Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-01-28 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• , DAILY l"l\.OT llflft ...... IN QUEST OF. TITLE Junior Ml11 M1rtyn Beach Girl Shares Lead In Jr. Miss Rhonda Martyn, representing Hun- tington Beach iJi California Jwrlor Miss competition, Is orie of four girls leading in preliminary 'judging for the Utle held last year by Jackie Benington, also of Hun- tington· Beach. Miss Martyn, a 17-year-oki senior at Marina High School, took honor! Jn the pol.st raUng of the contest in Santa Rofia. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mn. Kenneth A. fl.1artyn, 17041 Courtney Lane. Rhonda maintains a 3.7 grade-point· a"erage at Marina. She was also the BCbool's homecoming queen last fail. ri-1i.ss Martyn follows in the footsteps of Miss Benington, woo was a1ao from Marina HJgh and went on to capture the national Junior ,Miss tiUe. Three other girls sharing the lead in early compe.Uqon were Judy Jon.es of Sacramento, f.9ps iii . talerit;'. Cynthia P.almer of Turlock, leading in physical fitness, and Llllnne La'rson of Oakdale, leading in scholastic achievement. A new· state1Jwtior Miss will be crown- ed in ~fannal ceremoriles Saturday ln San- ta Rosa. ' POWs; ~ive~ W ait .to See Japan AUhs From Wirt Servlctt 'rOKYO -: Homeward Jiound with hopes unfulfilled, an El Toro. woman and th~ ~ wjves with .husbands mW. Ing in •Vietnam wd.ited today to confer with Japanese officials. Mrs. Carole Hanson of 241lJ Bl.rdrQ.ck Drive and her traveling cnmpanions said Tuesday the globe-<:irclihg trip bas failed 8l)d criticized their rerepUon in some areas. They singled out diplomats from tpe Jlfnoi regime and even U.S. Stm. Eugene J. McCarthy (0-Minn.) whom they met while waiting futilely to see if they would be permitted into Moscow. "Senator McCarthy :said to w that he was very concerned with the tragic: situa· tion of the war and he pointed out that he was trying to help the drall dodgers, the prisoners of war and the deserters, and it hurt," said Mn. Arthur Mearns, 37. of Los "Angeles. "If really hurt," si)e explained. ''because I don't feel that my htuband shoulcl be in the same group. "Tlpe aeulor wag very much in 'hu!]r, and he didri.'\ have time to taJk to us, ' she ~dded. With Mrs. Hansoo and Mrs. Mearns were Mrs. John H'ardy, 27, and Mrs. RooiiMh Hestle Jr., 37, both cl ,Loo Ang!)es. The four hoped.to meet with the wife of Japanue Prime Minister Elsaku Salb during their slay in TokyG and of· flcla)s of Ille J.,.. Red cross Society. Nixon," Wilson • Said in Accord • • WAsllINGTON (AP) -Pruldenl Nit· on and British Prime Minister Harold Wll.!IOn today concluded two days qi con. rerences, repOrt.edly In agT"eemerit. on:an major points. · wnson attended a meeting of lhe Na· tional Security Council on NIJl:on'11 i~ vttaUon, and the two 1 leaders ·then spent almost two hours with their prindpal aldea discussJng world problems. 11.e future of lhe AllanUc Alliance and ~­ Wtlt. relations were in the focus of wnr dbcusslons, a Cliplomatic souroe said. Contrary to earlier tradition there were no final statements made nor • com· munique issued. 'The NSC session preceded another meollng oI lhe Pr<aldeol and prime inJnbler sit for !lliolliy befo,. ,_, The NSC meetings m oo bull>llush INL Lile White "°"" oeldom dlaclosa evtn te general iopai up for coosiderfl.. tion. And the lnvitatJon lo Wilson to sit In underscored the depth of Anglo.Alnerlcan re1atkins at the top lev.el. . . Two High School Campuse s • • . . . .. • -· - Cen.tinela Sc_hool Dis.trict Opens • ~rograni to Fight D19:ii(J Abuse · (See Ster,:. Poge 3) . • Solid Victory DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * Nixon HEW Veto . . Upheld by Horise WEDNESDAY AFTERN~N. ;JANUARY 28. 1970° VOL.~ NO. ia 4 llCTIONS. M rAo•s ' . ' . .~ Russians Here I . Bus Driver Str ands · Gro up at Irvine New· Measur.~: .• Now Mil)~ TJe . Written WASHINGTON (/.P) ~ l'nlld111t Nix· on'1 veto of the fll.7 billion tiealtb-educa. tlon money bill wU uphekt today u tbe House rejected an effort to override it. The vote wu DI ,to 111, 52 abort of the needed two.thirds. The,result wu a solid victory for Nixon in his sharpest. controotaUon yet with the omocrauc controlltd Congress. The ~ldent said a ·veto was necessary because lhe •t.Jli biU!On which Congress added to the bill for ffealth and education programs wu inflationary. The over all bill finances the Departments of Labor and Health, F.ducation and WeUare, and various an· Upoverty programs. A new bill wilt now have to be written and tt ls likely the Democratic majority will q;ain try to put Jn more money than Nixon bu tiliQet8d, although not as much as Jn the vetoed blll. Just before the vote, two Republican leaders put forward a possible cont· promJae lhat would pennlt Qoo11esa to stand by Lile incroued Iundlng but let Nixon refuse to spend more than he wanted to. It was also reported that the White House is pfepared, to approve increases over Nixon's budget totaling '448 i;nllllon Jnstead of the $1.26 billion added I!> lhe vtloed bill Rep. Albert H. Qule, (R-Mlnn.), sald he recelff<I Loclay a Wltlte·Hou1e 1etter to be read to Congress allllJ'inl that Nixon l!'Ollld· put $t40 mUllon,,Jnstead,of.tbe l2'l2 mllllon be' had bu<!geted, Into the .pro- gram for akt to achool . districts that ln- . elude tar1e ~ber• of federfl.employes. Qufe told ne.wmten that, although It ls not mentioned In the leller, ~ hdd been asturtd that Nlxoo Would approve an a(l. dltlonal t?O million for vocattonal .tduca- tion. aDd f140 million for other pr:ograms . Thus the UJ!a( package W<!Ukl be 1441' mllllon over NlxO!j's. budge\ Instead of lhe II.II blHlon provided In lhe'veloed blD. · ' . " "ilI ~I · "lin II •-"~' AnoUier allematlve, approyal Of. the By otJ~~::!.T!,.RZA . ~' ~m R. 1' ason \8v g o si.uaucs full amount of the fipre·a Jn the bTil but a and olher facts ab6ul lhe poah shopping provision lelUng Nixon .decide l!ol\' much ~ ~',5ians came to Fashion Island . center, the journali"'! l~n~ to their fn... • would be ~t, Was propo.ed by ,Reps., TUe!ldf'Y· . ' • h, • terpreter, and a'feWof them snapped pie· Jot:!n Rhodel· {It.Artz.,) and Robert .»·, .\IUl lbe lounng .group •of 10 cl ·'"' lutes with lheir Easl C.rman.made Michel, (8.111.). SoViet Union's top editors had a litUe lnluble leaving N~ U.ach. cameras. #>eiT ""''driver l.!e.1 iboilolili ind 'ten The opparent lead<r of the ' ll<fay !_our theni ·walllnff Jdit,'halfw''1 \NIJ> 1110!lr ~lhnlQgb'o !he' ·United.' States 'Is lzYesUa &our of the lrvhlrRanch -Orange COUn· Senior Editor L. N. Tolkunov, a short. ty'• ,pillar of capttalilm. heavy•set, balding man who uked few The l(mtians ecUtors arrived at the que1Uo111 of the taller Ma900. hllhop shopplng center about l!i minutes As lbey strolled put Fashion taland's late aflu heavy lonch al the Stun Shlrl children'• playground Muon etplalned 11'61aur .. L • , , LhaL "u1Ually Lhls ploc.•i li full cl cblldren, But bebUM> or lllClt oflk:ll IOIJrpu&s and e.peclalb' on Sawrdaya." '(Where facial ......., ond ··-..,U.. lo at« Ille children now!" uked the dour questlonl; lhelr lmpreoolons of Lile food liv.,ua edilor. and the lhoppina center wife{ nevtr fully ''They're In school. The cold weatbtr known. , keeps lhef'l'I frO!ll: .J!la_y_i_!lg there today." Led by lrilne Company PrelldenL (50< RUSSIANS, Pqe I) i ' Nip.th I mmolation " Victim,. 20, Dies ' LENS, Ftance· (AP) -Albert ROUlieui; a· »-,ear-old 'lh u n I c i p a,l empllfe, pouted gNOUoe over blinlelf to- dly Ind llt blifileH oftre wiLh a match. He died on Lile 1fa1 lo Ille hospital a-u was Lile nllllll Jmmolalion - eight died -In Franco In II days. He wao repolted lo havt been depressed by lan\lb' lnllblel. . . ... ..... -3 ., .·J ·,, I ' •. ~~-pll!!!·Bft· .. • t + • .. ' . . Mesa: Continues Mass Drug Raid By ARTHUR R. ·VINSICI. ot ... -·~ ..... steff Tired lawmen today reawlied' •·round· up cl ""'peci.d teen drllf( dealm, ditcloslng, that elOtlc Mediternnean mind-benders ' auCh 11 apium .changed hands for marked money on one ·costa Mesa campus baseball diamond. A Lotal of five aduU1 and l2 juvonllll were arrested on campUs and at their: homes lhroughout Lile day and Into Tues- day night, with nine more being hunted today. , Nearly all were named In arrest wii'· rants charging sale of dangerous drugs, after Harbor District Judicial·· Court Judge Dooald Dungan con 1 Ider e d evidence collected 'ln a six.week probe. 1be five adults were expected to be ar· ralgnod on the felony chirges today, a!tfiough oome had already pooleil IQS or more ball to 1ecure their releaie. The adults are: -Slevio ~· Dallar, 18, of .21111 Ef Rio Clrcle1 c:osta Meaa. · -Rldwd G. Aldla, 18, cl 11111 Seuite St, t:osta Mela. ' Youth Leader's • Luneh ·I.eaves Bad Aftertaste A high school' student body prealdenl aLtendlng a leaders' ~ wiLh Ille 11.1perlntendent of ~ · Ga Ge n Grove Unified School Dlltrlct wu aro rested on a marijuana chart•. ·afler de...rl lloadoy. •· SanUqo HJah School ASS Pnsldent Gunner Swanq,.17 ~ of ll'I02~Euclkl ~.,, Gardef\ Grove, , ... adml!Wd tcdlr""" Counly. Juvenile · Hall on. a' d)erp cl ~ cl marijuanl. ' Sanllap 111cb Scboof .Vafi;r.;11:! Robert. Kernan told. polfco ... itouth1ohlt~onc1-.w111Uil In hla, J>oig1~ pocket, el wtlll:tl U.., SWIJ:MOll pulled CJ!IL a plallc,. bq cl green, MlfY material: 1 • "' :•~t's f~~~aUa and ~" he "'r.:!1 ~' ~ lliW.Oi.r be -"' -Lile bl; alcoc lo -WILh 8opl. DaYld Paynter. ·DJ11oi Ille tunci-t period, ·G- G'°l'e polict nU<Otk:t ~.., -, a ... yilnJ the Weed and flniJly -.-.It -mon 11\en allolla 1nd Cldllp. ' J __ .,,.,. ... -Slevea R. !Ask,. 18, Of 3022 [)on. nybroiik 1-, Costa M .... ~ L. Gomalel, 25, cl 111 Cedar Place, Costa Meu. Bail wu set at 11,175 for dollar; cftarg· ed wjth .ule of two oplites. The first three ,IU!peets were booked on charges or aale of dangerous ctrqp, in- cluding· opium and baaftllh, the powmuI sap derivative of marlju.aDI in the cue cl Dollar. er. and: the Gonzales woman were charged with aale of marijuana, while the ~)'arrant.naming Cross wu placed u a second holding charge because poUce allegedly found him clilUvallng the weed. The rtnWJider, rangblg tn-qe lrom II to jll!t ulifer 11, were booked tnto1Qrqe COUflty Juvenile Hall pending further IC- Uon Iii connectlon with l1IOir alleged dl'ug deall111s. ' DetectJve Captalri Bob .Gr.ffn aakt too. d•Y the lolaf hauld evldloce now held -r:iuctinl lleroin, hulillll, .~um, LSD. me.canoe, Jlilll -.0 and ..n: phetamlnepllli -Is ...., lhousanda cl i!o11ars: · .. ,... . I Juvenfles Involved atte6decl both Coita Mesa and Estancla hliib schools, with (!loa DRUGS, Pap II I ' l • . ·: I OAR; y PILOT • s Wld"""'1. J"""' '*· l 970 l First of ZO Platte• ! American Relief • t I • Arrives ~in Lagos • • LAGOS, Nl1orio (UPI) . -Freih AmerlCln, BrlUah and Canadian rtlltf arrived In LagOJ today and the Nigerian • Red (.Toss annount'tii it was now feeding ' 700,000 ~fugees from the civil war per day. . ' UM In the Blofrori .~. AU of , the • lft1Utary markinv1 wen painted over a1 •·ere those c.f the American, British and Canadlan planes. Two Arneriacn Cl4-transport planes landed carrying the flrat of aorM: 20 '' planelNds of-.•~pplies l? help an estimated one m1lhon Ibo tn~ suf--, fertq \n what was once Bialra. One ol the American sbipmenla carried tilm 11-ton truckl, iO generaton lftd 60& blankit.s. The aecond, which oripnated in Charleston, s.c .. carrted a similar ,carao and the two were supplement• to. $0 !MPI &nd three mobile hospitals which. arrived from lhe United States during the The Nigerian government .meanwhile went ahead with plans 10 expel relief \vorkers accused cf aiding tebel Biafrans dirrlnt lhe 30 month civil war. The tlrft or 32 Catholic missionar\e..s 11:d nuns rounded up and held in Port Harcourt. after the fall of the former aet.'eSll.onilt slate began arrivh\l ln Lqos ·-weeke;nd. . British and Canadian relief flights also arrived today carrying more ~ranipory.­ t\on vehicles and so1ne medicmes which Nigeria had requested. • Five Weit German Air Force car&o t>lanes left Bonn today with t~, ~· beli~ and ela:bt loDI of medlclne fqr flrom Pqe I RUSSIANS···· replied P.1uon. There \\'as a slight chuckle from the Russians. ,.. they passed the ctnltal statue of the ctnler the group pall5ed a bit to decide if they wanted to set the lnside o! a .store. "Would you like to see the ms1de of a ~10re?" Ma.900 uked. ., ••wen, whatever you want llli to see, said Tolkunov. . "Wei( • don 't know ... wou\d you hke to go inside. or do you wilb to go on?" M.uoo uted. ~ .. Wbat.ewr you w11.nt," came the reply rtom the edit.or. ••well, t guess you can_ walk in~ a store anytime," Mason said, concluding the indech•ive dialogue. . :· The chief of the official Communist Party organ answered only a f~~ brief queries from reporters before his croup tnlettd the gteel'j and white bw. 2.. Kb tmprellioi. of the U.S. were "Gener·tll)' ple.aaant, with a fe.w ex· ctptionl." " fl@ dldn 't elaborate, but it was aasum· HI, ·th4!: "exceptions" included demons~ra· ~ tiorui in Los Angeles and ~~n Jf'r~nc1sco ; 't:Omf)laining 1 . of aoU·Serruti!m m the Sovtet Union "What are-your impressions of your trip today?" came another query. . " "It is too soon to draw a concluston, he said qtllckly. "Perhaps when we ·~.return to"New York we wi\Snnounce au: canclusions. • , "I 8ia i journalist, and a jow'nall&t I who draws conclualons too quickly ls not : a good joumr list." With that . the weary R~ians boarded , the driverless bus and waited to be taken ; up to an orange tree on the Irvine Ranch. ! Someone honked the horn on lhe car- riage and slick·aulted tour represen-tatlv~s looked frantically for the driver. F1ve minutes later he sa·Jntered up carrying a pink sack with a fresh\y- bought item inside. B!hlnd him ran a teenaa:e girl twit. tering about the "far-OUl Ruuians" and a dinner she heard they were having tonight with act.ors Si.eve 1'1cQ~n and Henry Fonda. "You promtaed you'd get me tickets .•. yN prorril!ed. Man, what a trip ... havinc dinner with all those Russians and actors Henry'ii a little old, Peter is bet· ter, but J,ls dad will do ," she rattled. Fr>Jm the 11hoppin1 center the dour tourists visited a 1ectlot1 cf The Bluffs and strolled on its green lawns. They then travel@d lo an orange grove on th@ Irvine Ranch lo see some agriculture American· style. One edit.or picked an orange and tried to eat IL It wa1 green. His only reipon.se wu a puckered 'Nyet." . DAILY PILOT ......,... .... " ............ ~.... ,.......,.., CMt•M ... lolllort N. W."4 ,....,_ ...... """'"'..., . J1cli: l . c ... 1.l V'I:' "'""""' ... CO-. Mol'Mlltl' n ••• , ic ••• 11 l•I.... ' The••• A. M_r,111111 MIM1"4 l•litt --(*II M_.! )JI W.SI a.w ll'Nft .......... •Hc111 nH W•t .................. .......,. •otfJll• m ,_, "- ffvM.,..... •Ndu 1}1J'J •Nlfl '""'"- an their.way home. • At leaat 75 per50ns. all b4.1t llve of them Irish, fall into the federil category of fore.lgnen accu.sr.d of "helplna the rebels and prclong1ng the war." The Nigerian leader, Gen. Yakubu Gowon, .has vowed to expel them all eventu.Uy, letting some 1tay for the Ume being if they are providing services vltal to the survival o! war refugees. Paper Claims · Hired Men Were . Killers CLEVELAND lAP) -Sources close to th@ Yablon!kl family' a I a y In I in- vestigation said to d a y thrte hired gunmen killed the United Mine Workers <'lflcial and his wife and daughter, and that a fourth man v.·ho backed out of Ule assignment was in custody. . The Cleveland Plain Dealer, 1n a . eopyri&bt· .story in todll,)''s editions, said the tillers wer@ promiJed ll,700 apiece. The llory added that \ht triple slaying stetnmed from 0 a peraon.i. beef" not cOf'nected wllh unlcn mailers. Other developments reported by the Plain Dealer and other so urces: -Navy deep-sea divers found a .38· caliber pistol Tuesday In th e r.tonongahela River about five miles from the Clarksville, Pa., home where Joseph A. Yablonski, 59, his wife, ~fargaret, 57, and daughter, Ol8rlotte Joanne. 2$, v.·ere slain. . -l',BI agents extended their in· vestigation Into the Kentucky and Te~· ncssee coal mine flelds \\"here Yablonskr. a febel leader in the Ut.1\V v.·as a household name among miners. -..Jn Cleveland, U.S. Attorney ~rt~· Krupansky said a ~rand ~ury in- vestigation into the slaymgs, wh.ich open- ed Tuesdiy, probabfy would be extended U1rough next week. ·eo~ty Delays Air California Lease Decision Alter hearing resalulions from the cities of Newport Beach, Costa r.tesa and Tustin, the Orange County Board of Supervisors agre4!:d Wednesday to c:on· tinue to Feb. 3 the hearing on the assign- ment cf Air Californla'11 lease In t~e county airport tenninal to Pacific Southwest Airlines. . . In a mation made by SUpervoor David Baker. board members deferred the decision on the lease In arder to study conditions in the tease requested by the three cities. which lie adjacent t.o the airport or under the glide pattern. The cities were requesth1& the lease contain written agreements w b I c b stipulate: -PSA shall not land or take aff between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. -No alrcraft which generates more noise decibels than the Boeing 737 shall be permitt.@d to use the airport. -Flight operatiom shall be limited t'O a maximum number subject to prior ap- proval by the board. City representatives said" the resoh,1· lions v,·ere prompted by a gentleman s agreement" the board made with curr~nt leasehold@rs, which s u p ;> c. s e d I Y lfl- corporaled the cities' req·iests. Testimonv from Alrp<.irt Director Robert Bresnahan Indicated t h e "agreements" were ool clearly defined nor were they honored . Board membt'rs agreed to study the proposals with the Idea cf putting them into the lease transfer. Baker noted the transfer if approved would be effecllve pending Public Utilities Commission ap- proval of the Air Cal·PSA merger. Samaritan OK After Sl1ooting A Stanton motorist wa s In saUsfaclo"ry condition today at Oral'!&e Caunty Medical Genter after being shot In the leg early Tue!day whlle stopping his ear to aid tlim peraona. Carden Grove police old Bllly Wagner, zz ol. 10921 We.stem Ave., \\'Is fla&&ed d~wn by three men shortly after mid· night while driving on Western north ol Chapman Avenue. W1gn~ laid ofUctn he thouaht the trio might h,al't ear trouble, but aid one of I.he men nred a 1tngle rifle •hot which hit him in the leg 111 he approached the car· Aft&r the shooting the three fled In tMlr car. Officer• said \Vagmr drove himself to Stanton Comn)unity llospllal and was later tranJ!trTtd to the medlcaJ ctnter. I /. I Comtt.y ' OKs Compromise Harbor Plan Orana:e County supervisol'I hive aaretd to pruent a compromlae, three-point pl1n an the new atrueture of the Harbor District to the Oran1e County Ltque of Cities, which wants the d l 1 I r I c t eliminated. By unanimous vote Tue 1 day, supervleors agreed to preeent the follow· ing plan Feb. 12 to lhe apparently unyielding leacue: -To es:pand the Harbor Oi1trlct'~ fUllctions into the reaim of recreation and parks. -To expand ils boundaries lo include all of Oran1e County. -To add two more members to the five·man Harbor Corrunlsslan, an ad· visory group. The two new members would be selected by lhe League of Cities. (Its five members arc selected by supervisors at present.) Girl Friends Cheer Officers The compromise proposal comes an the heels of a Jan. 8 resolution by the league which rejected the earlier county pro- posal of incorporating ~arks and beaches into the-district administration. , . . Los Angeles policemen Edward McDonald (left) and Michael Kriha, who each lost.a. hand 1.n a ~omb explosion, are brightened by the v1 s1ts of girl friends Ruthann Drebus paedic Hospital. and Carol Littlewood in Ortho-In that action, which passed by a 13 to IO vote, the league also asked for new slate legislation on the dissolution issue. It has betn agreed that both the county actions and the league votes are alt.empts to keep the issue of disbanding the district a\\'ay from the pollll. 2 Medical Teams . Report Success Of Ab ortion Drug NEW YORK (AP) -Two ·medical teams report, alter preliminary re1earch, that one injection of a new drug ap. parenlly can safely produce abortions in women as late as five months after they become pregnant. One researcher said conclusive results o( the erperiments are expected to be available in about six months. Among 15 women treiited at King 's College Hospital in London. England, the only adverse effects were said to be diar· rhea and vomiting. All but one of the IS \\'Om@n aborted successfully. In Stockholm. Dr. Marc Bygdeman of the Karollnska Institute said there were no side effects when the drug was used early in pregnancy. A coople of days aHer the drug was given in early pregnancy, women experienced no more than normal menstrual period bleeding, he said. Administered into a ve.in, the chemical Is one of a fanilly known as pro- slaglandins. which are.,nlcltnarped PC's. They are potent, hormOne-llke regulatory chemicals that occur naturally within the human body . Some 18 types are known. The one prcxlucing abortions is PG F -2 alpha. Dr. Bygdeman said the injection technique js proving successful so far, but he did not say how many women have been treated. The PG appears to be completely safe in the concentrations he has used, Dr. Bygdeman said. Women do not have to be hospitalized for treatment if they are no more than eight weeks pregnant, he ad- ded . \\'riling in the British medical journal, The Lan~t. Ors. S. N. Karim and G. M. Filshie said they have found the same drug and technique ta be safe, simple and effective. It appears to work as well during the second 1three months of pregnancy as during the first three months, they wrote. nr. Bygdeman said women can be treated up to 20 weeks after conception. flrona Page J DRUGS • • • more than one transaction allegedly made on the latter's baseball diamond, as delectlves watched from a distance. Captain Green said the alleged drug purchases were made by olhe.r students acting as special agents during the past sev~ral weeks . The crackdown followed a conference "·ith Newport-1i1esa Unified S c h o o I District authorities. in which lawmen said they laid it on the line about the ex- tent of the local problem. Detective Sergeant John Regan today pra ised the administrallon's cooperatlan in the undercover probe and subsequent roundup of suspects, many at the cam· puses from which they will be expelled. Juveniles nOt idenU!led by name in· eluded three girls and cne . boy from CO!la Mesa Hi&h School and two boys and one girl from Estancia High School. The entire haul a( drug s confiscated during the investigation period include& :W kilos of marijuana, which amounts to nearly 50 pounds of the hallucinogenic weed . H1gh.quality hashish from the ldedller- ranean countries, more lhan two pounds, or about one kilo of that powerful marl· juana derlvativr. was also seized, along · with large quantities of various other dru~s. Teams of investigators separated dur- ing the day and visited campuses and homes lo make the arrest!, confiscating ~mall amount& of drugs durina the pro. '"''· TWo youth! wert questioned about one ,.lslt to an apartment In the northeast section of Coeta Mesa, where a small an10t.1nt of heroin was eontlscated, but rtllcased pending further Investigation. Detectives Norm Kutch and Bob ~ nerl said thty knocked and ldr:nUfled themselves as police officers, but tht Ratings Cha11ged Movie Board Drops . 'M' Tab •IOLLY\VOOD (AP) -After IS months ot what the rum ~dmtry calll "grali· ' fyfnl succeu,•• Its wluntary program·of r1Ung movie• Is being modified. Jack Valenti, president of the Mation Picture Asaocialion of America. said. Tuesday one charg@ was made bect\use a survey had shown conslderfble _coafusion over the "M" raUn1· ~ •lHch ~ant a film waa recopµrien ded"fef Jtlature au- dience• only. · .--: So thal cat.(ory 13 belnc dropped in favor of "GP." Thia means all ages may . view the movle but ·th.at parental guidance or discreUon is advised. The other change raises the age limi t for viewing films rated "R" -restricted category -without an accompanying parent or legal guardian from 16 to 17. Both changes are effective lt1arch 1. Observers said the boost in the age llmit may represent an attempt to broaden the "R" rating Lo include racy but serious films heretofore relegated to the "X" category f9r adults only. Valenti ha! said be originally intended the X to be a "leper colony'' for films of no artisUc quality. But it hasn.'t wcri:ed out that way; Two of the m01l successful and critically acclaimed fil nis of 1989 ..:.. "Midnight Cowboyl' and "Medium COql" -ended up in .the X class. Here 11 the new set of standard s: G -All ages admitted. GP -All ages admltled, bUt pa~tal discretion recommended. R -Anyone · under 17 must be ac- . companied by .a parent or l~gal guardian. X -Na one under JI adrr\11.ted. The Valenti statement called the classlficalion system. which went into ef- fect Nov. J, 19611, "a gratifying success." A survey conducted by the National Association of Theater Owners showed that nine out of 10 thealtts queried used the ratings in \heir advertising. Valenti was joined in his announce- ment by Euaene Picker, president of the ti.eater owners g r o u p . and ~lunia Podhorzer, a member of the govern- ing board of tbe International Film Im- porters and Distributors of America. , Tet Cease-fire Expected SAIGON (UPI) -Preaideat Nguy;en Van Thleu wlll ttnnounce a 24-bour cease· fire for the tet lunar new y e a r , in- formed South Vietnamese government sources said today. The CommunisU aheady have announced a four-day truce for the lei period. Thieu said in an official statement he "'still needs tJme to observe the sJtua. lion" before making any announcement but government sources pre.dieted be \\"Ould go along since both s.ida have observed holiday cellle·fires for years. Tel is on Feb. 6 and the North ·Viel· namese and Viet Cong annoi.nced. they would observe a four-day t"'ce beghming at 7 a.m. on Feb. 5. Allied military com- manders have predicted major Com· OOME the first watch on the moon CO-STARS IN , munist attacks before and after tet and this presumably Is what Thieu was refer· ring to. With ground action near a standsUll. niore than 500 U.S. Marines in jungle faUgues ~arded a troopship at Da Nang today rar home, the vanguard of 50,000 Americans leaving Vietnam .under-Presl· Aent Nixon's latest withdra9ra1J. They sailed as mllft.ary spokesmen sajd 4 combat lnvolvlng American force. was at its !owe.st point s!nce Jan. I, but said the command saw n:> sianUicance in the com- pal'atlve lull. One American was killed and another wounded Tuesday nlght when Communist gunfire downed a helicopter 16 miles northwest of Hue. Five other Americans were wounded In 17 overnl&ht shelllngs. The cities of Huntington Beach and Westminster hav@ been leaders in the four·year~ld Ught to dissolve the di.strict, & special tax.levying district which has the power to raise funds through bor· rawing er investment -money put to we for public, marine~rlented projttt!. The l.hree new alternative proposals were drafted recenUy in a meeting between Board Chairman Alton E. Allen. Kenneth Sampson, county director of harbors, beach@s and parks, a n d representatives of Huntington Beach, Westminster and Newport Beach. Allen, who introduced the resolution, added the two new proposals -that the commission be expanded from fi ve to seven members, and the additional mem· hers be appointed by the league . Allen said he wa.s taking the propoa:als back to the league because "It would be most unfortunate to have this situation dissolve in an electicn which would only sen•e to further divide us." Colombia Crash Kills T'vo U.S. Labor Leaders From Wire. Servtcu BARANQUILLA, Colombia -Two C..I· ifornia labor leaders, including a native of Orange County, were kllled in a high- way accident near here Monday. along with a Colombia union president. The bodies of Al Chand ler, of Long Beach. and Billy R. Ramey, of Pasadena, were flown home Tuesday with fonnal condolences from lhe U.S. ambassador to Colombia. Authorities said the pair was on a good- will mission to the Latin America nation "·hen the fatal accident occurred be- tween Baranquilla and U1e Caribbean sea· port city of Cartagena. Chandler. born Jn Ful!@rton, was s~­ retary of the Oil, Chemical and Atonuc \Vorkers Union of Callfornis. while RI· n1ey served as the organization 's treas- urer. Killed also was Gustavo t. Monr.on, president of the Chemlcal Workers Na- tional Federation of Colombia, while an interpreter accompanying them, Eugenia Bueda, was seriously injured. All N.A.S.A .• ,troneuts .•. including th• pion eert who first w•lked on th• moon •• Om•g• Sp•edme1t•r chrono9reph1. The 1•m• w•fch enyone cen buy in our •fore • And now you will t•• if on the wri1t1 of Gregor Y. Pe ck, Richerd Crenne, Frenci1cu1 end Gene Heckmen es th•y 1ter in 'Meroon•d." 111utlr•tod: Tho witch el tho A1t1en•uh. 2-butten, •.cfi•I Omtt• Spttd1111•l•r wri1I &6fl'lp~l•r. M•••ur•• ol•11•ed •f'lll1••lt of h•uf"I, mlf'lul11 111d t•collfl1, Steinl•n tl11I w1lor-r11i1leftt c•••· M•tchln9 llr•celet • •• • • • • ••. S1•s. CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARO MASTER CHARGE J. C. .J./wnp/irie ~ Jewele1•:J 1821 NEWPORT AVE. COST ,I\ •. MESA 12 YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE 5~1.1401 door was opened only after some delay. 'L--------------,-..-----------:,~-----------:.:;,~ ' • ·' -. . ·- " t • ., "" I Bu8:iipg~oit -Dea~h . . . ·- P entagon 4ide New Draft Head .WASHINGTON (UPI) -Charles J. Di89na, 37, a civilian weapons and systems analysis expert for the Pen- 1 tagon, has been chosen by the White lh&se to succeed Lt. Gerl. Lewis B. liersJi.e'y -as qirictor ot the SelecUve Serv.ice, it was reported Wednesday. C.Ongressional sources who disclosed his selection said DiBona has a ."very good" chance of being confirmed by the Senate, for the controversial job. iffers~y. the nation's draft chief since thc •start of World War II, will leave the SelecUye ·Service Feb. 16 to become a \\illite House consultant. DiBona, Rhodes scholar -with degrees earned at Oxford University In England, repor4ldly is a supporter of additional draft reform and President Nixon's pro- pos3ls for an all volunteer army. He is president of the Center for Navaj Analyses, an independent organization run by the University of Rochester in New York under contract to the Navy. It decides whether new weapons are worth v.·hat they cost and helps the navy ·and nu•rines plan how troops s,nd ships are deployed. A. >vlhil!! House spokeSrnan confirmed that}DiBona, 37, of Quincy, Mass .. was urtdU.conslderation for ~post Qf Se!~ tive 'Servlce•dirllctor and had discu.ss#t the job with \Vhite HoU!je aides. That spokesman would not ~iflll ·he had 4eUoitely .be<n selecl."11 ..,,,.,. • ~White House said an annou.nc'ment On Ule appointment was expected some time after this week. Beach Trustee Pushing to End Dr ug Abuses Dr. Ralph Bauer, a trustee for th~ H~­ tingion Beach Union High• School D1str1ct, said Tuesday he would not rest until dnig 8buse Is eradicated from each of tbe district's five campuses. ·He addressed his remarks to the district Board of Trustee s, which is cur- rently mulling over a Bauer-suggested drog infonnation campaign which would take in parent.s as well as students. (See related story, Page 3.) "'Apparently youngsters are now afraid to rbJow the whistle on those who are us- ing drugs," said Bauer, who added that he was apalled by threats of retribution against· Informants. · "The best way to oppose the threat of physical harm is to make it publl«:f'" he explained. And referring obliquely to a· • recent personal incident: "What do you do with a blackmailer? You expose him." At the board's Feb. 14 meeting, Baµer ls expected to present a detailed report on hJs!Sdeas to rombat.drug abuse. He Previously said it would basically · (Sff TRUSTEE, Pa1e l) • • • . • • . . . -.. OAIL Y P'ILOT St.it•P'llol9 IN QUE ST OF TITLE 'Jun ior Ml11 ty\ilrtyn Marina Be,auty Sc oring Hi gli .. ' Fo r:.,i un ftJ. M~s Rh,"'!d• ~!!•rtya.-:. t.'1"" ... ntin& Hun· t1ng1oo Bdch in ·C8111Drnla Junior M~s cW9". il! pne Of !Piii; girll .-;n prelilil)narY"i~&ii)&'lor 1Jit lihe llelil iast year by Jackie lle,!iiriglol\, lllo. i\t Bun· tington ileac!L ·• Mlss Martyn, a 17-year:-okt senior at Marina Hjgh School, took hopofs . u11the poise faUng ·of the contest in Sail~ i;tOsa.· She· is .the ... daugbter of• Mr.:· arid. Mrs. Kenneth A. Martyn, 1'104l ic0urthty'Lane. RhOrida m"aintains a· 3.7 grade-point- average at Marina. She wa,. also ·the school's !K>meeoml11g queen tan ran. Miss Martyn follows in the footsteps of Miss Beltington, who was also from Marina Hiifl and. went on lo capture the national JUhlor Miss Utle. Three other g,lrls sharink the lead in ea rly competitiOn were JUdy Jones or Sacramento, tops ·in talent; Cynthia l;"alrner of Turlock, leaC!ing in physical fitness, and Luanne Larson of O.akdale, leading in•scbolastic achievement. . A new state Junior Miss will be,crown- ed in fonnal cerem~s Saturday ln,San- ta Rosa. Stock Market . ED:ITI O N • • -,. l ' ' . ·ORANGE COUNt/Y; OAUFORNIA WEDNESDAY, JANU'ARY 28, 1910 • • . ft ' ~ . ·•.I S,,. -.-.. ' ' ' . -...... .· IXOil ,S R·~iSing . ' ' Oil Code Sam Vital By JACK BROBACK Of "'9 ti.Ill'( Plitt lll fl .. Revision of Huntington Beach's oil code ls needed if the city is to succeed in its Qrive ·to clean ·up the ·blight of deteriorating oil o~riltiOns, city officials said Tuesday, City .Att0rney· Don Bonfa and OU Field Superintendent Herb Day pointed out .the 1naqequacies of the present ,code wrute taking newsmen on.a tour of old wells. · The first item needing revision, Day said, is the bond required of oil operators to insure clean up of operations. It is now only $2,000 ·and, in many cases, the cost can nm as high as $6,000 or m"1'e to clean up an abandoned opera_Uon, Day &a;td. The city's oil code was patterned after the Orange County code, but was re\!iaed after a committee of oil operators con- ferr!d "With city Officiall , before enact-ment.. Definition or an "Mile well"" haa been one of the facel3 of ttie·oJ\,code. which has beti)· !IU~j~.!td. ' . .~t ~nt ,.qj co.tJD&!U. t!'. •• ' ~ • 11 'rlie'ln:~a Iha ~a ,..P"11iil7h!""not ral..i 'filr tho · ealfndar" · ope --~' ii .. "idl•-••ll" ~-. ' Amtber J1Vlfellm !11"4ili whJcli ha•rtthe " 'ct o11 ............. ed.too. ~~-'"411 not opOrl llif Iii: mc•dlie; Ire~ lo re..o.ai. -· ' '. ~ .. . . ....... -. _';Ls .ws.: i _(,I · f.3.~m±vin~y.Jcs · ~~v~·- -' • 7 • • I • • ' ' • Ed.:~ Bo9th M~)~.r Award ·1100ft. QJd. the oode may be rewrilten lo &now ...ctmt!OG· of tdle wellinmclet ce~ fipl coap-oll, thus perm!tting· an idle·well. lo go ltllo ptodUctlon while ln- surti:ig the .citbeni Of the con;nnunlty that the · site is ·cl~ up and beautified, Edwin BooUi·b a quiet man, a plumber ellirilnatlilg. vlSJlal·'jlliUulion• 'ln the oll by•trade, -\dOes a Jot o!JltUe ·things l!eld.. · • • · arOund;Wltri IOICh" al wtlrk!Jfg with "Boy Newsrhtn·. were shown ·seVeral ' ts-Scout.!, ietvlnc· the chlmber 'of oom- ampleS of Offending 011 wells. · · ma--ce and coaching Little Lealue · Day Pointed out ohe we~ wlilch, baseball, although not prodticlng oil did give oft L"ist•Satunlay·n1g11rhe was·named ~ enough naf.ural gas: to sati.sfy the ciEf's most; dl:S~ citizen in Fountain code and thus:.ptOseculiOn by the cl!y ~ Vllley at·the -lunlbr •Chaniber of Gorn· abate the ·operation failed in court. niitce DilUn~~ice Award ·Ban· Bonfi.. said ·the rrtinbnwn standards Cll*L • · ,' · \ . that quauty a. well as active.in .the· city's Some. of the "llUie11' ~s FAt. Booth code were not reallstic: The law says that did t.. n1ake 'him a bJg.mih"ln·the1tyeg o'.f· a well producing 20 barrels a year, or many wm-t playing Santa c;iaus for the 20,000 cubic. leet of natufal gas is:· "ac-clty'(·f .. '1Chrlstmas.decorattni .. contest, tive." -· ~lpin'g:'.le\\tral qrjanizatlOns" wtth· bis· Day said ·a well Bhoflld prOduce 10 bar~ plCk·llR . truck and :donaUng plumbing rels a day to be a payir:ig pfoposition~ n'fli_tertal for' the .FoU:ntain .Villey. Boys• Caught in the middle in the oil question Club; · , · are the owners of the lan4. An operator More. thari · 80 ~le .watcl;ted him holding a lease in perpetuity on the pro-receive his' award' from television perty can '"1Jandon operations and then pefsori~ity Djck ' Lane. NEW.YO~ (AP)'-The stock market', hold out for a good price to give~p his BoqUt', .. .nominatlon for the Jay.cee1' shelvipg its .morning gains, reverted to lease. DSA awatd was supported by the Foun- lts losing wa)IS-ln-.iact trading-today, MeanWhlle, the property cannot· be taln Valley W~men's ClUb and Ule Wom- wlth declines 'edging_,past advances. (See utilized for any other pilrpose'.. en~s Divl5kln ·of tbe-01.ambe.r of Co_m.. qu'otatiohs, .Pqes ~). · Day &aid there are 862 idle wells in the merce.· -~ .· · · Richard. '&:rugga of Goodbody ~ Co. city, but only. 300' are l~gally idle under Other nomintes·,for 'the ·award were ·said a sman,.raUy c~ be eJ'*'ed In the city's code. In· addition to revislqg Berni& Svaliµad~.a-cily co~ci~aP i Dr. ,the· market's present, oversold -c&ldij.ion the"code, 1h;e city coyncil is ct1nsideririg ~~-Adler Ji!aident .of. lJ1' Fountain 'butthat·Jhe bailc condition of theJnves-addln&.--~f-lo tho city staff,-Vcillly~-C!Wn'.J¥;':-Of 'c;.n. ... cc.; :aJld tors "is'staUC> pendin1 President Nlioa's .,. or hJrlnl outlide Jqal counsel to handle Charlel· ,DtxOn, ,,;,,,-. nPelidMt· of. ·the budget.measage.MO!lday." •oil .:ode ,matter& --. ~ ch8mlier. , . · ,,... " "' HOJl!OR.E·D BY JAYCl!ES Di1flnjvl1htd CR!zen Booth .. ' . . -- ll~ntington: Man Tries ' . ' N ov~l lf.aya~ for Surfing ~ -. .. By RUDI .NIED!EUIKI with body eng~Sh, · Ulltil he re .. hed the '.~ ot_.flle~tr P'IMfl19ftr" ~ d. .. .. . .. . ~. Frail ant}es and · slippery toes are no The next· attempt 'was ·somewhat less longer a·valid elcuie for tel using to daSh lrhprel&i\fe, With' George an<f 'the klliak through 1' waves on a· surfobard. ' sudden}y turning cartwheels Jn a bolling '.'?oucv~ ·8'>1 IP .ao it .!ltting \IOWO. In wave. . com!e:t,,.i~of Ute in ·a'boat," thought "I almost;started tO panle as f rolled an;enUrpritlng ;.u~'JMnufacl•rer ' over," be eiplain~ a!terwara. "1lte•ll f-.Encl:'J!u ,mo promptly dtllped a • though, 'waif a "1Jhiiie I'm~ \tapPed in n~.Qya~ fpt1 a~venture)n .lhe ~!_~Ins; and.Wi{gled out .. " surf. • • · iue byak, wh1Ch wel&JI> about ,19 The Mw 1t4yak was ta'"'! for .th• fir•t p0undi, lie! an·opt\ilng b(ltf iop, abC>ut lime~ a!l'emoon by. veteran •Hun-the .stz,, p( a · hlune• lo\!O· -.whlcb ~ tfil&ton 11Qj:h.111rfu George lltlper. 31. ..,a1'4, ol/ ,by !:llbbefized cloth lo • prevent '-'"· I · waler f~ ~nlerill& the shell. , . :·u.,.... lll<e.lt wou d be J111t·the right "IL'•• prelty •aensltfve," ,..., Ci<orl• in ~r ·an old man , lib· ma," !au~. evalaa.llncllie lwidl\nl Jl<OpetU,. or 1he ~'" be '«lu lhtwect lnli> tlie waler cra!l.>"lt takes pretty flood balej:e•lo b.b .. .;;atJa••.,-... • '.-l · m~«·ft.1~ 1 , • 1 ~ 111lna'ttl aDd a ~ il\l!Hlr•d Flota'*>,lubeo inside the kayak's ca•i- OAn.Y ,a.OT"lfilfr""'9 VETERAN SURFER GEORGE DRAPER TEST RIDES NE\t/ KAYAK FO/l ARM~HAIR-ilft,lRS .' ~l"'lf!l(roa loltr ~ wa!tad oil 1he , ly ..._.~ Jo keeJ> It aboVe 1'11ier,,Jn the ·Hlidmafiirl Bead\ Pitt for.a ..... wa9'. , evq~tho rioer>l1 oeP,11-fnlm'"· · u!!~·;f =:~= .J1.: . .;i.ak· "1d <jw~ .. will .. u.1or ( i . " ,'.! • T~y's Final .. .,, --- N. Y •. Steeks - TEN CENTS e· o 226-191• Vote Falls 52 Short WASHINGTON (AP) -P.re•ldent.Ni.r· on's veto or the $19.7 billion healill-ef!uca- tion money bill was upheld today •~ the House rejeeted an effort to override It. ·The vote was 226 to 191, 52 s.'loft of the needed two-thirds. The result was Ii solid viCtofy ror'"NixOn in his sharpest confrontation yet Wfth the Democratic controlled · Congres.i. ni.e Prtsldent 1aid · a veto was necetSary because the $1.26 billion which Congress added to the bill for health and ~uCauOn programs was inflationary. The overall bill finances the Departments. of Labor and _ffealth, Education and Welfare, and ·various an- tipoverty programs. A new bill will now have to be writtan and it is, likely the Democratic majority will again try to. put in more money than Nixon .has budgeted, although not as much as in the vetoed bill. Just before the vote, two Republican leaders put forward a possible com· promil! tQat would permit · Congress to slap! by the increased funding but let Nix~' r.tfu;;e ';o ' apehd '11lore than he WitJ\t,i4 tq. I •,. ~ ~~ • , It' •was also reported; that the White HQUft! i.•prepared lo •approv!iJncre•~ ovoi"~p's budget tota!inl .,11 mUllon =4Ji1.tbe fJ.JS,-1flll!an •dded, In the ~ '1borl IL ,Qu~, (fl.f!llnn.), said )\t -IVed loday • \Vhiie liouse letlfr-to lie read ~ Congres1 assuring ~t Nix'¥' woqid pit l440 million, inslead ol the $202 mDlion he had budgeted, iqlo the pro- gram !or aid· to &ehool d~trlcts that in- clude large numbers of federal emplO)'es. Quie· tol~ newsmen that. although it is not mentioned In the leUer. h~ had bl\m as!ured. that Nixon would approve· an ad· ditfopal $70, millio~ for vocatio~ ~iq:a· tion and -$140 milhon .for o\her program~. Thus thi;. total package \\'.OUld be ·$«8 million.over.Nixon's budget jnstead of'the $1.26 blrt!on pr\)Vided in lhe veloed ~ill. Another alternative, approval of Q>e full amount or the figures in the bill but .a prov;s~on leUing Nix~ d~id! how mucti would be spent, wu pro"""'4 bY, ljeps. Joh" ilhod"· (ll'Ariz.,) and Robert H. Michel, (fl.Ill.). Beach Chamber Banquet SeUout The &6th annual Huntingtop Beach Chamber of Commerce installatjon ban- qliet at the Sheraton-Bea,ch · Inn Friday night is nearly ·a sellout, charhber of· flcials said toi::lay. Those making last minute pl!ns· to at- tend are urged to call the chamber office, 002•1. In order to secure reserv.alions •. Rep. Craig Hosmer, (R-Long Beach)~ w,ho r.epr~nts . Huntington , Be;ach in Congress, Will be the princlpal.spEiaker. Awards will ~ made to the man _Of thi yf.ar 8.nd woman of the )'ear . . Peter Horton, · McDohnell Douglas Astronautics· erecuttve. will be installed ai president of the chamber, succeeding C. E. "Bill" Woods. Orange C:oan Weatller . ' . Hold on to your hats if you have any; i~'s going io blow up a storm (!l~urallvely speilking) on lhe , orange Coast. Clear. 1kies. reign ; Thursday with clillly lemperatures. • 11\'Sm E TODAY A , ti>rmer narcotics 4/tJe~r Jro1"'Wutminstsr tpe'arheQittf,41 new prpgram to give. tl~r11 a choke f!1 a «mpalgn to .JWJ4, off dr:ug ·~111e. se .. Po.go 8. • • • _,,, . . .. 11Wtw9l ,...... • I ..,,... 1+1 -" . ., .. . -Ot. ,........ .. ,. Mir-....., T......_ .. -.. -. --.. ....... """' ''"' .......... ,I , -_--... . " . . J OAll Y PILOT H -« w....,,........, 111, 1!7~ • f;ounty lio1as On>to Mile Square P~k -' 'Ille Fcuntalll Vllley School llistrkt ,_ 1 -iqull'Hnll• obatide ID D .-i 1.C.. new ·<ampus 'illb lodly, arler "°""IJ autbor!Ues voted 'l'utsday to ,ieei> an e.ye on the land lnvolved for a Pl>Ulble airport. ' , Dlltrict offldils have asked the Orange COurtty Board of Supervisors to drop the Mirlno CorPI Mlle Squire ·htli<opler lrllnllig Held rrom the Muter Plan of Afr Trantportatloo study. , '&rpervisors voted 4 to 1 aplnst. 1be propo.ul, but bowed to the scbool dbtrlct'1 needs by vowlna: to &peed'-1.y> that airport study and thus help thtm IC· .quire an arta campus mort quickly. Tb< Mile Square chDf>per lraininaf.ield -. 1 fla~ brushy plot leased to Fountain Mesa Police Continue Huge Drug Roundup By ARTHIJR R. VINSEL Ot fM O.llF PUii tt1n Tired la'>'·men today resumed a round- up or suspected teen drug dealers, di9C:losing that exotic 1'-1editerranean mind-benders such as opium chan&ed hands for marked money on one Costa ri.fesa campus baseball diamond. A total or five adults and 12 juveniles )Yer,t arrested on campus and at their homes throughout the day and Into Tueg. day nlght, with nine more being hunted today. Nearly all were named in arrest war· rant8 charging gale of dangerous drµgs, after Harbor District Judicial Court Judge Donald Dungan c o n s i d e r e d evidence collecttd In a six.week probe. The five adulta were expected to be ar- . raigned on the felony charges today, · all.hough 10me had already po15ted $615 or more bail to secure their release. . The a.t'.fulta are: -Steven ~I. Dollar, 18, of 2869 El Rio Circle, Costa Mesa. -JUchard G. Alctis, 18, of 686 Senate . St., Costa Mesa. : -Steven R. Lusk, 18, of 3022 Don- nybrook Lane, Costa Mesa. -Loretta L. Gonz.ales, 25, or 913 Cedar '. P'lace, Costa ?i-1esa. ~ Roule D. Crot1, 18, of 2830 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa . ~ Ba.it was set al s1.m for Dollar. charg- ed with sale or two opiates. The first three suspecta were booked on • ch1r1es of sale of dangerous drugs. in- -eluding opium and hashish, the powerful "sap d~rfvatfve ol marijuana In ~ caae of Dollar. •. eroes and the Gonzales woman were ·charged with sale or marijuana, while the $S2S warrant namlna Crosa was placed as a seeond holding charge because police i 811ege(Uy found him cullivating the weed. i The remainder, ranging in age from 16 to just under 18, were booked Into Orange 1 County Juvenile Hall pending further ac- tion in connection with their alleged drug , deallnge:. Detective Captain Bob Green said to- day the total haul of evidence now held - including heroin, hashish, opium, LSD, mescaline, plus barbiturate and am· phetamlne pills -Is worth thousands of dollars. Juveniles Involved attended both Costa ~tesa and Est1ncla high schools, with more than one transaction allegedly made on the latter'• baseball diamond, as detectives watched from a distance. 20% Tax Cut Due? SACRAl\fENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan says his tax revision program is ·designed to cul properly taxes on homes by 20 to 40 percent. But the aovernor was reluctant to discuss the specifics on his plan when questioned by newsmen Tuesday. He pro- mised the program ·will be s~nl to the legislature soon, but not before next Tuesday. DAILY PILOT OIU1HGE CO.UT l'UILIU•1HG (Ol.l,All't' ••i..rt N. W•1.I "•nMlll -P.-iW..; J1dc II. Curley Voe• ""•'""' ••A ~r11 M•"'9., Th.,,.11 K11w1I E41tor 'T~o,..11 >.. Murpl.•111 Mo" .. l"'I! t41!•• J.lb1rf W, a1111 AUotlllll f:~h!OI' H•11tl11tt•• ltMlll Offic• 1 r11s k i th l1ul1¥1•d M1ili119 Atdr111: P.O. 111 7,0, '2641 Otl!H Otflfft lllUl'I" ••~"= m ,., .. , "-co. .. Mtu ~ U1 Wnt hf '""' H..,.,t k«ll; Ull WMt t.IDM llu11Y1'11 ., • • V0Uey'1 rapiiUr, dlmnlolllnl 1111111t>1 Jn. --...,. ... da7 be • -ral ~orlll<lroport. :;tt ~ lliot3""'iblll!j< ii' held oat by t& ai. n 10,dJQh of the 0011111)''1_.vta- Uon muter plan, unUI it ts finally deterrnlnOd whether It can dellnlteJ, be UHd or not. ' Mqnwhile; 1he land tJ seheduled for tranaforrnaUon Into 1 county regional . park and the school district wanta a site iidjoWng It on the southwest. The Marint11 are firmly: entrenched, however, and do not anticipate a sur- rtnder. MJq llrkk, district superintendent. argued before ·the county Board of Superrisora Tueadlily that It" ls senseless to sptnd moOI)' on 11udyln1 the airport concopt fir that very ruson. Brick told tile board he hu been Jn. formed "' ltller. fhll' Ma~ ~ of· llclalJ cmtol lmftglne U1e or Iha Mile Square faclUty for an airport, based on several key point5: · -Jl'lxed·wing aircraft are lncompaUble with helicopters. -The Corps would refuse to enter a joint·powen: agreement (or civilian avia- tion use in the first place. -The runway is not suited for such combined types of aircraft to use it. -No platll are tnvisioned for declaring IL syrplus and available for purchase by any othtr aaency. Supe..-visor David L. Baker -long a ln'I T1......,t1 Kiekittg IJp Be1• Heels TuJlah Hauley, a former exotic dancer, is giving San. Francisco $3 million ¥70"rth of art objects, keepicg up with her dan_c.mg as she un- . paclu soqie of her art ~bjects, left to lier by bet;, late hus~an4, Ed· \vard Hanley of Bradford, Pa. Teenagers Change Minds ' Under New Police Pinn By ASSOCIATED PRESS "The main thing l learned," said the teen-age girl, "was that cops are human, too. They bleed just like everyone else." Donna Evans. wriLing in her student newspaper at Pacilica High School In Garden GrQve, was telling how her views <>f Jaw enforcement officers took a sudden flip-flop after she participated in a pro- gram called Code 7. This Is the radio message of!icers routinely give when they are lunching. "I never liked cops and I thought never would." said Donna . "Every time a cop even came near me I would get away from him fast because he was a ct1p." But under the Code 7 program, f\.1iss E:vans rode along with a police officer on his regular patrol. She saw him pick up a stray cat and take it home to his wife: she observed him help an elderly woman \\ith a flooding , stopped-up toilet; and she saw him take abuse from both parties when he responded to a man-wife fight. The program is unusual only In its comprehensiveness. lt !!larts ~1th grades 1·3 and carries on. in appropriate steps. th.rough high school. It began when Police Chief George P. Tielsch realiied this burgeoning com· munity had turned up a significant statistic. Studie~ showed that half the city's 14:!.000 residents were young. The chief said he also reallied that there was a stereotype among the young about police officers. His goal wa!I to break il dO\''" and create a mutual rcspcrt between his of- liceri; and the yout h of the community. About 18 months ago, Dave Burn , 27, was named community relations officer. Although Garden Grove has no ghettos l'rom P age 1 TRUS TEE •.• cor1ml of mall ing inronnatlonat tract1 to eath :;tude.nt home and possibly an adult clau on drugs. "Orua abuse Is the li)'mptom of Mme rtal problems -a sick soci•ty, disloca- tion -and we need to gel to the crux of it," explained Bauer. pointing out the neceulty of at some time treating cause a.s we.II IS symptom. "We're looking at a doublina of narcotics move every tlaht months. \\'e shouldn't JQ after the problem with tippy toes but with force and prc11ure. This I! one board me.mbtr lhat'1 not going to rt&t until the problem 11 aolved." as such, police 111·ere aware lhal teenagers thought of themselves as a persecuted minority group. The Code 7 concept began simply. Of- ficers on the day shift took along thtir lunches and made it a point to eat with children at schools who alllO brought lh~rs. "We got some real discussions going," Burn recalls. "They dealt with everything from police brutality, search and seizure lo the wisdom or curfew laws." Since then. the program has been ex- panded to regular classroom lectures and accompanying officers on patrol. Burn s;iid he soon learned that only one or two officers couldn't handle the situa- tion. This caused him to do some ann- twlsting to get every patrolman Into the program. Burn mentioned one officer who had spent a Code 7 at a particular school. A cou ple weeks later he was summoned to the school to break up a rlaht. "The kids recognized him." said Burn. "Ile wa s flabbergasted. The cooperation v1as 100 percent." ts lhere a key to success? ''\Ve don't moralize at all," said Burn, "because that just turns them off . "We just pose some of the situations kids get into, or "'e talk about anythlni th e kids want to discuss." Tr ucker Ch arged In Girl's Dea th Gives Self Up A Lraah pickup truck drive.r charatd 1vith manalaughler with a vehicle ln the death Jan. 15 of ~year~ld Peggy Burler surrendered this week to Fountain Val ey police. A warrant for the arrest of Ramoro Hurtado, 26, ot 174S2 Got.hard St., Hun· tinaton Beach, was Issued Mond1y by Welt Oranae County Municipal Courl flurlado turned himself in when Informed ol the warrant. Police said the girl was killed in front of her home, 9085 Mallard St., Fountain V1lley, whtn ahe darttd In front of Hurtado's trash truck on her bicycle. No ti3lt has been set In municipal court for a preliminary hearing on 1he charaes a(l:alnst liurtado. Maximum penalty for mansl11uihlcr with a vehkle 1s one year in County Jail. propooeot of cfroWil!J Mlle .Square. as a "llonal ~ 1lle -IUQtl.led Iha board ahould do '° and aubmltted a mo- crltlcal point In Ume would amoont to , priJ!1d4menl Of luture COWllJ aY!aUoa new. I • BatUn then introduced a new motion lo Uoo lo that effect. ahirt the Maalor Pian or A I r •HJab denlllY -latlon and alrportJ'' TrU>sportaUon Sludy phase ol Mile are not compatible," he said. "We can Squrt Itself to top priority, th111 setUing ,avoid lpl1"1 COnlllct now 'by deletin' this the qudUon early. . site from the ttudy." Tb$ school dlstrlct may then.proceed in HI.I co11eaguea refused to go along with ac4uitinf what.ever site In the general the ~easure, although Supervisor Robert area wll be available. Batun voted for tt, 1aying .he has been Su~rvi10r Wllliinn Hirstein backed aubjected to extreme political prtSSUre hJm up on that n'IOVe, which subsequenlly "' that point. paSled 4 to I, with Superv!Jor William Battin'• dirtrlcL--. includes Fountain Phllllpt casting the dissenting vote. VJlley. "We need the whole picture when we nie other 1upefvison shot down come to our declaions on county air traf- Baktr'1 moUon u too high-rtyin&, uylng· flc," remarked Hirstein, "We can't make that to ellmtn.ate 'Mlle Square al this a pre-judgment by leavin& one area out." Nuclear Power Won't Do 'It All EDITOR'S NOTE: Nuclear power plants are seen as the 011!11 answer to providing power for a growing popu· lation. But there are problems, both ph11sical and psychological. Those ore explored in a two-part series by A.ssociated Press \Vriter Doug Willis. By DOUG WILUS As_l.._. l'retl Wrlllf The 1970s will be a decade of tremen- dous change in California, but wide use of nuclear-produced electric i>ower won't be one of those changes, says the chalnnan of the state's joint legi.slative committee on nuclear development. "The problem is the treme'1dous lead time for construction of a nuclear power plant -seven lo eight years." said Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R- . Fullerton). "And the companies are gup·shy . . . there's the public reaction arid govern- ment red tape. Eighteen federal and state agencies havt? to approve a nuclear plant," he added. trlc power. A third nuclear plant ls under consµ-uctlon at San Luis ObiBPo and seven to 10 more are planned. "By 1980 we will double our nuclear capaclt[ .•. but we double our electric need ev"ery eight years in California, so in rtlative terms we won't be producing any more," he said. Briw said that in the long haul. "nuclea~ power is the only way to go," but that first an adverse public opinion 1nust be changed. "People are opposed mostly beeause they don't know anything about "It. The question Is how do you tell the people. I lhlnk lhe fact Lhat President Nixon's San Cleinente home Is · 11h miles from a nuclear plant dramatically shows how safe they are,'' ne said. He said fossil fuel electric generating plants -which burn oil, coal or gas - now are responsible for 17 percent or all al r pollution and one percent of the visi· ble smog in t~e Los Angeles basin. "We have about thrl!e times the smog tllat we can stand, so that one percent is too much." Briggs added. "but the real problem is running out of fossil fuel s. HEAD ING FDR THE HILLS V•lley Pl1nner Mansfitld Valley Plan Chief Quits , For New Post Stanley f\.1ansfield , Planning Olrector of Fountain Valley, has resigned hls post to become director of planning for Nevada Counly in Northern California. Mansfield will stay with the city until ~larch %. He submitted his resignation Tuesday. "I will always consider Fountain Valley as my city and look back .i.l the many ac- complishments that have been a part of the planning process. But I just couldn't pass up the environmental factors In my ne'v job," he explained Tuesd;y. Nevada City , the county seat. is 60 miles north of Sacramento and 75 rirlles from Lake Tahoe . "It's mostly (ore$l with lots of huntin& and fishlhg ," i;aid Mansfield. Mansfield is the only planning dlr~tor Fountain Valley has had. He started With the city in February, 1962, coming to Fountain yalley from Baldwin Park. Mansfield, his wife Joyce and childi'en, {ynne. 13; Laurie, 10; Munica, 9; Joyce. 7, and Stan, Jr. 4. will move to the north country this spring. Briggs said two nuclear power plants now in operation in California produce less than five percent of the state's elec· Filing to Open Thursday. for Council Posts Ratings Changed The race for city council seata in Hun· tington Beach, Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and Westminster starts Thursday when candidates can pick up applications at their respective city halls. Individuals who want tc run for city council will have from T?turbd&y through Feb. 19 to pick up, fill oul and return ap- plicaUons for the April 14 election. Councilmen up for re-election in Hun- tington Beach are Mayor Jack Green and Ted Bartlett, Al Coen and Henry Kauf· man. Fountain Valley incumbents in the April 14 race are Mayor Edward Just and Councilmen George Scott and Bernie Svalslad. Seal Beach Mayor St.mley Anderson and Councilmen Veda M. Oreis and John llamilton will defend their p:>Sltions in April. Westminster incumbents are Philip A.1thony and BUel Jarrett. OOME the first watch on the moon CO-ITARS IN Movie Board Drop s 'M' Tab • HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Aftef 15 months of what the ·rum industry calls "lrati- fying aucceu, ·• Its voluntary prog'i'am of rating movies Is being modified. Jack ValenU, president of the Motion Picture AssoclaUon or Ameflci, said Tuesday one charge was made because a survey had shown considerable confusion over the "M" rating -which meant a film was recommended for mature au- diences only. So that category i5 being -dropped i"n favor of "GP." This means all ages may view the movie but that parental guidance or discretion is advised . The other change raises the age limit for viewing films rated "R" -restricted category -)llilhout an accompanying parent or legal guardian from 18 to 17. Both changes are effective Marcil I. Observers said the boost in the age limit may represent an attenlpt to broaden the "R" rating to include racy but serious films heretofore relegated to the "X" category for adults only. Valenti has said he originally Intended the X to be a "l~per colon"y•• for fihm ot no artistic quality. But it ha!n't wo~ked out that way. Two of the most successful ·and critically acclaimed films of 1969 - "Midnight Cowboy" and "?..1cdium Cool" -ended up in the X class. Here is the new set of standards: · G -All ages admitted. GP -All ages adn1ltted, but parental discretion recommended. R -Anyone under 17 must be at::- companied by a parent or legal guardian. X -No one under 18 admitted. The Valenti statement called the classification system, which went into ef· feet Nov. 1. 1968, "a gratifying success." A su rvey conducted by the National Association of Theater Owners showed that nine out of 10 theaters queried used the ratings in their advertising. Valenti Wis joined in his annOunce- ment by Eugene Picker. president of .the theater owners g r o u p . and Munio Podhon:er. a member of the govern- ing board of the International Film Im- porters and Distributor!! of America. "All N.A.S.A. ettro nevts • •, includin9 th• pione1n who lir•f wefked on th1 moon , .• wiir Orn1ga Spe1dmaster chronogr1ph1. Th• ••rn• watch •r1yon e car1 buy in our 1tor1• Ulw1tr1kt; Thi witch ,f tl.1 Aatr•111vtw , J.Mtfktt. 4-4111 011t•t• Spt14l11111t.r Wl'iit tempukr. M111urt• 111,,111 lfltt rvt l• •I ll1ur., 111i11w+.1 1M 1•coittl1. St1h1IM1 1tMI •1ttr.r1tiit111t 1111. M1tchil'lt 9r111l1t ••••• •• ,. , l lfS, CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE • J. C. .J./ump/.,i11 ~ J~wef.r~ 1121 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA .. MESA ll YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE 548-1401 _. ....... -... . ... ~(ids pecide on Drugs Countian Brings Youths Information ' By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of tt1t Dally r 1i.t tl1ll Sometimes Rick Berman must write off part of his business as a total loss, ti,yond all salvage. : 1He hates that, but he is a realist. ~ "'0ne part or that business wa.:s 13 years : oJ.d. pregnant, infected with venereal : disease, sick with iniectlowi hepatitis and . r.trung out on drugs. She had a better : Jdea who gave her gonorrhea than who : 11ve.her the unOOrn baby. . The Sunset Sbip was familiar. • 'I'he guys were mostly strangers. : , "This kid was completely out of it,•• : lfY1 Berman. a \Vestmfnster resident . wllo spent 12 or his 16 years with the Uls Angeles County Shcrifr's Office in its bureau o{ narcotic.a:. He did a good job, quilling last June as a sergeant. But that interview with a drug· destroyed girl barely into adolescence v.•as· just one more time when he realized the job he was doing was being done too lale. So he quit. when given an acceptable alternative. "She was finished. A vegetable," says Berman, himself the father of five children. UNIQUE SYSTEM The former lawman is riow director of tM unique new Office of Narcotics Education Resources for the Centinela Valley Union Hleh School District in Hawthorne. No other school system in America has undertaken such a program to counteract the. drug problem, leading Rep. Glenn ?ti. Anderson CO.Los Angeles) to re"iew it recently before Congress. Authorities in Waslington and Sacramento are keeping a close watch on the program headed by Bennan, as its gix·point effort directed toward 130.000 pupils. down to elementary age, pro- gresses. Th<y think t~ be oolo iwmelhlng worth copying by other public ;school systems. possibly de.serving state and federal assistance. So does Berman. "We pay too much attention to just the physical hann -the difference between marijuana and heroin -and debating that is senseless," he explains. "Drug abuse i:oo drug abuse. There"s your problem." ~llDDLE DRUGS Dialogue on heroin.versus-marijuana may have its purpose. but Berman believes more concern should be shown toward so-e&lled middle drugs. the mileage markers on the road to human tragedy. Smt1king pot may 5eem like a game, but these compour·ds can rapidly transform it into pharmaceutical Ru!!ian roul~tte, with all but one chamber loaded, irultead of the other way around. Berman's new job began to evolve in iummer, 1968, when he was apflj'.)inted as the LASO narcotics bureau training and education s.!rgeant, !G advise the suburban district's vacation d r u g WOikSbop. Tht: revolutionary new school ad- minislrative department grew from there. aided by Hawthorne High School Football Coach llal Chauncey. a part- tlme Orange ~onnty resident, in Surfside. "We were just lucky enough to have a district willing tG do this," says Qiauncey, ct»ulhor of a just-published handbook used in the program. • "The whole thing is not intende<i to be punitive," he explains, but rather to help youngsters avoid the self-punishment of drug abuse by making their own decisions to do so. Drug dealers -contrary to some popular misconceptions -do not force pills down a would·be user's throat, and hook him. because that wGuld clefeat their basic purpose. so they use persuasive, if crude psychology. . . . The same ba sic principle apphes in Berman's job, with more sophistication. MAKES CHOICE "Let's use the same tools the riro- ponenls of drugs use." he says. noting that a youngster will make his own choice In the matter, based on what his aociety can offer In terms of guidance. "The intent is not to say: 'This is a red. ll's bad. Put it down because 1 said go,• but to l"'esent the information and let them decide," explains Benna,n. Force is not the answer ln changing human viewpolnl"I. Only as a last resort are lawmen called ,.,,hen a sl.udent comes to Berman's at- tention in the CVUHS program, such as in cases of on<ampus ~ale, or bein.i;. dangerously under thr influence of a dn1g. Arrest under the latter circumstance, for exarrmle eliminate~ any requirement for fiigned paren1al ronsent prior to gr.t- ting the victim emergency medical treal· men!. CreUing lhe admitted u~r. or lhe curious teen in search of clrug ex· perienc~ onto an understanding af his own motivations and achieving perspec- t.lve ln outlook on life is what tchool of· ficials want. Utile constructive can be act0mplished by gjving a teenager a polic~ record -ii the offense. Is reaaonabl~ minor -when what he needs Is help in developing better gelf.gUsfldion and personal judgment. The concept is lo help . not hann. NOT INVOLVED "He"s not involved In \a\v enforcemeat hue," emphaslzes Coach Chauncey. who also hes a high schoo\-a gt daughter· "for years -lhc more I worked narcotics -the more 1 saw a netd for lhis," adds Berman. "and in the past two years, t really got turned onto It." Ueginntng with raicully and parent orfentsllon, the CVUHS program is de11lgntd to draw In 1iludents refmed alttt all.campus arrest, « by achool 'LIFE IS A DRAG,' MOANS MANY A TROUBLED TEEN Educator Rick Berm1n Counsels GrO:ffY Drug-U11r authorities, families, clergymen or psychological counselors. "We have a Jot or sell-referrals that we didn't have at the 11tart now too," r;a~ Berman. hopefully indicating an accep- tant attitude among the student body. "There are several objectives and each has to work or the whole thing faJls on its face," he continues, saying they are now either completed or in progress. These are the six key points: -Development cr a classroom drug· Leaching concept -Eslab\ishment of lhe referral center, where weekly group counseling and in· dividual talks, as needed. are o£fered . -Establishment of finn, consistent district policier; on drug abuse. -Crgalliz.ation of an adult education program for pa.rents and teacher11, con- cerning drugs and the unique CVUHS i;ystem. -Starting an effldent exchange or in- formation on narcotics and drug abuse policies with other agencies from the district itself to city, county, &tate and federal levels. INTERVIEW, EVAWTE Berman himself will interview the yrung drug dabbler and evaluate !he circumstances before recommending one among several methods of handling the <.·ase. He has talked with about 350 student.s since September. Options :..... beginning at arre5l and ex· pulsion for serious offensei. -include transrer lo another campus. a con- tinuation school ror prob!em-pupils -or return to one's own campus and classes. One thing i! definite. All require at- tendance at weekly group counseling sessions. where the lndJviduaJ can begin to get insight into bis troublesome feel- ings and wrong rmtivaUona as well u constructl.vt ooa. "Jn doing th.is, the student will be aided in geeJ.ng that drug abuse is an unsatisfactory form or escape which can offer no realistic solutions toward meeting and coping with the world ," Berman says. ~low many youngsters are using~, that's the inevitable question. "About half your high achoot kids will experiment. •. one, two, three times,'' says the man who should know. ''But five to 10 percent will become frequent or habitual users." "That's a pretty good gang," he adds grimly. ARRESTS JUMP He also cit.es statistics ,;bowing juveru1e drul arrest. up 100 percent or more In m06f. areu where law agency jurisd.lc· tions keep C1:lmparatlve recc.rds. "The school dis1rict c:.od the parenls don"t realize the extent of the problem ," he says, adding that it is r;o large and complex now that old·fashioned methods cannot be expected to solve lt. Not only that, Berman charges, but society remained blind as drug abuse moved from a shadowy, storybook un- derworld selling into well-to-do family homes and progressive public schools. "lt was 50T0ething far away• unreal ... the average famil.Y had no contact. Thus many parents. as well as professional people, were unprepared-emotionally as well as lntellectu.ally -lo cope with the current situation." Ooe of those profes.slonal people W811 a CVUHS teacher wbo aat In reoenUy on a group sesdon as Berman -the onetime nark -and some of her sludents rapped. "They v.·ere now speaking from another "'orld, from a conte:rt entirely alien to my apparently superficial appraisal of young people on a ca mpus," she marvel· ed sadl y. SUDDEN AWARENESS "A good clcal of the r;hock of di&e0ver y, T believe. was a sudden awarenes~ that T had unconsciously built ruy own world or convenient self-deception lo conveniently blot out the reality of somctliing t did not wish to sec or know about," she said. "l caMOt help but wonder U many adults are unwittingly d:>lng tilt same thing?" Berman agrees, usessinc this u a ma· jor prob~m among adults. During the first few days of ecbool in September, Berman said :,e. conce11trated on studenu DO older than 11, learning tbat mMt had used all illicit drup available "Ix to IS times each. \Vile.re~ the root of dn1g abuse lie'! Probably -or at least partially -In the fact that "''hile contemporary life of· fer s more In many ways lh an ever bofore. it c•n algo be frightening, frugtrating and forbidding. 0 There's nolhlng to look lorwaird to," whimpered one 14-yeaMld girl, 1 member of a generation. whole f01"9Varcl· view includes the poaslbllil.Y of tot.el nuclear ertermlnaUon. Or else tlow wf· focetlon tllrough unmenlble ruin of the air. Theories about the uoderb1nl ,...... are nume!'Ous, but Benn an say1 ·the aL- tilude of breakiug away from society and making one's own maverick way through the tangle or 20th Century troublea Is becoming more prevalent "You can't do it ii you're just going to blame everybody else for the wrongs in IJe world and go get stoned," he remarks. The 14-year.(lld freshman girl with no future. to look toward -such as the bright dreams past generativns had - found her own temporary solace in pop- ping barbiturate pills to gel through the school day. Now . sbe is: beginning lO learn &<>me.thing of the emotional processes which generate such despair, but for thousands of other young people the gnawing, emptiness is as real as the mo. ment. Can American r;ociety itself look forward to any outside help in attempting to curb the growing problem of drug abuse among its young people, such as last year's border-closing Opefalion Intercept? Bennan believes not. "That's just tokenism ," he says with a lrace or bitterness left over from the taste or 12 yea•s as a nark and the knowledge I.hat the economies of a dozen nations .are based on drug sell ing. CAN'T STOP IT ''Say you're going to do what you can do," he adds, "f>ut don't say you're going to stop i.Dternationa.I b-afficking." Didn't •utborities demonstrate concern by setting fire to marijuana caches: last week in Culiacan, Me.xi.co, w h en crusading Deputy U.S. Attorney General Richard Kliendienst visited? "Mexico bumi:ig its fields of marijuana Ii; like lowa burning 10 acres of com," Berman comments wrily. Does widespread public educaUon do much to help, such as appearances before senice clubs and other such organiza- tions? "That's not where the problem U," he replier;. The. bagic answer -now -appeaB possibly to lie in organization of iuch school programs as the one Berman heads in cily~nated office r;pace at the Hawthorne Community Serviceg Center. Becaur;e that's just where the problem ii:. among young people. "And our district is no different than .any other," observes Coach Chauncey. ''Except for !he fact that we recognized lhe problem." MONEY PROBLEM They also re cogn.lte another problem: money. although aid could be on the way if Gov. Ronald Reagan, President Rlchard Nixon, and t.hGSe controlling the pursestrtngs are impressed. Nert to the fact of drug use among young Americans Itself, Berman believes the nert 1'0nt. probl.em to overcome ls IU.indneSs •and self~eception. on the part of adults who won't recognize It U ~Ous. "Our aMWer must be. a strong, poslUve approach by the adult world honesUy confronting its children and al the 5ame Ume letting them know that as adults we care er.ough to take constructive actlon, '' he warns. The Centinela Valley school sy~tem has b!gun an adult education course on the drug program. with teachers receiving sc:lary credits for completion. One group of 1?.S teachers Is Involved Jn ridlng along with Los Angeles County Sherirrs Office radio car deput1es to get a fU'&lhand look at lawmen'& prob1'ma Ill facing drug abuse. UNDERMINNED He al!D ooles ...my, while.., th.ti 1111>- Ject, that the LASO i1 undermanned, with onJy llO deputieio In the narcotics bureau. He believes, however. in what he and the Cenllnela Valley Union High School Oi.Wict are doing, but It Is almost too early to detennlne how 1uettSSful the concept may ~. Asked that question. he can only tell what measures bave been t.aiken 50 far - from being a quiet listener for il tragically unhappy girl -to broad educa- tional programs for the communlty Itself. And even then, Berman pames to reflect on it all. ''How do you meuurt tucceu?," he asks. hinting that more than y1rdlrtlck1 will be needed lo gauge how for It 11 from this end lo ooe that ls not yet In sight from here. Russians Visit Newport ay JOHN VALTERZA Of tM O.llY ,lltt Stiff ... The Russians came to Fa.sh.Ion Island Tuesday. BuL the touring group of 10 of the Soviet Union's top editors had a little trouble leaving Newport Beach . Thdr bus driver went shopping and left them waiting Idle, halfway through their tour of the Irvine Ranch -Orange Coun- ty's pillar of capitalism, The Russian edltors anived at the llilllop shopping eenter about 15 minute& lale alter heavy lunch al the Stult Sblrl RestaurMTit. But because of their official sourpuss faclal upm:sions and vague replies to quest!Ollll, thelr impressions of the food and the &hopping center w~ never fully known. Led by Irvine Company President William R. 1'fason rattling off gtatistics and other facts about the posh shopping center, the journalists listened to their in- terpreter, and a few of them snapJ!Cd pie· lures with their East Gennan-made cameras. ~ The appirent leader or the 18-day tour through t.'le United Stales ls 1-tla Senior Editor L. N, Toltunov, a short, heavy-set, balding man who asked few questions of the. taller Mason. As aiey 1lrolled past Fashion Island's children':. playground Mason aplained that "usually this place is full of children, and e!'.;>eclally on Saturdays." .. Where are the children now?" asked the dour Jzvest.la editor. "They're in l'iChool. The cold weather keeps them from playing there today," replied ~lason. There v.·as a slight chuckle from the Russians. As they pa:ssed the central statue of the «nter !he group paused a bit to rlecide if they wanted to see the inside of a l!itore. "Would you like to see the inside of a store?" M~n asked. "Well, whatever you want u1 to see," aaid Toltunov. "Well, : don't know ••• would you like to go inside , cr do you wish to go on?" Mason asked. "Whatever you want," came the reply from lhe editor. "Well, 1 guess you can walk into a store anytime," Mason said, concluding the indPcisive dialogue. The chief of the official Communist Party organ answered only a few brtef queries from reportv"s before his group tnter'?d lhe areen aod white bWi. His impressions of the U.S. were "Generally pleasant, with a .few ex. cepU001." He: didn'i elaborate, but it was 8Dum0 ed. the "exceptions" included demonslra· tions in Lo& Angeles and San Francisco romplelnlng or anll-SemlllRn in the Soviet Union. DAILY PILOT DAILY r1LOT Sltft "'"' 'DARK-SUITED MASON, TOLKUNOV TOUR FASHION ISLAND I rvlne Com.,.ny President Meet• I xvestia Editor CountyOK'sCompromise 3-point Harbor Outline Orange County supervisors have agreed to present a compromise, three-point plan on the new structure of the Harbor District to the Orange County League of Cities, wh;ich wants the d I s tr i c t eliminated. • By unanimous vote Tu e s d a y, 1upervlsors agreed to presel!t the fcillow· ing plan Feb. 12 to the apparently unyielding league: -To e1pand lhe HarOOr District's functions into the realm of recreation and parks. -To expand it! boundaries to include all of Orange County . -To add two more members to the five.man Harbor Commisskm, an ad- riloey ll"OOP· The two new members: would bt ee·feded by the I:eague of ClUes. (It.I five memben are &elected by supervtJort It Jl'estnl) The compromise proposal comes on the heels of a Jan. 8 resoluUon by the league. which rejected tQe earlier county pro- posal or Incorporating park& and beubel into the dlslrlct administration. In that action, which passed by a 1S to 10 vote, the league al.so asked for new state legislation on the dissolution Issue. It bas been &gr.ed th.ti both the COUllly actions and ihe league: votes are attempts lo keep the Issue or disbanding lh• diBtrl<t away from the polls. The dUes of HunllnglDn Beach and Westminster ba.ve been. leaden in the four.year~ld Oght to dl.ss>lve the district. a sped.al tas:-levying distrlCt. which bas the power lo raise £unds through bor· rowing or investment -money put to me for publiii, martne.or1ented projedl. The three lleW allelnaUve proposal• wt.N'''drafted . Uy Jn • roeetinc belo~Bo.ml ~'Allon E. Alleo, K~ Samp"'a, cumly dlreCfor of h&rbon:, beadiea and parb, 1 n d repreaentativea ol lluntlngton Beach, IV-.ter and Newport Beach. WHERE YOUR PATIENCE PAYS Off WITH ••• FINAL SALE MARKDOWNS DELISO DEB LADY · FLORSHEIM REG. TO $25. $ Pie••• •.• All S1!1s Final. No hchen4"11tt or R1funds. NOW 80 • i6 a LIFE STRIDE COBBLER COVER GIRL MISS AMERICA REG . TO $18. NOW $ 80 s.1, Starn Thu,..dey. ' Doort o,.,. 9130 A.M. 1052 IRVINI e WISTCLIFF PLAZA NIWPoRT l!ACH e 548 Hl4 l .. -.f -DAIL V PILOT Wodnndq, J"""'7 28, l'IO ~ ... IW tfrie OtllY Plllf lreft) Jockey Goorgo Poole almost lost e second race of his career by a bioker. Instead: he lost It by aev-· ral lengths. Poole was scheduled ride in the fourth race at ma .. ah in Florida l>ut hi• trainer said e had to shave off bis heard clr It as no go. He shaved it off -and nisbed eighth. Tbe. trainer was bis tber. • The devotl:es of lmo and or· der might conlicler a vi.sit to Sun PrcUrie, Wis. whole 10,000 smiling citUem got along in 1969 1Dith no reported crimlML homicidei, robberies, rape:s or aggraooied aasaulti. There WtTe onl11 16 bu.rgtarit1, five a u t o thefts, 38 caH1 of larcenfl -ot1e1' $50 valm and 85 cases of theft un&r $50. Stolen propertv total· ,d $11,550, and $7,750 of thot was recovered. • Popcorn and peanuts have been nned at the annual Southern · mta Boat Show undf:r W a y is week in Los Angeles. P11ul AJ.. i"reeht, chairman of the marine ex- aibltion, said in explaining th e lrder: "If I never see another lit· @e kid dumping bis bag of popcorn er my new boating carpet, that ill be too soon." Another exhibi- r, not identified, said, "When ose kids a cou~le of yetµ's . 1!g~ ured a bag· of peanuts Into the as tank, that was simply too uch ." Israelis Hit Six Miles '• -F-:rom-Cairo By Uded Pnt1 h&era1Uoaal lsnell planea bombed mWtary t.ars•t• wltbln sl. miles ol Cairo lod1y In • raid Defense Mlnilter MolhC Dayan 111d was aimed 11 lipd•nnllllng the leadership or .EoJIUan·~stdent Gam1l Abdel Naser. It WU tbe closest nld to the EIY!Jllan capital since the 1117 wor and tt bro11g)it Cairo's ao11alreralt botl<rles 1nto actlon !Or the !int Ume .me. then. . No Egyptian flgbt<ra roae to challenge the Israelis which hit u army camp on the banb of the Nile at El Maadi, sit: · mliei ·,r00,. Cairo and only a ffw miles across tbe river Nile from the Sphlns and the Pyramids. · They al5o bJt a camp at Dthabur, 15 miles aouth of Cairo and only nlne mlles · · from the ·5ov1e1 bulll and financed ln- d1.1&trlal complex of Helwein. They were the' niDth deep raids inslde"Egypt since Ju. 7. • Dayan'& statement wu made 1n an 1d- drtsll to a foreign press ISIOCition Junch 1n Tel Aviv today. "We want to uDdermine t h e leadership," D!lyln said. "We want to tell the people of Egypt. look here, you people of Egypt, your 1-?aders are not doing you g ........ any '!""'·. •. He said this wu one purpose· of the littpped up air offensive against Egypt and the others werP. to make it easier for Jsrael to "hold the line" along the Suez: Canal, to convince the E I y p t t a n leadership they are not ready to ,resume all-out war and to force Egypt to return to obitl'Ving the cease-fire. Court Rejects School Standard Plea by Kirk WASIDNGTON (AP) -Th< Supreme eoUrt flaUy rejected today a plea by Gov. Claude Kirk oC Florida that it set naUonaJ 6Lal\dard3 for school segregation. Kirk'! plea, which was framed ~ an at· tempted IUit against the 49 other etates and Secretary Robert H. Finch of the Department d. Health, EducatJon ..00 Welfare, w1• turned back un~. ~ Pll'igned decision. IJ>'llking far all ' or··the eight justices, aald Kirk had falled. to "state a claim against any .9f the defeDdants warrantlng the exercise of the original jurisdiction of the court." Only the Supreme Court, under the Constitution, can judge disputes between 1tates. The court rejected Kirk'a move without waiting for responses from the other states or from Finch. I - WHITE HOUSE GUARDS SPORT NEW UNIFORM 'Like Extras From Llthu•ni•n Movie' Says Critic New -White House Police Dress Gets Poor Review WASIUNGTON (AP) -Prest-Ni" on's AUgust idea of European-gf.yle formal dress garb !or White House police hall bloomed in late January -to a cOld reception from 50me critics. , The new $95 ouUits ordered for about 100 policemen are described by the Secret Service as "a white cream tunic, made out flf elastique, with a double-breuted Airliner Lost Over Lake Erie; Wreckage Found CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -A TAG Alrli~ plane carrying nine persons disappeared over Lake Erie this morning, and later a Coast Guard rescue helicopter found wreckage on ice in the Jake 15 miles north of Avon Lake, Ohio. There are no appaietlt survtvcm, the helicopter crew Teported. 'nle Coast Guard said that the wreckage'was spread over a quarter-mile area and the main wreckage possibly went through the ice In tho lalce. cut, three butt0t1s, a standup collar, gold nylon trim, and a vinyl cap." Nixon apparently was pleased by the unifonm: since he had four -0f the police in tOO!r new outfits at the front door of the White ltouse when British Prime Mlnlster Harold Wilson arrived f-0r a state dinner Tuesday nighL It was believ- ed the first time the guards had taken a formal part in a state dinner c::eremony. Some critical comments f r o m bystanders who got a first public glimpse -0f the uniforms ranged fro m ''Late Weimar Republic" to "They look like ex· t.ras from a Lithuanian movie" and "Nazi uniforms.'' One young man said the new headgear "looks like a cheap party hat." Jimmie Muscatello, a W~ington reta.fl ta.flor who worked five months and submitted three versions before getting the outfit accepted, was t beer!ai Put con- ceded the guards had a few cotbplaints. "A lot of the men said theY felt un- cmnfortable, but It's like an)1.hing else,'' he sald. ''They'll get used to it" For 36 years the guards wore drab ebony uniforms and white caps. With their new outfits, they continue wearing the ~ta, gitg ffW _h918ter which are carryoverS from usual police dress. Nixan's suggestion for new uni.forms came last summer after he noticed the palace guards and JX>licemen during his European tour. Fort as Issue Carswell Quizzed On Advisor Role w ASHINGTON (AP) -Judp G. Har· rold C1rl'llfell aald today thlt Supreme Court Ju.Uces h&v1 quit< e11<>11&h to do In corrylnr out their camtituUonal respoii· slbillties without :iervlng 11 presldenllai 1dvlsers. The queaUcm was raised at the l_JCQnd day ol tbe Senate Judiciary Committee's be1rh1,p on Presldent Nb:on's nomination of Carswell, 1 50-year~ld southerner, to be an associate jUfllce of the Supreme Caurt Sen. Robert P. Grlffm, (R-Mich.,) said aome objecUons hid been raised that the court not only has infringed on the legis· lative powers of Congress but Jts mem- bers have involved themselves In the af- fairs of the n:ecutive branch of the gov- ernmenL lie referred speclflcally to fonner Jus- Uce Abe Fortas who, he said, served al- most as a day.to-day adviser to fonner President Lyndon B. Johnson. Griffin, who led the right that blocked Johnson's nomination of Fortas to be chief ju!ilce, asked Carswell for his view of -what role Supreme Court justices should play in this r~spect. . . . Carswell said he did not think a JUitice should be an adviser to the President in the sense Griffin referred to and added that he couldn't conceive of Nixon calling on him to do anything like that. He remarked that he had met Nixon onlv on~ when he shook hands with him in i954. . He did not, however, preclude .a Presi- dent calling on Supreme Court members to undertake assignments in noncontro- U.S. to Double South Vietnam's Air Fo1·ce Mi ght \VASHINGTON (AP). -Secretary of the Air Force Robert C. Seamans Jr., said today the United States plans to dou- ble South Vietnam's air force to allow the Vietnamese to take over half the air war by lhe end of 1971. "As the Vietnamese air for~ builds up their combat capability we obviously can draw out our own Air Force," Seamans told a news conference. He declined, however, to say when the U.S. Air Force pull out might ~ com- plete. About 4,000 American airmen have. left Vietnam thus far under the Nixon ad· ministration's program. Seam8ns, ·a_ppearing before newsmen to report on a recent trip t-0 Vietnam, described the South Vietnamese as pro-- gressing satisfactorily In developing their air force, which dates back only to 1955. He cautioned, however, that the Viet· namese "face a tremendous job in all areas." "We must not expect too much," the secretary said. "There may be setbacks from time to time." At this point, Seamans said, the Viet- namese air force Is flying about 25 per~ cent of the sorties in Vietnam. verslal matters, saying that a president must have over-all responsibilities. Ca rswell , now a judge on the Fifth U.S. Circuit C-Ourt of Appeals, was nominated by Nixon last week to fill the Supreme Court seat vacated by Fortas' nslgnatlon under fire last May. Wliolesa le . Prices Take Major Jump WASHINGTON (UPI) -\Vhol"ale priceJ jumped 0.7 percent in January, led by a two percent jump in the category covering processed animal feeds and the processed foods lhat make up the bulk of grocery store products. Changes in the v.•holesale price index often portend later movement in retail prices. This means housewives may ex- pect ~creases in prices of canned, boxed, frozen and packaged foods as well as dairy products, meats, poultry, fish and other producls prepared for supermarket sale. The January advance 't\'SS the largest monthly increase in the wholesale price index since a 0.8 percent rise in May, 1969. Industrial commodities advanced only 0.3 percent, but rann products and pr~ ces.sed foods and feeds rose overall at a 1.4 percent rate in the month. Manuf1c- tured goods Increased 0.7 percent. The Labor Department's report on the wholesale price index rise came a week an.er the Bureau of . L ab or Statistics reported that consumer prices advanced 0.6 percent in De~mber. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said in- creases in wholesale prices for meats, animal feeds and sugar were mainly responsible for the sharp lncre1se in the index for processed foods and feeds. Von Braun Gets NASA Position IVASIDNGTON (A P) -Dr. Wernher vao Braun, the German-bOrn space rock- et lcientist, is being moved from the n&· tlon'1 rocket development Ct!llter al Hunts- ville, Ala. to a planning job in the 1pace agency's headquarters here. Von Braun's appointment as deputy administrator for planning in the National Aeronautics and Space Administration be- came effective immediately, NASA ad- ministrator Thomas 0 . Paine said Tues- day. His successor as director or the George C. 1'.tarshall Space Flight Center al Hunts- ville Is Eberhard Rees, 62, a Jong-time deputy and World War JI colleague at Germany's rocket research center at Peenemunde. Taking their cue from t~ song d- 1le "Blowin' in the Wind," this fam- ily waits at an intersection for the light to turn as the winds blow cold in ColOTado Springs, Frank Calperio, his wife Mi!tfi and daughter Dt'nise stand fast in the giuts that reached 41 mph in parts of Colorado. Governor Asks Law Compliance The plane carried seven passengers, a pilot ind c»J!Uot. Radar contact with the downed plane was lost by Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport's control tower at 7:49 a.m.. when the plane was reported lO mild o:rtbwest of. Cleveland. Subtarb's New Law • Tho Rev, Ralph David Aberne- thy, successor to Dr. Martin Luther King J r. as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, has received a check fo r $50,000 from Swedish donors to the organ- ization. The check was handed to A•bernat.hy by Prof. Gunnar Myr-. dal, chairman o( lhe S\vedish ~1ar­ tin Luther King Foundation, at a government dinner in Stockholm. Abern.athy, who· is on his fµ-st trip a broad, \Viti lecture at Gothenburg and Lund before leaving for Ailan-· ta, Ga. COWMBIA. s.c. (lJPIJ -GoY. llobert E. McNair told South Carolina ruldenla loday to comply with the U.S. Sup'eme Court's desegregaUon orders and crWciz.. ·m those "who woiild raise false hopd" that the issue can be avoided. The Coast Guard said the wreckage was ft'lmd at 10 1.m.. Hu ghes' Spruce Goose Hangar Lease Okayed Parents Bear Kids' Guilt McNair told a news conference that he disagrees with other Southern governors who have balked at the orders, "The people of South Carolina have established a repul.ation as being law abldlng. 1'm sure the people of this state are not asking me to defy the Jaw and urge others to defy it,'' McNair said. "It appears to me that we have run out of courts and run out or time. We have come to the crossroads where we hive to cboose between compliance and de- fiance." LONG BEACH (UPI) -Howard Hughes' lease for storing his $40 mlllion ply"ood seaplane. "Spruce Goose," which was flown only once 32 years ago, his been extended for another year. The board or harbor commissioners agreed the recluse industrialist could ex. tend his one-year leue eUecUve Sept. 3 for $36,0M. MADISON HEIGHTS-MICH. (UPI) - The Bible hints the sons may pay for the sins of their fathers. A new ordinance in this Uretroit suburb n1ay result in the im· prisonment of the fathers for the sins of their sons. "We want to make it clear to parents that society expect.<; them to exercise responsibility for the acts of their children," says Mayor Monk. R. Geralds. He admits there may be some legal que:s- tiom over the ordinance which imposes Storm Moves Over Midwest penalties of up to 90 days in jail and a 1SOO fine. MOil parents, and quit< • few ol the youngsters ln this middle-class suburb of 40,000 have responded enthusiastically to the ordinance, pwed by lbe City Council Monday. It will take effect Feb. 9. Neiv Snow Continues to Pile V p in Colorado Rock ie s The parents v.·ould not be hauled Into court on charges resulting from criminal acts of their chlldrtn under 17, but rather for failure to exercise "parental control ." They could face the charges If their offspring commit two er more criminal California lklft wtr1 """II" Junnv OYtf' S.V"'"° 1rn C•hlornl• lodl\' t•<tlll i., - Nlthft of ttrlY IT'Orlll"° "tl YV fO!I Ill 1-t°"'''"' •"" lnl•nd 'KlloM. Ttm· -llU•f"' we•• toolt• In Ille rnoun!l!n' end rn1 ... 1or 1«1ktfi' 1...:I II•-outlr ""'"-"'" wl~ wtre ••fftlfd. lOI AttOtl•!. Ind Vltln11V Wll mo•tlY tvnnl' wit~ -••"" matnlnt t°"1!tl tOI In "" r.oull'ltnl ~''°"'· GvJtr ~'f •Inch -•• iwKlll bflcw '919 tlnYOl'IJ. T8"l''5 lllth Wll 6'. 1111 1 6"f"M Iron> T.....,IY'' ..,.,in,vm, '--to1119hl 4J. Tll'I Alf Pollullen Co<1trlll Dlll•lc! •t· -led l'O ..... Ill IM l ot A119tlll 911.!n. Tiit tlvtodlv w!tooll Ctlltd tor ••nl• Of' ,,. ptf( .. ill llofl "'"""" Meo'ldt, wtt1t ..._.l\H'tl lr111n f I• I Mrttt ~ llOTll\fl. Tl'f 1M'9d'1n wtrf $l/llflV Wllfl tlr1Y -"'""' f9I ulen41nt ff'llln lllt l-•..c:ll ..... MUTll. °"11"1' llaf'IM ...... wlfteh I'°"' 7f ID Ill "'II" W '*'1 ...,_ kit ..,.._ ltlf un'fON. H1th1 '""""' 1111' 4Q. TM W....-,....,.,_,~,. •• , JI. Tht _,,,.ft WM -w ith ·~ IUtfY -*""" .,,111111. Hit~ ........ ~ ........ '" ........ ,.. .... -... 1ht ~ ........ lllM'f wtt!I flllfY ~ wr• ,..._ JS ft U ,..on •n flwr 11 tfill'lls, ~ lw IM" ..,_.. Ml W MM. T~, IM ""'....... "~' l'•lnil -ltd ..,.It ·~ U "'lift •n '*'1 )fl OMI lllr-tl ... .,....tl ~ ... ..,.. todly • .,..i n11r • ln 11,.,.., wl1n1 to •llalll 10 Ill 1111 loMr AtM . Cocstal Mol!ly Wftll1I wHll tu11Y wl!Nll , .. d•~. t..letlt veri.blt w4ftcls nltlll 1nd _,.,."' """" ti«Gmllll _..,,..lwl, Uta :s tM11 +adff. Hltfl}9CliW fCI. • Co.1t1I t-1ivf'" r""" ,,.,,. * ID "· lnl.-.cf ~llUT'ft ,.Mt ''*'" 4' IO "· Weter ·~·'"'" "· Sun, 111-. . 1'Wes W9PMUDAY -• ~ICOl'ld lllfl'i ,. lJ~N '·"'· lA ~ ... ·~" •.m. '·' TMVUDo\Y 111 .. 1 l>itll .... , ••••••• 1;061.11'1. , .. Fln t W .. ... . .. f ; .. •·"'· I I ,_.., 111111 ....... ' •••••• 11t4 .""' t,, Stoeell!! i.e ............ " •• kit •Jn· •.• illll .... , t :JJ '""" ... , J:J6 ''"'· ""'°" llllWJll:l7•A ktlf:Qt.1111. v.s. s u .. mar11 A wldts,.... tlllrYll JYtfton -"" ecron 1111 Cffl1lf' ol tM CWfttN loft\' ......... "" , . .,. ..... -· II WI• wt..,., .,.,, wtt ~ "" "°''II'" le ftlt G,..1 l.lk... H41•.,., •-wMfllnft _. IMUM flDr ....,., ... '"' WltCOf'l'lll •nf ffif Wl"""lt -· 11t lfftrcl W Tiit ~ O•HI I.Me!. Tfri'tl1T'I -•1'11'nft .....,,ifMtlll I" 11· ~ ,.,. ""' -··111 lflll .. c.i .. , .. ·~ ...... ·-«Wllll'IWd to pllof u .. JM lrtl •Ito hit .. ,_ "'111'r ·-,,..,. Wll ft!llt fllt llont _., of 1114 c;,,.11 (Mt! wllUt Afctk COid COl'>- 1 ....... llw1Ut'*11 -"""' "'" ..... l•M. Tiii ~l.tllt 1M w•l II llollow lrtf't 11 H ...... Mil- Te.,perat"r".i Afbu<IU9f"fl11t1 ......... AHIMI 1.1 ... ,n11d 11....,1rck ..... ... Ion • ....... ,.111. Clllclto ClllCl""l11 ..,_ ..... ~ Ottroll ,,.