJAN -All eyes of the University of·Southem CaJI. fornia alumn.ae who are members of the Trojan Guild wllf be on their alma mater and its mas~t, the Trojan horse, Thursday, F'eb. 20, when Trojan Guild Day is plan.ned. Training an extra ;ye on the horae. la Mra. King Cooper Jr. (right) while Mrs. Rober\ O. Baamajlan (left) and Mrs. Herald Piper oiler assist· ance . Trojan Gu·ild On Campus Focuses Activities \Vomen graduata o1' the · Playera have beeo the only the drarnallltl J D c I u d e Univenlty ct S o.u I her n American ltudeot ""'1P In-repreaeotlq USC u the llnt Calllorn!a, lncludlnc many vltod to p&rlldpote In the and only Amerlcu unlvenlty Orange Cout ,..111onta, will . lamed EdlnbUrgh Fllllval In .,...p to appear In the Holland travel back to their alma Scotland. for the put three. FuUval, pllyJ.na three weeks mater Tburaday, Feb. 20, for years. After their lppell'IJ1Ct In the Je1netta Cochrane the ninth annual Trojan Guild ln the featlval laat year they · Theater tn London and a~ Day. were lilvlted by the Stat• •· peartng on an h o ~ r-1 on I A stimulating program Is Department lo tour part! of ·· television program for the planned on Guild Day each Germany. . British Broadca.atlng Co. year for alumnae and friends Other accom plishments of AsgjstJng wlth preparations of the university. wiltt one for t6e day are Mrs. Herald · department of lhe school Piper of Seal Beach, reserva- featured. This ye a r the J ycetteS tions,• and Mrs. Ro b,e rt spotUght will be on the School Q Huotley o f Westminster, of Drama. deooraUons chairman. Mrs. King Cooper Jr. ~f See s I 1' des . Orange Coast residents' who Horoscope Libra: Praises Due Huntington Harbour is will attend with their guests .. chairman of this year 's Guild are the Mmes. Frank E. · Day, which inc 1 u des the Miss Tamara Bonell, Foun-Anderson of Costa Mesa; I drama program. luncheon in lain Valley'• foreign exchanae Robe.rt O. Bumajlan and Town and Gown foyer and student. will speak tonight at Willlam Barker (){ Newport tours of the campus amducted 8 when the Fountain Valley Beach; Geor1e D. Demos and by the Trojan Guild Tour Jaycettes meet In the home James T. Ferrell, HunUn1ton Group beaded by Mn. Robert Beach; Carl lrwtn, Se al Mahler of Bre:a. of Mn. Claude L. Cou. Beach, and Robert Shames, Two speakers from USC wilf MLss Bonell will illustrate Dana Point. open the drama program, her talk with slides of her ncketa may be obtained John Edward Blantenchip, -home in Jobannesbure, South from the USC Alumni Offlct professor of drama, and Africa. or from any guild member. William C. White, assistant The Jaycettes attended a The guild was organized in professor of drama. They will taping of the Truth or Con-1960 to encourage loyalty and introdu~ the USC Futival sequences TV show I a s t service to the university and : Theater Company, of which month, and member Mrs. to. offer opportun!Ues for Blankench!p 1s producer and John Flanders was selected educational atlmulation and White is aulstant producer. to appear on the 11how to be cultural enrlchment r or The FeaUval The ate r viewed Monday, March 17. . members and thtlr friends. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Dtltl1ff 5 Fllds lOEdttl ruld1nt 14 Yolcmo .,_ 15 '"' ofolf lb -ht\Jr 11 Vtf'f IWH( 11 v.., desirous 20 O•er~ --: 2 wordi 21 ll'akt nol11 or a 01111 n 111n1r11 dtpollt 23 Duck h111tw'• ICCtllorJ 25"-lllllout• ....... 26 Clltlllltf •cc••!'1 _ 30 ltthll OK Jl Utter failure 34 "!!'.!"· ...... , .. lb AS,:lnt r19lon of Austrl1 38 Ult 1n air J9 Trlli1porlAI· !Ion ''''" 41 Europe1n 43 L.1¥tllness 44 Pub gamt 4t Rtl1Un9 to Norway 47 Ability to do work °'' U•'1'• .... -51Fo• of . r'lt 52 Ortot1afly eatrtd '3 H1,lnt IHI coni.inatl• SS N•erlcal ••"• lH1<IO" orttnst 51 Ctrtaln Mldwttl• """' •>Quick light •ti) U Unl111111ln1· llYI 6i lu1lc1I "'"j 67 ltlllllllCt 61 CUrol T11• 4t 1.0.u. ,,,.. ~~r.:1 ••II ofUdt OOIN 1 Cl't1tlt1 K.-: l111Un911 u1oct1lt 2 l.irttnland vllllgt 3 Htun suffhc 4 Kttn stnst of whit lo 11y S M1chlnt tool 6 Pronoun i l•J,t '-1l•U Wl fL:tiiliit.'I .J.,13 1W i•H JL1Lll1f_'l .l' Ul31.:Ji..IU Wl lUlll..lU.l•I. U.JLJU 1 I Itri f.11· I •l'I ' 11111•11.1 1ri1·11n1 ·1.1· 1:1;·l :'J '1;11' n1.111r1n •• ,4Ll l•lt..Ht l!Jt•Jl 'I UI l~l.I·_ \IU·JL·l~f UL·JllLJtl l'.IJLL' U lt !:! tJr1 l-ll ~ll Ulllll·l 1 ' Pual1 S.IYll: tl ULJL:IU,•11 •.1 ~1111 1 '11 !.ll·lr.:1111 llliJ L 11·Jl·!I. iU.1nt·ll4 i~f.11 1 ltl•.1.11. ~n rlflll·IOllrlrl 11•11.ll'U• !JUI.JU LJUIJU f.l llWtJU UIJ'IJU lillJl~l:J UIJllllli 2111/'9 7 Pay1111nt to J? Lt•v• ol! fomiw wlft 3) Htld llllt to I Exch1n1f 35 "'"'of mtdlu• hllll • Wo1r1 37 Vtrth:al 10 N. A•tf. 111stl)' pipe I ~ shrub 40 Mt11llvt ..il Whert anawtr £J:etw la tt OlstllltUlt u Ex••lvoly o 1t•r dt1 41 A1rtetlltllal lJ • ., •• ~1111 11 Coal ,0 QUll'Ttl• """'"'' .... 24 Pmldt ,, -•• food W tnlllll'ICI 1ntco 54 '! to rvl• 25 Cltl' I• l5 K n10f L .. batdy the titn11.,1 26 Sttnle '' lhd ~ltw '7 Ctmt In 27 Ont""'.. • "°'' not btlong ,. Slneln1 bird 21 Having• '" A1sl1t1nt J windiftQ •t Zoll course tlll! 29 Mtn's •2 Futtnlnt nld:n•t dwle• Jl Fret on ~S Btlonglng Trvct: Abbr. 10: Sufflr Financial aid Is offtred to women student. on the cam- pus thi'~gh lta program. Russian Changes Reviewed At noon every second Thurs- day lhe Newport Harbor Gr1ndmothtr1' Club meeta In the COila Mesa Golr and Country Club. Mr11 . Dorothy Van ~farter may be called 1 for n1ore in!orniation. I Grandmother's advice can gel you in a Jc · or trouble A mild little hand lotion worked wonders for grandmother-but i( you expect it lo cope "'ilh tod1y•1 killer cleaners, yoU're taking !he lire of )'Our sk in in your h1nd5. \'cdra is the hand lo· lion up to 1od1f1 clean· era. Aloe, the de!ert'a mcf11turi1ing plant, helpa reatore what cle1ner! •trip away. Vedra Lolion, 1.00, Cream J .50. I "GHAT TINIS TO GO NATIYI IN" t 1"~ ~ HAWAIIAN IHOPI F11hion l1l1nd -Newport C1ntar Open Sunday 1.5 p.m. · Saturday alid Sunday Open 12 WALT DISNEY'S Noon • . • Merm·aids Dive Into Activities Doctor Bid "THI HIART IS A LONIL Y HUNTIR" PLUI "Tho Alrd1, Tho ... , And Tho lt1lj1n1" STAl'fl TOMOllOW ACADEMY AWARD WINNER -'•••CT•·•·,...,, IOMPH E. UYIHE -• Ml~E NICHOLS LAWRENCE TURMAN-·•• THE&RADUATE .. 111...-H11111111· .. llOtl IWll •··lflll 1111 ALSO JUUf 'f~C. Cl-lRISTIE ·SCOTT EXCLUSIVE AREA ENGACiEMENT ADULT ENTERTAINMENT NO ONI WIL1 IE ADMITTID DUIUI• THI WT 11 MINUTU 1rs time to spoak ol Ut1SJ10klft Ulinp ... . EUZAlllTH TAYLOR MIAMRROW .,_...._.__ tl'irl In Tt ---,... .,... .... ~........_~ _._...._,.. "llCllR CIRIMDNY" I RDllliiM'iTCHUM I • -PECiCiY ASt-tCFC'IP1' """"6LA BRCMIN • TUN•llCILOlt• ................... *NOW OPEN* "BEAUTIFUL• ,., '""N 111• 1' ..... ,, .... ~ • '•" •41 .... i.e. ......... eff .. .. lla••tr ... •,.. tW Y••rtt ....... ..,. .................... , ................ u-_,.....,. .. ., 'W .. SW. ''"': ......... 1. trrcat ............. ''""'"""" .. IMJltk 'tayH wtt• ,.,., 1 tU ,_.•I'' "REFRESHING!"!::.: ~::.:"',N~ •Ifft ,... .... """ lllll!•h ..... "' ti. ....... ,. ... c.-. •• .... , ... ~ ........................ ~ ... .... ...., ..... "" ..... ,,... .............. ,1 .. HAIPll'S IAIAAI "DAZZLING• 0 "' , .. -It, ,. .. ,, -.... . • pkt-'Ito_.. & J11IMt' ..... tM _, ,., d141 .,.,.,. • -u•1 "DAZZLING! Once~ see i~ you'll nerer apm pidUre 'Romeo & Juliet' quite Ille way yoa did befmr -u,1 r;;;;uw ~ ------------------------------------------------------------- MAT ADMllllON SI .Gt CHILDllN .10¢ tMIOl.ot....._ CQ'llAMllA, l'KlM '"·llOJ e POllTIYILY INDI TUIS • Frank Sinatra In ULADY IN CEMENT'' Also "~RETTY POISON" IWUtDOWLAs -..... .. __ THE IRO'nflRHOOD ft . -"-\.NOW "-AYIHG e \Dean Martin '1HE WRECKING CREW'' • ALIO • Peter UsllnOv, Maggie Slrift Kart Mil ~ .... _ .. ''-'CAI IH TI'la Wt:STNIHSn:" C•tfft:lll I I I - - fJ I ... Ill • - • [ "' • I" I I 0 • • - I • .. II I • • I \ II I TUE)OAI ' ,\ PEMUAltY 11 . ' "4."30· I • m GEORGE PUTNAM NEWS • * Tiie, Best News In Town \ l:JCI I • jD DONALD O'CONNOR ~ t .NEw TIME/NEW TIME ·••Bno I~ -(C) (60) Jony Duft11hy. Dill H-lrio"'1 !Cl !!Ol ·-·-(C) (>I) UTHE SIX O'CLOCK MOVIE * Color-"A Summer Place" Part II-stars Richard Egan & Dorothy McGuire. 0 Sil: O'a.ct "9fie: (C) •A s-. ... ftlct" Part It (df1m1) '59- lidtitd • (pa, Datatll1' McGuirt, S.11dr1 Dee, Trow Do111h11t. CJ I "' (<)(60) ...... H ('t) (JO) f!I WW'I NN! {30) ''Whtl1 Do W1 Gtt It?" Bill Smitb Joul1lfYI to .....,.1 fi rm to m /low fruits 1nd Vl(lltblts 1r1 crown, proceut1l lftd ,.Wpd. .......... .._ Ill""" -(<) 1-.lll D ~ .._ ... ricti (C) (60) U EXCELLENT POLICE * ACTION MELODRAMA 11 l!ll mm"''° !CJ tlOl .,., taftdy Min." Conclulion al I t'n- Plrl 11Dry. JllTlll E1rt JoMs.. st.r of tht Brofdwu hit, ''The Grut Whitt HO!>f." tuesb IS tandy Labon, dlr9ctor of Ult Pholnbc Hoult. 1 dnlf: rflhlbillt.tba CMtll' -openited by •-lddlcta. H•• W1rd 1ftd Col'IO eontinut tflelr ln- 8 RICHAELD PRESENTS --Imo ~' """" " ' local lf'OC'IJ mi. In wbidl tlll PERKINS ' I I 6 • ~" -•P "'' - 6 I 4 0 I I I 6 6 6 I ~,t'_ ,_ I' --... \ I d ! 6 I 6 0 ly. Cliarles M. Schulz ' . I .. 'J .;,H· -~. -~-.. ·"; .. : .... ::.· ...... ··:· .. ·1y Sciunden . anil. Ovei9ard I· I I I 1or "'o'-..... q "°- c . BY John Miies I 6 0 6 ! 6 0 6 ~ I I * LOS ANGELES LAKERS .,,, """" • """IM to " • JUDGE PARKER l(S. NEW YORK KNICKS '"''"" " "' """'" """· /i,_-----~z-----.. ,,_,.,-----...,---., 8'*'Wn>•(C) G-(C)POITtdM.,... By Harold Le Doux "°' 6ET' VRW' a.IElffS Wint 'IOll MANP5, FllENO! TU. GIVE l'OU '115T AVE ~PS 10 TA.K'E ™"' .,.,... ........ " .. ....., .. (C) (60) . D 111111111 W1t11 Your Qlill (30) lD:OCI II Qt·CI) IO Milllltll (C) (60) _ {)) -. _ ft'I ,..... (C) Sob/~ ol eurrem interllt 1rt ,,. --ur lill unted 1n • map>:tn1 lonntl l:JSlll.lbn ...... q (C) (2 ttr 15 iiirn) Chick Hum alls tht 1cti011 NtwMft l111 Anplts YUra tnrll the Htw Yort Knidletbocktrs. '.7;DOil CIS Eminr N• (C) (30) tflltw Cro~e. B f'Ws Mr Lint? (C) (30) 8J PlllWl'll (C) (30) fl! Tiit Ftllldl CMI (30') &'I ltlMcb ht tilt Suit (C) EE Trvtll • t.nseqDtllttl (C) 7:30 BA Natil. Geo. Special * "AUSTRALIA"- m GEORGE PUTNAM NEWS * One Report .. '• Opinion em-1<1 l"l o ll1l rn i!!l ""• "" 1C1 160) ''You HeYtT T1k1 Mt Atrywllue." 0 Mar*l Dllloll (30) m ntt .., <Cl IJD>· '1h• Joys ~1'nE~ndlc l:u~ ~::ret Tru- @l llld rw...-(30) A pentl of reporters from the· locll news mtdit lliicu• tht ampaip for MIY« d LOI ""Pl• witll ~lldl­ d1tl Willitm fflthliWIJ. 111-- Sponsors: BRITANNICA IUD-!<I "!loo -~ •ncl HAMILfON WATCH tiO"' -· l"'"'•l '" - 8QJJ(l)l1U111I CN1r•J•lc Kiri Mlldtft. Pltrlcia MtdiM.-- s,.dll lt> <60') "Austr.alil-111. m ._ <C> <30) Tin111•t•tld." An ad¥1ntul'Olll 1oo11 m ...... .._..c. •=-<JOJ ,It th1 Dolfit UndeJ CO!ltilllllt 1111'.1 .... 11 Ni*Ui ltl rQlld I~ who fotl• I tlft Irr tht IMntltf of the piontefl fl Alfteriu'• OI• ·West. Alm• 11:1111 II a D mm ..... (C) Scourby nMllles. Tht pf01J11m also 0 Alfnd Mttdlcld; tlUs 1 look at Syd!llJ, the IOPhll· tD llll'I tr9 (C) tlcllad mttropoli1 th.It sits not far Ol YIN "'tlll lltdl WlllJ" ( If frorn the chi!len1es of the st!N 1 ) .'57 " h M ... •-' · • ~ interior. ~n !"'' -nUI ''"'"''· n111lf .111 om m""' ..,.. (C) !601 ""'""' fiil! ritlds .11c1 P•ut L1n0t 111est tm rn ID oo m " ... It> . a tm m l!!l"" -<CJ t60l · ''fJ!t -Up.liatit Toll'11.." Pete. llnc 11:30 II Mowil: (C) ""' H1111t 111 ~ 1iM1. Juli• tmll to 1 t1111H westefn lvW' (wtsttrn) '59-;Audle Murphy, · ...., in tilt 1uist of trcl!HO!o.o .io.n Evtns. tll*nts to •rd! for Capt, Greer, • t1i1tc1 ID rttum t~ Ytc1tioll. O JOHNNY 'S IN TOWN :;.,:: r,:!., .,,.,_ ,_ * THE TONIGHT SHOW • MM ••ltil" (dr11M) '62.......,t.fl. Starrinc Johnny Clrson thollJ Quinn. J1ekl1 Gl1110n, Juli• Guests: Rkhard Harris " HlfTIL ' IDT ... er c...i ..... (C) (JO) ind Buddy Roprs .. ..., •-1601 oo@m1--(C) fl) C.-. • II Rm (30) 0 ll&Mt: •11,111' .......... E•.Allll •ti,_,. {dr1m1) '41-Did Powell, MW Tortn . .... .. ..., <Cl (>ll U IHHIJ Ill"" _, !Cl .• W..W ,,_ (C) (60) ID I ltw L"'7 ' 8> Pnllltf Cktto11· Co.Ct ' a:Jo 11 a m ... ske1tM cc> cso> 12:00 m n Su1111t strip Mlo:•11 Rooney 1nd H1I rraPer auut. 12:10 D Mtwle: "lbuahttr ef Dr. J1tyll'" B CJ (j) m J11lll (C) (30) ''Win· (lromlr) '!11 -John Ap1, Gloria di Mans Wtll.'' Juli1's IPll'tmf:nl T1tbott it b11rtttirized wilh un"frittina ht'lp ol f.lr1 J. W1utdom·s 1unt Wulda. 12•30 m Adltlr ThMtr . "Tht World Tricy Morain pl11s th• sister of • Owu Mt 1 Llvinl !; LIOlllnl Wauedorn (Hank Br1ndt). · 1,0000-(C) U c.111111tr W!eti11 ...., <t> m , .... 1111 , ..... o.1 (C) She Ls Br1ndt'1 rea1·1ilt wile. U @ CtHi!J • ,.._ • ""' !Cl (Ml) ~l!)IW." fen11ndo l.111111 ptltl 11 Ptpt Boucbet, I ttlltl WhofR Nmndlf Mundy trlcb Into ttfllnptlftl to rdlOm" the ltoltn trown jewel• .. LI Monie». 1:15 RMtft: .... " rll'I" (COl!Mlyl •l[ -6111 eoop., l""'1 Stl• .,,.. m MERV GRIFFIN SHOW * NEW TIME/NEW TIME m .... Crltfill .(C} (90) m"".., _ it1 (30) WE0t.ES06Y 1'111) '!i~lholl'f Qulllft, llldlu' [po. 12:30. '1\e .. Fb" (nTJstlfJ} '"'- ........ ""'"" "11111: c.tlll .. W' (•r1111t) '37-16 om.. ~···-....... -'51 i:GIB..,;,. ""' not ·--_.,... -"" -, ("'*7) '52 ~ Gii YOUllC. Miii ' -., •• - -(-)'A -Robert ~ Nilfll !Mt. t"t.i:t e-v•11illlllll Alllrb11" <dt•rn•> " , -~ l radJ, Auclllr .Totter. .. ...... .......,.. (..;..rt) •52 llf• m..,.... ~.,WI'<*•· -r.., C11r1t. .111111 F1111Cbtus. • • JOB PRINTING • PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS QutlHy rth1lin1 encl D1p1ttcl1hol1 Se"ir.1 '"' ·-tfl•• • Ovtrltt ., • C.ftftlty • " 1J1 I WIST IAl.IOA kft. NIWPOIT liACH • I CAM'r lEAW 1ME GAMe. NOW, U.UV! 1'\'e fiOT A . ' HOT" ~ 60IMG! ' TUMBLEWEEDS .MUTI AND JEFF ..... ". <iO.RDO . ~ :·18 MISS PEACH Y{I{'{ NO SMOl<IN&? JEFF.WHATS ~EMATTER? OFF o\\E! By Tom K. Ryan YA CAN'T PRlif WITH A Cl6'AR IN YERMOUTll! By Al Smith I SR.OKE-nlE .PICKL.E TRYING "TO GET IT OUT OF THE JAR.! . C.OMMUHiTY SECREr -M!Chae!.Cole and,Peggy Lipton11,above, ftnd·them1elves in ·d~ger 'wh~:ytey dl.ScOver a ,secret. in tonight's 11.Mod Squad" epilode , on Obannel 7 at 7:30 P.JD· Clarence.Williams ill'and Tige ~rewa are regular ~ast members, 1 TELEVISION VIEWS Some Beauties Now on TV ' ' By RICK OU BROW . . , HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Not so long ago, it was pretty difficult to find many truly attractive y;omen as stars of television's weekly series. I mean tbe kind of women who appeal ·mos~y to mt:n rather : than to ladies of the sewing-circle, bndge-club · category. The theory that kepi sexy dames at a minimum as Video regulars apparenUy was that it was bad business to give inferiority complexes to the . aver .. age ladies at home who do most of the buying of the products television sells. ONE OF THE HAPPIER. things about the home tube these days is that a fellow can tune in at al- m()Sl any hour of prime time and find a gorgeous dish or l\VO to ogle. . Maybe part of the reason is that the networks are going more· and more after the "young adult'' audience which apparenUy has fewer hangups about ha~ing pretty Iadtts as weekly visitors in the living room. . . .. . The sexiest thing .on teleV1S1on 1s, wlthO\lt question, Barbra streisand in her annual CBS-TV specials. As for the weekly stars, Susan Saint James of NBC·TV's "The Name of the Game" continues to outshine her vehicles. She is a. wonderful loo~g comedy actress, in the tradition of Carole Lombard. And ft is time she was given a ChS!lce f'o make her move in motion pictures. BETH BRICKELL of CBS-TV's "Gentle Ben" ls another real beauty. The way she manages to tran.r mit her sex appeal through this down·ttrearth, tam .. ily type series is something. . Hope Lange of NBC-TV's "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir'' is 100 percent woman: Wann, real, lovely to look at, and completely adult -a genajne rarity for the home screen. Amanda Blake of CBS-TV's "Gunsmoke" always was a gem, and she remains highly attrac- tive in her understated way. Goldie Hawn of NBC-TV's. "Row.an · and Mar- tin's Laugh;Jn" plays a rather nutty c~z:acter, but if ·you watch her often enough you can't help· but discern. that she has a certain vulnerability that makes her irresistible. DIAHANN CARROLL of NBC-TV'• "Julia" Is, or course, a classic beauty. And Nichelle Nicho19 of the same network's "Star Trek" is a maturely sultry actress . Elizabeth Montgomery of ABC-TV's 0 Bewitch· ed" unfortunately has to act cute much of the time, : but even this cannot hide the fact that she is quite a sexy lady .. Another lady in somewhat the same situation js Barbara Eden of NBC.TV's "I Dream of Jeannie," whose on·screen, scripted cute ness falls to. conceal her splendid looks. Joyce Van Patten of CBS-TV's "The GOod Guys " is just a swell·looklng dame, with \elent to boot. Marlo Thomas of ABC-TV's "That Gitt" ha,• a bright, shiny appeal. Peggy Lipton of the 5ame· net- work's "The Mod Squad" has a sort of mystique in her intense, new generation manner. AND LINDA CRYSTAL of NBC· TV's "The High Chaparral" is one of Hollywood's genuinely beauti· fut women. Detanis tfae Menace ... .. --,• • I ,, • \ ASSETS OVER $425,000,000.00 • ~""'--'D_All:..:cY_Pll_OT _____ H __ T ___ • Frbru&IJ U. 1'6~ i INGS • . .. -·---·-·---- "" ... ... ~:t .... ;,lt : ll :1 1 .. ~ .. ll n 'lt ·~ ·~ iii ;: ~ .. ·~ 'i: ll Ii: ~ ~ 1" .. .. ,. " .. .. .. .. .. ~ .. "' .. •• .. • " .. ~ .. ~ ~ • • 4 • • • : • ' ' • • • t • • • • • • • • • • , • • • I I J • • Tuesday's Closing Prices- 111tsdo11, F'ebruary l8, lM H -DAILY PILOT %1 COmplete New York Stock Exchange List 1 ' . OA!l.Y PILOT fundq, FtbMly 18, 1'69 BAY: CLUB COMPETITION -Davis Cup tennis star Charles Pasa- rell will be on band this week for the Balboa Bay Club's 15th invita- tional tennis tournament starting Thursday. Pasarell will be joined by Davis Cup teammates Art Ashe, Stan Smith and Bob Lutz. Smith Grab s Favoritism For Bay Club Net Cla ssic 'Balboa Bay Club tennis pro Hugh Stewart recently labeled Stan Smith and Art Ashe as co-favorites for the Bay Club's 15th invitational tournament which 1>lart.s Thursday. No1v make it Stan Smith, period. Stewart pared down his pre-lourney ana1ysis after reading of Smith's victory Sunday in the national indoor cham- ptonships at Salisbury, Md. 'Aside from the fact Smith will arrive 1n Newport Beach fresh !rom a major \liclory, Stewart, a former touring pro hlmseU, picks the USC standout for two reasons: (1) he beat A.!he in their 111!1: meeting and (2) Ashe has elbow problems. ".Th.ls guy Smith, in the coming year, could develop as the finest tenniJ player In America," Stewart said Stewart also indicated that fam on hand at the Bay Club this weet wouki be watching the world 's greatest double team in Smith and Bob Lutz. "Those two guys won the U.S. title at Forest Hills competing agaimt the pros so they're going to be fa vorites anywhere they play." Smith and Lutz are teammates al USC. Luiz is an Orange County product, having played at Sunny Hills High in Fullerton before going on to USC. Smith's athletic career began on the basketball court at Pasadena High, where he was a promising cager. But when confronted with both of them, he gave up basketbqll for tennis. Smith turned back sur prising newcomer Ismael El Shafei of the United Arab Republic in the indoor cham- pionship finaJ Sunday, 6-3, U, 6-4. M. He was third seeded going into the tournament and had to defeat vtteran Clark Graebner in the semifinals. Ashe sat out the Maryland indoor na- tionals with an inflamed elbow but Stewart says he hu confinnation that Ashe will play at the Bay Club. Smith's indoor championship trophy is one of four major national tennla cham- pionships offered in the United Slates, ranking with the nat.lonal clay, hard-cow1 and grass championship. Smith, Lutz and fellow Davis Cuppers Ashe and Chuck Pasarell will check into the Bay Club Thursday evening. They'll be staying at private homes in the area. Alhe and Pasarell will be staying at the home of Newport Beach act.or John Wayne. Stewart said tournament box seat saJe., have disappeared quickly for the tourna· ment. As or noon Monday. only a haiJr. dozen of the $75, four-seat ducats were left. (;encral admission ducats will be iold daily at match l!litel!I. .. . .. ... ~ . .. '' Net s-Get -Bid Rights to Big Lew •ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (/IPI -Tiie New York NeLI, by a coin flip, won the rlghta to UCLA All-American giant Lew Alclndor and selected b1rn in a -et ~~ Basketball A.saoclaUon drat~ bJibly Informed oource.< disclosed today. . AB.A Corwni&aioner George Mikaa wu not ea:pected !>.ck In Minneapolis unUI later today Ind Wa!I unaViilable for comment. Ak:indor's selection by the ctllar team . In the ABA's Eutem Division draws the blttle lines for an upected dollar Cruz, Ramos Clash Tonight In Title Fight LOS ANGELES (UPIJ -For the ,._ cond Ume In i... than alJ: month!, Carlos "Teo" Cruz. of the Dominican Rtpubllc riskl!I his world lightweight cbampiooslllp tonight against Mando Ramos of San Pedro at the Sports Arena. The fiaht will not be telecast or broadcast. Bath the champion and the challenger expressed confidence of victory as they awaited the start of their IS-round bout. The last time they met was Sept. 27 and Cruz retained his crown on a close but unanimous decision. Backers of Ramos, however, were so confident be would defeat Cruz the odds here favored him by a 10-6 margin. Jn other areas there was more suppor1 f Pl' the champion. 't'be 20-year-old Ramos has 'been a popular figure 1n hi1 brief boxing career and bis supporten felt he learned enough from bis previoua meeting with Cruz , to revene the· decisloli. Cruz is 31 and a ring veteran wbo was upec\ed to make up with experience for the age he is giving away to the challenger. Although he lost the light the first time they met, RS:mos had Cruz stag· gering in the 13th round but was unable to put away the champion who had built up a strong point margin in the early rounds. Cruz boxed more than SO rounds in Puerto Rico before coming here to finish training and said he was in better sh.ape now than he was when he won . the title from Carlos Ortiz June 29, I96ll, at Santo Domingo. Br uin Rall y Tops Huskies; Trojans Fall By THE ASSOC IATED PRESS The Waah.ington Huskies gave UCLA a run for Its money Monday night - £or the second time in as many games -but unfortunately for the n e a r I y 10,000 partis.an Seattle fans, a miss is as good as a mile. Towering Lew Alcindor contributed a scant 22 pointS, but it was enough to power his Bruins to a 33-44 Pacific-a basketball win over the Huskies. Washington State defeated Southern California 64·52 in the evening's only other conference game. The Bruins, v.·ho have won 36 in a row since their 71-69 loss last year to Houston, went without the lead for more than 30 minutes. It was the 7-1 Alcindor who brought the Bruins out of trouble. Trailing 32·28 with 10:50 remaining, he scored six points lo push the Califor- nians ahead to stay. The hosts led 22-21 at intenniuion. Jay Bond and George Irvine scored 13 and 11 points rel!lpCCtlvely for Washington. Jn Pullman, \Vash., junior guard Rick Erickson led the field with 21 point.~ to give the WSU Cougars a stronger grip on second place in conftrence play. USC managed to pull within eight points or the Cougars by the half, but were held lo only 28 point! in the aecond half. Steve Jennings, who netted 14 points, was the only USC player in double figurcs. UCLA WASMIKOTOM Ro wt !.hlcktllorof A.ltlndof' Htltr \ltllt ly Wlcki ·-· Pat~no~ Tol•li G I' T G ,. T 1 1.J 4 lrvlnt • l ·l 11 ) t-0 6 WOOicock 1 l>-1 • 16·9221-JJ.SU • 11-0 I SIClllt J 1·4 I 1 1·l ' Wlllt~berg I l.J l 1 1·1 S Slt tltdth! I 1·1 I 0 1.1 1 Tro~., 1 D.O • 1 l-• 1 l ulltck a a-o o ~ l.l.11 JJ TGlfl• 11 10·11 h UCLA w1~ln1ton 7l J'-" 12 :n -44 ' war be\'!ten ~ two-yeaNlld ABA and the Nallonal Bu.tetball AasociaUOfl, which reportedly con.dueled a secret draft three wteb ago in Chlcaao. the sourcts said. The Nets flipped a coin with HOOBton, the I a ' t·PlJCO t<lllll Jn ,t h e Western J Olvlslon, dilrlng the ABA 's secret draft by contennce tele}"bone caTul last Satur· day, sources saiil. - The 11-team ASA, in llJ,stcond season. conducted the Orst two round! of itl'I )969 dran. Names of other players takrn were nol known. •• However, the Oakland Trlbuae 1 a l d Monday that WIDle Corier of Drab WU drafted by lncUuia and Human Gllllam of Purdue was picked by Kentucky. Phoenix or Milwaukee of the NBA presumably would have the draft rights to the 7·foot Alclndor, who bu I e d UCLA to two straight NCAA cham- pionships and started them to a third. Alcindor, however, reportedly wants to play in his native New York if he decides to play in either professional league. Mikan bas said ABA owners have ~""4 IO.'pool money to 1!Jre Akli!do&: loto the Oedgllng Jeque. A speclftc prlce lw not heeo oel . "We don't know what. he is ukfni, .. MiklD aald in a recent latervlew. "W1. agreed this man ls valuable. So, I.lie league will put up a fund to matt sure be gets his money • • . " Mitan, a former NBA great, predict!I a no-holds barred war between the leagues for the nation'a top c::olleat players and says ABA owner• art prepared to pay for them. SO ·Years In Sports LEAV ING USC Dick. Cou'ry Telling Family Wa s Hardest For Coury By EARL GUSTKEY Of r111 oaur PllOf s1111 The worst thing about taking a job in Pittsburgh is telling your family about it ~ especially if you Jive in Southern California and even more especially if you have seven kids. That \Vas the unpalatable task facing Dick Coury Sunday night. The USC defenSive backfield coach had just ac· cepted a position as linebacku coach of the NFL's Pittsburgh Steelers. "l talked it over 'vith nly wife, Bonnie, and she was just great about it," Coury says cif the Sunday evening meeting nf the Coury clan in their Santa Ana home. "She agreed \\•Ith me that this \Vas just too much or an opportunity to pass up. Then we prepared to teU the kids. "It was hardest on my olc!er boy, Mike. He's 14 and for years he's been wanting to play football for Mater Dei High School. When 1 was coaching there he was the team's mascot. And now, just as he's old enough to enroll at Mater Dei, we move out." It was at this point that Coury began a carefully prepared s a 1 e s talk i!· luminating the wonders of Pittsbur~h. First, he told them of the pr~xlm1ly of the city to New York and Washington . D.C., \Vhere, he said, great educational experiences were in store for the1n . The seven pairs of eyes remained fixed to the carpet until Coury, reaching the end of the line, blurted out that it snows in Pittsburgh. At tha t. the ey~s lifted. •·1 think they're all ready to go now,'' Coury says. ''Even Mike's ready for the snow." Coury's rise in foolb31l coaching has been startlingly swift. Only three seasons ago he was just another .,..·inning high school football coach, at f\later Dei. USC tapped him when his '65 Monarchs v.·on the CIF championship. At USC, he became well-known in coaching circles for his hand in de velop- ing the Trojan defense. One v.·ho had the word on Coury was Chuck Noll, the new head coach of the ·Stetlers, formerly of the San Diego Chargers. He hired Walt Hackelt, also from the Chargers, and sent him after Coury. . Hackett called USC head coach John f\lcKay for permission to talk to Coury, which he obtained. That was last \Vednesday. By Friday rvening. Coury was in Pittsburgh \vhere Noll signed hhn. "I had discussed it \\'ilh coach ~lt'Kay and he urged me lo lak e the JOb.'' Coury says. "He relt a.~ l did -an npportuni1y like this might nevrr asain come aloni::." Ma x Stiles Near Death In Hollywood Hospital In his final days , aa ln his ap- prenticeship 50 years earlier, Maxwell Stiles proved to be an accurate, highly informed, enterprisiog member of the sports writing business. Two months ago he broke the story that there was trouble brewing bet\\•een the Los Angeles Rams and their e-0ach, Ge<>rge Allen. He was publicly ridiculed lor the yarn by one LA newspaper. However, Max wound up having lhe last laugh when his story came true a few W'eeks thereafter, ,, Today Max is in Ho l lywood Presbyterian Hospital, near death from his most recent heart attack. That sad ne~·s was conveyed to this column Mon: day by Mrs. Stiles, who between the . t•AAAAAAAAAA••• WHITE WASH *************** tears admitted that doctors had told her t:iere is no hope for her husband's recovery. Because of lack of oxygen to feed the brain which was the breeding ground for his column "Styles in Sports," r..tax is now going through periods of extreme confusion, according to his wife, Lillian. Max had to learn to ride a bicycle to get his start with the old Los Angeles Examiner back in 1920. _ He came up through the ranks - delivery boy to copy boy to desk man and then slipped into the world of sport \l'hich grew to respect him !or his kno\\•ledge of track and football, as well as other things. Maxwell Stiles took his scat in the Rose Bowl 43 times for the annua l New Year's football classic. One of his unfinished projects was a feature for lhe DAILY PILOT on the top 10 Ro!e Bowl games he had seen. In his time he worked for the Ex· aminer. Times, 1'.1irror and Hollywood Citizen News. He also authored two book!: "Back Tracks" and "The Rose Bowl." Mu was a virtuoso on the subjeCt ' of track and field. Rarely were his dope sheets off -...... although 1 ·recall one occasion when he missed badly on a UCLA-Stanford dual meet at the Coliseum, causing him to comment. "the· copy boy must fla ve done this one." A year ago at the Times Indoor Games at the Forum, writers were discussing who might beat Ron Clafke in the 2-mile. "I'll take George Young," volunteered the white-haired Stiles. No one else gave Young a prayer. You guessed it. Young won. There was another time at the Colisewn, during the championsblp aoc- cer duel between the Los Angeles Wolves and Washington Whips when it seemed that nothing would go right for Max. He WI! bitterly complaining about bav· Ing covered soccer a number of times and had never seen more than one or two goals. , That night the Wolves won. 6-5, · in overtime. Yet Max missed every goal because of bathroom calls, a beef with Jack Kent Cooke over parking pllSSel' and once when he stooped over to pick up a dropped pencil. Hank Ives, now publicist for the LA Stars basketball team, once remarked, "you haYe{l't lived until you've been chewed out by Maxwell Stiles." Former University of Kansas tract coach Bill Easton once called Stiles "the greatest track authority on the West Coast." I recall the days several years ago when l first met Max. Eager to jmpre55 a fellow cub reporter that I knew this outstanding figure io sport.I writing, I dashed up to where lie was seated and greeted Stiles. Max turned from what he was doing, looked up and smiled. Then he said. "Oh, hello, Gordon. How's everything In San Pedro?" J was then working in La Habra. You can imagine the shat- ter!!· of ego over that incident. in Ume he grew tG be a close fri - a man for whom I shall always bear the highest respect and admiration. Playe rs Reject Off er , Strike Threat Continues NE\V YORK -The major lea~ue clubowners' offer to avert a spring training boycott by adding $200,000 lo the Sl·million players pen.sion fund was referred to the players by their associa· tion·s executive director today with a recommendation to vote "no." The owners left the next move in the dispute up to the playerg Monday \vhen they rejected a proposal for a three-man arbitration board and t h e n made their ntw money offer. John Gaherin, chief negotiator for the owners, said the new money would in· crease the clubs' contribution to $S.3 million. * * * NEW YORK -Tbe Los Angelu Lakers tonight Invade MadlsOll Squire Garden tt1 meet t.be second place Ea1ttm Division New York KnJcks In a National Baakelball A11oci1don game. ne g1me i~ on Cbanuel 5 at 1:31. * * * LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles ~tars savored the re'!'·ards of victory today afte r breaking a five-game losing streak. durinc competition almost ttrtah1Jy will be barred from the It7Z Winter Olympic Games In Sapporo, J1pan. It 1aid the fate of the Winttr Olympict will be decided at the next 1es1lon of the IOC in \Varsaw, May 31. * * * SAN FRANCISCO -Kiev Dynamo, soccer champion or the Soviet Uolon, arrived Monday night for a two-gamt series with the California Clippers. Their meeting Sunday will be the first in history between soccer teams from the Unlted States and Russia. They alao will tangle March 2 at the Los Angeles Coll.sewn. Anteaters Invade Riverside Tonight The Stars slaved off first and last half rallies by New Orleans Monday night for a '101-11>4 victory. * * * •• •• I t's Another Mus t Gam e If UCI l s to Make Playoffs " " ' By RON .EVANS Of "" O.ir, """ ...,, ~IDE -UCl'1 buket~ team, .MC the wind in its face, dr1w1 an uaiiifriab1e as.,,ignment here tonight Ute Anteaters take on UC just lour games left, each one " for the Anteat.era. Dlclc Dam Upra bis club Cl don! to Jose another game Jf UCl lo lo wind up witb a poeWealon 1n+C1s'm to tht NCAA collqe division ,.,, .. All It aD, this will he 1 lry!nc w .. k fori!Jre AntufS'I. Davia t1ke1 bi.I club to Santa Barbara Friday to play red·hot Westmont. In Rlvenide, the Anteaters will be playlng a team they routed by a 1111'71 maretn 1 month 1go in Crawford Hall but the Highlanders are notoriOU1ly toughu on their home court. · "These are 1olng to be two very tough games for U3 this • wetk," Davis admUa. .. And l 'd fetl that way If we had beaten both of thtm previously by 50 poinlJ." Irvine has not flffld we.11 1t Rivers!dr. In three MllJOM, the Ante.1ter' are l·Z In the UCR bomJr boolJe, But if Davis ii worried, t.he outlook can't apptar too cheery for UCR coach Duane Lewis, whole team ii IJ.10. The one st.at in Lewis' favor b that UCR ls 7-1 1t ·home. Otis year. The Highlanders beat Cal Lutheran Saturday in Riverside, 90-83, but Jost its only home game lut Tuesday to Pasadema College, G-60. The Highlanders' Jeadina scorer ls 6-6, 220--pound Diet Barton wbo is scoring 21.t points per game. Lewis muat drum up some sort or ,defense for ucr forward Jeff Cun- nina:ham, who broke h!1 own UCI ain&le game acoring rtCOrd by pouring In l& points q:ainst Chapman Saturday ni1hL UCI won, 17-76. Cunningham'• now •veraging 21.3 per outing. .. Starter Nick Sanden, who Is somewhat hobbled with an ankle he sprained F'rl· d•y., should be close to full strength tonlcht. He scored only four aaalnst Chapman. Davis played 6-3 sophomore forv.·ard John Farwell in both halves Saturday. The Sierra High grad hadn't played much but rec:~nt sho1~.'ings In practice prompted hi1 appearance Saturday. ' l.fe made two buckrts and played well 11t both ends or court. He'll doubtlw 1ee action toniaht ··.:. ... LOS ANGELES -Ed Kelly ol Lu Ve1u vabbe4 the ltad ll Oe W...W't P.Wt llilllanl1 Clulmpl..,ldpa M ... 111 nt1•t by beaUng Jimmy Moore, Alba- querque , N.?.t., 15M4. * * * AGAWk\1, ~1ass. -Mary Ann Eisel. the nation's fourth-ranked player from St. Louis, retained her New Enaland indoor tennis championship Motlda}' with 11 7·5, 6-2 victory over South Airlc_a's Esme Emanuel, the top-seeded fore11n ~nltant. * * * LAUSANN?:. SwltierlHd -TI t lotem1Uo11al Olympic Committee wantd: tbe Jnttmatfona.I Sid FederaU1111 tod•t ih1t Alpllle akttn wbe accept paymeetl NeM> fJCI Ca.ch Confirming a story publi&hed. over a month ago in the DAILY PILOT, Gary Adams has been officially named UCl's bead baseball coach. He \Vill be at the helm when the Anteaters open lbeir first base- ball ••"-'"" in the spring of 1970. • ' l • N.Y. St.eeks t:. 62, NO. ~2. 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS .. I SuperiQr Is. Superior for Free-Way, State Told By JEl!PME F. COLUNS _!...!,.JI Of "* DIH1 PJW __.. , N .. l"f, Be¥'! has nq W'li<ular pre- ference on re-routing Of the Newport Freeway -just so it lies somewhere wot of Superior Avenue as it cuts thnluP. the ci\l', !l•YoriDol..o Marslla'l .slid toCiay, ' ' ' ... Mrs. 'Marshall outlined Newport's posi- tion in testimony before state freeway officials at the Ofahge C o u n t ~· ljlirlroood• In Cost.I Mesa. Girl . T-€lls- Of Sirhan RFI\. Shots ... t LOS ANGELES (UPI) - V a le r i a Scliuli<, a loog tre.Sed. blobde ,lestillecl at the murder trial of Sirhan B. Sirhan today that she saw him e.itend his arm and sl1oot Sen. Robert F. Keooedy. Miss Schulte, 22, was the mysterious 1irl in the Polka doe dress who has fig- ured prominently in the invesUgation but who had nothing to do with the &hooting except to be a witn~. · 'The attractive girl, who today wore a white dress with a red and blue scarf, bad been head of Kennedy's campaign headquarters in Goleta and bad gone to Ille Ambassador Hotel lbat niPt foc Ille victory celebration. She was on crutches at the time as a result of a skiing accident. nie girl's testimony was interrupted after she had been on the·· stand Im than lD minutes. Superior Court Judge Herbert V. Walker called a _recess when a sheri!f's I deputy in the cOllrtroom whbpered lo -im ~ .ho. ~ a clicklriJ< lioile · 1 '1'111 ~lo~ ftoiD lila doat. • 'lbe courtfoom iu Cfeared bY Judge Wllker ind a few minutes Jat'er trill was -rmed •Hen it Wu found th& tele~ ori the dePutY's desk had a buttering relay as a result of a test liy the utility company. It was indicative of the tenseness of. tbe trial that the slight.est ~icion there was an electronic liste.nini or recording device could lead the judge to hurriedly empty the courtroom. Miss Schulte had brought to court the dress she wcJre that night and she lle.ld it up so the jury could see it. It was lime green with yellow polka dots and the girl smiled brightly as she dis- played it. In her brief testimony, she said she had never known Sirhan at any time and had not talked to him on the night of the shooting. In testimony Monday, massive pro football tack.le Roosevelt Grier told of lKrw be beat back people trying to tear Sirhan apart moments after the slaying. Grier, a Negro, &ix-feet.five, 290 pounds, idolized Sen. Robert F. KeMedy. ~ut be knocked one man back and kicked another away as Bobby lay gasp- ing for life oo the floor and the tiny Sirhan struggled to escape. Jess Unruh. the most power f u I Democrat in California, stood on a ateam table shouting "Don't kill him, don't kill him" -deciding in that. moment of pandemonfum that there must not be another Lee 'Harvey Oswald.Jack Ruby stain on American history. Unruh, Democratic leader in the St.ate Assembly who ls expected to nm against Ronald Reagan for governor in 1970, was doing the yelling but Grier, the former Los Angel~ Rams star, was doing .the acUng ~ the five-foot-four 112-pound Sirhan was lina)..ly aubdued. Unruh was Campaign manager for Ken· n«ly in . the California PrtsidenUal Primary victory and was following behind him wbe.n the senator was shot. He looked at Kennedy and then :saw (sOe llUlllAN, Pap I) Here Corne The Brides Orqe blossoms IOOtl wl11 be here aod pl&ns for the June wedding 1lready are beginning :o bloom. The DAILY Pll.OT today o(fm an eight.pige sec- tloa crammed with featum, phoCOs aod adil designed lo help this JUr'• brfdes fmd the ...i.taoce. g-aod oervloea &be needs lo mab the wedding "per- !~" jlridal f~ Jl(ll on llow to pin lb! j§y_,. eveµ a gqid&. to how tO • 1af. . · · t are lDI .• ;~Iii: ~='or tooa1'• o~n:rPl!DI'. n 's .-cn1Rod-save feature for • ..,.,, bride-lb-be. 74 Rio Revelers Die lllO DE JANEIRO (UPI) -Brawls, txceuive revelry and the heat were -toill)' for the deaths o• 74 per11m1 ~llrin& lllo'1 aooual W11lval. Al1otber laMI ptl'IOnl we.re treated for • v1riOU1 lnjmiea, hospltall reported. l The public hearilil b the first ever on tbe-NewPl;lrt Freeway alignment, who!e orlg~f r~g alor\g ~Newport Boulevard ' was adopted by the state !? rears ago, At that" time, no i?Ublic hearinc,.wu r1!'Zllir91~ . ..-, ·~ d~,''., said 111a.ror MarshOll , "will support any of the propased ~s th.H will ·accomplish a realignment along Superior Avezwe," Sh.e • pojnted out that when the stale approved the present rotitlng, the pla~ ning concept wu simply to ~ad~ an elisting 1tate route to freeway stm- darda. "Sliice tl!eo, Newport Boulevard 11$ developed Into' a lllgbapaclty, III· lane divided arterJal street whlch is now the ptinclpal link between the ciliei of Costa Mesa and Newport." She said prtservtLion of Newport Boulevard, aa a surface atreet 1J a matter of "great importance" to the entire .. Harbor Area. She cited populaUon statlatlcs -past. present and future -to back up her views. In 19'4. when the present route wu adopted the aru'a population was 20,000. Tod"!' It Is 120,000. By 1916;· it J expected to be 270,000. _ "Right now," she said, ••ttte -number of weekend vi&tton to ~e'A'.POl't often approaches a quarter of a miWon. 'l'bis" · • ' ' . figure In the !oreseeable !ulure COUid climb' to hill a million. 11To accommodate 'lhe resu?tmc traffic demands, we must develop a total street planolng conc<pt. We ara cmvloced tbal bolf1 a oort!Houth !rteway ud ~ BouJ .. ard, ., a lllgb,capidly · local artetlal, will-be requlitd." Mayoc ~lflhaO alao lllUeJted lbat closing of portlpna or Ille bOujevard for freeway construct!oa could ·c r 1 a t • monumental traffic headaches. "Already tbe sikmer averap daib' lramC count on the boultvard it men tban 30,000 can," she said. "The lack of alternate routes ln the area woald requiro the dttourinC ol lhe>e veblnlea through lhe ~nstruction zone If the Newpcn:t Freeway ~ere to be placed on a NewJ>Oll Boulevlrd alignment "By the Selection of a route away (See MARallAU, Pap ll Navy Plane Wreckage Found on Catalina Peak • u,.1~· •TELLS-OF TESTIMONY· . fl ...... ~-~ . _1·1 ,.,..11~~xzd~ :r By JOHN VALTERZA or .. °""' P&llt ,.... ' A U.S, Na"1 p-.out of Long Beicil, carryloc a crew of fjve, crashed f:irl,y today' .... <;atallna ula~·. · ldlllng all · aboard. Navy search planes spotted the wreckage In a fe!Dole section of the island but the aite could only be reaCbed by a,,..uod aearcb -· • Hamper~ t>t-·muildled · roads, a I.Os Angeles County seveo-man rescue party, augmented by fire department personnel, reached the wreckage late this morning. 2~000 Gallons OJ Oil a Day Blacken . Oooao SANT,\ 'BAl\BARA (AP) -A new I~: at Ill offlllor, W<ll nite may be pounng u much u 1,000 galloni of oil a. day Into lht Paclllc Ocean, the Unioo OU Co. bu disclosed. The first leak apewtd more than 230,000 gallons, creating a slick that once reach· ed 800 squaJt miles. They reported all alloanf dead. Site of the . crasli. wu a r'tmote peak 00 the illlll!I-. Sber)!Ps ligt. Jack Vaughan oald that the crews, hampered by rain and muddy roids •found tht wreckage and "what appeared to be five bod.Jes" over a · widely scattered area of Silver Peak. 1'be mountiin is k>cated on the island's west side near Iron Bouod Bay. Vaughan said that it was ihe largest plane crash in memory on the island. Three me : from lhe Avalon substation and four county finmen took a f°'1f· wbeeklrive truck ....... lllppei:r,,..P dJrt l'OlldJ.lo lhl crab - '!be . twhHncb!e cnll ~· Iller taking oil f-. the, i..., lleld>buad carrier' Kf:ilsarae, attacbed} .to in alrbortle ~ly warnlog , .......... al North IJtand Naval Air Stallan:. · . The . NaYJ aild the plane 'loOt olf from the Keuurp at 2:'30 a.m. aod \VU to hive landed at North lJland 45 minutes later. ' . Wreckage was reported sC'attered over a wide area near the island's wtst end1 ·cliff~ The· Navy did not diaclose the lllJnell o1 thooe aboard the NIYJ EIB trainer. Tbe crash occurred on 1 '1\omt&IJn at· the norlhw..t corner al the lllaod and ·• ahertff'a poue w.u invelllgatint. After takeotf, radar contact wu loat almoot bitqiedtataly. '!'be Nlfy Lluncilecl two bellcoptera aod lhret aircraft. and the Cout Glllld launched one helicopter. A Na v 1 bellcopter dl!..'O\'ered the wreckage. The plane was on it.I way to 1"orth Island after completing carrier quallflCa· Uon tests. Mesa Police Arrest 17 Christ· Teens By Al!Tlll/R II. VINSEL Of ~...,,.,.., ... ,lfymm of 'coui... and faith "' a<f. verslty rang tbroogh the Colla Meu City Jail Monday night, u police booked the blggest crowd since last summer'• celebrated Hessian motorcycle llnl roundup. Firm to Gat her All Tha t Debris In West New port The neW leak has formed a slick two miles long and 30 to 40 feet wide, • leaving kelp beds off Gaviota and Refugio beaches northwest of Santa Barbara blackened by small patches of heavy oil. 1 Refusal to obey orders after beJng warned once led to the mus arrest of 17 members of Huntington Beach'• Teens for Christ, loudly evangellsing at two adjacent school campuses. A week-long machine cleanup of storm debris piled along West Newport's be"achfront will begin Wednesday, it was announced today. City General Service Director Jake Mynderse said a contract has been signed with the Harold E. Simpson Co.. an Irwindale land cleaning firm. The job will involve uae of two loaders and four demolition trucks, plus other heavy equlpment. It was fea red that southwest winds might push the new slick against the coast even as 800 n1en worked to clean up previously oil.gummed beaches and harbors in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties. ... . . ,., STEPPING l>OWN • ' ~P'1 Ray Biii • POSSIBLE .SUCCESSOR : ·_-··""wport'1 Chotlnar ...... ' . ' ' Work will begin at the mouth of the Santa Ana River, 1where the debris is stacked in piles up to six feet high. Simpson's crews will then head south toward the Newport Pier. One week ago, 450 Newport-Mesa students band· cleaned the area south of the pier. Union oil announced its new estimate of the leak's site Monday bul Union President Fred Hartley expressed hope it soon would be "reduced or eliminated." The firm previoualy reported 200 gallorui: a day flowing froll) the new leak. Althougb the well which unleashed the big slick bas been plugged, more crude <1il was escaping nearby because pressure deep beneath the ocean floor was forcing oil through· ocean bed fiS!Ul'es, Union said. Bliss Quits GOP Helm ; Mynderse said the project will compel closing of portions of Seashore Drive and some .. street ends. Union said it had asked for and re· cevied permission from Secretary of the Interior Walter J. Hickel to use another well, previously drilled at the site, to lower ezplosives designed to rearrange the strata beneath the ocean bed to seal the leak. Clw tiner May Take Ove r The contract calls for a maximum payment of $8,500. Mynderse noted that seven bids for the job ranged from '6,.500 to '27,740. Simpson esUmated i t will take from five to seven working days. Olber bidders had estimated up io three weeks. NEW YORK (AP) -'!be stock market c!Oled lower today in 1 continuation of. the sllarp downl11rn started Mooday. (8ee quolallnos, Pages 20-SI). Hickel ordered all drilling in the chan- nel halted after lhe disaster. In Wallijagton, Hickel issued a new regulation Mooday which said, "If lhe waters of the sea are pOlluted by the drilling <Jr production operati<Jns or• holders of federal leases to drilling right!, "the control and removal of the pollutant shall be at the expense of the lessee." By EVEL l'N SHERWOOD Of 11'141 Otlll' .. 1 ... 11•11 WASHINGTON -Ray Bliss resigned today as Republican national chairman ellective in mid-April and Newport Beach attorney Murray Chotiner, long a confidant of President Nixon, might be named the Bliss succe.s3or. And to all this, Chotiner, in an in· terview with the DAILY PILOT today, declared that the weather In Wasbington la invigorating these days -crisp .and cool. "All l know is what I heard on the •ntimpja~king ~ Fizzles Lagunan's B~mb T urns Ou t to Be Tr ansisto r Radio The gruj bpmpjack of.Jg&p, attempted aboard the aondob.. answer, p\isbed a "button" on hit black al the dty of Canon Mooday ni&h\ "I Janl a ride, Jlllll," be told Jim box. Hieb walled for an explooton. on the oatskhts of torte Beach, never Genet, a company crewman wbo works Inatead he· beard 1 blast of rock music got off Ille fP'Olllld._ on the Goodyear blimp by day and from the lad's tioy black transistor radio. A Laguna Beach youth, armed with a taku turl\ll worl:bi& a nearby IUard Aller °'ar,cblnr him, Hlcu "be!J>!d bljn guitar and ~terloua atack bor, at· shack by n!Jtht: ' ' ' · · :. ' '. , 011t. ' , • • ' · , · • . templed to llljt~l t11e Cf~nt ~' _2'...!'othet, I'!!_~~~lh\l!i up.• Gen,tl . En> nMl!e:lo a· ~tal ""'""be "" ~~Jo! I°,'~"~~~ -q~tt ,..Ji:,; ~::tY... tiie ~I' :~~ J:.::;;.u:,~~ 'fbe'lllilofe-1llie yauth u laler faenlJ. hoiir aod a hat; al>olit>10 inn.a oln<!iri that hi\ maoaged to· ollp by .the gui('d . fied-as limes Harrbon. SWTOUnded thi. titi pe b~ _!nil-waited -... bec:1hR I'm irfvialble'' " •• • -; : The would-be blimpjacller wn 1p-patiently. Said.~··~ '.'fR bl ca*' "He of:\l'et~ would haft Made It to · parently lmplred b)' the Be a t I e s he really did ~ve ~b. • · &p.n,~tJ said Ralph Rtledt • anolhtr animated. movie "Yellow Submarine" Finally, -~· Attl1ur Hieb ctewitiao or !be tlD-fO<lf•bll!pP. .used by wherein the alngers joumered ·to the and lhe bomb equad · ved. ~c'U "•lk· Ole rb1'ber1, ·com~ for • .iUferti•.~~-, land ot •the "Blue Meant.et' ln 1 COD-ed boldly acrott ppa.1E1f11.t1•1d ,P\li:·'·' · ! ;1 :-· ~· tl . troptloo reoombllllg a bllmp. aod opened the t!n1 : E ' ' ·~p lllit 1• •Ill~ , .. 1nnr So ~developed the bllmpiacklnl )'Ollth, hanelng under~ ~1.' .. !!,. .,J9'l"""' ~'ifi ~ '!,S';fll01" aboot Ill, at lint ldenll!hid bims<lf Ollly -"Are yoo the jllii!rllrt ,,.. • ..,. !6l<ftl. ll'i ,.....,,.. · lbel as "Georp Hanison (If tbe Beatles." ·asked rucu. .. t want to IO to Asptn, 1()1(( lllows on1J 20 houn In~ air." Early Monday nlgbt, lhf )'Ollth Jprlnted Colorado for a JID !eatlnl." Too bad. "Thi haiq yoong man bad acroa the blimp IJ'llllMll and leaped HJrri!Oll, wltiloUt waiting !or an brouiht along his toOthbrull>. radio last night ," Chotlner disclaimed . taking off on an old quote from Will Rogers. "Until an announcement is made, it would be presumptuous of me to make any statement. "If any vacancy is occurring, the GOP Nationa l Committee must call a meeUng. Commlttee members would make the decision and the appoinlme.nt." The announcement of the Bllas resic'· naUon was made today by the WhJte House. The Newport Beach attorney, who wu a campaign manager is past Nixon e)ec.. tions. Is now working in the oUicts of Republican National Headquarters here in Washington al 16!4 I st. NW. H11 fainl!Y remalnl In Newport Btal:h and won't join him unW June. Bllu, ell°"" lo head "tl!e GOP National Committee after lhe 1964 1ft$ldentlal election, announced his 'tnteriUon In a 1.et'ter to Pre!kient Nlzon. , . A runner Ohio state Republlcao com- mittee ' chairman, Bila WU a com- promllt caodldate far the naU""'81 pool and b .cr<diled with mudi .cl the rei>ulldJni ol lt1s parl;f ~. "the lilM pfeildefttlal ·tlttttoii.' . ' .. m~~P~ulP:i~~: u;tir~ 'ioit ~ llhd ~"111 holil oo Jlllb<malorlal dlaln lo·the-]IOlnl wheTo tri..Jtepliblk:oili Partf now bu 31 iovern!>n to the D<mocratl' 11, Biiu, .. who dlatinat>ld lllril&elf: .. a "n\lb aM boltl'~ ~n -a •JK!fttlc.11 lectlnlc!U ~11 •lfll'!I*! to be ouceeOded ai dlaitlUI bf a ..0.. '1111111ed· IUYlllon aod pJollorn\"'1rfonnef, ". I ' '' ~ ~"~ "lllO· Jllll'llftbu ei<dlon tbat 1i11u ww111 ·be replaced drew wli!etprta6 ~ !ram GOP ol· flctall •"be had -keel wltll ltlm al · the local ltftL , Crowds of children who had bef:o listen- ing to the 1eJf.styled Christian revolu- tionaries preach jeered a team o( police oUicers commanded by Sgt. Bob Ball· Inger as the militant! were led away. ·~If lightning atrikes, we'll know we we.re wrong," said Lt. Awtin W. Smilb aa he shoveled through a blizzard cj paperwork on the watch comaoder'1 desk, resulting from the roundup. A light rain feU .outs.ide, but no rumbles of thuoder could tie heanl aod the depart. ment wu still standing when he went off duty early today. . The five girls and 12 men -four of them actually ae.niorteens in a &e:nse -Wen! booked on suspicion of all. or combination of, two penal code of· fenses and one education code violation. "The thing that some people ju.st refuse to understand is that we aren't arresting these pe<>ple for preaehing or picketing," Poliee Ch.Jet Roger Neth said today. Refusal to disper:se, willful and maliciou.s obstrucUon of a thoroughfare and wilUul and unlawful disturbance of a public school are the ·ipeclflq chargel!i, with $190 ball aet for each perlOft. Arrestees plcktd Op at Maude B. Davis (See CllillST TEENS, Pace I) Oraage Weatlter The drizzle wUl be abort lived, the weatherman promises, with skies · cle.vln( w-.iy · while temperatures cllni lo the upper 50'1 alllll( Ille Orap1e Caul. INSW E TODAY Stan Smith, former PIUGdcna High, basketball 1tar and now t'lic hotttst plqer in amateur , t.ennil, ii the ftn10tU«rJo, ccw Uac ; ringlu 'cha,,,pi/litaJifp' of.tll'C ,,al- 1. bba ! sav 'Club's' 'inVt~ tournamtnt starting Thurldali'. See Sportl, "Page 22. • ' 1>n " " • • • u "" • u " " 1 _________ _J..___ ------- • ' .. . . -, .... ~ .. ·--· ..... -... -·· ..... . . ( Tut>dlir, rim.., lit IM it Silent "on L3guna Sailor's Fate :.· Red Chiire·se < • Siltnco WU the olflclal Red China '"'"' '' .................... ....... ..... " -....... ~ qu111l7 Wibln& In a mainland harbor. one owned and skippered by a La&una --· . Qewmaa aboard Chinese junks cruis-tnc the broad Pearl RJver estuary said the three yachb are moored at Gav Chau, a flahlnc village a few miles fnlli the POrtuau.., laland colony or M- Newport CofC Members Okay Big Budget A record budiel of fll.225 fOl' the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce won unanlmOUI approval Monday from chamber directors. The budget amount, which might be changed in six months after analysis of ezpense1, is almost $3,000 more than last year's. Normal ~ coeta in chamber operation caused the Increase (n proposed expenses, according to chamber Manager Jack Barnett. Besides the budget matter and routine monthly reports the chamber memMn heard a fcnnal dlscussloo on both tidet: ol the OrllDI!< Comity Airport Issue. Airport Director Robert Bremahan outlined the problems which the county fl«I In 1he next 10 yeara in pn>ridlnf an airport adequate for the antlcipated 8U111• in J19pulatlon. He alto detailed Ille county'• muter plan which lndlealed live posalble llilel in the county for a new airport. Oppooltlon to the addition of more fligbt.s into the field came from Dan Emory, chairman of the Airport. Noiae Abolement Committee, which haa been llgltllng nolae and other nuisances created by jeta ualng the alrpori. He 1tresaed the committee's recom· mendation that the field be used for commuter fiighls only and that large jets land and take off from some other terminal. 