~,._, Fort Wflfth P'••ll'O ··-l(.jlnJM(lfY l .. V••• .... _... Mlt"'I Ml-._.'9 N-0t1t.tns N-Vott. NoMtt 1"11!" Oa~l•nf Oll•'-'1 (tl'r ...... P1ltn ~1r!nt' PIM lloblft Pl>Ottll1 P!!hbt.i•tll Pltttl•nd RtPld (lty "" 91\ltt ·-•.a-te $111 Uit>t Clt'I' ~n01- "" F'•!l(IK.0 i11tll1 ,.,._ '""""' "ft" ..... "'*· ~~ ~ •11 acts 'Within a 12-month period or are con· •• 3' victed of four traflic violations during the ~ ~ i same period. ~, n .01 "Something like this should have been :: !! done a long time ago because a lot of u u parents don't even know what their kids !! ;: .o• are doing," says Bill Patton, a policeman .., ,, workina: in Rilyal Oak but living in: ~ .;: #' Madison llelghts. "I'd Ute to see 1s P Ar· !Qmethinl like this in all communities ~ :_: because a lot flf parents oow simply dan't M11 ~ do 1nythlng when you tell the:m about " : tbtlr ttds." '' n Some of the youngsters agreed. A :: !: .et group of 16 and 17-year~lds, r;itting in a ~ '' local drive-in restaurant after school " JJ 51 o .c1 TUesday, said most of thtlr co1np&nions •• ~ were for stricter enforcement of the .. -,. '' ·law11. ~ !! m "W:th something like this, IOPle of the i4 a .11 klda ml!ht be afraid of dolng something : : ·1' ·WTMg I they l<IK!w their partnts would 11 .u .ts bear down on them." said Jim Crabtree, ~ !? ·11 a 17-year-dd hia:h !ICbool senior. » .. m But Ramey Baldridge. IS, disagreed. :! ~ .n "Kkk v.·ho go out and d~y tbtlr •l -» parent& when their pannts don't know :; ll whtrt they are anywl)' aren't golnj: to • change because of this," he said. "If kids don't rP.spect their parents, this law won't make th<!m do It." GC'ralds, a faUJer or fi ve, said he hoped the new · ordinance would counter just such an attitude. "Too often the parents don't know what their kld1 are doing and some seem to have the atUtude, 'I don't care what you do as Jong as you don't bother me.' " he said. "What we're trying to do is set up some sort or counseling so we don't ha,•e to bring the parents into court and charge them with neglecting their responsibility. "This Is a new area and 1 realize there will be som3 legal questions about it," he admitted. "But my personal feeling is that these questions (about parental resJX>n.sibility) must be raised." That's Oil Righi Quiz Strikes Well of Humor HOUSTON (UPI) - A major oil company embarked on a caml'Jaign to obtain the answers to some puz:zUng questions about the petroleum Industry. The company sought the answers In various Houston elementary and junior high schools and published these responses: • "The U.S. uses JJ million barrels of petroleum a day -11 million la bigger than the largest known whale." • "Dinosaurs helped make oil. Now that thry are de1d, we can safely call them clumsy and ~tupkt." • "It tai..1 high oklil to find oil. The lowu the bolt, the hi&her the skill. '1 • • "The tttnlest part oil can be divided into is lhe drop." • "We say the cause of kerosene disapptarlng Is evaporation. Evapor14 tJon get& blamed for many things people forget to put the top on." • '"To Jeucn the chances of the drilling tool1 gctlng caught in the hole, rotary drllllni fs carried on around the clock. 12 days a week.'' • ••1 hive !ound name-jet drilling to be easier to 1u1y th an to t~U what it means." • "Before they actually atart drillfn&, the l1nd 1$ cleared 1nd graded. lt is gradtd A·plus if it his oU In IL" • uPttrocbemistry advanctd the study of petroleum to the point where. it is no longer ~nderstandable." ' • "Have. you evtr wondered bow • wildcat could hive anythini to di) with dlJcovering oil? Well, I wfll explain It to you that so hive I." • . 'Editorial Selection' Army Denies Censorship . • ' SAIGON (AP) -Charges that unfavorable news reports · were censored by authorities al the American Forces Viel· nam Network are "completely unfounded and unsupported," investigators for the U.S. Command said today. The command's inspector general also denied that a former AFVN newscaster who made the censorship charges during a broadcast is being persecuted for his remarks. The broadcaster, Spec. 5 Robert E. Lawrence of Atlan- ta, Ga. was transferred from Saigon to Pleiku and made a chaplain's assistant. A command spokesman said court-martial charges of di s obedie nce and in- subordination pending against Lawrence have nothing to do with the c enso rs h i p in· v cstlgatlon or th e newscaster's charge that he Nixon Lauds Officer on I Flag Button NEW YORK (UPI) -New York City patrolman Patrick Dolan, who caused a furor by \vcaring an An1erican fl ng but· ton on his unifonn lapel. has received a letter from Presi· dent Nixon congratu lating him on his ''firn1 sta nd to honor our flag." Dolan, 36, was cited for being out of uniform Jan. S for \vearing th~ lapel button. But the next day Police Com- missioner Howard L c a r y changed the regulations to allo\v city po\iccmeh lo wear nag buttons. The preside ntial I ct t e r . da ted Jan. 14, said "I wos very pleased to see that your rirm stand to honor our flag won a re versal of the ruling ... of police rules and regula· tions. We need to encouregl! Americans in pr jde of courlry. Now New York 's finest have another proud badge to wea r. y,·as "not free to tell the truth." The charges concern an earlier incident in which Lawrence refused to obey an order to drive AFVN slaff members to their down town billets. -~~~~~~~~~- UPI T1"""'1t •Se11ator'' Dies 'Senator' Ford, vaude- ville comedian whose joke-telling on radio's "Can You 1'op This?" gained him national fame, died of cancer a1 Greenport. Long Island, Tuesday. Ford. 82. be· came "Senator" in his early 20's when he was mistakenly introduced as a senator at a club dinner. Congratulations!" ;===========: Said Dolan, "To think that I would recei ve a letter from the President because I fought for something so fundamenta l, the love or our flag. I'll never forget JL" FAIR f•t•. f1 ir, ftt;fu1I. n,.,. lht•• words "'''" up f1etors lrt 11p•r1!iort ott ffio DAil Y PILOT odlfori•I P•4• •"•rt d1y, A 1Ummary or the ln- vesUgaUon report released by the command said that there was no censorship at AFVN. It classllled Ille withholding or certain stcties as ''editorial selecUons.'" ·1 "Spec. Lawrence expressed the vlelv that he and the other n e w s c a sters individually shQ1J ld have full authority to make such editorial choices." the report said. "However, they felt that If their superiors made such choices, this was censorship. Such a posiUon is Inimical to the operation of a radio or television station.'' Tile command statement said that the sensitivity of the South Vietnamese government must be taken into account when editorial decisions are made. "Material which would of- fend the host countrY cannol be uscil," ·it said. -{:: -{:: * 2 in Saigon Press Corps U.S. Agents SAIGON (AP) -Two U.S. government agents were in- filtrated into the Saigon press corps but were withdrawn after their identity was ei:- posed , U.S. officials said to- day. "Someone goofed." said one high-ranking of[iclal. The U.S. Military Assistaoce Command for Vietnam said those responsible for issuing press credentials to the two men ''have been admonished concerning the proper pro- cedures to follow in ac- credilation." There was no official word on why the two agents mas- queraded as newsmen or who ordered the operation. But there was speculation that they were trying to spy out newsmen ·s sourtts of in- formation. The men could not be located today in Saigon. Of· ficials who dealt wilh their ac· creditation and identified them as federal Investigators gave their names as H o w a r d Hethcox and William T. Tuck<?r and said t he y presented letters o f ln- t rod u ct ion from the "American University Prest." ONE WEEK SALEI PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE I DIAMONDS A. 14Kwhile gold pierced eorring> .......................................... Orig. 14.95 NOW 9.77 I . Oiomond hear! shaped Qolng steady ring ............... , ................. Orig. \4.9.S NOW 11 .11 C. 1/.K d•amand sol itaire, 14K while go!d .................................... Orlg. 137.50 NOW $119 D. 2 dia mond 14K necklace accenied by cuh1Jred pearls ...••••••••••••••.• Orig. 15.50 NOW 1 •.11 14K GOLD JEWfLRY A. lAK gold earrings, oil dortgles ... Speciol group values !o 16.95 ...... NOW 50% off I. 14K gold charms, 1nony style~. Orig. 12 . .5010 15 ............... NOW $10to$12 BIRTHSTONE RINGS A. Sol.toir• style lo die ~ birthstone rin gs. Ong. 14.95 .........•........... NOW 12,77 1 . Men's d1omon·d onyx r111g. Orig. 29.95. .................................. NOW 19.11 C. Lod•es sp~ciol 14K birthstone ring~. Or ig. 29.95 ........................... NOW 22.11 WATCH IS A. Wotchei with th• now 1oolc. Orig. S'20 ............•.............•......... NOW t .11 I . 17 iewel men'1 & lodies worchu. Orig. 19.95 •....•.....••.•.••.•.•.•... NOW 14.11 ONE Of A KIND A. lodies diamond Elgil'I wotch. Orig. S175 · •.........................••..•. NOW 131.25 I . 14K gold oll diamond wolch ottochmen! . drig. S'29S ~ .................... NOW $236 (, Sterling !ilver lde11tificotiort broce!e!. O rig. 5.95 ...................... NOW 3.15 What o fantastic collection of j..,..lryl And what o fantastic opportunity for you to SAVEi Seldom is such a tremendous reduction mode on fewaJry os fine os this. Check the outstanding selection! Check the remarkable Yaluesl Wonderfuf time to purchosa thot special lifetime treasure. CHARGE IT AT YOUR PENNEY'S 11NE JEWELRY OEioARTMIHT. s,.Wlimt Ill Pi.. Dlo~ Dlo-4 '-"'"""" w.-. .. •1'14 • .,.ir 1w..-.. NOW' THE SE VALUES AT ANY ONE OF THESE PENNEY STORES! CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD 00\'iNEY MONTCLAIR' FU LLERTO/'I HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA SHOP SUNDAY TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! • may co -semi-annual • '• 1 l •• ,. I I WfdnesdJJ, J1nuary 28, 1970 OAIL Y PILOT 5 ,) • ~ Falrchlld custom covered sofas reg. JI0.00 299 .00 •·fl. '°'' Four styles ... in modern, transitional ond traditionol moods. Choose your a. foot so fa in pillowback, tuxedo, 1awson or contemporary style. Each is covered to your custom order in dee.orator fab· ric.s ands covers. Loveseat, 7 ft . and 9 ft. sizes, available at comparable saving s. may co furniture 41 Imported glass lamps from Italy regularly 25.00 19.00 "Bell;ssi mo " (Italian for most beautiful) describes these swags that bathe your rooms with the warmth of sun shine . the su btleties of moonlight. Diffusers tone the light to create the mood. Each wit h 5 feet of chain. •-17" green teardrop, Ir die .. b. Light amber be TI, I 2" dio., c. 2 I" Amber t1'd cylinder, 7" Clio. mey co lemps 63. • SAVE ON LA-Z-BOY® RECLINA ROCKERS" ' ' " • ., reg. 219.00-239.00 179.00-189.00;' • t Smart styling and solid comfort orof your~ when you choose a La·Z·Boy~ ~ Recl1na·Rocker®, from our Ameruzana~ collection, for your home. Plus cur·' rent savings of HO to $50! Simply roiso the Comfort Selector® and tho 3-Posi· tion leg rest adjusts to give you just ffie· right amount of comfort. Positions for rocking. dream ing . or full bed . Tradltionai (shown) reg 219.00 179.00 Traditlon1I ...... r19. 239.00 189.00 Contemporary .... r-e. 219.00 179.00 may c.o furniture 144 may co south coast pl111 , sen diego fwy. at bristol, costa mue, 546-9321 sh op monday thru . saturday I 0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., sunday noon 'til 5 p.m. MAVCO I • . • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE .. . r I I . I I No Hardship Shown Surorlslngly, the usually tough and bardnosed Hunt- ington '&ach planning commlsslon gran~ a 11C>ning variance to Greenleal~obile Home Sales to sell traiI- en from the Orlltwood Mobile Home Park. Usually, berore granting such a variance, the com- mission has insisted that a hardship be shown. But ap- parently it holds that this rule does not apply when city- owned property is involved. Somehow this was overlooked in the Greenleaf ap- plication and this company will now be able to conduct a commercial operation 10 an office-professional dis- trict. The planning department staff simply recommend· ed approval. The commission complied, with only two of the seven members voting against the measure. Such action would appear to be a violation of the city ordinance, which, according to the city attorney's office, requires that a hardship be shown. For whatever reason, the zoning variance was grant,.. ed. The planning commission would do well to e:z.ercise the same degree of care when processing applications involving city property as it does \fhen private proper- ty is involved. Dampening Recall Embers Last week the Fountain Valley City Council ap- pointed three men to the city's planning commission. Two, James Dick and Tom Morrison, were actually re- appointed while the third, Richard Healey, was named to replace Dr. El~on Bainbridge. · Morrison and "Healey are noncontroversial person· alities, but when the council agreed to keep Dick on the . ,. commission it made a move which might help dampen some ot the remaining embers from the reeent recall controversy. · · . Dick had openly opposed the 'recall movement which placed George Scott, Ron Shenkman a nd Bernie SvaJstad on the council. It was widely expected that he would be removed from the commission for po11tical revenge. But the council realized the asset Dick is to the clly. As a commissioner, and current chainnan, Dick has displayed a wide knowledge ot commission affairs and provided strong leadership. During the recall lbattle he displayed tremendous restraint and obj~ti~ily in keeping recall issues out of planning comm1ss1on af· fairs. The respect ol his fello\Y commi!islone rs was re- centl y show n \vhen they l'C·elected him chairman. His reappointment, in spite of P?lilical differences, was·a wise decision on the councils part. It may help unite lhe city a litUe more. Help Sell tl1e Bonds On Feb. 10 the Huntington Beach City School Dis- trict will ask voters to approve an increase in the in· terest payment for some $4. 75 million in already ap. proved school bonds. If approved, the school district could then offer a better interest rate (up to seven per· cent) to prospective buyers. The current five percent limit has taken school bonds completely out of the market. Some school of· ficials are not sure they can sell even the seven percent bonds, but it will ~ive them a chance. It is a simple issue this time. The di strict is not ask· ing a p p r o v a I of any more bonds - just a change in the interest payment. The money is needed for school construction. I.f the district cannot sell its school bonds, voters \Vill be asked on April 14 to approve a $1 .50 increase in the tax rate to put the district on a pay-as.you-go basis concerning school construction. Jf the bonds arc sold, the tax increase will be unnecessary. One thing is certain -more school s arc needed. no matter how they are financed. Voters should give the district a fighting chance and grant the interest rate in- crease. H l11formatio11 011 Stcitabiltty for Cfaildren Is OJy Aitti ECLIPSE Jack Valenti Explains Nationwide Film Rating System To the Editor : Because the nationwlde film rating system is of importance to movie-goers in your community, l am anxious to describe what it is aod what it is not, what it tries to do and what it does not do. The movie rating system has one ob- jective: To inform the public, especially parents, about the JUit.abiUty <i movie content for viewing by their children. 'Ibal is iUi onl y aim and purpose. The film rating syttem does not rate films for adults. A film. Is not rated for artistic quality, or lac k d. it. The system does not rte0mmend fifmt or ban films or censor Wms. It proVldes a public in- formation service, whk:h the great ma- jority of responsible film producera..00 distributors believe is dealred by psrtnts. A RECENTLY completOd n11loo-wide survey concluct.ed by the 0 p I n I o n Relearch Corporation of Princeton, N.J., hu revealed some significant findings about how the publlc responded to this new program in its first year of operation. Fifty-eight pert:ent of the movie-going public considers the rating system "very useful" or "useful" in helping parents: guide the movie-going or their children. Only lS percent does not find it useful. ( .. No opinion" wa s the answer of the rest.) The survey also pointed out the nefd for some revision. Because the "M" category (M: F'or ltlature audiences, parental discretion advised) was con- fusing to a substantial portion (Ir the public, that category's description is being changed to ''GP: All Ages Admit- ted, Parental Guidance Suggested." f\.1oreover. In (Infer lo strengthen the EYstem even further, the age limit in "R'' and "X" film5 ia raised to 17. THE YOU.OWING , then, are the revis- ed raUna: symbol& and admission pollcles: MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE. G -AJI A&es Admitted. Genera] Au- diences. GP -AH Ages AdmlUed. Parental Guid ance Suggested. (Note tha~ the above two categorie s have an tmrestriet.ed admlstkm policy.) R -.ReWicted. Under 17 Requires Ac· compallyin& Parmt or Adult Guardian. X -No One Undtr 17 Admitted. (This age limit ltlay vary In certain areas.) HOW 00 THESE rating categorle:i; translate Into useable guidance for parenti? G. Films rated G include those with a broad r1nge o( ihtme and appeal to both the Y°'!Jll aod their elders. These filme:, in the jUdg:ment of the rating board , con- tain no m1terial wbich parents would find objectionable for viewing by their youngsteta. Dear Gloomy Gus: Re: Paul Jones' warning that cam- p.1Jp posters may fall under 6:1gn ordinance and candldatt's rmy have lO post $100 bond to gua.ranttt pnli- liul lliol will be removed from utntly and atrttt 1lp poles. l ~n't this pootlna llltpl In the f "" plac:tl -L. R. B. ,.. .....,.. .,..... ,.....,., ......... , • I ,..., -........... ,~,. le11• ,,_ ... ,... • ......., ... D4lllW' , ..... GP. While much like a G flhn, a GP rnm· is more sophisticated in treatment. Because tastes and standards vary by geographical area and even b y neighborhood. some parents may want to give guidance to thei r children, but both G and GP films are open to all ages. R. THESE ARE fi lms of adult themes or adult treatment, but a picture I.hat persons under 17 may see ir they are ac· companied by a parent or adult guardian. such as their teacher on an organized movie outing. X. No one under 17 will be admitted. It should be noUced that many X films have not been submitted to the Code and Ra.ting Administration. These non-sub- mitted film&" seU-apply the X riling. No X flJm may.otarry the Seal..of Approval al the Code and Ratirlg Adminl.&tratioB. Tms, IN BRJEF, is the movie ratlng system. Responsibl e leaders in the mo- tion picture industry are providing these ratings as a public service to parents and families. We try to make the ratings as accurate as humans can, thOOgh we know there will aJways be disagreements with our judgment. Meanwhile. we are con- tinuing to urge responsible film-makers to command all their skills to produce movies of good taste and creative U:· cellence. JACK VALENTI President /\lotion Picture Auociation New York, N.Y. l..egall::e A bort lolO To the Editor: Airs. Robert L. Sassone's description or a seven-week old fetus (Mailbox Jan. 21 ) is genuinely moving. Who would want to hurt a tiny little child-Jet that already has the "familiar features ... or an adult"? No o n e, of course-unless there is a compelling reason. But what one person might not see as a compelling reason, ·another might. Surely no one Is In a bet· ter posiUon to judge what Is a compelling reason to abort an unborn child than the expectant mother herself, the one who will bear the respomlbllUy of nurturing that child to adulthood lf it Is born. 1·~1 SURE Mrs. Sassone lvould agrtt that motherhood is one of the most :solemn and important duties a human being csn undertake. For the sake of the: child as well as for the sake or the mother. shouldn't it be undertaken only by choice and with wholeheart«I com- mllment? Birth corltrol deviCE"s have gone a long way to make "motherhood by choice" PQMible, but they are ri!Sky In more ways than one. And so ls an illegal abortion risky in more way!'! than one. Mrs. Sassone ~eems to Imply th1t If abortion Is not legalized, those tiny little fetusa wll1 be saved from torturous deaths. But of course that ls not so. MANY, PERHAPS MOST,. of them would conllnue, ais now. to be tom from the utern!'I by an instrument wielded. perhaps dum.Uy. by on• wlllini to brealc the law. Ketplng abortion Illegal will not save the feftl5. but lepllz.lng It ml&ht aav~ the mother'& life. 1'ho8e of us who favor legalizing abor· tion don't wlsh to lmpme our vafues nn individuals like Mrs. Sassone "'M ob- viowlly don't agree with U&. But legalltlng 11bor1lon would not do that. lt would simply gtve us all a choice. f'~f ACCUSTOMED. I'm 50rry lo say, lo talking with men who are only too ~·ill· Ing to sacrifice thelr wlve11' Jives hoor by hour and year by year for the "aake of childrm, '' but It pains me deeply to rtaid I Jetlflr (rom I WOMAn who Shawl deep corilpaSsion for a fetus nnd none at all for tier slste:~ other women. ( j Letters from readers are welcome. NormaUy writers should convey their messages i n 300 words or less. The Tight to candeme Letters to fit .space or eliminate Ubel is reserved. All let- ters must include signature and mail- itig address, but names may be with- held on request if sufficient rtnson is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. Aa to Judge Mast's recent decision: Afrr. SUIOne may disapprove. but I knOw one woman who fra med the news story that told of it and others who shed tears of gratitude when they heard about it. JOY CONNORS West Coast Public Relallons Co-Chairwoman, NaUonal Organization for Women (NOW) Laguna Beach Stlck to the f'acls • To tile Editor: Airs. Robert L. Sassone's letter (A1aUbox, Jan. 21) slated that the seven- week-old fetus "bears the familiar features .•• of an adult." While the fetus resembles a human being. ii alS<J resembles lhe fetuses of many animals and birds at the same stage of development Second.Jy, only If one can find an adult wOOse head makes up al least 50 pereent of its total body size, and ~ legs are much shorter than its arms, can one say that a seven·\\'eek-old fetus bears any familiarity J.o an adult human being. A FETUS WHO responds to the tooch of a hair la simply obeying the reflex of a response to external stimulation which Is a characteristic. of ALL Jiving things. Th1J cannot be interpreted as a purely human atlribute, nor can it be constred that a fetus feels paJn. When a pregnancy ia terminated, the fetus succumbs to ox- ygen llarv•UOI\. NOT pain. There has been enough emotJonallsm expressed in the pros and cons of abor- tion . Let's stick to the facts. What an abortion doea is to remove the products Clf an unwanted pregnancY for whatever reason a woman decides that she cannot bear the child. And that reason is lhe business of that woman and her doctor. MARGO MOORE Huntington Beach Bab11 Seal Slaughter To the F.dit.or: A&ain It is almost time for .. THE GREAT l!rnl SEAL HUNT," scheduled to awl In Mardi. Up and down tlj• Cana· dlan coastline, the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and off Alaska, Canadian, Norwegian, 8nd Amtttcan seal slaughterers will torture. club, spear, shoot and skin (often while still alive) hundl'Ms o( thousands of .eals. Many of the victims are just habits whose frantic mothers often try to throw their own bodies over them In an effo'rt lo prevent thcir brutal slaughter. OTllER TllO USANOS ol seal5 will also be shot. ga..Hed, or speared from shi p- board. Many of these will not br_ killed outright, but will be painrully woundl'd, \valtlng helplessly for .i slow and 8gonit· Ing. lonely death under the dark k:e. Shame on our own 'Department of Tnllrlor which will again hire prn- fesstonal seal killers to wantonly club to death over 60.000 seals on the Pribiloff lslanda off Alaska! • Soon the Ice will be a crimson patch work. strewn with the skinless remains of what once were harmless, intelligent mammals that have died an agonizing. unbelievably cruel and unnecessary d .. th . BUT YOU CAN DO something. Insist by letter or wire to the following that this bNtal massacre be stopped : Hon. Ame Gunneng , No rweg ian Ambassador. 3401 MassachusetUi Ave., Washington, D.C. 20007. lion. ·A. Edgar Ritchie. Canadian Amba ssador. 1747 A1assachusetts Ave., Washington. D.C. 20036. Preside nt Richard A1. Nixon. The White •louse. Washing1on O.C. 20500. . Further details can be obtained from friends of Animals, Inc., II l"'e&l 60th Slreel , N.Y.C. 1111123. DORIB VAN BRUNT !i'a ve lipper Bay To the Editor : The Upper Bay at Newport Beach is one of the two remaining estuaries in all Southe rn California and by "developing" this land (actually marsh ). as is sug- gested by the Irvine Company. it will be completely lost as a sanctuary for the migrating birds. This does not see:m serious but it destroys the ecology of the area to the delri1nent of the peQp\e. AS FOR TllE recreational facilities proposed by the Irvine Company-the children in this area have plenty of recreational activitiel'. but \\'ill soon ha\'e no natural area s left unless \\'e are farsighted enough In proLect such areas from develoi)ers who (let us face it) want to make money. Another concrelt' cliannel with the. water walled in is not to be compared wilh a natural bay in in· terest and Is nothin.ll lo leave lo nur children and grandchildren s u c h as a natural estuary. Once lost this bay can never again be reclaimed-do not let us lose It., GERTRUDE DALE Book Promotlo11 To the Editor: I hive gathered a few facts regarding the Cal State. Long Beach nudity class that Wi!re overlooked. \Vhat did !he pro- ressors, Robertson and Steele, have to lose? The ultln1 ate disci plinary action had already been taken by the school. L3wyers for Robertson and Steele were in attendance. The press also had been informed and were in attendance . Robert.s\ln and Steele had just published a book. I lhlnk they \'t'ere nol running a nudity class but trying to promote their forthcoming book •. KARL C1\TES Corona del ~1ar Vlc lo... Crime Circle To the Edltor: In e1cli succeecUr!g year for the last · B11 Ge orge ---, Dear George : I wrote and complained a neighborhood cal turned over my garbage e\·cry night. 1 asked what lo do. You ~id throw a~·ay a dog. That's a silly answer! t don't even hlvf' a dog. Anyhow, you didn't answer the second par! of my que~· lion -rntee get In Iha garbage 11fter it's spilled. \\'hat caa I do for the mice! ANNOYED Dear Annoyed : Throw away 110me chttM?. umteen years the FBI has informed us thal more crimes had been committed than in the previous year. What is so depressing is the facl that the crime rate may continue upward until some drastic changes are made. The big question is, what changes? Perhaps If we could pin- point where changes could be made, then the changes themsel.,.es would become obvious. THE POLICE ARE universally criliciz· ed bf.cause lhey are behind the times and that if they were given more money they would be able to cope with the modern criminal. Yet, the Police have much in common with Batm1n in that Batman will capture a crimlnal like J oker and tum him over to the authoriUn. Then in a few weeks Batman is once again seen chasing Joker. This may be fine for TV but we the people are fed up with this vicious circle of a committed crime, punishment rehabilitation, par o I e, anoth er committed crime. 1\1ANY OF OUR more conservative citizens point their finger of scorn at the courts and especially the U. S. Supreme Court. Yet. the courts are only following lhe Constitution of the United States and the Bill of Righls. Thal anyone can faull the courts and igno re the fact that our Conslitulion and Bill of Rights help those that have chosen crime as a profession i~ almost beyond belief. We the people are aware of and fed up with the fact that criminals who commit a crime are allow- ed to go free because of some unreal technical poinl that only has meaning to those thal make their living out of the law. l n conclusion. the rights of the creative WJ1y the Need? • \Ve&lden. N.l' .• Cilizen Herald: ''Will private busineu or industry move into the public education picture in the United Slates? The question is not necessarily ridiculous. The U.S. Office of Education is underwriting an etperiment in remedial ~ducatioo "'hich may be a breakthrough in raising achievement skills !or young people who can't seem to make the grade. Under this experiment. lhe U.S. O(fice of Education will contract wilh the nation's top ed u cation technolvgy firms, to provide teaching techniques ... ia an effort to bring all pupil.! up to grade level in verbal skills. Crux of the c~perlme.nt will be •guaranteed' performance .•• Prime (lb- ject will be to discourage dropouts .•. A lot of educators, parents and tax payers will watch the ••• experiment hopefully. lf It works It can only Improve the quaJi. IY of today'.s educational process. And, as a byprodu~t. It would render a gre1t and unexpected serv;ce, If It could supply an ano::\\•er to the question : Why Is there such extensive nc:ed ror remedlal educ•· Hon? .. \\rilJOtt, N.C .. Times: ''Penal!les for ~ru,q offenses are too light. They are light 1n England and in America. If this were not true there wouldn't be the increase in drug addiction which 11 now taking place. It ls difficult to believe that there are parents who are not concci.mtd. It Is lime tor all to btlcome concerned, and the first who should feel the full eitcnt or the law are tbe pushers, the ones who sell aad e.nmurage the UM! of dfllis." citizen are much more important than the rights of the parasites. HARRY B. McDONALD JR. School EvaluatlolO To the Editor: This is meant to be an honest evalua- tion of the school system available today. Take two interested parents, who are realists. \vilh the understanding that they must do at least 25 percent of the leaching. Once this is understood you havt. the nucleus of a good education. Try to build a good relationship with your cllildrens' teachers. (Thi5 is not always easy. Consc.ientioos parents are con- sidered busybodies.) Learn the subjects they are to study. ftfake sure that the children understand them . If !hey are stymied, see U you can fi nd stud y hints or habits that will assist them. Take an active interest in the sub- jects they are studying and in the teachers who are teaching them. BUT DO NOT be complacent! Be on the alert for teachers, who teach other than their supposed subjects. Don't think, "It can't happen here!!" Only by being alert can we cure some of the ills that confront our child ren . Arrive al the school, fully armed with information : lhcy'll hate to see you coming but when they realize that you ex pect the same from your children, as you do from lhem. they·ll soon be on the alert for the same things as you rself. PROVIDE A climate of readini;, in· terest in current events, religion. good sportsmanship and all the other im· port.ant things that contribute to well- balanced, happy, alert children. Re· member that you must cultivate an in· terest in acquiring an education. This is most importanl! To instill the children with the importance and responsibility or acquiring an education Is essential. Make the children realize that only they will be able to su pport themselves from what they have learned. THAT BEING popular. follow ing the 'in-crowd' and being accept«! will not feed their families in later life. Teach them lo participa te in the activities (If !he school. Go to the functions and watch thl' children with pride. Share with them 1n their activities. Securing an education, today. is a fam1· ly effart. It is not somethini; that can ~ gained merely by shoving the chiklren out of doors until dark . Responsibility docs not end with clothing ancl feeding !he chlldren. It is a job to be done 24 hours a day. seven days a week and St weeks a year. Double standards are nol acceptable. CONSTANCB C. BLANCHARO Westminster ------ Wednesday. January 28, 1970 Thi! tditofial poge of the Dail11 Pilot set k.s to inform and 1lim- ulate readers blf pre1enting thi$ nt1:1c.rpoper'1 oplnio11s t'lnd com- mentary on topics of interest and slgn1ficance, by f)f'Ovidtng a jor11m for the e.rpression nf our readers' opinions, and by presnt&tg the dlt1trse ulew- pofnt.s of infomud ob.servt:ri and fPOktsmtn on topia of t1ie dov. Robert N. Weed, Pu.bllsber . . . . .. . . . . ' . . .. . . . . . . . . . • • ... • •• ·i • • - -- Teenagers Take Note • Diplomas Not · Needed By PATRICtA McCORMACK NEW YORK (UPI) -My garbage man la a high school dropout. At the age of 20, he earns around $10,000 a year. He started at the age of 17 as a helper on a truck, mar- ried the boss 's daughter, got a truck of his own as a wedding present, and now has two trucks -and a helper, He lives in a nice. house, drives a fine car, tala!s his wife out to Wnner a couple of times a week and otherwise enjoys U!e. He doesn't have dents in his psyche because he never graduated from h!gh school or broke out in night sweats over the pressure of college-en- trance exams. · So far, his mini succe!.I story is typical of thousands being acted out nationwide by young men and women Who · never intend to fill out a col· lege application. They don 't all marry "the boss's daughter, but many are "making It" without' ever wanning a seat in an ivy- covered ball. The point is : you don't have Christine Marie Lewis To Wed Jerry .K. Doll Mr. and Mrs. Earl Allen Lewis oC Newport. Beach an. nounced the betrothal of their daughter, Christine Mar I e Lewis to Jerry Kenneth Dolt during a famify party in Taos, N.M. Among the 1peclal guests at the buffet were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Tarleton, the bride· elect's ireat uncle and aunt and 1.1r. and Mrs. John Schmidtke, her grandparents. l DAILY PILOT Jf• ·~ :~ ;.; for Success: . ., ~ :.: lo go lo college lo h•ve '!I rewarding career or make imt: mediate-spendb11 money. " Allen B. Goldtnthal, a~ of ''Teenage Emplormeri Gulde'! (l!egenta • PUbfW.ln~ Co.). makes· that polnl, ad ding: "Jf you are 1ge· 13 to 19~ there are more Ulan l,100 dlf ferent pan t.i me , sum;. merthne, or full -time jo~ available to you right now. Q "And il you CM't find a j~ oneJn y~ area, you can crea~ . s Some QC tt\e S{Ul'lpiel he list!· In the book:· ffi·fl kit con. slructor, gift or novelty han- dicrafter, jau combo orga"4tr t s.eamstress, junk collector, gardener. <ioldenth8.l describes dozens of independent money-making ventures and careers for the teenagers. He provides a view of the job market, poqlbiliUes and realities <J. dropping cut of high school, and the var!oos federal aid pr 0·1_ ram 1 (including where to 'Wlite for detl1lls). His advice to the searchers: feel both self-confident and op- UmJstlc in a job search. "There is no disgrace In askin~ for help (from public age0C1ea)," he said. "Once you have found the work y()ij want, it doesn't matter wb!f . helped you get iL It's the job that count.s: "What is disgraceful Is sµspecUng that you need help and not asking for it." A Dog-gone Good Way to Begin the New Year 1.1tss Lewis, a graduate of Newport Harbor !Ilgh Scbool, attended Orange Coast College and Northern A r i z o n a University. She affiliated with Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and Cardinal Key national honor society. Two chapters are devoted to the American apprentlceohip system, some • o O ap. prenticeable occupations, how and where to apply for tbe5e jobs, and even what to do U discriminated against by a prorpectlve employer." 'I A dog's tile won't be all that bad this next year as. according to Chinese tradition, it will be the Year of the Dog .. Chinese in the area will welcome the Lunar New Year during a party Saturday, Feb. 14, in the Newport Riviera clubhouse, featuring Chinese gourmet foods prepared and served by members of the Orange County Chinese Social Club. Getting the year off to a good start by giving their dog the royal treatment are (left to right) the Mmes. Fred Ju, George K e n t and Calvin McLaughlin. The prospecUve bridegroom, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Doll of Tucson, attended the University of Arizona and served in Vietnam with the Anny. Currently he is at- tending Northern Arizona. USC Graduates Wed In Beverly Hills Rites Barbara Josephine Simpson and Edwin Abel Meserve Ill, fourth generation Southern Californians, were married in All Saints Episcopal Church, Beverly Hills. The Rev. Kermit Castellanos officiated during the evening nuptials. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. James Hewes Crispin III of San Francisco and Richard Claude . Simpson of Beverly Hills. She was given in mar- riage by her father. The benedi ct is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Robert Meserve of Lido Isle. Miss Diane Simpson, the bride's sister was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were the Misses Patricia S to n e r , Katherine Bing, D a i s y Brookes, Marian Williams. Carol Simpson, the bride's slJter, Pamela Meserve, the benedict's sister and Mrs. Wiiiiam Lloyd. Michael Murphy was selected to stand as best man . Ushers were Kirk Elliott, Richard Rohimon Jr., Thomas Hogan, Thomas Schock, Dean Dorn, John Garrison, David Anderson and Lloyd. 'Ibe new Mrs. Meserve is a graduate o £ Marlborough ' , " ' . MRS. MESERVE 111 Newport Home School and the University of Southern California where she pledged Delta Gamma sorori· ty. Her husband altended the University of Oregon and is an alumnus of USC where he af. filiated with Pbi Kappa Psi fraternity. The newlyweds will make their home in Newport Beach. St. Andrew's Setting For Afternoon Nuptials The Rev. Dr. Charles Dierenfield performed t h e afternoon nuptials linking in marriage Paulette C e c I I e Donald and Charles Stephyn Barclay of Huntington Beach. Parent.s or the bridal couple are Mr. and 11-tn. Ray Ralph Donald of Newport Beach and John W. Barclay of Costa Mesa and Mrs. Albert Jones 0£ La Mirada. Attending the bride during ~ the double ring ceremony in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church were Terri Lee of Tulsa, maid of honor: Anne Martin o! Tulsa, Jane Francis Kovich and Kathy Brame, bridesmaids. Steve Parker was asked to stand as best man and usher duUes were assumed by For· rest Ludwick, Dennis Adams and Ron Huber. The newl)'ffds will reside in Hunlingtoo Beach following a ftdding trip lo Mexico. The bride attended the c-" ... ..,... MRS. BARtLAY New Bride University of Tulsa and CUf"o rentry oh< and her husband are enrolled" at Orange Coast College. WORLD ,PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT "T-r* .W IHtty et,._.,....,.._ LA. Thn•t ' -•..-le~­:'Dl(D;;tll'Nll'I .. Elizabeth Warren 'l'Qlor .Be8t17 ., The Only Game Ja'l'll'J\»-wnoa l!!I Ul1'flr•Lrl I SJMle ,_..,.. ,,.._, friilkry, l :JO -LIDO ONLY ORANGE DRIVE-IN e LIDO THEATRE, No rt The date· for the wedding was not disclosed. CHRISTINE . LEWIS Betrathtd Golch!ntbal also ahow1 hdw to write and address a letter requesting occupational in· formation from a bureau or agency. New Officers · Seated The only modus opetandl ~e overlooked: lrutructlons on how to marry the boss'• daughter. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedd,ing stories with black and white j?lossy photo. graphs to the DAJLY PILOT Women's J)e.. partment one week before the wedding. During Installation L.ING•IUI llOa•s Pictures received following the wedding will not be used. With the theme, the Word's wlll serve as the Installing of- the Thing, new officers cf Las ficer. Olas Toastmistress Club or Tenn goal for the club Is For engagement announcements it is imperative that the rtory, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be .su b-- niitted six weeks or more belore the wedding JI ti Ion B h .11 be . CommunlcaUon Lea~ un ng eac wi in-day for a Better World Tomor- stalled at 7:30 tonight in Fran-row. col• restaur•nt. A d d I t I o n a I information · date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fW requirements on both wed- ding and engagement stories. forms are available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at f>42..4321 or 494-9466. , Taking office will be ~1rs. reg ar<ling Toastmistresses Zoltan Smith, president; Miss may be obtained by calling! Pat Haynes, first vice presi-Mrs. Rollo West, 536-3052, or dent ; Miss Marge Dewey, sec· ..'.M~r_::.s-:...A~l~la~n..'.K"'e'."M~e~dy".'.,_54~7-5885~·'.:.·~!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!~!!!"!!!!"!!!!"!~ ond vice president ; 1'-tr:i;.1- Bellflower Home LEE EDEWARDS Eng•g~ Lee Edewards Will Marry Jack Brown Malie Fouts, recording secretary, and Mrs. Charles Marshall, treasurer. Chapel Rites Read During a !amHy gathering the Rev. and Mrs. A. C. Edewards of Fountain Valley announced the engagement of Mrs. Jay Ruediger of San Clemente Will relate her ex- periences in Chile a n d Afghanistan where she serve~ as a foreign service officer with the U.S. Jnformatlon Agency. Speaking for the club will be Miss Dewey, and Mn. Ernest Johnson of _i:ulalle Toastmistress C1ub, Stanton, The Chapel of the Wedding Bells, Bellflower was the set- ting for the late afternoon rites uniting Jeanne Michelle Collins and Johnny Clark Cash. Per for ming the ceremony was the R e v , Parents of the couple are Mrs. Irene Collins of Long Beach and Roy E. Collins of Haskell B. Long. One Percent Are Women Fewer than one percent of the engineers in the United States are women. H you wGnder why. join the club. Purdue University is puzzl- ed, too, since aptitude tests show .fO percent could come from the distaff side. Newport Beach and Mr. and their daughter, Lee Edewards J\.trs. Francis Cash of Tor· ranee. to Jack L. Brown of Long Beach . Alpha Xi Delta Elects Slate Miss Pamela Anne Collins, sister of the bride, was maid No date has been selected 0 C 1 r th ddt whi range ounty A umnae of honor and bridesmaids were or e we ng "ch will Club or Alpha XI Delta sorori- the Misses Janet Long and take place in Belheny Baptist ty will elect officers and hear J\.1arsha Ellis. Tess Scates was Church in Long Beach. a talk by Miss Ruth Chaffee flower girl. The future bride w a s during the next meeting Mon· Carl Cash .,,,.rved as ho's graduated from Fountain day Feb 2 t 8 In th -V II IIl h ' · ' 8 p.m. e brpther') best man and ushers a ey 8 School and is Corona del Mar home of Miss were Ktt1neth and Jam6 enrolled at Orange Coast Eleanor Hoy. Cash, also bis brothers. Ring College. Miss Chaffee of Laguna bearer was Jamie cash, his The prospective bridegroom, Beach will discuss the Crown- nephew. son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack H. ing Touch. She formerly was The new J\.lrs. Cash .is a Brown of Escondido, is at--an architectural designer and graduate of Jordaf'I High tending Callfornla St ate design draft.sman and now ex- School, Long Beach.. and. ___ co_l_l•:.g•_•_t_Long_:..._Be.::ach:..._·:..._ __ .::hi::'b.::lts:..::he::r.::art:..:...w::.•::•.::k·:..._ __ California Baptist College, Riverside . Her husband is an alumnus or Banning High School, Wilm- ington. They will reside In Bellflower. WIGS LIMITED TIME OfFER ON: ''MIRACLE'' WIGS! ' WIM 'tm &. -•11m, t:,...te ywr -•11'1'9 ' tt'Olft ..... lot'll. ~loll flblf" .... TM ·"""*' '" COll'¥WI~ "' ,,......., bMtlrif -""""" fYW \'M ftttd M ..,,., ....... Mtr ... m /}/J. , WIG & BEAUTY allie j SALON 250 l 17th ST. COSTA MESA 548-3446 ·DAILY TILL 5:30 THURS. & FRI. TILL 1:00 H he'• away from "-···· · He'd love Your Photograph on Valentine's Day! . lt'1 fhe Hxt best· lhing k) hovihg JOit MOJI Joo. .. month• ond eiiles yow lo¥tdy photograpt. wMI ... ..._. wed ltMpsake of war111 memaries ••• a proud pra ml• of a happy future together. Hurryillnow ••• wt.aa .... •1 1rTH tiMe ••• ond you con charge it at p__,•1t OUTSl'ANDING VALUE! !'ft9 ••10 Mfl ~ WOUef.ize1,...,,,.,,f • PULl.IUtTOlll -"'"' w f!Mr, '" ... 88 ONLY Mlltlf ... TOlll •I.ACM -~--Clntw ... ""'· M-177'1 • • M DAl~Y I'll.OT H P-T Un-its Gathering fo.r Programs (I.._, .. Nftt: A .,. .. OtYOt• to '"'' :t:i."'· "'\"''"!!::, ·~ ' !tV:.r.i&,".:l!I,';~".l· f::" r. .JA'i:-' ..... -~~1.\i~ J Arevalos PTO 1 Mn. Jack Llbldln1ky ·~ . President 'COMING up, Part II of tile it dru1 educathwi program will be pretented tomorrow niJht ·.: at 7:30 in room I with ~ gpeam Lonnie Fmbee. \REPORTS: Dr. Jan Pick ; spoke on effecb of dru&s on the mind in Part l of the ~ dru& education program last Wedntlday. . .Executive ~· board voted to obtain a portr1lt of Andru R . ( Arenlot to be placed in the 'I JJCbool lobby. . . PT 0 • ( 1poooored Cub Scout Pack a conducted a sale last .. COM t< R Friday of blkOd goods ftlade by the fathen. Eader PTA Mn. James Lewis Prt•ldenl REPORTS' ExecoU•e board memben gathtred to celebrate the birtbdsy cf Mn. James Lewis at a irurpri&e lunchton. Mrs. James Drevtct, first vtce preAidenl, hand 1.e d ar- rangements. FV Ele . PTO l\fn. Walttr Tate President CO~IING UP' Tonight at 7,30 in the multipurpo&e room. l\iike Brick, d I s l r i c t superintendent. will di1eus1 the proposed airport and Its possible eUecta on Foun~in Valley scbool1 . Also News of Council Meeting Tolled participating wlll be Mn. Gerald Hix, president of Superlntendenl·Parent coon- cll . Public Is Invited. FV Hi9h PT~A . Mn. Wllllam BroclmllP President COMING up, Pcrtralt. of Student Beliefs Is prngr1m theme at unit meeting Tues· da y', Feb. S, at 7:SO p.m. In the chor1l room. Panel of six hlih school Jenlor1 wilt diJCUJS currtnt issues and their ideas CGncernln& world b e t t ermenL Nominating committee will be appoint.d to select a slate of new or- ficers and Founders Day will be observed with a britf presentation. REPORTS: At ei:ecutlve bOtfd meeting, Mrs. Charles Upot. reported m6re than 1Rin&ing out the new s that the Fountain Valley Superi ntendent-Parent Council meeting Wednesday, Feb. 4, will feature a discussion of the district's Commun· tty Resource Programs are (left to right) Mrs. Gerald Hix. president, Juliette Craia: and Annette Hix. The three-phase pro&ram will be detailed at 9 a.m. in Lamb School with Bushard School as co-host. Overwhelming Enthusiasm Displayed for Ball 1100 J>ll"Oli an4 1tudenta hve Joined PTU. Joo!d membtrs approved a new dtl!IJI fOf 1tudont man- benhlp carda, and Dr. Paul Borger, prlncll'll. dllCQllO\I tll• ~pcomln1 bend elect!«> and tiX override. New drug abiae committee w1a ·nam· td to work with a student group. Frll\lc' Scholt wlll strve as chalnn•n. Gi1ler PTA Mn. ltarl-'ll'•JW Pmldtnl COWNG UP: PTA w 111 J'l(eatnl fU'at I • n e r 1 l metlinl and prosr•m We4netday. Fob. 4. at 7,IO p.m. In lhe scllool mall. smarvr .... wtJJ p,..,.nl lhe Pl'OCJ'lm· • .Sale o I _.....ed aweatallil'tl and scl1ool peonanu wtJJ be conducted in tile mell Fri· day, Jan. 30, durin& lhe luncb period. Sale I 1 spoMOred by PTA. 1tucltnta and Pep Club, and pn>coecll wllf be uold lot ocbool landscaptn1. Colt.of 1weabhlrta ii 13 and price of ptManb is 71 cents. Monocram s were d1li1ned by student• Dawn Lewis ind Sherll Downln1. McDowell . PTO Mn. Jllllff Ackley Pre1ldent REPORTS: Atexecutlve board meetini, Mrs. Marvyn Jack.Ion wu raUfled as ways and means chairman. Al Byrd as institutional represtntat.ive. Plans were made to conduct a meeting for parents lntertsted in in· iUating a block parent pro- gram. l\.tr1. Raymond Hart. treasurer, pre1tnttd the M· miannual budget report, and a ways and means program for the remainder of the year was discuSHd. Mrs . Charles Lytle, ice cream chairman, reported on cur· rent 1ale1, and Mr1. James Ackley reported that two world aUases have been ordered by PTO for ue in the school learning center. Mrs. Fred Ashley WIS ratified as first vjce presi- dent. succeeding Mrs. Milton Simpson who is moving from the area. ,._trs. Slmpaon was honored al the meeting . Board members voted to allocate $200 for .puidlaae or 1<1"'1 jJr!nta 1114 tapa for u.. lwnlnr cehltr, an<! lloltnd Gllftlore, principal, dlocuued dillrlct an<l lcbool poUeln. M11dow Vw. PTA Mn. Cort Hanf> Pmtdonl R~POltTS' Founcler• Day will be ctilbrlltd II a dime+ dip poUuck dinner Tuelday. Fib. a. at l :!O p.m. in tile m1Jltlpurpo1t room. Fllftlliff of 1tudcnta from ldi>dtr1arton through tllltd pl-are ultod to bring lllacll, lbOIO from fourtll u.r..tch •lrth ir•clta In brlnf bol dlllln and thole from aevenlh and eighlb sraclta an<! E. H. cluaes 1n brlnl deqerta. PT A will Prol'ldt rolls ancf coffee, and mlfk will be 0oold for 10 - ettJll. Each family will pr .. ··--·· ------~-J:...::.~~-.:::-.....i1.r.· vlde lb own table 11ttlnp. l!Jghllchl of the evanln1 will be pmentaUon (If an ltooorary 11rvk1 award for l'OCOllllUon (If ouutandlnc oervfce to youtJ\. Additional Wormation may be obtained by conladlng Mr•. Crandall Guclmimdson at 592-1561 or Mrs. H. D. Elater at 146- ~. Me11 Vw. PTA ftonlld Mun1y Pruldent CO~NG up, Nor.man Clnaberg, director or pupil personnel serviets of 0Ce1n View School District, win speak at unit mtetinc Tues- day. Feb. 3, at 7:30 p.m. in the multipurpo1e room of Hope View School. Ginsberg will dl"'ll" lbe speclalize4 problems ol children and their effect on leamlt1t. Que1tlon and answer period will follow. Briar Founders Day preJJentaUon wtll take place durlne the business meetlnc to celebrate 1n-- nlveraary or PTA foundlne. REPORTS ' Officers eleol<d rteently to serve unUI June are Ronald Murray, presi· dent; Don McAllister, vict. prt&ldent; Mrs. Ceo r 1 e Blank, secretary, and Dave Krause, treasurer. Seal Beach PTA r.tn. Saul ~tillsteln Pre.aident C0~1JNG UP : Seventy.third birthday of national PT A Space-age Tho'1ghts Take Flight Portrait< of Student Jllelle!s -.Im be presented for the Fountain Valley HJ,h Scllool l'TSA Tuesday, Feb. 3, at 7:30 p.m. in the school choral room, glvlft& partnts and teacher• a better id•• of studmts' thoughts In Ute Space Ai•· Pr .. paring a poaU!r for their portion t>f Ute program are Joan GaUermeyer and KaUtY Power (left to rilbl). wlD be observed at Founders Day celebrltlon Tuetday, Fob. 17, in Zoeter School. Chairman or the event. is Mrs. Stan Sloan. J oh n Georee is &ervln& 1 s honorary service a w a r. d chainnan and Mrs. Paul Dugmore, decor a lions chairman. Presented i n recogniUon of service to yCMltll In llJe communllY. an honorary .wrvice award Js a ~ contribution to the na- Uonal scholarship fund alven tn the name of the honored iJ"~TI;, Mra. Wlfllam Btmu1, represt:nt&Uvt of Orange County March of Dimes, spoke at recent meeting. Mrs. B e m u s preaented a film entitltd "More Than Love" dealing with causts and prevention of birth defects. Question and answer period followed. M'mbers voted to join Hun· tinfton Beach , Ocean View, Fountain Valley and Seal Beach ek!mentary schools in formilli a council if pro- posed split of Huntington Union Council o c c u r s • HMtesses for the meetinc were the ~fmes. Thomas Lenore, Rene Bollen and Ted Reichardt. Wardlow PTO Mn. Gaorge Meebu Pre1ldent COMING UP: Ei:ecu t ive board will meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Feb. 2,'in school.. .Bylaws committee members J1me. Macon and the Mmes. Geor1e Mtthan, Edward Spang, Jess Car- ranza , Harold Co-ha n e . Richard Eisenzimmer .and James Du1an will meel this week. R E P 0 R TS: Newly.named parliamentarian ia M r s . Spaug. Medicel Group Every second Tuesday of the month members or Orange Shores Medical Assistant&' Association auemble at I p.m. Location may be obtained by calling Mrs. Janis Anderson, 411S-1. J Treasurer To Speak Being Financially PrtparOd is lhe topic of a talk to be pte-- sented ror members of the Newport Harbor S e r v I c e League by Mrs. Ivy Baker Priest, treuurer of th• stlte or California, on Thursday, Feb. $. Mrs. Priest, treasurtr of the United Stales for eil!lht years, is the first woman t.o. be ele~ lo one of California's top seven Constitutional of· Ii~s. She has been selected as OM of the 20 most outsLandlng women of this century by the Women 's Newspaper Edit.ors and Publishers Association. The Service League, A volunteer training or1anit.1· lion, will hO.'St the. 11 a.m. meeting in the Newpor t Harbor Yacht Club. Columnist Tells It Like It Is DEAR ANN LANDERS' I am •till boil· tng over that woman who raced her kids to the paper every day to set if your col~ umn was fit for them to read. She said she would cancel her subscription to the paper If you printed one more dirty let· ter. T'll b e t anything s h e is fighting against. sex educaLion in public schools, too. ANN LANDERS ~ DEAR TEEN: Letter• like that doa 't bother me, btclttft for every one of THOSE, 1 get io like yours. l Intend to keep at It 11 Jone as m.1 typewriter bolds up -and I've 1ot a very ffne electric maclllae wbJcb Is virtually lndea:trucUble. and band it to tbe ne>.1 collector. A girl I know has a mothtr like that. If she says the word "boy" in the house she gets grounded for three day1. Of course, she is meeting guys in garages and parks and on street corners. just to get even w Ith h'r ma. And she's putting out to everybody. What do these mothers think they are accompllshing when they hide your column? Don't they know every normal teenaaer thinks about sex? Your column tells them how they oupt ttt think about it. Do these mothers believe if they tell their kids to for1et about sex that they will ? How come they dmft remembir how it was when tbey were teenagers? DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am gelting so fed up on ofnce solicitation I'm ready to 5Cl'eam . For the third Ume in seven weeks, I've been asked to chip in for 1 going.away gift. The girl!li are not getting married, or even J,aving town. They are qui tting to Like other jobs. Our office manager has been here 17 yea rs. She Is wonderfully efficient. has a beautiful disposi tion and is loved by evtryone. Someone should lake up the collection for HER -not the dam e!i Who quit to make $7 111<1re a week somewhere else. DEAR ANN LANDERS: This 11 no big deal , but I'd like your opinion. When my cousin visited me recently, she brought. along a record album which belonged to one of her friends . She said her friend didn 't know she had "borrowed" the album so we had to be extra careful with it . When my cousin left , she forgot to take the album. Weeks later I was taking the record to my cousin and it gut a little warped from being accidentally left on the ctr seat wh ich was parked in the xun. N o w my cousin says I owe her $5. T say she is responsibl e for the record. What do you say? -JUDY AND WSA DEAR J AND L: You botb sound llkt a couple of doJUe11 t.o me. Split lhe colt of the record and foraet It. Alr•ady In th• •piril of the festive Mater Dei Pre- lenten Mardi Gras Ball set for Saturday, Ftb. 7. are (left to r!ghl) the Mmes . George Carlyle, Jerry Moor•, Bernard F. Gorman and Henry Hellweg. Sponsored by the Mater Del Parents Guild, the eve- ning will get under way with cocktails at 7 in the Grand Hotel, Anaheim. Dinner at 8 and dancing to the music of MUI Washburn's Orchestra will round out the program. That dumb mcther doesn 't realize you are doing HER job. She should thank her lucky stars you are able to communicate with her teenacers. Kids listen to you and resped you. For sure that mother is out in left field without a 1Jove.. l hope you don't let letters like that get In you . Pleue keep on wrilini your col- umn, Ann. We nted you. -TAMPA Ti;EN I told the last person who approached me for a going.away gift don1ti on, "Sor· ry, no." lt was easy. Others should try it. -OMAHA DEARO.: Here's your Jetter. And for tboae wbo cu't 111, "SarrJ, JtO.." u easi- ly u )'llQ, I lllQtst tbey clip Wa eollUIUI Unsure of yourself on da tes? Whit's right? What's wron1? Should you? Shouldn't you? Send for Ann Landers' booklet "Dating Dos and Don 'ts," enclos· ing wttb your i:equest 35 cent! In coin and a loni, self-addressed, stamped envelope. Interfaith Series Woman's Role Examined Woman '• role in fhe major problems and crises of the preeent day \\'ill be discussed v.•hen1he Women Associates or the UCf lnterlaltll Center host their 1Mual worbhop begin· ninl 'l\Jeaday, Feb. 3. Tile Hand Tbat Rult1 tile World Rocl<I lbe Cradle will t~e the four-telllon series which wW Include t b r e e speakers and a p a n e 1 41......too. Openlnc the 1eriu will be Mia Clthtrine Blomstrom of American Friends S e r v i c e C.Ommlttee, whose topic will be Hunger. Mlal Blomstrom, currently t~vld 11 • coordinator ln tile CRASH (Call In Research and Act In Slop Hunger ) pro- p-am, has worked for the Chrlltmd 8uyln1 Boycott for Ptact and lived in 1 Quaker· orl.....S peace community • doh11 organic vea:•tarian cook· ing. Sht received 'htr BA degre e In relieion and philosophy trom Florida State University and pl1n1 to do graduate work In ~ ajudl.. at tlle Unlvenlty Of Clllfornta. Santa Barbara' next fell. Nexl wlll be a panel discuasion on Ecology Tues- day, Feb. IO. featuring tllrte UCI graduate students. Don Wilkin!!, Peter Thoma.s and Deborah Sullivan, from the Scl\001 of Biological Sciences. Deptrtment of Environmental Biology. They will discuss water and air pollution and population coolrol. Mrs. El111betll Cle11 of Cl1mnoot Unlveralty eenw Will lipeak on Education for the Feb. t7 1e1slon, focusing on woman'• role In re· educating a " d conUnulng educaUon. Summarltlng tht work!hops on Feb. 24 will be Miu Lucille J..'tlehn. proeram coordinator for the UCI Extension-Ford Foundation C o m m u n I t y Se.minus. Her tc)pic will be Being. The first stssion will take place In the UCI lnterlaltll Center and the final three are scheduled for tlle Unlvmlty Methodist Cburcll. Culver and Unlvenlty drtv,., ll'VllJe. All are slated to M:gtn at 10 a.m. arid conclude 1t noon. Admission for tht series ts M and si ngle adml.uloru; are SJ .25. Anyone wishtri1 rt$erva· Uons or Information may call the lnter!1ltll Ctnter, -1. or write to University Interfaith Cente r, 4201 Cam· pus Drive, Irvine. 92164. Tlcket.s also m•y h e purch1sed at the door. Child care will be available. ' - Chicago Welcome Mrs. Victor Balley of Newport !each (left) IJ 1reet· ed by Mrs. W. Lydon Wild. presl~•~t of the Chica- go Women's \Velcome Committee. Mrs. Bailey w11 s attending a bu siness convention with her husband and was enterlalned by tho commiUee. UC/ Happening Generations Clued In By PATfUCIA McCOBMACX IRV!NE (UPf) -In lhls corner. teenagers. In that cor- ner. 1dult1 -including some ~rents and teachers. And to each corntr goes this queation : ''What do yau hold near and dear?" The •~tt'Clll btlWftD the ..,,...u°"' OC<llrl«I duriJll a oe .. wttk litpptlllnf at U!:I. lt pro4uce4 clue• In tile dlf· lmiices be\wffn tile two. Dr. Eva Sehlndltr·blrun•n. ccnsultant tn u,e Beh1vortal Scie.nctJ, ~11dueted the h1p- peni111. Reportln& In "Childt1n." Journal of the Children's Bur11u of the O@p1r1ment of lit1llh, Educa- tion and M!lf1re, ahe uld: "Amona things held near nnd dear, the adulU men- tioned tile lollowln1: !lmUy: f ·O t ma l j n 1 tltutkmallte<f -· reJlcton; p er s o n 1 I and m1teri1l security: . success in 1 chosen profession; ability to commllnicate; goaJs: making money; helpln1 otlltrs; doing t~ifi1s for a ·reason and physical health." But teenaetrs mentioned self·love -whlch th e y deacribed as .. Olleself and his own interests always c:ominr Orsi." TIJcy 11.. ~de red ne.,-and dear -"Umt, '' the estence of We. "Every mer ment." said one. girl, "ls lm· portant and !:"" lhould util~e It lo tlle Ml ' "Tlle llfJ\llltJ al.. f~lod !J'ffdom to be 0"'41f ao4 to ~r..u one 1e If .'' Dr. setilndl1r·fl1il\Jn.ID reported. "Physical hullh. bteause 'all you have ls yourself and )'OU'd better like 1ood cert of your,.lf: faltll In aometlling btg1er than oneself, but not an inslitullonallied god ... " Under lhlngs lhlt they •·ere llOI Jluro -~ adulll lilted re ligion, honesty and open· ne ss, the draft and .sex. Among t h i n g s tf!i!n1cers were not su~ about : the value or formal education, sexual taboos, the draft and formal religion. The adults and teenaiers also were asked to identify the thina:s thty would n e v e r chance their minds about. On the adult list: rel1tlona to their f•mllles. reUateus · fa, lo•• of co1111try. dlaap. p I of lona: hair on br>ys and esly in dealill( wltb oUten. TOOJt•I• ~d tl!ey would pever change ftJ\lr mind.s about: -. , Fr-.<101n. their rl1hl lo ti)' ~ny 1xpeptnct end the ir right to makt flleir own d!tision!'I. During the happenln~ parents and teachers asked the teen agers: "How can w1 encourage y o u ? ' ' The teenagert replied: ''Let us 10 our own w1y," ... . .~ . . -• • Fountain Vall~y l \ I ' , . 'I ' ~C. 63, NO. 23, 4 SECTIONS, 54 PAGES OR>:NGE COUNTY, CALIFORt'.!IA . . .. \v,e!)NESDAY, JANl:J~R~ 28, I~ ' ouse ' •. Pentagon Aide New Draft Head WASHINGTON (UPI) -Charles J. DiBOna, 37, a civilian weapons and sy_;tems analysis expert for the Pen- tagOn, has been chosen by the White House to succeed Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey as director of the Selective Service, it was reported Wednesday. Congressional sources 'll'ho disclosed his selection said DiBona has a "very good" chaoce 0£ being conrirmed by the Senate, for .the controversial job. Hei-shey , the nation 's draft chief since th'c start or World War .II, will leave the Selective Service Feb. 16 to become a White House consultant. DiBona, Rhodes scholar with degrees earned at Ox(ord University iri England, reportedly is a supporter of addltlonal draft· reform and President Nixon's pro- posals for an :ill volunteer army. He is president of the Cenler for Naval Analyses. an independent organization run by the University of Rochester in New York under contract to the Navy. It decides whether new weapons are worth \\'hat they cost and helps the navy and marines plan how troops and ships are ~<ployed. , · A White Hou'ie spokesmllll confirmed that lJiBona, 37, of Quincy. Mau .. was under consideration for the post of Seleo-- live Service director and had discussed the job with White House aides. That 1pokesman would not confirm be had i!efinltely been &elected however.. the White House said an announcement mf t~e appointment was expected some time after this week. Beacl1 .Trustee Pushing to End ~rug Abuses Dr. Ralph Bauer, a trustee for the Hun· ttngton Beach Union High School District, satd'Tucsday he would not rest until drug abuse Is eradicated from each of the district's five campuses. -He addressed his remarks to the dtstrtct Board of Trustees, which Is cur- rently mulling over a Bauer-suggested druJ information cam paign which would take in parents as well as students. (See related story, Page 3.) "Apparentl y youngsters are now afraid lo blow the whistle on those who are us- ing drugs," said Bauer, who added th at he was apalled by threats of retrlbution against lnf6rmanls. .. The best way to oppose .the threat oE phyITTcal harm is to make it public," he explained. And referring obliquely to a rettnt perM>nal Jncident: "What do you dd with a blackmailer? You expose him." At the board's Feb. 14 meeting, Bauer is~expected to presenl a detailed report on his .Ideas to ccmbat drug abuse. He previou sly said it -would basicany ' (S.0 TRUSTEE, Poge l) •• " ' , . .,'ii DAILY PILOT Sltff PM" IN QUEST OF TITLE . Junior Miss Martyn Marina Beauty Scoring High For Junier Miss . .. · lUlonda J.j\rtyn, · ?epr~Unc itun· tingtan Beach in California Junior Miss competiUOn,'"i! one of four &irI11e.adlng jn prelimin~ judging for the till'-held last year by Jackie Benington, alsO oJ ,Jlun- tington Beach. Miss Martyn, a I7·year-old senior at Marina Higp School, took honor& in the poise raUng of the contest in Santa Rosa . She is the daughter 0£ Mr. and Mr!. Kenneth A. Martyn, 17041 Courtney Lane. Rhonda maintains a 3.7 grade-point· average at Marina. She wa s also the school's homCcoming queen last fall. Miss Martyn follow s Jn the footsteps of ~tiss Beningt.on, who was also from Marina Hi1h and went on to capture the national JWlior Miss title. · Three other girls sharing .the lead in early competition ·were Judy Jones of Sacramento. tops in talent ; Cynthia Palmer of Turlock, lead.Ing in physical fitness, and Luanne Larson of Oakdale, leading in scholastic achievement. A new state Junior Miss wlll be crown- ed in formal ceremonies Saturday In San· ta Rosa. Stock ltlarket NEW YORK (AP)-The ,stock market', shelving its. ptOrning gains, reverted ti> its losing nY1I In liack tradlllg1today, with declines' edBinl" past advances. (See qu,..uo .. , P•Jea :lJ.4.11. 1 Rlchald l!a'lu<U ol Good body Ir · Co. said a shUU .rllfy CCJUld be eJ'JM!Cled 1n the market's preSen1 over50ld condition buL that the bask: ccndition of the inves- tors "ls..atatic-JJtnditlll President Nixon's budget meuage MorRiay." .·-o Revising 'Oil Code Said Vital By JACK BROBACK ·Of ""' 0-llY Piiio! 1!1ft Revision of Huntington Beach's oil code is needed if the city Is to b'l.K:ceed in iU! drive to clean up _the blight or deteriorating oil operations, city officials said Tuesday. City Attorney Don Bonfa and Oil ·Field Superintendent Herb Day pointed out the inadequacies of the present code while taking-newsn1en on a tour of cld wells. The first item needing revision, Day said, is the bond required of oil operators to insure clean Up of operaliorui. It Is now only $2,000 and, in many cases, the cost can run as high as $6,000 or m.>re to clean up an abandoned operation, Day said. The city's oil code was patterned after the Orange County code, but was reviled afler a committee of oil operators con- ferred with city officials before enact- ment. Definition of an "idle well" has been one of the facets of the oil code which has been subjected to attask at recent city --,. 1*F:'f6• • l .,. ..,. !bat a fll. lbal he 1161 operated for the pmtiOUI. calendar )'ea( is an "idle well" and:mtt!t be cJeanecl up. Another provlslOn ~ te'Wds 111 lml which has had the ''O" or oil zone reinov· ed. Th~ weUs are ~onnµig. and if not operated for slz month• art subject to removal. Bonfa said the code may be rewritten to allow reactivation Of idle wells under certain rigid controls, thus permitting an Jdle well to go into production while in-- surlng the citizens of the community that the site is cleaned up and beautified, eliminating visual pollutlon in the oil field. Newsmen were shown several ex- amples oi offending oil wells. Day pointed out one well which, although not producing oil did give off enoagh natural gas to satisfy the clty'11 code and thus prosecutiOJt by the city lo abate the operation failed in court. Bonfa said lhe minimum standards that quabfr a well its: active in the city's code were not realistic. The law say• that a well producing 20 barrels a year, or 20,000 cUbic feet of natural gas i.5 "ac· live." Day said a well should produce 10 bar- rels a day-lo be a paying propOsition: Caught in the middle in.Ute oll quesUon are the owners of the land. An cperalor holding a lease in perpetuity on the pro. perty can abandon operations ~nd then h<t)d out for a good price to give up hls lease. Meanwhile, the property caMot be utiftzed for any other purJ)ose. Day said there are·862 idle wells In the city, bat only 300 are legally Idle under tile city's code. In addition to revising the. code, the city council is considering adding another attorney to the.city slaff, OJ'/ hiring outside legal counsel to handle oil cbdt ma.Um. . . OAILY PILOT SllH..,... VETERAN SURFER GEORGE DRAPER TEST RIDES NEW KAYAK F.OR ARMCHAIR. SURF.IRS , I • • • . . s. E<!wln;Bqolll ,!& '"!uJel•man, a Pl/!mb.er by trade, ,who -:• lot ol llUla,lJMip · around :t0wn IUCh .. , w!ftlilg wllh J10Y ; · Scouts, oeMng' the chlmb<r ·of 'com- mern aq1 coaChing LlUle I.:tiitie baseball. La!! Saturday nillil :ie· .... named the most' disUngui!heG citizen in Foontaln Valfey .at .the ·J_wilor · Chimber ol con;.. meree Dlstlnguilhetl Bemc. Award Jlan. queL Some or the "tittle" . d:dngs Ea Booth did to make htm a bJg man in the eye. of many wtre•pllying Santa Claus far the dty:1 'firlt-'Chrl8tmas ,decoratiftg contest. helping, ....... 1 ~. wilbi:Ji!4; plck"'P ~ct and • c!OOatiioli . plun\blii1( - materiJ.l for ' the FOllbtallb Vi.lley ·Boy•·~ Club. • " . · More than · 80 people 'watched hfm receive his aWard frOril · televislon · personaUtr*Olck Lane. · -· BbOth's nominaUOn '.for ·the. Jayeees• · DSA award was· supported by the Foun- taln"Vallty Women·•s-€lu6 Mcf1the W~­ en's ,IJiVUion of the-Chamber· of · ai:~ merce. other nominees for the award •were Bernie Svallllad, a..tty. c;ouncllman; o.. MBl'Vin Adler, pmideDI of.tba,Foomlain V.U.,. 4oombir .. of~r -and Char1r'. Dh!m, put prqlcleot' 'Of the Cbam111Cr. . 1 . . - ' . .. '·-: 'J1 ~-··1·· ' . . . . . . ·. Toaay'i Pinal TEN CENTS • 226-19'.L .. ' Vote Falls . . . . ~ • • WASHINGTON ·(AP) -Presklenl lflx· 0~'1 veto of the $Ul.7 billion heahb.ecfuca- tion mon'ey bill wu upheld today is the Ho.use rejed.ed an effort to. override Jt. 1be vote was 226 to 191, 5Z s!l:ort of the needed two-thirds. The fesult.wu a solid ·victory for Nh:oa in his sharpest confrontation yet Wltb·the DemoCraUc controlled Congress. The President , said a veto was neceSaary bedause the "$1.28 tilllton which Congress aiSded lo the bill for health and educaUon programs was inflationary. The overall bill finances the . . Departments of Labor 3114.. Health, Education and Welfare,. and vaz:lou.s an· tipo:verty programs. A new blll will now have to be written .rind it is JikelY the Democratic majority will lllain try to put in more money than Nixon· 1has budgfted, although not as much.as in.the vetoed bill. ·Just before the vote, two Republl<:an Jeadefs put forward a posaible com· promise that would permit Congress to stand by the increased fundfng but. let Nllon refuse to &pend mort than be wan~ lo. It wa also r'l>Orled lbal lh• Wbll• House ii prepared to approYe Increases over '.N'imn'1 budget totaling $441 mlilion jiulad of, the fl.26· blllion added Jn the vrtoed bllL Rep. Albert H. Quie, (!!-Minn,), '8id he rectlvtd today • White Houae lelter to be read 'to~~C<l(tgrw 8.SfUrlng that Nlxo11 wouk! pal '4!0 mlllion. Jn.stead of the f202 riiillion be had budgeted, Into the pr .. iram foi"·aid .to sch~I (llstrlcts that i~· elude large numbers of federal employes. , Qule,tOld newsmen lbal, allhouah ii is not tnenUoned Jn the letter, he, had been aisured that Nlmn would approve an ad· ditkll\al $70 mlllioo for vocational flduca· tion 'and ·$140 million for other JZ'Oll'aml-'11im the total package would be '448 millloo cmr.Nlxon's budget ln!lead of the $1.26.billiOfl. provided.in the vetoed bill. Anothtr alternative, approval of the fUll imount of the figures in the bill but a provi&lpn letting Nixon decide how much woql.d· be spent, was proposed. by. Reps. Joh~ Rhodes· (!!-Ariz.,) and Robert .ff, MldieJ;. (!!-Ill.I. Beach Chamber B-~nquet Sellol!t The 66th annual Huntington ·Beach ~jlf!1be,r of C.Ommerce installation ban· quet .at the .Sheraton-Beach Inn Friday nl~ is rlearly a sellout, chamber of· fiCia'ls"said today. Tliose making last rilinute plans to at· tm;l are urged tc call the chamber office, 9&U661, in order to secure reservaUons. .Rep. Q'aig Hosmer, <R-1-Beaehl, who .upreaem.. Huallngton Beach Jn Congress. will be the principal apeaker. Award1 will be made to the man of the year and·woman of the year. Peter Horton, McDonnell Douila• Aatronautics executive, will be instilled aa: pnWdent of the chamber, succeeding1 C. E. "Bill" Woods. ' Orug_e Weadler ·• . ' Hold on to your hats If you have any; it's going tc blow up a 1torm (fi"'ratlye~ 11pe1klnll O!I -the Orange Coast Clear skies r.eign niur.day wllh chilly temperatum. INSIDE ftDAY • ' DAILY l'ILOT H County 'HOids Oll to Mil e Square Park " . . . . -. ;n. f""'l.llJI Yallty Sdlool Dilttlct VaDq'1 raJll4ir dlmnlablnl lllllllol in-1"8 .... I ~!Lollsloclt le • -II -~one w be a -ral ill-"""' r.r a new wnpus 11te lo<llY. alrfteld or .,,..porl. an« counl!' .aull>orliles voted Tuesday to At' ltut 11111 Poillhlllcy 11 held oul by keep an •eye on the land involved for a the Phalt lt~ or the count7_•,·avl1· pocslble allporL. tlon mis!<r plan, until ll b finally ~ olfl!'llls have asked lhe 0'8111• dettrmh\&d' whether It can dellnllely be Cotintf loard or Supervisors to drop the ustd or not: • · Mu:inO . CorJ>4 Mlle Square helicopter Meonwbllt,, the land f1 acheduled for tralnil\I fJeld from the lo.fasttr Plan o( ttwro·rmaUOn Into a county realonal Air Transportation &tudy. , park ind the school district wants a sile Supervl!ors votad 4 lo I agllilll "tlio . adjoining ll onll!e southwesl. propGSll, but bOwed to the school The Marines are firmly entrenched, dlltrld'1 needs·by vowing to ~ up how~, and do not anUcipate a sur· that airport •tudY. and lhua belp lb.m... rtnder. quire an ana campu1 more qu!ckbt. Mille .Brick. district sUperlnltndenL. 11' Mlle Squ.,. chopper t11.1n1na tlold argiMd before the county Beard of -a Dal. brushy plot leued lo Foimlllo SUpervl•<>r• Tu.,day that II b ,.nseleu Mesa Police Cont;i.ue Huge Drug Roundup By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Ot tlllt O.ltt ,, .. "'" Tired la111-•me.n today resumed a round- up or suspected teen druf dealers. discJoging that exotic Mediterranean mlnd·benders such a.s oplwn changed bands for marked money on one Costa Y..1MB campus baseball diamond. A total of five adults and 12 Juveniles ~'ere arrested on campus and at their homes throughout the day and Into Tues- day night, with nine more being hunted today. Nearly all were named in arrest war. rants chargin" sale of dangerous drugs, after Harbor Dlslrict Judicial Court Judge Donald Dungan c o n s i d e r e d evidence collected In a six·week probe. The five adults were expected to be ar. ·raigned on th e felony charges today, ~although $'Orne had already pasted $825 or more bail to secure their release. .: The adults are: , -Steven M. Dollar, 18, of 2869 El Rio CirtJe; Costa Mesa. . , ..:..Rlchanl G. Aldl1, 18, of 686 Senate ,St., Costa Mesa. , -S&even IL Lask, 18, of 3022 Don- · nybtook Lane, Costa Mesa. --Lord.t.8 L. Gonzales, ZS, of 913_ Cedar ·.Place, Costa Mesa. · RoaaJe D. Croat, 18, of 2630 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa. lo •Pead mona1 on studying Ill• airport conetpt for that very rtaton. Brlclt !old Ille board ho hu J>etn In· formed bf lttlat lhll !lfltlne C«pa ol· ftdala CIMot Imagine use of the Mlle · Square facility for an airport, based on several key points: -Fixed-wing airtra(t are incompatible with helicopters. -The Corps would re.fuse Jo enter a j<>int·po\\'ers agreement ror civilian avia- tion use in the first place. -The runway ls not' suited for such combined types of aircraft to use it. -No plans are envisioned for declaring it surplus and av&llable for purchase by any other agency. Supeovisor David L. Baker -Ione a " Ball was set al $1,875 for Dollar, eharg· ·.ed ""llh ule ot two opiates. Tbe !int three suspects were booked on ,charges of sale of dangerous drugs, in- ~cluding opium and hashish, the powerful ·rap dtrivative of marijuana in the ·case Kickitag llp Her Heels JDf Dollar. · . Cross an4 t.he Gon~les woman were ·charted with sale or marijuana. while the 'S625 warrant namlng Ctosa •as placed as :8 second holding char1e because police : allegedly found him cultlvatfng the weed. The remainder, ranging in age from 16 1 lo just under 18, were booked into Orange 1 County Juvenile Hall pending further ac· ~ ~:U~~nnectlon with their alleged drug Detective Captain Bob Green 51Jd to- day the total haul of evidence now held - Including heroin,, hashish, opium, UD, mescaline, plus barbiturate aDd am- phetamine pills -ls worth thousand• of dollars. Juveniles involved attended both Costa Mesa and Estancia. high schools, with , more than one transaction allegedly made on the latter'& baseball diamond, a1 . detectives watched from a· dlstance. . • 20% Tax Cut Due? SACRA1'jENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald Reagan 11a~'ll his tal' revision program Is designed to cul property taxes on homes by 20 to 40 percent. But the governor was reluctant to discuss the speclflcs on his plan when fJueslloned by newsmen Tuesday. He pro- mised the program will be sent to the legislature soon, but oot before ne1t Tuesday. DAILY PILOT 011!-lNGll: COAIT l'UILl"HNG COMl'AN'I' Rell••• N, w •• 4 '"-'""' -l'llbli\llow J•~k It Curley VICI l"Tn-11'4 GeneHI Mfi""" 11rio,,. •• x •• .,a l•)lw ThttM•I A. MuritftiRtt ~ .... lftl 11.i1w Albert W. l1l11 Au.1919 MllW "'""""'" ..... Offk• 11&71 ... ," ••111 ••• ,; M.ili11t A1'41•11: ,,0 , l11t 7tO, 92MI o .... -l"-••Kt>: :n ,.,,., ..,_ (Mii ,,,._, DI \lllftl ... ~ ltt"I "'""'*'1 """'' nn wttt ••1., '°"'.....,.. Tullah Hanley, a former exotic dancer, i~ giving San. Francisco $3 million worth of art objects, .keeping up with her danci:ng as she un- packs some or her art obj~cts, leti to her by her. late Pusband, Edr ward Hanley of Bradford, Pa. · : Teenagers Chanrge Minds Under New Police Plan By ASSOCIATED PRE.55 '>11'1e main thing I teamed," Yid the tten..age girl, "was that ~pa are human, t.oo. TbeJ bleed just like everyone else." Donna Evans, writing in her student new•paper at Pacifica H1gh School in Garden Grove, was telling how her views of law·eiif'orcemenl officers too« a 11Udden flip.flop after &he participated in a pro- gram called Code 7. This is the radio mes!age officers routinely give when they are lunching . 1'1 never liked cops and 1 thought I never would," said Donna. "Every time a cop even came near me l would get away from him fast because he was a cop:' But under the Code 7 program, Miss Evans rode along with a police officer on his regular patrol. She saw him pick u_p a stray cat and take It home ·to his wife: she observed him help an elderly woman "'ith a flooding, stopped-up toilet; and she saw him take abuse from both parties \\'hen he responded to a man-wife fi~ht " The .program is unusual only 1n its comprehensiveness. lt starts with grades 1·3 and carries on. in appropriate steps, through high school . Jt began when Police Chle( George P. Tielsch realii.ed thJs burgeoning com- munity had turned up a r.ignlficant statistic. Sludies show ed that hair the city's 142,000 re~ident.s were young. The chief said he also naU1:ed that there was a atereotype amoni the young about police officers. His goal was to break It down and create a mutual respect between his of· ficers and lhe youth of the community. About 18 monlhA ago, Dave Burn . 27, \\'&S named community relations ofHctr. Although Garden Grove has no ghettos F ront Page J TRUSTEE •.. con1ist of malling inform1Uonal trac1' to •ach ltud"1t home and poulbly an &dull dass on drugs. "Drul abuse ts the symptom of some rtal problems -a sick tocitty, dialoc1- Uon -and we need to pl to the crux of it," etpWntd Bauer, pointlna out the neceSAlty or 11 !Orne time treatlna cause II Wt\I IS !lymptom. "\Ve're looking at a doubling of narc0Uc1 move evtry etaht moot.hi. We shouldn'l go afler the problem wtlh tippy 1oe1 but with force and pressure. This la one board member that's not ·ring to mot unUI the problem Is .olved." • a& such, police v.·ere aware that teenagers thought of themselves as a persttuted minoTity group. The Code 7 concept began simply, Of- fi cers on the day shift took along their lunches and made it a point to eat with children at schools who also brought theirs. "\Ve got some real discussions going," &.irn recalls. "They dealt with everything from police brutality, search and seizure to the wisdom of curfew la\\'S." Since then. the program has been ex· panded to regula r classroom lectures and accompanying officers on patrol. Burn :ia\d he soon leaTned that only one or two officers couldn't handle the situa· lion. This caused rum to do some arm- lwlstlng to get every patrolman into the program. Burn mentioned one officer \\'ho had spent a Code 7 at a parllcular school. A couple weeks later he was !!ummoned lo the school to break up a fight. "The kids recognized him." ~aid Bum. ''He was flabbergasted. The cooperalion '<''as 100 perrenL" Ts there a key to success? "\Ve don't moralize al all ," said Burn, •·because that just turns them ()ff. ·•we just pose some of the situations kids gel into, or v.'e talk about anything the kids want to discuss.'' Trucker Charged In Gir l's Death Gives Self Up A trash pickup truck driver charged "·i t.h manslaughter witb a vehlcle ln the death Jan. 15 of ~year-0ld Peggy Burger sun:endere.cl this week to Fountain Valley police. A warrant far the arrut of Ramoro Hurtado, 26. or 17•52 Gothard St .. ltun- lington Beach, 11t·as Issued ?tfonday by West Orange County Municlpal COurt. Hurtado turnttl hlmsel! in when ln!onned of the ''arrant. PoUct said the girt w11s kllled in front ol hfr home, m Mall1rd St .. Founhlln Vallty, wht'fl .~ dsrtert In front of Hurtado's trash truck on her bicycle. No r111t has betn Stt in municipal court for a prtllminary hearing on the charae• ap:alnst Hurt.ado. ~ Maxtmum penalty for manslsughter \\•Ith a vehicle is one year In County J11 ll. ~ent. of ~ Milo Squore u ,a • crillcal point In time weuld alllOllllt I<! regional ·~ all< -111welod+ll!t :1t,udpilent •I "!'.,.. ...,,II' ovtatloo board •hould do '° and submJttcd • mo-Battin then lntroductd a new moUon lo Uon to that ellect. 1 shift the Master Plan ol A I r "Hlgh donallf )>Opulallon and airpoli> Tr_,,.portailon Sludy ph>se of Mil• are not compUiblt, 1' he gaid. "Wo' can -Square ltself to top priorUy , thus settling avoid future conflict now by deleti~ this the. question early. site rrom the study." TM school district 1nay then pi acted in Hb colleagues refused to go along with c:Qulrlni whatever site ln the aenerat the ,,ea.sure, alLhough Supervtsor Robert arta will be available. Batun voted for. It, saying he has been S1'1>eryl,sor William Hirstein backed wbjected to extreme political prnaurt him up on that mpve, which sub&equently on that polnt. passed 4 to I, with Supervisor WUliam BatUn'1 dlstrict Includes Fountain Phlllip& ca.sting the dlwnting vote. Valley. "We Med the wl,W>le picture when v.·e 11le other supervison ahOt down ' COll'Mfto Our deciaibils on county alr traf· S.ker's motlon as too h.igb-Oytng, saylng-Hc;"l'emar~ Hlfst.ein, "We can't make that to eliminate itile Square at this a pre-Judrmtrit"~ area out." Nuclear Power Won't Do It All EDITOR'S NOTE: Nurtear power plants are seen as the 011111 answer to providing power foT a growing popu· lalion. But I.here are problen1s, both physical and psychological, Those arc e:rplored i1i a two.part series by Associated Pre ss \Vriter Doug \ViUis. By DOUG WILLIS AUMl91M l'ttH Wrlt..- The 1970s will be a decade of tremen· rlous change in California, but wide use of nuclear-prOduced electric power won 't be one of those changes, says the chainn!1n of the state'1 joint legislative committee on nuclear de·;eJopment. "The problem is the treme"ldous lead time for construction of a nuclear power plant -seven to eight years." said Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R· FuUerton ). ·"And the companies are gun·shy ..• thtre's the public reaction and govern· merit red tape . Eighteen federal and st<1te agencies hav.? to approVe a nuclear plant," he added. tric power. A thlid nuclear plant Ls under construction at San Luis Obispo and seven to 10 more are planned . "By 1980 we will double our nuclear capacity .•. but we double oirr electric need every eight years in California, so in rtlative lenns we won't be producing any 1nore," he said. Briggs said tbat in the long haul, "nuck!ar power is the only waY -to go," but that first an adverse public opinion 1nust be changed. "People are opposed mostly because they don't know anything about it. The question is how do you tell the people. I think the fact that President Nixon's San Clemente home is l lh miles from a nuclear plant dramatically shows how safe"they are," ne s<iid. He said fossil fuel electric generating plants -which burn oil. £oal or gas - no\V are responsible for 17 percent of all air pollution and one percent of the visi- ble sn1og In the 1..os Angeles basin. "\.\'e have about lhree thnes the smog 111al v.•e can stand, so that one percent is too much.'' Briggs added, "but the real problem is running out of fossil fuels. HE AD ING FOR THE HILLS Valley Plenner Men1field V ltlley Plan • Chief Quits For New Post Stanley t.1ansfield , Planning Direet.or of Fountain Valley, has reslgned his post to become director of planning for Nevada County in Northern California. r..tansfield will stay with tbe city until ?\larch 2. He submitted his resignation Tuesday. . "I will always consider Fountain Valley as my city and look back dt the many ac- complishments that have been a part of the planning process. Bul I just couldn't pass up the enviTonmenl.al factors iJ\ my new job," he explained Tuesdoy. Nevada City, the county seat. is · 4IO miles north of Sacramento and 75 miles from Lake Tahoe. "It's mostly forest with lots of ~unting and fishing," said Mansfield. _ Mansfield is the only planning d~tor Fountain Valley has had. He started With the city in February, 1962, coming to Fountain Valley from Baldwin Park. Jl.fansfield , his wife Joyce and children, Lynne, 13; Laurie, 10; Munica . 9; Jo)ice, 7, and Slan. Jr. 4, 1vill move to the north country this spring. Briggs said two nuclear po\\'er plants now in operation ln California produce less than five percent of the state's elec- Filing to Open Ratings Changed ' Thw·sda y, for Council Posts The race for city council seats in Hun· tington Beach, Fountain Valley, Seal Beach and Westminster starts Thursday when candidates can pick up applications at their respective city halls. Individuals who want tc run for city council will have from Thursday through Feb. 19 to pick up, fill out and return ap- p\lcations for the April 14 election. Councilmen up for' re-election in Hun- tington Beach are f\-tayor Jack Green and Ted Bartlett, Al Coen and llcnry Kauf- man. Fountain Valley incumbents in the Aprll 1• race are Mayor Edward Just and Councilmen George Scott and Bernie Svalstad. Seal Beach f\layor Sl.dnley Anderson and Councilmen Veda ?>1. Dreis and John Hamilton will defend their positions in April. Westminster incumbents are Philip A.1thony and Buel Jarrett. OOME the first watch on tlie moon CO.STARS IN Movie Board Drops 'M' Tab ' HOLLYWOOD (AP) -After I~ months of what lhe film industry calls .,grati· fyiJ1g success," Its voluntary program of rating movies is being modified. Jack Valenti, president of the Motion Picture Association of America , 1aid Tuesday one charge was made because a survey had shown considerable confusion over the "M" rating -which meant a film was recomm ended for mature au· dlences only. So that cattgory is bein&. dropped in fa vor of ''GP." This means all ages may view the movie but that parental guidance or dlscreUon is advised. The other change raises the age limit for viewing film s rated "R" -restricted category -v.·ithout an accompanying parent or legal guardian from 16 to 17. Both changes are effective 1\1arch I. Observers said the boost in the age limit may represent an attempt to broaden the "R'' rating to include racy but serious films heretofore relegated to the "X" category for adults only. Valenti has said he originally intended the x to be a "leper colony" for films or no artistic quality. But it hasn't worked out that way. ' Two of the most sucwsful and critically acclaimed films of 196~ - "Midnight Co\vboy" and "Medium Coot" -ended up in the X class. Here is the new set of standards: G -All ages admitted. GP -All ages admitted, but parental discretion recommended. R -Anyone under 17 must be ac- companied by a parent or legal guardian. X -No one under 18 admitted. The Valenti statement called the classification system, which went into ef- fect Nov. I, 1968, "a grati£ying succeq." A survey conducted by the National Association o( Theater Owners showed that nine out of 10 theaters queried used the ratings in their advertising. Valenti was joined in his announce- ment by Eugene Picker, president of the theat.er owners g r o u p . and MUhio Podhorzer, a member of the govern· ing board of the lnternalional FUm Jm. porters and Distributors of America . All N.A.S.>... •ttton1uts,,. including the pion ee°l't who first wellred on th• moon , • , weir Om•g• Sp••dm1s+•r chrono9r1ph1. The ••m• w•tch •nyone tin buy in our stor•. .A.nd ~ow you will••• it on the wti1t1 of &t•9orr, P•clr, Rich1rd Crt nn1, 01vid J1n11•n, J1m•1 Fr1nc11c111 end &en• H1c:krn1n •• they 1t1r in 'Maroonad." lll~tr•t-4: Thi ••t•~ ef th1 A1t1e11•vh. 2·~ '4-41•1 °"' .. ' S[11•ed111•th1 wrist '*"'fllll+•r. M••tur•• 111,_.., l~ltntlt •• hewn, 11tlDvt11 •atl IKIRtl•. St1iRI ... ttHI w•+.r-1•1ltl•11t , •••• M•tchlRt .,.,.1.1 .......... $195. CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARO MASTE~ CHARGE J. C. .J/ump/u.u '6 Jewetr~ l! YEARS SAME LOCATION 1 llJ NEWPORT AVE. COSTA •• MESA PHONE 54t.J401 • • ., --Sadtilebaek N.Y •. Ste"eks • ., -~ . ' 'I YOL. 63, NO. 23, 4 SECTIONS, 54 Pf.GES ORANGE COU.~TY. ·CAIJFORNfA-' ,. WEDNESDAY, JANµ~"( 28, ,i 970 TEN" CENTS ,.· .: lJphill Battle f Or Laguna -> • I Beautif icatio ri an .. Facing problems such as an official ci- ty tree that's becoming a public· nuisance and vandals who steal SllO gratings around trees newly planted io sidewalk! .apd -make off with decorative garbage <:~ baUlers for Laguna beauty are car· ryiD on bravely. . ae·porung to Chamber or ·.Co(Jlmerce directors on activities-of his beautifica- tion cOmmittee, chainnan Lloyd Milne ~..-many goals, including removal or l~tandJn& "eyesores" on c o a s t "' Highway, have been altalned arid otber:J are Well in band. One somewhat cootrOverslal project, said Miloe, will have to be ~t of eucalyptus trees In the downtown area with a ·Jess trouble.some vartety · .or greenery. • The cil)', be aplalned, baa nothing bul problems-with ~-"2ai1ypt11'1rhoee roota heave up sl41ewa1U and whose branches, unless 1req..,.~y -· break off and tQpple onto parked· cari. This is embarrassing because the ouse eOCllJptus cllradora "91, ~Iona ago was -named Laguna'• olli~ tree. Direcor-LoQl.le. ~ "'ggestcd that olber vlrletlea of eucalypbls 'with leas an- noying habita might be fou111t Miloe usurcd her tliat the offending treea will not be banished from the Art Co!oN', Just-moved to aome.aru, lite.a park, where they can play QieJr oWdal role without disrupting pedestrians and vehicuJar traUi~ · _ Also ln the tree department of bta4ty, 0 Lousy Connection Laguna Riled Over Phone ·Setup Directors of the Laguna Beach Chamber of Cqmmerce voted unaninious- ly and loudl y Tuesday to file a formal ~plaint with the Calilomii PubUc Utilities Comrr.ission (PUC) about telephone charges between Laguna and surrounding communities. r'.dicttlous, it's even used as a horrible ex- ample In A.T.&T. trainlng programs on rates," said Hasting!. He pointed . out tha! phone. rill.ea originally were established when ·&anta Ana was the location of the central ex· change. f.11 rates were set up on the basis of going lhrougn Santa Ana. "I fherefore ·sugge&t that-the next step has. to be a formal complaint to the PUC aod have drafted a letter that could be sent from the chamber. It would be .ad- visable to have similar action taken by other ~ber!i of commerce in the af. fecled area." Direclor$_ appioved the drail, which re. quests PUC action o~ r~ie~ w.ithin 30 days and on · .rec;lefinin& beuodarlea lor . ' lie noted lhlt IJ'lli!!P !iloced ~ the tftes 're<ently plonted ,oo ~ lllghway willhave to be welded becauoe& two- secllon, llJP-ln·v~ hi\'. too• much ap- peal .for"'1DUvmir" hwltets._. • 01t a moi. -~I· !'Ole; he reported thllt .1he water COniPAnY ba'atp.-to replice'lreel.l:omc"1Jil;du}jpa loiW)atlOIJ of .lhe new wattr·miJD With-.)>lanUnp 11o( equal size." ~any · req..,sts ' Jor . plant~ o.r memorial . .trees, ,have bee~ ~eived. .. '. ' " . ' Milne said, and Jhe Chamber now· bu ar- raog~ lo .re<elve prlva\e ·don<!Uqns earmarked for these Uvinc memorials. ' Tho 'drive against trulr and llUer will got •.liQQSt. be said, when the dty tabs · dtuvery, ol l90o worth of new ·silver garbage cans for the 1'downtOwn, afta &Jone Breadwa,y~-.the bomtwalk The cans, be noted, will be bolted down. For , the lime belna no attempt will be . mode to n;place the ~ lrash.c,w cbalhed lo Ille boirilwalk"alOllf·tM land. "The tmb . : .,. ". ' .,. ' [. o-·n s -. x · __ · "+: ·_ .... ·~_· .. s . c~ on the sand like too rilUch' of a beaUng," Milne · qplaine\l, '/both (rom the pu&llc and from hltih Ude"'' ' A lnajof projed to be Wldertaken by his ·...Mtillff,· said Miine, wlu • be coordtnatlm ot plans to convert ,.! snill pari:ti..of·dtY, owned land at Wllaotj $treet and SL Arui'a . Drive;· behind the, high schoo11n1o. "ii\lnl·)IJll"r '" l9'l!!Jerl !lfld thetr mothers. The land Was <1rlglnally eyed · fer-le,Mi:i courll, but deemed unsiillable. · . • . Vote .Falls. • ~ • •r I I ' • t ' ' .k . ' 52 Short . . WASHINGTON (AP) -Preslden.t Nix- on's .veto of the $1P. 7 blllion healUHduca. tion money· bill was upheld today as the House rejected an effort to overrtde lt. The vote was tu to fil, 52 s!imi of file neeilel'two-thlrdJ. Tbe result "aa a solid vlctorY. fOJ' 'Nlmn !n.hi&-iharpest conlr'oritatlOrLl•t"•ith the Dtmocrauc controlled Coocms. The Prealdepf aald a· .-to waa, ...,....,,. bee&,..; the !UI billion whldl .Canve>s The applause-punctµa~ed actiOn follow- ed by a report by committee member Rbbert Hastings, who described efforts utendlng over the past three years to reach a solution of'the phone· rate (l('O- blem.. whicb· Jlmlts local phone calls in and Dut or ~guna Beach to the Immediate tqailal--araa. and tilt Newport ..llarbor •r'-•- llas.tings, retired ,·Pacific , Telephone C:m\pany employe., Uld both Pacific and General Telepllom, who operate lil the area, recognize the problem and .~ve made #forts lo !ind ... oolvJi"ll• • 1 "Frmp. tlme to time It has app6.red that we were on the brink of solving the probleJD,JS'. ht> Yid, "but SO fa .. no-pJM •usgeiled bes been acceptable to all partlet. local;all•JVi~.f'~ ·111 """' ~to bllxb Ii.~~'' ,_! ~-·lllo.lllll!oi'buldi md adaoalton " Jll'Ofl ,m. w11 lnDaUonary. · · · · The ,.Ver , all ~I · , llnanctt tilt J!ipartmenta of Labor and 'lfeal1b; Bdu.citioi> 1114 · WeUA(', and var!Ous an- !'The sitUatior1 Ls so impos.9ible, so Chamber Group Studies School Tax Vote Issue At the request or Laguna Beach school Superintendent William UUom , Chamber ot Cammerce directors have appointed a thrtt-membe r commitlee to study the propositions that will be presented to voten·ln the Feb. 24 school tax override tnd'bOnd election. Meeting with directors on Tuesday, UlJOm said he believed such a committee, fully informed on school needs, could be ~f great help in Interpreting election facts for the chamber mem bership. Olrettors William McCready, Louise fumer and Lloyd Seilset were appointe.d lo undertake the study. "SctJool financing," tiaid Ullom,,, 1111 very copiplicated and statistics often tall \o reveal the actual facts." '• · • i;:'or example, he said, charges of 'ex- ce.!Sive administrative expense are * * * Betty Myers To Head CofC Mrs. Betl;J Myen has been apPointed manager of the Laguna Beach Chamber If Commerce to replace Warren .F. ~f"fian ·wbo will relire March 1. refuted by the fact that the school district, which was run by three ad· mlnistralive officers JO years ago, stlll has only three, despite a growth of 700 students, the additional workload having been distributed amoog Jess cosUy clerical help. Eighty percent of the school budget, he said, goes for salaries, which reflect the 11 per cent increase in the cost or living in the past two years. Laguna salaries for certificated fteachlng) personnel are competitive, Ullom said, but salaries for classified personnel (gardeners, maintenance men etc.) are average or below average. The cost of-tes:tbooks and . other teaching mtertals hu.-skyrocktted and new state legislation hes upped insurance costs fO per cenL "TbiJ' ts something we can't con't.rol," he said. Citing the neea to maintain Laguna's high level of educaUon, he cited recent tests tbai !ihawed local sixth gradeni are more than a year above average levels 111 ~I and one group of elementary sdloOl'students two )'Ur! ahead in math studies .. A comparative Rudy in six Orange County school d!sb1cta, Ullom said, rated Laguna highest of Ute six and well above avtrage state levels.in general educalion. (Ste TAX llSU!, Page %) ( rate to-and Crom areas _P.ere calls now cost from 10 to a cents, then eventuaR.Y p~ the entire aru within the local c.1111 boundary. 1' Mesa Police Continue Huge Drug Roundup By AR1HUR. R. VINSEL DI "'-Delb' f'lltl Steff Tired lawmen today resumed a round- up or suspected teen drug dealen, disclosing that e1otlc Mediterranean mind-benders such as opium changed hands for marked money on one Co6ta Mesa campus baseball diamond. A total or five adults and 12 juveniles were arrested on campus and at their homes throughout the day and into Tues- day night, with nine more being hunttd today. Neatly all were named In arrest war- rants charging sale of dangerous drup, after Harbor District Judicial Court Judge Donald Dungan cons l de red evidence collected in a six-week probe. 'The five adults were expected to be ar- raigned on the felony charges today, althoogl> some bad already posted 1623 or more ball to secure their release. The adults are: -llleml M. Dolllr, 18, of 2869 El Rio Circle, Cof!a·Mesa. -IUcUrd G. Aldis, IS, of 686 Senate St., CoRI M'5i. -11tmo .. ft.. Laat, 18, of 3022 Don- nybrook Lane, Costa Mep;. -Lordta L. Goaute., ZS, of 913 Cedar (l!<t DllUGS, Pqe 1) The announcement today followed an ~xetuUve session or the board of dlrec- lors Tuesday. :Mn. Myen began her (Aguna chamber ~ in 1964, first for a'om MacAllltaire, \hen for the past. 3~ yem as aec'ret.art- illanager ror Morgan who WdS executive rice president. . Safe, SN1Pfl•free, But ••• ~· She had slx year• · Or 'chagi.~r ex- >erli?nce in Redland11 before coming to \.aiµna . She had work'cd' w I l h N-pl~·nts . Hurt \taCAUstaire In Redlands. • ~ A resldent or Laguna. Mn. Myers has t IO!l, David, 16. a junior al Lai1JDB Seacb lligh School. EDITOR'S NOTE: Some obstocles .. ' . sta11d in the way of wide uie of nuclear power plants, mu.st ezpertl say. Thtse obstacfe1 ore ezplored in tlti.s . two.par& 1trit1 by Auocialed Prtsl \Vriter Doug \V iUis. ' NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market, By DOUG WILLIS .tt.lrina its morning galnl, r"erted to ln<ln• I I k trod' tod SACRAMENTO (APl -Safe, •mog· U J .L2\', ways n 8 ac i.ng (~ free, clean nuclear power Is "tht only wilh, declines edging past advances. way to go" to meet future demand.a for JUO(ations Pag"' 42-43). . Rl•'•rd' Scruggs oC Goodbody & Co. elect~ty, aay v Ir I u a 11 y ,all ia;dr,-imall rally cOuld be eJ"peCted In knoWledgeabl~ ·public <1 ff l·e I a I e, lfl· .he markefs present oveMl;fld cendlUon ; dust&llsb f!"1 ecoloFIMI. : , • iut that the b8f1C condlti011 of the lnvea-, Bo\ Iha! lki>!lt'. In . n U cl e a.r \Ors "II static· pendln& President Nixon's generating plantr iton'\ 'have ~ny effect tKJd&et message Pi1onday." on Ute envlrooment. • --- ~·There..art tremendous.safeguards-for nucle.Br plants. There has. neY'ft', ever been a dealh from commercial nuclear power," said l\ss.emblyman John V. Briggs, (R-Funerton), chairman of the slate's joint Jegi!lalivt Committee on nuclear development. "The biggest thing i• thermal pollution. Tbe&e plants need a tr'etMndOUI amount of water," he added. , "Sare It'• c"an fuel. but heat ii a pro- blem too," said Leonard . N)tup, lllJ a~lcultural engineer at the Oniverslly of Catlfomia at ·ocvJs,. -.... ' · -J 1 "OU.env1r811ru<ot,,.,<:J~_,p,that any •lgnlncimt-lncreue lli m\touot of heal Is going lo have an eC That can be ~I, « ii ca.~.!!p~," • • DAllY f'l"°1"'Sllft' .,.,,.} DARIC.SUITI D MASON, TOLKUNDV· TOUR'.1'ASHION ISLAND· I rvln< ·Com pony P r•.ldont· MMft lzva1ll1 Editor ' 8us8'ians· ·Here· . . . Bus Driver Sti~ndS .(;ro11,p at Ir vine By ·JOHN VALTERZA or IM O•lt)o Plitt :Ii.tr The r\.USSlllU!I Ca'.Jlle to· FasblOl'fc Island Tuesslay. . . , Bu< the touring group of 10 of the Soviet. Union'-a top .ecUtor:.s h<id a litlJ.e trouble leaving' N'1'P.Orl Beach. Th.tr bus driver went lihqpping and left them waiting Idle, hallw'1. !11'1!""' the~ tour of the Irvine Rancb -Orange Co!lll- ty's pillar of µpltaUain, ' · 'Tiie' -. edli<h. in!~ a!. the hllttop ·shopping ·center• .iiout'.U Mtnutes ~".°''Y lunch·a! lhe Stiilt ~hlrt But becauee• of their of(icfal ··odl1r.pu'5 . fl<ia! •11\n.SS!Onl aijd Vagll!! replj~ to q""'tl0t•; their lmprtoaloilo1of '.the food · • • • • I .. ... ·~ and the shopping center·were never fully known. ' . :. '_ Led by Irvine Company Pre.stdent Wllllam R. Mason rattllqg o11 · s1<1ti.st1ca and other facts about the po'!h •~'!ii eenter, the JouniaH.ta ~IQ 'tb!o~'!lt­ tetpreter, and a. rew of them snaPl£(f pie· tm:es with their : Eaot · ~mllile cameras. Tl!e aj>parent leader oi the ll-<lay-"'1ir tlltoup. the United · States 1J . ~ 6en1oi !:dhar 'L. N .. TOIJoiiiOv, a-llioi't, htilvy-1et, balding nwt who · ,q.ea few. questions oL the taller.M88011. · ·As .aie1 &tiotkd ;,.;st'FaibtmY111mkY1. chllC!ren's ~laygr<\llnd"· Maon ·e!iplallitd fllat """'ally this p1-ls !uU of~; and especla!ly on Satllrdli)'I." •Wlle,re are the.chUdfen1 now?l' 'Uked the 11olfr lrvestia ·editor. " , · "TbtY're.i" achoo!: The·cold ·wutber keeps them from .playina 'there.tdday:• replied MUO!l. • . There waa a sllaht chuckJe flilm the RUS&l.w. . • ~ Aa.lbq,~tbe eenlral'llalue Ol'tlie center theigrotip pluled.1"bl~lo ite</de ff they wanted ~-.Ille~ ot~: "Woulit wi11~ ...., .i.:....-itl . •'--'"" ,_ .. ..,..OF ,.._,. swrar·· Muon • . 1 •11fell,·~ J.QUIWiatJtnJto '•~" saldfo~.· . ... Well,,! don'lkno,w: •• , would yaa ·likt w go tmtde, Cl' do yoa wlah to ao on?l' MlaOll uked. · · . , · , · ''Whm.vtr you w.mt," ume the-~· Crom tht·edttor. ... 1 ·"Well, J .. guas 70U CM waJL into a 1ton lll)'ilme,"· MMl'l"i ukl, wacbatMc . the 'inclfrc:ilM dialope. f' ' • The chlel o( lhe ollklaJ ~ Party orp(a' .... >Odly a,'few biiof 'q--lopoNn.bll'-hli ..... ' tnterjd tho' ft"/ and· white bu& · !His • lrnprleilbria <If lhe II lt 1 -. ··~1' ~' Wtth ~1 1 feyr-ti•' ~111 .. ...,.. ·'\ 1 •• ·-· ' . l . . . • ( U~· priijj"amL ' . . fA niw bill wm--)lave to be Written iitd U> IJ llkily the liemicratie' illaJorlty will again try to put In more money than Njton has bqdgeted, although. not as rhbCh as In t~ vetoed blll. · . Juat before Lhe vote, 'two . Repqbllcan leaders put forward a pouible Com. pr~mlae that wCJJkf .. permit Congm,s to " st4nd by the ~ued ·funding bu! l<t ljfJo>!> refuse "' spend mo e .lhan" be W!p'lted to. ' •· 1 It wis· allO repotte~f that the· White HoJJae b ,prepared to approve lnatees OYtr· Nixon's .budget totaling, $t4I mllllon Instead of the l!.26 billion added. In . the vtloed tilll. Report Plannetl On Drug Abuse . , .. . Saddleback Drug Abu.e ~l. wtll hear an outline of school progfama ,aqd. objectives In -dealing wJth, ~s. headaches Thursday frqm JJY• Inaalls, a~t oupertnteedent, ln!t~nal aOl:vl<;t>Jor Tustin Union High School. 'I'hemeeUng Is pub\ic. It·wm be Jn the te(evlslon ·room of Mlsslqn ~Jo lli&h School beginning at 7:30 p,m, (See related Story, Page 3). . ThecCouncll, which beaJ11s,a HeJp ,Llne program Sunday, 1lao'haa ~ elec- Uoo of offlcon al the mertli>g. Presittent 'Bob Allama said, ~~ ob- jective of the Drug Abule Co<mcll II' qi l!Sjst commUnity organlutlons provtdO an eUectlve, constl'uctlve jJrogram. for the community to Comblt 'drug abme." ,.Qr .. .-; . 'Ceu( ' W\Nlaller llold .on to your .bata,lf you·!Ji!ft any; It's gqlng to blow up a storm (fi&l'faUvely opeaJUn&) on • tbe ~ Col!!. Clo/ aldeo rt\in ' 1l>ilrl\l&Y wUh chilly-lelllperllUl'OI. I . INSIDE ;TODA:Y . A formt; narcoib .of/lcrr 1-w.,1m;,w,., -""* • '!""-rem .to .gioc '"-'" a cllolco. I• o -,,.iv. lo """" off dncg ob .... s •• Poot· a. =:.. ~ ~·-,. , _... --:: ::...-::. ·': i as111u 1 • -..... -" ~ .... u..t.n . • ·-. r,_. • ..,.. ..... ·--.\ = ..... : ............ +1 ! ., ... ...., 11 ... .. ~~'ti: ·~ • • '"' . ~-· .. ;;;;;-,;,::-: "/; .. , ""if"'"" ....... _... .... ~--------- ' • I '--;+-- ' , I r • :1 DAILY PILOT L Firs~ of 20 Plataes American Relief Arrives in Lagos LAGOS, Nigeria (UPI) -tl'esh American, Brit~sh and Canadian relief arrived in Lagoo today and the NigerJan Red Crosa announced it was now feeding 700,000 refugees from the civll war per day. Two Amerlacn C14-tral\ljport planes landed, r<irry ini:: the first of some 20 p\aneloads of supplies to help an estimated one million Ibo trtbesmen suf- fering in what was once Bialra . POWs' Wiv es Wait to Se e Japan Aide s From ~'ire St:n·lct1 TOKYO -Homeward bound with hope! unfulfilled, an El Toro woman and three service wives with husbands miss- ing in Vietnam waited today to confer with Japanese officials. ll-lrs. Carole Hanson of 24112 Birdrock Dri\'e and her traveling companions said Tuesday the globe<irc\ing trip ~as failed arm criticized their reC1!plion in some areas. They singled out diplomats from the Hanoi regime and even U.S. Sen. Eugene J. l\fcCarthy (0-Minn.) whom they met Y.'hile waiting futilely to see if they 1.1·ould be permitted in lo Moscow. "SenalOr 1'tcCarthy Mid to us that he was very concerned with the tragic situa· tion of the war and he pointed out that he 1.1•as trying to help the draft dodgers, the prisoners of war and the desertP.rs, and it hurt," &aid Mrs. Arthur Mearns, 37, of Los Angeles. "It really hurt,·~ she explained, "because I don't feel that mt husband should be in the same troup. "The senator v•as very much in a hurry and he didn't have time to talk to us." she added. With Mrs. Hanson and 1'1ra. Mearns were f\frs . John tlardy, 27, and Mrs. Roosevelt Hestle Jr., 37, both _of Los Angeles. The four hoped to meet with the ~1fe of Japanese Prime l\1inlster Elsaku Sato during their stay in Tokyo and of· ficials of the Japan Red Cross Society. Wilson, expressing encourageme:nl over talks with Nixon, noled Tuesday night that for the first time in years "in· temational economic relationships are more settled." He said there has been "a significant mo\'e forward in W{)rld monetary cooperation" that would not have been possible without U.S.-Brltlsh efforts. One of the American shlpmtnt& carried three 18-Lon trucks, 10 generalors and 600 blankets. The second, which originated in Charleston, S.C., carrltd a similar cargo and the two were supplements to 50 jeep111 and three mobile hospitals which arrived from the Unitl!d Slates durlng the weekend. British and Canadian relief fllghls also arrived today carrying more transporta- tion vehicles and some medicine which Nigeria had requested. Five West German Air Force cargo planes left Bonn today with trucks, a ht!licopler and aighl tons of medicine for use in the Biafran area. AU of the military markings were painted over as ":ere those of the American, British and Canadian planes. The Nigerian government meanwhile went ahead with plans to expel relief \vorkers accused of aiding rtbel Blafrarui during the 30 month civil war. The first of 32 Catholi c missionaries a1.d nuns rounded up and held in Port Harcourt after the fall of the former secessionist slate began arriving in Lagos on their w8y home. At least 75 persons, all but five of them Irish , fall inlo the fedtral category of foreigners accust.d of "helping the rebels ai1d prolonging the war." The Nigerian leader, Gen. Yakubu Gowon, has v<iwed to expel them all eventually, letting some stay for' the lime being If they art providing services vital to the survival of war refugees. Nixon, Wilson Said in Accord WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on and Britiah Prime Minister Harold \Vllaon today concluded two days of con- ferences, repqrtedly in agreement on all major points. Wll90n attended a meeting Cf the Na· tional 5etur:lty Council on Nixon's in· vltaUon, abd the two leaders then spent almost two hburs with the\r principal aides discussing world problems. The future of the Atlantic Alliance and East· West relaUons we~ in the fOCUJ of their disalSsloN:, a dlplomaUc source iai.d. Contrary to earlier tradition there were no llna! statements made nor a com· mun!que issued. · The NSC session preceded another meeting or the President and prime minister set for shortly before noon. The NSC meetings are ., hush-hush that the White House seldom discloses even te general topics up for consider• lion. And the invitation to Wilaon to sit In underscored the depth of Anglo-American relations at the top level. 122 Color TV Sets Have Above Average Fire Rate WASHINGTON (AP) -Th< National Commission on Product Safety uys 122 rr.odels of color television sels have been catching fire at an above-average rate. The commission's decision l\·londay to Identify the models brought an aCCUBation from the Electronics Industries Associa· tion that the commission y,·as creating an unfair competitive advantage for some manufacturers. , The commission said the nation's 22 million color sets have been catching fire at the rate of 12 per 100,000. It said the set.J it ldenlHied were igniting at lhe rate of 30 per 100,000. Olympic televlsJon sets manufactured by Lear Siegler Corp. a\1eraged the highest rate in lhe industry, the com· mission said . It sttid nine of the firm's models were identified as potential DAILY PILOT OltAKGt CO.t.,T'Pl.llLISHING tOMP.t.l'l't kobt•+ N. w,,41 Ptet~nt •nd Ml~ J•ck R:. c.,.1 • ., Vl(t PretklMI 1nd <>-11 ltUM9 .. T!.o"''' 1<'11wil fdi!« lho,,.11 A. M11•1lhint M1 .... in1 ll•llr A!chortl P. Nill L..-lff(fl (JIJ ldUw L .. lflMI .._. Offt'' liZ f:o11tl Aw1n111 M1!11119 A~'••l1l P.O. l ol' •••• t1•s2 OtMr OMcn C•i. 11\tut Ult Wnl ltr 11 .... N--' 11 .. 11: nn w.-.1 111• '"'""°~ hllllllllfi.:'I l .. dlL llUI loKll ltll•ftl• Dall.,. Pl\,OT, Whll -· i" ""''tr.el ""' N-~ It ""'"":d ltlty 1•~,.t $~ •tr 1i11 __,,,. •11-. lot Ltt"""" lttell.; ...._, -..t(fl, C-11 lll«M· 14""'tliofi~ kXl> """ F-tlltl Vtllorf, 1i.,,o will'! ..... '"*"" ""llM-°''"" c .... , l"liellloll"" (~r jlll'lflflnt •~II t•f ~· 1111 WHI 11 ... t' IMI~ ~ I•-•~. •l'Mll UI ....., .., ~ C...lt Mnt. .T8':0'1• .17141 4f4.f466 ,....,_~ o.,t. 64J-4JJI ~lo Jttf, Of",.. tou1 ~~ C...0.""'. Jrtt -11e!'lt1. IHlftl<tl""" "'"""' ,....,.,.. ., '"""'""' ...... " Jltrtlll !Mf .. r1•n•11Uol "''3"\l'I' •OHltl Plf• """", 11 QIOY•if"I -· .._ .... tllM •tttt r.:lf tl Nc..-.. 1 ltK'fil i nt "''' l!WMI. Cf\,..,..,, lo1•~•u•o1 '" wt ,.,"., UM ,...,..1111Y1 bJ ll'lllt U,Jt "'°""'''' ,..ii,..,, 111!11111 .... 11, i.2M -"'·' ha!ards. The other firms Identified as excteding the industry average ·we.re, in descending order: Packard Bell, Magnavo x, Sylvania, Philco-Ford, and RCA . Si:t firm s "·ere id entified as having an incidence rate below the lndustrv a\'crage, allhough some models caught fire at the 30-per-100.000 rate. The firms, in descending order, were : General Elec· tric. Admiral, tl<lo~orola, Emerson, \Va.rwlck (Sears), and Zenith. \\le~linghouse \\·as the only major brand not mentioned in the commission's statement. This was because, a spokesman said, "no problem models could be identined." The commission, which has been con- ferring y,·ilh the industry for thrct: months on the issue, sent letters asking lhe manufacturers to recall, repair or replace faulty sels. Commission chairman Aroold B. Elkind said some sets on the list might not be Ort haunls but he added the information should be furnished to the public "rather than ri sk the consequences of fires in col· or televl11ion receivers." In attacking the commission's action. Jack Wyman. staff vice president of the electronics association, saJd the report "will result In unduly alarming the pub- lic about the n!laUvely Iimiled problem." He said the problem of fires is small com- pared with the number of sets in American homes. "Television sets are safe products," he said. College Accepts Festival Mu sic St\1eral hundred musical scores fron1 the Laguna Beach Festfval or Arts hive bttn aC"Cepted with UwW by truslets CJf Saddleblck College. The orchestrationa are stock ar· rangement! no longer u1eful to the ~·e~h·al now that Conductor Vic Schoen composes original music for each 5Ulll· mer'• Pageant of the M1 rtt.rs. Tiley also are ror • sm11ller orchestra than the FesU,·al now u.cs. Stuart Durkee, Ft.Uva! of Arts dirtt- tor. said al a rectnl board meeUng he h11d 1Mde several overtures to Laguna Beach High School and that they did DOt. 11ttm lntlr~sted in the musical acora. 11e bU&gested they he offered to Saddleback Col~i• ond the festival board agret<j. . ' . . tll'I Tt ltttlltl1 Girl Friends Cheer Officers Los Angeles policemen Edward McDonald (loll) and Michael Kriha, who each loSt a hand in a bomb explosion, are brightened by the visits of girl friends Ruthann Drelus -and paedic Hospital. Carol Littlewood in Ol'lho· Youth Leader's Lunch Leaves Bad Af te11aste A high school student body president aUeoding a leaders' luncheor.. with the superintendent of the G a . · G e n Grove Unified School Dimict was ar- rested on a marijuana charg~ after dessert Monday. Santiago Hlgh School ASS President Gunner Swanson, 17, of 13702 Euclid St., Garden Grove, was admitted to Orange County Juvenile H~ll Oh a charge of possession of marljuaila. Santiago Hi&h School Vice Principal Robert Kernan told pOllce he called the youth to his office and 1sked what ht had 1n. hls bial.ging pocket, at which time Swanson pulled out a plaaUc bag of green, leafy material. ·~t's just alfalfa aDd catnip," he rep:>ttedly said. Kernan apparenUy suggested It would be unwise to take tha b.13 alcng to lunch wilh Suet. David Payol<!'. • During the luncheon period, Garden Grove police narcotics det.ectJve1 were analyzing the weed and finally declared it was more than' allalfa and catnip. From Page J N~PLANTS ... for heat exchange and it causts a very small increase in temperatW'C with little effect," said Robert S. Loomis, director of the Institute of Ecology at UC Davis. "But even ocean sites have raised con- cern," he added. Expending warm water from a nuclear plant into a river or other smaller body of water can cause "a ma· · jor drastic change in the ecology," he said. "Also, the nuclear reactors we arc looking at now arc quite small compared t.1 those on the drawing boards. Polen· tially we have a very serious problem here," Loomis said. The Sacramento Municipal Utility Districl, "''hich i& constructing a nuclear plant designed to provide po'.l·er for a population of 640,000 perrons. is building two cooling towers in .11 foggy site in the SaC'ramento Delta. At<:0rding to company projections, the two towers will evaporate 16,000 acre-feel or water a year, equal to about one-half n! lhe annual e,·aporation of nearby Folsom Reservoir. Condensation is the best solution for the Sacramento area, the company says, because of the large amounts of heal con· sumed in the process. But warm 1.1·ater. in spite of iLs 11lann· ing potential dumped without planning in· to a stream or bay, isn'l necessarily bad. say ecologists. lt may upset fi sh spawning cycles or the biological reJalionshlps among fish. insects and water plants and algae. but it n1ay abo be used to right fr~t and ex· tend growing cycles or even be nscd in .11 ~unicipal heating systen1, says Davis ecologists. County in Opposition To Airport Expansion In a 4 to 1 vote the Orange County Board of Supervlson went on record Tuesday as opposed to any expansion of commercial flights using Orange County Airport. The resolution presented by board Chairman Alton Allen and supported by the Newport Harbor Chamber or Com· merce outlined four areas of restriction until completion of phase two <Jf the County tit as t e r Plan of Air Transportation. In addition to opposing new ap- plications for interstate routes, the board went on rec<ird as maintaining the statu! quo of maintenance operations, pro- From Page J TAX ISSUE .•. In other reports al the Tuesday meeting, directors learned: -That entry blanklj: for the annual Mennalds city beautification awards are available at the Chamber office and awards will be presented at a champagne reception in the Festival Forum in May. -That inquiries about Laguna have tripled in recent months and a survey will be made of hot.el and apartment o\\-ners and businesses to see i! their in· te~lt aroused by intensive advertising is having a material Impact. Seas-Vacation Village owner Loren Hanline stated he attributes an increa se In his business this winter to the advertising campaign. Dick Clark reported that Holiday Magazine; with a circulation of l.6 million, sent a writer-photographer team to Laguna and will run their story of the Art Colony in ti fay. -That the Jaycees are planning a "Laguna first" with a dart Loumament for their contribution to the Winter Festival and expect several hundred en· tries. hlbiling use of the airport by planes with 95,000 pounds dual wheel weight and op- posing terminal leases for new carriers. The dissenting vole was cast by Supervisor Robert Battin who said the policy statemenl would be "a strait· jacket on our flexibility of judgment. l can't support this resolution because lo do so would be Lo tie our hands for the future." Charles Curry representing th e Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce said lhe resolution will give the board time to have a complete study made of county air needs. The airstrip is currently served by t\YO commercial lines, Air California and Air \Vest in addition to Golden \Vest Airlines, a commuter service. Supervisor William Phillips expressed concern that passage of the resolution - prim.arily the part dealing with new leasts -\Vould affect merger plans between Air Califomia and Pacific Southwest Airlines. Robert Bresnahan, airport director, said he had spoken to rep~Rnlatives of the airlines and none voiced any opposition to the rtsolution. Retired Judge Back ·on Bench G<iv. Ronald Reagan has reappointed Judge Ronald Crooksharik to the Orange County Superior Court bench he left 13 months ago in an action that is believed to be without precedent in California. A reliable bar association source ad - vised the DAILY PLLOT that Judge Crooksh ank, 63, of Santa Ana, is Reagan's choice for the 22nd court seat created last year by the legislature. It is expected that the $31 ,816 appointment \\·ill become effective immediately. O ~OME the first watch on the moon CO-STARS IN Marijuana Sqioked .Out . - h1 Laguna A f1ulty exh&ust syst&n 11moked eut nine kilos of marijuana for Laauna Beach police Tuesday afternoon. Stopping a vehicle on Glenneyre Street at· Mountain Road for emiltlng "el· cessive sri\oke," Offictr Donnle Abshier dlscove~ driver Michael \Vlllian1 Wood- bury, 11, or 1008 S. Coast High\vay had no operator's license. The car w a s registered to a lfollywood woman from whom Wqodbury said he had borrowed it. While checking there g isl rat ton , Ablhier Mtlced what appeared lo be fragments of marijuana on tfle rlOQr of the car. Further investigation, he alleJed. uncovered nine packages wrapped in green cellophane on the floor by the back seat. Each package turned out to be a standard one-kil'O "brick" of marijuana police charged. The brick.a were booked ·as evidence. and Woodbury and hls companion, Joe Daniel Catron, 18, of 1249 Octan Front. wei:e booked on charges ol possession ~f marijuana wit h intent to sell, with bail set al '2,500 plus penalty. From Page 1 DRUGS. •• Place, Costa ~1esa. Bail was set at $1 ,875 for OoUar, charg- ed with sale or two .opiates. The first three suspects were booked on charges of sale of dangerous drugs, in· eluding opium and hashish. the powerful sap derivative of marijuana in the case of Dollar. , Cross and the Goniales woman wtrc charged with sa1e of marijuana, while the $025 warrant naming Cross was placed as a SttOnd holding charge because police allegedly found him cultl\'ating the wffi!. The remainder, ranging in age from 16 to just under 18, were booked into Orange County Juvenile Hall pending further ac- tion in connection u•ith th eir alleged drug dtalings. Deteclive Captain Bob Green said to- day the total haul of evidence now held - including heroin, hashish, opium, L.50 , mescallne, plus barbiturate and a1n· phetamine pills -is wort h thousands or dollars. Juveniles involved attende.d both Costa 11esa and Estancia high schools, with more than one transaction allegedly made on the laller's baseball diamond, as detectives watched from a distance. Captain Green said the alleged drug purchases were made by other students a!=ting as special agents during the past several weeks. The crackdown followed a conference . with Newport-tifesa Unified S c h o o I District authorities, in which lawmen ~id they laid it on the line about the ex· tent of the k>cal problem. South La gunan Wreck Victim A South Laguna \\'Oman attempting a left turn onto Soulh Coast Highway wa~ injured Tuesday morning when her car was struck by a vehicle driven by another South Lagunan. The victims, Viola Madeline Kling, 72, or 31112 Brook St. was turning from Vk· toria Place, police said, when her car ~ol· lided with a northbound vehicle driven by Oflsa SuJtonu, 29, of 31728 Virginia WaY. Neither woman was hospltaUzed ac- cording II .. police reports . ' Tough as those posilil't?-applications n1ay be to achieve, they orfer better pro- sprcts than fossil fuel plants. Nobody has found a good use for the more than 300 tons a day of sulphur dioxide, nitrogen oxide and other air pollulants a t,000· megatA·att plant tx?lches into tne at. mosphere, :All N.A.S.A. •stronaut1 ••• includin9 the plol'leen who fint w•lked on the meon • , , we•r Ome91 Sp1edme1ter chrono9reph1. The ••me w•tch •nyone ctn buy in our store. Honey on Stove Ca uses Blaze A can of hone.y left on 1 stove bubbled over into a 5ooey, $450 fl~ In a Laguna Beach home Tutsday morning . Flrtmen sald the blaze at the Art Fisette hmne. C4S Ollk St., apparently started when the honey, lnadVf"rttnUy 1et do1A11 on 11 lighlt'o burner. bolltd ovtr Into the fl ame, StlUng fire to paper towels and an adjactnt plywood wall. CONVENIENT TERMS 9ANKAMERICARO MASTER CHARGE J. C. .J/u,,1phrie·~ JeweferJ ll YEARS SAME LOCATION Dousi ng the rtre In five minutes, firemen stayed around to clean up the •• ,.. and mop lb< ..... of! lh6 Ooor. I llll NEWPORT AVE. COSTA •• MESA PHONE 541.HOI 1 1 r I I 3 . ; - + "blM7 4: 'l'.1: I l . es z I I I $ 1 . , * \ ' ¥0t 63 , NO. 23, 4 SECTIONS, 54 iPAGES . . . . .. .. s s a I ' @ c Bea eh • • . ' : ;: • • ' Ff,P ' S)C , .. IV• .. '''f''r+ ," ' I ' . . ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA WEDNES DAY, JANUARY 28, 1970 .. ' ~ ... ... ·'·. -· • .. . . . .. ·- . ~ 'N.Y.;Steeft• · ~ . -' . . . '· . ' ., . I ..... , . .. ;. Beautification· ' ' ' an Uphill. Battle for Lag1iria · hcing problems such as an official cl- ty 'trit that's bfcoming a public nuisance anl:t vandals who steal $110 gratings a~d trees newly planted in sidewalks aDd. make off with dttoratlve garbage oihs, battlers for Laguna beauty are car· ,Y!!fg on bravely. RtporUng to Chamber of Commerce Qi~ on activities of his beautifica- !I~ conunltiee, ·chairman Lloyd ' Milne --"~ many gQB.ls, Including removal or loni-1~ "eyesores" on Co a at . , . . Highway, have 't.een' attained aad other• are well In halid. · , Ono eotnew.b.•1 ~I .Pn>~ said Milne, wtn· hav• to be r.placemenl of eucalyP!us tree1 uflhe ~ area . with a ten · trOubfesomtt ·v_iriety ot greenery.;-~ \ • . . .. -· . The ~ily, he expltlned, 1W not1ttng but problems wtlh the tuealyptl, wbooe ioo\, heave up sidew~ ,ind whose branches, unless frequently ,trimmed, break off and topple onto patUd cars. This . is embarrassing because the o .use ••• ~ cilra<!ot• qot loo long qo ;.is named.IJig\lila's ol!lclal tree. ilin<orc bMzile TUm.. ·lllllested tlta1 otbe'r vailetieS of euc~yPtul with less an- no)'lnc hablls might be lound. . .Milne assure<! her Iba! the offending lrees will ·not be banished from the Art Colony, ·Just 1\lOVed to someiarea1 like a park, where they can play thelr 'officlal i:ole w1~t disrvptlng ~strians and vehicular traffic. Also ln the tree department. of beayiy, 0 Lousy Connection Laguna Ril:ed Over Phone Setup Directors of the' Lagun·a , Beach Chamber of Commerce voted unanimous- JY. and loudly Tuesday ln file a. formal complaint with the California Public Utilities Commission (PUC) a b o u l telephone. charges bet'i'-·een Laguna and ·~ comtnuitllles. · n.e app1ause-punCfuated acuon follow· e<j by ie1"11'1 by commit!~ mem~ Robert. Hastinp, who, descri~ effoda extelljling over the past thret Y'2rl to ~ a solutkln or the phone1r11te pro- bltm which litnlts local phone qalls Jn and otit of Laguna Beach , lo the fmnlediate cOastal area and the Newport Harbor atea. 1 ""'The situatio11 ·ts so im~l:ile, so r!dicuJOUJ, it'1 even used as a horrible ex- ample in A.T.&T. training programs on rates," &ald Hastings. He pointed out that phone rates originally were established when Santa Ana ras the location of the central ex- ch8J1Ge. All rale;s: 1fert ~t up on dlfJ ·basis or 1'Jinl lhrougn ~la Ana. . Haslinls, retirtd ,Pacifi<,_ Telephone COl11lle'.4JDl>l•J«a!A bolli I'-llld Go.otril 'l'tlepoone/who o~ale Ip lhe ~ ~ ·ihJ ' pr~ and •NVe made di-to fu>d ... 1u11011: "From lime to tlnu! ll bas appearod lbal we wett "1 the brink of si>lvlng lhe problem," he said, "but so far no plan suggested has been ac:eeptable to all parties. Chamber Group Studies School Tax Vote Issue ... At the request of Laguna Beach school refuted by the fact that the school Suphintendent William Ullom, Chamber disLrid., which was run by tine ad· of Commerce directors have appointed a n;iinistraUve officers 10 years ago, stiJI three-member committee to study the has only three, despite a growth of. 700 proPosillons that will be presented lo 5tuderits, the additional workload having voters in the Feb'. 24 school tax' override been• dlstributeCI arilcilg "less costly arid -bond election. clerical help. MeeUng with directors on Tuesday, Eighty percent of the school budget, ·he Ullom· said he believed such a commlttee. said, goes for salaries, which. ren~ the fully .informed on 5chool needs, could be 11 per cent increase In the mst of living of ijreat help in interpreting election fa~ts in the. past two years. for the chamber membership. Laguna salaries for c e rt I £ I ca t e d . Directors \Yilliam McCready, Louise (teaching) persoonel are competitive, Turner and Lloyd Sellsel were appainted Ullom said, but salaries for cl86Sified -" · personnel (gardeners, maintenance men to Ufldertai! the 5iudy. etc.) •1' average or·below average. The '"Schooi fin~nclng,'.' said Ullom, "11 Cost of~ t.extbooks and other teaching ver)f corriplicat.ed and statistica oft.en fall mterials hu Skyrocketed and new state to". reveal the _8ctual factst' leglslaUoo 1Jl.s upped insurance costs 40 1 For ~txatnpl.e. he said,. ch~rge1 of ex~ per:"'ieent. "This II something we can't ~vt admlnl&:tr~tive elpense are ·"°lf{rol," ~said .. _ / · _._ _,,_ _,,_ '-I' 1 Ci!fng lhe need to mainlaln Laguna's 'W w )...£ • • high level of educaUon, he cited recent · ~ !¥ sliOwed local slnh graders are Belt_ y, Myers more lhan ·•·J.oar above average le,vels lo reading and -..ie --p of elem"11arj , school atudenta, tlt'o years ahead In tnath To Head Co fc l!ludles ..... . 1_ • ..._ A Comparative alody in six Orange Colnly M:!iool di!trict., Ullom &aid, noted lotrs. Betty Myers has been appointed i..pna tHghest of Ute sis: and well above manap:r of the Lapna ~ach Chamber aVerage state levels in general education. ol Coniin<tte lo replace Wal'(Oft F. (!lee TAX ISlllJE, P11e I) Morgan whd will rtlire March I. • · flte announmnent · today. folloW!d an "I therefore-suggest that·the nelt -step has to be a formal complaint to the .PtiC and have drafted a letter that could . be sent rrom the chamber. It wOuld be ad· \"isabl~ t,o. have .simlla~ action t'aken by other chamben of commerce jn thf af. feet.eel area." ''-;.l·. ' Direct.ors appro.vtd ·tbt dr~., which r.e- quntl PUC ~1 Olf1 ri.'iee: Wfihin~ JI days and oo t-!"OI bowtdlri1& for local cal!J wllllln a,:Ytat. Hasllnp ...,...tec1, .one procodure would 1be to ,estQDU u everaJl lo:cent rate t,p and from ar.,1 where Cl/IUs. now cost from 10 lo 25 centJ, .then, eventually put the enUre area w:llhin ·the local .can boundary. Mesa Polle~ Continue Huge Drug Roundup By ARTHUR R, VINSEL ot "" .,,. fl"' ·lllft Tired laVimeli today resumed a rollnd- up :o( SU$4!Cted teen .dnJg deilen, dlscloslng that, exotlc Mediterranean mind-benders si.lch as opium changed hands for marted money on one Costa l\tesa campus baseball diamond. A total of five adults and 12 juveniles were arrested on campus and at their homes throughout the day and inttl Tue;s-- day night; with nine more being hunted today. Nearly au were narried fn arrest war· rants charging sale of dai:igel"OWI drop:, after Harbor Oi11trlct Jadlcial Court Judge Donald Dunean c 0 n s Ider e"d evidence collected In a siz.week pttlbe. The five adtilj& were eipected to bear· raigned on,.,the felony charges today, although 10me bad already posted $625 or more ball to lecilre their release. .The adulla .,. : -11rtea. M. Delllf, 18, or 21169 El ruo C8'de. ca.ta Mna. . ' --ll. ANla, I!, ol 686 Senale St., Costa Mesa. ....... ft ll. LcH, 18, Of 3022 DM- nybroolt LOne, Coola Mesa. ~ 1. -· u, or 913 Cedar ' (Set DRUGS, P.111 f) execuUve ,.,.ion of Utt! board of direc-S f S f B 1or~Tuesda1. . ·• a e , mog• ree, ut ••• . ' bO ~-lbat graq placed al'QOlld lhe !Au r<ceo!IY plaiilld oo. Coasl. H!&hway -will hav'e iO-bO'~·-~ I~ ~o; illp.ln. varlely•hts Joo.much ap. peal~ ..z " -1-i• ~.'!.,.:.:,. ior souv1::11u_ IJWl""'''°· .. _ ~Oi:t armore cheerful nott, he ·reported lhltlhe WJ!u ·company ha! prom!Jed to .-.ploce lnes'"l119vtd'duriog JniWlation of, the new :water .ll)iln "ilth plantings ''of eq~t 1lze.11 Many· reQueata -ror planting of memorial trees have been reeelved, •••• ••• • Milne said, anif~ Chaglber nOw h,:s ar- ranged , to .. ~ve ,privata donaUOna eannarked for·thete living meipm;ats. The drive against lralli and lilter will gel a lioci>t .. lllo '"1a; w~ the city taku d8ll~ery or s9oo wofth of ~w silver &arba&e cans (Ol"" the .downtown area al~ Brood;.>aY, and lhe boardwalk, The cans, he noted, will be bolted down. For lhe time.being no.al16mP\ will be made lo re Jace·lhe oPen tralll '"' Chained' to the.~w.4Jk dJni lhf~~ "N traah . . ' ., ' .. . lXOll ·S. . . -' . .. _, · .\.. -• OAQ.Y Pn.OT-"8ff......_~ . ~~!ltK•SUltED'MASolll; TOL'KUNoV TOUR FASHION'IS~A'ifD •.. . • lrYI•• CemP••Y P .. 1r.tont·Mat11 livarll• Edlt,r . ' . . :Bnssians· Here Bus Dr:ive~ .~ti-ands Group at Ir vine ' By JOHN \'ALTEJl7A · Of tllt OlllJ' Pllllt ,IWf The Rpss.ians came to Jl'~ion llland Tuesday. . , Bui lhe lourllll 'gnllp of. IO'· ol lhe Sov~' .(lnijln'1 tlij> ,Cij!J<!;• ~ad· ·a Ultle trotlbie·'l•aYlng Newjioi'! !leech: • · . ·lltttr bu.I driver w•#··~er.~itd. left lhem wa!tJni ·ldle, haHwlf1 l!lelr . tl>llr"ol Ute lt>lne Ilm!Clt -· ange COun. tJ'11 ptllar vf c•pttalBm. , . , 'Tiie RuJi!lan ·-arrived ·11 ·the hilltop •hopping· cen!Erabout, 1$ mlnutu 13te· afler he&!IJ' lunck ~ lhe Stuft Shlit Relltautllllt . ' Bui because or !heir oUIC!al '9'!R'll" facial· ·ezpreialons ~ v.alue re~ to quesilo<m,_ their lmpre!tsioitl 'of the· food Mn. Myers began her Laguna chamber ·- worl< Iii 1114, f~sl 'for Tom MacA~ln!, .!!;:ti':!rt~:r~~:~ ~~rswa:s :; N pla·nts Hurt vice ipresldent. ..-. ~ , &ht: had !Ux years of rhamber ex· . Enviro·ns? ' • I • perience in Redlands before coming to Lquna. She had worked w 1 t h MtcAllstalre In Redland5. -..-. . .A resident of Laguna. Mrs. Myer1 h<111 a tOni.. David. 18. a ,Junior at Lag\ina B<iaetl High lchool. ' . ~ EQ!_TOR'S NOTE: Some _ob1tacle1 stand i n tile way "' wide ... u1e Of ntfClear wwer plant.J, "'""'' upettl JOl#i-T)§e1e-obs~les .are. ~qllored i"' thil t11<>-part series by Aaaoclattd Pre:1 •Writer Doug Willis. NEW YORK (AP)-'!1ie stock marktt, B D01JG WILLIS ~ fli mornlnf galos~mm.d to·--s"'A"'-= .. =~~NTO-==" ( Pl sf ·iw losln& woy1 hi slack tradinf today, ~~ A -a e, llllOfl· wtlh declines.edging past advances. (See free, clean nuclear power it "the only 42-43)1. way to go" to meet-future dentnds for quotJUoa•; Pages · electrlcltv. say ·' I r ,t a a 11 y all !t'ichard Scruw ~f Goodbody & Co. ,, A~ 1 sm~IJ rally coo Id be expected In knowledReablt public or fl c I a I 11 ln- lhe market'• prt&tnl ove~ld conditlon dustrlalists and etOloa;i1ll. b\Jt th.at tht' bask.~ilion .of the !nv~-But Iha~ doesn't me"' n n c I e 1 r ton "U static-peochng President Nixon I seneratlna plants dan, bive' a01 elft'fl bufl~ message Monday." • . on lhe ell•lromneo~ I ·"~re,.,.. tremendoUs bfeguards ~ nucltar · pl11rit1. 1 Therri his. never,._ever been a death f(om ~mercial nuc\ear pow~,•: 18id .~blyman ~ 'V. 'Btlgp; (R>l"Ullerton)~ cba!mWI of •a.I. state's ]oint' legrslat1Ve Committee ~ nuclear development. .~ "The biggest lhing·i,.lhernia! i>OliwU These plants need a ttemUdoUS iitiou or water, ""fie aaaea:-·---- "Sure ft'• clean flJel; blit hllt 11 1 prd- . bl'111 loo," said Loilno,. ,-tolyrup ah agricultural engineer Ill ~ UNveri{ty ff California at Davt1. ' · ' ~ • ·1 I "OJr environment Is ctoeeft e'Do\llh thal aoy sipificant incrtase lo lbt a'tnoont of htat 11 golng to ha\'e an effect._ T}lat~c~n bt beneficial, or It can bo ~" ' ~s og .lh1 •sand 1 t.Ue too m~ of ' beating,". Milne esplatned, "b;oth from the public and £ro11111!111 J.ldeo." , . A m•~or. proj_ed to, be, und_e~ 'by his. 'CQrnmitt.e; sa!d :·MI~ •• )'ill . be codfdtnatloD of'plans lo"' convert a"sinall pan:el of dty,owned'land 11 Wflsotl lll<ett and st, ,Ann'•' Drive~ behhXI the ilJp sChool illto'a •mtlli·J)lr~~· lo.-to4!1ers and lhetr·rnolheis. The land was originally eyeil for lennia courla, bul ~ unsullable, ,. .. , 22&.191 ·, '• Vote ,Falls · 5·2Short WASHINGTOj'I !AP) -Presldenl Nii· .. ~ velO of lhe $10.7,blllion beallh·- tioq·money bill was iipheld today as the House rejected .an effort. tq override 1t. ~,vote w~ ~ lo 191, 52 a!'lqrt. of the ne'1Jed; IJ'0'1/'1nl•.' ' . -~ m.i1 .. a.. ttlid ~fl>f.?!1""11 ill his Wt}fHI coofronlalioti.,. _ lhO !lQ>octalk, CODtrofI'1f ;c.ap.s.; "Tlit J'Prtsldiat .iaJd a . veto . wal neeeaary 'becatioe tl\O•tut blllion whlclt Coqreaa ~lo lfla blll:,,.. beallh ml ...... ttoci ~ -Jnllatto0ary. • ,,,,.. O\'tr •ll bill -the Deporyn"11s of ,Lai>Ol' ...J. ·lfe'1!ft. ltdilcatlon,anCl ·Welf~ •• •nd Y4tk!Ui an-- tf~ progJ"amll. " I .. ~ • : A new bW Will now ilave to ·&e·wrllten and it 11 likely tile Democratlc1rftaj0rity will again try lo pul Jn more money lhan ~lxorr ·has budgeted, altHough not. as much ~ In the vetoed bW. J"'8t before the vote, two ,Republican leaden put forward a poSslble" com- J)romiee that wouJd pennlt Congrt!3S to stand by the incre'.ased funding but.'let Nizon refuse ~.o S(l'.end more the&' be lad /'_. ' ... ,A , ... win. 10 •• ' • . ·• ,_ ~ 11 It was also reported tliat 'the'~Wltite ijouse ii prepared to approve lOcreasa over Nllon'• budge! ·to~ $141 ~on !qst<ltd ~l lhe.,$1.26 biUl<m.. ... ~ . vetoed bill. .,:r. · · . . . ..... -.,. ... . ' Report Plaiin~ On · Drug Ahµ_s e . . ' • - • ' I ! D.lll. V PllOT l .. , ~ . First of 20 Plataes ' Ma,ij~ana Smoked Out ' American Relief ' . -' . (. , ~rrives in 'Lagos In Laguna LAGOS, Nl&•ria (UPI) -Fr•1h American, British and Canadian relief arrived in Lagoo today and the Nigerian Red Cross announced it was now feed ing 700,000 refugees from the civil war per day. Two Ameriacn Cit. transport planes landed, carrying the first of some 20 plane.loads of supplles to help an estimated one million Ibo tribesmen suf- fering In what was once Blafra. POWs' Wives Wait to See Japan A ides From Wirt Strvtce1 .,-. TOKYO -Homeward bound wtth hopes unfulfilled; an El Toro woman and thfft service wives with husbands mlu-- ing .in Vietnam waited today to Q>Dfer with Japanese officials. 4 ?.frs. Carole Hanson of 24112 Birdrock. Drive and her traveling companions said Tuesday !he globe-circling trip. has failed and criticized their reception in some areas. - They singled out di plomat• from the Hanoi regime and even U.S. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy CD-Minn.) whom they met y,•h.ile wailing futilely to see if they would be pennitled into Moscow. "Senator McCarthy said to us that he was very concerned with the ttaglc situa- tion or the war and he pointed out that he was trying to help the draft dodgers, the prisoners .of war and the ,deserters, and it hurt.'' said Mn. Arthur Meamll, 37. of Los Anjeles. "It really hurt,'' she explained, "because I don't feel that my husband shopld be In th~ same group. "The senator wu v·ery much tn a hurry and he didn't have time to talk to us," she added. With Mrs. Hanson and Mn. ~feams were Mrs. John Hardy, 27, and ~frs. Roosevelt Hestle Jr., 11, both of Los Anaeles. The four hoped to meet w1th the wile of Japanese Prime Minister Elsaku Sato during their stay in Tokyo and of· ficlals of the Japan Red Cross· Society. Wilson, eipressing encouragement over talks v.ith Nixon, noted Tue.5day nlght that for the first lime in yean ''In- ternational economic relationships are more settled ." He said there has been "a significant move fOT"''ard in y,·orld monetary - cooperation" that would nol have been possible without U.S.-Brilish efforts. One of the American shipments carried three IS-ton trucks, 10 generators and 600 blankets. The second, which orlgJnated in Charleston, S.C., carried a similar cargo and the two were supplements to 50 jeepa: and three mobile hospitals which arrived rrom the United States during the \Veekend. British and Canadian relief flights also arrived today carrying more transporta- tion vehicles and some medicine:: which Nigeria had requested. Five West German Aif Force cargo planes left Bonn today with trucks, a helicopter and eight tons of medicine ror use Jn the Biafran area. All or the mllilary markinV y,•ere painted over as "'ere those <if the American, Brttlsh and Canadian planes. The Nigerian government meanwhile went ahead with plans; to expel relief \vorkers aceused of aldl~g rebel Biafrans during the 30 month civil war. The first of 32 Catholic missionaries at:d nuns rounded up and held in Port Harcourt arter ·the fall of the fonner secessionist state began arriving in Lagos on thelr w1iy home. i· Girl Friruads Cheer Officers Los Angeles policemen Edward McDonald (left) and Michael Kriha, who each lost a hand in a bomb explosion, are brightened by the visits of girl friends Ruthann Drebus paedic Hospilal. and Caro] LitUewood in Ortho· At ieut 75 persons, all butilve or them lrish, fall into the federal cafegory of foreigners accusF.d of "helping the rebels and prolonging the war." The Nigerian leader, Gen. Yalrubu Gowon, has vowed to expel them all eventually, letting some slay for the time being if they a~ providing services vital to the survival of war refugees. Youth Leader's Luncl1 Leaves Bad Aftertaste County in Opposition NIX• on •. Wilson A high >ehool 1tud•nt body prOlident .......,:.. atteodlna a leader11' luncbeor. with the ""'' • -. supetln tendent or the Ga, "<i en Said•·in Accord Grove Unified S<hool District was ar- • .. ~ , mLed on a marijuana chatf! aUu i • '. • lvASIUNG'l'ON (AP) -Pnaid<nt Nit· d•.,t Monday. oo and BnU. Prime Mlnlater-Huold Sll>tlqo lll(Jl School ASB Presidtnt Wilson toalY. ciloduded tWo day• of eon-Gu..,.. Swansmi,' 17, Pl 13702 Euc!jd _Sl , fertnc:et,·n~y in llJ'tement on all Garden Grove, wu admitted to Oranie major point&. ' Wllsop attended a meeting or the ·~a-County Juvenile HaU on a char&e of tional .~curity Council on Nixon's in· poue'sakfu~of marljli~. _ · vitaUob, ·and tile two leaden then spent S111tlqo llJch S<hQol ~. Prindpal almost two houra with . their. principal ' Robed Kifnan" fOld·potlce he callei:I the aides dl.soJulI!I world problems .• The ' youd. to hb office 'and u ked what he had future of the Atlantic Alliance and E.st-· • West ~llo"!. were In ti\• focwo of~ ·.lit:~• ,.bulling Jl<!Ckel, at which Ume dlswuioriil·, a diplomatic-10Utoe said. S~alllOO pWJed oat a p1uUc bl&: of Contrary to eltlier tradition the're were ~~· ~afy material. ,1 no 1JnaJ 1Jlitemf:Dll made nor a com· · .-It.a. JUJt alfllf1. and ~tnlp, he munique J,Jsue<f. J'ipalUJdly A id. . ~ '111< NSC slssion preceded ailother Kernan apperentfy "'ranted it would metUng or the . Presld'J't and prime be unwlae to take tho boa alonl to 1undJ minister set for shortly before noon.· with Supt. David Payn~. The NSC meetings are so bus~uah During the luncheoii. period, Garden that the White House seldom dlacloaes Grove police narcoti~ deteetlves we~ even te general topics up for c°"5ldera~ ana.1yz.ing_ the weed ancf.;rtnaUy declared 1t tiOn. And the lnvilation to Wilson tO sit in waa more than allalia and catnip. undersct1red the depth of Anglo-American relations at the top level. F'1"" Pa9e 1 To Airport Expansion In a 4 to ! vote the Orange County Board of Supervisor& went on record Tuesday as opposed to any expansion of commercial flights using Orange County Airport. The resolution pruented by board Cha.innan Alton Allen and supported by the Newpart Harbor Chamber of Com· merce outlined four areas of restriction until completion of phase two of the Cou nty Mast ell Plan of Air Transportation. . ~n addition to opposing new ap- plications for Jnterstate routes, the board went on record u maintaining the status quo ol maintenanct operations, pro- From Page I TAX ISSUE ... In other reports at the Tuesday meeting, directors learned: -That entry blanks for the aMual Mennalds city beautification awards are available at the Chamber office and awards will be presented al a champagne reception in the Festival Forum in May. ' . hi biting use' of Ule airport, by planes with 95,000 paunds dual wpeel weight and op- posing tenninal leases for new carriers. The disse nting vole was cast by Supervisor Robert Battin who said the policy statement "'oUld be "a strait· jacket on our flexlbi1ity of judgment. J can't support this resolutlon because lo do so y,·ould be to tie. our hands for the future." Charles Curry rep resent ing t h e Ne"'J)O rt Harbor Chamber of Commerce said the resolulion will give the board time to have a C11mplete study made of county air needs. The airstrip is currently served by hvo commercial lines, Air California and Air \Vest in addition to Golden West Airlines, a commuter service. Supervisor William Phillips expressed concern that, pass.age or the resohi,Uon - pritnarjly the part dealing with new leail:es -would affect merger plans between Air California aild Pacific Southwest Airlines. Robert Bresnahsn, airport director, said he had spaken to representatives of the airlines and none voic:M any oppasition to the resolution. A faulty exhaust system Jmoked oul nine kilos of marijuana for Laguna Beach police Tuesday afternoon. Stopping a vehicle on Glenneyre Street at Mountain ~Road for emitting '"'ti· cesslve smoke," Officer Donnie ~bier discOvered driver Michael Willian. Wood- bury, 21, of 1008 S. Coast Highway had no operator's license. The car was registered to a Hollywootl woman from "'horn Woodbury said he had borrowed it. While checking the r e g i s t r a t i o n • Abshier noticed what appeared to be fragments of marijuana on the floor of the car. Further investigation, he alleged. uncovered nine packages wrapped in green cellophane on the floor by the back seat. Each package turned out to be a standard one-kilo "brick" of marijuana police charged. The bricks were booked as evidence and Wooobury and his companion, Joe Daniel Catron, 18. or L249 Ocean Front. were booked on charges of possession of marijuana with intent to sell. with bail set at '2.SOO plus penalty. •' DRUGS. • • Place, Costa ~1esa. Bail was set at $1,875 for Dollar, charg- ed with sale or two opiates . The first three suspects were booked on charges of sale of dangerous drugs, In· eluding opium and hashish, the powerful sap derivative of marijuana in the case ol Dollar. . Cross and the Gonzales woman were charged with sale of marijuana, while.1,he S625 warrant naming cross was placecJ as a second holding charge because police allegedly found him cultivating the weed . The remainder, ranging in aae from 1& to just under 18, were booked into Orange County Juvenile Hall pendlrig further ac· lion in connection wilb their alleged drug dealings. Detective Captain Bob Green said to- day the total hauJ of evidence now held - including heroin, hashish, opJum, LSD. mescaline, plus barbiturate and am· phetamine pills -is worth thousands of dollars. Juveniles involved attended bolh Costa htcsa and Estancia high achools, with more than one transaction • allegedly made on the latter's baseball diamond, as detectives watched from a distance. Captain Green said the alleged, drug Pll[thases were made by other student! acting as special agents during the past several weeks. The crackdown followed a conference with Newport·~1esa Unified S c h o o I District authorities, in which lawmen said they laid It on the line about the ex· tent o( the local problem. 122 Color TV Sets Have N·PLANTS. •• -That inquiries about Laguna have tripled in recent months and a survey will be made of hotel and apartment owners and businesses to see if their in· for he.at exchange and It cau1ts a very terea:t aroused by intensive advertising is Retired Judge Back 011 Bench South Lagunan Wreck Victim Above Average Fire Rate WASHINGTON (AP) -Th• National Comrn!aslon On Product Safety saya 122 models o( color television sets have been catching fire al an above-a\'erage rate. The commission's decision ~1onday lo Identify the models brought an accusation from the Electronlcs Industries Associa- tion that the commission was creating an unfair competitive advantage for 50me manufacturers. The commission said the nation's 22 million color sets ha\'e been catching fire at the rate of II per 100,000. It• aaid the set; it JdentUied were igniting at the rate of 30 per 100,000. Olympic television sets manufactured by Lear Siegler Corp. avera~ the highest rate Jn the industry, the com- mission said. It said nine of the firm's models were Identified as potential DAILY PILOT OllAHG£ COA1f PUSl.ISKIHG COMPAN't Reloerf N. W1t1td P'•t•lftt1I '"" Plllllitllt1' J ee .. R. Cwrl•v \11<1 P•ft~I er.• "-11 ,,,....,.. .. Th ..... , ic ••• a "'''°'" Tllom•• A. M11r11hh11 M•MOW. Editor IUd1•'4 P. Nell ....--Cll"f' ldl!OI' &..pN .... Offic• JJ? Ferell A"•~w• M,;11,., ,.,,,,,,,, r.o. lo• '''· ft6S1 Ottri.r Offkn Cltll NII• J)I W..1 1•¥' $1rfff ~ tffefl: nu Wiit ''""" ...,ltv•~ ~1111-.1 tai:cll; lftfJ kldl l >win11• DAll't 1>11.0T. wlilt ..,1(11 ;. ~bll'tlll 1111 NcW,.,...... lot M 'llll!'d ••llY ••<wt $1!'!"1 ''' .,, • ...,.it •nlw.l "" 1..,v.... 1..ui.; ......,,, .. td\, C.tt MQ.I. MI0"1~"l. k '(tt .,,,, '-"•1" .,,,,...,, ...... •(Ill ,... t~ lflt,_. or....,. (Mt.I Putlli&lllftt ,_ ,,witll'll ,,."". -'' r.n wt11 •-1•• Ir.I~ ..,_, ••:di. •roll 1JI Wft,l lofy .,,..,. CAU ~·· , .. .., •••• llt4l 4t4-t46' Ch. .... ._ hpf~ 64J-4JI\ <.1""'1111t. ..... o....,. '-"' """"''~ ... '-"""· ... -... 11o.. "''""" .... dlltrl1I -""' tit , .... rtlMl'Ml'I.. ""''""' ,,.., .. ,......,..... ......,, -tit! .... ........,., •I CAYl' .. I -· ~ (llW ,..._ ,.if "' ti~ ftK'lo ... (aft ""'"'· C..!-• , ..... ,.. .... , c•,.llt tJ• ........ l'rl W lnJll ........... l'JI """'''"' •t1t1Nt-. ~. -tfl·f · hazards. The other firms lde.nUfied u exceeding the industry average were, in descending order: Packard Bell, Magnavox , Sylvania, Philca.Ford. and RCA. Six firms 'll'ere idenlified as having an iocidence rate below the industry average, although some models caught fire al lhe 30-pcr-100,IXlO rate. The flrma, in descending order. were : General Elec- tric, Admiral, ~1o:orola. E m e r s o n , \Varwlck (Sears), and Zenith. \Vestinghouse was the only major brand not menlioned in the commission's statement. Th is was because, 3. spokesman said, "no proble1n mod.els could be identified." The commission, which has been Con· ferring with the indust.ry for three months on the issue. sent letters askinc the manufacturers to recall, repair or replace faulty sels. Commission chairman Aroold B. Elkind said some sets on the list might not be fire hazards but he added the information i;hould be furnished to the public "rather than risk the consequencts of fires in C11l· or television receivers." ln attacking the commission's action, Jack Wyman. staff vice president of the electronics association. said the report "will result In unduly alarming the pub- lic about the relaUvely limited problem." He said thl'I problem of fires ls 11mall com· pared with the number of seta in American homes. "Television M:ls are safe products," he said. College Accepts Festival Music Several hundred musical ICOr'tl from the t.eguna Ekach Festival of Arts have boen accepted with thanks by tru&I"' of Saddleback College. The orchestrations are stock ar- rangcmenll no longer uHful \o the Festival now that-Conductor Vk Schoen corn~ orlJjnal mull< for "'h •um· mer a Pai:tanl of the M&rttrt. Tbcy •lso are for 1 m•ller orchestra than the Festival oow ust1. Stuart. Durkee, Festival of Art s dlrte· tor, uld el a rectnl board mecUna he had m;ade st\•tral ove.rturt1 lo Laguna Beach High School and tll•l they did nol aet.m Interested in ~ mwk:aJ JCOrtl. lie bUggested ih•y be offtred to S.ddl<bad; College and Ille YHllval board •sreed· small Increase In tempe.raturt with 1ittle having a material Impact. Seas-Vacation Gov. Rllnald Reagan has reappointed effect," &aid Robert S. Loomis, director Village owner Loren Hanllne stated he Judge Ronald Crookshank "to the Orange of the Institute of Ecology at UC Davia:. attributes an increase in his business this County Superior Court bench he left 13 A South Laguna woman attemp""" , "But even octan sites have raised con· winf,er to the advertising campaign. Dick l_er_t turn onto South Coast Hi'ghwa_y,. was '. -,"he added. Expending wann wa•·r Cl k ried th 1 H lid M months ago in an action that is believed '" -.c ar repo a o ay agazlne; inJured Tuesday morning when her Car from a nuclear plant Into a rive r or other "'ith 8 circulation of 1.6 million, sent a to be without precedent in Califorr.ia. II bl b was struck by a vehicle driven by smaller body of water can cause "a ma-writer·photographer team to Laguna and A re a e ar association SQUTCe ·ad· th So h L ano er ut agunan. jor drastic change in Ult ecology," he \Viii run their story of the Art Colony in vised the DAILY PILCYT that Judge The vlrtims, Viola Madeline Kling ·i2 said. ?.1ay. Crook.shank, 63, of Santa Ana, is of 31112 Brook St. was turning from 1Vic: "Also. the nuclear reactors we are -That the Jaycees are planning a n-· ho' 1 toria Place, pollce said, when her car col· looking at now are qu ite small compared ''Laguna first" with a dart tou-am•nt iu:agan s c ice or the 22nd court seat "' t d I ~ b h I · 1 11 · lid_ed with_ a notthbound vehJcle driven by to those on the drawing board!. Polen· for their contributi'on to the wm· ter crea e a ... year Y t e eg1s ature. IS or s ton i_sa UI ti, 29, or 31728 Virginia Way. ti11ly we ha ve a very serious problem Festival and expect several hundred en· expected that the $31,816 appointment Neither woman y,·as hospitaHzed ac- here," Loomla said. tries. "'ill beC11me effecli\'e immediately. cording ti. police reports. ' The Sacramento ~funlclpal Utility 1------------------------'-----...:._;:_.:.:_2::.::.:_ __ _ District, which is constructing a nuclear plant designed to provide po'll'tr for a popul1tlon of 640,000 persons, ia: building l'll'O cooling towers in a foggy site in the Sacramento Delta. According to company projections, the two towers will evaporate 16,000 acre-feet of water a year, equal to about one-half nf lhe aMual evaporation or nearby Folsom Reservoir. Condensation is the best solution for the Sacramento area, the company says, because of the1arge amounts of heal CQO- sumed in the process. But warm waler, ln spite of ils alarm· ing potential dumped without planning In· to a stream or bay, isn't necessarily bad, say ecologists. · lt may upset fish apawnlng cycles or the biological relationships among rlsh, insects and water plants and algae, but it may also be '"eel to fl&hl frost and ex. tend growing cycles or even be used in a n1unlcipal heating system, says Davi11 tc'Qloglsts. Tough as those positive aP'Plicalions may be to achieve, they offer better pr~ spects than fossil fuel planll. Nobody has found a Sood use for the mon than 300 tons a day of sulphur diodcle, nilrogen oxide and ~tr air pollutants a 1,000- mcgawatl plant belches into tht at- m011phere. Honey on Stove Causes Blaze A c1n or honey left on a 1tove bubbltd over into I &ooey, $4$0 fi~ .IJ'l a Laguna Beocli home Tuellday morning. F'irtmtn said the blaze at lhe .Art Fisette home, 445 00 SL, apparently star1ed when the honty, lnadvene:nUy set down on a U1Jrtt.a burntr, bolled over tnto the name, letting fire to paptr towels ind 1n adjacent ptywood wait Dousi ng lht fire In fh·e minutet, firtmtn 5tayed around to clean up tht ~tove and mop U!e mtM oa the floor. the fi rst watch on the moon CO-ST AllS IN :All N.A.S.A, 11tron1ut5 .•• fnch1din9 th1 pion 11r1 who flrit w1lk1d on th1 moon , .. w••r Ome91 Sp1edm1st•r chrono9r1ph1. The 11m1 wi tch 1nyone c1n buy in our 1tor•. Ancl ~ow you 'Will 11e it on the wrists of 6r•9ori P•ek, Rich1rd Crenn1 , 01'f'id Jtnti•n, J t mis Ft•ne11cu1 i nd 6•n• H1ckni•n •• th•y 1t1r in 'Meroontcl.'' CONVENIENT TERMS I ANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE J. C. .J/umphrie :t JeweferJ I Ill NEWl'ORT AVE • COSTA • .MESA 22 YURS SAME LOCATION PHONE 541·340 I \l 1 --.,-;-~-,.~,~~#""'""""~e'-~=~,,..,,,,...,..,....,,....,.,..,.._,__..., __ _,_.,.. _________________________________ ----·,..-...-- TUMllJWEEDS • ly Tom ,K. RyCJll . • • ltJ\W'(, INJUN! WHY'THE i:llRK ,GLASSES? ~ 50)Tl'l_H!!, AAS SEEV 1HROUGH #( lllSGUISEl--HE SOSPECKS l'M A INJUN '·-THIS' CAU.S FER QUI0<1HINl<JJ.iJ I GQTrA COME UP Wfl A SHROOP, CLEVER WED N E~D AY JANUARY 28 l~rr.,ril. li:OO 8 •11 tltwS (C) (60) Jerry Dunphy. · Q m HundtJ·lrlokley (C) (30) IJ C11t Yiu Top This? (C) (30) P1nel11\1 Moref Am5te/1:11m, D1nn1 Thomas Ind Stu Cllll1m try to \Dll jokes unt I~ bJ viewers, with a comp_\lllfiltd '\.eulh·O·Metel" di· tenninln& tht winner. Wink M1rtl11- d11t Jmts. Dick Gautier lctl 11 realdtllt )l:ika·ltlltr ol th• viewers' atories. fJ CPLOR-COnnie Stevens, * Troy Don•hu .... "PALM SPRINGS WEEKEND"! ANSWER ..... UO ID 9 (jJ n. _,, _,,.. {C) (30) .kd has h11 ...,. t~ lleeoin1 Shorty lrom 1unnl111 o on his Mddlnc dq. U-p111 footb· sl.111 Cookl1 Gllt:hrllt and C. fabon pl~ th• b111piera. 9:00 O \HJ CI1 al -m IC! (Jr "<>nc1 UpGn 1 Timi Thin WM ~ You Couldn't SH.,. Pttt DiMif1'5 studtfltl Rlctlit and Jnon under· t•kt thtk' own TY tlll'f!fl]l aplnst amos. ' m .... '"" -· ICl l'Ol M1rty Alltn, la Lupe, I . J, ThollllS ind Helmut l•ra1r. m"" '" ,..., IC! <"> m n. ,,.,, '"" (30) ill-,,., ID DANNY THOMAS!! * REALLY SPECIAL. WITH BOB HOPE AND CAROL CHANNING ' .. I I'' . . " ' . ly •. Frank laglnlkl PERKINS By John Miles · II Jl U IBCIJ ll!lll!U_,_ d " '""' " •-,..., '"' JUDGE PAR~ 9y Harol ·Le Doux y...,_ (C) (60) A nrltly hour 1-, ... ------""'~'"''""iiiiifr"r:~mn~Mo;~'*E~~w'A.~~~~~~~!Etla.f:r-:v-'11 pruent1n1 Bob Hope, Ciro! ChtA-fl rt>-IETTER MCW t.Ot.16 HAVE A!CXIT W.O WEW •• .ult:' IEtlM ME, . i. niqL Juliet PRIWSI, Oloft,., W1r· 10 ~· ·~ -w ~.~ .... ~s .. TOU"" ~. 10 HAMPLE.' wid. Ind Tim Conw•w--tlonf willl Jtll'6E WJOCa', nus IS RU5! GET" &ACK """' lllll:"l;ft "" ... ~ nr:; " ""' ..,.. I SMrll bi1·tim1 surpriw iuestJ 1nd I PON"r KNOW' WMAT I WOULD C.\ll WHILE IAt.. WIMTB;S? I 10LP M~ WINTERS ME 5'MOllLO BE ylf"l'lnesday, January 28, 1970 ' • DAILY, PILOT 4 ' By Charles Barsotti, . T.· ~ • t::J...~~-' " •• :> ,--------------------...,~ By Charles M. Schulz TELEVISION VIEWS CBS Looks At Schools •: D Sb' O'tloQ Mowir. (C) "hl• S9f!ACS WMMfllll• (comectr) '63- Tror Don1hut, C'.onnle Steven!,. Ty Ha rdin, Sletanl1 Poweri. Durin1 East1r Week, peacllul Palm Sprln11 rocks ullSteM!ilJ wlth lh1 1nnu1I G11111u(ht of w1cltlon!na: st!K111nt1 and assorted dl1radlrs. CJ Dkk Ya• Drllt (30) Marjorie lord and Allie'• C.rt· HAVE PONE wmfOUT MtM! ME~ YOU TALK! . IN A. "'Eff'TAL ~PITAL •• *'1' A.T M0Me! wriflrt froni the "MIN ROOll lal SEEN A WONPERFUL ATTEND-I NEVER SAW '-llYONE AS PE\Ot"E£1 ' '1""------------------"l'llfil OICidY" f1m111. AJJT FOR CARL! 1t> A IA>JI AS SHE 15! ,___.,, 11· By CYNTHIA LOWRY .... t 8) DI FHnbelMI (C) (30) m stir TNt IC) (60) ll1J ffi ABC -(C) (30) fJ1) Mtr1 N .. r (30) "Sports and th• Prorwor." A mech1nlul •ncl· netr . confronts the wtll-known Tinker TOJ Sii: and demonstr1tes limple prlnc:iplts for buildina com· pllx struduras.. ll!J (I) CIS -(C) (30) ea ..... ciltaM <JO) (!) JrllWI (C) (60) Jac;k White. 7:00 IJ CIS Dtlll•c NMI (C) <301 CJ .,...., Mr U..I ICl (30) GI I LM Luer (30) QI ....... -(C) (30) fl)ColtlllldltJ/Matual rund (Cl 9 (I) Allltfkl! (C). (30) fill ..... , (30) !0;30 0 -(C) (30) IJtCIJI""' • ....,,._ (C) ill-• (30) 6' W1ndtrlllll (C) (30) ED TW Cid (C) (JO) 7•30Gtl!ICIJ '"' Nn (Cl (601 Guisti · lnclu611 lolstlt Lynn ind Mll11 H•u•rd. D @ f1'l C':) Thi f"11tlnl•• (C) (f(J) "1li* Slliloh Yea1s. .. Tony Fnnciou iunts II In •fl!lt for 1n E1ster• combin1 whidl tttempts to undermlt11 th• Wyomm1 11nchrr b, uusin1 fin1nci1l stril• In 1 land 11.00 ID am mm-(C) on.w..-... 0 ll1l CII llll •'"' <Cl OM..W. .,._..ti ........ (dram•) 'SS-Robti;t Stick, Shirl., Y1m1iuchi, Roblrt R)>111. m_,,_ m"' ""' "' "" <C> (30) GlllSl:1 1r1 On. Miiton 1114 1lr)'f.t 8111tllm, Bobby lt11UP1 11111 .hrllt Lorw:ton, Jsck C.tllclJ and Sh.,,., Jonas. L1ny Q,illin)' Ind Carol WellL @CIJ3CIJ -ICl fill ..... ~"""' (R) 1r1b scheme. Q @(I)l!!)NIMJ tM ~ pq. famr (C) (30) '1h1 Wibllt Will Gtl You " YOCI Ooll'l Watch Out." Whff• N1noy II tryln1 to Kelp Pruder1t1 1.t rid of •n lmafinarr Nahl visi-tor, Ht! Ind 81J!cll rNM plant lo ll:lO l1ll (JJ CIM9t .. ""-'-= "Four ....,. tllelr little sisttr a Wibltt. euRets lal Jot. JUiiet Miits ind Rk~ard l.onJ star. • Jolnn• Moo11 iuests. 11:30 & IS (JJ Mtn' lllHJI (C) G•'r"'.' """' • .., -u @mm"'"' -IC! ( .. sttm) _48-.lol!n W1ynr, Mont· Schedulid IUllts: WUlfim 'F. lld- fOmtr)' Clift. W11ttr Brennan, Jo· 1., Jr. and o..w &mklnl. 1nnt Dru. Ttus cattllman i nd foll: ..... ciu•rrtl Of« cattl• drift.I o Mllrit: ...... ,,,... · ...... m Trd 1t c.m.-('C) (30) (com_edJ') ·~ ~ H". QIMo;..._(!O) OOIDidl--IC!. UIT ...... _<30) fm Jcrrca Clllll Cd& (30) "S111n· 11111 Duel" 1DCn1 • ..., (30) THURSDA Y ' DAYTIME MOVIES t:09 II".\ r.rtlp Anet• (C0111'4)) •41-Jttn M!nlr, John Lund. 0 "'JllllllJ 8tlt" (dltlM) 'SC iofu' ~ Pi,.r un m"""' --<....,, •5Q -61n1 Tltrnty, ..,.. fllTlf. QI_, ........ ~ ... , .... 1c1r1m1) '51-.llln Simmon1, Off1i ...... <•••o) ~l--, .... -l iWlllf. tt:ta U .....,." .. .......,. ,.,. .. , '54-ltlf £rk:boll, OOMl4 Wood .. Chud. CourtMy. 1:)0 m (C) ......., Cllllt" (mualcll) '!I-JudJ c. ... EMii fO'f Jr. l.1IO a""" .. "' .. "'"""" ~""}£2:~ ..... ,.. Mun AND .JEFF MISS PEACH KELL'( CCt\OOL ~UOfN . Coo~T -• ' --- ' ly Saunders and Overl)Cll'd 50 liQLD;ow, 80fS/ 1M ABOl/T 'TO SMOW 'l'"'L WMAT THE lotlLITAllY CAI.LS "TAKIW' , EVASM: ·AfTION:'. ~ -,~,,· . id'~-· ~,. ~~ I/ p ' ,,_ ___ _ NEW YORK (AP) -CBS news department prpgram. "The Day They Had ID Close the Schools," was timely and consisted of a long if not particular• ly deep look at the money troubles of the U.S. edu· cational system. . Tbe program Tuesday night focused on Fre-. mont, Ohio, which was faced with closing the com;.. j munity schools after a school lax levy was voted down. NARRATOR Daniel Schorr pinpointed the proJ>- lem'of ''explosiVe population and exploding taxpay· . 4 ers" in noting the large number of recent school bond issues rejected by voters. . ' Fremont's story was rather heartening. It rallied ·. around ·in 'the ·emergency, finally voting the levy -. and paying .its p_roperty tu:es in . advance to a~ .:1 cuniulate iminediate funds. ~ r ~ 1 'Almost glossed over was the reason behind ' tbo !:~ resistance of many of the voters -steadily · {n.. ~ c~eas~ property taxes and, as one woman snapped, ~ a feelin' that no efforts were made to ·economize;; ~ Schorr noted that 10 Ohio communities did sug.. · pend clasSes because of a lack of funds. The pr<>,t • gra1p concluded with interviews with public officials 11 on methods of handlling the education emergency! ! ' Generally, efforts are in the direction of taking the : major burden off local property tax and having : , states J?llY the school tax. ; • . . THOSE CHILDREN of all ages who love the : circus -even the televised kind -had their ari· • l nual sampling Tuesday night of the Greatest Show , on E_arth .• with the addition of instant replays in • , slow motion. ' . ' · The NBC special showing highlights of Ringling ! Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circqs . }tad all J the usual treats -high flying acts, elepbants1 'big ~ · ' cats, clo~ns •. acrob;ats; dancing. bears. end cOIOr:flg'· :. process;ion~. And cameramen used that fa'l'l)il \{r .., football technique to show, in slow motion a d/iuble flip oU a trapeze1 8 WOinan jumping from' a SO..foot· ~ high platform Into the arms of her partners and two :: hum~n canno~ ba:,lls flying acrQSs .the auditorium. It · ~ proV1ded an interesting new dimension. · ~ N!'TWORK EXECUTIVES are beginning to play their-annual chess game in which the enter• tainment series are pawns. Programming beads probably know now which ' current programs are unlikely to survive another summer. Between 20 and 30 shows die each year' .. ~ to be replaced in September. ' Most midseason replacements have a few more weeks to be tested before their Nielsen ratings de- cide their fates. It appears, however, that C·BS' "Hee· Haw," an early midseason arrival is doing so well it probably will be renewed for a' full season. - Dennis the Menace ' -r--~ • ~ l l • • • • Pr~~=~~====-----=------_..,..---------....,.....,.---------·- L LEGAL NO'tlCE LEGAL NOTICE Electricians to Install Pres.ident Complete-New York Stock List Market Sy111bols ' \ I ' AT&T at Lowest Point in Decade NEW YORK (Ul'l)-American Telephone stock fell to its lowest level in 10 years Wednesday as the 1narket declined for the fourth day in a row 1n moderate turnover. Shortly before I.he final gong, the UPI market· wide indicator was off 0.66 percent on 1,552 issues traded. Of these, 813 retreated and 429 gained. The Dow Jones lr.dustrial average of SO select· u•L inc , ed bl ue chips showed a loss of 4.02 at 759 97 near u•tt.co 1 io UGI Cp 1,)0 f! ~f f~ m; =;: the close. uMc 1nc1 11 jf = it: nt: .! }! A turnover of around J(}.1/2 million shares was ~:!i&c3111\~: fl ff: 1'14 ~\4 .!_ ~ 8boUt 8 m1J1iOn Shares ahead Of Tuesday's at the U11 (8"'1• I 11 7 '" ~ _ 11 Un C1rbto. 1 1ti ,1\.-i ,5 "~ .,. " same time. u111o11 cor• .. ~• n11o 17\(o -lli Chr l Un !IK 1 20 ' 'lotor• were off in moderate tradin~ ys er u11 El ""·~ I l In ". •• n' \J..Ollf1l l .. 1 '°"" ., '° .... closed al 27-1 /4 down 1-518. Ford Was o 1/8 at 38 uoc• pn.50 lOJ1 Ut\J h7!1 141\ -!' 1 Un ,~ C• t ff &~ B~ m: ! :: and General Motors was 65-1/2 off 7/8. tl~r.:·~'-l -''' ,, ,,,, • 0 ·11s also sloped do·"nward. Texaco closed al u111o111m 1 • ,.. I -• n UnlrOYl l 7' 45 1• '~ 2~ -" ~.]/8 off 7/8. Standard Oil of New Jer1;1ey was off u ... 1tw11 "'1 J4 ~ ]](1 Jl>i + ~I ~f I" ,~11111\0" :10 11; ~ .. ~li, f3., .. ·: .. • 1·7/8 to 58-118. ~nltAl•c 1110 ~ 1~h 1~~~ ,~~ +~ IBM continued to dror closing at 341 off 4-1/4. u:n ~n "cC:1 ~ ·~·· .;f\~ .... x I ed t 1-off I /2 Un l'rul! 1 10 15 11,. 16~, 11,,. _ 'l ero:'f cos a u.;. • . u"\' 1nd :io so u ... ~ J1•1 -'' Prices ba cked off on the American Stock Ex· un 11"" DI' 0 :ICI lJ {j'" !Mo + >0 Unit MM 1 :10 1: JJ~ 1;,~ t.. 71,\ change in moderate trading. ~~1~1~ ;,,'7:, 11 \1 11"11 !\lo -"o Ull'"Sttv 22 •••• u •; u .. -•• , .... ,., ........... "'"'"'"'"' ..................... .., ..... u FrMI lAO 11 1tl1 1t11 I•'•\ -to , Us.G~111m ll Ntdmd&y, Janulf1 28, 1970 L •• • ST. LOUIS (UPI) ?tfon•anto Co. '1 capital e1· pendltures thls year will it about !300 mllUon, c:ompartd w1th U20 mllUon in t•} chairman Charlet H. Sommer said Tueld1y. The 1919 OJ· pendltur., SJ!Urted from ti,!! milllon the previOUI year. """ MINNEAPOl.IS !UPI), .!. Apache Corp. announced two apparent new oil dilcoverfei In lll< Hlghli&ht !I e I d Ji1 Carnpbell County, Wyomine. JC they bear out ln1Ual ei ;. pectalloM, Apache will have broua:ht Jn four IUOO!Slful .. 11, In the lll&hllllrt field within a year. One ol the laat well• drilled nowtd at t9I bar~· relS a day and the other at s3o barrel& a day in !arly teats. NEW YORK (UPI) American Electric P owe i System hu announced .a retord con'tructlon budcet oL s-tao million tor 1970, an \'ft-: crease of about 'lS mllUaa from the eltimated outlays for 1961. QI the 1970 tolal, li30 mllllon will 10 for -generaUnc capacity, I 11 i million for tn.nsmt11ion llDti and I.he re11t for miacellaneoia projects. WASHINGTON (UPI) The Air F~ haa: C'iven Lockhe<d Ail<raft Ccrp A flU million order r.r .P.,. parts for CSA alrcra!L Al tilt tlJl!e Ume, Central~ Corp. obtlinld a llJ mllllon Air Force order for arqund equipment for Jl'·ll alrlial\. •• ' ' " SCHICK rLu~ Platinum , :.>/. • • · Jergens· EXTRA DU Skin FOl'lllUla .. Bath Oil Concentrate wfCotoanyt Oit Bise for Dry S~in ••• soollling ta I~ most tends s~11. tuves t~b cleaA. ' "Cr1sl11~ ..• No.non polyes!er-cotto1 slays h!Sh 111 d11 Ions. Sl'cirt sleeve sly~. 11111 cwt 1or comfort 2 poc~ts. spre.Jd ·collar. S.1n J-4K II 11. •• ,. 2.31 Wrdntsd11, Jiouary 28. 1970 PILOT-ADVERTISE~ :J Service A·roun.cl ·the World • Ill ' d\1-~. fill er Paper Y'flyl, J.1m11111te- boo~sw1thaSSOrl· ed designs 1n J.Hoie tor looseleaf Noteboolos Wide 11r "ar1&W.i:J!e ~II· ik ~lk If 301 "Mod" colors. Double booslers. ,. l~'o9'., iW:i; lg Theme Books ''4rl·,.lll~wllh J s•'i•tt 4ifi4tr .,. '3-hole punched. 69 Sidi S,iral bollfllj I~ VOUI c ci19ict ot wide, narrow rule. Assl tDlo~. 11. Steno Book Clip Folio with Inside Pot~et for loG~s p.Jpers. Sllff.!eall!er .gra1~6 vinyl ciwer in assorted dar~1 29 colors. 8\~xll" Silt w11~ strong chp, IC!' pad, 1)1Dtfs • 3-Ring Binder Shml111t flv:1bl~ 8~~1 1 1'' 9 v1ny1 1n yowr tho1re of l:'' 9c Ill I" rmg si1e •11~ doable ~·~\~rs. Ass"! color• 3-Ring Binders @] Qloose lr001 l4'' or I" slle · ~·. nngs !Jilli double booster. \•;.w"' 'flexible ~w11 cover it 1s-&9c ~ ... .. sorted coron. , ''· •l'l•"" Report Covers F~xiMe, resthent. durable twigard oo!yallomer J" uo· 49c ac1ly metal '°"i 11Ste11er. . Aswted coltrS. Slide-Lock Folio ::ii-:.~. i•l'l•"" SNeet Protectors ' , I that will orot~it pape1~. C 3.~le poll(:~ed cle31' sheel> 29 photos. el c. lrom getti~g " ' ' soiled & worn. P1k of 5 ..... -· .. "Stri-Dex" MEDICAno PlDS ... helps 11111~ out pim- ples OMJd ?reYenl oew ones !r()ll1 hllm1ng. Super cleans~s. helps 59c unblock rores. l!t 4Ts •. .' ._ ~· -___ .., .. __ "Bromo-Seltzer" EHtrme11t Altaci•-J.tr a!d for tile pleasaot relief ol minor upset stomach, ner· vous tension. l\eadai;hes. 1.114Y, 11. Silt . 'I " ANTISEPTIC ~ills '•rills kr Mil· U11s 11 C11tact? 1.49 ll 11. Silt .. "ead & Shoulders "Colgat~u '.. SHAMPOO fir Elf1~tlff Di14r11t C.1tt1I! INFANTS' Diaper SITS I DENTAL CREAM wil' C1r41I '''' "" m MULTIPLE I Skirt Hanger I Holds UD to !i ''HI~ . . .. ,.,.,, ,,,,. sac with li~hl grrpo1~g plastic cllos "Dymo" y," LAllL MAKER Makes f)el1Nt1enl self-stick· ing. 1a1sed ptrshc letfl!fs. , 49 10e~1 ltx perso111hl!n1 scllool RUBBERMAID Dish Drainer ~a""" 13~ 15V1i4~" s11e with raised tee\ that lets wat~ flow oft ' d•shes freely Dislte~ i1r-dry ggc ~ sale11. White and colors. INTRODUCING ••• HEALTH-...RITE Health Food Products Many of cur cuslomws have belln askini us lor a prodoct fin' ~r Maturitl O!'~an1c Heal!ll food Products .•. NOW wt have 1n ~lot~ 1 hne et Nutrihenal PrOOocts which we b~lie'le Ill b~ the best NATURAl prod~ct lin~ a•~tlable. tltDlpmelll. e ·---~ .. -...--. . (lr1jJ1G\u1c'-'l Rt1.1.SI • • HOUBIGANT Big Beauty Buy! Chantilly HAND and BODY LOTION lllDD ~ 1.19 •• , . • ' ' ·-T OL. 43, NQ. 23, 5 SECTIONS, 60· fAGES ' . ' . PSA ·Uase ~earfug . . Gontinue4 ! r ' After he&rint resolutioni' from the citi~ of1Newport Beac.h. ~ Mesa and 'I:ajlO, th< Orango County Boa;d of ~rvi&ari a g r·e e.d today to con- ·t~ to Feb. 3 t!'le hw-tn'6 on the ~ meot of · Afri C8llfornla's ·least in the COUDl.f airport terminal" "\o Paclffc SwUnvest Airlines. • IQ a moUon made by Supef\tisor ·oavid Biker, boon! 'member• diferre! th< decision on the lease in order to study conditions ln the lease requtSted by the tnree: cities, which 6e adiacent to the alrJ!prt or Under the glide paU.ro. 'I'be cities were requesth.g the le.ase contain written agieem·ents w b t c h s~lale' ::P".SA.shatl not 18.nd or take off between 11 p.m. and 7 a.m. -_;NG aircraft Which generates more noiSe decibels than the Boei!lg 737 shall be permitted to use the aifport. -Flight 'Operations &hall ·be limited to a maximum number subject tG prior ap. provil by·lhe board. City representatives said the resolu· tions were prompted by i "gentleman's agreement" the board made with curTent leuehokters, which s u k? o 1 e d I y in- coryor~feJj ,U.,.cllje(Ji"' . ~ W""'°';j;"' ""'1i·· • ./!'~ ~=men~-· cle~ly~~~. _ nor were they honottd. 1'olnf membt!"· agreed 19 sll!dY the =•,with the. idea ;!l(ll¢tinl'them tuoe inlllriri ---·~ thll l!•approved ftlld•be 4dl .. ptilding Public Utllltlp (lomn\Jalon 6;. jin>va! of the AJr·CaI·PSA _,.,. P •' irtr• nsoner .1 wives ' To Visit 'Jap~n After Trip Fails Fram Wne Services ~TOKYO -Homeward bound with ti.Opes unfuUiUed, in El Toro woman and ~ree service wiv!S with hUsbands.miss- lng tn , Vietnam waited today to confer with Jzpanese officials. Mrs. Carole Hinson· of 24112 Birdrock Drive and her traveling compaajons sald Tuesday the· globe-circling trip has failed a1ttt criticized their reception in some areas. They singled out diplomats from the Hanoi fegime and even U.S: Sen. Eugene J . l\TcCarthy (0-P.1inn.} whom they met while. waiting fuUlely to see if they would be' permitted into Moscow. ~'SenatGr McCarthy said to us that he \\'IS ve;ry conc::eru~ with the tragic situa- tion of the war and· he polrited out that he was trying to help the ·draft doclger1, the prjsoDf:n of war and the ~r.s. and it hijrt." said Mn.: Arthur:Mearns. 37, of Los AD~les. , . . . 1111t ; ·rUuy hlzr.t," Me explained, ''l)eca-I don't feel that my husbaod 1illould be ln'ihe ume .1roop .. "The eenator waa ...,.,_much In a hllr7, •nd ht didn't havt.·Uml -to talk to.us,' .slie added:• . · . · ·- -. So~ h• Dutch Howard Samuels Jr .• 17-year· old son of New York's candi· date for the Democratic guber- natorial nomination, will bear-· raigned in Youth Court Jan. 30 on charges·of using marijuana. He was arres.ted in Greenwich Village two morrlhs ago. , '4' . ~ • Chqrles fJiBona, • • • T • ~en~;; .. Expe~t, "IV ~w 1J~a.te ~4ief wASHJNl:TO~ 'iui>n -· chir1es J . DiBona, 37, a dvilian weapons and JYBt~ analysis expert ror the Pen· tagon, has bttn chosen by the White Hoose to succ~ Lt. Gen. Lewjs B. Her&hey as director o( the Selective Service. it was repOrted today. cOrigresslonal MKU'Ces who diseloSed his selktion said. DiBooa has a "Very good" cha:pce qf"~ng confinned by the Senate, for the controvenl1l job. Hmflet, the nation's draft clUef ·since the ~rt of \\'.orld War II, .wm leave the Selective Service Feb. 16 to become a Whitt• House consultant. DiBona, RhOdes scholar with degrets eaHied at Oxford Universiti in England, reportedly is a 1upporter of additional draft refonn and President Nlxon·s pro- po~ls for an :11! volunteer anny. He is president of the Center for Naval ADaly~_, an independent organization ruh. by the Unlvfrsity of Rochester in New York undtr contract tG the Navy. It d~ides whether new weapons are yrorth w!iat they cost and helps the navy and m{ldnes plan how t:oops and ships are deployed. . ,,~.~White House spokesman. confirmed t1fat .DiBona, ~. Of .Quincy, Mas.!1.1 was lifid«'~kleration fOr the post of Selu- 'l'Ve ServlCe dir.ec\Or and ~ disc""e:d the Job· with White House aides. !J'hat JPOkesman JtJ>uld not confirm he had 'definlte'ty ,been ~I~ however. t-Tl!e1Wh\le Houae Aid an announcement on the appointment Was expected some time after this week. ' • ORANGE COUl"TY; CALIFORNIA • WEDNESDAY, JANtl,t.RY 28, lt970 Move Grows For Restudy ' Of Bay Swap .More Indications that Orange County's resolve. on Its proposed tidelands ex- change in upper Newport Bay for Irvine Tuesday in demands by a county :ruper- viaor that the plan be restudied. ShorUy'-afier Supemsor David -Baker'11 unsuccessful appeal for a new study was made, spokesmen for the Irvine Company promllied a break in the long-standing si- lence on the l!!Ue by Irvine President William R. Mason. · But despite the promises by Irvine spokesman Gil Ferguson, the statemeat was not made a.!I promised today. Instead, Ferguson said, Mason would speak on the issue some time Thursday. At Tuesday's meeting supervisors !'ll first ~id they wou1d consider Baker's proposal then decided, instead, tD drop it after hearing that a staff report on supervisor Robert Battin'5 earlier re- quest for reevatuation would be ready ror the board by March 3. Baker suggested the restudy of the ex· change, he said because of the swelling Wave of concern in stale government ovrr environmenta l i11sues -a change in gov- rrnmenl posture since the proposed ex- change •·on the 1tate's bles.sing in ~. 'j'-Q!IJ~f r.°J!>"" no lqnal(, lllO· .• •fl ~;.) thini' ... should ~dir lt," kei said. " th'· ft{arcfi S report wOL. deal wilh,.the plan introduced by Battln. who late. Jail year offered several alter~e propoala to reylace a fJat swap of Janda. Arnone P!em Wu a suggestion that the cwnty -n and buy the ltvlne-own- ed bay islanda and develop a 11eep-;.;i.r channel all'.lli' with four 'public park11, leaving u~ t"taches of the eitua'ry as a wildlife area. · · Baker was the second supervisor In re· cent months to hint that the county's re· solve in the exchange might be wavering. Baker's sUggestkln was questioned by rellow supervj&<>n later and he admitted it was an attempt to have the controver· sia l and legally entangled exchanljl! dropped in favor of alternate plans for the huge estuary. The supervisor's suggestion for reeval· ualion comes during complicated litiga- tion Over the exchange of county tide· lands for Irvine Company acreage. Biker said he realiud that the litlga. lion was still going on, but he cited ex- treme public interest in the issue as the reason for hls proposals. He offered no specific alternatives to the plan currently being tested in court . Monkey Business {loods 7 Floors LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Early morn- ing monkey business resulted in the nooding of seven rloors Tuesday of the UCLA School of Public' flealth building. Armed with giant rubber squeegees, six companies of c;ity firemen sopped up the wat.rr..-and later found the culprit -a monkey. the small monkey, used for research, ... escaped from his se\lf;nth-floor cage and turned on' a shower used by !clentists to waah off hannful chemicals. The animal did •not-knoW' how to turn the water off and all ieven floors were partially flood- e(f~ Damage wiis not u:tensive. The' rrionkey was 1ater found, wet and angry, but Wlhurt. " . . ' s ixoll's ;. . . .. . .. .. .. ..,,, , .... .,. Kti{eiq~v, Her '!-eel~~·"-'. . ·, Tu11li)l !fattley, a former exoUc .w;o.,; f• pYhlf ·san. Ftln<Jic~ fl . million 'llfOith of tii't obJecu, ke1q1iDg 1IP wi\ii her ~cm~· un;, packl •<iln~ of her.art -.i,jects,' left to 1ier)T tier, 11~ ,!!$- ward· Hatil•Y qi ~radfa;ll,. Pa., . , , _..,. , , . ... Nuclear Power 'In' But . ' ' Won't Solve A-ll Needs EDITOR'S NOT&:,.Nucleo• powir plan ti a.re 1ee1i" 41 the onl{ra1t11Der .Jo providing Poi.ctr fo~ a grGwing popu- lation. But t1iere ore probltm1, both pht1sical and p.syChological. Those are ezplored in a ttDo-pcrt ' 1erle• ·by Associate d PTess Writer DOllg WiUll. By DOUG WIWS A-lalM ''"' Wrlttl' The 1970s wilf be a decade of tremen- dous change in California, .bat wide use of nuclear-produced electric power·won't be· OJU!'. of thos& rhanges, says Uie chairman of I.he state's joint legislative committee on nuclear de·leJGpment, ' · "The problem is the trem~'1doul lea~ time for construction of a nuclear p>Wer plant -seven to eight year~" said Auemblyman John V. Briggs (R. F!!lertOn). · . "And .the companlts ar~ _giin-shf •• : !here'• ljle :[>4jbnc fe!IC\I'!" and govern- ment . leit-!ape. ~l!lhteen <led.era! and state ag~leS' l'lavo to apProve a 'nUclear plant," be added. Brtgp "Baid two .nuclear power plants n0w ·lnoopmijon ·In <;alllol'llia .pmluce !eSI than five peroem ol tbe state'1"1ec· trlc power. A thl;d·nuclear plant b: under con1tructkm It San lAlJa · Obispo a.NI 1even to 1G mort are pltnned. ~ .. ,ey 1980 we · will doull}e our. nuClear Ca.pa.city: •· .but "e double our electric Deed every eight ye1r1 in Callfornlf,•IO in telaUVe tenba we WGn't ,be producJng.any niore~" he 111d. Brigs. said ·that ih, the Jong-haul, "ituclear polter is the only waY•to go;" but the~ first an advent public opirtion tna'st be' change~. "People are opp1>se.d mostly ·.because they don't. "know apything ·aoout It. The question is hQw do you tell the' .peoP,te. I thlrlk the faet ·thai Ptestdf:nt NixOft'I San Clemente home Is 1 'A miles . !rotlt a nuclear plant' dr&ma~lcally shows how safe they are,'" ne. sald. • He si;1;id fossil fuel electric generating plants -wl\loh ilum oil, coaJ.9r ,gu - now are-responsible fGr 17 p,el'Ctnt. of.. all air 'poOuUon 1 and oqe .~i :of-'the visi- ble smog ln the Los Angeles bas1n. • "We riave. about. three tirMl·the ·JtnOg that we can ~taiid. so that one percent.is too much/' "Brigs added, "but the ~al problem ls numlng out of fossil fuels. :With. Mrs. Hanson _and .Mrs. Mearns were -Mn. John Hardy, 27, and Mrf. .R?'Jsevell Hestle Jr., rT, both of. Los /.!18eles. '11>e·four ho9e1fto meet with tho •1fe of Japanese Prime MinJster Eisaku Sato durtng their stay In Tokyo and or- liCials of the Japan~~ Cross Society. Wilson, expressing encouragement over taiks "'Ith Nixon. noted Tue.sday night UDt for the !Int Ume in years "In· tei'natiooal economic relationships are rriore settled." Drug Roundup Cont~nui.~g . •:ei:. tlil!l ~· l>rj\l ... ~u ~: .. lll•l\h ~letfrlc. '.' ,alf 11_>i Uqlled States ·~ now, '-so you tnmt" ·we can't rely on fo!IJI fuels. • , .'1111 altern~tjv~ diilbjl ")'91" ajr" coodiU9ner wun't "work .when you i..turn it on, or hospitals won't have polii'..er in their operating rooms... . .. .Mind~en.ders Change Hands at Mesa Schools ·, He said there has been "a significant rrtove forward in world monetary -cdoperatlon" lHat Would not have ·been J>6s'ible wlthoul U.S.·Brill!h ~!forts. • '' ' . • !f . By ARTHUR R. V)NSEL ot *' D9nr Pltlt SM Tired lawmen .tOOaY fesQ!~!<f~a. l'Ound· up of ""pected teen drilr • lll'>len, dilclostng that exotic Mtdtte.r_rahean mlnd·btnders such as opium changed hands for marked money on one dO&ta •NEW YORK C AP )-The stock market, Mesa campus battball dlantQnd.• , ~helving Jta mornilli pins, reverted to A total of five adults .and U Juvtrules tta lo&lDg '#Ifs in stack tradlng -tod.11, were arrested on c~pus and at their With declines idglng pas( 1dv1nces. (See homes tltoughoul the ~•Y. alldJlllo Tue. --.Jl~oJatfolll l'!ges.c-41 ). .. day lliibl,~wlth.nlnt -•,bt'll!l.hunted ~•chaiil SCluiiJ""M 1;ood!Jodr&--Co.-loda¥ . slid a 1mall ralb' could be eJri)eCted In NeaTlJ ·•ll mtt n iln ·1~1r· the market'• pruent overaokf conclJtJoa rants charging sale Qf dangel"()u1 druga, bot that the basic con<illloa ol the Inv• after lfarbor Dlatrlot Judicial Court ton "i11tatic• pending Presldnt Nixon'• Judge Danaid>Dungan con 1 l de red budget message ~fondl,y." evidence collected tn a slx·we<!k pro~. • The five adult.a were expected to be ar. charges or ,aa.Je of dan,erovs di'ugs, in. ralgned ·on the felony charges today, eluding opium and hashlsti, the poWerful althobeh 110me-had already 'posted f62S or ·sap d~rivaUve. of m~uana in the ·cast more ball to s~e their release. of tfollar. . • The adults art: CrOSll and tbtr Gonzales woman were -Stevt.a ~. Dollar, 18, of 2869 El Rio charged wlth sale of marljuana;wbile the Circle, Costa Mesa. $625 warrant nair\h]g Cross was placed as -RJdlard G. AkUs, 18, or 686 Senate a second holdlD& charge becaUJe police St., Cosla Mesa. alle~edty fouaj bin> ~llivellbg the 'w!«I. -Steven R. List. 11'. of 3022 Don-The rema.Jnder, rangl!}g In i.ge from 15 nybrook Lane, Costa Meil. 1 1 tpjQ:St under 18,,•ere ~ tajp Orange .. '-Loretll I. ~'I'· 2 • 010113 Cedar • CoubtrJ~vinile HIU' ~l_nl ~,. ... P1a<;f, C<Ssta ~.... . I :_r .:_ ' I .U!"l in Conne<t10n flli ll}tti''1Helfd dl)ii ll<ioale D. en,,, 1t1o! 263nl~ Av.,,, deiollhp; . , COiia Mesa. · ' · bel«llve Captain. l!'!b <lr'e!ll '!Ii<! i.;. Bail wa1 ,.1at11.~.~or Dollar, charg. day Ilia~ bau!'of endence.nOwbtld- e!l willi 111le Qf I"!' <>l>M!les. , \lll;ll!dln( h~ln. hoshf.<h, oi>il!'ll• LSD, T!ie nrst three 1111pefls wer~booktd on · (Set DRUGS. ~•If.I) . . . . . ~ -... , ·• t +• .... ' ,. . . . -. ~j ' .. . .. . _ .. _ -T .... y'11 Pinal • • • "N1a'Yi. -Stieks TEN CENTS • • ·~ 226-191 Vote Falls 52 Short ' ' . _,. WASHINGTON (A!'l -~ }IJ.. on's veto:of' the $1!'.7 billion' heal~oca· tion money bill was upheld. today •a. the Houae r.ejected an eUort,to ovetrtdt Jt." The vote was 226 tO 191, 52 short of the needed two-thirds. · The result was a soUdrviotQry for•NIJ:on. In hie sbarpost confrontation yet wJth'lho ~alic . controlled' ' Conl'fll. Tho PfeiJClent qid a· veto wal'" nece.., becaaie'.ti.•.11.2& billion" which CaotrUa a_dded to the· bill for health llDd educatiMl programs was Inflationary. -· The o~'erall bill flnanct1 the Departmenp or Labor and Health, Education. and Welfare, and various an- tlpoverb' programS; · A new b,\ll will oow have to be writteo and~it is llk,ty the DemocraUc majority will, a1ain try to put In more money \haft Nixon bas budgetei:J,. although not ~ much as in the vetoed bill. . Just berore the. vote,· twG Republican leaden put forward a possible com- promlJe that wook! permit Congttsl -to staJKl by the increased fundirig ~ let Nixon refuse ~o spend more than he wanted· to. lt was also reported thal the White Hou1e 'l1 prepared to ·approve incre;pea: e•er'?lh<O!I'• budget totaling '44t l!'ilHOll tn1*9d•Of 11ho-IJ.1''billi.., •ttdd!d. ~the vetoed blU. . Rep. Alberl H. ~. CR-Minn.), said he rec:eJVed today a Whlte-Hou!e-le.tter tio be noel ,to. ~ allllriiw that Nil!IO ~pit '4111 ailnlon, inltead'ol Lile'* ~,'be. l!Od "bu41<tei1, Info' tbt' pro. ,,1111 "f:,':16' to «iloot.dlitrlcll that. fn. ~-l nwnben Of federal.iinit>"1a. •. IOla.newin\l.i that, allboiigh 11:11 nol'fnel!\fotl«! In tb• !di«, ht hid -asaared \flat nixon WOuld apprd-ve an ado d.iti<J9al $70 million for vOcational educa- tion and )140 .mplion for other proirams. ThUI· the to:tal package would be $448 tnUllOn over Nbum'11bud~et instead or the 11.u bl!Um provided In Ille velOed bill. Another alternative, apprGval of the full amount~ the figures, In the bill but a provlSlop letting Nh<on declde hoW'much would· be tpenl, was propo.<ed by Reps. JOii~ Rhode&• (1!-Ar~ .• l and Ro!Sert H. Michel, IR·l!l.). Samaritan OK Mter Shooting A. Stanton motorbt was in saUsfactcry condlUon· today at Orange cOunty MecJlcal c;:enter a,fter being shot in the leg early Tuesday while stopping·hJs Far to aid three persons. Garden Grove police said Billy W..11aner. 22, of !0921 Western Ave .. was flagged down by three men shortly after mid- hight while driving 'on Western norUi Or Chapman Avinue. · -Wagner told officer• he thought the tric> mfgh~ hav~ car trou~le, but nid one o£ the men f~ a sin1ie rifle shot which hit him tn theJeg a1· he approached the ca~· Aller the !ho!>tini the three fled in the& ~r. . .. Officers said Wagner ·drove himself·to Stanton Conimunity Hospltil . and wU later transferred to the medical center. ' l • ; • l • ' I J ~y P,llOT N • Wtd"''l'l• J1~•"1,f'1 ltl11 '""TO"----....,.. • • -. • • ~~ ,~'1 Planes • ~., . ·' .. [? · ·Amer.ican ~ Relief -• T -• • # ;..-, .:~:rt v~~'m i agos .. .,.,. .. . . ~ Nlpria <UPI) ~· Fresh Cllarl6ol.on,-S,C.1 <mied-9·4!mll1r cargo ~n, BriUsh ind Canadt<il Alier and tbt two "ere supp!tinellll to so j .. ps alrlVld In u,., todu and lbe llli•rl111 aod th,.• mobile bospltala which arrived .Btd er0n a~ it was now ftedinl .. from -the Urill~ States durln11 the ~.aoo Rlu10e1 -fioni "" cMI wir 1'11' w~:i:::::· and Canadian r.Utr IH&hls also day. .:-, -· pl arrived t.oday carryinl'J"ore ~ranspor:ia- 'hfo -~•Cft.. Cl4· tra~, pes liOn v~les aqd sorrtt; m6dic1nec: which ,lud<d, •artYl\11 !)le llr!t ,ill &0m• .JO. Nlger13"iiad f"l ... sied:• ~- pfwloida at s6pplles ta hel_? in Fil'e West German Air . Force cargo e.sUrnated one million Ibo tribesmen sut· planes left Bonn today \VJth trucks. a ..ferlhg In what ..-·as ooCt Blafra. helicopter .and ~lghl tons oI medicine for One af the American shipments carrit!l;I use In the Bia!ran area. All or the tn.ret 18-ton trucks, 10 aeneratoD anq .,0 · m11\~ary markln~s wert. painted. ~ver as ):>JanketS. The aecand, which 011.11natedift "A'tre ll'tose c..f the-American, British and · C:inadlan plants Pap~r Claims Hired MerJt Were Killers CLEVELAND tAPl -SoUrces'c1ose to the Yiblomki family 1 I a yin I in- vestti:aUon gajd .today .thr.ee hired . aunmm kil!td .lhe United Mine Workers cfHCial and· his·wi fe and daughter, and that a fourth man who backed out of the assianment wa:: in custody. • ~· The Cleveland Plaln Dealer. in a -copyr;ght". story· .1n· today's edltlont, sald the Ja11ert were promised $1,700 apiece. The story added that the triple slaying 5temmed from "a personal bed" not c.)iinect.ed with union m1tters. Other developme'QtS rePQrted ~by ,tbe Plair! DtaJer and other sources : -Navy deep-sea divers found a .38- uliber pistol .Tuesday In t h e . MonOngihela Rlvef about five mlles from · <. the Cllriav:llle, Pa., home whert Joaeph A. Yabklaski-. 69, his: Wlfe, Margaret, ~7. .: and dau&htu .. Charlotte Joanne, 2$, were '" &lain. . -FBt aaenll extended their 1n- velti11tion into the. Kentucky and Ten· ; nessee coal mine fields where Yablon!kt, : a rebel leader in the UMW wu a boUsebo'd name-amopg: miners-. -In Cleveland. U.S. Attorney ~obert _B. Krupansky said a 1rand jUtY in· ~ VHU&•tion tnto Ult slaflngs. which open- ecf :fuelday, probably would be extended 1 ~nextweelt... . _:Th~ Pleln Delle( reported.that "all • the lillolm>UOri i•th•Fed led authorities to cODChide the deaths wert 'a hit" or #. .hlrtd .killing." . ! ·Three men have been charled with . murder ln the alaytngi. Thty are Paul E. ' Qj1tJ 18 , l<l•ll<le E. Vealey, ·:18, 1nd ! Ahbrm ·iv.' ·Martin, 21. au 'bf the 111ritland'~... . . • . . . Reporting that.llr. lnformlllon had been -pieced together from varloua_~ctal the Platrt:Dtaltr·aave thll accoun~: . Yablonskl's home had been vl11ted aeveral times befort the killings. On one trip the alayers entered the bou1e when the family was abstnl and made friends with the family dog, and on another OC· calion two af the men ~onfront~ Yablonski at the door. intenOng to 'Kill hlm the n. but changed their minds. The Vablonski'a wtrt slain in thel'r bedrOoms Dee. 31. The bodies were not found tmUl Jan. 5. The Nigerian government mtanv.·hile W(:n\ ahead .with plans to expel relief workers acCused of aidlnt rebel Biafrana du tint the 80 month clyll war. The first of Sl Catholic minionaries e1;d pune ·roUnded. up and held in Port . • tt:l~--·af'ter the fall of the .former · settQlooist state began arrlvlDI ln Lagos on 'ttietr way home. ·. Af leut ,5 persons. all btJt five of them Irish, fall tnta the ftderal category af forelentra 1t~cu1t.d of 1'h!lplng the rebels . and prolcnging the war." ·The Nigerian leader, Gen. Yakubu Gowon, haS Vowed tO e:ipel them all even~ually, lettinC.~O?le.stay for. the ti.me being U they are providing services vital to the survival of war refugees. -From Page l DRUGS ..• mneallne, plus barbiturate •nd am- phetamine pills -ls worth thOU&ands of dollars. ~UVenileS Involved atltndecf both Costa Mesa .and Elllncla high .schooJ1,, with more .•th<fl..: one tran~ctitJn allegedly madt on t.be· Jatltr's baseball d1amond, as detediVes wa{cbed fro"m a dlatance. caf>lain Green ·said the tlleged' drug P4f'Cbases were made~ !>f other students acttnj 11 sptclal agenti dwinl the past sevmrwee.U..'