4 County Parks To Be Funded By State Bond Funds to continue development or four Orange County regional parks will be provided from !he 1984 Stat< Park Bond Act It wu amounced in Sacramento Monday. . State officials said •.ooo was alloted to the Orange County projects. Mile Square Regional Park in Fountain Valley will get $212,59(> for second phlse development. A golf course and club- hoose are now under construction there in the first phase. University ~lonal Park, near UC, Irvtne ·w111 get $212,500 in state funds to develop 50 acres in the second stage plan for that facllity. ·FuUerton Dam Regional Park of 1%& acres geta m.ooo for development. . Fourth part to aet state money is Lllguna N'liU•I Regional Park -flll,000. The governor's office said a total or $7.2 million ii being released for 53 parb throughout California. The projects approved add up to $.Tl.I million of the $40 million that was provided for local projects In the llM act. Oil Merger Halted NEW YORK (AP) -A federal judge lta5 enjoilled the $3.8 billion merger of the Atlantic Richfield Co. and Sinclair Oil Corp. pending a court trial of the government's contenUon of antitrust violation. r DAILY PILOT O•.llNGE COAST l'UI Lls.i-t !NG (0Ml'.ll"'t l•M•t H. W11i l'<n iclt<lt •"" l'u~lill,., l h'"''' 11: ..... a 119illr The"'•' /4., MY•L1~i111 /,\111111"' t •lltlt Jttllfll F. C•lli111 P1 ul N;o •11 ,.,..,,.,, llKll Adfft11u ... Cit" r.111., Ol11<IM' ,....,.,, h9Ck Offk• !!11 w ••• 11111101 ••• ,,.,,"' Mt'iiht Alllr111: P.O. I•• 1111. tl•&J > o--.. (11!1 """--' U. Wnl .. ., l !r .. I l ...-.. ""°: 'II F..-n! .... ....,. Hurillflt lvr'I k Kl'I: Jll't J!h !.!Tr i ! l . ' ·ljo·,:r.: bu been beard !( wi.t ~lo-·~11,oll• CUii Drift, l.qunl, ..... q, " a.. oilier H ,.._ lboo!!I llit -llllld SoildN"' -·~ -launc1fes. • • Mrs. Marjorie Baldwin, lhe mlasipg aircraft parts dls~rlbutor's wife, said Monday she has heard nothing fro1n the U.S. State Department. The missing man's brother, De.Forrest, ot Los Angeles, has reporltdly been Jo CODlli;t wllJL W,.itlngton oboul tho relatloos. eaa,llri.lllld1rln<Ml4.11~.. ~~· 111- Dlpldtnl,ll b"!ll 11"1"1 ... -al °""' 11)'1111 lo ... ,._ ~tint = '"""" JW 118$ Ol!IHirlllah Hq KON ~ YMIK a.b. ~. ~. ~·ence ID ~ X.,t were e1peeted amonc: a nOtiira--ot otb'ers' al,owed \o to aeet an lnclc'ltnt. · pass after mere harusment Sunday. Portuaueaie ·autbort Ues wll.b <!:oinmunist Boaters had been warned against mak· China contacts say the three yachla, Ing the 4$.mile holiday cruise from Jlong whoae passengers 1nc1Ude six Americans Kong to Macao, since the Chinese ae -three of them you na: girls -are <.-elebraUng the new lunar Year or the being detained for investigation. Rooster, and aroused by bad government The Moraswn •. owped by Baldwin, tho ' ' OAILY PILOT l"Plolt UL .. l"IPM COSTA MESA COUNCILMAN WILLIAM ST. CLAIR DISSENTS AT FREEWAY HEARING Highway Officl1ls Heir Testimony at F1irgrounds on Possible Route 55 Realignment Freeway Shift Plea ~eard Sister Cities A$k. for Route Change to Stem 'Disaster' ' A ·parade or Harbor Area represen· tatives with a freeway breathing tlown their necks today appealed to the state to shift Ute route chosen a quarter century ago, or force disaster on the effected sister cities. By noon, unanimous agreement on a Newport Freeway route chang e from existing Newport Boulevard -preferably as far westward as possibl e under four proposed alternates -seemed eviden t among speakers. Rain pounded at limes on the tin roof of Ute eavemous Junior Exhibits Building on the Orange C o u n t y Fairgrounds as the State Division of Highways public hearing ground on past noon. JETS ROAR Jets roared over periodically and the effe ct was like Ustenlng lo Whi spe ring Smith tell a ghost story in an ech o chamber floating dO\\.'n the Santa Ana River, as the crowd strained to hear. City officials, merehants, and l~abror Arca planning agency emissaries all call· ed for a change in the State Route 55 alignment chosen in 1944 \Yilhout any public hearing. Some speakers requested the state to choose the mmt expensive alternate. S·7, or so-called Rcd·Blue Route, but others urged a more moderate atlilude on which route should be adopted by the State Highway Commission. They said officials should go slow in this area, pending a deeper stud y of long term effect posed by the 0th.er possible alignments o[ the 4.5 mtle freeway, whic:h is to be buit in five to seven years. CONCERNED GROUP took no stand, but , said be. and others have been losing money for years due to ·th! hanguig freeway question and pleaded for swift action one way or the other. Presiding o~ficer T. Fred Bagshaw, deputy state director of public works, assured Vogel that no matter what choice the Highw11y CommisSion makes, "It ls not far away. Today's hearing drew about 300 persons: Costa Mesa Vice Mayor Robert M. \Vilson led off th e parade of spe1kers on th! freeeay problem .and what it me11ins to the Harbor Area. Costa t-.tesa City Councilman \Vill iam L. SL Clair followed Wilson to the podium carrying a visual aid gimmick resembl· ing a barbell with pompoms of spaghetii on the end s. He hefted it overhead to show what the Newport Boulevard alignmen t will mean in terms of traffic. "1 am not add ressing mysel f to the frc1vay but to the problem of su rfa ce. st reets," sald St. Clair, an outspoken pro1noter of the Hed·Blue Route. REPRESENTATIVE Demonstrating with the contraption. St. Clair said the center tube represented a Newport Boulevard Freeway route b~tween 17th and 19th streets while tub- ing attached to runnels -24 at one end and 25 at the other -indicated secondary route lanes whose traffic flow will be funneled into that narrow stretch. "I ran out or hose and I'm short one la ne on each end," the ebullient councilman said . but slate highw~y ex- perts seemed to get bis message. Continuing on with lhe problem of commercial development in t h e downtown area, the former Scoutmaster developed a woodsman's analogy to the fate oI downtown Costa Mesa businesses if the freeway does not spare the entire district. "If any of you ever tried to build a fi re, you know you can't do it with one log, you must use two for feedback," he declared producing two logs to make his point. · CANNOT SURVIVE ''Strip commercialism can't survive without something on the other side to complement it and feed i\, '' he ex- plained. "If you take out one side between 17th and 19th streets you might as well take both.'' St. Clair predicted in today's hearing that downtown Costa Mesa can become the finest commercial area In all Orange County although development has been slow so far due to the threat of a freeway slashing through the center or town. •le also said tha t the Newport Beach- pr~ferred Superi or Avenue Route 55 alignment will seriously damage com· mercial and manufacturing activity there as well as wiping out downtown Costa f\.1esa. Newport Beach ~1ayor Dore e n ~1 arsha\I followed St. Clair to the stand to spell out past, present and future population and travel statistics in an attempt to convince officials that Newport Boulevard from 19th Street to the Arches overpass at the future Pacific Coast Freeway Ls imperati ve, Reverie, owned by Swedllb-bom Cbris- liao v"' _.., _. LbJ u~.._ .... llr •" ' llktir If. Jlo9,.. ,..... apP&rtiilly In !J<ni1e olbhon oeu . Red China clalmo IZ.mUe Wrltoria\ aten and ael.&ed the lhrH yachts after allowing three othtn -one d1COtated with portraUa of Mao in lhe cal>in - to piss on to M&cao. Besides the Americans aboard, the three yachtl ca:rrfed a Swede, tWo Britons. one Frenchman, an Auatrallan &irl and four HOOi KOil( Chlnue. Aall!*lllltt ~. ~IJ.1411 -.... .......... tUI the)< dtd nol vftw the incldat ... u anli-American 10 naturt, due to the 1amolderinJ sltuatloi between Peklq and HOOi 1\0lii. The yachtsmen had betn warned agaln!t makinl the lunar new year holl· day cruise which has gone unmolu ted jn past years, bu\ lhey chose to -iport the suueauoa ol trouble at aea. Pleased by Bond Vote Mrs. Lilly Plans to Run Agqin for Sclwol Board · Mrs. Ell&abeth Lilly today aMounced she will seek re-election to the Newport- Mesa Unified Sc~ Di~!!t~-'9an!.~f Trustees. The lncumbient board member, wife of clinlca( Pl)'Chologlot .Rob..i T. Lilly, said paaaage ol the $15.1 million bond issue la.st week made her deciaion to run again easier. "It lfves ua a tremendous opportunity for some long-range plannlna," she aald. "But I probably would have run even JI It bad falled. The obllgatlon would have been greater becawe we'd really be ID trouble:" Mra. Lllly, a mother of two, bu been on the board alnce unillcation ol tht district four years ago. Prior to that. she had served on the old high school board. She will seek rHlecUon to tbe Trustee Area No. 2 seat. As of this moining, she was without competition. She is the fourth incumbent to an- nounce her candidacy in the April 15 election. The others are Donald Strau53, who so far is oppoaed by Terry Hay , a college student: Lloyd Blanpied Jr.1 unopposed; and Roderick MacMlllian, llllOpposed. Deadline for filing is noon Tbur5da7. .Frem Pqe l CHRIST TEENS ARRESTED • • • Jntennedlata School, IOIO Arllnctoo Drive, and Coota M... Hlllb School. 2650 Fali'Vlew Road, lnelud" -. ~ Be<ty J. artallleb, 21, ol 110 OcuJ1 Ave., Huntington Beach. Carolhte B. "Buule" C.llacott, lt, ot 110 Ocean Ave., Huntington Beach. C..taa" N. Pelderful, 19, of 110 Ocean Ave., HunUngton Beach. Madelbte C. DoMlell7, 19, of 110 Ocean Ave., Huntington Beach. Jotep N. Lulford, 11, of !06V. 10th St., HunlinP_:!a Beach. Paal B. Bfrt, Zl, of 60SV. 10th St., Huntington Buch, son of the Teens for Christ spiritual advisor and ecclealuUcal guru, the Rev. Dave Btt1, 491 who is known to his flock 11 Uncle. Daniel P. we11ii, 22, of 116 Main St., HunUngton Beach. Howard E. Bro1lu1, 19, of K.ittaning, Pa. , . ~IIchael G. Barbour, 19, of Ill Main St., Huntington Beach. Bruce A. Grtg, 11, of 3591 Howard Ave., Los Alamitos. Rlcbard c. La Brill, 19, of 2261 Santa Ana Ave., Costa Mesa . Ralpll K. Baker, 11, of 116 Main St., Huntington Beach. Jama BaResleros, 22. of gosy, Main St., Huntington Beach. Ralpll Dolpll Alleril, 19, of Cathedral Cily. Police said the 16 adults - including the four older girls tranfe!T!l! to Orange County Jail -would be 1rraigned toda3•; but a 17·ycar-old girl was soon rtleased to her parents. STREAMLINE PAPERWORK Records clerks trying to h e I p streamline the massive flow or paperwork finally made photocopies of a basic master sheet of facts, with indivldual data to be filled in. Virtually all of the Teens for Christ member s gave their occupations as Minister, but La Brill gave hi!: title as Missionary of lhe Gospel and Gregg settled for Servant of the Lord. High schoo l Principal William J. Gas Truck Overturns COMMERCE (AP) -Aboul one mile of the southbound Santa Ana Freeway \\'IS closed to traffic early today when a gasoline .tanker truck overturned and !Pilled fu el over a large 1ection of the roadway,~ hl&Jlway patrol &aid.,The~ were no reports of injuries. Vaughn 8l1d juniOl' high school Principal Werner J. Carlson had warned thl gospel-spouting firebrands about 2 p.m. before calling for police a1&istance. Warned also by investigating: ofllcert, the sign-carrying, Bible-quoting youth continued to preach to their flock!. MAKING AllRE'8TS Police at that point began making the arrests, saying the Teens for Christ were causing the milling crowds of observers to obstruct Arlington Drive, as well as creating a disturbance. Placards and ptcket l!ligns proclaiming that Christ is the only answer and the question won't be asked very much longer were confiscated -about 20 of them -as evidence. Police filmed the incident on videotape to use 11 evidence in court action . Throngs ot achool children w)lo gathered to witness the roundup of the professed witne!ll~,for the f.1aster tend· ed in aome case.s to regard the police as Philistines. One girl of about 7 uttered a comment distinctly contradictory lo the teachings of meekness, one which would sound rather pungent and scorcltlng even from the lips of a 17-year-old. "What a fine thing for a little girl to be saying,'' said Patrol Capt. Robe.'1 Moody. who was busy helping t~ supervise the hectic scene. CR05S EVIDENCE JnvesUgators took into evidence a wooden cross spattered wiU:. blood-like stains and hung with tinkling bells, al!o locking a number of Bibles into property rooms for safekeeping. The series of arresll Monday afternoon was the largest so far in lhe conUnu.inl campaign of the Teens for Christ group, ,,,.ho are no strangers to jail, just as were their fortbears. "This problem has betn in existence at local schools for more or less a week," said Lt. Smith, "last week they had a six-year~ld boy down on his knees, blessing him." Not since 28 Hess ians motorcycle club member1 \•i'ere rounded up for investlga· tion after a vicious w au lt cue list Augu.!lt has the Costa Mesa City Jail been so full. "This thing pretty well shot our whi le shill," U Smith said, "they were sin1ing and chanting back there earlier, but I guess they've quieted down." He then leaned back in his chair and said a few thlnp about con- temporary religion and police work, compattd to the way It used to be. The Costa i fesa City Counci l is virtually the only conctrned group to take no defi nite stand as yet, and Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley is one of those who adheres to the deeper study theory . Only one person appearing before the panel of experts by noon had not called for a route change. Patman Raps Tax Free Philanthropy Retired contractor and N e w p o r t Boulevard property owner John Vogel From P1111e 1 MARSHALL ... from the boulevard , the need to disrupt large volumes of local traffic and the need for costly detouring would be large· ly eliminated ." NO~PQNSE RepresenlaUvu of the. caWom ia Dlvlskln of H.ighways were not expectfd to m pood to any of lhe testlmony from public agencies or Individuals tod1y. Divlslon spokemeo said the purpose of the hearing was to record all views lor ~tation later to the Hjghway Commission, which would make the final decision on re.routing. Costa Mua ofilcl•la have yet to decide which of four altttnate route.I through their community would be prtferabJe. Each of the proposed alignments ter- mina te at th ccw tline we.st of Superior. \\'ASHJ NGTON (UPI) -Rep. Wrighl Patman \0.Tex.l, charged today that tax-exempt foundations have perverted philanthropy into a "vehicle for in· i;titulionalii ed, deliberate ev1sion ol fiscal and moral responsibility.'' Patman. chairman of the Housi ng Banking Committee and a longtime critic of the foundations, propo5ed t h a t Congress ~vy a 20 percent lax on lhe income of lhe more than 30,000 ta x.free organi zations. He u.id this ww ld yield an estimated $200 million a year. He testified al the opening of ltou.~ \\'ays and ~1eans committee. hearing ln to abuses and loopholes In the lax Ja,vs. Patman, a fiery Texas lawmaker, al one time turntd his marathon probe of lax-free foundations toward Orange Counly 's Irvine Foundtitlon. The Irvine organization ha' channi!lcd hundreds of thousands Of dollars inlO cb1rltable and civi c organitationl!I in Orange County. A maulve report on the PatmA.n committee's findings on nll founda tJons ft lnvestisated was published at one time. Noth ing much came of it. In today's acti on, a witness represen· ting the Carnegie Foundation conceded there have bten "abuses" but that lhe philanthropic foundatio n occupies "an ho nored place'' in the American system. Patman, argues that the foundations had used their tax·free status to ac· cumulate millions of dollars. "Put most bluntly," he s a I .:t . "Philanthropy -one of mankind's more noble instincts -has been perverted into a vehicle for instl!utlonalized, deliberate evasion of fiscal and moral responsibility to the nation.·• Alan Pifer, president or the Carnegie FoundAlion . one of lhe nation's olde..~t foundations, told the committee thett: have been "abuses," but 3dded : "The phila nthropic rou n d a t Io n deservedl y occupies an honored pllu:e 11mong a large class or private organiza- tions that ire protf'tted and encouraged under one of the most fundamental te~t! of the American system:'' Ways and Means Chairman Wiibur D. ~fill& (0-Arll:.), Js on record fa voring reform. He said he hoped to get some legislation passed lhls year, perhaps in the area of foundatlou, but said any major overhaul could not come before 1970. "There ls a croundswell of aentlment in thil nation today -resentment apinst impoalng on the Uttle man, to the benefit of the big man," Patman said. Numerous councilmen r e p o r le d dowu of le Uen dally complaining about people who do not pay enough LUU. Rep. John W. Byrnes IR·Wls.), the commIUet's 11enlor Republican, aaid be was 1et1lng 70 letters a day W in;: for cha11gt1 in the ln structurt. Letter• started Oooding Congress after former Treasury Stcret:Jr)' Joseph W. Birr t.old a committee in J 111nuary, 155 peop~ earning more than '200,000 paid no taxes last year, JncludJnC 1 STOUP of 21 fl'ho m1de more than $1 million. "We are almoat adoDUni a 17stem of not-equ1I rights fof1111 and special prlVUeges to none -but Jult the opposite to th1t, special prlvtlea:tt to a fetr," Patman said. There is no 1drn.inistralio11-proposed legislatlon before tbe c o m m i t t e t , although President Nixon said th& Treasury would subm1t a tax. reforrq bill later. The panel doa'h1ve rticom-- mendaUon.s -t b 0 U I b no( I bill - from truaur)' uperll who otudled reform Jut year. 1 Mllla plaMed to delve Into a halt ot pr_.t w relonn auu..UON alter hll probe ol found1Uono, lncludl111 pew• b" t.auUoa ot unnlated busi ness and advertising Income Of chunobel and llOClal organiaatiou. 1be "worst loophole." Patman aald, wu tbe tu brt•k oU companJes l't for overseas drilling. Although Patman gaw some merit In the 271~ percent depletion allow1nce for domestic drlllin&. ~ &aid there was no justiflcaUon for the brt1ll: for foreign etploratlon. • Congresslon1I llberala have b e ~ n demandlnc legbtaUoo to tither reduce thl1 allowance \hey claim 11 1 P -bUIIQ bonus to oil firms. Opponents. hawevm-, claim lht allowance he~ps develop new sourctS. " • " '"t'f -.~--...- --. .... _ • EDIJION .. N. Y. Steeb :VOt U, NO. 42, 3. SliCTIONS, 30 !'AGES, l ... -.. --- • ORANGE COUNT'/:, CALIFORNIA JUESDA:Y, f.EIRUARY 18, :t96t JEN CIMS ' ·s.is_te.r~ -\~-ti ti es -. :r·. . .I . ~ ..... ~ Plead for New Freeway ·-ao._t~· • .. " .. , ... • "!" J ' <\'' .,:, A porldO of Huw ArU' reprwn-IWn pounded II tmi.. on U.. .tin . lati.vea: wt,Ui a f~qay ~eathing d,own roof. of lhe caYernou1. Junior Eihibita; their nee.ts today appealed to .tbe --state Building on the -Oraqe C o u n t y lo sblf\ the route cbosen a quarter Fairgounds as the state Division ol ctntury ago, or force -disaster on the Highways public bearing ground on past affected sister 'cities. noon. By noon, unanimous agreement on a ..Jets roar"'1 over 'periodicallv, and lhe ,New))O(t Freeway route chanli 'from d&d .. w).s .D,ke J:tatei:un.a t&)~lnl aistlni Newport Boulevard -prefealably • Smitb tell 1 gb6&t Bory Jn an echo as far westward ~s possible under four , . c!fan.lber· n~r dp~n tbe San la ~a propo1.e1L~l~ -~ed evident •.Hi..,, ~ llralned to beor •• ~-~-: ~~ ~-.. _~;1.~: ~ f: -,~~~~ Area planning agency emlsaarles '" call- ed for a change fn · the SLI~ Route 5S alignmeol chosen in 1!i4 without any public bearing. , Some spU.ken requuled the state lo choOse lbe most e~ve alternate, . S-7, or so-called Red=tlue Route, but others urged a JPOl't' nWJerate attitude . on which rou.te al>ould 1le adopted by thn,s;;te ::""~mn::;i;· go : .slow In lhil area, peildiOg a deq>a' atudy ol long term effect pooed by the other po&sible alignments of the t.i mile freeway , wtuch is to be buit in five to seven years. The C,,,ta Mesa City Council ls virtually the only concerned ·group to tUe no definite stand u yet, and Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley ls ooe Ill lbooa wbo adheroa to the deeper llludy u-y, Only one peraon appearlna belore the panel ol elf"rls by noon hid DOl><:ailed for a route cha.nae. Rellttd contractor and New po r t Boulevard property owner John Voge1 took no stand, but Aid be and others haVe been losing money for yein due to the hanging frttway que.tion and pleaded for swtlt action one way ot the other. Presldtn& ~Ulcer T. Frod· Baphaw, deputy state \direetor of pUbUc worU, assured Vogel that no matter what cbOtce the J{ighway CollUhlaaloo mates, It ls not far away. . rocr.Y•a • Wrlnt ....,. .-1t11 -· Costa Men Vice Mayor Robert M. wn.on led olf Ille parade o1 1peatera on the freeeay problem and wha1 it means to the Harbor Area. C,,,ta M,.. City Councilman William L. Sl <;ialr followed Wilson to the podium carrylna a vllual ald glmmlct -· Ing a barbell with pomJ>ODl.' ol opagbetU · on the ends. , He hefted it overhead (Set .FREEWAY, fap I) "Air '· Crash l(ills 5 -' Navy P~oo W reek Found on Catalina By JOHN VALTEllZA OI .. ~,... ..... , A y'.S. Jia.y pluo Out Ill !'\D&Jleacli, <P<Yinl a crew " n .. ; c!i'Ulied early ;' tOc!ay on Catafuur. ~. killinri' all ,,.. •aboard. ·-led by IJzo department~ re,cbed U.. wreckage la\e lhlJ .-.... .. .Jl'boJ. 1<POded all Wrd dell£ .- , JJW or -thf crash· wa1 a remote peat ' ..r Ille Island. . . DAILY PIL.of ltlff;..,. TEENS FOR CHRIST LEADERS DISCUSS -CASE WITH PUBLIC DEFENDER-JIM LANG (RIGHTJ Nathan Berg,·David Bor9, Unlclentiliad Yeufli· (from left). Map Comint Court Fl9ht . Mesa Nabs 17 Christ Teens • . Arrests Follow Refusal ,w Halt Preaching at Schools By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of .... a.u,. l>lllf 11.n Hymm o( courage and faith in ad- versity rang through the Cost.a Mesa City Jail Monday night, as police booked the biige.st crowd since last summer's ceJebrated Hessian motorcycle gang 1'1Jllndup. Refuaal to obey orders after being warned once led to the mass arrest of 17 members of HunUngton Beach's Teens for Christ, loudly evangelizing at two adjacent school campuses. Crowds of children who had been listen- ing to the self-styled. Christian revolu- tionaries preach jeered a team of police officers commanded by Sgt. Bob Ball- inger as the militants were led away. "If Jightrung strikes, we'll know we were wrong," said Lt. Austin W. Smith u . iae , 1hoveled through a blirwd of paperwork Oh the wafch comande.r'1 dest, resulting from the roundup. A light rain fell outside, but no rumbles ol thunder could be beal'<l·and the depart. ment was sUU standing when he went olf duty early today. • The five girls and 12 men -four of them actually senlorteen! in .a sense -were booked on ill!pkltln ,.or all. or ef)mbi.Datlon of, two penal b>de of. fensea anC:I orie education code violation. "The thing that some people just refuse to understand is that we aren 't arresUng these people for preaching or picketing,'' Police Clllef Roger Neth aaid today. Refuul to disperse, wilUUI arid maliciouJ obstrucUon of a thoroughfare and willful and unlawful disturbance of a p\zhuc ICbool are the specific charges, Here Come The Brides ' . or.nee bkmoms soon win be here al)CI. pl.ans for the June wedding already are bePlning '.o bloom . The DAILY PILOT 1oc1.ay-often an eight-page ·tee-- tion crammed with features, phoCol and ads desi,ned to help this year's bn"'des find the mi.stance, goods and services she needa to make lhe wedding !'per- fect." Bridal rashloos, tips on how "' pion ' the ~' even a gul.dt to how to •boo I~ rllht apartment •re Ill· ctudod in the Brlctes Section of today's DAil.Y PILOT. It's 1 cllp-and-savt feiture for evtry bride-to-be. with $190 bail set for each person. Arrestees piUed up at Maude B. Davis Intermediate; ~I. JOOO Arllngton . Drive, ·and Coita' Mf$1 High Scnool, 2650 Fairview Road,· include: ., lle<lly J, Qriotlle .. • 21, or "' Ocean Ave., Huntingtgn Beach. . Carou.e 8. ''Bade" CeUacoU, 19, of 110 Ocd·n Ave .. Hpntlniton Beach. Coos-. N. Pe-,U~ lt, of 110 Ocean Ave., HunUngton Buch. Maddlle C. Donelly, 11, of UO Ocean Ave., Huntington Beach. J-" N•.Lnll""'· 11, or 605\\ loth St., Huntington Beach. Palll B. Ber(, 21, of SOS'A 11th St., Hunthigton Beach, son of the Teens for Chriat spiritual advisor and ecclesiastical guru, the Re.-. Dave Berg, 49, who is known to his flock as Uncle. Dulel P. Welsh, 22, of 116 Main SL, J{untington Beach. , Howard E. Bmius, 19, of Kiltaninc. Pa. Michael G. Barbour, 19, of' 116 Main St., Huntington Beach. Brace A. Gregg:, 18, or 3S91 Howard Ave., Los Alamito.!. Richard C. La Brtll, 19, o! 2261 Santa Ana Ave.; Costa Mesa. Ralph K. Baker, 18, of 116 Main St., Huntington' Beach. Jam es Ballesteros, 22, of 6051,i Main St., Huntington Beach. Ralph Dolph Ahem, 19, of Cathedral City. . Police gaid the 16 adults -including (See CHRIST TEENS, Pare Z) Bli1npja~k Fails 'Bomb' Turns Out to Be Transistor I Tile ireal bti111pjack of 1169, atte111pted at lhe. dty 'of Caraon MondtJ night on ~ outakirta of Long Beach, never got oU tbe ground. A t.agu'na Beach routh, armed with a guiiar ltld mflteriOU. D11C\: box, It• tempted to hlJack the giant Goodyear bli~p Coltlmbla for a free. ride to Aspen, Colo. . The' hippie-like yauth w11 11attr ldenti· fied u 3ames1 HarrilOn. The woukf-be bllmpj~er wu ap- parently inspired lly Ille Be a I I es animated movie_ "Yellow Submarine" wherein the stngen ~ to the land of the "Blue Me.ulea' ln a con- trapt.ion raembllna a ijjmp.1 So tt developed die bllmp~ J'OUIJ> •• about ZO. a( rnt ldentlllO.l'llliaidl only as "George RairUon ot ~lWaUes. ·~ Eerl1 Monday nilhl. Iha youth .... inted acrou the 1!liml' ,.....U ind leaped abOar<I lhe adnd<iia. '1 want a ride, man," he tokl Jim Genet. a CQtnPU11 crewman wbo,workl on 1he Goodyear blimp by d_, and tatd IUml Wlli:llin( a nwt>y luani shact by nflllL "If nOl, I'll blow ~ thine up," Genet quoi<d the ""'111 .. lliyi11f. . Genet' ealled for help. For the n .. t hour and • bj(f, aboul 30 anned olf!Cera sumuoded ·the' big ·g11 bq and watt.cl • paUently. Said one -"just In case he really did have a bomb." Finally, Stitriff1 Sgt. Arthur HJcks and the bomb squad arrived. Hlckl walk- ed boldly acroM the open, gragsy field and o~m the tiny door ol the gondola hanging under the dirigible '• plump belly. "Are you the pilot?" the hairy occupant asked HJclai. "I want to go to Aspen, Colorado for • /au fesUval " Harrison, w ftlout waiting for an answer, pushed .a •:button" on bis black bos:. Hieb waited for an erpklslon. Instead be heard a blast of roe~ muaie from the lad '• tiny black tranaistor radio. After searehtng him, Hieb helped blm oot. En route lo a hospital where he wu admitted -still unidenttl'ied -for observation, the bearded youth explained lhal be mariqed 1" slip by Ille iuard "becauae I'm irivltlb1e." "He never would have made It lo Aspen," aald Ralph Reed, another ettwm.an ol the t~IOOI ~limp UJed by the rubber company for ad'verttslng -·· ''The blimp bas a maimam celltng ol 1,IOO !eel and "-'11 aboul 13,000 feet high. Beakles, Its maaimum fue1 load al1on only 10 hour• In Ufe air.'' Too bad. The· hllrf young man hod brought along hiJ toothbruJh. . . ' Navy aeartb ~-. apotled the wreckage in a rinote ,!ICtlao ot the lslml bul the Ii~ c<iuld lll\J1~be rucbod by a grouncllwch l!artY. • : Hampered by muddled T08ds1 1 .Los Angeles .County se-m"I racua party, ibertll'•'act..Jact Va1Jl(>an Aid.that the crews, llampered by rala U.. inUddY n14da found' the wr<chp mt ....... 1 appeared to be five ,&odiu" OVf!!l a widely scattered 1 ard of $1lver Peak. 'M'le rilountaln Is located Ga 'the ]&Jaiad!& ~9'&, 1~de!~ Iron~ ]lay. ' . . Girl Testiiies .She Saw Sirhan ;'_ Shoot Kennedy • LOS ANGELES (UPI) -V a le r la Schulte. ·a IODf treolod bli>ode teslllied al the munror lrtal of Sirhu 8. 8Jrtian today that 4be llW him utend his arm And shoot Sen. Rohen F. Kennedy. MJas Sclltilte. 2Z, wu the' mysterious girl in .the polka dot dretJs who has Og- ured prominently in the investigation but who had nothing to do ·with the shooting except to tie 'a witness: ' The attractive girl, who today wore a white dress with a red and blue scarf, had betn head Jf Kennedy's campaign headquarters In Goleta and had gone to the Ambassador Hotel that night for the viclory celebration. She was on crutc.ties at the lime as a result or a skiing acc ident. The girl's testimony was interrupted arter she had been on the sland less than JO minutes. Superior Court Judge Herbert V. Walker called a recess when a sberifrs deputy in the courtroom whispered to him that he heard a clicking noise which seeined to emanate from his desk. The oourtrbom wu cleared by Judge \Valker and 1 few minutes later trial was resumed when it was fGWld the telephone on the deputy's desk had a fluttering relay as a result ol a test by the utility company. It was Indicative of the tenseness of the trial that the slightest suspicion there was an electronic listening or recording device could lead the judge to hurriedly empty the courtroom. Afiss Schulte had brou~ht to court the dress she wore that night and she held it up so the jury could see it. It "·as lime green with yellow polka dotll and the girl smiled brightly as she dis· played it. Jn her brier testimony, she said st)e had never known Sirhan at any time and had not talked to him on lhe night of the shooting. In testimony Monday, mwlve pro football tackle ROOlevelt Grier told of how he beat back people trying to tear Si rhan apart momenta after the slaying. Grier, a ' Negro, ais:-feet--five, 290 poonds, id~ Sen. Robefl F. Kennedy. But he knocked ooe map back and kicked another away u Bobby lay IUP. ing for llle on the noor and the tiny Sirhan struggled to escape. Jess Unruh, the most power f u I Democrat In California, 1tood on a steam table ahoulJng "Don't kill him, don't , kill him" -deciding Ill thal·-1 · of parKtemonhrrn that· there 'mUJt not be another Lee Harvey OswaJd.Jack Ruby atain on American bi.story. • Unruh, Democ:raUc leader in tile State Auembly 1!bo ts e>pectecl to run l(llnsl Reinald ReqlD for governor in ll70, waa dolnt the ,.um, but Grlu, th• former Loo Anleleo Rims llar, wu doln( Ille aclil1f as the ft ve.looWaur llSiJo<!nd Str11an was finally sulidued. Unruh wu campaign manager for K~ nedy in the-California Pmld'"Ual Primary Victory mf WU followintJ behind him when the aenator wu aboL lfe looted at Kennedy and lhea saw (lee lllUIAN, Pap 4) . -~ -· • · WIT ........ TELLS OF TESTIMONY Slrban "Witness Unruh Custom Ri_fles Stolen in Mesa An arsenal of seven unique rines and shotguns worth nearly $1 ,400 is belng sought by police in the Harbor' Area today, alter being stolen from a Mar.inc c~. officer's home. • Police said Monday th1t the back4oor burglary of Goodell P. Warreri's bOme at 426 Princeton Drive, .. Coat& Meiia, Sunday nett~ forelan and domestic weapons customized by the Yictiin himaell. The Intruder took nothing but tbe weapons, several of which had hunli01 ICOpel. Some of the guns are completely done In white, and most lnclude"fancy 'engrav. iOI ind silver tnJay work, the gun buff told lnvestlgator1. Amon"g the IG6C Items are i wHiti. .22 caliber Hu1qvama; .a .220 cauber WinChe!ter rtne, 'a »08 Garand rlne; a .30 cal. M-1 carbine and a .250 ell. Maf15'r With a white barrel. .., 'Silver Li~ing' · Seen Wednesday A .UV.. lloiui behind todaJ'• pim looting cloud1 w11 """1llaec! ,,.._ Wtld- neljlay, wltll ciearbw tides tnd di1e< coridltlons on the way. Tiie -nln lrcbl, which moved.Ill .....-ntcht from the COlll ell l'lorthem Clllfornla, .... ._ied' to dnip ftoiu a quar1<r to a hlfl inch ol.. pr6clpjtalkio on Ute. Orarice coaat bef.or. movma on. NEW'YORK (AP)_,,,,. •tock mltbt Howew, cleiring ""'-tell, for clored lower tod1y lit a·contlnuit!Cit ol • late"anen-· wllh 'clllJ!Yulr taaptnl the sKarp 'downturn stalled ·Mondlly. tht . mulmUm terrtpenture • bO!ow'tbe (See quotaUona, Pqu J0.21). ~ null!. ' • Vaughan said that it wu 11lt largest plane crash in memory on the bland. _Three me : from the Avalon 1Ub"1.ltiol and four county firemen took a fGW'• wheeklrive truck acroa:: slippery,. rouP dirt roadl: to tbe crash scene. The twin-engine craft crubed aftrt taltin~ off from the Long BeaclH>ased carrier Kearsarge, attached to an airborne early warning squadron at North Island Naval Air Station. 2,000 Gallons Of Oil a Day Blacken Ocean UflTA B411BAJIA (41') -f. new 1 leak at lta ,oUsbare well' lite .may be • pouring a& much u J,O!I galloDS ol • otl ·• 4"Y Iota the Plerni: Ooean, Iha .., Unlan Oil Co. bu dJsalosed. ' ·The first Ieq 1pewed more than 230,00IJ gS:Uons, cre~uftg a slick that once nacho eel *>O square' miles. The . ·~w leak has formed a 1llct two miles Jong and 30 to 4<I feet wide. leaving kelp beds off Gaviota and Refugio beaches northwest or Santa Barbara blackened by small patches of heavy oil. : It was feared that southwest winds might push the new slick against the coast even as 800 nren worked to clean up previously oil-gummed be.!lcbes and harbora in Santa Barbara and Ventura counties, uliiou oil announced its new esliDiate of the leak's size Monday but Union Preaident ~ HarUey erpreued hope it soon would be "reduced or eliminated." The firm previ.ously reported 209 gallo113 · a day flowing from the new leak. Although the well which unleashed the big slick has been plugged, more crude oil was escaping nearby because preSl!ure deep beneath the ocean noor was forcing oil through ocean bed fissures, Union said. Union said it had asked for and re-- cevied permission from Secretary of the Interior Walter J. Hickel to use another well, previowly drilled at the site, to lower uplosives deaigned io rearrange the strata beneath the ocean bed ·to sea.I the. leak:. f Hickel ordered all drilii111 in the chan- nel halted after the disaster. Orange eouc Weatller The driu.le will be short lived, the weatherman promises, with skies clearing Wednesday while te01peraturta clln1 to the upper 50'1 along the Orange Cout. INSmE TOD-'Y Stan Smith. former Pa.sadma High b<llke&bali · ttar and no10 tht 1'otU1t plo~r h' amateut ttnnil, ii iM fovorlt1 to cop th1 tlnglet cMjnplotuMp o/ 111• Bof· boa Bau Cl11b'• lnofradonal tol.,,...,..t tlart!ll(I T~v-r: S« Sports, PG(lt 22. -I ... ,_ • ·-' -• ._ ... -• ,_ ... .. --• ·-" --.. --• ==--. -• .... "''' ... ·--• --. ....,,..,_, .. ............. ·-... ·-.. ,.,. , ... • -.. ............ .. -• -" .... _ a. --" -- > • • • J STEPPING DOWN GOP't R•Y 81111 Newport Says Superior Ave. Superior Route By JEROME F. COLLINS ot ,.. o.r" r1i.i ''-" Newport Beach has no partiC"Ul1r pre.- ference on re-routing of the Newport Freeway -just so il lies somewhere west of Superior Avenue u it cuts through the city, Mayor Doreen Manhall 5aid loday. Mrs. Marshall outlined Newport's posi· tion in testimony before 1tate freeway officials at the Orange C o u a l 'I Fairgrounds in Co6ta Meaa. The public hearing is the flnt ever on lhe . Newport Freeway alignment, whose original routing along Newport Boulevard was adopted by the state 2S years 6go. At lhat time, no public hearing was required. "The city," said Mayor Marshall, "will support any of the· proposed routes tha:t \rill accomplish a realignment along Superior A venue." She pointed out that when the state approved the present routing, the plan- ning concept was simply to upgrade an existing state route to freeway atan. dards. "Since then, Newport Boulevard hs developed lnto a high-capacity,, six· lane divided arterial street which is now the principa1 link between the clUes of Costa Mesa and Newport." She said preservation of Newport Boule\tard u a surface street is a matt.er of "ireat importance'' to the entire Harbor Area. She cited populatiOn statistics -past, present and future -to back . up' her \·iewa. In lH4, 'hen the presen\ r6ute waa: adopted the· area's 'population "'was 20,000. Today it iS 120,000. By 198.i, it is expected to be 170,000. "R!ght now," she said, "the number or weekend visitors to Newport often approaches a quarter of a million. nus figure in the foreseeable future could climb to hall a million. "To accommodate the resulting traffic demands, we must develop a total slteel planning concept. We are convinced that both a north-south freeway and Newport Boulevard, a~ a hlgh-<:apacity local arterial, will be required." Mayor Marshall also suggested that closin& of portions of the boulevard for freeway cOllltrucUon could c r e a t e monumental trallic headaches. "Already the summer average daily traffic count on the boulevard is more than 30,000 cars," she said. "The tack of alternate routes in the area would require the detouring of these vehicles through the construcUon zone II the Newport FreeYoay ·were to be placed on a Newport Boulevard a1ignmenl. "By the selection of a route av.•ay from the boulevard, the need to disrupt Jarge volumes of local traffic and the need for costly detouring would be large- ly eliminated." Costa Me!a officials have yet to decide lvhich of four alternate routes through their community ,.Wtluld ba preferable. Each of the proposed alignments ter- minate at th ecoastllne west of Superior. DAil Y PllOI ORANGE COAST ,.USLllMING COM"•"'Y It•!.••' N, w.,J """'1"~• ..... ,~~li•ft!• l"•"''' l'••"" f lfllll' T~'"""' A.. Mw,,h;.,, ....... nftl ... l'lliW '•111 Nin•" Al't'tfltW..e Oirttl9r c .... w ... o"'" lJI W1lf l1y Slr11t M1n1 .. , A44'''" r.o. ••• 11.0, t2tl6 --,,.._, ..... ~ 7711 W.11 ..... ~ u-kl(fl~ '" ,.,.., ... _ IWl!tilltfoft .. .,.: ,,.. Jtll a- ' ' Bliss ·QUits :«GOP .. Chief Post .... r;. ·-.. . R·umors Pu~ ~e¥'p0,rt~ s: t;.hoiinet i~ Ru.nnin,g as S~r • ,, • i, ' •••• • , • • • • • • 111'7 SVILYN -'ll'OOI) • • ~ and W!lll'I join him until June. ' • BU.., who d-led blmsell u a · °',.. Dtltr"" *""' ' • VntU an anbouncemerii Is made, u· Bllsi, chotteii to bead'" GQf NailopaJ ••nuts and rbolts" man -a polJUcal WASHINGTON -Ray Bllsl • ...tgoed would be presumptuous or me to make Commltt.. alter lho 11114 'Pferldenllal lechnleha Ian -lo eq>eeled :,1~. suC<eededl •·•--. R b\1-I I ... Inn . as c lrrnan by a more eu le evl&IUQ today as epu ,..an nat on1 u•a an any statemtnt. eleet!on, announced h1I intenUoa 1ft a and JaUorm performer effective in ·1nld·~prll aod Newport "If any vacancy .ls occ4rrlng, the letter to Pres14eqt Nixon. . p rts ehortt aft.; the November Beach attorney ~urray Chotlaer, long 1 CO? National Com~ttee must call a A former 9hio ltate Republican com. el= that 8ik,. wuuld be npl.M:ed confidant of Presldent Nixon. might be mttUng. ~mmitt~ members woul~ mlttee c~, Bliss was a com-drew widespread protests from GOP of- named the Bliss success« • make ~ d~lslon and the 1ppolr.tment. prom.lse c.and1date ror the uaUonal post flclall ho had worked with him at ' • . The announctment of the Bliss reslg-and ls credited with much. of the · w · ~ to .all thi1, ChoUner, Jl'I an Ill-nation wu made today by the White rebuilding ' of hl:I party folJowtng the the local level. terview with the DAILY PILOT today, llousc. 19M presidential election. _ Republican governora, metUng In declared that the weather in Washington The Newport Beach attorney, v.·ho was Durlng his tenure as natioaal chair-Callfornla in December, praised his is invigorating these days -crisp and a campaign manager is past Ni.I.on elec-man, the GOP picked up seats in both record highly. cool. tlons, is l'IOW working ln the offices the House and Senate and increased its ~ Friends said Bliss lnt.eodl to retlrt "All I know Is what 1 heard on the of Republican National Headquarter! hold on gubernatorial chairs.to the point from pollUcal actlvity and w.IU return radio Jut night," Chotlner di&claimedl here in Washington at 1624 I St. NW. where the Republican Party .now bu to Ohio, where he heads an inaurance taking off on an old quote from Wll Ills family remains in Newport Beach 31 governors to the Democrata" 19. agency, POSSIBLE SUCCESSOR N•wport'1 Chotlnor Pleased by Boad Vote , ., • • ' "'I I ' . ' • \ . , 'DAILY PILOT ....... "' I.II PIYl'lt COSTA MESA COUNCILMAN WILLIAM ST. CLAIR DISSENTS AT FREEWAY HEARING Hl9hway Offlci•I• HNr T11tlmony at Fairgrounds on Possible Route 55 R'i1llgnment . . ... ·From Page 1 · . , , ' " "' . . ' . FREEWAY -ROUTE PLEAS HEARD • • • to' ahow whit the Newport Bouievaid alignment will mean"ln terms of ttadlc. . ' "I am not addreuing myself to the . frewtiy but to the problem of surf'ace streets," 1aid 'St. 'Clair, an ~n promoter of th! Red·Blue Route. ' ~ . . ' '· , ' REP.ftESENTATIVE ·• •.'. DemonstraUng with the contnPti9n, St. Clair said the center tube represented~ a Newport Boulevard Freeway ro\lte between 17lh and 'ltth streets while tub- ing attached to funnels' -14 at ooe end and 25 at the other -i.mijmted secondary route lanes whose traffic.'flow will be funneled· into that narrOw stretch. "I ran out ·of hole' and 1 'm short one lane on 'each· end," the ebullient counci!Jnan said, but state highway ex- perts setmed to get hl11 message. Continuing on wllh the problen:i or commercial development in t h e downtown area. the former Scou tmaster developed a \\'oodsman's analogy to the fate or downtown Costa Mesa businesse:!I H the freeway does not spare the entire district. "If any of you ever tried to build a fire, you know you can't do it with one log, you must use two for feedback," he declared producing two logs to make hiS' point. CANNOT SURVIVE "Strip commercialimt can't surviYe without · something on the other side to complement It and feed it," he ex· plalned. "lf you lake out one side between 17th and 19th streets you might as well take both." St. Clai r predicted in today'' bearing that downtown Costa Mesa can become the finest commercial area in all Orange County although development has been slow so far due to the threat of a freeway slashing through the center of town. ' He also said that the Newport Beach· preferred Superior A venue Route S$ alignment will seriously 'damage com- mercial and manufacturing activity there as well as wiping out downtown Costa Mesa. Newporl Beach Mayor Doreen ~larshan followed St. Clair to the stand lo spell out past, present and fu ture popula tion and travel statistics in an attempt to conYincc officials that Newport Boulevard from 19th Street to the Arches overpass at the future Pacific Coast Free"'·ay is imperative. DlFFERENT ROUTE Newport Beach attorney Charles Cur. rey, a Newport Harbor Chamber or Com· n1erce officer. underlined M a y o r Marshall's statements and urged adop- tion of a different freeway route. "We must adopt one of the four alternates or face a terrible traffic situa· lion," he told the panel or six highv.·ay experts con\·ened for the hearing. Attorney Thomas Henderson, represen- ting the Costa Mesa Business Men 's Association follo1ved Curry, saying that his organir.alion is in favor of the Red Roule and that the Newport Boulevard alignment would create serious proble1ns in east·\\•est flow or traffic on surface street.s which would ha \'e to be bridged over the sub-ground level freeway. "The govern1nental unils • arc all in favor of keeping the arterial rQute as is," he. said reclUng a number of letters of support Including one from the Orange County Board of Supervisors. Henderson concluded by submitting a Route 55 realignment petition carrying 612· signatures to the panel, saying that more ate coming and that the majority of signers favor the westward-loping Red· Blue freeway route. IMAGE CONCERN Jim Wood, speaking for CHART, a Costa to.Iesa planning advisory group, said his organization is conrerned with Costa ro.1esa's image In 1980 and 1985 and that studies satisfy them that a route westerly of Newport Boulevard mwt be chosen citing the same reasons ad· \·anced by other speakers. "But, before we can make an in- telligent choice, more study of the in- clividual routes is needed ," he said. The freeway rou te question will come before the powerful State Highway Com- n1ission in the near future, and, if it chooses after Wi!ighing the facts to rec· ommend an alternate route, another public hearing \\·ill be called also on that matter. Costa Mesa city councilmen have never taken a stand on the Newport Boulevard freeway alignment ,·ersus the four alternates proposed, but are expected to do ~o after considering the results of today's hearing. Mrs. Lilly Plans to Run Ag~in for School Board ~ , ..... ~he~il ~~~~n 1~~e ·=~~ M~ Unilled. School Dl>tricl Board of Trultffs. . Tbe incumWnt board member, wife ol cllnlCll poychologiJt Robert T. Lilly, 1aid pu111gt of the fl5.9 million bond luue Jut week made her decilion to run qaln euier. "It gjvea: us a tremend004 opportunitJ. for aome· -·raqe planaina:," she aaJ(t, · "Bui I probably would have nm even U ii had failed. Tile obllgollon would have been greater becaue we'd ral17. be In trouble.'' • Mrs. Lilly, a mother OI two, bu beto • on the board since unification of the dl!trict four year• aeo. Prior to that. she had served on the old high ·school board.. . She will seek re-election to the. Truitee Area NG. ·2 seat. AJ of Olis .D\'orninl, · she was without compeUUon. ~ ··- Slie js the fourth Jocumbent to an- ......,. Ii« condldoey In lho April 1$ 'elecllcio. . The otbera ' are Donald Straua, who ao. for la opposed by Terry. Hay, • coUeae student; Llofa Blanpled Jr,. WlOppORd; and _Roderick MacMlfllan, unop_.t. ~e for filing is noon Thursday. FrOtll ·r .. e· l CHRIST TEENS · ARR,ESTED • • • the four older .girls transferred to Orange ·county Jp.jl -·would be arrai.gried today: but a 17·fear-old girl was' soon released to Her paPfilis. . . BT~P~WORK -:oltrks lfYin& Jo h el p slrcainllne .. b,:::~asslve flow or paperwork_.~~ ·.made. photocopies of a basic m'4ater ~et of facts, wit.h individual da\a to be. filled in. Virtually all Of the Tffns for Christ mmtbers ~avt ti)eir 1occupations as Minister. but La E;-ill g~1 e his ti tle as Missionary of l!ic. Co~.:cl and Grc~o settled for ser\'anl of the l.or(t. High school Prinl'ip3l r:il!i:'n1 J. Vaughn and junior high sc~:3cl Pri'l~·ipi:-1 \\rerner J, Carlson h<1d r t rnr:I t .c gospel·spouUng firebrands r.llo~i 2 p.111. before calling for poli~ assi!llan c<'. Warned also by in vestigatinR of,icer~. the sign-carrying, Bible-quotin; you ul continued lo preach to their flocli~. Talk 011 Future Slated by Cities A crystal ball glimpse of the futur~ will be offered Wedntsday \V h e n spokesmen for Costa Mesa and Newport Beach Jong-lenn planners address the Harbor Area CoordlnaUng Cowictl. The noon luncheon will be htld al the Costa l\fesa Golf and Country Club, according to council President Gt0rge A. Tucker. Whal will the Harbor Area look likt? Ts traffic congestion to be solved? Recreational needs are expanding. Will they be met? Where will we all park? These quesUons will be explored by George Kuyper, of CHART, the Costa ~1esa group, and John J\tacNab, of Newport Tomorrow, a beach city plan- ning and rt!Search counterpart. The Harbor Area CoordinaUna Council It an organiz.aliort of representaUves of the t"'O cities' various club! and service orgaitlutions, dealgned to maintain liai~ among U\em all. Police · at !bat pol\JI becan making lbe arrest!, saying lho Teens lor Cllri.sl Were~ causing the rnillin.I croWif.· of 'Observers to ob!truct Arllngton Drive., n well u creating a dlstur~. Placard• ood picllet slgna proclaiming ttui1 ·CbfiJt i. lbe only onswer and 11>1 question won't be asked · very much longer were confiacated -about 20 ol them -u evideoct. 'Pollce filUJed lho lncldenl oo vldeollpt to r":.;,,":;"'~:-i .. ~ ~ 'Who gathered to witness the roundup of the professed witnesses for the ~.iaster tend· ed in some cases to regard the police as Philistines. One girl of about 7 uttered a comment distinctly contradictory to th e teachings of meekness, one which would sound rather pungent and scorching even from the lips of a l7·year-old. "What a fine thing for a little girl to t c s.:iying," said Patrol Capt. Robert P.1o:d,r. 1rho 1vas busy helping t'l supervise the hectic scene. CROSS EVIDENCE Invesllgators took into evidence a \voode n cr.oss spattered wilt blood-like stains and hung wlth tinkling bells, also locking a num'.Der of Biblea: into property rooms for safekeeping. The series of arrests Afonday afternoon v.·u the largest so far in the continuing campaign of the Teens for Christ group, who are no strangers to jail, just as were their forebears. "This problem has been in existence at local s::hools for n1ore or Jess a \veek," said LI. Smith, "last week I.My had a six.year-old boy do~"" on his linecs, bles11ing him." Nol since 28 Hessians motorcycle club members were round!d up for investiga· lion alter a vicious assault case last August has the Costa Mesa Cily Jail been so full. "This thing pretty well shot our wt-11e shift," Lt. Smith said, "!hey were singing and chanting back there earlier, bu\ I guess they've quieted down ." He then leaned back in his chair· and said a few thinas about con· temporu')' religion and pollct: wort. compateel to tbe way it used to be. Chess, Checkers Slated in Mesa A couple of tried and true pastimea are beina: offered Wednesdays by the Costa Me11a Recre11tion Deparlmtnt. Patman Raps Tax Free Philanthropy 1be cily .is Initiating a CheM and Checker Club, to begin meeting each midweek night from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. in the Community Recreation Ctnter on the Or~e County Fairgrounds. RecreaUon Di.rector Keith Van Holt suggests Interested persons call his office at 834-530.'I, so his aldes can map plans for the number of people who will join. 4 Soviet Trawlers Detained in Ghana ACCRA, Chana (UPI) -Four s0"'1et fishing trawlers and their 52 crewmen have betn detalned by authorities here more than four monlhl on auslpclon they were standing by to help restore depo&ed dictator Kwame Nkrumah, police &aid Monday. Police spo~ttmen confirmed a Life mac:ar.ine report that a Ghanaian warship lnLtrtepted the Soviet v~els within the 12-mile offshore limit l111t Oct. 10 and forced them Into Takoradl port. I ' ' \VASHINGTON (UPI ) -Rep. Wrlghl Patman (0-Tex.), charged today that tax.f:xempt foWldations have perverted philanthropy into a "vehicle f~r in· stltuUonalized, deliberate evasion ol fiscal and moral responsibility." Palman, chairman of the Housing Banking Committee and a lon.gtlme critic of the foundations, proposed l h a t Congress levy a 20 percent taJ; on the income of the more than 30,000 tax-frte: otganlzations. He said this would yield an estimated $200 million a year. He te11tlfled at the opening of Houiat ~'11y1 and Means commi ttee hear~g into abuses and loopholes Jn the tax laws P11.tman, a fi ery Texas lawmaker, at one time turned hJs marathon probe of tal'·frtt foundations toward Orange County's Irvine Foundation. The Irvine organiiation has chlinneled hundrtdl or Lhousandl of dollar& into charitable and civic organlu.Uons In Orance County. A massive report on the Palrtlan C"Ommlttee's findlnj;1 on all foundallon.t ii lnvtsdgated was published ' at one thne. Nothing much came of it. 'In today's action, a witness represw· ting the Carnegie FoundaUon cooceded there have been "abuses" but that the philanthropic foundaUon occupies "an honored place" ln t.he American system. Patman, argues that the foundaUon1 h"ad used their tu-free 11tatus to ac- cumulate millions of dollars. "Put most bluntly," he s a l ;J • ''Philanthropy -one of mankind 's more noble instincts -hat been perverted into a vehicle for instltuUonallttd, deliberate evasion of fiscal and · mor::il rtsponslbllity to tht! nation ." Alan Pifer, president or the Carnegie Foundation, one or the nation's oldest foundaUona, tok! the commlttte !Mre have been "abuses," but :tdded : "The philanthropic f o u n d a t I o n deservedly oceuplea an honored place among a large clan of private organiia· lions that are prottclfld and encouraaed under one of the m011l fundamental te~ts of the American 1y1tem." \Vays and Means Chairman Wilbar \ D. Mills (D-Ark.), Is on record favorlni reform.· He said he hoped to get some legislation passed this year, perhaps in the area of foundations, but aid any major overhaul could not come bef«e 1970. "There 11 1 groundrwen of 11nUmcnt in UllJ nauon todaJ -resentment aplNt imposln1 on the lltUe man1 to the' btneflt of the bi1 man," Patman said. Nwnerous cruncllmen r e p o r t e d dozens of l<tter1 dally complllnlna 'bout people' whO do not pay eoough tuea. Rep. John W. Byrna (R·Wlt.). lhe conunlttee'a S111lor Rtpubllcan, 1ald ht was getting · 70 Jet ten a day uklna: for changes In the tax: structurt. Lttttr• &tarted l1oodln& Consrea afttr former Tre•sW')' 5ecretary Joseph YI'. Barr told 1 committff 1n January, 155 people earnlnc moro than Q'.IO,CIOO paLd no ta... llot )'ttr, locludin& • &fOlljl of 21 who niact.e mote than St mlllloo. "\Ye are almost adopUn1 • system of nol-<qUll rlgbls for 111 Ind apoclal prlYlltges to none -but just the opposls.o to thal, special privileges to a '"','' I Patman said. There is no admlnislration-proposed legjslaUoo before the c o m m I t l t e , although Prealdeat Nixon 1aid tht Trt:Uurf woUld submit a tax reform bill Iller. The panel does ha,. nc1I!"' mendatiom -t b o u I h no( 1 but - from · treasury experll wbo studied reform last year. Mills planned to delve Into • host ot pr0po6ed las relonn auggealions after his probe of found1Uonl, including poai- blt taxation of unrelated bu.stness and advutising income of cburcbes and IOC11J organiiaUons. The "worst loophole." Patman uld, was the tax break oil companlet aet for overse11 drilling. Altbou1h . Palman aaw aome merit In the fl ~ percent depleUon allowance for domestic drillin• he said there was no justlfie1;tion for lhe break for forelan erploraUon. Congreulonal Kber1ll have b e e n demanding leptaUon to tither rtdU\.. .. lhl• lllowance Ibey cl1lm lo a I! blWoo bonus to oll firms. Opponents, however. claim the allowance belPI develop new sources. \ ' 11 - ' -. WILW.M ....... REED ........... ' . ., ~'·the lf!i~: 4r 'I • .... , .. .. . TBe: '1~ for trustee seats on tho; ~ove~g boan) o! . the · H,un· lin&to1i':!leach· Union High ·Si:li<Jol Ota!