. The crackdown followed a conference with · Newport-Mesa Unified Sch o a I District authorities. .in Which lawmen 11aid the.y laid it.on the line about the ex· lent of the local problem. [)etecl!Y~ Serg_eant John ~gan today 1'11"•~ed the admlnislrajlon'8 cooperation In the undercover probe and ' wtise<iUent roundup or ruspects. many at lhe cam· puses from which they will be expelled. J uveniles nOt identified by name in- cluded. three .atrls and one boy fr.om Cl<15la Mesa High School .. •fld t'FO "9Y• and Ont girl fr~ Esljl!ICl8 High School. The entire· haul or .drup conn~ated during the lovesti11ation ptriod Includes 20 kilos of marijuana,.. which a'.mooots ta nearly SO pounds of the· halludnogenlc weed. HJgl\.quality baahigh from the l\fediter· ranean countrlu, more than two pounds; or about one kilo of thil powerful mari· · juana derivali\!c. ·was alM> seized, along with large quantities or various other drugs. · Teams of investigator& separated dur· ing the day and visited campuses and homes to make the arresli. confiscatin g small amounts of drues during the pro- cess. Girl Friends Cheer Officers Los .-;rigeleg pollc'emen Edward McDonald (left) and Michael Kriha, who eath lost a hand in a bomb explasion! are brightened by the vi15its of girl friends Ruthahn Drtbu$ paedic Hospital. Teenagers Change Minds Under New Police Plan By ASSOCIATED PRE58 "nle main thing I Jl'!lmed," said Ute tee.n-age girl, "was that COj)S are Ruman , too. 'Ibey bleed just. like eve'ryone else." Donna Evans. wr1Un1 in her student newspaper at Paelilca HJa:h. School in Garden Grave, waa felling ¥w her views of· I.a~ enforcement o·rnCers.took a sudden flip-flap after JShe partlcipattd in ·a pro- gl-am called Oxle 7. · · This is the radlo message oflicer s routinely give when they are lunchlng. "I never liked cops and t thought I iiever Would," said Donna. "Every time a cop eVen came near me I would ge:t awa y from him fast because he was a C(lp. •• But under the Code 7 program, Miss Evans rode aking wllh a pollce officer on his ttgufar patrOJ , She Saw him 'pk:k·UP a stray. cat and take' it tiome to . !Us wife ; she observed hitn help an elderly waman with 1. flooding, stopped.up toilet ; and she . New.port firm Quickly Decides Bird Cage Needed Bulldlng bird cag~·s 1s -n'bt one of the usual diversified activities of the Surg ical ~fechanl~al Research Carporation, 960 W. 16th Sl, Newport Beach. But employes af the small firm pro ved thev 'Could do it Tuesday afternoon whtn an ·obviously domesticated parakeet flew in the factory window and took refuge. As soon as SMR Corporation emplayes realited thelr visitor 'Yas friendly and probably a misplaced pet, they im· provised a "bird lx>x" in which to keep him overnight. according to Bob Justus, aaw him take abuse from both parties ¥.'f'lef'I he responded to a man-wife fight. The program is unusual only in its comprehensiveness. It Btarts with grades 1-3 and carries an, in appropriate st eps, lhrou1h high school. It began when Police Chief George P. Tielsch realiz.ed this burgeoning com· munlty had turned tip a significant statistic. Studies showed thal haU the city's lU.000 residents _were young. The chief said he also realized that there v.•as a stereotype among the young about police officers. His goal was to break: it down and create a mutual respect between his of- ficers and lhe·youth of the community. About 18 months ago, Dave Bum. 27, was nam~ comi:nui:iity re)atio~ officer. Although Garden Cil"Ove ha:s:..no-ghettM as such, police were aware that teenagers thought ar themselves as a pen;ecuted minority group. The Cade , Z C®iept:began si mply. Of· ricers on ~''·day shi(t .took along. their lunchts affll made it a pcl:int to ·eat with children r,t scti6oJa who· also brought thtlit. . "We got some real discussions gaing ," Burn recalls. '1They dealt with ~erythlng from police brutality. search and Seizure to the wisdom af curfew laws." Since then, the program has been ex- panded to regular classroom lectures and accompanying ofrlcers an patrol. Burn said he soon learned that anly one or two officers couldn't handle the situa· lion. This caused him to do some arm· lv.•isting to ge t every patrolman into the program. Bum mentk>ned ane officer who had spent a Code 7 at a particular school. A couple weeks later he was swnmontd to lh! school to break up a fight. "The kids recognized him ," said Burn. and Carol Littlewood in Ortho- Colombia Crash KilJ s Two U.S. Labbr Leaders From Wire Services BARAN,QUILLA, Colombia -Two Cal· lfomia latior leaders, including a native ot Orange County,. were.kflled in a high· way accident near here Monday , along with a Colombia union president The bodies of Al 'Chandler, of Long !leach, and Bllly R. Ramey, of Pasadena, v.·ere flo1'11 home Tuesday with formal condolences ·rrom the U.S. ambassador to Colombia. Authorities said the pair was on a good· will mission to the Latin America nation v.•hen the fatal accidenl occurred be· tween Baranquilla and the Caribbean sea- port city of Cartagena. VCI Stat Girls ' . Hurt in Wreck Ballot~_Bid • • By Te ache1·s " Mis ses Date ' A campaip by Gl1Uarr111-.school teachers M ccllect enough algnaLUreJ ·to qualify • school and welfare flnance ~ pot;al for the June state '>allot mlly have failed . · A&sL Secretary or State H. lt Su!Hr,an 1ays, the deadline ,has pau ed wlUlou~ttit required r\~mber of sig~tures belna P£O- duced, but altarneya , for CalU~a Teachers Association (CTA) contest 'the applicability of the deadline that feU list Thursday . They claim there ls still time lo qualify ind ¥.'Ith more than 450,000 signatures tht: teachers are close to the 520.000 required. Of lho5e signatures about 4,llOI) were collected by teachers of Newport-M&a Unified School District. considerably short of the.Ir goal of 20,000. ·Throughout the county, teachers collected 40,IOO signa tures -not near the 250,000 CT A had set as the goal, but then CTA had Set gaals qutte high to clearly overreach the required number. The proposed initiative ballat measure is jointly spom:ored by the CT A and .ftle Co"•lY SuPerlisors A$soclatlon of California. It would ~ulre the stale · to pay 50 percent of public school cosla and 00 percent of welfar~ costs. Curr~ntly. mu ch of the moriey for these servic~s comes from local property t.tx revenues~ Back in 1953 the state did pick up .so percent or the cost of education but now 16 years later it is dow n to 35 }M!i'etnt. In re latively wealthy Jireas such as Newport Beach~a Mesa the locitl tax- payer pays an even higher percenlaJt: In the Newport-Mesa Dislrict property ~X· payers Win. e<>ntribute 71 percent of 16eal education cqsts this year and the st~te only 18 percent . . If the state were required to pick up 90 percent of welfare co!ft$ Ute CO~ty Board of Supervisors can foresee a SI million per year 58.Vinp on the property tax. · _ .. tf the inijiative were qualified a:nd t111.s~ed by voters the state LeglslJiture \r.·ould be forced to consldtr other rp.eans or financing. Youth Leader's Lunch Leaves Bad Aftertaste ,. A high school student body president aUending a leaders' lunchcor. with the UC trvine.'1 attractive distaff tria of $Upertnte~tnt. af the Ga .· cl~ n bas~et!Jall ~tatj1tici~na a,re h~pit~l!ttd '. µro'(e . Unill~.'~hool . Distrl~: wu .~· t~ay with. inju.r1,es s~fer~d w,hen , the re1ted ._1 an , a · mlrljuana charge ~ gi rJs ·wft-1nvolved ·in ·an autombbfle ac· dessert M011day. c.ldent before a gl11\e In Davls. · . . . Lucy Schrader remains tn Sutter Me· Santiago High School ASB ~ent morlal Hospltal ·in Satramento .. ~ith a ·Gunner Swanson, 17, of 13702 Eucbd St., broken jaw· On two plac~) and a .t)roken Garden Grove, was admitted to Oriil.ge elbow . .She is ~peeted to be released County Juvenile Hall on a charge' ~af 'Thursday or Friday. . possession of marijua na. Mary· Schtaone suffered a d11located . . . . shoulde r. had two pins placed In it in an Sant1a10 High School Vice Pr1nclpaJ operation. and returned home Tuesday. Robert Ktrnan told police M called the. Carold Hyland, he.ad of the scoring trio. youth to his affice and askfd what he had suffered a broken left arm, foi'ehead in his bulging pocket, at which time and knee cuts and a fractured breast· Swal\S()n pulled aut a plastic bag af bone. But she was able to return home gre<'n. leafy material. on the plane with the Anteater team "It's just alfalfa and catnip," ht Sunday. reportedly said. The accident occurred priot' to l~st Kernan apparently augge~ted it would Friday night's game with UC Davis. 1he be unwise to take the baz alrn1 to lunch girl!! were heading toward their hotel in with Supt. David Paynter. · a clrivin1 rainstonn when a car driven Dur1ng the luncheon period, Garden l!ly a Davis associate professor in engi· Grove police narcotlct detectives wtre The night of the slaying, the .men entered the Yabklnski home. one with a .33-caliber pistol as!lgned to .t b t d&ughttr'• btdro9m and anal;her with a JO.caliber ~fl c~ to fire . from the h~llway into the parinls' bedroom. A shot which-killed the daughttr awaktntd the parents. They too were shot dawn and the three men th.en cut telephone wires and slashed the tires on the family car ~~ort Jeavlng:. _ _ • Twa youths were questioned about cme visit to an apartment in Ule. northeast section af Costa Mesa, W11ere a small iimoUnt of heroin v.·as confiscated, but released pending further ln\lestiga~i~n .. Detectives Norm Ku'teh and BOb ten· nert said they knocked and ldentUied themselves as police officers, but the door was opened only after some delay. . company purchasing: agent. 't'he bird has been kept warm and v.·ell ft<! while waiting to hear from his master (or mistress). "He was nabbetgaated. The cOoperlHon was too perceiit." · neerina: skidded' 'across the di\•ldi.ng line analyzing the weed and finally declar.ed it and hit their car he8d-on. was more tban alfalfa an<I catnip. A few miles from the house Ulty .threw the carbine aild pistol into t h e Mnnang.aheb. River. "The men later consoled thtmselvu, 'It would be a big splash In the Clarksville paper and blow over Jn a cou- ple of days,' "the Plain Dealer said. DAILY PILOT OUHG.-CA»ST l't.ll~IMUNG COMP'ANY 11.i;.,. N. Wt.ti ,.,.,1ten1 ...i P'llMl111« J.,~ 1. Curi.1 ~ ,....._,•IHI C.-e .iMNttr' ri. ..... , ic ••• ;r H- f~•Mtt A. MurJ1l.ift1 """"'""If•,., J., ..... F. e.11i~1 ·--,.,., l,h ... _ .......... .. :1111w .. t1.1~ •• 1.111 .... " M•i1f .. J.Mr ... 1 r.o. ••• 1111, ,,,,, --a. .. IMW: »t WHI ,,., ltr9et ~---:m,.,.,.,,._ MontW.,. ~ ~J '-'~ ·~.....-- Officer Dave Hayes, waiting ouUsde, discovered a plastic bag containing three s<Kalled bindles of heroin on the ground, after noticing drapes caught in a hastily- opened second story window. Sergeant Regan said routine. ques- 1.lonlng IJf the suspects rounded up Tues- day included whether ihty. thtmselves uae drugs and how frequently -with all replylna anly once in awhile. .. 'When did you plan on stappln1?'' Re11n said he and fellow lnteJT<>1at<lr1 atked. ••None had any definite idea." he ad· ded.' . Justus described the bi.rd as six to seven· inches long, pale blue v.·ith a light grey bead that runJ to shades af "almost. white." The bird'a tall and tip are outlln· ed in a dark blue -almost black -COi· or. he said. Numbers stamped on a copper band an the bird's left leg will be. wed .as Iden• tificatlon. Anycme whc) can call and give the n11mbers to Justus will "get the bird." he said. Telephone number for the SMR Corporalion is 646-tfOS. The sooner someone calls. the tt00ner everyone there can get back to building equipmen~for the medical prafe1ston. Ratings Changed Movie Board Drops 'M' Tab HOLLYWOOD (APl -After t! months or what the film industry calls "graii· tying &Uccess." ll! valunt.ary prorram of rating movies la belnJ modified. Jack VelenU, president af the Motion Picture Association of America, said Tufsday one ~argt was made btcluse a gurvey had shawn constdetlble confusion over the "M" rating -which meant a film w,_. recommended far mature a11 •. dlen~ ·on1y. So tll•t cete1ory Is 1><1•1 cltopped In favor of "OP."" Thb: mtana alt •its may view the mavie but tha& 'parenbl l\Jldanct ar dll<ftUon la advised. 'l'ht!-otber cb11J,&e rtbes the Nt·llmlt for vtew1n11 film s' rated "R"--restricted calfgory -wl\hOUt an accompanying pattnt or legal guardian Jrom 16 to 17. Both (ha.ngu art eUectl'o'e ~larch I. Ob5el'\'lr1 II.Id the boost in tht age limit may reprettnt an attetnpt to broJden the "Fl" raUn& to Include racy bot An"lotliS films htrt:tofore rtlcaated to the ··x;· e1tegory ror adulta: (ll'lly. ValenJI Iw oald be orlglnally lntrndtd ' ' tbe X to be a "le per colony'' for films of no artistic quality. But it haan·t worked out t.hit way. , Two of the most successful and critically acclaimed films ar 1969 - "?tfidntght Cowboy" and "Medium Cool" -ended up In tht X claas. Here is the new set of standardli: G -All ages admitted. GP -All ages tdmitted, but parental discretion recommended. R -~ under 17 must be 10- compaJ\led by a pa.rent or legal tuardlan. X -Na one ut1der II admitted . The Valenti statement called tht cla11sl8cation system, which v.1ent lnta ef· fed. Nov. I, 1968, "t &ratlfyinl suecess." A survey oonduc:t.ed by the National Association ar Tbealer Owners showed tl'lat nine out ()f 10 theaten quer\td u5ed the ratings ln their advcrtlllna. Valenti ..-·as joined in his annotinee- mtnt by Eugene Picker, prtsldent of ti'!• thetttr oa·ntrs & r au p • Md Mun10 Podhorzer, A member Of the covem· ina board at the lnternatlanal Film Im· pontrs and Distributors of America . OOME lh!I first watch on the moon CO·STARS IN All N.A.S.A. estronauts , • . including th e pion •er1 who first walked on the moon • , 1 wear Orn e91 Spaeclrn11t1r chronograph•. The 1arn o w1tc.h a(lyono c.an buy in C!Ur rlot•· And now you will••• it Ol},.th• wri1t1 of'Gre9orr, Po,k, Rie.hetd Cronn•, 0f¥id Jan11on, Jam•• Fr1n,i1c.1.11 •11d l,;ena Hae.FM' an 1 1 th ey \t~r in 'Maroon•d." lllvttftt•d: Th• w•tc.h •f the A1t1t11t11h. J..~uHt11. 4-41tl 0M9't s,,..,,,.,,.,., wiht _,ut•r. M1e~u '" •'•II'••• llllN'¥t l• tf hovrs, 1r1triutt1 i114 11coll41. St1i11l .. 1 1teol wtt•r·r•d1la11t c.•••· M1tc.hi11t M1t.tltt •••••••••• Slti, CONVEN IENT TERMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHAR6E J .. C. J./,,n ipfuie ~ }etu1fsrJ llll NEWPORT AVE. COSTA .MESA ' ll YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE ~··1401 • --· 'Editorial Seleetlon' • Ar~y Denies Ce~o-rship SAIGON CAP! -Charge& that unfavorable news reports were censored by authorities at the Ameri an Forces Viet- nam Network are "completely unfounded and uMupported," investigators for the U.S. Com'mand said tcx,tay. The comrriand's lnspeetor aeneral also denied that a former AFVN newsC:aster who made the centorshlp charges during a broadcast is being persecuted for hls remarks. • The broadcaster, Spec. 5 Robert E. Lawrence of Atlan- ta, Ga. was transferred from Saigon to Pleiku a;nd made a chaplain's assistant. A command spokesman said was "not free to tell the court-martial charges of truth.'' d i 11 o b e d i e n c e and in· The charges concern an subordJnation pending against earlier incident in which Lawrence have nothing to do Lawren:cf refused to obey an with the c e n 1 o r s h i p in· order td drive AFVN staff vestlgatlonl or the members to their downtown neWSC1$ler'a charge that he _b_ill:._,•_ts.;_. -------- Nixon Lauds ' ' ' Officer on . Flag Button NEw YORK (UPI) -New '"• YOTk City patrolman PatTick "' Dolan, who caused a furor by wearing an American nag but- ton on hls unifonn lapt:I, has received a leller from Prcsi· dent Nixon <:0ngratulating him on his "firm stand to honor our flag ." Dolan, 36, was ciled for being opt of uniform Jan. S for wearing ffie lapel button . But the next day Police . Co m- missioner Howard L t a r y changed the regulations lo 111low city policemen to wear nag button!!. The presidential I el t e r , dated Jan. 14, said "I was very pleased to see that your rinn stand to honor our flag won a reversal of the ruling ... or JX!lice rules and regula- tions. We need to encourage Americans in pride of cour.try. Now New York's finest ha\·e another proud badge to wear. 'Se11ator' Dies 'Senator' Ford, vaude- ville coll}edlan whose joke-tellirig on radio's "Can You Top This?" gained him national fame, died of cancer at Greenport, Long Island, Tuesday. Ford, 82, be- came "Senator" in his early 20's when he was mistakenly introduced as a senator at a club dinner. Congratulations!" i ===========: Said Dolan, "To think that I woukt receive a letter from the President becaU5e I F9ught for something so fundamental~ the Jove of our nag. l'lt never forget lt." ' FAIR f11f. f1 ir, f1,k11I. Tho1• th11e word1 '"''" 11p f1,tor1 111 op.,1tii111 011 th• DAILY l'ILOT tdlt.ti1I P•t• .... ...., .41y. A summary of tl1e in· vestlaallon report released by the command said that there Wl.8 no l!ensorshlp al AFVN. It clasmned tJie wltbboldlng · "ol certain stories as "Cditorial selecUons." "Spec. Lawrence expressed the view that he and the other n e w s c a sters lndlvldually should have full authority to make such edltorlal choices," the report said. "However, lhey felt that iI their superiors roade such choices, this was censorship. Such a posilion Is inimical to the operation of a radio or television station ." The command statement said that lhe sensitivity of the South Vietnamese government must be taken Into aceoutlt when editorial decl!ions are made . "Material whiCh would of- ferld Jhe host country cannot be used," It said. * * * 2 in Saigon ~Press Corps U.S. Agents SAIGON (AP) -Two U.S. government agents were in· filtrated into the Saigon press corps but were withdrawn after their identity was ex- posed, U.S. officials said to- day. "Someone goofed." said one high-ranking official. The U.S. Military Assistance Command for Vietnam Said tbose responSlble for issuing press credentials to the two men. "have been admonished concerning the proper pro- cedures to follow in ac- creditation.'' There was no nfricial word on why the two agents mas- queraded as newsmen or who ordered the operation. But there was speculation that they were trying to spy out newsmen's sou rces of in- formation . The men could not be located today in Saigon. Of- fi cials who dealt with their ac- creditation and identified them as federal investigators gave their names as H o w a r d Hethcox and William T . Tuck~r and said t h e y presented letters 0 r in- trod u ct Io n from the "American University Press." ONE WEEK SALEI PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE · I I DIAMONDS A. l'K whi!egold p;erced earr111g1 .......................................... Orig. 14.~5 NOW t.77 I . Diamond heorr shaped Qo111g steady ring ................................. Orig. 14.95 NOW 11 .11 C. 1/,.1( diomorid solitaire, l'K white go!d .................................... Orig. 137.50 NOW $119 D. 2 drarr.ond l<IK necklace accented by cultured pearls ..•.••••• ,,,, •••••. Orig. 15.~0 NOW 1 •.11 14K GOLD JEWELRY A. J.4K gold earri11g1, oll dang\es ... Speciol group values to 16.95 ...... NOW J\1%offi I . l4K gold chorm1, 1noriy ~!yles. Ori~ 12.5010 15 ............... NOW $10 I• $12 BIRTHSTONE RINGS A. So\11a ir e 1tyle ladiei birlh 1to ne ri11 gs Ong. 1'.95 ..................... NOW 12,77 I . Me11'1 d1omorid or.yic ring. Orig. 29.95. .................................. NOW 19.11 C, lodiu ~pecial l'K birthslone ri119s. Orig. 29.95 ........................... NOW 22.11 WATCH IS A. Wotche1 with the now look. Orig. S20 .................................... NOW 9.11 I . 17 [ewe:I m•n'• & ladies walch•s. Orig. 19.95 ........................... NOW 1•.11 ONE Of A KIND A. ladies diamond Elgin wa1ch. Orig. $!75 •.•................ , ....•.. : .... NOW 131 .25 I. 14K.gold all diamond watch onachment. Orig. $295 1 .................... NOW $216 C, Sterl ing 1ilYer !de11hficotio11 brocelel. Orig. 5.95 ...................... NOW ~.15 Who! o lantostic coll1<tion of jowelryl And whol o fonto1tic opponunity for you to SAVEi Seldom is such o tremendous reduction mode on jowwlry os lino en this. Che<k the ouhtonding selectioftl Check tho remorkoble voluesl Wonderlul time to purtho5t that special lifetime treasure. CHARGE IT AT YOUR PfNNfY'S ,,Nf JfWftRY DfPARTMfNT. ~lidl'!f Ill PIM Dlil~1, DJ.-~ •-flrlt. W.tlh.1, -' ..,.., ,.," ... NOW! THESE VALUES AT ANY ONE OF THESE PENNEY STO RES! CANOGA P/.RK LAKEWOOD DOWNE'!' t;IQ!JTCLAIR FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA SHOP SUNDAY TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! I may co semi~annual • WHtttldV, J•nuM)' 28, 1970 DAILY PILOT Iii • Falrchlkf custom covered sofas '°'' 380.00 299.00 a.ft. Ml• Four styles ... in modern, transitional and trad itionc!il moods. Choose your 8- foot so fa in piltowbac.k , tuxedo, lewson or contemporary style. Each is.covered to your custom order in decorator fa b- rics 11nds covers. Loveseat, 7 ft . and q ft. sizes, available et comparable savings. may co furniture 41 l • l l . 1 i--------------111!"'1--.... ~----------------------------------.. , i ~ l 11 •• , II I l=~ • Imported 1:1lass lamps from Italy regulorly 25.00 19,00 "Bellissimo" {ltoHon for most beout;ful) describes the$0 swags thOt bathe your rooms with the wormth of sunshine , the su btleties of moonlight .. Dtffusers toMe the light to create the mood. Each wah S feet of chain. a. 1711 green teardrop. 12" dio .. b. Ught amber boll, 12" dio., c. 21" Amber toned cyf;nder, 7" dio. moy co lamps 63 • SAVE ON LA·Z·BO~ RECLINA ROCKERS® • • ' 219.~139.oo 179 .OQ· l89.0D,t Smart styling ond solid co,;fort aret yours when you choose a L~-Z~Boy®· {• Rec.line·Rocker®, from our Americ~na;s1 ' collection, for your home. Plus cur- rent savings of $40 to $50! Simply raise the Comfort Selector® and the 3-posi- tion leg rest adjusts to give you just the righ t amount of comfort. Positions for rocking . dreaming , or full bed. Trodltionel (lhown) rot 219.00 179.00 ' Trodltionel ...... r09. 239.00 119.00 Contemporory . """ r09, 219.00 119.00 ' may co furniture 1+4 may co south coast plat~,· s• di egg_ fw¥'"-· _.a,,__~b,_,ri~at=ol costa mesa 546-9321 shop mo~day thru 1eturday I 0 a:m. to 9:30 p.m ., sundey noon 'til 5 p.m , MAVCO. • ~-.:-Dn.Y · PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE . i Freeway Row R-0lls On l ! I • t For more than six years no?.', Newport Beach of· !lcllls have fought an unyieldin~ camra1gn against the slate's ad.opted route for a pr1ncipa segment of the future Paclllc Coos! Freeway through th• cll,)I. The section under dispute 1 l e s generally between Upper Ne\vport Bay upcoast to the ci_ty Li!11its . at the Santa Ana River. Jn 'lhis area, the Cahlorrua Hi ghway. Commission in ~lay of 1963 adopted _a fu ture fre_e""'.aY alignment generally parallel and adJacent to ex1st1ng Pacific Coast Highway. Newport B~ach wanted the route line further inland -the more inland the better. Costa Mesa officials, on the other band, favored the .co15tal routing. They insisted Costa Mesa already. has enoug_b superhighway!! 'vith portions of the San ~eg~ • Newport and future Corona del l\lar freeways w1th1n their city. . \Vhatever reasoning may have prevailed, the state zetected the coastal alignment. Since that adoption. Newport clty government hai; refused to sign the legally requir~d free~ay agreement on this segment and has campai~ed vigorously over the years to have the route question re-opened before the Highway Commission. . . Durin~ the long flight. Newport city councils have changed. Four mayors have served. City managers have come and gone. So have planning director!!. state directors. state highway engineers and assorted others. Throughout it all. Newport's· battle cry has remain- ed the same: fl.love the freeway inland. And for New· port, there have been moments of high optimism but at the end of each new appeal. no real measure of success,. Now once again only last week, Newport officials made the familiar trip to Sacramento to place an ap- peal before the Californ ia Hlgh,vay Commission seek .. ing re-opening of the freeway question. Several Newport ~ity offic1a1s suggested that this 1,1,.ill be their last appeal. If it fails. they said, the city will knuckle do\vn 1,1,.•ith high,vay engineers to negotiate a precise freeway design within the adopted corridor. Several factors. however, suggest that the coastal freeway controversy may not even yet be at the end of its string. History suggests that, for one thing. Another element is tbe f a c t that when Newport lllaced ~ta final appeal 'before hlghwa)f" comm111\ontrs last week. the city asked that the state delay Us decision until the February commission flession in El Centro. Upon reflection, it may develop that February will be too close to the City Council election campaign wherein the freeway question 1nlght well become a po- llticat issue again. Then too, it m)iht be thought wise to wait until afler May so the newly.elected c\IY council can gel organized and prepared to do business with the state . By then, of coµrse NeWporC• Freeway. Question will he more than seven years old. Indeed, II seems that just like old man 'river, Newport'• batUe against Pacific Coast Freeway just keeps rollin' along. United Funds Unite Lona In the planning stage, Harbor Area civic lead- ers have accomplished a happy union by merging the United Fund chapters of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Ju•I wbat ts the United Fund? The UF collects money de signated for a number of youth and health service organizations, based on their size, need and extent of reach within the commupity. By de!inltion, the new Harbor Area United F u n d is a natural agency to serve the Orange Coast, which is tied so closely together by geogra phy, population and basic economy. · For example: the Boys Club. Girls Club and the YAICA serve the whole area, and Scout troops cross over city borders, so why not consolidate the primary agency helping in their support, instead of fragmenting the effort? The spirit of this new United Fund unity might also extend to other areas of community endeavor. (N) ... -........ ···~'-'""'.:.':···:--.-. ' .· ........ "~·· ' f(LIPSE r1af or11aatio1a 01• Suitability for Children Is Only Aina Jack Valenti Explains Nationwide Film Rating System To the Editor: Because the nationwide film rating sy5tem is of importance to movie.goers In your community, J am anxious to describe what it ts and what It ia not, what it tries to do and what it does not do. The movie rating system has one obo jective : To inform the public, especially parentli, about the suitability of m-OVle content for viewing by their children. 'n!at is Its only aim and purpose. The film rating ayattm does not rate films for adults. A film' is not rated for arUst..ic quality, or lack of It. The ayistem does not recommf!rld fllma or ban films or C2t\SOr films. lt proVldta a j.lublie in-- formation service, which the great ma· Jority of responsible film producer!! and dlWibotors believe is desired by parents. A R&CENn. Y completed natlon-•lde uvey conducted by the 0 p I o 1 o n Research Corporation of Princeton, N.J .. has revealed some significant Und ings about hew the public responded to this new program in its first year of operaUon . Fifty.eight percent or the movie.going public considers the rating system "very U8eful" or "u!ieful'' tn helptna pannt1 guide the movie-going of their children. Only 16 percent does not find it useful. f"No opinion" was the answer of the rest.) The survey also pointed out the need for some revision. Because the "Jl,1'' category CM : For Mature audience!i. parental discretion advised) was con· fusing to a substantial portion of the public, that category's description is being changed to ··GP : All Ages Admit· ted, Parental Guldanct Su11e•ted.'' 1i1oreover, in order lo strengthen the system even further, the a1e limit in "R" and ''X" films 11 ralsed to 17. THE FOU..OWJNG, then . are the revis· ed. ratJn1 .J)'mboll MKS admission pollcl .. : MOVIE lt\TINGS FOi! PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE. G -All A&.., Adzniti.d. General Au- dJeneea. GP -AD Ages Admitted. Parentol Guidanct SUJgeated. (Note th•t the above two cate1oriu have an unrestricted adml1t1on policy.) R -l\estrict.ed. Undtr 17 Req uires Ac- companying Parent or Adult Guardian. X -No One Under J? Admitted. <Thi• aae li111lt may VIJ'Y in certain areas.) HOW Db THESE rating categorie!I translate Into useable auidance for parerlU? G. P'ilm5 rated G include those ~·ith a broad rlnci of thim• and aJ)f)e•I to both the young and thtir elders. These films, In the judament of the rating board, con· Wn na tn•terial whldJ parcnu would find objectiooable for viewing by their youngsters. Dear Gloomy Gus: If f.f. 8. P. (Gus, Jan, 23) was "wow'd" by condillon11 at the Cor· oaa del Mar campus. he 11hould come. ~ Newport llarbtN' Jligh'1 flUll laWlll and IUfTllW!dini l lr· b19' rtrewa strtetl any rtoontfme. MciodlJ throu&b Friday. DAILY PIW!' plio!Oir1ph<r, 1<hool prln· cjpll, counc111n ... mQW -wbere lltt )"'I!!! --C.H. --:\! ,._....,.. ... ..._ ... ........., .. flit...,.."' ...... ,., ,. ,... .....,., -. o.lrr ''*"· .. GP. Whlle mut'h like a G film. a GP film is more sophisticated tn treatment. Because tastes and standards vary by geographical area and even b y neighborhood, some parents may want to give guidance to their children, but both G and GP film s are open to all agea. R. THESE ARE films of adul1 themes or adult treatment. but a picture that persons under 17 may ~ee if they are ac· companied by a parent or adult gu1rdiln, such as their teacher on an organized movie outing. X. No one under 17 will be admitted . It should be noticed that many X films have not been submitted to the Code and Rating Administration. These non·sub- mittecl films self.apply the X rating. No X film may carry the Seal of Approval d the Code ind Ra ting Administr1tltin. Lttter1 from rtadtr• art welcome. Normallu t.ontn1 ahould conv111 theft' tM1.!aQt1 ln 300 words or le11. The right to conc:Um1 letters to fit space or eliFmnatc l!btl i.! rtservtd.. AU let· ter.! must tnclud1 1fgnaturt and ma.a. i1117 address. but namts may br wit• htLd on requett tf suffici.::nt reoaon ;f. apparent. Pottr11 will 11ot be pl'b· hshtd. As lo Judfe AfQt's recent decision: 1i1rs. SallQM may disapprove. but I know one woman Who framed the MW!I story that told of It and others who .!bed tears of craUtude when they heard about It. JOY CONNORS \Ve11t Coast Publlc RelaUon1 Co-Chairwoman, NaUonal Organization for Women (NOW) · Laguna Beach Stlefe to the Faee. To the Editor: TIDS, IN BRIEF, is the movie rat!na system. Responsible leaders in the mo- tion picture industry are providing these ratings as a public service to parents and families . We try to 1nake the rating11 11 accurate as humans can, though we know there will always be disagreements with our Judgment . Meanwhile, we are con- tinuing to urge responalble film·maker1 to command all their 1killl to produce movies of good taste and creative o;. cellence. Mr11. Robert L. SU1one'1 letter JACK VALEN'l'l CMollbox, Jon. Zt) silted lhot the 11ven· Prtsldent week~ld fet.ut "be1r1 the familiar 1i1otion Picturt Anoclation; feature a .•. of an adult." While the fet us New York, N.Y. resembl!s a human being, It also Legali:e Abortion To the Editor : ~frs. Robert L. Stuone's description or a seven·\\·eek old fe tus <Mall box Jan. 21) Is genuinely movinl. Who would want to hurt a tiny little chtld·let that already hu the "familiar features ... of an adult"? No one. of r.ourse-unless there Is a compelling reason. But what one person might not see as a compelling reason, another might. Surely no one ta ln a bet· ter position to judge what ts a compelling reason to abort an unborn ehtld than the expectant mother herself, the one who wtll bear the n!spoMlbUUy of .nurturh!& that child to adulthood U il Is born. l'r.t SURE litra. Sassone would q:ree that motherhood Is one of the moat solemn and important duties a human being can tlndertake. For the sake of the child as well a" for the sake of the mother. shoulrln't It be undertaken only by choic-e and "·ith wholehearted com· mitment ? Birth conlrnl de vices ha\'e gone a lonF, way to make "molht'rhood by choice' J>055ible, but they are risky "tn more ways th11n one. And so i~ an Illegal abortion risky in morr wa y.! than one. ~1rs. S11ssont' seems to imply that If abortion 11 not• legalized. those tiny llttlt fetwlet wt11 be sa,·ed from torlurout deaths._ But of course thl'll is not .so. MANV, PERHAPS MOST1 ol lhem W()Uld continue. a~ now. to bi tom from the ·uterus by an Instrument wielded, perhaps clum~ily, by one. wtlllnj to break the law. Kttping abortion fllegal will not save th< let"'. hut lqlltdnc k mlihl 1ave the mother's life. Those nf u~ who fa,·or l@g1dlzln!t' abor· tlon don't wi&h to lm!)O~t, our values on individuals JlkP ~,r~. Sa~'iOnC who nb- vl011sly don 't tlji!rH \\'Ith u11. But leaalliin1t abortion would not do that. It would simply aivt US aU J Choice. t·~t ACCUSTOi\1£0, I'm sorry to u y, to tal king with men 'ol'ho ar!. only too will· Ing to At'rlfict thtlr wives' lives hoor by hour and year by year for !lie "11ke of childrtn," but It pains mt deeply to read a. lttttr f~ 1 wcmu who 1how1 deep compaulon for ' fetus ind none at all for her sisters, other women. resembles the fetuses of many animals and birds al the aame stage of de"elopmenl. Secondly, only lf one can find an adult whose htad makes up at least 50 percent of Its tota1 body 1b:e, and whose leg1 are much ishorter than Its arms, can one say that a aeven-week~ld fetu1 heart any familiarity to an adWt human being. A FETUS WHO mponcl> to tho touch ~ o halr ts •Imply oboying lhe rollu of a response to extemal ltimulaUon which it a character11llc of ALL llvlnc th1n1s. Thlt cannot be lnterpnted a1 a purely hum11t attribute, nor can It bt constred µtit a f1tua fee It pain. When a prepancy t1 terminated, the fetus suocwnbl to Olli· ygen at.arvatlon. NOT -p1ta. There hat been enouah emoUona lltm exprtued In the pros and cont of 1bor· lion. Lel's stick to the facta: Wl'lat an abortion does is to remove the productl of an unwantt:,d pregnancy for Whatever reason a woman decides that ahe cannot bear the child. And tbat real§On is the buslne11 of that woman and her doctor. MAJ!GO MOOJ!E HunUngton B11cll Bahg Seal Slaughter ' To thfl Editor: . , Aaaln It is almo8t tlme for .. THE GREAT 1970 SEAL HUNT." ocheduled to •lu\ In Morch. Up and down the Cina· dlan coastline. lhe Gulf of St. Lawrence, 1nd off Aluka, Canadian, Norwegian, and Amer1can Ral 1lau1hterer1 wlU torttlrfl, club, 1pev, shoot and skin (often while sWl aUve) hundreds of thouaandt or aeal1. Many of lhe victlms are jult blbltt whose frantic mother1 often try to throw their own bodies over th!m In ari t!forl to prevent thtlr brutal 11lau1hter. OTllER THOUSANDS of istals wlll 11Jso be ~hot, ~afled, or speared from 1hip- boar<I. Many oC lh ... will not bci killed outright. but will be painfull y wounded, vo~itini:: helplt'llsly for a slow 11nd 'gool.J.. isl~. loo@ly dea th undtr lhc dark ice. Shame on our own Department of Interior whltlf will again hire pro- fe13ional 1tal killerli to w3ntonly club to death over 50.000 seal5 on th~ Prlbiloff Islands o{f Alaska ! Soon the ice wi ll be a crimaon patch work. strevm with the skinle11 remains of what once were harmless, intelligent mammals that have died an agonlzin1. unbelievably cruel and UMeceissary deolh. BUT YDU CAN DO somethin1. Insist by letter or wire to the followina that this bnrtal ma mere be stopped : Hon. Arne Gunneng, N o r w e £ i a n Amb&.l!ador, 3401 Massachusetts Ave., Wa&hlngton, D.C. 20007. f{on. A. Edgar Ritchie. Canadian Artibassador, 1747 Massachusetl3 Ave., W.11.!hington, D.C. 20036. President Richard M. Nixon, The White House. Washington 0.C. 20500. Further details can be obl.alned from Friends of Animals. Inc., 11 Weil 60th Street, N. Y.C. 10023. DORIE VAN BJ!UNT Save Upper Bay To the Edito r: The Upper Bay at Newport Beach is one of the two remainina: estuaries in all Southem CatUomla and bY "developing" this land (actually marsh). as is sug· gested by the Irvine Company, ll will be completely lost as a sanctuary for the migrating birds. This does not seem serious but it destroys the ecology of the area to the detriment of the people. AS FOR THE recreational facilllie3 proposed by the Irvine Company-the childrtn in this area have plenty or recreational activities. but will soon have no natural are1s left unless we are farsighted enough to protect such area5 from developers who flet us face it) want to make money. Another concrete channel with the waler walled in is not to be compared with a natural bay in in· terest and ii nothing to leave to our childnn and grandchildren !I u c h as a natural estuary. Once lost lhi!I bay can never aa:ain be reclaimed-do not let us lose IL ' GERTRUDE DALE Book Promotlo1• ?o the Editor: I have gathered a few factis regarding the Cal State. Long Beach nudlly class that were overlooked . \Vhat did the pro-- ftssors , Robertson and Steele. have to lose? Th~ ultimate disciplinary act1on had already been taken by the school. Lawyers for Robertson and Steele were In atlendance. The press al.so had been Informed and were in attendance. Robel'Wn and Sletle had just published a book. l think lhey were nol running a nudity clw but tr)'ing to promott their fortbcomlng book. KARL CATES Corona del Mar Vleloua Crime Circle To tho Editor : Jn each aucceeding year for the last B11 George --.., Dur George : I wrote and complained a neighborhood cat tu~ over my garbage tvery night. I asked what to do. You said throw tiway a dog . thal'1 a &Ill)' answer! I don't even have a dog. Anyhow. you didn 't answer the second part of my ques· tlon -mice get in !he garba£e after it's spilled. What can I do for the mice'! Dear Annoyed : 1brow away .some cbetst . • umteen years the FBI has infonned us that more crimes had been committed than In the previou s year. What is ao depressing is the fact that the crime rate may continue upward until 1SOme drastic changes are made. The big question is. what changes? Perhaps if we could pin- point where changes could be made, then the changes themselves wuuld become obvious. THE POLICE ARE unlvertally criticit· ed because they are behind the times and th~t If they were given more money lhe.y would be able to cope with the modem criminal. Yet, the police have ~h tn common with Batman in that Batman will capture a criminit like Jo,e.r and turn him over to the authoriUu. Then In a few weeks Batman is once again aeen chasing Joker. This may be f!M for TV but ~:e the people are fed up with this vicious circle of a committed crime, punishment, rehabilitation, par o I e , anothe r committed crime. l\.1ANY OF OUR more conservative citizens point their finger of scorn at the courts and especially the U. S. Supreme Court. Yet, the courts are only following the Conslilution of the United Stales and~ 1he Bill ot Rights. That anyone can fault the courts and ignore the fact that our Constitution and Bill of Rights help those that have chosen crime as a profession is almost beyond belief. We the people are aware or and fed up with lhe fact th~ criminals who commit a crime ere aJlow;.- ed lo go free becau.!ic or some unrea 1 technical point that only has meaning lo those that make their living out of the law . Tn conclUJlon, the rights of the creative citizen are much mtire Important than the rights of the parasites. llARRY B. McDONALD JR. follee itlake Law1:' To the Editor: For some time now, the Anny Corps of ' Engineers has bee.n working on the beach at the Santa Ana River jelly. Surfers ~·anling lo surf this area hil:ve been told that they must walk in this area by way of the Hunt1ngton Beach side. Now the Newport Beach Police Depart· ment is saying that its officers will start impounding surfboards if they find any along the beach. I think that this is un · fair. for the police department has no right to make.or enforce any laws ln this area. Does this area belong to the coon· ty'! If so. how come the Newport Beach police mak e Jaws that they have no riJht to enforce? RICK t'LAMSON Student Corona del Mar High School Blank Ballot To the Editor: In our local area, wt are going to have a type of ochool bood electloo nut month. I am fotn1 to vote In 1 w11 I never lhouaht would; t'm eolna to turn In o blonk ballot. I hlvo rtoch<d !hot conclusion by the fotlowlna proctss of ellmlnalion : I WILL NOT vote Yes for two reuon1: F'lr51 , every student in the it.ale must ha ve the 11amt amount o'f muney ape.nt on him. Right now . local financina breeds unj usllflable Inequities In lhe quality of California eduution. Althouah we should keep local control, CON for edueaUon In California should be financtd 100-ptretnl by tht s~te. Each district must aet money only •nd directly proportlonal to the num· btr of ltUdents In the dJatrlct. 5ECOND, property tue1 far homeowner.!i who live on their property should be aboll1hed, for the 1lmple reason that you cannot dlg the money out of the ground . Your property tax money really comes from your Income, making the Income tax the only lair tax from ""hich educationa l costs should be deriv· ed. Property should only be ta1ed if the owner makes money from the property, such as in lhe case.! of landlords. farmers , corporations, and church-owned properly on which there is no church. These are the reasons I will not vote Yes. l \\o'lLL AL.SO not vote No because under the present school·bond·paissage re· quirement, 87 percent approval is necessary, That me~ my No"vote would cancel out two Ye11 totes. and that wOuld give me more power t.han 1 am entitled to. School bonds. whether financed tocally or state-wide. mUJI. pass with 50 percent approval. Any percentage more or les:o;; than .that is a dictator.ship of the minori· ty, which is neither constitutional nor morally sound. PETE ENGi.ANDER Litter at1 CMBS Tu th< Editor: A letter 10 the editor by some wise guy (January 7) entitled "Harbor High Lit· ter" stated that the horrible mess on the grounds after lunch al Newport Harbor High School should be photographed and win some sort of a prize. I challenge that statement. I sugges1 lhat .vour photographer take a picture or the cafeteria at Costa Mesa High School arter lunch on any achoo! day. l'll bei ou r aide wins. C. R. CLARK Need for Scrutiny ... ' .. ' ·l ...... ' • ... t I ' .. ~8' Co~men'te t • Bedford, Ind .. Tlmes-~tall : "It's ;i small hole in the pipeline, as federa l spending goes. but we note with satisfac· tlon that the Nixon Administration has decided to get the eovcmment out of thr busint:ss of Insuring loans for aoH courses. Publ\clty abou l a $265.000 loan tn a Missi.~s lppi golf cour!ie ... brought public attention to this little known policy , which began during the Kennedy Administration. Whco the public yelled about such use of federal funds. the Agricuhure Department decided t o abolish the practice. Score up one mort proof of need for constant scrutiny of 01Jr federal eovernment's labyrinthine opera· lions." ---iW- Wednesday, January 28, 1970 Tht editorial page of the DniLy Pilot .!Ct:ks to inform ond stt1n· u.ta._ r1adtr& b11 pr11t1Ulng th is ttttl.!paper'3 opinions and com- mfnlor11 on top k:.t of ;nttrt&I ond 1ionifir:once, by providing 11 forum for th e ~.rpression of oiir rcadtrs' op'iniol1.l, and by pr111ntino tht dlvtr1t tric~ po'nu of in./ormrtd oNtrvtri and :polcermfft on toplct of tht cfov. Robefi N. Wud, Publisher ' , I I I 11 • -. . " -- • Costa Mesa EDITION Totlay's Ft.al • N.Y. Steeb •• VOL. 63, NO. 23, 5 SECTIONS, 60 PAG~S ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAYr JAMUARY 28, 1970 TEN CENTS '. - House WMHlNGTON (AP) -President Nix- orf•s ·Veto of the flP.7 billion heall.h.educa- tion money bill was upheld today as the House rejected an effort to override it. The vote was 226 to 191, 52 s.'1art of the needed two-thirds. • Tb.e result was a solid victory for Nixon in hit sharpest con£rontaUon yet !i\'ilh tbe ~mocratic controlled Congress. The • Upho~ds NiXOD's. ' President Said a veto .wa11 ineeesaary beciiiuse the ·tl.26 billion which Congress added to the bill for health and education programs Wa! inflationary. The overa·IL bill 'finances the Department! or Labor and Health , Education and Welfare, and varfous an- tipoverty progr8J1\5. • · A new bl.II will now have to be written • and it is likely the Democraiic majority will again try to put in more money than Nixon bas budgeted, a1though not as much a11 in the vetoed bill. Just before the vote, two Republican leaders put forward a possible com- proml:se that would -permit Congress to stand by the increased funding but let Nixon refuse ~o spend more than he wan led Jo. · It _wu a\$0 rtPoi\ed. ~t ,ti\< White House Is pn!plmi to aJllll'Ove. lncreasea over Nllon's'budget totillri1 Mqi'mlllioo instud of !lie $1.ZI ·bl!lfon added In tiie veloed bill. .. --;:- -Rep. Albert H:Qyjl!~~MlJlll;l.~ be recef*<l<today a•W)Ute HOEWilett~ fu be read to ~ assuring that Nixon Campus Drug Raid Continuing ,· Opi'1-m, Heroin, LSD Seized at Costa Mesa SchQo~ By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot tM Diii• l'lllt ll•ff Tired lawmen today resumed a round- up 9f suspected teen drug dealers, disclosing that exotic Mediterrane.an tnfnd..benders such as opium changed hands for marked money -0n one Costa Mesa. campus baseball diamond. A-total of five adults and .12 juveniles ~re arrested on campus and at their h~es throughout the day and into Tues- da, night, with nine more being hunted today.. • Nearly all were named In arrest war- rants charging sale o( dangerous drugs. after Harbor District Judici al Court .Judge Donald Dungan cons f de red evidence collected In a six-week probe. The five adults were expected to be ar· reigned on the felony charges today, although some had already posted $62S or more bail to secure their release. The adults are : -Steven J\f. Dollar, 18, of 2869 EI Rio Circle, Costa Mesa. -Richard G. Aldia:, 18, of 686 Senat4! St., Costa J\.1esa. Hershey Successor Civilian Arms Expert New µ.s. Draft Chrof WASJONGTON (UPl) -Charles J . DiBona, 37, a civilian weapons and sy~tem.s analya:ia expert tor the Pen· taaon .. ha11 betn choien by the White Kouae 1 to succeed U. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey a11 director. of the Selective Service, it was reported today. Congressional sources who disclosed his selection said DiBona has a "very good" chance of being confirmed by the Senate, for the controversial job. Hershey, the nation's draft chief since !he start of Worlcl War II, will leava the selective Service Feb. 16 to become a Prison~r Wives To Visit Japan After Trip Fails · · Frbm Wn-e Servl~s Toivo -Homeward bound with hopes unfulfi.lled, an El Toro woman and thrtt'"service wives with husbands miss- ing in Vietnam wailed today to confer wlt.h Japanese official11. P.lrs: Carole Hanson or 24112 Birdrock Ortve and her traveling companions said ruelday the globe-circling trip has failed and criticized their reception in some areas. They singled out diplomat! from the HanOf regime and even U..S. Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy (0.Mirm.) whom they met lVhife wilting_futilely lo sec if they would be permitted into Moscow. "Senator McCarthy said to us that he "'a~;'\lery concerned With the tragic sit.ua· llon of the wir and he-pointed out that he was trying t(? help U:ie·draft dodgers, the prisoners of irar and the deserters, and Jt hllrt," said )In. Arthur Mearns, 11, or Lo5 An'geJes, "It really hurt," she explained, ''because l don't fetl that my hu sband should be in the same group. \\llile llou.te C!OIJSU!tant. DiB.on.a, Rhodes scholar with degrees earned at Ollord University in l!lni;land, reportedly la: a supporter or additional draft reform and President Nixon's prG- posals for an tll volunteer army. fie is president of the Center for Naval Analyses, an Independent organiution run by the University of Rochester in New York under contract to the Navy. It decides whether new weapons are worth "'hat they cost and helps the navy and marines plan how troops and ships are dep:oyed. A \Vhite House spokesman confirmed that DiBona, 37, of Quincy, Mass .. was under considera.J.ion for the post of Selec- tive Service director and had discussed lhe job wlth White 11ouse aWes. That spokesman would not confinn he had definitely bee.n selected however. The Whlte House said an announcement on the appointment was expected some time after this week. Father, Son Hurt in BlClze An Anaheim father and son suffered minor blll'll! early Tuesday when a fire broke out in the boarding house in which they livtd. Flremen said Jerry Butler, SS. and his son Raymond, 30, of 601 S. Claudia St., were trealed klr burns on their fa ces. and arms and released from Orange County Medical Cent.er. They were an10ng six p<'rsons in the two story home when the fire broke out in an unoccupied bedroom al 7:05 a.m. TI\ere were no oUier Injuries. f!ren1en said. Stoch Market NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market, shelving H~ morning gains, rtverted lo ils lo.sing wa)'l Jn slack trading today, with declines edging past advances. (See quotations, Pages 42-43). -Ste\•en R. Lusk, 18. or :i022 Don- nybrook Lane. Costa Mesa. -Loretta L. Gonzales, 25, of 913 Cedar Place. Costa Mesa . Ronnie D. Cross, 18, of 2630 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa. Bail was.set at $1,875 for Dollar, charg- ed with sale or two opiates. The first three suspecls were booked 911 charges of sale of dangerous 1ruga:, in- cluding oplwn and hashish, the powerful sa p derivative of marljuana in the case of Dollar. · Cross and the Gonzales woman were Ul"I T111Mole Son ht Dute/• Iioward Samuels Jr., 17-year· old son of New York 's candi- date for the Democratic guber- natorj.al nomination, will be a1- rai~ed in Youth Court Jan. 30 on charges of using marijuana. He was arrested in Greenwich Village two m-0nths ago. Prisoner Death Probe Opens SOLEDAD (UPI ) -The ~lonterey County Gra,nd Jury loday opened an in- vestlgaUon into the fatal sh:xiting of three Nelro prLsoners at Soledad Staie Prisan on Jan. 13. The' diBWict attorney's office already bas announced Its. Investigation indicated thci· shootings, by a guard, were juslified. The guard said he fired four shots to break up a racial mel~ in the prison ex- ercise yard. Tl}ree Negroes were kUled, and a white inmate was wounded. Meanwhile, three inmates -including a karate expert and a weight lifter - were charged Tueaday with the fatal beating of a young guard Jan. 16. All three suspect!' 11re black. charged with sale of .ma~juana,:while. the $625 warrant naming Cross was pla ced as a second -holding· charge because police allegedly found him cWUvatlng the weed. The remainder, ranging in age froai 16 to just under 11, w.ere .6o0ked into Orange County Juvenile Hall peitding further ac- tion In connection with their alleged drug dealings. Detective Captain Bob Green said to- day ijle total haul of evide!)ce now held - including heroiii, ha$hish, ophi{n, LSD, (St< DRUGS, Page II OCCBasketball Game to Aid . Par~~:Boy - ~ beneflt'basitelball gal\1• ·li>r -• t;oat• Ma&:lliJh ~hOol '"l""l\tt paraiyzitl in a tnilfc pl'ldict iia&Ch Js tehednW next Wednesday in E)&erson Gyriinasium at Orange Coast Col}M:e. Ticket! for th< '.I f!Jll! tlasid>itween occ and Jl'ullerton Jlimor College ·are n per person, availab1@ at ~eyeral loci· Uons. with $1 ·from etch toin& into the JusUn Ogata Fund. • They may be purchased at the Costa Mesa Chamber of 'Commerce office, Pink's Drug Slore, Harbor Tire, and the Orange .County Maraba!'s office, across from Harbor District Judicial Court. Sponsored by the ' chambtr'1 Red Coats committee, Whlcb promotes area athletics, the proceeds: wtll help Ogata, 16. now a patient at Los Angeles Ortho- paPdlc Hospital. He suffered permanent spinal damage last Oecfmber lri a Practice mltch at Costa Mesa 'High School and Is paralyzed from the neck down as a result Of .the. one-in-a-million chance tragedy. Donations may also be .sent to ·his fund In cart ol the Bank or Tokyo, 501' N. f\1aln St .. Santa Ana. Sama1·itan OK After Shooting A Stanton motorist Was in &au.factory condition today at "Orange County h1edical Cenfl!r alter bei~ 'shot in the: leg early Tuesday while stopping hlt_ car to aid three persons. . Garden Grove police said Billy Wagner, 22, of 10921 Western Ave., ~s flagg~ down by 'three men lihOrt.ly after mid· night while driving on W~tern north of Chapman Avenue. . Wagner told officers he thought the trio might have car trouble. but said one o( the men fired a 'ilngle rli¥ ll1ot which hit him in the leg·u he approacbed 'the car· After the shootilig lhe three flOd In their car. 1 • Officers Aid Wagner:drove himself tO Stanton Conµnunlty Hospital and was later transferTed to tht med1Cal1center. "The senator was very much in A hurry and he dldn 't have l~e lo talk to us." she 'added. \\11th Mrs. Hanson and r.1rs. fo.1earn s 1vere Mrs. John Hardy. 27, and fo.trs Roosevelt ffesllc Jr .• jf, Ix.th of Los Angtl6. The four hoped lo meet with the \\')fe oC Japane:;e Prime Mtnister Eisaku Salo during their stay In Tokyo and of· flt"tals of the Japan Rtd Cross Society. PSA Lease Move Delayed Mt. Etna Erupts CATANIS. Sicily (AP I -Mt. Elna , Europe's tallest and most active volcano, shot molten rock high into the air todoy following a fOUMnounth lull. The eruption from the ~nlral cratrr came -after a mighty roar. Expert..'1 said I.hf. emption was p.1rt ol Ute volcano'• normal eye~ ol actl\•lty. Conditions of Old Air Cal Agreement .Studied I • After hearing resolutlon.s from the citleg of N6wport Beach, Costa Mesa and Tustin, the Orange County Board of supervisors a g r e e d today to con- tinue to Feb. 3 the hearlna on the assign· ment of Air California 's lease in lhe cou nty alrport terminal to Paclflc Southwest Alrllne:i. In a mot.ion m&de by Supervllor David Baker. board members deterred the decision on the lease In order to study conditions in the ~ requested by the three chles, which lie. adjacent to the ' I .. airport or under the glide pattern. . The cities were requesth.(, the lease contain written agreements w h I c h stipulate: -PSA shall not land or take off between II p.m, and 7 a.m, -No alrcraft which generates mart nolM decibels than the lloelng m shall be permitted to u~ lhc alrpott . -Flight ope.rat.ions shall be limited to I maximum number subject lo prior ap- proval by the board. City represe:ntallves said Lhe rtsolu· tlons were prompted by a. "genUf!:man'1 ~" uie boehl iuode wllh cumnt ltaaeholden, wh!Cb tu ~ poi e d I y bJ. corp0raled the dtle•' nq'Je.!19. TesUmony from -Airp«t Director Rober! Brt11nahln Indicated t be "agreunenta\' ....,. IOI. cleorl,y .dollned nor were tmrhonored. Boord membeca .a1rMI ,to study, the proposals Tlilh the Idea of pullln& them lntc. the lease tranafer. Baltet oofed the transfa if approved would be effective pending Publk UUllUOI Commlulon ap- proval of lhe Air C&I-l'SA morati · . ,. IIE·-.w .. ' . . . .. ' . woqld,pu~l440-million. lnslead of'the·f202 million he: bad budgeted, into thi: pro;. gram for aid to IChoo) districts U..t In· elude large .numbe?s otfederil employes. QWe told newifuln tli84 ·although II ls not mentioned in·theJett'er, he· had been a~Y!:_edJliat Ni>on ":.ould •J>l!l•ve an a<j· dill on al $70 ~tUjop• for. vocaUoniil. e®ta· tlon and $140 million for other prolf'llDS. eto .. ~ . ~ Thus lhe total package ~I(!;< $!48 million over Nq;on's budget lnsjeid of the Sl.26 billion provided in the vetoed bilL Another alternaUve, approval · ol 1 the full amount of I.he figures in the bill but a provision letting Nixon decide how rhuch would be spegt1 wa.s _proposed.:._b)' ~ John Rhodes• (It.Ariz.,) and !\obert H. Michel, (R-111.). . -. '~ ,... Kieking (Jp Ber Reels Tulljth Hanley, a fol'ltler.uotic. dancer; ls .giving' San Franclsco·$s milljon worth ol art objects, keeping up with: her 'dmicing as she un- packs some of her art obJ~cls, left to-Iler by her late husband, Ed· ward' Hanley . of Bradfoi"~, Pa: County Young GOP Blasts Aldrich 'Double Standard' The board of dir.ctor.. of <lr'l!P. Coun- ty YOung .Republicans Tuesday acruled UC· Irvine Chancd.lor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. of employing a double standard with regard to Students for a DemOcratic Society (SOS). A resolution from the. boa.rd Siild .it is "inexplaJnable". that Aldrich woUld ap- prove hiring of fonner SOS leader Mike Krisman as a campus adfnlnistrator ahd th"'1 dtny permfssion to the campus SOS chapter to host a SOS 'National Con- ference. · · County Young Republican Chairman• Colonel Doner cha'rged that 'Aldrich is trying· to pltaie .the-..commuiilty ~bile ap.- peasing the ndlcalS. "The chancellor wlll pl'ease neitller. group with hls·lriane edlcl He must make a decision to etther stand with lt\e cml-' munity or the radicals . He can no longer afford to play both sides of the street," Doner declared. . ~ . Nixo~ Wilson .• . Said i.p Accord WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix· on and British Prime Minister Harold Wilson today concluded two daya of con- fertncts, reportedly in agreemeat on all major point!. WU"" al~nded a meeting· or the N•· Lionel Security Council on Nixon'• Jn. vltaUon, and !he two leadm lben .opent almost \ two-hours ·with th<lr pc:illclpal aides diaaiuln& world prql>lema. 'ille futul'e ol lhe· AUAnUc Alliance and Eaal· Wiit ..iallooia ,..,.. In !be focua of .thei. -.,,., a dlplomatlc-eource lald. Contrary to 11rHer tradition there were no final statemtnta made nor a com· mlll)lqJK Issued. The · NSC 1t91ion oreceded anoth<r meeting of the Prealdent and j>rlme minil!Or ~!Or -1y. bdore • ..... · The NSC meellnp are .. hufh.~ lhat the White H-1eldom dliclooes even te lf!Mral topiai up for ~ra· Uon. And tile lnvltaUon to 1Vllson to elt In undenc.i<ed th< deplh of Aoalo-Alllerlcan relalionJ al tlio top levtl ·, . .,. ~----- The chaoceUor .was unavailable today (or comment. Previously, he ha11 explained that he knew Krisman .when he approved the hlr· Ing (Krisman fonnerly. was uct student bocty president) and found him sincerely committed.to making cons t r.u ct Ive changes. Likewise, he said, he. knows, the campus SOS students and they have never done anything .dlmiptive. l!e does not know SOS merobeni from other places and elsewhere SOS has been involved in di!rupUons. But the chancellor ha,s,not offered that as a full explanation for hi! decisions. He hils acknowle<tged that his mdst. recent decision tG not pennlt.the1SDS National Conrerence wu political. Re himself Is aware of some ln- consl11tency. When told recently by a stu. dent, "'this is the same issue as Mike Krisman." he. answered: ~·1 know It is an<\ I am hung up a11 a cona:equence." • Orange Ceu~ Weather Rold on to your hats ii you hav'e a"y; Jt'a going to blow up a stori;n (flguraUvely spetlkinal Qll tlio Orana:e Coast. Clear skies: reian Thursday with chllly temperatures. INSIDE TOD~\' A ,.,,.., norcotiu oJJicrr from Watmimter tpecrheoda 'G ntw proorom to oiv. t11:nog1r• a choic1:• in a campaign to htad off dTug abuse. Ste Page 3, ·-· ' ' • • I ~=;-=-:-:-:-'"-re----- •.• "<K -. --• nter1can Relief • ;~·~_f.rives ~ liagds · I, ~I • -U.GOS. Nl .. ria IUPll -f'T<1h A1MHW. Brlt:'h and Canad11n ttllef itslvecl .'JA Lagoo today and the Nigerian 1\ed CrO.. artnoW'K'ed ll was qow feeding 100,090 rtfuiks frora the civil war per d~ . ~ AmUlacn Cl., transport Pl•""• Paper Claims Hired Men Were Killers CLEVELAND !AP) -Sol.ll'Ct'S clo~ to the Yablonski {amity s I a yin g in- vestigalion !laid t o d a y three hired g1W11en killed the United MJae Workers official and hi.!I wile and daughter, and that a fourth man ""ho backed out of the allignment wa s in custody. The Cleveland Plain Dealer, in a cqpyrlght story in tod~y's editions, .saJd the killel"I were promised $1,700 apiece. The story added that the triple &laying i;temmed from "a personal beef" not c:>rntct.ed with union matte.rs. -other -developments reported by the Plain Dealer and other sources : taii\ted;, carrYtni the first of · some 20 platieIOads: Of . suppUes to help an .,!1m~ed ""° nlllllon ll>o· lrlbeJ,..n suf· lerlJ\a in "till .,., o~ !!afro. ;.. - One,.af.the American 1hlphitntl carried llll'k ti.ton trucks, lO generalon illd !Oil blank•&&. The second, whleb orl.gbllted in Ch8r1eston. S.C., carrred a 1jmilar cargo and the two were ~upplements to 50 jeeps .'ipd thrte mobile. h0ipltals which arrived from the Unftl.'<I states during the weeiend. · ·· · Brltiah and Canadlin relief flights also irriNed today carrying more transporta· . Iida vehicles -and some medlcinet which Nigeria h~ requested_. • . Fiye , Weit German Air:; Force .J:itrgo planes le.ft Bonn todl.y .Ydtb trucks, a h1!:lic6pter nnd !IRhl tOn& of'medlcine for use in tM Biafran area. All of the m11itary markinl{s were painted over as \\-ere those <if tire American, British and Canadian planes. 'Phe Nlgerlin government meanwhile went ahead with plans to expel relief \VOrken accused of aktlng rtbil Bialrans during the 30 month civil war. The first of U Calballc missionaries ai;d nuns rounded up and held in Port Harcourt aft'r the fall of the form l!r secessionist' state began arriving in Lag os on their_ \Vn-...:..ltQ~-. .. . Girl· Erienu Cheer Officers " -. , . . .. ,. ... ' .... ' . Los Angeles ~llcemen Edward McDonald (lefll and Michael :kriha, who each Jost a. hand in a bomb explosion , are brightened bfthe visits of girl friends Ruthar\rt Orobus paedic Hospital. and Carol Littlewood in Ortho- · From., P•9e J DRUGS ... Nuclear Power 'In' But Move G1·ows • Fo1· Re study ' Of Bay Swap -More indlca.Uons that Orange Couno-'s resolve on its proposed tide.lands ·'i:- change Jn upper Newport Bay for 1"1M Company acreage is wavering -cime Tuecday in demand s by a COURty super. viaor that Ute plan Ue restudied. ·shortly 'atter SUJ>erVisot David Bak~t'.• unsuccessful appeal for a new study 1'•u: made, spokesmen for the lr\'ine ComP4AJ pr omised a, break in the long-st.anding si· Jenee on the issue by lrv\ne Pre1ident \Vi\Uam R. Mason. But despite the promises by Irvine gpokesman Gil Ferguson, the statement ·"'as not made as promistd today. Insteail. Ferguson said, Mason would spear onj];e Issue some time Thursday. , At Tuesday's meeting superviM>ra· at first said they would . consjder Baker!s proposal then decided, instead, to drop it after hearing that a staff report on supervisor Robert Battln's. earlier rP? quest for ree~aJuation WOJJ)d be ready fer -the board by Mai'ch 3. Baker suggesttd the restudy of the. •t· change, he said because of the swellini: wave of concern in state loYetnment o\ltr environmental -issues -a CKange in i;ov· ~ment posture since the propoud es - change won the slate's blessing in lt161. -Navy deep-sea di\'ers found a .J&.. caliber pi!tol Tuesday In t h e J,1ononphel• Rjv,.er ~b9ut five miles from the Cl1rk1vll\e, Pa., home where Jo.stph A. Y1blonskl, 59. his wife. Margaret, 57, and daughter, Charlotte Joanne, 25, were Al least 75 persons. all but live of them Irish fall into the federal category of fpniinen acoui1.d of "helping the rebels and ~g the war." ni.! · Nigerian leader, Gen: Yakubu Gowan, has vowed to expel them all event1.1ally, Jett log some 5tay for the t_lme being if. they ~e prov\~ir:ig s~ryices vital l.tl the survival or war re.fuiees. mescaline, i>lus ·barbiturite and . am · · phetamine· pills -iJ; wOrth tho1;1sani1a or ~ollars. Won't Solve All Needs "The condi tions of 1~165 are no longer the-conditions of society today. I think we should re<!onsl der it,'' Baker $8-ld. The March 3 report will deal with· the plan introd uced by Ba ttin, who late last .vear offered several alternate propoaals to replace a flat swap of lands . ~lain. . -FBI agents extended their in..::_ \'estigatlon Into the Kentucky and 'Ten· ncs1ee coal mine fields where Yablonski, _ •· rebel leader , In the UMW -wa1; a •_ hOuithold name among mlMn. ·..:.tn Cleveland. U.S. Attorney Robert _B. Krupansky said a grand jury 1n- : v~1t1gatlon into the slayings, whleh open- . td 'rutsd~. probably would bt«xlt!lded 1Jn'ou&b next w~k. : · .-The Plain Dealet repo~ tl~at_ "all tbe lnfmnatlon 1athered led ,author!Ues : to conclude the dtaths were 'a hlt' or hired killing." r -Thr" · men have been charged with , ni~i<ler In the slaying>. Th•J are Plilll E. Giiiy;-311,, Claud• E., Vt~~I 11. and : Aubran W. Martin. 21, ·au of the ." Cleveland ajea. ~ ·Reporting that IU lnforynallon had ·been "Pieced together from vmous sourees. the . Plain Dealer gave this account: . ; Yablonskl's home hid been \'tsiltd "" seviral time~ before the klllin&a-On one . trip the slayers enttrid the bollM! wben ' the family wiis abse{lt and made fr~ds ! wllh the raml\y do~. and on 111other. ~c- cnf:ion two of the men confronted Yablonski 111t the door. inten<!lng to kill ;___him-th~n. but changed their minds. The : Vablonskl 's were slain In their bedroom~ ' Df.c. 31. The bodies were not found until Jan. 5, Filing Papers Read y Tl1u1·sda y Filing papers for cand idscy in the April 14 Cost.a Me.sa City Council election will he avallable to ampslgn\ng cltltens beginning at 8 a.m. Tl'lursday. City Clerk C. K. "Charlie" Priest reminded potenll1l c•ndldate!I or the_ opening of the raee, which closes Feb. 19, the deadline for returning the papen . Councilmen \Villard T. Jordan and Georee A. Tucker will be finishing four- year terms but both incumbents plan to run £or office again. Planning Com"missloner Jack Hain- mett. a long.tJme Chamber of Commetce leader, has announced he will be a challenger, while Theodore C. "Ted" Boloeh plans 1 third campaign as well. Details of ellglbility may be obtained from the City Clerk. DAILY PILOT ltoll•rl N, Wo•al ~re.IHl!I" .... "i*llllltr J.,1.; It. C11rlt v VIM ,.,....,...1 t..a G-41 M•11tt1t Th'"''" K1 t•il EGllW Tha"''' A. M111p!\I111 Mlnlflnt IEClflitr CMfe Mew Offk• JJO W10 •·v S!rttl M1 UiNJ A4411n: P.O. ltt 1160, 92616- °"'' .,.,,_ H ........ 1 lfftfl: 1111 WtJI l•lllN • ............, L,.uN kflll: m ''"" .11-H\l!ltln'"" lff<ll: 1117S htdl 1wi..1r4 C.tl.Y "11.0"', wl.., ""!ell "< ......... fht N•-·-.. h. -·fail1t ••llt R(Ult '4111. • ., "' -· .. ""-"" l..ftl,oll .... di. .._. flflO\, CM!• ,..._., .....,,btl~• 9M(ll -"-""' \lt lll'y, .... ..-'Ill ... ....... 1 tOIM.__ Ot•-(-I 11'\rMlttt .... ,_, .,.i..11111 "'~"' .,.. " ,," w111 .. Iott.I •M., l.i-t ••~ ...... Ull ~-hi llf ,,,lfl, CM•• M111. T...,....._ \7T4) MZ-4J11 tT•lfM..'A4-tW"t 642•1611 CiftrY• ... I, llM, 0...... (IHI """'"""" (: ...... ,. NI M'll\ 1"':.t, lllwttttlltflt. lldltlt\41 ""'*" ., c~ll-:"11 lttrtllt "''!' " ·~" -'_,. ....... ,... ''""""' t ! .~I IWfl .... MtoNI d••• IMI• "~ ti row""' .. ici. t rO C:•lt ;....,, (t!H-•1, ,._,. .... W '""IW It QI -lt>lr, "' "011 U IO"'°""""'' ~I,._,, ttwlrllltlolol. 'lOO ,,_:'tll•. Bm,g Of~~ncl~r-. ... ·-·. -·-... Rall W 's-. e y JI .... J!fltll~QS to Jail A probatlO!lary drug qfftnder picked the. wrang 11me to report to Colta .M~a police and register a& re.quired "by law Tuesday nigJit. winding up in jail agalo. Glori~ . A. Greenhalgh, 20.. of 3018 FillmOre-W'a.y; was questfoned il~ her dilated eyes and unstudy ~nntt. then ·led back to be given a &0brlety teat In ex- amination rooms. Offiotr Pat AJexander said she was judged to be under the lnnuenct and takeh ·'to be searched by POiicewoman Shirl# .Groves prior le booklng on the 'frilsdemtahor charge. · Patrolman Bruce Hagan, however, 5ald he discovered a· dropped plastic bai con- taining 22 barbiturate tablets where ~he had " been standing, nut to the. atat1on watch t.'Ommander's ofnce. The suspect was booked on the ad- ditiQnal felony charge or possess.Ion of dangerous drug!! and her -probation of· · ficer advised of the alleged violation as y,·ell- 3-car Accident_ Hurts 2 Mesans Two Costa l\.fesa 1vomen were. listed in satisraC'tory conditi on today at ftoag l\fernorial HoSpital following a lhre«ar collitton at Red Hill AVl!Oue <ind Ji.fain Street Tuesday night. California Highway Patrol office.rs said \l/illiam Sno.,.,·, 40, of Los Angeles wa& eastbound on fl.1ain Street at Red 1U\I \vhen he became involved In a broadslde ('rash with the veh icle driven by 1tfr11. Doris C. Roberts. 68, of 268 Fordham St. The Snow vehicle spun out of control and slammed into a car driven by CarlO!I M~r:doza. 23, of 2708 \V. Aurora St., Santi' Ana, which y,•as stopped-· at the ln-- tersection. l\trs. Roberts and her daughter. who was her passenger, fl.trs . Leola l\fenzi11. 49. of %69 Cecil Place, and Snow were taken to Hoag Hospital with major in· jui"ies: Patrolmen said Mendoza was not injured. Juveniles involved attt.nde.d both Ccsta ?-.tesa and Estancia high school1, with more uian one transaction ·allegedly made on the latter's baseball diamond. as detectiveA· wa.tchtd from a distance. 'Captairi Green said .the allegtd drug purthases. were ·made by 0th~ students acti na; as ~pecial agents during the past several \•leeks. ·The crackdown .followed a conference with : Ntwport-Mesa·"" Unified S c h o o I Distri ct authorities, in \\•hich liwmen ~~id-lhej laid it-On the line about the ex- tent of. the local problem. Deleclive sergeant J ohn Regan today praised the administration'1 cooperation ir1 the .uridercovtr, p~ and. subseq_u,ent round up Of suspects, D,)lny at the tarn· puses ftorp .which th_ey wll~ be expelled. Juveniles not identified by name in- rluded three ·airl.s"..;and one boy from Co8 tt ~fe5a Hi&h School and two· boys and 'one girl fr~ Ei\incla Hlgh SlhooL The tnUre haul Pf dr,ugs confiscated during the ii.tYeitigJlion "period Includes 20 kilos of marijuana, whic.h amounts to nearly 5CJ pound5 bf the hallucinogenic 11'eed. High-quality .h~shi1h from the lttediter- ranean &untr1es. more than two pounds, or about one ldlo or that po"·erful m1ri· Juana derivative, was also seized, along with large quantities of variou1 other drugs.- Teams of lnvestigalors separsted dur· in&_ the Jl.ay and \"isited campwts ~nd homes to make the arrests, confi!!Callng ~mall amounts of drugs during the pro- cess. T111·0 youth! v.'tre quesUoned about Ont ,·isit to an apartment" ..1h the northe.ast section of Cosfsi t.1e5a, where a small amoun t. of heroin was confiscated , but released pending further investigation. Detectives Norm Kut ch and Bob Len- nert said they knocked and identified the1nselves as police officers, but the door wa s opened only after some dtlay. Officer Dave ·Haye~, waiting outlsde, dis~yered a plaStie bag containing three so-calle'.d "bindles of heroin on the ground, after noticing drapes caught in a hastily- opened second story window. Sergeant Regan said routtne que!- llOfling of the susP,e<:ls rounded up Tuell· day lnrluded Whether they. themselves use drugs and how frequently - with all replying only once in awhile. "\Vhen dtd you plan on stopping?'' Regan said he and fellow interrogators asked. "None had any definite Idea ,'' he ad· -""'· Ratings ~hanged Movie Board Drops 'M' Tab HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Afler IS months of what the film Industry calls "grnti· fylng success." Its voluntary program of rating movies is being modified. Jack Valenti. pn!sldent of the ti1otion Picture A$$0Clation of America, said Tuesday one charge was made because a survey had shown considerable confusion over the "~f" ratlna: -which meant a fJlm Wu recommended for matW'e •if' dlens:es Only. . . , . . · So ·that ca\rgory I~ ht•na ·dropped I._ favor of "GP." nus mean1 all ages m1y view the movl~ bot that parental auldance er dlscreUon 11 advised. _ The Other change fai.sa the .... 11e llmil for vtewtna films rited "R" -rutrtct.ed cattgory -'vithou\ An 1cCbmpanyln£ per.tnj or_tejal guardian trom 11 to 17. Bolb ct>.,,,., art cliei!IVe l lw 1. Oblervers 11Jd the boost in th e ape ltmU m1y rtpresent an attempt to broaden lhe "R" raunc.. to Include racy but se-riOUs fllms tteretolore relegated to the "~"category for adults only. Valenti h.:is s•id he.9figinally Intended ' -the X to.be a..!1e:per colony" for films of no Artf~Uc quality. But lt hasn't ~·orked oul that way. Two of the most succe!Ssful and rriticall1 acclaimed films of 1969 - "l'ttidnlght Cowboy" ind "Medium Cool'' -ended up In the X class. •tere is the: new set of standards: G -All aaes admitted. GP -All q~ adm itted, but partnt.11 d\M:retion reeomm•nded. ft -Anyone under 17 must be ac· -eontt>tnled by a-pa.rent or legal auardian. X -No one under 18 admitted . The V1lentl 1tatement called the classlncauon system. which went Into ef· r~t Nov. 1. IMS,"• rratlfylng success." A survey conducted by the N1tlon1I Association of Thtater _OwntNi showed that rune out bf 10 iheater1 queried used the rallnas ·1n tlleir a(Jvcrtlsllfg. Valenti was jol1'fd In hla: 1nnounce· ment by El.lglnt Picker. president or the tht1ter ownert g r o u p • and Munlo Podhon:er, a member of the govern- ing board or the Intern1tlon1! Film Im· porlcrs tnd Dl5trlbutors of America. . EDITOR'S NOTE: Nuclear powtr pla.nr1 arc seen as the only answu to providing potoer for a growing popu- lation. B11t there ·are problems, both phys ical a1id psycllological. T1to1e ore explored in o two-part ser ies by .1ssociatcd Press. Wri ter Doug WUtis. By DOUG WILLIS . . Al-t.19111 P""' Wrltll . - The 1970s will be a decade of tremen· dous change In CalifornJa, but wide.use_ of nuclear-produced .electric pOwer won't be one of tho•~ changes. says the cbj.ir'man <tf the state"! jo1Qt leglalalive committee en nuclear de·1e1opment. ''The problem is the tremeimus lead . time .for cell!lruction or 1 ·nuclear power plant -seven to eight years," uid Auemblyman John V. Brl1gs (R- F'ullerton}. "And the companies are gun-ahy •.. th'1't's t,he ~~~lie reaction ~ govern- mlhl red tap<\,: Elg~letn fedti'•I ,nd 1itltte agencies· l'lav..1 to approve a nuclear plant," he added.' · Wives Cage Loop Forttis in Mesa •' A Friday morning housew ives' basket- ball league is btlrlg organiied by the Costa Mesa· Recreation Dti>attment and only novices wUl be eligible. 1 _ In other words, \Vilma Chamberlain need' not apply: Entry fee is $2 and all games will be played indoors, with ind.ividual trophies £or flrgt ind second i>lac~ team members af!d"outatanding plnyers will be awarded. Gsmes will" be at 9:30 a.m. Interested Cost1 Mua women may obtain additioilal informat1on by calling the department -at · L1~·S303, .according to 'foni Popovits. the first watch on the moon Briggs said two nuclear power plants now in operation In California produce less than five percent of the state's elec· tric power. A thi.-d nuc lear plnnt is under consl~uction at Sall Luis Obispo and seven to 10 more nre planned. "~y I~ 11·e '."ii\ double our nuclear ca pacity ... but "'e double our electri c need eve ry eight yea rs in Calif.ornia. so in rtlative terms w~ won 't be producing any more," he said. Briggs said that in the long haul, "nuclear power is lhe only way to go," but that £irtt. an adverse public opinion 1nust be changed. '"People are opposed mostly because thty don't know an ything about it. The quc~lion _is ho1' ~ you tell the peopl e. I think the fact that Pre!ident Nlxorl's San Clemente home ·is 1 1~ miles from a nuclear plant dramatically shows how safe they are," ne said. He saY:I: fossil fu el electric generating . plants ....:. WPlich burn t>il, coal or :&as - · now are responsible for 17 percent of all air pollution· and one percent of the visi· ble smoa in the Los Angeles basin. "We have about three times the smog t!:iat. we can stand, so that one percent is too much," Briggs added. "but the real problem is running out of fossil fuels. "By 1900 California will require as much electric power as all the United States requires now, so you know we can't rely on fossil ruels. .The alternative is that your air Conditioner won't work . when you turn it On. or t'lospltals won't ha ve pcll\'er in Afeir operating rooms ." Briggs, whos~ co"mmittee ha s held r.umerous hearings since the 1969 Lepislature adjourned in Augu1t. said he expects a report fr om the State Ri:sources Agency next. month on the feasibility or a "one-slop" agency for nuclear plant approval and that he ex· peels to pass legislation this year to streamline procedures. Among them was a suggestion lhat the county condemn and buy the Irvine.own- ed fiay islands and devel op a deep-waler channel along w.ith . four" public parks, leaving uppermost reaches of the estblty as a wildlife area. · Saker was .the second supervisor in re· . crnt months lo hint that the co~nly'~ ~e­ solve in the exchange n1lght be wavering. Baker's suggestion was qUesUontd 6y fe!Jow ~pervi~rs later_ amf he. admitted it wa_, an attempt to have the controver· sial and legally entangled exchange ' riroi)ped in lavo r or alternate plans ·ror the huge estuary. : The supervisor's suggestio'n for reeval- uation comes during complicated litiga- tion O\'er the exchange of county tide- lands for Irvine Company acreaae. : Baker said he rt:alized that the nUga tion \Vas still going on, but be cited ex· treme public interest in the issue as "the reason for his proposa ls. He offered no specific alternatives to the pl~n currently being tested In cturi. Youth Job Unit Meets in Mesa · Representatives of Harbor Area servit: clubs will gather in Costa Mesa F'rldif for a breakfast meeting and di9Cus1ioft ,. the Youth Employ ment Service i>f th' Harbor Area . Ch airman of the variOllS organizations' youth programs will mee_t al 8 a.f"!';, in H .. uben's restaurant. Interested clmen1 "·ho might have suggestions are also in- vited. .Jim "'ood. an aclil'e director in the Jobs-for.young-people project will outrine 111•ho is in volved , how YES is supported, .. -rat it has accomplished and what . its future plans -and goals are. Reservations for the $2.SO breakfast may be mad e by calling Wood 's ottlce, 5"6-5!$0. ht s~ld. All N .A.S.~. •1tron1ufs • , . includin~ th• pion ••r• who fir1t w•l ~td on th1 moon • , • w1ar Omti;t Sp1tdmt1f•r chrono9r1pJ11. fh• ••m• watch 1r1yon1 ctn buy in our stort. - And now ycu will st1 it on th1 wr i1t1 of Grtgcry P•c~. Richard Crtnna, Oa.,id Jt n1s•n, J t mt1 Fr1nc:iscul and G•n• Htc:kmtn ti th1y sttr in "Mt roon•d." l1lu1lr1•1•: T~1 ""•t<~ tf th1 A1trt11111h . l-bul1•~-4-diil Omttl S~•..!11111 .. r w,i1t 1.9111,.uftf, M11~u,t1 111,.11.4 int.M'th of ho11n , minlltl1 111111 ••t.•ltfl1, St11ftltn 11111 w1i'tr·r••ltl1nt c11t. M•tchin9 lw-t t1l1t , • , , •••. , • SlfS . CONVINl!NT TERMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE ~· C. .J./u111pfrrl-e ~ J~t'vefer& 1121 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA .. MESA I ll YEARS SAME LOCATION PHON~ SO·HOI 1 I I 1 " 'Editorial Selection' · ; Army Denies Censorship SAIGON (AP) -Charges that unfavorable news reports were cen&0red by authorities al the American Forces V~t· nam Network art "completely unfounded and unsupponed, .. investigators for' the U.S. command said today. The command's inspector aeneral also denied that a former AFVN newscasler who made the censorship cbar~es during a broadcast is being persecuted for h.is remarks. The broadcaster, Spec. S Robert E. Lawrence of Atlan- ta, Ga. was transferred from Saigon to Pleiku and made a chaplain's assistant. A command spokesman said court-martial charges o f disobedien ce and ' in- ~ubordination pending against Lawrence have nothing to do "'ithJ,be censorship in- vestigation or the newxaster'a charge that he Nixon Lauds Officer on Flag Button was "not free to tell lhe truth." The charges concern an earlier incident in which Lawrence refused to obey an order to drive AFVN stan members to their downtown billets. ~~~~~~~~- . NEW ·YORK IUPll -New York City patrolman Patrick lJolan, who caused a furor by wearing_an American nag but-,.. lQn on his uniform lapel, has received a letter from Presi- dent Nixon congratulating him on his "firm stand to honor our flag ." Dolan, 36, was cited for being out of uniform Jan. 5 for "'earing ·the lapel button. Bul the next day Police Com-•Se11a.to·r' Dies ~issioner Howard Le a r y changed the regulations to allow city policemen lo wear flag buttons. The presidential I e I t e r . dated Jan. 14, said "! w;:,s ''ery pleased to see that your rtrm stand to honor our flag "·on a reversal of the ruling ... of police rules and regula- tions. We need lo encourege Americens in pride of cour.try. Now New York's finest have another proud badge lo wear. 'Senator' Ford, vaude- ville comedian whose joke-telling on radio's "Can You Top This?" gained him national fame , died of cancer at Greenport, Long Island, Tuesday. Ford, 82, be· came "Senator" in his early 20's when be was mistaken1y introduced as a senator al a club dinner. Congratulations!'11 :===========: Said Dolan, "To think that 1 would receive a letter from the President because I fought for tlOfllething so fundamental. the love of our flag . I'll never forget it." FAIR F•1I. f•ir, f•ctu•I. Tho1• th,11 wt1rd1 1um up f•clo" i11 op1r•tion on th1 DAILY PILOT IJ!iltori•I P•t• • .,,,., ~•'I. A .mmmary of the in- vest11ation report released by the command .said that there was no censor1hlp at AFVN. lt clwllled 1he wlthholding ol certain stories aa "cdttotial selections." "Spec. Lawrence erpressed the view that he and the other n e w 1 c a sters individually should have full euthorily to make suci} editorial choices," the report said. "However, they felt that ir their superiors made such choices, this was censorship. SUch a position is . inimical to the operation of a radio or television station." The command statement said that the sensitivity of the South Vietnamese govemmeot must be taken into account when editorial decisions are made. '·Material which wootd qf. rend the host country cannot be used," It said. * -{:( * 2 in Saigon Press' COrps U.S. Agents SAIGON IAPI -Two U.S. government agents were in· filtrated Into the Saigon press corps but were wilhdrawn after their identity was ex- posed, U.S. officials said to- day. "Someone goofed," said one high-ranking official. The U.S. Military Assistance Command for Vietnam 1aid those responsible for issuing pi'ess credentials to the two men "have been admonished concerning the proper pro- cedures to follow in ac- creditation.'' There was no official word on why the two agents mas- queraded as newsmen or who ordered the operation. But there wa.s speculation tllat they were trying lo spy out newsmen's sources of in- fonnation. The men could not be located today in Saigon. Qf. ricials who dealt with their ac- credilation and identified them as federal investigators gave their names as H o w a r d HethC{IJ: and William T . Tuck"r and said t h e y presented letters 0 r in- tro du ct 1 on from the "American University Press." ONE WEEK SALE! PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE I I DIAMONDS A. 14J::;wh1tegoldpierced eo rrin~5 ••••••••••••••••••·•••••••••••·······•·•••Orig. 14.95NOW 9.77 I . Diamond Meort $Moped going iteody rin g ..•••••••••••••••••••••••••• , •••• Orig. 14.95 NOW 11.11 (. 1/i f. diamond ialitotre, lAI( white gold ............................ , .•.•... Orig. 137.50 NOW $119 D. 2 diamond 14K nott klote occe,..ied by c•Jhured pe:orl1 ..•.••.....•..•.•.. Orig. 15.50 NOW 14.11 14K GOLD JEWELRY A. 14( gold eorr•rigs. oil dongles Spsc;ol group values to 16.95 ....•. NOW SO%off 1. 14K gold chor"1s, mCl(ly ~•yle1. O rig. 12.50 to 15 ............... NOW $JO te $12 llRTH5TONI RINGS A. Solitoire s1yl 1 lodi•• birlhsto11• rin g~. Orig. 14.95 .................. : •. NOW 12.77 a.-Me11'.s d1omond ony11 ri11g. Orig. 29.95. .................................. NOW 19.11 (, lod1es spec101 14K b1rths1011e ri.,gs. Orig. 29.9.S ........................... NOW 22.11 WATCHU A. Watches w11h the now look. Orig. $20 .................................... Now t.II I. 17 ]1w1I m1n'1 "& ladies wotcheJ. Orig. 19.95 ........................... NOW 14.11 ONI OF A KIND A. Lcd•eJ diamond Elgin watch. Orig. $175 .....................•.....•.... NOW 1)1.21 I . 14K gold oil d1omond watch onochmel"ll . Orig. $295, .................... NOW $236 C, Sterl!rig 111..,.r lden!1ficotion bracelet. Orig. 5.9.S •.•.•.....••.. : ......• NOW J.IS Wha 0 t a fontosfic colltction of jewelry! And whot o fantastic opportunity for you to SAVEi Seldom is such a tremendous reduction mode on jewelry as fine 01 this. Chtck the outstanding selection! Chtck the remorkable values! Wonderful time ta purchaie thot special lifetime treasure. CHARGf IT Af YOUR PfNNfY'S ftNf JfWfLRY DfPAATMfNf. S,.ct.lbl"t M Phtt DM-4 .. oi....i ._ ... w • ...,.,, .,. . ..,. ......... . NOW! THESE VALUES AT ANY ONE OF THESE PENNEY STOREsr CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD DOWNEY /,IQNTCLAIA FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH VENTUR A SHOP SU NDAY TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! I • 1 • -• Wtdntsd'1, J""l(t ?8, 1970 DAILY fllOT IS may co -~emi-annual j • • " •• ' ' • may c:o 1outh coa1t pleze, 1en diego fwy. et ' 1hop monday th ru 1eturdey 10 e.m. to 9:30 • • • ' Falrchikl c111rom covered sofas .... JI0.00 299 .00 a.11 ... ,, Four styles . , . in modern, transitional end traditio nel moods . .Choose your 8- foot sofa in pillowbOck , tuxedo, lawson I or contemporary style. Each is coverod to your custom order in dee.orator fab- ' rics ands -covers. Loveseet, 7 ft. and 9 ft. sizes, available at comparable uiv1n,gs. may co furniture 41 Imported gloss lamps from ltoly r19ulorly 25.00 19.00 "Bellissime " lltelien for most beeutiful) describes these swags that _bathe your rooms with the wermth of sunshine, th 0 e subtleties of moonlight. Diffusers tone the light to creete the mood. Eech with 5 feet of cha in. a~ I]" green teardrop, ' . 12" die.,.b. Liglil ember, bell. 12 " die .. c. 21" Amber loned cylinder, 7" die. mey co lemps 63 SAVE ON LA·Z·BQY® RECLINA ROCKERS® l I I ,, . " . •I ., "' ,if )! ::> ">ri tl " 219.00.13,.oo 179 .00-189~00~ ~ ·~ Smart styling and solid comfort ar•"- yours when you choose a Le -i -Boy® ~ Recl ina~Rocker®, from our Americ8na;1 collect ion, for your home. Plus cu r- rent sevings of $40 to $50! Simply reise jhe COmfort Selector® end the J.pos;. tiQl'I leg rest adjusts to give you iust the right amount of comfort. Position' for rocking , dreem ing , or -full bed. ~ Troditlonol (lhown) reg 219.00 179.00 • Trodltlon•I . . . . . . '"I· 239.00 ·ra~.IJO Contornponry .... r19. 219.oO ,. 17'.00 mey co furniture 144 bri.+ol, co1te mue, 546-9321 . p.m., sunday noon 'Iii 5 p.m. ' . ' . ' l : ' ' I I ' • DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Freeway .. Row Rolls On For more than six years now, Newport Buch of- ficials bave fought an unyieldini campaign against the state 's adopted r oute !or a principal segment of the lillure Paclllc Coast Freeway lhrougb the city. · The section under dispute 1 i e s generaUy between Upper Newport Bay upcoast to the city limits at the Santa Ana River. In ~his area, the California Highway Commission in J\1ay of 1963 adapted a future freeway alignment generally parallel and adjacent to existing Pacific Coast Highway. Ne,vport Beach wanted the route line further inland -the. m.ore inland the better. Costa J\.1esa officials, on the other hand, favored the co1$.1.8.l routing. They insisted Costa Mesa already has enough superhighways with portions of the San Diego. Newport and future Corona del r..1ar freeways '\1:ithin their city. \Vhatever r~asoning may have prevailed, tbe state selec.ted the coastal alignment. Since that adoption, Newport city government ha5 refused to sign the legally required freeway agreement on this segment and has campaigned vigorously over the years to have the route question re-opened befo re the Highway Commission. Durinj!: the long flight, Newport city councils hive changed. Four mayors have served. City managers have come and gone. So have planning directors, state directors. st.ate highway engineers and assorted others. Throughout it all . Newport's battle cry has remain- ed the same: Move the freeway inland. And for New· port, there have been moments of high optimism but at the end of each new appeal, no real measure of spccess. Now once again only last week, Newport officials made the familiar trip to Sacramento to place an ap-. peal before the California Hi ghway Commission -seek- ing re-opening of the freeway question. Several Newport city offictals suggested that· this will be th eir ~asl ·appeal. If it fails, tlioy said. the city \vlll knuckle down with highway engineers to negotiate a precise freeway design within the adopted corridor. Several factors, however, suggest that the coastal freeway 6ntroveny may not even yd be at the end of its string. History suggests that, Cor one thing. Another element 1s lhe fa cl that when Newport placed Ila final-appeal before highway commissioners last week, the city asked thal the state delay Its decision until the February commission session in El Centro. Upon reflection. it may develop that February \vill be too close to the City Council elecllon campaign wherein the freeway question might well become a po- litical issue again.• Then too, lt might be U:iought wise to wait until after May so the newly.elected city council can get o~ganizcd and prepared to do business with the state. By then, of course, Newport's Freeway Question will be more than seven years old. Indeed, it seems that just like old man river, Newport's battle agaJnst Pacific Co~st Freeway just keeps rollln' a1ong. United F unds Unite Long in the planning 5tage, Harbor Area civic lead- ers have accomplfshed a happy union by meriing the United Fund chapters of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. Just what is the Uni1ed Fund? The UF collects money designated for a number of youth and health service organizations, based on their size, need and extent of reach within the community. By definition, the new Harbor Area United F u n d Is a natural agency to serve the Orange Coast. which is tied so closely together by geography, population and basic economy. For example:---the Boys Club, Girls Club and the Y~1CA serve the \vbole area, and Scout troops cross over city borders, so why not consolidate the primary agency helping in their support, instead of fragmenting the effort? The spirit of this new United Fund unity might also extend to other areas of community endeavor. (Cl lnformation 011 Suitability for Children Is 01ily Aini -, __ .... ,, f(LIP5E Jack Valenti Explains Nationwide Film Rating System To the Editor : Bec:au1e the nationwide film rating isystem l.s af Importance to mavie-1oers in yoor cammurtity, 1 am anxious to detcribe what it la and what lt is not. what it tries to do and \\'h.at it does not do. The movie rating system has one o~ jeclivt: TG inform t.M:ipublic, especially parents, about the 5Ultablllty of movie CM~t for viewing by· their cbildren. Tbat is Its only aim and purpose. The film ntlng syrtem does not rate films for adults. A film is not ra~ for art.l!tic quality, or lack of it. The system don not recommmd films or ban rnms or censor films. Jt provides a public in· formaUon service. which ~e great ma· jcrity of responsible film producers and distributors believe is desired by parents. A RECENTLY completed nation-wide survey conducted by the 0 p I n i on Re$tarch Corporation Of Princeton, N.J., has revealed some sijjnilicant findings about how the public responded lo this new program in its first year of operation. Fifty-eight percent af the movie-going public considers the rallng system "very useful" or "useful" in helping panints guide the movie·golng of their children. Only 16 percent doeli not find it useful. ('·No opinion" v.·as lhe answer of the rest..) The survey also pointed out the need for some revision. Because the "l\1" category (l\t: For 1.1ature audiences, parental discretion advised) wa.!I con- fusing to a substantial portion of the public, that category's description is beiag changed to "GP: All Ages Admit· ted, 'Parental Cuidanc:e Suggested." Moreover. in order to 'streng1hen the system even further, the age lltnit in 1'R'' and "X" film• Is raised to 17. THE FOLWWING, then, are the revis· ed rating sym bols and admission policl .. , MOVIE RATINGS FOR PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE. G -All Ages Admi tted. General Au- di!nCes. GP -All Ages Admitted. Parental Guidance Suggelted. (Note that the ·1bove two categories have an unrestrk:ted adlnisslOI} policy.) R -Rtstrkted. Under 17 Requires Ac· mnpanrtnJ Parent or Adult Guardiln. X -No One Under 17 Admitted. (This age llm.ll may vary In cerll.t!n areas.) HOW DO 111£SE ra.ting categories transl1te Into use.able guidance for parents? G. Films rated G include those with a broad ranae of lhtme and appeal to both the young 1nd their elders. Th'se films, In the judgm,nL of !ht ratin11 board, con· taln no msterlal which parents would find nbj~tlonable for viewing by their younast.ers. GP. V.'hlle much like 11 G film, a GP film ts more !IOphisticaltd in treatment. Because tastes and standards vary by gtoil'aphical area and even by neighborhood, some parents may want to cJve guidance to their children, but both G and GP films ire open lo all age:i. 1l THESE ARE films of adult themes or aduJt treatment, but a picture that Quotes Sim lADIMrt, execau,·e stttttary, Na~ titoll·-4-latioa' "We spend 50 «nla on hour -l•I' illan the ~obyslt· l!r I~ -on Ille IJ'plcal public ochool. .• ~t 50 ctnt.I a ht1d, Sfhools cannot com· ~ for poar home backgrounds in tM Wms, product merit scholar~ for auburtila, ketp UM! curriculum re\e,•ant. or lin th• but and brl&htost ln!D lellthln&·'" I persons under 17 may see If they are ac· compttnieit by ~ parent or adult guardian, such as their teacher on an argani.Jed movie outing. X. No one under 17 will be admitted. It should be noticed that many X films have not been submitted to the· Code and Rating Administration. These non·su~ milted films self-apply the X rating. No X film may carry the Seal of Approval ol the Code and Rating Administration. TIDS, IN BRIEF, is the movit! rating system. Responsible leaders in the mo- tion picture industry are providing these ratings as a public service lo parents and families. We lry to make the raUngt-as accurate as humans can, lhough we know there will always he d!S11.greemenls with our judgment. Meanwhile, we are con- tinuing ta urge responsible film-makers to command all the ir skills to produce movies of good taste and creative ex- cellence. .JACK VALENTI President ~tot1on Picture Association ·New York, N.Y. J,nte /\'lght /\'olse To tf'le Editor: In reply to Bill Conde (Mailbox, Jan , 21 J entitled "Street Oraga:trs" (2.0th Street in Costa ~1csa) J believe our por- tion of the neighborhood Is partially re- sponsible for some of the noise he setms to think is so deafening. But I can't quite agree on the time element involved. We are avid motorcycle fans. We participate in dirt races, therefore, aur bjkes are stripped of pipe!:, baffles and extra weight. They are not street legJJ. But I can guarantee Mr. Conde that they are not ridden on the s~l nor at' the time of night he refers to. l'm inclined to believe that Mr. Conde has a ~neighbor that watches the late show at fu11 blast or plays his stereo unit super hlgh, OUR STREET IS really no different than any other street. Every street has its cy('llsts and fast cars. But the police have been on this street at least four tim- es In the last month thanb to a dial-hippy r.elghbor of ours who insists on calling the police each and every time a cycle is started up. regradless of the time of day. And I might add, that they arrive in ex· actly three minutes and ten seconds after they are called, Maybe someone should call about those no.isy Air Cal jets that fly over day and nighl And don't forget to call city hall and complain about those noisy 4 1.m. street sweepers. J. & C. CLAY'"'N De fe nds Tucke r Tn the Etti tor · The letter from Don Canlrtll. forrntr Costa flfesa nev.