&.t.Jooks like a good one . with the tb?ee incumbents in , the' run .. ning a&llln>t -a (lost o! ~ who have' taken-an interest in the.plight of the 52-sqt..iare mile distr}ct. Trustees · John Bentley, Ray Schmitt and Richard Wilson are going to be on the hot stat during the campaign. The finance prob-- terns of the district are well knOl,\o'D to almost everyone in wet( Orange County and there is a feel· ing that the public may. ha~e lost so1ne confidence in the d1str1ct and its 1ulministration. Carpeting and athletics were t~e big issues of past years, but this year the \Visdom of the trustees in locating schools and b~ying school sites will be questioned sharply. * Doing some of that questioning \viii be Robert E. Dingwall, who led the only successful tax election the district has held in recent years. Bob, who resigned as chairman of the district's full school use citizens committee in order to make the bid for the trustee seat, is joined in the campaign by the other top officers of the conunit- tee. Mrs. BarUetta S u t e r of ivestminster, now acting chairman ~C the committee. is also running, ;i:s is Mrs. Carolyn 1'Iitchell. secretary of the full school use :ommittee. * On the horizon are Gordon Powers of Seal Beach, Dr. James Lennertz. Dr. Ralph Bauer and Mrs. Andrew Yeiser. [ sus~t that >ehind this list there are many, many. more who will file before. lhe period ends Thursday. Three of the present trustees are from Westminster and, of the three, two are in the running. For some time there has been some complaint th~t Westminster, one or the five elementary districts in the high school district. may be over represented on the board. In addition. Schmitt is also on an elementary sshool district board as is Dr. Bauer. All running are sure to question the advisability of a person holding a seat on t\vo school boards. It looks like a lot of fun . Golden Wes t Sets Clas~ Exploring Maii1la nd China Red China -Where is it going? What .:i re its intentions? These and other questions about mainland China will be dealt with by Dr. James L. Catanzaro in a nine.wee k evening course at Golde n West College beginning Tuesday. The class will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the College Center and interested citizens may register Tuesday, Feb. 25 or until 7 p.,m. March 4. There is a $5 rcgislration fee. The class is orfcred as a transfer course for credit, or may be taken as a non; credit course. Dr. caLanzaro will cover such topics as Chinese versions of Manlsm, isola· lionism and China, China's vlew of the Soviet Union and the. United States. the cultu re of Mao, and a projection of China's future world role. Marina Stir ·"li t Plays for Dni1es 11olarina High School guitarist and folk· singer Stephen St. John will make a i;peclal appearance at Golden West College Thursday to climax the campus March of Dimes drive. St. John will pay at .an 11 a.m. concert 1n the Forum. Tht public is lnvited. M part of the Dimes drive, the coDege sponsored a spaahetti dinner and Valen- tine's danc< last Friday. Incon1c Rises Sligh tly WASHINGTON (AP) -Labor dispul., ;i.nd tax ~ases were cited as con· tribuUng facton by the Commerce Department today as it reported the :;mallest monthyl Mse in per10nal incom e Jn more than a year. Personal income climbed during January to a &e890!1ally Adjusted annual rate of f715 billion. a $1.8 billk>l'I Increase. nie· ti5e from November to December had been $5.5 bi!llo<" !Sl DAILY ~!LOT f -T he· ·Law in ·I'O Years· SEAJ.AB Ill HA BITAT Judg-e S_ees Divorce Changes, No Exec utions CORONADO (UPI) -EtimlnaUon of CJpltal punishment, dme,.,,t dlvor<e ru1.. and ltgalbatlon of moat sexual practices were among lhe changes In Anleriean Juriaprudenco predict..i within the next 10· yean by State Supreme C<>urt ~uatice Stanley Mook Monday, "I abandon any 'Claim to beina: a legal JµJes Verne," Mosk told lbe Interna.llonal Academy ot Trial Lawy'ers armual convention, but "I do commend you for inviting me to project lnto lbe future. "A decade f1'om now Americam will look back and wonder how an enlightened society could have so Song tolerated capital punishment," he said. "It will by then have been legislatively eliminated in all jurisdictions, and we will merely be embarrassed at the length or time required for the ultimate reallu· lion that killing cannot be deterred by killing." He predicted the federal system and most states IO • years from now wil~ have adopted california's indeterminate sentence law , and all jurisdictions will have m4de practical use of p.sychhitrl.sts, psyChotogisL!I, sociologists ' and Olhers concerned wllh rehabllltating convicted criminals. A family court, where all family· related matters will be investigated, assessed and treated together, will go a Jong way in replacing present divorce laws, he said. Problems regardlng juvtnlles also will be handled this way. He criUcized current divorce laws ror requiring fault to eiist with one partner before divorce is granted and said such "unilateral fault exists more in fantasy than fact." ln t.be future , trained professionals will investigate the . marriage problem and attempt to reconcile the parties or discover the best solutions. "An order dissolving the marriage will be entered, effective immediately, if the court finds the legtt.imate objects of ma\rimony have been destroyed and thet there is no reasonable likelihood that the Marriage can be saved," Mosk said. "Long. belore the end of the next decade most jurisdictions will provide that no sexual practices of ahy kind are per se illegal, provided lhat no clement of force is lnvol\'«11 thlt hO minor Is a parUclpant and that the acts arc hidden from potential public view," he said. Mosk pointed out that recent rulings protecting the right of privacy ilf marilal relations and the recent liberalizing of laws relating to homosexual behavior in Britain are trends in this dirtctlon. Urging the attorneys to wort toward sim plifying the legal process and to examine why laws exist, Mosk said "What we achieve in the next decade will depend upon the vision and idealism of today's courts and officers of the courts in their determination to preserve liberty under the law." Other changes predicted tor the next 10 years included improvement in the quality of judges including no noJHlt- torney appointments, better and more efficient organiz.aj.ion Md elimination of superfluous procedures, and admission o( any evidence· as long as it is relative to the case. * * * Bill Would .. •• :.·; .. .... ::. .. "!.-..... .. ~ .. ''i\t" <l "' Navy's Sealab ·: ••• ... .:~ ., !,•t .. \ :..! •if. .. • Make · Divorce This is a drawing of ~ab III, the U.S. Navy's underwater !abora- tory. An ~quanaut identified. as Berry L. Cannon, 33, a civilian eng~ neer with the Navy Defense Laboratory, died of an apparent heart selzure· Monday While swimming with team members 600 feet deep near the Sealab off San Clemente Island. The tragedy came as the Navy was attempting to get the Sealab experiment under way. STUDENTS 'OF MONTH NAM~D AT VALLEY HIGH Swimmer Denys Larkin South Africa's Tammy Bonell They're Tops Valley Higli's S~i,ident,s pf Month A foreign eicbange student and a top athlete have been selected as the outstanding girl and boy at Fountain Valley High School for February. Tammy Bonell, 18, an exchange student from Johannesburg, South Africa, is spending a year in Fountain Valley under the American Field. Service exchange program. She currently serves as vice president or the campus drama.guild and is an honorary member of the chamber oC deputies. She lives with Mr. and Mrs. Keith Crozier, 16681 Cedar Circle, Foun· tain Valley. Denys Larkin, 17, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Larkin, 16854 Daisy Ave., Fountain Valley, has been On the varsity swimming and diving team~ for two years. ·He also takes an active part in school drama activities. holding the leading part in the school's winter play, "The Rain· maker." Murphy Urge s Protectio11 For Tuna Boats Off Peru WASHINGTON fuPI) -Presicrent Nixon was urged again Monday lo pro- vide naval or · other protection to American fishing vessels operating on the high st~ off Peru and Ecuador. The new request was made ln separate telegrams by Sen. George Murphy (R· Calif.) and Rep. Thomas M. Pelly (R· Wash.) both of whom made similar re· quests last week . Murphy, In a telegram to Nixon, said there was a "threat to American lives and property" and that the situation waa "Dbviously explosive." Pelly, in calling ror naval protection. said American fishermen were in "danger or injury or even death at the bands of gun-happy L a t i n AmeriCans.'' 'Ibe renewed demands wete lhspired by reports that the San Juan, one of two American tuna boat. attacked by Peruvian gunboats last week, bad been promised It could enter aod clear the porl ol SalillfS. Ecua11or, to let U.S. ~ ' J ~,.. $622,704 ·~ill For SF State SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The cost ol policing the ~ FnndlOO Slate College campus from Nov. I to Jan. 17 wu $821,'lOf. Mayor Jo- seph Alioto Mid Monday. Alioto set the figure In a letter to the city'• lobbyist, John Shelley who was dlrK'tt:d to attempt. to eel reimbursement from the state. About hatr lbe cost repr...nlod S9,729 man·houra spent by officers during their regular duty periods and $141"91 WA» givtn 83 the value of 26,000 man-hour! spent by police rrom nelpbori111 Jurbdlc- Uon~ The only casti outlay was $181,· 160, the cort or poll~ ovmfme and 90me damage to equipment. ofricials view the damage. Instead, the legislators were told, the captain had been denied clearance and fired on \\:hen he went to his vessel after U.S. officials left the scene. "Such outrageous affronls to American rights and dignity must end and con- sequently Immediate· action , •. is im· perative ," Murphy said In his telegram to the President. The California Republican said steps should be taken "lo provide neei!ssary protection. military or otheTwise, £or United States fishing vesse ls •.. " The San Juan was one or two vessels reportedly attacked by Peruvian gun· boats more than 20 miles at sea in waters considered international by the United States and mosr-countries but which Peru claims as ils lerritorial sea. The other vessel, the Mariner, was taken into a Peruvian port. The San Juan fled into waters claimed b'y Ecuador. Fun Club Keeps Doors Open to Senior Citizens If' you're over 50 and would like to make some lriends your age and join a rew Jctivities, the Senior Clliuns' Fun Club of Westminster is waiting with open doon. , Members meet in the civic center, 8200 Weatminater Ave,. every second and fourth Tuesday of the month for a poUuck luncheon with card games and otMr acUvilies afterward. Membershlp dues are S2 per year. The new year begins in April. On Thursdays, from JO a.m. lo noon, club members m;iiy play shuffleboard In Sigler Park. For further inlormaUon call 893411,· e1t. 281 , or ask tor the RecreaUon and Parks Department. r A Dissolution -SACRAMENTO (U Pr \ 'Assemblyman James A. Hayes (R-Long Beach) Monday introduced a bill to eliminate the word "divorct:" from California law and "to rtmOYe acrimony as much as possible'• from the legal breakup of m~iages. Sea Urchins, Sewage Pose: , Hayes said .bis proPosaJ would change Jaws governing groundJ -for t b e -·dissolution of marriage," dJvision or property and alimony. The · bill sets up three grounds for the ending of a marriage : "incurable insanity, .conviction of a felony and ir· reconciliable differences.'' Double Threat to l{elp Hayes said he wants to "remove the harsh tenninology that leads to much bitterness in divorce proceedings." Tl'IC legislation calls for community property to be divided equally, except where (!C{)nomic circumstances dictate flifferently, for alimony to be based on financial ability, the length or I.he mar· riage, and the ability of the supported epouse to hold a job. Hayes said he hoped the provision would correct present practice. where 11limony is used "as a means of punishing lhe spouse who is found to be at fault in the marriage.". · Cory Asks Halt In Oil Drilling SACRA MENTO (U PI\,,.- Assemblyman Ken Cory (D-Ga'tden Grove) Monday introduced legislation asking the federal govemmenl to halt offshore oil drilling until an inspection can be made of each well. The measure al.so urges establishment ()f an lnsura~ fund to be used for removal of oil from the water and lo C1'.lmpensate landowners whose property js damaged by pollution from oil leaks. The resolution asks the federal govern. ment lo strengthen regulations ror federally controlled offshore oil ()pera· lions and pennission for California to inspect and supervise offshore oil drilling facilities and practices. Claarti 1a9 Future By JOHN VAL TERZA Of tM O•llY .. 1111 l"lf Sewage dumped Into the sea -allied with the hearty appetite of u~ spiny sea urchin -poses a threat to valuable kelp beds off the Orange County coastline, says an Orange Coast marine biologist. Sea urchins, explains Dr. Wheeler North of the Calif0tn1a Institute of Techl;)olo&Y's Kerckholf Laboratory in Corona de! Mar, thrive on waste materials cast into the sea by man. ,Jo. tum, he adds, the urchins devour kelp which serves to harbor and spur the breeding of fish. In fact. says Dr. North, sea urchings, highly prolilic near sewage outfalls, already have decimated once lush kelp beds and now are eating young plants so fast the beds cannot restore themselves naturally even though kelp can grow several feet in a single day. The problem , says the scientist, Is of much longer range than the current dumping of thousands of gallons of raw sewage into the sea as a result of storm-dam11ged sewer lines. NEW PLANTS or more con<:i!m to him, is wbat he describes as man's continuing abuse or coastaJ waters through construction of new sewage treatment plants which empty into the sea. Dr. North currently is engaged Jn an effort to restore nature's balance by replanting kelp in coastal waters off Corona de.I Mar. He shudders at Lne possibility of another sewage plant being built between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach to serve future ·~·.,.. ' ' New officers of the Huntington Center Merchants Association are planring a big year. New officers are (from Jett) Howard Matheny, prestdenl; Mrs. Emilie Quick, vice presidenl; Dr. stanley Ami<, secretary, and ~dy PetleriU, treasurer. I> residential developments In that area. "If another sewage plant Is built, those kelp beds along the ahort will · be ta definite danger," he says. The urchins, which can derive • quarter of their dally nourishment from amino acids associated with aewqe, take five years lo develop into a iizeabl1t kelp-threatening group,.Dr. North said. • ·:Thereklre the raw 1ewace currmtly coming out of \be Senta Ana Rivet wouldn't affect the sea urchins. er the ne~eit· te1p, which i.t miles any ta Corona del Mar," be said. 1 REPLANTING PROGRAM For the pasl few years, since the eea urchin theory Wu proven, the bloJogist has developed a kelp i'eplanUna program along with a project involvinl the dumping Of quicklime into sta urcb1n. beds lo kill the sl)lall, spiny creatures. "Even when there Js no ttlp1 to eat. Dr. North said, the urchins can survive on the amino acids from sewage alone. Although the qWclllme lechl4que It cffecUvt over small areu, research ta conUnuing into wide-scale techniqueJ to eliminate the urchins to a rate where their numbers are safe for kelp. . Among Dr. North's teclmlques for mainlaining the balance are an underaea nursery where he and his itaH cro'lt and nurture baby kelp plants. , He also has been experimenting with new specieJ of kelp from wanner climates that can live in the coldef\ coastal waters with tbe benefit of water wanned by electrical power aeoeratin(' statlons. ' NATURAL BALANCES Digi:essing to the Santa Barbara oi~ slick and problema It pose! to natural' balances in the sea, the researcher said> that the slick could kill kelp beds lf- enough oil fouled the plants. He apreaed coocern over the rulninc, by the oil of several projects undertaken: by biologists at the University o£, California at Santa Barbara. Dr. North's research is sponsored b1 the Federal Water Pollution Control Administration. Young Musicians Compete Tonight Jn, Solo Festival Forly talented )'OUlll Fountain Valley musJciana will compete for honors toitl&ht jn the fifth annual Solo Music Festival at the Lamb School, 10251 Yorktown Ave .. Huntlngtm Beach, Competition begins at 7~30 p.m. Solo Music FesUval Is sponsored by the F01111laln Valley &hool District chapter of the C&llfornla S c b o o I Employees' A.saoclation. Cootestants will be drown from aO sinb tluw&h elglllh grlde stuci.nts In tbc ICbool di.ltrSct wbo are .ctlve rnembm ol • llCl>ool band <r -·· Top prile ls I l"°'Week acbolanhip to An'owbtar Music c;amp durtnc the summer. EiCbt ...u.r~sts will be plebe! cr.m lbe field ol 40. The 8'mlllnallol& will perform a ltCOnd Ume !or ielecllGa of the wlnber. Jodge1 inclucle Kenneth Brigl, p.,. mount Unl!led School Dlalrtc:t ; Jim Dellolste, Paramount; Fred PtMn, Sr., Loq Beach Unllled School D111rtc1, ud Gary Wiedman, Seal Beaclt E1-J School Diltrlcl The publle ls lnviled to Wiid!, Iha ~,llll!llclw """""' In Oto ~ Sc-~room. , 1 ' Wllll•m H1rm1nd Is no dummy, but try to tell that to a computer. Hannand transferred from the New York Suite University of Bu!· falo to Syracuse University last September. A computer at the Buf· fal o school marked him absent from classes in five subjects and computed an "F" average for hiin. in each subject for the fall term. Ha rrnand is an honor student at Syracuse. • • • i A 11ew world record was claimed in Graz, Au.stria after a Volkswagen tra veled more th.an fivt uards wilh 57 pa.s- sengers. Inside were 18, two i·n + the l uggage compartment and l the remainder hanging on out- side. i • Several months ago a local Penn· sylvania educational television. Btation ran a program. on the birth of a child and it's a good thing the Rev. Robert P•y1on was watching. The Rev. Payson, using the know .. ledge gained from viewing the show, delivered the baby of one of his parishioners, Mrs. Robert Gast, in her own home. The mother and her 8 pound, 10 ounce daughter, were reported doing well at a Lan- caster hospital. • After compioining in a recent columll that the flmnbot14nt press agent of 1'tsterdat1 II no more, Vernon Scott, UPI Ho!IJITDOO(I correspond"11, '°"' surprised to find the Warner Broth.- ers studio pubUcity departm.tnt'1 life silt fibnglass dummy of "The Illv. stroted man" (Rod Steiger) in hi.s of· fice. Tht fibergla!s dummy cost ·the lihuiio $10,000 ·and will travel os ad· vance man for the film to New York, London, Paris, Tok110 and othe r world capitals. • The Connecticut :Legi&lature's Corrections Committee needed some correction ttself wben it met this week in Hartford. A sign on the door of the ·room where the committee was holding public hearings said: 11Corrct!ons." Nation Pueblo Officer Beaten.Into Cohfession ~' •r Lt. Murphy Tell.s Court · of Torture .by North Kooran Jailers CORONADO (UPI) -When Lt. Edward II. MurPhy Jr. went to of!icer Cllldidate school, the Navy uld #• Amtrlcln prlaoner ci • ., mull Cell the eneDJ1 only h1I name, rank and wlal number. Wben Murpby arose !or the lllth time !tom a Konlll jail floor '1Jck with his own blood, he hid learned 110rr1elhlng dse; wbeo pooplo burt YoU badly enough they can mate you tall:. Murphy, 31, Mooda.y totd a Navy Court ol Inquiry Into the capture ol the USS PueblO that aCter two vicioul beatings by North Korean soldlen he eive a fabe coofossion the spy ship bad Intruded into North Korean waters. Murphy, the Pueblo's execull:ve ofDce.r. Reds Assault Garrison in Mekong Delta SAIGON (UPI) -Flrini lDICblno 1U111 and rocket grenades, Communist euer- rillu mnuhed over barbed wire and Into a South Vldnam,.. ootpoet In the MekOlll Deltl and mauled lta 7lknan garrilnn, mllltary spokeamea lllld today. U.S. helicopter JllWbips whirled to the rescue, kllllng 12 of the hundreds ol attackers. nie mt ol the guerrillu fled. The defenders suffered slx men killed, seven men wounded and 21 mlqing. The blltle empted Monday night 60 miles 10uthwest of Saigon at a baae set up five days ago to convince Delta residents to swing away from the Com· munis:ta. In Saigon, military spokesmen said the Viet Cong aod North Vle- vlolated a 14-hour Tet holldly truce a record 261 times. In a delayed report, they also said the battlesh!p New Jersey &helled North Vietnam Frldly !or the first time this year and wiped out an antiaircraft site that Md fired at a U.S. scout plane. In the detla, allied troops foda, swept through the .,.. around the village o[ Gia Due where the two-hour battle erupted Monday night. They eeited 15 weapons including machine guns and rocket grenade launchers, enough heavy weapons for a JOO.man Viet Cong unil The number of defenders Uated as missing indicated they may have been canted away IS prlaooers by the &lJer• rlll11 or almply fled In the tn!We fighting. In Saigon, military spokesmen uid 1he Communist violations of the alJJes' 6 p.m. Sunday to I p.m. Monday truce triggered lighting that killed eight Americans and at least 151 guerrillu. Another 94 U.S. troops auffered wounds. The Amerlcua took the brunt of the vtolatlons, 191 of them. Another 13 were directed against the South Vietnamese wbo auffered flve men wounded. Cong Turn Down Coalition Rule, Vo'v to Fight PARIS . (UPl)-Vlel Cong negotiators today ruled out any possible coa1ltlon govemment with the current South Vietnamese regime , rejected an lmml· nent ceaAe-fire and vowed to continue to fight. A Vlet Cong spokesman said the Saigon government's refusal to match the Viet Cong's Feb. 15-22 truce, and tbe resumption of American air llrlkes minutes alter a l .. hour allied truce ended showed the "belllcose atUtude" ol the Saigon ,.g1me. "No coallUon ii poulble with these people," tbe spokesman said. His ltlte- ment came two days after a 1lmllar statement In Saigon by Presldeilt N111yen van Thieu ruling out any lnclualon ol Viet Cool In bia cabinet allo "told the Kar-whit they knew alr<ldy -that the Pueblo !\Id been qapd In eoplonage. · Tbe lormll Court of Inquiry by I board .,i five ~ into the Pueblo'• capture Jan. II, 1988, cootlnued today with te&tlmony by two more Pud>lo -· Muriib1 wu die leadoll wltneu !or the thJnj pbue ci the Pueblo Inquiry. deaJlna wllh u.. coo<1uc1 ct the a -. lll1d men during their II mnntha ci capt!Yity In North Korea. Other phuta hive deall with the lblp's mbaloo and capture. Near the concJnakln of hla teatlmony, Murphy wu uked hit ~ ol the Code of Conduct !or Amuicln mi!111rJ mm, laid down In the lllOo duflnl the COlllnlvany over "brllnwullln(' ot u .s. prllorera In the Korean war. · "I think the underlying principle muat be maintained -loyalty to ..... - try," Murphy llld. "However, ,the Ute· ci the art bu cbanpd since the ~­ wu written. Whit we have now, ii a poychological warfare env1romn.n~ I think the Code ci Cood1Jct does, not apply well lo web an environment." · MIJrllby's ordeal took P'-the aipl ol Jan. 29, 1911, six daya after tbe Pueblo'• capture. The vessel's eldpper, Cmdr. IJoyd M. Dueber, alttady bid dictlted I -!...ton to the Konllll ll1aT boatings and threatl that bia crew would be -... by -u Ill, dlllll~ .. aloo(. Murphy WU llr!gpod to !Iii obcN ln a room open to ibe tre.i.iii Korean winter and forced to oquat with i lllck wedged b!h1nd bit knell to cut oil 1IJ!IOd clrtulatlon.· When be w1vtted "' reJJ, Korean IOldler& ooec1 him ... r, botterod hit la~ !'Ith their lllt,I. . Murphy l&ld be IOI! . ...,.1,._ -Ove Umea, and wu N•~:Una from ala,tbe.s ci the mooth and ear. Alter be ~' ClOl1lciouaneu I filth lim<, be _apid .be was ready to 0 eonfess." But the Koreana· !mocked him out again before llCC<pling the oiler. When he wu led befort1 the pilon. qxnmander, Murphy'• mouth " a 1 putlally panly>ed and be could only UPI T•lt""1'8 Oil Goes llp in Smoke Workmen from the Parlin Fork Conservation Camp at Carpinteria Beach bum oil·Soe.ked straw collect· ed on the shorelines near the !lite where a Union Oil Co. offshore drilling rig ruptured three week s ago. Authorities said the flow of oil is slow ly de- creasing. SIRHAN ..• (Coatlnaed From Page 1) the struggle surrounding Sirhan. "l became terribly aware we co u Id have a repetition of the Oswald altultion and terribly aware that it was important that it must not happen again," Unruh said. "Thia man bad to be kept alive and, with the eyes of the world on us, that he not be subject to mob acUon. "I cllmbed up on a table and shouted 'Don't kill him, don 't kll1 blm -We've got to keep him alive!'" Grier spoke aoflly u he told ol Ken· nedy jumping off a plaUorm after a victory s~ and his helping Ethel Kennedy down. Barry helped, too. "I escorted Mrs . Kennedy into the pantry," Grier said. "I could see the senator ahead. Somebody pushed her and I stea<iled her. 'Ibe I beard pops like firecrackers . . . and I reo.lized it was gunfire. "I pushed her down and .someone else carried her to the floor . I went behind a big tray and came around and saw thb: guy there and people around there . "He sUU had control of the gun ao I put h1s: le1 In an arm lock and took my other hand and 1ot the sun "People kept com.Ing at him and so I bit one guy and kicked another on my right and they 1ot the idea we were try1nJ to llVt the suy so they stopped." SF State's Spring Term Off to Stormy Opening SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The spring semester got off to a stormy start at San Francisco State College Monday aft.er a two-week mid-semester break that included two bomb attacks on the beleaguered campus. The first day of the new session was highlighted by the following develop. ments: -Striking • students and f a c u I t y member! attended class for the first time th.ls year to circumvent a new en rollment check which would have eliminated courses not being taught. -Acting President S.l, Hayakawa suspended two Negro faculty member1 for their part in a disruption at a faculty program whert Hayakawa was speaki ng last week. -The state attorney general's office won a resiralning order against the school's elected student offittt1, acUve supporter-$ . of the strikes, on grounds they violated tNSt and spent student body money for unaulhorlted purposes. Haya kawa said the amount may reach 1100,000. -Militants read "Quotations From Chairman Mao" and shouted for 20 minutes to break up a political science class taught by Or. John BunzeI, a public critic of black nationalLsm. -Detectives continued t h e I r In· vesligalion of Sunday's pre-dawn ex- pl~ion which shattered 18 windows in the cam,pUJ administration building. It wu the second bomb blut of the mld- semester break. -Mayor Joseph Alioto said it cost the city $622,704 to police the campus from Nov. &, when the student strike begB:R, through Jan. 17. Dry, But Chilly * * * Berkeley Rioters I 111Swer quatlons by Y• or no. "i had ,..,. enough to uk myoOil why I ilbould fifl'I the war llngltbaDded when othtl's blij sUrrendtted," Murpll1 -... ' ~· ~ be bad beard •, ~Pl ~ coofoalon by 1 voice be tielltv• td Wu Bucher's, but adJ:Rlited under qu-be bid .... •11 ci belllC -lie .aid .... --hro othtr olllcn. bid &Ivon lil,.·bul the tatlniorl~ did nol make it <IW, how be 1mtw this. . • or Bud>er'• IUIT<Dder ci the Pueblo, J\rurphy l&ld u be had beOn Commlndlnl the vessel his decision woWd have been "eueniiaDy the same.". * * * Pueblo Men Mocked Reds, Says Murphy CORONADO (UPi f -The enliated men of the USS ~lo mocked and subverted their Communist jailers the entire 11 months they were in North Korea, the ship's u ecuU ve officer aid Monday. 'Ibey plotted jailbreaks. They filled their letters borne with ridiculous state- ments, knowing these would be read by Communist cemon:. They made obacene gestures when their pictures wert taken. And they always hoped an American rescue mission would swoop down In helicopters to liberate them . That was the testimony ci Lt. Edward MurJihy, executive officer of the Pueblo. Y.onday at a court of inquiry iDto the ve&Sel's capture by North Korea. "Did you ever see anyone get special consideration in return for cooperation with the North Koreana:?" Murphy was asked. "No, nobody," wu bis 1111Wer. During four hours of lnt.erro&ation, Murphy told how two Pueblo enlisted men tried to build a r a d i o receiver so the captured ship's company could get news from the outside world. Murphy said the radio was designed by R&dJoi;nan 2.C. Leroy Hayes, 28, Columbus, Ohio. It wu built with stolen materials by CommunicaUons Technician J.C. Angelo Strano, 23, Hlrilonl, Conn. When the Pueblo crew wu freed: all that was needed to put the rad.lo in operation was a set of earphones. The crew hal:I been trying to steal them with· out success. Murphy said Fireman 2.C. Norman W. Spear, 26, Portland, Maine, with whom he roomed for a few days just after the vessel's capture, suffered a violent beating at the hands of North Korean interrogators. Spear wore engine room work clothes at the time of his capture. Murphy said this apparenU)r suggested to the Koreans that Spear was a civilian. "He came back to our room stunned -unable to move," Murphy aaid. "I think they tried to get hlm to confeu he was a CIA agent. He was only an engjneman -he had no knowledge or our mission ... Murphy said the enlisted men wer1 quartered separately from the officers. They were housed six to a rom. Korean j a i I e r s regularly appointed "petty officers" for each room and jwit aa regularly fired them when they failed to produce cooperation from t h t prisoners. 11.urphy menUoned three wbo lost such jobs because they were ".so good from th8"American point of view," They were Quartermaster J.C. Charles Law, 27, Chehalis, Wash.; Marine Sgt. Robert J. Hammond, 27, Fort Mead, Md.; and CommunJcatilJJls Tethnlcian t.C. Francis J. Ginther, 25, Pottsville, Pa. He d1d not disclose what acts led to their dismissal by the Koieans. Murphy said the Americans never were allowed to cook their own food. It was brought to them in buckets, frtquenU7 covered with files. He sa.ld dysentery and stomach cramps were common ailments. The Americans wert forced to bow their heads when they walked throuah the corridors ol the jail or acldrused Koreans. Subzero Readings Recorded ·in Rockies, Netii England Using ),Tear Gas Dumke Confirms Reagan Charges On Dissidents C•llfornl• ;;;;;::;K"!::lY~caca \ ,-.. (/ .s. , ..... ... °" -rtw ,.......1i.. ..... '"'1(fl " "" --~ .. , ... • 1'11111 ..,...,,., "'""' ...,... """ _ .. .. _, ,......~ ....... ""'"""'-"""""' ..,.... ""' lllrhnl 0 .... 1 ltltll", .... v"'"' Mw.etl t t W91I M II !tit T-1-V•lltv. ,,.. l'lltfl --· """"' ...... ..., .. ...... tlwn\111111 .... ..... ... ... ,.... Gtlt .-i .... ,.,.,..,.. •• ... ,... • ... Jiit """"' Alltliflc CM1t, . """"" .. " .......... ,,._ ,,.., ~ "'"" _,.II • "*"' ., ............... ... ,....... ... ~ --..... Cello ,_. .. tr .. lflt -.111 ...... "" COMI .nf --,.. ,.......... ......... ·~" ...,.. ....,.., .... 1111'11. n " . ,. ... .. .. '1 .. .t( 11 1S T' .. " Jt ti T' .... .. ,. " n . ,. .. , ll ,. .. ,. • a .., .. . &of II .14 .. . n " • • a " " . " It .1t a ., .. .. .. .. • • ... M 4t .n .. . " 41 .u 40 tt Tr " n " " " .. ,. " 4t M Tr 0 ,, l1 .. .11 . " • • .. . " .. " " n a a • BERKELEY CAP) -Striking students at the University or California are using tear gas to d.IP'Upt the campus, They drove out 200 diners and most of the employe1 at the Golden Bear cafeterla Mond11 by tosalftl a 1as ca nister into the Student Union bulldlng. Rising fumes also drove 100 persons from a cafeteria Oft the floor·abt.iVe. Demonstrators set off four cherry bombs and sh•tlered a few windows durln& marcbts lblout t h • campus. Damage WU reported minor. Santa Barbara Sit·in Down to 20 Students SANTA BARBARA (AP).,-1-thin 20 students rtmalned early lodlY out oI abou t 600 who marched Monday into lhe 11tudent onion building at the UnJvmlty of Caliloml1 at Sant.a Barbara and vowed to stay lndeflnlte)J. They Identified thtmlclva u mtrn· ber1 ol the Students for a Democratic Socltty, Black St\ldtnts Un\on and U n I t e d 'Merlcln-Amtrlcan Studenta. When Ibey occoplad tho bu!ldlna. they declared it a '1atodtrit liberated aoot." ..,_ f'•t•re Sp•ees•U Spacemen in future Apollo mi&- ~ slons will wear this extra· vehicular acUvtUea autl Tbe equipment, weighing appro>cl· mateiy eo pounds, consists of extravehicular v 1 s o r a n d gloves, lunar overshoes and a cove r w)llch fits over umblilcal connections on the fronl of the suit. Men also will wear an in· tegrated thermal meteoroid garment wel1hin2 about 19 pousvis. SACRAMENTO (UPI I - A group o[ "black d.luident students" forced a dean ol admlutnns ot 1 state c<>ilq• to enroll 1 number of otUdlllta by threatent"' him with bodil1 blnn, State CoUece Ollncetlor GI-S. Dwnke lald Mand&y. Dumke oMlrmel I ~ made l'r\. d11 by Go•. Ronald lleagln In hro Jpe<dlOa . In Newport Biid! lhlt Ibo college official approved the admlllion of 40 1tudent1 afttt SS other ltudentJ threatened tiim . When Uked lhout Reopn'I chqe, Dumke rtplied: "It dld happen In the •tnae a group of black di.slldent ltudenll exerted preuuret on an admlnlstratlvt official lhlt he agreed to admll - students." Dumke Wei the. lndlttnt occumd "aome Umt qo'' at a (lmpu1 whJcll h•"'"'l<l not Identify. But he said U-lnvolved denied that the otudentl threaltn<d the ldmln!Jtralor by hoidlna swll<h-bilde kni ves to bis -~ II 'lported by Reagan. • ""-KING HUSSEIN OF ~ORDAN VISITS PALl!STINIAN REFUGEE,CAMP Unldontlfltd Arab WOtnln P!Mds With King to Rotvm Htr to Palaotlnil j. ' Middle East Talks Jerusalem House-Hit ' By Blast JERUSALEM (AP) -A hind gre'nade e:iplocied •nd 1-wlndowt Ill • -Ill the Jewfsl! sector of old Jetusalen) today, aborlly lfttr a mystery blur, llartled residents through the city. Wltnessee sljd the 1reqade I blasted I holJlt de!lpatld for J ewhh octUpaUon in E t Monadllem Street. nie street Ill the former Jordlnlan aru has been llr(ely uninhabited since the ltrf Aral>-IaraeU· WIJ'. No injuries or other damage were reported. Residenta of the both East Ind West Jenwlem slid they beard a powerful e:iploslon before ~ srenade wtat oU, but police laid ttie IOUice of the blast was unknown. The Tel Aviv new1paper Haaretz reported today that the Palestinian commando organizaUon Al Falah la -· ''"""" u, 1'69 D,lll Y PILDT lS · • , Nixon Will Back Surtax Extenswn WASR!NGTON (AP) - Prealdtnt NIJ<in'1 bud&et director told eon,..... today· the 1dmlnlltr&Uon wlll IUPP«t 1 CM-YW atenaion ot tl)I! 10 percent aurtax . Nevtttbelw, he l&ld, It fore1ee1 1 abrinklce in thia yeu'• bud&tl ...,pluo Ind poulbly nest year's. llDl!'rt P. M!yo, testifying before t b e Senate-HOUie Econt\'\IC Comrn!t!ff, pro- mised "• diligent eflcrt to reduce out111s" in 1 review of former President Lyndon B. Johnson's $195.3 blWon lllCll 1170 buqet now un- der way. "l am rtall1tie enough, however, to apprecllte that over-all 11viq1 are not likely to be dramatic either for the · few rema.lnillg moatht of 1989 or for Jf'IO," the budget direc- tor 11id. ' ·Rockefeller . Go~g_South For N~on WASHINGTON (AP) • -. .. ' :- ' t • • Europe VnionSnubsFratice , establishing cells · ln weatern Europe and 11 likely to uae them as 1taglna' ~ls for "attackl en Israeli or Jewlsb objecUves." The new~paper's military reporter Wrote: ''Opln!on hue LONDON (UPI ) -Britoin and France's five common market partners t~ spurn- ed President Charles De. Gaulle's demand to cancel a Western European U n i on Council session and went ahead without him. his Common Mubt partners for siding with Britain. II might well precipitate a new crisis inside the pro- sperous six-nation economic club, lhe diplomats said. A complete walkout by Frl!lce from WEU al12r .Wed!>es<Jay's weekly Paris cabinet session was not ruled out by officials here. But the British, kept out is that the rspanslblllty for of the Common Market bf prevent.inc that acta o f two De Gaulle vetoes, h 8 v e sabotage is placed chlelly on 50Ught recently to uSe the tM governments or the states where the cells are beinj WEU as -a forum for regular organized." The newspaper pol~tical consulla~ons with said Israel would report the thelt European Del.Sb~1 , or1aoiUUOn's activities to the ... - l'WJ~~ Colrf, Hours In the cleareat declarat.ion ye[ of the Nlxon ad- minia:tralion'1 poalUon o n whether to Jet the 10 percent surcblr1e on Individual Ind corporaUon income tues ex- pire as scheduled on June 30, tbe buqet . chief told the lawmakers: The 1eve·n perce:it automobile excise la:r and the 10 ,percent telephone excise are aclleduJed to drop to fiVe perce/it Dm JlJI. I. PftS!dent Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller. -· who helped ' develop Fran)Jin ) D. Roosevelt'• Good Neighbor' Policy more than XI years aao. is going south~f-the­ border in April to seek im4 proved U.S.-Latin American relations on behalf ol ~I· dent Nixon. The union (WEU) countries are Brllain and the .six Euro- pean Common Ma r ket members: -France, West Germany, ltaly, Belgium, the Netherlands and Luxembourg. Diplomat.s ·predicted this latest Oareup would push Bri· tain's chWy relations with France even lower. They said It also could touch off renewed acUon by De Gaulle agalnst ·The rumpus flared l~t week when a WEU permanent eoun· ell session was called here at Britain's request, to discuss the Middle East crisis. WEU was set up in 1954 to control West German rearmament. I t s prlnclP.Jl function sUll Is arms control in We.,tem Europe. '.J'he French have· resisted governments C011Cerned. this strongly. 1'1ey interpret 1be Israeli Foreign Ministry it as simply a l!iritish .&(mmick _and . arlDJ' denied_,, know ledge '-°·get around De Gablle's veto 'of w such ac.~yfty. and lrito tbe Commol: Maftitt; ~. · Ai f~ ""ialft:ady bad an- by a back dolr. • · , • llOllleed pld.,lo "t up Euro- France reacted angrily to pean branches which it said last Friday's session. French would be for fund raising and officials described it .as propagandir.ing. "useless," said they would · · )>oy~ and demanded 'It be .. :ii ~tatn and the other · Peru, USSR five went ahead anyway. Italy and the Netherlands sent high. ranking officials of their foreign minillries in what Sign Pact iloiding a rllle and shotgun on the waler tower of White, Ga., George Huskins, 55 year4'1ld construc- tion ,worker, .lb~~ned ~ Shoot anyone who came after hlm.' He scrambled' up the tower crying "The bees are here," and remained for nine hours before his brother could talk him· down, after most of the officials had' gone ·bo,rrie. , · 1 •stew~ • ID Not Girl, So Not Hired diplomats interpreted as a LIMA, Pena (UPI) -The deliberate snub to De Gaulle. Soviet Union expanded I I s MIAMI (AP) -Cello DW from IUCb 1llepd diacrim!nl- France hit back angrily in influence in South America to-. Jr. wan\I to be an airline lion. ·J-~edanex· tension, IDd Mayo11 testimony disclosed that the Nixon ad- ministration see. equal ~ed Ior .the Iilcalrestrihtt. The need for a surpl111, bowever niodeltr in fiscal 1989 Is clear, Mayo said in hls prepartd tesUmony. He coocurred witb the Prealdent'a C o u n c i I of EconOmic Advlsers, whole membe-1 teltitled Monday. that a return to deficit fm.an- cing would dama~ any pro- spect of curbing the i.o- flaUonary spiral. Nixon's conflnnttion Mon· day that the New York governor •Ill be his sj>eclal emissary came as U.S. rela- tions with one of the south'Of4 the-border nations -Peru":.. was near tbt crisis ~tqe. Rockefeller wu coordlnator of Inter-American A ff a tr s under President Roosevelt and helped frame the G O•O.d Neighbor program. No schedule wu annotmetd for Rockefeller's vlllts, but the Whlt'e Home olld eldl of the tours will cover '- four to sl:x countries and 1ut about a ntk.. I 1t.atement, branding the day through & trlile -lleward • Ind cillmo thoro'a meet1.... "illegal" and re.. ment with Peru's new military ••·~-•-·tton 1gainst men for "OW speaks four languages p • • T 'k ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;; -.. -··~-d Is quallfled In every amhna a en .. WASHINGTO.N (AP) --greater Importance than tbe JecUna the right of the others rel!lme. . tbe job In favor of shapely an . -e wtloo to meet without her, Peruvian Foreign Minister sky bunnies. respect but one -he's no\ LONDON (UPI) _ Thieves -.,_. Nwtlrt-bN. llr .. Rogers Urges Senate Ratify Nuclear Pact Secretary of State William P. endeavor to prevent such an 111.e latest WEU showdown Edgardo Mercado Jarrin aaid Diaz, a 31.l.'ar-old Mla"mian. a cir I," said bis attorney, smubed throulh a rear win-...._ '-tk Ces 'i ' 1 Rogers urged the Senate today eventuality," Rogers told the was today's permanent ~the aocord, aigned Monday. flltd sult in ederal court Mon-Robert Bums. dow of a Portsmouth museum s:!!.!~'::, ': =. to ratify promptly the nuclear Senate Foreign Re I at ions seM!on, a routine meeting ended his country'• Jong eco-day charging ~f'P an I tine Di Monday and ttole paintings H...,,..... et,... ..... nooproliferaUon treaty to pre· Comdilttee in a brief slate-called to clean u P ac-nomlc reliance on tht United American Airwi s refused to inB~n:if :f ::::ican o:fi valued at $240,000, includlnj ' Mn. W"'-......_ cumuI1ted business and to States, until now Peru's big-hire him because Of hi! sex R b ndt' "Port It of .417 , .... Aw .. vent "the awesome insecurity ment as the first witness at discuss plans for 1 gathering ge.rt trading partper. nd th b 1 1 tod hil . ii Llberties Union and thlnkl bis em ra • ra an N..,.., ...... c.Af. that could resu1t from the hearings on the pact. of the WEU parllamentary . Tbe pact signals "the OJM'.n-:ighta. ere Y v 0 a civ •1_.:c~ll~en~t:_:w~i~ll_:w~in~.-----_:O~l~d~M~an~W~e~utna~~B~l~ac~lt.:_":_~~~~~~~~~~~ spread or nucl~ar weapons." In his first appearance on assembly In Paris Fel>. 20-21. mg .~f a • new commercial He asked the court to issue I r Capitol Hill as secretary of The French EmbaS8y here !ront and 'the end of an era "There 1 no e fort of state, Rogers made clear the Monday asked that today's m which OUf!'trade was cha~: an order restraining Pan Am Nixon administraUon agrees session be Canceled, and said neled· In on~.' one direction, with it! predecessor that Ute France will not take part ill Mercado said. pact should be ratified swiftly, any ol lbe permanent council's 1be trade agreement w a s that it will not "adversely .: 'ties ,, 1.1 1 b the flrlt between Pen.I and el acu.VI ,, un 1 u r t e r t•· So-Union and came afiect our existing d ense notice 1R:1 alliances," and that it does · just 11 days alter the two na- not create any new security However, an em bass Y tions establShed diplomatic commitment by the Unittd s~an. aaid France slill relatiom. will participate In work of States. the WEU Arms Control Agtn· JET '.9 ~ , J .. -.. NOISE Shaw Jury Gets to See Mardi Gras Callingita•·carefully cy. Three Seek drafted and care f u 11 y ----------NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -balanced" international agrtt-By now moe:t c.f you l!avt The Clay L-Shaw jury and ment, ·Rogers quoted Preli· SMOKE read that we have concluded j udge took a holiday today dent Nixon 's Feb. & atateinent AD Ne'" Seat our presentation of law suits TI again.st the County of Orange on a private ll'Ollt porch from which slressed that nUlica-BAN ASKED and are now waiting !or a trial which they could watch the tion now "Would advbee this SACRAMENTO (UPI) -date. color and festivity of Mardi administraUon'a polley · 0 f A special election to nn the Gras. negotiation rather than con-SACRAMENTO <UPI) congressional seat vacated by The ageregaie amount Is Judge Edward A. Haa:gerty frontatlon with the ~" Sen. Anthony C. Bellenson t~ Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke w a 11 nearly $30,000,000 and Jncludes Jr. said a friend of his ~ad Allhougb the adminl!traUon day introduced a bUI to out. scheduled for April 1 by Gov. the claims of over 900 property donated his porch, about 50 has called for prompt ratUlca-law all advertising of clgaret4 Ronald Reagan Monday. owners here in Newport 'Beach, feet from an avenue down lion, the Senate A r me d tes In California to stop what Three Republicans have al-.Colla Mesa, Corona del Mar which will pass the traditional Services C o m m i t t e t an· he called "the glamorlting of ready announced their candl· and other Harbor areas. Parade of Rex, king of nounced plans Monday for ~=~ .. agents of death and dis-dacy for the seat held by Rein· carnival. Haggerty declined to hearings oo ·military aspects ecke before he r,slped to ac· Now we must wall and see give the location. of the pact. . Beilenson, (0.Beverly Hillsl, cept Reqan'1 ap~tment to when, and what will happen to Haggerty originally had an-Chairman .John Stennis ([).. sakl the legllltt!on would the state'a No. 2 political job. these suits In our battle against nounced he would hold court Miss.), incllCat.ed the hearings make It 8 misdemeanor to ad-They are Jack B. Lindsey, lhe overhead Invasion of our on Carnival Day but was would start after the Foreign vertise cigarettes, cigars and Reagan's fonner legislative homes. dissuaded by attorneys for Relations Committee "1ndl up other tobacco products in secretary; Loi Angtles CI t y both sld ho ·d th The addlU -1 newspapen and magazines es, w 11.1 ey it! own lnqniry. on.., _ _._, __ . d Councilman J. B. Potter, and """'-moot Jm-M•M ~ •· I ed the ••""" I and and mt telcv11Uu11, radio an £1c }"A_,.. w ear a--t\Aomon um hearings could further delay Auemblyman Patrick McGee that we have fUed our c aim llttet-bloct!ng crowdl would ·the~~pa~ct:•s~r1~tillc~1~Uoo~. ---=b=Uibolr:::rds:·======-..:<t~V~ID~N~UYIUJl~··:._ ____ jr.. d&mq .. wtthlll the st.atute prevent witnesses fr o m -~ ot t1J monthl ot reaching the Criminal District denlal. Remember, other Court Building. llrporl llwsult.a have £ailed be- The juqe told the all-mile ...,. <t the t.ardlnels Ill filllli Jury be ~ew they had b<on their dama1e cialml. We feel ii . under r otrll~ bellli lqciJed is lignlllcant that we are not lip for four weeks and that confronted with such a failing. be hid uranaed for them to be 00 the pon:h, ill I quiet enough locaUOP to FtVent their being botbared by the public, from midmorninl lo mldaftemoon. Tn the span, he said, they would be able to see both the Rex and the Elks Krewe of Orleanlans parades. Transportation Aide Improves WM!ll!NGTON (UPI! · ~anspcrtltlOn Secftlll'Y John A. Volpe, holpilaliled for trutment <t • pl»ched ...... 'perbapt a11ravated by bandtbUing, Wll ts:pected to be hack 1t hla deal< Wed- . neldly. The former MlllSIChuoett.a aovemor entered the holplt.al Friday. Aides laid lbe aliment wu appartnUy a repeat ol a 1tmU1r one he had four ,..... ..... ' ,, The Colorful Sound of .,.,. •• .CQ•IJ Music I RADIO KOCM 103.1 FM FAOM FASHION ISLAND, NEWPORT BEACH ••• One of our readers sends us an ldvertlsemenl from the Piiot telling about a new air service to Oakland. lt is inter· esting that the firm ls adver· Using bdore they are granted a permit! • * * Tbere "" lot.a of bwllper stlc\ets on can In the area , hoWever some people have com· plllned that their stkk.ert have been torn off their bwnpetl. u thll happe111, drop by. We'll be happy to alvt you more. And tell yovr frfendl ll>out the batUe ol the "noise over Newport." Stop by, •rtte or call us at 438 El!t 11th St. In Cost.a M ... -<1p1talrl. Pilon< 14H40I. Airport.Not" Abatemmt Comm,tt11 . ' • • Buy a bottle of Seagram's 7 Crown and you an be sure of three thlngt: • Superb Savor • Fine qUality • Appreciative gue.ls 7 Crown ... the un-risky whidtty. Say Susram'• and .. San; '1" ~ ... Susrm Dillilltn c:o.,.ny,N,Y.C. llendH Whlak.ty. 1• Protf, 65'9 Crain Nftl.lral Spldt" /, I I I • • -------.. • " IJ lnARY PILOT EDITOllIAL PAGE I The Pendulum Swing.s I ' Gov. Ronald Reagan rectlved a rousin& welcome when he v!stted the Oninge Coast last Friday. And It wasn't just courtesy ex~tid to the office of governor; his two audlencH---011e adult, one high school students -liked mus:h tba~hehad to say. To the audience of some 700 al the Newporter Inn, hosted by the Newport Harbor Exchange Club, he said: "We cannot have an orderly society it that society Is forced to determlne !lself by threat.< of violence." Reagan made the point, too often obscured., that when diss,ldents resorted to violence on campus, that same violence automatically became the primary is.- sue, not the demands. These dissidents as the governor said, demand free speech. And they deny it to others by intimidation or by the crude tactic or simply shouting down other views. They demand academic freedom. Yet they prevent others from pursuing any .kind of education by harass· inent, by invective and, yes, by bombings and at knife point. .....,. They demand control of curriculum in special areas. In the process, they exclude consideration of any other area but their own. As the Allen-Goldsmith column below reveals, there is a plari-a nationwide pla~for violence and disrup- tion on America's campuses. But another revolt is being heard, too. The pendu· lwn does swing. Across the nation, the people who finance and sup- port the higher education institutions are making noises themselves. They're growing weary. Their patience and understanding of "student rights'' and "academic free-- dom" have stretched as far as they will stretch. They've seen "student rights'' and "academic free. dom" trampled by those shouting the loudest. These new revolters are the taxpayers and alumni \vho ultimately foot the bill for higher education. They : SDS Conspiracy ~'.Details Exposed . ' WASHINGTON -Conclusive evidence is in the hands or coogress.ional in- ye~tigators disclosing the e.mtenct or a detailed plan for fomenting student l)prisings, ag.itational demonstrations and other disturbances and violtnct in flnivenities and high schools throoghoul Ille country. • Instigator of this l\IUonwide conspiracy ts \he revolutionary Students for a Democratic Society '(SOS), io cio. a.lliance with the eltrem.ist Blact Pan- iher party. : Some 300 representatives ol SDS, the Blaci Panthers. the Progressive Labor !>arty (a pro-Red Chinese CommUDlsl fact.ion), and other radical elements deliberated this sinister plot at an un· publicized meeting at Princeton Universi- •Y early this month. , PRIMARY BASIS of their discussion ~as a five-page SOS tract titled "Sm&l!lh the Military Machine in the Schools: /. National Winter-Spring Offen.sjve." • Throughout, the document parallels Communist doctrine, In tenor, terminology and every other aspect jt echoes undilu ted party line ldeo~ ·aod policy, including its clmacterisilc racist .appeal to Negroes. · Great emphasis is placed on portrayblg them as the spearhead of the "mass anli-war and anti-imperialist offensive." "In effect," proclaims the SOS tract. .. the struggle of the blacks in the U.S. is a people's struggle ; a war of liberation that is being fought within ihe U.S. at this time." To ''denote the mid·poinl" of the !'spring·winter offensive," tbt. SOS calls (or a "mass mobilization ln Wasblllgton Jn early April." ITS PU~E is summarized :is follows: "This mobilization will be the clearest presentatioh, since 1965, of sos· political position: Support for black liberation: immediate withdrawal (from '1ietnam); smash imperialism .•• The v.•ar remains, with the black struggle. the primary embodiment of American capitalism . . . We must no longer inerely resisl imperialism. we must mobilize the people to combat lt." To fuel the "Sma&h the Military )1achiue in the Schools" oUensivt among university and high school ltudenta lhroughoot the country. lhe SOS pro- pounds the following nve demands: No ROTC. No war~or cou.oter-insurpoq ~ch. No military or war rec:ruilln&. ---B11 Geo,..e ---· Dear George ; If you want my .ttvice. t- !CEORC E'S NOTE: That's ss far as I ~ver read In those. What kind of a nut would tab advice from a total stranger?) Dear Ceorgr: t am writing to you becluse 1 know of no one tlle &o wrf\t to. L have a problem. I ban. th1a pnlen. which had a lol or r11Uborb. Qver the ytars I have given 8WIJ lillmost 111 of my r1tub&rb.. I "" wonilering. Bow · doa rhuwb roprodtlct. PS.: l lhlnlt your col- ' .. rnn JS Ver/ well written. But ; you rosy rewrite thll letter if -. nec:wary. R.H. .. Dear R.H.: :-Rhubarb, il\S(lf&r u t tnow, reproduces In the ordinary ••1 ~ -tht Slotk brinp ft. And I wouJd n't. rttrite l'V'U' letter for 1rt)1hing in the work!. 11 • No draft assemblies in high schools. No high school sertdinc of n1mt1 to draft boards. IN URGING TIDS oul-INkul COm· mlinirt agitaUonal altact, SOS stres!es two points: "(l) 'Ibis struggle should rKll be seen primarily as a university struggle; it is necessary to make stl!dents fight the universitiea not as stode.nts but as radical! attacking A mer J c a n im· perialism. This means that, o( necessity, it is more than a right al the universities. The war is racist as well as imperial. "The fodder o( the war is black arn;t working class youth (30 per~t of the soldiers in the Vietnam and over ,j() percent <if all casualUes are black}. Therefore, <iur program must cncompa!! off<ampus as well as on<ampu.s actlOD!, especially around high ieboola. We must arUcalate and demomtrate the class nature of thelt military lmtltutions, u well u their racist nature -that ROTC su~ the officers and high schools supply the G.l .a for imperialist wars. . "fl) A NATIONWIDE attack <>n the ROTC would severely hurt the military . ROTC exists in 343 campuses ·and in man:Y Midwest high schools: in some places it la compulsory • • • ln the ·case of high school demands, a coordinated university-high school attack will ~gin the articulation <if the ·growing rebellions of black and white hiCh achoo! students in the direction of a permanent radltal movement." Listed aa planners and organizers or the April 12-13 "mall.! mobiU&aUon in WastJtngton" are the following: "Lewis Cole, Columbia SOS ; Dick Fried, New Jersey regional; Juan Gonzalez, Columbia; ~fike K a z i n , Harvard : Eric ~1ann, N. England reg.; Bob Kirkman, NYU; Tom Jlurwitz, Col- umbia; Reger Lipman, U. or Washington : Chip Marshall, Niagara: Joe Kelly, Niagara region ; J im Tarlau, Princeton: Jean. Weissman. WDRU ; Dan Swinney, \VDRU.'' . UNDER THE subtiUe "Strategy," the sm tract directa that chapters adopt the five demands as the basla for local drlvea in universities and high schools, and for initiating "militant actions around these demands immediately after the Wa.slµngton march." Repeatedly the document Elresses t.hft these demands "must always be made explicitly anti-racist as well as anti-im· perialist. ·• ' This is esaential, it Is explained. In- order to "CQOrdinate organlting and local acUons Oil a long-term basis around a n1Uonal ~am and u part o( a larrer Jthte17." JN PURSUING this "lar1er strategy." the SDS tract h1yt down one stern ad· monition -make IW't to relaln "complete control". ''Whtie we should be apen to working with pe<iple In cMher or1anh.atJons," says thf directive, "we murt. undertake to kttp the oraanlutlonal Implementa tion or tht: pro,ram completely undtr our control: that 11, fund ral&1n1. tacucs. Uterature. advtrtialng, travel, etc." Also sttoDCIY advlaed b lbal j 11nlUal contact.I In hJ1b .cchools be made with black sroups." 