·spaper reportt.r.fd.ltar, now of Las Crn«s. N.M. (Maltbo1, Jan. 14) is an unwarranted attack on City Councilman George Tucker by a person who does not reside in Otl& stale, to SI-)' nothing ot this city. Opinions expressed by dtlitns of Cost.1 Meta about oor coundlmtn art surtly welcomed. u with any words of en- couragement or praise by "out&lder1. '' but derogAlory mnark1 dtsla:ned to af- fect the city's fUturt governmental sff\J('· lure by a per~ not a.ctlvely contributing to it must surely be unwelcome. TO EXPRm MY """ lhouaht• on Cowlcilmln Tucker, I believe him ID be a contcitntlouo contributor ai!d admire hi! tenacity Jn the !act of much apparent personal opposition in the council. Hls re· eJectlon is vital tr our couor.11 11 to remain objedJvt. Any body of men Who aJ)fltar to be Jn perffrt 1ceord In govemm1Yrtlal matters must be viewed v.1th aome wsp\-clon. George TUc.ktr Is not easily railroaded . ' r • • • • Mailbox ' Let"'' l•om ,.....,.. •re wtlcomt. Norm•ll'I' """'~ tl'lovld C011WY ltwlr ""._ l" JOO ~I O• ltU. The •ltl'll -.i ~ Jelle~ lo 111 uitu or ellrnf. "'t' libel II .._,,..., "" lellert ll'Wtl lncll.Jd.ti •I•· "11'.rtC ..... m.1111"9 ltddf'IU, bvl 111""1 .... ~ tit. w!!~"-111 Ofl r9QUISI If Wffid..,.I r1•l0f'I 11 IP?lf9nf, '°'"1 win flClt 11e l'W!lillfld. aiid is the type of councilman we need In this YOWlC and growing community. I suggt.st Mr. Cantrell confine his politJcaJ views to his own locale. We have suffJcleJ)t quattfied Tuesday morning palitica! quarterbacks on t.and. JAMES A. E. HYAMS 'Com Palhs' for ill esa To the Editor : This is an open plea to all citizens of Costa Mesa to join hands with me in my Operation Caw Path. Some of the happiest and most carefree days of my life were Sl>Cnt walking to school on an old cow path, the soft and ~ilky dust squishin1 between my bare toes. A little dungbeetle would come roll· ing along wi,lh his house of dung. I would give him a little help with my big toe , thtn go merrily along my way. with no worry o{ fast cars. NOW lttANY OF aur precious little ones have anly a blacktapped street ·with speeding autos lo compete with. -I know tha t concrete sidewalkt are too expensl'le for the average home owner to go lt alone, but my Operation Cow Path will only take a little time and energy rem ov· ing fences, brush. flow er beds, oversized mall boxes, etc., from an eight-foot ease- ment. by doing this we can get aur little ones back an the curbs and out of the streets. How can we educate them to walk on the 1ldewalk when we give them only streets to walk oo? DAVID J. YARNAL Legnll:re Abort ion To the F4ftor: tttrs. «Cbert L. Sassone's description of 111 seveD-Wttk old fetus (Mailbox Jan. it) is genuinely moving. Who would want lo hurt a tiny little child-let that already bas tht. "f1millar features ... of an adult"? No on e, of t:OUrse-unless there is a compelling reason. But what one person might not see as a compelling rea~n. another might . Surely no one is in a bet· ter poslUon to jud1e what ls a compelling re1son to abort an unbom child than the expectant mother htrse.U, the one who will bear the responslblltly of nurturing th•t child to adulthood if it is born. i'M'·suRE Mfs. Sassone would agree that motherhood is ooe of lhe most solemn and important dulies a human being can undertake. For the sake of the child u we11 u for the sake of the mother, shouldn't It be undertaktn only by choice and with wholehearted com· mltment? Birth control devices have gone a fo~ way to make "mothtrhood by choice ' po.uible, but they are risky in more ways th111n one. And 50 Is an illegal 1bortlon risky In more ways than oM:. Mn. SaSM>ne seem~ t(I imr:ily that if abortion Is not leg11llttd, thou tiny little fetuSts will be sa\'td from torturous deaths. But of COllrM that 1J not eo. · MANY. P~RHAPS MOST. of lht!ln would continue, as nov.'. to be tom from the uten1s by an Instrument wielded, JW"rhaps clumsily, by one wtllini to break the law. Kttplng abortion llltgat wlll not uve the fetus. bu1 leaallztng tt might save the mother's life. Thoae or us Vi'ho favor ltialltin& abor· lion don't wi~h to impose our valu es on Individuals lik e t.frs. Sassone who ob· vlously don't agree with us. But leealizing abortion would not do that. It would simply give us all a choice . I'M ACCUSTO~fED, I'm sorry to say, to talking With men v.•ho are only too will· ing lo sacrlfict their wives' Jives hour by hour and year by year for the "sake of children," but it pains me detply to read a letter from a woman who shows deep compassion for a fetus and none at all for her sisters. other women. As to Judge Mast's recent decision: Mrs. Sassone may disapprove, but I know one woman who framed the news story that told or it and others who shed tears of gratitude when they heard a.boot it. JOY CONNORS \Ve~t Coast Public Relations Co.chairwoman. Nation~! Oraanizalion for Women (NOWl ,. Laguna Beach Stick to the Fa cts To the Editor : Mrs. Robert L. Sassone's letter (~tailbox, Jan. 21) stated that the seven- week-old fetus "bears the familiar features ..• of an adult." While the fetus resembles a human being, il also resembles the fetuses of many animals and birds al the same stage o[ developmenL Secondly. anly if ane can find an adult whose head makes up at least SO percent of its total body size, and whose lees are much shorter than its anns, can one say lhat a seven-week~ld fetus bears any familiarity to an adult human being. A FETUS WHO responds lo the touch of a hair is simply obeying the rtflex of a re sponse to external stimulation which is a characteristic of ALL li ving things. This cannot be interpreted as a purely human attribute, nor can it be constred that a fetus feels pain. \Vhen a pregnancy is terminated, the fetus succumbs to ox· ygen :starvation. NOT pain. There has been enough emotionalism expre ssed i~ the pros and cons af abor· tion. Let's stick to the facls. What an abortion does is to remove I.he products of an unwanted pregnancy for whatever reason a woman decides that she cannot bear the child. And that reason is the business of that \\·oman and her doctor. MARGO MOORE Huntington Beach Bab11 Sea l Slnughler Tot.be Editor : Again it Is almost time lor "THE GREAT 1970 SEAL H\JNT."' ocheduled to start in M11rch. Vp and down the Cana· dian coastline. the Gulf of SI. Lawrence, and off Alask•, Canadian, Norwegian, and American seal slaushterers will torture. club. spear, shoot and skin (often while still 1\lve) hundreds of thousands af seals. M1ny o( the: victims are just babies who&e fr.antic mot.hers often try to throw the1r own bodies ovtr them in M e(fort to prevent their brutal slaughter. 011IER THOUSANDS of seals will .also be shot. IJlfftd, or 5peared from ship- board. fltany of these "''ill not be killed outright, but v.·111 be painfully wounded, wailing helplP.!iSly for a slow and ii:gonli- lng. lonely death under the dark ict. Shamc on our own Department af tnter!Gr which will again hire pro- fc11~lnnal !Ital killers to \vantonly club to death ovtr 60,000 seals on the Pribilof! Tslands orr Alaska! Soon the ice will be a crimson patch work, strewn with the !iklnless remains of what once were barmless, Intelligent miunmals that have died an aionlting. unbelievably cruel and uM ecessa ry death. BUT YOU CAN DO something. Insist by letter or wire to the following that this brutal massacre be stopped : Hon. Ame Gunneng . No rw e g i a n Ambassador. 3401 r.tassachusetls Ave., \Vashington, D.C. 20007. Hon. A. Edgar Ritchie, Canadian Ambassador. 1747 flfassachusetls Ave., Washington, D.C. 20036. Pre.!lident Richard M. Nixon, The White lfouse, Washington D.C. 2.0500. Further detail.!! can be obtained from Friends of Animals. lnc., ll Wm! &Oth Street. N.Y.C. 1002.1. OORIE VAN BRUNT Save IJpper Bn11 To the Editor : The Upper Bay at Newport Beach is one of the two re1naining esluaries in all Southern California and by "developing'' !his land factually marshl , as is sug· gested by the Irvine Company, it will be completely lost as a sanctuary for the migrating birds. Thi:i docs not seem serious but it destroys the ecology of the area to the detriment af the people. AS FOR THE recreational facilit ies proposed by the Irvine Company-the children in this area have plenty or recreational activiUes. but will soon have no natural areas left unless we are farsighted enough lo protect such areas from developers who '1el us fa ce it) wanl to make money. Another concrete channel with the water walled in is not to be comp ared with a natural bay in in· terest and is nothin(I to leave lo our children and grandchildren suc h as a naturel ei;tuary. Once lost this bay can never again be reclaimed-do not let us lose it. GERTRUDE DALE \liclo11s Cr lnie Circle To the Edit or: In each succeeding year for the last umteen years the FBI has informed us that more crimes had been committed than in the previou s year. What is 10 depress.Ing is the fact that the crime rate may cooti.nue upward until some drastic changes are made. The big question h1, what changes? PerhaJ>.!1 if we could pin· point where changes could be made. then the chan~es themselves would becoine obvious. THE POLICE ARE universally criticit· e.d..because they are behind the times and that if they were given more money they would be able fo cope "'"Ith the modern criminal. Yet, the pollcc have much In common with Batman in tf'lal Batman \viii capture a crim inal like Joker and llLI'n him over to the autborltles. Then In a few weeks Batman is once again seen chasing Joker . This may be fine for TV bul we the people are fed up with this ''icious circle of a committed crime. punishment, rehabilitation, par o I e , another committed crime. ~IANY OF OUR more conservative C'ilizens point thtlr fin1er or scorn at the coorts and especially the U. S. Supreme COurt. Yet , the cou!U are anly £allowin~ thl! Constitutlon of the United States and the Bill of Rtghts. Th1t anyone can rault lht courts nnd ignore the fact that our Constitution and Bill of Rl&hts help those !hat have cho.'\tn crime as a profession Is almost beyond belief. We the people arc aware of and fed lip with &he fact Iha\ criminals who commit a crime itre allO\\'· cd lo go free. btcause of 11ome unreal lechnlcal point that only h8s rne.aning to those lhal make their living out af the Jaw, In conclusian, the riptJ of Ule creativt ' citizen are n1uch n1ore important than the rights of the parasites. HARRY B. McOONALD JR. Bln11 k Ballol To the Editor : In our local area, v..-e are going to havt a type of school bond election ~xl month. I am going to vote in a way l never thought I would : l 'm going to turn in a blank ballot. l have reached tbal c..'Onclusion by the following process of elimination: , I WILL NOT vote Yes 'or two rea:sons: First, every studtnt in the sLate must have the same amount of rrwney spent on him. Rlght now, local financing breedii: unjustifiable inequities in the quality or California education. Although wt should keep local contro l, costs for education in California should be financed 100 percent by the state. Each distri ct must get money only and directly proportional to the ,num· ber of students in the district. SECQND, p r o p1e, r t y taxes f o r homeowners who live on their ~perty should be abolished. for' the simple reason that you canf)OI dig the money out of the ground . Your property tax money really comes from your income. making the income tax the only fai r tax fron1 v.·hich educationa l costs should be deriv- ed. Property should only be taxed ir the owner makes money from the properly, such as in the cases of fandlord s, farmers. corporations. and church-owned property on v.·hich there is no church. These are lhe reasons I will not vote Yes. I WILL ALS:O not vote No becau~ under the present school-bond·pa"sage rt· quiremenl. 67 percent app rov<1 ! 1~ necessary. That means my No vote would cancel out two Yes votes. and that would give me more power than I am entitled t.o. School bonds. whether financed loca!lv ar state-wide, must pass with 50 percerit approval. Any percentage more or les11 than that is a dictatorship of the minor!. ty, which ii; neither constitutional oor morally sound. l'ETE ENGLAND!:I! . Liiie r a t CillBS To the Editor · A letter to the editor by some wise. 11.1.v (January 7) entitled "Harbor High Lit· ter" stated that !ht horrible meS& on the grounds after luncb at Newport H!\rbor High School shou ld be photographed and win some S'>rt of a pri2e. I challenge that statement. I sugge~I that your photographer take a picture or the cafeteria at Costa Mesa High School 11fter lunch on any school day. I'll btt our side win~. C R. CLAH K ---- Wednesday, January 28. 1970 Tht editorial paoe of tht Dail11 Pilot seeka t.o inform. and st.im- ulatt f1ecMrs by P"e•enting this 'Pltwspaper's oplnfons and coni. mentarv on topfcs of "lterest Df\d 1lg11ificanct, br providi11g a forum for th1t cxprt~on of 0"' rmiders' O))it1iorl1. and bfJ prest1ltfng the diverse viaW. points of inform«t obstrvers nnd spokttmen on topics of tll« dov. Robert N. Wood, Publbher :· ·. .. : I : ' l • . • • . l l(ids Decide ·on Drugs ' Countian Brings Youths Information Bt ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of"'-Dill'( •11tt ilttt Son1etimes Rick Berman must \\Tile off part Of his businesli as a totaJ lo!!, beyond all salvage. He hates that, but he is a realisl One part of that business was 13 years old, pregnant, infected with venereal disease, sick with infectious hepatitis and strung out on drugs. She had a better idea who gave her gonorrhea than who gave her the unborn baby. The Sunset Strip was familiar. The guys were mo5lly strangers. "Thls kid "''as completely out or It,'' says Berman. a \Vestminster resident who spent 12 of his 16 years with the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office in its bureau of narcotics. He did a good job, quitting last June as a sergeant. But that interview with a drug- destroyeci girl barely into adolescence was just one more time when he realiied the job he \\'as doing was being done too late. So he quit, when given an acceptable alternative. "She was finished. A vegetable." says Berman, himself the father of five children. UNIQUE SYSTEM The former lawman I! now director or the unique new Office of Narcotics Education Resources for the Centinela Valley Union High School District in llawthorne. No other school system in America has undertaken such a program to coonleract the drug problem, leading Rep. Glenn M. Anderson CO.Los Angeles) to review it recently before Congress. Authorities in Was'.llngton and Sacramento are keeping a close watch oo the progran1 headed by Berman, as its six-point effort directed toward 130,000 pupils, down to ele mentary age, pro- gresses. They think the di strict may bt: onto something worU:. copying by other public ~hoot systems, possibly deserving st.ate and federal assistance. So does Berman. "\\'e pc.y too much attention to just the physical harm -the difference between marijuana and heroin -and debating tha t is sense less," he explains. "Drug abuse is drug abuse. There's your problem." fllIDDLE DRUGS Dialogue on heroin-versus-marijuana may have IL! purpose. but Berman believes more concern should be shown toward so-ccilled middle drugs, the mileage markers on the road to human tragedy. Sm<iking pot may seem like a game, but these tom pour ds can rapidly transform it Into pharmaceut.ical Russian rou~tte, with all but one chamber loaded, instead of the other way around. Berman's new job began to evolve in tummer. 1968. when he was appointed as the LASO narcollcs bureau training and education s..!rgcant, to advise the 5uburban district's vacation drug v.·orkshop. Tht revolulionary nC\Y !l<:hool ad- ministrative department grew from there, aided by Hawthorne High School Football Coach Hal Chauncey, a part- time Orange .:aunty resident, in Surfside. "We were just Jueky enough to have. a district willing to do this," says Chauncey, co-author of a just.published handbook used in the program. "The ·whole thing is not intended to bf: punitive . ., he explains. but rather to help youngste rs avoid the self-punishment of drug abuse by making their o"'n decisions to do so. Drug dealers -cootrary to .some popular misconceptions -do not force pills down a would-be user's throat , and hook him, because that would defeat their basic pur pose, 50 they use persuasive, if crude psychology. The sa me basic principle applies in Berman's job. MAKF,S CHOICE "Let's use the 1ame tools the pro- flOTlent.s of dru gs use.·• he says, noting Lhat a youngster will make his own choice in the matter. based on what h.is society can oifer In terms of guidance. "The intent is not to say : 'This is a red. Tl's bad. Put lt down because I said sc.' but to present the. infonnatlon and let them decide." explains Berman. Force. ii not the. answer In challging human viewpoints. Only as a last resort are. lawmen called when a student comes to Berman's at- tention In the CVUHS program, such as in cases or on-campus sale, or being dangerously under the Influence or a drug. Arrest under the Jat ler circumstance, (or example eliminates any requirement (nr signed parental consent prior to get- ting the victim emergency medical treat- ment. Getting the admitted user, or the curious t e en in seurth of drug tx· pc!riences onlo 11n understanding of their own motivations and achieving perspec- tive In outlook on tire is what school of· fi cials v.·ant. LitUe con!!trucllvt can be accomplished hy giving a teenager a police record -if the offense Is reasonably minor -when whal he needs is help in developing betltt self-saUsfacllon tnd pertonal judgment. The conctpt Is to help. not harm. NOT INVOLVED "Hl!'S not involved in law enforcement here," emphasizes Coach Chaune!ty, who a)9f' has a high BChOol-age daughter· "For yran -the more l worked narcotlc11, -the more t sa\1i' a need for thia." adds Berman. "8 od In the pail two years. I really got tumed onto it." Btllnnlng with facuJ.ty and pannt. orientation, the CVUltS progrll!n Is designed to draw In students referred after off-ampu1 arrest. or by school 'LIFE IS A DRAG.' MOANS MANY A TROUBLED TEEN Educ1tor Rick Berm1n Counselt Grogey Drug·U1tr aulhorities, families, clergy1nen o r psychological counselors. "We have a lot of self-referrals that we. didn't have. at the start now too," says Berman, hopefully indicating an acce~ tant attitude. among the student body. "There are several objectives and each has le> work or the whole thing falls on Its face," he continues, ~aylng they are now either completed or in progress. These are the six key poinl..s : -Development or a classroom drug· teaching concept -Establishment of the referral center, where weekly groop counseling and in· divklual talks, as needed, are offered. - Establishment of firm, consistent district policies on drUg abuse. -Crganizalion of an adult education program for parents and teachers, con· ceming drugs and the unique CVUHS system. -StarUng an efficient exchange or in· fonnatlon on narcotics and drug abuse pollcies with other agencies from the district Itself to city, coonty, &tale and federal levels. INTERVIEW, EVALlfrE Berman himself will interview the young drug dabbler and evaluate the circumstances be.fore recmunendlng one among several methods of handling the case. He ha11 talked with about 350 students since September. Options -beginning at BJ'Test and C.lf· pulsion for serious offe~ -include transfer to another cam)Jlls, a con- tinuation school for prob!em-puplls -or return to one's own campu11, and classes. One thing is definite. All require al· tendance at \li'eekly group counseling sessions, where the individual can begin to get insight into his troublesome feel· ings and wrong motivations as well u coruitructive ones. "Jn doing this, the. student will be aided in seeing that drug abuse Is an unsatisfactory fonn of escape which can offer no realistic solutions toward meeting and coping with the oworld," Berman says. How many youngsters are u.sing'l', that's the inevitable question. "About half your high school kids will experiment. • .one, two, three tllnes," says the man who should know. "But five to 10 per~nt will beocme frequent or habitual users." "That's a pretty good gang ." he adds grimly. ARRESTS JUMP He also cites statistlca showing juvenile drug arreslli up 100 percent or more ln most areu where law agency jurisdic· tions keep comparative reCGrds. "The school district 1.nd the parent! don't realize the extent of the problem," he say1, adding that it Is so large and complex now that old-fashioned methods cannot be expected lo solve it. Not only that, Bennan charges, but · are numerou1, but Berman says the at. titude of breaking away from society and making one's own maverick way through the tangle of 20th Century troubles Is becoming more prevalent. "You can't do it if you're just going lo blame everybody else for lhe wrongs In t:1e world and go gel sloned ," he remarks. The 14-year~ld freshman girl with no future to look toward -such as the bright dreams past generatic.ns had - found her own temporary solace In po~ ping barbiturate pills to get through the school day. Now, she is beginning to learn something of the emotional processes wilich gene.rate. such despair, but for thousands of other young people the gnawing, emptiness is as real as t.he mo.. ment. Can American society It.self look rorward to any outside. help in attempting to curb the growing problem of drug abuse among. its young people, 1uch as last year's border-closing OperaUon Intercept? Berman believes not. "'That's just tokenism.'' he says with a trace of bitterness left over from Lhe taste. or 12 yea:s u a nark and the knowledge that the economies of a dozen nations are based on drug selling. CAN'T STOP IT "Say you're going to do what you can do.'' he adds, '"but don't say you're going to stop lnlemational trafficking." Didn't authorities demonstrate concern by setting fire to marijuana caches last week in Culiacan, Mexico, w h e n crusading Deputy U.S. Attorney General Richard Klie.ndienat visited? '"Mexico burni:'lg its fields of marijuana Is like Iowa burning 10 acres of corn," Berman comment.! wrily. Does widespread public educaUon do much to help, such as appearances before service clubs and other such organlta· lions? "That's not where the problem Is," he replies. Tbe basic answer -now -appears possibly lo lie in organization of 1uch school programs as the one Berman heads In city-donated office apace at the Hawthorne Community Service! Center. Because that's just where the problem is, among young people. "And our district is no different than any other," observes Coach Chauncey. "Except for the fact that we recognized the. problem." society remained blind as drug abuse AIONEY PROBL~I moved from a shadowy, storybook un· They a180 recognize another problem: derworld setting into well·to-do family money, although ak1 could be on the way homes and progresslvt: public 1SChools. if Gov. Ronald Reagan, President "It wa1 something far away• unreal... Richard Nbon, and those controlling the the average family had no contact. Thus . . ~,.,, many parents. as well as professional purse.strmgs are unpresoo:u. people, were unprepared-emotionally as Next to the fact of drug use among well as intellectually -to cope with the young Americans itself. Berman believe.a current situation." the next worst problem to overcome ls One of tho.<ie professional people was a blindneu and self-deception on the part cvtJHS teacher who aat ln recently on a of adult.a: who won't recognli.e It ls groop session as Berman -the onetime. serious. nark -and some of her students rapped, "OUr answer must be a strong, positive "They were now speaking from another .approach by the adult world honf.ltly world, from a context entinly alien to contronting its children and at tht same my apparentfy superfidal appraisal ot Ume letting them know that as adults we young people on a campus," she marvel-care er.ough to take constnJcllve acUon." ed sadly. be warns. SUDDEN AWARENESS The Centlnela Valley school system has "A good deal of the shock of diKOVer)'. begun an adult educaUon coarse on the t believe, was a sudden awarenea11 that t drug program, with teachers receiving had unconscio~sly built n1y 9wn world of Slllary credits for completion. con\l'Cnlent self-deception totconveniently One group of I'! teachers ts tnvolv!d In blot out the reality of sometl.tng I did not riding along with Los Angeles County wish to,see or know about," aha said. Sheriff's Office radio car deputies to get ''T cannot hel but wonder If many a firsthand look at lawmen's problems In adults are unwltllngly d:>.ing the same facing drug abuse.. tiling?" UNDER!IUNNED Berman agrees, assessing this u a ma· He also notes sourly, wtine on that sub-jor problem among te.a-~be.ra. l During the first few days of 1Chool tn eel, that the LASO Is undermanned, "1th St:ptember. Berman said ~ conceutr.ated only 90 deputi5 in the narcotics bureau. on studenta no older t.han ll ~Ing lie believes, however. In what he and !hat most bad used all miclt drugs the Centln<la Valley Union Wgh Scllool available stx to 15 times each. DI.strict are doing, but it. Is almost too Where dots the root of drug abu1e lie? early to detennlne how successful the Probably -or at least partl11ly -In ~pt may be . the fact that while contemporJrY life of·--.!.\. Asked that question. he can only teU fen more in many way& than ever what measures have been taken so for - before, It can also be frightening, from being a qulet Ustener for 1 LrustraUng and forbidding. traglcaJly unhappy girl -to broad educ:a. "There's nothing to look forward to," tional progr&mS for the community It.self. whlmpered one 14-year-old girl. a And even then, Btrman pauses to mtmber of a generalion. whose rorward· reflect on It all view lnclude.s the posslblllt.y of tota l "How do you measure success?," he nuclear ext~rmJnatlon. Or els~ slow sur. aslts. hinting that more than yardsticks focallori thf'OUib unreversible ruin of the will be nwkd to gauge how (ar it It from afr. this end to one tbat la not yft In sight Theories aboot the Wlderlylng , .. ...,. from hen. Down the Mission Trail Game Tourneys Set Saturday MlSSION VIEJO -Group tournaments In caroms, maze, chess, ping pong and checkers will take place Saturday. Recreation center members aged 7 through 9 will compete at 10 a.m.; ages 10 through 11 at ,!l a.m. and ages 12 through 14 at 1 p.m. at the center. e \llllalfl! Gr""'' Open LAKE FOREST -Village Green one or several Lake Forest recreational areas is now open Tuesday through Friday. Playground supervisor Dennis Kubeska will be available between 3 and S p.m. for participation in basketball, game!! and other activities. The park has playground equipment, grass and • championship tennis court. e Parade E11trles Set SAN J UAN CAPISTRANO -Entry blanks are now available for the. Fiesta de las Golondrlnas parade Saturday March 21. The parade, which Is scheduled for two days after the retum of the. swa\Jows to the old ml!sion will begin this year at 1 p.m. There are « categories for entries: including floats , bands, marching unlts and equestrian units. Send inquiries to the Fiesta Assoc.ia· lion, Bot 532-San Juan Capistrano, 92675, Mrs. Silve1"vood Rites Saturday . Servl.~s will be held Saturday at J p.m. m Pacific View Chapel for Nellie P. Sil· verwood of 1573 Louise St., Laguna Beach who died Sunday at Beverly Manor Con- valescent Hospital, Capistrano Beach. She was 93. P-tra. Silverwood Is survived by a daugh- ter, Mn. Marion La.Boube of Laguna Be.a ch ; a sister, Mrs. MabPJ Starbuck of Seal Beach; a brother George Bradley of Detroit, Mich.; and by one grandchild and two great-grandchildren. Dr. Dallas R. Turner will conduct the service. on Saturday with Interment to follow at San Gabriel Cemettry. --- ' LAGUNA BEACH -WARNINW- 1\US 10WN MJt( 8£ HAZARDOUS 10 'llU CAAEER ! YOU MAV MOr lliA>IT 'b LE'AVE Embezzlement DAil V I'll.OT 1F By Phil lnltrl•ndl County Attorney Draws 1 to 10 Prison Term Attorney David Cadwell Tuesday wu .sentenced to one to 10 ye.an in state prison following his conviction on charges that he embezzled an estimated $35.000 Crom a Santa Ana chapter of the Disabled American Veterans organization. Superior Court Judge Ron a 1 d Crookshank sentenced the Santa Ana lawyer on two counts of graod theft. The prison terms will run concurrenUy. Referring to Cadwell as "'a bad apple," Judge Crookshank denied the. appeal of defense counsel Edward S. Ulman for the probation denied by the probation depart- ment In a recent report. And he crisply rejected Ulman's arguments for a new 1rlal with t.bt comment that the evidence assembled In the Cadwell trial was 'much stronger than t.hat In comparable cases." Cadwell filed a $:1,IXXI al)9Cal bond Im· medlate.ly on leaving the: courtroom. Ulman predicted that the appellate. bench wJU •'quuh this convjctlon 1n •hurry." The. portly balding lawyer had no com· ment to offer on the sentence Imposed. llls wife and 11mall son were with him in the courtroom. Cadwell, 36, was found guilty by a Superior Court jufy la.I Dec. II •Iler 1111 second trial on charges that he mtsap. proprlat<d funds of the Jack Fisher chapter of the DAV. His first trial ended in a hung jury. Cadwell W8' Indicted by the Grand Jury after it was tutlfled that he took the money while acting as trustee for tht chapter in another legal 1ctlon. Witnesses said Cadwell told them that his wlthdrawab represented legal feta which would be. roughly equal to the sums transferred from the chapter account to hi11 own. Judge Crookshank ttflected tod<)' th•! those le.gal fees amounted to fltO 111 hour and lhat Cadwe.11 llhoold not have usured chap .. r Olllcen that the Superior Court would confirm the validity of the fees charged. ''This was not Just theft, th1s wu also breach of trust," the judge commented. ''Members ot the state bar are expected to behave in an hooorsbl<, ttp11tabl< and trustworthy .....,., and thla < ... tumed out to be otherwise." A rtote bar omcfol todoy con!lnnod th~ the luue Of Cldwell'• poalble disbonnent ln>m the nrrlllluUon Is cur· reoUy betng ditcuqed. WHERE YOUR PATIENCE PAYS OFF WITH ••• FINAL SALE MARKDOWNS DE LISO DEB LADY FLORSHEIM · REG. TO $25. NOW $ 80 "Where Shopping Pl••S• ••• All S•!es Flntl. No EKchen9e1 or Refunds. • tif a LIFE STRIDE COBBLER COVER GIRL MISS AMERICA REG. TO $18. NOW $ 80 Stle Stertt TltuMsy. Doon Opon t :lO A.M. 1052 IRVJNI e WISTCLlff PLAZA N!WPORT l!ACH e $41·1614 Six Miles . F.rom . Can·o (C-ltllH llf tlle DtllY ,1 .. 1 llllll Jockey Georsi• Poole almost lost e second race of his career by a hisker. Instead, he Jost it .by· sev.:..:. al len~thi. Poole was scheduled ride tn the fourth race at ffia. ah in Florida but his trainer &\'kt had to shave· off his beard or It as no go. He shaved it off -an d ished eighth. The trainer was bis 'ther. ·-· • The dtvottes OJ law and or- der might consider a visit to Sun Pratrl.e, Wis. tDhose 10,000 smiling citizens got along i11 1969 witl1 110· reported criminal honticid.es. robberies. rapes or aggravated assaults. There were only 16 burglaries, five a u t o ChcJts, 38. casu -Of larceny .over I $50 value· ana '8JCasei oJ theft under $50. Stolen propert11 total· ed $11,550, and $7,7J0 of C/&at wru recovered. • P opcorn and peanuts have been ned at the annual Southern · mi.a. Boat Show -tinder· w a r. is week in Los Angeles. Paul A· echt, chairman of the marine ex- bition, said in explaining the der: "IC I never see a nother lit- kid dumping his bag of popcorn er my new boating carpet, that ill be too soon." Another exhibi- r, nat identified, said, 0 Wben ose kids a couple of years . (Igo . uted a ' b.1g. 0£. ·fie Bn'uts into-the ; s tank, that was simply too uch." • Dy United Press laternatlonal lsraell planes bombed mllllary targets within aix miles ol Cairo today in a raid Defense Minister Moshe Dayan said ""'as aimed at undermining the leadership of Egyptian President Gama! Abdel Nasser. · ·tr was the closest raid to the Egyptian capital since lhe 1967 war and It brought Cairo's anUaircrafl batteries Into action tOr' fh'e nm time since then. No Egyptian Hghters rose to challenge the Israelis which hit an army camp on the banks of the Nile at El Maadl, six miles from Cairo and only a few miles across the river Nile from the Sphlux and the Pyrarriids. , They. also hit a ca1np at Dahshur, 15 miies south of Cairo and oniy nine miles from IJ1.e -Soviet built' and financed in· dustrial comple1 of Helwean. They were the· nlnth deep raids inside Egypt since Jan. 7. · ·Dayan's statement was made in an ad· dress .to a Jorelgn press assocition lunch in Tel Aviv today. "We · .want to undermine t h e Jeadenhip," D!lyan said . "We want lo tell the people of Egypt, look here, you people of Egypt, your l'.!aders are not doing you any good." · ·He ·sald1his was one purpose of Ute stepped up air offensive against Egypt and the others werf! to make it easier for Israel to "hold the line" along the Suez Canal, to convince the E g y p t i a n le&dershlp they are not ready to resume alHrut war and io force Egypt lo return to observing the cease·fire, Court Rejects School Standa1·d Plea -hy Kirk WASHINGTON (AP) -The Supreme ~ flatly rejected today a plea by Gov. Claude Ki,rk of Fl orida that it set national standards for school segregation. Kirk's plea, which was framed in an at· tempted suit against the 49 other states and 'Secretary Robert H. Finch ol the , · nepartrnent of Heallh, Education and Welfare was turned back unanimously. ·The u.:isigned decision, speaking for all (jf:the ·eiglit Justices, said Kirk ~ad failed lo "state a claim against any of the defendants wartanting the exercise of the orhdnal jurisdiction of the court.'' Only the Supreme Court, under t11e Constitution, can judge disputes between states. The court rejected Kirk's move without waiting for responses from the .oYi.er .states or {r9m Finch. WHITE HOUSE GUARDS SPORT NEW UNIFORM 'Like Extras From Lithuanian Movie' Says Critic New Wliite House Police Dres s Gets Poor Review \VASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on·s August idea ur Europcan·style rormal dress garb for \Vhilc I louse police has blooml.'ll in late January -to a cold reception from some critics. The nc1v $95 outfits ordered for aboul 100 policemen are describ.!d by the Secret Service as "a white cream tunic, 1nade oul of elastique, v>'ilh a double-breasted I Airliner Lost Over Lake Erie; Wrecka ge Found CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -A TAf; Airlines plane carrying nine persons disappeared over Lake Erie this morning, and later a Coast Guard rescue helicopter found 1vrcck;igc on ice in lhc lake 15 miles norlh of Avon L;ikc, Ohio. There are no apparent survivors, the helicopter crew reported. The Coast Guard sa id !hat the V.Teckugc 1vas spread over a quarter-mile ;1r<'a and the n1ain wreckage possibly went through the ice in the lake. cu t, three buttons, a standup collar, gold nylon trim, and a vinyl cap,'' Nixon apParently was pleased by the uniforms since he bad four of lhe police in their new ouUils al the front door of the White House when Brllish Prime J\finister Haiold Wilson arrived for a state dinner Tuesday nighL It was believ· ed lhe first time the guards had taken a formaJ part in a state diMer ceremony. Some critical commenta fro m bystanders who got a first public glimpse or the uniforms ranged f r o m "Late \Veimar Republic" to "1bey look like ex· tras from a Lithuanian movie" and "N8%1 uniforms." One you ng man said the new headgear "looks like a cheap party hat." Jtmmie Muscatello, a Washington retail tailor who worked five months and submitted three versions before getting the oulfit accepted, was cheerful but con- ceded the guards had a few complainta. "A lot of the men said they felt un- comfortable, but It's like anything ebe," he said. "They'll get used to it." for 36 years the guards wore drab ebony uniforms and white ca ps. With their new outfits, they conUnue \Vearing the pants, gun and holster which .are carryovers !tom tlsUal police dress. Nixon's suggestion for new uniforms came last summer after he noticed the palace gua rds and policemen during his European tour. -- Fortas Issue 1-Carswell Quizzed On Advisor Role WASHINGTON (AP) -Jlllllt G. Jlar. rold C&nwtll aid today that SllpRme Court justJcu line quite enolJI)> to do ·in cam'll1I out UieJr .-!tutlonal ,_.,. 1ibllJU11 wiillout oerv1n1 as pmldential -·· 'Ibo question WU railed It the l<COlld clay cl the SaWe JUdldary CommlU,.'s hearinp oo Prtaideot Nixon'• nomination cl Cinwd1. a IO-,..,-..ld llOlllhmier, to be ao .auoclate jmtjce of the Supreme Court. Sen. Robert P. Grll!ln, (II-Mich..) said IOllle objectiool bad been raised tllal the court not ooly bu infrlnled on the iegis- laUve powm of Congrw but Ill mem- bers have involved themselves in the af- fairs of tbe o:ecutlve branch of the gov- ernment ile referred specifically to former Jus- tice Abe Fortu who, he aald, served al· most as a day-to-day adviser to former President Lyndon B. Johnson. Griffin, who led the fight that blocked Johnson'• nomtnaUon of Fortas to be chief justJce, uk.ed Carswell for his view of what role Supreme Court jusUces should play In this respect. carsweu said he did not think a justice should be an adviser to the President In the sense Griffin referred to and added that he couldn't conceive of Nixon calling on him to do anything like thaL J He remarked that he bad met Nixon only once when he shoot handl with him in 19M. He did not, however, preclude a Presi· dent calllna on Supreme Court members to undertake asslgnmenta in noncontr~ U.S. to Double South Vietnam's Air Force Might WASffiNGTON (AP) -s.cretar)' of the Air Force Robert C. Seamans Jr., said today the United States plan& to dou· ble South Vietnam's air force to allow the Vietnamese to take over half the air war by the end of 1971. "AJ the Vietnamese air force builds up their combat capability we obviously can draw oul our own Air Force," Seamans told a news conference.. He decllned, however, to say when the U.S. Air Fore< pull oot might be com- plete. About 4,000 American alnnen have left Vietnam thus far under the Nixon ad· ministration's program. Seamlll'll, appe.aring before newsmen to report on a recent trip to Vietnam, described the South Vietnamese as pro- grwing satisfactorily in developing their atr force, which dates back only to 1955. He cautioned, however, thal the Vlet- nameae 11face a tremendous job in all areas." "We must not expect too much," the secretary said. "There may be setbacks from time to time." At this point, Seamans said, the Viet· nameae air force is flying about 15 per- cent of. the aortlea ln Vietnam. versial maiters, saying that a presldeul must have over-all responsibiliUC!. Carswell, now a judge on the Fifth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, was nominated by Nixon last week lo fill the Supren1e Court seat vacated by Fortas' reslgoation under fire last May. Wholesale Prices Take Major Ju.mp WASHINGTON (UPI) -\Vholesale priceJ jumped 0.7 percent in January, led by a two pe~nt jump in the category covering processed animal reeds and the processed foods that make up the bulk of grocery store products. Changes in the wholesale price index often portend later move1ne.nl in retail prices. This means housewives may ex· peel increases in prices o! canned, boxed, frozen and pack.aged foods as well as dairy products, meats, poultry, fish and other products prepared for supermarket sale. 1be January advance was the largest monthly increase in the wholesale price index since a 0.8 percent rise in May, 1969. Industrial commodities advanced only 0.3 percent, but farm products and pro- cessed foods and feeds rose overall at a 1.4 percent rate in the mOnth. Manufac- tured goods increased 0.7 percent. The Labor Department's report on the wholesale price index rise came a week an.er the Bureau of L a b o r Statistics reported that consumer prices advanced 0.6 percent in December. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said in- creases in \\•holesale prices for meats, animal feeds and sugar \Vere mainly respon sible for the sharp Increase in the index for processed foods and feeds. Von Braun Gets NASA Position WASHINGTON (AP) -Dr. Wernher von Braun, the Gennan-born space roc'k· et scientist, is being moved from the na· lion's rocket development center al Hunts- ville, Ala. to a planning job in the space agency's headquarters here. Von Braun's appointment as deputy administrator for planning in the National Aeronautics and Space AdministraUon be- came effective immediately, NA&\ ad- ministrator Thomas 0. Paine said Tues- day. His successor as director of. ll:ie George C. Marshall Space Flig~t Center at .!;Iunts- ville is Eberhard ReeS, 62, a Iorrg-time deputy and World War ti coilea:gue at Gennany's rocket research center at Peenemunde. Taking llieir cue from the sono tt- tle "Blotvin' in tile \Vind." this fam- ily tDaits at an i11tersectiO"n for the light to tum as the 1vi11ds blow cold in Colorado Springs. Frank Calpeno, his wife Mi~fi and daughter Denise ~tand fast in tht gusts tliat 1'eached 41 mph in part# of Colorado. Governor Asks Law Compliance The plane carried s('ven passen~crs. a pilot and co-pilot. Had ar Contact 1vith the do1vned plane 11·a:; lo~t by Clevel and Burke Lakcfront Airport's control to11er at 7:49 a.m. 1rhen the plnne v•a<: reported 20 miles nort h11est of Cleveland. S11b11rb's New Law • The Rev.,..-Ralph O,avld Aberna- thy, succc:;sor1o Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as head of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, has received a check for $50;000 from S\vedish donors to the organ- ization. The check was handed 1o Alietnalhy by Prof. Gunnar Myr· d81, thainnan of the Swedish Mar- tin Luther King Foundation, at a government dinner in Stockholm. Abernathy, who is on his firs~ trip abroad, will Jectilfe al Gothenburg and Lund before leaving for Atlan- t<f, Ga. COLUMBIA, S.C. (UPI) -Gov. Robert E. McN air told South Carolina residents today to c:omply with the U.S. Supreme Court's de.segregation orders and crltlciz- ·-ed those "who would raise false hopes" that U:e issue can be avoided. The Coast Guard said the wreckage was found at 10 a.m. Hughes' :Spr uc e Goose Hangar Lease Okayed Parents Bear Kids' Guilt ' ~tcNair tOkl a news conference thal he disagrees With other Southern governors who have balked at the orders. "The people of S\'.luth Carolina have eslablished a repulaUon as being Jaw ·ab.idlng. I'm sure the people of this stale are not asking me to defy the la1v and urge others to defy it.'' McNair said. ''It ,' appears to me that we have run out of courts and run out of lime. We have come to the crossroads where we have to choose between compliance and de· !iance." LONG BEACH (llPI ) -llownr d Hughes' lease [or storin!! hi~ $40 rnillion ply11•ood s<'apl;-111c. "Spn1cc Goose,'' \Vhich was fl0\111 only once 32 ycJrs ago, has been extendrd for another year. The board of harbor commissioners agreed the recluse lndustrla!i.~t could e~­ lcnd his one·~Cur lca!ie ef!cctivc Sept. 3 for $36,054. Storm Moves Over Midwest ,New Sno ·w Continues to Pile Vp ' CaJllorni• • Sar.IH _,. moiltv IUrof!Y-owr Sovlll- e•n Cit!llornl• lod•Y •1tc1pt for - Pl lCh11 ol 11•lv morn!nt tw1vy IQ In lef'nt co11t1! and lnle..a H<llOnti. Tim· 1ttr11ur11 "'''' cool ... In Ike mount1l111 1NI ln•e•Jo< •Ktlon1 end 1!ron1 v111ly- r.ortt>..-1v wind• wire 11t1>t<:!t'd. • Ul. Colorado Rockies I ·lt •10 Alttu'ltlftftlut AM.,.,,.1101 ""'""", .. B1~orslir'~ Bltmt"t~ Bl.Ille 80i1D" 8"1Wr>$Vlllr r~1~·~0 C•,.t1nn,.tl oe~~e• H••h Low l'rtc • " . '/I 9 .11 .. " ~l Jt T .n ?1 ' ., l> .a1 n :u ~1 ·~ ,, Jl " )1 ., 't .(I~ •'· l l MADISON HEIGHTS-MICH. (UPI) - The Bible hints the sons may pay for the sins o( their fathers. A new ordinance in this Llctrolt suburb may result in the inr prisonment of the fathers for the sins of their sons. "We want to make it clear to parents that society expects them to e1erci!e responsibility for the acts o( their childrl!n.'' says Mayor Montt R. Geralds. J le admits there may be some legal ques- tions over the ordinance which impMes penalties of up to 90 days In jail and a $500 fine. l\1ost parents, and quite a few of the youngsters ln this middle-class suburb of 40.000 have responded enthusiastically to the ordinance, passed by the City Council J\1onday. It wlll take effect Feb. 9. The parents wou1d not be haultd Into court on charges resulting from criminal acts of lhcir children under 17, but rather ror failure to exercise "parental control." They could face the charges if their offspring commit two or more criminal nets ~.!thin a 12-month period or a.rt con- victed (;f four traffic vlolatlons during the same period. "Something like this should have been clone a Jong time ago because a lot of f..OI illnO'(ll11 and v"-lnll• '"''' mo1tlv WllllY wl!ll """'' 11•1• mornl"' «ljll!•l f(l9 In •!'le MOUtn.,n M!'Cllon1. G!.otrv "°"""""" wln<ll W11•1 lo•~•' bclo" 'h9' '"""""'· To0tv'1 11!"' w11 ,,, u~ t M9rM l•Of'I T~llUV'I mtitlmum. Low 10<'!1 ... ! ~.I. TIM ,fllr l'<tll11tlon (O~lt'Ot Ol11Flcl re• -t.d 1!0 -In lht l.Ot: A"911tl lll•'I". 50 D<'• A,\~ln•• (l•tt~ l F8"b•n•• Fort Wort~ ··-t-<•••111 ~' '~ ' ·• 1\ ~' parents don't even know what their kids art doing ," says Bill Patton, a policeman 'A-'orking in Royal Oak but livin1 in :1 til.'.ldison lleight.s. "I'd like to see something like this tn all communttlts because a lot of parenta now simply don't 1'9 JI .01 " :1 T'ro. flYHll!Y 1111llo!lk t•l!ed for Miiie ctr 00 tP<9CkllllhOr> lllt-11 Menlll\' wltfl 1-llUrtl INlll'I 2 10 I MllfMI 1llo¥9 !'Mmll, Tfllf lleldWs _... lll"lnY will\ t.,lt ~I""' fot atendl'"' ,,.,m !t>e 1. .... ltKfl l<H tollll'I. (iln!y norlllfrlY w~ from '° to • mllft Def i-r -ftll lltlqw !llf (_,,...,.. Hi.td ~ -..6). 1'N WI!« ""'""ltllfT' • ••• $1. TM ""°"lltt"'-w.,_ tuf>l'Y with Coestal :!i.,"";! •• :':' ~ ,.::'":· .. "'1! Sun. MtNHI. Tl4a Ml'flfvtt.. ~111 wio~Y t •· Tiie bewtl• wt rt ..,_ wlll'I ""'"' secoil'ld ~19h • n :OI 1,i.., J 4 iwr!llerlv wtndt "-" U le JS mlr.1 k<ond IOw •:OI tt.m. ,,. 11'1 '""" ti !lfnet. ~11111d ~ to<•I 1'MU~OAY 1110•"'9 oM! Mid .. r>CI. T~. lilt ,ltll h!tl'I ........... t ;Of•,M. 4.J Ctt"°""I "''-""'-" flllfrol ,_,ed F1rl! lllw . l ·OI '·'"· t I '""' alf 4J mllfa i !I lwlll,or In 1111 B•r· .k<:ond 111911 · ......... l 1:M1.m , 1.1 •r.""'°'"'11 ,,_,,. wl°~Od>IY r1,..i $KOl'l<I '" • . •:a 1.m. l.t ,...~ • 1ir1'1t111sr v.n..,1 lo •11oo11 10 ' "'" 11;1 ... 1:u e,m. a.u Jit111.m. 111 ine 1owtr miO•"· Mooll ltlMt 11 ·17 '""'· StB •:S11.m. fJ.S. S11n1mar11 A wi.M•-t<I llf!M'n t~•t•fl'I ~ •t'-IM <itnl•r ol t/\t COIHll•1 roo.r bf'lfllltle rlll'I •'111 .,....,. fl W•l "'11'!d\' ilM Wfl from lt>t ltoc:lt.lt• to ll'lt O•ul l~lt.tl HetvY .,,.... Wflr>ll'lfl .....,. II-~ II'>< Nlf!P!· t •ll WI-In lr>lf N it w••lllnt\ ...,,., In tllKI lor I/It -GrNI i...t.u, Tr•Wlfn w.mlllv• rlf'Pl•IMCI I~ '' It(! "" ti. mou~1,1n "''' ot C1'>10- r11ta 11 "'w 1"0W t OO>ll<Wttt •o ""' ~ll. Tiii trll tho ~Ill ll"'ll!I OU\,, """'· IP!trt ... , dt~~ lot ~•11t1~ "'"'' ... "'' Outl eo.11 wl'l!I• Ar<.!lt r~l.it <a~ !!"\l'ld tt>t-ltovt r>11r!lltr11 Nt ,.. [~~ ltllCI, lM ......... lfl'll IO• .,..., 11 t11~ .. 1''11 11 H!Wllorl, M11M. 1<1n•11 C!!~ U1 Vtl~I l ot Anot t • M•tml M•"~"Ul•I"' N""' 0>1•1~> h fW Ynrli; N~··~ Jll~!ll o~-1·....i Oll~"°"'' c11v ... ~ ... "•'"' $••·ng, -~ .... 111\1'.•U ""~-~ . P1!!1t>~"'" p.,.,_ R411'4 C ·~ ~""' 111v11 ··~ ,,.f''"'""''!I :>.•+• l~'· ... f !~~fl;~~· \~" rrtnt ~ ••• !! ' • "f'' ·~· ln1•m•1 ~ " 11 ., ~I '~ ., 11 "' ,. ..01 I• ~I ,, " I! JI ... •l .Ol .. " " ~ .• •1 SI J1 .~l ., ·~ Joi i1 ,11 d l6 •• u ti l! .01 " ~ » ·-.ll " " l 'YI 01 " I ., " " ,, .. • • " " do anything when you tell them about their kid s." Some of the youngsters agretd. A group or 16 and 17.year-olds, altling in a local drive-In restaurant alter school Tuesday. said most or their eoinpanlonJ ''ert for Slrlctet enforctment of the taws. "\V;th something like this, 50me of the kids might be afraid of doing tomething wrong If they knew their parenta would btar down on lhem." !'iaid Jim Crabtree, a 17-year<ild high school i;enior. Dut Ramey Baldridge, 18, d!sagreed. "Kids who go out and dlsot>ey the.lr pnrenta when their pmnta don 't know where they are anyway aren't KOing to chan1e becaust of thla," he aaid. "If kids don't rP.spect their parents, this law won't make them do It." Gt-raids, a father of five , said he hoped the new ordinance woukl counter just sqeh an attitude. ''Too often the parenU don't know what their kids are doing and aome seem to have the attitude, •1 don't care what you do as long as yoo doo 't bother me,' " he said. "What we're trying to do is set up some sort of counseling so we do n't have to bring the parents into court and charge them with neglecti\l~ their responsibility, · "This is a new area and I realize there will be som.:? legal questions about it," he admitted. "But my personal feeling is that these quesUons (about parenlal responsibility) must be raised.·• That's Oil Right; Quiz Strikes Well of Hu1nor HOUSTON (UPI) -A major oil company embarked on a campaign to obtain lhe answers to some puzzling questlons about the petroleun1 industry. The company aooa:ht the answers In various Houston elementary and junior hl&h schools and published these responses: • ";rhe U.S. uses ti mlWon barrels of petroleum a day -JI m'illion.is bluer thin the largest known whale.'' • "Dlnouurs helped malte oil. Now that they are dead, \VC can safely call them clumsy and stupid." • "It takes high st.Ill to find oil The lower the hole, the hliher the aklll." • '"Ibe teeniest part oil can be divided into is the drop." • "Wt u1 tbe ca111t of terostne disappearing Is evaporation. Evapora· Uon 1et1 blamed for many thlnp people forget to put the top on.·• • 0 To leatn the chances ol the drlllln1 tools geling caught ~n the hole, rotary dtllling Is carried on ll'OOlld the clock, U days a week." • "I have found name-jet drillin1 to be easier to say than to tell what lt mean.a." • "Before they actulil1 llart drilling, the land Is cleared and ~raded~ It II 11aded A-plus U U Jw oil ID ll" • 0Pdrochemlstr1 advaFIC'td the study of petroleum to the point where U Is no Jonatr und<nlandoble." • "Have you civer wondered how a wildcat could have anything to du with discovering oll? Well, I wlD uplaln It to you 1hat so h11va 1." - 'Editorial Selection' • Army Denies Censorship • SAIGON (AP) -Charges , that unfavorable news reports were censored by authorities at the American Fortes Viet. nam Network are •'completely unfounded and unsupported," investigators for the U.S. Command said today. The command 's inspector general also denied that a focmer AFVN newscaster who made the cmsorship charges during a broadcast is being persecuted for his remarks. The broadcaster, Spec. 5 Robert E. Lawrence of Atlan- ta , Ga. was transferred from Saigon to Pleiku and made a chaplain's assistant. A command spokesman said court-martial charges o f disobedien ce and in- subordination pending against Lawrence have nothing to do with the ce n sorship in- ves tigation or the newscaster's charge that he was ··not free to tell the lruth." The charges concern an earlier incident in which Lawrence refused to obey an order to drive AFVN staff members lo their downtown billets. -~~~~~~~- Nixon Lauds Officer on Flag, Button NEW YORK (UP I) -New York City patrolman Patrick Dolan, who caused a furor by wearing an Amer ican flag bul· ton on his uniform lapel. has received a letter from Pres!. dent Nixon congratulating liim on his "firm stand to honor our flag." Dolan, 36, was cited for being out of uniform Jan. 5 for wearing the lapel button. But the next day Police Com- missioner Howard L e a r y changed the regulations to allow city policemen lo \Vear nag buttons. The presidential I e t l e r . dated Jan. 14, said "1 was very pleased to see that your firm stand to honor our (1ag won a rtversal ol the ruling .. , of police rules and regula- tions . We need to encou rage Americans in pride of country. Now New York's finest have another proud badge to wea r. U .. I T1 .. ,hllt •Se-1111tor' Dies 'Senator' Ford, vaude- ville comedian whose joke-telling on radio's "Can You Top This?" gained him national fame, died of cancer at Greenport, Long Island. Tuesday. Ford. 82, be- came "Senator" in his early 20's when he was mistakenly introduced as a senator at a club dinner. Congratulations~" ,;c===========: Said Dolan, "To think that I would receive a letter from the President because I fought for someUting so fundamenl al, the love of our flag. I'll never forget it.,. FAIR F-a,t, fair, fachtal. Tko1• tkree wonh tull'I up facton iri operation on tha DAILY PILOT tdltorial pat• ,..,,,.., 4ay. A summary or the ln· vestiaatlon report released by the command said lhal there was oo censorship at AFVN. It clusilied the wilhholdlng of certain stories as '"editorial selections." ''Spec. Lawrence expressed the 'View that he and the other new s ca sters individually should have full authority to make such editorial choices." the rtpOrt said. "However, they felt that il their superiors made such choices, thi s was censorship. Such a po.siUon is inimical to lhe operation or a radio or television station." The command statement said that the sensitivity of the South Vietnamese government must be taken into account when editorial decisions are made. "~laterial which would ()f- fend the ho.st country cannot be used," lt said. tr tr * 2 in Saigon · P1·ess Corps U.S. Agents SAIGON (AP\ -Two U.S. government agents we re in- filtrated into the Saigon press corps but were withdrawn afkr their identity '>''as ex- posed, U.S. officials said to· day . ··someone goofed," said one high-ranking official. The U.S. Military Asslstaace Command for Vietnam said those responsible for issuing press credentials to the two men ''have been admonished concerning the proper pro- cedures to follow in ac- creditation. '' There was no official word on why the two agents mas- queraded as newsmen or who ordered the operation. But there was speculation that they were trying to spy out newsmen 's sources of in- formation. The men could nol be located today in Saigon. Of- ficials who dealt with their ac- creditalion and Identified them as federal investigators gave their name9 as Howard Hethcox and Will iam T . TuckP.r and said l h e y presented letters o C ln- tr od u ct Jon from the "American University Preu." ONE WEEK SALEI PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE ( I DIAMONDS A, 14Kwhi1egold pierced eorn119~ .......................................... Or19. 1-4.9.S NOW 9,77 I. Oiomond heorl shoped 9oing sreody ring ........................ , •.•••... Orig. 14.95 NOW 11.11 (. 1J4K diomond soli!oire, l4K white gold ........................... , ...••••• Ong, 137,50 NOW $119 D. 2 diamond J4K neckloce O(Cen!ed by cultured peorls ................... Orig. 15.50 NOW 14.11 l<IK GOLD JEWELRY A. l4K gold eorrings, oll dongles .. Spe:coof group values 10 16.95 ...... NOW 50~ o!f I. J.4K gold chorms, mariy styles. Ong. 12.5010 15 ............... NOW $10 to $12 ;, BIRTHSTONE RINGS A. Solitaire ~tyle ladies birthstone rin g ~. Orig. 14.95 ..................... NOW 12.77 I. ~·s diamond cnyit 1ir19. Orig. 29.95. .................................. NOW It.II C. lodiu speciol I ~I( hirrh~tone r1119~. Orog. 29.95 ........................... NOW 22.11 WATCHES A. Watches w11h lt1e now look. Orig. S20 .................................... NOW 9 ,11 I . 17 jewel men's & lod res walches. Ong. 19.95 ............................ NOW 14.11 ONE OF A KIND A. lod1es diolTIO(ld Elgin wctck. Orig. $175 ................................ NOW 131.25 I . 14K gold oil diamond wotch o"achmenr. Orig. $295, .•....•.••..•••.•.•. NOW $236 C, Sterling silver identilitolion brocele!. Otig. 5.95 ...................... NOW 3 .IS What a fantastic collectiOn of jewelry! And whot a fontastie opportunity for you to SAVE! Seldom is such a tremendous reduction mode on jewelry os fine os this. Check the outstanding selection! Check the remarkable values! Wonderful time to purchase that special lifetime treasure . CHARGf Ir AT YOUR PfNNfY'S flHE JEWELRY DfPARTMfHT. S,..ciolitilll 11'1 Pl111 Dleniend1, Olef!Mlfl4 •-Mt. Wellh.1, •1'14 • .,. SenJ... NOW! THESE VALUES AT ANY ONE OF THESE PENNEY STORES! CAN~A PARK lAKEWOOD DOWNEY IAONTClA1R FULLERTO~I HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA. SHOP SU NDAY TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! I may co semi-annual •• • '• , ' Wed...,.,,,,.,,,.,., 211, 1970 DAILY "LOT & Falrchlkl catom covered sofas ,.,, 3IO.OO 299.00-a.ft. ""'• Four styles ••• in modern, transitional ond troditionol moods. Choose your a. foo t solo in pillowbock, tuxedo, lowson or co ntemporary style. Eoch is covered to your custom order in CJecorat6r fob· rics ands covers. Loveseat, 7 ft. and 9 ft. sizes, ovoiloble ol comporoble s&ving s. may co furniture 41 • Imported glass lamps from Italy ,.,ularly 25.00 19.00 "Bollissimo" (ltolion for most beoutilul) describes these swags thot bathe your rooms with the warmth of sunshine, the subtletios of moonlight. Diffusers lone tho light to creole the mood. Eoch with 5 feet of choin. •· 17'' green leordrop, 12" dio., b. Light omber boll, 12" dio., c. 21" Amber toned cylinder, 7" 'dio. moy co lomps 63 SAVE ON LA·Z·BO~ RECLINA ROCKERS® -• " .n . ' •• e , . .... 219.00-239.00 •• 179.00-189.00~ ': Smort styl ing end solid comfort er•i yours when you choose • lo-Z-Boy® " Re cli ne-Rocke r®, from our Americona '~ collection, for your home. Plus cur ... > rent sovings of $'40 lo $50! Simply reise the Comfort Selector® ond the 3-P,OSi· lion leg rest edjusls to give you just the right •mount of comfort. Positions for rocking, dreoming, or full bed. Tradltlonol (shown) "' 219.00 17'.ot Traditional . . . . . . , ... 239.00 1n.oo Conlomp0<ary .... ,.,, 219.00 17'.ot ' moy co lurnituro I +4 may co south coast plaia, son diego fwy. at bristol, costa mesa, 546-9321 shop monday thru saturday I 0 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., sunday noon 'Iii 5 p.m. ----- ·• DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE l { • ' I Way to Pay Trash Bills Pladn& ln1h collection cltargts on water bills '""'1d be tbe 1lmplest legal way to enforce mandatory Ntuae collection In Laguna Beach. It wu pointed out to councilmen ncently that 6311 roatdences or businesses are not paying for trash col· lettlon and at.hers are delinquent. After fretting over and studying the trash problem for months councilmen are now taking a direct air proacl\, asking 1..aiuna Beach County Water D~strict directors for a meeting. \Valer board cooperation ts needed by the city. \\le lrust it wiU be forthcoming . Once the mandatory collection is accomplished, councilmen can get down to th e task of revising their requlrementa and rules abolll trash. In doing this, they might bear In mind that some Lagunans seem a trifle out of touch with the times. Th•)' have great expectations about what rubbish col· lection 1hould include which just don't jibe with what is paid, the labor market. steep hills and. traffic. Councilmen have also talked of taking proposals ·for Ule trash contract from other contractors. It never hurtl to accept proposals but they can't always be evalua ted on the simple basis of a bid. Other cities have changed contractors on the basis of a low bid only to find thttt service worsened and tbe populace howled. Certainly the present system is inequitable. A change iS: overdue. Long-winded Citizens Public o!lleiab in Laguna Beach generally have to be rretty well cornered and fati£ued before they sui· ges to some long.winded citizen that it's time to sit down. · Unfortunately when some Lagunans get wound up, a variance application for a two-foot intrusion into a sideyard becomes practically a filibuster. Many people seem to believe that public bodies make their evaluation on how much is said rather than what is said. They act ., II a sufficient volume of words could tip the scales. Often much that is spoken is repetiUous. Or oppos· In' sides begin attempting to rebut wba\ has Just been said. The \vhole process 1s inefficient and wa~'te~ the time of others who have come to the councll on business but are)ower on the agenda. Public bodies believe It is democratic to Jet every~ one have his say. This is fine if they know when to q_ult. The school board used to be particularly leruent about letting everyone talk until the cows came ho~e. But Board President Larry Taylor now sometimes in- vokes a five.minute rule. Other public bodies might take a lesson from this. A good deal can be said in three minutes or ii ve rnJnutes if the speaker has organized his thoughts. Three Council Seats Open Now is the time for alJ good critics of "the w a y they run this town," to get on the "they" side and back up their comments with action. Three seats on the Laguna Beach City Co un cil must be fiUed by the voters on Tue1day, April 14. The race Is open to any adult resident of the city who is eligible for registration as a voter. Filing begins tomorrow (Jan. 29) and closes at noon on Feb. 19. Nomination papers may be picked up at the dty clerk's office and must be signed by at least five, but not more than 10, registered voters, also resid· ing within the city limits. Successful candidates will win a four.year term, with guaranteed long hours, low pay and credit (for dis· cred it) for "the way they run this town." Two councilmen whose terms are expiring, Joseph O'Sullivan and Richard Goldberg, are planning to run for re-election. The 'lhird, Mayor Glenn Vedder, will not be in the race. Councilmen Roy Holm and Charlton Boyd have two more years to serve. s ltafornaation on Suitaltilit11 for Chiklren Is Onl11 Aina -- • f(LIPSf Jack Valenti Explains Nationwide .Film Rating Syst.em ,.. Ill<_, BecaUH: the nationwide film ratihg l)'fl.tm la of importance to movle·(lotrs .., your community, I am anxious to dttctibe wo1t It b and what It 11 .nol, whit It ttie.s to do and what it don not do. 'nte movie rallni system has one ob- Jtctivc: To Inform the: public, especially ,.,..,ts, about· the sultablUly of movie eorttcnt fer viewlng by their cblldrea. Th1t ia it.I only aim and purpose. n.e Olm ratlni system does not rote films for adult.. A rum is not rated for artiltlc quaUty, or lick of IL T,he 1yattm does not recommend n1m1 or ban films • censor films. It proviMs a public in- formation service, which the great ma· jorlty ol responsible. film producers and diltribukn believe is desired by parents. A RECENn. Y completed naUon·Wkte N"VflY conducted by the 0 p I n I o n --Carporltlon of Princeton. N .J .• bu revtaled aome significant findings about how lht public responded to this new progr1m In it.a first year of operation. Fifty.eight percent of the movie-going pubUe considers the rating system "very UMfuJ,11 or "useful" in helpin1 punts l\dde the mOvic-going of their children. Only 16 percent doeJ not find It useful. ("No opinion" wa11 the answer or the rell) The survey alao pointed out the need for JOme revision. Because the "fi.t" catqory (M: For ~1ature audiences, parental discretion advised) was con· fuilng to a substantial portion of the p.1blic, that ClleiOfY'S description is btloi cMll(Od to "GP' All Ages Admit· led, PartntaJ Guidance Sup:eat.ed." Nareover, • in order to strenaf.hen the S}'llttm even fl.D"tMr. I.he qe llm.it in "R" and "X" fllml la niMd to 17. THE f'OU.OwtNG, then , are the revis· ed raUn1 1)'111bols and admission poilel«' ~OVIE RATINGS FO!t PARENTS AND YOUNG PEOPLE. Ci -All Agta Admitted. General Au· dllOCtS. GP -All Aies Admitted.. Parental Guldanct Suggeated. (Note th1t the · above two cateaorie5 have an mlreJtricted admilalon policy.) R -Rutrict.ed.. Under 17 Requires Ac· comp1.n)'in1 Parent or Adult Guardian. X -No One Under t7 Admitted. (This qt lim1t m1y •lri in ct:rtaln areas.) HOW DO TJtESE nUna ea~aories l11nsi.te · Into ~-le llllld•noe lor parents? G. Fil.ma: r•ttd G include those with a brood t.qe ol lhtmt •nd 1ppeal to both the Yi1QJt1 ,aod UW:lr elders. These film$, tn Ult judgment of Ult ralln1 board. con- tain DD mat.lal which parent.a woWd flnd objectlonlble for vlewi111 by the~ ywng1ttt1. Dear Gloomy Gus: From wllat l'Te observed around t.quna Bach, a compact craib-up 11 ...,a117 a _, IQIUl>up. -N. !".S. 1'1111 .... ....,.,.....,... ........ ..t __ ..,., ............ ,,.,. ~ ,.. ,.. ...... ....,. .... °'" p1i... GP. While much like a G film , a GP fllm is more sophisticated In treatment. Becaui;e tastes and standards vary by geographical area and even b y neighborhood, some parents may want lo gtve guidance to their chll~n. but both G and GP films are open to all qes. R. THF..SE ARE films of adult themes or adult treatment, but a picture thal persons under 17 may see if they are ac- companied by a parent or adult iuardian. such as their teacher on an organlied movie outin2. X. No one under 17 will be admitted. It should be noticed that many X films have not been submitted to the Code and Rating Admlnlstr~tion. These non-sub- mitted films seU-apply the X ratlna:. No X film may carry the Seal of Approval of the Code and Rating Administration. TlDS, IN BRIEF. is the movie rating system. Responsible leaders in the mi>- tion picture industry are providing these ratings as a public service to parents and families. We try to make the ratings as accurate as humans can, though we know there will always be disagreements with our jµdgm.ent. ?11eanwhile, we are con- tinuing to urge responsible film.makers to command all their skills to pr<Xl.uce movies of good laste and creative el· cellence. JACK VALENTI President ~lotion Picture A110C!ation New York, N.Y. Legalize A IJo r tlon To the Editor: Ml'!. Robert L. Sauone's ducriplloo of a seven-week old fetus (Mailbox Jan. 21) is genuinely moving. Who would want to hurt a tiny lltUe child-let that already has the "fam!Uar features •.. of an adult"? No o n e, of course-unleas there fs a compe lling reason. But what one per!!ion might not ste as a compelling reason. another might. Surely no one Is la a bet- ter position to judge what U: a compelling reason to abort an unborn child than the e:<pectant mother herself, the one who will bear the respons\bllliy of nurturing that child lo adulthood if it ls born. J'M SURE l\lrs. Sassone would lll'ff that molherhood ls one or the mMt solemn and important duties a human being can undertake. ror the sake of the child as \1'ell as for the sake of the mother. shouldn 't it be undertaken only by choice and with wholdtearted com- mitment? Birth conlml devices have gone a Ion!( way tn make ''mo!herhood by choice" possiblt. bul they are risk.v In more ways than one. And so is an ille1al abortion risky In more ways than one. l\trs. Sassone seems to imply that If aborUon i!" not legnllzed. those Uny little fetuses will be saved from torturous deaths. But of course that Is not so. MANY. PERHAPS MOST. or thtm would oonUnue, as ncnr. to be torn from the uterus by an ittmnunent wftlded, perhaps clumsily. by one wUUng to bniak the law. Keeping aborUon Illegal wlll fH'lt save the fetus, but leaatlling ll might sa\'e the mother's life. 'IbOM l'.lf us who favor leaall&ing •bor· lion don't wtsh lo lmpo!le our values on lndivtdueJs li)l:e l\1rs. Saunne who ob- viously don't agrte with us. But legaliz.lng abortion would not do th3t. It woulO slmply &1ve us all a choice. l'M ACCVSTOMED. I'm sorry to oay. lo t.atkinR with mffl who art only too will· lfli to sacrifice their wives' lives hour by hour and ytar by year ror 1he "We of chtld,.n." bllt It pains me clofply to rl!ld a letter from 1 woman orho 1hows detp compsJS{on for a fetus •nd none at all for Iler alrteri, other women. , )1ailhox , Letter1 from rtaderi are walcomt. Normollt1 writers should convty their mes.!age.t in 300 w&rds or less. The Tig ht to conden.!e let ters to fit space or eliminate libet is restroed. AU Ut- ters must include .tignature and mail- i11g address, but names may be with- held on request if suffici.:nt reason is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lis/~ed. As to Judge Mast's recent decision: Afrs. Sassone ma,y disapprove, but J know one woman who framed the news story that told of It and others who shed lean of gratitude when they heard about it. JOY CONNORS West Coa!t Public Relations Co-Chairwoman, Nation1l Organization for \Vomen (NOW) Laguna Beach Stick to t/1e F a cts To the Editor ' Mrs. Robert L. Sassone's lelter (Mailbox, Jan. 21 ) stated that the seven· \1'eek-old feLUs "bears the familiar features .• , of an adult." While the fetus resembles a human being, it also resembles the fetuses of many animals and birds at the same stage of development. Secondly, only U one can find an adult whose head makes up at lea!\ ~ percent of its total body size, and whose legs are much shorter than its anns, can one say that a seven-wee k-old fetus bears any familiarity to an adult human belng. A FETUS WHO re!pond s to U'le touch of a hair is simply obeying the reflex of a relp0r\6e to external stimulation which is a characteristic of ALL living things. This cannot be interpreted as a purely human attribute, nor can It be constred that a fetua feels pain. When a pregnancy is terminated, the (etus succwnbs to OX· ygen atarvation, NOT pain. There has been enough emotionalism expressed In the pros and cona of abor· Lion. Let's sUck to the facts. What an abortion does Is to remove the products of an unwanted pregnancy for whatever reason a woman deeides that she cannot bear the ehild. And that reason is the buline1s or thst woman and her doctor. MARGO MOORE Huntinilon Beach Ba r.11 Seal Slaug hter To the Editor' Again It Is almost thne for "THE GREAT 1970 SEAL HUNT," 1<heduled to start In ~1arch. Up and down the Cana. dian eo•riline, the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and off Alaska, Canadian, Norwegian, Ind Amtrl<:an seal slaughterer1 will torture, club, spear, shoot and akin (often while $tlll alive) hundred! of thousands of seals. ftlany of the victims ;1rn just babies whose frantic mothers often try to throw thtir own bodles over them Jn an effort to prevtt1t thtlr brutal slaughter. OTHER THOUSANDS of se1ls wUJ also be shot. gaffed, or speared from lihiJ>" board. Many Of these wlll not be !tilled outrlaht. but w111 be painfully wounded, ..-•ailing helplessly for a slow and agoniz- ing. lonel y desth under th' dark Ice. Shame on our °"n Otpartment of lnterlor Nhlch will 1g1ln hire pr{)o fesslonP "Rl killers to wantonly club to death over 60,000 se1\1 an the Prlbik>H f1l11nds off Alaska! • Soon the Ice will ~ a crimson patch work, s1rewn with the sklnleas remains ol wQat once were harmless, intelligent mammals that have died an agoni.z.ing, unbelievably cruel and unnecessary, death. BUT YOU CAN 00 somethini. lnsist by letter or wire to the following that ttUs brutal massacre be stopped: Hon. Ame Gunneng , Norwegian Ambassador, 34{1J Massachusetts Ave., Washington, D.C. 20007. Hon. A. Edgar Ritchie , Canadian Ambassador. 1747 Massachusetts Ave., Wa shington, D.C. 20036. President Richard ~1. Nixon, The White llowe, Washington D.C. 20500. .Further details can be obtained from Frie'nds of Animals, Inc., 11 West 60th Street, N. Y .C. 1002.'.J. DORIE VAN BRUNT Sa ve Uppe r Ba11 To the Edit.or: The Upper Bay at Newport Beach i:ri one of the two remaining efi;luaries in all Soulhem California and by "developing" this land (actually marsh). as is sug- gested by the Irvine Company, tt will be completely lost as a sanctuary for the migrating birds. This does not seem serioug but it destroys the ecology of the area lo the detriment of the people. AS FOR THE recreational facilities proposed by the Irvine Company-the children in this area have plenty of recreational activities. but will soon have no natural areas left unless we are farsi1hted enough ln protect such areas from developers who llet us face lt) want to make money . Another concrete channel with the water walled in is not to be compared with a natural bay in in· terest and is nothin~ to \eave to our children and grandchildren s u c h as a natural estuary. Once Jost this bay can never again be reclaimed-do not let us lose it. GERTRUDE DALE Book Pro111ot lo11 To the Editor : I have gathered a few facts regarding the Cal St.&te , Long Beach nudily class that were overlooked. What did the pro- fessors, Robtrtson and Steele, have to loee ? The ultimate disciplinary action had already been taken by the school. Lawye rs for Robertson and Steele were In attendance. The press also had been informed and were in attendance. RobertsJn and Steele had just published a boo~. I think they were not running a nudity cl1ss but trylng lo promote their forthcoming book. KARL CATES Corona del Mar l'lcloas Crime Circle To the Editor: tn each :succeeding year for the last Br George --~ Otar George: I wrott am • complained 11 nelghborti<>OO cat turned over my garblge every night. I asked what to do. You said throw 11way a dog. That's 1 silly answer! J don 't evtn have a dog. Anyhow. you didn't 11nswer the f!el-ond part of my quts· liOfl -mice get In the ,arbage aftt.r It'• spilled. Whal can do fOr lhe mice? ANNOYED C>ear Annoyed : Throw away aome cheese. umteen years the FBI has informed us that more crimes had been committed than in the previous year. What is so depressing is the fact that the crime rate may continue upward until some drastic changes are made. 'Ibe big question is, what changes? Perhaps if we could pin· point where changes could bt made, then the changes themselves would become ob\'ious. THE POLICE ARE universally criticiz~ ed because they are bthind the times and that if they were given more money tht:y would be able to cope with the modem criminal Yet, the police have much In common with Batman in that Batman will capture a criminal like Joker and turn him over to the authorities. Then in 11 few weeks Batman is once again seen chasing Joker. Thh may be fine for TV but we the people are fed up with this vicious circle of a committed crime, punishment, rehabilitation, par o 1 e, another committed crime. l\1ANY OF OUR more conservative citizens point their finger of scorn at the courts and especially the U. S. Supreme ,,..Court. Yet, the courts: are only ft>l.lowing the Constitution 0£ the United States and the Bill of Rights. That anyone can fau lt the courts and ignore the fact that our Constitution and Bill of rughls help those that have chosen crime as a proression is almost beyond belief. We the people are aw are of and fed up with the fact that crlmlnals who commit • crime are allow· ed to go free because of some unreal technical point that only has meaning to lho6e that make their living out of the law. In conclusion. the rlfht& of the creative citizen are much more important than the rights of the parasites. HARRY B. McDONALD JR. Bool< 'Starvation' To the F.dit.or : I was curious about school libraries in Laguna Beach. being quite new to this area myself. So when one of the local school librarians dropped into the library. I questioned her about her particular library. The flnt question was: "Whal do you think of the budget that your school library has to work with'!" ''\Vhat budget'!" she replied . "\Ve have no book-buyin2 bud1et this year." That statement aSlorilshed me. How in the world could a public school in this aJ. fluent area. in this affiutnt society , not have enough money to buy books for the school library? PERHAPS I should not ba.ve been '° surprised ·by her information. Already we had been lnfonntd that there wold be no class visits to t.he pobUc library for lee:· ture-book-bornlwing periods. b e c a u ' e thtre was no money for !Choo! bus tripe. But still, one is not quite the s•me as the other. A school bu.! trip t.o the library. while It mlght be hl,tlly desirable, Is hardly a necessary thing . But booka for the library of the schqol -that would seem to be an entirely dilferent milter? Here was a lovely· modem library, In 1 lovely modem school, and there was no money available for books. I DETERMINED to find out mor< about the school library situation, 90 I calltd one of the local elementary school principals. Does the :ichool have funds for operating the library, I asked? He answered Umt there were funds '° p_ay a half.Ume librarian. Then I asked lf Ch.re wa1 a book-buying tu:taet.. tor new book• and for replacina old copies or Utles 11lread'y in lhe school llbr1ry. "Unfonun1tely ." the principal told me, "we have no funds with l"hkh io. buy • ' books, exetpt what the PTA has given us." (I made a mental note to newt again think anything but good thoughts about the PTA.) "YOU SEE," HE WEI\'T on, "th~ money for textbooks, paper, pencils , health services, AND library books all c.-omes out of the Instructional Suwlies Budget. Of course, texlbooks, pa.per, and pencils are so basic that the school absolutely cannot function without them. But by the time these basics are purchas- ed, there is just about no money Jefl for library books." This situation is even more seriOUll thao might be thought at first glance. Since all three local public elementary schools now have school libraries, both parents and chUdren are tendlnR to use; them for borrowing books -both for assignments and k>r pleasure reading. OBVIOUSLY, the school library can and should be a great canvenience. But v.•hat will the children find then! Not nearly what they deserve and could desire in the library of a publie educa· tional institution. I asked the principal ii the passaae or the tax override measure would help the situation. He told me it is up to the local 'Board of Education to detennine di$lribution accord ing lo the needs of the school, but that certainly some of the money \li·oukf flow into the library budget. That was "'·elcome news. But his next statf'ment was much less heartening. "If the tax override is not passed. we probably will not have any librarian next year, not even half-time. Jn fact, we wUl very likely bt forced to close the library entirely." TJDS LAST STATE~TENT Wils .so hard to be lieve, or perhaps just so sad to con· template, that I telephoned another prin· clpal, and ptlt the same questions to him. The answers were almost precisely the same. No book budget; only PTA monle.!1 for new volumes: the possibility of clos· ing the school library next fall. That was when I dec ided thal the pe<>- ple ought to be informed about the situa- tion, because only the concerned voters ol this school district can d() anything to change it. Jn one sense. it will only bf! their children's tducation which will suf· fer if they fail (()do anything. But even· tually, of course, the enUre community will pay the price for neglectinc Its scl'lools. There are parents who help by doing vo1untttr work in the school llbrarie.c;, and the PT A tries to provide fund s for books. You can help by goins out and votlng for the lax override on February 24\h. KATiiY Tt1'11.E Olildrtn's Llbr1rtan L.aruna Beach Public Ubrary ....... ~ Wednesday, January 28, 1970 The editorial page of thll' Dtitlw PUo' seek-' to inform and stfm. ulate readers by pre1111tino this ttctospopcr'.t oP'niO?U and con .. menta"!I on. topict of '1itere1t end .rigniftcancc. bu providtng o forum /or the t:t'f'Ttatlon of our f'eaders' opinion~._ and b11 prll'stn«na the diverse o~w­ poinU o/ in/orm.td obsm:ttrJ and ipokf.rtncn on. topiu of th• <1au. Robert N. W•ed, Publlohcr . ' CHECKING . •UP• Mailer Testifies For 'Seven' 4 .' o fC,•. a • .._+t. 1. c,• •.. W1dntsdq, Jsnuary 28, lf!O Puhl le R ecovery, P riva te Agony Doub le-life of Blaiber g Revea led MD..A.N, Italy (UPl' -Dr. drtve to the beach and show lion that chan1ed blm from btcamt whit it Uitd kl bt. He PbiUp BlaJberg, who turVlved people how well he was, Mrs. the easy.going deotill betort was tbe dear oW Phll qaJn." loqer than a.nyona elle wltb a Blalberg said. the operation to 1 MMl.11, Mre. Blll~ llld -tblt CHICAGO (UPI) -Tbe P"" trlll&Planl<d heort, lived 1 BlaliJerg, who received the short·tempered type wbo flew ...., dJyl 1ftir her h.-d secutor it the • • c h 1 c 1 g 0 doUbfe life of ~very In heart of a colored factory int.o a rage when dlMer was took part. In a-1ame Of rugby DAIL V PflOT 7 , ·A . THOUGHT " FOR -TODAY 1 ,._.........., MitllllM n.. lift la ... ... tit, tt '"""' ca..,., Mc•. _ ... ,,,,,,,lllllut Pl•H NleD J<l A ,..1,111.~ llA,VICE e\IElt'o' OAV •v: L• Roofing Co. M1Y•rs ill lullnft1 public and agony In prtVate. worker in an operation Jan. 2, 15 minutes late, hls widow on May II, 1988, he "at back Seven" trill told novelist 1be maguin• Bell 1 z 1a l~ by Dr. Christiaan said. in the h03pital for a nonna11':::=:=:=:=:=;=:=;=:=;:='. Nonnan· Matier Tuuday he printed today an interview Barnard, died last Aug. 17, "Phil became furious If he checkup. 1; .wu tr)lln& to get the "fact.J'' with BlaJberg's widow, Eileen, Doctors who pcrfonned an had to wait for dinner," she "The checkup lasted until Elephant's Heart ' UllA .......,. Av., <Ml-ntt ln' the Clilfl. who said Blalberg apel# more autopliy on his body found his said. She consoled herself by Sept. 27,'' she said. "The racu are nOthlng' than hall the .$M day1 with 1 bones so decayed they could thinking ; ''It is not he who Is "The clinic bulletins never wl••···t ••·ir· n"··-, -·'· .• " transplanted heart in bed., not understand how he could shouting. It is the pills talking revealed the frequency WJth 1.1wu wn: -·-aw-Some day1 it took hlm' all move, M1·s, Blaiberg said. for him." which Blalberg was taken to Maller shot back day to take a ba~, 1have and He kept alive on pills, in-Jn the last stages or his ii· the hospital unconsclous,v the Weigh s 45 Pounds By L M. BOYD DO seagulla: live?" A. About ON THE TUBE For tha bait 9111.le to what'1 h1ppf111119 011 TV, raad T'V WEEIC -di1tribl.it1d with th a S1tut<ley edillo11 of Iha DAILY PILOT. DON'T KNOW WHAT good 21,1 years. 'Remember, tblt''t lt will do you In a power their life ezpectaney when outrage, but 1pproximatt1y tbey ire bcl'Slng arou.nd t b e one million flrtrtles will give beachel. ni.1r Ufe 3PID1 )'OU I I much light 81 I llO-W&tt Wblch iJ aomeWnl clJe qain, bulb . . . TAKE A MAN Ind a 1'11111 lboot 25 yeltl . . • Q. ah1tk, both wolghlog aboot the "WllAT'S In Tiler'• m!lkb" A. same. In the water you ~ Milt. yeaat, IO)' I 1 o u r , bet the man wW be just about molaues ud aome sort of twice u strong a.s the shark • . fruit juice, blended. There were nuapcu 1n drus IO be could take a short. eluding a cortisone prepara· lness, she said, ''his character magazine said. Mai ler's tesUmony In behaU otl ..::.=::..:::.:::..:::::.=:..:..=::...:.::::::::..:_::=:::.:..:::.:::::::__:::_:_::::.::::.:::.::__::::.::::::::::.:._::::::::::.:=-_:_--_:.==========' . l\11STER, IF you were going 'l'URKEVS -Did I say to chan&e your natrlJ:, what there were no turkeys in name would you take? Most Turkey? Wrong again. The men, who do such, pick their Turks herd turkeys through mothers' maiden names. the streets, using l o n g OPEN QUESTION _ ls it switches to keep them bun· true the horse if given enough ched up. Most colorful sight, food, is the only animal that it's said. Noisy, too.There, the will eat Itself to death. turkey is known either as the Hindi or the Great American T~E GIRLS -Been looking Bird. My membership in the over a JOO.year calendar of Get It Right Club bas been feminine fashion. Fasclnatlng. suspended (or 30 days. Again. In 1875, the bustle em phasized, OUR HOUSEHOLD HINTS • no. glorified where the girll specialist 1 u 11 e 1 t a you sat down. In 1905, the blllt llne sprinkle 1 lltUe salt in the was big. In 1913, hail the amall fryinf; pan to keep the hot waist. In 1920, the napper cos· greue from 8patt.ertnc .•• tumes wiped out bust, waist, IT'S NOT THE ODCOmlnl the where1bouts of the byeone daylight lb.It cues 1 rooster to bustle, everythlnt: uoept tbe ~1-n&-ie •·pt I f t ... ••· "•h• bin crow, no, au. niN9 n N egs. n -. ·~ ... • 1 Y for experiment In pitch black dresses clung to the hips, ac-mine ahafta also pow at just centuating same. In lMO, about the aame time every heigh-ho the sweater, 19115 all p o g E R b k th b morning . . • over again, ac to e ust PLAYERS, pleaH: note: Out line, and who found fault ln of every IO openlni hands, five that. In 1947 -or wu it '48 will be buJts, four will have a -the New Look tried to will be 1 package the enUre len1th of pair, and one at 1 par. Yovr qiie1tiom ond com-the body. In 19!>5, wh at ha~ mntl ore tHfcomld and pened. That's vague. But in will be Ult d wher.v1r J>Ol- 1965, the miniskirt relnltated dblt in uc 1'dckhio Up. n legs, conclusively, and the st• PlfOH addr1111 vour moil to through blouse lionized tome L. M. BOfld, fn car11 oJ few. Where to now, Glorla, DAILY PILOT, ·Boz 117$, . you nearly naked raacal you? Nl1DJ)OT1 Beach, Cal,J., Am at a loss to propo1Ucate. 9266!. 1eVen, men charged· •Ith con- 1Plrlng to Incite r!Oll during the llG8 Dtmocr1Uc Nltlallll Convention, juat u there art nuances In bis award-wbmln& wrtuna. 0 Pollce," Maller 1 al d , describing one confrontaUon, "cut thro'ugh the crowd like sheets or rain, like swords cut· ling down grass. They cut the crowd into two, four, eight pieces, then they'd b eat them." I-le s aid Gov. John Love of Colorado "looked sJck" at the sight. U.S. District Court Judge Julius J . Hoffman sustained an objection. The, words were stricken from the trlal reco rd. "I don't think the sickness of the gdvenwr of Colorado is at blue 1n th1t cue," Hoffman said. Maller aatd ot the Mlchl&an Avmue bltUe between police and dtmonltnton, "It wu twilight. It tvu a rare twlll&bt and the police unlforms wen sky blue, So were their helmets and 10me of them 1ot "° hot 1wlnJ1n1 their clubs that they tooX them oU. It WU quite clear there wu a 1lpal for the attack." The re.mark about t h e ·~signal" wu stricken. 'lbe nov1ll1t wu repeatedly worned to llnilt his, testimony to tlmple anawen. At one point the judge 1ccu,.d him of "breaking hla promlle" not to waate the court'• time. CUSTOMER SERVICE -1-------------------1 How much does an elephant'• heart weight?" A. Maybe 45 ..------------------, pounds .•• Q ... HOW LONG U.S. Coed Kidnaped In Manila MANILA (UPI) -The son or a prominent Filipino politl- cian barged into an exclusive su burban girls' college Tuel· day nig ht, fired two .shots at:Kf dragged away a p r e t t y California girl who had spurn- ed him. Police immedJa tely be1an a search for Deborah Stevenson, 20, of South San Fr&nelsco, and her suspected abductor, Cris Lecaroz, 20, son of a mayor and nephew of a governo r and congressman. Lecaroz rushed into the girls' dormitory at 1'-1aryknoll College, a Roman Catholic school in suburban Quezon Ci· ty, and chased her down , fir· ing two pistol shots that 1ent other stud~nts screaming from the building, police said. No one was hurt. Lecaroz, with a n ac· complice, cornered "11 i s s Stevenson in the lunch room, dragged her out or J.he building al gunpoint and fled m a taxi, according t-0 the official police report. Russ-China Talks Hit Standstill LONDON (UP ll -The Sino- Sovlet border talks in Peking have come to a complete standstill, diplomatic sources said today. By tacit mutual agreement, both parties nevertheless in-- tend to keep the discussions going a.s long as possible although no results are ex- pected, the source1 said. They 11kl that by keeping up the flctton,of the Slno&vlet negotlatlon1; the t•O Com· munl1t llanta hope to avert an amied conlllct which bOth sides fear could occur follow· Ing coilapae of Ille talkl. The sources said neither Pe\:lng nor A1o:scow expects a setUement or their wide rang· ifli differences in t h e foregeeable future -if at all. Jury Selected SAN RAYAEL !UPI) -A jury of 10 wo1nen and two men, ineludlng one man who said he has smoked marl· Juana, was chosen Tuesday In the n&rcotlcs trial of the fc:>rmer manager of t h e Kingston Trio. THESE PENNEY STORES WILL BE OPEN SUNDAY AFTERNOONS 12 TO 5 P.M. •BUENA PA RK •BURBANK • CANOGA PARK •DOWNEY •FULLERTON •GLENDALE •HUNTINGTON BEACH •INGLEWOOD •LAKEWOOD •LONG BEACH •LOS ALTOS •MONTCLAIR • NEWPORT BEACH •NORTH HOLLYWOO D • SAN FERNANDO •SANTA MONICA •TORRANCE •VENTURA •WESTCH ESTER •WEST COVINA • WH ITIWOOD - THIS IS OUR BIG WEEKI A COLLECTION OF VALUES LIKE YOU 'VE NEVER SEEN BEFORE, DON'T MISS ITI Whitewall styling bias-belted tire ... low-priced with excellent stability 700-13 plus 1.96 fed. tax and old llro WHITEWALL TUBELESS SIZE 695-14 735·14 775.14 825-14 855-14 775.15 815-15 845-15 SPIC!Al lliYI 8 frock t01'9 car!tldgn fl<llu ring top arti1tl and their hit tunes. Don't min the fa ntastic savings! Wilt! 4FOR $77 'r fr bl1ck canter bou m1g whHlt ... , The greatest show in whee ls. Two-plKt WhHI wllh bkick cenlor. SiH 14" X 6" 4\lt BC (Ford) or ].(• X 6• '4'.4 BC (Chevy). PRICE $18 $22 $22 S26 $26 $22 $26 $26 FED. TAX 2.15 2.35 2.55 2.67 2.93 2.61 2.77 2.91 THESE STORES OPEN SUNDAY TOOi 12 to 5 P.M. ,.. ., CAN OGA PARK HUNTINGTON BEACH VENTURA CH ULA VISTA MONTCLAIR DOWNEY FULLERTON NEWPORt BEACH ' . . ' .. ' .. :·, ., ·- ·• •' • .. .•. • .l "' ' ' • .. ·-' . ; l • . • ' • • • ' l ' '. ' . Ji -' r ' I I DAI. Y'Pll.OT l ' Wedntsdot, January 28, 1970 ---- '* '* '* * * * Wil9! YOUR CHOICE HOUSEWARE NEEDS • trary Daisy' an purpoM jumbo ltorag• box ••• floral pottem • 3 packages of 5, 7 bu. plmtic leaf ba;1 • 3 packa;11 of 6, 26 ;oY, plalfic trcnh can UMrt • 3 packages of .20, 24 qt. plastic wasf9 basket bog1 • Plmtic laundry basket ••• cvocodo or harvest gold •Thermos• bottle holds 1 pint of hot or c:old liquid Wi\llM l.47 SPECIAL IUYI .40 qt. fift.top plostie tro1h can. Extra 'lorge copotity ot this Special Bvy price. Choose avocado or harvest gold. 20 go!. plastic trod\ can, • .-•• ,,,,,, .1.97 SPECIAL IUYI Twin Jizo quilted flrm mattress and ba< spring set. Extra firm innerspring unit with: durable floral print cover of rayon 1atffn. Box spring is scientifically engineered for flrm support. Ve rtical stitched prebuilt borders. Ir• a dream al a buyl FULL SIZE SET •••••••••••••••••••••• , • • • • • • . . . . . . . .•••• 165 NOW! Til!SE VALUES AT ANY ONE Of 11THESE PENNEY STORES! CANOGA PARK ------- * * * ·* * * * * * * DOWNEY \ • ' .. WilD! $233 · SPECIAL IUYf Your choi~ of 'Modem' or 'Traditional' style convertible sofas. Both feature · quality construction, full sizes, full upholstery, com- fortable seating with . Kodel9 polyester wrapped foam seat cushions, )tandard size 52" X 7':f' 253 coil innerspring mattress. Modern has nylon tweed. fabric. Traditional has nylon/ cottOn/ rayon matelasse fab- ric. Bath hove ScotchgarcP Brand Fabric Protector. Wil1M 9.98 PENNCIEST STiAM and dry iron for care-- free ironing. 21 steam vents, fabric guide, polished aluminum so1eplate •• , all mike this 1 real value in qualilyl FULLERTON * * , < • * WillMS.97 SPICIAL IUYI Proctor•· ironing kiht.. Steel· table is sturdy ond rUggtd ••• it 'Non't wob· l»t. Adiusts to multipl• heights. Offs11 le;s for sit down ironing. HUNTINGTON BEACH ·- .. . . ~ -.. . ' . . ' ., ;: . . . * " * * * . • . . . . .. . . . • . ' . . . : ~i .. . , . • . . . . .. . ;: .. . ;~ J ' r Ir I . l ~ . ·i ·. :. • • . . . • •. ' •, . ~- . . . . . . . ·. . . . . SPECIAL BUY! Swag · lighti~g fo~tires. Choose the style to fot your decor. 'Modern' style nylon. string ball with light diffuser in wh.ite, green ·or gold. 'Mediterranean' style oblong glass ball in amber or ruby. 'Tra- dit ional' style round glass ball in amber, green or ruby. 'Traditional' style oblong glass ball in amber or white. Block or brass chain included . .1111! 8.77 5 SHELF SmL SHELVING UNIT -is extra strong, ideal for heavy storage. A full Tr' unit ot such a wild, low price! Silver tone shelves with pebble groin finish ore scratch, rust and fade re .. sistant. Sturdy g_rey tandem pqsts • Easy to auemble with just a screwdriver. Plastic ftool' guards, post caps included. Extra deep· .upit.is 36" wide, 7'1' high. 18" d .. p. S 1htlf 1tnl 1tor1p thelvlng 36" x 72" x 12"----·6:17 • * * I •Wedl*daY, January 29, 1970 ."''J c . ~ -· .. ' THIS IS OUR BIG WEEK·! A COLLECTION OF VALUES LIKE YOU'VE NEVER SEEN BEFORE. DON~T MISS IT! . '~ t ' . YOUR CHOICE -. GADGET ASSORTMENT • Egg iepo~tot •Broom holder1 .> • Ice ueam scoop • Nylon mixing 1,)oons • leoltrf'Yhipper •Party pids WilH -9.97 •Tin opener/ser1er • Butter slicer • Decorative maQne tic memo holder1 • Cheese sliter •Jar wrenth • Bottle and can opener SPICIAL IUYI 7 pc. cookware set. 1 and 2 qt. covered 1oucepan1, 10" frypon, 5 qt. Dutch oven wilh coVer, Heavy 16 gauge aluminum wilh acrylic coating in ovocado r harvest gold. Teflon 111 Inner coating. ., I-. wa1M~;.7c , . < SPECIAL IUYI lodMducl metal 1."'Y ·~bl;I,· ' Choose 'Sunbursr' in bright void ,_Of'Ot, 'Brookside' scene or tmart white 'Marble'~· tern, luy them 1n,O'fll' and ~··Qr ''1i~low; law price. · · ~ · . .I' ·' ' ' o1 • "I .,, I p ' '{ • . . • 1 . . •. • ' _ .... _ . ~, \ ,,. ' I 'l ' I •r I ~ ' \ ,...:.'· f'. ''<'I._~:~: ·~ W&llM •$s PENNCIAFT STORAGE IUILDING ho• ' 380 cu. ft. •lorog• Oreo, 10' wide, 7' deep, 6'.4~ hi9h. * * * WilW . 7_9. 99 ST£EL END CiASU STORA~E IUILD· ING ha1 106 cubic fee·t of 1tore9• spice in an a:ttractlv~ 7' x 6' gr••" * building wlth whit• trim. *-.1 '.I •• ,. ,. " ' 'I . J I •,I i I " ,, . I ,'I , . .r 1! " .1 • ' ' " ....------,..~ LAKEWOOD MONTCLAl·R NEWPORT. BEACH VENTlJRA SHOP SUN.QAY,JOO 17tti 5 J'.M.l ' , " • • -1 • . ~ ' I , 1 .:) oi ., ... .. ,..---• JANUARY 25th TO JANUARY 31st * * (!]. 2 PIS. FO~ SPICIAL IUYI ca.tr_. stretch nylon hose for beautiful legs. Superb scmngs ••• superb fashion I Cantrece• 11 hose fit fike a secand skin I So slHlc, so smooth alld the styling perfect. Proportioned in short, """'9•• long aMI ....,. extra '""9 lengths. Hove yoilrs in two fcl'lorite fashion shades, sunt0n or ceffff bean. All hove that fomovs Cohtrtc• fit1 the cleiest, s-thest eml lttesiotible? Definitely, 10 hutty in and buy a bunch todoyl smlAL IUYI ...... •f 1h,..d .• •pool• and 1poolt of bl.U •t1d wfrllit 1501 'Your ino1t M~,ct •ind ef thrttd I• ntw pric•d fer quentity buyin9, H tltclt up now oncf '°"'I Mok. turt )'OU don't rvn out. * * SPECIAL IUTI 1""o ot0 tk "'11 "'lrto ""Y man will •• ";rid"' 1-J lM(re 100" ful fcuhioned OCIYllc •nitt th•flhlJ 11eof with • rnit1imv1n of C91'a. High .a.w rtfd: ttylt, lib •nit Cllfft aM ....,.., Loh ef colors! S·M·l.Jll. * * * * * * : I. . ' ... . • ••• • • ___ _,__ . . 4- i1Df 12.88 SUNNY·UP THE SCENERY with one of these oil weather coots. Per- fect every season, these coats are ready to take all the elements in their stride. Choose from trench, A-line, belted styles and more. All in the freshest shades and newest ony·weather fabrics a lady could want. Smartfy detoiled and ·trimmed. So hurry in and save a bunch for those rainy days. LIKE IT ••• CHARGE IT! ,,, ~( ' W&RH 3 ~o• $5 SPIOAL IUYI Boys' 100" acrylic knit 1h irt1, oil handsomely 1tytecf with mock turtleneck, and raglan 1leevn. They k"p their 1hape, and thty li:ffp their neat look• with little core. Faih· ion iolld1 and slripes. S·M·L * * * * SAVll Toddler's acryllc hlend turtle- neck style 1lffper with a bo11•r waist. Th••• great heavyweight 1l••p•r• come in ouorted eolon, 1ii.u 11/i.,2,3, ·~, .5, 6 and 8. Huny in nowl AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE ' ·.·: - * ' ' " . .. Wil9! LONGSLHVE 4 99 s 99 TUNICS, e KNIT SLACKS, e TUNICS TOP ALL ••• in slinky Amtf9 triactlalo jersoy kn ils. Choo" dashing prints and smart solids with a scoop or V-neck styling. Sizes 32 1o 38. Next, double your fun with these eosy care polyester double knit slad:s. In all your fovorit• colors, Hove at least f'Wo! .S4zn 8 to 18. WiDM2.99 T•nific seviftll .,, • .,., girt'• "Yl•11 quilted roff. Thele f .. hioM"I• ttylM rob.i oN macihlne WCMMbl .. A"MIJ. a'9le ir1 oft 01t0ttfftel'f of .. 1.,._Si,_4 t• 14. Hurry i" for fint cMic•I * • WlllM 7t•14, 2.88 S'ICIAL IUYJ fatllton sweot.,, i11 Wg end littte tifl•'· •il .. I fo¥9rite ...,... lo -""' -_,ti< hlh. White, _.,,Wion colon. h<· feet with''°"'· ••im . * * * * * Wednesday, Janu1ry 28, '1970 DOILY PILOT JJ f . THIS IS OUR BIG WEEK! A COLLECTION OF VALUES LIKE YOU'VE NEVER SEEN BEFORE. DON'T MISS IT! EASY CARE FABRICS -1-1/-15 " wide , 3 10 10 yd. lengths. Al this fabu· lous price you 'll want to buy yards and yards! A wide assortment of better fabrics in cotton and cotton blends . Choo1e· from Dacron• poly· ester/cotton poplin solids, combed cotton broadcloth, duck prints and sol ids, te xtures, twilb , sportswear prints. Sew for yourself, for the chil- dren . All fabrics machine wo1hoble. Hurry in for first choice I , ... x, SPICIAL IUYI Sup•r.1lockt 11\ 1izt1 for big and littl• 1i1terl Groovy ffor• ltg ond modified stroi1ht l•g 1tyfe1 In the wildnt collection of lf'Oy-out prh1t1 and t01id1. All cut and tonorecf lft cri1 p cotton and cottOn/polyffl•r blench . * Willl! 7.99 SPICIAL IUYI sr .. pi,.g bag/quilt combo with lot• "og. Atl pol)infet fiberfill, pr•tty canon pt in I• with heavy duly tipJMr. Great for 1lumtMt partier, T.V. lounoing, boot and cal'l'lp 1Mmk1. Potchwofk ond floreb in Iott of 1roovy color1. * * . • ' r . •· t· i'·: I{" !fl " " .\ " AVAILABLE AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE I • • lJ DAILY 1'11.0T WtdntSdly, Janull')' 28. 1170 LEGAL ~OTICE LEGAL NOTICE Reagan 'Landlords' at Issue SACRAMENTO (UPI ) Gov. Ronald Reagan's rental ot 1 fashionable home from ''beneath respect" Jor con- sLantly hinting conDlcl-of·io· terest may be Involved.'. asked (or special goverrunenl favors. (rom newsmen when h e•J;;:========:::::::;;: LEGAL NOTICE Bank Heist Susp ect • wealthy pOlltlcal allies emerg- ed today as ooe of the hottest iss ue s of the early gubernatorial campaign. Reagan angrily c h a r g e d Tuesday that Assembly Democratic leader Jess Untuh ts .. beneath contempt" and The governor also rtported at his weekly news conlerence thet $125,000 In !umlture and paintings have been louned or •detded outright to the mle tor his temPora.ty private use at home and at the offk:e. Reagan said his landlorda aud furniture donors· have not Protest Marks Date Captured SANTA BARBARA (UPll -corned citizens called •he .Ian. Public indignation over oil 28 Committee. Of First Oil Spill MODESTO (AP) -After a leakage from offshore wells Speakers on the program at high speed chase over moun-found orderly expression today Santa Barbara City Coijege in- tain roads early today, San in a program marking a eluded Sen. George MUrphy Joaquln County sher i ff • s declaration of environmer.tal (R-Calif.): Mayor J oseph deputies shot and captured a tights. Alioto of San Francisco; Sen. man wanted in a bank robbery This is the first anniversary Alan Cranston, (D-Callf): and during which an officer was of the start of an oil spill tl!nt .Rep u b lican Congressmen killed. contaminated a 40-mile stretch Charles Teague, George There had been three gun-of beach in a resort area Brown and John V. Tunney. (ire exchanges with deputies sometimes called the Southern A feature of the progran1 in two counties before the cap-California Riviera. The black was the reading ol : h<' ture of the man, identified as ooze washed up on the tawny, declaration of environment al Leonard Ellsworth Miller, 45. well-kept beaches and the rights by ils author. Dr. scum spread over the ocean in Roderick Nash, associate prc>- He told his captors he had an 800-square mile area. ressor of history at the "Oh, for heavens sake, ol course not." he replied in answer to a question. "First of ull, I don't think they ever would. Second or all, 1 wouldn't lbten if they did .u Reagan renta his 12·room, mansion-style home for $1,150 per moolb from 17 landlords, most of them wealthy friends and campaign coritributors. Unruh -a candidate for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination -has charged these land1ords are among the "half~biddco millionairet who call lhe shots in Sacramento." Reagan, in pain from a sp rained ankle 11uffered last weekend when he was bucked oCf a horse, drew laughter remarked: "I don't koow how you fellows feel and maybe I don't know much about renting, but r want to tell you that when l'm paylng 115,000 a year I doo't uactly le.ti that l'm obllialed to do thetn (the Jandlonb) any favors. Al a matter of fact, I nllgbt ask for a favor or two." Alter, southern Calllomla DemocraUc chairman · Leon Cooper tssu~ 1 prepartd statement•accuslng Reagan of "ignoring 1he very real issue m possible coollict of lotere>l •• , [ can.well understand why this matter ts embarrassing to Gov. Reagan, but the issue de se rves lull public discussion." WANTED IOTS AND •llLS A•IS J 1'0 1' ................. Dll (,.._. ('lfwll T'I .. .....,., '"' ......,......,. ...... ,., AUDITIONS WILi. II HILD THIS WOK IN OIAN•l C:OUHTY ,., ,..,.. 0. "11*9 ......,. ... cau547·6251Newt Tal-.-t s..rU lelnt C9Mluctt4 t.y TAU I PIODUC:TIONS HOLL TWOOD, C:ALIP. Prlfl(optl Of!l(t •n 0•11111e Counrv M(t)Wl!N & G•l!EN, •ti,1, &SI E. C~•-•" A--.. Oft"''' C1lilornl1 ... :15111 NOTICll!" 01' DIS$0LIJTION 0 I' .. AltTIU!ltSMll' ANO Ofl DISCON• TINUANCI 01' U11! 0' l'l•M MAMI! Pur..,•nl hi the .., .... 11;ons of Sectlot! UOli.J o1 -C.lllor!IM C-1tt.n. C~ •nd "" s.ctlen 2•.1 !/If tlte Glllfornl1 Clv!I Codl, notlC. II tMrwtw '""" lhil the generel p1rtnenlllp (9TlflOled ol' RALPH spent 26 years in prisons. Of· Today's observance w a s universily or Californi.i at Iicers said he was from l _.'.'.•~•g:•;ru~·zed~~b~y~a=gro~~u~p~o~J~c~o~n~-~s~·a~n~ta~B~ar~b;u-~a~.=====~===============================:::::== Albany. Ore. The second man in the rob- bery and slaying still was at large. FBI agents, sheriff/a deputies and dogs joined the 'ti,: UHi U)·S!N Pubtistifd Cio'anlH: Coast J~nua"' 1. U, 71, ?I. lt111 D1llt Pilot, l. HOYLE, JR. 1nd JACIC HOYLE " 10 he,..loto,.. e.,.....i i.. llullneu V!llkl' tlw LEGAL NOTICE . llrm ,..,.,., llf HOYLE AND HOYLE II New!M>l1 BeKll. Callfornl1, w11 dlsso~ 11 ot the cloH ef btnl-,... SefoltmDer JD, lNt; tNot 11>er11tltr uJd firm dl1CDn- lln1<ed Ille u~ of Hld Mme; 1nd 11111 -----suPE"RiOlt COUJIT Oii' THI 1lt.r Uld dluolutlon no per-l'led STt.Tf OF CALIFORNIA l'Olt 1ulhorlTY 19 Incur obl\t1tlon1 for 111(1 TH£ COUNTY 01' OJI.I.NCI fat-r firm. Nt. A.-1 1-!0VLE AND HOYLE OltOElt TO SHOW CAUSI! ll'f RalPll L. Ho-fie, Jr. CCH.l.NOll!" OF NAMl!I ll'f JKk HO'l'le I~ Tiit M•!t~r of ll'le A1>11lk1Hon of T..JMS1 PETE R PISPISA. JR. 1od DONNA LYNN WILLIS, IUTLl!lt & SCHill'LY Pl5Pts.A. For Cf\fil>Vt-of Nwrw. IJ1 Dvdky M. Llftl Wl-lEREAS. PETER P1$PISA. Jll. and AftWMJ• 11 Llw DONNA LYNN P!SPIM. _.111"-rl •nd ITS S...lh l"lewer SI .. S..ltt 11M 1oolkan1s on lhelr OWt1 tlefWlt _,., as Lei "-" .. C.llt WU t111<f11IS o1 "'1>llul'llS TllACY DAWN Publllheod °''"'' Coed Dtlll' Pllol. PISPISA. a iemale under fl1Meen. •nd Jt-•T 7, U, 21, H, lf10 1~10 TAMMY DEE PISPISA, • ~mele 11nder LEGAL NOTICE ••fM"'"' f\tvt lllfd 11' tPl>lleallOfl wtlf\ ,.,. c1er11; of this eo11r1 for •" orclolr dl•ntJ-r..., PO!lillonPri ........ from PETEil PISPlSA,, Jll. 1nd DONNA LYNN''-------cc-,c,..------·I PISPISA to PETEii COLLINS AND DON·1 P.utll NA LYNN COLLINS, r~YttlJ, Ind ClllTll"ICATE OP l USINl1S ,h1f\91"9 !Pll!lr chll!lrfn's Mmes li"om FICTITIOUS NAMI lRACY o ... wli PISPIS"' Ind TAMMY Tiit \lllcle'llllned urtlfles .iv I• con· OEE PISPIS ... "' TRACY o ... w N COL-l!UCllntl I buslnns ., 21125 West 9ttbot LINS •nd TANN.Y OEE COLLINS, 91¥11., NtwPOrt 9ttdl, Ca!llOl'n1t, under <fJ,,.,.;t!ve•v. lllt lk!lllolK firm t111mt o1 NEWPORT n •I Dl"<le•td !~ti tll ptr.oM !1'ltrHted EDGEWATE'l 11.lALTY and !tit! .. Id In t~ tbovt 1n1illf<I mane• •-•' befan flrm 11 comcio1ed ot IM foOowln11 --. l"!s c1>11r1 ~· 9 JO .fl,M., "" FPb, 17, 1971l, I ot I 1,, tne CQ~rtroom at Oe1>~•1mont No. J, ti wlloH Ill""" In l11U Incl P •<t ra • 100 Clvlc c~"'" D•I~•. cu, o! &ant• AM, lltnc~ 11 1$ follows: COl!nlv at Ortnv•, S!i•e ot C1!Uor"l1. ancl Helef> Rlndt11<neclll, ls» E. Oct1n """W cilu\f, It •Ill'· WM'f IM 11111lk1llOI' 1 1..i,, 8tlboa, C11ll, lo• cl>tn!I' pl Nm' •hl>u!d not lie t••n1ed. Dt1td J1nutrv •· 1'10 11 1, 111r~r orlltrto t"!ll a <Diil' ol !hi~ Helen Rl!'lde~I Ot!!er to Sr.ow C•u<f lie published l" rl>t ST ... TE OF CAt.IFOllNl4. O~>lv Pllol, • "" .. '"'"'' ot g'nertl OllANGE CO\,INTY ..:ircule!•o". """''" '" tilt COllMTY ~! On J1n1tlfY 6. 1'70, bef«t mt, • C\•~na•. Slil!e of C1lilar<>I~. oncce ~ w~e-Notlrv Public In 1(111 tor ••Id S!elt!. '"' tour •utce•llVt Wff~• 1>tlor to lflt ~~Ill' IPP!'l<td 'Helen ll.IN1erkned1t 11~•• >t-1 lar hellllnG I~ A,pplkllion. ~llCIW" lo rfte fll fls !l>e ,..._ wftoM Otteo· Jan l1. 1970 n1me Is wbsc.rlbf>tl lo IM wlltll" ln- ll•YMOND THOMPSOM >lrllrne<ll tnd t ar-led1ied lhf l llKUted JuO<I• M. J"'CK MALL •11or"'' t i law H1-L1w twlllllnt 11' Et ll Stw.,!Hn1~ SlrHt <•II Mnt, Ctlitorllla mn "'"°"""': (1141 '41·1'4t Al!w"'' for ,.e!lllt"'r' PubllJ~..., Or1119e Cae•t .l~~u•rY !4, ?l, 71 •nd !'10 ti'!~ ••rne. (OFFICIAL SEALJ Josepfl E. D1v1J Nol1rJ Pub!!c • C•lj1orn!1 PrlnclPll Office In Ot11>9e C01.1ntv Mv CommlHlo!I Eoire• J-21, U1' 0111¥ P•lol, Publltlltd Or1,,,1 Caelf 011/Y P!~t ftbrutrv ,, J .. w1rv ,, 1l, n, 21, 1970 226M.f .. ,. '---'--'---------I LEGAL ~OTICE_---1 LEGAL NOTICE "'" T·H$-lt NOTICf TO ClllDITORS HOT!tl!' TO (Rl!.OITOll.S Of a ULK T•AHS,.I• SU PERIOll. COURT 01' TM! Noll<e It hereby 1lven lo !I'll' Credl!Dl"I ST ... TE 0" C•LIFO•NI• 1'011. ol C. E!IW1rl! Mel!flll Ind Dorotl>y Mellon, fHI! COUltTY 01' 011 ... NGIE hu•blncl Ind wl'1', d/b/1 9ob't ol Coslt H.. ........ Mew, Bob'I Bit eov of COlll Melt. £5l•te of JOSEPH J.. COAO, Dece11eel. Tr1n1fert1r1. whose buslnnt lllllrnt Is 15' N011CE IS HEREBY GlllEN to lf\e E11t 17111 Slreet. Cotll Mew. caumv ol (rNl•loo o1 the 1bove named llecedenl Or.ntt, 11119 el Ctl!!i!rnl1, !hit I blllk ,.,., all per.on1 111v1119 c!1lm1 a111lnsl tf\.e lren•ter Is tboul lo t>., m11!e ~ 911 eov ••Id oectdent 1nl! required !o llle 11\em, of Cot!I Mesa ll'IC., T,.ntle•H, wllOlt wotn the .....ce111rY YOVdltr1, In Ille ottica blltlnfu addrtU 11 111111 E11t Color.00 ot !1>1 cler~ ot 1tHr 1toove tnlllteel COl/rl. S!rttlo Gl8od.le. C1111nlf' ol LOI A119e)e., ..,, to prne"I thfm, wilfl •hf ...ces11n Sl1!1 <I C11llotnl1. vGl,oehffS. 1n tl'lit under1l11nt!d ti 11>t office lhf' prgperty to be lr1nslfrrt!d b .,, eOOKIN. Bll.ESLIN .. LUDOY end loctl!!d ,, ls.t E11t 11'11 S1reel, Cooh '"iAll.llY A 01.IVAll., A!lor"tv•. 1100 Mes1, (.01mtY pl ()ran11e, Slllt ot ... Y,/\Ut of • tilt • SI•"· Sulit IJS. LOI' Ctlllornla. . •"9tlt•. catl!ornlt 90061, which li 1he S1l!I Pl"OPfrlY I! !ltscrlbed In 11"""'1 pltct of W.lnets of tt\t 11nde•1l11nt!d In 111 ,15, an sl<>c~ In lrt!le, lhtlu•ti, ~trul!>men! maners Pert1\,.ill9 to tht nl•lt of said incl 11aod will of !Ml rtsltur•"' bl/1l"ts1 !1-<eci.nt w !f\ln 1o11r rnon!fll 1t1er ti.a -nown •1 lklb'• tilt BOY of Cosl1 MtJa ''"' PUb.tl<al'ion of lf\ls nolkt. and loc1tt!d ., 15'1 East 17111 SlrHI. Co·•~ Otlt'<J J•nua•v 5, 1'711. Mn•, County ol Or1ngt, S11I• ol Lu (of!!! So<Jte C1IUMnl1. . A!lmlnl•trft1or of '"• p1!1tr 111, bulk tr1n1l•r W•ll be consummA!e!! 01 th~ ebcovt nimt'd oectdtn1 on or 11ter 11'11! l!fl dAY ol t=ebru••v. 1'70, I OOK1N llRIE$LIN & LUDOY ., 10 ... .M .•• Ktlmblcll, o~ M•r<O, ""' ""'R11tY ... OLIVA• KNU>SI .. ChllnMworlh, ,11 Wtsl Sixth ;'°' J.wnue o1 '1111 s11r., Swile 1.u S''"'· 1. ... A"'''"· '°""" et lo. l o• Antlle•, '''"· ,_., AnatlM, 51•1• ol C1lltom!1. T•I· nni 17'·1211f ~ I•• 11 kMwn to ""' Tr1n11e-.<, •II AllirMYI Ill!' "'dmlnl1tr1lor bllol!W!'ls n1mts end •<!llrMsf1 •1'•d b• py~ll•l>ed Ori"'' COllsl 0111~ l'llol, Tr1,,1'1!ror Im' !he tf\r.e Yflrl lttl 0~11. J•~U•" 7 U, 'I 21. 1t111 14-70 ftt•: !lob's of B1tbolo, :J0S M•rln' AV""""• ' ' Newport Buch, COl/ftlY d 0•1n9e, St1t~ LEGAL NO'l'TCE et c1111or"n11. Dt!N: J1n1>1rv :it. 19111, ...... tt:ll 919 $0¥ ot HOTICE TO ClltEOITOllS Cost• Mt•• •ne. SU1'1!1110R COURT 0' THI!: D-1•• e. WlfT~n \lATE OF CALtFOlltNIA fOR Trinlffrff TME COUNTY OF OlltANGE KllMltttll. o.Mtln:I. l(u1n ' ..... ""'tf'll 01111.,._,. E~lllt o! HANS ,,,. l!UDOLPH. Oe<et .. A"": L. Tiwtn rd &II Wetl llllla $Ir"' f'IO'l'K·E IS HERERY GIVEN to Ille SU!l1 1M <tedflors ot lf\f 1bove named oecedetll i.... A11191tK. C111ftrnl1 rn1 t 111 swrM1111 f\1v\n11 cl•lm• 1111ln1I t11e ,.Ybfllht!d Or1..,, Cati! '01nv I'll(.!, .. Id dt!ceoenl tft rO'QuJrt!d I<> ll!t !Mm, J1rt111rv 11, 1•111 1(S·70 w•lll lht ne<entrv \IOl/d'ltri. If! !hf ofllc••l-----------,..---1 al !ht ci.rk of "" tbo•e , .. nti.d <ClllM, or LEGAL NOTICE to 1>rnent ltlf:m, wilh Ille nt<fHI" ¥0l.IChtr .. I<> !ht Unlltrllt;ined ti ll>t Of· t•C'I ol f\11 A!lorr>f~I ROSENt=ELO,,l---.,-~~~OC"CC,-,.,..-,,.,.,.,--1 MEYEll AHD SEISMAN. '6111 Wlb~ln NOTICI 01' TllUSTl!:lf'I SALE fllvll lltverlv HlllS (:1tllornlt to1\0, <ln Ftbnlt"' U, .,70, ti !ht "°"'r ol t wnic;.; 1, tl\f pltce 'of bllllnfll ol' the t .m. •I lht off!« of Hl9blt & Higbie, 21' un.r.•sklned !n 111 mitten pert1!"1"' to ,,.,."'"' Awflllf:, 1!!11bae 11i.nd, Cll• ol !lit f'Slllt O! stld <lec-..1, Wllflln """' N~ Bt1Cll. C-1• ol' Or-, St1!~ monl~I '"" Ille Ur11 eublluliotl o1 ltoll of C111toml1. SUZ ... NHE •Ol!!INSON, •~ •IC!lte •"'"llfllle T•UITEE, wlll 5111 II PUbllc Oiled Dtce"'llfl' n. ,,.._ 1uctlbn lo tr.I hitllt'SI ltl<!lltr tor ftcl!. In E'IC Lldow ltwllll (J'OMY of ll>t Unllt!d $!tits, Ill $1>.clal Mmlnl1tr11or O! t~t NYtb~ 1t Ille 11,,. or 1a1t, a11 lh•I cer- Estate of l'ht •-t named Ill" t"ea1 Pl'""rlv 1ltu1teo 111 !ht (II• of search. The chase started Tuesday when two armed men wearing stocking masks robbed the Central Valley National Bank in Hughson, 10 miles east of Modesto in Stanislaus County. The amount of money taken was not immediately determined. Billy Joe Dickens, 36, of Modesto, a sheriff's deputy who answered a silent alarm from the bank, was shot there and died 4.1h hours later in a bospita1 at Ceres. The bandits, surprised by Dickens as they ran out of the bank, lied in a s tolen automobile d u r i n g the shooting. Dickens' partner, Charles Moore , emptied his gun at them, wounding one. In vestigation involving the FBI indicated the neeing men might be beaded for Allaville near Angels Camp in Calaveras County. Sgt. Steven Foundation of the San Joaquin County sher· iffs department said the car carrying the wounded bandit abruptly stopped and the ban· dit ran toward the deputies firtng three or four times. In the return fire, he was struck in the neck, shoulder and stomach., captured and taken to San Joaquin General Hospital in Stockton. Miss Reagan Piques Dad SACRAMENTO IUPll Gov. Ronald Reagan C:<· pressed displeasure with his daughter, Maureen. Tuesday for saying she doesn't believe a military viclory is needed in South Vietnam. Miss Reagan. a singer '~ith a USO troupe which recently \ returned from a 35--day tour nf the \l':ir zone. told the San Diego Republi can Businessmen's Club Monday : 1 "Before going thO?re I was absolutely convinced that v.•e ; should have a military victory in Vietnam. I don't believe it anvmore.'' When newsmen told her falher or the remark, Reaga n replied ~ "\Vhile 1·m partial to my daughter and love her very much. I don't think foreign policy should be decided by USO entertainers." North <.:ountics Disaster Ar eas oece!lt"I wllll tfMl'tl ~ Newoorl ~ CollnlY of Ct1,..., Sl•M llOS'IENfl!.LO. MEYER .. SUSSMAlf II C..lttornl1, detcrlbN II follow., SACRAMENTO (UP I) A,lltfMYI •I LI" lat 7t In 911od< 7t ol N-1 Bttdl Go Ron Id R .,. , .. 1 w11,111,, ••le~•r4 l r..ct •1 11t10w" Of' 1 ma1> re1;o•dt!d 1~ v. a eagan, Cl 1ng ., • .,..,Nm., c1Ntort111 "11• Boo~ 3. """ "'· ot Mlsc,iia.,...,,, M•'1• .. condittons of extreme peril ," "EL· ftl11 171.fl .. {JIH 17'1 .. 111 •ecord• of °'""'' Count.... I ed t2 N I ,.,,.,.:....,. tor '"'''' • 4m1,,111r11.. 111e "" w111 be mad• w1111o111 ''""'"' Tu esday dee ar or~ 1Cr1' P11b1;,,..... Or-c1111t1 0.1"' ,.11o1. or wtrriniv "'11'"'1,,. 111"°· -••11'°" "' California counties disaster1 J1....,1,,, 1, ,.._ 21, 71. "" t"21Mf t fl<vmtlrtMn 111 ••lt•IY !tit ebn111io.. ---~ _____ ----1 HCVtld bJ, 1nc1 PU""'"' to. 111e -01 areas as the result of slorm LEGAL N~ICE Hit conlerrt<I '" 111;1! ctrllln cited °" nd n-• d VI ITvtl PKVltd ll'f GEllALD It. MIT-a ......... amage. CHELL 11 Ttvtlol'. (tt111tff vnde• ctrl•!~ B d I Super•1"sors c•o ,. . .Ktfl tru11 !lated December 11, 1ff1l, $ECl)RI· oar S 0 CE•T•F•CATE 0, IUUNESS TV F iii.ST "'"''TIONAL llANl(,.1 Nttloll•t now setik state relief aid due· F•CTtT1ou1 HAME 111n~1i .. "'saor:1111oi1, 11 o-1•1n11 Trusm. lo "·agan's Issuance of a ,..,. un11~t1i.twd 60l'I cfrlil• llt b con-lor ll>t llitf>dit •NI JKVrltf' of ll08'11T ""' I M;IU .. 1 bu1t-1t 15' Bl'Olftl•· Coal• A. CM\,., I mRrritcl -~II ~Is tolt Ind dJSBSter proc:Jamation. The 8C·I ~. C•ll•o-.. 11 . .....,., "" 1;cn1-II"" -···"' ... -.... II BMefl<llllY H I-.! .. -01 11,.11.8011 a•IE"' T111.E COM· Ao•I! 1•. '"'· .,,., recor!lt!d ,,...,, L '"' tion was sought by tr.e coun- 1 P•NY Incl 1'111! ""' tin" 11 c.....-.0 O! M ~u.nf111 No. «ISi, In Boo~ IJU, 1>19' t' th• tollOWoPI ioe...on. -l• l'l<M l" h•tl 71ll at Otlkltl .,e<irili er! Ora119, C01.1nlY.1 __ ic_s_. __ 7'_,..--.,----- lnd •i.tr O! r111!1v>c1 Is •• lollow\: Ct!ltoml1. lllc;l'>trll H. 01'MoMt, 1~ B"""Wtv, S\Jl.ANNE' ll<lllNSON Wt~ •-ln™9, ____ _:"':..:_'_"' __ "_'---'----- Coi.lt MfW, (.iifotnl• •"" 1.t>t!IMl!d 81 Tn"let under ll>t !lffdt Cl••"' J11\1111Y )0. 1t11 el '""''"' • wbltnutiofl """' *"'"!Mor Do Thil If 11.lcNrl H DeoMo!!• If, JM , ltNI rr(Ordt!d °" S.pfOm""• 2S. ifAT( Of C•ltr-OllNIA. tffl, I I GO(VfT\lfll No. 1~117 ln Boolo tOIO. F.~LSE TEETH O~ANOIE COUNTY: ""' 111, Olllcl•I •.corn I" •ht Dlllc1 of On Jtnu••t Ill, 1"1. bi-to•• ""' I !ht Countil •ec:Of'tlfr el ••1!1 C6""'1v. Not•rv 11..ii11c. "' •""' 111" "'" St•"" Notiu e1 Ottaull '"" e1M:uon to .. n Foo.I Loo10, Insecure -.-11'1 _.,ti! •1a11r1 H DtMotte 1!M #IUlbtf r ... t ••-l'f ,,_,. tl>f •-,. me le bf !!If ~·""°" ""'*' flftd " f'IVll .,..,., rftOl'lttd on Sr••""br Dcm'l bf, IO •fr.Id U111 JOU' Ill" "'-11 wt1W-,-11lr!I 111 -Wl"' " .,,. ,., '"'· " llO(lllN'"' NG IJHO II' looll t.ee&.b •IU com• '°°""or drop Ju•t ., ,.,_, '"" 1dl"""IM!t"' 111 ''l'(Vltod "°"' ""' •If, Offlc\ftl •..:"'df ot 11'1t the 1"'0fll time. Por mou 111eurtt1 Mii' ''""' c°""''' •l'Cn~• ot uld c-rv 11114 mo:1!'9 CIOmfOn, aprtnkl• fa.ruou.t !Of!itlll k-111 Cl•IN· J""""'1 lt. lfl'tl, FAIST&BTH Dotutw. Adl'leelr• Pow-Mt•Y K '"i""'" SvrtMt lltollil'IOM clfl' oa 10Uf pa..141, PA8Tll11t Not•" l'lltltt C•lllC•l'•f Sllhlllul• TllUSTf [ f\ol69 dllllunt "7rar~J''· Na)tl "•l<ltlNI Olli<;• '" HIOlll A MIO&!• f!lua. fllMltt. PA u, alll:a. 0••~ Clufllr _,,.,.,.. "' T'nlllft llne-won'I lour under C11ntlll'f9. ,.,._ Commlnlofl Loni,... l•t C. A. HI""' .. Ne,. 1•. 1frt Plltlllthtd "'-' H••""• H1.,, ""'" o•O cumm7, rootrJ, PMtJ u11a. Dtn• A E OR OF TES TOC 00 E FRO to 1 -2 Get the highest guaranteed rote in the world on insured savings for as long as 10 years. . You choose the way to save that suits you best. TYPE OF Guaranteed Guar•nteed Minimum Minimum Intere st Interest ACCOU NT Annual R•t• Ann ual Yleld Amount Term Paid Compounded PASSBOOK so;. 5.13°/ • $1.00 Unlimited Qu•rterty Da11y · ----Guarentffd Rate Certificate =I 5.25~~ S.3'9/e $1.00 90 days Quart1rly Daily -Gueranteed Rate Certificate =;o2 s.2s01. S.39'°/ • $1,000 180 days Qu•rterly Daily Gu•rantHd Rate Certificate =±3 S.75°/. s. 92'/11 $1 ,000 1 yea.-Quarterly D•lly Guaranteed Rete Certificate =±4 6°/o 6. 1s01. $$,000 2-1 0 ye•rs Quarterly D•ily Gueranteed Rate Cerlificate =t l 6.50°!o 6.72°!o $100,000 60-89 days Quarterly D•ily Guaranteed Rate C1rlificat1 "' 6.75'/. 6.98°/o $1 00,000 90-179 d•y• Ouarl1rly Dail y Guaranteed Rate Certificate :1 7'Yo 7.25% $100,000 180-364 days Quarterly D&ll y Guara nteed Reta Certificate :t8 7.50°/. 7.79°/o $1 00,000 1 year Quarterly Da lly For more infor mation and professional guidance in planning your financial fu ture Call Collect (213) 631-051 l 11nd ask for •World Savings Money M1na91r. \NDRLD SAVING , a .. =~s:=~~c:=·=---Wll--9'SYDl:-......... ;;i.-• 'Gf. BR EWTWOOO LAGUNA BEACH Ll'llWOOO(H-Oll!Goj 11601 Witshireetsan \l".-ito 292SoulhCoaotH1ghway 1lf70 LangllNch8oUl...,d NORTHRIDGE 9036 Rosed& Boulevard at Nordhoff WILSHIRE-ALVARADO 2033 Wiishire BM!. LooAngolcs ONTARIO 521 North Euchd Avenue SAN BEllNARDINO 1.165 East Highland WOODLAND HILLS 2332.5 MuU10Uand Or1ve at VaUoyarolt Roed El Camino Shopping Center WEST ARCADIA 12DOS.Baldwtn01Dull18Road SANDIEQO fl70 6111 AYOOUaat B Slnlol :l'ubll>l'ltll Ort,.... '°"'' o.u. P•lel, c...n!Nil .,1r11 D1Jtv l'!lo!, H•wlOt'! tu,.. tllatftt .. r.i-nttal to l'lu1th ·-·n••--·•·,··--·-··-1 !~!~!-·~·~·~0!'!"~·~·~·~-~·r·~·~·~·~,~~C'.L-~:=================================================:::::::::::::::~-,...,. 111" ,_.,.,. •· ""' 101.10 ~PAllftlTH •~au dru1 <?OUnten. ,, .,...------------~------------~~~~~~~~ Wtdntsd&Y, Jan\llfY 28, 2q10 ' Membership lnte1·est Lags :=Pl?--s~ Relations. Group Change in ihe Stars Astrologers Forecast Conservatism By JOANNE REYJllOLDS ' Of tii. OlllY 'pjltf lt•lf SANTA' ANA -Clly Coun- cllma.o. Jerry Patterson says he plans to meet pext week. Mth the special Cornmiltee he h9ds to smooth out channels "b'} which Santa Ana ruidents can teelr: membUshlp on the. , city's new Human RelaUona ~ •• F9Jl10'llsslqn. . I '· So far, city officials reveal-! e<l Mdnday; ·only one person has lncHcated he wants to serve <1n the commission created by the city council Jan. 19. Despite the fact the com· mission was the subject of a six-month controversy, Pat· teraon says be ls not surprised by the lack of immediate In- terest in commission membership. "Hopefully, there will be a lot more interested people ANAHEIM -Southern The d ay 's utroloalcal when we have fonnal ap. CaJJfornta star-a:aze:rs met last analysis featured more than a plicatlom prepared," says the weekend in the heart of dozen Southland aatroloeers, councilman, whose Human ,._,... "-·M•" I ed lh Relations FonnaUon Com-........ e """"'v• v ew t; with more than 300 starey- mittee ls studying lhe qaestion CQO.StellatklDI deapite heavy eyed fans present. of how to proceed with com4 foe, and predicted lhe new Mol"3e and hls 'COileagues m i s s I 0 n membership pr1r }eat will be poUtlcaJly con· evaluated the year, and in cedures. servatlve. some cases the entire deCade ahead, in terms o( love, The Jan. 19 enabling legi.sla· A few other stunning an-finances and politics. lion passed by the city council nouncemenls wen also made. • appeared to end tbe con· UCJ p! _J_... · . '\Ye gave them the cha.nee troversy that swirled around ~ ''The cult or the ugly will be lo 1neet p r o f e s s i o n a l fonnatlon of the human rela· dylng out," prooOW1ced Burton astrologers and question tions organization. Mone, orga.nlur of the them," said Morse. "Then we !~~'.1'.hr.e~ Set to Study Ca:nyon Flood Threat ~· . On Jan. 5 the council voted Traditional Anabtbn ConventiOn Center said that people who were ln- to form a Human Relations event UUed; astrologanza. ;:~~~~ .. should investigate it Commitlee ralher than a CO""-G ad • .,.,_,.le will tend to make .. ..-111,.., •""l' "Besides," he added, mission. Under the cl t 'I r l.&,(.,Hlwn tbemlelves mott: attractive "astrology is fun. •I charter a commiSllon must than they have recently,'' said have eight members, the IRVINE -There wlll be no ~orse, pointlng to his own · Pooled predictions involved power to subpoena witnesses rock and roll band at UC newly aL'q\lim tollpee. a wor ldwide trend loward and is created by ordinance. A Irvine's June 1 r 1 d u a t 10 n idealism, or, as Morse put it : , i)l!LVERADO ~ 'J'hi'e COW!· f department beads have ~_selected to study tem- ~ary means of reducing pOtenUal -. flood dam a~ in SilV'erado and t.1odjeska Can-yons-. . Fo1· The H G Osborn h . f committee has 15 members, cere.mooy. Students up for "A tendency to stop tell lng i' · · e, c 1 e no speci,al powers and is graduaUon have voted 1 clear Coast Man like it is and start telling it engineer for the county Flood created by resoluUon. prefereoce for the university like it should be.~• Control District: F. G • Membe rs of tbe council who orchestra and that la what P.1orse -\vho said he McLellan, Jr .. director or the opposed the formaUon ot. a I.hey w1U 1el E l p} became i n v o I v e d wilh county Department of Building commission said they· did not They a11o by d>Olce will ll erS ea astrology long before it came and Safety, and F 0 rest want the body to have the sub-wear formal attlrt of cap and to Its presefit height of fashion 'Dickason, county pt an n in g poene power for fear Ule gown. Jn Shootin• g -offered one explanation for director, will make the study. .greup might turn into a police TradlUon won out in a poll-that current vogue. Fourth District Supervisor review board. Ina of graduaUon candidates "Life on earth is not depen- Willlam Hirstein said the ln-Minority members who ea1ier this month by Mart SANTA ANA - A Hun-dable . But people have always lerim work by the study team worked on Patterson's Human Fischer of the 1170 Com-tington Beach man who was felt that the universe is depen- will help prepare the areas for Relations Formation Com-mencement. Committee. arrested after shooting bj.s dabl e. They look to the a possible repeat o! las:t miltee, wh.tch recommended a CUriously, PhD and medical t5tr ed wif d h .,\ heavens for something." · · ·d th · ang e an e r The astrolo'"sl who began w.inter's flooding. comnnSSlon, Sal ey were doctor candidates split 11·11 brother 1..--J ded ·11y In •· years ago nid the -t\"tDd toward poUUcal conseniaUsm should remain unW 1972 at least. The planet Neptune is seen In the constellation Sagittariws -that's wh)' .. sald Morse. He also had a timely evalua· Uon to deliver Sunday. ..Mercury weot cUrtet today. Thert are good aspect.,," Atone explained. Evidently the A n a b e I m Police Department consulted sources oOler than the heaven· ly bodies when Afo rse lir!t ag- plled for his AJlrologam:a permll. ''The vice squa d in- vestigated us when we decided to have this gathering," he said, rather dourly. "Then when "'e were cleared, the mayor called and asked me to do his chart." "I did," he said, adding that Mayor Ralph B. Clark is an Aries. • DAILY PILOT 13 SMOKE CHOKE CROAK! or •.• QUIT, and LIVE • LIVE -LIVE Learn how. FREE consul· tation &nd det&lls. Spon- sored by Natlon•t Antl- Smeldnt Cevncfl. Call for appointment 642 .... 161 ... 67J.1127 Guaranteed to help you quit v.1lthln 10 day1! No problems! ' ' Record not satisfied with the Human •-tw-· the " n I v er 11 t y ua:i p ea gw his career in the study or the "Our '--st course of action Ll'll: ....... .. Su-"""' ()lat l.o charges ol ....: Relations Commltlee. .......... const.ellattoos more than 20 seems to be to keep the orchestra and a rock and roll assault with a deadly weapon.1-============~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=====~ watercourses open as much as Arter further study Pat-band with nloe wanUng no Cletus G. Posey, 44, of 17122 11 I . -"' .. "**"'l~_,~.,~.rr~f~"',.."""~""MCO" p:>&sible and regulate builclirig terson's group recommended mus1c. Younpr, bachelor'• Emerald Lac, was ordered wt:oN&.SoAt along portions o( the stream.$ formation of a commission by dtgrte candklatea curled the by Judge James F. Judee to Hun!l";'O<J &f.1c.11 Exc.111"" C'lib, so that undenni·n1·ng of atruc-resolution. day for the more tradiliooal F b • f In rera10 .... 8•1Kh ln~.11·un l l nglon appear t ." or sent.enc g. '°'~:c~t~•••'Y. c1utt. co.t• Me&• tures can be kept lo a At Its Jan. 19 meeting, the approach. AddiUon.al charps -among ~.·no1 ClluplrY ckltl. cos•• Mal, minimum in future floods," council approved the fonna· Accordingly, aaid..f'iJcber, a them a count· oi assault with we11minster E1t111ne1 Cli.tb, H1'Pennv said Hirstein. tion committee's r e c 0 m-psychology major who lives ln intent to commtt murd•• _ Inn, 1..a.o1 8tKh Blvd., Wn1mln11tr. 8 donnflory the -,.,.,"· Permanent flood c o n l r 0 1 mendation, voting 5 to 2 in campu1 • will be .. u-........i of •t that COiia Me11 Oorlmll! Club, C0tt1 Mo• I It --1..-..i---in "--......... _... Goll and CoonJry ciub, IJ'Cl GGlf works for the two canyons ar.e favor of the commission; with un vers 1 UJ"UICM&a ww uic time. Courie Drlvr . Cosl• Mftl, n<IOll. ~:n-v· M w d H . nd asked to --""onn • pr .. J N ...... -,,.',, "•'',oo,•,,,•,.!!o,•,•,w,,•.·-v.!!!.•, ucu1g studied by the 1.J.S. ice ayor a e errm a ,...... Police said the fracas tn • -,,-,, -··-A Co f En . bu Councilman O""'en Markel orw cessional and rteelllonal hlcb p II edl hot his fou!.~11~ v~11,:·Wxc.11ar-c1ub, Fr•,._ nny rps 0 gmeers, t e"' r before aod after ceremonies. w osey 8 eg Y S fi.~!b..1'~~,SBPe~ BIYd., Hvnn1111on the report will not be com-~ng. Giving the atude.nta what wife, Geraldine, 44, and btr A1rorni1ri>nic. Toeiim151trs, v 111 a pl~led until 1973, ity attorney William Mock h brother, Clarence Lee Russell, M•rln•. 1g.(5 81v11dt Drive, NewPGrt said the commission Js "really t ey want, the Com-bolh f -· c c1~1~1'~lr 6 :r~,~ot· SQ\lldron 11, 20011 • mencement Committee also 0 ''" 1 ypress Ave., ... <•cl• s1., cv.;11 Me... 1 a committee that is being call· ted f lrldl Huntington Beach, erupted ,.,m .. M1J.C>n1c St1t1rint1 LOO .. No. Bi'd Deadlm' e ed a commission." vo or tional cap and 1 1 N 16 h M p JOI, M11Dnlc Ttm111-t, n111 Sir«• 111<1 p gown attire, as•--cer-y as OV. w en rs. osey st ... p1 N kacll 1 atterson noted the com· 11111·~ '"""""'' d h b the ed . 11.M. n<lrews "''' NoP«t • mission would have the r•·gbt of not more than an hour and an er ro r attempt t.o ·' H•m!ln;ton e.eact'I Masonic lodtt, SANT A AN A Th t ha" f move furniture from the , Masonic H111, J'CS L•ke ... vr., Hun· -e coun y to go to council in any ·s......,if!c a 11, names o graduates be • 11n111on Be~. 7:l0 P.m. Board of Supervisors has sel ~-read but lhe not h apartment fonnerly occupled · cn,u Club ot co1t1 ~ ••• Coml!'lun11v case where subpaena power is Y mare lh l ~:ir::~o~ •. '~V~· ,..,~::."Ye11.~n1Y March 2 as the deadline for neeessary. "'11le council will across the atage, a reception by e separated couple. co.ss C•~·· c111b. R 'c • r 1 'Io 11 filing construction bids on the folJowina the ceremony but no Officers said Posey shot his Buod1nu. 111• w. B11t1o1 · B w.. review the comm.i.!slon at tbe .. 06 or~~"°Ctou8"'i~c.11.a..:,:1~.:rm;,,1ron0m1cii AliS(l Beach Fishing Pier in end of the year to determine graduation ball. wife In the hip and her brother Aun., Sant'"° H 11t1 S<JIOOI, G•rde" South Laguna. · A aubcommlttee headed by in the stomach. Both have Tl-IE 1/3 to 1/2 OFF Sale Begfn1 Thurs., Jan. 29 Hours: 10:00 to 5:30 • Plccollno • Merry Mite • European Imports • Imp • Duskin . ,!:,',"'•·!;,••,·,·,,· .,,,,, '" w. '"" ns progress," he n ° led· lo since recovered from lhe1·r 4 & -~· e1 ,.. The pier, expected to cost in "Perhaps this will let the E ise Kloke, e:zecuUve aasis- ! ..:.!1~~.;0>:; "'ct;1~i'm1~,;m·Na. '391, s1. the neighborhood of $600,000, minority people know we have t.ant to Chancellor Daniel wounds. RED BALLOON ~ !~1~.~:1~ ~-™ orinee ... 'f •. , "'ill be financed with federal, taken a step and are willing to Aldrich, decided that the OWctrs said the wounded u" 1 1' 11 • • 1111 U 11 "'"' ; R~~~ '::miHu~;~~,.~~Jee:.,~~n H1fi'.. state and county funds . take another.'' theme ol graduation should be RUJaell persuaded Posey to T "'D Clethl .. fer Cltll4lrH • luffy • Groce ~ or~~~~,i~zi"r;··~t1 1c~v'!:: e 1_, c 1ub, ··~~ijji~~i"~i'iijiii~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiil "Environment and the Future surrender lhe gun while Mrs. Huntiniton Harbour ~1 • 16111 Al901tqui11 St. 1 :1.45' VI• DP«ta. '"""'-' B11ch, l:JO Of Man." . p OS e y called police. Huntington l11ch Ph. 146·166• ~ 11.m. 1_::..:::::::..:~~~~~~~~_:_:::.:=-.;'.:::::2'.:::::.:_~~-'=====================================================================J COid Slnglt$, YMCA I.JOO Unlvtn ilY 1- : or1w. N~~au\~·:v1:JO p.m. 1 Cllrl1t11n Bu1lnt11mtn'1 C111n111lt'", ~ Hyn!lngtoo B11cll, M1nn'f'I. H02 l £d!netr ,..,,,,, Hun!lntlO!I B11th, 7 • 1.m. I H1rbor-Lltts Too•lm.11rer'1 Cl\lb, Ontr1 ' C1ftrerl1, F111hloft ltlJnd, Ni""°" • Cmler. Newoarl Beach, 1 1.m, Brttkl11t OJ>liml1t Club ol COJll Ml:!ll, :· Cortl RM Rn !1ur1"'· 2"1 H1rbor Blvd., Costt M111, 7:l0 1.m. , 8oard Of Rt1!10~. Nt wP«I H1rbo•· ' Colli Mfll, Btlbol BIY Club, 1121 . • W. Cotll Hlghw11, Newport &tic.II, I :· 1.m.. ( W~•lmln1ter Ral1ry Club. IC Int'• Ttble ,. R11t111r1n1, Wtl!mlntler, 12 ""°"' Deal/a Notices ARBUCKLE & SON Westcllff l\tortuary 427 E. 17lh St., Cct,sle l\1esa 64Mlll • BALTZ MORTUARIES C-Orona del !\1ar OR 3-9•50 C-Osla l\1e6a Ml G-U:C • BELL BROADWAY !HORTUARV 110 Broadway, Costa l\lesa LI s-3133 • DILDAY BROTHERS IJunUngf.on Valley l\1ortuary 17911 Beacb Blvd. ltuntington Beath 11%·7771 • PACIFIC VIEW l\ID 10RlAL PARK Cemetery. e Mortuary Chapel 3500 Padrlc Vltw Drl'(e Newport Beach, CAWornla 64+2711 • PEEK FAMILY COl.O~lAL FUNERAL ROME '1881 Bolu Ave. We1lmlnder ltWlts • SHEFFER MORWARY Laguna Buell iN-1531 San Clemente 4tz..41llt • \ SMITHS' MORTUARY • 127 Mila SL '1tmlttngtOn Stach __,_ -·'13$f$39 -·-You could buy oile oft small cars. But look what you don't " ..... ""''' anti·tbert iraltion kQ wan.io.J hm* NtYl'I Marie-Minor acrylic lacquer flnlab Nova's &love comput- ment with lock Now1'1 clrar•tte li1hter cbolOI of thrtt atand.e.fd ensinu: 4, 6. or V8 Ntw'1 room for t'live --and tbelrlqpp Hen's blu belted ply tirto NIYl'I widertnad Ctont. and rear NOTa'e aot • lot to talk about. 8eeaut1 ~ fet. IO roucb more vaJu• 'frit.h a N0'1'1. "l'blnp you ju.t can't. find on otbtr an anywhere Mltr the prict;. MQbe t.ba~a •h1 Nova Ii tu.c~ a bit Nova's day-night rearview mirror Nova'• more uMbl• lu11age capacity Nova's rear window that roll up and down Nova's carg"<>·ruard lu11a1e compartment Hen's £orward·mount.t door lock butlomt NoY1'1 computer-Mltct«l aprin.11 Nov1'1 Cou.r t.raMmiuion choices Nov1'1 innlf fendtrt front a.nd NU' Hllwr. Jt. oft'era what D>ON people want. Alonr with 11 rM&l.1 v1tua thit'll mUe eotot of t.boM ot.ber can 111m eva amallc by comparl.:>n. Puttini you fin~ keep, "' llrt~ l I J4 OAllY PllOf \"ltdneiday, Januar.y 28, 1970 QUALITY DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES LINK STITCH ACRYLIC ' CA RDIGAN SWEATER 7.99 value Save over 50%! Th• favorite tradi· fional style mcn'.5 sweater ot o terr ific pric.e. 100% 'Virgin a cryl ic in a fi rm link stitch wl1h rib c1,1ff and waist, button front., Wolhable fot eosy·«Hll in t.hadn of gold, blue, green, si1e1 S, M, l, Xl. FABULOUS SAVINGS! lNTl!JlATE A PAREL DISCfJUNT PRICED: EMBROIDERED PADDED BRAS Save 5 1 %! lightly podded bros of C111 2.00 value rcuy-(ore ble11d of .45 °f. polycslet·30% ny!on·2S~b cotlon with cillover multi-pcutel 9 7c dointy l'mbroidery, Sizei 32 to 36 A. B. NYLON·LYCRAD GIRDLES Save 37o/ol Choote the i.port brief ..,...ilh trip le dioonond reinforted front panel or pt1nty girdle .,..;th embroidered .i.lretch ftonl pt1nel. Both ore sturdy nylon powered with l )'<tO.., srondc11.. White, pi11k, blue, beige; sizei S, M, l. Shop ot Zodys for so'f'i119s! 2.99 value I'' SHEER GLITTER NYLONS TERRIFIC BUY! Sove S1 %! The fi11hhing 1ouch for drC$)Y otco5ion)! Shef."r glitlrr nylon ho\ie,...,. with 11ude .. cf'I, jocquord late welt, mesh knit, Black, silver, catfee!Ol'lt'; sizes 8V1 to 11. 79, value Ll'L GIRLS' WIDE WALE CORDUROY SHIFTS Sovc 67%! Popula r wide wole 100o/o COi· 2.99 value Jon corduroy shift~ wil h sell belts, tob-s o nd 9 7c inverted pleat trim~. Choose red, navy blue, brown, !3reen, pink, gold; J to 611.. GIRLS' NO·IRON conoN PANT DRESSES Save ~8 %1 Prr:·~co1o n totoop al Permanent 3.99 value Pres' cotton pant d1es1esl Uvely prlnh in sl eeveless $lyle.s, novelty doisy button trim 247 or zipper clo,i11gs. Choose blue, red,. pin\., navy blue or green; girl'' 'i1e1 7 to 12. LITTLE BOYS' PERMANENT PRESS PANTS Savo S0%1 Mcrde 10 please Mother ond 1.29 vafu• ion, too. Popular bo•er model pont, of completely co•rfrrc blend of .50¥• polye~ 67C ter·.50% col!on 1llc11 nevet needs ironing, O;ive, black, blue, whhkcy, navy; si1ei 2-6. • '· • ' ' ----- Wtd!Mdaf, January 28, 1970 6 PILOT.ADVO::RTISER HIGH FASHION AT ZODl:S LOW DISCOIJNT PRICES! ONE-PIECE TIE·TOP DRESS A. Save 62%1 Petite dress for petite sizes. One· piece plaid 1n plain dress with lace-tie bodice~ stand-up collar and short sleeves. 100% Coloroy® rayon backed with acetate. Turquoise, pink; 3 to 1 T. 9.99 value 3'' SAVE! SPRINGWEIGHT TOPPERS I . Save 30%1 Tailored and terr ific diagonal wea ve ~ 100% acrylic laminated to hold its shape. Style 14.99 value features include wide notch collar, big patch poc:· I 047 lr;ets and sporty half belt bock. Choose colors of bright white or popular navy blue in sizes 8 to 18 . U·NECK MINI RIB SWEATER C. Save 51 %! The new-look! Casual u-neck mini rib sweater with short sleeves, pair it with skirts or pants. 100% acetate in a choice of white, black, red, ;,avy·blue, brown; sizes 34 to 40. fashion buyt BONDED ACRYLIC SLACKS D. Save 37-%1 Our 100% bonded acrylic slacks ore the perfect c~oice for blouses, sweate rs or o ny casual locket, Zip-front, contour waist and th e new· 'esi wide straight leg. Assorted bold plaid combin e· tidns in sizes 6 to 16 at Zodys low discount price! J.99 value I'' 5.99 value 3'' CLINGY ACE'l'.ATE PRINT SHIFT E. s;v• 42%1 Soft ond .s.linky 100% acetate flo1 o l 4,99 value print shift, great to wear, great to core for. Simple 287 collarfe,S Y..neck, long sleeves with trim sh irt cuff and self-tie belt. A'sorted print~; .s.izes 8 to 16. IHUWCIOll ........ •llTM ..... llACll AllARllM•I .... PUIC AllAKllM·•ULLUTH WUTCOYlllA .... , ....... llHNDOllACll Cl~tf l l'I .. Af CllMSHAW IM,.lt&I NWT. Af t"'91Ulll L tOVIM Sfllll Af CtnttT llACM ll¥a. A UHCout OIAMOllMOIPI Af \IMON AlUIA AYL Af "'INTI tllfOA ILVO, At Ol'IONSNlll MAwtMOINI I LVO .... , so.tar''""' POMClllA •llllTAI• YAWY LOllO llACll llUllT .. OTH llACll SAllTA UA OAIHll OIOYI IUOIUIC CAllOOA PAOK ~ Y•lllf ct•lf• MU:IOl ltW9. "' ........ '°' COTGfll,l ....... WOONUn ...... Wiit ........ H •...... avL •• '"" '"'" CMAPMAN. llOOIMU••• .... tllNANDO ILVI •• , 1u11...... TOP ... NOA (AMYO .. •LVO. "' IOK ot J I - • PILOT.AOV!RTISER 1 Monday, January 26, 197()1 DAILY PILOT Ji. BRING THESE COUPONS FOR FABULOUS SAVINGS IN ALL DEPTS. AT ZODYS! - •11•1 Ll•I lllACll UAlillM•lllllA PAIK WmM•""11U• L llllR Al CMlllf llACM at.Q, I UMCCM.N MAH1tlf0wt At 'IMOM IAllfAW It. MMe A'fl. Af 1 nM ltl .. Ll•l lllACll , .. ,.,..,. ................. , ' . , WUT COYlllA •111•1111 Al¥tA An. At !"""" llllN Q. At llYONIMtl .......... . ... .. , .. ,,, ............... , ................. .,., ... .. ,, ......... Cll llAWfMOIWI N ... At M.NY C ..... CAllllAPW fW...u cMfOM M,., At IOICOI f • ( l ' I - DAILY ,PILOT Wed"'~'' January 28, 1970 'La Paz to·f;;abo San -Lot!as Last Ellmlnatlons • • Places of In terest, Anchorages Not So Safe Congress Cup LineupNear By ALMON ,LOCKAB&V .. fl .... ,.., He~ sooth from La Pat to Cabo San Lucas -or for that matter, vice versa - there are 11u111crous polnt.s or Interest, biit few places that can be called safe anchorages. We made the trip south. and with just myself and the two gals, we \\'t!l'e careful to choose ovcrnigh l spots thnt of· fered the best protection !ro1n the ever-present threat of northW6lers. Such better knu11 n resorts as Las Cruce•;, San Jose deJ Cabo, Rancho Bua1a Vista, and Palmilla are luxurious stopping places if you go by land or ciir. but ;ir(' open roadstead and offer little pro- teclion in the 1::vnt of sudden weather if you are cruising. These are popular fi shinc resorts \\'i1h moclern holcls and other accontmodations. BUT TllEY arc interesting nlaccs to cruise slowly by and pick out the luxury homes of Mich personalities a5 Bing Crosby, Desi Arnaz• and the 11·ell-knovt'11 chronicler of Baja California, Ray Cannon. Our first overnight stor en route fron1 La Paz to Cabo U'as ;ii Puerta Ballandra. only a few miles east of L.a Paz. Jt was here we. got our first look at the Uny ie1Jyfish wblch had plagued us on earlier parts of the entise. They resembled tiny brown worms with an orange-red head and literally s urrounded . the boat, discouraging and thoughts or swimming. But a trip to shore in the dinghy revealed there were none of the peslcy creature9 Ylithin 100 )eet ot shore. We got an early start next morning (or a leisurely run to Muert.os Bay (Bay of the Dead ). Kee.ping an eye out for off-lying rocks and reels we cruised close aboard the beauliful Las Cruces club resort where a number of celebrities have built homes. The northwesterly d i d materialize. giving us a chance to shul dow., the motor and get in some sailing, but \\"C were thankful to get a hook d<Jwn at Muertos after the \vind breezed up to 20 knots. \'VE ANCllOREO orf the warehouse about 150 reet from a converted sea-going tug, The Forge. which had about 1~20 persons aboard, mostly young people. Possibly because of the generation gap, they mad~ no effort to be friendly, but an cocouriter wlUi a young couple oo the be.ach revealed that the • boat wu ,a. ·"school ship" wh\C\i cruised the gulf a.II year under the command of an Oakland doctor. We learned that the doctor was a doctor o! naturopalhy and that there were about 20 young people enrolled, but nothing more. The )'oungr,o- ple were cordial, b!Jt ma e it clear they had no wish to reti,im to "civtllzaUon." The mere mentlon that I was a newspaper man turned them o(f P.rompUy. Besides t h e dilapidated warehouse an the beach - which contains no wares - there Is a hut which houses one family. The head of the famll)' -a fisherman -in- formed us we could get good water b)' having it trucked from a village about 16 kllometers inland -a proj~t those aboard The Forge wete• busily engaged in. THE WATER is trucked to, !he beach in 50-gallon drums fron1 where rou low it to your, boat by m.cans of a din ghy - If you have a powerful enough motor. Los Frailes is a favorit e anchorage for the A1exican fishing fleet as well as cruis- fift$fOnt BRAKE SERVICE OFFER All Work .Performed by Skilled Mechanics Using Modem Precision Equipment POINT BRAKE OVERHAUL DON'T TAKE A CHANCE ON BAD BRAKES! s NOT JUST A RELINE WE DO ALL THIS WORK: 1. '.RePlace brake 1inin1 on all-4 wheel• 2. Arc lining (or perfect mot.act with druma 3. Rebuild all 4 wheel cylinders 4. 'furn and I.rue brake druma 5. lruipect maater cylinder 6, Repack outer wheel bearin11~ on boLh front wheels 7. lllBpeci. brake hoses B. lnspccl brake 11hoe return springs Pde• for drum·tvpe brakes on most Fords. Plymoutht, Ch•YVI, Amerlcal'I comp1ct1 1nd l ight trucks, Othe11 slightly higher. 9. Add super heavy duty brl\kr flu id 10. R011d test car "CHARGE IT" CONVENIENT TERMS FOR APPROVED CREDIT CUSTOMERS Precision· alignment by skilled mechanics using modern equipment $ 6. !!.~ ..... " 1ir condltlonlng higher. Parts ••tr•. f~mous brand SHOCK ABSORBERS 4'" SllOCK COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH· 415 E. 17th St . e 6'6-2444 Open Mon .-Frl. 8 to 7-S•t. "tll S l When you buy the first 3 et our everyd1y low price. COUPON EXPIRES .' JAN. JI, 1170 USED TIRES fjrtttont and other brands < t'.oodi""""""'"tllll" .. '""""ot. I'll lrlilnoll'I ltlft. ldHI l()f --&--ki..111""' •!ld_poln. MOllt __ _,,.,..,.,..,...""" ~I~ ~HEV LA8T ' HUNTINGTON BEACH 16171 Bnoch Blvd. • 847-6081 Open Mon .-Frl. 8 to 8-S11t. 'til 5 ing yachts headed across lhe gull lo and points south. When we .arrived after a Hine-hour trip fro1n f\tuerlOI' there \ltere seven boaLs -in- cluding three c r u l s I n g "ail boat.s at anchor behind the high blutfs. The fishing boats left during the night, but dur- ing our twl><iay stay several ether cruising yachts made the stop before praceeding on their way to their variOU& dest.ioations. AnlOllg those we visited was lhe K-40 Emerald Isle (ex-Sea Smoke) which once was actively raced in tliese parts by Jim Arness of Gunsmoke fame. AFTER LEAVING Fralles we caught our first cabrillo while cruising past Palmillo and 'found him to be a very ·tdqgh fish.· •Alter virtually drowning the critter getting him-aboard, and then clubbing him thoroughly we thought he w~s dead and dela)'ed cleaning him for anoth,er hour. But when I pulled him out of the bucket to start cleaning the $ob came aJlve, stabbed me "'ith a fin and blithely bounc. ed off the deck. No fish for dinner. In lhe final chapler we will talk aboul Cabo San Lucas and give the ladies a few pointers on going ashore for dinner at plush hotels via a rubber dinghy Lhrough a very active surf. • Boal Sho'v • Ou.tboards ·Re81 Wild Psychedelic outboards? ,·wlkl, man, wild. But you won't know just how wild until you eyeball Evlnrude Alotors' new "Surf- Slx-0'; at lhe 11th annual Sports.VacaUon-Travel Show which starts Friday and runs lhrauglt Feb. I at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. Feeling U1at today's youth needed their q~n "in" power plant for the'ir j>oats, Evinrude is featuring 'a varicolored 60- horsepower motor w h i ch would make the rainbow hide in embarrassment. The C<llors \COmbine wild gr•pe. maxi pink, raucous i'lllt, surfer blue. mad mauve and pcrper mint. The pro- peller 6f the englne is palnte::l fuchSla. Ellmh>aUona sd.eduled this w~ktnd will dttel'1)1lne tM three skipper; remaining to be ass1&11J'd Jn the I o • b o a t Congreaalonar Cup matcb race series ln Long. Beach March 1~22. Sall-off11 are Sc h e d u I e d Salurday and Sunday i n Newport, ·Los An.gfies and SanLa Monica Bay to select sem·l-flnalists for the' two re- maining berths in the popular match racing event. Four skippers are ente~e<l at Nt.\lrporl. six In the Lo8 Angeles-Long Beach area and New Sloop On Display at ieast six in lhe Santa peUtlon this year, Locludlnc Monica-Santa Barbara sail-off. the finals, will be sailed ln Seven skippers have been Columbia.SO sloops. 1 previously 'naqied and an Entered in th e weekend's eighth was announced ~)' LAYCbased saD-off are Jim .on receipt of orflcial certiflca.-COwle Qf Cabrillq Beach YC; Uon by lhe.;.ft.awali Yilcht Rae· Ed Lorence, t,.A YC; Mort Ing ;.sabclatlClf of~ HonolUlu. Haskell, Alamitos Bay YC: Ed The Honolulu skipper is Cy Feo, Seal Beach YC; Tom ,Gillette, internationally known Pickard, Seal Beach YC; and Star sailor, who won the sail· Roble Bessant, St BYC. ' pff .in tbe ... 1sljU1~ earlier this Entries In tbe Santa Monica· month. • Santa Barbara 11all-off are The. San ,Diego semi-ilnaUst Chari~-Hathaway, Jackson ii Olymptc yachting. gold Scott, Buzi Boettcher and Bob medalist Lowell North of San M~lzner, all ' of California YC : "Diego Y~c;bt Club who will be Andy Macdonilld, King Harbor making hls second bid for the YC:· John Andron, Santa Cup, Barbara YC. North wUJ sfil Feb. 14-15 Previously announced as against jhe Newport Har~r Q;ngressional Cup contenders survivor or this weekend's were Bamey Flam, Long eliminations. The Newport Beach YC; Ted Hoorl, New contenders are JQho HaskelL York YC; William lbs Jr., Newport 1Harbor YC aboard New Orleans YC; Patrick \V. \Yeslerly; Argyle Campbell of O'Neal, Larchmont (N.Y.) The new Halsey Herreshoff-Balboa Yacht Club in Yacht Club; Ches Rickard, designed fiberglass 5 I 0 0 P • Escudero; Harry Nye, NHYC, Royal Vancoover YC; Thomds Sailstar-26 is attracting wide in Astro , and James Seals, Fisher, Grosse Point (Mich .) attention at the Southern BYC in Loco V.iente II. YC and Ted Turner, AUanta California Boal Show at the 1 • · Pan Pacific Audiloriwn. -==A=I =C=o=ng=re=s=si=on=a='\=C=u=p=c=o=m=·=i=G=a.=)=Y=C:;o.======~ ' The latest design from "i young Herreshorr is manufa- ctured by Bristol Yachts, Bristol, R.1. and recently ar· 1 rived on the We st Coast and ls being ltand\ed In Newpo~t. Beach by Bristol Yacht.s on Coast Highway. The Sailstar-26 represents one of the first production high-performance fiberglass hull.5 with iither a shoal draft fixed keel or centerboard. WORLD PREMIERE ENQAGIMENT "Taylor Olld hotty Cit their bnt'' -L.'A. Tim11 -••.e.tlc Co-"f -2\'llQMll'·Hlk' l'IUYIS Bllzabetb Warren 'Nflor , Beatt)' l!!J..,. The 01;1JY Game In 'n»wn Ql.(l~llLIJI( St11dla Ffft•r• r,_.ft, Fr!Hy, l:JI-LIDO ONLY ORANGE DRIVE·IN e LIDO THEATRE, Now Get the BIG 6% at the BIG M Everybody knows that NOBODY TOPS THE BIG M -Mutual Savings, in offering the most in earnings to savers. 6 11/o 2 ye1r term account with $5,000 minmium b1l1nce 5J(4•/• I yeer term 1ccount, with $1 ,000 minimum balanc• Sl/4•/• l ·months bonus account, with $500 minimum b1l1nce 7'/1•/e certific1l1 of depo,it available, $100,000 minimum b1l1nce If you are a Mutual Savar, now is the time to invest additional tunde In these new high-rate accounts. (Insurance has been increased to $20,000.) If you are not 1 Mutual Saver, now Is the time to open your account at The Big M-Mutuel Savings. ACCOUNTS NOW INSURED TO $20,0001 COVINA QLaNDALa , MUTUAL SAVINGS · • and IKn uuciatin CORONA DEL MAR 2867 East Cout Hlohw.y Tel1phoM $7$-5010 • waaT AlllC/IDIA 660 We11 Duar1• Road T1l1phone 440·0168 .. 200 North Citru1 Avenue T1l1phone 339-54711 )38 North Br•nd BoOlt¥ttd Te11phon• 242-'\146 .. AeADaNA (HN<I Off;ce/ 315 E11t Colon1do BOulevard T•l•ptton• 44g.234s ·---------------------·------------~-----~-------- 4 PILOT -ADVERTISER (NI Wedn~sday, January 28, 1970 Pancakes Please Publisher •• .. • ' . • If you happen to pick up the January, 1970 Issue of Sunset magazlne turn to page 98 and let yoU11 eye travel to the l)ottom of the Inside column . There you will find a recipe for Sour Cream Pancakes that ts the brainstorm of a Cos.ta Mesa resident, Mrs. George D. Ellis. , , The recipe1 a ·breakfast favoiite that can turn into dessert, is. cooked at the table in an electric frying pan and is a light and airy pancak"e, rich .. with a full-cup of sour cream. ... ~ " · This is not fhe first time Mrs. Ellis has had the' distinction of seeing one of her recipes in print. She has had abOut 12 puJ>lished in Sunset since 1953 and has submitted several' tO' f\.{idwesteril newspapers. · ' Her first recipe was printed ifi the Omaha World Herald when she was a new bride, late in Depression days. , Born in Au burn, Neb., she moved at a very ear'.ly age with her par-, ents to Freemont County, Iowa where they were pioneer residents. Growing up there, she stood on a chair in tront of a great wood stove to stir her first culinary e'Uort~. . TodaY tfle aroma of homemade soup and fteshJy baked bread often \Vaft from her rhodei:n kitchen as she experiments to find another original recipe. _ 1 Soups and br~ad ere her favorite foods to cook , a·nd ijle loves to make pastries wJ1en she Ji.as guests. lier soups, simmered in ,a giant, friendly old kettl.e, take two or three.days to make and never turn oot quite the same. A Costa Mesan since 1964, she and her husbarid came fiere from __.Elsinore and_be!ore. thaLwere-from_-Holly..wood...wh.e»e..Ellis ~ OFJ!,r _gf a ._ sound equipment firm. , · , SUPER SOUPER _,.Making a hu ge pot of sottp is a labor of Jove for Mrs. George D. Ellis, a Costa Mesa c<;><>k who recently had an· other recipe published in Sunset magazine. To make her soups she starts with soup bones and water, and the finished product, two or three days later, is never the same twice in -a row. Her most recently published recipe was for Sour Crea1n Pancakes. Surprisingly; the · adventuresome cook does dot collect cookbooks. She reads extensively about food and clips recipes, c;:hanging and adapting them or using them as the basis for .a creation of her own. She ke'eps her own recipes in a series of boxes she designed herself, filing each category of food separately. Some of her prized possessions are cookbooks, even though she is not a collector. · One is an old Mary Margaret McBride cookbook \vhich she keeps because she also is a history buff, and another is a Brown's coolCbook which she IJsq likes becau.se of its old recipes and quaint instructions. Others are a Blll'niese cookbook and one from Io,va. Mrs., Ellis has one son, Robert Gamble who is an engineer and cur- rently lives-in England. Gamble is married and his wife, a native of Spain, is an expert cook hersetf. · Mrs. Ellis' biggest cooking failure occurred she says laughingly, when she ente11ained .ber daughter.:in-Iaw's parents in1Spain prior to the wedding. . She kne~v nothing of the quality. of the roOd packaging there, never having be·en 1n Spain, and cooked an "Am"erican" dinner with taste1ess frozen peas and rubbery steak that was not meant to impress future in. laws. Sho1·t (5'2"), 'vith snapping b1ue eyes, she fairly glows \vith excite- ment \vhen she talks about cooking. "I'm one of the most enthusiastic people you ever 1net, '' she smiles. . · Here is l\.1rs. Ellis' recipe for Sour Cream Pancakes appearing in the current Sunset magazine. · SOUR CREAM PANCAKES 2 eggs 1/4 cup sugar 1 cup sour cream 2 tablespoons warm \Valer 1/2 teaspoon sbda 3/4 cup unsifted flour 118 teaspoon salt Separate eggs. In a bowl lightly beat egg yolks 'vith a fork ; beat in sour cream and warm \Valer (refrigerate if made ahead). Combine unsifted flour , sugar, soda and saJt; sift together in bo\vl and set aside. Just before serving, stir liquid ingredients into flour mixture. Beat egg \Vhites until they hold firm peaks and fold into batter. At the table use a ladle to dip out about 2 tablespoons batter for each cake; bake on lightly greased preheated pancake griddle or electric frying pan at medium heat. J\1akes about 16 small pancakes, about 5 to 8 servings. Table Brightener Fruit Dollars Well Spent Winter Days Warmed By JO OLSON 01 1111 0 1llY PUii S!lll ..-£!£lure a di11ner table set \Vith pretty di shes, an altracffi..e centerpiece and only bread and meat on the plates. The appeal of the setting is lost when U1e eye travels to the co1orless plate of food and part of the incentive to eat is gOne. The color a nd variety of vegetables and fruits, along with the essential minerals and vitamins they provide, is the reason that they are included on the daily menu. Many a tip.icky eater can be induced with a bright display of color on his plate. Fruits and vegetables. combined for the thir~­ or the basic fOUr food groups, \Vere diSCUSSed by Mrs. Dorothy Wenck, Orange County home advisor, for her series, Stretching Your Food Dollar. All of our vitamin C. much of our vitamin A and some of our iron and niacin are supplied by this food group, she said. Vitamin C is essential beca:use it helps form and preserve the cementing material that holds the cells of our body together. Mrs. Wenck elaborated. Our bodies do nCYt store vitamin C so we must rcne\v our supply each day . Excess amount~ arc eliminated fro1n th e body so it is valueless to take in extra. Although the amounts required vary according to age, everyone should have at least one fruit or vegetable high in vitamin C and several other veget- ables and fruits ·daiJy. HIGH CONTENT f'oods high in vitamin C include, in milligrams, highest to lowest. green pepper, broccoli, fresh orange juice, frozen orange juice, canned orange juice, canned grapefruit juice, cantaloupe and straw- berries. Medium amounts of vitamin C are found in potatoes. spinach, asparagus, tomato juice, cab- bage, fresh pineapple. avocado and banana. Poor sources of viliman C, unless they have been enriched, are canned apple juice, cranberries. canned grape juice and stewed dried prunes. Proper storage of foods containing vitamin C is irnportant as it is one of the most unstable vita· 1nins. It is destroyed by heat and exposure to air and dissolves in water. To preserve Vitamin C. the home advisor sug- gested keeping food s cold, covered and dark. Fruits and vegetables should be eaten raw when possible. Skins should be left on when cooking, if possible. .~mall amounts of water should be used when cook· ing and the water should be saved for future use. l'~oods should be prepared just before serving. \Vlthoul being simmered, an_d should not be over· cooked. Leftovers should be eaten as soon as possi· ble. Half the vlta1ni11 C will be gone from a JeJtover ve~eLable if it has been stored in the refrigerator ~ tnrcc days. Vitatnin A, a second llllljor contribution or fruits and vegetables. is necessary for the proper function· ing of the eye, Mrs. Wenck said. It helps the eyes to see. in dim light and adjust to sudden bright light. The vitamin also helps the outer layer of skin stay healthy. UnUkc vitamin C, Vl'l.amin A is stored in the body fat and therefore does not have to be replenish- ed every day. DAILY RECOMMENDATION . One medium. carrot provides just about the amount recommended for both men and \Vomen daily, and more than this is not necessary beca"use it is possible to get too much vitamin A.1 Toxic r~ suits have been observed from too much, Mrs. \Venck said. Foods high in vitamin A are egg yolks. whole n1ilk . butter, margarine. liver, bright orange and yellow fruits and veg~~bles and dark green veget- ables., including tomato.es. Accordipg to Mrs. Wenck, vegeta)11es and fruits have other benefits. Dark green leafy vegetables provide iron and thiamine and vegetables and fruits furnish bulk and rough8ge. The plant cells act as a scrub brush for our teeth and out digestive tract. The cell material, cellulose. also is an agent for t he growth in the intestinal tra.ct of bacteria which aid in digestion and synthesization of ;certain vitamins. Eating fruits and vegetables is a double bonus for health. They are lo\V in calories if eat~n without the fattening extras such as butter, sour cream or salad dressing, and provide the bulk ·needed in our diet. When fruits and vegetables have been purchas- ed and taken home, they should be reLrigerate9 ~ cause they still are breathing and need to have the , respiration rate reduced. 1\1rs. Wenck offered tips for getting If.he best buy in canned goods: larger size cans and packages are the best buy, if they wiU be used completely; ~hole vegetables and fruits cost more than chunks, pieces or slices ; plain vegetables and store brands are cheaper. Larger size containers usually are the best buy, r,1.rs. Wenck pointed out, ht.rt even so, labels should be t'ead carefully and prices compared. Packaging costs amount to about 10 cents of every dollar, so small amounts in small packages are 'bound to be more ex-pedsive. A comparison of salt prices illustrates this well. .~ five-pound sack costs 5 cents per pound ; a l pound, LO ounce box costs 9 cents a pound ; a 12 ounce shak(!r costs 17 cents a pound ; a package of three 4 ounce shakers cost 39 cents a pound, and a pacakge of three 4/10 ounce shakers costs $1.47 a pound. Anyone wishing further lniormation on select· ing fresh fruits and vegetables may write for the USDA publication, "Tips on SelecUng Fruits and Vegetables." Order publication MB 13, free. from the Office of Information, U.S. Depart.Jnent of Agriculture, Washlnglon, D.C. 20250. There's a nip in the air and a zip in lhe wind. \Vfnter's here, wllh all ils frosty fun. Time for gctling the skates sharpened and the wax on lhe skis. Time for gelling out the soup tureen and getting in so1ne friends for a warm·up party. This ls a party you can im· provlse on the spur of the moment, any time of day. You need ~ little more to make it a success than a hospitable spirit, a supply of conde~ soup on the shelf and some big-soup recipes. You'll want some bread for toasty croutons and perhaJ)i! some apples to crunch and nut.s to crack. But that's about all. l'he important part or the HEARTY SOUP WARMS APPETITES party is the soup, warming and wonderful. Be sure to make eoough of il. Appetites get healthier as the days get colder. And, make it good and hearty, to satisfy the men .. One of the many advantages of using double-rich condensed soup as a base in your big- :ioup recipe is that by adding extra meat, vege~a ble s croutons and' o t he r em: ~llishments, you can end up ..._ with a soup just as substantial as you want It to be. . , The calendar says that the proper date for a "welcome winter" party ls Dec. 21, the day the season officially begins. But who wants to restrict such a friendly function to any one special day? Better by far to make it a happy wlnter habit -having people in for soup when it's cold outside. TOASTY HAM ANO TURKEY HOT POT 1 cup diced cooked ham 1/4 cup chopped onion 2 tablespooM slivered green pepper 2 tablespoons butter or margarine _ I can (JO~~ ounces) cono: densed turkey noodle soup 1 can (IOo/• ounces) con- densed vegetable soup I i,.i soup f3JlS water Garlic croutons Brown hanl and C<lOk onion and green pepP,er in butter un- till tender. Stir in soops and, water. Heat; stir now and then. Serve with garlic croutons. Makes 4 to 5 servings. Tureen shown holds 5 quarts (about 4* times this recipe): Bowls hold 12 ounces each. SAVORY STOCKPOT - WINTER WAllMEI\ I can (10% qunces) con- densed vegetabft and beef' stockpot soop t soup can water ~i cup cooked pea,, wilh pearl onions 1 tablespoon c h o p p e d parsley Do.sh garlic powder Chinese noodles or shoe- string potato stick! Combine soup and water; odd peas with pearl onions, parsley and gttrlic powder, lleat; sUr now and theo. Se,,_.. with Chinese noodles. Makes 2 servings . I Eight Years Recalled at Birthday Party ,filewpart Beach Chapter of Kiwis is celebrating its ei~hlh birthday with a noon ,luncheon Saturday, Feb. . 7, in Lht! Mesa Verde Country Club. Hono red during , a special tribute will be Mrs. Edward Burke (right), :Costa Mesans Repeat Pledges · · Exchanging wedding vows and rings In C ren shaw. Imperial Neighborhood Church, Inglewood were Ruth Elaine Van Devent.er and Ken- :tieth Wayne CoulSon, both or :COSta Mesa. .. The Rev. Jess Coulson, the 0 bridegroom's brother, performed the e v e n i n g · ceremony. I! Parents o( the brtdal couple I are Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Van fl Oeventer of Torrance and Mr .• 1:1nd Mrs. Ola Coulson of Fresno. founding president. Greeting new and old members will be Mrs. Paul Arnerich, president (left). Former American Airlines stewardesses are invited to the celebration. Arthritis Campaig n Leaders Named Area chairmen for the Feb. 5, 6, and 7 march for the Arthritis Foundation have been named by Mrs. Bessie Campanis, chair- man of the Orange County -Branch of the foundation. Women leading the campaign \Viii be the ~'Imes. Sam Martinez, Costa Mesa; James Hanna, Huntington Beach, and George Silver, Newport Beach. Funds raised will support area arthritis treatment cli~ics and rehabilitation pro- grams at medical centers and assist \Vith re- search, traln ing and educational progran1s. Allending the bride were Mrs. Roger Garst, malron of r honor: Miss Nancy Steel, maid of honor; the MiS&t:s Shelly l'! Davis , Clealus Bowser, Vivian Medina and Sharon Gollnick, ~~.,.-.... ,., •• ,., .. ~"-'"· ""'""""'m.~.;:o:..z:<hO' bridesmaids, and J a n e 11 Pion eer Looks at Futu re Space Age Spells Out ~ Peace I . • Bf BARBARA DUARTE 01 nt. D•llr l"llflf 11111 Contrary to the old saying lhe 1ky'1 lhe limit, "The sky has no limit," Lt. Col. John· "Shorty" Powers (USAF ret.) told a capacity audience in Laguna Beach Monday morn- ing. K.Jck~U speaker in Assistan- ce League's Town Hall Series, the Voice of Mereury Control ouUlned the history of the space program which he vleWa as the answer to world peace. Powers recall1 that lnitlal efforts to get a space program under way in preSputnlt da)13 "".ere "laughed out o f Congress." Then, when the Russi.ans fired oll the first s»ac_e j:r@b everyone .asked "Why don't you do- something?'' "Why go to the moon," or "Why spend bllliolll of tax dollars on space when people are starving hert on our planet?" Commonly asked questions, P,owers lays their cause to what he labels the RC (resistance to change ) factor. CITES FOOD WASTE He cit.ea $4 billiot spent by the goverhment on price con- trol s to keep farmers from growlng crops as oppoeed to advantages to society gained through space age technology. "Development·ol space and itJ subsequent contrlbutloo to the social structure Is Ule only constructive alternative to war," he emphasiied. "We stand on the brink of world wide communication." With advanced methods of communication, people of all nations will be able to receive radio and television programs beamed across the earth wUh an ordinary antenna , he ad- de<l . Powers sees a time when nations will work together on the vast program of space: establishment of manned space stalions, w e a th e r satellites, and active com- petition "without force." As a result of space flights, cameras have been able to detect the earth's resources, track warm water currents to determine where there are schools of fish , and more sophisticated equipment will be able to det C:<'t rocket launching pad s and even determine if rockets are equipped with n u c I e a r ·warheads. VOICE OF MERCURY SPEAKS -Lt. Col. John Powers (USAF Ret.) chats with Assistance League hostess Mrs. Charles Coffyn following a Town Hall 1ecture Monday morning. As for the newly-sprouted goatee, the space pioneer grew it while on vacation in the Michigan wilds and is stuck with it because his ''wife and daughter like it." "We've come a long way In a short tlme," he declared. He cited the initial "Ill-conceived" Vanguard rocket built by the Navy and described i t s counterparts up to the present Saturn 5, a 363-foot high rocket which he feels is the "upper limit" in slze. The retired Air Force pilot who flew missions in World War II was present when America took Its first step into space in 1958. Having worked in the rocket field, he was then director of the Air Force Lunar P r o b e Information Center and became the voice of the men in space for the· world. With an eye to the future, .he sees space buses running within two decades at a cost of $250 per passenger, and the next space target aimed at Mars which scientists feel may sustain' life. A round trip to Mars will take 19 months, he estimates, but views it as a great challenge in regard tti man's "basic drive in the search for life." FREEZERS OBSOLETE Freezers will be obsolete; food of the future will be flash frozen and will require no refrigeration; a spin-off from space technology. Ovens will be electronic and m u c h s ma 11 er ; transportation streamlined. Powers urged his listeners to support the space program and tackle "people problems" personally. He is involved in a college lecture series in wh ich he urges young people to take an active interest in 1he "challenge of tomorrow." One of the first steps is solu· tion of envlronmaltal pro- blems such as pollution. "Lake Erie is a dead area," he declared. It contains no fish or life, only mileJ of pol- luted waters. As a result of his direction in the area or pollution, students have in· vested money in companies guilty of polluting the atmos- phere: then they "bombard " company officers and fellow stockholders with letters urg· ing corrective measures. PLEAS, NOT PLACARDS Instead of ca r rying placards, they are doing something constructive, and it will-work, he told hi s listeners. He urged stockholders in oil and motor CTJmpanies to follow suit. "The dirty layer of smog over the Los Angeles basin could be cleared off in 48 hours if auto makers were pressured into p r o d u c i n g smog.free exhaust systems," he said . Henry, the benedict's niece, flower girl. Glen Coulson was h i s brother's best man and Paul Theador was the ring bearer. Ushering guests to their pews were Jim McKay, Steve Hop- per, Kenneth West Brooks, Jim Mentz and Bob Lee Jr. You r Ho roscope Tomorrow "It's lime for the private sector across the nation to becon1e Mvolved, to meet the challenge." he stressed. MRS. K. W. COULSON Winter Bride Newport Rites The bride is a senior at Southern California College where she is sludying for her teaching credential. Her bus. band is a graduate of Central Union High School, Fresno. The newlyweds are making their home in Costa Mesa. Marilyn Rollins Wed '\ DIANE SPACINSKY V JUl Ide W~ddlng vows were ex- changed in St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church b y Mari!Yo Jean Rolli ns and Ronald ~e Allhouse during a reremony performed by the Rev . Dr. Charlts H. Dieren- field. The bride Is the daughter or tlirs. Fred K. Cadwallader of Balboa Island and Robert H. Rollins of West Covina.and the bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Althouse of Tustin. Serving as matron of honor was btrs. Robert Rollins and as bridesmaids, Mrs. Michael ~tc~tiUan and the Misses Deborah Clark, Mary Lou Corake, Christle Denner and Jo Ann Thompson. Holly • Althouse wu flower girl. Bruce Hicks wes best man and ushers were Jan1es and Robert Rollins, N e I s o n Ferguson and Jerry and Donald Althouse. The bride was graduated from O>rona de! Mar High School and attended Orange Coast College. Artist Plays The Orange Branch of the ~fuslc Teachers' Association of CaJUoml1 Is sponsoring for the aeventh year a scholdrshtp benefit for talented music students in Orangt County. Fullerton Junior Coltejt's theater auditortum will be lhe mu»cal acene SUndly, Feb. I, at 2:30 p.m. ) MR S. ALTHOUSE S1y1 Vows Her husband attends OCC, where he Is a member of the varsity football team, and will attend CaUfornia Polytechnic College, Pomona. For Benefit Dottle Ogle Nix of Yorba Linda , concert plan11t will be the featured artist. Funds from the conce rt will h'IP music studcntJ fUrther their career In Orange County colleges. Ticket.a for adu ll!I are JI .00 and children's tlclteta are II. Summer Wee/ding Planned Diane BethSpaein s ky , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Spacinsky of Costa ~esa. and Arthur St,ven Jbn"of Chico, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sheppard Jones or Swita Ana , have seJected July 11 for their wed· di!ll dale. The ir engagement was an· nounced during a champagne blJ{fet in the home of the b r Id e·e le ct' s parents. Relatives and close friends congratulated the couple. Miss S pacln s k y will graduate Crom Estancia High School ln June. l·ler flance Is an alumnus of Coata Mesa Hlah School and will graduate In June from Chico State College where he Is studying aarlcultul't! buainess. The coup!• will be married in the Lutheran Church of the Master ln Corona del Mar. Sleep Vories Sleep rwan:htr1 say the amount ol rest necessary depends on lnd.Jvidual need s. Sagittarius: Privacy Needed TH URS DAY JANUARY 29 By SYDNEY Q,\1ARR Experimental and creali\'e work 1hould be enC<Juraged, wllh spotlight on Scorpio. tl1any persons tear clothing tl:lrough minor accidents . Lunar position good r o r rlshlng, planling. ARIES (Atarch 2l·April 19\: .Concern with n1oney which , Huntsmen Meet"' lnlongs to another is highlighted. Don't perm It tension to jar logi c. Do what you know is right. Scared money could result in loss. Rel;ix and Jive. TAURUS (April 20-Jl.lay 20): Accent on public relations. Build bridges which could make future more secure. One connected \Vith law could prove benefi ci al influence. Stop being afr aid. GEtltlNl (May..__21.June 20 ): Change, i m pr o v e d CTJm· municalions indicated. Obtain hint from Taurus message . Avoid excess. Rememb e r resolutions concerning eirer· else. diet and general heal th. CANCER (June 21.July Z!l: Good lunar aspect today coin· ~ides with creative endeavors. Member of the opposite sex pays meaningful compliment. l.A!ave details to others. This is your day to imprint your personal style. A tou r of Coto de Caza, ne\v fnmi!y rec reation club Jn Orange County was on tho Itinerary of Joan (1r\1inc) S 1ni~h. and her hu sband Cappy, prom inent Middle- burg, Va. horelin1an1 \Vhen they v1s1ted So uthern California They are shown \Vi th the clu b's hun master. Bob Sanchez (right). • • LEO (July 23·August 22): Avoid self-deception. You can be happier if you face sltua· lion as it actually exists. Home, property, basic values are accented. Don't attempt lo skip essentials. VIRGO (August 2 3 • S e p- t ember 22): You can make constructive contacts with neighbors, relati ves . A positive -and profita ble - agreement could result. Sense of humor at supposed crucial moment works wonders. LIBRA (September 2 3 - October 22): Previous plans, efforts begin to pay dividends. Finish a project. Try not to leave loose ends. Greater recognition due. Your talents, products have wider appeal . SCORPIO (Oclober 2 3 - November 21 ): B e in· dependent In thought. action, Break ground to new territory. Highlight originality. Cycle high: your judgment, intuitlOT) are sharpened. Invest in your own abilities. SAGmARIUS (November 22-December 21): Be aware of need for privacy. Some find it impossible to be discreet about your affairs. Know this and r es po nd accordingly. Don't wear your heart on sleeve. CAPRICORN (December 22· January 19): Accent on ap- preciation received f r o m friends . You ~can have fun lonight -and you deserve It. Obtain hint from Cancer mwage. AQUARIUS (January 21). February 18): SpoUight on prestige, standing 1n com. n1unily. Your desire to tear down and rebuild Is basically constructive. Special assign- ment could result in real ad · vancement. PISCa (February 19·March 20): Good lunar 1iJpect today coincides w I t h long-range plan1, jeurney1, &t11dles and publishing. Be aelectlve. 'J'lme your moves. Make inqult1es. Look 1he1d. Don'l be coughl off guard. '"Don't sit back and ask why doesn't the governm ent do so mething. Do it yourself. You are the government.'' SHERI OLSON Betrothed Couple Set July Date The engagement of Sheri Olson and Tom Hetherington has been announced by Mr, and Mrs. Robert Olson of I-fun· Ungton Beach, parents or the bride-eleet. News or a July 25 weddin g was revealed during a family party in the Westminster home of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Hetherington, brother of tile bridegroom-te>-be. Also attending the party were an aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hodges and daughters Pat and Leslie from Lansing, Mich. Miss Olson will graduate from Marina High School In June. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Davtd Hetherington of Seal Beach, also w a s g'raduated from Marina High School. The couple wHI excha ngo their vows In the CbllUllunli y ~fethodist Churoh , Jiuntlnglon Beach. r---------.... ---------------------·-----.·--~···-------·----·----·--~- Wtdntsda.y, January 28, 11J70 Teenagers Take Note Diplomas Not Needed By PATRICIA McCORMACK NEW YORK (UPll -My garbage man is a high school drbpout. At the age of 20, he , earns around $10,000 a year. He started at the age of 17 as a helper on a truck, mar· ried the boss's daughter, got a truck ol bis own as a wedding present, and now has two trucks -and a helper. He lives in a nice house, drives a fllle car, takes his · wife out to dinner a couple or times a week and otherwise enjoys life. He doesn't have dents in his psyche because he never graduated from hlgb school or broke oul in night sweats over the pressure of coUege-en- trance exams. So far, his mini success story is typical of thousands being acted out nalioowide by young men and women who never intend to fill out a col- lege application. They don 't all marry the boss's daughter, but many are ''making It" without ever warming a seat in an ivy4 t'Qvered hall. The point is: you don 't have Christine Marie Lewis To Wed Jerry K. Doll ~fr. and Mrs. Earl Allen Lewis ol Newport Beach an- nounced the betrothal of their daughter, Christine M a r I e Lewis to Jerry Kenneth Doll during a family party in Taos, N.M. Among the special guests at the buffet were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Tarleton, the bride- elect's great uncle and aunt and· Mr. and 1'-1rs. John Schmidtke, her grandparents. -. DAILY PILOT J'i ~ :,..- "' ;:: for ~S uccess~ ~ to go to college to have c;. rewarding career or make inv.: mediate spending money. !'" • Allen B. Goldenthal, au~ o f "Teenpge Employmen~ Gulde" {Regents Publish.Jn~ Co.). makes that point, ad· ding: ' "If you are age 13 to lti there are more than 1,100 dl1• ferent part t i m e , sum! mertime, or full time Job< available to you right now . : "And if you can't find a job in your area, you can create one." Some of the samples he lists in the book : Hi·fi kit cro- slructor, gift or novelt.y han- dicrafter, jazz combo organizer. seamstress, junk collector, gardener. Goldenthal describes dozens of independent money-making ventures and careers !or the teenagers. He provides a view of the job market, possibilities and realities of dropping out of high school, and the various federal aid p r ogram s (including where to wril.e for details). His advice to the searchers: feel both sell..confident and op. timistic in a job search. "There is no disgrace tn askin~ for help (from pubUc agencies)," be said. ''Once you have found the work Yoti want, It doesn't matter who helped you get It. It's the job that counts. "What is disgraceful Is suspecting that you need help and not asking for It." A Dog-gone Good Way to Begin the New Year Miss Lewis, a graduate of Newport Harbor High School, attended Orange Coast College and Northern Ar liona University. She affiliated with Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and Cardinal Key national bonor society. Two chapters are devoted to the American apprenticeship system, some 8 O O ap- prentieeable occupations, how A dog's life \\'On't be all that bad this nex l year as, according to Chinese tradition, it \\'ill be the 'i'ear of the Dog. Chinese in the area \\'ill \Velcon1e the Lunar Ne'v )'ear during a party Saturday, Feb. 14, in the Newport Riviera clubhouse, featuring Ch inese go urmet foods prepared and served by members of the Orange County Chinese Social Club. Getting the year off to a good start by giving their dog the royal treatment are (left to right) the Mmes. Fred Ju, George K e n t and Calvin McLaughlin. The prospective bridegroom, soo of Mr. and Mri'!. Charles Doll of Tucson, attended th e University of Arizona and ser"ved in Vietnam with the Army. Currently he is at- tending Northern Ariuma. '-and where to apply for these jobs, and even what to do If discriminated against by a prospective employer.'' USC Graduates Wed In Be ve rly Hills Rites Barbara Josephine Siinpson and Edy.•in Abel r.lcservc Ill . fourth generation Soutfiern Californians, y.·ere married in All Saints Episcopal Church, Beverly Hills. 'PheRev. Kermit Cosle\lanos officiated durr;1g the evening nuptials. The bride is the daughter of li1rs. James Hewes Crispin Ill of San Francisco and Richard Claude SimJJSOn of Beverly tlills. She v.•as given in 1nar- riagc by her father. The· benedicl is the son or lilr. and Mrs. J, Robert t-.1eserve of Lido Isle. Mi ss Diane Sin1pson. the bride's sister was maid of honor. Bridesmaids were the Misses Patricia SI one r , Katherine Bing, D a is y Brookes, ?\.1arian \Villiams. Carol Simpson, the bride's sister, Pamela J\1eserve. the benedict 's sister and ~lrs. \Villiam Lloyd. J\Uchael M u r p h y '''as selected to sland as best man. Ushers were Kirk Elliolt. Richard Robinson Jr., Thomas Hogan, 'l'homas Schock, Dean Dorn, John Garrison, David Anderson and Lloyd. The new l\1rs. Meserve is a graduate 0 r l\1arlborough ' MRS . MESERVE Ill Newport Home School and the Lniversily of Southern California \vhere she pledged Delta Gamma sorori- ty. lier husband attended the u·,1ivcrs1ty of Oregon and is an alumnus of use \\'here he af. filiated \Vith Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. The newlyv•eds \\'ill n1ake their hon1e in Newport Beach. St. Andrew's Se tti ng For Afternoon Nupt ials The Rev. Dr. Charle s Dierenfie\d perfor1ncd th e afternoon nuptials linkin g in marriage Paulette C e c i I e Donald and Charles Stcphyn Barclay of tluntington Beach. Parents of the bridal couple <1re ?\1r . <1nd ~!rs. Ray Ralph Donald of Nc,vport Beach and . John \V. Barclay of Cosla l\icsa and J\lrs. AlOOrt Jones of La J\.1irada. Attending lhc bride during the double ring ceremony in St . Andrew's Presbyterian Church were Terri Lee of Tulsa, maid of honor: Anne J\.1arlin of Tulsa. June Francis Kovich and Kathy Brame, bridesmaids. I ' ~ .. Steve Parker was asked to stand as best man and usher duties "'ere assumed by Fo r· rest Lud\\'lck. Dennis Adams and Ron Huber. C•!Mt H-Plitt• MRS. BARCLAY New Bride The newlyweds will reside in Huntinglon Beach following a wedd ing trip to l\1exico. The bride attended the Universily of Tulsa and cur- rently she and her husband are enrolled at Orange Coast College, II> l!!J WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT "T91lot a11d leotty at their bell" -L.A. Tlfll•• -lomct11tlc Cci!Ndy - ;ir u~·" 11.1.1 1'111,.~; EElzalllie1tlll Warre1111 ~Oil' • Beatty '1!'11me Ollllly Game 11111 Town ro. 1' ti j l Studio Fest11r• ,,.,lew, frldov. l :JO -LIDO ONLY ORANGE ORIVE·IN e LIDQ THEATRE New rt The date for the weddin g was not disclosed. CHRISTINE LEWIS Betrothed Goldenlhal also shows how to write and address a letter requesting occupational in· formation from a bureau or agency. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to. have it.heir wedding stories \Vilh black and white j!lossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT \Vomen's De- partment one week before the wedding. New Seated Officers Installation During The only modus operandi he overlooked : instructions on how to marry the boss's daughter. LIMQElllE llOIE5 Pictures received following the wedding \\'ill not be used. With the theme, the \Vord's will serve as the installing of· lhe Thing, new officers of Las ficer . Olas Toastmistress Club of Term goal for the club ls For engagement announcements it is imperative that the S'l.ory, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- Jnitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story v.·ill be used. h 1 Communication Learned 'fo-Huntington Beac wi I be in-day for a Better World Tomor- stalled at 7:30 tonight in Fran· row. cois restaurant. A d d \ t i o n a I information To help fill requirements on both \ved- ding and engagement stories. forms are ~vailable in all of it.he DAILY PILOT offices. i:\1rther questions will be answered by \Vomen's Section stafi members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. Taking office will be J\.1rs. regarding Toastmistresses Zoltan Smith, president; Miss may be obtained by calling Pat Haynes, first vice presi· Mrs. Rollo West, 536-3052, or dent; Miss Marge Dewey, sec-Mrs. Allan Kennedy, 547-S885. ond ,, i c e president: "1rs. ,_:::::..::...'.'.'.'.::'...'.:'.:'.:::'.'.''.:..:~~:'.:..'~!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'!""'~ Marie Fouts, record Ing Bellflower Ho me LEE EDEWARDS Engaged Lee Edewa rds Will Marry Jack Brown secretary, and Mrs. Charles Marshall, treasurer. Chapel Rites Read During a family gathering the Rev. and Mrs. A. C. Edewards or Fo1111tain Valley Mrs. Jay Ruediger or San Clemente will relate her e'x- periences in Chile a n d Afghanistan where she served as a foreign service officer with the U.S. Information Agency. Speaking for the club will be Miss Dewey, and Mrs. Ernest Johnson of Eulalie Toastmistress Club, Stanton, The Chapel of the \Vedding Bells, BellfloY.'er was the sel- ling for the late afternoon rites uniting Jea nne l\1ichelle Collins and Johnny Clark Cash. Per!or 1ning the ceren1ony wa s the Rev . PnrenLc; of the couple are J\.trs.' Irene Collins of Long Beach and Roy E. Collins of Haske.II B. Long. One Percent A re Women Fewer than 1111e pcrcenl or the cnginCers in the United States are women. 1£ you \\'ondcr \\"hy, join the club. Purdue University is puul· ed. loo, since aptitude tests show -40 percent could come from the di staff side. announced the engagement of Newport Beach =ind Mr. and lheir daughter. Lee Edewards f\1rs. Francis Cash of Tor· ranee. to Jack L. Brown or Long Alpha Xi Delta Elects Sla te Beach. li1iss Pamela Anne Collins, sister of the bride, w" ma,·d No date has been selected C f h Orange ounty Alumnae of honor ancl brid<>smaids were or t e wedding which will Club of Alpha XI Delta sororl- the Misses Janet Long and take place in Betheny Baptist ty will elect officers and hear Marsha Ellis. Tess Scates was Church In Long Beach. a talk by Miss Ruth Chaffee flower girl. The future bride was during the next meeting Mon- Carl Cash ""rved as h.,, graduated from Fount a in day Feb 2 al 8 I lhe -= , . , p.m. n brother's best man and ushers Valley High School and is Corona del Mar home or Miss were Kenneth and James enrolled al Orange Coast Eleanor Hoy. Cash, also his brothers. Ring College. Miss Chaffee of Laguna bearer was Jamie Cash. his The prospective bridegroom, Beach will discuss the Crown- ncphew. son o[ Mr. and Mrs. Jack H. ing Touch. She formerly was The new J\.1rs. Cash is a Brown of Escondido, is at-an architectural design~r and graduate of Jordan High tending California S t a t e design draftsman and w ex- School, Long Beach, and College at Long Beach. hibits her art work. California Baptist College,'.----=---''------...:.::::._:_:.:__:::_ ___ I Ri~:~,;~~;band is an alumnus c:Q.~C> "'fiLINVAL"~HNiS of Banning High School, Wilm· ..C).11 · Jr inglon. They will reside 1 o Bellflower . WIGS LIMITED TIME OFFER ON: ''MIRACLE'' WIGS! W•1~ 'om & WHr 'tm, t,..t. your -1ltye from l!lfS• 100'!' K11\11111Dn llbtr wiot. TM "'"'°'' In '"°"-"iW:• for ~ ....... bOlllftf - ........ eYel" ~ l'lffd •l'I "lnlteflt" ... , do. ;7;; i 22;; m /JI}. , WIG & BEAUTY all ie j SA LON 250 E. 17th ST. COSTA MESA 548~3446 DAILY TILL 5:30 THURS. & FRI. !ILL 8:00 If he's away from home.,, He'd love Your Photograph on Valentine's Day! It'• the naxt be1t thing to having )'OU nearl ActOll .. month• ond miles your lovely photograph win beci ,...... urad keep1oke of warm memories, •• o proud protniM of o hoppy future togelher, Hurry· in naw ••• whll&·lbwe·1 1till Unia ••• and YIW con chorg• it ot P~'sl OUTSTANDING VALUE! ont l.wlO and 1bc wallal-size pOtlrot/• •ULLl•TOlt OrtflOtlllP C..IW w ""'" '71-d4 88 ONLY MUWTlfHtTOM •IAClt HIMltlnelftO!I t.ni. .... floor, ..,.,,,, ll..,_T •IAae ........... 11111 "°"'•..,_mt I • M DAll.Y 'ILDT s Wtdnesday, January 28, 1970 I General Meetings Scheduled by P-T Units .. Adams PTA ft.trs. Paul Obl1en Preli.dent REPORTS ; Coordlnatlng the precinct work sheets for the Minis and Maxis fliix , upcominl! bond e I e c t I o n were the ~tmes. John Camp, Ron Taylor , Paul Ohlsen and Duane Slepuiis. . .Books were audited by M r s • Lawrence P~ton. lit r s . Fashions of yesteryear will parade alongside the latest in mod fashions for the 1970s when Presid10 Elementary School students and their mothers gather for \ea and a fashion sho\V Saturday, Feb. 7, at 2 p.m. l\lusic by th!! Harbor Area Women's Chorale will accompany the fashion shOY.', to be presented jointly by Goodwill Industries, students and their mothers. Stepping out from the history book in a PreCivU War gown is Mrs. J. J. Earnest, \vho is greeted by "mod" Mrs. John Earnest. Overwhelming Enthusia sm Disp layed for Ball Charles Lamb reported the purchase of • refrigerator for the teacher•' lounae. Bay View .. PTA ft.in. Wllllapi Frost PretJ,dent COMING UP: Board meeling at 9: 15 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 3, in the multlpurpoR room . REPORTS: Procteda from the January paper drive We!e S70. Mrs. Miller Buchanan's third 1rade and S a m Thomas' filth grade class provided the mo.st papers. Coll e9_!_ Pk. PTA Mn. 'James Schitfer President COMING UP: Mother- daughter bullet wUJ take place at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 5, in the mulUpurpose room. Entertainment will be provided by the Marineer~ from Marina High School, Huntington Beach. Advance ticket sales will take place tomorrow and Ji'rlday, Jan. 30, mothers $1 a n d daughters SJ .50. Mr'. Bernard Faubel is chairman .•. Board meeting at 9:30 a.m. TueJday, Feb. 3, in the home of Mrs. Donald Bruneau. . .11ckets for the Fox West Coast Theater winter movie series will be sold during the lunch hour Tuesday, Feb. J. Ha rbor View PFO fllrs. Charles Sword President CO~llNG UP: Board and faculty members informal get·acquainted dinner will take place at 7:30 p.m. Fri- day, Jan. 30, in Ute home ·or Mrs. Charles Sword. Ap. petiurs, entree and side dishes will be prepared by board members. REPORTS: Bicycle rodeo supervised by Mrs. Stephen Fryer. health and safety chair-man took place IaJt Friday. Police departmenL and PFO members issued licen11es !_qd conducted safe. ty tests to students in third throuah filth grades. Sure-fire Formula for Successful A talk on science will be the fonnula for the Har· bor Council meeting taking place Monday, Feb. 9, in Davis Middle School. Registration and coffee will begin at 9 a.m . followed by the business session at 9:30. Werner Carlson, Davis principal and Mrs. Meeti'ng La9una High PTA Mr1. l\tar.k Smith Jr. Pre1ident COf\11NG UP: Gener a I n1ecling <it 7:30 p. m. \Vcdncsday, Feb. 4, in the auditorium. Ralph Reeves. principal and Dr. William Ullom will discuss needs of lhe high school and the ui:r coming tax override and bond election. Monte Vista PTA fltr1. M'1'k rt1orrls President COMING UP: Board members \\'ill host a coffee al 10 a.m. tomorrow, in the lounge at Newport Riviera. 0 r . \ViJUam Cunningham , superintendent of t h e Ncwport·~1esa Un I fie d School District will speak on the bond and tax override election. Public is invited .•• Cookies will be sold during the lunch hour Frid1y. Jan. 30. Funds will be used for library book>. Paula rino PTA fltrs. Nigel Bailey President COJ\tING UP: Volunteers are needed to help on the bond election Wednesday, Fib. 11. Workers may contact f\1r&. Nigel Balley at 545-1476 .•• Book fair will continue Fri- day and Saturday, Jan. 30 and 31, in the multipurpose room. REPORTS: Unit meeting took place: la&t night Lawrence Y. Savercool spoke on ~lelp· ing Our Children OverCQme Learning Difflcullies ... l\1rs. Arthur Lundgren, Founders Day and honorary I i f e ch.airman hosted a meeting lo select this year's reci· pient. Gordon Imler, princi· Grant Bertolet, Davis PTA president will be l~oat4. Previewing the Lalk, to be given by Blair Hatnlllon, district speciaJ science teacher (nght) are Bradley Brown (left) and r..tike Powers. pal is the .advisor .•. J\1rs. Don Diaz, room representa- tive chairman hosted a meeting to discuss the Val- entine parties. Prince of Peace PT F Harry Soulhron President COf\11NG UP : General meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tues- day. Feb. J. Seventeen children and live adu lts from the Navajo Indian School at Rock Point, Ariz. will be guests. Students have supported the school with food and clothing. Enter- tainment will be provided by the choir under the direction of ?-.lrs. Jan Unvert .•. ?i.1rs. Norbert Prechel will direct the P.O.P. BraJS at Ar· rowhead Springs for the Amer can L u theran Regional ConvenUon. SC High PTA fllrs. Alan Clark Presiden t CO~·ltf\1G UP : Parenti , teachers and students are invited to try out for U1c Triton Capers from 3 to 5 and 6 to 8:30 p.m. tomorrow in the cafetorium. Proceeds will be used for scholarships and library books. Wilson PTA 1'1rs. William OuUaw President COriilNG UP : E·xe cutive board meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 3, f11 the teachers' lounge. flt obi 1 e "~rls' Club program will take place A·londay, Feb. 2, at school. R E P 0 R T S : l nternational potluck dinner took place at the association meeting. Columnist Tells It Like It Is DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 am still boil- ing over that woman who raced her kids to the paper every day to see if your col· umn was fit for them to read. She said she \YOUld cancel her subscription to lhe paper if you printed one 1nore dirty let· ter. I'll bet anything she is fighting against sex educat.ion in public schools, too. A girl J know has a mother like that. Jf sl1e says the word "boy" in the house she gets grounded for three d:i.y~. Of course, she is meeting guys in garages and parks and on street comers. just to get even w i th her ma. And she's pulling out to everybody. What do these mothers think they are .accun1plishing when they hide your colu1nn? 0on·1 they know every normal teenager thinks about sex? Your column tells them how they ougbl to think aboul it. Do these mothers believe if they tell their kids to forget about sex that they wilJ? How con1e l~ don't re1nember how it v.