111 Rtliert S. AtkJt alld \lob A. Gtlclsmflll hold ultimate contnl over .all of the university and col· Jege .. boards of regents, treasuries, academic senates and Ille teachers and the students In them. To tbL'J eroup, Governor Reagan and San Frapdsco Slate'• embaWed acting ptteldent, S. I. Hayakawa, are emerging as hen>es of the hour. The applause glven the gov...,.r In Orange County Is lndlcaUve of what 'he would receive In any American city with lb• same speech. Deadline Is Noon Thursday Bein( a school board member has become an in- creasingly complex, tlme-conrwnlng and thankless job. Maybe that Is why only st per1011s have filed so far for 34 board seats to be filled In • dozen school trustee elections alODf the Orange Coast on April 15. Most of them are iicumbents. In termS of service to the community, in terms of contribution to the fulur~ and In urms of expenditure of public funda, there is no more important posiUon in local government than that of school hoard trustee. The deadline to Ille candidacy papers for school hoi.nl elict!bnt is next Thursday, February :Ill. Unless more aspirants file in the next 36 hours, there will be no con,tesl ln seven out of U school districts and, ther"" fore, no election. A new state law say1 that uncontested elections shall be cancelled at DOOll on ,tb6 last day of fillng. In other worda, where there ia 1only one candidate for a school board poll as of noon Thuniday, that elecUon will be cancelled and the single anoounced candidate will be declared elected. Persons interested in btcominf candidates for school boards have unlil noon Thursday to go to the of- fice of their school district and make out a declaration of their candidacy. Thal'• all it lakes -thal. plus a sincere dedication to service. .. ...;; ... t(~;t. TENTING (}.J !HE OLD CAMP6Ro UN t7 'Who Doesn't Want to Ban The Bomb?' Congressional Bearing on Pueblo Case To the Editor: .. One can hope that the recent literary skirmish concerning tbt refusal of the Orange County Board of Education to purchase John Hersey's "Hiroshima" and Frederick Lewis Allen's "The Big Change -America Transforms Itself 1~1950" ha,, led some citizens to read both well written, important books. More often than not, thank heaven. ailly, i!l-dend ollempts al lhoaght control bring about a lharp anlT)' reac- tion enUre!y unexpected by t h e perpelralon and that's unbeallhy. IT HAPPENS THAT I own lint odi· tiOM of both "Hiroshima" and ''The Big Change." I have reread them and il is hard to understand bow anyone aside from those with Bircher-like prtj· udices can make claim that they give aid and comfort lo our enemies. Mr. Hersey waa a correspondent wi th the U.S. Marines on Guadalcanal and helped lo lmmortalJu lhal lint tough assignment in driving back the Japs in his stirring Sook, "Into the Valley," (Allred A. Knopf, February, 194.1). It is a splendid job of reporting In which he makes no attempt to justify or danm our presence in the Southwest Pacific. NOR DO~ HE in "IUroshima." Again, llersey does a magnificent piece of reporting. Leave it to others to justify or curse President Truman's agonWng decision.· (It is worthy of note that since that first bomb was dropped weapons more than 2,000 times more destructive have been developed.) Who doesn 't want to ban the bombs? Some dentists? My copy ol the first edition or "Hiroshima" is probably by this time a collector's item. It is the Aug. 31, 1946 edition of the New Yorker ma.gai.ine. On page 15 a brief box reads: "TO OUR READERS: The New Yorker this week devotes its entire editorial space to an article on the almost com- plete obliteration of 1 city b)' one atomic bomb, and what happened to the people ol that city. Jt does so in the conviction that few of us: have yet compm.ended the all but incredible destrucUve power of thil weapon, and that everyone might well take time to ccmsider the terrible implications ol its Wit:. 'Ibe Edltora." SURELY BOTH Afoscow a n d Washington live in awful fear that some madman in China or Ult Atid·East will ignite a spark wh1ch wUl bring about nuclear catastrophe -briefly, the end or modern civillution as we know it. The end of all of ua wilhin the reach of fallout. As for Frederick Lewis Allen's "The Big Change," it tells or the-truly remarkable progrtu the U.S.A. has made in a brief SO yean, of brlnginc aboul an almost unbelievable advance ln the 1tandard ol Uvtnc for the aver.ace American. FAR FROM pralsm. lhe USSR, as the Santa Ana denttst IUUests he does, Mr. Allen dlnWI Irrevocably the Com· munist cure for oor troubles. And we do .cull have troubles, don't we? It mlght be 1 good Idea for our would·be thought controllers to brin& themselves to 1ctually reading and lh1nking about the mes.sa1es of the books they ban. GENE McNERNEY Major, USMCR (R<l) l•fhlrt .,._ ,........ .,.. ......... ~ ...... ~'*ilN _....,. "*' ........ Ill -... W '-. '"-rl91'1t fl ....._ tttt.1' " ltt '"° W -'"""' '"" 111141 " ......,,..., "" """' -· ~ ,,.,...,,,,. tt11 -1rw ...,,.. .. "" -""" "' .. ,,.,,..... "' ,...... ff lllffkltftf ,._ "' .,.,.... •• Public Has Three Queries WASHINGTON -Various projected inquiries in Congress on the Pueblo case ought to be consolidated so Commander Bucher and the crew will be required to appear before only one committee. There is sufficient precedent for a single investigation and common sense suggests this even without precedent. Judging from letters to congressmen. the public wanb to know three things: 1. WHY DID NOT the Navy have an established procedure commanders of sucb oil-chore aurvelllance ships wae required to follow in the event of their capture? Who was responsible for placing the Pueblo in IUCb an esposed positil'.m without arrangement.a for its support <ir withdrawal In the event of attack? Z. IN VIEW OF the foregoing was Commander Bucher justified in sur· rendering the sbip without adequate measures to dispose of secret equipment and material even though to have done otherwise might have resulted in sinking the ship and loss of the crew? l. UNDER CAPTIVITY was Com· mander Bucher justified in falsely con- fessing an invasion of North Korea's territorial waters on a spy mission for the purpose of aaving the lives of his crew and gaining their release? Of these questions tbt third is possibly most heavily laden with emotion, for it involves the spirit ol. our times, the morale of the armed forcea, and the validity of our military mission in the world. It involves questions of duty and honor as they are asserted in the code or conduct ol. fighting men in the anned forces . That Spartan code sprang from another time in public revulsion against the tarncoats, the brainwashed and the confessors of the Korean War who fed doubts aboutotthe fortitude and dedlcaBon of America's youni when called into batlle. TWENTY THREE of more. than 7 ,000 American prisoners in Korea refused repalriation. Scores of others were separated lrom the services, reprimand· ed or permitted to resign after their repatriation. President Ei3enhower set up a special commission which brought forth lhe Spartan code or highe!I dedica· lion to the cause of the United States so that never in lhe future would American fighters quail before the enemy when captured. Article V of the brave code states: "When questioned, sbouJd I bealme a prisoner of war, I am bound to give only name, rank, service number and dale of birth. J will evade answering further questions to the utmost of my ability. I will make no oral or written statements disloyal to my country and its allies or harmful to their cause." IT COULD BE JUDGED that Com- mander Bucher violated this code when his confession gave the North Koream a propaganda document to spread over the Far East to prove the wicked machinations of the b I oo d ·stain e d capitalist warmongers. A wave of compassion for Commander Bucher in his ordeal has swept the country, taking the fonn of demands that the code of conduct be revised so that a captured American can tell his Communist tormentors any fabrica- tion. sign any confession, and procraim to the world that this is U.S. policy so that no such fabrication or confession will be believed . Feelings run ·very · strong ag ai113l Americam being forced to undergo the. inhuman tormenu inflicted on Com· mander Bucher when they could be tenninated by a phony confession. But it is not all quite that simple. THE COMMUNISTS do nol recognize the Geneva Convention's protected status of prisoners of war. A prisoner 'vhB confesses to crimes against an enemy state may dig a hole for himself and be hauled before a rigged court ··as a war criminal where he couJd be sen· te.nced to prison for the rest of his life. Commander Bucher and his crew faced that possibility, Subtle and cruel psycholog ica l pressures c:ould lead a weakened p~r from one confession to another until he finally revealed some scrap of in- formation, large or small, which was a valuable contribulion to an enemy ·~ pattern or intelligence. The arts of military psychology are far enough ad- vanced to gain some knowledge from confessions which are patently phony. ASIDE FR0!\1 THIS purely intelligence aspect, however. there is something to be said for the spartan code of conduct as a dec laration of resolution and faith which can sustain a strong or weak man in his painful ordeal. What is to be said, most of all, is that this is not a simple question. It is not one <in which Congress should legislate, as advocated by Rep. Jonathan Bingham of New York, much in the same spirit as the students who "'ish to take over the discipline or great universities. But it is a question which, al the right lime, should be reconsidered by a new presidential commission represcrl- tative of competent military and civilian thought so that the duty and honor of an American fighting man can be more carefully defined in a perplexing v.·orld. The Trouble With Advice Tttoocbts At Laree : The trouble wilh advice is that you don 'l know whose to take; and if yo11 know whose to take, you don 't need advice. • • • I read a motto the ether day that went : "Shallow men believe in luck: strong men believe in cause and dfect." It shouJd havt: added that wise men know that luck <iften intervenes between cause and effect. • • • A good chainnan or a meeting is one who has the abilily to lel each person speak his piece without Jetting the meeting 10 to pieces. • • 'Dear Gloomy Gus: Why do clerks In the trading at.amp stores trtat customers like they were "'elfare clients? We pay, end pay well, for the stamps that con· vcrt to merchlndlse. I'm tired of their "ouW-stocl." and the long "·aiting for servlCe. -D. L.B. The kind of ••love" that separate.t lovers rrom the world ts only a fonn or inf1tuaUon ; the only love capable of being pennanent and productive is that which joins the lovers to the world, and ridiates its inll~ rather than reciprocating U between only two. • • • The way to cure the. symptoms of revolt in this country, or In any country, is by more freedom. not len; as C. Stanley Lowell poin~ oot: "Revolution in a rree country is a contradiction In ttnns -freedom u lsts for the purpose of making revolution un- nece1Sary ... • • • One reaaon that modem rock Dlll!lc doe.m'I get lhnluaJ> lo adolll ii lbat we "''"' c:ondlllon<d lo lblen cnly to the tune. and the lyric:I wu~ lmlevant or hopelessly banal: but ln modem tunes, ~ words art crucial to •"1 1ppnclatlon o( what the--L'J lryfnl to say. • • • with the idea of "conforming·· is the best e\lidence that we are not conforming too much -fer a genuinely conforming culture is unaware of what it is doing. and assumes that the con\lentiona/ 1s the natural. • • • We hive studied the way men behave under stress in jungles, in desert.~. marooned on islands, underw ater in sub- marines, and even encapsulated in outer space -but the way millions are force( to behave under the permanent stre+ o! the asphalt junale in urban slu rTW has not been studied sufficiently to t:vo~ the wide.!pread sym1>1thy that wou lll be .necessary to abolish th is tiistort cf e.n\11ronment. t • ---WWW-· Tuesday, February 18, 1969 . Thr· rdftorfal peg• o/ Ult .Daily Pilot lttkl to tn.form and iiim- uloU rtcdn1 by J)T"tltntfng thit fttt0.tpeptr'1 opinlon1 and com· mentory on iopfct of fnre.,.tst and lfontfkonct. by prov iding a forum for I.ht t%pN:.tsion lJf o"r rtadm· ophtiom, and by prr!tntino Ult dtverst vlew- poiftf.I Of inf°"""' C'.lbs1rver1 end 1pokumn on topfc1 o/ 01r dav- Robort N. Weed. Publisher > 1"l'le fact that we are so preoccupied r '----·--------'- The medical dlagnosls Is not always the same as lhe "cltJSf:" ot death - the m·t d I c a I d\qnosts may be "congestive heart failure.," but the cause or death may be alcoholism : or the mcdlcal diagnosiJ may be "natural caustS... but the true cauae of Wth may be mtlanchoUa and loss of stll· .... 1!<111. • • • I ~! I l .I e ·-e " • • 0 y d ' ,_ s • r 1 ' • ( 1 ' l t T-,, Ftb<ult)' 18, ltff DAILY Pit.OT 7 . ' A~y ~~~s'. V~r~e ' . ' . . . Is 'Ode to a Nurse'· • Mutiny Trial . , . ) - Moved . ' SAN Fli.(NCtSCO ·~UPI) - · 1 A mlllt&;ry Judge ' t).as ordered the. trial of a rourth soldier 'on mutiny charges moved to ' 11h isolated Arnly camp near Death Valle.v to•,'protect the .proceedings from antiwar pro- testers. In granting a change of By L ~t. BOYD out of that furry litUe phony:·. : ·~~~ Mw~::yd;t~bs~~~ NOW OUR LANGUAGE . DlJRiNG an lnternaUonal that the neW site, Camp Irwin, tilAN is stlll scouring arouad art feStival in East Berlin, 31 mile.. tram Bari tow, without success to tum up the Communists on television "seem! to me to be the least some explanation why the recited that Robert Frost likely :area· for PIJ;bllcity . "and word "heel" is used to labe l poem called "Mending Wall ." protulets." , Pair Guilty In Double Mate Kil1ing a contemptible person. . Therefrom, they q u o· t e d . The ctiange was reqtJ;eSte.d POlJND the following recent '''Cood fences make good by the dviijan lawyer 0( J>fc. LOS ANGELES (UPI} - classified ad touching: "Wish neighbors." But deleted the J9bn Collp,' 20, ~acramento. A former policeman and his t4 dispose of late husband's key line, "Something there Is . ~acing eourt, mar.tlal on platinum b Ion de girlfriend rdany tooli. Please examine that doesn 't love a wall ." mut1ny1 charges for .bJs, role v1ere convicted Monday of the them and pay whatever J:~l .That's the bunk! The poem among %7 Gls in a &t.d.own "double indemnity'' murders feel they are worth.''. ! : E<A· w11s written before the flr~t, strike at the "Presid.io Stockade of their spouse:S .. in a scheme PERTS SAY some \>oltled food world war ... WHILE ON PO. last fall. , · to collect on i n s u r a a c c st.aYs considerably fresher iJl El'R.Y, lhe anny officer wlio ·The firit three soldie~-were policies. tbe refrigerator if you ·leave has taken up ver•·~since..1lis tried at the, Presidio, con-Paul S. Perveler, 31. and tlle lid off. Olives, for ffi. rel.itement submits another : victed inii sf:ntenced )a.st week W.rs. ·Kristlii.a Cromwell, 27, st.a.nee. • .HERE'S ONE to ''Ode~ a NurSe" ii ihe tlUe. to 14\ 15~ and 16 years at both were found guilty of first spring on the family scholar. ti. !~~,','Her attitude Is too hara J 8 b 0 r 8 t Fort degree murder in the fatal Why d.oeS, 'honeysuckle always pliltonic-And that's w h a t Leavenworth, Kan. . shooting of her husband, twlne1 counterclockwise while makes if ·SO' ironic-The ills The laWJtr. Ron Sypnicki Y.arlin, Dec. 11, 1966. mornin'g glory always twines to wb~ ttie flesh is heir-Oan't ·or Sacramento, queStlon~ the Perveler, &-foot, 2 ·Inc h clockwise? .• UNDERSTAND 1ll bti cured by Joving care." 10 omcers on· the court tor mer Los Ange I es uie Japanese have come up \Vhat do you think of it? Tl\e martial board se:~ed to try policeman. also was convicted i:flth a television set about gentleman has ' a knack, Colip and argued tHey could of first degree murder in the the size of your fist . Intend what? . be biased because of publicity shooting death of his second It Is Datlflla~ 'Bullet Riddled ' ' BQdy Identified EL MONTE (UPI) -The relatives and friends of Anita Arteaga, 22, were quesUoned loday by detectives to determine how her bullet-rid· died body came lo be buried In a shallow grave beneath her parents' home. An autopsy performed Mon- day on the decomposed body revealed she was s b o t numerous times in the face and chest. She disappeared in lbe northern CalUornia comrounit)" of SaUnu Jan. lS, three days before her schedul· ed marriage. Detectiv~ sald altl)ough no one bad been arre.sted, nobody had ~n cleared as a suspect. "There are 1 lot oI loopholes to close." said Lt. Robert . Campbell o! the Sherill's Homicide Bureau. Anita was· the eldest of seven childnin of Silvester and Consuelo Arteaga. 'Ihe father discovered the body Sundiy partially burled undeneath the kitchen of their home. Anita disappeand Jan. 15 In Salinas where' sh< had 1one to be married to a serviceman staUoned at nearby Fort Ord. Hu uncle, Adoullo Maldonado, dropped her off In downtown Salinas where she wu to get 1 blood test from a )Jhy&iclan. She was never seen alive again. Her fiance, Pfc. Welsey Harrl..agton of San Gabriel, .said. "Nobody l ever knew disliked her. She had a nice personality. was kind to people and liked them . But she wa s shy." HarrinJton said the entire f3mily approved of the wed· ding and Anita got along well ' with all of her relatives. Nazi Support Bomb Suspects in Court to get one or those. THE FIN AN Cl AL EX-over the earlier trials". Two wife, Cheryl. 22, la~t April NONE TOO WIDELY PERTS e St i m' ate Aristotle .admitted lhey might. 20 and of the attempted REDWOOD CITY (P) -weapons or explosives, con- KNOWN Is the fact that St. Onassis' incorile to run-around "l have no doubt the court murder of his first wife, Lela. Seven of nine persons ar-spiracy and criminal syn· Patrick is the patron saint SI0,000 an hour." Amazing, i! would sincerely try to render 30. June 25. 1966. ralgned on charges including . dicalism and Inciting others cf Puerto Rico. Why is an true. That means on any given a fair and impartial vttdict," The same five-woman, recent terror bombings on the to commit criminal acts. oddity. \Vhen their island was day before lunch , he picks said Snyder in granting the seven-man jury which San Francisco Peninsula have overrun with ants in 1536, the ui> enough to ,pay for a $40,000 change. deliberated three days before entered pleas of ianocent Several people al the &r· Puerto Ricans prayed lo St. house. ln one hour he earns "However, I feel that the returning the verdicts, will before a municipal court raigrunent Monday w o r e Patrick to clean up the place wbat Kn. Jacqueline Bo,vter;, dqtif~lil :t b t 1 cue is ~ convene Wednesday in the judge. . . swastika lapel pins and "white the way legend tells he clean-Kennedy Onassli received 1n publicity In the press ln this ·penalty phase to determine The other ·two had their power" buttons. ed the snakes out of Ireland. a year as a President's wldoW. · area -the publlclty is na-U the couple should be: sen-cases continued Monday to Outside, two men distributed Shortly thereafter, a ~loud· A pension she now declines, ··ttonwlde. J thlnt the ~ger tenced . to death in the gas allow them to consult at-JeaOets saying "the American burst scrubbed the ISland ~ inctdentally. What ~Qllld .you arl.iies from a ,,. o 1 s I b 1 e cbunber or life imprisonment. tomeys. Nazi Party gives its full sup- antieu, almost. "'do With that kind of-money? baclilaab," be 1ald. PerveJer and Mrs. Cromwell Prellrilinary hearings will be port to these defenders or the .CUS'J'9MER SERYICE: Q. "' I'd buy that' trqut firm .l'.ve He · explained that "har-· met··fiVe yein ago when he held Wednesday for the seven, white race." "WHO do you like best, been after and dredge the rassment insults and.thrtats'' went to wort as an insurance six men · and one ·woman, Muncipal Judge Roy W. ~lu~tley or Brinkley?" A. So creek. .of antiwa'r d'monstrators who adjustor for the Southern charged with Uieg81 possession Seagraves reduced ball to you re trying to trap me, are RAPID REPLY : Yesj sir, -have crowded the courtroom California Automobile Club. or transportaUon of deadly $6,250 Monday. y~? How can 1 nan_ie on; now it's repOrted there are and marched outllde "could , She wor~ed µtert as a clerk. 1;::==='======"======-"======.I without i~sulting ~e other · more bald-headed men in the have a backlash, which could They-. were arrested .last Never nund, the J~ue can cify of Long Biach~ Cal; mall 'advetsely affect the aa:ustd." ·,May 1. be evaded ~eatly. Think Harry fo! man than anywhere else Reasoner 1s about the best earth Surprised to hear · th b . Q "WHAT on . Ill e us1ness. · · · it too Thought S t . DOES YOUR Name Game ' . Fl d that ha I bout f 11 w Petersburg, a., ma e man ve o say a e ~ s claim called Owen?" A. H~ cla1!115 Y~ur stions and com- they ~ have an inventive ts :-: WeZc:Omid and streak m thelr natures. Cou1d ~ d ·h be, altho oUb.and 1 can only ~lt be. w~ to erevn po~ lhiDk Qf one Owen who ever SJblt in , C~cking U_p. Invented anything. Owen " .Addre~s ·~' to,, L. M. Smith the man who devised • Boyd, in ca.re of the DAILY the &st mechanical rabbit foi PILOT, B~·Z~75, Newport doa: tracks. He made millions Beach, Calif., 92663 · Kidnap Suspect Gets Ten Years for Assault .SANTA MONICA '(AP) last Aug. 30 which ended when Robert Lee Dacy went on trial the agent's car rammed today for the kl"dnaping of Dacy 's. Author Boosts Bill On Campus Pro.t~ts SACR.iMENro (uPJ) Tbe authOr of leglllalloo to k e e p trouble-mabn students, profeuors • n d others -off University or Callfomla aod 1tate college campuses defended , his ~ey bill today 11 constitutional. campus. · aiier. Ol1C•, being ordered· tt leave. Anotlier de$i81lates UC cam· plti police as "peace officerS" and provides that a person assauJting a member of the campus police could be sebtenced to serve at least five years in prison on the first offense. LUNCH AT MR •. STEAK ' ' HOT SANDWICHES: BIG DADDY STEAK SAN s.r .... d Ofl • Frtncli rO/l with Frtnch frit1. THE "DUKE" BURGER 1/l lb. chopped 1irlei"•' Frtn(h frl11 . · ' THE "DUKE" BURGER WITH CHEESE 5•'1'• •• •h0¥• with '"'It'd A1r11ric1ri ch•••• toppin9 • ROAST BEEF ON A BUN · the ~year-old son of a Beverly The FBI agent said be Hills banker. In a Los Angeles pursued Dacy to rescue court Monday, he was sen-Stanley SW!ord Jr .. tl,le kid· "I don't think everyone under ill clrcumstancu has a right to come on campus," , said Stn. Donald h. Gruosky CR·Wataoavllle). 1'lt'1 not a i)ubllc beach or park. It's a university." Two bills Introduced by Grunsky, Republican leader ti~ the Senate, come before the SenJte Judiciary Committee for the first committee test of tough anU-demonslraUon legislation.• Although dozens or bills have been introduced to puniah unruly students or faculty members, the Grunsky meastires art tbe first to be beard-by a committee. · The key bill allows the cam· puS chlef admlni!trative of- ficer to nolUy a person "that coueot to remain on the cam· pas . ·._. has been withdrawn whenever it reasonably ap- pears to hbn that the presence of such person may threaten the orderly operatlon of (the) campus or facility." Slic•d thin for t1tft. Fttnch fri••· CRAZY DOG Ftot lon9 hot dt9, Con•y hlend 1tuct, poltlo chlp1. 1.10 .99 1.04 1.10 .90 .. tenced to io years in federal naped boY. and recover a prison for assaulting an FBI quarter-million-dollar raMOm. · nfrlcer. "The only reason no one lJ.S. District Judge A· . was killed was because he Andrew Hauk, imposing the ran out or bullets," Judge maximum sentence, describeii Hauk said of Dacy. "The court Dacy as a "veritable maniac." cannot condone this kind ol Dacy, 40, pleaded gui1ty Jan. violence.'' 31 to wounding Emmett D. •-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; One bill would make it a misdemeanor for a perSQn to either remain on or return to a state college or university Doherty in the shoulder during II ::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; , 1 btgb.sqeed au~oblle chase - Accused Slayers Plead Innocent LOS ANGELES I AP) '- Two brothers who pleaded in- nocent to slaying silent screen _idol Ramon Novarro y,·\U return to court Friday for the setting of a trial date. The pleas y,·ere entered P.fonday by Paul Rob e rt Ferguson, 22, and his b"?ther. Thomas, 18, both of Chicago. • Superior Court Judge Sherman W. Smith denied a defense motion to dismiss the charges. " LET'S BE FRIENDLY l! you have ne\v ncl::;hbors or know of anyone moving to our area. please tell u1 so that ,~·e may extend a friendly welcome and help them to become acquainted ln their nf}l' surniundlnp. ·Huntinaton Seitb Visitor '61-4Mf Costa Mesa Visitor I Hl-4M' So. Coast Visitor 494-0579 Harbor Visitor 494-9361 in Leasing. YOU CAN IAYI MONIY IY LUSIN• You ctfl tft•11 '''" c1r1 •t r1t11 b1low 01t t¥tr19• co1t of 1wnifl9 • cir. Tlt i1 i1 1r11d1 poulblt by th1 low r1!11 •t which we c111 borrow c1plt1I. vol11m• di1- co1111h, t nd th• fl1lw r11 tcono1r1ic1 of f111t typ1 op•••· tltn1. Wht 11 l1 t1lri9, y•ll p1y 011ly for th• 11 ,....ic11 •• yow rtc1i¥1 tktll'I. LI.I.SING IUMINAm M"IW CAI SHOP'IH6 AND UJD CAI Dl5'0SAL PiOILIMS. Th, both1rtom1 ordtt1 of 1htpplnt ftr Y••tr n•w ctr 111d di1po1Jn9 of yo11r u11d c1•, i1 11imin1t1d wh111 you lttlt from UI. HO CASH IHYESTMENT IS n9u1110. Ptop11 who bvy tht ir c1n• pr•p•y for thtir tr1ntporl1ion ovt r tilt ctr'• llf1 cycl•. Wh111 l111iri9, yow p1y only for th1 11rvlct 1 t1 yt11 rt cti¥ th11r1. Thi1 fr11• lht c1piltl Y"' wo111d h1v1 i11¥11t1d in ctr 0Wlltr1!.ip f•t incom• prod11cin9 opporl11niti11. . LEASING SIMPLIFllS YOUI TAI llCOIDS. Allow1bl1 t11t dtd11ctlon• ••• ••1ily CGfl'lput1d tnd dtcw1r1•nl1d on 1111• c•r1. Mtny owfllf· 1hip co.ti which ••• ofttn o¥ttloo\:4id ·,,, t 11to1r11tict lly irlcludtd in your d1duction1. FREE MAINTENANCE Wt 0H11 you 1 t.41i11ltntnct Coupon lcio\: w!.ich covtn t v1rythin9 fro1r1 tu"•·Upt tnd oll ch1111111 11 r•commtnd1d int1,....1l1 lo tht ttpl1ct1r1t nt of wind1hitld wiptt b!1d11 tnd ftUligkt bulb1. AU you do i1 I•~• your c11 to •ny tulhori1td lincoln·t.41rcury Ot1l1r 1nywht11 In th• country, hind him your coupon tnd 1l9n tht rtptlr ord1r , , • 110 fun . , •. no rtd ftp.•. And wt c•n ••'•"d th1 full ntw cl• "'••ranty •n l incoli1·Mtrcury prod11ch wp lo ~0.000 1r11l•1. THIU ARE MANY LIASE PLAN$ TO CHOOSI FlOM St CtlM b1 u.I .SI! -••• H .. S..1'1 ... teHy, Ler u .how '" tH -•Y .n.,..... ef IMllitt ffHt JellMMI & 1•11 ANO IF LEASING IS NOT FOR YOU, WE'tL SHOW YOU HOW, TO BUY THIS MARQUIS. INEXPENSIVEL YI JOhDSOD+SOD LU(CHI COl!TIHRTil• uu~m ·ll lHHY•HIHI HH MA1M1i ..-.VAn, COITA lll'.IA CONTINENTAL ltr91 J11rnhur9tr on ryt , filltd willt Swiu chttlt i nd rnv1IH••1r11. Fr1nch fritl, COLD SANDWICHES: ITAL)'AN HOAGIE Cht111, bolo9n1, 11l11nl, h11n, lt1r11to11 •~d ltttll~• on • roll. Pot•t• chlpt. MR STEAK CLUB DELIGHT Co1r1bin1tion b1con, ltttuc•, to1P11fo, cold chicktn o~ lot1ftd b,.td. Pot1to chipt •r col• 1ltw. 1.20 1.25 1.30 The folkiwing sandwiches aT~ served with pickles and choice of potato chips OT cole slaw. BACON, LETIUCE, TOMATO ·--···-·· .............. 95 SLICED COLD CHICKEN ---··---.85 GRILLED CHEESE .. ······--·--. __ .SO HAM & AMERICAN CHEESE -·---.95 COLD ROAST BEEF ·-·-· .95 TUNA SALAD -·-· .75 SOUP OF THE DAY (cup) .20 CHltl .SO \\le are also serving our famous line of USDA CHOICE STEAK DINNERS and many other dinner specials at any time of day. 0.sMrt menu, too. f ' I A Glorious New You In Just 12 Weeks wt JUST ADDED A HEATED Y£AR-AROUND SWIMMING POOL . Roll bock the clock ... you con . • • hove the Y 0 UT H FU L FIGURE you've always desired ... in lux-· uriously exotic ·environment. Strictly feminine ... yet the dues · ore remarkably reasonable! · · FACILITIES FOR MEN & WOMEN JOIN .TODAY! ... ,, O•r o.,.,.,., .. M> ,.., Wt guarant1t you tht finest Httltl\ Spt facilities in Soulhtrn C1Uforni1 ar up to SO% l11s thin aur mt]or hetlth club compe:l!tors or the 111d· 1ng ladies figur• s1lon. llamit:----~~· .. WOY Emll QUI FACIUTIU AT ff IXTU COST ••• • DANISH COlD PlUNGE • SWtSS fACJAL MAOl'"U • HOT WHllL100l IATHS • flOllDA SUN TAM • FINNISH IOU: SAUNAS • IOMAN STEAM • ULTU M00DN -IOOMS FADLmU OPIN 7 DAYI A - 10 'TIL 10 lllWI HONO•BEj. CALL OR STOP BY TODAY FOR A FREE TOUR SWIM & TRIM HEALTH .PAS Our new91t tfMlth lpa in Hwtlntton IMch now unClw cottalrvd'91t OflNINO SOOM-(.5 Poinh Shopping Cent.t'l COtTAMDA MNHI UGO HAlllOll IL AllAllllM 116-oi11 510 $. llACll 1,.r,,...., JO ......... ,...... ..... .......... c.w ·~ Cuttf Olllllll at•M41 622 l ICATBIA --... -~ • c.,,.ltti.I , ... lkl!My ""'"' ........... .. • I I I I I J I ------- T.,....,, f..._, 18, 1969 For The Record Fifth Amendment Education County •Growing Up~· MeetillfJ• Births DEA'l'B IVO'l'ICES COWNS .l.llM'Clla CoUIM, 5ervlcl!s perodl,,,. Oll!Ny 8rotlie'I Hu11tlr111ron VtiltY Mottu1ry, t0-1"1. KRAFT Anlhony P!!11111111t l(r111. 1"61 arodc· hurtt, SHce SL Huntlns!Gn 8HCfl, .\111t T4. SllrYl'tt4 by wHr, Vera/ ~. JOMPt!. Memblt d l lnco!n lodN #SIW. F & AM, #125. Detnlll/ ... , MallJl:MI Shrine, Los A-!.1; Chattet Memb« al San &erTlllrdlno Ma-le l~. Al ASll.1 Mtmboor of c-Walllllnpton Club. 5ervkf", WTdn~ay, 11:30 AM, Dlklav Bratt.. fltl Hun!I"""" Vallt\I CNO<!I. Int.!•· ....r.1, prl.,.a!t. Dlldav 9rolhel'$ Mor· tu .. "Y. M2-nn , 0 1"'1;1.,,,, RADECKI Anthon., !T...,vl J<>1oeoh P:1deckl. "'"' 61. al 2lll6 Wlndmln Lultc, l19Ulll H19vel. Ollt of ~alh, Fd>rvary lt. su,.,.lwd "' wlft, SYivia: "°""' John alld G-. 11111111111 IUctiard. La- '"""' 1'0weli broll\e"I'$. Joe and Leo 11.oKl<h 111,...,., M"', "°"rv M!xa. all ol IMlnolu ind I tr1nd<tll1dr1M. Graves~ u .... 1cr1 will be held Wed-f!Hday, 2 PM. AKenslon cr-t.ry. ulldef" fh.e d!r«tlon d She4fer Lall'Ulll 8Hd'o Mof11,iary. Ftll'l!!y !'MVl!SIS fhosr wlsM111 la m1ka mrmorlat contrlbo· t lon1, ple1se contrlllule lo lht C1llC91' Fulld. McCAUSLAND Robitr't J1me1 McC1u1l1...:r. l~ Mldalo! RklH LIM North, R:aU!n11 Hiii!. ,l.Qe 5!1 d!l!d Febl'lllrv 15. SurvlVfld b• wire, Connie: • 111 er, M1r11r~t khwelchkr, of Penn1ylv1nl1; th•~ niece• 1no -"'"""""· Ems>lovl!d b'/' G1rn!tt (°"'°"'''°" ln Torn nce: ""'"""' of soc11tv ot Protn11on~1 e ... 11""'1, Society of N1v1I Archl!Mho 111d M1r1M E"llll'ffn, Mll'lne Tedt-no!Ofl' SocJetv, Rollllll Hllll P"""' Club, We.t H11!1 Hunt Clubt Repre-~t1nn of L.A. Counc.11 of El!llnHrl. 5"'¥1ces wt1l be Mid W9dnetel1y, 1 :30 PM, G'"" H1U1 Ml-lnllrlll P11'11; Chll'tl In S.11 Ped,._ Nllllld Mortu&ry, TOf"f"1nai, DlNC10f"I. EVANS l!i1tell1 M. Eft111. 2100 81"*9m Cll'"dt, Hu"""'tml 8tllc:h. $Uni..-b• hlnblnd, H&f'llN H. E ... MI i.on1, H1r- old A. 11'1111 OoMld A.I bf'olllef, Frftl. ridl;. G. Kndu twu 1!1ten. Myrtle ~""""'" 11'1111 Miidred EdwlrdlH fl>ur 1r1..U.uth1'M"1 end two 1nnc1..,,... Services., Wiii,..,...., 10:311 Nii: Pfflr. F1mnv Colanlll Fu11tr1I Hltfll. • NEAL ll'MI H111I. 111 lllllllMPOI~ ,t.v• .. Huntt.._,on 11..U.. Surv!YH bf "°"' RlcN!rd PKll:l"l'I O..Ullhttr, P1trkl1 N .... 1: lather. Wll!lllot COWleYI 1nd bnllhet". Geol'H E. (owlev. $efY1Cef. Thul'Sd1y, 1 PM, Peete 1'1mlty C0111- 11l1I 1''"*11 Horne. COLVIN J1ck Colvin. All "' of 112 10lll St .. Hvn""9ton llffdl. 01111 Febnlerv 1'- SUNfwd bY wlft-, Mll'NNfl dwlh-..... Mn. Clllrlll t011Ul1t1 11t~. Mr1. Tf'CllF MCH1n•11 two 1nnddllk1Tt"n. CN1r1ft K. tnd Ml.,,.Nf •011Ubl. ~ Wtd"'9dlY, 11 #tM, Smllfls °""JI. \niem-1. Goad ~ CemtftfT. 01Adld bY Smlh ~ ·~· BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del P.far OR 3-M51 Costa Mtfla Ml 1-t.n.4 BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 B-y. Colla Meta uwm DD..DAY 8llOTllicRS Bau.po V.U.7 M-, 17111 Beodt 11"11. emu.ac-Be•cll IC-1171 PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK C<melerJ • ~lortalll}' Cllop<I -P1ldllc: View Driff Ncwpln -· Calllonila UU'lll PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNEJW. HOllE 1111-An. Westmled-IN.ms 6MITll'!! MOR11JAllY G7 Malo 8L 8 ....... -LB.- ll'&WCl.ln' MORTUARY a7 E. 1'1UI SL, Cot:&I Meu - #tr, .... Mti. Klll't OlrllttnMll. 1'I KIM!liDlll A"t .. '°'" ..,,,..., ..,. IN. ltnlll Mn. F•"* C•°'*-• »II ""'"-or .. 0.11 Mtsa. eff'1 'Balance"-Sought Tax ----. Break Planner W a~ns of Comi11;g Pr'!b~ms Ml . .,,. ,,,,.. J•,..... o.1111P. 1nd ""--u •ow• 11 .• wnlf'lll11t"'· .1r1 A propoMd \.NU tutionll tloo of penons Ukeb'1 &o cont· Pr' oposed ANAllF.1¥ -Oruge C.Un-department, , L ty leaden 1111111,flice -,1111,tG ·~ Wbeh·the !l'~onth 1111<11 the fact that the area 11 rapid~ Js complet!d, ~ a Prtllmlnary IN. w ~"::"'0•1• 511111111M. .,5 amendment 1 e e t I h g • rnlt crimes, suc.h (IS habitual Parents and sludtnts will Jy changing from. auburba.n to leneral ~lan ~ be lm-W. '"" 11,1 New-1 flffdl, [11'1 "balanced" Jnterpret&tiOD Of crlminals aDCf the like, ~ &llllf Mr•. Ml111e1 J. e..,kk. Mik71~·~·s'·1r~~~· Ae~· ?:,~,~ the seU-incrlminaUon clause or Hosmer said the proposed '"' •11111eim Avt., c011~ Mn •, the. FlftJ, Amendment has amendment iii based on • bvt F*"''' 11 " receive a special "tax bretJk" on oollcgc education expenses under provisions of a bill in· troduc.-ed b y , Congressman Craig Hosmer ( R • L o n g Beach). urhan wtih all the problems P!mented, !oil&~ 'by • associated with such growtii, pehua'rient geneijl. plan SU~ Mr. 1...d M'1. r11om1s !.1.. 111rnum. been introduced In Congress series OJ recomrnendaUcn11 ,.,,~1 J:' s,i-;1~~n11~Rt;.~v11i01 by Rep. Craig llosmer IR-made by Judge Henry J . Mi.-:= L117i. "'1t~111nl. .. 8':i.~111, Long Beach). Friendly of the U.S. Court or face the consequences. ' This was tbe m essage "''jecl to coostMt JIPiiaUng. The big" QuesUOn-Ls "can ~:.J.'~v Av1.. No. r . ;-111nHllllt011 As an aid to laW en· of 4.ppeaJs for the Set.'Ond Mr • .wi Mo R-td w. ~~... for:cement , ltbsmer's amend· "ircuit, iL New York, duri·n, Under Hosmer's bill, income brought by coont: Planning Director Forest Dickason to "" we g~t 1Coiweifa~ve, free- wbeeUng ,• Ol'ange C ounty leaders : to look seriously a~ coming u r b a n problems,'' Dickason said. • s.n ... br.. Mun11""'"'" a .. c11. .,. "' 180 persons at the Ora[IJl:e ..., ,...,..,., 11 ment would legallze certain lectures at the University of tax credits will be granted "';.\:Ill! ~ ~:"l!.1~'."bo-lu police practices barred by re-Cincinnati Law School. for tuiUo:n rees, books, sup-County forum of Town Hall "'hr~'· 1ttt::, t:" * L• cenL Supreme C o u r t in--Durin&'lhese·lectutts, Judge plie3 and other equipment meeting Monday at I he 1., c~wv Ii te..-tation1 of the Fifth !:'..' di 'd " h h o· 1-·-• HJ-L INVOLVED Mr. ~ Mn. ~ c..,1.,........,, '!"""-rlJen f Sal t e lime has C arges. Botll partf$ who ISDe)'illAI ~ PUBIJC a1 1t11Sburv or .. c°""" "' Mar, Amendment. which provides, come, believe, when lhe nil· pay their children's education-Dickason said Orange Coon-Dick3son sald the public M~llll 11\1'$. SlM-Gf'(I~. 1069 Dover in part, that "No person shall tion should face up to the al expenses and students who ty is n.11inting ttself into a or .. New_.-1 leadl. glr1 • _.... would be involved through w. 1nc1 Mr1. wnuan. e1111w. 1705 • • • be competled in any hard la$k oi considering an pay their own .. '05&8 wUl be comer by the lack of regional :~t 1111* Blvd .• ~ 11"<"-crimin al case to be a witness ameodrftent to tbt 11elf-in-eli'1'ible ror the credits, ·~·hich planning. All agencies and various organizaUons. "\\re MS:u1'T'1neMN10. ~r.''C.Ot'~a,w.M.~ ~ainst himself." crim.inalion clause that wlll w i 11 reduce an individual 's "We are: jusl 25 cities and jurisdictions can go it alo~ have had invaluable help frpm •1'1 sT. Jose"" Hos,.1TAL Hoimer said that the ob-preserve all the !ramers said actual federal iocorhe tax by the count'y a c l Ing in· and suffer the consequences. the Orange County Chamber Mr. ,..., Mr:'."Ofv~ 5c. LP count, jective of the proposal is "lo and some 0£ the courl'!i t'f· one dollar for each dollar dependently With no cornmc.n 2 _ A new countywide of Co'mmerce and UCl's Pro-i:,s1 Gi..ITTER s1., we1tm1n11"'· restore a balance in the ap-tensions, modify others and spent up to $325 a•year. agreed plan or policies," the ""'· '"'° Mr1. Hac:h Mur•'•· 1'11 F1owtr pUcalion or the Fifth Amend-expunge some altogether, ar.d '•My proposed tax credit will planner sai~. government can be created. ject 21. We will seek a forum st .. coit• MJo~. bo~ t rd I 3 Th 't' d the coon-''h th ·za1·0 s but "elvu•N ' men to guarantee not only gua against accretions quite great y assist parents and -e c1 1es an Wh o er orgaru 1 n M~. ·~mi~~-N~''°H, ~~~~~~~ the rights' of the accused but obviously in the making." students who are faced with CAN BE DIFFERENT ly can move toward coopera-there will be no approach to M:.1 ' 1 .no ~."'.l'~ 1o·cimb, •!~' the ability of the state to . Hosmer said that "tt\e t~e rising cost. of higher "Orange County can be dlf· lion in general deVeiopment. the g~neral public through G1&•cow c1rc1e. Hunun"o" 1t1c11, protect its citizens against writers of the Fifth Amen<;t· education , higher living cost ferent fi;om other urban afeas The county cannot force its hearings." ' 1 '1 ,. .. ,,,,,. , criminal acts." ment were seeking "'a rne!llls and a heavy tax burden," if the people want it to be. • 1 •• The planner sai·d lie had o "" M • w x 11111cw1 1,.s u th H · H d Th · h t plan on ciUes, there m. us ~ 'C>r.~ A~e:. c0s11.· M-;i'ri. , e osmer Amendment to keep innocent persons from osmer sai . e time as come o move ed h th """""'"' '' I d ted Jt uld b · !Ir d H dded th t t 1· 1· It t•" cooperaUon, D1'c'·"'n said. been encourag Y e grow· Mr. •nd Mn. itiiilll Edob':,. ,.satt ~ op . wo : emg ra1 oa ed behind bars. . e a a s a 1s 1cs men as we as ear 11, ....,,., ing concern in the last few ;~rmb11 L'!'f, Hu111111111on 1 .. c11, Allow interrogation 0 r They were not d e v i s i n ~ compiled by t h e Department Dickason challenged. Jte said be could no~ see months of those who have Mr .'"° Mr1: =•6',Ji!. ,,45 J.demt. us~~s before arrest .without loopholes to keep cri minals 'of Health, Education o.-a::t "We have to face the fact Orange County going ·to a sizeable capital in ves tments ia Hu~t1n~1"" 1e•cti. tiav · adv1smg them of the1t right out of jail." \Velfare show that tuition and that we will h'ave racial and J · d f bt" I d melro or countywide govern-the county Divorces DIVOIKai ~L•D llonnlf Jean 01lleY VI Ylnc.nl 0.llt'f John Flcwh VI lrme ll:009h Judtlll l.~nn llrown v1 Jlm,.,Je llr"" \11¥11n RH• BtlK v• PlllU1> EmJI '"" P1trlc!1 Lv ..... Beirne VI l111o1l1 A, ..... GeM (,_II, Jr. VI Mn Elle<t Crowell, el tl Lindi ICIV Lff VI Rov Oun LIN J. kltY Pnrto vs w. Jlmf't ,.Hrlo G.-.tct>en Ann Satin VI 0,,., W. """' ' N..N Kay Patt llil VI lll"UU Urry P11em1 •, Jolu! W. RlmlUSJell YI SUHtlt L lit11mune" \tell I, llltft VI Rld\anl M. ltfts J1net It. 8,.., VI J-C. lrl.ldef' Lou AM s.tt.rwhn. VI .um .. H1rrlto11 S.ttl!t'Whll'e Doraltlv M. lltll vs D•roN E. ~n Charlei L1wrence OeB-"' Elber11 Celesi. Otllow Do111rd J. lode "' \llrolnl1 Mat ,_ llerlha M. H1rrl1 YI 'fllomlJ E. H1rrl1 Mernwon Ill/lier Flrtit•dt VI Cknnltvt Marie Frresllck LYndl R1t Osllo V1 'J1111111 Lt a.kt Emllv M. Flum-'ti Robert o. Flummer \llr1lnl1 L, Wfrl1 VI Pf\111" Wirt& Nef!IOl1 C. '-11 n 'l(>lrv J. Cwriell Allct OoroltlY $1-VI G¥11d \.IN S!twnlOll Sustn T. Miiiet' VI -.,.. Mlditd Miiter Lonnll K. Ftrr VI John s. F1rr Mlrl1Y11 J•ne \.dlmtn VI OoNld Herm111 Ll>hm1n Meli ll:vlll M1<11r vs 1osepl! Ml'!IMW M•dar M11111rtt II:. Filller VI G-11 A. Fl1her E~an11 Puton ¥1 John WUll1m Pllloll Mlnhl ,t.nn H1r<1v ¥1 TrrUf M. H1rdv Mlrl1.....e G1rk vs Edwl!'l Gtrlc Get11dJ111 M. Ralil""°" VI Albtrt I'. Robt10n Relph ,t.nlhon~ 1"1&1.,. "' Ill.on• M11 Plunn M1e Mll'UI VI lorl!fl C. M.lnn Gerik! F. llrllftl VI Oorolhy I. lltlm• Sherrie l.Yllfl Hllff YI David Edwin """ Robert Edwtrd Grtvn VI Shirley Jeart Gr1ves Sondra Lee L-renct YI Ru1iell Ktn. nelh Lawrence Sheryl L Selway VI Robert w. Selw•v Clarr llobtrt Hovel VI Sllfrltv Ru!h """ Jov Ftldman vs George Feldnwon Carmen M. Dffrl111 v1 \.1wrl!fl(.f Dee r. '"' Jo.an Francf'I S~itY vs Wtllff Seeltv Carl 8tnow Umber!, Jr. V• Jeane •· l.&mbtrl Dennl1 ll&Y Ott.MY VI CO!'ln le ) . °'"""' £=;... ROlllld O•ryl JUlll Vt Suun J•M '"M Nonn1 Jean Mow1 v1 Hcw•rd M. ,_,. ll1rtllr1 E. 0.-L-¥• Wiiiiam I . ""-lrltlld• JO'l"CI G•uerltt "' RoY Edw1rd ....... ~ P111'kl• Goocll .,, Cll1r1ts Eut-Goo¢:h Tlne Mari. Oul11111tt VI All111 Jon" .Dvlllmel ~ Alwl SH!Yo v1 J-ph St~vo Triom.s E. M-ln\ldl vs Roberta M. Hanrdl JN~ TIP$COt! YI Tl!Omlf Gtn' ,,_ Judith A"n Eblo!hkh VI llernlrd E"1 ''"'""" Marv E1111bfth ·""'" VI Tlmotf\y L .. H11'ff P1lrkf1 ,..,_rlt Monhlrl YI O.~ld Yark Mor•rt s.nor• K•v Mlddu. VI J1me1 e .... n. ~x.Jr. L1no1 L. Hltelnl .,. Site~ W. H111ln1 LeoM•d T. ,._l'Y W Vel1r111 N. Per,., Ell-ni.r111 Albert vs Clifford C. .,. ... Fire Calls --12:2' &.rn, Morldly, res.c111. '3J w. 111'/ "' 1:0! 1.m., rescut. 73' Weeto Drfvt 1:'2 •·m~ ur 11,.., m e. 1t1~ "'''' 11:415 1.m .• ftbl 1llrm, lltv 1nd """"' U:7J P.m., ...,10 Wl"tekl"" v1rO. ;GIJ PllClfllll Ayt. W.JltnlMMr t :CIO 1.m, MoftoHy, l!Wd ic1I 11d. 7611 C.lifornll l :U p.m_, fire 1nws11.,.11on. 1~01 Tihts l :ot 1.m. Tuncl9y, tnf(!lc11 1id, Mll """~ H•"""""" hid! I :OI o.m. Molld,ty, ••••• I!'*, Bu1111ro .,.. Yortr.~ l :M p.m., ft'l«llgil aid, J'7t2 Trktenl l :SJ p.m .. s!nldur9 11 .... Sii 111h SI, t :P 11.m., .,_ flA, 8rooltllll'11 1nd A.dam• ... _ 11 :• •.111 .. mldlcal 11d. J!h 11'1!1 ~•n '''' 1.m. Tuel!Ny, lfrvcture fl,.., 113 llldit-111 I not to reply. u ge Friendly has pointed ees at pu 1c co Ieges an other problems with our Dickaso~ sai d we could not -Perrn,it the judge at a out that interpretatioo8 of lhc universities rose 90 per cent growth," he warned . "The OO's ment, so the third alternative write off the lveslern half of criminal trial to comment on Fifth Amendment made t.y between 1955 and 1965, while "·ere tbe area or un· was lhe only practical answer. the refusal or a defendant to the present Sunre....... Cou1 I U1e median income f o r ed t d th Tb 70s the county• now h e a v i 1 Y d •· "" 1 1 th h th prec en e grow · e S.MONTB STUDY developed within 16 cities. answer questions about his ten to serve the Jailer arni ies with e ead of c Will sec a change Jro1n n... h h h Id be 35 ;J ban " The county is now two "This area will have a s~ond a .... 5ed crime. purpose, not t e former, and ousc o tween ages .1n subu rban low· . h chance with new multiple -Require a person 10 prt> that the present treod of these ~. rose only al per cr11t. months through a five-monl duce physical evidence such decisions is like1y to get worse Tuitiorn arc expected to r~ 3 ALTERNATIVES study in cooperation with residential development and h 0 Count h "-ee TR. W a consult'•g f'•m work new induslrial complexes," he as account books. papers or unless stopped by amendment another 50 per cent I e next range Y as 1.1u , ... .. • • loot, as distinguished from . _:to~the::::_:Cons:::::~t~it::•:::tion:::_. --~;.__:':O_:y:::e:":.:':_· ::h•:._:sa:_:id:::·::.... ____ .::•::lter::; . .::na:ti:· v::es:·~D:::ic.::kason=::..:n:.:o::ted.::... _i;::•::g_w.::i.::th::..:tbe::..:•.:.oun.::..t.:Y...:._Pl_a_m_u·..:ng::__'_ai_d_. -------- verbal _evidence. in response I' to a subpoena, deJpite the fitct that such evidence may incriminate him. -Permit dismissal of public employes who t a k e refuge ln the Fifth Amendment to withhold data about ~eir possible official misconduct. -Require anyo ne lawfully arrested to submit to scientific and medical tests on his person relating to the crime, jf he has legal counsel or without it "when urgencf r&- quires." -Allow law enforcement agencies to requirt registra- County Law ' Enfo1·cement Study Slated SANTA ANA -The Orange County Counsel's office is in- vestigating the level or re· ~ponslbllity of county agencies in law enforcement in unincor- porate.d islands throughout the county. Supervisor David L. Baker requ ested the study pointing out that the county spends $1051000 a year to patrol island areas. He said sheriff's depu- ties spend 80 percent or their time fletting to the Jslands through incorr>orated areas and only 20 percent of the time rarrying out law enforcement in the areas. Baker suggested creation of ser\•ice arP3S as a possiblt so- lntion lo tht prob.,lrm. w Ith · the residents of the Islands pa~1inR for their O\l'n protec- tin•1 lie pointed out !hat in some county arras th"rP wPrt> as many A!I 25 small islands sur- rounded by R sinl?le city. CitP.d as the larjlest conntv lsh1nd.<1 were Rossmoor. Ml\i. way City and !he r.aza Strip between Co st a Me~a a nd Nrwnort Beach. Baker said legislation has been proonsed to rorre b;:lands to join cities. He said a law to accomplish t~ic:: 11·.'lc:: \•rtoed two vears o:igo h\' th" !!'ovrr- nor. He said a "'"" ="""rn;irh would be to izivf' !hr '· n r ;"1 1 A~enc.v Formiilil'ri r "•n•11ic:;. sion the riPht to forcl' annr\'.·I alinns to cities. The Oranstt Countv Lt>i'~1,. of Cities also has the islanri problem high on its agenda of items for study this year. I See by Today's Want Ads e Nc\V Crew: TI1is se rvice slation needs P.fanager, m~anic:, & attendants . . , all ex· perienced. f•ill time and part tlmf!. :P..Iust haW: lo- c:al rererence1. Good sal- ary and commia&ioo. ln Newport &ach. e V AARR.RRGOOOMMMM! A 1J5T Harley bavldlon Sportltet, ICock. good con. diHon, uk1rw $500, Saw cu an:! lfl 90me flab ab-. • Near t~ ~ach: A 2 bedroom apartment. with wall to wall cvpet1. Clean, ""Ml adu!W, with no pela, lor only Sll.5 mo. e RESULTS Ja wr mkldlt! '~j' .Can today ---------~- How milch does it cost to run your set? Less than 11 an hour-morning noon or ni ght. Any size TV. Quite a barga in, is n't it! In fact, electricity in Edison areas cos ts an ave rage family less per kilowatt-hour today than it did 10 .... 20 ... even 30 yeats ago. And practically everyone today is using much more electricity-more kilowatt-hours-than ever before. ) Take washing dishes, Few people owned electric dishwashers a J.ecade ago. But now you see th em everywhere. And you can wash a load for less than Zf, Or washing clothes. Remem ber when this was a hand operation I With an electric washer, you can now run through a load for less thanllil. ·Or shaving. Electric ra zo r sa les areJ booming. And you can shave all yea r for less than a dime. In Edison areas, one of your biggest bargains is electricity. It does so much for so little. You can watch TV around the clock and it hardly costs you a"thing. (Except maybe a night's sleepJ Southern California Edison sC-fi. M l.Ql.ALOPl'OlTUNITJ l.Ml'wtLl. ' t ', • dy ry ... • lb- an , .. ly a\ . " ,, lie gh 're •m er ... m •Ut to gh ad W• :w ve ID ot of y •S. 1d le id " • ' I' I : . , ' Let this special section help make your wedding day the most memorable of your life. lnsid~ these pages are helpful hints on wedding preparation, bridal showers, beauty helps, select- Tuesdq, Ftbtull')' 18, 1969 = DAILY ~ILOT f ' A special edition of the Daily Pilot especially for this · year's Brides-to-Be ing your trousseau, ideal honeymoon locales ••• plus suggestions on how to meet the ch~llenges of homemaking. Save this edition ••• it can help you start out right! , . • t . 1 I • l. I J I I 1) I I ------..... ---...-.- JO OAILV PILOT Your Marriage Is In Stars . .. Egyptians Saw As Symbol of Ri11gs Eternity . . . ' ' . . > Is your marriage 'In . the stara? The best way to determine this ·and "the best way to select a mate," s a y s astrologer Llnda Goodman, "is to consult an astrologer to determine if his moon is trine to your sun or vice 11ersa. That's the strongest J>ign of Jove and empalhy bet ween two people." "Sun s.igns," says the author or "Linda Goodman's Sun Signs," are the "single most important consideration in a person's natal chart and they're accurate 80 to 90 pet· ce11t of the lime." To achieve deeper, more ac- curate analysis, she userts, one must know lhe exact hour and minute of birth. If your 1igM are incompat- ible, don't despair. "What helps a marriage," she adds. "is knowing bow to deal with a mate born under a certain sign. For example, ti you're married to a Gemini and you send him out for a loaf of bread on Monday, ·don't eipeet bJm to come back unUI Tbunday." That's part of his .resUess, unpredictable spirit. Or, she goes on,, if • o/ It///? tb !f)~ /am m17fions ofy~ars old and yet as yovng •nd mod•ll'f as today. I have ~an dHP ifl the heart of th• aarth sine. lh• ver; dawn of tima, /.am the harde$1._ svbst11nce known llfld men had to blitst and crush and dig through tons and tons of earth and rock to reach me. I have b-.n lovttd and desired all through /he Ages tor my uniti,ue b111111ty. I am rar11 and prKlous. I am the unjv.rsal •xp1ession of love and 1om4nce. I am history and t1MJition. I am the King of G/lffls. I am forewr. · I am• diamond. lam available at From $300.00 Kirk Jewelers 17~ .A.IF: Akut Kirk'• f91m1 f 9i~ \1 • mester clll ~ Up to 12 Montfu to Pery ~::sz.:'.!; HAllOI SHOPPING CENTER HUNTINGTON CINTIR 2JOf HAlllOll: ILYD. · l(ACH & IDINCilll: you're manyln& a Capricorn expect h1m to want to make love on a schedule. The following are Upt from Mrs. Goodman for dealing with each sun sign to insure that you and your mate won't become star-crossed lovers. IF IDS SUN SIGN 15 , ARIES (March 21 through April 20) Aries finds most happiness with QlJ!mbers of the opposite au who fall under the sips~ ol Leo, Gemini, Libra, sqlttarius and Aquariut. Two Aries will make 11 all rlahl but Ibey must decide ell&' _in the game who's bosa. Atj4jo wants a fairy tale rOIDIDCe ; i t ' 1 perftlfl If be '"l. play Romeo tp your .JulieL Ail Aries man won't mlbd a working wife , If you Dre the money and don't oullbfne him. Aries will insist oo .being first in the relaUonsblp; he'll '1lo bl lbe first to aay he's sorty alter a quarrel. . TAURUS (April II through May 20). Most Compatible with Virgo, Capricorn, Cancer, Pisces, SCorpio, Twti Taurus together can present quite a troblem unless one controls lbe lrall ol stubbornnesa. The Taurui person is sensual; the sense of touch i1 Very im-portant. Be tlls woman; then you can't ask for a better man. • GEMINI (May 21 through June 21). Best bet: Aquarius, Libra, Leo, Aries, Sagittarius. Two Geminis would get along great though they'd seldom see each other. (The Gemini is the one who goes out for brea'd on Monday and returns oo 'Ihyrsday.) He's a restle!s, unprdctable spirit. When you're married to a Gemini, you'll never walk alone. You'll have two people to walk with and both wll1 be hlm -due to Gemini's dual personality. CANCER (June 22 through July 23). B~t matrimonial bets are Scorpio, Pisces, Taurus, Capricorn and Virgo. Two ~Cancers would probably drown each other in tears. When moon changes, their lunar laughter goes to deep pessimism. Cultivate the cancer's mother. People of thil sign love to be mothered and babied. LEO (July 24 through Aug. 23). Best matrimonial bets are Aries. Gemini, Li~a. Sagit- tarius, and Aq98'1us. Two Leos would bW'ft the house down with fire ind enthusiasnl COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON IUCH S4S.f415 1'2·SSD1 Open Mon., Thurs., Fri. Till 9 p.m. 1 and with so rnuch pride and passionate jealousy you can expect nonstop July 4 fire- works. Flatter a Leo to death; never try to top him. Don't try to have a career; -1 • Tradition Elegant Hand • In Crafted Originals BRETT nm; JE\VEJ.JlY • 'N°' 31 ,...,. .. """""" m 60. MAI~ &T • ~01, CALIF, HAND CRAFTED I~ K GOLD WEDDING BANDS FROM $55 WALKER COl.DSMmlS • .. r , ,, . M:'"' • •• ~ • • , {tel frtt lo come in and browse be'• your career. Be his au- dience. vmoo (Aug. :u lhr"'ih Sep!. U). 'Bes! beta are Capricorn, Tiuru.s, Cancer, Scorpiocand Plsoes. With two Vlrgos, dirmer would never be late and you'd. be wise to buy soap by .the case. Virgo is extrem~y punctual, clean, neat and tidy. Be a lady with a Virgo .male ; he can't stand vulgarity. Don't hope for romantic dreanui and fairy tales with him. A Virgo lives on a pracUcaJ, material level. LIBRA (Sept. 24 through Ocl 23). Best marriage beta are Gemini, Aquarius, Aries, Saglttariu.s and Leo •. Since Libras are 90 lndecillve, there 't llUJe chance of tWo of them marrying -nellber would be able lo mate up his mind. A J.,j_bra man love• for you lo take. lbe lead and make ~·dedatOris; you can even propoite :to Nm· He also insists on harmony and order in the home. Make I llD'e '-the colors ~ that 'Use radlo and TV1..., luned 'down .op<! · lhat lbe. plclUre lrame1 are . · stral&bt. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 11). Compaitible Wttb PI a c e 1 , Cancer; Caprlcom, Virgo ltld Taurus. Two Scorpioe would creat.e a nuclear espl~ Handle with ca:re. Xf hla U-1 plosive temper goea off, It' 1 can strike a llletlme wound. Scorpios are passionately in· tense about everything , • , busineas, politics, eto. Let a Scorpio male wear the pants and don't try to keep any secreta from him. He loves myllory and W'"1, resl Ill! he's aoJved it. The tradition of today's wed: ding ring comes from a col· lectioo of various legends, ac- coiding ,to Weinert-Clark Fine Jewels. 32 Fashion Island in Newport Beach. Histtlrlans believe that an- cient Egyptians may have in· vented the first wedding rings as symbols of eternity. T h e Pharoahs believed a ring was a "heavenly sign that love has no beginning and no end- ing." Early Greeks believed a ~rson's ring finger was as one with lhe heart,' >coMectad by the ume vein. Tbe finger was se••. hon<>fed.by_ ~~do or gol<f, ~Ver aQd °'?Pjltt.-, t,Qday's ~ bridal f114bloM, along with wedding ri,ng fasho ions, also depend on a number of traditions. The custom of the bridal veil, fot example. began in this counb"y during the colonial days when a yoWlg bride. chose to wear a lengthy scarf pinned to her coiffure, to ad.d the allure. ol being seen . be.hind a speer drape. Aft Types of Formal & S.ml·FOr!"al Wnr Cnt.111 S.ih M9'e t. OrMr ~-hr"'" •IMI ••-• •• . . . SAGmAIUUS (Nov. 2.1- Dec. II). Bell lllllTJ.,. bets , are Arteti, Leo, GemJnl, Libra. Aquarius. Two Salis would be DEMURE -The little flo~er,blimmed, dOtach,ble. I II constanUy f\&hllng and mak-cape which sets the mood for .this ecru crepe ·Wed: ' · · 146•091 1 ing up. Gel uaed lo bt1 bru:al _. franknesa, He'll say "I· Uke ding gown is ·on1y~-0ne of many "tout:hes feature~ in 540·8491 that sweater, it tildea your gowns from January issue·of Mademoiselle maga· .,-.._ .IDINGER 3333 BRISTOL double chin." zine available al .May Company stores. Brides l:lifliTINflON IEAC:H C:OSTA MESA CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. gowned by May Company cat'r be as demure as ," 11~,. c:..t91' South co .. t Pina J l.M d tat• 5 I t It' · f ' ..-. L.9-r Level0 Fro11t of EKolatM 20). Best bets art Virgo, u le~ .or as evas ing qs car ~ . s a ye~r o • .i!:~ 1 1 s,rl•tMM lrluol _.So• D~o "--' Taurus, Scorpio, PI aces , _ _!P~oe:_t~ic~b_::ri~d~ali__l~a~s~hil(lo~n~s.:_ _ _.:_ __ -'---'----~~~....,!!;!""'~· ~=!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"""~""""""!!!!!~• Cancer. Two Capricorns will own their own home and ad-... , --·.~ •,., c-.~ 7 vane6 but mah lock horns oo-,. l ( !*J:.~~M, •••JI.I ~~r:t~:; i~\l;: · i _, )~+r•' ..... .,,. "lt, ·~· !f ~·-learn bow· to balance a B S 1 clleckbook. < e a ~ 1! Y.. a. 0 XI. s AQUARIUS (Jan. 21-Feb. 19 ). Marry Gemini, 'Libra, \ ., Aries, Leo, Sagittarius. Two Aquarians will live on a rain- bow with the wild blue yonder as the zip-code. Give an Aquarius plenty of freedom to wander around among his friends. Get used to hls being interested in everybody; it's doubtful whether you have to worry abOut physical in· fidelity. Bil idea of a good wife and mother is someone who work! at it almost con- stantly. PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20). Be.st bet: Scorpio, Caricer, Virgo, Cipricom and Taurus. 1 Two Plsce.s will \irown in rosy daydreams. Pisces are ·very romantic and are not not;ed for a triple A credit tat.ing. He'll never mind a .wife w«k· ing. Serve him Chopin !or breakfut, Browning far lunch, a dream (rr djm\er and after tbal you're on )1lUr own. Good Care Makes Glassware 'Wear' Given the proper care, your glassware will give you many years of enjoyment. When you wash it, the water should be comfortably hot and sudsy. Avoid sudden changes or temperature and have a soft cloth spread over the drainboard for w a s h e d glasses. A few drops or bluing in the water will give them added luster. When storing, s t e m w a r e should be ~Id rim up where possible; olberwlse allernate one rim up with one base up and IO on. Glassell should be stored by type from front to back, graduating from the sbOr'test Ip Jhe 'lallesL A rub- ber mat placed On the shelves will help cushion gla.S1ware from shock. To pre vent chip- ping or cracking, put paper dollies or napkins between stacked plates. lf t w o twnblers or bowls should stick tdgetber, pour cool water into Jhe Inner -lJ1d tel lbe outer me In wann water to looien lbem quickly. AOYIJtTiSIEMl:NT WHO PAYS Many qltfl8tlons ari.!ie when plantllng • ~-Send now fat tiffow-lo Plan-Your c w,.sd1n1• ~ui!\". ~ ~ In coin lo P.O. Ilol 388 • llllnlillilOn Bea<h, caut. -. FRONT.;. SIDE ... BACK ... ALL CURL, ALL COLOR, ' ALL CUSTOM \Ve snip and shape, custom-cud your new hai1·<lo. Tiwn we(ustom-color your hair 'vith )'O ur O\V11 ]Jer~dn al izcd colo r. l~y Fnnci-t.011e, of course-our tin t in ~-llf'\V push-button d ispenser that kts 11s create ju . .,f the color .'·011 \r;111 t, ~nHl duplicate i ~ r\·r r;y ti 111e ! N ;1 tu1·;d looking c:o·lors fo r g i·~l\·· ha ir, toning colo rs for bleachc<l ·hai r. a1 1d our iil tr;1·sophisticated 11Color Originals," the style rolors that set the styles ! Fanci- tone rolor does n't wash out, cohditions your h~it as it colors. ' 8EAUT7f SALON 00 FLOOR, PHONE 0·0000 Newoort lioch, Celll. · aus~ ""· M~et ... ~ "lltrli' US-UtO Or1nge, Calif. lfH W. CJM111r"" -..,.,.. ' ' . . ~ . ~' ' Coita Me .. , Cini: ;700 ~1r'Mf ,,..., K..Y.•l'I f'llU ""°"' .... "" . t CREAM HAIR TINT with Shampoo and Set, Mod C-$5,75 ' ' Coatt Mou, CllJI. 7'6 W. !ti~ Sl""I ,.,.,.,...~, S1nt1 Ant, C1tif. tlst Ne, F•lrvlew "•lrtl9w Ctllltr .. ._ "'"31all ... '" 1 \' .. FOtJntal~ V1llty, Calif. 'OV Edl""°r 11 E..ell<I V1llrt Cffltff' Pllont ,,,, ..... Bride,s Photo Always . 6eautµru :, Her Inner Light Is Levely fA;Jujul 'M_rtde · • • • and her attendants exquisite hair styling for that very important day! and don't, miss ou1 wonderful selection of wigs, wiglets ·& falls m~IAe!> 250 E. 17th St. DAILY TILL 5:l0 Thurs. a. Fri 11111:00 WIG & BEAUTY SALON COSTA MESA 548-3446 tbt--.... I« mUtup -1111ura1 1tnet mueup · 11 the '111'· When ~ • p l lhould bop happy ~ in· tw •mind. "Pay attentlan. lo !be phologropher but the bai>P1 tlloqhlJ-lbat is whal 1flll, relle<I in . Ille pictur<," be add1.: "'--.. Ibo bas !be •• dlJll -in band, . Gonion Ul ... the bride lo make ID ·~t. . After putting on her makeup, • pl lhould study henell hi tho mimr aDd llOJecl thO looll Ibo -lo cmvey. The photographer wm direct h er , acknowledla Gordon, but the slrl berllOll Is olt<n the best iUJde lo whal will be the best pooe. The bride's last encounter with the pbotop'apher comes on the weddlq day. On this occuk>n , he aays , it ia the ceremony that is mort im- port ant pbotographica11y speaking -rather than the bride herself. f.. Although Gcirdon _. that there are photo restricUom in &Orne churches a n d 1yn11f11Ues -such as no flash -~ comments that with tetefoto lenx.s and available light there ill no reason why a photographer would have. to disturb the ceremony in any way. Just in case, however, be advises the bride to WU't art any photo restriC<- liona with her clerlJ'llWI brfore the ctrtmony for the bl 'dal portrait. This giVOI the photosr1pher time 1o retoucll lhe photo, The bridal portrait uquires a complete makeup job as oppooed lo the recullr str .. t makeup worn for the engage- ment photo. Brides shoold use a light baled makeup, even ii they're llll, and the base should be worked down into the neck and into all visible arus so that the akin color appean evtn. If a bride uses a dart bast, he aplaim, the contrast between the li&ht ton and tht dark complalon makes for a poor picture. Gordon cautions a atrt to handle the makeup accents lightly becaun "when a lif1 is In a gown and a veil, any accented features show up more lnttn.sely than iC she Wert In street clothel.'' A bride should rullze Iba! photos add 15 percent in wei1bt to a cirl'I normal a~ ~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~iiii~~pwii"""'iiliaay' G~ rd 0 n·1 ~ -n..aalic.qh~ Lti.i.I~ bi 6-t Poinbc.ulfl~..-... ~11N111, ti11q ID lio&o. oad ~~~belkAA lleev•-t IJIO lat!•• 11o .. b' • ..._ CDl'd .nd11M6id ..... lo flocl•~' · pink, mint-arllltitf. willi wbi+& iac.'h'M------DO Rogislor no'ir fo• froe Bridal gown -drawi~g Morch 29th ORGANZA GOWN IS UNDERSTATED, SIMPLE It's Part of PenMy'1 Varied Collection This Year Bride Stands Unique In Creating In this workl w b er e everyone searches for in- dlviduali!m, there Is no one more dist.lncUve than a bride. She stands unique in her in- dividuality and ability to create her own aura. The spring bridal fashions at Penney's are a collection ol dresses With the ritht kind ol variety to suit the many moods al today's brides. 'lbere are the rorDantlc, the tradi· tiona1, the understated, the wttmuicll and tbe fanwtic. '!be silhouette ii closer to the body in smil A lille or slightly belled skirts with definlte waistllDel eW>er 1t the.fr · natural pl&ce or raised high up'to an empirf, accented by a bow or ribbon sash. 1be romantic bride ii a;een In a tum<f-lhe century orpn- dy drOll with ahlrldrell lly~ ing. This empire dress with rows of Venise lace em- broidery has a slim-lint 1ll1~ ly Oared skirt with all the fullness swept to the back into an attached chapel train. A high choker collar and Jons tight slttve.5 edged in a lace nail complete the romanUc touches. For t h e tradltionalilt, Own Aura and is scattered in huge bou- quets on lhe skirt front. It is repeated again on the border of the tulle mantilla attached to a baby bonnet headdress. The fantasy and pageantry of a aouthern plantation is reflected in the all-lace bridal gowns with their yards and yards of skirt cascading in tJers from • tiny nipped-in waist Ind tight fitting bodice. Some have d e tachable Cathedral trains, others have the fullness swept to the back into a chapel train. Penney's spring b rid a 1 dresses capture t h e uni- queness ol a bride allowing her to "shine" ir. her aura of romance and Jndlviduality. I DAILY 'ILOT J J Groorµ Chases Whiskey • On her wed<ll!i& day, Diane -Mattaaoi .WI didn't tnoW. ... ahe was go!ni to honeymaaa. "thaa OOOUlh to cope with -with llChool and tho wedding (she was married at pie end of her junior year a t calllofuia State colle1e at Loog Bellcb) without worrying &boot where I WU going OR 8 b<l!eymoon," says the prtUy blonde. "But,'' she ~1. "it I knew where' we would wind up, I would have worried plen- ty. As it WU, 1 felt that whatever happened, l could blame OD David." Oa\id: her new buaband. bad told Diane to get a ]11:.- cinatloo aqd to pack aome beach clothes becaUJe they might be golng to Acap1.dco or "someplace." Someplace \urned out to be deep In the jungles of Venezu~a·1 remote . Grand Sabana. · It seems that David, while searching for honeymoo n ideas, had seen an a d challenging · s o m e o n e to recover a case of whis'r.ey hidden under the w o r I d • famous 3~11 loot high Angel FallJ, It Umea higher lhlD Niagara. "David told me later, u we were on the plane to Venezuela that be wanted a r~al Special honeymoon for us." Thus it was that shortly after her weddlrig, Diane found herself and be r 1toctbroter husband, together with an Indian porter and auld• 'Jwigle Rudy' Trufflno, paddling up the Rio Carrao In an Indian dugout canoe. "The only pl.ace 1 bad ever canoed before was i n Dimeyland," says the bub- bling Diane. "And we had to 10 over 79 swollen rapklJ, Actually the whole trip was like the adventure ride in Dlmeyjand.,. To complicate matt.en, il was the rainy season. (July). "Besides being wet all day. rain slowed us down aod mi<ie tbe trip even more dangerous," she ei:plalns, Yet despite the rain, the mosquitoes, flie1, anlJ, the constant feverish feeling, lfllj the boon ol rugged cllmbln(, Diane Is glad she d1dn't hav~ a dull honeymoon. ''111e only Keep Your Career thing I didn't do was lhe last hour's climb. That wu just llow can you best avoid too ateep IO I let Dave recover rnarryin& a man who believes the case of whiskey by woman's role is only in the himself!' home? Look for a man wboae•--'==,-..,-.-.,-,.-.. -.-.-,-- mother had a ~. adv~ Dr. Susan Vogel» a , Brandeis University psychologist. She found that men whose mothers worked have le .ss "atereotyped" ideas of what a woman's role should be. And Still Growing The nwnber of marriages in America has grown from 1,451,000 in 1951 to over two million in 1969. WEDDING DISASTER . ' ' ~ Planning your wedding can ~ be fun and ~asy. Well , thought out plans make for ;. enjoyable memories. Find ~ all the Inrormation needed ~ in "How to Plan Your Wed-~ ding" Gulde. Send 25c in $ coin to P.O. Box SSI. Hunt· f lngtoo Beach, Calif. -i NOW SHOWING! . ' Complete Wedding Arrangements BRD COCKTAILS FLORIST PHOTOGRAPHY TUX RENTALS CAmlNG INVITATIONS Gmpr.f~a 546-0175 1541 WEST ADAMS COSTA MESA · . :~ r. i.: ~ '. ,. ,• there's a nylon organza A line dress with lace empire lonl- sleeved bodice. The lac~ is dusted in greal bouqueta down the skirt and is repeated Jn two deep borders around the hem. A detachable organza train bas the--same lace borders. Keeping in the romanUc mood ii an organza cage dress that falls from a Venlse daJ1y lace short-sleeved yoke. The flower scatter down the dress and bocder the hem and at- tached chapel train. fdCi'«k.J d~ pit a /~Tte-/kut 9"&ru.eJ.,, ttteife A more slmple, bul po1Uvely elegant dress is tn organza 1 lride's dress with fitted bodice and Dared skirt Alencon lace accents the ralstd W1isWne ' Better Than Beer No matter what they say about marriage, it's ltlU popular. Ninety-two percent. of the U.S. populaUon Is manioc! or will marry. By contt11t, ollly 60 percent own cars, IO percenl drink a 1 c 0 h 0 I 1 c bevera1es, and as percent watch TV. Prefer Pomp Only 15 out ol every 100 brides II)' "I do" in a civil ceremony. ,,,_...,... ...... , 0 I y 0 u RUSS ntOMl'SON Holt Stylltt ,,.... C.ut .,., ... ..,., · c-M Dlt ll1r -···•n-tt'1 Je&ck61i ~ !!l1ear$j1t/CiB?~d !!lJMt{) Cl&A54m FOR FIVE ,PIECE PLACE SETTINGS-TOP PHOTO, DESCRIBING FROM LEFT TO' R/GHt: MINTON'S Greenwich, $2T.75 I SPODE'S Consul, $36.95 I ROYAL DOULTON'S Baronet, $27.95 / . ROYAL WORCEstER'S Delecta, $39,75. LOWER PHOTO, DESCRIBING FROM LEFT TO RIGHT: WEDGWOOD 'S Wiid Strewbtrry, $25.95 I ROYAL CROWN DERBY'S Regency, $29.50 I COALPORrs C.lllnl, $135 I COALPORts Adlnlral, $70. ADDrJ, CAUFORNIATAJClfHEllEIT APPUES \ 'I I I . . -- JI DAILY PILOT !Ufsd11, r•brllvt ie. 1969 Try Inviting Males To a Bridal Shower A shower needn't be an all· g~I alfair. U most of the bride-elect 's friend! and the.ir boyfriends or h•&Sbands are members of the same social crowd, why not give the bride aDd her fiance a comblnation coed shower and party! To enlarge : the guest list and make the • eroom·tt>be feel at home, ask ~O\'fll;TISIEMIENT · l'YE GOT A SECRET If you need help in prepar- ing your wedding. You 'll find all the secrets in ''How to Plan Your Wedding'' Guide. Send 15c in coin to P.O. Box saa, Huntington Beach. Calif. 92648 him for the names of several of his close friends and add them to the invitation list. A wine-tasting party is Ideal for this type of entertaining. The proci?dure is to have various kinds of wine -white and red, sweet and dry, apertifs and after~iMer wines -to taste in glasses poured ·only one-third full . Plates of bread and cheese are the ooly other essentials. T h e y • r e necessary so that the guests can prepare their palates afre&h for each new tasting. For decorations, ask a travel agency for color posters of v a r i o u s wine-growing regions. Wine-eolored (red a n d white) linens or placemats on the tasting tables c a r r y through the color sche me . As centerpieces, use bowls or red grapes spread on g r a p e ~~~~~~~~~~leaves. NOACK TROPHY & GIFT SHOPPE 102 EAST 16th AT SUPERIOR COSTA MESA PHONE 646-3 141 • Something OLD & . th ' some 1ng 18W ' ... -~--.....,-\ .... -~---. . . . . . Dad . Didn't Pay Everyt hing • I 1 11UJ 1 lllltar of the lij!dt. bride may !Mii' -for i,, QHJJ for ~.JI!!!!_ and •· 0 f.111: cllri and NlC<(lllcrD • ~ -Iba pool wod-own mother and rrandmolbfir. usher•; gl~ve•, u .. and ascot• -l!ental fee for church; , ... 611 "-1 blllt -· hll -For ,_ who belleVe lo for men In weddinll party for organtat and soloist beard II --. l'I -Ibey ~ wilh eliquollonlh · Complel< weddlnll lrlp _ Reception, includinl Iood, lo the ~ of tho r,w, ~·· Weddlnll lifl for )>ride ' beverageo. J1lUlic . WGUld hive eloped." Tbe a pdllloOal. atlq~ , , Lod&bll 'f o t '"'I-of.town · Bouquet for maid ol -· -couple need DOI fO Uoned bmkdown of other ..-, brldeamaldl, flower (lrl ud that. far IO provide ftnaocl•I wedding--: Bride or her famllY pays &lft.s for her au.ndlnt. rellol lo u.O bride' lalhor G"""1 or hll flmllJ PIY• for: Groom'• wedding rinl ' ' 1 • for: Invlllllona and her penonal Trl\l)lporllllon of b r Id 11 More Ud more yow11 wort· Bride'• .., .. .....,t a o d stationery party II church and reception 1111 couplea wbo wlDI 1 larpr wedding iinp Weddinll drw, acc<-ies. Loqin& for out-ol·town and more e11W1te weddlq Marriage ne.-trouueau bridelnialdt lban WGUld be poalblo wblie . Clerll'mlll'• fee Pllotofl"1pher1 and Dowen Gilt la the .......,. teepbic within the tirlde'a ~:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;:::::;::::=:=:=:::::=:::::=::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;::;;;;~ parents' t1mw1 me.ua. are paying Ill or part of the <o.ta tnrdltlooally borne by the bride and her family. For ex- ample, • couple wba wantl llleu lmtod of the chicken that the bride'• budiel calh for ~y elect lo P1Y the price dWerence thenuelve1. Or if . the couple want. moro guelto lban the bridal budiel lllows . for.. Ibey may chip in the addltlooal <1111. It'• not UDUIUll -even if EmUy Poat -·1 ...... -for the .,..... or the .,......, ' . COUNTY QUEEN -Modeling gown and accessor· ries from Park Avenue Bridal SbQp, 785 N. TUstin Ave ., Orange. is Orange's own Marcia Roberts current _ holder of Miss Orange and other beautY queen titles. P~rk Av~nue shop offers gowns, veils, party and br1desma1ds1 dresses, photographer, flower s, catering and personal services-the com· plete wedding package. family , to auume 1101De ex- -lradiU001117 borne by the bride -portlcularly u the groom'• family ii C(JO.. slderably wealthla than that of the . bride. If the groom lllml!elf ls financJally eatablllhed he may wUb lo foot all the wedding expenses. (In .tetpin& with propriety, however, be ahould not pay for the more intimate items in his bride's trousseau.) Even the formal eUquette If Ir's Second T ' ime, boob hive bent m recent yun and now list aeveral expenses that are optional or set by local custom. However, in m91t cues these 80-Q}Jed optlooal espensea doni live any financial break to the father of the bride -they Don't Imi tat e First Thanks to lhe ~'do your own thing" approach which has modified. if not abolished , ell- only add to hill burden. Items quette rules everywhere, the in this clualfJcation Include: secondtime around bride need Bride's b o u q u e t , tradi-, tionally a gift from the groom, no longer hide in the shadows. may be purchased by bride's Allhough newly re I a :1 e d family as part of her ouUit. rules permit much more Bachelor dinner ii given by freedom in planning a second groom in some areas; by bis attendants in others. wedding, most ~ely a second· Rehearsal dinner may be lime bride will not want to bollted by either the bride'• imitate the bride who's saying or groom's family. her first "I do." 'Ille elaborate ~idesmaids' l u n c b eo n , } white dress, the long train usually &ivu by tbt bride, • '(and veil are all part of the may be liven by ~ at· first nuptial ritual -but that tendanll. doesn't preclude the second· Conagea for mothers and time bride from wearing white grandmothen are UIUllly pro. . . JM OFFERSTllll CUllllL 'S911U11llle nin Is CLAIROL'S HAIR CARE COY. Pll1ER, al ll(n llllil It II all~ bullJ salons ta flpre •Ill JU•r nry n1, Jist·mt·,..·llilr·•ldl;"CUSlllM CAR£* coadltloner form1la. In •ms I )11 •ca-.mlHll Jld!Vldul hair dab, and !bit's all tile mill ...Utl •• "111111 tit ldlillyllll1im llalr .condltloaillJ llld stt-llllldlae f1llllll. fir tlll Cl!! If Jiil dream, Ille CUSTOM CARE" FORllllLOTlotl* Cllllllllllrwltll 1 U.,.1•set.fn•7.50, •d fir just hrl ........ a.II ,.,.11£1tnpllllf Q:.1Jt2.'5o. JDSEPH . IAGNIN 'BEAUTY WEST for11lptllilrm.t;CllSll91t)Ma1111-i]llaii;-...... • t in wedding bands again. A white or pastel gown lf~vid;ed;;;b~y=the~gr~oom:;;bul~;lhe;:;=:::::::::::::::::~================~~ long or short, traditional or· up-to-the minute sans train and veil is perfect. A very young second·time bride may prefer the more elaborate trappings of a first-time ritual -(train,. elaborate gown, ,etc.) and if the groom-te>-be doesn't object, thue's no re~son why anyone e 1 s e should . PARK AVENUE Tbe ~ old in .. ArlCai>ed weddini t.nd Ml a tradition of tvelu1 artiluabip which --lo 'f'SO. The ......,.,O.lnr new ii a ,_,, ..... thatmakatbe .... .,.., .... na. witWand. the test ol time. We an proud to hoArteornd __ .... A-U.WTOll SET 101 S)t.50 N•n $37.50 1 -AllNGTOll SET His '47.50 M•1 $U.50 C-kDfl"SlT Kl1 $35.00 ""1 $32.50 t -OflMDO In NII fota.50 Min $39.50 to offer you the mOlt. beautiful collection of matchinr wedding rinp '"'"' ewr NeD. Whether yoiir taste NDI to eOmetbi•r like a aoft antique ftorentine finish or a bold. contemporary aculpture, we ........ ArtC.n1i!CI riDp -old and new -for you. kCarved W E DD I N G RINGS Second wedding plans are often pared down -but they needn't be -as loog as everything ls in good taste. The processional can be eliminated because this ·time the bride doesn't have to be given away. Two bonOr at· tendants on each side are all WE INERT -CL A R K Fine Jewels that are needed. Chlldten of a first marriage shouldn 'l be forced into flower girl or ring bearer roles. They'll most likely be happier as gues1i5 than as members or the wed· ding party. However, if they fine Jewels I •I• weisf f!.@.s ' t ~ ' 'vish to be included, making them a flower girl or ring· bearer adds a nice t.o1lch. • • · 3333< lilstOL I SOUTH 'COAST ~ .. (0-LHoQ ...... 540.1'7· Bridal Shop 785 N. TUSTIN I J~ Off Newport frwy.) Telephone 53 8-6412 Orange County's Finest and Largest Custom Bridal Shop * BRIDAL GOWNS * BRIDESMAID • ) .. • MOTHER of BRIDES . , ' * FORMAL GOwNs * DEBUTANTS CLAR En A ZIMMERMAN • , , formally or Brent,11ood IOCiety - fuhlon dedfller -recentb' with Buftums. Newport Beach and on@ of Oran1e County's ftnelt bridal coord.lna tors -tor KOWDI, flowtn, cater:lni and photo81'1Phf· R.gister No w Fo r DRAWING for BRIDA L GOWN AND VEIL .. FREE Engagement Portrait 3-4_x5 Glouy Prints Pl us 3 La rge Bridal Portraits OP EN--• Drnlna·April 15th II MON· TUES· FRIDAY WED· THURSDAY SATURDAY 10 to 9 p.m. 10 to 6 p.m. I 0 to .5 P""· • I. ' . ' ' Where 'Will We Live? your hUJ1Ung illoerary by area and U a plione number II :~;-:.; ... ~":.!:. _leltphcme HOW TO MARRY ' ' I Whan lftRll'ln( !pr )'(l!lr s1.1•rs • CHINA • CRYSTAL • SILVER J'lndlna 11* two, three, .... lour . and, a hall room apan. lll!lll ol your -IDO)I 'be • ...., bit u -·(If DOI more IO) U llDdln( IM perfect mate. Tben ts · no ..... ~ In, the \DO"t -,""l!!""P·111.town. you JDa1 be )nlilf"I ,a pod bet - a tlqoe room .,apartment In • ' lillld'1 oldo!r bulldlol In Ille aame aedlon ·ol. wwn at~ Ille rental. The. classi/ied section will also provide a lead Cl\ realtors and rental agents. It'1 a good idea to call. an tbmn and register your: needl. Their staffs can suagest polilbiUUes you haven't ,conddlted. wocldJnc you need' lots ol be1p: Get the Wormatfoo neceuary in .. How to Platt Your Wedding" Gulde. Sen~ 2Sc In coin to P.O. !!ox 388,, Huntln&lon lleach.· ·Calil. l! 1 t • -iliort<ut to -tur: )'OUl!lllllcrmtall-. · ••. where, you'll find the most beautiful china from the world's ••... where you'll find the m~t beb'utlfol china from the world's · leading makers. Before cetUnc aUrted DO the actual .bunt, 11'1' belt. to , set up aqme prello>lnarY \ auidellnel: . I . 'Ille duallled -ol the dally -ts an apart· ment bunter'• best friend. Read·and cllcest )be ads; plin - ,. ' WEDGEWOOD'S " " T urquoi••, Florentin• $37.ts BLOCK'S Fl•m•nco $17.ts LANGLEY'S Sherwood . $15.95 FRANCISCAN 'S Madeira $1 t.00 HAVE :VOURSELF A RING-A.DING FLING . Trecfftlons Fading In Bridal Flneerw1re Diamonds Traditional But Not Must in Rings For wedding rings, stone on the buis of its mean- diamonds are traditional but ing: the green em er a 1 d not a f11usl. In fa ct (according signifjea love and 11uccess; the ruby, contentment. What bet-to Bride's magazine) 25 per-ter stone for an engagement cent of current brides choose ring than the peridot, the com- other gems. :And m a n y binaUon of yellow and pale engagements are marked by green t hat means married a bracelet, a watch, a string happiness? Or consider the of pearls or ' _mere1j-sealed -golden topaz which stands for wi th a kiss. 1 fidelity; the pearl a symbol When yoti go shopping for of ·health and longevity and a ring -and gone · is the the garnet, the dark-red stone day whrn a suitor. haul ring associated with mor~ ancient in hJs pocket when he prbposes virtues than are attributed to -don't let Convention ,hindtr any other gem . your choice. Be guided by Once· you've decided on a your personality and the life stone, you can select the set- you lead. Your only limita-Ung. The solitaire (single tions are personil preference stone) is most popular •. but and your Nance's finances. there are many alternat1v.es. Once he's set a price range You can surr?und your ring with you or the jeweler, begin with contrasting ~nes. or thinking about stones. split the one stone .into three. .Your China :will be ch'erished for many years. Select where you have a c h o i c e, for we have over I 50 patterns in stock. Many girls pcefer their What really detennme the ~t­ birthstone, or perhaps there;'s ting are the shape and me a family heirloom that yOu ·ot your hand. In general~ a wish to have reset. Your large hand demands an 1m- engagement ring can have the portant ring. A big stone will glittery blue of a sunlit com· OveI'JIOW'.er ~ tiny hand unless flower, if you chose a sap-the design JS either high set phire. Yuo may prefer an or dome-shaped. Short fingers amethyst, the stone Worn by are enhanced by an oblong St. Valentine. (His was ring like a marquise, while engraved wHh a Cupid.) thin fin,ers are balanced }D' Perhaps you wish to select a finger, m a haU hoop • Bride's Luggage Needs ~Only 4 Pairs of Shoes Plan Early ••• to give the most trea•ured gift possible ••• Jewels. de!ignod by you I ' Any groom faced with the prospect or carrying around or supervising pounds and pounds of shoe-laden luggage is apt tO' wi8h that Jie had ••• (Nationafiy and Inter- . nationally knoW!1) will per- fect and then create your own desi~ng it into a supeob . o( jewelry art... · We have a vast treasure of stones to select fro m or we will also design using yaur own gems. married a barefoot hipple. "A bride needJ only four pairs of shoes to be ap. propriately shoed for all honeymoon occasions," aaya shoe designer Larry Myrln. "She'll need a sporty shoe to wear with panl·suits and slacks; a dressy shoe fer magic evenings, and two pa1ri of afternoon shoes -one Spol'- ty and the other a bit dressier. One of the afternoon shoetl should be a versatile sandal that may also be worn with her golng·away outfit." Myrin says that the two cardinal rules for choosing a becoming basic shoe wardrobe that will go with anything are "stick to neutral colors - bone,· chamois, black or white -and to keep It simple, particularly in light of the sporty-well-tailored look that ts fashionable today." Extra buckles and bowl, he. adds, will give a basic shoe a varie-- ty of looks. "The latest trend for spring and summer is the spectator influence, which is once again very strong," Myrln asserts, citing a spectator of white, reptile print Corfam with a perforated black patent toe. This number makes an ldeal daytime walking shoe and aoes with a variety of lilloted 1ports oulflts • ' The he-she look Is .UJI soing 1trong, u , lhc.wn by an ln- leresUng •leP"ln pump In brown with a kilUe tonp · and a wheeled, eilension sole, j\lst the lhJnc to ....,. with 1lacks, pants-dmses a n d pant>uits. Another shoe In this category ls a leather step-in with puckered tongue crOSffd by a Sold cbaln. Brides, Myr!n notes, will be Do you want an imlw'nllboa ota~a~T ·ln what .... ol town -1d )'OU prefer to live! Do you prefer • 1arden lplriment, • b1&I> rise buUdlng complete with doarmin, « an aparlmenl 111 • two-family houaet Do ,.. want • modem dwelllq equip. peel wtth the lalesl -verilencecs or would 1"11 tie. happier with Ille qualntnelli and areater decorating -lbWUea thaf an older unit might provide! How 'ton& a 1eaJe. ""' )'OU wllllng to •Ian -If 1"11 oo1y pllJI to stay In 'the apartmeot for • )'tll', It might be wiser to aublel How much can you allard to speml! (Tbe monthly rental should riot uceed ao perceot of take-home pay -Ills, nol both.) 1 CUSTOM TAILORED TUXED6S1 • -' ' ' " For AD Occasion FOR THE SAME PRICE . , . AS .READY~MAD~! , WHT:,AT M0117 A lllAUTIFUUT TAILOUQ TUX CANU YOURS FOi THI SAME PllCI TOU WOULD pA Y FOi A ' However, don't be IO rlgld ln Httlng Up tbeae guldetlnes that you restrict youneH 11J1o necessarUy. l!y iaylng that you only will look at three lllADY·MADll Meat a hero •. HE'S GIVING THE BRIDE & GROOM A SUPERB SYLVANIA COLOR TV · ••• THE ULTIMATE IN WEDDING GIFTS. ·You can be the hero of the wedding day too ••. and save money to boot I Davis-Brown hes a raft of 51ifts to choose from • • • Radios, reCord players, portable televl1lon1, sttrto radio/record players, color te,levi .. _ ions and truly ~lor\dl"I s71·~nl•. Home ~ntertalriment Ctnfert Many availoble at BIG SAVINCiSI .1 ll REMOlE CONTROi. COLOR EARLY AMERICAN COlOR COlllfMPiJIARY COLOR ---- ' ~ .. ,. ~ .,,1 !-.---ii I • ...... I . . -' ;-r. r. 1-.-- CPsNWR . -Hond..;..,e Console CF622K-Chumlng Early Amer~ CF615W -5-rt. ,Cont•mpN'ary ,of watnut elad on metal .ubinet. can Console Color TV In Maple Color Ceneole Wllh smart clecor- ''Ultram1tlc:'' full funct5on Remote vtnMrs. Carved front with drawer atlve IN• rail, A'C full 295 aq. Con(rol. Full 295 "I• f.n· col.or pulla. Full 291.aq. I~. color bright• In. vlewoW. ~tura.' ' brlaht 15• picture tube. Legs '"" picture tube. · . .:F"'l cluied. · ..,. JUST ~559" JUST 556«1° • ~· $~ti YOUR HEADQUAR:rERS FOR SUPERB SYLVANIA HOMEENTERTAINM&N'FINsrnuMENTS. Free Consul tation and estimates pleased to learn then ts a 11 ~t AL ~~tom~ n: :.= /:°~ ~ 17 ~"-Street inttJ anc1 versatile beJ"' or c""••.. M'"' .. black sllng·back wjth a -tie ¥,.." ....,.. underlay-oo the toe. Thia ' '46-"614 , little shoe Is a mult for any . _it,..._ :.i !~. \ .,. brldt -black !lor Ille dty DAILY ..... ·. M111RDAY M orbelgt!/~·.....,ns. 11....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;~ .......... ..;. .... ;.;..;...,...;'-! .. ..;...;;;,...,..,..;...,;,..._....,...,iiiiiifi;i!!ll • IANKAMEllCARD o MASTER CHARGE ·• PERSONAUZED ClW>tT .... CDlltPlm • 3333 lrWol • Com Mal • S4M066 \ ,-. I I I Jf DAILY 111.0T TuMo7, '""""7 111, 1969 Wanta Live longer? IWTlecl JIOOplt live longer, rate than lb<lr marrlod or 1ccord1nc to tbt California r e m a r r I " d counterparu. Public lkaJt.li lltpar1menL G<neral 111n.... alcoholism, Dfvarced meo and women at mental Jllneu are more com· every aie Jewl die at 1 h!gher moo among the. divorced. YOUR GEHJUMAN'S GENlUMAN FOR EVERY FORMAL OCCASION ' Our Modern RENTAL SERVICE At Very Popular Prices - _.....___ ---·4- Marriage Popularity Growing Marrltge II more popular · than ever, accordiq to the latest atalll!ics con!pilod by Ibo Doporlinent cl Health, F.dueflloa llld;WeU.... Tbie ..-ol men and womm m, the lJnlted states .... 11o oiarrJ each yoar bu 111-1'".ued IW>oiantWly a n d • wfthout lnterrupttoo I I D c e 1911.' Nol aloce the c!Oet of .World Wai,n JJave m•Pl'i•ge:s ~ 1be 111'1 'i~ of · i.tu:6ao, and not aJnce the \ IRIDE.AND GROOM Are Ibo two· moot lmpO<tant ~·1a a W<ddfnl.'u your -tr l<! wolk down the alsle, Pl Ibo "How to Plan Your Wedding" Gulde. Send 25c In coin io P .o. Boa Siii, Huntington Beach, Calif. 92641 rlaaes have lnc:reued both absolute numbers and In portion to Ibo tDt&I popl!a . only about ooe out of ev l t women ol eligible •P rled durin& lM'T 11 end of lhe Korean Conllict . hu the mal'riage rite reached Its preaeot level of U mar· rlages per I0001>0pulaUon. Tb• magnitude of the marriage boom ii lndlcaled by annual tncreuu in mar,rlage:a between 11112 and Itri which have averaged ,fS,000 -well above average annual in- creases in marriages for any other ftve ' ,ear period •ince World War JI. ~. sll!ce 1962, mar· to one out cl elibt la I High postwar birth r "'sultlng fn the currut larp number ol young people OI marriageable aae, are tbl keJl ractor1 afiedina: the upw awing. 'WB>DlllG FABRICS for SEW 'N SAVE' Re-embroidered Lace, Ruffled Lace, Colton Lace. 45" wide .......... 2.49 to 4.98 yd. Dull Satin ............................... 2.59 yd. EXPERT DRESSMAKING I 81nkAmerlc1rd Muter Charge, The FABRIC CENTER 488 E. 17th St. at lrvi-Costa Mou In the Crestview Center 646-4544 ) "THI PUP SHOP" YOUR BASIC GUIDE TO EUGAlllCE ••• We can help you coordinate your wedding apparel IO that everything is just right ••. and for your going away ensemble we have all the latest styles . 'COVER GIRL' GOWN -This imported organza gown with Venice ,lace of- fers new look in sheer and lace applique (see closeup, left, for collar detail treatment). It's part of cover group featured in Spring 1969 edition of The Bride's Magazine. The entire collection is featured at Gene's Bridal Salon, South Coast Plaza, in Costa Mesa. WROUGHT IRON CANDLE HOLDER S7.95 $12..95 HAND BLOWN GLASS ENCHILADA f~m GUADALAJARA BAKING DISHES • In Some Suggestions Bridal Attire Here' re Getting • PREP SHOP 3333 BRISTOL SOUTH CO~T PLAZA Costa Mesa 540-9521 Your weddfna ...Ult ii prob· ably ooe of the m o 1 t ex- pensive ensembles you'll be buying for a long time to come. So shop for it ac- cordingly! Here, culled lrom the suggestions of bridal con- sultants, are some shopping do's and don'L'I that will help ensure that the gown or your choice fuUills yo u r ex- pectations: NIOM a1q·J1cr. _... ._ ··::-:r -..... ... 4 ....... ~ .,DISMAID'S OIUS ff SYLYIA ANMo •-tk en.dtelile ............... witli ...... ... ~,.. ...... .....,, ..... . MINETTE'S MON.&Pll. Of'l .. t~JetP.JA. TUIJ.•ft .. •t'MfU•tA'', t1•TO ... P.M. 1.501 No itPin SAblTA ANA f. 543-5484 SHOP EARLY. Since most wedding gowns lake from four to six weeks to be fitted and altered you should begin shop- ping no later than two months before the big day. ( Have you ever seen a bride in hoots? No gown can look -.i. JJE m~-A ] very pretty that way, so take a WUV ·lltAAW along the type of shoes you •~tc.o1t , , ~-plan to wear. (Many shops ~•• m • :~Hv?!~',1;r.;1~:~1n: sots .. ~rt ~Wife~::i~~ . To make sure that you get the best personal service, it's smart to set up an ap- pointment in advance. This is particularly important if you're shopping in a large store during Qie busy spring months. SU IT ABLE UNDERWEAR. ~. NEW STORE: 2722 "D" N. Main St ••• Don't worry about lhe hoops .~'. F•ahlon Lane, S•nta An• 136-4'21 or crinolines that may bel ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ necessary; lhe bridal shop willl,: supply those. But do wear EXPLAIN YOUR NEEDS IN DETAIL. You can avoid wasting your own and the bridal consultant' s time by laying the proper groundwork. Tell her lhe date and time of your wedding, the degree of formality, lhe approximate price range you have in mind and your fashion likes and dislikes. WEAR OR TAKE ALONG APPROPRIATE SH 0 ES. a girdle and a padded bra -if that's what you ordinarily wear -and bring with you a strapless bra or off-the. shoulder bra in case a particular style requires that type of foundation garment. If you're going to be starting birth control pills before your wedding, mention that to the consultant: it often makes a difference in the f i n a I measurements. CIRCLE of LOVE • The TRADITIONAL BRIDAL GIFT .•. A cultured pearl necklace to wear happily ever after. A cherished gift that re- flects your good taste. from 25.00 CHARLES H. BARR 118 Mlrlne Aw11uu. lklbol 1.t.nd, Calif. New~ 90morrow~ GBride! ,.,~ •• '1 . . \ ' ( ;;z;1 "') "" ---.. -: );, .... -· ... i ,,.----· ... :....--, ' , -. ·"" >. I ·-19 • NEWPORT BEACH SANTA ANA 11 ........ ,.._, ---0,.. ..... & M . ., ...... , ... ltJ w ..... St. .,_ .. _ .... lid ' , .•. - ZAr.ES· •.JBWBLBBS . ' ' • .. .1 ·' .. ~ l :! ~ ' , ' ·' < ' , l .. ,. ' ' ' ; ' ~ ? . i • • -- • f ~·.Old World. ,. Mediter.ranean 1 ' Spa1'iah · Furniture ·r. ,.._..,. oncoll1tion of $22,000.00 -Sp1nl1h and· Mtdlterrane1n Furniture ' All New,., 9Nllty kolMI Na .... he.,,.... .... "-Oa ~· Items <11 follows: GeorReous 8 lt custom . qUJ,11¢ sofa with separate )oose .~illowa with hea,Y· oak trim dec:or and m.atching chair, 3 matching oalc occulonal·tables; (2)' 58" .tall deeontor lampt, hanstng chain swag lamps in~wrougbt iron, an 8 piece ~g alze· master bedroom suite in pecan panelled Mediterran- eab' otyle with top· ~uaUtf 15 yr. warranty ki& llije')!111llfess & b'Ox springs.' Spaniah . d-dlniitg ~·" ·~ ' ' ; . l ..... ....,.._,...,,,,..... ., ~:'of:~111'1C:.~ .. : .... -.... -. $698.00 AtH Ploc• Can Ila Purch-lndlvlduelly Tirms Av1llabte -Newcomers to C11lf. ,Credit Approved lm11l•di1tely . '·;L:f J] Furniture <· At Harbor Blvd. 1944· Newpoit Blvd. Costa Mesa only Evlf'y night 1tll" 9 -WM., Sat. &. Sun. 'tll 6. SILVER· SPECIAL 11/l qt. C~SSEIOLE-CHAFING DISH •. PYllX LIN!D ' . .' /.•-' . . , One of 9'• fnoit ........ ·,,_w ..,.. .. we're .. ever off1rid yeti ••.• n11 ..... of .. hit .... ~ items eYM at tM regular price. H• ... :Mttfy Sllvtr· plated. luy ......, lot yotrr "°"'' . , . lot upcomlo9 , Birdoy Gilts, order today. ' ' ' ' ., : Mail ordm ... , $1.ilJ.15, ca•eri Sain Tat, l11~ni..-. •IHI Local l>ellnry CIMlttl Acco111tt hrrltttl GIR WI.AP -NO CMAl&f lllDAL ltGISTIY GEORGE MURRAY Sfl.Vlll e Cl:UNA t Cll:VST~L. • r'UllHITURE So11th Co•it Pino lrltt•l.Street •I 5011 Dlt<Jo Fro1woy '~•n 14'·2700 . ,, ( Yau wtilll IMr clown tk aisle, W!'LL taU care . of the Chcimpapel : { ' SPECIAL Dl$C'OUNT l'RICES ON CHAMPAGNE IY THE CASE " ------------------------------·-~·---·--~·--.-..-~•·c~~'''""'"'J ___ ..,_,.~.,.,,._owwww._.____._ __ _, It's All Knit W&.t.R IT, IN RAIN 11'1 W0?1(preol ... ·- ' ' ~ "-~1. 'ooas:'At.YWHERE ' 11+r Oiilte or Dinner ' •. i • '!be . luhloa:corilolous bride put CUllilly by . dly with Tr0usseau ' ' ·SOPHISTICATED Wkle P•nta 'In' EVENING ELEGANCE C<1ahm1N •ncl Velvet • TundJ1, , ..... ., 18, 1969 DAILY PILOT JS . ' FROM CILlrQRNIA ARTISAKS, ENCAStMM RIND! Of' !NCOMPWBtE BIW.J'JY. TH~ CHALON' 00Ll.£CTION. ·l . 1823 NEWPO~T AVE., COSTA MESA Con~•nl•nt Tt•rm1 BankAmerit:erd Mast•r Cherg• 548-3401 P1'IONE wbo bows tf!1 liDportaoco llldla· ot ' ohort skirt or that upkeep and packabllity. RWnoroullY1 at night with a swllbing Harlow styles, at thelr nattering best in tex· t~rtd mohair blend. [annal Ulrt. A mohair play in a wardrobe, can add . ~· · ~ a d e 1 i· ~ a t e Dresses that fravel well an extra verse, to the trldh lacy knit, 1S an don't have to be the duU, resistible knit bonus or all the trousseau ls the robe of bOnded wool jersey witb Its supple fluidity. It can be/~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ tailored or frou·frou short orli long, but it always bu the quality air of elegance and that welcome natural wannth. tlonal bridal fuhlon rhyme. minl·wrap or safe classics -not if they're It now it>eS: "Bomethlni old i, t~D'.liltl. ~ magnUicent woolknlts, which hide their J}ftjng colors that a r e practicality in resilient, non- something new;. somethiD( ~·· a&;nature give 8 ra-mussable textures. There's 1 borrowi;<t; som'.elhlrlt blue, d1ut . llfl" to the w h 01 e touch of romance in engaging and evetythlng knit in her wardrobe.. little dresses with ruffled cufili trousseau." A ·wool or cashmert vest and tiered ruffled skirtl, or ' ~ taus litU ·t in a dress and coat costume For whatever ~· on th~ up ftrY ~ su1 cue detailed with scalloping. itinerary there'• 8 knit to apmce ~t pU.ys an un~nt ~ . · ·: wll'dro6i role by unifying A multi-purpose coat topl make ' ~t-drtued oecuton'~ llPl!'•tel 111d stamping the the bride's wardrobe. New are out of ~t. · · · 1 outftts with individuality .. "ater·repellent styles ,tn N''Ver underestlma.te th•· ChOOH from any number of 11.otible-knlt wool which aerva costume power of a' good interestlng"textures, includlna• .. both as top coat or 1weii.r, By changlna; the rest cables, r ibs, tweeds, d t;bO!rercoat. of the out!it, the sweater can boucles, in solid colon or .pi\,, • · 'l'hse coats look rich and fill most any fashion need.• terns such as menswear strip-· retain their smooth suffact For erample, a knitted ing:s or Indian motif jac· despite strenuous wear. The beauty of all these fashions is that they CID literally be rolled up 1n a ball. To fre1hen them up, almply han( on the showv rod while a tub of hot water ·-Otom lo crllphlu. For IOlhe btldts, I ht trou.ue1u may reprtHnt the fllat time they hive eVtl' auembled a completely ncw wanhbe all at once. tr they bull4 li around fine knits - wool, cuhmere, slllr: and cot- ton, they'll be m&klng one of the best long·lerm fashion investments of their lives. cashmere sweater sblrt, in a quards. Perhaps the mo st ir· 1ofUy ruffled style, tailored, By all means include some 1..===================:;::;;,ll or In a delightfu l Mexican pants for the fun of it. The wedding shirt version, can ap-most ezciting are the wide, ' W ell.;dressed Bride Is '.Also Well-tressed PEIGNOIRS GOWNS FOR THE BRIDE The well-dressed bride is also a well-tresS«I one. But, like other facets of the bride:s ap~1rance -h·er complexion , her hands -the right hairdo cannol be c reated in· stantaneously ; il mu st be worked on. "A bride-elect should start thlnldng about her hair just as soon as she sets the wed · ding date," says halr!tylist Frances Denari. "If her hair js in poOr condition, this is the time to do somelhing about it. And if a girl's got a way-out haircut, this Is also the time to Jet it grow out. or to buy a wiglet or fall ." That way,· explains Miss Denari, when the bride shops for a veil, she can wear her hair approximately the way she plans to on her wedding day -an important point since the bride's hairstyle del.enninftt' the type of head- dress selected. "Don't wait until the day you are getting married to see how your hairdo goes with the headdress you h a v e chosen ," caullol\5 Miss Denari. She recommends that a girl come in with her head- piece at )east two weeks before the wedding so that the stylist can try out and perfect lhe de!lred hairdo. And once a style Js chosen -stick with it. The something new at your wedding should not be a new hairstyle. Extreme, dramatic hairdos are inappropriate for a bride, says Miss Denari. ''A bride's hair should look nice but as natural as possible."· That's why she favors a son filp, a soft, modified pageboy or an upsweep, with a !Oft cascade of curls plied high. "These hairstyles are eta.WC; they don't date the bride," she comments. And they're not going to fall apart once the bride starta dancing . Not only ls a simple hairdo the most flat1'rin(, explains Miss Denarl, but it's the easiest to care for on the honeymoon . "A bridesmaid cani have 1 lot of curls and • real elaborate Creation because 1he can always go back to the salon the nezt day, but what bride wants to spend her honeymoon running back and forth to the beauty parlor?" EDITH SMl.TH Co,.•t I lnti111•t• Wo•r 2711 I. CMlt Hwy., CM.,.. lel M•r 673·2611 .----l'JRGINIA'S------. SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE 3334 E. Co•1f Hwy. e Coron• d•I Mar Phone 673-8050 Wo'ro mucll to old to c•tch th• brld1t bouquet, but not lo old to holp you pl111 pr1tty 4ron11 for yo11r brld•I p1rfy, 11•t 011ly #11 brl41 but brld••• 11111411 111ofh1r of th1 bri41 11 will 11 mothor of the 9roo111. Drop by 1oon to ••• 011r wi4o 1l1ction of febriu which •to 111ltebto for tlio I lg Occ111lon l Or )'Ill 111ey pr1f1r to 1h1p fro111 011r brid1I book with 11111° pl1 whtch con bo ord1r1d. Pl111 1h114 01 1p1,ci1! or· dirt t1ke 111 1 .. tr1 two w1ok1. If y..i11 cluo u1 i11 11 to w1ddln9 pl1nt lfor111ol or lnform1ll 1114 timo of doy for tho ti do'1I thon with your cr1eli¥1 ido11 1llCI our knowlo491 of 1uft1bl1 p1tt1rn1 incl y1rcl191 yo11 h1¥0 yo11r ¥01')' ow11 orl9• ln1I w1cldl119, 1111 to 11111111011 tho 11"•in91 whlh 11111 t1ir1 e111 lio uucl to·lniy o.tr11 for your 11ow homo. See you $0011, Vlttlnll That's one reason whJ wiglets and falls make Ideal honeymoon cooipan1ons, she notes. "Then a girl can swlm l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ au day, comb out her holr, TV WEEK Tells it Stick some curls on top and ~:~~.;--lh•'•inhercrowning Like 'It'll be -... .. INTRODUCING "FMt LA0r,,, ...,..,.c1on_onc1_,.,. __ na ... that..,. ffteJdy "mD lotMCh (l:thtr ... Thay 111 !QgolllW boautllUlly to Illy In ploco, otwayo. StoP In and let us give you 1 closer look at the deli- cate futurn Of thl Fair Lady wedding sets, soon. , . SLAVIC"'S ~ ....... Sinc91917 I I ·I SEALY MATTRESS Now on .this Sealy Golden · ·Guard • SALE-PRicEn$4:99s AT ONLY' (' . ·1 • • ::::~: ,.. ::..11chp\111 You get this ef ~gani cover plus • DURA-LUX CUSHIONING Snl(.• udilllvt blond of COiion end . S11fylo1.,.. givtl "'' quilted l!Jlfoci a puffy, luxurl11t11 l1~J. ." __ ,_ • REINFORCED SUPPORT In tho ctnllf 11!1111 ·I"" notd It molt •• , co111bln1d wltll Snly.1 illluu tx1r1 ftrm inn1rspring conitruction. 1 • REDUCED MODERN SIZE PRICES ' BO x ao• OUEfN SIZE Vwldor, 149" , •• , .... doll ., ""'-'« 1111 2.,....; ' . " 22'- l' lollfll' dlln ...... -"' .. . -199" SfC.; ut . ' 1 Fine Wine • ~·~ Po•9'J • Candy • ·~ • 1r flilllon hl1od • Nowport IHch -6"'4-1 llO . ' f.ASHION ISLAND e NEWPORT CENTER Oppotlt. lroadw1y Yowt Chtrt• _.,cc1u11f Wolcoll'I• -ltnlAmorlctrl, M1•l•r Chor91 ,too Op111 M111., Fri, •11tll t :JO '""'' 1865 HARBOR 1.LYD. e I'll. 548·5131 DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA JI llollLY M -.r.....,11,1'69 . . ,.. . . • • ' . . , • : I . . l'llCIS DNl.'11¥11 +1 IDAY --'llW'f, FE iitaT·1t-u . . . . . . . . • . . ' R'llK' llllOM ·1111 · DllM , . .. LB •. BAG c miC°YEDoui&ii 2 lc 8 :a 77c Al~-PUIPOSE•SAYl42c 20· LI. aa· RUSSET POTATOES · ~"'0 · c 10! THIN S«INHED •NV.TY -. . RUBY ·RED GR.AP.EFllUIT • .. . QUALln! ....., , ....... '°·' .... ' , SAT, & IUN, 10 A.M. TO 7 rJI'. • . • '. if SlAI SPlcws' , 'Cl'9':e~f!cl llCIVfnga I ,. , ~a~·pos•lf?le by special , p\irchat-flam th.~ manufacturer ·and pa..-d on. to you · everyday, swocio:sPECIAL TIES : ' . COOKE!> CUBMEAT . COoKED CRAi LEGS FROG LEGS SHELL CLAMS SM()KED FISH FRESH LOBSTERS EASTE"N OYSTERS . . LA~E SHRIMP '. "COCKTAIL SHRIMP SCAUOPS lAWRY'S e l Y. .QUNCE e SAVE At &Ill SPAGHml "'-riOTiiusii" . ...,. SAUCE MIX :~ 22' ~ ioMiio~ . ' ·~ JUICE SAVI •• :!-'·OUNCE BAG • .I YARtff!ES e SAVE 7c s159 DEEP SEA 79r. OCTOPUS FRllH:·FROZIN ·tTIAKS FRESH FROZEN 1 SWORDFISH $ 09 STEAK.... 1b. SEAL M00NN •129 STE4K • • • • 1b. ,16-0UNCl IOfTU.e TiiOU&ANO ISLAND ROD'S 59c DRESSINGS ILIU CHEESE .. 63c IOQUEFORT .. lfc 21c 29c =====: HOME·IRITI e 6·,ACK LIGHTIULBS :;r;: 88' ~ PICTSWEET 30RF$1 ~ VEGETABLES 2-100 _,, ... 1.10 • KERN'S • 2-ll, e U..VE 16c • STRAWBERRY 59c PRES DYES i4l woiiiik 3~s1 "I"' BREAD R • ,, '. •' ,, .... t ... ' ' . J ODEAN HAST INGS, 642-432f TliltMlay, ,tbnllf'Y l .. lfM I Pitt ir .. For Sou th C0,ast Juniors 0\,Spring Styles ,'. . I ,,~ To Blossom ,. . r . • .1-Fashions in Springtime will b~ presented Saturday, Feb. 22, 'When the South Coast Junior Women's Club of Fountain Valley sj>on-~Ors a luncheon show, ils nlajor philanthropy for the year. ' Gigantic glass flowers in pastel shad~s will center tables in the Golden Sails Inn, Long Beach, when members and guests arrive for ·an 11 a.m. social hour. ~ Following luncheon at noon a collection of the prettiest in ne\v spring fashio ns from Orange County shops will be coordinated m· a showing by Miss Florence Smales. ' Tickets for the luncheon show are $6 per person and ' may be obtained by calling Mrs. George; O'Hare, 962.3134. Servitlg as chairman is Mrs. Andrew Edwards, and assisting . ~re th~ Mmes. Lloyd Satterthwaite, program directory; O'Hare, tick- ets; John Gengenbacher, table favors;· Larry Long, table decorations; F,'rank Fleck, programs; William Ha.res and Paul Johnson prizes and Milton· Rohrer, publicity. _ • ' . All proceeds from the spring di.splay will be used for the Teen ;i;Cballenge program in Anaheim . • • . A nonprofit ?rganizat~on which helps dope addicts, alcoholics or ,hard-tcrhandle children, the Teen Challenge program is not limited to-teenag~rs only. FASHIONS TO FLOWER -Mrs. George O'Hare, Mrs. Willial!' Haye:; apd Mrs. James west (left to right ) admire the :enormous ·glass flowers in perky pastefs".which \Vill center tables when South Coast Junior Woman's Club of Fountain Valley sp.on&Oi;s a .benefit' luncheon sho\V Saturday, Feb. 22, .in the Golden ·Sails Inn, Long Beach. Proceeds will be Used for. Teen Challenge. New Show On Tour . ~" I In support of a.hea1lhy corn. n1unily, "cuenlbers of Uie Hun- tington Beach Junior Woman's . , ' Club are sponsoring two cor\- tinuing projects. Healtli •puppet, shows are~ being ~ucted through the remainder-of ·tms ·month tor f~ iµid fifth grade studentS in .the fluntingtotl Beach ~ Ocean ~iew School Districts. The ill-new show contains a skeleton and different parts of the body such as heart, lungs, kidneys, stomach, liver and skin. Mrs. G e r a I d l\tarigold is assisting Mrs. Karl Hammer, health chairman, with the scjleduling of Juniors prtsenting1the shows to 24 area schools. · The cliib also is sponsoring a medical self-help program each Thursday between 7:30 and 10 p.m. in the clubhouse, 420 10th SI. Mrs. William McCourt, safe- ty chairman, and Mis. Edwa rd flennigan have ar ranged the program which is . being presented by Vines Col- lier. assistant director of the city's Civil Defense Depart- ment. ~1rs. Hammer~ Mrs. Eugene Williams and Mrs. Wiiliam Zeithing recently preiiared a dinner for members. past presidents, past coordinators and ~sts to raise funds for a $100 nursing scholarship to be presented to an Orange Coast Collegt! student. Surf Sounds • ·M~rrn .~:ids . lour .. . . CHOC :·Facility : By JODEAN HASTINGS or .... OlllJ ,llOI Sl•tt TOURING ClllLDREN'S Hospital_of_Orange County ». day are members and pro- spective members of. the Little Mermaid·· Guild of Huntington Beach. The visit to the hospital instead of a regular rrieeting Serves as an or)en.. tat~n and provi,des· an op- portunity for new:~ members to meet William Spurgeon III, executive vi~ ~nt of the hospital's boar~ of directors. Mrs. C .. , 'ljo~ Hubbard, president of ··tittle Mermaid Guild, will present. the guild's check from its supportive ,con- tributions during 1968. or ~untin-Bton ~each: & many times as I've been .Jn the ,shop in the· league'i.,chaPter house, I had never seen rthe bulging bookcase of ~softect hardback ·and p·a·p, er.ba ck boob on a varietjr Of topics -some only IO ceqis _each. THE ARTHRl'nS fund will · benefit frQm a bridge luncheon sporW>t_ed by the Woman 's Club. of· . S.eal Beach taking place al "11 :30 a.m. Monday, Feb. 24. Martha Lust plans to open her hOme f. o r members and guests, and assisting her will be Charlotte Crowley, Golda Phelan and Polly Arthur. Martha is re- qi.iesfinl feservatio.ns by· Fri· SUE AN D RUDY Kundig, . dily, Feb: 21. . who will be moving out or ;Seal'Beach Juni9rs are ~ian· the area, were guests of honor Ing. a ~r and . pizza party during a going-away party Satucday, Feb. 22. Barbara hosted by ~1ary and Arnold B1u1on is,requestjJlg everyone Mendoza in their Huntington to brtog. a pizza and gift·wrap- Harbour home. ped whi~ eleph~rit and _. Enjoying cocktails· and a the 'fun. • · delicious buffet were Charlie and ·. Kay Andrada, JiID. and Merilyn Martin, Petty and Bob Firth and Ja<;_k and Jackie Satterthwaite. • Other health projec'ts in· elude , sorting 62 boxes of Easter Seal envelopes by zi p code for ·me Orange "County Societj or Cripjiled Children and Adults. .. . . .. ' IT COULD BE> A DISASTER -Mrs. Robert A. Obland'at\d Mrs. Edward Hahiligan· (leftt to right) receive instrnction in bow to han- dle an emergency from1 Vines Collier, assistant director of the Huntington Beach Civil Defense Department. The medical self- • ' .~ , l • ' ' ' help program, sponsored by the Jilnior. W,oman's ·Club, •Will · take place eacl;l 'lbUrsdily between 7:30 and 10 p.m. thtough March W. . ·AM AZ l·N G, WHAT· you discover tucked in iioots ·and crannies in · the thrif\ '.shop run by the · Assistance. League MARGARET KR UKEN· BERG, member Of the Foun-~iri Valle)-Wozqan's Club; is i'etnindlng area wamen that help · Is needed·; in t.h e Westminster · ~val~ent Home. An)'one willing. to'sJiare a cOuple of. hours any TU~y to pl8y bingo wl!h µle patients Is invited to call Margartt! It is.open lo.the public at no cost. , ,. ' · · • ''. . , Vfsit·-a · Doctor Before ·You PEAR ANN LANDERS ' Is it possible that my boyfriend: is ~gic to me! Lately when we in: together he breaks oUt in 8-rash and at.arts to itch like ci1uY. Believe me, this cart ruin a roman- tid ffio~t... 1 ii first 1 thooght it might be my weol sWeater,' but lhe '11me thing hap-other t.ban clotblng, sucb u makeup, ed when I wore silk and cotton hair 1pray or perfume. He 1bould go d ' ·, One day, as an e1.periment. al once to an ·11Jergl1t who will kll I k almost everything off and he blm whit to bring 11 for ttsdag i ,led ~orse than, ev_er. Does thi~_ IT\eap U, lh' tests reveal no alle;g'8 and w can t &et l]W"tietl? Please Check the ltchfnt pent1t1, lte tboldcl C'Ditlkler '"' h your COMttl~ ~nd get SQ1T1e word ·· tbe possibWly that .u.e ru11 ls caused b to me 1mmedlltely. I(, ,you say 1'y .aa. .emodonal .prlblta •. Be .might t~ go t4 a doctor he has ' promised be .. ltaing" to get ...,,_., tr lit-m11 ~t he, .will. ·ao. Thank you · for any ,bl 'afrakt of mU'1ilp .. ••ttcblq" to ; yoU £ap ·ve us.+-WO~D • •&If sln&Je. i. . .., uet, be caref•I NDY .• · tt. ~ wf&li &ltose Uperlm81!1Ll1 B•tlef'Clp, «' EAJt~V':folt.\Mytriollt 111&111 'YOU mlaiil etld 11P with an tddldonal be lllerslc t. 10tDeO:Un1 yoli are weirlnl .. ~ problem. - • DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your reply• to the widow who translated a former fTiend's sympathy note as, "Get lost." could only have been written by a woman such as you -one wbo Is happily and safely mard.ed. You sakf'an ioteresUng and llert widow not only· hangs on to her' old ftfends but makes new onea. You are paflfy right. 511<'11 make new lrlen<ls all rlghl, U ahe Isn't careful she'll " llJ\d hmeU ' . ' '• :scratch Him Off Your Lrst .. surrounded· by dro.'ves or widows, divorcees and maiden ,ladies -all just as Jonf:ly and isolated f~m married people as she· LS. & awhile she'll .resign . herself lo the • truth -it is better lo go to ~ theater or a 'movie with another lonely woman than to sit home In a bathrobe. • I hope the widow wtio wrote to you will ask herself, "How many 1 widows did 1 .. ihcltide Jn 'l1'f1 soelal ,llfe. When . my husband was alive?" It's a good question for warrled women to ask themselves, too. God. alone knows whose husbanil wm be next. -WASH!, D:C.' DEAR D.C.: Voar kUer lJ &Utt to prld< '' • eooiscl-of, ..,.. a a• IOI • t11a • .....,, or 1 ollltn. Pleo,. ieid Ille , t!eit -··It eOllld lie y.;.., lioaii - '-lllo' Uy; • from miserable. The last ·thlng I want DEAR ANN:1Don't close thi ~ is. to get married again. SO tell, tbp8e on widows without adding this ~ last . smug women. to stop worrying., 't'bty · thought. As a widow, 1 am acCUstoniec1 ate safe.·-OUSK -• .' 1 to being left out of .. thi .... a by ,old p•• D ou•· I ""--· ---.1 ' -... -_, -·--to .