·as when the~ere teenagr.rs? ANN LANDERS ~ DEAR TEEN: Letters like that don't bother me, because for every one o( T110SE, I get 20 like yours. I Intend to kee p at It as long as my type"-riter holds up -and I've got a \'cry fine electric machine ll1hlcb is virtuaUy indestrucUble. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I an1 gelling so Ced up on office so licitation I'm ready lo scream. For the third time in seven weeks, I've been asked to chip in for a going·a way gift. The girls are not getting married, or even leaving town. They are quitting lo take other jobs. Our office manager has been here 17 years. She is wonderfully efficient, has a beautiful disposition and is loved by everyone. Someone should take up the collection for HEit -nol \he dames who quit lo make $7 more a \\'eek somewhere el.oie. and bend it to the ucxt collector. Dl!:AR ANN LANDERS : This Is no big deal. but !'d like your opinion. When my cousin visited me recently, she brought along a record album which belonged to one o( her friends. She said her friend didn't know she had "borrowed" the album so \Ve had to be exlra careful with it. When my cousin left, she forgot to take the albun1. Weeks later I was taking the recu-d to my cousin and it got a little warped from being accidentally left on the car iseat which was parked in the sun. No \V n1y cousin says I owe her $5. t say she is responsible [or the record. \\1hat do you say? -J UDY AND LISA DEAR J AND L: You both sound like a couple of dolli es to me. Spilt lh e cost of Lbe record and lorge t it. Already in the spirit of the festive Mater Dei Pre- lenten Mardi Gras Ball set for Saturday, Feb. 7, are (lefl to right) the Mmes. George Carlyle, Jerry l\1oore, Bernard F. Gorman and Henry Hellweg. Sponsored by the Mater Dei Parents Guild, the eve- ning will get under ,yay 'vith cocktails a t 7 in the Grand Hotel, Anaheim. Dinner at 8 and dancing to the music of Milt \Vashburn's Orchestra will round out the program. That dumb me(her doesn't realiie you are doing HER job. She should thank her lucky stars you are able to communicate with her teenagers. Kids listen to you and respect you. For sure that mother is out in left field without a glove. I hope you don't let letters like that get to you. Please keep on writing your ct1l· umn. Ann. \Ve need you. -TAMPA TEEN I told the last person who approached me for a going-away gift donation, "Sor- ry, no." It was easy. Oth ers should try il. -OMAHA DEAR 0 .: Here's your letter. And for tho1e who can'l say. '"Sorry, no," as easl· ly a1 you, I suggest they cllp thb column Unsure of your11elf on dates? What'~ right? \Vh.at's \vrong? Should you? Shouldn't you? Send for Ann Landers' booklet "Dating Dos and Don'ts," enclos- ing with your request 35 cents in coin and a long, self-addressed, &lamped envelope. - Interfaith Series Woman's Role Examined Woman'• role In the major problems and' crises of the present day will be dlscu!sed when 1ht Women Assoclat.es of the UCJ Interfaith Center host their annual workahop begin- olni Tueoday, l'eb. 3. 1be Hand That Rules the World Roc:ka the Cradle will theme the four-session series which will include l h r e e speakers and a p s n e I dia<:usslon. Opening the .ser~ will be Ml11 Calberine Blomstrom or American FrleOOs S e r v i c e Committee, whose topic will bt Hunger. Mia Blomstrom, currtntly Involved 11 1 coordJn.ator In the CRASH (call to Researcl> and Act to Stop Hunger) pro- gram, haa worked for tlle Chrl1Jm11 Buylnf Doycoll for Puet aod Uved In a Quaker. orlr peact community doi ne organic vegetarian cook- ing. She received he!' BA desree in religion and philosophy from Florida Slate University aod plani to do graduale work In rtliilous studies at the Unl•er:ilty of Cell!omia, Santa Barbara next fall. • Next will be a panel dl.SCU§ion on Ecology Tues- day, Feb. 10, featuring lhrec UCI gtaduate students, Don Wiikins, Peter Thomas and Deborah Sullivan. from the SChool of Biological Sciences. Department of Environmental Biology. They "'ill discuss water and air pollution and population control. Mrs. Ellubeth Cl"' or ClllJ'emoot Unl\ltr!ity Center will speak on Education tor the Ftb. 17 i;esslon, fcx.'ll1lng on womun'& rolr In r.- educatlng t n d conUnulng education. Summarizing the workshops on Feb. 24 will be l\1iss Lucille Kuehn, program coordinator for the UCI Extension-Ford Foundation Com mu ni ty Seminars. lier topic will be Being. The first session will take ph1ce in the UCI Interfaith Center and the final three are scheduled for the .University 1>felhodist Church, Culver and University drives, Irvine. All are slated to begin at 10 a.m. and conclude at noon . Admission tor lhe series is $4 and single admissions arc Jl.%5. An,vone wishing reserva. lions or ir\formaUon may call lhe Interfaith Center, 833-0891, or write to University Interfaith Cenler, 4201 Cam· pus DMve, Jrvlne, 92664. 1'ickets also 1nny be purchased .al tha door. ChUd care 1''ill ht available. Chicago Welcome Mrs . Victor Bailey ol Newport Beach (left) is greel· ed by Mrs . W. Lydon Wild . president or tho Chica· go \Vom en's \Velcome Co1nmit1ee. !\Jrs. Bailey 'vas auendlng a business convention with ber husband and was ,entertained by the committee. I UC/ Happening Generations Clued In By PATRICIA McCORMACK IRVINE (UPI) -In this comer, teenaaers. ln that cur- ner. adults -Including so1nc parents and teachers. And lo each corner goes this quesUon: "'Wh.at do you hold near and dear?" The exerc.lse. between the generation& occurred during a one-week happenlng at UCI. It produced clueJ to the dif· ference& betwun the two. Dr. Eva Schlndler·Rainman, co11sultant in the Behavorial ScienceJ, conducted the h1:1p· penina. Repo r ting i'n "Childrtn," journal of the Children 's Bureau of the Department or J.lealth, Educa· lion and Welfare, ihe sajd: "Atnon& things held nc11r and dear, the adults 1ncn· tioned the followin&: family: f o r m 1 I l n s tU.uUonalized re ligion; personal and material security; sue<.-ess in a chosen profession; ability to communicate; goals : maklng money; helping others; doing things £or a reason and physical health." But teenagers mentioned self-love -which t h ~ y described as "oneself and his own Interests always coining first,,. They also considered near and dear -"lime," the esaence of life. "Every mo- ment," said one girl, ''is Im· portant and you should utilise it lo the hilt." "The teen.agers also Usted freedom to be onseU and to express one se If.•' Or. Schindler-Ratnm11n reported. "Physical health. because 'all you have is your~l! and you'd better like good care of yourself; faith In lKlm1thlng bi gge r t~an one5elf, but not an lnslltu1\onallzed god ... " Under things Uta!. they we.re ool 1ure abou~ adult• llftd religion, honesty and cpen. ness, lhe drafl and se;ic. An1ong t h i n g s teenagers ..,.,·ere not sure about: the value <lf rom1al educaUon, senial taboos. the draft and form:iJ religion. The adults and t~naa:ers also were ask.ed to identlly the thlngs they would n e v e r change lhcir minds about. On the adult list: rel1Uons to their families. religious beliefs, Jove of country, dltai:r proval or long hair on boVI and hone1ty in d'aling wi\h others. Teenagers said they would never change their nlindJ aboul: Freedo111, their ..right lo try any experience and their right to make their own decisions. During lhe happening parents and leacheni asked tho teenagers : "How can we encourage )' o u ? ' ' n11 teenager& replied: "Lel u.s go our own Wt:/.'' •. I .. Ancient Adobe Recalls Echoes of the Past Lake Forest hostesses (left to right) Mrs. Lloyd Wing and Miss Georgia Schmidt, listen as an Orange County author-historian describes operation of an old lamp in !be llO-year-old Serrano Adobe. The ranch will be open to !be public from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday; take San Diego Freeway to El Toro and follow signs. Pledges Exchanged In Chapel Making lheir holM t n Corona del ~far are O.UU Vhay Richardson and .the former l\trs. Gail Kimble Prullt. The couple were married in the Chapel of the Bella, Amb<lm by the Rev. Eugene R. C.Cx. Parents or the couple art Mr. and Mrs. Don JUmble of Arcadia and Mr. and Mra. Harry Vhay RlchardlOO · or Corona de! Mar. Mr1. Matt Kroll served as her sister's malron of honor aod the bridegroom,., father was best man. The new Mrs. Jlichardaon is a graduate of Are1dla Hl&h School and attended Puadtna CJty College . Her husband is an alumnu1 of Corona del Mar IUgh School and was a student at California State College at Pullerton. Rites in March Told at Party DIANE PLUMB Future Bride The Newport Beach home of Dr. and Mrs. Hup J . Plumb Jr. wu the setting of an engagemmrt party for their daugbte, Diane Plumb and Michael1':-Glusey. - . The betrothed revealed that they will be married on March 28. Special guests at the lun- cheon were Mrs. Hugh Plumb, the brlde-elet't'1 1?1Ddmotber; Mlss Pam Meserve, MW: Karen Jackson, Mln Nancy Daigh and the blnedlcl-te>be'1 mother. ' Miss Plumb, a 1 I It Chlldrtn's Home Society debutante, w a 1 graduated from Newport Harbor ffigb School and now alttnds the University of Callfornil, Santa Barbara. The future henedict, son al Mr. and Mrs. Warren GIUSty of Arcadia, is an alumnus ol UC! and 1' In tile Navy Reserve. North Carolina Home Curtain Goes Up On Comedy Raising the curtain on the generation gap will be playera at tbe Huntington Beach Playhouse who will be preeen- ting "Impossible Years" for the next five weekends begin- ning Friday, Jan. 30. The comedy may be tten each Friday and Saturday beginning at 8:30 p.m. until Feb. 28. Producing a n d dlrecUnc · the play, which depicts the m l 1 er i e s , apprebepll.ODI, mlsunderstandinp and Joys of t he parent-progeny ret. tion5hlp will be Blll Suman and Randy Keene. Stan Bell with !tar as the hmied Dr. Kingsley and Valerie and Bon- nie Harries will portray hll daugbtlrs. TicUts are $2 for adults and $1.50 for studenta. Additional information may be obtained by calling the Huntbigt.on Shores Motel , ..,.1 or Mariner Realty, 8 4 2-114 1. Special groop rile& l1lo ue available. Vows Said • Fullerton In Wedntsdl.Y. J1n1111')' 28, 1'70 DAILV '!LOT II Betrothal Told • During Party AbUl!tl-pulywu the Mlllnc far tile ..._i annow)CllDIDl of, Charlott& Edon· and Army Ll Joltn Camotte. HoaUn1 tile party wm Mr. mid Mrl. R. Cbarlea z-i of Newport Buch, tbe brtde- elecl'1 pareata. Amoa1 lpeclal flMlll wtre Mr. and Mrl. Edward carrette Sr. o I ~mala City, the future bridegroom's partots and Mr. and Mn. L. W. Eason of Lynwaod, Wub., llle brid .. elect'• paternal grandparents. Tbe betrothed met l n Guatemala atJ in ltlO while Ibey .... ~ --They also . ._._ tbelr •..-tlnPanama-wbete tbe benedlct.to-be -lta-tialoclwlth.tba..G.-n.llenll. M191 Eiion ti a lleoior at UC! mojorlq In $paolsh and working toward ber teaching credenUal. Her tlance w as gradua~ from the New Mex- ico Military lmUtute and at· tended tbe t.JnJventty of New Mexico. Currently he is aerv- tog in Vietnam. The ""'!Pie hive ,.lected Dec. IO for their weddln1 In the ChrllUm Ctnter Church, Anaheim. Peggy Edmiston Weds In Double Ring Rites AdOlll>le rlqcemnooy con- duc!<d In the Uoltod Methodl!t Churth, Garden Grove , united in marriage Peggy Edmiston and Gayle Dunkle. The brldo, ~ of Mr. and Mn. Geor'p _,_ al HunUJlllon Beach, was stven in marriage by her father. Preceding her down tbe allle were Mn. Jim Cohen, matron of honor. and the Mlsses Sue Weltz, maid of honor, Wendy Nlcbola, Yvette Putnam and Debbie Young, bridmn•ldl. Junior bridesmaid wu Anna Marie Dunt 1 e, the bridegroom'• sister. 5ervtnc U best. mU WU the bride1room'1 brother, Ron DuntlefromEn1lewood, , Colo., and Ulhera were Mike Ferris, Cbrla D u n k I e , Thn Brvwn alid Bill -. the bride'• brother. MRS. GAYLE DUNKLI Newport S...eh Home 'Ibo bride .... ,ram&led !nm Gol4m Wiii' ColfeCe and -11111> School 'Ibo beJJedld, ... of Kr. and Mn. Verl Dinkle of ASuia, WU sraduated hvm Azuaa 11111> School and allonded cttrua Jllnlor CoUeae. He bu •md In the Anny three yun. 1be newJywedl will reside in Newport Beach. Job's Daughters Mark Month With Activi.ties Job'• Dau&btert of Bethel 157, Newport -will lfl'lld the WMkend of Jan. IO 1t Bl& Bear mow camp. On Monday, Feb. I Mn. Jam" Common will pay an ollldal vldt to tile bethel. Sbe IJ the ciepulJ grand suard1an of Callloniia and put guar. dlJn of Bdhel US, Newport Beach. under the cllredkln ol Miu Debbie Wubko, honored queen, a bl\b &ale will lab place In Harbor Shopping Center OD Salurday, Feb. ti. On Monday, Feb. 23, Job's Daughters from area bethets will galher for a meeting in Seafaring Muonlc Tmnple. Following a special election Mlll Kathy McMillan waa elected aenlor princess; M1s1 Cindy Tuz, junior prlncoa ; MIM Glynna Beeler, fl\lldt; Miss Klthy Budd, manbal, and Miss MarU Houston, ae. cood messeoeer. HB Auxiliary T'ifice a month the LlcUtt' Auilllary to HunUngton Beach Veterans of Foreign Wan, Post 7381 meets at I p.m. The flrll Friday of each month they gather in Odd Fe1lowa Hall for a buslneu meetlng a n d the third Friday t h e y socialize In various Joc1tlon1. Further Information may be 21ecured by calling Mn. LeRoy HermaM at W.3580. For Vietnam Nurses - Cosmetics Collected CosmeUCI and tollelriol for dQ>, Feb. I, to hos llle baolat nuraea In tht cam Rani> Bay for tbelr deltlnattons. ana of Vietnam an 'be1111,·--..-----, uannbled bf .-bef1 o1 t11e THE N "W SoiJtb Coast JllDfor Womm'1 • "P Club or Fountain Valley. LQQK Items &Oll.;lted from ..,.. meUc companies b'ave made . the project flO>'l!>le for the thin! year, ~ Mn. Larry LonJ and Mn. MonUe Carter I Amerlcanllm C 0 • c:llalrmen. Members l1lo ara OOl!ectlng ao4 IOrtlng -~boob, paperl>ackl aiid otbef reading material for Long Bocb Veteram' HCllf'ltal, Sberman J lnsti-and FOunwn V11lty mg11 School. Any..,. with contributions Is Invited to call Mrs. ·-Marlon, 111-I•l~Mrl> Maritn will conduct a worklhop Tues. Chemise Is Back in Style for HAIRSTYUNG bf th• ....... TOP l:n'LISTll • Mlnlcurea and PllllcuNO ' Think ultrafemlniDI for ly Appefnlialliiftt :n~~~~y"!;'." newly I r1 Yi•t~YWOiAcosiii1i'.;:woiiil~~···0:1n1 I The cheml!e will be back, but watch for 1 version that'• a II! cry from the old 11111 uck: The 1'10 model ~I 11 1llakl ..... to the body In ~­knits, crepes and un.lfnea fabrics, cemlnc In many Ienstbs and up.tqlng ·tlte ~ look with soft ptbm, flouncel, Jona sleeves. A GUARANTEED "METHOD OF REDUCING •• , YOU MUST GET THE RESULTS WE SAY OR WE Will GIVE YOU All THE FREE TREAT· MENTS IT Will TAKE TO GIVE YOU YOUR PERFECT FIGURE -Santa Monica Woman Says: · (. WHAT WOULD I HAVE DONE WITHOUT SHAPE SHOPPES !NTL MY MARRIAGE WAS ON THE OUTS BECAUSE OF MY WEIGHT. I FELT THAT I COULD NEVER REDUCE BACK TO NORMAL THEN I. SAW AN AD ABOUT SHAPE SHQPPES SU4CESSFUllY REDUCING SQ MANY OTHER WOMEN WITH WEIGHT PROB-' LEMS LIKE MY OWN. THAT WAS THE [UCKIEST DAY IN MY LIFE. I REDUCED FROM SIZE 22'h DOWN TO SIZE 12 MY HUSBAND SAYS HE LOVES ME MORE NOW THAN THE DAY Hf MARRIED ME. ' . ' ' EllJabeth Cit,y, N.C. will be home tor former Huntlngton Beach resident Richard Jan Elliott and Jo Ellyn Scheidt, who exchanged w e d di n g pled(es in the Finl United Methodilt Chutcb, Fullerton. SteptKin Smilb served as best man and ushers were Joe Terrell, Bill Smith, Tom Coo~ and Allan Coopu. 'nie new Mn. Elliott, a former stewardess for Pan American Airways, is a graduate of California. state College at Fullerton. She at- tended the Untvustty of Colorado and the Uninnlt,y of Arlr.ona extension ln Guadala- jara and now is worklnJ: an her elementary t e a c b 1 n g Her husband, a gr;a-:!uat.e of Huntington Beach Hlgh School and CSCF, attended Orange Cout College and Olapman College's SS Ryndam. He also-------------------• Mrs. R. J. ELLIOTT Methodl1t Rlto1 I Parent! of the bridal couple are Dr. and Mn. John E. Scheidt of Fullerton and Mrs. Nonna Lee Elliott of Garden Grove and Norman C. Elliott of Austin. Mr1. Michael Wildman serv- ed as matron of honor, Mi!.s Maureen Miller waa maid of honor and bridesmaldt we.re the Mmes. Donald Heydlaulf, Fronk Satkobky and Stepheo Keller. I See by Tooay's Want Ads e 11M' bigdl Valentine ot all. enolllh doe fOr the --·-Great DANE, 3 )'Mll aid. • ""'1ahle """"""'· tor the IO • Io eJCf'CUtiVt, Haw typewrittr, wm Travel e WANTm: --to love, INa 16' lllbjlord Ma· _old .... ~-­di- .. is a graduate or the Coast Gue.rd Officer C a n d l d a t e School in Yorktown, Va. and ·was a member of Phi SllJD.I Kappa fraternity. Beauty Sleep cred~ntlal at Whittier College. Y o u n I boulewite., ae- Whlle at CSCF abe affillated cordlDg to a survey, nap more with Alpha Chi Omega 90l'Ori-than okier ones. Why? ''1 aleep ty and wu a UttJe Slater ol to keep from eating/1 one Phi Sigma Klppa. young boUlewlfe uld. VfRGfl\'fA'S ~?ii SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE lll4 E_,, Coast Hwy. • Corona dtl Mar l'ltono 67l·1050 .. J. •Ml ill19v1fe4 wltfi ih• 4,..,., "f ... t•il" 11• il-,.1 tfff t•ff tolf ., t.111111 •••th· 1r, IM.t • ,,.,f fl1111 t. 1t•rf t1wlflt 111p ''"'' new colerf11I 1Hir1 for ycu1n 1H 1IMI fe111ilw. C.11"111't .,., ••• • ....,, 1111lr •f il11~I• knit tl•c\-11 S. •••Y t. 111•k1 I not'"''"• 7ip,.il r•• ct11lr1d I elMI Ctl'Rplef1 th1 011tflt with • c••t• ,ill111tM hp fr-••t 11lffff•11 of •C•t•t• Mr· Jer lfWll ICltf "lllh. $"iJltl tMI tMl'RIP f1W!c1 1rri'l'f11t ileily, Vitlt 111 ..... , a 111r1 ctr•. fH Mr .. o!'R. VIR&INIA • Thl1 11 Qlll or tb1 fiattt tx1mp111 o( tb1 cb11l1 m1kn'1 trade. Clttdon WhHl 8wt11 is m1d1 the old f 11blentd wa1 la h111t wbHl1, from quality milk,,.,.. duced only durfna cettalli ptriod1 of th• )'llr. n .. wheels an p1tlent11 c:vrtd until nady for marbt This he1Jlfl _round oat tb1 IWttt. Dlellow hWlnut Savor wblc:h tlloeM lonn find oo deliltitlol lo die tut•. l 'l'rJ a -plo ""' --,_ ,. ...... ft Will btntfnob'-diewbealwlilloltmalu.,_ tun ud tall tu(J I•-· '1• 111. llFOU PHONE TODAY • CA\LUSNOW .. COStA ·· ~ ·MESA .. · ~ 642-,7032 , • FlGURF.-REDlJCING SALON..; I • I .. ·~ :.. 7 p DAILY PILOT WednndQ, January 28, 1970 MAY FRESH MIX or MA TCH 'EM MAY FRESH MIX or MATCH 'EM . 'TOMATOES·-,~~ • COT GREElll BSil~,,,CAI< CREAM (j RI~~"'" . .GREEIP• f 4~ .. lOU 5 ;,$ '. .. GUOIE ~ ,..... ~ . : •.... OIEFOR ....... FRUIT COCKY AIL ,., CAN PINEAPPLE NO.·.·~·~ FRUIT DRINKS •«'1.CAN ~~~4i 5 1 GETOIE MORE FOR ...... . ·1 f • m~t"air :frozui Food,---... ORANGE JUICE MA YFRESH FROZEN 6-0Z.CAN YOU 4 '$1 GET OllE IVY ~ MORE FOR •• ; C· MAYFAlll BLUE RIBBON OR U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS ROASTS BONELESS SHOULDER CLOD OR CHUCK-WASTE FREE SHORT RIBS OF BEEF BAR NONE 1 lb. CAN GET OllE MORE FOR ...... STEWING BEEF LEAN AND TENDER CHUNKS OF BEEF (. . . ...,, <D 01Wt9 $pcclots! -~~?{COTIAGE CHEESE CHUCK ST.EAK MAY FAIR BLUE RIBBON OR U.S.D.A. CHOICE .. : ........ LB. ) •.. · ·1 ARDEN REGULAR CREAMED ~/ PINT2 C '>J? SIZE QUART SIZE . 57c • . ARDEN ICE CREAM .. QUAllTYHAUOAl •• -. 59' ARDEI son MAR~RINE '''"'"·-·31s1 • ,,.--...,.-m~fair Liquor--- VOR.lNOFF VODKA ~it:~~:L ·3 · B I 10-PROOF QUART e I -i McCLELLAN SCOTCH i:,~0'~~~ .. -· ,,n.1319 ;y J ROYAL OCCASION GIN ';,';:~: .. __ n•THs3s1 ' . . CANAD I f [)MUNION'Ji S'>tl . IAN WH SKEY '°"'oo' _ ..... _ .... "n" ~ .... ... p PREMIUM BEER ~~\'c'!~0;'.. ___ ::S 00.,,.s100 --ma_yfair Dtf.ieo.«ssui-- FRANKS c MA YFlllSll ALL MIA T 11-0L .. ~l!!,~t!~!.Fe,!J ~}f~~~JVK ... -69< R.AJ1!!~P.!J~~~~-.. -.. .. . ... s2'' !P..T ... ~9,~.~~~"~~~~t~.~!~R-~-----98' LEAN TENDER BLADE CUT YOUNG HEN TURKEYS lffQYJ\D ~ 11.1§\D11.1§ Van de Kamp's SPECIALS Thm.·Sn.. Jan. 29.fob. 1 Chocolate $lZS / Almand' Cake ... 21.,... · Bur Claw Cattee Cakes .. "",, 439c Plaln Cake Douehnuts .... Pie." • 33c TOllH llSSUE ~r~ ~-.,,. 27' M!G!RINE !'W~'"'"'"" 39' RITZ CRACKERS r,~L"'i:._ 39' KRISPY Cl!CKE1,~"l'e'.~:t~35' SINKA COFFEE J. ... 11• INSTANT COFFEE .~l'fl~ --'1" YUBAN COFF!E flt .. ---··-.81' 2·ll.CAH --MMM_ .. ___ , .. SI.St c lb . FRESH FROZEN U.S.D.A. INSPECTED .......... -.... -... . BONELESS CilUCK STEAK ADVERTISED PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DAYS THURSDAY , JAN. 29 THRU WED., FEB. 4 MAYFAIR MARKO 0~~~ouRs 175 East 17th Street, Costa Mesa LB. --------------..... ------------~---~~-----------·---------·-------- Final Week! El Rancho January Sale! ••••••• 'l'he finest gl'ound n1eals •• , cxperlly blended ••• made \vith \\'hole rggs~ Ju:-;t shnpe and bake! I) • • • • • • • • • • El Rancho's Jean ham, trimn1cd of excess fal, prcci!:'ion ground pork, cornflake cr·umbs and fre~h eggs! LoCal Ground Sirloin ............ $1°9 ,b El P.<incho's lt'ancsl g1·ound 111cal .•. al1nost complcll·l.v fat frt'l' ... for lhe cholesterol conscious: Chili Grind ..................... 69~ Ground Lamb ............. 49~ Coar~c ground beef .•. n1caly chunk~ for cluli ! 'f11nder, flavo1·ful, nutritious! Try some! I Sliced Bacon ................. 89~ Fresh Sausage ............. 49~ El r.ancho's , .. thicker slices, ranch style! El Rancho's O\\'ll country style blend! Super Shopper Grocery Specials Pork I n Beans .......... 5 for $1 \7an Ca1np·s .. rich tender beans in a tasty sauce., at a price Lhars c:tll'.11laterJ for ;:,a\ings! l\o. ::!~;Cans Heinz Ketchup .................. 19( 1'-run1 rrd ripe fruit, .. dclighlfu!ly seasoned r Three varictit'~, ton; reg .. '' tlh onion, or \Viti\ rcli!ih !"14 oz. Ore Ida French fries ............... 39¢ Del Monte Relish ................... 29¢ 'l'hey go \1·ith 'Uul'gers ! •.. big:? lb. packil,\TP. ~\veel, J1 ickle 01· Jlarnbul'ger ! ... 14 oz. jar. Whole Dill Pickles .................... 49¢ Black Pepper ............................ 39¢ Iieinz , .. crisp and so tangy! ... ;)2 oi. jnr. Schilling's ... :iavc 101.'. on 4 ou nce can! Green Giant Peas ............... 5 '" $1 Green Giant Green Beans .. 5 ,., 51 So S\1·ect ... ~o tender ... No. 30J cans. l''renth ~tyle ... cris p ycl LC!ndcr ! No. 303 cans. Green Gian t Rice ......... . . 3 '" 51 Tab by Cat food ................. 10 '" '1 }'rozcu , , .rour choice of reg. ;J!)c va1·icli<'i'. \T;_1 rieties to please Ki lty ... 6 ~2 ounce cans. Rinso .......................................... 59¢ Snowy Bleach ......................... 39' Giant size ... incl ud e!' I Oc off label'. J·'or delicate fabric~!, .. 16 ou nce package. Drive Detergent ........................ 59¢ Johnston Apple Pie .................. 59' \Vit.h <!nr.yme action for added po,,·er ! Giant pkg. Big 9 inch size ... plun1p, tender Cl'U!lll Frozen. Liquid Wisk ............................. '119 Springfield Ice Cream .......... : .. 69¢ Use it for stubborn stains'. llalf-ga.llon. J.-a,·01·ed fla,·ors in half-gallon carton. Liquid Dove .................. . .......... 69¢ Hills Bros. Coffee .................... 73~ So ge nt le. yet di11solvcl! gl:'easc so easily! J~ing s1zr. T"·o lh. 1·1111 .••••• 1.4:; Three lb . can ..•... 2.13 Burger l'lump bullll from Langendorf ... ::\Od so fresh I ' { • Have a butge.1· feast this "'eek..end ••• and know you're budget \\'ise ! Package of eight. Hot Dog buns, too, at th is price I •••••••• ' . f so,n1any \Yays ••. and be so plt~aseU \Vith the Savi1_1,p! •••• I I I Looking for value! ••. El l{ancho ground chuck offers so much flavor al s uc h a reasonable p1·ice! So lean and lnsty! And all Bl t:anr.:ho g1·ou11d mcnls are a!"'ays fresh! Patties, loo, al this price! Chopped Sirloin Steak, loo , at 89c lb.! Choos~ g1·ou11d or 1.:hopped and enjoy lea n, top qualit,y sirloin! t c t Turkey Breasts ................ 89~ s\,·eet \\•hi le n1eat ... f1·on1 plun1p broad brcastcd birds! \Velcome fare any lime of Uu• year! Turke y Legs & Thighs .... 49~ Rieb , juicy, dark meat , .. tli-u111~li1.:k~ heavy \1·ith flav01·'. Lel every one huve his !uvorite portion ! Fillet of Halibut ............... 89~ l'~or a filh; fry thaL's sure to be 'vell received! Why not tl'Y. it oyen-cooked \Vilh "Shake 'n' Bake." Super Freslz Produce Specials! r ·lettuce . ~~~A~~E. ~~ .B~~T~~. 1 o~ 1.-i·esh ... lo offer U.•nder leaves, criSll ancl colorful ... and flavorful in salads and sand\\·iclu,~! Ser the differcncP in El Rancho produce! Red Onions . ...... ... . ..... .. ........ 10~ SPrve slu:r>s to add t(l bu1·ger fixin's?°Robusl fla\'or ... not overwhelmin&"I Cucumbers ................................. 10!. Cherry Tomatoes ................. 25¢as~ Crisp 1'licPs add f[a\'OI' and color to lhe l<1hle ! Little, !'Cd jc~·ch~ .• , brin1n1ing \Vith _flavor: Delicatessen Specials El Rancho Fine Liquor American Slices ........................ 65t El Rancho Scotch .. . . .r1nH ...... '5.79 Clenrfie!d ... individuull.v ,\·rapped ... 12 or.. Bottled in Scotland , .. just for El Rancho ! • Straight Whiskey ........ r1nH ...... '4.99 1<:1 J?1tncho sour ntash . , . 6 yr. old .• : Qt. 5.99 Leo's Sliced Meats .. . . . ....... 3 '" $1 \Vafci-thi11 ... your cho ice of '.\!le vurieti<'S. Busch Bavarian Beer .............. '1.°' Six pack ... 1 :.! oz. cans l Great Utirlt quencher! HUNTINGTON HARBOUR: Warner Ave. & Algonquin St. NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newport Blvd. • 2555 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastbluff Village Cente.) Also conveniently located stores in Arcadia, Pasadena and South Pasadena I • Cozy Poncho Toss lhu; cozy, marvelous poncho over pants, skirts. INSTANT PONCHO! Knit of heavy, jiffy \VOOI or tv.•o strands worsted in openwork plus stockinette bands. Just tv.·o identical pieces plus ctil- lar. Pattern 7230: easy direc- lions. FlFTY CENTS for each pat- tern -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air Mail and Special Handling; olherwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooks DAILY PILOT. 105 Needlecraft Dept., Box 16.1, Old Chelsea Station. New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Name, Addre1~ Zip, P a I t e r n Number. BIG 1170 Needlecraft Cab.tog -40 pages, 200 designs, 3 free patterns! Knit, crochet fashions. Quilt, em- broider, weave. Toys. gifts! Send 50 cen ts. NE\Y ! Complelt A I g b a n Book -marvelous afghans. fas hions, pillows, baby gifts, mon!! SI. •;50 Instant Gifts" Book. 50 t-ents. "II Jiffy Rugs" to knit. crochet, weave, sew, hook. 50 cents. Book ol 1% PriJ.t Afghani. 50 ce nts. Bargain! Quilt Book J has 16 beautiful patterns. 50 cents. l\1usewn Quill Book % -pal· terns for 12 superb quills. 50 cenls. Book 3. "Quilts for Today'• Uving." 15 patterns. 50 cents. Breakfast Skippers In Trouble Br e akfa s t skippers are prone to accidents. costly mis· takes and a cranky personal· ity. \Vhat better reason is there to start now on a better breakfast plan? Breakfast, you will find. is well worth giving up that ex- tra I~ minutes on the pillow, s11y Dairy Cou ncil o f California nutritionists. The tiomemaker. the husband, the .:P.en-agcr, ana the children viii all find that the day goes better if they have fuel to start it off. O.K., so yor are not used to eating bacon and eggs and toast and juice and milk -the "usual" breakfas~. Learn to eat breakfast gradually. First -just start off your day with a single food such as a glass of milk. l\1ilk is a good sLart.off-lhe-day food since it contains mosl of the nutrients the body needs to function - such as high quaJlty protein. carbohydrates, calcium, vlt;i. mins A and 0, and ribonavln. Then, gradually add other foods to your breakfast menu. \Vithln two or three weeks you and your famil y should be en· joyin1 the benefits of a better breakfast Remem ber, you don't have lo eat the conventiona l eggs or breakfut cereal. T o a s t e d cheese sandwiches, pudding, hamburgers, hot dogs. last night's leftover casserole - all make excellenl breakfasts. As 1 brea1dast eater, you'll be mott cheerful and I e s 1 prone t.n accidents and mis- takes. You win be able to wotlt and s1udy belier. And you will look betler, too. Save Juice ,f'uJc.'t. dra1ned from canned frui t can he used for part of " 1he Uquld In making up packaged Jrult·Oovored gela- tlll d<saerll. • .. r--__:_~---:;;~~-~-~~~~~-::-----=--- '' Alpha Beta's Man in Blue says: FRED SUTTEl STORE MANAGEl HAAllOI ll VD. GARDEN GROVf thiS 8d, including 69 D • 1n ·~""' \lill·"' .. , .. ) ,,,,;;", 'Total savinis is computed 011 ii11gle·unlt purchase. t~e figure would be m11e1t higher it Meat & Produce snings were l11cluded. Bette.r Produce at DISCOUNT PRICES ·SALAD FIXIN'S ROMAIN£ • BUTI£R R£0 L£Af • ENOIV[ t·L-:D::-,..-.., • SALAO BOWL ....... •ESCAROLE c EA . BUNCH VEGETABLES • LONG GRAIN RICE • PINTO BEANS •POP CORN SUN.DRIED FRUITS l·t ll fJCK.\G[ BREAKFAST PRUNES l ·Ol.INC[ PAt(.t.G[ BREAKFAST APRICOTS l !.-OUHC£ f .CKloC( I WISE IUYS IN ECONOMY SIZE I IO·LI. IAG DELICIOUS APPLE$ 20-LI, IAD RUSSET POTATOES IO·LI. 1.lG NAVEL ORANGES OISCOVHT l'•ICE · 12~b. ALPHA BETA 29' RAISINS t Vfn O" lOW 9l' YOUR CHOICE EA. lHESE PRODUCE PRICES EffECllVE lHURSOAY through WEDNESOAV. JAN. 2g.rEa •. ~ IOTAl DISCOUNTS [V[RY DAY !.OM( At,HA 8ET.& STORE! DISCOUNT C~AllC( ,.IC( MICRIN ciUAAT BOrru: • lNCLUDI:S 2.X Cif ---· ~MICRIN ~MOUTHWASH I G>. C:.l~LETIE . ANTl-PERSP!RANi . s.az. RIGHT GUARD ::.ot-~E. :;101u.:-. CHARl!L.l.<i!~ ii ll·OZ. CAN $113 f.CONDMT SIZE liem• :i!o·o• Ch .. 1:a_l.lt· - ..... ,,.. So~ i>Jhl ··~-... ._,.._ \t1\~ ,, ..... TOTAL DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY SOMf AlPH.& 9(TA SfOltES OISCOUJ<IT CHA RC( PRICE "'TTL!: or l00 1'A8U:'I' .. BA YER ASPIRIN l'Offif: 01· ~00 TA11u;n:; bOTTU'. or J.XI '!'AB!.[!:; CHllDALN S ASPIRIN • :-.6'1 -- ., . So~. >'I rn .. .:.:;:.:.:' •·'·• ~,~, •1,,, --------------- 5.0lJNCE AEROSOL SPRAY SOFT & DRI ANTl-PERSPIRANT s~i~~s )08 CHA RGE .J.35' a.OUNCE CAN \-85 1.49 F AM!L Y SI ZE TUBE HEAD & SHOULDERS SOME STORES CHARGE l .7S )45 FAMILY SIZE JAR tR5 1.56 FAM ILY 5!ZE LOTION ~ 1.J2 ·-------.... ---------- TOTAL DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY SOM[ At'H.li l[T.I STD•E! OISCOUltT CH.&RCE '•It[ ... slR'L'olii 'fliis · '""& 41 1 @ C!ltAM.eD CHICKFN • r..oz. Ji! o .. Pt?P!:lllDCI: r,l.llM •ALL Y.lll!l:Tlt3 @l'.4Y'Eil 'c4K"Es .98f 751 WATERSOFTENER ,59C 571 w'lilTE ii1N'6°0"'' 0 " J~c 581 w'Hltf iilll'G'Oso4P" J5c' 631 ------------------- SOME STORES CHARGE J-,31f K ING SIZE BOX GAIN DETERGENT 1NCLUO£S 25c Off LA8El 111 ------------- '0'";•; CJ. • "!:~:JLA'I COMET CLEANSER ~~-OUtlC!: !IOTTLI: MR. CLEAN LIQUID CLEANER • ~··:"'!'.'!IOTiL-: THRILL LIQUID DETERGENT -------------------GIANT SlZt BOX CHEER DETERGENT ------------------· HICK INCLUDING FREE BIR LUX BATH TOTA t DISCOUNTS 'tVERY DAY SOM! Al,llA l!Tl STOl£S OISCOUlll CIW;C( 'RIC[ r-OUNCt P~<;;ICAGE: • 6'k VALUE: ALPHA BETA PIZZA LOAF lllPKA 81111 • 6-0UNC[ PACl:AC!: CORNED BEEF LOAF' ~ YALU[ ALPHA BETA • ! ~L!Ct;. • Pfl;OCtSStD AMERICAN CHEESE t~: VALUC 451 481 37; VA!/ 01: KAMP · :mo ISLAND ~i'/rDc'o~ffi\~G J!E 291 f!Lt:U CHEt:St 8-0Z. '8f .'.19e ROQUEFORT, 8-et. ,$<: 4Sa flORDrN'S . :i.Lf! LOAr 239 AMERICAN SLICED CHEESE ~ AtPHA BETA • lh:CAUON IMITATION MILJI: ~9c VAL:..l: t PINT • 29c: VALUE ALPHA BETASDUR CREAM 271 P!NT CARTON • :l..'.lc VALUE •!lo. QUART CARTON • l ~ VAWE ISe J'AT!O • ALL VARICTU:S 39; MEXICAN DINNERS ;~ oz n1~2r:N .48( @ GA£f•1 G ANT • ALL VARlttlt~ 10.0UNc;; J'ACO.Ct • fJIOZEN 35; RICE EHTI!EES )9f ~ f''JTi~R Si REIJSl:L ~ sA'Ri''l'Ei'c'D'FWi"hKE89C' 74' ALPHA 8[1A • 6-:t.AflS • l'ROZEN CORN·ON.THE·COB 7>e VALUt 11 •. QAlLON • GOURMf:T • 90e VALVt ALPHA BETA ICE CREAM •I ~ _ ~~, l"Y ALPHA BETA 68' 891 ,}Jii , , / QUALITY BAKERY •• . AT DISCOUNT PRICES ~ .. D.wi Sot1 · Dou-ih • Round 51\c~d ~ ALPHA Bf TA • !·LB. LOAF 33' FRENCH BREAD vJ.r "' ~ ALPHA BETA • ~JNCK 65, ~ PINEAPPLE PIE v~il. ALPHA 81111 • • i:.r. •lo"; VAt.'J!: 33' CINNAMON ROLLS AlPHA BEHi .. • F ?ACi: 36 BRAN MUFFINS · ,, "·'"' ' AlPHA BETA '. 1 U.YrR . 7':VALU!:68• CHOCDLATE FUDGE C!KE -----------------· \, ANi :;rz.<: tCA TIDE DETERGENT .B3' 82' ------------- IUMBO SlZ[ ecx DASH DETERGENT lA!iG!:' :;;zE. 2AP: LAVA BAR SOAP ·"l'!G ~·zr BO:< BIZ PRE·SOAK 22-0UNCE BOTTLE PALMOLIVE LIQUID DETERGENT INCLUDES lOc OFF LABEi. SOME STORES CHARGE 63e C:IA1ii Sil[ aox o J:-;C!.UDES 10:: ore DR EFT DETERGENT ------------------· NEW •M SOAP ~ AJAX CLEANSER ,...,.. .... -' ....... ~~""""' ------------------- ':,~~~ 40' ~ GIANT SIZE CAN INCLUDES 3c OFF LABEL BOTILE Of JO• 50ME STORES CH,4,Rc;i 65e ANACIN TABLETS BOTTLE OF 50 TABLETS BOTTLE OF 100 TA8L£TS ,,, 79' 54' JA 1" DRISTAN TABLETS •gx or .t !" Mc sro11r.s CHARO[ ,.L.at-$11' !OX orMTAllL[TS A 1.11 -------------------'t-OIJNCt llOTTU: • SUl'tll SfZE: SCOPE MOUTHWASH .lJ" $) 4t ------------------- il'LE'E M'rooTHPAsrE ..39~ 341 LARCJ; SIZt 1UBt JI 'lk ''TlMo\CTION """4\JltlllD Oii YC>IA MOl'ltY lqlJf'IOUI • UltS ill tOtltCTCD DI! UL TAllBtl 1HMS • ~1l ttSlM THt RICliT TO •UU!( !'J.($ TO COMMERCIM. DUlUS ~U.11A M&!JOA-241 E. l )ttl lo!. HUNTINGTON llACH-9041 All•IM HUNTINllTON llACH-11611 N .M•h• St. fOUNTAIN YALLIY-ttlO Wenter SOUTH LAGUNA-10122 S. Cont Hlwo, LAGUNA HILL~2JS41 c.n ••• ,, l·lu l l'~it1r-1 r,040 Cr•l\m , u~1py ""'k SOM[ STORES CHARCEK 19' • t " " " J 19 1¢ ' --· 24 02 c c -------------·-------~ • ' a 1scoun s . . BLE DISCOUNTS, save s17.19 *'' TOfAt DISCOUNT S EiERY DA1 SOMr ALPNA lEfA ITOlltS ll lSCOUJrft CNAlCt PllCE l:ING SIU: IOX BOLD DETERGENT ------------------- SOME STORES CHARGEJ!3E RINSO DETERGENT GIANT SIZE BOX INCL'IJDES I Oc Off LABEL ·------------------~)~ BA.TH SIZE BAR t':=ll ~~ LIFEBUOY r .~~;;~, ~~~AL~~~~ OR WHITE J5f 31' ~ 16' @ lfil[A'M' coilll . Wl!''.Zst 23' ~:} CA!/ • ~!:ASON[D PE AS Zc ~~ @ ll'i'N'K0s1i:1111ir1 "LLa 83' @ GLof!'iETT1A 'Ffiis' m' 32' @ wili'4 f"H'E4'ii'fs'' m 41' @ ilotlil'6'E\'.A'ilil~voi'Oc 8' @ iior'aL'P'uoo1't16VTu 9' iNs¥'liit0'1Ca'¥4 .95" 93' I Hl6Ll.S BROS:ll' o~ [U:CTRA P7CR8K c COFFEE Jat ' ' y,., ALPHA BETA Ne~hborhood Butcher (the Man in the Red Apron) Proudly Offers DUTCHER'S PRIDE MEATS WILSON 'S CRISPRITE ' . BACON IU. PACKAGE MEATS YOU'LL If PllOUD TO SERVI • DISCOUNT PRICED • QUALITY & SATISFACTION GUARAATEED • U.S. GOVERNMENT INSf'ECTEO BEEF ALPHA BETAIU!CBEfl lllllmr BONELESS 109 FAMILY STEAK ii. BEEF CALIFORNIA GROWN USDA INSPECTED • FRESH FROZlN \ . SHORT RIBS c Fiii 1ntnr1 nI'? RE.ClPE BONELESS STEW BEEf YOUNG HEN lHIS WE.EX: "" BONELESS 7-BONE ROAST TURKEYS ti ME IAJ;EO ... l·lB. PACKAGE • st.ICED IOWA MAID 69c BACON l·LB. PACKAGE • SLICED (Ar1111111JOHH77c BACON sM"o'ii[o"siusAG'E' 89¢ eiiuoio 'sii~;ip'" 87¢ HtAT ANO 5£1\V[ •TASTY 79;. HOT DOG on·a·Sllck c lb. "'"' "" IDIDBll'I Pl!IE • DEPENDABLE QUALITY FRESH GROUND BEEF SHRIMP' ~~TlfCRAB ROLL 1~9 ID!CBl&'S ll!IE • COOKED IN THE BA& •WHOLE IODT 68~. BARBECUED CHICKENS T~ESE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY lhroueh WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 29-FEBRUARY • TOTAL DISCOUNTS EYERY DAY SQM[ .llPH.I. IETA STORrs .CISCOUJl'l CHAAC( PRICE -------------------KING SIZE BOX DRIVE DETERGENT ~i;'.'[5 $136 CH ARGE .kal!~ 33-0UNCE 80Til£ DOWNY FABRIC SOFTENER SOME STORES CHARGE .B'Jo • P'GULAR S12t BAR 79c CAMAY BAR SOAP J.2t l1 1 11.EGULAR SIZE BAR , ( Personal IVORY 412~c 4 : 28 "f:GVLAR S12£ II.AR ZEST BAR SOAP 11( 141 -------------------GIANT SIZE BOX .COLD POWER LAUNDRY DETERGENT INCLUDES I Sc Off «LABEL SOMES STORES CHARGE Jl3c 59' IOTAl DISCOIJNIS EVERY DAY D..i; 40 0•·1.cr aor. "'"'" BISQUICK SOME Al"IA l[Ti STO~ES DllCOUNf CHARGC PRICE ..56f 441 ~ llil[s£1iv'is "' · C"1i! 34' ~ STRAWB£1tFIY • 12-0Z, !All. )!£. ~7c @P'iA't1''ToM'1r'oEs'm 31' CONTADINA •NO. XIO CAH @ ~~~:T~t~AUCE .2¥ 211 H/COU"!T t::M-. SPICE TONE ~ ZEE llAPKlllS ~ J'OLLY' '.JtME OR wxnc 591 ~ POPCORll .i!!" I Lii. I AO '2-1.8. llAO •~ .llir ~ ,,,. PRICES EFFECTIVE IN ALL ALPHA BETA MARKETS NEW ZEALAND • SMALL lQlff USDA INSPECTED FRESH FROZ_~ GOURMET FAVORITE lOTAl DI SCOU ~JS EV£RY DAY SOME AlPlll I ETl $TORES DISCO\JHf CHARGE 'l'lC[ It -OUNCE BOX • U:MON CHlrroN 16-0UNCE BOX I-STEP ANOt l. rooo 1~-0UNCt aox '2.sTEP ANGEL rooo BETTY CROCKER CAKE MIXES .S5( $51• ~ GLORltnA • 303 CAN· 22' ~ Stewed Tomatoes17t @ a\ldw'ti1i 0MI~ · w•• 55' rRttlCH STYLE • 303 CAN DEL llOllTE GREEll BEAllS ,2C 221 ~ a'iiE'E'N'a'E'aN's ""~ 23' ~ ITAUAN CUT • X'3 CA11 ~ ::tk @ s'ii1iacli'" "" )3( 201 @ z~;~hl~isQ'UASH)l( 281 @f.l'ill"IEAits'" J1( 33' @s'uiiili 'ia'liiss"" .m ~91 OAILV PILOT ZS Granny ·Tackles Market LIMA, Peru (UPI) -A young ... looldng aranclmolher hiS tackled one or Lima's toughest jobs -supervision of city-run food markets. About 30 serve Utis capital of 12,m,Ooo population, in ad- dlliOn to pri vately-run RW'kets, supermarkets and bOdegas (Independent groceries). tfaruja de Camera Checa got the uslc~t as one_ or the first four women members ot the central Munlclpal Coun- cil. She Sfid tn an interview that she's trying to cli!an up the markets aod bold pricea al reasonable lev_Fi. lt;s asking a lot .In •• city where many are so p.ior they can afford to buy food only In single units, such as one egg or one orange at a Ume. Stall keepers also 11 v e precariouslJ, the coun- cilwoman added. That's why business Is allowed to con- tinue, even in markets un· dergoing a I m o s t total reconstruct.ion. As ~trs. Carnera Checa talk· ed, we visited the 68-year old Mercado de la Aurora, which she called ooe of the city's worst Workmen were replacing old, cracked concrete floors with marble tiles, decaying wood counters with ceramJc -lites, and painting grimy walls and ceilings. The project also calls ror replacing· wooden water and sewer pipes with cement ones and substituKng individual garbage cans at each st.all for larger common ones now In use. Garbage will be hauled away in covered containers In· stead or open trucks that spill part or their load in the streets. Mrs. Carnera Checa sa id doors and open spaces in ceil- ings would be screened to keep out flies . Progress at this early stage is hard to evalaute. Ml'J. Camera Checa was elected to the council in 1966, and the market p."'Oject was Iaunched two years later, over what she said were objections from the mayor and other members or the council. She added that the counciJ so far has provided 3,000,000 soles -(about fll,000) -and stall keepers h~ve matched that sum. Food prices are established by the minister of agriculture . They are posted dally Jn all markets, which serve both retail and wholesale customers. Goods and services we take for granted in the U.S. have just begun ta appear in the city-run markets. White paper and plastic bags on]y gradually are re- placing newsprint as wrap- pings for raw foodstuffs , The small ones are free; large ones sell for one 10le - (slighUy aver 2 cents). Food that needs no wrapping goes into a CW1tomer's wicker or straw basket or shopping bag. No refor1ns Instituted so far resulted from popular de- mand, said the councilwoman, wife or a prominent Con1- munlst journalist. In fact, she insisted, no one had complained about the markets' condltion. Hard to believe, until you realize that the poor probably are so used to substandprd conditions that they think It's . useless to complain, and the well -to-do never see the markets because their maids or cooks do the shopping. Mrs. Carnera Checa .aid United Sta tes-atyte supermarkets -one now In eaCh section ol Lima -at first lured away 1 om e customers. But she said she expects them to return as the markets are upgraded. She conceded th a t im· provement or the municipal markets ls only part of the food problem . Hundreds of street food vendors remain unsupervised, which creates an obvious health hazard for Lima'• residents. "It's a disease," she tfiid. "But many have no other way to support thelr famJlles, and we don't want to push them out.'' , Whet Appetite Layer cJUlled consommo Madrllene (It lhould b 1 jellied), dairy sour maro. die. ed lreob California lllrUetl pears Ind chopped walnui. In eartalt gluses to terve •• • fil'M course. · Buy The DAILY PILOT Just for 'PHnuts' r n ' n • r • d •r I ' I I ' . • • DAILV PILOT Wtdntsday, J.1nuary 21, 1970 12-WEEK .Jilt; g,_ li'ante ~ 1 PRINT FREE EACH ·WEEK WITK COUPON (N) PILOT.AOVERTISER 5 3rd week COlllHHI VAiUO ONlY J11\. .II 10 1"1•. 4 FREE! ONE 12" x 24" PRINT .. "f ,_NH sl JI • _, UCI" ''* ,. ..... f ~ It• lllilllT OHi c:otW0" 'II PAMll 'f " 1Mlt COUf'O'l g9c t 11 WOllTM P•ICll IPPICTIYI THU•I. thrv IUH., JAN. 29·PIB. 1, 1970 Choose from Old Masters,· portraits, landscapes, city scenes-120 lively pie· 1ures in a choice of sizes, can be yours -frtt, at the Art & Frame fair! 23 dift- arent framt styles and sizes to Mltth -at up to 50% Yvln1st HINDQUARTERS -YOUllG -TURKEY a•tAO!D ot ,l.AIN Frozen Y-1 Steaks 39.:. U.l.D.A. IHtPICTID • ' ENRICHED FLOUR PACIAL SPA TISSUE BOX Of 200 ITRAIHID Beech-Nut BABY FOOD •-OZ. ac JAR I PET FAVORITE PIXIE CAT FOOD 106'h-0<.•1 co n1 5 ""'1 1or• GOLDEN DELICIOUS SENECA APPLESAUCE •O·o.·29C '"" FRESH KIST PORK&BEANS FRESH KIST APPLE JUICE •"·"33• btl. • BARTLETT PEARS ";.'.'h 39' iiiiilED POTATo'is" 39c FRESH MIST -LIGHT ME.AT CHUNK TUNA ••-'h29' '"" DELICATESSEN ALL MEAT OSCAR MAYER WIENERS r'R'AN'l<s 6ftc :.'i, 79,1,. Yu •. FOOD GIANT -SLICED, DELUXE, WISCONSIN AMERICAN CHEESE PASTEURIZED 49c PROCESSED H IGADOON IMPORTED BLENDED I OZ. PKG, SCOTCH WHISKY $ 4 ~!. DANOLA -IM>ORTED, SLIC!D •u.-ST-Ell-1 ROMA--N-llM-PO_R._TE_D -------i DANISH HAM ITALIAN WINES :w.1~ 99c " 1 ·-·· 65c pkg AUSTJUAN ALPS -IMPORTED, Sl!C[D SWISS CHEESE CA ~t Of 11 ,.fTHS S 10 .• , •"-49c pk11. PRISHKllT FRUIT DRINKS • PUNCH •GRAPE • BOYSENBERRY 4 '1 •CHERRY-APPLE 46•0S. • • ORANGE cans . • PINEAPPLf·GRAPEfRUIT MAGIC CHIP SALAD DRESSING 24-0Z. 3ftc BTL. ., WHOLI IWl lT LIBBY'S PICKLES 22·0Z. JAR 4tc MILISS TOP ROUND OR FAMILY STEAKS 'I~~ LAMB ROAST SHOULDER 59.C P•llHFROZIH U.l.D.A. IHIPICTID lb. YAN de KAMP CHICKEN PIES OH BOY CHEESE PIZZAS 3 ,_,,_., .::. ate pkg1. per ,,, AUHTJIMIMA GOLDEN WAFFLES Buttermilk or Regulor WILCH'I GRAPE JUICE ::; 43c '~~·: 3fc TENDElll RED ANO RIPE I GARD!N FRESH All GlllE!N LARGE COMPACT HEADS 19.:. 19.:. 39c CHERRY TOMATOES 12·• .. 19.c lt••k•t ea. 1 BROCCOLI FRESH RED SUCCULENT 'RHUBARB I LARGE BROWN STEAK I MUSHROOMS N E'N CllOP 11, lb. All Gllt!HOS-(OfFfE t-.t ........ 11 Hou1• Betty Crocker Loyer Coke MiJtes, reo. pkg ....................... 39c Btlty Crocker Angil Coke Mix, I S·oz. pkg ............... -------65< ADORN HAIR SPRAY Mory Ellen Preserves. Strowb'y or Seedless Blockb'y, 20·oL 69c Mory Ellen Preserves, Grape Jcm, 20-oL jor .................... 55c BETTY CROCKER FRO STI NG MIX Whitt fluff, Cl!Qtolore Fudgt. (htf'ry. CrlOl'lly Whi1e, (hffry, Dole P•fltO~ Milk Cllocolote. SOI.Ir Creom fudirt l·lb. (Oft ,........... 78<; 2·1b. QOn ............ $1 SS ).h con .•.•..•••..• S2 2~ lnftoM(1 0..t.I "'11 SJ Blue Bonntl Morgorine (Incl. 2c off), I-lb. pkg ................. 29c Cornctfon Coffee·Mote Coffee Creamer, 1 1-oz. btl. ........... 79c Thoto Ftd Dog Food, All Varieties. no. 1 con ,,., . 23c Down Fresh Mushr oom Steak Sauce. 'r'•·OZ. cons .. 2 for 25c In "Touc h Top~ Con A:~uto1 or 99c Hord to Hold Mery Ellen Prese rves. Plum Jam, 20-oz. ;or ..................... ~9c Hondl·Wro p, ll)(J.foor roll ....................................... 35< Mr .. Cli:cn ,Liquid Cleane r. 28·oz con ............................... 73c , Thrill liquid Otte rgent , 22-oz. bottle •.... • . ............. 59c 2300 l lurltor Divel. ut \l'llsou St., Uu1•J1or Shop11i11g Cent.er, Costa 1'lesu Rf9 P\9 'le Coe~ ,f(On, Rtg P'..g 49G CllOCOlott So1111 White Sa11n Mil• Choe:olote So11n Rt9 F'..g 5~ • • PILOT-ADVERTISER 5 Wednesday, January 28, 1970 • . MARGAiitii .__ __ ;·~:: 2 7 c · iiiiY'i:OOD5 __ 3 ·;~;~'25' ................ 23 IORTILLASv:~.~r ·-···········~~~i c """"""'"""' · s 129 • INSTANTYllBAN .. -10L : iiAxwii'LHOUSE. ~~~78' • IDAHOAN SCAUOPED "'~'"' .... "'w.39' SUPERIOR TAMALES "· IO' IDAHOAN AUGRATIN "''""'--"'~•43' ·HIUSIROS.COFFEE >u. 11.54 PAlMOUVE LIQUID QnEJtGENT ,.~·;,Gf. 5 3 c GIANT • ' . OH THf l'UIKMASI OF J-LI. CAN MAXWRL HOUSl COFFEE PW!Tt,;.l~... 39' °"'"""""'l&"llWC>' 93' .. COCKTAIL NUTS -w. SLICED CHEESE _••"-.._... ~ 35c ........ -67' SPANISH NUTS _ .., AMERICAN CHEESE.'"" ------------~ ·---------.,....--. • WtdntW,y, January 28, 1970 DAILY PILOT 27 USDACHOICIOllSTATRllOS.QITIAID-s 12s . D ' T -BONE STEAKS ................... u. . USDACHotaOllSTATRllOS.~llfllD-• 1 47 . TOP SIRLOINnu ........... __ L1. • USDACHOICIOll_STATRllOS,C811--• 105 U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR STEAKS :ig:~~~--............... LI . STATER BROS. CERTIFIED BEEFl!SD•CHOICI01tsr•••110S.ca•••-· 99c C. "~RIB STEAKS __ .... , ............................. La. "usDACHOICIOl.STATR~IW 99 . . ·.~CLUB SftAll ... _ .. .:_~..... .. .... .L•. c "fllM:f • IXTIA LIAN • TASTY 8 5 e'°J:iE · GROUND ROUND ........... LI. c ')oNaas--. ·93 •1" ·>aOLLID ROAST _ ......... -LI. c IONIUSS 95 ROUND STEAK -". ' MOllllU'S YOIKS.. 1111,C;U~~ THICK 6 7 C SUCED . Aev11 ~--.... LI. MANHATTANflllSlll.tlC>l.'!!!1CHUI ' 59c LIVER SAUSAGE _____ . USDACHOICIOllSTATRllOS.alTlftlDlllF 95c· RU• ROAST . -LI. MOlltllUll!ltDfAU-69' DltlNER FRANKS ....... LI FAIMQJOHNSLtaO 49c COOKED H4'1 ___ .. L 6-TH RIB & 7-TH CHUCK GROUND ROAST BEEF BIEF ALL MEA'l ROAST WIENER ROAST U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR STATER IROS. CERTIFIED IEEF c LB. 1-ST. THRU .. ~TI' 111 --""' U.S.D..A. CHOICIOI STAnR IROS. CERTIFIED IEEF FIHH • LEAN GROUND HOURLY STA-CRISP U.S.D.A. CHOICEOI STATER IROS. CERTIFIED IHF C ROUND BONE LB. CRACKERS .................. . 09ER11-PITTED GIANT SIZE -RIPE OUVES ·-· . . PORK • BEEF • CHICKEN • MUSHROOM ·"=iu DINNERS . KERN'S 'TOMATO SAUCE 4 ~K~s.5 1 3 TALLSI CANS • _ ..... 42-0Z. 7 9 C 12 ~t:s 5 1 ()'dfe1tJlfli1'~/ VITAPAKT 59c .. ELBERTAPEACHSLICEs ,. .... _3f' ORANGE JUICE 18-0Z ELBERTA PEACH HALVES ,.c. .. __ 39" ... .. ' BARTLITTPEARHALVES -·-"""3' THOR·O-FEDASSORTED DOG S si . WHOLEPEELEDTOMATOES _,., .. 29' ' BALL TALL BOYSENBERRIES _ ,.,a,41' MIA FOAa CANS . ' · VEGETABLE COCKTAIL i '"41' VU ........... - VEGETABLE COCKTAIL ,.,, 31' THE GENTLE DETERGENT 4 5 . :~~:~LE~~:~ IVORY LIQUID ....... -.... ~~~~~... -c STRAWBERRY ____ ,,,,.,45• •J•XPOWD•a 2 46. • ORANGE MARMALADE ""' 34' - -~ GIANT C ~:.'lt":~ .. ::'.-" 45' EANSER ~~';;L,_,..................... SIZE : SKIPPY DRY DOG FOOD ._._ 10 ... '.1.19 HANOI WRAP ROLL PLASTIC ___ , ,,,,,_31• IDAHOAN POTATO FLAKES '"' 57' DAYS-WE BOWL CLEANER ... _ 2 ,.,. 11.4! HUNT'S TOMATO PUREE 2 ~ 35' ORLEANS SMALL WET SHRIMP _,.,,, l5' HUNT'S TOMATO PUREE '""' 37' ORLEANS DEVEINED SHRIMP " ·-", <>< 93' HUNT'S TOMATO JUICE -"''""" 31' McDONALD1 MAPLE SYRUP '"M -• U-OL 75' HUNT'STOMATOIUICE _ 2 ~"" 29' YUBANCOFFEE -H•.'1.63 "'i 12' .. HUNT1CHILISAUCE ._,_ '"~'· 31' INSTANT MAXWELL HOUSE ____ '""· Ut Fl.EISCHMAllN'S DRY YEAST -·-·~•"'' 11' INSTANT SAN KA COFFEE ---., ""-11.63. WlllTIKlllG 63' GLAD2S.COUNT 3ftc SOAP GIAHT0°l'~L ,~C.:: .• ') FOOD BAGI . ...- SCOT PAl!t •. TOWELS . --'""" i3' GLADPLASTICWRA,..,....n l ,l' __ ;,~, l5' FAMILYSCOTTROU TISSUE _ ... .31' DIET DELIGHT APRICOTS ---~"' 37' SCOTROLrTISSUE . ----· • .. , 38' DIETDELIGHTFRUITCOCKTAIL _.~ 27' SCOmESFICIAl TISSUES _ ,oo<.ovtor 28' DIET DELIGHT PEACHES ;;g:~t~~~s _ :io> 24' PURR MINI BITSo«""'""-· 2 "o• 3~ DIET DELIGHT PEARS ____ .. -·-"' 37' ON Tl* l'VllCMASI Of SAHITAIY coiFi;ns 6-°""'1' .. JfATllllOI. th#W-':.t , ... 2t.fll. .. FINISH brr -'UT OMA TIC DnHWASHI• DIA~N": 5·5 C 33-0%. n .. ' • ' • d •r • ' . ' I \ . ' ' I • • WtdntM111, Januart 28. 1970 · · Sriti!h 'Heritage . ' Childhood Favorites on Menu By JOHNA BLINN NEW YORK -"Wt !lid a marvelous dish whlcb I loved as a child called 'bubble and aqueak!, It's nat really a meal, but ~");I: The. El!Ctiab ... ••pecllo114Py good •\ le!· lovers," London-born atcreu ~ean Simmons said over -· "In Golders Gfftn (a Lon- don stiburb), where I 1rew up, the dilh WIS almply made with chopped. cooked cabbage, col~ J?Oll1oel a n d sometime!, bits of meat. All you b..-d to do was mJ,x it, and do a fry-yp in bacon fat." have a nt! 11>ey'~ all against J)Ws. My mother'• llvina with us now and once 1n a while I'll say, 'Mummy, ""maybe you should bave a vitamin pill,' "A pill,' she'll say. 'l get mine in the food.' PersonallY, I don't go along with tht ,.-ay food is treated now with at Ore addlUves and sprays. But I have diM=overtd two very good health drinkl. When I get bored with one, I switch to the other. Being an aclrt$s, I'm constantly on a diet." JEAN SIMMONS' BUBBLE AND SQUEAK 4 small boiled, p e e I e d polall>O• 1 cooked cabbage (green sprouts or uvoy) 1 small peeled, chopped onion s tablespoons bacon drip- pin11 (or bacon) Salt, pepper to taste Sliced leftover meat (beef, pork or lamb) Pickled onions Chop potatoes and cabbage (er cook chopped cabbage un· tit barely tender in salted boiling water, drain well). , BEEF PIE MATCHES SKIERS' APPETIT ES Jiq. tleganlly attired in an lviiry. lllk,.flOor-teqtb kimono described \he COctmey la•~ as common to Enetanden IS "fi.lb'n chlpg" and "ha'rn ha'f."' Actually, it got ill name from the m~r·ln which it's; prepared. "nts_t, you, bubble or boll the P,tatoes in water then fry the greens (cabbage or Brussels sproutJ:) in a skil- let until they hils or squ~·; •he g1ggled. Heat bacon drippings (or butter) unUl hot ip. frying pan. Add onion,( cook few minutes bifore adding potato, cab- bafe, salt and popptt to taste. Cook few minuUs (er unW cabbage is lightly brawn.) Serve at once with meat and pickled onions, s.r.es 2-3. Beef Pie ' Satisfies . -Jun. W,bo.deacril>id henell as;fi'~ ·~ .. Ue"t and onif'.tpttiesled Jn .. 11n1 wl>tn I'm buciJY," ~ the forqo-ibc-liol her. funct of food . Qoirleqe.' Howevft', s b e CONSTANTLY DIETING Jean Simmons Hearty Ski Appetites .. !·~: ·;p<6ved able to sualain a cult- ~ conversation thniugb the 'eocttail hour along with eome "comments on her lll esp I an talents and praise for the latllJi efforUI o! bet husband Richard Brooks. He wrote and directed her latest movie, "The Happy Ending." Jean explained. "Oun Is an enormous house. Many of the rooms are not fumls hed because it just doesn 't go with us lo have fonnality, especially a formal dining rOom. We eat in what you'd call a sunroom. You can put your feet up in every room and be comfortable. elaborate. "My favorite meal is roast beef and Yorkahl.re pudding wit.b roast potatoes or bolled beef with the cooked ve~t.ables arranged around the roast. Weekends, when a whole load of people come up to play tennis, I never have special hon d'oeuvres. Allerthougltts: If !lesired, chop leftover meat and brown with vegetables or fry sliced meat until lightly brown in bacon drippings (or butter). For flavor accents, sprinkle UghUy with few drops of a 1barp W!egar. Calirornia beef takes part in all the activities in which Californians are engaged - winter or summer. During the winter season, Call!ornians take to the slopes and the home economists for the California Beef Council of- fer a recipe for Skier's Beer 'n' Kidney Pie which honors them. The pie's hearty robust flavor will be a winning at· traction al after-ski dinner parties where the pastry-top- ped m~at will more than satilfy the most ravenous ap- petites after a Jong, strenuous day "out in the elements." This steak and kidney pie i:. pracLically a meal in itself, easily completed with .salad , bread and wine. An apple makes a good dessert. Nonskiers, too, will look forward to serving this beef casserole during the winter for guests at borne. nu. di.ab goes to the dinner table wlth candlelight for easy en- tertaining. A glamorous avocado and artichoke salad and a light ch090late mount for dessert make splendid ac- companiments for an eleganl evening. SKIER'S BEEF 'N' KIDNEY PIE 'a pound veal kidney, well trimmed 1 ()-pound) thick top round California bee£ steak, fat removed. :i la blespoons £lour ~~ cup cooking oil Chocolate Mild Accents Flavor Banana Make a batch late in the afternoon and serve fresh from the oven for dlnner. BANANA CllOCOLATE COOKIES I cup unsifted flour I teaspoon baking powder 1.i. teaspoon baking soda 1{4 teaspoon sail l!J cup butter or margarine 1.lz cup sugar I large egg ·~ teaspoon vanilla \1 cup mashed ripe banana 'n cup semi-sweet chocolate pieces On wax paper thoroughly stir together the flour , baking powder, t)aking soda and salt. Cream butter and sugar; beat in egg and vanilla. Stir in flour mixture I I alternately with banana. Stir in choo:llate. Drop by level t.ableSpoonsfuls, about 2 inches apart. onto buttered cookie sheets. Bake in a preheated 400- degree oven unW lightly browned around edges and baked through -10 to 12 minutes. With a wide spatula remove at once to wire racks to cool. Makes about 3 dozen. Store in a tighlly covered container. The freshly baked cookies will have a crisp ex· terior and a soft inside. They will soften entirely during storage; lo freshen , place in a single layer on a cookie sheet or foi l in a 400 degree oven for a r r w minutes. 1 Tl\ere's no time like l1QW • I to IM18 OU! Pepperidge Frnri' ~ · wtt11 Wiid Rice Soup.~ . Of dallc wild rice. lii a Sofdlll of meetY chicken and me11DW ~. Hill IJP. It's the blsl ..ci,,. i~,. ll'IOl1th of souJ!dl1'! 2 large onions, chopped l (1 01ti-ounce) can beef broth I (4-ounce) can sliced mushrooms, undrained \\ cup dry sherry 2 teaspoons salt 11, teaspoon e a t la crushed rosemary and bull Pastry Cover kidney with cold water In saucepan and bring to boil. Simmer 5 minutes ; drain and cool. cut kidney in small pieces. Cut Steak in I lh·incb cube5; roll in flour. Brown kidney and steak in oil in skillet over moderate heat. Add onion and brown. Add broth, mushrooms, sheny, salt and herbs. Cover and sfin. mer until meat ls teoder, l 'n to 2 hours. Tum mixture into 2-quart baking dish ; cover with pastry. Crimp edges over t0p edge of dish ; cut sllta to allow steam to escape. If desired,. garnish with pastry cqt outS. Bake in oven preheated to Since their marriage 10 years ago, the Broob' h a " e lived in a glass-~led, out- door-living house In Hohnby Hills. with their · t w o daughters, Tracy. 13 (the daughter or Stewart Grancer, Jean's first husband), and Kate, I. The keynote of thelr home is informality, a reflec. lion ol Richard's sartorial at. titudes. "Richard's always w o r n blue denims, not blue Jeans which are three sir.ts too big for him. His shirts are always oversized too. 0 n I y oc- casionally does he ~ 1 tie," Orange's History Ancient "We have a lovely kitchen done Jn what are my !avorite kitchen colors : white and yellow. The walls are white wood and the counters daisy yellow Fonnlca. I suppose the house will forever be a poten- tial of what one can do with it. But we'll never get ~ to it. I should go out and look for things to do to it, but it's so livable. The kids have their own rooms. They can make a mess withln reason and it doesn't matter. "Our entertaining is casual and f'tltricted to weekends. Friday•. Saturdays and Sun- days, all our chums come up. They can go in and out 81 they please. Fortunately, we have ·a tennis court and a projection room. We have movie 'orgies' three days a week!" "Do you ever have eating 'orgies'?" her \lisltor asked. "Just a few, but lf people come, they chip in and everyone helps themselves to food and drinks ." "It's just Jots or lovely cheeses, crackers or frulU, afterwards. This way everyone can help themselves and it's not too much for Heidi, our marvelous Swiss cook, who has to cook dinner later on. For special friends, however we have one family we're devoted to who come to visit often -we have a special meal of fondue or cbeese souffle." Foodwise~ Jean is• much more sophisticated than the young, school-aged actress who once yearned for "fiah and chJps" or "winkles" in shellfish. (tiny snails picked from the shell, served with vinegar and salt) 10ld in paper bags on the stretts or London. Curiously, her daily diet Is a compo1ite of the foods from her childhood, Swiss fare and health foods, a California in- novation. · Shirt Look 400 degrees F. until brcnrn. 20 ~. Orange& were gr9wn first in to 25 minutes. Serve at once. Southem Asta. References to i takes about a servlngs. them date back to 2:200 e.c. PreparaUon for guests is not "I have several recipes for health foods and that's cer- tainly Engli1h In oMgin. Boy, try and get the Ena:lllh to take a vitamin pill and they will Pa1try They were brou1ht to Bread Right Tastes Out of Best Combine l ~ cups sifted Florida by _early Spanlsh n:~ flour with % Uaspoon sail plorers and colonists, some cut ~ cup shortening into time between 1513, when flour with pastry blender. Ponce de Leon was looking for Add 3 to t tablespoons chill· the fountain of youth, and 15'5 ed water to make stiff ckJ!,lgb; when St Augustine , the first roll dough to fit top of baklng Florida colony, was establish· Oven dish. ed. Before 1577, oranges al90 ller,·s a delicious Date-Nut tmis and sides of all 101ii· Bread baked in soop cans. It ounct empty soup cam. Half an Egg To divid' a whol' raw egg in half (when halving a recipe that calls for one egg), beat it in a measuring cup just until yolks and whitea are com· bined, then divide easily. were Planted in S o u t h Carolina." The oran&e r ·eached callfoml:a with the founding or San Diego Mission in 170 but the fint grove of l'O!Ulderable size was at San Gabriel Mission where tOO seedll111s were planted on a six acre tr.act in 1804. Combination Pleases All makes six small rolls -somt Into a medium ml.xipg bowl to keep, some to give as gifts. tum the dates; 8.dd bollina: Be sure to taste these rolls water; set aside. as soon as they have cooled, In large bowl of electric The action pleat puts brisk because then they have a mixer, cream butter, brown motion in this shirt style step- delectably sort texture. sugar and salt ; thoroughly in. Proportioned to fit your They're still delicious after beat in eggs one at a Ume. flpre, planned to brighten storing but the texture SUr baking soda and vanilla your busy life. Send now. becomes firmer than when into date-water mixture. Printed Pattern 9'l94: Half they are fresh from the oven. To creamed mixture add Sir.es U'iii , ltli2, 16¥.i, 18 1h, You can store this Date-Nut flour (in about t additions) 20~. 22\1. Sb:e 16% (bust (fl) Bread in a tightly covered tin alternately with date-water requires 4 yards ~Inch. box for about a week. For mixture, stirring after each SEVENTY·FIVE CENTS for longer storage -a month or addition just enough t o each pattern -add 25 cenll so -wrap the bread ap-moi!ten flour. Stir in raisins for each pattern for Air Mail propriately and store in the and walnuts. and Special· Hand 11 n g ; freezer. , Spoon batter into prepared otherwise third-class delivery DATE-l$UT BREAD cans, filling them 2/J full. will Late three weeks or more. ·All aaes usually like the I 'Ai cups cut-up fresh dates Bake in a preheated 300-Send to M11rian Martin, the particular combination of in-2 cups bolling water degree oven until a deep DAILY PILOT, 442 Pattern gredJenll that go into this 'A pound (lf.i sUck) butter brown. color -60 to 70 Ot:pt., 2S2 West 18th St., New spread. 1/3 cup firmly packed Ugbt· minutes. York, N.Y. 10011. Pr Int VIRGINl.A SPREAD brown sugar Plact cans on wire racks NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, t teaspooD salt and Jet stand JO minutes. Run SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. I jar (4'~ o u n Ce S ) 2 eggs a long thin shlrp knife aroond BIG, NEW SPRINQ.SUM· Smithliekl-type de v 11 e d 2 teaspoons baking soda inside and to bottom of cans MER PA1TERN CATALOG. meat spread 2 teaspoons vanilla aOO shake slightJy ; turn out on I 11 styles, free p a t t e r n v. cup peanut butter 3 cups unsifled Dour wire rack; cool completely. coupgn. 50 cents. 2 tablespoons cllghtly drain· I cup raisins Makes 6 small loavea. INSTANT SEWING BOOK ed swee~ pickle relish 1 cup chopped (medium-Note: To cut the dates, use sew tod1y, wear tomorrow. $1. In a small bowl thorouahly fine ) walnuts a kitchen scllaon -blades INSTANT FASmON BOOK stir together all the in· \Vllh clarified butter or solid flouttd if nect•ary -and -what-to-wear answers, ac- g red i e n t s . com and white shortening, rase bot· snljl each date into I strips. cessory, figure Ups! Only $1. rerrtaerate: iet stand at room ir-----~iim•••••••••-••••----------;I temperature 1bout ~~ hour before aervtn&. Makes about '°' cup. O NCE A YEAR SPECIAL HANO TAILORED l PANT SUITS , .. JJl•WEMV:l WA · • ·SoMf 11\kll'IQ, some Usttnll'lt •nd • proQr•m 11'1•1 works. '"' Jlll l lOC!Mf-<AlL HS·ISDS CLEARANCE SALE Just 5 More Days SAVINGS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS •s9so M.t.llOI CINTll a 2100 HAllOlt a COSTA MISA • MONDAY, THURSDAY. fltlDAY Till t P.M. Ph. 646-1242 Open a Kings Charge Todoy ' WITH SALLIE STEP UP LADIES AND GET YOUR DIAMONDS CLEANED FREE .. The most stupendous, a m a z i n g , scintillating. rau.le-daz.zllng act of clUD- ing you've ever seen ..• Now you see the tarnish on silver, now you don't •.• dingy coppe r gleams dull brass blooms, old gold shloes like new, precious stones take on a d d e d brilliance. Instant Glo made its' grand entrance on our tarnishing removlng shelves and in the better depart· meot stores around towl\ last October. It is the brain child of man called Ted Peacock from L a g u n a Beach.. \Vhen his children left borne to go to college, be found himself cleaning ·pats and pans with hil wUe Marilyn and he decided there ought to be an easiet way. He upped and found bimseH a -chemist, and together they dood it. Instant Glo Is a first, ln that lt is the only spray~n: tarnish removu .anywhere°' You simply spray, rinse i!Do' mediately and dry. Th& pump OD the bottle is to'. great, in answer to manJ' requests, Mr. Peacock ha11 bad to come out with empt,: pump boUles to sell, and' they come in white, black.i and natural colors. Rat.her a. crazy shaped bottle, too.,. Mr. Peacock se:1 i t ' s. specially designed to fl~ easily Into the hand. I say It looks like a girl and ~ mad, m a d decor at . , generation will drWn up i sorts of Wild paint, spangle and ODW!r1, fandangles forti the boudoir or patio. See th(> demonstraUon this Fr!dafl: and Saturday . . wUI nol:i even barm cultured pearls. ~ AN OLDIE BUT GOODIE • . .•. In the January 22 Jg. sue of the Newport.er New paper appeared a plctur of a cute couple 11tanding arms entwined, under a striped awning In front of .. a u:~a:~~·ared: '11 don't care what you s a y • "An orange is an orange is- an orange" and the price i• , still too high!. Here's what they w er •. really saying: "Jennie, aren't we lucky to have lhls~ wonderful ;ob working to.· gether ri&ht on the Ocean:; Front here In N e w po r t;' Beach." "Yes, Dick," she •. answered, "And maybeS someday we'll h a v e our~ very own market and can·;. it Richard's.'' ..: Sallie note: See •. .f'; Dreams do come true. 1 f • THE NAME O~' t THE GAME i; IS SALAD ii .-'<. . . An oldie that calls fo attention. Hidden Valley , Ranch dressing . . . Way\ back when, Hidden Valley~· was a guest ranch up::: around Santa Barbara way.~ The guesli clamored for the;. lalad dressing on the salad,~ so the Hidden Valley folks:: found themselves doing upjl little packages of th"~ mysterious dry mix and·~ giving it to eacb guest. Soon~ the guests wanted more .J packages of dressing to lake i home to their friends, and '} so the salad dres s ing. business grew. Now only a restaur ant remains at Hid- den Valley, and the umptious dressing is sold In all 50 slates. C1tnada, tlle Virgin Is.lands, Guam, Well Germany, and Richard 's. Actually we've had t t around the old corral for years, but it was vitalized about a month ago with a demonstration that made everybody do the salad flips. The secret is ln the mixin,. You use butttnnllt. which you ca n't taste. and mayonnaise, not s a I a d dresatng. You come up with 2 big beautiful quarts of dressing that will kei!p 1n-J definitely hi your retrigerator. Very exclUnf. 11 shopping at Richard'11 the Penple ') Store, always is, every day. l i , ... ( ' ' • ' ' I J 1 ... ' ·-------·-·- \Vtdntsdar, January 21, 1'70 DAILY l'!LOT PHONE 673-4360 FOR HOME l)ELIVERY IN OUR DELIVERY AREA" PRICES EFFECTIVE JANUARY 29, 30, 3 I ' . •. . . .. .. . TREESWEET ORANGE JUICE •or. 5.,. '1 S VARIETIES, ,E,,ERl~E FARMS LA YER CAKE ,, oz. 69c KEi;NS SLICID STRAWBERRIES "OI. 4 ... '1 OH IOY S11JFFED Potatoes with Cheese,, oi. 3.,. 'l OH IOY STUFFED , . Potatoes with Chives u or. 3.,. '1 1101. 4 ... '1 SERVE A HUN&RY FAMJL Y OF 4f .•. Macaroni & ~heese ,. oi. 79c Chicken Chow Mein uor. .1;.69 ' Or91n S.Nn1do For Your PIHsuro LIDO MARKET CENTER SLOPPY JOE _.,,...,u,or. 1.69 OH IOY GARLIC BREAD NEWPORT BLVD. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISLE ' or. LASAGNA .. ,. or. 1.'9 by lornico Fay UY THEM SLICED WITH SUIOAR & CREAM FANCY, SWEET, WASHINGTON D'ANJOU .. PEARS 5 LBS. $1 LARGE.SIZE, COMPACT, FLAVORFUL NORTHERN GROWN Artichokes 5 fOR s1 TiiE "VITAMIN C SNACK" FULL OF JUICE, SWEET, FANCY, VALENCIA ORANGES 10 LIS. $1 FIRM, RED, RIPE MEDIUM-SIZE ORE-I DA CHOPPED ONIONS~ ~ ... ltc AT RICHARD'S! YOU CAN FIND FOODS FROM THE FAR CORNERS OF THE WORLD, EXOTIC SPECIALTIES TO TANTALIZI ANO INSPIRE YOU. ATTENT1VE SERVICE TOO. SHOPPNG AT RICHARD'S IS A LITTLE ADVENTURE! RICHARD'S CHOOSES ONLY THE FIN EST, CAREFULLY AGED U.S.O.A. CHOICE BEEF. THAT'S WHY IT TASTES A LITTLE lmER! IONl•IN RUMP ROAST !thepot-.::..~··"~ Boneless RUMP ROAST ~·~,:;'.' SWISS STEAKS. ' . . ' ' a«rLI. 98¢LI. ,,.. Chicken & Dumplings .. oZ. 2.29 ~~~~ Hills Bros. Coffee ~L 73¢ HILLS BROS COFFEE SUNSHINE COOKIES CHERRY COOLERS KNUDSEN .LA ION BUTIER SCHILLING SALAD Sl)PREME JELL-0 J: LI. ,. 01. 1.45 47c ILi. 7'1 Tomatoes PKG. OF 4 ROUND ·STEAK :::'t:t~.!t::'.' 1111m. 89-LI. 98¢LL 1-2-3 DESSERT MIX .,,, or. 5.,. '1 GRANTS FARM A VERY SPECIAL. PRICE FOR THIS TANGY CHEESE KRAFT CRACKER IARREL SHARP Cheese Wheel 2 LI. 1, 98 ARMOUR STAR ALL MEAT HOT DOGS 1 LB. 69: DOFO IMPORTED DANISH CHEESES Tybo, Havarti, Samsoe, Dofino I Or. 55c FROM BRAZIL. REESE, for 11l1cl1, 1pp1ti11r1 HEARTS OF PALM ,. oz. 79c HUNTLEY I fALMIR ENGLISH BETTERWHEAT BISCUITS,v, or.3 ,,.'1 FROM IAU ER CARAMEL MARSHMALLOWS Venlll1 c1r1m1I topptcl with m1r1hm1Uow and cev· ertd with li9ht or clerk chocol1t1. R19. 2.00 6old gift b.a SPECIAL 1.75 I u. IOI •:\f',,.:: @?fweltJ~ WHAT IS CHEERIER THAN A IUNCH OF •.• MARGUERITE DAISIES wt.It• •r Y •llew $,ICIAL 95¢ BUNCH 0, 2S "£;.J......t.-MA~KET HOME & GIFT SHOP OP,fN DAILY f.7, SUN. f .6 ,. OPEN DAILY 9·6 Lean Ground BHf RICHARD'S OWN KOSHER STYLE IRISKETS CORNED BEEF RICHARD'S VERY OWN GOURMET ENTREE5-ALl READY TO COOKI MARINATED MEAT BALLS T encl•r meet ball1 rn1rin1t1d In Chili S1l1•, to tltv• with h11tt1rtd n•o4fl11 6r rlt:e. 49¢LI. 98-LI. 98cu. SYRUP .. o.. 59c Hl-C ASSORTED FLAVORS FRUIT DRINKS 46oz.lr..19C lil·AIR ALL FLAVORS CROUTONS 3 fOR $1 CHRIS I PITTS CUCUMBER STICKS ''oz. ltc • HUNTS SLICED OR' HALVES Yellow Cling Peaches #••1. 4.,. '1 HUNTS Tomato Juice ~t 3 fOR s1 MEAT LOAF 19cLI. HUNTS 01li9htfultr1111on.cl, r11cly io ptp in the 1w1n. STUFFED ROUND STEAK 1.29 LI. STEWED TOMA TO~S '" 5 ,., '1 HUNTS Suct;ulent round 1t11k 1tuff•cl wlih evr 1wn 11'f'ory p1r1/1y an4' ch11tnut dr111ln9. Rta~y to br1l11 or tHst • MENU STUFFED ROUND STEAK ARTICHOKES with HOLLANbAISE SLICED TOMATOES VINA!&~ETTE' GARLIC< BREAD BURNT ALMOND TORTE COFFEE Sm• with Plnot Or B~91111dy "Th• whole dinner cen bt '''''"~ltd •••lly-wlth •ut Ctn- dlell9ht Stulltd R°"nd StHk, Holltft4the 1-1 co•, loot· ted Vlnai,rette, frozen 9atlic brttd tl\d luntt Afm-4' T.rft from eur 1ktryl TOMA TO PASTE , or. 8 ... '1 LARGE BROIL-A-FOIL PANS ..... 49c GLAD PLASTIC WRAP '""·2,.,.49c DELICIOUSl Y FUSH IAKED CINNAMON ROLLS A NICE SANDWICH IRIAD POTATO BREAD ,LEASANT WITH IEEF 6, .. 31c 37c RYE ROLLS 6 "' 29c Surprise Special '/2 Price A 1utjtrl1t for y•.,.....n• of .vr ftt•h •l'""lolty po •triH fer HALF PRICE! eA 771W&T41JO&fJt£JJU 715314 FLOWER SHOP CLEANERS £J 12u 11srs•caarz2a 12 1 2z?J LIDO YACHT SHOP ANTHONY1S SHOE REPAIR 1 OPEN DAILY, 9-6 DAILY 9-l:jO, SAT. t .S OPEN DAILY t -6 DAILY l 1J0.6, SAT. l :JO.S ' • n • ., • n 1 ) • ' n ~ , ·• ~ Jl . ' " i • • l ' l ' I ' • • ~ • . 1 ) ' ; • '• 1 ' ' 1 { \ ' I I J Home News and Views •' ' .. ·WhG Care Needed to. 1 .Yolunteef for Program , Housewives • By DOJlOTRY WENCK Q. A friend of mine lold me help by cooperating counly n\un.ity. Others have vl:llttd help nte wlth p;'y •bousework. ' e<lu'cotional -~·teach a>n· Q. Someone told me that vent gray hair is based il1 about. your women' Who C4re agenclcJii particularly t h e €9mmunity Action Centers or \Vould one or your voluntetr-s sumer and home.makiq know-•eaUna potato peelings would wishful thinking rather than OrMM C-tr ...... ...._. program. My question ta, how Welfare Department, • th e Head Start M:hools In their be able to l::!e!.p me and also how to homematers wllh he!J> to retain one's hair color. facts. Graying of the hair is• Patsy II 20 y;an old. She's do the volunteers locate the Probation Department Md the community and orfcred to h.clp drive me to lhe store once a limited rt!IOurces. Call the Wtial do potato peelings con· result of the natural 8~ wbite. She's unmarried, but homemakers " who need in-llcallh DeVCfrlment. Some of where needed. wee~ to sl)op? Volunteer Bureau ln your area taln that would giv Lhem this process of the body and cannot the bas three.chlldren, aaes 3, fbrmatioo!' .., lhem al*O -register with the A. No, our volwitcers do not to see ii they can find some-abili ty ! ' •. be prevented through eatlnt: l, and I, by two black fathers. A! The. volunteera are re(er· Volunteer Bureau' or private Q. 1 ain an elde rly woman perform these kinds of one to · help you with clean· A. I'm afraid the notion that special foods such aa potato SM'1onWetfare..SL>edropped ~red::'..~te~htm<mak=;~:::::ers:,:::~l:n,~nee<l::::~•:l_:w:•:l!:ar:•~•~g:••:<:l•~•:i•:lli:•:l:r:co:m:·_:l:i•:i•~B:•~lo:••:·:l:•:••:d:•:•m:c:•:n<:l:•...:~::.:.:'':ice::::•·_:Thei:::::':r:'~pur::.::po:se::_:i•c_m::'.!,g:•:nd:..:u:•"':::!:"°:rta.:::U:on:·~~~"°'.::::m:l:•~pee.::::lin&>:::::w:i:ll:h:•~lp_p~r=~~:peec_lm~g:s.~~~~~~-Olll o! hJah ochool al II alter 1. " , bllng an igdlfferent student. ~ , t , • , 1 l • Patsy's mother never taught her anything about homemak· ini and is not Interested in helping her now. Consequently Pat3y doesn't even know ho\• to do slmpJe things like wash diapers or make breakfast. She think.s peanut brittle makes a good breakfast for htr chlldmi -at least It's ell)'. i .. ' Patsy didn't eat well during her pregnancies and she's not doing much of • job of feeding her youngsters. Two ol them appear to be mentally retar~ ed and it's possible that poor nutrition is part of the pr1>- bleJTI. Patsy has a great need ror nutrition information .. a<n'"d home.making know-how. Bu how is she to get it? wouldn't think of attendinl adult education classes - be&!des she has to stay heme "'ith her childrea. Shi doeln't read anylhinc -1.nd cerLala)f not articles on llomemllin& m· magazines or new.p.ptra. iJht . television programs a be watches don't teach her anything. Her only contact Y.'ith the outside world is her social worker who would like to give her more attention, but her caseload is so blg that she doesn't have the time. SOMEONE HELPS Is there anyone who could help Patsy learn how to feed and care for her family ? Yes, thge is someone who could anl did help Patsy. She is a volunteer for \Vomen Who Care. Women Who Care is • h om e m a ker·ll>-homemaker educational p r o g r a m cOn- ducted by .., volunteers in cooperation with the UC Agricultural ~tension Service in Orange C<lmty. These vo lunt eers are homemakers -usually with ctuldren of their own -who care so much about women like Pat.sy that they are will- ing to take the time to ''islt them in their homes to bring them information and to help them learn how to become better homemakers. This partlcu11r volunteer taught Patsy how to launder diapers. How to clean a sink. How to make cocoa using non· Eat dry milk. How to cook cream of wheat for her children (and did they love It!), She helped Palsy plan merru. and ~ for low<OSt, nutriUous foods. S h e en- oouraged her to organize her Ume and gel her housework done. But most of all, this volunteer showed Palsy that there Is someone In the world $bo cares about her and her children. Patsy -a lonely girl who !eel.! left out of society - has never really had this kind of relationship with another wuman before. It may mean a llg change In her life. NEED VOLUNTEERS We need many more such volunteers. Jn the past year and a half, about 00 Orange County women have com· pleted the IS.week Women Who · Care training program and are actively involved either helping In di vtd u a 1 homemakers, like Pat.sy, or tea c hing groups o f homemakers -for example. mothers of Head S t a r t children. Any woman -regardless or age, education, race. o r religion -is eliglblt to become a volunteer. AU that's required Is a sincere desire to contribute a worthwhilt amoont of time (at least a morning a week) to helping other women in the com- munity. There is no charge to participate. A new series or training meeting& for \Vomen Who Care \lolunt.eers is scheduled for Wednesday mornings, 9 to noon, Feb. 25 through May 27. We conduct the meetings al tbe UC Agricultural Extension ()(flee, 1000 S. Harbor Blvd., Anaheim, naos. For an e nrollment ap- ~lcatlon or more 1nfannat1on lbol.lt this program write to me, Horne Advisor, at the above addreSI or call me al 77!-023<. QUE ST IO NS WE Al\E ASKED BOAT BUFFS _ _, ....... Swo,.fisk I Pe..C. Fillets """"cur 98' "'"' """. · 79" SW.XS • HEATH' U.f ' • Gouftnlt Shrimp :.ll<t. r.W.,, IML 1 ... ...._ .,,, ••• 93c: BONEWS ROUND OR FAMILY . SLICEDCllSP-lln65 1-11. c BACO ,PKG. - Northern frie'd Halibut ,_,., -. .... , ........ 93c FIWt ~Gorton'• 1-.. ff<. 1Mo ............... 69c Clalft Crisps Gorton'• ,_ ..... .. ... " ... "' ..... 79c rttdi or Cod FM c .. -. w.... .............. 67c ~ Min'iatur. -""""' ,... ftt .••••.••••••••. 79c F&li ,..,, -....... U... 1.2', I~ ............ 79c Top Round Steaks ~.. • 1 !.' Bane less Sirloin Tip ~· 1 a• Turek Yeal Cutlets S'1~ OscarMayerSlicedlae111~'Jk.-ll' Liat Saulp OKN: ltU.'""-1-lL f'lG. ••••···· ... PORK&BUNS VAN CAMP'S Punch Detergent -=~~9' - Dole Fruit Drink:46~35' Minute Rice ~~~q..:·.~~~49' Jerseymaid BuHer 'i:.",~79' Saltine Crackers ~:.~.. 29' Kid~ey ~ns ,,~~ ... 2: 2$' Vons Shortening 3t:H 69~ Fresh Cookies ~:.-~·... 39' Golden Bananas ~~ 10~ Fresh Lemons '"~;.i:.::u 5! Fancy Grapes ·~~"'=" 12~ TOILET TISSUE ~ , This Week't Feature: Spedol , ... _ n.r. W-" · lco4T~@ 4i$J4t Spoon ... '""-..... VDllS IUI CLAWS """""' ...... r:=1 45• snu COfra: c...m ~ VONS PmT FOUR ....... T ....... ~ t;;;;;=."C...'" r.-:;1 69• c-w ....... ,,. ~ ~IJJL.Jf} IROZH• FOOD BUYS! ASST'D COLORS I Royal Ytlnt Gin ".:::" 13" I And,. Simon IMPOlllD FRINCH WINES ,,... I ..... ,., I -... Heir P.iW. WI,.. fm 2'' "'" 2" Wiii 2" WEST rACVfGETAUS :::.~==.c::..-. ........ 20.:. 31' ~-~ ................. Qo ..... ,,...0..... ........................ 1 ... C-MQ W ......................... ) .. '·" '-..... ...,~ ............... , .. '·" ~ ... -~ ........ 1, .. .. °""'.,,.._, .... ,,.., ............. If-., .. °""'°" ............ ; ............ 11flt. n. °"" .,,.. "' ,_ ,._ ................. n.. "" ,_ ,_ 0....,.. ................ "' ..,..__.,.uoo .. -... -... -...... -.. --1 ~,... .. -. ........................ _ ... .,. .. lhlt&w,,.,,..·s-.. ""', .............. _ ........... 111:, JOU•IWl I """' I ~'-"'-•<.e1 ................ -• ~--e--.............................. 1't C..tc...o.t,..._,,_et_-. .. __ 21»r Popcorn Coffee ~----....... _.,,_111 c.....ill &..c11 ..... 1-.-,. .... ,..,,.,,.,,.,It liflC/f_Olf,....Ul-IMll.UM ............. 2/Xk ""'91.~mlOW l.&I, tAN 82' =a:.-•-........ -·--.. -21411 ,.,.. ___ -..,, ... --.-.. _._ ... !Sc ~ ,...........,,11.-......................... • t<(l, 1'111), ....... 3& Ml. c:.wt irM' . ..... ...... __ .......... a..._c:..-1'6.w. "' ,,,. Gllrienl,... ____ wi ...... --2" """...... 7 • Nl'Nn.OC.tl.» AIM•• LMlr•..., ft "'9 "ty htl-tiri1• ff•tlitt H ltor •-"Int ... •"'1 _.,.,_ 1111 0r.,,.. "\ FRUIT COCKTAIL FANCY FAR.MS luddlg's Smoked Assorted Variefies -- •• Ml or 3; s1 Longhom Cheddar JI[ l \'_,........_..,...... { $A'll )95• •• ,,. : =-.:'""..:..~,_ 20< " Kosher Franlii cocH<'ii» iwt ~ ,r :.£.~"'.'.:':::' § •t• 0 NEW" SCHICK ...... ,. --:_ .... Cfil53· ............. ;11 •• ur.•1 .... ..,., I - ----.... -".:"' Ccffff SprvyStardt ....,..._ -. .. ~t=:M' m:~ii:W'nl -"'fD.Otiu'lf A)t ·-· -"" ""'" 11.M liD .,. C..111ty. Hit •wc.huf .. c"H8f• • • ,, ... "'' ·"' ,. .... , .... 34881 Doheny Park Drive, Capistrano Beach hi 1 41lly-1., .. , • .f tfri• DAILY 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beach 17950 Magnolia, Fountain Valley. 21082 Beacb Blv~, Huntington Beach !::"=LOr=. ===='11011 Adams Ave., at Brookhur$t HuntillllM 8aach . I - -----.,....,---..,._, PILOT-ADVERTISER 7 (N) Wednesd~y. Januar1 28,1970 c LB. aun POllTION .............. 75: •. ~IAM SLICES .............. 'I .29,.. WitOLE HAMS ................ 75: •. Rl>AL McCOY BEEF SPECIALS • 12.0?. ,.G. 69C j I OZ. nee;. 31 C:' t.t P. 'ICG. 49c IACOl'll . . . . .. . . . ! LINKIE .. . .. .. .. ! BEEF ROLL ...... .. BREAKt'AST SPECIALS -U.S.D.A . INSPECTED CHICKENS GUARANTEED FRESH FRYERS NO BACKS OR NECKS : cur.up BEST OF THE : PAN -READY FR YER ~ FRYER 59fb l 39fb DRUMSTICKS •• 59!. • BREASTS •••••• 65!. BACK & NECKS 1 O~ ii:lsciii BACON 69~ ·en~I ~.·,i~s .................. ~i';: .89' ; :i::~·i08;~~0H~w.~ .. '.h.'~: ......... ~~1!: 85• FRYER. THIGHS• 55~ • F1·o~e1i Food Specials COFFEE CAKES-PASTRY REG. 89e 6 • SELECTED VARIETIES SWAN.SON TV DINNERS \Ytdflesday,..JanWY 28, 1970 -·-•-DAILY Pu.6r--3f 21 VOLUM E SET NOW ON SA~E! • ; ILLUSTRATED )VORLD ENCYCLOPEDIA . V()L t4• 911 VOl,.?TllllU21 . Not• 1ptt1<\l ed1tiori, no1 111 1b111d,ed ptJ11!11>i;. b11t ' ~ $1 ff IACH the hill and compl~I• 2l volume set! The orii;u\JI ONL T • · eneyclopedi•. ol luthorily Ind i.c1>0!1r$hip ou.b•lshtd IUY .. VOL.UM[ .. W([I(, IUllO TH( tor th• 5pet11I llftd1 OI yoi.itl1 DCOOlt lrcin1 JUlflOI COMPlET[ 21 vot.UM[ S[T 111d1s through hilh 1ehoo1. • SAVI •st.71 :::El;;...:::..,,:~~-t w ' l!.S.-D.A. Graded •aioice 9 . . . . RIB ROASI . -,. c SMAll t;ND , 98. RIB ROAST . . . . . . . . . tti RIB STEAKS ........... ; .... 89~ SPENCER STEAKS ........ $1~! . SEAt'OOD SPECIALS COREGRON ADUNGBENEsSs FRESHLY coo~~OLE . 6 ,fb , , , , , UNCLEANED , , , . FROZEN WHITE HALIBUT STEAKS ................ 98l. flE~H-M lf\I, WT. !-Ol. 39( i l~t~H-10 Ol J "-~ 79c RAINBOW TROU T .... . " ~ PACIFIC OYSTERS ......... . Lowe1• Tha1i Discoutat ALL GRJNOS-l-LI. TIN · ... · •• · 6· 9c aunERNUT COFFEE . . . . . \llTA-PAKT-CHILLED ILEND-41·0Z. IOnLE 73c ORANGE JUICE ... .. . .. . . .. .... . .. . ................... . HUNT'S-1.oz. TINS 12 ' $1 00 TOMATO SAUCE . . . ... . .............. .~ ··SARA LEE ALL VARIETIES c GLOll A·l-1-ll. PICGS. 2 ' 39c C LONG SPAGHEnl .................. . . ......... ~ II \IARIETIES-TWIST-OFF CAP-NO DEPOS IT-21·0Z. 5 ~ $1 00 SHASTA BEVERAGES ....... . . . . . . . . . ... .. • • ' ' ' JERSEYMAID-CATERING 69C: ORE -I DA POTAOES-PIXIE SHOESTRING 2 5 ICE CREAM ... ~:~ i CRINKLE CUT .'!•~L. ;. FROZEN lUEAT Dl>PT. SPECIALS -C1rn41ion 1.!b. 98C M". Fr1d1y"1 I 111 ·lb. $229 FILUTS OF SOLi • •. • • • • • • · • · · · · · • · · · · · · .. · · · · · · · · · ·... Pk9. 111!.t.DED SHlllMI' ................................. , ... l'kf. C4r111t io11 12 .01. 49c Kold Ki1t 8 I \; ·01. 99C PISH CAKIS •... · .• • • ·,. • ·,. · • · · · • · · • • · · • · · · · · · · · · ... ,. Pk9. IEIF STIAK$ ...• , ••••••.• , • , , •.• , , .• , • , ,, , , • • . . . . St11k1 :i;~o;TICI$ ............................... ~ ............. ~-k0;: 73c ~l~~-~~;i1~:c1~~ ..................................... , ~~·. $109 ~;1~11t; FILLIT$ .................. · • ............ , .•.. ',;~~ .. $13I ;~~· ~~~C'iEI .... , ...... , ............... , • , , , , • , ........ ~~~ .. 59C M,,, Frid1y'1 1·01. 98C GOURMET $HllMI' , ..........• , , ... , .•. , •...........•.. P~~- ILUE SEAL "CABIN CREST" WHITE OR WHEAT 2-5c SLICED BREAD . . . .. . , . .. ,'Q~; LIQUOR DEPT. SPECIALS 1~uRa10N .. $ Hill RIVER BLEND WHISKEY ... SUNCERLANC IA. EIFTHS l>RY GIN ... KARASOV-FIFTHS s2 79 "C>l>KA ........... . --P1·oduce Dept-. SJJeci,.l WISCON SIN-MEO. SHARP : CHEDDAR i 85~ : XLNT -IEEF B-OZ. TAMALES 29c JANE ANDERSON CHILE WILS ON CORN KING-ALL MEAT ERS TOPS OFF-TENCER CARROTS 10~ 12-0Z. PKG. OF I 0 c CURLY ANO CRISP SPINACH ' WASHINGTON STATE-EXTRA FANCY LARGE -RID DELICIOUS PP LES c . LB. ' ' JANE ANDERSON-PKG . OF 12 CORN 2 25C 1 C f REC LEAF OR BOSTON 15 c : CANY SCOT SLIP PIT ...a.oz. BAG 59 c ' TC>RTILLAS.... . . . or eunch LEnUCE ... ..j APRICOTS . OL' VIRGINIA-3-0Z. PKGS. 3 5 TEXAS-RU8Y RED 8 '1 00 BEEF , CORNED BEEF, HAM, TURKEY . c GRAP. EFRUIT . ~~ 45c ~~~: CHIPPEI> MEATS . ea • • • • . for "' .. ' ~RICES EFFECTIVE THURS. tllni SUN,, JAN. 2t, 30, 31 , HI, 1 • I 1 fofARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDINGER, SANTA"·A"'~:' · 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO : .. -~"-·-1 \ I I n .. , n • • ,, I I I ' \. \ ... !11'11111!'111-----------------------------~---------·--- "' D,l(LV ii!LOT ' ; Wtd11tsday, J1nuary 28, 1970 Florida's Orang.e Butter Spread Changes Toast to Treat ' DEAll ~AN: How about 8 llttle restauran t out on tlle \Yhat chicken! Crispy, crus· pieces in salt-and-peppered · least, but not enough lor 11n get lhe hang of it but It doell Jed fry pan Is a big help some of the finest eating in the f!dpt fer ~range butter? 1 highway -it was really part t\•, scr\'l d so fast aRd hot rrorn (lour. No egg, po milk~ Just actual deep-fry ' method. lt take prac tice to come up with but these people were using counliy. tilive ..._ It In Florida at a garage and filling station -the pan you had to wa!ch that flour. The o &j!l the pieces shouldn't be smokliig bot but It 100 percent perfect every just big old blac k skillets and ratawut Dear Lake Wales except for my husband who first mouthful, but not a bit aside to dry for about ' IO "hot enough.'' time. Everytldng depends on know-how. And fresh chicke n, Nan \\1iley u grets that she aDd H's de.Uclous. I 11.ave nt\'er traveled 1hal route regu1arly , greasy. The proprie tor didn 't minutes. Then fk>ur again and Brown the pieces on all having the shortening deep not frozen. That cream gravy cannot provide pe r s on a I He8 tt In any of the stores. knew oil about It. mind at all telling me how. He right into the pan. sides. Then turn the hea~ down enough, at a j us t. r ight was something loo! Heavenly answers to yor cooking queg.. G.G. GENTILE, &SCONDIDO The place ~'as packed with doubles as cook, too. when Now -and th!J is Important and keep on cooking till the temperature. And you do havl! over bot biscui ts , grits, rice or lions. but quest ions of general people in their rar1n and work thir~s get frantic at noon -that chicken isn't going to chicken tests tender. Don't lo stand over it to iurn-and-ju~t plain bread. interest will be answered in Recipes for ·this type of clothes. A sure ti p.off. \Vhen hour. be just great unless you use cover the.pan or you'll lose all turn until the chicken Is just .{ust goes to show you her column. Address your orange butter (not an orange the townsfolk eat at a place, So herc "s 1vhat you do. enoi<gh fat in the pan. Should the cr~iness. right. don't need red plush carpeting ques tions to Nan Wiley in care butter frosting) are con-you know it 's good. Shake or r o 11 the chicken be a good hall-inch df4!:p, at Sounds easy? Jt !8· once you A thennostaticaJly control-and crystal chandeliers for of lhe: DAILY PILOT. spk:uous by their absence but1,~~~;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;jj;illiillm~iill;;iiiiilliill~illiilmiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiijliiiiiiilli~·jjjjj·~~~~-iii··~~-r~~~~;;~~jjii-1 managed to track dO\l'n jusl l 1 one. Whether it ls exactly Jik·· what you tasted is a moot quesUon, but it should be close. Cream ~ pound of real but- ter with 2 tablespoons po'ol'der- ed sugar. the grated rinds of 1 mediwn-sized orang e and I lemon , plus a dash of salt and the juice of half of a good-siz· ed orange. A ft er ex- LETS ASK THE COOK by NH Wiley perimenling you may want to use the juice of the whole orange. They don't all give lhe same yie ld. Store the blend, covered, in the refigerator. The sugar us-,ed here may sound strange but it is needed to balance the pungency of the fruit rinds. Any whit:h way, it is an unusually nice spread for biscuits or toast. DEAR NAN: Ye1, It is still possible to buy tlw> old-fasbion- ·ff arrowroot cookies. I find this cookJe makes a delicious crumb crust. especiaJly ror lemon pie or cheese cake LOIS G. FYFE, NASllVILLE Other readers have tipped me that sometimes you ha ve to look in the baby foods aisle 'to find the cookies. One brand features a thin, nol·SO-SY:eet cookie. Another has a fatter. sweeter type . Either way, the~ . are cookies even the trickiest digestions ca n handle . NAN 'S NOTES : Have yon tried the "lemon pepper .. seasoning recenUy on lhe market? l am always in· tereskd In new and different te8J(lning:s so I try just about all or them. Sometimes I am dJu ppolnted but not with this one! It has the mos l intriguing flavor. Now I like it so much that plain pepper has all but lost its appeal. I have beer. using it on everything from m y breakfast poached eggs to s&.lads, meats and gravies. It is especially fine for perki ng up plain tomato juice. There are directions on the bottle for ma k I ng a well-seasoned marinade v.·ith it. It is put out by the same people who make thf" po pular bottled garlic spread you have knO\l·n for so long. DEAR NAN: How do you make that rtall y C'rusty fried cllleken like they do in the South? I have tried every which way, usin g egg.and· flour batter and everything else I've ever beard of hu t mine just Isn't the same. G.8 .S., BLOO~tlNGTON, lLL. I had to hi t a little southern Missouri town before I found any as good as v.·hal my mother-in-law·s cook used :'l fry every Sunday years ago. They do cling lo t h e i r herilage. I "'ould never havt' stopped at that shacky looking Sandwich Trickery A flavorfu l sandwich fillin g that's hearty, too. SPECIAL HAM.CHEESE SANDWICllES 1 cup.finnly packed ground cooked ham 1 cup lightly packed . finely grated Swiss cheese 1h: cu p mayonnai se l• cup drained sweet pickle relish Thinly sliced bread Butter. soft M.1% together the ham. cheese. mayonnaise and relish -there will be about 2 cups. Make sandwiches of the Jill· tng and unbuttered bread, us- ing 3 to 4 tablespoons of the filling for each undwicb. Spread oot.llde surfaces or $andwtchts with butt tr. Broil sandwicbc1 on both sides until &olden brown. Cut in triangular halve.s and serve at once. Makes 16 to 2.0 undwlch halves. STARS CHOICE OR ALBERT~ON'S BLADE CUT CHUCK STEAK 58~. 7-BONE CHUCK GlEEM Tooth Paste WITH THIS COUPON · LIMIT 1 COUPON· IXPlllS 2·3-70 Playtex TAMPONS WITH THIS COUPON· LIMn 1 • COUPON· U:PlllS 2·3·70 SIRLOINT•" $ STEAK ... LB. 1.19 ROAST .... ,.69c IONEINRIB 123 STEAK ....... : .. " $ • B COUNT 3 9c 30 COUNT 139 PRIME Rl!OICE OR ALBERTSON 'S 109 ~!~ .. ~~-~ ...... lb,77c f,!~~,.~~-~ .......... lb.·53c Pork Sausage S6c freWtSo.rS •••••••••.•.•••..••••• Lb. BEEF· THE KING . . ROAST OR ROASTS ...................... LB. f..O! .. ~~-· •... u..79c ~~.!f ,~ .. lb.1°8 ~~~~~-~ ..... lb ~9 ~!~~~-~~-~ ......... lb 33c Pork Roost 79c Boncleu Butt••••••••••••• ..... Lb. Sliced Bacon 83c BorS No. I ••• , ................. lb. !:'!1f~2t•nter Sikes .......... tb.1 OS Medium Shrimp 129 Broken Shell On ••• ,. ......... ,, ••• lb. ZEE ASSORTED cc6iNr NAPK INS 10c ~\\EINZ COllOOISlll SOUP .• ,.. : AU!ERTSON'S GT. 49 C · Detergent ... • SANTACRUZCUJ BEANS .. -........ 30, l Qc 8'.UE BONNET In -Store Bakeries Mean Hours Fresher Products For You •.. • OLEO ............ lb 28( JANET LR fRUrT Albertson's SALT '"'"'-0.-100..::,u=-o .-... -... -... -... -•. ~-•. q-z.1_0_c.., DRINKS .... "'" 4 / l . ' Macaroni & Cheese ~,~i?.:~~~~'~oz.10( Sun Vista TENDER PEAS ..... ·"''"'"N 1 Oc American Beau1y CURLi.RONi •oz.1 oc FRESH CRI SP SOLI D HEAD LETIUCE J . ' 2for 29C . , • ' .. ... ~ .. __ 1.JUICY WHITE Grapefruit 15 '" s100 NO. 1 RUSSE T POT ATOES CHERRY TOMATOES ""n22C CUKES LARGE I 0( -. SLICING ' . .. SN OWHITE SOLID 19C CAULIFLOWER ...... , NABISCO HONEY MAID 69( 2 GRAHAMS LBS. AMERICAN· CHUN K LIVER SAUSAGE JOHNSTON'S FRUIT PIES S~~!:E:Y 69 ( RHUBARB· EA. 1/1 Gallon Albertson's Sq\lor• ...... 59c ... 3/1. ICE CREAM ......... . 12 Oz. Green Giont Anon.cl RICE DJ SHES. BridgefOJd White BREAD ...... .. . ...... 1•0.. 49c Sprinofi.w P-.fC«yi/Ma...d VEGETABLES ........... 7 /1. LARGE 8 INCH APPLE PIES ....... . CUP CAKES wi,;,.M Cho<oloto .......... 20/1. SQUAW BREAD 16Ch loom .......... 3/1. DINNER ROLLS '"'Mh~~uoh• 39, one! Te!!dtl' Oo:r. ••••••••••• SAVE 16c BUSCH BAVARIAN BEER 6/120Z. $ I 09 CANS e GIBSON LOGANBERRY WINE , .• 89' BALI-HAI Sampler "" 39' CHABLIS .:'.~<'.!:. l ~!c All America r. Bourbon Fleischmanns EDEN VODKA Supreme Preferred ROC 3.79 QUART 10.95 NEW LIGHT WEIGHT PLASTIC HAlf GAL.JUG Bourbon Brandy 10.86 1/2GAllON FIFTH r ·~ ---.. , ...... . ··-... _ ............. _, -... , . . . ~-· :~~~~·wH1P 57c lEVERY::OAY IS BARGAIN OAY ••• AT KUfT JET-1\1' ~ • M/Mallows 10 oz. 23c i ' DRIVE E=\tl 82 ~r. ' ' . • • ' . • ! . ' ' ' ' ·' . • Svcln•v Orn•n It '"' cf tlift w,,1J·, t rtat 11tn1l0<91t1. Hh 11l11lfl11 11 ,,., of th1 DAILY 'ILOTS f'••t f11t11t11. . ,. Huntin9ion Beach -15511 So. Edwards Laguna Beach-700 , So . Coast Hwy. Fountain Valley-16042 Magnolia Huntington Beach -8911 Adams Corona del Mar-3049 Coost Hw1., ' I , I ' GI Fl J c Fl . . . ' . . • . . . • BAR M \VESTEIN STYLE - ~ WTIRN GRAIN lllD PORK .SPARE· RIBS ·SMALL SIZE FRUH SUCID YOUNG-N· TtNDElt ·BEEF LIVER OSCAR MAYU 12 OX. AU. MiA T, ALL IU,, THICK 3·LEGGED CUT·UP . SLICED WHOLE OR HALF FRYERS 39¢ LB. LB. BOLOGNA GREENLAND 59~ 59 ¢ IAR M WISTllN STYLE a SLICID BOLOGNA CORN KING FILET HALIBUT 7 9 ~ FOREMOST <m S 3>.i ~ COTTAGE PINT CARTON '11i111P CHEESE Jack and the Beanstalk GREEN BEANS FRENCH STYLE OR CUT #303 CANS PINT CARTON 4 5 c LIMITED SUPl'LY -WHILE THEY LAITlll CLEANSING CREAM FOR ORY SKIN-REG. $4.00-BIG 14 OZ. JAR BODY LOTION FOR ORY SKIN-REG. $1.50-12 FLUID OZ. IOTTLE ~T~ ~S~EN~E~!R~~$~S-12 FLUID OZ. BOTTLE $1 13 ' G LY CE RI N E and RIG. 11,50 7 5c R 0 s E w ATER i"2 PLUID oz. BOTTLE LANOLIN PLUS LIQUID WITH OEN-G-GEN-REG. $3.~ FLUID OZ. BOTTLE DOROTHY REED EGG SHAMPOO 8 Fluid OL Bottlo VO.S SUPER LATHER SHAMPOO 3.5 oz. BOTTLE ROYAL STANNOUS FLOURIDE TOOTHPASTE =~~z.; s1zE Tu11 ROYAL HOST PREMIUM ICE CREAM ~o~t~· AUNT JIMIMA IUTTlllMILK WAFFLE$ 9 OZ. IOX KERN' .... 10 OL "''" STRAWBERRIES VAN OE KAMP'S-REGULAR 49c PKG. BLUEBERRY MUFFINS 25' 29' 39' 69.¢ 3/$1 4/$1 39¢ NINE LIVES SLICED BACON fORtMOSl PlllSBURY CAKE MIXES e TUNA CAT FOOD e TUNA & LIYlll Oil e TUNA & CHICKIN 6 OZ. FLAT CANS CARNATION COFFEE-MATE 11 OZ. JA~ FOLGlllS COFFEE 3 La.s22s CAN 11 LI CA-71c) • '.· RY ILLIN 4· 9¢ STRAWBERRY PRESERVES 2:A~z. l!Y ELLEN APRICOT-PINEAPPLE. JAM 20 OL JAR ALPO CHOPPED BEEF AND BY-PRODU0-,011 l'UPPIEs" cATf ~;:~L PACIFIC GOLD RIPE OLIVES # I TALL CANS 45~ --·------WtdntSdoy, J"urt 28, 1970 DAIL V PILOT :J:J LB. USDA •llADI "A" 59~ ft YING CHICKINS LIGSATHIOH' USDA •llADI "A" PRYING CHICKIN IRIASTS ,RUH LIAN GROUND •••• GROUND SHOULDIR llEF PAnlES I PAmlS TO LI. COllAL 9UDN IREADID SHRIMP I ... PKO. 69~ 49~ 69~ $12~ WllNERS 12 oz. ea. GOLDEN RIPE BANANAS 10 ~ 23~ ICIOUS APPLES , 10~B. SWEIT 'N' JUICY NAVEL ORANGES U.S. NO. I RUSSETT POTATOES GLEEM TOOTH PASn MEDIUM Sl%E TUBE RECi. 39¢ FRE E D ONLY AT IAlaAIN IA.SI CONFIDETS SANITARY 49 NAPKINS -( BOX OF 24 REG. 79c PllCIS EFFICTIYI THURSDAY, HIDAY, SATURDAY l SUNDAY Jan. 29, 30, 31 & Feb. 1 WE ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS Pll:ICll IUIJICT TO STOCK ON HAND WE GIVE WE GIVI! ILUI CHIP BLUE CH., STAMPS STAMPS COSTA MESA 19th and Pl1ctnllt PlACOOIA 710 W. (Upman . • ~ -j • I l r " n ., n • n ' d " • ' I I 1. \ I 1!111[1~--~--------------------------- . • • • . I V '"' 1 I 1" ,.., P )ti • I I • ...... L FRE DOG FOOD SCOTIIES Mrs. · ri6:.:·J SupN :,,. So lt~nom, 1 1£·0?. loai I - J • S f'!~ ........ .. Gragnto· ! llefre bing Coia r • le·o<. bl::. . --.. \ • (r: i r • • ~¥ ' • """ ., .... ,. .. ·• ,-.11~ u.~. U' ' ••• lns p:? ....... _ ~ f•dA •. Crai.A wr·. ;: f ' 'I Cu .;;, 4.\r Be; V iii • 111 11 .i. • • ' J' ') ~ I I a ' ... 'I • . -. ' -./ ' .... ~ Q I "earns I· 11. Fl11or1 c. •amJ·Smooth .:zlf Jlalla~ •• • [ . ; Gi;::e:tll ~ 1 ·~·fer A .2 ~:: j . ~:. Cl il " .. .,,.,,.. -l . ' I I I i ,-,. dl··~ . .. ,. . ' -~ ' - r I ;_. ') ••• f r •. r l .. .,, ·I l c,. J • Drur.r ..a···:: " • r,.,r . .. . -,.-v · i .... i r. u'111g ~'j'J( ·~-•,., . /. I • ' & '}I i : ,., , ....... L .. _.,. .-• ·t IY, C.1 ---Pe re c. I" ' • 1' •. Pre--~ ' < I Pre ·C 1 • Clticl«!'1 ' •. " c - " . Wbitt F1ei1I Tissue ( 3c •llJ Lold Pkg. 11 200 .. - ~ 0 R DlllJ Dltl Baluced Do( RlliOI lk1.c11 ES MARGARINE • F$ Co!tfltrooi 1 Creamr SllOoth 0 fl • I • Dru mstick s • iurkey Wings _ • llindqua rters (Includes Orumst icl< lb & Thigh Portions) , ' . » In Tnl ure 1.111. ohl,' Beef Chuck .Steak ~:~ Or 11111 Round Ste1~ B~n!'!SS-IJSIJA Cho.ct irloi n Tip Corne d .Beef ~i:!~i!t°'~ f " ... 59' 1•. $1J' .. 981 F$ Beech-llut Str1iie4 Frtiils, Yag1l1bl11 0 And J1ie1s R Your Choice ••• -;. . -. ~·CANNED PICNIC 11 Boneless & • , ,, Fully Cooked $ 99 Dubuque Brand 3 lb landwlch each l• • • • Style .••..•.. . ' ~I ·--== Veal Shoulder Chops ... 79' Veal Patty Steaks ~.:. ... 89' Veal Sirloin Steaks ~ I .. 99' eless Roast Rtllll4 l Tia• Chuck 89' USDA COOice Grade Seel-flavorf ul · • N>dJo<t. "''"'"Pot RO>!I. ·_ lb. ef Rib Steaks ' USDA Choice A G1and Stea~ for Tht B1rbecue-la11e Meaty Cut • lamb ilioulile' hast 79c 5 Rib S11u~1e Cul-USDA Clloite Graded tab lb, l ssmb Ri b Chop s ::1."'' $J29 lfDA Choice Grade Lamb-Aged & l11111med lb, •am b Chop s· F•'" """~' ''' 99 ii. Grt1I T 1 lrt1I ( U S}lA COOt~c fresh American Lamb lb, Pork Sausage :;:::" Piile Ea~lern G~in·Fed-Se1soned Jus! Right Sliced Bacon ::;·;!::::· Luer'$ Iowa Farms or DuboQue Miss Iowa l Ch M t Saf1w1y Slict• un . ea S YorloUH l1!1w -f·lb. 59' roll r.1b. 73c pkg. a .... 