~ "friends." But 1 get furious wlien wives &Mm, Honey, YOU did. AH I illak whisk th.ell" hu$an~s away ffont me + yod. ~ • - · at cocktail parties and civic fUnctibos 4 ! as if I were .a· scheming hussy With U~, Or y~if on {ates? Whit'• evil designs, . right . What 's -wrong? Should Lyou? . Most .of Ute oJd eoats .have hearin( Shou)fin't f.OU? .Si!nd ifor" .,.nn Linden' aids, emphysema and are loade!t wit~ booklet "t>aUna Doe-l!'td DOO•ta," eodo.. liver spots. Who'd want I.hem anyway? ing With jYOOr ,requ~ 35i cents Jn cOin 1')1cre .are more b¥ marriages I •rouf!d and rtpna.; .$elf~~~· ~ l~ g~· Qbes, .and nobody ~nows_ lh11 1 .• ~vekipe. · ' : better tlWI >.nn ,Landers. My marriage , Anli Laridtts will 'be ':lo lbtlp ,.., ·not ·a · very good. one but ' I kepi , 11111 ·/'lth yobr probleml, .Send _!Mm my mbulh shlit . and never· let on td It ~ ta ''I" GI ..!J:a~'f P~ anyooe.-Of~ I· lift lonely,-'but ~ns+-M.11 · J .. aleo am reasonably content ind .far enveJbpc.1 • .. .... j · 1-f .. \ I I ---------------------------------------• " IWl.Y •JO.OT PMIOUS TROJAN -All eyes of the University of Southern Cali· lomla alumnae who are members of the Trojan Guild will be on their alma mater and its maseo\, the Trojan horse, Thursday, Feb. 20, when Trojan Guild Day is planned. Training an extra eye on the horse is Mrs. King Cooper Jr. (right) wblle Mrs .. Robert 0. Basmajian (Jell) and Mrs. Herald ·Piper offer a .. lst- ance. Trojan Guild Focuses On Campus · Activities Women graduates of the University of S o u th e r n CalHomia, including many Orange Coast residents, will travel back to tbefr alma mater Thurtday, Feb. 20, for the nlntll annual Trojan Guild Day. A lllimulallng program i. planned on Guild Day each year for alumnae and friends . . of the university, with one • department of the seho&J featured. This y e a r the spotlight will be on the School cf Drama. ·, • Mrs. King Cooper Jr. of Huntington H a r b o u r is · ' chairma(I of this year's Guild : .. Day, which i n c l u de s the drama program, luncheon in ., Town and Gown foyer and · ·~~ tours of the campus conducted by the Trojan GuiJd Toor · .. Group headed by Mrs. Robert Mahler of Brea. . Two speakers from USC will 1 · open the drama program, ,"',:.John Edward Blankenchip, professor of drama. arid William C. Whitt, assistant professor of drama. They will •· introduce the USC Festival • ''Theater Company, of which • • Btankenchip ill producer and White Is assistant producu. -' The Festival T he a t e r Players have been the only American student group in-. vited to participate in the famed Edinburgh Festival in Scotlaod for tile part three years. After their appeai'a.nce in the ftlllval rut year they were invited by the state Department to loor parta of Gmnany. Other accomplishments of Jaycettes See Slides M~ Tamaril Bonell, Foun- tain Valley's foreign exchange student, wUI speak tonight al 8 when the Fountain Va11ey Jaycettes meet .in the home of Mrs. Claude L. Cos!. Miu BoneH will illuslratc her 'talk with slides of her home in Johannesburg, South Africa. The Jaycettes attended 1 taping of the Truth or Con· sequences TV show I a s t month, and member Mrs. John Flanders was selected to appear on the show to be viewed Monday, March 17. '~----~----~-~~~~~ ". Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Dtf1attd 5 Fr111ds 10 Edtn . r11ldent 14 Volcmo of EuR>pe 115 Serl of old 11•-hour 17 V«t swtel :u v:;i lllH rous ,20 0¥1r-.--. 2 wards 21 •11i:1 nols1 of a gull 22 llneral deposit 23 Duck t11mter's acctssory 15"-llltlout · IO#ltn" 26' Clothlng accessory 30 lortrd OK 31 Utter fal lurt 34 ltllh~ • .,.,word l6 Alplnt region of Austria 31 Use an air 3'T~· lion Q.U. -49 U11p's '""~ 51 For11 O :-M'llblt • >2 0.111.1111 c•l td SJ Havln~ less conWI n1tlgn SS NUllltrlcal ~·fl• . S7 rrlous offtnsr 51 C1rtlln lilld•••l· '""' 63 Qu ie t llOht ... ,, M Un •agina- "" 66 luslcal '""'' 6l ltllllwtct Iii Clb' of Texas 69 1.0.U. slgntt 70 Vtry ••II 71 Kind of tldt DOWN l Ch1rlts H.-: l1nUn1's 1s111:lalt 2 Cirt1t1llftd 'flilttt J Noun 21111'9 7 Pap11nt to 32 L•nt off fol'llll' wlft l3 Hiid tltlt to t &chMlt :JS 1t1n11 of l!ll~IUll hllls •Worry 37 Vltllcal lON.A•et. su"lyplp1 shrub .(0 H1g1tfy1 ll lhll't llllWtl' E11t• Is •2 01arrput1&l• lt Exctsslvtly 45 Bow dry 41 Agtlcultural 1 ll Way 111ad'lln1 I 11 Coil SO Quarrel· contalnH sOllt 24 rrovldt 5; -dt food tnd r1slst1r1c1 servlct 54 Go to ruln 2' CltJ In SJ klnt of l.ollbfty . 11\t Gtm811 t• Scenic S• Bird vln 57 Co11t 1• 21 One who doll a flood not Ml"'I 51 Sl•d'I Mrd Russian Changes Reviewed Grandmothers Horoscope Lib ra: Praises Due "IHIAT· T'fN•S TO •O NATIVI IN" HAWAIIAN SHOPS F .. hion Island -Ne;,,port Center Open Sunday I ·5 p.m. rf· :1 llt.r=. tuft' le 4 Ktn.stnst .. >Ji•• tfwt\lt •• lttl ... S :1:fnt to"'"'" 47 lblll(J tool ·- 21 Hawfa1 a 60 ~alllllt ttflldkll '1 Ztll COlfM tlUt 2• ••'• u r11ttn1111 t'ld:ft•t dt'llCt ll Fttt • 65 ltlonaln1 Tnict: Abbr. to; .SURh1 At noon every second 'nnlr•· day the Newpcrt Harbor Grandmothers' Club meets In the Costa M.,. Golf and Counlry Club. Mrs. Dorothy Van Marter may be called for more information . I ~ I ..... -. I . i • • I , . . \ 1 J Grandmother 's advice can get you in a lo' of trouble A mild Jiit.Je hand lolion worked wonders for grandmother-but if you expect it to cope with today's i:iUer cle.11ners, y·oU'ri taking t11e life of your 1kin in your hand•. Vedra it the band lo- tion up to 1oday'11 clean- ers. Aloe, the deac rt's moitturi&lng plant, helps re1lorc what cleaners strip away. Vedra l.otion, 1.00, Cream 1.50. Mermaids Dive Mermaids, \Vomen'1 Dlvlslon of wcuu ,Beach Cbam,ber of ·-. ·Ji making a big spWh with beauty spot awards, participating in W i n t e r FesUval event.a and by lo- creaalng Its membership. Mrs. Floyd Lee w a 1 presented with a Golden FU~ per Award for brtnalng in the · most members during a re- cent luncbeoa m~g. Among llioae new to the ~p are the Mmes. William H. Bruggere, Cniger t . Brighi; W. U. Allerbjuld, Allen Smith, llalJ>i> Bell, Andy Arr tosik and the. Mflaes Er<lyn• Birch, Slndy Shlrey' arid Glad Keer. Doctor. Biel STAITS roMOllOW ACADEMY · AWUD WINNER IOIEPH E. LEVINE -, -ENICHOLS LAWRENCE TUftMAN -THE&RADUATE NlwtOlt tU.Cll .. •I IH o•H••'" '<I l•kol1• U41 loll -01. l·ll Jf 3 ACADEMY AWARDS 3"'1blner of Academy A,warde! ' dl) lllllllClllll'PlllllSlllll' flllll WlllU llG$.·SMI ms "' ' ALSO 1rs time to spqk of unspol<en tllinas ... EU~TAYLGR MIA FARROW """" .....,_ d'wih~y'a a.by .. ,,,,,..,o..,i~~ ..-.-... .. l'lllCAIT ·CEAIMCINY" ,,. ...,_,. __ _ I AGlllRT MITCHUM I -~~ ~~ •TA111Aa•!'D1;, ' .. __ ·--~lllf-.i-...... ........ ~o.:::::::,•' "COOGANS BLUFf" *NOW OPEN* "BEAUTIFUL'""'""" ... •·,...",. ... • i... ............... ~effette • .......... ,.... tll9t ~ ........ QI IHJ .... _ • ..,., .... . .. ................. c. ~., 'Welt ... iMfy.' .... tH .. 1, lyral, ,,,.,., •••• •11• 1,...,,.wweiy "'M911tk ''•l'ff wltll ,.,. 19 .. ,..ila11J'' "REFRESHING• 01""°' "'"""k '''"'"" .,. • ftf'de11 ef 'I••• & Jllllet' ....... IMMlrtlhl ... , ................... ,. ....... . .......... , ..... ,.. .......... ,,.,_., ..... ,.... ,..... ..., ..... ftkt ............... ...,...,.. ..,, .. HAaNl'I IAZAAI "DAZZLING• 0 -, .. -•· ,. ... - -• rk""* ....... ,,..,. ....... • .,,.. .. ~, -UN ' - • HELP OV£R • ••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••• ; NOW FOR THE FIRST TIME : !CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES ' ; ... RECULAR PRICES --J1JM9e'111a1 :'? eftl ....... -"""°'! AUO AHOTHll MAJOl ATTIACTION MATINEE WED. AT 1 P.M. Flll llFllSHMINTS MAT ADMISSION Sl .10 CHILDllN .10¢ lol>'llOl • #oDAMlt COflA /Ill.SA, lllOH( l <l6'i101 e POSITIYILY iHDS TUES e Frank Sinatra in 0 LADY IN CEMENT'' Also "PRETTY POISON" e NOW PLAYIN• e J>ean Martin ''THE WRECKING CREW'' • ALSO e P,eter Ustinov. Maggie Smlll Ka~ ~la . llCOflt TOP PIX Ooorp Pep~ Mary Tyler • "WHATS SO IAD .•MQUTtFIEUNG . "·600D7'' " • ' • . I• ------· .. -------·~-- • TUE~DA\ . .. 'fURUAri 11 r ' '"' ...... ~ . ., .. ,_ ... '1i": 1--riit Aw·'snl" (-.... fUft)' ..... ,... •. te Coll«, Johll SU.. Elnilll ,.. undtl. Mttt fltldM(1 pita to bt- &111 • .... .Ill'• .. Ill• fDltlJ brattl·. er'• nncll Is uPttl: 'fl'IMll • .._k:111 btlldlt llt."11 hit Appaloose 11«it. D-5 <Cl (601 N Hht. tilt tqtri wtlO Mily knows how te NU 1 tnll!IPll talk. IHlnp 1ixtJ lltturtts ol SOUND • .IOMinl lrll1111 .,. Str1h Y1uchl. Tht N Hirt S.mt. DiDJ Cilltqle, Pth Coftdoli t!MI ID GEORGE PUiNAM NEWS * ~ r..t Nf" Ir Town 'l:Jl ' lit;ilOllAl.O O'CONNOR ; ""'·NEW Tlillt/NEW· TIME t'' -. ~... •. ,,.. ..... '" ...... ,. 160) hny """'"" l!I Ill ....... ,.... ... (C) (301 a 1n11111 • AdN11 <ct (30) Q THE SIX O'CLOCK MOVIE * Colot:..:."A Summer Place" P.art II-stars RM:hard Epn & Dorothy McGuire. Q "'"'""" -(C) •• --~ hrt II (dnnn1) 'S-b::fwfd' [&an. Doruthr McGuirt, Sltl\!lrt1 DM. Tmy Dol'llhu~. 91 IW(C) (60) } ..... (t) (30) • Wllll't lllw? (30)" "Wlltft Do .. Gtl llT' Bill Smith jcM.lnw/1 to ilvwll f1ms to see how fniitl •nd \'flflllblts •rt ""'' proct• aM ,.a.iirtd. ....... Sill,... . m lPUI 11 ... (C1 1:30 0 .,_IC Nenttvict (C) (60) Don "Ellis. • Cl) ... ltr Y• Lilli (Q (60) fl Jf(f , ..... (C) (60) "Th• Filllll G.nenllon tl'I MUlic." Acluf Mdft'lf Outlctn ntml:• this PfUll'lm tn music en fil111 . S1111111t1 1r1 "fnCM." ... by Will Hlndlt; ~1:1111e­ ln1 Soqs. .. bJ' Bilka locirP.: --C. prk:clo," by Ole AKllM11; WVlllow SUbmarlne" from ttlt MW Batln movie; "Music.I Pl1," by Zlltllo Grric; ind "TunUy Nt1rnoan." II) Cllodle Awtllutt uoe a Cll "'".., (C) (30) .... · is wry ucltld O¥tr hb wiM1ln1 pr...,ec:ts in the 1nnllll horltlhoe toumlJ'Mnl unlil ltrOJ tceidtntllly RtvlflllzU tht pitd'llftl l flll of Doe Clrptnt«, lluck's 111rt111r. 0 EXCELLENT POLICE * ACTION MELODRAMA o @CIJ II mo ·m C30l .,,,, Cindy M1fL .. Condusi1111 of 1 two- pi1rt ltMJ . .lll!llS Eul Jonis. :rllr of 1111 ll~~•J hit, "Thi Cimt W?litt lillpe," llltsb IS Cindy tll:son, dnctor of the Phoenil House, 1 df111 rltl1bilit1tion center opented br •·•ddlcts. H1ines, W1rd ind <:orso conlinut thtlr hi· 8 RICHFIELD PRESENTS vestiption Into Ul1 robbery ol • locsl IJl)CtlJ' "°" in which the * LOS ANGELES LAKERS m1in susPld b thouaht to bt 1 VS. NEW YORK KNICKS resident of the PhoeniJ: Houst. • Lllllfl ...... (C) G M.s (Q (30) Ted Mt)'tf:L m v.,... " ttie ... ., -. •"" • ... (CJ (601 flD ._.,., 'Mt11 Y• ClliW (30) 10:00 8 QI (1) IO MinM (C) {60) -rn-,.... ft\,.._ (C) Subjects ti cumnt lntwllt 1r1 pr• Yl1 .., ~ ~ sented M a mspzlnt lonnat. 7:9 B C1S t"9liJl1 Nm (Cl (30) W.ttw Cfonklt1. m GEORGE PuTNAM NEWS * One Reporltr's Opinion 018-(C)(iOI o crii oo m ""'' "' 1ci <60l ,.'You Nenr T1ke 1111• A11ywh1J1.'' 7:30 CJ Wlltt'• W, LIM! (C) (30) m ,......, (C) (30) m n. rreldi a.1 (l;Ol ii' lllllU ill tllt SllR (C) OJ Tid ..-ConMqlll!IUI (Cl OMinW ..... (30) U)Tlld S11e9 (C) (10) "Tht Joit at Ethnic Httmor." N1t11rtt Trv- m1n Md Leo Rosbin 111tst 8 A Nat'I. Geo, Special fD Md ,_.... (JO) A p1llel of rtportl~ lrom ttt. IOCll news m1di1 discua tht ctmplip hw M1rer of Los An11rn with cslldi· d1t1 Willi1m HlthlRJ. 111--* "AUSTRALIA"- SponlO<s: BRITANNICA llt!OfJ-(Cl -... -" and HAMILTON WATCH th bo -1"""'1 "' - IJtBICl)l1llt11I '"''''·' Kut lll•ldln. htr1dt MtdlnL s,m11 IC> 1&o> "Aultrlfi• -The m .... (C) <JO> Tilllll• Lmd.n An ldYlftturo. look ....... ._. C""lllfw•tnet-(30 • .. Ille °"" """' COlltillllll ..... ., .... ...... Its iuwd fron\ltnm«r, who· fort • M1 111 tt11 11111nntr o1 ttit · · of Americt's Did West Al••• lt:ao 110 O Ill GD ... IC) Scoul'oy ••rratts. The prosrain· .11o a Alfrtii Hltrk9ct 111111 • 1oo11: •t Sydrwy, tnt •is· m Lill'1 a• (C> ticltld nittropolis thlt sits not ,., lit """9: "l1lt MKli Whip"' ( d from the dllllenres. of th• ltiN vtnturt) '57-Hu1h M1rtawt, An~ hostll• inWbr. .....~, 11 l!iJ m Ill""' """ !Cl !60) _,,.. fiit Flliis 1M P11il LYRdt pest. !11J CIJ 9@ Em llN'I IC) 'L al)u~l ':n, .. ~ (60) 11:301J MM: (Cl "fM ltl9I '" .. 11111 Julie tmsl i. 1 .. n ...tern ltllet" (wuttm) '59-Audit MUJphy, ton ill tht pbl !if trthleClktu' .loin Enns. stlldtrltl to •rcll for C.pt. Greer, lllho f11l*I to relum lrOnl nation. .11soe Evn psts. Q Mil.._ $ McMI: ._.._ ... 1 ~ (dr1m1) '62-Afl. thotrJ" (lulnn. J1ekit Gltu0n, Julit ..... CD 119111 .,, c..-...-IC> <JO) .,.,, .... (60) ta C.licitll .. II bn (30) ., .. Alltl .... flllfl 0 JOHNNY'S IN TOWN * THE TONIGHT SHOW Starrinc Johnny Carson Guests: Richlrd H_arris, and Buddy Roa:ers l!J@ @l!llT--(CJ D llllirir. •••••••' Reel_,. (dr1m1) '41-0idl Powell, Mirta 1or111. I I" wom...., 1ci 1301 mwot< -(CJ 1601 llt ,_.. °"'°" c.c. Q @ (J)lfl..., ""'' (C) m I Lon lllCJ • l ' l:lO • a m w SlltltOll <t• 1sol U:oo m 11 s.• stri, iiikH1 Too11ey 1nd Ktl frui•r auat. 12:11 a••: '1JincMll ~ Dr. #kJ!r 8 ID CI! m Jttlim (C) (30) ''Win· (liOrtorJ ·57 -.kMln Apr, Gloril di Muni Will." Juli1"s 1111rtm1nt T1lbott. ii burct1rtzllll wltti wnwittinr htlp ot bri J. W1utdom'• lllllt _W•l'ldt. 12:.JO m Actitll TMtlrt: "Th• World Tra<:J Mor111• pllJS thl 11stlf of • C: M LM " ltOlllnf W1apdom (Hink Bnndt). 81 I 1 ni. 5111 i. Bnndt'1 ru1·1if• wift. IJ@(J) Q) It T• I Ntf (CJ (60) "Citll!IW." ftrn1ndo U11111 fUUb u Ptpe toudttt. • ttlitl whom Alwnd• Mundy lritb Into 1tt1mptln1 tt reccwtf tht Molin ''°°1!10-!Cl OC..•IJflHI' 1.t111M ,._. <C> .,,.. tllt l..W. Ott (t) crown 1l'ftl1 of l• Monim. 1:15 ti Mwit: ..,.n ti "'1" (tomtdy) '41 -G11Y Cooplf. Bub1r1 Stint· .,. .. m MERV GRIFFIN SHOW * NEW TIME/NEW TIME m....., •rff'I• <CJ 19Cll m ...... -(CJ 1301 DAYTIME MOVIES 1:30 m Nl·IKJM ... : "Th~ Lonr. Daft Ht11," "l'lll Alflphibl1n Mtft,• tnd "W1r PtinL" olM) •554.fttflony Quln11, lticllltd • [1111. ll:JO m "TM .,, ,. .. (l!l)'SltfY) ·•s- 11"'" lro'#R. -n.I c.111111 ... ....... <••fl'I&) '37--lttt• Dtvil. t:oo m • .,., "' Hitt"' (lllJS!trJl ·51 t:t1 D "T\e cttr 1\tt ,...,,. Sltlfll" -stwl BfOdit. l111 Tholnu. . (mydlfJ) 'S2 -Gil YOllAL M11' ,._L J:JCI D l'hellla ....... (llMfttvrt) 'SI __,,..~....._Mttflnooo. uaiu __ , ...... , , r •SJ-.ScDtt '""· ~ Totter. ._ ... .,._ .....,.._ (ldwtd:w1t '2 · sa..•411--~...,. ,.. -'"'"'°'"" -•- I' ' • JOB IRINTING . • PUBLIOATIONS • NEWSPAPERS ' Q1111ity Prh1tint 1114 Ot,tl41~I~~· fllf IMf't th•• t Q111ri_,.....,. •• r ...-y. J, U11 Wiit' IAUOA ..._ PEANUTS PERKINS ' '..!.~~""r, ~ .. 11 I I I 6 JUDGE PARKER ! I 6 4 I CANT lEAVE TME ~ tiOW. ur:rv ! rte GOT" A HOT !illtEN: 60IN6! t !aAIP 1 WAllT'YOI 10 COW: WITM ME •• 10 MEEr SOMftiOPY ... "TUMILEWEEDS MUTI AND JEFF GORDO I :-is t.tlSS PEACH \(<(.!.'( S'.c"Dot. 10~ e~ ,,,,..,. ...,. I , I 6 6 6 I I ' ,. 'I • -, op ,,. ... , ~ • 6 r ' 4 I ,Ot ... p~ ,..qUP-., c JEFF, WHATS itlE MATTER? ly Charles M. Schum > NOlofI l<MOlli OOT Hf MEANT .:rve 'TtJRHED 11110 A f'IU.M a' OW.K DIJ~ ! ly John Mila ! I ! 6 6 ! I 6 By Harold Le Doux YOI GET VEtN' CAIELES5 WITH VOllll: MAWPS, F"llalO! rLL 61VE YOU JUST RVE !IECONtJS 10 TAKE TNEM OFF ME! ly Tom K. Ryan YA CAN'T PM< WITlf A CIGAR IN YER MOUTH/ By Al Smith I BR.CKE THE .PICKl..E TR.YING "TO GET IT OUT OFT+IE JAR! By Men r 1 I I DAILY PILOT ' ' C()M/olUNITY SECRET -Michael Cole and Peggy Lipton, $hove, tind themselves in danger wb~n they discov~r. a secret in tonight's '1Mod Squad" episode on Channel 7 at 7:30 p.m. Clarence Willlams Ill and Tig~ Andrews are reguJar cast members. TELEVISION VIEWS Some Beauties No'v on TV By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Not so long ago, It was pretty difficult to find many truly a~active women as stars of television's weekly series. l mean the kind of women who appeal mostly to men rather than to ladies of the sewing.circle, bridge-club category. The theory that kept sexy dames at a mlnlmwn as video regulars apparently was that 1t was bad business to give inferiority complexes to the. aver- age ladies at home who do most of the buying of the products television sells. ONE OF THE HAPPIER things about the home tube these days is that a fellow can tune in at al- most any hour of prime time and find a gorgeous dish or two to ogle . Maybe part of the reason is that the networks are going more and more after the "young adult" audience, which apparently has fe"'.e~ h~gups about having pretty ladies as weekly visitors m the living room. The sexiest thing on television is, without question, Barbra Streisand in her annual CBS-TV specials. As (or the weekly stars, Susan Saint James of NBC-TV's "The Name of the Game" continues to outshine her vehicles. ·she; Is a wonderful looking comedy actress, in the tradition of Carole Lombard. And it is time she was given a ·chance to make her move in motion pictures. BETH BRICKELL of CBS-TV's "Gentle Ben" ls another real beauty. The way she manages to trans· mit her sex appeal through this down-to-earth, fam- ily type series, is something. Hope Lange of NBC-TV's "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir1' is 100 percent woman : Wann, real, lovely to look at. and completely adult - a genuine rarity for the home screen . · Amanda Blake of CBS-TV's "Gunsmoke" always was a gem, and she remains highly attrac- tive in her understated way. Goldie Hawn of NBC·TV's '_'Rowan and Mar· tin's Laugh-In" plays a rather nutty character, but if you watch her often enough you can't help but dii;t:em that she bas a certain wlnerability that makes her irresistible . DIAHANN CARROLL of NBC·TV'• "Julia" ls, ' of cdurse, a classic beauty. And Nichelle Nichols of the same network's '4Star Trek" is a maturely sultry actress. . Elizabeth Montgomery of ABC-TV's "Bewitch· ed." unfortunately has to act cute much.of the time, but even this cannot hide the fact that she is quite a sexy lady. . Another lady in somewhat the same situation Is Barbara Edeh or NBC·TV's "I Dream of Jeannie,11 whose on-screen, scripted cuteness falls to conceal her splendid looks. Joyce Van Patten or CBS-TV's "The Good Guys" is just a swell-looking dame. with talent to boot. Marlo Thomas or ABC· TV's "That Girl" has a bright, shiny appeal. Peggy Liplon of the same net. work's "The Mod Squad" has a sort of mystique in her Inten se, new generation manner. AND LINDA CRYSTAL of NBC-TV's "The High Chaparral" is one of Hollywood's genuinely beauti- ful women . De.ants the Jtlenaee • I l • --------------..---.... ...---...... ----------------------------~---·. -- ASSETS OVER '425,000,000.00 HEAD 0""1CE 815 Ea• Colon.do ..., .. PaNclena. c.flfornl• 11109 • INGS OTHER BRANCH Ol'l'ICl!9 WHt Ate8dl• p Covlrui Glendale -~--------------------·-----------------------·-------·-·· ... -·--··~·------~------------·----------... M6nday's ·Ciosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Ex:change List ' I I I ! r BAY CLUB COMPETl'l'ION -Davis Cup !emus star Charles Pasa· rell will be on hand this week for the Belboa Bay Club's 15th invita- Uonal tennis tournament •tarting Thursday, Pasarell will be joined by Davis Cup teammates Art Ashe, Stan Smith and Bob Lutz. 1.-. ~S'mith Grabs Favoritism For Bay Club Net Classic " Balboa Bay Club tennis pro Hugh stewart recenUy labeled stan Smith and Art Ashe as co-favorjtes for the Bay ~·s ISth invitational tournament whlch ilorta Thuroday. Now maJle Jt Stan Smith, period. . Stewart pared down his pre-tourney ~sis after reading c( Smith's victory Slmday ln the national indoor cham- pionships at Salisbury, Md. ~Aside from tbe fact Smith will ar.ri.ve Ip pewport Beach fresh from a ma1or victory, Stewart, a former touring pro himself, pie.ks the USC standout for two reasons: (1) he beat Ashe in their last meeting and C2) Ashe has elbo""' problems. "TbiJ guy Smith, in Ute coming year. could develop as the finest tennis player In America," Stewart said. Stewart also indicated that fans on band at the Bay Club this week would be watching the World's greatest doubles learn in Smith and Bob Lutz. ... 'Thoee two guys won lbe U.S. title at Forest Hills competing against the pros 50 they're going to be favorit es anywhere they play," Smith and Lutz are teammates at USC. Lutz ts an Orange County product. having played at Sunny Hills High in FuDerlon before going on to USC. SmJUl'a athletic career began on the ;. basketball court at Pasadena High, where he was a promising cager. But when confronted with both of them, he gave up basketball for tennis. Smilh turned back surprising newcomer Ismael El Shafe] of the United Arab Republic in the indoor cham· pionsbip final Sunday, 6-3, 6-1, M, M . He was thlrd seeded going into the tournament and had to defeat veteran Clark Graebner In the semifinals. Ashe sat out the Maryland indoor na· lionals with an inflamed elbow but Stewart says he has confirmation that Ashe wHI play at the Bay Club. Smilh's indoor championship trophy I~ one of four major national tennis cham- pionships offered in the United States. ranking with the national clay, hard-court and grass championship. Smith, Lutz and fellow Davis Cuppers Ashe and Chuck Pasarell will check into the Bay Club Thursday evening. They'll be staying at private homes in the area. Ashe and Pasarell will be staying at the home of Newport Beach actor John Wayne. Stewart said tournament box seat sales have disappeared quickly for the. tourna- ment. As of noon Monday, only a half· dozen or the $75. four-seat ducats were le rt. General .admission ducats will be sold dally at match sites. ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOwS /A}>)::_ The New York Neta. by a coin . Olp, won tbe rights to UCLA All·American aiant Lew Alclndor and selected him in a 5ecret AmerlCan Butetb&ll ABloclaUon 1 dra!~ hJcblY WoMned ooun:es dlaclosad today. ADA O>mmlutoner George Mlkan was not especled back In MJM,.polls onUt later today and was ·unavallllble for comment. . · Ak:iodor'• selection by the cellar team tn the ABA 'a Eulern Division ·draws lhe battle lines for an upeded dollar, Cruz, Ramos ' Clash Tonight In Title Fight LOS ANG~ (UPI) -For tile ,.. cood time lo lesa than si:I: months, Carlos· "Teo" Crul flf the Dominican Republic risb his world•Jiptweigbt championship tonight againol ·MJlndo Ramos of San Pedro at the Spc<ts Arena. The flihl will not be telecast.or broadcaat. Both the champion and the challenger expreued coplldence of victory u they awahed the gtart of their 1$-round boul '!be last llnie ·they met was Sept. 11 and Cruz retained 'his Crown on a close but unanimous -decision. .Backen of Ramos, however, were so confident be would defeat Cl'U% the odds here favored him by a 11).6. margin. In other art:as -there was more support for the champion. The 20-year-old Ramos ha!! been a popular figure 1n bis brief boxing career . and bis supporters felt he learned enou1h from. bis ~vious m~ting with Crui to reverse the decision. ·Cruz ii 21 and a ring veteran who was apected.to. mlie up with experience f0r the a1e ~ is giving "away ~to the challenger. · .. 'Although he · lost the fight the first tlme they met; Ral!los: had ~ stag~ gering in the 13th round but \Vas unable to put away the champion ·who had built up a strong point margin in the early rounds. Cruz boxed more than 50 rounds in Puerto Rico before coming here to finish training and said he was in better shape now than he was when he won the title from Carlos Ortiz June 29, 1968, at Santo Domingo. Bruin Rally Tops Huskies; Trojans Fall By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Washington Huskies gave UCLA • run for its money Monday night - for the second time tn as many games -but unfortunately for the n e a r I y J0,000 partisan SeatUe fans, a miss is as good as a mile. Towering Lew A1cindor contributed a scant Z2 points, but it was enough to power his Bruins to a 53-44 Pacific-I hasketball win over the Huskies. Wa.Wnllon Slate deleat.d Soulhem California 64-52 in the evening's only other confennce game. The Bruins, who have won 36 in a row since their 71-69 loss last year to Houlton, went without the lead for more than 30 minutes. It was the 7·1 Alcindor who brought the Bruins out of trouble . Trailing 32-28 with 10:50 remaining, he scored six points to push the Califor- nians ahead to stay. The hosts led 22-21 at intermis.sion. Jay Bond and George Irvine scored 13 and II points respectively for Washington. In Pullman, Wash., junior guard Rick F.rickson led the field wilh 21 points to give lhe WSU Cougars a stronger grip on second place in conference play. USC managed to pull within e.lght points or the Cougars by the half, but were held to only 28 points in the second half. Steve Jennings, who netted It points, was the only USC player in double !irures. U(LA WASHINGTON ·-SllK-•lfOfd AIClndof" H1ltl V•llt lY ...... ··-PtlltrtOll TOllll UCLA 0 I' T G .. T l 2·l • Irvin. 4 :W II ] fM ' Weolaic:k 1 0.1 4 • ... zt lond s ).l ll 4 Ml lSlent Jl-(1 I 2.J 4 WlllWllltrt I 1.J l t 1.1 l Si.t~afll t 1·1 I o 1.1 l Troyer J CMI 4 1 l•I l 811tlocli: 0 o.t 0 21 1).11 U Tollli 11 I0.11 44 ,, »-" Wt ... lntlOtl n n-M • •war between the two-yw-old ADA and lhe )'laUonal Buketball ,lMod•Uoo, which ~Y coad~ a semi droll three -llf 1110 In Cbjtago, tho IOUrCOI said . 'lb. l!leta .IUpped a. .Om wtlh ~toe. the I a11:Pt .... IMIJI In \be W..tem OlvlaJon, during the ABA't secret draft by, conle......, telopb!Jne caill lut Satur- day. IOW'ct.81 aid. ' • Tbe.11-lelm A.BA, ln.lta,aecond aeason, condoc\ed the fint tfi , rounds ot its 198t drafL Names Of other players taken ••. n(IC :Jmown. I l EAVING· use Dick Ceury Telling Family · Was Hardest ' For Coury By E~RL GUSTKEV Of 1'1141 D1111 ~1111 Sltlt The worst thing about taking a job In Pittsburgh is telling your family about it -especially if you live in Southern California and even more especially if you have seven kids. That was the unpalatable task facing Dick Coury Sunday night. The USC defensive backfield coach bad just ac- cepted a position as linebacker coach of the NFL's Pltt.sburgb Steelers. "l talked it over wrui my wife, Bonnie, and she was just great about it," Coury aays ol the Sunday evening meeting of the Coury clan in their Santa -Ana home. "She agreed with me that this was just too much o! an opportunity' to pass up. Then we prepared to tell the kids. "It was hardest on my olc!e.r boy, Mike. He's 14 and for years he's been wanting to play football for Mater Dei High School. When l was coaching there he was the team's mascot. And now, just as he's old enough to enroll at Mater Dei, we move out." It was al this point that Coury began a carefully prepared s a I es. talk il- luminating the wonders of Pittsburgh. First, he told them o( lhe proximity of the city to New York and Washington, D.C., where, he aaid, great educational experiences were in store for them. The seven pairs of eyea remained fixed to the carpet until Coury, reaching the end of the line, blurted out that it snows ln Pittsburgh. At that, the eyes lifted. "I think they're all ready to go now ," Coury says. ''Even fl.tike 's ready for the snow ." Coury's rise in football coaching has been startlingly swift. On1y three seasons ago he was just another winning high school football coach, at Mater Dei, USC tapped him when his 'SS Monarchs won lhe CIF championship. At USC, he became well-known in coaching circles for his hand in develop- ing the Trojan defense. One who had the word on Coury was Chuck Noll, the new head coach of the Steelers, formerly of the San Diego Chargers. He hired Walt Hacketl, also from the Chargers, and sent him after Coury. Hackett called USC head coach John McKay for pennlssion to talk to Coury, which he obtained . That was last Wednesday. By Friday evening. Coury was in Pittsburgh where Noll signed him. "l had di9cussed it with coach t.tcKay and he urged me to take the job," Coury says. "He felt as l did -an opportunity like this might never again come alOll.I." .f.\nteaters Invade Riverside Tonight It's Anotlier Must Game If VCI ls to Make Playoffs • • • 117 RON EV ANS .! • .. Olltr Pllltf Jfltlf *1i:&aDB -UCI'• buketball team, 919'--~ wind tn its face:, draws an w Q 1611. wll""'ent here tonight ........ Ille Anttat.ers lake °" UC ~ four ...,.. l<ft, each one la ~., for Che Anteattrs. ~ Did: Dlwll Iii.,.. his club ad\'-to Jeoo another game if UCJ 11 te _, .. .wftb • post-season ~ to .. NCAA college divillon ~el, UM w1D be a trru:s week ~ .. at•11'1 1. Dem &ttt' 'club . ~ lo Santa I no rrlday to pity red.oot Westmont Jn Riverside, the Ant.eaten will be playing a team they routed by a 106-78 margin a month ago in Crawtord Hall but the Highlanden are notorioualy tougher on their home cocirt. "These are goint to be two very tough 1ames for us this wetlt, '' Divis admits. "And I'd feel that way if we hid beaten both of them previoualy by ~ points." Irvine has not fared well at Riverside. In three aeaaons, the Antuters are 14 tn the UCR horror hour<. ' ' But If Davis Is worried, lhe ouUook can't appear too cheery fer UCR coach Duane Lewist whose team is IS-10. The one stat in Lewla' favor Is that UCR ls 7-1 al horn< lhil year. The Highlanders beat Cal Lutheran Saturday In Riverside, 90-13, but lost its only home 1ame last Tuesday to Pasadena Colleae. Q.60. The Hi&hlanden' leading llCOfer is H , 220-pound Dick Barton who l! scoring 21.t points per 1ame. Lewls must dream up some sort ol ddtnte for UCI forward Jeff Cun- nbtgbam, who broke blJ own UCI tlnile gome llCorin( record by pour1ng In 15 poinll qalnll Chapman Satumy nipL UCI won, 97.71. Cunninehlm's n0w 1vera&in1 21.3 rier outing. Starter Nick Sanden, who ls eomewhat hobbled with an Al\kle he sprained Fr1° day, should be cl.,. to lull su.n,th tonl1ht. He scored only four qainst Chapman. 0av1s pl,yed ~ IOphomoft rorward John Farwell ln both halvts Saturday. The SlerTI l!Jth lll'ld hodn't ployed much but recent showings in practice prompted his appearance Saturday. He made two buekett J.nd played well at both end< ol court. He'll doubt!..., •eerocllon tonl1hL ' ------ ' . -. . .. • , I ·~ .t , ,e However, the OUl~nd.-~.a!-_l d , Mood'ay. lhet WWlo Cirla' etDl'ab WM drafted by Indiana and. Herman GUllam of -· ..... plcUd by KenWclty. Pboenil' 1 or Milwaukee of the NBA prOIWlllbly 'liould have the draft rights to t h e Hoot "1drldor, who bal le d UCLA to two 1tralaht NCAA cbaJn. piOlllhlps and itarted ihem to. thin!. . . Alcindor, however, ~portedly ,. If\~ to play in his naUve New Yort U be deddOI to play in either proleulon1I league. Mitaa , hu said ABA ownel-3 have • lll'fd , to, I '""°'Y to lure Aiflndo< . r~ Into tile ft leque. A ljlOCll!c price bal not been set. "We don't lmoW' what be la ukJni," Mikan aald In a recent Interview. 1'VI• agreed thla mu Is valuable. So, tht league wUI put •P a lund to mall sun> he gets bla mooey , • , " MUcu. a former NBA crt•~ Jlftdlctl " no-holds barred\ war between the leagues for lhe naUon'1 lop collq't players and aays ABA owners an prepared to pay for them. 50 Years In Sports Max Stiles ·Near Death In Hollywood Hospital In his final days, as in his ap- prt:nticeship 50 year:s ear Iler, Maxwell Stiles proved to be an accurate, highly informed. enterprising member or the sports writing business. Two months ago he broke the story that there was trouble brewing between the Los Angeles Rama and their coach, George Allen. He was publicly ridiculed ior the yarn by one LA newspaper. However, lvlaJC. wound up having the last laugh when his story came true a few weeks thereafter. Today Mu is in Hollywo o d Presbyterian Hospital, near death from his most recent heart attack. Thal sad news was conveyed to this column-Mon- day by Mrs .. Stiles, who between the GLIHN Yl'fU TI WHITE WASH tears admitted that doctors had told her there is no hope for her husband's recovery. Because of lack of oxygen to feed the brain which was the breeding ground for his column "Styles in Sports," Max is now going through periods of extreme confusion, according to hiJ wife, Lillian. Max had to learn to ride a bicycle to get hi3 start with the old Los Angeles Examiner back in 1920. He came up through the ranks - delivery boy to copy boy to desk man and then slipped into tbe world of ljlOrl which grew to respect him for his knowledge of tract and footl>all, as well as other things. Maxwell Stiles took his seat in the Rose Bowl 43 times for the annual New Year"s lootball clusit, One of· his unfinished projects wa:s a feature for the DAILY PILOT on the top 10 Rose Bowl games he had seen. In his time he worked for the Ex- aminer, Times, Mirror and HOilywood Citizen News. He also autbottd two books : "Back Tracks" and "The RoR Bowl." Mu was a virtuoso on lhe ziubject of track and field. Rarely were hia dope sheets off -although I recall one occasion when he missed badly on a UCLA-Stanford dual meet at the Coliseum. c.Jusing him to comment. "the copy boy must have done tlliJ one." A year ago at the Times Indoor Games at the Forum, writers were di.scusalng who might beat Ron Clarke in the 2-mlle. "I'll take George Young," volunteered the white-haired Stiles. No one else gave Young a prayer. You guessed iL Young won. There was another time at the Coliseum, during the chai:npionsbip soc-- cer duel between tl}e Los Angeles Wolves and Washington Whips when it lff!Ded that-nothing would go right for Mu. He wu bitterly complaining about ba¥s Ing covered soccer a number of tlmel and had never seen more than one or two goals. · That night the Wolves won, 6-5, in overtime. Yet Max missed ·every goal because of liathroeim calls, a beef with Jack: Kent Cooke over parking passes: and once when he stooped over to pick up a dropped pencil. Hank: Ives, now pubUcist for the LA Stars basketball team, once remarked, "you haven't Lived until you've been chewed out by Maxwell Stiles." Former University of Kan!as track coach Bill Easton Once called Stiles "the greatest track authority on the West Coast." I recall the days 1everal years ago when I first met Mu. Eager to imJnU a fellow cub nporter that I knew thia outstanding figure In 1ports writing, I 'dashed up to where he wu: seated and greeted StileS. . Max turned from what he was doing, looked up and smiled. Then he said, "Oh, hello, Gordon. How's everything in San Pedro?" I was then working in La Habra. You can imagine the shat· tering o{ ego ovh-that incident. But in time he grew to be a cloee friend -a man for whom I ahall always bear the highest respect and admiratio?L Players Reject Off er, Strike Threat Continues NEW YORK. -The major league clubowners' offer to avert a spring training boycott by addJng $200,000 to the $I-million players pehsion fund was referred to the players by Uielr aSsocia- tion's executive director today "1th a recommendation to vote "no." The owners 1eft the nut move in the dispute up to the players Monday when they rejected a . proposal for a three-man arbitration board and t h e n made the ir new money offer. John Gaherin, chief negotiator for the owners, said the new money would in- crease the clubs' contribution to $5.3 mlllion. * * * NEW YORK -ne Loa Anselet Lakers tonl&lll lava Madison Squre Garden to meet tlle secend place F.uitra Dlvtaloa New York Knlc:b bl a Na._al Basketball AslOdaUoa pme. Tbe 1ame is ow Cbamtel I at 1:3'. * * * LOS ANGELES -The Lo.! Ana:eles Stars saV(lred the rewards of vld1.t9' today alter break1n1 a fi ve-1ame losing streak . The Stars staftd off first and last half rallies by New Orleans Monday night for a 107-104 victory. * * * LOS ANGEU:S -Ed lCelly o{ lM Vesas arabbed UM lead la ta.e Warid'1 Poelcet Billlol'll ctiompioodlpl M....,. mpt by beatlq Jimmy M-, Alllo- qaeniae, N.M., lit-IC • * * * AGAWAM, Mus. -Mary Ann Elael. the naUon'1 fourtb.ranktd plQer from St. Loo.ii, rttalned her New Enaland Indoor tennis clwnplOMhlp Mond>y with a 7-$, 6-2 victory ove.r South Africa's · Esme Emanutl, the top-at.tded foreip. entrant. * * * LAIJSANNE, Swlberlacl -T b • I-Olyftlplc c-1lll1M wanod Ao I•--fW FedentlM ... .,. t111t Alpllle Ulen ........ ,.,_to r dorfnc competition almost certainly wiR be barred from the 1m Winter Olympic Games in Sappore, Japan. It said the fate ol the Winter Olymplca will be decided at the next 1e1slon el the IOC fn Warnw, May 31. * * * ;>AN FRANCISCO -Kiev Dynamo, soccer champion of lhe Soviet Union arrived Monday night for a two-gam~ series with the California Clippers. Their meeting Sunday will be lhc first jn history between soccer teams from the United States and Russia. They also will tangle March 2 at the Los Angeles Coliseum. IVete VCI Coach Conllrmlng a story publisho4 over a month ago in tht DAILY PILOT. Gary Adame hu been oflicillUy named UCl's head baseball coach. He wUI be at the helm when Iba Anteaters open their first ba..,_ ball season in tbe sprtng ~ 1970. ~ \ • ----------------~----. -......... -..--~....---~--~---~__.. ------·~ • . ·~ t•• ·' •• ./' ................ . .. I ·i I . . Tark&pian Still Hoping To Get 49ers in NIT ft11~tl r~ • Tackle Cypress In lhe mid&t of Its · worst slump of the year, Golden Weat Colfege travels to West· em High School tonighl to t a k e on Cypress College in an Eastern Cont:~ce. . Now that he's hustled Cal State(Long Beach) to itS basketball iame that could first-ever California Collegiate Athletic Association send the Rustlers spinning into (CCAA) basketball championship, coech Jerry Tarkan--the second division. tan holds out hope for an invitation to the National In· vitation Tournament in Madison Square Garden. Tipoff will be at 8 o'clo$. Golden West , 1oser of its In view of the school's past performances in bas-last three games and five of ketball, '1;.arkanian's first year at Long Beach bas been its last six EC starts, oow 1ensati0Qal. The 49ers are 19-3 and won the CCAA by a is g.7 in conference play and mile. ( . holds down fourth place. Tarkanian feels bis club has a chance for· a trip Right behind the Rustler:; to the prestigious NIT, but he doesn't sound too enthu· in a three-way traffic , jam •ia&&.49<fver the chances. for fifth ar,e ~presS, Mt. "SAC 0 11ve read where teams like Detroit and De.Paul and Ri verside, all hofding U records. are being mentioned as possible NIT teams and they The Rustlers have been bav1;,eigbt and 10 losses," Tarkanian says. plagued by a cold .shooting Detroit has Spencer Haywood, however, and that touch in the first half of nearly will Carry a lot of weight \Vhen NIT officials start mail-all of their conference games. lng rout invitations. And although it's possible Long Earlier in the ! ea son , Beach could wind up in the NCAA playoffs via the quali· Golden West was able to c1aw fication route, it doesn't appear !n the cards. "-its way back into the lead The 49ers' best hope for post season activity seen1s in the second half, mainly to. be the NIT and right now it's a slim shot. by using three or even four guards in its lineup. * ·* * But in recent games even SANTA ANA DEPT.-Santa Ana High School con· 'nuts to iind itself in a frightfvl fh,.ncial situation dur· fng football season with the city-operated Santa Ana that tactic hasn't been able to get the Rustler attack going. .. .. .. ..,.._---.. --. ----....---~ • • r • '; • . ' .. . . -, --" ...... -. -... ~ ._________...--- .. ~ .... , Tlllfdo1, rt"""1rJ 18, :.:1969.:..:..._-,-___ IW_LY_l'Mf_.,.-::;•~ . • ' t Tonitilat at 3 . ' ' Rejuvenated oca . Entertaills Tribe : .. By JOEL SCOW ARZ Of tM Dflly ,tlot Stiff Qrange Coast Col I ege 's basketball team begins lt1 stretch run with an eye on third place in the Eastern Con(erence tonight In a borne game against San Be~nardino VaUey College at a o'clock. Comfug 'off an impressive Pair: of ,weekend victories over Golden West and ~anta Ana. the Pirates will be out to extend their longest winning streall: ·of the season to four games tonight Oranae Coast curre n t I y sports a 'Z-8 record.. in con- ference play, good for eighth place ln the EC standings. However, Bob Wetzel's crew Js only one game out of fourth place and two out ol third. S:VI Bernarrlino is wallowing ,jn Ioth· place with a 3-12 r~ord,, but one of its victories was a 7o.69 decision over Orange ·Coast in the first round of play. The Pirates must stop 6-3 San Bernardino c e n t e r Haward Lee, to get by the • Indians tonJghl. • Jn that flrst.round g~ L e e, who is averaging n points a game on the seasoo. poured in 28 points. His frtie th.row with just two seconds showing on the cloCk iur""' ~!JI to be the winning poiijt 1n that game. Orange Coast. however,. ls a different team now. Wetzel~• team apparently has jelled tn the last week after losing 14 ol its Cirst 21 games. · .. One of the biggest di!· ferencej in the Orange Coat attack Ms been Ute bot hand of Mike Flaherty. Switched rrom guard to forwa'rd, the fl· 11 Flaherty has supplied the Pirates with scime deailb' shooting from the corners. 1: In the last three w'eeks, he'.s raised his season averqe nearly SO percent, from 19.a to 15.6 points a game. t Flaherty will be joined In the Pirate starling lineup :~ center R I c h stickelma •• forward Phil Jo'rdan atd guards Tim Salyer and J"un Kinclelon. CIF Rankings· Go Unchanged k. tad.;i';;; the city getting 15 percent of the gate, the Saints must pay an average fff of $1,000 per game. For t1 Westminster game, for instance, the school paid $1,119. The city gets all the conceuion and parking I money. rn their first round game against Cypress, the Rustlers posted a 68-56 victory. In that one the Rustlers had their usual cold first hair, hitting but seven of 33 shots and five of ihose were ti~ins. Dave Hardlng came off the bench to ·pump in 22 points to pace the Rustlers. No change . occurred In eilher the AAAA or AAA ClF basketball rankings gcilng into this finat week of league ac· ti on. volve teams in the top 10. ~ Pasadena and Muir . 'Ile . Saturday at noon to de~ the Foothill League ch . and \Viii be aired on Ch For its smallest crowd of the year, a S_aturd.1y aft· / , ernoon game with Nawport Harbor, the tab was $721. Hemmed in on West Walnut St. in Sant• AM, the school has no room for stands •'-l•lde its Pr.ictice field. There was at one time a , plM afoot to build • district stadium at Santa Ana Valley High but nothing came of it. * * * MUSSEAU DEPT.-Morris Mmseau, son of the former Mater Dei and Orange Coast College footbaU coach, has transferred from the University of Alabama to U. of Hawaii. Musseau has retired as head coach at the U. of Idaho and now · works with the university's alumni department. * * * MAKE-BELIEVE OEPT.-The swing towerd Tar· ten ethletic fields continues. Pittsburgh's new S0,000 seet stedlum will have it and so will the new facility at Portland. Pro football commissioner Pete Roulle says all. AFL and NFL teams wil be playing on synthetic sur· faces in five years. * * * GOLDEN WEST DEPT.-Golden West College foot· ball coaches say that 34-20 win over Orange Coast last season is making their life easier on the recruiting trail. "We're finding that at schools where kids wouldn't even talk to us before they are now leaning our way," says assistant Don Rowe. * * * ANTEATER DEPT. Look for ox·Huntington Beach High basketball star Greg Snyder to evantually play.for UCI. His friends say Snyder is unhappy at Stanford and lltfill probably play JC bell for Golden West or Orenge Coast next year before matriculeting to Irvine. * * * GREAT STORY DEPT.-Two seasons ago, Chris Cagle was the basketball coach at Buhl High in Buhl, Idaho. Last season, he co~ched at Jerome High, Je- rome, Idaho. Playing at Buhl last season, Jerome trailed 62-61 with nine seconds left in the game. Cagle ordered a time out and ordered his players to stall out the clock, which they did. Cagle had looked at the scoreboard and seen: ''Home 62-Visitors'61" and forgotten that his ·was no Jonger the home team. Cal State Frosh Bm·y Saddleback ·Nine; 11-2 ' Cal State (Ful lerton) Gauchos' 1t1rter Dave freshmen scored five runs In .Burkholder and two relievers the bottom of lhe firlt innina: ·for 10 qit! · Monday and and went on to bury Sad- dleback College's b·a s e b a 11 ' team Monday afternoon on the Titans' diamond. 11·2. The defeat wu the third in four games for Saddleb~ck. "'hich returns to a c t i on Wednesday at S a n t a Ana College against the Don JV squad. bolmd an l-0 leld before slddlebaci scored a single run in lhe toti'o! the fifth. r Ed Elgle, the Gauchos' second -bueman. was the only Saddleback player who had any auccess at the plate, going two tor four . Cypress presents D i c k Stricklin's team wiUt another problem -it's a ball control outfit and the Rustlers have trouble in a slowdown game. With four speedy guards like , Golden West has. the Rustlers are most effective sweeping down the floor pell·mell with the fast break. Stricklin figures to go with a starting lineup of Dave Prather at center, Allan Robinson and Dave Harding at forwards and Ollie Martin and Mark Miller at guards. Cypress will counter with 6-1 Gary Schmidt at center, Pat Quinn (5-5) and Mike Luker (M) at forwards and J\m Browning (S.10J and Duane Davies (6-3) at guard.!I. Area Sports Calendar Tuesday Basketball -UCI at UC Riverside, Pius X at Mater Dei, Golden West at Cypress, San Bernardino at Orange Coast (all at 8). Newport Harbor at Anaheim, TusUn at Mission Viejo, Foothill at San Clemente (all at 7), Santa Ana Valley at Huntingl9n Beach, Marina at Western, Santa Ana at Westminster, Laguna Beach at Orange (aJl at IU5J. • * * Pt•esidetit's Cup Chanipio1i Lucille Paddock holds the honors after winning the fifth anpual Presidenl's Cup championship F'riday at Mesa Verde Country . Club in wopien's club activ.ity. Lela Staderman, runnerup in lhe tourney, loolts ·on. Seagren's 17-9Marl{ Overlooked ' LONDON (AP ) -Everyone agrees that Arrlerican Uob Sea·gren set ·a world rec;ord . of 17, feet. 9 inches for the pole vault but he'll have to \\'ail until some red tape i~ cleared before it goes into Boop Rom1tlup Sailors, Anaheim ·Collide Tonight ' .. By ROGER CARLSON season. ,01 th• D•Ur P'no1,s1.i1 Coach Dave Wax m a n• s Newport Harbor High Schoo l qu intet opened 1vith an upset will be lrying to add ,final over JI.farina. then lost five luster to Its varsity.basketball in a row to Suns!l com· season tonight ":hen th e petiti on. h 0 h , Sailors invade Anaheim J-ligh The Turs then proceeded to T e lympic c, am P 1 on for a Sunset L ca g u ~ the books. , made the jump al South Lake sho\\•down. \vin five in a row before drop· T h Se t '" h •J ping the overtime spectacular a oe on P ·' "'• s or. Y The Tars, .ifter falling to to Westminster. before the Olympic games in Westminster, 97·95 in five Mexl·co c1·ty Mater Dei will be trying · overtimes Friday night, will B t th · t · I to throw : the Angelus Le~gue u e Jn er n at 1 on a be seeking a repeat upset of back into a scramble with Amateur Athletic Federation the second place Colonists. the Warriors. world ruling body of the spor1, Earlier, Newport shocked ·d M d 't t · Pius X leads the circuit by sa1 on ay 1 was no 1n Anaheim. 59-37, after posting !'st r Id rd i.. a game over St. Anthony ond a 1 o wor reco s suu-two upset '"ins last year over · ed h b h Bishop Amat and I he mitt to t em Y t e the same team. Mona rchs are a notch behind . Amateur Athletic Association Game time is 7 o'clock . of the United States. The Pius ripped the !o.1ona rchs IAAF announced a list or Other 7 p.m. games in lhc in first·rotlnd action. 68·48. t·r· d Id d I t F . Orange Coast area arc in th< San Clemente faded badl.v · For the first ti me this year raltngs remained the ·same after every ranked team but one was victorious last .,.,•eek.· Aviatton, a 92-91" ·1oser to fourth-ranked Beverly Hills in five overtimes, continues in Lhe fifth spot in the AAA ratings: • Huntington Beach is slill seventh, six points behind North Torrance. The only undefeated team in the AAA~. Compton, re- mains a landslide choice for first place wilh all 17 first place votes after improving its ClF record to 55 straight victories. The rankings are scheduled ror change next week as l\\'O games in the final week in· ......... ,, l'llea T1tm I. Com111lon (?J-11) 1. Muir (15-1! J. Ventvr1 !'1·11 '· c~.11.., n'·1l S. P1'8den1 17l·ll I. NOrlh Torrani;e !23•,) 1. Hunth111ton llt•c~ 0 2·1) I. Nolf11 D1m1 (21·•) t . Troy 120-21 13. Sun"I' H!ll' !lG-11 ... Jtolnlt '" '" "' ' " "' " " • • " l. 0 1rdt11 Gro"" 12-Ml 16-4 ? . c l1rtrnonl US-01 Ht 3. 511111 M1rt1 !73-11 131 '· lleverlv Hiiis 120-51 l?S s. Avl1llon (1MJ '' '· L1twn (I,.,, 10 1. N091IH r:i.n 41 I. Glenn (lt-4) S6 t . Foothill !11·Jl 11 1~. C¢1t!ll! llWI 71 Olherl I Co•Olll Ml M•r 1, M"riol!I 1. 4. JL And, Sunny Hills invadecl. Troy today to settle tU Freeway League title. * led by a game going in. Garden Grove (first) ~d Foothill (ninth) are the ohl)' county teams in the AAA, but Corona del Mar receivli:J seven points for 11th place-.-;: ~~ CountyPolj ~· Status Q~ For Preps The Top 10 prep basketball list of Orange County teams remained status quo · after;Jlft IO entries went 'through tl!tir paces without defeat last week . Huntington Beach, champ!' of the Sunset League 12-0 mark in circuit a and an overall 22-2 mart. con· tinues in second place behind pacesetter Garden Grove. Troy and SuMy Hilb, wbo were meeting each other ·.., day, are third and fourth a.t the Irvine League top irlO is bunched at sixth, seveni!l and eighth. Golr -Newport Harbor Costa Mesa (2). ra J 1e wor recor s as l"l· Crestview Leanue with league· at day " in the stretch, losing its la st · leading Foothill at S a n th r II I Voss to Speak At Men's Club That threesome figures to see some juggling •this wetk with Magnol ia { s event Jtl meeting eighth~anked Corofta del Mar Wednesday evening and then sixth·rated Loara Friday night. :" * * • Wre11tllng -Orange Coast at Cltros. Golden West at Fullerton (both at 7:30J. * * • Tennis -Long Beach State at UCJ (2:30), Orange Coast at Redlands (2), Estancia at Villa Park (scrimmq:e at 3:15J. * * * y., lt In New York. an AA U Clemente and Tustin a l ree games to a out o k ·d th AAU h d contention. Costa Mesa· Golf and Coun-spo esman sa1 c a Mission Vieio. II h B'll v d S , db The Foothill lest was billed try Club wl ave 1 oss approve eagren s recor ut ~fate. r De i 's third·placc 1· 'bl . I I h f t ke I "there was s 0 me cor· car 1er as a possi e tit e· as e ea ure spea r or Aflgelus ·League team ff.4 ) decider but the recent skid the men'1 club month I y P''-<• '"!!\ respondence involved 1 h 8 l hosts Pius X (6·2). the leader puts the Tritons in a 6-5 posi· meeling Wedneaday at 7 p.m. 1. G••den Grove n•o> may have held it up." in loOp battle in 8 o'clock tion. four games off the pace. Voss, who attended Newport ~: ~~;:1~;, &e•d'> 1?7•11 HC said t.here was no ques-action. Mission Viejo is also on the Harbor High School and ;: ~11.~fi.Hl\':.J~~n lion about the record and that Newport grinds to a halt :,kids, losing its last five in Orange Coast College, was ac· '· L1>11• (211 the AAU would try and get with the Anaheim fraca s a row after threatening the quired from the Chicago White :: ~o-.:.,":11~e1n~! t1.,1) the matter straightened out tonight and Huntin..tnn Beach Crestview League with an ear· Sox by the California Angels '· ,..,..~.1 ... 11•·0 as soon 1 ·bl 6 "" 10. t<oo1brn (17·!1 "' * ... 1.: .... " " .. I " .l! ~ !'"•· s JJOiS1 e. Thursday night after going ly 4-2 record. recently. 0111tr•: v1111 P••-z. Donald Paine, the JAAF-through a dramatic fhp·flop·-"-----------·-------------------- secretary. said: "We noticed that Seagren'sjump was miss- ing from the list submitted .... ... .. , Bae-..U -Golden West at by the Unlted States' Amateur Santa Ana, Orange Cout at AthleUc Union for ratification. Citrus (both at 3). Villa Park "We have written lo the at Estancia (scrimmage at• · Amf!'r'lcans asking whr. We 3:15). ' know ,of no reason why the 1GWC Bags · 31-5 Wii1 · fqr peop~e :{ going places • • • Swlmmhi1 -Fountain Valley al CtF Relay prelims at Belmont Plaia (2 :30). Orange Coast and Cerritos at· Santa Alla 13:30). record~ shouldn't be sent in. · l imagine il is just an overslg,ht." Under IAAF rules, records must be submiUed f o r ratification within sfx months. Paine said Seagren'• record cannot now be ratified bdllre Golden West recorded its fi rst-ever golf victory Jl.fonday troun cing the C y p r e s s Chargers 31·5 in an East('rn Conference match on the Costa Mesa Golf and Countr y Club course. 5.29 . TRAVl!LIR Ca l State jumped o n Basketball Rankings SMtleNc' 10 11ext year. Collegiate . The Rustlers had lost 37 straight duel s encompassing two seasons and one ganie. The win evened their jeagul! mark to t-1. , ' C>elllt.,.!rt, " L~er.2b-d 8.,,'kl!oldl!r. """' $-i.nd. c.ff EMt.. A $1\IMla. IHI Vltk, rt AWi, n-Jb .,lt(k/noll, ct Pe•""· I ,,._, .. "' . " .,. ' . . . • 1' • • ) 1 l D ' • 1 0 if ~ : : ,, . . . J • • t J • • • ( • • 0 1 • • 0 lJ , .. 1 '°''" tel ltlt. 11~) • " •• , S I 1 ) S 7 I I ' I • I ! : I ·: ' t • • ~ ' "'2 ' f I •l I J t l l f f I I :.11 10 • ktft ., lllflMtl • .. • Cal Stf!C' SOI flt 11•-ll If 1 a.fdreti.dl ooo 010 001-J ' J (]Pf Poll ..... , ..... 1. \ICLA fl.SI UMl t. '-'ii. Cit,. CINJ l. Hortrl Carof!fllo· (lt·U 4.~0NI .... ... "' "' '" Cage Scores · Ken Kribel ot Golden West shot the low &core of Ute day, a 72 over the Mesa link& . The next match for Coach Ray Shacltlefotd'• iolfer1 is Frkf•Y at ·eosia Mesa verlus Ci1tu4. Remllt&: Mike N I c h o J g (GWCJ def: Mike Stlnlbn (CJ, 77-14 : Mlk• Aguilar (CJ dtl. Tom Scbwitlera (GWC), &f-85; ·Brian H<mpmll (GWCJ def. George Blos.~ (¢), 78-85: Krjliel CGWC) def, S l Ip 8feJdfn (C). 7Ut; Art Moder (GWC) def. Les McMlllen (C). ' 81·9&: owc•s alttrnatl!: g<itfer Roger Epperson shot an 86. 4/5 QT. The place is ~ere! Old Crow makes it a little more special. Old Crow IUTllCU lll,IJQll IOUf;_., Mll~U II PIQIJ, llSl!lW W•UtW tf tlll IUCIDll' DISTIUIJT CD .. UA!laltl!. 'Y l I • . -. ·-----· --------·----------------------------------------~=--------~-~~---"-" "'"""'"'""'!'"".,.,..,.,,.,.,. ...... ,. ... ,,.,,.,,.,,,..,,,,,,,,,,.,,., •• ,,..,,.,..,,~..,,"'"'"'"'"'"'""·,..." .. ..,l'..,.•,~••..,,..,,,.,,,,""""""""""""~··~·''"·'"'''''"""''"·'·"·"·,..,-,,.,,r-'"'"'-""'r".'""',.-~-:""c"r,-;-:--:;-c,;.~.:.~c."'--:::;:c;;:-;;::;:;::::-~;;·-: . " .. " ,, ' I I l I I l j l I i ' t I I J • I OAll. y I'll.OT "' "" LIGAL NOTICB IUr'l.Nll• DMlfM S1+'tNIW • •1•.• m.:at.• 1,211.MM . . . . ... " M " .. '" " .. " .. " " " .. " " n , . .. • D .. " " " "' " .. ·~ .. " " .. Lightweight Basketball IV Scores ....... ~ (#1 110 Tnllfl OM ..... 07) ,. UtJ Sw•I"' JKt!Mlfl OJI F l'J Cnimb1y Hetbolll 11) C llJ) Htlm T..,,,, ft) G 0 ) TuveU SdlmJII (ltJ t;; (ll Cot" Smrlllll ...... , L.nu111 -l"lmeY 2. T11lllll-l"twttllltl 111. II:-I , •tr· t11;111'9 t. .....,... " fWlldirl' •• H1lftlme: t........ ff, T111ll" JO ~ Yltlt (1'1 00 •1 ~ C.-kl f12J F' I&) IClttltl K•I-f7) F' 1101 lldtoi O'NtR Ul C C20) IC.., M-,-ff) G CHI ICM111 Cltrt U'IJ G "' L-brlN SI.lbs: Mrsa1e11 vi.i~ori- 11. lkM '· ~t Mod9fte -Cotittt. S. '"'""'°" 6. C1r11M f. N.,,,,l"I"" !. H11't1,,,.1 MlfJlolt Ylelo :U, El Mo-..... ""'"'"""' Cltl f6tl .......,, • ,,,. (t) F C•J Stltdd T"8mtt 1111 F' (7! S.ll'hlll Melendoll 1t•1 c nn K@nt N...,._ fl:I) G CJJ MIU ~ (UJ G (tt) ... 11 Scwlnt .-: Wftfl'lll"'*' -"'*" .._. !. N1•"wt •ldW!t t , YMl!lt 2. ~ ~z rw-t H•rbor :tf, W.tmlfllMI' w. ~ ('6) (Q:) 19""' Alll M11ltli'I' (141 ,. (17) .... ~n1 K~ (1-0 ,. fl•l wmi.m' ~f,.. C•) C C14l Moe¥er ._, (ll G 1•1 icocq,.. E1rll 131 G CO Cr111d1H korltltl t ubol: Mar11'1t-C'9111!1tt r. H..,.. I. S.n• "'"' -Wvrldl l. Tl'lf'l.tlew•lilf ,. Kllf'flmt K'Ot'I: S."11 Alll :rt, Ml• r1,,. " MlllllWltltlt IU) C.t1ftn Oll 0..rl"-t Cf) H1n'lll 1111 Mort (4) Witt {IJ Ha tcOf'lnt Ctrd 1. • ' ' G G ""'' IUI W.W11 (t) Lt,,,.lldott {0) HUii U7) Grw111no (JI Turn.r (4) Hoefll l"rfddV 2. M<' Htlftlme: Hll!lfl,_..., ''"'" wemni ''· Bee Scores Tho Or1n9• Coast's Most Complete PRINTING SERVICE ----..MHn1 9:1'-i. IQ) !ill Mt .... " C.nfw (U) F 41'1 ONdll ,,,,_.. f') .. (t) ~ lfft(lO c If)~ Olwl, J. f'l G fl) l"MIPI 01_., T. Ill G (ll Wnlff korl""' II.lbs: (S"ll(.!1 -IMS1 !. M1>1naUa-l.ll'ltVllt 1. M911• 171 (Sil °'""""" 1101 " '"" 01) " T1111rm un c MUii (11) & Wrlll!t (JI S s--r,,. llllbl: Msrl,.. 10. w".-. 1. S.ritt AM {lOI M- UOI Ac111 (fl -Ul Gennlw (11) •Y.n ---H1ffllms _,..: Marl"' ». S1nt1 ""' Jl. La-tul 1"1 ,..,., •• ,_., !fl " (fl Good Ol'TTNr II) I' 111 Nldlo!s ~.. ,,, c (" ,. ..... , Corwlfl Ill G !141 l1.....,k1 cti.rm..<'9 "l G Ill Whffter Scorl,.. llltlt: l--N-. Tw1tl-Dlnl1 t, l""lme ,_ H11ftl1N: l .. 11111 ,, Tutti" 17 • Mtw-9 1•1 UO WftfWIJ•• MCN--, U). ,. 111 Tll'"lll1 l11ftw11 COi F (ti ll:Uft9C! TllCQr fJJ C (:t) C..• Cll1'1 1111 G Ill J.....,._ ICt~ (II G (l l Albtr1 korlllll ..-: N......,-11:~ !, ._,., I. DwYw 1. W"""INtw-Mtol"""'""'"' t, Giit 1, y...,,.. l , _ .. Httrtl,,,.: Nf'A'll«f 1" W.tmlllftitr t """""""' ....,. '"' (If) ........ McNll' 1111 1' U J Mu lt!cti Ul F If) Olllour" C1rt-It) G Ill Mir T"--(HJ G (13) S!e!M Whltfleld IUI G 101 1111119 korl"" 1ubli Hwn!l""tllll-Whtll I. W•'11•r :r. COl!lllft ,, Worl!!Y '· U.w-n...:. 7, 1"1rltt t. Wtti.m-N-. H1lltlme-Hunl!"'ter1 31, We.fern u . Ctatt Men 111) IHI c-. *' Mtr "Ul'Cll!I If) F' {0) Ctmtrtll'I ltoldell IOI F 101 L-rv ,l,rdwt fll c (7) 0.111 Al1hl!r rtl G (4) S"'"Mr IMVllle fl) G 14) lt!t IGl!'IN Mt: CK!t ~,,. -,, c..-*I Mtl'-NicCM9 .. AUTO LEASING All Makes ·-· 1969 Thunderbird 4 Dr. Landau ,,, ............. CORT FOX IWlll6 224 D· W. C-Hwy. Newport ... ch, C111f. 642.a440 ~ A1tMrhe4 l111l111 Sy1ttM ••• " NOW! NEW! PILOT PENNY PINCHER CIJ~SSIFIED ADS WITH A NEW-LOW-RA.TE l f :IMES IN THESE CLASSIFICATIONS! IOOO I010 IOll I012 I014 IOU I020 1100 1110 1120 11;15 Piant11 & OrgMS Rod lo Tot..ltlon Hl·fl& S- T1pe RffOrdert c ....... a1~1_..1 Hobby Supplies Sportint Good1 linoeulan, $copet Mlocoll- 11IO 1200 l20S 1210 cno uoo -HOO HSO MOO e EACH ITEM MUST IE PRICED e e No Item 0.... $S0 e No C.....,..rciel FinM e . ' e No C.,., Cho-e No A ..... i.ti-e START MAKING MONEY :·NOW! ' I CALL ' I 642~5678 ASK FOR ; YOUR DAILY PILOT ''AD· VISOR I AND YOU MAY i CHARGE IT! I ,. .. " " " M .. • ,. • • • n •• " • " " • • :r .. u ,, " .. • " " • • " " ., • " " ' ... '" ., • .. . " •• ' • ~: :j ~ ·' • ~ ;.. "' :~: . , " I ••.' -" ' . ~- • • .. ~ .... t I "!' .... ""'"" . -~- .. ! WASHINGTON (UPll -n -Id coot the pemment $1 billiOn or more 14 turn the .OU.fouled Santa B a r b a r a· ·~1 oil Cllilornia lnln a '.Put#: marine 1anctuaf1, '°" !'«fDI 14 unolliclll Interior ~e.,.nmeet estlmatu. &rd tlult lllQerinf eost woW!I appear 14 lillke it Im· -!hl• ln turn the clock back ~ .... ll time eould bell lhe~!nvagea caund by tbe oil atage from an ottsbore .. ne $1 billion or more ac-tua!11 would be only a part ~vie~Have ~ew Ability :For Attack ' 4 .;· . eotiN (UPI) -'The Soviet Ualli'a ability 14 mount 1 aUJllile attack • I a i n a t Wlllim Europe was coo-sidorJbl1 lmprvved by Ila in-v-of CaecballO\'Ull, the W:tf'\~ Germall Defen1e Mialalry lllld. . ~-1 of American ...i . .-, annla by -r.m.ci to the European ...,. linolll by air woold be uaeful only ii enOllgb Westun troops are . ~anenily in pla<e 14 rill\l.;s.v1et 11tacken.in the Initial llqes, I h e ministry e.w.d. ·J'b'1defeme ministry's vitwl were outlined in a 11Wldie Book." the first ialued bt;W,e 11 Germany. Ill Sp-~ eo!nclded with 1 new llll'llil crlllll In which Soviet JJlUJl#Y maneuven "est of. kllil on ezpeeltd to play &.~ • • • \ • • J.PWf HOTJCI • ' -..... ----·------··-----·---·-:--:------------------ WAIJ TO OWi UP OH YOll OWi OUJI FOR FlSTI FASil ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IRED DAILY I'll.OT . -.. ' ·~~-. ·Y ·PILOT WANT ADS ...... •tn.t Slaifle Mlri'lceepi--ne .,,...... CeUt •• ._ ~. HO!JStlS l'Olt SALE HOUSH 'l'Otl SALi 1000 Genoral 1HOU ;o-....-Sl;;;S,_l'O;..;;.,ll:.;IA=.1.:::1_ 1 HOUSIS l'oR sALi! 1000 Gonorol • 1000 0.-11 1000 $3.000 Pl!C~ IEDUCnON On thla h ....... ....,, -· ... --X.O..ted tn ....i. ltnt>.area ot Newport 8eteh. Wl'RI WAVING :!.:::"~~~ THI FLAG coun~ t)'pe abnolpbl!:N • .-. ........... """"°""" POR ••• p10s huao den, p1 .. 1am11,y ''THI RIAL UTATIRS" room, plus formal dJnitlC, plus huce yard and ma,m.. ticent POOL. Low intelftt insurance loan may be usu. med without l"lle in 1nte~1t. Full price St!.~. &l.bmlt your amalltr home on our au:arantee trade aale plan. WE SELL A HOME ,gVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee Spectacular view of ~ lakes, trees I: pttns ot the Mesa Verde Country Qub. Jlllt lilted by the dewloper tor qUiclt sale, l'l5x90' lot. $14,tSI . '" \ . ' ' ".' .' ' \ ' •• ' _ 1 \ • 546· 599 0 Dover Shores Waterfront Spa.ck>w: two .. 1tol')' 3 BR home. Formal entry hall with clrcular atairway, din. in& room. Panelled den bu fireplace. Pier • float •• ••••••••••• ......... $155,000 Mn, Raubton ...... C.WW.0, Buker & (o. All our eftorta ar. concen-trated In the Newport Har. bor Colt& Mna area. Wf are yoor neirhbon. We live here and must continue to succeed here? DoYa•WM4•1 which area ill j Ullt rl1ht. It ml1ht bt- Halecrest in this neat, bri_gJtt A: very .cJ ... 3 BR, big lam. home. On1y $24,960. Flexible termi. "'-~----· 20 Prnfeuinnals To Serve You! HORSl LOVEH Santa Ana Heights 66x200 with 2 bed· room hnme and a 2 car garage. Lnt C'Om• pletely fenced. $%i,· 500 -Great terms. llCO IONUS • Bdrml. plu. 20x30 playrm. plumbed for bath or wet bar. 4 yra. ne~1_'!· tchoola 6 ahoplJUll. '32,950 ' Honest Action, Sincere Service We Proud to Serve 136.IOO G.I. LOAN. Low _...,._ .. lacl_ tax" ud tnawuct. mu tpaclows home otten. e~ by ball. lats• li""" -with fireplace, three bed- rooms. two baths, B\1llt.1n lOtcbeO. Family room and eodoled patio, The patio Is covertd and ICree.Oed in for SUMMER OOMJ'ORT and bu stauene attachable panels to aompletely enelolo it in winter -makiJW tt ideal for YEAR AROUND LIVING, Twn .eparate rear yards, the yard oH patin has a green house and has a beautiful Jlower 1arden, The other rear yard behind dou,ble, 1arace hu a IarKe 24x28' patio slab and ... 90J'ted fruit b'flllS with ad· dltlonal room for boat and tralltr at.nrap. Here ii a lot YoU can reaUy romp on. nJlJ.. PRICE ONLY $32,(KX'.I -SUBMIT AS LOW As $3,000 DOWN! MASFiiiB. out of State Owntir bu mowd ml mµst an hll ·-•ll l>lthbomo located OD tft+.lfned llreet tn fi<clusive Baek Bay ..... Spacious yard with -owimminc pool Tbll beautttul borne ts fttsh1y decon.ted and ready to en. 151.500 can: Jim Cobb Rel. C13.!JN lllALTOltS '673-4400 --· ----. ABSOLUTELY HP DOWN TO VETS Lc:lvely home with bup Jjy.. in& room. Wood bt.trnifW fireplace. Warm wood panoJ. Ing. H ... dinlnc room. FllJ. ... """'"" and draped. • lllXllri<>us batha. Built-in cm. ....... olldilw: -..... 2llf. IM to -.. tio an1 roor,.... E'venlnp Call 568723 2 min. from muveloul ahc!p. ;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I pitlg'. center, Only S24.50o. WE SELL A HOME Pele Blrrett Reilly EVERY 31 M1~uTEs ,,.._,, Walker & Lee COCKTAILS For 4G-2043 W tclill D . BA YCREST ea · nve places. 646-ml. Open E'ft'& Spacious 4 bdrm. 3 bath INSTAN1'1 APPEAL home on fee lot. Luxury For-the taad1y that bl katutts: 2 water heat-more than the ~ ers, electric prage door Newport HeJebts charm with openers, . 3 ~places. expowd beam cellinp ancl ~r will _ finance at w n 0 d burninl' fireplace 7% -S49,750. bright Country Jdtehen· and .. '"' ... . -.,. .. .,. • "' ~· " . ., ... ". ,..,. ... '! . ·v ~:o ,-... .. .. .;1 ... ... " ., < 16C6 Weatclltt Dr. NE\VPORT BEACH private prden patio. Three bedrooms plus a •parldiaa suest apartment, with pri- vate acoeu. perfect for tbt _., DEPT. ' 111t•.c....~ ~llMCll.CI ........ Klf..JISl oa .... S ilDlOOMS rm Mesa del Mar's nicest. Owner's say I'm too bl1. But tor $38,500. I may be rta:ht tnr you. Warm & friendly and lnve kids. 642·5200 inlaw. Butt or ...U.. -are· area. Reduced to on11 $26,900 D I A l D I R E c T - 6 .4 2 • 5 6 8 11tl'ff Wishes It peace, comfort location are important to YoU, look this over. Convenient to Newport H e 11 h t a irade tchool, and all shopplnc. · 2 blka to JW:W park. Only $25,500; and all the• "plus" features. 3 bedroom.a, 2 batba. fittplace, cpts. and drapes. double sanae. con- crete drive, tarp tenced b<clc )'U'd'oo 50xl30 rr. M Im. There ts not to much available tn tfril put ot ll TllS llLAXl Here's the perfect buy. 3 bedrooms, added den llnd kit· ~hen with new elee. Bil ranse. $23,9®- No down to Vets. euta.ide C.M. HWTY. OWN-· r-- ER, '642-<980. 2 BR DUPLEXES Lari:e 900 aq ft units with en- cloaed raraan &: in excel- lent condition. Near schools I. ahopplna" Owner asking $24,000 •, 'PERRON ·-'' . .r.·· .•.. * 642°1n1 Anytime * VACANT LOT FOR $2,500? This one has a BEAUTIFUL VIEW in HORSE RANCH COUNTRY 15 minutes from the heart ol -Orange c.oun. ty olf the Rivmlde F1ff. way. Build your own hoUse or invest in the future. Wli SELL A HOME EVliltY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adam.a $15>9491 Open tD 9 PM ---- JUST LISTED F~ •imple duplex ntar chan- nel ~ ocean. Modem attrac- u~ eon1tructlon. 3 ~ rooms, 2 baths each ult. Foroed air hta~ .-.... electric Jdtcbtm. $49,SOO •. <;all It" fllt1 p&rflculari and appt. to see. •Dllll · It E,A LT Y 2025 W. BllbOe· Blvd .. N.8. 675..000 -·~----- HUll:t'! HURIY! Beautiful Ma .. Yarde 3 BR l "' batbl. JnunacuWe. LaJP $19,(llX) FHA Joan can . be ......... Fall prico ..... '23.500.Clllnow. '!!~II! CLEVELAND 141 .., ~<11111 1wa.M2.usi'4Mm DAVIDSON leolty COVftlri' Chllo .lewol A fn' ltfps-to tbt OUb from thll s Bit 21! l>lih llpantth -°""'°' IUtr. • ml u.'tt>or 18, CM '**··~Eno.- LACOUNA VllW 4 Bedrooms. Family room, dinin& room. Coast line view tn Dana Point-$89,500 Ap,,.t .... '22,210 Immediate poues• aion. 3 bedroom, 2 baths, lving room with open fireplace. Carpets &: drapea.- No down tn Vebi - $1400 down to all. NePd Information! We are u close u your phon~. UTATI SIZI Back 8aY 3 Bedroom Custom Dlt. Lot 75x 275 with _!]pen t.y view -$55.000 -Owner wUI help fin · ..... UTCLIPI' vacant 6 Jonesome read,)' tor immediate. Occupancy. Speclqus llvln' room With IOI burnJng fireplace. C&.rpeted A draped. $40,950 -10% dn. Call or Coml!·ln. \Ve can E)CJ)lai11 FHA and Veterans Plan. HOMl+INCOMI Npt. Habts. Dist. 2 bedrooin oomoletdY remodtled + "1 btcf. room rtbtal-4 pr.. ares.New~• -Inc. pot. '3tlO -S29,eoo -lOl' dn. 546-2313 ' or 646-7171 'T' 1-J l:_· ~J i .'\ I~ I ' ' ·--. -'-I ,• \ J , J • 4 BfDROOMS $25,900 + 2 baths + GI • Jo'"HA terms. Walk tn all schools. Good quality w/w carpets, custom drapes, aluminum <.-overed patio, lup Jot. Ideal for boat or trailer. HurrY on thil one! tr!J l'\l I ·\\11 111 ~ ! \It\ \It \ \ o ' \ I I 1 < CORtlfR LOT Easy access for boat nr trail- l!!!r, 3 BR 2 bath, hudwood . doot'!I. VA nr FHA $1B7 per mo pays alt $21,990 Nowport at Vldorl1 '46-1111 Colesworlhy & Co. 1904 Harbor Blvd. C.M. 642-7777 Open Eves. EASTSIDf BEAUTY . A mtlit to .ee. Tri-Jewl, 3 BR + family room. 211 l>llhl, fireplace, d o u b l e pdioe, bllilt-lno,expenolve- " drapes, automat$C Pl'llCI dOGr opener 6: tpdnlden front I: rear. C.U no. to 1ee. •$32,500 Nowport It Victltfla 64Ulll FORCED SALE Owners muat ,ive up thll hup 5 br, 2~ b&. home in Ilay=ot. Al thla price, ""' receive the fireplace, pool. and Jacuul tree. Jmt 1& duced $2450 to SG.500. HUI'?)'! l.!\s;;i~G «""..eREALTY Newport Sp1nish -.-"anuumc• 2629 Harbor Blvd .. CM. ~:'.P ~-1~: ·--Ex~C;;LF:U:::S=1v===E=-1 4 bdnn. lamil.Y _nn, elec. kitchen, eu1tom 1tereo • Near Harbor HI_. vacoum .,..tem throu&hoUI ,.. surrounded by beautttul home. Crptl, drps complete. homes. Redecorated. all new near all acbools. $56,000 copper plumbinl, FA heal, Owner. S49-{)51)7 bufil-inl. double· tftplace, I sPIClif VALENTINE i\.fany bonus extras in tttia nice Newport Heilhts home. S J:!edmoma, dinins room, pado for entertalninc' 10'D' cue•fi Ott ot ldtabtn and LR. nnv carpl!!!tln&', •hakt> root, 3 klngalzed bdnns, 2 baths. Walk to \VetitcllU sboppina" Priced lo tell. Rltr. 6'6-3928 Gt' 642-0ls:i *LACliENMYEI °"'1'l1z<d double ....... Nie< Eulhde 3 Bl!, deo, :=:, tothil~ ': bu!It·im. carpets. t•need borne "OU?I yard. $23,300· • FHA W 1' J • tnt. • 10% down. Immediate llQ Dill =.1"Rlty. 54a.2209 -- --I • Older Unit1 '385/mo lncolnf>. Lot 62x300' Owner mtat sell -EZ tmns ,,..,_, ....... $29,500. 2 BR Cotta90 Homa UNUSUAL Weotslde. I block to ..... Split le 4 bd hom ·"th Pinf • • • • ... •• ...... , Sl5.960 v11 nn • ~' GENCO REAt.TY HMC22 -poo1 and polio. Good I :;;:=~:;.:=:.:_.::::::=:1 tenns or mJebt leaee ·with option. ArllOld I. Fl'Hd 313 E. 11th SL, C.M. 1ta11on e.ms $750 DOWN Jmmed, ~. 3 llR Newly painted. Yard, patio. $19,500 JUlr. 61W130 Ewa.. ~ e KENNEDY NOW'S THE n,,_ FOi fj>UICIC CASH THIOU5H /4 DAILY l'ILOT WANT AD '" ' . :· . ' . I ' ;. ··~ . ··~ .. '' .. " .. "" .,,, -,q. -~·.1 'f•'l ·':~U .. , . ... ' . . " . :1 ' .. <t ... ,. ·-... '~ ., ,,. : '~· . .. - •• "' ... . ' .,. .,. , .. •• ~, .... -.:;;'--~~~~~~"' .... ---------------------- r T"""1, ,...., 11,. IM 1100 COIY & WARM . . . . . . . . .. . ~ . . . . . . "" '. ;. ' .. ,. HOUSIS P:Olt SALi Lide hie ;1151 ' ltlNTAlS ltlNTALS RENTALS HMJ111 FurnllhM HIUMa U1t"'1nleheitt ~ fumlsW Nwport -h 2200 -.- 0 Hllth11 3210 ~!'J*:f -' 4200 I BR "°""'· partly >""1lh. OIAIUllNG 2 bedroom A 2 BR. n,J. VERY NICE! ed. Adults, no pr.ta. Call den. 2 bath home. w/W Xhrt Ptnlnlula loc. no pef3. eves alt. 5 l'M or nU: cupe1a, drQU. F.utsido employed iad\Jll A v I I I • e• 54&-6123 Costa Meu..0.:-to mop. about Feb. 25 'tli Jw• ts. 81yfront Duplo-nOO.ooo . i.threi! BR'a s..tll.000 -S Ba a Two BR'• ~·lib Flrepla.ces Welker R11lty S3!6 Via Lido b15-5200· ID "fN. Ocean J'roqt, N. B. Pine Ii: park. NI ce I y ReUOMble. i7S-2111 . RINTAU lllAL UTATI Apts. Unlurnielletl _:Goo=-::.· =•'------1 1111 lluff 52.42 ••ntllo "*"• e NEW DELUXE e FIREMAN Nttdl 2 3 Br. 2~ ha. apt. tor )ult home: baby A pets. Ind. IPIC. mstr. wltt, din ref's. Call ~t 16111 I. Tuatln -Cod• MoH Excellent locatlml, near schools, sbopping ad beach. Ouly a few lelL Buy now while . Jnterest rates are only --- Is this 2 BR. homC! near Newport Hf'lshl• on ahort - r • Ira!& 11reri. Good •be R.-2 lot ror futuft potential. S19._900. ® ~ .. $125 mo. winter, util pUt. --No or. no pelt. 6TS-#1$. ua::. c ... 1y ;1 .... landscaped ,..,,_ cowred p atio , very q alat ...... -. $US,... mo. $paCJoU1 2 BR, 2 ba' bo~, modem Spa.nlab decor, la:e ateluded con:itr lot ,$61,500 LIDO REAL T,Y, INC. 3400 Vin Udo G73-8S30 Coron11 d•I Mir 2250 .AvallabJe 6'r lnu•+&• OC> ·-----1 eupancy, Write Bal m c/o Conn• dol Mor 4250 2 BR clooo to Shopplns, $l6' mo. L.eue or month to montl1. H~ P1nchln .C: .u.oc. 67$-4392 rm. • dbl ca.rqe, ·-1-=-=:::;====:::;:::::jj door opener avail. Pool A •--& •··rel rec. am_ Nr. CathoUc l~~~::!!.-':...!-:::::::::. _ _:::=if Oturch le s;chool I: Corona WINTER retital. i,s block del Mir Hl&h. beach private entr&rk'll: e ONLY $280 e Adult' only. W 34lh St.i 837-871 Amigos \Vay, N.B. Nl:l 673--2473 a.ft 6 PJ\f · 1 1% with 20% down -7\.\% with 10% On. no 2nd -no point• -2t yrs on bllanc• lf:AlT'f Near NB Post Ore. 646-2414 3 Bil 2 Ba., blt1111; all ~;;,Plloto:;o===== Narcissus. 2 Children OK -C ,_, u. :J250 t ---- 644-3282 -· --r l•lbo• ~--·· ,.1 u.r S250 $50; PRIV. room, emplo~ ~a -mai or colltce eentleman: I~vely home. Eve. 546-lnJ Prlc.cl from $30,150 to $33, 950 Ni('(' l bdrm. Jt.2 ZONE VACANT. JMAifED. POSS. * $12,500 Full Price ~utll~~e.~ ~t .. ~ Exclusive Agent 315 E. Balboa BIY4 Di. c;.,, v Ml"4 Rentals 5""-~·t~r.'!~ SING!.!= ...... witb ele<~ p. a. palmer incorporated 3377 VIA LIDO $3000 dn. Owner will c:a1·1')' 2nd TD, Drivf'I by ~ t;. \Vil50ll then Cllll ; .. & w4ter. Renl $25 mo. or ON .TEN ACRES will v.'Otk out ~clwJ&e ti!( lalllN leltllMI QSS 1 I< 2 BR. r.m I< Unturn dock 'PB""· 10!.I W. 8"' BAU!O/< .,,._ Troct Ph: ~11.1 From L.A. Cell MA s.I034 LOCKHART REAL TY 646-2301 642-«l67 548-2951 i)'plcs I Pri I Patios I Ave 673-4303 .• I BAOIELOR apt, •inlle lttt· Pools. Tennis· Contnt'I •1-==· =======>I Newport Shores Home 3 large Bedrooms, dining nn, spacious living rm, w/ stane Jireplare. Many ex· tras including additional 600 ..:i. fl. -$32,500. Might exchar@e ~uity ror' larger h o m e In Orange C.OUnty plll! some ca.sh. Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. 901 Dover Dr., NB Suite 221 645-2000 E-. S4U966 Impre5Sive Mediterranean home. CUBl<im quality thni· out. Spacious living room with beam ceiling. F'omial dining room. 4 BN:lroom. family roon1 1vi!h fireplace and wet bar. Beautiful mas- ter suite with wall of mir- rored wardrobes & separate dresa~ room. Sauna bath, heated & filtered pool. .................... $105,<XKI Call : Evelyn Cray Shown by appt. (714) 642-8235 901 Dover Drive, Suile 120 Ne\\'J)Ort Beach $162 INCLUDES lntere1t, laxes &. ill5Ura.nce. Assume 5 ~ '/~ IO&n -DO k>an fees. 4 BR, 2 batb honlf: in ex-FIRST TIME cellent residential are a. STED Cash talks! CAU.. ~1151 U !open eves) Heritace Real Be. au I If u I corKiominlwn! Estate 'l'hrtt bedrooms, 2~ baths. RM -"·· . lud-4 BO , 3 ba, ra .. .....,. rm, carpeted throughout U)C J car garage, bit-Ins, crptg, in&: kitchen and patio. Fire-in ter.com, elei.: gur. dr & 7682 Edinger place in large living room, sprinklers. nr roU course. 842-4455 or·Sf0..51«1 spacious dining area. Dou-"""" It "' = by Open Da11 .. til 8:30 ~sq , .,....,.......... ownrr. I~~.!,',~::.~~,,,-;==~ ble garage. Owners mus! Trade income property LARGE 5 BEDROOM lcnve area due to business 675-6846 rewions. $250/month oovers I~==~~==== Executive n ~ii h b o rhood. Trull J:!ee<i payment., inter-PENDING FORECLOSURE S32,91JJ -YOUR TERMS. est lnsurancf', taxes and $995 mo\leA you in. 4 BRll Single story, separate !or-- mantenance. View of Ocean 2 baths all b...ilt-~. sunken mal dining room, tarie liv· lrom second floor. 5 min-living room & fireplace. ing room with slate brick Full CALL AL Bl.ACK ~ll51 fireplace, terrazzo tile en-utcs 10 Bay Ii: Ocean. Heritage Real Estate try, Wl'Ought iron decontive prici~y····g··a~!J:·750 fe~ with brick, double rtt· Mei• Verde 1110 age, big lot, Re•lty, Inc. If • 90l Dover Di'.. NB Suite 221 * OPEN llOUSE • Lovely ~· '.~~WIJllJl\{I 48-6966 3 BR. 2 BA, fan\ nn. NelV -·--mm-6"4S·2QOO Eves. S shag crpt'g: bltns. Beaut BOO HOO! lndscpd 11•/ spn1klr sys; --UP to 80% t"OlrlM. boat stor. $23,900. Olvnu. + BONUS * ~1&:-2880 R. ~-Salesmen ar Women. BARcG~A~lN~P~R~lc=E~D'",-openings now. Exper. or l Hu ge BR. 2 frplcs. Only flt'\\' licensee. Tralning pro- $3000, assume 61h'/o Joan. gl'am. Conl!dt'ntial Call Mr. Total pymnt SHIO mo. full Kory price $24,800. 0 w n c r . Fir1t · Pioneer 545-7822 842-4421 Not O~E PENNY clown Santi An• Heights 3630 Quall!ying Vets can move 10..;;;..;;..;..=..;.;=:...c:....- in immediately. 3 BR. 3 Ba., 20x40 pool; on ~ acre. Rm. tor horses Creal location in Huntint:· or what ha\'e You. Least ton Beach on Hamillon Aw . avail., $325 Mo. 642-6606 between Brookhunt and eve. Bushard -cloee to the 1'3'""B°'R'""'•,.--·--·· ----. ... _ • ·~. 1(1.J'., ucach. lea!lle.· $.165 mo. . SU-1362 Quality 3 l:. .f bedrooms. I========= 2 l:. 3 baths. all one story L19une l..ch 3705 homes. From $32,400. }.Jonth. --"--'---'-'--- ly payments from $288:21 GORGEOUS View: must including Pi:f. taxes i: tn· rent this week; 3 Br. 2 l!UI"&nce. Ba. Has everything! 1:i46-lj98 only, $100 roo. Yculy. 1Jt1L ~ 9 •-•-l'utt/G·-~ · cl 6T">Jl86 IJK. ,......, ' ~....... Income Property m · 900 Sf.a Lane, 01M "4-2&11 --; !Mae.\dbur nr. Cbut Hwy) * EXCHANGE ·· Huntl.,..... IMch 4400 HAVE: 13 M\\'er unill $12,000 PREVIEW SHOWING! e SPANISH Sl'YLE • Decorator 1umlshcd, thaa: carpetq, sett clelllinl fl\I· en. . e $1ID-$22a 11:.2 BR. 2 BA. • Live the Ca!Uornia Ille as it should be lived.at The CALIFORNIAN Brookhll!"llt·N. of Adams <n4) 962-2981 crul'mEL Red 1 yr 1&r: equity. WANT: land vacanlt ¥iOO mo. 2 Br, 2 ba, R-3 Orttnie County. ~ Wat•drnttt, boat ,i;p. H._ * 1' Unlit • $175,1)00: Rogers 67S-M&1 Annual gross f'..4,600, NciU' LGE. Studio, new cpts. I: Euclid t:. Balt. Anaheiln. ; drps, prime loctttion $15G. * I Unlls'• $72,SOI=• Also Ba.ch. ss:;. 673-69<H , $8,000 down. 30%, retW1):)".'U -• • "'"I. eichange., Call Ml'i Kr&ider l1lboa 5300 or Mr. Ferg1110n. lnvea~'~ GRACIOUS Adult Livin&'.. •Dept. ;>46-2313 --' ·-1 1·t1 L f..:f'i .i\ .•. E L-.:T l\.TI.r;' Octan .l Bay view, Spacioy11i 2 BR. 2 BA.. walk ' tn clogefs, beautiful carpets .C: draperiea. Pool. Boat .Ups """'""'""'""'""'""'"""'• i for tt narits. Subterruea.n ,..,.i,... 613-3003 . $115; l ·BR., patio, wlw, drape._ Child I: pet OK. Bn>m 5J4.6980 Costa M ... 5100 Buslno11 Property 6050 Huntington Bolch 5400 OFFICE BLDG.· HB: EXCLUSIVE ON-THE·BEACH liOOO sq. ft. 15 oUices. G..c1 for: Dr .• La\\')'e.n;. Savinp t:. Loan • Bank. 3 yean.Jll.i{ E asy conversion. w~ • 2 & 3 Bedroom Apto. R. D. SLATES, Rltt~ '. Luxury livinu to please the 347.3519 Eves, 96).M SMJBt dlscliminahJ1'· )'10\" ----·---~..-T 1 available at ~ U you a.re a quaillied Vell.:o======== HAR 0 you can mov• in without Llf\lno Niguel 3707 B R Balboa Island , . one peMy down • • . not Business Rent•I .,.. The Huntinal~n ~meboey lost a houSt'. You can pick ii up for on1y $950 down. 4 BRs 2 baths, shake roof, excel- lent condition, Full price only $24,950-immcdiate possession. ~ COAn ~ wAL"t..ce REALTORS 54M141- 10poti e .... ;....i NewPC!rf Beach 1200 even ciosing costs. NE\V 4 BR 2 BA, fam rm. GREENS 'fl rm Choice of Two, $150 &.~. cyt. """· pvt """"· ' mi Paci ic ~ rutr . ..,_.,,._ •• HUGE ADDED ou~:b~~o~: ~=~gh =~~'.:~~· 495-5.593 BACHELOR .·UNFURN. j FAMILY ROOM from $100 m Ocean Av< .. H.B Office R1nl1I '!11.D The Bluffs ""'ilh s .... 'tdist. fireplace. Pink \Valkcr io Lee, Sales Agents 1--'A-"pl"'-'s.'--'F..;u;;.r;;;n..;i•;;;hed.:.;:__ Al.SO AVAILASLE (714) 536-1487. "LINDA'' & y,·hite farm style in model n..... 10 · ·1 d k d a.. LAGUNA BEACH ' "I""" ti us a..., Gtner1I 4000 1 • 2 &. 3 BDRM. Air Conditioned · 3 BP.. 2 Baths. On major ~~~~000'·Leo~.lot,carptls .'_5 968 3036 l-leatedPoolll,ChildCal'9 PREVIEWSHOWINGI ONFORESJ.'AVENUE -· •-Jt. ~t·•. d ..... 'd -Ul&V~ u """mg .... -• RENT "-···· Ad" ·-Sho I • SPANISH STYLE .. ·--" ..,.. ...... ,, .,.. JI · o·•·· ~900 ~300 '-'C .. '"• J. w PP na: -. Oe!k spaces available iii l\l any e.'(IJ'as. Sho11•n by ap-eving • ,..,. -· • ""' No ""'IS '11 d e °""" tin U J d & FHA I 3 ltooms Fumitur• .,... m\'e "'-6 carpe g, se: c can-newest <if.lice bu.ildlnir •i pointn1t'nt. own , assume oan. SHERWOOD ESTATB $25 M h 2700 Peterson \1/ay, al 1-lar-~ O\'en. prime location In ~CIJ?f 0111nr.r * &14-1798 I' P•ul Jone1 Realty . Oftf bey.· & Adams. Co~ta l\Icsa. e $140-$180 1t:.2 BR. 2 BA Laguna Beach. Air c~ BEAUTIFUL 1117-1266 Eves. riJG..7lZ4 FULL OPrlON TO BUY !J46..m70 e Live the California lilc as tiuned. carp?:ed .. b,~u~ QUALITY HOME VA down by lhe SEA (Rcfrig""""' Availablot it ahould"' Hvod at ,,.,..,, .. """"'.""'"· ·~·W• PRIME COMM. LAND 1 ....... N-EW_L_IST-IN_G......, 13t' tron~ on Beu.ch Blvd. In Huntington &ach. Prime location v.ilh lots of room fDr parking for any com- merd.a.I endeavor, $92,500 • 29°/o down Newport .. Vic!•ri• 6#-1111 "ring" I!\ SPRING •••REALTY w• "anyti""" 2629 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Huge Rumpus Room 4 BR home>, 1% baU11, hRrd· wood floors, doublt<! garage. $25,000. Well ... McCardle, Rltr1. mo Newport Blvd., C.1\1. 548-7729 Eves. &M-0684 EASTSIDE COSTA MESA Real pretty redttorated home with new rarpeting lhroUgh· OUI. new financing & a COf· ner for accomdaring your boat or trailer. 4 good siz.ed BR& l: Iamily room le now ottered at $30,950 at 10% down. A mual to see. IM· J.fED. POSSESSJON . ~ 541·18!0 fl'lell'cMlll~ OLL~~~}l DOVER SHORES Designed &. built by IV AN \VEl..J...S. Unequaled for qua]· ity, & elegance. VIEW. 4 Bdrn1s. 3 baths, atrium. Roy J. Ward Co. (Ba,ycttst Office) 1842 Santiago Dr . 646-1550 NEW DUPLEX on Penn. Dlxe 3 BR UnitA. Adj. lo Ocean & Bay, $59,950 Balboa Real Estat-9 Co. 700 E. Balboa Blvd .. Balboa 6T.l-41411 2 Bt·. &. Fam rm. :!~~ Ba. 00 l =:::i:~~==:::::::==I No deposit o.a..c. MOVING FE-8. 23rd entt-ances: ~·rontq::•-" .. Op, Xlnt area. Priced Right? or as!Wme FllA S-X % loan. H.F.R.C. N•wly D.c:or•ted Jhe CAUfORHIAN Forest Are .• rear lead ... .\O O 'v n e r. 642-3219. OPEN J BR. l8xll separate family Owneri Attention I Furniture 1tent1l1 2 Bdnns. w/rarage $115 P.11Wcipal parltine lots. ~ 1-IOUSE SAT & SUN. room, hdwd ~. cpts/ Do you have re:ntal unitBf 517 W. 19th. C.M. 54.S-3Ul \Yater I: Gardener Paid Brookhurst·N. a! Adams per month for space. ~ 3 BR Waterfront No. 6l drpl, l!n'ly painted imide l: \\'• have good tenanb from 1563 W.1.ndn. Anln T1t-:llOO 1575 Orange Ave., Apt A Cn4) 962·2981 and chairs availab!e bl~. Balboa ~-$60 ,0tt. ou t, cov. patio. previous yeus aJ1d ne«I • HOLIDAY PLAZA. ==-=-·=6°'3M,...,,.1_2_o,.•~~ .,.~~..,..,..,..,..,..,,I!_~ haun.,1 bl ~~ ~1•• '-d• lo• ,,..__ ar BRASHEAR REALTY SUJ\IJ\1ER • \VINTER • and DELUXE, .,,.cious l·Bdrm. 91o:t1. 2 BDR .. •-•· ·2' BR 2 ba / ~,,.._.., av • e .... \ .. 1'~ rn:: ,.. u 11 • ---..---~ , n, ..... ..,.., pn ths, built-ins, w w All ulilltiei paid ,_ will con&ider other. 546-7771 M7-3531 Evn. 968-1178 ANNUAL rentals for them. Film. apt. $135 Pim util patio, drpA, crpts, blt-tns. drps. freshly p ain te d ··'\o '1. Please call our rental dept. 2 Br. le den $160 Plus uW. adulb. Avail · :rt1an:h ht $n5/mo. Mgr. 536-4488 lelept.onDAILe. y p••,..,.... ·:.~-: OWNER Sa.le-Duplex. Near POOL ANYONE? and let us 1ive you the RED Heated pool. Ample parkinr <213) 59?...-522'1. u.vi Bay & Ocean. $46,500. 23> Plu,· Sp••;•h 3 "'droom 3 d N hl!•-N ts L le h 5705 . -FORE57 AVDTl11r. -........ CARPET treatment.you e--O c ui-..:n-O "P@ DELUXE z. Bdtm. apt, 19una IC .....:i, •GUNA BEA;;;;,:,":",r.,,. 34th St., NB. 673-5536' bath. Can assume FHA loan, sel'\'c the best! 1965 Pomona. O f 642-5&:i8 dulls '"' a.on \.l'I ~ • · *BAY VIE\V Yee lot 85' Near schools -in best I~ a over .N. S130. Near 100 CLIFF DltlVE 49'-9"i6 .... ,,, x · 195' w/ plans. $3-4.900. cation. 646-«14 R:;~ ~pi::ET ~ $90; Ji-:n:;," ,~~~rpaid nirkt. 2&3-2G5 lGth Pl. See LUXURY FURN/UNF1JRN SACRIFICE On Bay r:;;{;l, O\vner 54.S-7249, 548-4207 J ~-\\' Bolboa m d . MB r.Igr. Yea..l u Lease. l lcc 2 Bdrms. \Villin<> to 1·cnt tor· ... ftalf. fi ~;-=-....... a . v ... ,. . Broker 534-6980 ... BR 1,. •-lld -Y • ~ " · '~ ""· Ch ren steps to Shore Ir. Shops price. 2 office unit~," ,l :1a Newport Heig~ts 1210 })itt• fi~•\ £.sta~ ''·el®me. Sl.50. 1'.tzr. 8o'"2 \V. Ocea.nview from every Apt. 480 sq. fl. \\'l-4 0H1ce9°..;:. --ffiVlNE TERRACE-2 BR Coil• Meta 4100 Center Apt .1: 10 Al\I • from S150 maup.lease reception area. 2nd iA.~· Newport Shortt 122b ---TERMS to .suit or lease op- tion. 2 Bedrooms, ~n best condition. 219 Cedar. 01.1.'Tler not at properly. $24.~. Call ov.'ner 54G-2991 er 642.-2835 BY O\VNER · personality plus, nr. beach. 2 BR, den, 2 ba, $25,500. 642-3324 after •• • REPOSSllSIONS $695 to $895 DOWN NO 2nds l.al"l?C 4 Bclnns -Vacant. llAF'F'DAL REALTY 8740 \\'arner 842-44('6 Fount1ln V•ll•y 141~ Vacanl/lmmed Pos. 3 BR 3 baths, 1600 sq fl, frp\c, bit-ins & dishwasher. Low do\\'n &. assume existing Corona del Mir 125() loan. Owner will pay all ;;l;;;n;;;c;;;o;;;m;;;e;;;;;;P;,;~;;op;;;e;;;rty;;;;~ I T'~~ o EW 1 Nos R L TY. Fully Furnished I Bdrn1 Apl. 8·12-j{\ll or 8·12·5012 to help pay your rent & LARGE Tri·level ~ BR, 2'AI taxes plus a h110 Bdrm BA home. All b 1 t • i n s , home lo Jivt' in -$45,900. carpeted, draped. Large tot Oringe Colsl Properly & complelt'ly fenced. Close 332 r.ta1'guc1i 1c. Cd~1 GT.:-8550 ~~1-~~~~ai~.!fe;00~~r~ I: lrt-c11,'al'. $30,CQJ. MZ-2342 lL den. Fa.ntaslie View, -----·----4 Pr.I <l!M-2«9 eculive area, <100 sq. rt ~· •. ~~ul. condllior: -$750 $25 Wk. Up 1 '3,..-,B°'R""""I~'•~. ~ba~th-,-. ~$1~S<l=1,-10. E L A\'ail for 8 mo. call aJtc)' ,..... """ \\'ells-r.IcCardle. Reallot'S xlr• •rgt 5 pm 838-3455 · .. • --• Studio & Bach apts. :? BR, pvt patio rar ocean ;. BEACON BAY - 2 BR .C: •Incl Utils Ir. Phone sei'\·. SU-Tral \'le"" near be~ch i:. shop-* Modem Offi · den, or 3 BR. Con1111unity e }.ta.id Service -TV avail. 2 BR., pool, No pet.'J, New ping. Adults. $185, inc. util. ct .... te ·or suites. Air ·~ beach. pier. tennis coot -e New Cafe i: Bar carp.: Sl25 mo. 642-8499 4 .. •M• ~~ ••30 """'......,... itionin&:. parkirl&'. aecre . #" per n10. 2376 Newport Blvd. 54S-9i5:i 313 E. 17th Pl., C.l\:I. · ,_, l · • · John f.Icnab ~ally Co ~rvlce, cenu&1 oeatio,i..-, &l:?.-823.i . SPACIOUS, CLEAN I Br. 3 BDRM unfum for rent, IC.EAL ESTATE C. Robert Nattttss Realtor ,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!-! (or unfum). W/1v crpts, 2 children ck, crpls, drps, Gener1I 230 E. 17th Street '. $175: 3 BR. 2 ba, frpl. \\'i1v, drJ!&.~ltt.N bl::· All %shly blt-ins. 545--0262. No pets! R1nt1ls Went-, 5990 Costa Mesa ~ bltins. Children l:. ""t OI.::. paint · r 'Yl!I i: 9 p·g. 2 BR grrlll apt f'pl cpts -Execut'1ve ---.·' .,... No pelS. 549-IHU e,yes. & ' ' · ' Broker ~980 drps, bltns. patto, pool. SO Co' G Co 1 • wknds. Adib . no pets. St4:i. 546-5163 · s a.11 • cmp oyec Office $135; 2-BR. To\VJ1housc. 1~~ G I 'd I L" • needs 3 BR home. Possible , Baths. \V/iv, b 1 t. ins. rac OUI ~ U t 1v1ng SPLIT level 3 Br. cpts, drpa, rent with option. Loe. East approx 700 sq. ft. in · Childre.n OK. Bkr. 534-69&1 1 &. 2 BR., w/w cpts, drapl:s, bllns; Al!O bach. of H arbor bet \Veen nc11· Building by Oral31;t; -===..::.::...::=..::.-'-"'-! pool, Student! O.K. 2885-A Mendoza 54a.54Zl Pauletino &. Fair, CJ\'l. County Airport. Availaw.e:- co.I. ,, __ 1 3100 MESA EAST APTS. LIKE NEW 2 Br., ne1v cptll.. f>.16-9888 after 5. immediately. S325 mlS; : .:.;;=-"~.;c:;.c_ ____ 145 E. 18th, C.M. 642-3474 drps, bit-ins; carport; 00 \\'ANTED 400 sq ft in vie 67"'.>-4130 Bkr. · • THREE BEDROOMS 2 e Nassau Palms e pets. Adults. 54M769 of Dovtr &. Coast Hwy, for J\fEDICAL • ProfelciiQJ1'1 baths fan1lly room w/w . 1 !: 2 BR. • Pool. 11tora.ae &. model shop. ~lust Suites for lease. Cw;rom carpcis, all built-ins & Jove. 177 E. 22nd Sl 64:!-366 5200 have pov;er water, good ren1odeling avail. 18 7 l ;J ly yard. Lease S185/mo. LARGE Bach., nicely turn. Newport lleich lighting & ' \Valer proof. J\fain St., Hunt. Beach " 1 CAIL AL BLACK 543-lliil blt·ins: Employed adult; LEASE, Yrly.: oceanfront 643-1335. (1-213) 435-8226 " ' 1-lerita.ge Real Eatate av&il. Feb. 19th. 545-5421 unfurn. Contact: Jones Rlty, Ef..tPLOYED Lady needs 1 NEWPORT CIVIC ~ 2 BDRl\f unfum Couples onl y, BAatELOR Apt Furn, ivith ask for Anita Stine BR unturn Apt, beach area, Office~ suitable ror Oiib,. :? children ok, no pets. $125 ylll'd, $100 utils pd. ~?750 673-6110 DaY1I to $110. Carport or garage mercial, 1'.fedical. Dental: + $l:i dep. MG-5637. UPPER Duplex, 2 Br. $160; noc. M2-0086 'a[l/J p.m. Air-cond., crpb. elevate( ' 2 bedroom charmer on rear ,..!!!!~!!!!~!"!:!""l"'""' Lido Isle of large R-2 wned loL Channel Rfff ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1705 1351 REDECORATED. Spacious N•wport. leich 4200 yard & 1 Br untum, vacant. --'-------- 1 Jt. lease. Adults, no pell!. \VANT Ga.raa:e for Boal stor· From $70 See by ppp't on1y. $!0 N B 541-5032 OR 675-2464 . · age. mo. . . area. $18,700. 0wl1t'r leavin&: state. Penthou1e Apt. EXECUTIVE HOME _L;;•;:g;;u;;n;;a;; ... ;;;;;;c;;h;;;;;;;;;;;;;; JEAN SMITH. For Sale or Lease al S550 M0&l UnUS\111.J 3 &Inn, 2 ba • t -"-bl -~;-I ncom1 Un1"t1 per mo. o "'-U& e _........ plus 5tudio & ba, lge lot Realtor on I y. ~ter Sallsbury, $'12.SOO. Submit lease Furn Handyman Speci1ls 64&3255 Realtor, 6~ or Un.furn Via lthica $550/mo. Loe. on ~an.side of 1-IW)', OWNER. anxioo&. Make ~­ fer. Nr Bade Bay, Spacious I BR 1% ba, lam rm. Quiet atreet. Aturume 5%9' loan. 2606 Redland11 Rllr' -MI 2-2222 ..... -» ' ""·" l-10..11; ll""°'1S Costa Mua 1100 ThnfACULA TE 3 bclrms, 1 i;; ba. crptg, frplc, diahwuher, all extru. $24,900. FHA le VA acceptable. 6f6.8t03 ' R. c. GREER, Realty 150 yds rrom Beach, 4 lge :nss Via Lido. 673-9300 Apt. unitis. need! paint & =!!!!!!=!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! BY. owne:r 2 Br, 1 ba., frplc, bltN, pla.yrm Ii ba. Best Lido buy $44,500. (llC) """" goocI general cleanup. PO- TENTlAL I NC 0 Pt( E EX· CEEDING $10.00'.I ANNUAJ.... LY. Price $69,950. MISSION REALTY f94.-073l. 985 So. Coast, Laguna LOWER 3 ARCH BAY 4 BR. pla_vroom, paUo, citru.~ t:rees on la.rg! JeYd ~an view lot near benth ent:ra~. Private party. Bo:t f\1·'104 Dally Pilot L•gu~ Nlguel 1707 DEL1J>,,'E 3 Br. 2 Ba.: pro- fess. lndacpd. • decorated: in exclusive Nonuds Ba¥: lovely ocan vliew: auto. 'l."ater softentt I: dtc. pr. doon; 1 )T, ..... : $59,500. ""lh 6%~ ..... °"""' (1) ..... 1911 Oonor1I ___ 2000 $1~: 3 BR. l bath. knttd ya.rd: W/W, Qlildrea 0K. ........ M<.- Rent1l1 to Shire 2005 \\'0fl1AN to share hOme ''/n'IOther '-~It 11 d re n : Westmlnattr ma. ~1114 '--------------------·----------~--·--- Mi'U \Vhite 772-9150 67).6434 e\'el. Sf.fALL Office suitable ~ S!L. 288 Knox St. C.P.f. OCEANFRONT APT. Ideal -------'-"-- 2 BR. Ii;:. Ind yd, hdwd for bachelor: nicely f\lm. nr., litv. No re:frig. Lse $150. $100 Alo. util. pd. 673-6990 67"'..>-3927 or 673-1410 Newport H9tt. SllO --- • LANDLORDS • FREE RENTAL SERVICE Broker 5U698'J traclor, distributor, 19,J~ Util, air cond, rum lndud; ed. $70 mo. l902I ~ hwT. St., H.B. 540-2529 •• Newport Be1ch PLACE )'(*' ..m ad Wht:N 3200 ll><7 .,. --DA!L'f PILOI' d.-&d! W.-567& 3 BR 2 bath home. Back 2 BR. w/w crpts. Clean. Adults, no pets $U5. 1500 Haven Pl., 1Wr31172 Bay Dble h'plc, lge cor. Gener1I .OOOGener1I nIE QtnCKER YOU' ~ OFFICE on Coot Rwr, 1ltE QUICX!:R YOU SELL a croS3 from Balboa · B11::r Club. Approx 270 sq: ~ 0.Mf'ltl 4000 w I cabineta 6: 2 etrtraDc:Jl9. lot. Lse er I s e I o p t I o n• I -'=-'-'-'"-- $275/mo. Avail ?.larch ]. ----:-":"--~------------8~~~, BR • d.,. S©1l~~-~i~s· Avail on iub-Jea11e March lS Solve a: Simple Scnmabled Word Pkzztc fora Ouckle to June 15 w/pouible ex- tension. No pell. $3'10/mo incl 1ardener. A&l 846-9626 CHOICE 2 bdrm beach apt. Luxnriou!' carpe lln~ t:. drapes. l yr lse. f.tust Sec! lo apprec. ~l River St., Apt B, N.B. er call 531).513(1 BA YCREST 3 BR It den. Avail an sutHeue Mattb 15 . to June JS w/poulble ex- tenlioo. No pets. $370/mo ind prdener. Aat. '*"926. ELEGANT Bayview, xtra Jc 1 Br. 2 ht.. pool, eott, erdntt. CdM HI. $3SO. &l>-lllJ 0 Rtorr0n;• C.IT•11 or th• four xrombi.d words b. low to fomi four aimpleo 'ffOl'dt. lfOFIOG I .1'1111' IKUlCC I I I I' I I IFYNIN I I I I' I Boss obout h~ oal-n: :::=====-~~-."He's my contact mon. Ht'• ITAIPI D loll -ond no -.· . •-1 1 1r,;.;.;-;, _;.;.;.' -,..--,_,, ... , -I 0 c.,,,,,,.. ... ... _ ~-by'""""~ .... --- Call day1. ~ -~ '. SMAl<L offtoe on buq ~ ner Costa Meu. $55/moaah utilities included. 64$M lndustrlol Rant•I '* FOR lease Lquna N~el,· ol! San DiqO Fwy at ~ Valley, new commercial IL industrlal units. Delta f:ti.. trte. Days • 131·1400. Ewi: 499-4198. ... ' 3IXMl SQ ft warehouae I: ~ + &«» 11q tt pawd .l te~ yard. 1850 Ll&una C...00 Rd. "141 -... .(1111 ~Ml .... lKl·A; N'pt ll<h: <SQ~ ft. small 1fttc'. le Ofc; .. .Q .............. --·· NOW LEASING ~ New ~J """"'""' 1351) 11$1/tqa; Acftlt 642-ltM •. ·~ 4100 Newport _!:t•ig~• _!210 A 11ict 3 91., In Ollfhavtn looklnr for ttsponslble k>nc tenn a.dull tenant& $225. Sec aftel' March 1st Call: 548-i'28S an. ~ Pl\J -)'VU d1v11oji frOM ..,, No-. ;f below. ... LOWER 3 AROr JJ.A Y • 'II:. ~INJ.~rs=f~TIERS.11 . ·r r r I' r I' I l..a.rrc ln •t l OC't'tln -l'ielv. 191 -· ------_ . ___ . _ . • near beach enlranc,., wATC11 10ur ·iv show•. •f\ii;:r J . I J, I ~ND NO I I I I J ::i~~,rwu-tl'·~~ thfl llel )'OU find in tht • IM n. --1_,., ,... BY OWnrot, view lot. ~ 0 """"',,... °""k ~ SClAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 rue,., Tu.u,. 121•11111·-•" no\\ !---...,..--------"'·~-------~-------lpm.544-MU I •• IUSINI St -BUSINISS inf PINANCIAL PINANCIAL , Going Into Bus1n ... for y<iunellT --DO IT RIGHT I · •. All States eompreb~e lralQ!n& pr0. 1.lram pl111 'Brand Name lO< Snack& and Candy \.......auu:re your success. WE DO I r: F.atabU.h Route j!._ Supply )!JU with ~ .. · NablscO,' AusUn, '''""''"Burry, HeUhy, and many 'other NaUonal ~fBrand Name· t Oc --Snacks and Candy S. •• Give yoU home of· :.. ·~:flee training' and · ;supervision ·If: Provide you wilb __ ei:cellent income ..... :. for a few · hours' work . each . week .(pay or Eve.) "•' " ¥OU DO . I. Sui>P)y ~-4 'howt a ,welt .. 2., ~~.to le;lz:ii 3. Keep your coin: . op~rated dllpensers, . cJian and stocked 4. PrQvide $1,995 to $3,750 operating capitol. 5. Show ev!d~nce o! permanance and stability In your area. • • • . au ,~:-.. -; .. ~:-.. -; .. ~;ii .. -;n~~~~~~,.....,~·~·§""""'7~~U~,~1~~·~~~~:!:!~DM~L~Y~Pll~~~27!tl .... NOUNCEMINTS SE RVICI DllECTORY 4 * * JOBS & EMP LOYMaN 1 >vo• & >:M"LOYMkN 1 JOIS Ind NOf~CEf -..ibyslttl11t . 6550 * * *· H<iln Want ... MOn noo Help w ....... Man 7200 11e1, w, ...... Mlit . Povnd (F-_,Mtl 64CIO BABYSITTING 1:.::======1 FOUND. P<li!riant .. ~; 1n"" biiinO:-N•ar .u..oi1. AEROS1ACE FAST11tt1R5. 1h .. P· Fin, l!IC'" "'• vie: Newport 1 • I a n d, and ~r Sl, Wertmina> "!. 7 , :.!' , ''"!"f N•wPOrt Beach. Ca.II • ttt. Fent!ed )l&t'd. hot met.II New n1anufaetur1ng facility 1u Orange County You Mil.¥ qualUy tor • po0. kientif.v 6f3...2'M: a.Iler s included. Call e.f\)'Ume. has openings for skUled • • tlon wilh 01ICI .<If America'• P.M. 8'7·7187 • leadina COlllUmtf tltlanc:e MALE do(: wlti1 tox like liq; LICENSED day care. Pref e HEADER. OPERATORS companies. To qualify YoU bu&hy mixed -. J111t w1<1y 2-4 ,,... 1101 '"""""-e THREAD ROL L MACHINE OPERATORS m"" """ • mlnlm"m ot l darlin&l Talberl ~'vt.uuc, balanctd actJvltle!!i. '4&-1539 e PR ESS OPERATORS year experienct" In the CM- Fowitaln Valloy.-tiABYS!'M'ING ""' bo.U.: e CENTERLESS GRINDER OPERATORS iome, 11.....,. Oeld. Phono Bl.ACK'-Whlte 11.na.U shag-days or nltes: w. Newport. e J RAUB -ECONOMY OPE RATORS or apply m ponon 52S w. IY tem• dog wearing .646-3814 e UTILITY MAN 19th St., CM. M2-Z700 heeds. Focttld vie W. 1ftb WVE to care k>r girl 2 GUARDS '°""' M ... 548-3421. ••, ,.. old. N•" ;·ab-view Wh1ddya Want? Whaddya Got? Call ( 714) 540·6740 Nl ~ port lime pooltlons !'QU1'!0' SmaJ1 while ' PQo. &. Fafr o.. 54>--0596 SP I CIAL CLASSIPICATION FOR available In CaJJbtrano dlt. vie. Irvine &: 'mth, TEAOIER turned bou:sc\l'ile NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS SERVICE DIRE CTORY AreA. Unltorm1Aequfpment Costa Meaa. Call & Wentily \\ill care for your 'citlltl as $,.cl1l Rate rt•IP Wan t9d. Men 7'l00 furni.hed. Fl'bWt bentlltt- 642-2343 niy own. ·SS day. 645-2219 S Linn -S tlmet -S bucks Uphol1t,~ry 6990 time &: ~ evtrtime. Car • TAN le white maJe Pel.-I .. _ • BABYSITTING ho ltULEI -"° MUJT IN(.lUOE Sales Orange County telephone, required. ca 11 ""'5~ • my nie 1-W"-t "'°"' ,...,. ;o trfldll. i-wiw ,..., -n• In ,,.._ CZ Y K 0 SK I 'S CUatom HOW TO MAKE 54.3-1387 .or apply 1116 A So. nete. Vlc Shalimar St. C.M. on F1o11.1er, Costa Mesa. :t-10IJ1t p1i-.. 1010r 9ddl'9t.. .._, nn.. tf RYt"rti.1.., aDfa 64fh5361, 5!1S-4531. Reliable, 548-180l. ~111p'•HF001t s1.te-T1tAoe1 OHLv1 ~~':~t~~a:subrl~~;r:; THE MOST Main St., MSanENAla. 2 BOY'S blcycl" ''""" vk. NE 642·5678 NeWpol't Harbor Area. Brick,MllOftry,.te. • To Pl1c1 Your Tr1der11 P1radi11 Ad !~~·&tZ-~. ~~3~ IN SELLING Leam & e.rn $150-$250 per Please Identify". 64~2812 -----·-.....;.· 6560 10 acres 5 ml from new Ti; BAYFRONT 1 dock; 2 Bal-Newport Blvd., C.M. 1. Assodate Witb national week pful.. N<t .uperience FUUND: \\Tllite nl&le Poodle, BUD..D, Remodel, Repair te1·nat1ona1 Airport In Pallll~ 1x>e, Coves, NB ; eq. $52,000. JOSS & EMPLOYMENl corpora&n, with CJOWlh necessary. Professional ~!e· M&gna:lla & Edinger, Brick. block, concrete, dale, aell for $5IXK). per TradeforT.D.'sOr !??orl---------2 ~~~· .... traininginl>ftstigeworlr,No westm~s:tfor. 894-3222 crpDtry, 119 job too small, acri, or trade· for anyt:hiqr lease I option. Courtesy to Job Wanted, Men 7000 ' ""'' ...... tervices ,,..ve door knc>ckilW. our cuato- BLACK & white female J.,lc Contr. 9C-694S ot ·eq.uat valu,. 841)..2019 brokers. 675-4331 top market acceptatlee mera call us. For appt Call. kltren, 9 mo. old. 29th St. Ttade' New 2S,500 aq H Lady Barber· Ji.laster. and are sold on dlgnll'ied 9:30 to 12, 526«1.6 .~... For interview in your area: write ?i1r. . H. S. Campbell, Diredor of Distributorshlps, ::l'.O. Box 297, Lafayette, CaWornia 94549. ·"·include Name, Address and Phone Number. Balboa Peninsula. 673-3156 8u1ine1t Service 6562 pnllti.unit iadua bid&, fully 33' Chris Exp, '!'l5 Twins Desires Poaition professional basis. OUTSfANDING OPPTY Nt>\v survey Al-Dbl Plank 548-2133 evenings, 3. No servk:ing o1 a,(:COWJts. F 1 · • SM. FluUy tan & IP'CY cat EXP£RT Typlne !:.Dictation leutd Uarbor/Wamer 10% f.1AH. OF, SI S outrlg, dock oollectlng etc. No can. o~ dynam e young men dis- ,. female, Republic Homes Exec IBM equip $1./PI,' dbl net returl;l foio ~anfroht et~. Trd R.E. Eqty. motor Job Wanted, Lady 7020 vassing Full time donat. satisfied with their present .:Jt'E .. AL ESTAT• area. 962-7464 , sp or $5/br PU-(lel a.vall OupteX W/Newport. 54&.JDfl home, ? 644-2374 ed to sitle1 and sales pro-earnings, but wll11n& to 'I 5 I · Comm · PDSITION Of Dirt to ( work hard to eam $18,IJX> G I Bus. Opportunltlll 6300 Lost 6401 Hrs 9-5, wkend by ap.pl. Have: ei'cial-Medical fl.larantz 7 & component£ ; c r o motion.. . lint year. Hearing Ui m. 1··.,·~ ... 1n1.,...._r_•_____ 507 Ave Largo, N.B. 644-.2&U Bldi, free&: cleaf, $100,000. finest stereo outfit. Coit Nursing In Medicare A~ l~ you are rntere1t7d tn train-aursnce or direct bom.e sell- 6150 LOST 18 mo. old brown & Trade All -OI" part equity. J1700 4 yrS ago. Want color proved C 0 r v a I e • c en ing for a pro!eu1onal sales ing dperience helplul. gold Gennan Shepherd last Carpentering 6590 Want: House1, apts, land, or :.'OD.SOie TV, 4 track tape rec Hospital. RN <3 yr school) career with earntnc ol $12-Phone 547417'l 9 am to 5 - Important Notice • • • • CANDY ·SUPPLY ROUTE *' * '* * ·November, Vic' Santa Ana ?·? Myeni, 6'7U156. , .. • .00.1331 with College background. $16,0'XI annually, with euar-pm, 54M.U5 eves .• Ave, CM. {Belongs to u. 2 bd d 1 · ·· Experienced aa Director ot rantee oI $600. per montb 1-=,-:,,-~~--~- CARPENTRY no.ve: nn, l!n, poo, Cabin Cruiaer, Twin Screw, Nurs1..... Please phone CIVIL A Mechanical '""-"l .... disabled Vet.) REWARD house, Banning. $10.000 ....,_ .. .., for those who met!t·our re. ..___.. 6U-9l58 544-2.324 MINOR REPAIRS. No Job . . ...... 30' Owens. Top cond. $70IXI. 548-8976 quirements, Draftsmen for O ran1e Too Small. Cabinet tn P1" uity + moo: 2nd T.O. t'qllity Trade for house, -'-,,.-"='-====~ER~ Telephone ror appointment C,ounty or San Francisco LOST: Much loved 2 yr old ._ 1 h bl Want: Land, income, ? ? lot, auto or '! F. C. BOOKKEEP 0....., =-i area. Min. 2 --~-. ages "' o e r ca nets. llotel/Rest. Exp, Fin. Stmts, o;;rv...-· ,, •• ..,,.,......_, female Collie. Vic ~lesa 545-8175, U no answer leave Myers. 673-6756. 675-5582 Qtrly taxes. 64>2794 10 to 12 AP.I & 2-' Plot Salary open. Phone 'l'l'8-9'1?0 v,: ~~:: unhappy l'l'ISg at 646-2372. H. o. San Oemente Income 2 Delux@ 4 Bedroom Oare--""'-===..:::;:.:.... __ RETIRED FULL .l part t1me 'help c n. Andel'IOn stores • 2 Jots 2 offices 2 mont home, $27,500 for Qr.I---------M man aa pa~ time wanted. Top We.sea. chance FEMALE Pe~nese, blk & Apts • Will take TD's or all&e County property • or Domestic Help 7035 anagcr & Host in the to dval!Cemt t red. Am "Soolic". Red col-smaller proporty. Make oil· TD 1· · Co 1103 w friendliest & m<>1t ~eluxe rMETa RO CARn WASH QUALITY Repain -Altera-. · orlin · est. George Allen Bylard Agency self rvi I od So Jar. Vic NB. Rewa r d. 1. N 1 b bo er. Call -494-326'l chU Dr. 642Sl00, 548--0390 Employ•· ha-y..... . se ce au ry . •n. · 2950 Harbor Blvd CM. 6'15-4317 ions -ew OODS · Y ur = r •H =-C8hf. Baker &: Fairview, l-~===-~~- or Contract 646-3442 TRADE '66 Kartnann Ghia Unobtruaive view lot in Pal-106-B E. 16th, SA 547-0395 -C.M,' l\fUBI bt l>Ober, depen-e ~UTO TRIMMER e ALASKAN Mal.mute, male pup, 13 \Vks old. 25 lbs, blk muk like markings. REPAIRS. ALTERATIONS fo=-older %. ton, 4 1~ os Verdell Penn. Will trade Chinese live-ins. Cheerful dable, in g_ood health & ac-.,.EiperWence-«> boun. CABINETS, Any size job. pick·UP or older VW bug or for contractors servlcts, in. PermanenL Experienced customed to meeting the DeGuelle & Sona, Huntinaton 25 yrs. exper'. 5(8..6713 ? !'! 31M Madeira Coila come propery or ? ? ? Far East Agency 64l-8'103 public. Short hours, not Beach. 536-6561 Ji.iesa, 546.Q92S ' · 54~4 physically demanding. \Vork Carpentry, A~ ,1.2,e job! 1969 PlymoUth Satellite 9 Tradt>: '60 Ford Gal.axle, Wed noon thru Sat. Modt'lt Agencies, Women 7300 We t:f1vt: Rew1rd. 833-,273? • 2 PARAKEm'S lost e. week An outstandtni oppol"" ago from 900 block Piirk tunlty tor a distributor to Avenue, Laguna Be a ch. earn ~ent income for 1 ,,;<91-ls22:;r,;:;;;,..,;,· -,,,.,-~-,,~ ft\\ hourt'weekly work (days i·,,DAISY" is lost, black &: or l!Ves) white cocker, bead• around Call Gordon 847~45 pass £ta wag trade tor e1r-and/or 16' outboard Cebln Help W1ntecl, Men 7200 salary. See John or Betty Uer model transpo~lfon ~·-'-15 I J h Briscoe at tbe store, or call MASTER . carpeDttr; $4 per car. Call .• 1,, 3 .... n .... ..,,,_.,,"· e ec, 0 n£On, FUL,L TIME 644-1307 alters ho n --•·JJno n -..i-Ill -for good oondition new fam. AND ~~5.i&.ii.:i .""'_..... e 536-7919 e ily car. u S.983'2 PART TIME 22• Cenl\lry lnbro., ""'all TOWNHOU~E 3 "'· 2\0 ba. REXAIR INC. extras, C.G. s.pp. equip. Beaut. &.ppt d. Priv. pa.tlo. + SIS RT. Sold new $'000. pool, close to bay. Val. ANAHEIM DIV. e KEYPUNCH• OPERATORS Experienced Alpha I Nu:m..' Long tenn ~. days. Lolli Beach 81'ta. Free p81iting. W• Art Lookln11 For,; OUT • • • • :r;!.· 5 Call Judi, Kl 5-5061 Cernt!1f• C:ori:cr~• ,6600 DOBERMAN-Male, blk, ean • 'BE':ST 1N <:.'ONCRE"I'E crped, <;hain collar, name Walks, pQOl decks~ floats, Winter price $429S, Trade-$32,000, low dn. or T.D .. for 1111all1ir boat. 546-9812 Car or ? Owner 64&-0654 NOW HIRING Test . Technician To pertonn final test on comPlex electronic. equip. ment. Must be famillAr wllh operation of all typl!s of electronic test equipment and be 1.ble to devite suit- ahle test arrangements and \Vrite test p~urt'. KELLY SEJ!VICES .INC. 230 E. 3td Street """' O.ach, Calli. (213) CUl9l and , AWAY!!! . _ OM; .. ~ .. OTHER REWARDS , WHkand .. tr.at Investment Ut & •prlcot growing Fish raising Alfalf• g'°wlng P1rcel of l•u'll · · · •II your own · 'OWn your own leke ls 1eWng • people ue creaalnel,y becomin& awani . ~~:_the potential in Silver 1 Valley, 18 ntl eut ot Bar-. ...... CaliL , ''WHY WAIT? et In before the real push .1....-m•k• money 11 CALL OWNER 8'7-6640 eves aller 6 PM .-00\VN, $8 per month, $195 IWl """" ..,,.. 10 , ,Aerel in So. Callt'. L. • 'Sbewfelt, 326 W. 3rd St .. ; .1?r'; (213) 623-5102 , 1 '"ire prime Nappa view &n!a , nr twnJgolf coune. Write J owner, 20121 Marl.na. Ln HB. Reliable party to devote 2 to 10 bouni per week re. twin& .l colleetitl& money from new &: unique coin op. erated diapenaers in Orange County A. surrounding area. (Handles National Brand Cand,y & Snacl<s). To quali1y you m11,1t have 1ood. car, ref. erenccs • $1,650 total cash to invest, No selling requlr- od. We Offer; "Fred". Eves. 646-1207 Patios .. P~ 642-8514 LOST miniature brown poo-e CONCRETE wor~ all dle, female, children's pet. type1. POol declaf A: 'custom. Reward! 548-0117 eves. Call~ ALL Black female kitten, * CONCRETE work. Bonded 5· mo old. 29th St. Balboa & Licensed. C.0J]crete sawing Peninsula. 673-3156 Phillips. Cement 54.S-6380 "=~~~""'==-=-=~ CEMENT 'PO'rk. no ~b too Penontll 6405 small, reaaonable. F r e e estim. H. Sturuck. 548-8615 -.cus'I'OM PATlOSe Cl lot 80" 175, Tustin. val 1966 COLUMBIA -Mobile NE\V BRANCH EXPANDING $45,000, Trade for Ctlmm homf', beaut. cond., in 5 TO ORANG,E COUNTY bl.dg, w/income or Palm Sl.ar Pk. nr. ocean-trade for Top Starting W1gts Springs House, Robt WheeJ. tri·plcx or duplex, locally. OPENINGS FOR 35 MEN er, Agt. 42 Plaza, Orange, 536-9911 TRAINEES 53&-l72l. 17 Ft. outboard for station NO ~~~CE Laguna Beach - 3 residen-wagon or auto of equal val-WORK WITH tial lots $26.500. Wlll trade Ut'. Phone 642-4980 HYDRO EQUIPMENT up for building suitable &.s Laguna Beach 4 bdnn home NE\V BRANCH. . .RAPID g&race. Newell. Associates. & near by 10 acre orange ADVANCEMENT 1'0 l<EY 494-6594 grove. Want ho1'91.' ranch or POSITIONS. aplB, BKR 494-1330 AL'CEPI1NG A P P L l C A· concrete a\rini A removal WANT condo. House, or State Lie. • 142-1010 ·•• • Hoping you'll be up on you r =========== uni .... m good atta, HAVE l & ba ·th -up to 120 a.cres at $300 eet ck w1 us soon. Child C1r1 6610 "-"'-"-'-.;,;.----"-'-" per acre. Matchem Realty 64&4831 The Gals at the olfice. What do you have to trade? List it· here -in Oranae County's largest read trad- TIONS MON. & TUES. 774-7151 m, post -and make a d<af. * FRY COOK An ~ oppor- hmlty to join a leader in this .11eld. Financial 'seCuri.ey for YoU A· your .fiurJAy; ~ be I ;W;;ANT"'"ED=-.. -.. =na°';gom=-,-,"c ~~. thil proven &: boom· Ladies &: girls apparel: formals, cocktails, casuals, hata, bags, shoes, costume * * --------- COST A Ji.Ieu pre-school Age.< 2 lhru 6. Open 6,45 * to 5:45 PM Planned pro- gram. 548-9803 SERVIC~ OIRECTORY CHILD Care my home. Daya It nitea. N.B. atta. Lr& hse w/fncd yrds. 54s.8873 * * * NJGHTS Reply In Confidence For more lniormatlon Ii detalla, Bend ha.me', address & phone nwnber to: ROU1E DBIARTMOO P.O. BOX 3146 · ANAHEIM, CAL. 92803 Hou ling e730 P1perh1n9lrig APPLY IN PERSON jewelry. Labels prefemd. Call 10 am to 5:30 pm, Tues thru Sat. 544-9311, Contractors 6620 "7-4211 I _ ....... _ .............. _--e..;;;;.;; YARD, gar. cleanup Remove I "-P-'a"-ln;;.ltl"-n"''----..:6::8:::50 trers, Ivy, trash, .stumps, grade, trench, excavate. RfUBfll E. LEE LICENSED Spiritual Readinp, adviei! on all matters. 108 S. EI Camlno Real, San Clemente . 492-9136. 10 AM·lO PM SPECIAL $2 READING O\VNER or 24' motorboat \vishes to lease slip. April 1-Ji.tay 30. Call d a y s 778-3080, nites 837-09i5 DON'T let anotller lonely Weekend gti by! Succeed In dating without really t.ryin°', Laguna Bch 494-4479 e BUGGY OWNERS e lntenated in tmning family dune buggy club? Call """" ADDITIONS-REPAIRS REMODELING . Designing It Plannlni' Kllchens-Bethl, etc. 962-8745. Haullng.Canage Cleanups Trim Hedges, Trees, Reas. BIG JOHN • 642-4030 Interior P1lnting Apls. or houae• by job or room. Low off season rates. 645-1058 151 E. Coast Highway Newport Be1ch VINYL wall covering--------- specWilt. Kit, h a t h s • Material &: labor. Est. DAY Lic'd & Bonded. Free est. A & B CONSTRUCTION 1122 Paularino, CM. • 545-400 * -H_o_us_•_c_l•;;.a~nl;;.n"'"---'6;;.7.:;;3S c64;;.1~-~'659""'"'"~""'""'­PAPER llANGING PA!NTING Busboys Additions * RemodelinZ µTE Haulin&: A cleanup. Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. Reasonable. Any area. 673-6041 * 54~2170 I ~"=='Call::::::...:642-:::..:265=1-­ cARP£"I'S, window!:, Ors, etc. Reaklen. or C.Omc'I. Xlnt work Reas! Refs. "'-'ill 'C1rpet ctHnlng · 6625 PROFE.SSIONAL Rug le. UphOlstery' Cleaning, Top quality, guaranteed result£. Allen' 1 Maintenance 67>-300 APPLY TN PERSON REUBEN'S COCO'S e INT • EXT, ANY SIZE JOB. Xlnt WOl'k, tt!I, free e1t. JIM. 642-4669, 646-3749 PAINTING, inter. -exterior State Uc .• bonded. Free l!ltlmate1. 642--0238 1555 W. Ad1m1 VET'S Bondro pa 1nt1n1 . Cost• Mt•• J: ...,".:;m~~·~ Small RBERGLAS PLUG Call 646-9611 e FINISHED &jual OiJportwUty em;>loyer See Betb' Biuce at mJ&Gxec Agency for career Girls 410 \V. Coast Hwy., N. B. By appoint. 646-a:939 CARPENTERS e PLUMBERS \Virh experlen<:1! in n1obUc \:_:":::;:=;::;:=;'!:'!:'!:::I homt', campers and motor Help Wanted homes. Must havt own tools. Women 7400 Islander Motor Homes Inc. 1-------~~' I 806 E: w a.shin&ton St. Santa Ana e SMALL growing Orangt> County co., needs thin fil m specialist to m!lllage optical coating dept. 5 yr .i; minimum exp. e PRODUCTION control, 5 • Newspaper Artist yn: minimum exp. Optlcal Experienced in finished or jOb ahop exper. pref'd. wash E1d line. Layout and EXCYI'IC MATERIALS, 2968 pasteup knowledge helptut. Randolph, C.M. 54.5--9425 Permanent. • CABINET MAKERS V.'ilh experience in mobile '42-4321 °' 54().1210 Ext, 270 Jiomes, campen le motor I==-~----~ homes. Must ~ve own tools. f'ULL lipu-or part ti.me St>e "Rick'' at 2135 Canyon· cos.metolOgist or 1 a I o o Drive, Collta Mesa or call make-up b e au t I c i a n • 642-9758 Permanent poaiUon pro- n10Una: n e w Tri -Dermal e ~RY COOK e Beauty Plan that worb WANTED with one demonstration:. CoC!Cl' Shop. Day shifl 7 to 3 You will be lnvol.wd bl p.n1., 6 day week. Med. ins. training and organblrig new aJt 30 day1, $26, shlfl 1o personnel &: selling the pro. start. Mu.st be fut, neat and ducts. Bue salary qalnat able to control coat. C&lJ comm. Send resume to Box 893-5815, UJ am to 2 pm only. 567 SUnll!t Beach. Cal. · e INSTRUCTORS -Full S UR G t CA L I M EDICAL WANTED : OU.sate liquor Uce:nae fOr Ol'anle.Collllcy Call' 6™139 • 1.ADIES Are you lonely, new in are&.'! We haw your kind of excitement. Cell 636-0361 * APT. CLEANING * Faat & tl1<1r0u'gh 642-8164 WD..LIAMS Oeantnc Serv. Discount Oeaning Sl!rvice Apt. • Cllpeta • Upholatt>ry e Fast Service 539-1456 e HOUS~ P&.inllng. Quality at or/and part time. Neat ap. tranlcrlber needed at om. a fair pt'!oe!,.,.. en. Call & MOLD BUll.DfRS .. aranoe. M\151 be able In "'"'"'"'"' m heavy Rick, 645-2275 meet and deal with the IUl'lical dictation. Hoon lli ... sort Property 6205 I --I Op '"10 ~~0~~7 o~:°': l"'n"-come=.;.·_·T;;a;;;•c.....--""6"-7.;;;40 PAINTOiG, Paperlnr: 16 >Tl with e"perience in boat• and public. good figure. Apply nexlble. Contact Mr•. '· ~"" nYt••n•n por. CN P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. G1rd1nlng 6610 -1n Harbor area. Lie le bond· cars. Mwit have own tooh. tn peraon. Holiday Health Alagna. Santa· Ana Com-, ij'~~ ACRES. Qwlce mobile PARTNER W 8 n.t e d to H. K. C I a r It Acctg Serv. ed. Refll furn, 6'2-23S6 See "Rick'' at 2135 Canyon Spa, 2300 Harbor Blvd., munlly, 600 E. Wuhfna'ton 646-4063 Cir ew& 642-3526 CARPET &: Furn. cleaning; Ior 1 day aemce & quality work, call Sterling for brlghtneu! 642-8520 PK ·i 1 simon! on portle ANTHONY'S Incoml! tax, .. nwnaJ or 0 · C ,18 Mc•• call C.M. Ave., S. A. SI e or nve i .. te in b1ni.1 .. ,.._ a I 6•10 rive , o ""' or • ~='=~===== oil <&...., ... v "'nnouncemen • .. Gar:dtn Service busineu, YoW' home or ofc. DOORMAN, PARKING 1M.ATURE. EXECUTI VE , F.oyy No. 'Q. ramp. filable real estale Jlll)ject. .t ,,,,_ ~ 1 firm p 642·9758 • lUVerslde Co. $39fll pet Realty project is reaey to ATTENTION BUDGET-LAND194~ ...... !NG ~or ~~::ves · l11terlng, Rt pilr 6810 "----------1 ATTENDENT TYPE RECEPTIONIST/ , ''Acrt'. Ea~y Terms or trade. conurie~ &: f i 0 an fin g EX-NAVY MEN ~ • PAT'S Ptutertni. AU CAREER F'ull or part lime, da)'s or SECRETARY lot orthodon- • "tias-6230 alretdy obtaJned at 6.a% Oran out I.he old sea-be.& Prune ..• Plant.'. Prepare BE A Satltfled Client wUh typts. F'tte catlmate. Call eve•. Neatnes.~. refs., CaJU. Oc olllce, Dental ottlce ex· : ~ RENT Furn ~th for~ yean. Profit on eaal'I· and help out a good ca119e, ?itonthly Maintenance Harris Tax Service. 9th yr, M£l..682f; OPPORTUNITY! drlver'11 Ile required, can perience not necell&l'Y. 1 Mou nt a In Condominiwn in~sted wU1 yield doubll! 'Give ycur old unUoma (OU-Exp. HortlcuJturbt locally. Avail. 1l mot. 3117 4-6 pm, Mr. Lomas, Posh 642-1530 alttP' 8. 675-4130 minlmwn within One )'tar. leers.\ Enlisted) to the Sea-·AU.EN BROS ~ .. ~.0-~.~ ~ •. en 1-.. t · Wa,y, Of. INT. Pluter, ext. llucoo, dry Join todays fastest g:roo;vlng Parking Service, Newporterl':rrocK==-e1r=1 "'""""-,,."''""tu11..,,..llm~e Need $50,CQ).4100.IJX> Cllh Scouts. Need blue1, whltes, GARDENERS srUDENTS .iu.aal _,.,.'"' wall taptnr, acowitit: It.lot prof~utU&I Fund sales Irm. 644-1700 m . 555. Iot Santa Ana ahop. Own 6210 llOW! Qualiflitd prlDclplla sea·ba&'a. etc. 64U769 ~ldne thelt w1.1 tbru ool-' • ntE TAX ADVISORS ,1o:"""""=:=:;";;lll;np=:.;5l5-6003=:,;=~I :: train.;::'::-, Tremendous Pohntl•I transportaUon. Intenrlew Ol1Jy! Box M ?o.! Dally Pilot ASI'RQLOGY Oau, rqit~ ~T~ EXP/""" '!?:,., RE A S ! NY..,1rouncl81.~ otNo.9 329 !~:. _PlumWna 6890 Mutu1I Fund Advisors, Experten<=11 or no. Job oUers ~~~-1° 6 8Apropos. ra.hkia tion epen untU Feb 18th. can ~ -::;:-T -wn c: ~ ~ ~ppl! --""------1 Inc. unllmHed cpporlunlty tor U141..,, N .• R .. I Ell~ LNM. ...... ,. ~to -~~... PLUMBJNG REPAm Npl B. 1603 w-·"U ..... ...... ambttioua pe~n. 1's"E~w=1"'N"G.-"'M"A"c=H"l~N"E'1 ... --Mabiten&nce. Uotwd SKOUSDf TAX SERVICE No.~~ .. ~ ... small. S.A. l2l2 N~B'roadW~ 800 S. El Ounino Real OPER.~.'IQRS~ Experlencect. I HOMI LOAMI ,..,..,, '412 5CM808/64$.231D aft 4 Your b (I m e. Rwronabll!. ............_ ..., Suite m. San Clemente JAY MAR, me. 2907 s. : . •J.chlngH, l o I. 62S0 MONEY AV.All.ABLE ' JAPANESE Gardentt, com-Eves. Norman Ma n z PLUMBING 24 hr aerv. Soll-8331 10 am -1 pm Oak, Santa Ana 8 to 3 PM ~ VE'°'"""" ........ l!OO Call , .. details on !Oda>'• WISTMINS'"'R . . pt.le-yard """'''" .... -Work ..... llC, '"'· .. -. Camper & ""DISHWASHER"" HOUSEKEEPER . houri per :.ftr &.ere rui down ps,ym~nt ·rates for bl A W Tt>I. I Ii otlmates. ~13l2 * mt YEAR * repalr. rooter serv. 531~'1566 day 5 day:t wk. $2 an hr. ilofo "°"'" ., amall unlla. Sorvtna °"""County to' MEMORIAL PARK Jtpanell Gardanor .A-1 SJ'ENO EXPERtENCED Own transportati o n ~nl --days, u,...,.. U-~·· ar-t Exp.,, cmnpl yanl ,.,..;.,., HARBOI< SllOP'G CNTR. Remod•l .. R1.a1 •• 6940 Motor Home NoPhon<Call> 642-341Tan!. ' nl ,.,... S&tUer f\.fo..+ ..... Co. Inc. 191Ur•v ry "4l'nl ery ............. tlmel•. "~" """'" 1!ve/wkend .._. appt. rn --=====----~•I w '" ·~ Comt,ot fu I •= -·~ "' ~ IF od SURF &.SIRLOIN EXPERIDICED <In>& clen< to.ADE your vacant tor aood ..... _ 21 n336 E. !TUI St.,,_ ,_ 1 '. ,..! s•!'°sri t ct.£AN,UP eo ........ lallst! Mow· Walter H. Fahrfnhoh P.A. , You need rem r.Ung, BU IL DERS S930 Pacllic Coast Hwy., N.B. for proletstonal ph&nne-. --u.-, _... -~ lnco Servi PllDlclnk'"l'!'l~ t't'palrs, Call -NEEDED IN ALL phoscs . ""# wing commerc., lnc1ual. or Eves. _ 7865 .... • ..... 1 C-e"' Iota ina, odalni ,odd jobs, liabt me Tax ce vv-,01 COOK • Experienced 1..... PARK UDO Pl-lARMACY apt. propertles . .,..,.,,. ~ ~ $150 1t1avtn,. Reaal 548-69'M , 6'2-8204 or 545-1398 eve. . , ol aaaembly 6' ptoduotions. broiler man for lamj{y 60-1580 IJivan, A&t· 54(}-4429 Mortg• .... ·T .D.'1 +145 ll'ldlkW EndowmeAl Cate YARD c J ea Du p . Tree PERSONALIZED, expert ~R::;IO::f::l•::c•!-----=':.:9=::50 =tr!,';;, •t;eex~:;:::e ~ .re1taur11n!. Top man only MATURE dental Ukilt&nt. ,1.4..111 -1r'...-w ...... m, Cllot bttuutul ·aetvk:it, ne• 11.w•a, Tax .HIV., Year round cde., . 2135 ca .., ..._. ,..,..., need apply. For lnttrvlew, over 25, chair akle 1: frOht •i:::.::~==--.:-::.::-:1 HAVE $60 IWt. -•• ~~:-~-..m-1~ --axlnkltn,. rototDl. ~ reu. 64S-17U ROOFING REPAIR., nyc., .unvt, .....,,.,, contact Mr. Schlethold, Mr det:k exp. Send rHWM to 1~ ~ ---no i..Jc toQ amall! Mesa. or call 642-9758 SI -Prfvl.te moneji.··1mtdot Notramoprcblau. JAPANESE , Gl.rd•ner tNCOMETu:Strv.,Notar)' ••2!62• eak, -·Fairview Rd, P.O.Box28,So.Lquna wants to buJ x'· ifttd: ·lit M101 Bead. Wllltmlrl..« Complete Ser v 1 c: e, Ex. Public. Rea&. Eva 50-13t0, C. M. . CURTAIN I. d r a P-•l'~f • 2nd ---.... ~ 53Ut25 .. ~un """"""· Rtllable. 642-4.181 2361 Z.pllh, 9.A. H!a. ..,.. t9'0 EXP ' SERVICE atallon ... _. .....ad!H; Al'Jlly u-. r:;:~c,;;;;;,::::..:;:;o----' I count. ~ . INCOME T.x., ,......,., --SET-UP & LEADMAN meclwUo & atw..rania. rwt Honie Film~ S. Qui r:: Sattler Mortpp Co. Inc. GeMr1I Strvlca 6612 l'OUr borne, lore form com-• Dre.am:aldns-AltmtiOns . Iar plaatlct mold.Ina: ahop It: part time. Muit be exp Plata. C.M.. 336 E. littrs& · Memorlll Pirkl 6421 -blned •111:. ...._. ... _ • ~ ...... i on Item Ct.ll 546-3370 btwn 8 am-5 pm w/Jocal ma. Good Baluy"l'a"nu.~"'-= .. ,-tl~--.-d~.,-,---6 cc.nn , 56MJ CRYSTAL JANITOl!JAL & • --,,....... + •-J ow ··-~· Ewa. '73-'1'8SS • 6U-ll!7 2CnotCEeiltombment wtndow Oeantna. Compl 00rdon A.Wirren,PA *~* BUS boy/Dllhwalher to t'Omm. -wrb', OOO E. tell wll'ldoW shades. WI ~:z OU gpaces at liArbor A.Mt JMltorlDl "'rvict. Bualn, lJth ,..... Appt. 61&-3345 Altet1tlont:='42•SMS· ~rk dflYtlme. See Mr. Coalt Hwy, NB. ttn.ln. OJstoin Shade Shop, ANN JNCllft\IHTI 1.t~morio.i Puk, CM. Large re~dcn. or constru. }"rte. e PR.OFE~IONAL TAX Neal, ~le, 20 )'!'I. f!XP. Schlethold, l\lr, Steak, W GENERAt. Plant Jtelp d!al'll 3835 Eut Coe.at Hwy, CdM. •l'!9 "°1'1C•S . dttcount by prlvalt party. eaUmale Sofa..87l~ ~RV. Home-quick aCC'bf'lfl!. FAll'Vl~ Rd.1 ~ file!IA. \Wlrk). P.lu!lt be (Jependable. )."O()D &: Cocktail walt:rftli; .. 11o,_, • ' • 12131 ~1900 TILi, C.rtmlc • 6974 RETAIL Nu~ry salcsmna. $1.SS hr start to $2.JJ. TRI· APP.If In perwon lfenry'1 Feund (Pl'M ~ ~ ·SERV'fCI Diil1:1rb1tY ·~~e..·..: 'i::he~~ fl9, Complete!! 9'8-34Cl1 ..... -Penn. Gd 1\'m'ltlng contll. O.VISlQti, 1415 Edqtr, nesl.urant.' 54s-s5m SM While ntndb .....,.., • ..-~ * Verne. tht 'nte MM * Holllster Nursery 2640 Hllr-s . .-., 547--0709 "'•TU;;;; ......_.-1 .... --- nr: Brookhunt ~ ~ a.byifttfng 6.$50 ~72.17n~T~ hr MrY. Ironing, 6755 Out~ worlr._ Install-' l"l!~\tl-bot Blvd., C.~f. ~ P~. PART TIME COOK. li 'llr' ~lt-~~1 .iy ..... &r:; H.B. ll6J.Q05 otiuJ~·, S"d••1 .. ~. l!AUUNG. Ct•~·~· , Ho job too smaii. ·PlfttlOr EXPEiii£NOED 0 NL 'I · ~ ... '\"'>: .• ~~ IAaul>a Nlgqej. - FOUND remate cute vie l hot I·-"·• vie. ~., ..... ~ _._. n.bo ele. ~ Jim Wlll"do·Jnmttw-tn patch.. Leaking t..b cw• t 8UrftiOiia ~li:in-~ rnrt'IUUS mm1uUV<iu ......... ......... ~ ~IW rRW myhome.$1.1'5doltn !"J'&lr •. trr-19571M6-0;JOS &U"fboard ~. ·~ Mtptu1i;utnotnee.~ J'ort>o.D1PDotWant MI.. 23rd As,,~: Ana.:60-1431 & Holt, HJ!. 84J,;l,.._ ~anytime 646-.2663 DAILY ~ILOT WANT ADS UUI Pl&ctntia, C.' \Vhtl!!' tlephan11! DltnH.-IJnc lJLll 642-061t for ~ . I \ -.. --.---.. -.-----.. -.• -=--~--;--.--.- ' -~­. . --------------------. . . . • J>olll.Y PU.OT Tuadat, robt!l"1 18, 1969 & IMPLOYMENT .,_ -.101S a LOYMENl. ~BS & EMPLOYMENT .IOU & IMP'LOYMIHT MERCHANDlSI FDR , MEllCHANDISI l!.011 • Help W1ntod 'Agoncl•, Min & w-7400 w-' 7550 Joa. Men# w ...... 7500 SALi AND TllAD! SALi. AND T,IADI! 7400 -=-· ---'-'"" .. . ' ' -EXPIRllNCED-UNllARD -l .. .. ; ' ~I ' llole tnWranee Group TIRED OF A LONG COMMUTE! Unlpnl-G,..pb now h:lri.na tntincel or eiqier-- lcnced pet"IOllnd for poaitions for our new 419tslon' offittt opening apjlrwt. 4/lS/'G In }funtin&ton Beach, Ju.st off the San Diep Fwy. Thete positions will·~~,., abort tnUnlng -of 2 ...,....,, ln our Loa AnaeJea otnct, before the move. Mileage will be paid during this .. rlod. • . Teller • • • ' ' . '' APPLY IN PERSON 1st llltional Bank ' . · of Oringe County J'5i0 Adams Coat• M•••' •• ASK FOR.: I.tr Starner or Mr, Springer . ' ' lmmtdi•te Opening• In the foUowi"I •N•1 .. An equal opportunity employer CODING Applic1tions Being TAKEN, fULL TIME EMPLOYMENT Permanent only Experienced or l:raiMe in tire &/or casualty statisti- cal coding. Math aptitude """"""'· ' ACCOUNTING no students. perter mature. .. Uberal vacation pay. Merit raises, employee discounts, .. five day week. Apply Mon. day. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, 9:30 to 4:00. Type 40 to 50 accurately. Some experience or aptitude with figures helpful Light customer contact. RATING . f. W. W~orth 2300 Ha~ Blvd. COSTA MESA WAllRESSE5 All Sh ifts Apply in person Experienced·or trai~. Rat- ing our policies requiles a good mi.th aptitude A plea. sant phone personality. ~ Denny's Restaurant 11477 a..ch Blvd. Huntington a .. ch Excellent free benefits. Permanent, s t e a d y work. Our policy is promotion from with· in. Your future is de- termined entirely ' by you. New modern of- fice, friendly, pleasant atmosphere. • Ne Pbont Calls Please For Details and App't. Call .Collect· PERSONNEL 1213) 384-1213 -. ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETAR'( - $536. to $631. l!Aquiromenb' U.S. cl¥ ahlp. five yean ~ • •experlence, two ~-(ipol--• ep, Shorthand 90 wpm!~ " Sn& 50 wpm, Apply at; UNIGARD INSURANCE GROUP CLERK • Westminster· Schfol District 14121 CEDARWOOD WESl'MINSTER Waitress 18 to 35. Full time Neat Appearance OPPORTUNITY .. No experience necess&I') Apply in Perh'i .. Top pharmacy n e e d s clerk.in cosmetics ll gen. mdse. Will train • Must be perm. Neatlless, k manners and·~ sincerity with p@Ople ilnport. ~ catt'd Lido-Balboa atta. AU replies confidential. Write details to: The Daily Pilot Box P-617 Bob's Big Boy 15! E. 17th St. C.M. • • -sRARP Gil.!- o assist nianager ol &1'00\'Y boutique. Permanent posi- 1tion with room ior ad. Vancement, with rapidly growing organization. Ex- ~ gals only, call !Dr appointment . THE LOOK ' 644-2400 'lions al.so available lar part time. • MAIDS. Full or part time. Must be able to work week- end• PART time housewives have you. ever given a jewelry brunch or , cookware party? Ever thought you'd like to? Make mart money showing your friends the Tri·Dennal Beauty Plan that. works with one·. demonstration. Commissions ll incentives paid~.Plm: -this new ~uty ritual and get a Io v e I i er oomplexion Yourself. Contact P .O. Box 567 Sunset Beach. Cal.it. P0&itions available in area, * RECENT dental grad or exper. Must be outgoinr ~ UM' own initiative. Ken Niles Motel 1021 Bayside Dr. Newport Beach * D E N T A 1 receptionist 1---'-==.:..::.=:::._ __ I (girl Friday) exper, Light Telephone reception bookkeeping, phone work. work. Appl) betwffn typing & gootl public rela- J p.m. & 5 p.m., 1626 lions. G45-I06D E. Maywood, S•nt• An•. WORKING Mother needs RELIABLE babysitter SECT'V/RECEPT Tuesdays &: possibly Good typist, varied duties. \V e d n e a d a ya 8 4: JO. Real estate experien~ de-\Vestside C.M. area. Your airable. 642·3430 home preferably, 2 Childttn :-;-WOMAN WANTED, night ages 3% (boy) & 1% {girl) • · N 646-0836 &ft 5 PM lbilt, part tune. o exp. • nee. Z-45. App., Mt. Donut, HOSPITALITY HOSI'ESS is ~ 135 E.. 17th SL. C.M. looking for mature Women MOTEL maid \\Wied, part to \\'elcome newcomers to # time daily mornings. Apply the conimunity. Mu.st have typewriter, car, and bf! hon. ,. ln person, 2la4 Ne,vport dable. Apply 285 E. :P.tain, r B!vd, C.M. ~73 Suite 7, Tustin Ca I i f, '• * OPERATORS * 5t4-692:"i "Better dresses. top· wage for e NURSES AIDES_•_ qU&.lil) work, Lai u na 1 AM to J PM ~ Beach. Dorl 494-8ll8 3PMtollPM . WANTED: Aggreuive. ef. Park Lido : ficient, .aperienced, Front Convalescent Hoapita' desk girl fot' Dents.' otfc. 1445 SUperlor 89'2-8612 Newport Beach. 642-WO MOTEL .MAID BABYSflTEk Wan...,, my Part time.,~ home~ S days pu wk. GALS, I bavt an idea! Small 8-5:30, 5 children, 4 in housecleaninib·Uslness. school. Salary open. F.V. Let'g get oUr h q_ ad a area. Call 531-3205 aft 6 togt"ther! 642--2812 · pm. MAIDS WANTED LADIES lB to 60 show Sarah 2JOl Newport Blvd., Costa Coventry Sprln& & all Nlesa. Apply In Penon. season jewelry fashions, WANTED Live In babysitter. absolutely no 4nvtstmcnt, • Light bousecleanln&. we t train, 847w1567 or 536-1018 540-061.f:. Ask for Donna BEAUTICIAN, local r l TI LADIES 19 to iO earn $25 pnoferred. 729 W. 19th SL, to $100 wk w I C.ttannl ' C.M. ~· Lingerie. F,qua1 Oppty BABYSllJER nttdf.'d 8 AM Employer. No exp ntt. call 10 s PM: Fountain Valley 9-10 am or"-' pm. ~ area. 531:.;im_ PHYSICAL 'lbeftpilt. part -IT~E'!L:.:EPHO"'°:=N::E--A-ns-•~•-n-·ng-I time, momiQp fbr Rm. Service. ~ nctd tlnaton )JttfdJ. 0 f f I c e • WAlffiE$ wanlfd, apply In WANTED babysitter m 1 (pl!rson, Mesa Lanes. 1703 home Fri tbN TUl'!s. dlys Su...rtior A..,-e,, Colla )lt e5ll. only, 'l:li to $:3l. 2 \onl..v a.ppl,y, 541).80 545-7524 R - • • remtel' P111$DNNIL· A.-NCY 4'5 L 11th St. C.t1~ _, 11'4 a. 11th It. ...... _ S47-fn1 FEMALE ICor<loln......., COllt!"I $ltl.67 Good 'with figures, v.·UI add . & subtract Shipping orders from kardex cards Girl Fr1tlay $4ZO Type 50, shorthand nice but not necessary. Accounts *'DllVIU * ' No• ..,. ..... c. Nec:ii•my! Muse law dlla Cl.Wondl drhol .. -••• YELLOW CAI CD. U8 £. 16th&. a.r.- FULL time tUel rmna.pr; Hire. train ano set 1,1p dislilbution for akin care cosmetiCll. An exoCIJe:nt p~ duct with a dynamti alts organization bebhld It. ~ mW1on. Send l'ftQJnt io P.O. Box: 567 S\mset Belch,. ~If. • Paying & Receiving Teller with desire to learn other phases of bankinc. Ex-per. ience required. Please apply In pen;on 2523 EastbluU Dr, Newport Beach SECURITY PACIFIC NATIONAL BANK Spanish Mitdltel'l'ClnMn lloulht Mlauflcluror's '69 Showroom S1mpl91 "'~--·---.. 8' \Vood cai-ved arm divan. lg. man's chair 1 or love seat. 5 Pc Octagon dark oak din set w /blaclr or avocado lramed chairs; 8 Pc BR set. 9<lr Mr. & Mn. dresser, lg mlrror, 2 commodes, decorative headbo.atd ill ~panish oak d~ign with malching box springs, mat- tress· at f.rame . Items Sold lndlvldu1lly · Shop Around -Boforo you bliy soo USI VALUE $1095.95-FULL PRICE $529.95 or t.rmt 1.1 low •1 $4.66 per week U.e Ou.r Store Charge Plan or Bank Financing No Fancy Front -BUT. Quality VaJU'es ,Inside. ' ' •WANTED•: . Furniture • Appl~~ Coloc. TVs e P- ETC.· . ~ ... ) Cash iii '12 hoar ': 541-4531 . ; : payable & Ac co u n t s F..qual Opportunity Employer receivable, p a y r ·o 11 ex- perience. Will run oUice, public oontact Roc,i/Typlst $450 Typo 60. -II), 1-gal office, must be sharp D-1 Aut. $375 4 day week, must be ex· perienced and know X-rays 111'"9 Clerk $150 Experienced in billing pn; cedures, filing, phone, col· lections, accounts ree€ivable. An excellent opportunity for older \\'Oman \vith bookkeep-""' .. ,,_W>d Casliler A/PI A/I to $375 Good bookkeeping background, must be able to post & balance lus D•lvtr $400 California drivers license. Good drivin& record, ex- perienced EXP. Dinner Waitre&s - Waiter, Cocktail Waitreu. Busboys. BEN BROWN'S REST. ,_F_u .. m .. ·1 .. tv;;.ro.;;· ___ ...;IOOO;;.;;.c. ~G..;.1r..c•.::•;;.• .. S1'-l"-•-__ eo __ 22 it tho 20 PC. "MADRID" L•gun• Be•ch C( moo s. eo..1 Hwy, 3 Room Group So. Laguna Beach $2Ql3 FROM MODEL HOMF.S Real Estate S1S.1 Includes: Quilted sofa &. Men & Women chair -2 encl tables I:. co r. BO"'-T Stoves, butane &: alcohol $50 & $25, many miscellaneous items 53&-6185 Appliancu 8100 Expa.ndlng again. Office # f~ table -l lamps -dress-e SPECIAL PURCHASE e 4 · openings available for er -mirror -headboard - licensed n1'!n & women. In-. •-Relrigerators, automatic quilted ho." spnng "" malt· \\!a.fibers & other major a~ e TOP QUALITY -NEAR NEW e Couches, loveseats, sofas, sectional&, hide-a· beds, Bedrm sets, Dining rm sets, dinettes, 5 1\Jle Fr. Provincial BR .sets. Refrigerators, stoves washers & ~ers. W1 Finance With Gaod 1 Credit M~stor Chorgo I l11nkM-.i~ AOK Commission Gallery 7722 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. I Block West of Beach Blvd· .. off G. G. Frwy. . . stant iricome &: training. Mr ress _ 5 pc. dining room; Gardner. Spri n r Realty, table & 4 hi·back chairs. pli.ances from model homes Pi1nos & Organs 8130 540-4824 at fantastic disrounts! No -- COMPARE AT $749.9;; Do11ln. We service. See al; • New Pianos· • ' POOL Horses •OJ PRINTING. duplicator oper-$399 F.OSTER'S HEREFORD .weatem aaddli ator Huntington Beach. Ex· No down-Pmts only $16 mo. 17185 Brookhurst, Ftn Valley WURLITZER&: ~~BURY TAIL' ES . "' perience A.B. Dick or Multi. · (So. of warner) 968-1234 All ~tyles & finishes. all $300 new, asking 1150. ~ Must work without l!upervis-WEUl'S WAREHOUSE Amencan made, 88 note, del cellent cond. 838-62rl ; • WESTINGHOUSE •ide by 'W-benoh • """"· Price ....... ~ sc:~~~ c::: 600 \V. <Ith st., Santa Ana side retrig w/ice maker. ing at $499 New .slate $6!kl val Now,.fl95 TRANSPORTATl.ON ~ ~ 0 1 mo. old. Cost $525. sell W 1• · O .23 ltodels to cliOo8e /;iom, $59 & y ht <" part time. Reply P. • Box Open Daily S-9 $375. 5 4 6 _ 9 2 6 5 , 1330 Ur lfler rgans Q. ,213: ~. fiS'j.2101 Bo.lb R I ' , 1066 Huntington Beach, 92M7 1 __ Sa_L_9-<i_=~Sun=~ll-~~~ Palisades Rd No. 17, S.A. e NEW & USED • MAHOG b.i -bunlts 1 om. SCRAULE PHONE from home, 1 hour SPANISH FURN l'T URE GENER AL E·l e ct r i c Tremendous savinp; on 'Ga "Queen' ~~g; c0m.P1:~th · llr."' . , a night 5 days a week to RE T U RN' E V F 'R 0 M automatic \\'asher, I a t e models and rent returns. matttea.; ipiellllll·-lr-·Queen ~ people who have recel\•f.'d MODELH:JMEs.'SAVINGS model, like new. $1 S. EVERYTHING IN MUSIC Mary ~t'llSs p'!que: ideal ANSWERS ' ~~~=!e:iee ;:.rial. ~fa T~ ~oak~ !W7-8llS Beach Music Center for boys rm. $95 each. : 675-4570 room tables, 2.llyjng room MON~ Elec Fljlnge, auto l\1inney's Sb.Ip Chandlery Forgot -aUck ....J. r~J. -bould ,•--ps .•~ S=•I•> pa'•tin' g. oven, new,l rievcr used. Factory Sales & Service ,253'1 W. Coast Hwy, N.B. Adrift-OON and no 'ffict 5 ...... ary $550 REAL ESTATE. s n't &CUU "" ..--... "'"'" ....... Ope" Sundoys __ ., • * 962-3914 * Da•'ly 12 """n 'Lil 9, Sat 9-"' .... 0-0....... Boss about his lll:Uesman: you be selling the hottest ·El Prfsidente · k i 1' g s· i z e ""'" oJ Type 60, shorthand 90 +. area Huntnigton Beach? ·bedroom suite, oak triple · 1740-I Beach Blvd,. (Hwy 39) Gr.FT Shop selling out; an. "He's my contact man. He's \\ill type legal descriptions. Villaie Real Estate S62-44n dresser & rn11'rbt, king Antiques 8110 llh mi. So. San Diego Fwy. tique trunks, statues, im· all CON and nci TACT:>'. · filing & run errands. Must or "'" ~03 'head'-'~ 2 mmode UE ,1 Huntington Beach 847-8536 ports; also, old Persian rug, \ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ... iii;l;iii \ be sharp .,...,...,,_. ~'"'riiam: & .:~ ANTIQ Spanish and .. ex. fire extinguisher, sbelves, INVENTORY ·.· . MOTEL ?-.tanagers, couple. ,....,.,, 2 boudoir lamps, religious art inn. small pvt. Grand Opening brick display counter, an- G111eral Offlct Salary apt. For 30 unit collection. 18th C. paint. San tique desk, etc. 551 W. 19th SALE ," I N · ----' 6 piece Spanish wrought A "tonio w, g•'ll frame·, Mex· qur new organ d~partnlent St CM "'"1914 Clerk $350 mote' 0 expenence '"""'"' iron dining set. Only $467. ~· .fix. 11 is now open featuring ·· ·......,.. NEWPORT 20'5 : ! Prepare orders for _od_._ln-'q'--u~_,_ .. _~-'°---n:l. down & $4.50 weekly, 1~n .. curc1. s~a ' THOMAS ORGANS FRIGIDA"IRE Washer, Slips Included -: ' warehouse. Good figure ap-sell separately. Easy credit. r~:;nltic~ ~i l~~ i~~~~ with the exclusive Color-Clo perfect oondition. $ 4 0 ' •PACIFIC YAorr SALESf I titude, sh<µ'p Agencies, Men & HAMILTON FURNITURE parchments; tin pilintings. and Playmate. Dining nn set, '3 0 . Kettenburg Dealer • , · Women 7550 5943 Westminster Ave ·· Sensibly priced or exchange FREE . . !~ported~ W~ing ~ 3446 Via Oporto, Ne~· Accouats P. avablt Westminster. 8!»--4434 daily La w lk lamily size 5, $35. Zircon \\'e<ldmg 24 Hour Phone .... 673-""'11> -• 9 Sat for good naulicaJ antiques. wrence e music rina set $35. S40-6539 • T "'. Jr; Receinble $4SO FEMALE orvtSlON 10 a.m. to p.m., . 64~2629 co~. a noo ~aluc, 1ree -i .., 2 . 1 Office Mj:r ............. $586 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.. Sun. with every Thomas Organ .. FO S8.le: .n.~. ll:T.U., 17 FT. Performer. IsllufJb' years expenence: " Part Time Sec. ,,, . $2. pr hr 12 p.m. to 5 p.m. VAST stock Arr.er " Eur Prices sci.rt at $595. Kenmore air· con<1llioner, Deluxe model fall fi~ automotive, know inSllTallCe T U Train $3..'>5 furn & clocks. La r r Y no volts .. Used just one glass} outboard.. CUsfrom :i~~ GM parts kno\\·ledge i.:g!f Sec (~;··::.'.'.'." $650 17 Pc. King Size 11-torgan Antiques. 2 4 2 8 Coast Music year $135. · 638-7185;..' ll301 snap down cover. Big w_bee1 P Payroll Clerk •.....•. lo SSOO Bedroom Newport Blvd., c. f.f. 1839 Newport Blvd CM tuclid Space 102, Garden tilt trailer. $700 or best off. MALE DIVISION ANTIQUES & CUX::KS ' Grove er.~ 642-4980 after fpm PIX Rtcpt $350 Admin-trnee .......... $650 Large29 ;:-;;r di;::r, = FOSTER'S ANTIQUES Corner 6460211 Harbor POOL TABLES -\Ve Buy, 18' CHRJSCJtAFT, utilltY I !~te~~n~ 1:s.s':!t Drflsmn ·····•••······ $180 !'°~head~, ~m:.' quilt-16'.=·~:;!38:::::::•::'::""'=::F"=""=''::CM=l -tt:-:-:;-';~·::-:::-:07-Sell & trad~. _Table recover-pleasure, 105 hp, 6 cyl. inbd. oWcc type ill'l Audit MgT .•••••••••••• $1250 ed. mattre~. sheet!§, blank· Used Organ Sale lngs & billiard supplies. Lapstra.ke constructton. Credit Mgr, •••••••••• , ... $650 Sewing Machines 812~ SPORTS 100, 10273 Garden Xlnt rond thruout. tuD T'pi.t $375 Some Free, Some Fee et.s, eChoto. 1.,.e of Spanish Grove Blvd., Garden Grove. price $1450. S62-l440 aft ,, M h I P on .. ' ... 1968 SINGER, Zig • Z a g , Hammon-> MlOO Spinet •995 636-2730 p · ire an s tr.I or Modern Style '"" " ?oil , · 3 yean: expeN~ ~to ~· w dill Ori touch-0-matic. \Val cabinet Hammond AJOO Console $1800 2 LARGE 1 · ho ;;;tJ;,· •-m· g ol -po·~7t . s, ,........, est ve All fo $249 · t · g "'· ' w.""'· SHARP 16'\ boat w/ ·• '"¥ ... ""' & Lobb Olli r incl. Servtce man eav1ng Hammond RT·2 Concert with 2 tabl Jo -• d 1 ti.l' mail y ce f ' S39 85 . es r Wluuow IS~ ay, swivel" itat~40 hp mbuir mg&. Corner 11th&: Itvine No down. Pmts. on1y S9 mo. area orees repo. · RR 40 •·•·•·•···•····• $1895 p1ciw:e· frames. all sizes, & trailer. '$7;,iJ •. ,6<12-0267 , "'N"·'mwpoo _rt ~.,a~o::· WEUl'S WAREHOUSE Cash or assume $4.66 mo. Hammond C3 & PR 40 $1995 1,~~n~~' ~kn•orBe'o~ha Ir .1.::c;:;=:.c.:=-'----· l MALE .....,.. ~ Button holes, o v e r c a s t Hammond B-3 &: Leslie' $2150 ~ ~" .. SKIPPER wa!ffS part. blind hems etc., without at· Gulbransen Premier only 6 time work.· 548-3561.· llcft. Mal•t. $450 Fee paid. l year background ting, Kno\v codes. \Vil! fix light.bulbs and etc. . IWt. Malnt. Engl•-hi $750 Know all trades. Air cond., htg, elec, plumbing & pain. in tight machine repair. Will supervise 10 people. Some papel'\\-'Ork. Excellent 01> porlunity to ad'Vance to fulure managemen• Coastructlon Supenl10r $975 up E.."perience in home con- struction, purchasing estimating &. supervision Prochtctlon Conrtol $600 vp Experienced with records, shop follow up and shipping A: receiving ,_ M•$600 Experit~ in foreign car auto pAts good memory Opoml-Officer $500 op Minimum 3 )'ears tX· perience. \Vill h an d I e customer&, ".tnployees & en. lo.ref! bank policy newport . personnel . agency Prof1.1sional Service for the employer •nd th1 applic•nt 133 Dover Dt-., N,B. 642-3170 549-2743 Schoals-lnttructlon 7600 The Newport School of Bu1ine1.1 FEATURES: e Electric typewriter:s e Dicta.ting equipment e Modern office procedutts • Brush up Gregg Shorthand e Personal Development (Ask about our special Feb- ruary offer which includes free typing instruction.) ...0153 LIFETThlE Ci.ft, typewrttlllg. OUldren, grandcblld.rtn, or yourself! Il'ldl\idually tutor- ed Chilcoat 10 Ie&Sons typin& school. 173 Del Mar, CM, 600 \V. 4th St., Santa Ana Open Daily 9 • 9 Sat. 9 . 6 sun. 11 • 6 MORE CASH PAID FOR Furniture Colored TV's, Pianos Appli1nc~ Antiques 1 Pl1c• or Houseful!· 11 Our SpeciaJtyl 636.3620 24 HOUR SERVICE BUYER ON DU1Y 7 DAYS 20 P~. Maple G~OUP Includes: Living room set· • tables • lamps ~ bedroom set • quilted mattress • ma- ple dining room. All Jor .•• $449 No llO\Vl'I • J>rnil. only $18 mo. WELll'S WAREHOUSE 548-2859 600 W. 4th St., Sanla Ana i'OTORING in )'OUl' home Open Dail,y 9 • 9 by cttdtntlaled t~aehers. Sat. 9 -6 Sun •. 11 -6 All oubJttU. ......_. 1 to • * $29.44 * 8 Call: 54M,702, Aft. 5 PM 3 Piece &aided MERCHANDISE FOR • OVAL RUG SEr • SALE' AND TRAiii Nylon blend, m'lnible. Brown, coppcrtone, gr«.n. l'umltUre 8000 Sizes: 8 x .1p. 2 x 3. 2 x 6 Lot Att...itot $400 ·---AL'S UNUSUAL Caliloml• dri"""' ""'""" 20 PC. MODERN FURNITURE goo.i ""''"" "'°"'· ""'' • GROUP 17881 """"' 81""· clean Ho.ntington Beac!h 842-446-1 • Inch~cs: F1o""1 tola & cha.it , "'VE•-I -8' ~ ·-'-tltl Drivtr $400 _ walnut ta.bles • lamp& • ...,... ""'"a -· m.:u . ..._._, ~ 9tal, coffee & end California drivers li«nsc, • complete b(odroom with quilt. tables, lamps, ~ pc dinetre good driving iecord, cx· ed. ma.ttttis • S pc. dinette, si?t. ia, than · 2 mos old, perienced etc. AU for • · • MUii sell this week. Prv Dlosll Moc11•li $277 , P"'· S3Ml46 c No dowll--Prnt&,.q SW mil. -E"'L~E_G_A_N_T~-s-p-.-,-,-. h .. "37 w•1 ••s wu•lilllir• lurnttur." 3 ....... 1 mi> !wlna • mldnl(ht ihift. Pft ~C: old. Cost $4000. new, &eU Mnltary com p I t I t , tx· " all $2500. M6-926S. 1330 per~notd In all pbuts dtiM:I EllO W. 4th St.., Sa.nta Ana Pa.llsa.d~ Rd, NO, 11. S.A. motors & tratmnb&ion, Ch\.-n Open Dlllly .9 • ' Toot,, dependable Sat. 9 • 6 8'an· n , 6 12: 3 PC couch; ro11 .. \\·ay ta h Gu a rant e c OK Kirby vacuum cleaner w/at. le:i...e nie""''"'e, · c · ' months old • •• • • • • ·' ·' • $3395 tacbments. Take over small I==~;;;;~;~;::~_,,;=! 52.6-6616 ALL PIANOS .... , . • ·... •. • ts u bal 1968 SINGER, Zig Zag 20% or mo1-e Savings!! pymn or pay_ 0 ance S1llboats 9(110 automatic with wal cabinet. Open Mon & Fri eves. of $36.l2ia: ~~pt. Ca~ic Racing Sl.ooP: .Take over 5 pymnts of $7.25 HAMMOND per mo. Call .52 6-6'617 in CORONA DEL ?o.fAR SONY 500 Stereo tape RhodHJ1Lt anytime. 28$4 E. Coa.;;t }fwy., 673-8930 recorder, complete with HANNA J.1 speakers &. 1nikes. First o . . 812-5 \VE'RE In our new store. $185 takes. 545-64.73 Sleek racing Bay "'.Ol)!p Musical Inst. · Our fantastic sale of Pianos .,._,, t'<~-• I ----.. _ QUA LITY king bed ....... er .. ~u..,st eqwpmen Guitar Heldqu1rten & Organs now, continue~ at w/quilted mattress, oomp, & oondilion. Terms. ~ • NEW ml USED • Orange County s only piano No\.-r ,. __ .. •OO, worth ."°'"· Owner '73-Lm a & organ "super market" .. ~ """ -"" Fender• Vox • Standel Pianos from Sl95 ~ 842-G536 · COLmWIA Defender :29', e GIBSON e. MARTIN from $195 . Mobile Telephones sip~ 6, ~ h.p. inboard. N •WILSON • YAMAHA \'fARD'S 8ALD\VIN SI'UDIO Lease or sell raonggear&extras.~ Drum H1itdquarters 1819 Newport, C.M. 642.-848.f • 839-4030 * & outboard. $12~ • NEW and USED . =========:l..!6~16-«14~~'~"';,'~ .... ~-~ms~.,_ __ j LUDWIG, ROGEllS, ASTRO Tolovlslon 1205 FREE TO YOU Cal 2'. 1 yr old. • Large selection with new 4 --------* $6,75{1 * pc. sets and cymbals start-23" l'fAGNAVOX Console ---------1 Call 644-4177 aft s ·pm- lng at $189. Pedals, hi-hats TV. black & white. xlnt ORGANIC Fertiliztr. agedll========:t and sets repaired. All sniaJI cond. beaut cabinet $50, ho~ manure . combined Power Cruinrs 9020 parts, accessories &: cynibals l-'64-'&-'-l~l~Zi;.,..,~=~=-,1·1th '''OOCI shavmgs, Good _:....:c..::=-'---- in stQCk. RENT TV $10 mulch. 833-5332 or 546-4931 30' DRAKE cabin cru~. EVERYTHING lN itUSTC Nt Deposit . Free Delivery betw 8 & 5 Mon thru /}'lying briftgr, electronk Beac~ Musl·c Cenler 534-<>ln 0' m-suo Fri, 2m ...... s.crm.,, "'° o. PETER Rabbit 6 mo old. ' :838-5:;";;'====== HIF' & S 1210 Checkered giant buck a':....._.....----'::'actOry Sa.Jes & Servil>e • 1 ttreo familypet, permanent home .SP!•0_Slc:i Boeh 9030 Dally 12 noon 'lil 9. Sat 9-5 STEREO 1969 solid state ~ ted t ha --::....... 11404 ~ach mw ... (H~ 39) sole. Never used $85. Also Y..'M • mus ve ~. 13' WHALER· 35 HP l~ m1. So. San D~o Fw'J· 6 ' w a I n u t A M I FM will deliver. 675-2445 Johl"l80rt, oonU:Ols; $ 9 9 S . H1!f1tlngton Beach 847-8536 multiplex, 8 s-aker audio NEED good home for i.;675-2:=;:":';;"':=;6,::73'-::' 2332=::,Ev:="'=:, ... ~ "Barney," lovable. small 1~ ST. Geo~ guit8.r & system, Normally 9tlll.s for , .,.....,; amplifier, 8bo 3 pc. drum $489.95, sacrifice • $250. breed Tenier-mbc: male, Bolf Slip Moorl,.i l'Uil9 Housebroken, all s h o I s ; , . · · set. 548-4525 eves. Credit Dept. ~7289 loves children. B28-79'n 2/20 SUPS FOR RENT : ; MELODY GUITAR n .•t nnA PENIN~• • Ml II l600 HAPPY Valentines Day! '64 PtUoDV .,.,._. New gears & sl:ri~ '$21 see IMOUI Ford oonvertlbit with Pink * 5;!6-4953 * ,673-4151 or 642-00't2 • ========o ITILE hbbb)'ial: H~re·s a·rtal Slip nda wOrk .. 67~7475 Boat 't cht Pi1nol & Orn1nl 1130 bargain. 2 x 4 foot table alt ~:30 2-18 • a GM • _ and original Denwar tiles FREE TO GOOD HOME 2 Ch1rter1 ... rf PIANOS & ORGANS ready for cuttq: and spayed 1and altered kittens, CAL 24 tor CllARTER. Famous Nan1e Brands mastic.· all for SJ:;, 644-4188 to adult hon1e. Needs shots, $25 dn.y. $1.SO wk. lrom Li29. .j PIECE dinette lM!t sn. 540-6183 front ll-4 p.m.2/20 *842-1528• Also USED lnsh'\ll'l'l~IS Stl'QJl•a-chair baby bugu f'REE tO good ho1nt--pu~ Gould Music CoMpany $5. 8921 Cornet Circle, pie's, )la,ck'/wtiltt, mixed Mobile Homt1 9200 'lGl5 N. Malu, Slnta.'Ana \Vestminsttr. 847-TI81 bl'ffi:I 8.he'pberd 't)'pe, 1 ~1cs , bo so. 91 ,,,...,., !111-0681 .• VACUUMS,. bid "'V'.., ' 2120 a.I Hor ' ' f.1on ~ Fl1 "til 9&mda)'12,5 $10 u:p. Repairs le pal°t&"" i% ~&\R.·<¥ blond cock•· 16.:,:._:. ~0::-~ PIANOS & ORGANS Rea...onable. Coast Vacuum poo. ni.)l• 10 ~ tiome! From $69&i» \Vurlib'.tt e Knabe, e l'bcher 333 E. 17th. Clit .. IC2-1.SO. . Viti)'. 1iaYfW . fr Io v es ~ WIDES Orange CO..IY'> tiraest 2 WAY RADIO <hildtt!i' 1'31-IJ!lj · 2120 <O'.(!'"''..ll0'""''-60"64 • mui.ic dCaltr'. • · • · •••• • &1 wall base A mobile OOWEomil., f •kl: old. FroM $39".6 : WAJ.llCH..$. gtaliohs. 83!M030 M'•}.!!"· At,1·-~ p .m . Parttsavatl1blel11all&m11. MUSIC CITY LEAVING itate mo~t tcll. 64S..U'la1 2/20 1425 ~St. 3-IOO &.. Brtstol. C'calil Mt&a c n m p I e t e ho u a e t u I NO GD'· home for kwtt.ble "' b&ock EMt of Harbor Blvd. __ •::...:5:..•:::•c:3:.:1:;65:....:•:_ __ ,rurniMiings.rea,onable O::llf~ +--mlxtd'. 2 yr,. vn.Balao.r : l"'' children, ~ flCbool ""-· MBYSl'TTEll -g AM ........_ Adi-TraH $575 • fto 5 P~t: Fountain Valley ========='I BA or BS de&rtt-any major. rumllu~ returned lrom di> pJa.y studios. model hemes. dec:xJralOI'$ c:ancdlatiM, ~n181'1 4 Mcdltel'n\ne&n "'c bed, rua. dincth' _.1, COf'lo ntr t&ble, r ea s6nable . ~ ltAJ\~fOND • stdnway YR· 536-6185 How,ii~ .~ 2-18 Coata P.ftsa (7lfl ~ 'niaha ~ oow A 'Ulil'd pianos l_tl_S'IU_R_Y_o!_RDc __ k_N_'_Ro_ll MJXlD?fi'rlier.Beagle pu~ SEE the Oun1: Wide ~ of an ntakt>a, Besl bllY9 ln rtt0r<ls for-Sftle. 45's & p f't'I, 1 wk f . o Id . liner Pan AmcrlcM, F,anl· lll"fL 5.'ll-3230 E\U. Jobe Mlft. Wem. 7500 1-lan'IM,. good pmionalily. ~EPER. W one aagneaaJw Jitd1. full time. liw in. Pvt. \fli.'"r'!n a ::iJ.~ ~~ : 5!' ,. 2600 i."'"eout llwy NA ~· """·~ M.nlcurlll W1- "'"""' Salon. &G-1lllO Bolh ,.. by •Pf'll<>nt .... ,,_ ptld ..., ....... ptny pooltlons. ' • RD FURNITURE 11144 Nftpon lllyd, CM twrJ nicht UI 9 Wed .. Sal &: !un,...'til S SOCK JT TO 'D.f? -----------------. .. UALlTY kin; bed wlqullk'd m81tl't'U, oomp. NC'\."tr used $98. v.u<th $250. .. ~ roR u.le • leaving area •. Patao • hoUsthold rumitim Ir acceuorieL 548-3942 So .. Calif. right btre. Al'-·--~~'1951 ~ ... .,. 2na mount, Elite and Gen.'"'' SCIDtIDT P.WSIC 00,, vw•"'··...:;•"';..·-='-~~-..,. 21iAND Crocheted double POWER.GLIDE mobU<": ~mP~ now •1 r ~-!:" bed ,,....... """' ......, '"'"'"""'°"' rr.o. 842-10Jt Ducil Wide 5°'9\1 PRIVATE PARTY m. tach, 646-7506 ews, 17313 Palm St. F.V. ~LI Oieoma!f•fl,fotille l'fbmf'S1lrlc. \\"ants to buy piano Fct Daily PUot Want Ads. 15' PALM trte. You d.lr a-520 N . Heritor, S~ '"' Cub. 21U1'1-tl).'1l o;,1 w.5811 .. ui. -2120 531-1571-- 7 • .... -' ... i; --~-·-· -~---•------ I ' 1' ' -·· --~------~--·----·--·--·-·-·-------- TllAH$POltTi\TIOM I"!....,_ A- TRANSPORTATION TRANSl'OITATION TRANSPQRTATION • 9300 MOO !l!'J!!rtod A~ · 9600 lmpol'.fod Autos 9600 Auto Lo11ln1 • 9110 * AUTO-iEASIN6* TR6, .~ Triwnl)h. -• FERIARI POUCHE VOLKSWAGEN draecd eustom .eat. ---t, .... .. •lfe<l " -FERRARI ,,, l'ORSCllE tu~~ooo ml !\(UST sell 'tl1S vw, 'Sunroof, ., co:P~E'r~PIUCES bike «t]y. Many eir;tru. N rt ( ts Lid. ~ Red/blk int. Chrome wbla 4AJIJ'M, •Uto. xlnt catt, $150. 51$.4323 aft 5;50 pm, f.'WPO mpor \bot-AM/J'M. 1 m ma c " I • t e ; U.000 mi ltlt °" warranty. Cort fox Auto Lu1ht9 • : ~SOI 6 SUn. -= =~· :onlJr au DlyJ. U>· 111!" N!Pts ·-· 494-.utl..., «-JIU, 'N~J-~~ Hie~.:. 'J 'Ge: HONDA 18> SALES • SERVI<% • !'ARTS 613-4223 Uk fQr G•ty Arthlbatd "''"l'Y' • __.., ,,__.., ' ·~-bier. Low nillu&c ' ~ w. °"'I Hwy. •• POJlSCHE 1600 s Convt. '6! vw BUS ii...tce.. '900 · . , Tuned plpe1 $215. Ne\V"lort Bt•clr-, Chm. w.hls. AM J F' M. $700. JUST REBUILT JRA·NS--TION-, • 1147.am • 642.!l!Oll 540-l'IGf Rodlah, .... -. N• • • 962-$9!D • PORTA ST tell 1961 Yalniha 100 Autborlud MC Dealu clutch Emfl ~t: $1ASO. '63 VW BUS ~: =e.1P~t.G~ ki~ ·~· ft4T, :· : ~ ~~ good, c1ean. ,. • ., !300. 613-3312 • ., J'~Sfj) ....._r', 'S.UBARU Mini bl.kt. New piunt. ~- el good con<Ution. ,i<UJt 16·', ?~;/~, • 1969 SUBARU '64 VW 1500 S, sedan, radio. lll'.!w uphol/tlres. $1195. Orlg owner. 646-7305 .• P2"'l" Sat• sun. • ='~'=~:;:,,.c;:;..:.,,,,±-trl.m $1297; 66 MPG HONDA TnJl 90.' Like '67 FIA'I:ISO Spider, $165ll. Complete foreign car !lf'rvl~ VOLVO new.'on1y 500 mi. l2iil Call * '46-l9lO • Kostel Kusto111 Kars1--- HON"gA' :·cc. Good HILLMAN 845 Bokor. C.M. 54<).59lS '68 VOLVO 2 DR. . ~ltion. $400. ~Hu Cb ,62 HIJ...U!AN Husky, lo ml, • 'fiutaon, ~ SUNBEAM MANV EXTRAS EXEC CAR ... iET IL\RLEY D • v Id' c n runs great, new Urea, '69 . ,, -~.. •tod<. gd <Ond, :""::::::=· l350==' m-m;=· === SUNBEAM TIGER $249' KARMANN GHIA ' "~-968-2711 after 5 pm · '67 Honda 30S Scrarnbler Like new. Ma'ke otfl'r. CAR SALE '6:! CADILLAC 4 door hard- top, fuU po\\·er, factory air, conditioning ••..•• , • , • $799 '59 T.SJRD Full po\\'t't $299 'GO FORD Convertible. Auto. ma tic, radio, beater •• $199 '62 OLD~10BILE F -85 4 dOOl'. Radio, heater, auto- matic •••.• , ...... • •• • • • $99 '57 BUICK 2 door. Radio, heater, auton1atic •.... , $-19 BLUE CHIP AUTO SALES TRANSPORTATION Utod Co" 9900 CHRYSLER ~ SAVE $1200.00 Brood Now 1N9 Chysler New Yorker 4 Door hardtop. 3 In 1 bench seat, driver ab· group, AM· FM radio. power steer1n,, power brakes. 3 speed 'wind. shield wipen, remote out- side rear view mirror, pow. er \VindoWll, po\ver antenna, torqueDlle tran smi al!I• Ion, bead rest. 440 cu. In. en. iPne, tinted Clas&, cornering ll:hta, automatic speed con. trot, power seal, power door lockl, tilt & telescopic steer· Ina: wheel, vinyl roof, white waU titc1. CH431<9C100889 was $6192 NOW $4992 ATLAS Git~ '' + *·M>T992 • "-· 't''=~;,,;;;;:;:;;;:;.~= -1 ~ · ~ itr1ller, Tr1vtl ·~i.;~:r~~~ fjtu L~ tras, never raced, well IHPORTS malnWoed by loco! owner. . · $2295. m.5603 . T~YOTA:Y~LYO 2145 Harbor BlvcL , Costa M~a· 6f2.9700 .? 54~ CHRYSLER·PLYMOUTJf --. 29'l9 Harbor Bl\ld. 9425 00NTRACTOR'S field office , Walnut paneled int. : : • carpeted, $100Cr val, 675-5582 ' h==========' 2 ·61·,· 2 .... , I '6! )~ d~r, ~.M . ~.l<~l13\13 • '66 . SUNBE.0! Tiger, Fao-·'ti~ -·ii • s ; ' toey Maga_ •• New Pittllls. Au:tc* Yf.iqt,f' ' , 9700 Tvo'O loPa-, AM/FM. 61&-2557 , • !~ 1 • ' • All e..\:lra sharp, 8n With ft· dios & heaters and one with air C1lndlttoning. 5:30 Pt.1 WE PAY .•. ruclc1 V500 · ·: *SPORTSMENS VAN* · •· •· * TRUCKS * . ~ · They Aro All Hero At · ~ F1nt1stlc DIKount1 . •' . .. . , .... • Ready foi:" Un.mediate delivery BEACH CITY DODGE : ;, 6535 Sep Blvd., (H\vy. 39) : -i ; 54(1..2660 i·ir · HuntingtOZJ Beacl. 1 .. • --·-' , '66 Ford Pickup ~ ..; Lol1g tied cust cab, V.S, ?lr, • · bumper, pearl grey exterior. 1 V1n t cond. Take foreign car I •f' .,_- ! ·.,w In trade or $50 cash dels. S4t·Ol 03-...67J.11 tt 1110 HAllOI ILYD. COSTA MllA TOYOTA '67 TOYOTA corona, automatic transmis- sion, radio, heater, se-e I drive today. Lie TYX217. $1475 "' tM Lemu .. IMPORTS TOfOTA·YOLYO 196.i 1.arbor, C.M. 646-9303 TOYOTA HF.AOQUARTERS ELMORE CASH for uSed can I: truCks just call \II for f\'ee estimate • GROTH CHEVROIET Ask for Sale• Manq:er 13211 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach Kl 9-3331 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET ·, \WW. finC prvt i)rty. L.B. : ~ ~187 cau Jw -"t'713 or ,~:,..~, ,. ' · ~VY 1 Ton·, · 4 sPd, 'll&t ~1 many ext(as. See 28'28 Harbor Blvd. Oista Mesa 546-1200 J.131)1) Beadl Blvd., w-1--=::W:.:;:ll::l::B,::;:..::::__ """"' 1191-3322 uy . at 8.t7 W. 17th: CM 6'5-1691 • ~ .' Ill' eves. 548-7112 '. ~~ £>00GE 1,~ ton. '62 pick-up; : :. · rlean; 8 11. bed: 1-owner. 34.000 Mi. $1050 548-5750 , ._;, '&I Ford ~2 Ton V-8, custo1n ce.b, -31,000 mi. Very dean. $1000. 548-8584 C1m,.r R.ent1l1 9522 • • COP.CH • TRAILER RENTALS . t's none too early lo make ,. i'e11ervations f.or Sprine Hol· aya! ·-. WEEK-END OR )VEEKLY ~l -ne B:uggi .. 952,5 1966 •' . ' DUNE BUGGY. ""' "I 1965 P/b, p/s, auto trans, alr· conc:l. A111t cond. f.fuat 5ell, ,vill sacritltf:. Ev c a • 833--Tl46 '67 230 SL ~ert«le11 Benz. Light blue \v/navy blut: soft lop; all ex l.ras incl. air; xlnt cond. $5600. 962-2011 MG MG Sales, Servi~. Parts Immediate Dellvtry, All Model1 J1rtup oi t 311up o11•, 3100 \V. Coat;t Hwy., N.B. 642-9405 540-1764 Autborittd f.IG Dealer VOLKSWAGEN vw ., ... , Ready to Go '67 MG MIDGET $1699 ·Rdst.·, Mark III. 4 kpd, dlr, ; .. ' ~ excellent running cond. Wire ' wheels, cream white body, • ft ~ plush black int. Driven by . " ;-~~ . o li!Ue 'ole man from Loguna. . ~ s $85 Cash dels, will tine ,prvt. , '0 '-prty. L. B. UOF 593. 49Ui73 ,~, ~~:.-.1:'.'~/H, Wlro whoe1', ,.. ~ •• l,.'Ood condiUon, &1kin& $2200. ' ' 14t·OJ0l-£7l·11t0 1970 HAllOI ILYD. COSTA MISA tmportod Autot 9600 "' · .,. Spot Cash tor Imports • pay: more for any lmpor1 ' ·' ~repnl1eu or year, make : <... or condition. 1 ry us before · ... )'OU aell. ELMOR E •" , J.IOTQ~ 1m Beach Blvd . ., • · Wttt:r:nbmer. 89f.332'2. '·• DATSUN e DOT e DATSUN AUTHORIZED DEALER ';· 'HUNTINGTON BEACH vf, New and Used Cars ·;f· mpl•t• S1rvic e I: Parts • • 11835 BEACH BLVD. ' • . 142-7781 -540.0442 ' 7 J11rl 3 tnll•• So, S•n DM-9• · -'fwy~ ,,.jlj l11at • f•w tnlnllf•t ;~~ • . North •f "''"" . • • . ' ' ' -~' DATSUN 1968 DATSUN --1600 convertible. 4 11pttd . '..i tranlmialon, radio and beat- .~ . .. -• er. (WIJ856> $1795 ATLAS CHRYSLER-PCYMOU1ll 2929 -Blvd. Coal& Mtta 546-1934 Open 'tD 10 p.m. 'ff DATSUN '· Illa ...... 96 bp, ........... cam e.ng •• dlr, 4 apd, n.dio. , :... , heater, WSW Uf'u. loedfdl ' 1200 miles, Wldn tactorJ --::~ ••1T'&nt1. &J $1175. Take \.~, m cash dell or older car. : ; LB. YNWOS'f. Call altu l~ .. ~.. 04-81JJ. I Low miles. 642-l&tl • PORSCHE '64 V\V 9 '>assenger bus, '64 pORSCHE C, black 14,000 ·mi. $129:). w/blk. in ter.; exlra clean: * 673-6T;i6 * many extras. $3350. 137.(iW '64 vw convertible, new top, eve paint,. interior. 551000 mi. '63 PORSCHE S. xlnt coDd, Sharp. 646-5278 al.I new equip. Best oUer. 1965 V\V Bus, new wsw, 494-3237 after 6 radio. $1350. '62 PORSCHE Coupe, Super, *Call 644-0444* xlnt cond throughout. $2350. I c,~'8~VW="B~1a-1=-'-.... -."""Xl,..nt 613-<689 o>nd. AM-FM. P.-v -· '6b PORSCl-IE, 912, must see $25(X). 642-1031, 837-4:lll , to 11.ppreciale. $4000. '64 vw Sun lUiof, R/H, 1 * 5364627 * owner, $850. Good tiru, '66 PORSCHE. 911, all ex· reblt eng. 644-0136 tras. Must sell. $3750. •62 vw BUJI, new e~. A·l * 675-0084 * receipts to prove ·ss PORSCHE Sp:str. Comp. 592-5329 Recond/65 S.C. Tr!lns. It '61 VW, 1ncch. A--:r,-- eng. recently rblt. 1;44.2694 $69j. or best oiler. '64 VW, new tires, radio, 962-3853 PJ beater, xlnt mtch ~nd; VW •59 sunroof. R/H. New ~ paint, $875. 4.99-26411 cl ·~ ~ Int T•nns """"' u""""' """" pa • , 1964 -XLNT COND i .,:,1395:.:,:,..· o,-~=--o=,--;; 67l-9339 & ~ '$3 V.W. Camper $1,100, '59 THE QUICKER YOU CALL. V.W. Sedan $500, both exceL mE QtnCKEll YOU SEU. ''""'· 962-3873 ·Dt·li'l·lD~ ELMOltl MOTOU , .-·· 15300 llACH ILVll .. WIStMINSftl "4.lnf - .,; ' ELMORE ' MOTORS TO YOTA I' 4 1/2% l .tflk fh1•nc.l1119 •¥eileble on ~•nk ,,,roY.tl ol ,,.41f. RIEE-FREE us VIQIS Vacall1111 I DAYS & 2 NIGHTS FOR TWO H• '"rch•'• N•c.•u•ry 15300 Beacb Blvd. Westmillsler 19,·3322 OPIN 7 DAYS --~-------· ---· ---- Your Volkswa;tn or Porsche I pay top dollnrt. PaJd for or not. Call ljalpb 673,-1190 9810 • A NEW LIFE ON LEASE • ~lCS' • SP.~ C.011ta fo.lesa • 546-1934 bNt.'l' 10 ~ · · Open 'W 10 p.m. ·Q.'l< '1<11 Eafi> qu>to"\~ I :::::;;::::::::===== $!5.' loo. ~. $!Ott plus lax & Uc .. NEWPORTER MOTORS 2035 Harbor Blvd. ' 548-&ru BUICK --'61 BUICK La Sab1-e, 2 dr . hardtop. New red pa.Int job A upholstery. R & H. Po,ver t1lecring $400. 1532 Pegasus, s .. A. Heights. 54s-M49 ~uick Century. Good transportation car. Sj75 ... 548-0'!il * '66 BRUICK Riviera, full equipped. Immaculate con- dition. Call 6#-ut!J ···--- CHEVROLET 1961 CHEV'( Convert, good running 348 engine. Good tires, lst $275. Call 546--1128 after 5. '6.1 CHEVY II Station Wqon $400. 445 East 17th St., Costa Mesa T '57 CHEVY, good cond. Going in service .$300. • 646-0885 •s CONTINENTAL 'li6 CONT. 2 Dr. All pwr. Air-cond., stereo-tape: xlnt o>nd. 12800 6#-2861 ll07 Goldenrod_, C.D.M. '61 CONT. fUll pwr lthr int. 2.(i way patJ, $1675. pvt pty."3"343 '64 LINCOLN Con[., low miles, very clean. $179S. 714: 34&--9104 Palm Deset1 '67 LINCOLN. 23,000 Mi. Red \vtlh black vinyl top. Loaded ,S395o cash 673-5180 CORVETTE -----------'62 CORVETTE Black beauty! Must sec to appreciate. Loe.et car. $50 cub dela, dlr, or will take torelin car tn trade. can altu 10, . L.B. QOB223. ~ or 545-0634 '67 . CORVETI'E. Burzundy 427, low mileage, xlnt cond. Sacrifice. 548-8522 COUGAR FORD '62 FORD XL Coovt. A-1 Shal"Jl! at $&50. Dan McGhee, 6 42-93 2f ,. or 8:U--0600 f!Xt 2378 '6S~i Ford E 200 SuJ)f'r Van. AUlo-302 V·8. 8000 ml. $2900. 540-1694 '48 WOODY, xlnt ct>nd. Sell or trade for good conc:l . Pie.;. Up. 714: 758--016.5 '64 FORD l'atrlane, ,.. dr. r Ir: h, Good condition. $(12.'\ 673-3523 eve11 & wlmds. Ntw C1r1 HOLIDAY RAMBlEI{ Invites You To COMPARE AND ·SAVE BRAND llW '69 RAMBUR Full Sl1e Seats 6 12. !i.P. $~043 Plus T I l-order t•day BRAND NEW '68 JAVELIN BIG ENGINE BIG SPACE SMALL PRICE '?386 Pl u• T I l-1279969 BRlND NEW '69 REBEL THE PEOPLE CAR ·~436 Pl111 T a· l.-il11212 ·----BRAND lftW '69 AMBASSADOR AIR COND·V8 TINTED GLASS etc,, etc., etc. $3286 Plua T I L-S I 1021f '~FORD . aoloxlo Hordtop White nterior, pluah lU!'- quoloe boobt -11, loct dlr • .·DID vou ... air. lilO cub dell, will lino • ~ .. """' -· Pymll $29.85. IA • KNOW )I;. ~ 798. 4M-8'7T3 or • 1958 i'ORD Station w....,. • JHAJ YOU', Xlnt cood, &'Ol)d tire1, drive • tt ' lee! $350. ~ • MERCURY • CA,N BE ~t! c~~~v:.:R!th : DRIViNG '.. _ matching \in)ol i!'lter. tn xlnl A BRAND • cond.; al< • c0n4., ••tc>. • · " . trus.; p:>wer brakes, 1teer. • NEW. •., ' toa: I-rear window; radk>. a hea~ eood w/w tfta; cua-• tom foam .. tilled naughhyde 1969 :m pad !or ttar deck (ideal "1t • • •• children when trave11ng.) • ... Licensed. ""1 ramlty • POOLE BUICK · Ii C&l', fairly priced at ~ • f,. ., , ...._ ., ;. 642-3589 Aft 7 PM. w.... '66 COLONY Park, 9 pas!, • 23.oOO rnSlea. Big engine; • power. everything. Heavy • duty ahocb. premtwn tires. • iteoo. e.an att 5 pm. $2444:. 64S--1'108 • YOU CAN!'• 19«1 MERCURY. Xlnt cond. 1 owner. $250. 548--0593 alt 3:30 p.m. BREEZEWAY, pa, pb, r & .b. vll'l)'I int, $1600 548-6254 • . ., ~ Jl='.'.'.'.M:::'.'US=TA_N_G:--.-: BUICK : '"1 MUSTANG, pwr "''"a~ • SPECI' AL .·•. tond. Many extru, fact. WaJT, like nt>W ~1877, aft. • 6 pm call fl62..9566. • • • ... MUSTANu Hdtv. Big •: • 2 DOOR auto., MH: lady owner. SEDAN $1095. 644-.2951 Alter 6 PM • • :. O.LDSMOBILE UNIVERSITY • • • • Factery Qf-4fef "' ...... 21121 '• ·:· :~ ~ • SALES & SERVICE : DOWN ·'.ii . OLDSMOBllf ..... ,., ... ...._ .. ~. 2850 Harbor Blvd. ·~ ~· •MA~. 540-964.0 ~ ~ 540-8881 •• Ink ••••• ,.... :' . ' '65 OLDS 88 2 Dr. H.T. • 11!9~ Original owner. Like new. · rv LE 'S FINE USED CARS f.1ust sell-best oiler. Aft 6, .a 961--1782 • . ' a '62 JA9UAl · . .J.I 4 door. Awto. ft1na ••• r1tlio, h•eter. Shew• ••• •' a e1ptionel c•r•. IWNAllill • $2195 :.: Brand ~tw 1969 a , . PLYMGUTH SAVE $1000.00 PLYMOUTH Vin. • '66 TOlONADO r ' aFull power, f•cfory ef Red• White Ir 2Doorhardtop.Fullyequlpp. a''"d· ISINll21 , • II~ ed with light packago, AM· $2995 II - -FM mlltlplex radio, torque-•:--.:.....----.. ! S. A. LE fiite b'anlmiulon, power • '67 OPIL ' 1teerlng, power brakes, sure a • . IJip differential, 383 cu. in. Spt. Coup•. Ae41o, ft1•t•r,8 e.;.;ne tJn•-• ilallS air con-14 •P••d. I own•r. IUOF~ FREE·Car Radio ·•· · ~ · "" , 41tionlng, powc" 8'&t,. powe< • 51495 Power Brakes windowl!I, rut steering whee1, • vinyl roof, white wall Urea. ' · Vinyl Roi!* PP23G•m1tl189 : • '65 1u1cK Will ~$5009.15 Sport Wegon. Fectory .1,; SPECIAL Now $jOQ9,25 • .,,,., "dio, '"""pow Jt a•r •*•••· lVZXZ•l I . : . USED CAR ATLAS : ; s229s · CHRYSLER·PLYMOUTH • '65 CHlYSW .' 'VALUES 2929 Harbor Blvd. .New York1r h•rcUop cou p• Costa Mell& 546-1934 Full pow1r, f1ct•ry ,. '66 FORD' STA. WAG. Ope ti! l •cond. CNHA 31'4 ! '1' " Country Squire. 9 pus-Jl --'-~;;;'n';;':=;;;:;,';;;•;:;·m;;. ;;;-• ~~~~~:·trans, pow-1967 PLYMOUTH • _ _:$!:;2=2:.:9:..:5=-...; $1995 • '67 COU~Al Flay Ill 4 l>lor hanltop. V8, RIH 1 PS . Ml' automatic, factory air con· •. .' •11 0 1 ·• ' '1' 1'u'cx' '64 YOLkSWAGIN di . 1 ring • 0111ng. owrter. , Radio. heater white wall tion ng, power stee 'ra· •121 1 HMR 549 dlo, wrute sldo wall tilu • 52695 $995 . CTNB299) . a_..:r,.:::..::;.::.=--;i;;j 'U AMIASSADOR $1895 a '66 OLDS "ti" , 990 2 dr. harilto(ll autO. ATLAS a Luxury .. door, "'" P-•r, tram:. power itttrtnc A af•ctory air. ISUP5121 brake~ Extra clean • · • $2495 $1795 o-IRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 29'l9 Harbor Blvd. • ,62 CHM '64 llAMILll Cotta Mosa 546-!934 • PICKUP Cluslc 710 ' dr., Hd.,)•l==Ope=n='til=lO::p;:.m:;·=:: I Aidlo, h••*•'· 3 .,"~ti' . Vfi. auto, trans., fact. air • 'K 63951 > • ccnd. PCS 915 Po .... ac $195 "'"' • $1195 : '66 llAMIU" 1962 PONTIAC Bonnevlll• ' • '65 OLDS 'o• .... "' dr, pwr atr/bralre1, R/H, 1 •I Rogue 2 dr. hardtop, &lr-cond $'100. 646-7230 4 Dr. H.T. RAH. ••••.• ,s~ auto. tn.na., bucket Ul6l PONTIA' C 1 bit ••i• conditionln9. lMOY'9 1eau.$'1~6butto9n51'1dlo. ' new Y re-•"" ' engl.,, mogs. 1315. or best 51, 6.95 • olfe•. Call ......... • •• '67 FOlD Folttooo 500 '18' PONTIAC Gl'&nd Pm; • )I 2 dr. hardtop, only 14~ 31,000 ml. Pwr. steer. & a '62 GIA.ND PllX 11ii miles .. ln warrant)'. Vrw brb. extru. $UIOO. ~94n •""t' trent., ,•w•r lt••r.:f"': 031 e 1968 FIREBIRD 350 Ral. r•dio, h.eter. fOH? 621 ~· $1895 wbil., 3 on Or. $24SO • $1195 II . Call 530-11111 • .• 'M DAlT •T ••• 6j f..!: ~"!,';; ... ~~to. RAMBLER - . • •••••• OMLI; 11 rs 1967 RAMBLER ss1 : Jao-.a• • '64 FOlD 4-Dr. S-Rebel oo•pe. V8. automalic, • HEADQUARTERS .: .\Uto. trana.J.. pwr. atffr. Sl,ctory air conditioning, pow. 8Compl•t• s.1 ••. Serv:a 6 btakn. Q.:,K 710 er 1teerina. PoWer brakes, eice 1nd Parts D•p•rt"' _$)7D' rad~;-heater,whltesidewaU -.m•nt for JAGUARS.~ tires. -Extremely shatp. (SU Iii S11 Th• bclffn9 CAMPER SPECIAL JOOI] "" J., ... TH•Y "' • ... -'595 $1795 ?·······= :·.:·::: '1775' 'ATLA.S • 23, E. 17111 ST.~. .. ...... ,..... . se,9!. ... ., ........ OiRY$.tR·PLYMOUTH • I • :a· HOLIDAY' eo.t::-..'!-81~1934 : 541-7765 '.~' Wot. Somu _ ...... _ ,., , .. c.. ...... ,. ' 1969 llirllor Blvd COSTA MllA '642-6023 ,l=='Opm=='til:=lO:,P::;·m:;·== • Mon.Fri 1:30 om r '°'"" t S.tu;:•z :i om • 11 ___ T_-ll_R_D __ : '61 T-BJRD 4 Dt. L&ndtu • P/W l ai...ond. Pfr< ...... MUii 1'111 14100 -• _VAUANT, __ VALIANT 'ti 4 Dr.' (I), P/S. Auta, •· ft/H;· .. tow · ·mtn- 'IJ/Fac warn.nty. $1-'/tK)..bnt offer. Ewe.. &n1362 • Sund1ys 10 ..., .. .. ,,... ,, ' --- .~~-------~~----~~-""'"- • . f! DAILY PILOT I • -~ • r ' I \ • • . . .... ~ ~ ._ -.. .-, J : ' ' Please, let's set· ·the reeo:td straight . During ·lhe course of our continued struggle 1o·sca1 olf1he oil leak in the Santa Barbara Channel, a •ta1mlmt has been attributed to me by the press, radio and televlsion. A state- ment which, quite understandably, has generated a certain degree of public outcry. Were this statement true, I should have nothing .to :@ but shoulder the burden in silence, accepting the response as my due. The fact is that at no time, anyw)lere, did I n;iake thl!t insensitive statement charged to me. The Wall Slleet·JqprnAA acknowledging its error, printed the following le!!Cf from me on February 14th.: Editor, The Wall Streel Journal: Si11ce the first moment of the very regrettable incitknt affecting the Union Oil Company-operated well in the .Santa Barbara Channel, the Union Oil Co. has mustered an ever increasing force of men and material to control the well and to clean the ocean and beaches. At the same lime, the com- pany has taken lleps particularly to care for wild fowl and/ or marine life adversely affected by the slick. It is particularly galling, therefore, in view of this all-out effort, lo read, in a page-one story on Fil!. 7, a statiinent attribllled as testimony by me before a Senate mbcommittee on Feb. S, 1969, In whic11 l was falsely charged wilh callously saying: ·"I'm amazed at the publicity for the loss of a few birds." I said no such thing at !lflY time, anywhere, nor did 1 sll'Y it before the Muskie Senate subcommiltee. My commaits rel9- tive to our concern about wildlife, as reported in the official transcript of the proceedings, follow: "Mr. Chairman , l would like to comment futther hue: I think we have to look at these problems relatively. I am always tremendously impressed at the publicity that tkath of birds receives versus the loss·of people in our cow.try iii thu day and age. ,When 1 think of the folks that gave up theii lives lvhen they came dow1i i11to the oce'an off Los A.ngilts some three weeks-ago and the fact that our society for8"ti aboilt that wilhin a 24-hour period, I think relative lo that the fact that we have had no loss of life from this incident is Important • "We Stt up, on the third day of the incitknt, a l!lrd 11111c. - tuary, set up with appropriate scientists and cleaning chem, icals t~ try to do our btst to save our feathered friends, l!ut I do say to you that relative to the number of detiths that have occurred in this fair city due to crime and all the acddmts that do occur-relative to that problem of our nation, this tksccration to the offshore area of Santa Barbara, although important and certainly one whkli we art 111111 UwMl to •• ' ' . ·-.. -... -·---·-·-·-··- .. , ... , ttikilit ear• of, relqliittlY it does 11tem that we.lhould give this thing ,j liitr. pt,SpeCti'li." . ···- l11"4dftio11, we'luzve anignedll""lnt_ biologists and otkr scientists to .assess tire efj~ of the ·C1ll ,9fl 'fll/fW lift and t{I tkttmiine In what fashion we might be able to expedite a return to a Mrmal balance of under-sea life. ' And-of course 111e have not overf'!tikd peoplt.1J!ith flf,lT three partntn In the well--Gulf,'Mobil and TtJWXJ-we .·1uzve arrat1glllJDr our-lnsurant:e carriers to set 1lfl special o[fku tO q,;;,;tily ~ dllmage clailil.r to 6/xit1 or "other piop;itj. . W1 htln.prvv/dn more than a score of·boats, 8e'lmsl . , tiirp/linu, ·""1l1 · ofpl/uifc and wootkn booms; thousands of bale1 ·of 11Trnlt; tltJtbtl .of vacuum .trucks, ·du.mp trucks. and bulldoztrt Oltlf· mori than 500 men for cleanup operations on 14tul onl 111. •. ii & WU Hfll llrtjlossible to Sll.'J how dt•p~ w• regret this at:ddtni. wi """-operated at all times with procdures .. , , . approved ' liy our thrit ·partners and the F etkral regulatory authoritieJ: Lo1Angele1 .. Fred L. Hart/ey President Union Qil Company (The lournal regretl ft3 inaccurate quoting of Mr. Hartley. -Eil.) In view of our attitude and these things we are doing, it is most distressing that because I voluntarily and responsibly appeared before a United Sta':8 Senate Comtnittce to provide inforination needed for possible legislation, that I-or any oilier Private citizen-shduld be maligned by manufactured . ' . qu6tations. For l!eVCllty-eight years we have been building with the country. ·In its economy. And in its communities. We share a ~t stike in its fu!1!fe. We are. confidclit that those who have known the com· pany durinJ· ita long hisiory nnderstand ~ respect our.phi- losophy and record u a good citizen and a good neighbor. By otir ac&n! we h"P' still to merit that nnderstanding and rcspCct , '· • . ·. . , . President Unlon Oil Ocinpany of Califomia -un1en, .. ···--·--------~-· -~- 'I l .. , --· ~ ,· . • l l ] • tid th• th• Ii Ii ( "" Wh Un . l •Iii Yo !ft clti ., p11 Yo in baJ A loo ~ div in 1 F . E Fa II ' but ~ or an< s !alt lea1