39c pkg. ; .1~ • :-ritPEN ED ·J ·Soda Crackers ~~·~,~:.~ . l ,,. ' "'" 29c ... a. • rjj r r ,..~ " .. FockO!Jtcl f1 Oa.ly fc• Y~, ' _, ' . • • ,, .... 25c ... s: Pork & Beans ~~;;~~.r;;~ R•-1 s«.J '°'"'II•. ;,~ppyWith Flovor. ·-Ch1·1.· ·,Con fc .eci \'v,,.1 Vira min C. low In Colaries .•. Tewa Noust With IHns ·"~ (~ ll!:w<-"'· ~ .. I• llH. U•1 11 st"'-S...S TN o .... 79c . .. . ... y h .. '3 ... ' , ' . 1 -I • '· I J, itU SS C , 14<: ,. . • j I ' ' )101 ,.,_ fl..i•or . Salad Oil NuMadt--111111 light" liul IOI filo\I Coal• ... t( frpin1, 8t .. <1tt fl...,.. ll·•·43' '"· toilet Tissue .~;-~:~~:· ~·bi 99 c Pineapple .Juice .... 11 34c pack Loi an I •&·01. c:an 31' lb•. 29c Dressings llrnsteln's Salad frt!U, 1111111~ ... Cl"111•. v,...,_lll. tt1~• or •"""'"! Cream 01 Crop fln!\M flWI ""'II· " la • .,,.. ''"'' 25c .... 72 Dtt. C 1111. ;':i 59c Large Eggs 59 Beans or Corn .J~~:;.:\{\:· .• 49' ;~, c Sharp. Cheese 99c • • S1f1w1y Cheddar lb. tnS I Pricts Effective th11s •• Jan. 29 ttv11 Sir! .. rpb. J .u s,,, . 15-oz. C · · Newport Se.tdl, Uruna N1(Uel and Mission Vie/a). los 3 5 I 1 w1y 1n Coonlles of OrllJ,t !Sell 8eacll, Cost1 t.le!.i, 'kg. _ Anft!es 1 · ' :;,., Dim~ Claremonl Av11!onl. Jar TOMATO SOUP T1w1 Huse Tops In Qllll· tty!. Tnle lD;l·oz. can c • • ' ' VILLAGE RICE INN • Curry •Spanish $ •Yellow • Chicken • leef &·oz • • Ner~ pkgs. Your Choice .,,.....,mee--. ........ ..._..-. 1 ~ Lucerne Yogurt I Low In Calories 10• 1 '20j~ i Rich In Proltin.,. Rich ,~ft:n s In Flmr. Hi&h Fobd Value! rA'I ---9 ........................ , ...... -·-· ...___ .. ~ Cottage Cheese I Llca11• Quality ll c 1 Low In Calories. Farmer, P1r!n ~ Chive or Large Curd car . 1 .-....-: Retl or Golt/en Delicious Apples Crisp And Cruncftj-idra fancy Northwest 8 lbs~ 1 ·lr<·Illli I Jj Jt; f Pl HEA1ff & BEAUTY AID PRODUCTS . Baby Powder J1h1111 Product 14 • .,, 9 9c (Sl.05 hlue) size Ce .IL "~ '54' paco ozenges , .. ~1 .: 1i • Mouthwash • '"'" Ill" ...... 92' CcpKOI Val~ef ~ti. B b 0., Jolin~ & lDhnson lt·tl. s101 a y I Seiter Sk•n [$1 l! Viltie) 1111 B b L t• Jchn10~ & Johnson 9,,,, SJ 01 I y 0 100 foim~lilrd !l l.J) Value) fl it Soft 'n Dr'1 ""'' "'"""' ...... 76' It Work1! !SI 00 \1lurl 1111 . . . , • ''I GllRDE.N ·SHOP_PE . ~~~~~,~.~~!~ ... 98c . ~~~ ... ~~~~. s1 s9· Fertilizer "~ ~~~~:s! ~:t 99 - Sulphate Of Ammonia •:;~" 991 Vigoro Rose Food ::::.~ ~!~ 781 4 Seasons' Mulch ':;~ 1211 1 c~i ~~):.de ~r.. Newport Bea ch • 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Laguna • 636 N. Coast Hwy., G S2nta Ana freeway at La Paz, Mission Viejo • Wilson & Fairview, Costa Mesa Laguna Beach ( ' ,......--------·. -----------·---~-----------------·-----~ ------ r ' • • • ' • PILOT-ADVERTISER 11 lvrdnesday, January 28, 1970 Wrdnesd.lt, Jiniwy 28, 1970 DAILY PILOT ~:;::;::;::;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:::::;::._~~H~A~V~E·Y~O~U~V~IS~l~T~E~D~O~U~~~N~E~~W~S~T~O~R~E~A~T~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~.,~.~,..~ •• ~,.~,~,,~.~-~ .. ~ .. ~ •• ~ ..... ~~,;..,~_;.~,~.,~~w:;:~~•~ou:,~,.~ .. ~ •• ~,~,,:,~-~, .... ~;M.11;•~~~11.~s~•~•~,;,,.,.~:;;, Men in Service I n terior Commwlcalions Electrician Fireman Appren . Robert B. Amacher of 964 Lansing Lane, Cmita Atesa, is &erving aboard the attack aircraft call'ier USS Ranger off the coast of Vietnam. The Ranger is condueUng rlight operations in support of allied ground troops in Viet- nam. This is the Ranger's ninU1 \Vestem Pacific cruise. Airrnan Blunty C. Sherron .. son or Mr. and ~irs. Blunty W. Sherron of 215 lndianapolis St., Huntington Beach, has been assigned to ~1cClellan AFB. for duty with the Aerospace Defense Command. The airma11 1vho h a s graduated fro1n the U.S. Air Force aircraft m cc h <1 n i cs course al Sheppard AFB, Te:<., is a 1968 graduale of llun· Ungton Beach High School. Airinan J.C. Ti mo 1 h y Bryant, 22, son of Mr. :ind titrs. George Bryant of 191!1 Kauai Place, Costa Mesa, has been chosen Base Airman for lhe month of January al George AFB, Victorville. The airman, a 1nembci-of lhe med.ical corps, 479th Tac- tica l Hospital "'a~ designated as group airman for the moolhs of October a n d Decen1ber. l·le is a graduate of Costa Mesa J~igh School, 1964, and allended UC! and UCLA n1a- joring in biological sciences, before entering the service. His father, George Bryant received his commission at George AFB, Victorville, 26 years ago, during World War II, as a bombardier, naviga- lo<. Two lluntington Beach n1cn helped mark the 15th An- niversary of nuclear power r,1 the U.S. Navy "'hile servi ng aboard the nuclear-powered aircraft ca r r i er. USS Enterprise al Newport Ne~·s, Va. They are Scan1an Thomas C. Robson. son or Mr. and Mrs. James Robson 0£ 221 Geneva St., and li'ire1nan Claude K. Winfree, son of.Mr. and Mrs. Claude N. \Vinfrec or 5201 Sk.ylark Drive. The ·Enterprise is a veteran of seve11 cruises with three tours or duly in l\.1editcrranean \Valcrs, four in the Weslern Pacific off the coast of Viet- nain and one world cruise. Scaman Thomas C. Robson. USN, son of LL Col. William B. Folline. USAF. S0'1I of Mrs . Olga Folline or 1502 P.1erlon \Vay, Seal Beach. has arrived at Wright-Patterson AFB . Ohio, to assume the position of chief of plans and programs \Vilh the Aeronautical Systen1s Division. The colonel previously serv- ed as squadron navigator al Khoral Royal Thai A F B, Thailand. A graduate of \Voodro1v Wilson High School, Dallas, Tex., he received his B.S. degree from the University or California Berkeley and 1\.1.S. d egree from George \\'ashington Univ e rs i I y, Montgomery, Ala. Mospili I Corpsman I .C. Harold R. Staley, son of Mr. :.ind ~1rs. S. H. Staley of 15968 Rocky Court, Fountain Valley, has been transferred to Long Beach Naval Hospital after an injury incurred during an air stri ke, Vietnam. lie is altached Lo the Firsl Division. T h i r d BatLalion, tih1rine Corps. flis wife, l\.1arcia, and lhrt.'C children live in Hanford. Lt Kyle W. Ren11lcr, USAF, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Ren~ler of 16444 Bolsa Ch ica Road, ltuntington Beach, has been awarded the U.S. Air Force silver piklt wings upoo graduation from Laredo AFB, Tex. Ll. Rensler has been as.'lign- ed to Mather AFB. for flying duty with a unil or the Strategic Air Command. Capl. Charles L. fakler, son of Mr. and Mrs. tharles ll. f'akler of 34245 Camino El Molino. Capistrano Beach, has received the U.S. Air Force Commendation tl1edal at Bien Hoa AB, Vietnam. Capl. Fak1cr was decoraled for meritorious service B! commander and training of- ficer of the 3720lh Basic Military School, Lack I a nd AFB, Tex. He was cited for outstanding professional sklll, knowledge and devotion to du· cy. The captain is servinl; at Bien Hoa with Air Force Advisory Team 2. He ls a 1!~60 graduate of San Juan High School and received his A.A. degree from Orange Coasl College and B.A. degree from Calif. Slate College, Fullerton. lliNT4 ANA-UN W, •illlllff' • .,.... ... SI, MUlit'TIM•TOH ll!ACK-tlU1 ~ l lff. •I ""'""''°: 9861 ADAMS AT BROOK HURST IN HUNTINGT4N BEACH ~:~·::.·;~.-;:·::.::~.::-::~:::-;.~·· :~:.~~:~~~:~~=.·:-l ;: CQ$TA M•SA-2U I. 11ltl 51. ~o ·-·-.~·--·"' - 39' to 49c Stuart Hall - School Supplies ~;:~~;;22' quality. 6 most w1n1° ird school nttds •t Jo.,·est price around. $ J 1t Pack of 500 A•1t• "MW11t" 991 S 1.69 Pencil Sharpener Filler Paper T~dc 1500" A•N .lj\\\\ . ·;;~~1 39c Cello T1p1 291 89' lex •f 64 Colen 61 89c Crayol1 Crayons 6 ... _ ...... 8!AX11", wide Of cOlle,gt rule. l~YffM 890 C1nvas Binders ..-. S2.47 Metal .. 1--------'.r--·~ . Lunch Kits 3·9~9~;&:~ic'covers 4 •·· 271 ~,'>, --~ .. "ith 10 Ol. .,.~' ';-~ Vacuum. $196 Vh1tl •Ith %Ip,., '"' 791 ~,,..,-i:i "°'"'· Economy Portfoli o SJ ea. Tussy Splash Cologne or Dusting Powder 3i$1 lllJ' ~ n4 Uvt 'I 6 oz. Spluh Col· 01:ocs. 4 oz. Du!t· in.11 Powdirrt, . Disc. Pk,c. ,~15° Yardley ·r.., \ Lipstick 1 Whistles .39c ca. -· • Yardley'5 Slicktr lip-~ticlt in choice of Eu11ide, Westside, ·Taxi Slicker or Frosted Slicker. ' , 5637 Full Fashioned Embroidered Sweaters DISCOUNT s5 PRICED f ull (nhionird 1cry- lic. Imbroidcrird floral dl!Sips. S.M- • L 'I . Women's ,:;.\ Nylon ):,:. Shells r .-... 2'$5 \ Jr 0 \~ I ' ~~ 1 o o % ?iJonmto ~'fl . .,,'ear dated nylon in your chnicc of fash- ion rolort. Sil.CJ 34 10 "°· 891 pr. Latex Rubber Gloves DUTCHMAID 3i$1 l llJ s p11., "" $1J7 First quality. Oioice , _ _l,l'--' of yellow, rcdorblnc. -, li&hm;•h;.•· 11111111!""1 Monogram 6 Straight Bourbon Fl!TH $299 ULLOM Priced e\·en lowtr thln our 1cgul.ar I°' price of l-'9-•. .-'~:: 691 2 .Pound Pks. Fruit 8ars .APRICOT·ILU,9t:RRY & DUtCH APPL& ' ' ,,,,, .... , .. 2 i $) $JH ea. Chlldren's No-Iron Jeans i . i ' 4~$5 '"' 4, •• ,. $1.7, Prcm.iwn qu•litr 1'';0 cotton & 2,%. Vp:roo polyester ,.•ith &ail rclcaJe fin· i!h. Boxer style waist. Sita 2-7. Reg. s3 99 Casual Tote Bags Viaylpa.tmrt or calfs, cuu•I or dtc1sy ••. totes w i t h all 1he fuhion J'Oll like. s24ts Value! 'Cobra' Sldewalk Bike $1711 • Fam ed Hcd· 5trom 16" 5izc with removable training wheels le l 98c 011 or Pencl Craft Sets Pl.int hr num· bm. Choice oI pictures. 661 Regular &le Zn Hustler Cars 11.ubbtt tires, "''""" ..... 441 6 1tylcs. C1t1p1r1 ti 1U11rs-11lltn1 ftr St.5 Contaln1d <Actltn "Rtll1blt" Cold Capsules 2 1 .. $i Reg. 69~ & 791 Men's Socks llY I P1lr-6=$3 Im fl-14" ,. $ .74 lldoBa11 loll Nylon, 8·Pl1 'Nylonot c:owtler Odon Aaylic/Nylon. Fashioa colors. 29' ea. Women's \ Tailored Briefs . .,.,, .. .,,.""· 51 SJ Smooth Citting tail· :' orcd style. full cut Jiu, , to 10. flu. tic lirg. White. pu~b. hi..shades. I 5 '" $J 00 & 6 1 .. ,$100 lass Tumblers "TREND" 14 01, $$1· price ncr ••• aparklio1 aqua. Family or party f•Y· oritel. hJ I .. "" '1.11 tt •t.11 • ''c J Qt. Mttcllbit PltcMr ••••••••• Sh 49' to 99c Plastic Housewares ..,a ..... 3 s1 41• .. $1.14 Dustpans, pitch· : en, co landers. • tura·t.abkl, many " mote. R1111cd plutic in spar-. ldio1 mloa. Reg. $JH.$J" Enamelware .l ~.,. SJ ea. Yardley TOUI SJ CHOICE Re9. '12" & '13" lledric Blankets SJO Stainless Steel Spoons & Forks 6i$I Pol7ab!r • nylon. r•yon blend d cir ~ plush pilir. Choice of strlcs & colon. SICid rc1iH1nt back. • • . ' • j •• •• .. • .. •: I • i: r; Twiggy $tlx ,ol Eye Pencil ~~ .. ,, .. 3~s1 Aero t.ukhn 1trip ICatk, ~ iointtJ, l uildc :--:i' S.'ftl $1.00 l .., Ute u llntr ot (or brtnvJ. trlMtr ••• c:xdt-iaJ actlon. • --• n ~ n • n • p ,, • e ' \ -~: ... -OA!lY PllOI Wtdnt.sday, Januari 28, 1970 1Five Area JC Players I I on State Grid Team • ROB PURNELL Orange Coast ~ttles Na111ed . , • ~layer-Coach .. J' or Warriors ~ '; SAN FRA NC ISCO -Al Attles was a ~ombined player-coach today for the first 1.ime in his long basketball career ~ause of a major San Francisco War- ltio:rs staff resh uffling touched off by the ~utprise firing of coach Ge<>rge Lee. : 6llles. 33, said he would keep hilnsclr 411 the lineup and indicated his leadership :0,ieht be temporary. ,. -':,I agreed to take the Tesponsibillty as •?Ch only until the end of lhe season,'' said after Franklin Mieuli , owner of National Bask~ball Association club, •, ~unccd his appointment Tuesday. ., -• -NEW YORK -The Boston Celtics held 1 40-minute "pride" meeting after Tues- aaj night's 33-point loss to New York and Larry Siegfried indicated the discussion centered around the possibility that some players are not giving 100 percent on the tour!. : "I don 't <!arc if v.·e lose by one point or JOO." Sieg!ried said. "The whole thing is how we lose. Pro sports is built on pride. .• "A lo< of our guys have played on title teams. They've never been on a losing )tilm. and I'm one of them." -!· • SACRAMENTO -Gov. Ronald Reagan 1ays he doesn 't think state government 9bou.1d permanently take over California IJ«irae racing. now shut do\vn in a strike. ~-says a temporary takeover might be )!'!'.idered. ~ ~e governor's position c.:ame as an at· ~pt to get management and union :iE:ioUators back at the bargaining table !'5~e rlown Tuesday. with management ~ng it was willing to talk but not in a ~ic "fishbowl." ; : ji \'loo Id be opposed to the st.ate going ~the race track business ... I hate to ~ the door lo government injecting 1-~f into these disputes,'' the Republi can jOo/ernor declared, recalling he had been ti ·longtime uruon leader or lhe Screen )ctors Guild . : Rea gan ca lied for a state-supervised ~et ballot among striking union ;Jhembers, who i1ave California's only :winter racing -thoroughbred racing at ~nta Anita in Southern California and ~ss racing al Bay !\-feadows in the ~ Francisco Bay .<\rea. ··-'•' . . . .•. ~ JjOLTON , Kan. -Jackson Heights shut "'4· Dover High School. 4--0. that's right . h to noUung in a baskelball game here tutsday night . ":Jackson Heights got a basket in thr> Qrit quarter and scored again in the final quarter. 'Except for those two bric{ out burst." spectators were treated to an unusual lay of ball COJ_llrol. ! : • "NEW YORK Joe Paterno of Penn le was honored by the Football tters Association of New York Tues· y night as Eastern college Coach of the ar for the second conse-cutive season. terno's teams have won 22 games 1n row and haven 't lost in 30 games, ;i ~etch marred only by a 17·all tie v.·ith Orida Stale in the 1967 Gator Bowl. Despite the award. Paterno said ht' Ji;n•t "think Y.-e did a particularly good ¥.-of coaching lhis year.'' a F INCH STE RLI NG Orange Coast ROD GRAVES Saddleback TOBY WHIPPLE Saddleback Fat Pact A waits Bradshaw; Owens w-ould Like Recount NE W YORK (AP) -Pro football's draft resumed today following an opening session that put Terry Bradshaw in posi· lion to challenge O.J . Sin1pson's record $300,000 contract and sent Steve O\vcns scurrying back to his agen l for a qwck recount. Bradshaw and Owens. the two most heralded members of college football 's eli te, wound up in substantially differenl negotiating stances Tuesday as the 26 prO football teams drafted the first 182 of 4~2 players to be taken in the two.da y sele<-- lion session. Bradshaw. a blond 6-foot.J Little All· America quarterback from Louisi ana Tech. established himself as a strong threat to lake a crack al Simpson's t'OO· tract record v.·hen he was made the No. I se lect.ion 1n the ent ire draft by the Pittsburgh Steelers. Owens. the Heisman Trophy winning running back from Okl ahoma, lost a good t!eal of lns luster when he wasn't picked until the Dclroit Lions tapped fiim No. 19 in the firs! round -after lhree other running backs had been selected. The: contract target for the outstanding eollegians was set last year by Simpson, the Jleisman Trophy winner from Southern C3lifornia who signed with the Buffalo Bills !or $210 ,000 in salary, a $100,000 loan and some $25,000 in pcrfonnance clauses. Bradshaw was quoted al the end of last season as saying he thought he should gel between $250,000 and $300,000 lo sign as a pro. Owens acknowledged at the time he Ul'I lrtrP~•T• Co1ncdian IJanny Thorncis fC'1);!11s :-hoollni-; hin1 ,c!{ \11th a golf putter after n11ssing a short put t 011 the first green during the Pro-An1 phase of the ,.\11dy \\'i lliun1s-San Diego Open 'fucsday. received the Heisman award he was look· 1ng for a contract in the $200,000 neighborhood. Despite the 1 a t e s l developments, however, neither was issuing detailed contract positions although Owens. who watched the proceedings in person at the draft headquarters in the Belmoot Plaza Hotel in midtown Manhattan, did say : "I'm not concemed that much about money. I'm interested in playing football. 1'hcn the monetary phase will take care of itself. All I want to do is go out and play and be successful." But he did speculate that unjustified criticism of his speed and blocking ability might ha ve been the reason for his low selection. ·•1 think things have been said that are unjustified ," he said. .. ,t bothers me -people saying things they don't know too much about. But it all boils down to performance. The only way to prove people wrong is to perfonn." ilots Need $5.5 Mil lion ERKEL~Y (AP) -F1 \'r and -half mllllon dollars -cold, hard cash tP lhe bank -is what appears to be ~ to keep the Seattle Pilots base· au Club· from l1110tniniously le1v1ng IOWll fjter just one year there. .Amcrlcon Lca3ue owut rs scheduled a nd day of meetJngs here today. hop. he8ir that 1 group ol Seattlr busi· en wJll be able to com(' up wi1h sum !Those bu.su~ssmen, thou&)l, will br 1n ~arby San Fr1ncltc0 ru.ining up a phone ~ In a Jost. de!:pcratc attempt In ,l!rl tit money and keep lhc l'llot1 fro1n n10\· Ing to .Ot1llll!'·f"nrl \\'orth nr J\.t l!"·a11i:<·1 \\host rc1>rebC/lUll/\'t'S <If(' on h<ind Iii Hllll'C 1n for thC' kdl 1f the Se:illll' bul f;11b ii Js clear the league 011·11ers "'11111 10 ke>ep thr rean1 in Seattle, if only !o pre· Yent .a la11,u1l that ~layo~ \Ves Uhlman has threatened if they leave. But monC'y was the problem 1vhrn the meeljngs here started and it is the problem today . The only real developmen t alter JO'" hours of nlPt'tin~il Tut"ldily w1111 thr rC'· ductlon of the price of the Pilots In O<:tober the leagur apprO\ ed <t ~;1 lt prl<!e of 110 3 m11l1on and lhe club "'~S tu be sold from Clevrland busintssrnt1n \\Iii· ll~nn Dalev !o a .11roop headed by Sf>aulr hu ~1lll'.~~n1cn frrcl Dnni and E<h1ard c · ·il~on U11. 1 .. 1111 11 11 .. ll·.inll·d 1/1,11 ,1 ih.)., nul· • /Jun bani. l11an l;l\'Cn 10 thr nr1g1nal own. 1·r~h1p "·ould l'tln1r d1tf' 1f the L'lub 11·a~ .~old. Oan7. and Carlson L'Ouldn't pay it and the prl!sent cr1s1~ aro~r. Tuesday. Daley's group agreed to ac· ccpt $9 rn ll llon for !he club, saying ]I "'<IS forcgoinK all profi1 Jn doing so. Bul 11 was dirficul1 lo s1•e how this 11ou/d bOlve the problem of the SJ.5 mil· hnn hank loan In addition, the n1•w ownl'r$ "'Ill nttfl a1 lea.')1 12 million to run the club nclt\ yeer. mca.nlng ill Jei1s1 JS 5 million . is nredNl right a111ay rr.i:.1nllr:c~ of what· f'l'<'r IOnl-'(-lrrn1 pflvn1rnt d(•;1I llHRhl hr \v<1rkcrl out 1\1\h OalL,\'. JEFF JORGENSEN Golden West South Africa Refu ses Ashe Vi sa Request CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) Ame rican Negro tennis star Arthur Ashe today was refused a visa to compete in the South African Open Tennis Cham- pionships in P.1arch. A government statement ssid, however. he will be allowed to play in .South Alrica as a member or a Davis Cup team. Sports Minister Fran k \Varing, an· oouneing the government's ban on Ashe as an individual but not as a member of a team, said Ashe's statements from time to Lime showed a "general antagonism" toward South Africa. Ashe, who ha s spoken strongly against apartheid, had promised to make no statements about anything except tennis for three or four weeks after the cham· pionships are completed. Waring, however, said Ashe's ap- plication for a visa was . in his own words, an attempt "to put a crack in the racist wall down there" and not just for lhe purpose of playing tennis. Race segregation laws in South Africa forbid whites and nonwhites playing.sport together. It is strictly enforced where loca l sportsmen are conce1ned . although there have been instances ol visiting nonwhite sportsmen louring S o u l h Africa as part of a visiting team from another country being a!.lowed to play against white Soulh Africans. The visa refusal, which had been ex- pected. is considered here likely to lead Lo South Africa's ouster from the Davis Cup competition this year. An ernergency meeting or competing Davis Cu p nations has been called for ~1arch 23 in London to consider a pro- fJOsal thal a committee be appoinleu an- nually and gi ven power to refuse an entry by any country if it considere<! the Davis Cup competition is endangered. It also is proposed that if an entry i.~ al rl.!11dy accepted , further participation by the cou ntry can be refused. L11st year Poland and Czechoslovakia refused to pl ay South Africa and tenni~ aulhorities fear a disruption again this year in the Davis Cup European rone rompetilion if South Africa is allowed lo pl11y. Golde11 J et • Wins Honor NEW YORK (AP) -Dynamic Bobby I-full, the Chicago Black Hawks' record· shattering triggerma n. v.·a~ n am e d hockC'y·s Player of the Dec<;dc today in an Associated Press poll of the nation 's sports writers anrl sportscasters. Hu ll, who revived Chicago's National tlockey League fortunes in the booming '608 and topped the magic ~goal mark four times in the process. out~i11tanced venerable Gordie Howe of the Detroit Red Wings in a two-man ract for the award. The balding Golden Jet. at 31 a 12·year Nl{L veter11n, received 4361,; votes, to 1451h: for the 41-year~ld Howe . a super star in the ice game tor more than two decades. Hull and Howe desci matcd the field in the balloting. Bobby Orr, Boston's brilliant young defenscman, finished a distant third with 19 \'oles, Center Stan Mikita. Hull's Chicago teammate since J958, was foorth with seven. Goalie Jacques Plante, a 13-year stan- rloul with fi.iontreal. New York and St. Louis, and centers Jean Beliveau of Mon· treal and Phil Esposito of Boston each rece.ived lwo votes. Goa1ie Lorne "Gump" Worsley and right wing Bernie "Boom Boom" Gtof· fr lon. both or Montrtal and New York, pi cked up one apiece. Hull, who grew up In the hamlet of Pointe Anne, Ont .. and still make.s his home nearby, on a 500-acre cattle ranch, came to the Black Ha-ks in 19$7 without prior professJ onal exposu re. The husky, blond left wing scored 13 goals In hi!l first NHL season and 18 In his sct'Ond. In IO campaigns since then. he. has avrragerl 44 -with t high of 58 ror an J\1-time record last year . Yuba Bacl{ Leading Vote-gette1· Five Orange Coast area junior college football players have been accorded All· Califoniia J C honors, according to the Junior College Athletic Bureau. Center Rob Purnell cf Orange Coast College was selected to the large schools first team offense while teammate Finch Sterling, a linebacker, was named to the defensi Ye first team. Saddleback College quarterback Rod Graves and running back Toby Whipple were named to the small schools first of· fensive tean1. Tackle Jeff Jorgensen of Golden West College \vas selected Lo the large schools second team offense. Yuba College tailback Fred Riley was the biggest vote getter on this season·s all-state team after leading the 49ers to the small schools ch a m pi on s hip , defeating Saddleback in the final game. A baker's dclzen , gleaned from the best of tile California Junior College Assn.'~ lwo JC football di visions, makes up the all state team . It includes Fullerton JC's record break· ing split end Jeff Baker .and quarterback Mike Rasmussen. who led F'resno CC lo two straight large division chan1· pionshi~s- 1969 All.California Pos. Player School E-Baker, Fullerton F..;-Smith, Hartnell L--Pulutl , Pasadena L--Craney, Chabot L--Hawkins. Long Beach L-McDaniel, East LA L--Holden, Bakersfield B--Rasmussen, Fresn:> B-Riley, Yuba B-Downey, Ventura B-\Vest, San Diego ,.1esa B-Buchanon, Mira Costa 8-Jim Sander, Harbor Lar1e Schools (offen1e) POI. Player Scbool SE-Brown, Southwestern TE-Reed, Pasadena T-Agness, Bakersfiel d T-Ruperl, Harbor G-Kirk, Bakersrield C-Pumell, Orange Coast \\'l \'r. 180 So. 190 So. 230 So. 205 So. 230 So. 190 So. 237 So. 175 So. 175 So. 196 So. 190 So. 180 So. 190 So. Wt ''r. 1'8 So. 188 So. 259 So. 215 So. 432 So. 225 So. 170 So. 215 So. I~\ So. 155 So. 185 Fr. QB-Gleason. Grossmont RB-Boyd, El Camino RB-Hallman, Am. River RB-Ray, West Valley RB-Ridley, Santa Moni ca fL--Da ,•idi an, Fresno ldefense ) 165 ;o . P<>s. Player School L--Breitkreuz, Riverside L-Busick, De Anza L-Fitzpatrick, Fullerton L-Galigher, Chabot L--Conzalez, Ventura LB-Huntington, Fresno LB-Paul. Sequoias LB-Sterling, Orange Coast DB-Demp!ey. Citrus DB-Gudelji, De Anza DB-Scheid. Fullerton DB-Stuckey, Merritt Second Team 0£fense Pns. Player School E-G-:>rdon, Moorpark 1::-Sherman, Laney T-Jorgensen, Golden \\l est T-Malepeai, San !\-1ateo (:-Keppel. Marin G-Esparza. Santa Barbara C-Merlo, Fresno Q~wens, Fullerton RB-Chiurco, San Mateo RB-Hughes, Santa Barbara RB-Kendricks. Riverside FL-Stephenson, Grossmonl Small Schools (offense) Pos. Player School SE-Duckhorn. Rer.dlcy TE-\Vilson. Redwoods T-Hmvington. Imp. Valley T-Nelms. Porterville G-Trent. Cabrillo G-Vincent , Gavilan C-,.1iddleton, Shasta QB-Craves. Saddleback RB-Austin, \Vest Hills RB-Brown . ~1l. JAG RB-Shelton, Hancock RB-Whipple, Saddleback FL-Batlle, Reedley (defense I r0ti. Player School C-Aquirre, Yuba !..-Brown. Siskiyous L--8. Bl'Olvn, Redwoods l.-De La Crut, CUesta L--Gomet, Hartnell LB-Bratcher. West Hills I.8-McFarland, "'1onterey LB-Randlcas, Yuba LS-Root, Desert LB-Bennett, Merced DB-Johnson, ft.1ira Costa DB-Gieck, Sierra 08--htcGee, Butte WI Vr. 220 So. 225 So. 215 Fr. 235 So. 244 So. 190 So. 220 So. 185 So. 175 So. 175 So. 190 So. 175 So . \\'t y, 205 So. 185 F' 225 So 240 So. 195 So. 230 So 192 Fr 1!15 So 165 ·r r. 175 Fr. 21fl So. 150 F' \\'t Yr. 180 So 210 So. 215 So 205 F' 210 So 22S So 200 So 170 So. 190 h 205 So 190 So 18S Fr 175 h \\'t Yr 220 Fr. 230 SQ 190 SQ 215 "· 215 s.. 430 s.. 200 s .. 215 s.. 205 So. 115 So. 165 So. !BS So. 170 Fr. DAYTONA RACE PRACTICE BEGI NS DAYTONA BEACH, Fla . (AP) -Two of Europe'• great names in auto racing, Ferrari and Porsche, begin jockeying for top starling positions today In the flr!l. round of practice and lime trials for thL'I weekend's 24 Hours o( DtytOna . The two foreign team entries -fi ye new Ferr1ri 512s and three streamlined Porsche 9171 -ha\'e by far the fastest cars In an entry list lhat also Includes an r1ssortment of machinery from lht United Sta tes and six olhcr coun tries. ---------~--------• /floore, Soder&erg Ex-Marina Teammates Follow Separate Paths By llOWARD L llANDY Of lflt 0.1" l"llitt ilaH h1ark Soderberg is a reserve on tbc University of Kentucky's No. 2 rated na- tionally basketball team . Bill h1oore is a starter on the UC Irvine quintet Both are sophomores who took dif· ferent direcUoos when th ey left fo.larina High School after leading the Vikings into CIF playoff action two years running. Undoubtedly, Soderberg \Ylll be in lhe national limelight far more than h1oore in his junior and senior seasons, playing for a major university. But. this doesn't bother the &.& forward who gained a starling assignment with the Anteaters in hi s first season as a varsity performer. "I believe the out-.of-slate schOQls over· recruit in California ," ri+1oore says in relation 10 hi s attendance at UC Irvine. ''You hear of some shady deals lhey make and ii makes you wonder. "Dick Davis and Tim Tift !UCI coaches) were real honest with me before I came here and I knew if they said I would play· I would. ''I am happy here and t like the al· mosphere. l am glad I kind of fit into tho pattern or what !hey needed." \Vhile he spent long hours playing the ga me he loves. ~1oore is the first to ad· mit, "I'm really kind of lazy and I don't Uke practice al all. In fact, I'm sure coach Tift gets mad at me during prflc- tice and he had me about No. 10 before the sea.son started. "But, the games are different and I en- joy them very much." \Vh ere did it all begin for the young cage star? He started playing when he \\'as in tl1e seventh grade with a young J'leighbor, Greg Snyder. "'ho later starred at Huntington Beach 1-tigh School and was an All-CIF selection. Snyder moved to Stanford. played freshman ball and rleparted the Indian in- sitution. He is attending Orange Coast College this year but isn't playing basket· ball. Accord ing• to neighborhood chum lttoore, he plans to aUend UCI in the fall and compete for the Anteater varsity basketball team. Many cage experts V.'ho ha ve seen UC! in action this year feel J\1oore is an ac- Pro Grid Stars 111 Ad11lt Le8t,uue Hoop Hostilitie s How does a professional football player spend bis span: lime in the orf-sea!lon? Jf you 're Rod Sherman. flanker of t~ Oakland Raiders or Dave \Villiams. split end on the St. l..A'Juis Cardir.als, you pro. bably play in the J\1ission Viejo .Adult Basketball League. C"nmplished performer right no\Y and that his future is bright in lhe cage sport. lie is averaging 13.3 points per game as a sophomore and adn1its to a devaslatlng bit or aocuracy along the baseline and at the top of th e key, his favorite shooting spots. Figured after 12 games. J\1oore has hit 6(1 of !IS attempts fron1 the floor ror a remarkable .522 avera ge. llis free throw percentage is .765 ancl he is second to i-enior teammale Jeff Cun- nini:!ham in rebounds with 88. "I don 't have the riizht temperan1ent for coaching," l\1oore ad1nils. "I lead the team in technical foul s and I \Vas thro1\·n out or one ball game already. ''To me its ridiculous \vhen somf'one like coach Tift has to rely on untried sophomores llke myself. I appreciate the facl he has stuck with me all the \Vay. "\Vhen he started twa sophomores IBi!l George was the other ). we made enough mistakes combined to last the rest of the St> a son in those early games." J\1oore tall ied 26 points against Cal Stale (Fullerton) in the sixth AntealC'r outing and his confidence has been grow· in~ ever si nce. He first beca me interested in UC! dur- ing his junior year. He suffered a back injury playing volleyball and his high school coach, Lute Olson. recommenrled Dr. James T. Kidd to the )'Oung cage star. II just hapjlfns lhat Dr. Kidd is also the learn physician for the Anteaters and one of their most enthusiastic fan s. In l1is senior year at ~1arina. J\loore had offers from Utah State, Arizona State, Arizona University, Idaho, Frc.~no Slate, Cea! State (Fullerton) and Loyola to name a few. What about the future of the Anteaters"' "l know our luck has to change. I ca.11 see us losing too many more th ii;; year. And I think \\·e will have a good team next season."' He knows ii will he tough lo replace lhe three seniors in the s t a rt i n ~ li neu~Cunningham. Steve Sabins and J\1ike Barnes-but feels the chief need will ~ a big man at center. To shO\V his knrrwledRe or lhing!i to conte, he named Phil Rhyne as a prob· able running m ate at f0t\\1ard n P x l season. Rhvn e is a transfe r from USC 'vho is red .Shirting this season. tlloore also noled that a form er lr~111e star. Steve Parker, 'viii be geltin~ ou t of U1e ~1arines soon and could help. Parker is 6-7 and played for Davis tl'.'O years aso at Irvine. 1'hree freshmen v.·ill be vyini; for 11 starling berth alllng with other returnee.~ including Gary Fox, another sophomore \\'ho has come along strong in recent games. "Those three freshmen (Bob Black, Garrick Barr and Tom Hanson) \viii be pushing everybtKly ("Or a starling spot and that's good," admits Moore. "It improves everyb<Kly when you have competition !or starting assignments." The social science major is undecided aDotit the futu re and says he will see how things work out before committin$i hhnself about a profess ion. Il could he in political !ICience, anthropology or n1aybc even as a lawyer. lfestnii1ister Ace LEON WH EE LER New M•rlni1 Grid Coach It's Official: Wheeler New Marina Coach By ROGER CARLSON 01 tlHI O.Uy l"Uel lltlt Leon \\'heeler, f)(l, is oHicially the new v;irsily foolba ll coach al ~1a~ina Hi~h School today follow ing raliflcat1on of lus appointment lo the post by the Hun· tington Beach School Distri1.1 Board of Trustees Tuesday nighl. It confirms the DAILY PJLOT's ex- clusive report 1 uesday that \Vheeler \~as in line for the job. Ile replaces Jim Coon at Lhc position following ti1arina's last plact finish in the Sunset League last year. Contacted al his Whittier home, \\/heeler told the DAILY PILOT, "T'vc known \Vade 1Wutts of Newport Harbor). Bill (8oS\Y('\I of \Vestminslcr). Clare tVan Moorcbekc of Anaheim} and Herb (Hill of Loara) for a long tiine and I'm really anxious to gel into the Sunset League and mix il up ." \Vheeler Is no stranger to coaching circles. ha ving coached for 23 years si nce gradu<1ting from Long Beach City College. His last five years have been at ti1orn- ingside High where the Monarchs have captured two Sky League championships. His 1966 team went lo the CJF AAA finals before losing to South Pasadena i28·13l and the following year his team advanced to the CIF se mifinals before bo1\•ing to Temple City. His coaching experience includes stints ;it Stuttgart (Ark.) High, Imperial Valley College. Blythe High, El Rancho High, Santa Fe High and ~1orningside. During that span \\'heeler's teams have cotnpiled an enviable 154 wins, 59 losses and six ties. His ~fomingside teams have averaged 27.3 points per game for the past four years. The Monarchs featured a mulliple '~·ide slot offensive formation and lhe Arka nsas 5-2 defense. 1-le's had two of his players selected fo r the North-South All-Star claMic in Los Angeles and 12 of his gridders arc now cornpeting in collegiate ball. San Diego State's Tom Reynolds. who set an NCAI\ receiving record of 18 louchdowns, is a graduate of \\/heeler's s~ stem. The twi> pro wide re1.-eivc:.rs, residents of the ~fission Viejo and Saddleback Valley areas, play on the undefeated La Paz ReaJty team in the "8" League, con- isidered the best o( the three leagues in the entire setup. according to Jerry Cur- ran, Director of Recreaticn for the !\fission Viejo Company. \vhich runs the league. Wrestler Baffles Rivals; Curran, ~-'ho has been associated with adult le ague basketball fur six years in J'\1ission Viejo, La Puente and 'Vest Covina. says the La Paz team is really loaded. In addition to Wilhan1s. the leading scorer in the le~gue, and Sherman, La Paz also boasts the la\cnt.s of Fred Hill, ex-USC and Philadelphia Eagles receiver, former Canadian pro footballer Bil! Rid · die and Lew Moyt. one-lin1c Southern Cal high jumper. now a n1aril 1t officer aL nearby El Toro. Hoyt is the only n1ilitary nu1n of the aforemenlioned fel'1, \Vhile Hill and Rid· die, like.Sherman and \Villiams, reside in the general area. Although there arc a few ntarines liv· in g with their families in the vicinity or !\fission Viejo. "Even though thi s co1n1n11n1ty (f\1ission Viejo) only has a small popula tion (10,900), it's really a1nazin~ the quality or players we have in our league, especially considering my past experiences in this type of work." Curran notes. Anyone interested in catching some of lhe action out t.1ission Viejo way can see UJC "(;" anrl "D'' Leagues perforn1 at 7 and 8 p.m. every t.1onday, while the lOf)· notch "B" League is in the lorefront every \\'ednesday at 7 and 8 p.m. i\t Mission Viejo Sport Is Family Affaii· Dy PHIL ROSS OI 1111 Dlily Pllt! STiit Little David Wommack of Westminster J-ligh is an unusual sort of prep wrestler. Unlike many stereotype high sc hool matn1e11. the 123·1b. flash more or lcs.~ does his own thing, according to Lion wreslling coach Bob Cossarek. Cossarck s;1ys. "He's a very unu :-L1al type or high school wrestler, whose style baffles people and makes it seem like he has four legs when riding on top of an op- ponent." "The a1•crage high school kid who v.Testles generally learns 1nost of hi~ tech niques and which specific .move!\ to make frorn his coach, but David isn't lhat v.•ay al all." Cossarek. a successful wrestling mc11· !or al Co1npton's Dominguez }lig h unl il taking over the reins at Westminster thi s }ear, claims wresUing and all its in- tricacies seem to come naturally to \V(ln1mack. He a d m It !Ii !hat his main job in reference to the rugged litUe 123-pounder is lo make 5ure he "gets to classes, passes the courses and gets lo practice on time." The senior, who started t-Js grappling career five years ago al \Vestminstcr's Johnson Jr. High, took the consolation lrophy in !he 123-lb. category at Saturday 's Five Counties Invitational at Fountain Valley and is now 18·1 on the season. The feUow who \\'ommack lost lo. Gilbert Mendez of Bi:awley. is defending CIF champion and the hungry Lion hopes to gel a final crack at hin1 when the CIF championships roll arounJ in March Cossarek noles, "The average prc11 v.•resller tends lo follow a patt.ern. but ~i nce David is pretty invent ive out there or. the mat. once he perfect.'! a certain £tyle, he continues to use it wilh added suceess." Since Wommack ha s been involved in wres tling for so long. it has lurocd into a veritable family affair. His younger sister, SuJan, a junior al \Vcstminster. is lhr team stali!llClan. Another youn ger \Vommack, Pighth· grader Mike, wrestles at Johnson in the lJS·lb. class and Cosssrel. ls looking for11,•srd to his arriva l on the Lion catn· pu.1 ne;o(t fall. Bucs, Sadclleback Meet And if tha t's nnt enough, WommacJt;'i;; parents bring their camper lruck to all lhe meets (home or away). park out In the parking lot and cook dinner for U1e whole brood. David has been kno,,1n to lake ii few well-deserved n 11 p 5 in the back of l h e camper during :soinc long and grueling lourna1ncnts. fl.fetting for !he ftrrt linlc in IJa~krlUal\, Orange Coast nnd Saddleback t:ollcg\'s tangle tonight at 8 In a non-confe rente aame at ~1lssion Viejo High. Bolh clubs come Into lonlght's i;n1nc \vllh losinE: records. Orange Coast ha s an S.12 ~eason 1nt1rk 11nd Is 3-3 in South Coa111 Conft:renct pl11y. Saddltback ha'.S a 9-10 ri..-cord and is 2·4 in I>Psert Conference acllon. Three of the foor Gaucho losses have been by a totul or l!i1" points. The Pirate5 will hflvc a ll istlncl height 1dva.nlAge with 6·6 cent('r R i c k Sllckelmaier find IH Phil Jordnn doin~ most of the boardwork for OCC. Jordan and guards Jim Kindelon and Troy Rolph pace the Pirates oflensivtly. The Gauchos will depend primarily on lhc out.side shooting or Bill Noon and Eric Christensen. Noon has scored 83 points in Rarldleback's lust three games, including :J2 in an 00-78 double overtime loss to ~ll. San .J;irinto Saturday night. lloth clubs hH ve g:unes scheduled this v.cckcnd . OCC. idle in conference action. lra 1cls lo typress F'rKtay whil e Sad- dlcb&ck hosl!I ~Ura Costa in conference play Sitturday Golden \\est has flllly one game slutcd !his wct:k, 1·L~ltlng Eas1 l..A Frlday nigh t In Southern Califamia circuit action, Wommack. a Cir finalist the pasl three years. has wrestle<! under three dir· rerent mentors during his Westminster stay. Before CossArek. Don Davi~. current v11rsHy grid aide, kept an eye on the am· bilious Ullll" botllcr. l..cw Boyles Wfl!I the head man when David Urst stepped Into a: Lion uniform. As far as coll ege i~ concerned. Wom· n1ack is undcciOed. although he indicatei; he would wcleo1nc some type or scholari:hip lo a fo11r-ye1tr Ethf>ol over the po.<isl bility or ending up al a junior collcso for a year or two. DAIL V PILOT :J'J Oilers, Lions Lock Horns \Veslmlnstcr and Huntington Beach •Ugh lock hot·ns tonight In the Suneet League basketball feature with the two loop powe1 :i <.'Ollld1ng at the former's gym. EIRwhere around the circuit r.1arlna t4-IJ risks Its shiire or the league lead st Anaheln\ and Ne\vport Harbor takes the night off with a bye. All ganies start at 7. Westmlnsti:r, the other co-leader, faces tho same problem as Huntington -re· boundi~ fro1n defeal. The Lions were spanKed by Marina, ;i!). 4!, Saturday night while l-luntJngton ~as dropped l\VO strai.ght lilts after chalking up 44 league vlcl0rle1 In succession. A~other Jou tonight would just about e.Uminale the. Oilers rrom serious title con!ideration. Westminster's cause took a major blow when It wais lt:arned that forward Steve htcLendon will no1 play tonight alter suf· ferlng an ankle Injury In the Marfna gan1e. He's 6-6 and was averagiug 20. 7 poinls per tilt before the mishap. MaM. ltuntlngton Beach's IT\8noto-man pressing defense could be a big factor. \Vestminster wilted a.gain"t Marln1's defen.i;e. 1.'0mmltllng 22 turnovus tn route to .a 5Ml upset lou. Coach Jim Stephens and hfs Marina team are fighting for survivaJ tonight ln t.he hostile Anaheim confines. The Colonist.a feature strong oul!ldo ~hooting along with good rebounding and must wln tonight to stay In contention for the championship. Both teams have been held to under 60 point.a Jn four or their five Sunset Lea~ue battles so Car. Without bim , the offensive load falls on ce nter Dan Broderick and guard Richard iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii SALE SPECIALS FOR TODAY THRU SATURDAY WESTMINSTER SANT A ANA FULLERTON 1522 1 Beach Blvd. Ph: 89J.8™ STOl! HOURS MONDAT THRU fl!. •:oo ... M.·t ... M. SATilROA Y • , , ••. , . 1:00 A.M.-6 ... M. SUNDAY •.. ., •• ., ..• t A.M •• 2 P.M. f'11'0 """'" clwty\ ..... rJ..J rllbl>n r.~u wi119 HEAVY DUTY DETERGENT OIL S,A.I. GtADfl ,.... ,1.1 .. , .... .......... ..... 11i.. ~·'""'" o~f :~:.r 29C TUBELESS TIRE REPAIR KIT 110 E. First St. •t Cypr111 Phone 547.7477 STO lE HOUIS MONDAY THl U fll. 1100 A.M .. t ,,ht SATURDAY ••..• , .• 1100 A,M.•' ,.M. SUNDAY , ••••• , ••• , ••• t A.M.-4 ,.M. 1530 S. Hu bor Blvd . Ph. IJG.0700 STOll HOU•S MO NDAY TH•U fll:I . 1:00 A.M •• t ,.M. SATUlDAY ••••• , •• t :OO A.M.-' '·Ill· SUNDAY •.••..• , , , , • t A,M.·l '·~· NOW ••• BIG SAVINGS fOR CAR·HOME and SHO,. 'I~ Oil' FIRE '"'""" EXTINGUISHER WlfK Ptl$SUl l OAUOt & MCXINTINO llACXTI CORNELL 4·PLYTIR NYLON CORD LE ARAN I • GUAltA.NTEED JS MONTHS • .. '"'-"" 6.70:s.15 1.15x 15 7.lOx 15 8.15 .15 6.40x15 TUlfD l lAClf Sl.ll 'fD. flCClSl JJo'( 6.70x15 ,,__....,,_,hill, ... -...,'""' -.......... TMklf t1,1-ttyton Cor4 CtnrtmtltR •.oo 14 4S 6.10 1495 •16 u.t•X x is 1x,r1o.x 2.39 2.-«> .... x 16 • \ - \ I REACH THAT BALL -Kirk Myers (35) of Mission Viejo battles '.''ith Craig Anderson (24) and Tom GauJden (44) of San Clemente for possession of loose ball. Mlssion Viejo took over and went on to post an impressive 81-48 victory over the Tritons in Crestview League play. The Diablos play al Foothill l'"""riday night and are one game behind Villa Park in the league standings. Also in the pie· lure is Diablo center Dan Kratz. Diablos Blitz Tritons, 81-48 Four-team Race in Crestview League Develops By HOWARD L. HANDY Of tM D1llY Plllt SllH the game. ll's a tight squeeze in the Crestview 'League standings with Vi.Ila Park holding a precarious two game lead over two foes. floor for a fantastic 60 percent. For the opening half the Olablos had a mark of 50 percenl. The Tritons matched the percentage figures closely by hitting 50 percent in the second stanz.a and 45.2 for the half but forced turnovers gave Mission Viejo five more shots. Center Dan Kratz played an out.slan· ding game along with Holmes who repeatedly harassed the Tritons with quick defensive movements all over the floor. In addition to his constant pressure on defense, Holmes, the smallest man on the noor, grabbed numerous rebounds with his great jumping ability. Alission Viejo helped to pul the squeeze on the leaders Tuesday night with a con- vincing 8148 victory over San Clemente in the winners' home gym. But il's out of the frying pan and into the fire for the Diablos as they journey to Foothill Friday night for a crucial game with the Knights. Foothill dropped a 63-58 decision lo Orange Tuesday to fall from a first pla~ lie with Villa Park. This means that Foothill and Orange are 4.2 and Mission Viejo is 4·3 behind Villa Park, &.l. Coach Pat Roberts' team v.•as more than ready for the Tritons Tuesday night and raeed to an early lead it never relin· qui shed. Rick \V.adsley h.il a pair of field goals and Rudy Holmes scored another to put the Diablos in front, 6--0. San Clemente closed to within two points, then to one three times before Wadsley made it 17·14 at the· buzzer. 1\tission Viejo was red hot in the second J>f.rlod, hitting 12 of 20 shots from the Mlnlttl Vlef9 Ul) l•11 Clell'ltfl!t C'IJ Mo!mes w .. ,1~y Kr•U Wn• MutlrJOn Citro ~Im~ Myert ... -Tor.ll ,, " ,, '• ~ J l U i .Loml»rdl 1 0 0 ,. """''"'" I 1 I JJ MllC ... !I 0 0 • 0 Dlln'w!!>lclllrtl 2 1 l 5 McC.•llfl 2 • 0 • M.tton O J 0 ~ D.LOmMrdl 1 1 l ~ G"1ld.., 0010 Monro-t JI It t II TOlllo $CIN ., QINlrttr• ft II 1111' I• • 1 4 ll ~ 1 l 10 1 ' 2 ' 2 0 2 • ' . . • ' 2 0 I o I 2 1 I 1 ! 1 0 0 2 " ' 11 .. Ml111oft Vlllo II :li 11 t2 -11 Sin Cil'mflll't 14 U 10 I -A MESA SEEKS SHARE OF IRVI NE LEAD Costa Mesa High's surprising ~1uslangs take a shot at a portion of first place In Irvine League basketball action tonight when the Mustangs meet host Edlson at Huntington Beach High. It's the only Irvine League action o( the nJght as the affair is a makeup test that was originally scheduled for last v.·cek. The second half was a dirferent story. San Clemente was forced into a game of catch up and began forcing it.s shots. The erratic shooting brought the Triton game shooting percentage down to 29.6 while the Diablos maintained a 48.4 mark for Kratz was high point man for the game with 23 while Wadsley hit 14 and Holmes 13 for the winners. High man for San Clemente was Sal Lombardi with 13. Lack of Depth Hurts A1•tists Laguna Beach Upended By El Mode11a, 67-47 By PlJIL ROSS 01 l~t O.lly Pllll SI.ti \Vith only eight players suited ur for action again, Laguna Beach {0--6) mired itself even deeper into the Crestview League cellar Tuesday night, dr.opping a 67·47 decision to El Modena's Vanguards in cage antics at Laguna's gym. As usual, the gutty little Lagunans t tallest man on the roster is &-2 reser\·e Dave U\1001) made a fair match of it in the first period, trailing only 18-14 al U1e close of that stanza. But, depth once more was the downfall of Jerry Fair's Artists, vi'ilh the visitors holding a 3t.2S halftime edge and leading by a' many as 12 points toward the end of the half. 'l'he second hall gol even further out of Laguna's bands. The Vanguards rolled up a 44'25 advantage before Artist Denny Schmilz put in his tean1 's first points of the half on a 2()..foot jumper with only 3: 13 left in the third period. 1\·as Schinilz, the Laguna leader with 14 markers. The Artisls will be look.ing for an upset Friday night when they t!'avel to league· leading Vitia Park, which smashed Tustin Tuesday night, 9().!15. The Spartans took over undisputed first place as Orange v.'aS upselting Foothill, the previous leader. l ,Jollnoon O~M 11 MMtt11 1111 1,11.i 1, 0 0 1 0 • I l f 1 1 1 5 • 0 1 • 115129 0 l 0 , 1 J , 7 0 1 I I I 0 ) l I 0 I l '~· Tlvtn•n M.Jolln•Dn " Soroul I f l I L11wn1 lt•dl cnt 1,11.it• 1 0 I 14 • f 1 I 1 G J 2 J l I ' I I <I l 0 l 0 I l I I 1 I I 0 J sc11m11r MtMurr•y Htrbold 6••cll Po.,..en 5tllwt tlr TtbOr l.lllDn> Col•tll (trl.on P•ldlno No•mlntton lo•••• 11 u 11 •1 l oll!• ktrt I~ Q111rttra 11 " 1<1 11 El MOdf~I L1011n• lltl<.11 u 11 -67 t H -•1 Arca S,vit11 Honor Roll Or•n<U Coe1I t•rt ortP 1 .. 1.., honor roll Wttd on Wlllfllno tlnlt1 !fl "'"llV corn11e1ulor! OfllV. 200 Mtdl•v "•l•v -I. C11<0fl8 dtl M•r (ltronon. J1ciuor., &ernt•d l ltci<l 1:0 .S J. CDlll Mtu 1! ... 6 3. M1tll\I 1: ... t. Six Winners Retmn to '70 Drag Classic Six ehampion.s from 1969 will return lo the Los Angeles County Fairgrounds this weekend for repeat shots at their in· dlvidual titles in the 10th annual NHRA Winlernational drag r a c l n g cham· plonships. The elite group Is part of more than 750 entrants for the $266,000 classic, richest event In the history of drag racing and one of the highest paying events in all motor racing. • Heading the list of defending champion.'> is Tacoma, Wash. driver Dave Grassi who captured the event's top gas crown a year ago and will be back at the wheel or his Dodge.powered dragslcr in an effort to become the first driver to win his division twice. , Grassl will be joined by Jim Lieberman of Long Beach, last year's Funny Car champion, Dick Landy of Norlhridge, 1969 Street Eliminator, Ken Dondero or Concord, Calif., winner of the 1~9 Super Eliminalor crown, Super Stock Eliminator Don Grotheer of Oklahoma City and young Mark Coletti of Hillsboro, Ore., last year's Stock Eliminator. Lieberman will again pilot a Chevy II funny car but will be facing perhaps his stiffest competition over the weekend when he meets more than 50 other top ranking drivers in that division including female star Paula Murphy and four Mach 1 Mustangs entered by Speed King 1tfickey Thompson. Landy will be competing with a team or Dodges and actually will drive in two separate areas cf competition ... Super Stock and the new Pro Stock category. He will be joined by Grotheer who is passing up a shot at the Super Stock title this year to concentrate on the ))l"esUgious Pro Stock crown. Looking To F11ture U CI ' s Tift Puts Eagle Eye On Cypress ' 7-fo otCenter Tim Tift at UC Irvine is looking for n big center to anchor a potent crop of freshmen and underclassmen who will perform f o r the Anteater basketball team next season. One of the men he is watching with a hopeful eye is a seven foot sophomore at Cypress College, Swen Langeberg. Ironically, Langeberg didn't play high school basketball at Long Beach Wilson. And last year he rode t h e bench at Cypress before blossoming this season In· to a full·fledged starter with a fancy 22 .D average. He is also averaging 18 re· bounds per game. The big center has improved to the point v.•here he is hitting .556 percent of his shots from lhe floor and at a .735 average fiom the free throw line. Needless to say, Tift isn't the only col· Jege or university coach scCking his services. Latest reports indicate there are 17 schools that have sent letters of in· quiry. Langeberg isn·t the only seven footer in junior college ranks this season ,.,.ho didn 't play high school basketball. Lon Sprayberry of Porterville, ha ils from Oregon and recently set a school scoring record of 49 points in one game. * * * Transfer sturients are makinit their mark In ba1ketball play for rival junior colleges. San ~laleo College lost 11\•o · members of its team this season by transfer and both are leading scorers for their cu rrent junior college teams. Al Winfield, who played basketball and high jumped for CS~t prior tn entering the Sl'rvlce, 111 lc·adlng tbe Desert Con· fl'rence In ,coring at CoUege or lbt Dtsl'rt Yi'ith a 34.0 average. Gua rd Dave • Jefferson h!S been scoring at a 15.0 clip since jolning Foothill ond made bl1 debut against his forn1er Sao Mateo leam· motes. Freddie Hicks. an AU-Eastern Con· ferenct center for Chaffey several years • HOWARD HANDY HOWARD HAN DY back, can'! dent the potent Compton College starting five . He Is the sixth man oo the undefeHted (19-0) Tartar qulntet. * * * Angel questionnaire ... Jay Johnstone hit 10 hon1e runs in 1969. How many of l hem \I ere gan1e-winning blasts~ The Angel outfielder had four homers that v.·on games including one in the ninth inning and another one v.•as a grand slam. fie drove in nine runs with the four game \\'inning blasts. Off to a poor start, Johnstone came on strong at season's end lo finish with a .270 average. On June 28 he was hitting .205. From th(lt point to the end of the season he hit at a .316 clip. Buy3at Regular Price ••• GOODYEAR "POWER·CUSHION° POLYESTER CORD TIRES • l·T lriple·tP.mperecl polye1ter cord • z durable plle• nr 1he cord Goodyear dev1\oped 1pecific1!1y for rlre1, •. double layer of 1tron11 pHe1 for cuahioned, no·thu~p rid e •White 1trlp11 or black 1idew•ll 111ckw1U Tubtln' l•t•• 1.)5 1 ll 1.15 t ll a.2s 111 7.7S•l5 l \5 (\50f l .2S l lS l.~5xl5 I.as l IS t.15115 JttK!I!' ,r1,, l1;ll $11.IS $l1.J5 $JI.JS IJ1.J5 IJ4,J5 . $JI.IS 142.10 $<14.55 •e1K!1r Ytu 'U h lc1 !tr r1unh Tire J Tln1 ,,,, 5 11.15 ftuMh 1!r1 frte • 11.t»i fturtll Tire f111 $1GJ.GS flUrl~ Tl,.'"' ' t4.0$ rD•l'C~ f lfl ffl! 110J.ll' fturt~ Tit•'"' 1111.IS f1~rth Tlr1 rttt $lll.1D l•arl~ Tift r1t1 1133.IS ft~ttk Tlrr frtl S1i1 End1 Saturday Night an Thsse Famous Tirss ,I~' f1d. ll. t11 ••r tlr1 en I Tlrl\, NI Trade N••••• $1.81 $1.97 $2.17 12,()( $2.?J 12•1 $2,62 $3.0fl AUTO ~ERVICE OFFER -l LOW PRICES --Take your car where COMPACT STANDARD DELUXE CARS CARS HEAVY CARS m FR~e;;,.~sir;o $950· $1050· 1250· REALIGNMENT / •Price tor any U.S. auto plvi pw11. "Od $2 IOJ torsion bars. • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Edison's woes with getttr.g final ap- proval on ilS new gymna:;ium delayed the Jssue and now a contractor's inability to supply the stands with the required roller• bu forced Edison to move to Hun. Ungton again. Afler Laguna got up lo 46·29, El Modena carried a S..O run Into the fourth quarter and bad lls biggest margin of the contest at~ with less than six minutes remaining. lllO l"•-1 l(rumptoo!r ICdM) 1:41.J f . S!Cf\htlert'I ,.. ICdMl l:f.I 1 J, Evins IHll l :U .J. Tipoff Is set for 8 o'clock. Jl'1 not all bad news for Edison, however, as the 2-3 Chargers have won both of their games at Huntington Beach. Corona del M11r and U>ara lead the loop with $-1 mark'S while Colla Meu 111 half pme back at 4·1. ' The Vanguards coasled home from there, as both coaches cleared their benches and seldom.used reserves got a golden opportunity for live unabashed minutes ol OOsketball. Hottest man In the gym was Et ?o.1odena's 6-2, all-league guard candiriale t-.1ark Johnson, who canned 29 points ;ind hit 12 or 20 from the neld. The only other player in double figures 511 Fr,..._I, hr"'rd !CdM) H.t t , t-ill!m1n CCdMI 2l.I J. l l•t ll COtMI D.•. 200 ll'lcllv•ch11I Medl<tv-1, 1Crumllh0!1 tCdMI 2:1f a J. Ew1ns (1"1(1) 1,1t.J l. N~ll !CclMI 1!11 4. 100 l"IY-t. llt•~•d (C4M) K .1 t E~111$ 0~8 1 K 1 l ~''"""!•m icaM l 51.' 11)(1 Fret-I. fll~cll !CdMI 4' 1 1. Mt(ltnnlllQl'MlY (M••ln1] JI.• 3. H~n~l"ll•O.. !Wm1 Jl.1. 100 ll•cll-1, Ml1lo1..-. (CM! Ml • 1. L, a11111rf'\1n CE>tl 1 llO.l) l!t''"°" !COM! 1:01 I. t00 l<•ff-1. lt•vrn-li ((CIM) J:" 6 l. Nt..Cllf'iD !(dM\ 4·0.1 J Mlrt-~ !SCI • 11.1. 11)(1 B•"°tl-1 ~oor>101r {CM) l:Ol i l. Hlll"lt n ((OM) 1 Ill.I ). Wtlll1m• {M1d""I 1 Of I, ClO Frtt l tlt y-! lO•fW)I f t! I''' (fltr""td, ST-1""1· lt•11"'ll""''· 1111c~\ J 116 . San C110m41n11 J Xl.J I. CMll Mww J:JI J SERVING ALL SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. 1596 NEWPO RT BLVD. Ph . 548-9383 COSTA MESA YOUNG & LANE TIRE CO. 482 OCEAN AVENUE LAGUNA BEACH I 'I • • rl I I ·------·---- Area Prep Swim Teams OAJLV moT ~ Unpredictable Rangers · Hand Foe First Def ea• Fare Well in Moore Meet Newport Harbor tnd Coe:ta Mesa retum to Lona Beach Poly Friday nl&ht at 7:80 for the Moore Leatut lnvltaUonal 1wlm meet finall ancJ Ealln- cla does likewise at Long Beach \Vllaon In the other hall of the Moore League affair. Corona del Mar, however, wW 1tay home Friday after irrlvin1 at Poly Tuelday for the prellma unlnvli.d. The S.a Klnao. who had hoped to add the Moore League InvtttUonal to their Impressive strlng of credits, went thtough th~lr paces but without official result!. Corona del Mar wu dropped from the recular li;t or entries afttr last year's CIF penaJtles barred tbtm f r o m In· vllatlonah. Poly brought In a new coach Who toot a loot at the list or lalt year's entrle1, 1cbeduled them and brou1ht in a couple more teama. Corona, however, w a 1 overlooked and the Sea Kln11 failed. to doublecheck with P~ ly officials. Despite the loss of CoNina, Orange COUt area te&ml fared well in the prellms with Coat.a Mesa'• Ron Mislolek leading the way in varsity com,etltlon with a be1t time of H.O in the 100 backstroke. Kevin Albe of Newport Harbor took a fir1t in the Bee 100 butterfly with a 1 :00:2 ti m- ine and Costa Mesa's Neil Rlchev clocked a 1: 10.6 in the Bet 100 breutstroke. Ellaocla~ MUton Kawabe took a fltrl In the Beo JOO back at Wllloo with a 1:00.2. Me11'1 Steve Sponagle wa1 1 double winner In Cee action, copping the 50 breast In 31.5 and th< 100 lncllvldual medley In l:Ol.O. Mite J$ Carpenter won the llO back In !0.1. And. the Mesa Cee 200 medley team of Carpenter, Mike Yarwood. 0ou1 Woulff and Erle Lund hod the belt mark -a~·58 !. *i• •I WllMl!1 •tt"' ~ ,....,lu, 11.tJtir -I, L11l1wood t. ~ :'1:~.r'IMli"' .lr<dt• s:w1rre11. ...... -1 Mtrlllr\clu (W1r'9!\/ >. Ar91 l~llr!ljt J. I. LIM IWon1tr11 '· l 1 ,.,... fAtt: .. •l f. K....,• (WllMfll '· Mlfltr (Wlrrtft . Tln'lli 1:12.4 w:.::.-(A~1'a.u:r""J1 1"~9!'gmj' 12i (Wll;ofl) L :1lklm Gltlldtr• J, DIYllJ&ll (41\111""'1 '· 0 Ir I 1 n (,llrcadl1), Tl['!•: 1:2. ' 20t 1""'1Y141111 M .. 111.,. -• ~Id"" IW!l,Oft! 1. G r 1 I II ILilttweOO"I ,, AlldtcrMn IWlllonl •. """ .IErtlllld•I J. ...,.n, {Wll<e11I l . I HdiU ILMewood). 11m1: ?;GL, -l!IO Fl'f -1. Art!! ! Nflllml 7. Hiii fllll1woodl '· Mttin11 (.a.n..dl1I •. l 111t IW~ltrnl s, C:1!1""11,l'I (W1rttlll •• Rot~ (An1lol 11!1. t1mt: 5S.A HIO ,., .. - 1. K""'" {,ll~•fltlml 7. Wo6dllde (Arca.Ht) 1. D •GI 11 1 Basketball Standings ,l,JWAY LJAGU• WL'l''A S111lll'1' Hllll 1-1 H1W1 .-~n"'°" '"' Co••• SI.I-'•rk ·-· Sl•l lllll 615J1)fl J 1 117 4'2 5206 451 • J •U .u.s l • A14 JI~ IS•lJOf IJ"14lt 1 ' .o2 4tl TMMn'• ·-lb Svllll'f Hill• JS. IWfll '•rk 61 LI Hlbl'I t7, l.ow911 14 Tl'9Y )'t, ,11llttflll !t Kenllldy 14, ""',,Ill 1' !OOUbll gv•- llmtl """'" ·-KMntdY 11 S\.lrl"I' Hllll 111'1'\I l"lrk If ,..,111111 LI HltM'I 11 1'11lllif'Mn tret 11 LOw1H CttllTVllW ~..,,, •. Hfflt!Cfl 10~11 s. ri.".iltOll tAll~ll'll) '· N 1 um 1 11,, tlttwoodl. tlm11 S1.S ~1 0:.h~~ll -r'1h~1r.~r 1r1~!.~i ~~ 4. GJ1t Mllllk11Jl J, IC.int 0 I. Ntltti ,_ I 1111"*>· ' .• ,. ,~ -I \..1-'lbrd. jAneNilml ~rc=l'"'l~ 11:!1P1. ~M1"11t.c1t~!~ ' II"'• !Wit.if •.Ml!Mr <W1r'9!\ _ IPn!I ):S<Y 100 1~111 -1. Or~ !l.tllf~l ~ 'r'"":'f:t~'*"l~!.h,,. ·~ 1ft~J tMi115i.~» " '•Idle <otti.ltr.V: im.: l :04.1 .. ...... lttllt -l. Wlloon Ind ......,m L • .._..,, , .. .,,_ '· G,.,.,, 6 1!1lMC11 (Mc:Kll\ley, lertiltY, KIM. Z"'°"'I}, Tlmt: J!tf.5 ... ~L"'1~"~' r1 11r Aa;'·,~~rc.~ • r...JLOYI r, JOfW W9lltr. II:. .,,.~II , Timi! l : . • ~~ -I, l!t\'11r (Wlloonl T. :1111 !Alllftelrii) J. 0 l 'f f I CM.I llk111 '· ~utti11 IG!enckw1J 5. K ..... abl E1l•M;I ) Ind Jalln$0n CW1" '91\l. Tim.: l1U. Jll FrM -I. '""~ 1wn..,.,, 2 "', rttll CWl,.QO'l) 11111 S1undet'I (EJll.,:. l 'I '· Slrvblt-ILH.twoodl s. How1rd M lllktfl) 6. 1"11111111' {Arcldl1). TIMt: '·' 1,100 ll'ICllvklu•I MtdleY -l. Wlllon leftdorll T. ''*'~•rd 1:WllW111) l ~•ld•Y !Glu~·-~-~-4, ltou Arcad111 J. lw-,,""> TIL~,. l '· 01 o r1ti sin . 'lmt, .01.4 100 FIY -), l'ltJIHfl (llktWllOCI/ > lurrLtt (Gle£.dttr•I J, I! t y 11 o d i a~1fll 4., r.' (Af~Hl1l J. W1tler :~:one• · ••• •rr•nl. Tlmt: 100 F!'Jt' -I. Wt!IOll fOllfldor11 > DE1¥l1 IMlll1k1t1) 3. Mllldl (Arc1dl1 ,; Ytrllh !Lllcr.1.1 J. WtktlY coie ... ocr1) "-"lldlrl 9llfld1J TI111t· S3 o sJ?1111KljM'jj~fn1 •••~ C\'11l.~i11 0 ~ ~Uk~) l . Jallfl10tl IW1rrtt1) ! urrler (QtellClor•) •· Gnt11t IWU11111 : lmt: l:ot.2 2.1'~:. -nJi ":t*T"rJ~"'r&1m1 ft'.!t ... t, L1mti Cl J, lttr119'T: ti,;',_ 1\ .. S 1011 (Mllllklt1). '!r~,!~:i1-I H1nley (Llkrwoodl 1. C~~'-"'111 ~. "•!'1111 (E,t111el1) fid ittrd A1111!tll'll 5 Jdlt11tofl \ioV, •I'· 111111o ru'il11), Time: i6Q Fr .. tll•l•Y -1, WlllOll 2. Oltn· OCrl 2. ArCHll• 4. 1.,llchllod I. •it1"' c11,,.rn:t1r.r. Liii•~ a.u,.,.. KIW,bel 6. nnt.t1. Tlmt:6.»-1 100 ftotc!MY lltlr. -1 L1k..,..ood 7. E111nt1• cGr•mi Hdv1.b"''· Fr111r1 3. WIKoll L M I k1• S. ultndor1. Timt; 1 :Sl.I 100 Fl'H -.1;. ,-ryef111d ILllllWOlldl T, Lamb (w1ltClfll l. L•llllbroolt (.1.11.i..1mJ • l(r~ (\.fklWOOdl S. ~•li.tod lf1l1 U' 6. MHle1n {.l~~· ~mf.' ~~!,, (Wiison) 2. Sfftt111 (Wlloonl l C:l1t11: (LH.IWl:!Odl •·._ • .f!Y.tr<lrd1 l'ii•lldcl••I s. IJll!' \.'imt:'\""J '· ltPlliM IW•rr1nl. 11"0::,J·1~du1I Mtdlt't' -I. ~fwltd& (Wllao%!' a.rllt fl IWllMlll~~lebs ·~ (Et!• I 4, Clt111 (llk '"" Wtll ( t 1!111n) I. RllW {i1t-11). t11'1111 h o,J.O . IWl:!Odl 2 a."""~1l\i.lf -1(L~=) l\..r II WI~ CMUllkt~ • D"11 IEsllllCl•I 5, Fta1w ~11~111 6. C1riTIOll• tGMl'l- fllt{A'· FM·:~ ·r. 11."91 ~= '· t.11t1ll ( 1 I J. Kl'tlll Liii" =" ~I~"°* Alllllttml s.. 1inl' ~!":\ 6 .. HWll•n {All M ml. • l ;(lii -1. Gr'"' 1E1l..-.cl~l 2. I"'*" (Llllo;ewDOdl l. Wtbi'*' ~tic1~1 4 Vl\!llul fWlllon) J. 811•1! llkl fl) •. •tvfll'llM (Mf1111cll'I). ...... ,., 50 i...tlt -1. Ell'I'•'* (Wl'-l \ r(~=oodl (i.1•,:"J'-1l•~cl•) S 'T~~ !Arudll) 6. Wirt (~11111111). ~lmt. i;;., llreti Rt!•• -1. Wll"n 2. l.lkl'MIOlll '· l!rl••'"::t, 101'11~. q''"'· Slnlil"llfOOCI W•Mfff '· AMflllM I. WI'"" ._·0 ,.., .. ,,.., 1:n.1 ....... Q111lll1WI It l"ttrr: "'""' 2'0 frte -I. Nl'#!Ofl ilHI 115".G 2. llud"lll (Iii! 1 :51.S J. Ml&llllk !C:MJ l :J1.1 L OVtf (tlownt¥) l :Jf.J 5, M1rl'"1 !OOWMYl 1: ... 7 6. Lv11..et11 1,.01YI 2:02.7. I••> t>, , 511 frM -1. "°"er · · 11.Hklt IJll'dlll) J:l,J 1. Dl'lllt !~) 11.t I, Clrn' !SHI Jl,t S. Alktn t.-Ol'fl 21.5 •• LOIVR l"•IYI 11.1. • '''' 2N Inda m.-:111'1' -1. 11..n'l'IO • 7:10.t 2. Chlnl IKti>nldvl 1:11.1 S . C1rl1011 (IHI 2111.2 I. l tvntr iKln· t1tdYl ,,,J.S s. McCven (IHI t :l6.t •· Mor•IH cJJull) 2121l.S. > H '' l(ICI fly-1. ~ (IHI SJ.f , 1 ICM) l tOl.S J. K1rwon CCMI 1:11.0 4. Tll0900d !0-.l 1101.l S. V1119ble !fltl 1:04,7 .. Jlllfd {SHI l;Ol.J. 100 fret -t. l'othr (!:Ill -"·• 2. lltdlct fJort1111) n.• J. Cir_., (SHI 17.9 ' DVrt IDIWlllYl n.e s. M•rhfll ib-vl U.I .. LUlt'llU (Po!Yl n .•. 100 bid: -I. M11l~ltk (C:Ml 5'.G 7. llDldl (OoWnl\'l 1 :01.0 ,, C:tlwfflrtl 1$Hl 1!01.3 I. Nlk~lhllrol (llilll l1M l S. Hullkitn (Oowf>IY) I :M.9 C:lll'tl !SHI 1 :05,f. ~ , fQO trH -I . llllillf111f (IHI •:111 .... Cll1t111 !Ktnrllllvl •:M.l :I. Albfl l"ol'fl 4:H.3 4. Hill ((Ml 1:27.t S. Atltn (O"""'n~) 4:,7.2 I. KLt1YGn !C:Ml 4:71.0. lOCI ~rNll -I. llr>1nrr /KennMYl 1:0S,S 7. lll'l'llOldt !Eltl l :OJ.I J. SPon11le !CMl 1;1111 O 4, C:ttllOll CSH! 1:8'.J 5. J, W111'9 tNHI 1111 .. I. MOAlll 1Fu11l 1:11.0. ·-200 mt<llit'I' ,..11v -1. Downtv l :Jl ,1 7. NIWPOtl Harbor llCl!ntldtr, lmlltl, A•h, F1r1111r) l:Sl.6 !. Coil1 Mt11 flitnnOfl. lllcf!~y, W1ld1tlcl!, MCAAfMY }1:5'.0 I, !11mi¥ Hlll• 1:5',0 $. '"61¥ l:H.J ll. Arlttl1 l :Sf.J. 200 ftM -1. Putm~n (Jorlilanl l :Sl .S Im~ rec:tnll 1. PPlllP!li {D!o-¥1 1:5$.1 ). IMll'tif>i fOowMtl 1:57.1 •. Wf!etltt (!HI 1:11111 5. H~""y ISHJ 2:01.I t. Ft,.,....r (NH) 2:0S.I .. ~ fre1 -1. Horne CJ""'!la,,J '1 ~ fmetl tKD!"dl 2, Asf!I (NH) 2A.0 3. F1klm1n !PglVI ,,,1 I. Tt~ukl {~} ''·' S, 11111 (SH) 2•.• •. Htllford fK..-ch'I 1S.•. lDCI lrldo midi.,. -I. Miki !Po!vl 1:M.f 2. D""'\Wtl'lfl !Ktnnf'd~! 1:01.6 J. ttfflf llll'Cllnl 11ot.l •· Mllch•ll (SHl l:ot.f 5. Smllfl (ltH) l:N.5 6. khw•r'll !SHI 1 :oe.o. 100 fll" -1, AsPll 000 l :flCl.T ?. W1ldetlch (CMI 1 :flCl.I 3. Clwclln (.l.rtttl1l 1:01.7 •· Otrt11 1,-unl l :M.t 9. NMll !NHl l :Ool.I ll. Ml'flllm (IH) lJCl.t. 1111 frM -1. Horite IJ0'1111111 Jl.J 2. ~ (l(~J $!.l 3, "''"''" 1"•1¥1 5'.t A, McA'*"" {CMI SJ.J S, Tr1111kl (Oowt!eWI SA.I 6, l1H CIHl u•. 1'0 Midi -1. $c:Plwlrll (SHI l1ot.t 2. Gonlf~ !Arhlltl 1102.• l. Miki lll'OIYI l •8'.D4. lttld IJorct111I l :M.! J . ..,.,.., IN1'4l 1!07,I I . Cllrlr.ton tNM) l: ... J ():If.I "'rwlmtffl. 4IO t'l'M -I, l>utr:'litn fJorffnl •:•.1 fmlff rtew'll) t. ""lllllf (~I •:H,$ ,, Wllttltr (!Hl •:oe.t •. H1r¥tY !SHI 4:0l.I J. ll1tn11001 IC:MI l ilt.I 6, Farrer fNHI •:T0.0, 100 brl!IJI -1. ltlchn !C:M) 1:10.6 1. Moore l!Hl 1:11.0 J. Tie br>lwffll ~mu~ CNHI 11\d M!lllllT'I !Artnl•I 1:11.• S. 11-IKlflfll'dV} 1:11.0 6, llrldt CDc"'11tYI t:n .t a !T'M NI•• -I. Jonl•n J:JSA 2. Cotti MQI fWtldtllch, ~. Wtlttr.. ler11ic1nJ 3:41.e 1. SUl'lnv Hllt'I 1:45.1 6. D9wMY 111'.5 l Ntw-1 H1l'tlol' !V1..,bltr;., C:1tt1111.1.. Yo1111i, N""") •:~.J .. Plll\I' 4:13.•. , .. 700 l'Mdlty •Ill' -l. Co111 MHI SOFT SILL SAM ly Marvin My•l'I ~ r0/T11 / ]J)) ~ I I ~ 1~l\,.J 1 -"'.:.:t tfl:. /II; ' 1 !.''1 OONNf. l)J.OW MY !:NT IR c Yl:AR-~t> BONIJS IN -lltl1f "" fJKICK WAY TO 11\f S!IOE LACE'S?' cc.,._,.,, v1,..,.oo111, Luna, w1111tn I :SI.I T. NIWPl<"I H••Dor IOtllU111, 1111• 1119t. W•ll. Lllldr6flll 7:00.J :a. •unnt Hlll1 1:01.l 4, OowntY 2:02.J. J. Joto:l•n 2:11.J' .. ti ... 2:0t.•. HO I•• -I. f>11rc1 !1"11111 J:00,1 1. ,,,_, (NH) 2:04,9 3. "'-H 100-1 1"6.4 •-W11111t ICM! 21111 S. Mortorl ($H) 2:11.J '· ll.Q1et1 tlH) 2:15.6. JI) "" -1, .Nl~lfl to-n.¥1 it.• t. Cl•IY (SM) 21.S l. Wltblffl (0owntYl U.1 •· lltt>W (Full} 16.f S. l1tcf!lller (NN) 26.6 6. l1ntl'f (Jord1t1l 21.1. 100 l111k1 mtdlftv -I. SoaMtlt IC.Ml 1:06.0 1. Vlrwood ICMI 1:16.9, J. w1111 (SHI l :ot.t I. l lHl11ts CNHI l :tt.J J. Lunt (Jord1nl 1:10.I " Vl111kltr ( Dawrlit\l I l : I f .1. • ffy !IY -1. Will INHI :11.J t. co1~ 1$11) t ,t 5 J. Wtlllor11 !Dowtin'! JO.O '· l,.INln:ilh INN) JO.I 5. JOlllY U>owntYI 3G.J I. Lv D fCMI 31.1 . 100 ffff -l . NI~"" !DOWlll'l'I U .J 1. P1atce tFulll JJ,, 3. F1"fltr tNHI M.J A, Cll'IY /IHI 1'.1 J. P1w1H !Oltwnt~I ,.,0 I, WtH INHI $t.1. .II btck -1. t1•11tnh" !tMI :W.1 1. o·en111u !NHI :io.t J. McO-ld (0-ntYJ Jl.O 4, Ow-IF11lll Jl,, S. Wtlblrn f0owney) 32.• I. Q11lnn (NHJ » '· 50 brtlll -1, SPOM91e !CMI 31 .J 1. Ylrwooil (CM} ;12.0 J. W•Pll llHJ l ) J '· Clh (SHI lJ.• J. lthll'ol 0 1oty) l4.6 '· Ml'fl {Jtr0111) s.i.1. 20G ffff l'lllY -1, M-1 H1rtlor (0'1'11teu. Llndratll, Flrll'ltr. ll•l- Ch1lllrl l :Q,t t. OOwnll' 1 ;14.~ J_ Cost1 M''' f(l'lltnltr. w~111m11re, Lund, Wuolf11 1;.U.O •. JOl'd•n 1:50.l s. S1mnv HUii 1:i1.0 •. Pol'f 1:02.S. PARDON MY •.... Coa1t Rangers player Steve Johnston (in white) takes a mean hip from a Dinubia playe r while trying to steal tt\e ball during Sunday soccer action. The up and down Rongers n1anaged to win, 4--0. AMBASSADIJ.t nsB; • 4-PLY NYLON COID • tlJllUIS • llMloWIAP .,,CllW:.u. ,t:1 '""'' AIOUND 1VIJl: ua. i~x • TllAO U0.11 1.11 112 7~1• 7.71o14 7.7Soll e.1J.-1• a.u.1 11.11 $14 $11 -::tl!...-..... $11 • .... 1111.41) ALIGNMENT LUBRICATION AND Oil CHANGE '~' ,, ~llllNllf - • AW"Candlt1...s c..,_ n.oG-.. I. Lotlri<-11<1 d1..a. 2.. Cblue..U!U1wt•Hf.94,.m L SrieulatA~,$11 .... la,\ ...... " Cllltck•l..,illf s. r-... rttrin._tlta •. R...i1 .. ••T \2 "" •• ,"° .... .. 18.95 fLASHllliHT COMBO . . ""'""'"' ANTI FIWE lo COOLANT aac •~.?.. ... -0011 36MON1 • FULL 4°PLY NYLON CORD BODY • TUllLESS • 12/32'' TREAD DEPTH WITH A TOUGH TREAD COMPOUND l l.l.tl.WALI, tllll llil 1111 Those unpredJctable COll!ll Ranaers bolAlCed back from two straight IOCCer deleats to lash previously u n b e a t e n Dlnubi~. 4-0, Sunday at Newport Beach's Mariners Park. The Rangers erupted for all their goals In the final half to complete a swt-ep of Pacific League acUon. Jn t h e }lrellminary, Ranger reserves slammed Dinubia subs. 3-0 . with John Barnes. Andre Cousin and Dave Morley scor· mg. Coac h Brion McCaughey's major division forces brQke their scoreless deadlock seven minutes into the last half when Glen James made his fi rst of t1vo scoring assists, passing to Brian Gallagher, "'ho drilled it in Crom two yards . Five minutes later it was James to Steve Johnston and he connected from three yards. Gallagher added anolher from %0 yard.a and ~ Reuther wound up the oflliile \\'ilh a heolJ shot. .'!J"~ This Sunday the Rarl:i.s are at Fullerton for a pai{Ji battles, the first at 12:JO;~ feJlure match two houn f~. ., ' UCI Frosh Wu~ • UCI l'•OSH '"' ~:. " • •f'T•• Hinson • • ,,.,n .. , " , ~ e11ck " ' F•wlPI' ' , $mllll , ' . , """' ' • '" Murr1¥ ' ' '.' tot11S ,, " ""' . LOYOl.A 1111.0IN C"I • .. " " ,.,, ClftY!O" ' ' • , Stlll<blrl " " . " .,,,. ' • ' ' rt111a" • , ' , HaMel\ " ' , . "'""' • , . " H•Ml!IOll , ' ' ' t g1111 lol n ,, to Hiliii"m1: LoY•I• --.u;-uc1 Froifi 0 .. , ... tJ lt.ckw911, ,,,, ....... l'fot• 1.11 F1d. •••I E1ci11 T11 ' • '' . ' . '. ,·. W~~.~~:~·INr4 49 i .~:,o,~~ AL.AIM ~ l••t•l .. tt .. ...... 11 .... Nw minialUre design perm it• 1imple in~t.a.llatioit in •IQ' vehicle ewn wheo epac. i••la premium. f'ul ly 1ut.on1&tit wlLh.elednlaic ebannelchanll'.e , All tranlristor 10lid 1th1le u"ili Sp_eak~ E1tra. • • ., . •' •• ., . ' THESE SPECIALS GOOD AT THESE LOCATIONS ONLY • ·l' W!STMINSTElt 15440 ·-· llwl. et Mcfaddto 89Z·ZOll BUENA PARK sns Uocolo Avo. at Yal•r Ylew 826-5800 , BUENA PARK 5301 leo<h llYd. at L•ltwleltr 523-3040 COSTA MESA l200 -ltd. at Wlboo s4a.zoe2 ,, SANTA ANA ~·. 1400 Uhlt« ....... 546·7132 ' ' ' j • • I I ' ) I < • l I l • D~LY 'ILDT WrdMMlay, January, 28, 1970 LATE SHOW TOHIGHT -ALL THE ... T111!5 Sii aOTH PIATURIS AS U.TE AS 10:• PM. -·-· ·-· !M5-lllJ ..... , ,. ..... "" c...,. "EASY lllOElt" 1111 "COLL ISfON COURSE..,,. P•11I NtWIMll e All (tit• WW 1•1U'JCH CASStOV & THE: iUNOAHCI IUO"' tMI "CHE" (Ml Pt!tr Uill--All CtMlr "VIVA JrAA.)C" (GI Pl11t ''THE WAY WEST" "F,t,HNl Hll.L" 00 Colfr "DE SADE" Ill! Coi.r Ht .,, .,,.., 11 Hmltted 110e:Mnl 1.,r1--.Cllnl Etl'-d "WHERE EAGLES DAiii" (Ml C.ltr "111 RIFLES" CM) coi.r Ewe. Show Stam 7 p.M. CONTINUOUS SHOW SAT. AND SUN. FROM 2 P.M. ...... .. .... .... f ecltnicolor-Pana,H' -- ALSO THIS NEW COMEDY DAVID NIVEN JU.N PAUL IELMONDO Ell WALLACH IOURVIL "THE BRAIN" WID., THURS .• FRI .. MON,, TUES-"IAnLE" at 1:45 NATt()NAl,.CENl:RAL C~it.1'10"1 I BOX OFFICE OPENS FCO$ .. AM•-SOUTll COAST Week Days, 6,45 ox PLAZA TMSATiiC s.t. and Sur)., 5:00 ltl P,.p f~7 at t.rutol. ~711 NOW PLAYING No One Under 18 Admitted He made evil an art ... From the counlly lhal gave you, •1 A WOMAN," "INGA" and "I AM CURIOUS (m.lOWJ .. EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING SHOW TIMES 7,00 & 9,30 MATINEE SUN. 2 "THE SECRET OF SANTA VITIORIA" -ANTHONY QUINN VTRNA HARDY SERGIO LI SI . KRUGER' FRANCHI !~ANNA MAGNANI.-] ___ _.....,_ .............. __ _.... __ ., ----------..... _ ... _ .. _, _ _ .. __, __ .,._ .. _.., •• _. PANAVISIOH'TECHNICOlOA' $ I ............ '°'"'""" ...... I 'Ml ~ ftr MATUJI( ....._., .,,~..._. oo ,,..n., ..... ,, °"'.;: . -........ ----Unitld Arhll• Theater Notes ' ' . 3 Generation Gap Comed~es Ope11: PERFORME~S TURN TO DIRECTING Randy Kffne, Jo Scott in Debuts. WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT "Toylor Olld ... tty at tti.Jr best" -LA. Time1 -ao-11tlc. Collleify -* C!M"!.111 l4t f!t:ii..:s EUZabeth Wanen TayJor • Beatty ..,. 'll'Elle Olllllly Gailllllle Ea 10Wlll 1!!1 . !llOll~t\llt-" 5t11dlo Fear.no Pre•low, Friday, l:JO -UDO ONLT ORANGE DRIVE.IN e LIDO THEATRE, Newport NOW-2 Of THE SEASON'S TOI" FUN HITS ON THE SAME PlOGUM- BOTH IN COLORll SHIRLEY r..1acLAINE: · ,. JOHN McMARTIN .. 11 .. l FiiXSOUTH COAST ONU~ PLAZA THEATRE CD~l'OR.llllllt s~n Die1.o Freeway il B1istoC • 546-2711 MATINEES ONLY AT )2,30 and 2,30 SAT. f EB. ht MON. JAN. 31st SUN. Feb. 2nd ~!.'·.(~-- ' '!'ha most suspenseful fairy tale adumturc: of )IOUP lffdim• ! . (' . ... . ;• ' . , ALL SEATS 7Sc EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY PREMIERE SHOWING Dice was his vice. Men hers. , ' .. By T0~1 11TUS 01 lflt Dall'I' Piiiot ll:lf They're beading them of(. at the generation gap around Orange County playhouses thls week . Three openings dot the coon· ty 's CQmmunily theater calen· dar and all three may be lumped under the heading ot generallon g a p comedies, plays which-contrast the views of young people and the establishment. Firsl to arrive will be the popular "Generation," in its third county staging, debuting Thursday at the San Clemente Community Theater. SharMg opening'. night honors Friday will be "The Impossible Years" at the Huntington Beach Playhouse and the Weslminsle r Comm u11i lY Theater·s product iOn of "lnvitalion to a March." In the latter two cases, the directors of each are well known on the bright side or the footlights and are making their initial crossover to the director's chair. Randy Keene is staging the Huntington Beach comedy while Jo Scott handles t Ile Westminster reins. At San Clemente the reverse is true. Tony Brandt, a multi- credited director, is 5lepplng into the leading role of his pro- duction of "Generation" alt.er failing to find an suitable ac- tor for the part. Joining Brandt in the com- edy of .an up tight father trying to talk his daughter out of do-it-yourself childbirth are Cathy Fifer and Ralph Appell as the young couple with modern ideas. Clark Farrell plays the wisecracking doctor for the second time, wh11e Eugene ~ppleget and Chuck Schicker complete t cast. "Geoeration" pla s Thurs- day through Sat day for three weekend,$ e Cabrillo Playhouse, 202 A v e n i d a Cabrillo, San C e m e n t e . Tickets can be reserved by calling 49!4465. -{:{ A Successful psychiatrist and expert on teenage philosophy who is hard press- ed to control his own leen daughters is lhe comedic premise for "The l~sible Yeirs.fL the tatest offering from the }luntington Beach Playhouse. ' Pliifing the harried father is Stan Bell. with Miriam Kaiser cast as his wife, The young daughters will be played by real-life sisters Valorie and Boonie l!arries. Rounding out the Huntington Beach cast are Pat Mullins, t-.larly Fuchs, Steve Uhler, John Phillips, Don Naranjo, Doug Gracey, Kathy Sheldon, Dan ' Kaiser and brothers Mike ,.1111 "ONCI UPON A TIME IN THE WEST" w·,111 Ht...., P'tndt COHTINUOUS SUMOAY -l:JI ~rtJlltf'fll.5 ]!£111zabe¢11l Taylor Warren Beatty' 01 li!ID' SIE\HSFREO KM MAR P- 'lt'he Only Galimle 1n-n.wn .. ,...." 'U f)l'flrl -~ .. tfN ''OOIS ~"' lbll'. (lllJl'kiM. ~ • v ...... ~llllil'JWI~ 01.{l .. fl ll.Ol !ll-r-'"~~--· £,,do NfWPOat lfACH -<>I th• '"'"""'10 th" lobulo .. 1 lido hi• 01:1:J·$)S0 "THE ONLY GAME IN TOWN" SHOWN DAii Y FROM 7,00 P.M, CONTINlJOUI SHOW IUNOAY FROM 2 P.M. CO·HIT Ol'l:ANGE ONLY ---PACIFIC'S----, ORANGE DRIVE-IN S1nt1 An1 Frwy. ,t Chapman 547~1 I "THE ONl Y GAME IN TOWN" ~how~ A.1 8·30 -Fr! . .&. l•I. l t:lO .&. 1l:)O "BANDOLERO" Sl\own It 1:30 A 10:10 Lnl CttftDll!f SPIO .. '"" w.-1.~11 111>1 ,,,~,., .. , and Steve Crowley. B 11 1 Susman is producing with Grace Shaw~ as s t a g c manager. Five weekends o( production are plann@ for ''The lmpossl· hie Years.'' Fridays and Saturda ys through Feb. 28 at the playhouse, 2110 Main St., 11untlngton Beach. Rese rvil- tions are being accepted al ~I. * An earlier look generation problem is being taken at Westminster with Arthur Laurents' tG-year~ld comedy •·invitation to a ltlarch," which reunites a woman and her teenaged son with her now married former lover. Yvonne Tardy plays the leading role of the uninhibited and unwed mom, with Bill Cullen as her young.-son and Robin Smith as the girl he pursues. Ray Scott is cast as the old "friend" while Gene va Kollar plays his shrewish wife . Completing the Westminster cast are Betty Gordon, Kl"ll FalSetto and 10-year~ld Chip Williams. The play is being co- directed by Boyce Gitzen, with _Roger McBride and Gene Tardy handling the technical I v.·ork. "Invitation to a March" will I be presented at Finley School. Edv.·ards and Trask Avenues. for three weekends on Friday I and Saturday evenings.The reservation nwnber is 897- 116-i. Audience response to South Coast Repertory's comedy "Joe Egg" has prompted the company to extend the play another two week.s-through Feb. 7-at the Third Step Theater in Costa Mesa. Peter Chur,eh stars as the 1 fathe,r of a retarded child, with ·Eileen Fishbach as his 'wife and young Dierdre Emmes taking the role of i!t- tle Joe. tttichael and •roni Douglass and Pat Brown com· plete the SCR cast. David Emmcs cjirects the: British comedy which plays Thursday through Sunday at the SCR theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa. Tickets may be ordered by calling the box office at 646-1363. * ., A Smile is-a Frown Tutned Upside Down," the Open End, Theater's musical revue, con- tinues Friday through Sunday (with a 7:30 p.m. curtain OJI Sunday nights) at the Newport Beach 'theii.ter. Thor Nielsen directs the pro- duction , besed on Jules Feiffer cartoon sketches, \Yith Warren 1 Deacon supplying original lyrics (or the musical numbers. Saundra MaUhews- Deacon, Joe Del Rosso. Jayne Hamil and Robert Vaught are featured cast members. The show is being staged at JAMES BOND "007" "ON HER MAJESTY'S SECRET SERVICE" CHARLTON HESTON "NUMBER ONE" To11iglit st I & 10 Matl11n5 Sot. & 51111. ho111 1 p .111. THE REIVER: il •SCOUNDREL, .n OPERATOR •nd • BRAWLER·••• 2001 DJpamo6ysw/ ON GlA?\"T CINERAMA SCREEN !'olETROCOLOR the Open End, 2815 Villa \Vay, Newport Beach. Rei;ervatlon.'i mjily be obtained by callirij; 67f>.1120. * Another holdo\'er has been announced by the Long Beach Comn\lll1ity Playhouse, which is extending it s current at- traction, ''Catch f.1e If You IWllOt o1 -CDll• WU. -)l .. JIOZ --------.. --..... Can," one weekend, to Feb. %1. Director B e rtram Tanswell 's ca.st i n c I u de 1 Gerald Herbener, Barbara Crooker, Bernard Simon and Howard Solomon. ·The ~medy . mystery plays at 5021 E. Anaheiln St., Lo11R Beach, with tickets available 111 (213) 438-0536 ), ALSO 7th EXCLUSIVE WEEK 20tti CENTURY·fOX PRESENTS Dustin Mia ,.,~~ < Hoffman Farrow · 1;~ · - JOHN AND MARY :,_, -:!I Panavisione Color by Deluxe • -- 1st Area Showing .- -EAl•l'"llt.li ... -1-Cfolllllll~ PETER USTINOV· PAMELA TimN IONATHAN WINTERS ·JOHN ~N ~EC::~"',:;n" ~·;it::-1~;-L ~ 2 Top Comedies "'"""""°' ¥WWW * * BEACH BLVD. AT ELLIS * * ·HUNTINGTON BEACH* 847·9608 Exclusive Coast Area EnCJDCJel'lent "AN ELOQUENT FILM OF CAUSTIC CONVICTION AND LYRICAL BEAUTY!" -ROLAND GELATI, SATURDAY REVIEW "A VIBRANT, BRUTAL VISUAL ESSAY. ONE HELL OF A TRIP!" v1ra1en by PETER FONDA O.•«.ted t>v DENNIS HOPPER Produced t>v PETER FONDA OENN15 HOPPER. .As50C••te Prod..ctt TERRY SOUTHERN WILLIAM HAVWARO E•Kutove Proc!vcer BERT SCHNEIDER • COLOR .~ 1 Rtle•!ted by COLUMBIA PICTURES I ~U.Slo2 2nd Top Attroction Jarnes Coburn in "WATERHOLE #3" . • .• -~ ;-·: ·: . .-·: TUMBJ.EWEEDS eltUT' SCbl'l"f •• HaAAs Si:Ell °™ROUGH //II( PISGUISE! •• HE SUSP£CKS l'M A INJUNj;-THIS' CAU.S FER QUI0<1HINKJ'I') f6QTl'A COME UPW(DIA SH~~ , By Tom K. Ry11n . 'SCIJSE ME1 SIR ••• I ••• UH ••• ~1 1NJUN! WHY1 HE i:l\RK GLASSES? WEDNESDAY JANUARY 28 [1/!N 1 ·~(. 6:00 8 lie """ CC) (60) Jerry Dunphy. 0 m Kuntl1Y·lri11tl'1 CCI (30) o c.1 Y•• 1., ni.r CC) cJ01 Par..lirti Ma rer Amst1rdlm, Danny Thc11111 1rtd Siu Gim1m try to loll' io-H sent in by viewen, with 1 COmfKJl•rlzed '\.luifl-0 -Meter" d• tumlnll'I& the winnet. Wink Mertln· chle PloStl. Olc:k G•uller ects n reMdtnt job-lellei of tile viewlf1' stories. 0 COLOR-Connie Stevens, * Troy Donahu~"PALM SPRINGS WEEKEND"! fJ Six O'Clod: Mnle: (C) whl11 Sprinp Week.r (comedy) '63- Troy Donahue, t.onnit Stwens. Ty H11din, Slel1nle Powers. Durln1 East1r WHk. peaceful Ptlm 5'!ri111s rockl unsleadlly with the 1nnu1l 11rlll1urht of vacatlonln& 1tud111ts encl tUCl/'led duiraden.. Q Dick V11 D,M (30) m 'he Fll11btHts. (C) (30) (!)star Tnik (C) (60) il1J Ill ... -(C) (30) EEl Wbt't Nn? (30) "Sports 11111 th• ProltslCH'," A mech1niCll en&i· neer cnnlr11nts the well-known Tinklf ToY Set and dtm11nslr1tes Simple prl~ciplu for bulldl nJ com- plm. structures. tif) (I) CIS Ntw1 (C) (30) OJ l'eslH Cita111 (3D) (D Nm (C) (60) Jeck Whit .. 1:30 0 MIC NIWlln'icti (C) (60) ANS\VER ••••• 1:30 fJ 9 CJ) 1't 1mrtr MNnt· (C) (30) Jed II.ls his fllodt lu btpi111 Shorty from Nnnlna o· on Ills weddlnc llar. E.l·pro footli· st1r1 Cookie Gilch1lst and El Falson pl1r the brottlerl. 0 IHHJJ m -m (C) (!t ''Orlu Upon 1 TI"" Tht11 Wn A. You Couldn't Set," Pitt Dix:on'! studtnls Richie 111d J130n ullder tau ttlllr OW11 JY t1m111i111 u-lnst smo1. m DtWfl Frut 5"" (C) (90) M•rtJ' Alltn. LI Lupi, a. J, Thom•• ind Helmut Berier. m 111o '" ,..., (C) 160! Ill 11lo """ .... (30) @?ii !olll'lla (30) 0 KRAFT MUSIC HALL * Eddy Arnold, Sid Caesar, Sacha Distel B ~ (J) m Kreft Mnlc: Kea (C) I (60) EddJ Arnold Is hott to fl«· D Sim Alln Sbow (C) (90) Guests inc:ludt Chu Chtst, Pl&mtal M1rUMm tnd Biby St1!s, Dr. Mil t:30 B NIWI CC) flO) Btxttr Wtrd. lllid'i tlMI JIJll* Me1don. (!) IWI Win NIWI IC) (30) 0.,. Clt8'1 , .. (t) (30) • • Mud! Pride Oo You _H1v1?". Guesb11t008ft ({)Hnrtil r...o (60) A pan1Ust1 ire Sht~• Wtlhs, R dilhonut poller 11me ctuset e Clark ind Beth Bntklll, Jim Mac. JOlll'll hofllyf!IO!lnlf to IOst hli llft.. Krttl hosU. 0 ID (j) m Tllll ea.. ...... m Mr fnortle M1Jtitl (30) 1111 (C) (60) "That Undiav1rld @I]) l'trTJ Mmn (60) Country.• BIOMOll unintentiolUlllJ ·m hmm..s ShlwcaH (30) nurly breeb up Utt m1rri111 pl1ns PLAIN JANE P1RKINS i • WHAT llARK . GLASSES? @ (I) H••ISIJ-lriaklq' (C) (30) Ill •n Amish -~ Ind rirl Gueats I .:t11 t'vtu Ti (30) 111 M11k Jtnk1ns end Heidi Y1uati"' i'• Q;,I I 0 Q?j CJ)'(!) Eftfllblrt • ..,.. • I ~Cl)Tlll Mlll'IM'I (30) 1Hnd (C) (60') Cluatr. Ga&il .., .~· @El Notkler1 S4 CCI (60) Brown, Arte loll•ton. Roi'• Miiiet •. • ifi' lMll NIWI (C) (30) ind Elll:t Sommer. .., : 0 Dtlle! (C) (60) lklb D1ri1 L...:·"-· !..' '°"'""°---= 7:00 D CBS &1nln1 News (C) 130). 0 WMt'I MJ Un1? (C) (30) m I "" "'7 (30) m"''"'""' CC! 130! U)C.lllOdlly/Mtltlll fltld (C) @ Cil ...... , (C) (30) ·-· m ..... (t) c&o> . m,..,, ..... c60> fl)t1a111...i (C) (60) In Tth iti." (R) mo ,..,. c.niu c30l al Ahclral (30) 10:38 II Nen (C) (30) ll!JIIJT .... ".....,,,_(Ci ill-• (JO) mJ Wendlrfust (C) (30) (D lld Cill (C) (30) '"''ID om 11> m -1t1 I Ollie Wldlr•• 7:lOIO ll!JIIJHot How (Ci 160) O (l})IIJ l!!l-IC) Guelll lncludt Lorett• Lynn •nd O Movie: ........ tf l1110M• Merit H•u•rd. (d1•m1) '55-Robtrt Stack, Shirl11 0 @ Ci) @e Tiit Virrfni111 (C) Y111111uclll, Robtrl Rytl\, (90) 'Tu Shiloh Yt1r1" T1111J OI...,... l'IMa fr1nclos.I cunts 11 •n •lent for Ill Eastern eombine which att1mpts to undermlnt !ht Wyom!n& rtncher b, c1usin1 lln111tlal 1t1if1 In 1 l11!d 1r1b schtmt. - 0) M1 S.W. Slit Seit (C) (30) Guests 1r1 DrJ. Miiton end Joyu Brothers. Bobby Troupe end Jull1 London, Jack Cluldy tnd Shirley Jonu. L•rrr Dohrny 1nd Ctfol WtllL @@Sill•.., (C) 81l•aM ~ Prin<7 IRl o ~ rn m "'""' eM uie ,.,.. ftNOr (C) (30) "The Wlbtet Will Ge1 You If Yoa Don't Witch Out" While Ninny Is tryin1 to ht1p l'rul!tnce 1at r1d rA 1n im1finaiy nlfht viii· tor, Ht l i nd Butch mike pl1n1to11:1D~(])a••• SMntto: "'four eho'll their little sister 1 Wlbltl Bullets for .loe." Juliet Miils 11111 Rlch1rd Lona stir. Joann• Moo11 ruests. ll:IO fJ QI.CJ) lllrf lrfffll (CJ GMihiol $ Mori•: "1114 tiftt9 o-~--.._ (wesl!rli) '48-John Wayne Mont--l.."!.I u:i (C) IOfllWJ Clift. W11ttr Brennan, Jo. Sdledu1t0• .. 111uts: Wllll1111 F. Buck· tnnc D1u. To.is uttl1m1n 1nd tey .Ir. Dntd Sussklnd. foster-IOn qu1rr t1 iw1r utt11 drive.I e lllM: "DI rtrMa .._. m Trdl w Ctwtliilfffltll (C) (30) (c.omldy) '39-ltdrll &: Herdy. C8 M•itt Mllllti (60) D aJ Diet e...et ._ (t) fE TtcUlctl C.. (30) ID Mwit: -...i,.-(mystery) CD Jerct Clllll c..ta (30) "Shan-'50 -Gene Tltmty, ..lalt Ferrer. f111f DuU." G:I trwr ,. AMr (3-0) t:oo D LNm 11K1UMJ1 IC) (21/t hrl L.A. L1k1rs n S.1 Dlefll Rockets et Sin Dieto Sl)(lrt& Ar11111. n ~m m"" """"''' '' COdle"'i' Jittltr (t) (30) ''Thi Mod Couple." Mrs. Uvincston quits ht1 job U the Corbttts' llcK!Mkttpw wflen she ruliles TOIR ii too com· IOftabll 1nd llOt loollft& for I IWlll. m Tt Tiii .. Trwtll (C) (30) fl) Mid: Mlmt/ftltn (30) !lil"" ''""' S.p (IO) IRl !11-(30) THUR ~OAY - DAYTIME MOVIES m,... •s. L•r 1t "' '*" (dr1m1) 'Sl-Jlt11 Simmons. Dirt; Bol;1rdL 1:00IJ111 .... : "'ltf' (dr11111) '47- Jot11 f11nbffll, 'f1trtc KnowleL oo-(C) II C......., ..... 1Nt4 (C) Im Adllll n.k "Twt Gue I.atty." 1:10m...--. ....., '"" Hortll,.. r-slwMdowll 1t Boothlll." "Th• 11111 lamp." (d,.llll) •n -ca fort Gene TlerMy. lt."OD D "llnl " 11t .....,. (drMI) ~tit Ericbon, OoNMI WOOU. Chuct CotlrtMf, t:JO m (Cl ........, twit"' (m~siY1) 1:00 n .,. ftnip Atr•if" (cemtdJ'I 'll-MY ClnM, Eddlt fllr Jt. 'li-Jlln Artltllr, Jol'lft L~nd. %:OD CJ "nit f111t IN lllt ~ O ".llk••J Der\" (dr1m1) "SC _ 1 (dr11!\1) '62~ Webber, An111 TonJ Cilr11a, Piper L1ur1L St1n. ID._""'~"'..,..<"'" !:J:t CJ "lr1tk I• .. Cln.it" (edw.n· m•l ~1111 ltltdltt, Litt Ilk· 1urt) '17 -fortul TIKW. t"J Dontll. ...... 4:.JO fJ (Q "hi LAI t TW" (ldvno fD "TM Stalt If CNtkS LIM lute) '67..f.ttl'lll W}'lll. Int W.. STEVE ROPER YMEAW·~ Ol[) MAN IS,._ MOON.SHINER, BETIYLDU? MISS PEACH KELL'( Ccf\ooL ~fllVfK Cou~T -/.Al'f(U.\A' IW'IA$C11t, ""'"'f BUT. RONDO. V>lY AR£ VIE: 12USHING TO THE MOVIES? II II SALLY. BANANAS H<>w ~ ,: t: e.;. lf:! '. MP ? 1 '""-·"' IV//A • By Frank Baginski . ~y John Miles lly Salindel'I and Owergard SO HO\.D ON, BOY5! rM A80llT TO SHOW YALL WHAT THE Mll.l'Ti4.RY CAl..LS !AKIN! E\!MM AC,TJOH"l CJ ... ..... ---.. ""11>..C.y, Januart 28, 1970 OAILY PILOT 41 By Charles Bcil'IOttl T ~ ~'7::~. ! ' J ONE TEAR ISllT CK<IV<6 ! TELEVISION VIEWS CBS Looks At Schools By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -CBS news department program, "The Day They Had to Close the Schools,'• was tlmely and consisted of a long if not particulaflo ly deep look at the money troubles of the U.~. edu· catlonal system. The program Tuesday. night focused on Fre.- mont, Ohio, which was faced with closing the com· munlty schools aft er a school tax levy was voted down. NARRATOR Daniel Schorr pinpointed the prob- lem of "explosive population and exploding taxpay· era" in noting the large number of recent school bond issues rejected by voters. Fremont's story was rather heartening. Jt rallied around in the emergency, finally voting the levy and paying its property taxes in advance to ao- cumulate immediate fund s. AJmost glossed over was the reason behind the resistance of many of the voters -steadily in· creased property taxes and, as one woman snapped, a feeling that no efforts were made to economize. Schorr noted that 10 Ohio communities did susp pend classes because of a lack ot ' funds. The prcr gram concluded with interviews \Yith public officials on methods of handlling the education emergency. Ge~erally, efforts are in the direction of taking th~ ma1or burden off local property tax and having states pay the school tax. THOSE CHILDREN of all ages who love the circus -even the televised kind -had their an· nuaf sampling Tuesday night of the Greatest ShoW on Earth, with the addition of instant replays in slow motion. The NBC special showing highlights of Ringling Brothers and Barnum and Bailey Circus had aU the ~sual treats -high fl ying acts, elephants, big cats, clowns, acrobats, dancing bears and colorful processions. And cameramen used that familiar f~tball technique to show, in slow motion, a double fli p off a trapeze, a woman jumping from a 30-foot- high pl8Uonn into the arms of her partners and two human cannon balls flying across the a uditorium. It provided an interesting new dimension. NETWORK EXECUTIVES are beginning to play ·their annual chess game in which lhe enter· tainmeot series are pawns. _ Programming heads probably kno\v now whfcb current programs are unlikely to survive 41nother summer. Between 20 and 30 shows die each year to be replaced in September. ' Most midseason replacements have a few more \Yeeks to be tested before their Nielsen ratings de- cide their fates. It appears, however that CBS' "Hee Haw,'' an early midseason arrival' Is dolng so well it probably wilJ be renewed for a ' full season. Dennis the ltletaace • ' - 1:: • • •• " . . . • ·l :· . .. •• ' • :-.- .. . .. . . . .... ... ·:~ •'· s:-: :-: I I .1 ' • • • • . . • . . . • . . . ' . • . . • • • . • . • . •• -.. '• .. . • '• :: ' • . ' t . '• , -= .. : . • • • --~·,·-········ ..... ...-... ~ ........ --·- 4J DAIL~ S Wtdoud,y, J.,,,.,y 28, 1970 LEGAL N<Yl'ICI! LEGAL NOTICE Electricians to Install Pres .ident f.omplete-New York Stock List \ I ( • • . • " ' " • • • • " • • ' " " " ' .. '• •• '. " . , '. " " ,, " '• '• •• •• '• • '• '. .. '· '. .. " .. ,, " " '. '· '· • .. " " •• '• .. '. ,, •• •• •• + '• ' . '. • ~ .. "' '" •• ,, " '• .. " ' ' • " .. ' " . •• ' ., ' " ,, ". "' ,, "· ' '• " ,, " ' ·t •• " • ,, .. •• ' " ' " -.,. , .. ••• ,_ II: .. ... ... .... ... •• -... ... f! '1ri. W> ""' om ... •• ~· .. I 1970 DAILY '1LDT • Tuesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stoc k Exchange List "... N~ SI... "''!''J'll ................... ~ .................... ,. ..... ~." --~-~ ~~---H ll., Jlil "I'='·• STOCK LEADERS ,'":.!.~ " !I" !Ill ~:: ~ "' 1J 11" U.. ll1!=~ ., .... ~'Wi1t'~.1~t~'c~,:.'r,,• 111!.r ,f_*U • n~· ~~ 4l:• ~4116 #~ _, .. n .... ~.:c..~ on"li:ii")r:r; r.: f;-r,~1 " l!"' m· . -~ nn-1cMnt• :l:'~'~~·1-11t~•-• I VI 1'\' -"' 11!!;0" C• 1'1 , .. lOSVI _,.,, I J q 14 •,It ~ -\t ' n ~ Jl• -" x;;;''?., ,., H"' 'I" ->" !J'! •• • " ioj ~\'I " .o!I" :1:: ~~,~~!, :u l!! :·~ u = ll .~::.\! lJrl f:~ {i; " = ~ I ~.., , 14 -~ C• ;Hi ll1 ' 7t~ = .. Tl 11U ~ 't4 -... 7110, 1U ,?t"-'::n'I n~.,~ '9 w."i ~110 -__ 11 ~i.w'.tt '• l1l~ u ~+~ 'I St1• '11'1 Jh~ -1\'I oll&hw Gtoa l'o lfll\Ylt I Ml ! I \o ij'' -1 •1,\ o " ... !. •1r Cory:i 1 "" +•14 1.,,,.~ ~ ,, .. 1 ~ 11, _ \ .. ~ l ~t !"' )1Vi-fl 11 011 '• _,, 1tN1jl J ~ \'I '1-\f ,: ~.? J1A ~ll + "l:t'itltwJ ~~= .., =:t :;r:O'ft, ~ u ''I ~\ti U~-~ NE\V YORK (AP) -\Vlth no stimu lus to tempt ~ 11~ n'll ull.: ~ m T.Oto!t llO(IOO n... -"' ::=~~ ': n :nn ~ ... r,.\ -"6 investors to buy, stock market prices reu to lower .1-.0 ~' 1 u -• !ll!I!• vine 1 1' ''"" 2J" on•• -1\ ground today with the Dow Jones Industrial aver. IJ 11 0•1 10'•-• 1-W lH tu!• J2\lo ».\/i-1-4 115 )lllo no.:. 3'1• +t Sllu Met !loneCont Y • I \~ 1114 It .... -fo age at 3 new three.year )OW " li'\ ~ U(o -~. kort•Sckot 1 I 1j H -• ' u ""Jrb •111">"11-L•wc1Mec-.. s11111twor1~, '' ·~ '"" "''-'+' "lt looked hke a reru•1 of l'vlonday" said one 111 l 26'Ao 11 -•~ O!'•ll!l"A 110 $1u wor 1)165 1 '1 1t '2 -1 _, _ 8'.:" ,,,, , Jt n 211. 1n, siuw p1.o,1 .o 11 tt" '' nu ,. 11 analyst. ' T11ere 1s abso lutely no 1ncent1ve to buy • •• ll ~'• I/ d -\\ .SUbvrbCo 6' )0 16 • 151..o *" ,_ " a\' 20 Kl ibd Mir 1 j ~ ,. + 't Svb PrOll I IG •' 30'0 >0\4 h 1" e erybody is JUSt Sit"ng around WBJttng for 1 lo 1'1' 2''o + ~\ Ol.lltt• Co ~ • I\ i" 'jll + • ~lltm llO !• 31 :io 1 1, V -" ' '" ,.,., !!" °"' 'fi"" 1 , !!.'; 1 1o1i g_. ,. 1_. 011 lb ,2 .iol'I jffi .io1\ ·~ some excuse but haven't found any " l 1~ ,,"' v. 5r1"' )6 ·-.. ~" "'Ol'Cll''' 1• )4" l""'-~ • 11•. u 5 -h Miii 111 lolO '°"' 1't ,,.. -1111 M•m N u 1s1.1. • ''"" -n' Th D J r ge lost 4 ~ aboul half a 111 u• 11n 1n. -1'' 11~1· 11 11 1r, '°", 1 ..,, _ ~ trlMI r, 1" 11\fo ~ u :.11 _,, e ow ones ave a o ... u "'\ ,.. !!,'4, -+ •" ••':i"' , , 'lo'° , ,.., u' 1rt. + 4• 1unt1t""' 1 1• '~ l!"' H _.. l• percent, to 763 99 its lowest closmo level since Oct. :JU 11'~ 111'" .-p lU ltt; 2t1' "{\ + I\ ~ YtlU I 10 11 1~ \4 U" + 'Ioli • 151 JI<\ l\\I H'-' +\'> IC II •P U "" 11•• 1:r.. -l• 5u11trOll I IO 111110.:. I IHl'I -1\~ 11 1966 ,t 11t~ ~, •. i1~ =:: ;:L:ii~,' r511 ~ ~ :~ u: = ~ •~=G;,1;: : E"' u l! =1,.. 11 1.,. 11-. "'' P1ePwL 1,. " it•. 1t1-> "1" _ .. r..,,.vv,11 He 1, ~ '" ,,, _\lo The recenl, continued market sllde has reOtcted 1 11 ~ 131, lj" -v. Ptc :s ... 1 Air 11 2"' 1i ,, ~" sw•l'lk '°" s u ,, •• 1nve t o ry o er uncertain econo 1c conditions 15 1 ~ + \t Pt''!' "" ,ll •''.. ..'"' 11,1 _ ,.. 1•111 ci 10 1, 21.. )I\_~ '°"' ,. \ s or 'i\ r v m , to 11 u" 11 + .,. P•cT T 111 • i -.... U1.1 + .,., w111111,.. ., n ,..,., 11w uu -1 • tight money and burgeon1n~ evidence of lower co~ y !Olio 11 10 -,._ Ptc TLn .0. l 11 1' 1• SvtlronCp N It 31 .... Jl+i 31\.\ +\o •I' i 11~ 11" '''' + "P•lll'llk~ .2s • 11•• 11 "'• + \, 5y"on pt'l'CI s 1n~ " •1v. + ~ orate earnings in 1969. ana ysts noted lJ tt, I I -l4 1'1f\A$.vl t11 II 1.,, 1-~ lf'o + \\ •rstron OOM I ~ 211\ JHo -UAL ll'IC I " 1n. 1(1\lt 1(1'11 -~ "'""'" wAir 2Y 1t\oo u 11 T Trading \V&S ~uiet with 1nve1tors hesitant and uA1tco 110 ;µrt .0\111 11111-"f Pll'llrEP lM .. u J:llo J:l't -\\ --uo1c:, 12' 2 Mlt. 70't 111U +111 P11>1"c•tt ~ • n 1, JltJ 11 \.\ -1~ 1,11 ,,., '° f,1 21v. ,, ?t -'• \Va1Ung for Presa errt Nixon's budget message on uMc 1"" n •I ti• f\\ ti\. + "Pt•Ofit n 221 1114 H\10 lllO + Ito Tt1C~N 110 11 in. 11 .. + • •1 d U"lrCO .IO ., 11 111,\ '"" -"P•rktDawh 1 •s .,... JQ"" :ii:••+ 1, r,11.., •nt1 !J W1o '"' w. +"' 11 onday brokers sat v"1Li.i i .. w. , 1•1• u!t i.11 + "Plrl<:H~" I IQ ' "'• ,.. • olO \, r1m_pe fl 11 ., no.•• 2"' u:i. -\It Cl ti th N IJflllflV ~ 1 1n, ut. iJ\' '''k ''" ta • 1' 11u 11 . -~ Ti ndv c,,,, n 51 ~ JI -1 osrn~ ~r1ces among ac ve issues on e e'v u c.m, 1 • a'· nv. ~ .... -'• Ptnl'I Ctnt ltl.. It . ttlj, ·~-. T1l)CllnCo '° lff 1(1111 , ..... , ..... -Ill York St~ xchan~e lacluded U~C.t'blft 2 1 ~" 71 It 1 l,'J -2\'i P'tl'lnOI• lt° !) 151'1 u... U\.o -l.r. T~l\Mlt 2:11 11 I\\ ,.. tt• -\lo ~ Un , •• 1' nw 7114 -"'""'" Fry l )2\, lto.:r. Ullo -~ Teklronl• Jll "" "'"' ~ti\\ Xerox, down •1 2 to $103 ••·• Telex, up $6 ·1= to e "' '~ l 11 '' 11 -"" Ptnner JC J '~ .. 09' 4 -\• Tt lildYl'I 1,0tt IS. t2 JI\' lJ:" I • ~ ~ I 'I",' \U tt'HI 71 ,,~ -"'P• Co 01'" ul t~{! t~ t', -· Ttlild'f pfl.)G I 12J Ill I -$151 50 , IBM. off $3 25 to $345 25 and Boeing, off r ; U :1~ nl'o ~:~rL~ 1•~ JlllO .. w •J\'f 1!:% +lllr t•lfllv!M i:ott n 111Jf'\'l utt~ 1S1~\ +~ll $212 lO $24 12 3 new 1969-70 IOW 882~'f1P!'l1ir JI ll)llo t'11 tit -v, "•PL..('' •Cl llG ltlo'I ii t:lr'~ +11~ T~~l•~~PU u ~ tU• 10•, -\1 Un Ptc Ca 2 •• 'I~ "~ 2S"" -l'O ~=!l 1~,''n ~ ~~ ~ ~ !_ ~ Tin .... ce 1132 m 'l11'1 ttl4 2711 Unl,,.il"Kll 2 'l t 'Ao 21' .114 + U. PilMJUn ta 1n ll \o :ioh ll ..... _I\ Ttftntc pl SO 12 tJ11. ll"" ll\t -•\-........ ,. ... ,., ........... C!ll " .. <l•m..., ...... ,,, ....... UU~r,!~,,:'1'1o II r,;.: n~ m~ _"lo P1n1U t11J3 l2 u;.. •l, Cl~\ Tt~~· I 60 1'1 2tl1 21:\11 ii -\,I...._-.~• ' --· 11 31., J\'\.I l1U -"'PtODOrg 110 l 11 ~. 20\lr -, I 11o 11 /1 11 +14 P.O.,OH lH !7 l1'o ""' 11•,+._ to 2g, "~' 11~• P,1atlc,o.,• • 11 SJ ;, 5' st\\ -, , •• •'i toG.... u Ill.to 111. 1•·1'-l'I C I Cl . ·p . 51 lfl'o II • "1' -Perlt(I Fiim •1 1l lttl 11 '4-\1 t g es n ·:" ·:~ ·:· -•· "~" .,. "' " .... "" _,,, omp e e os1n r1 c 1S1 oo l9 :ttl~ + "-Pel ll'IC \10 U 39 lf.lo 2• + .\o 10 ,... ''"' ,.1, -~ ;!t t: :i" : n:: ~ ~ -•• .' n'' '•i"'•• "", = !,, Pt!tP1u1 t 111 ! J)'~ 2J'4 )Jto -\\ I U • lfil ! " •.... , "., .. ,•,ti•~,.~ I "'• I !\\ 11\, _ \> NEW YOltl( !AP) TUffdl~ 1 tom1lllt , .. rt.C~! Ojf )> ,_ i • I~ -,• ~orntdl1" lnG It '1 •1'o tlb + 'It t't r(l1 Mi"O U I>. l lo t;;! -1 • ~-, .. • ',',' ", °"• • " .. •,•,1~ t U; t •• .. Im "" " I 5 • E cl\I k 11,..1.. 7• '• l\lo-' ti h Sall j 16 U 'I +'-'NI/ '\''fll ' I I'• Tn +"ll 1 ' I t-• 6l 10 l\lo 3H•-' pfinrC l<'Oo 1' lh• 1~ lt\\t .A~rttfl fOC: x Ml•• U 11,, tot' JI lo \• lh + '• 111(1. 1, fJ..,_ 72'• l -l•N•'8tfH 2JI 6) Jll I ; -'-""'ti lll 11\to 211'1 1t\6+1!~ I -~ I lil JO -1 P .... l"D 110 )I~ l~r~J!l,~ \~.:.1~! l•lft Ntl IOHY 111 ll 111 1 11 '• 111 Ill , .. 1'4 1 '' N C1.._t ISO 100 1t'\ 1" It~ ~· r atd<I 10 »Ho Z » ' ll !:fW ,,J lru TI, ~ n:· -II. Plllll Et 1.61 Hll ll'-22Vi ,, ... + ,, CIMlt I Hltll Ltw ,,_Chi ~I ,_.. ~ .~ .. ~ ,, SI t1•1 • 51 LI,.., \ ,,, .. : '" -~NII·~ ... 1 34 I'• ,1.: I~ -mp tab ' I~ ·~~ IS-I + ,: 1i +f 1' r 1•. I~ -~ P'tdliEt "' 1 11110 ti '"' ...... -~ ... -,'.".lo s .... """ 211~ + ... If Wint wt U1 s..... ' • S• I + \~ H•I o ... "" l'I m fl\ 1~~ + YI cltlltl'I :io 111/o 11\'i ''"" -\I, J ' I -1 u n 11 ... ,11:· -\t ;~1~: =~.:: l~~ r, ~~ u.. =,:~ -A-6-Of! Mii ti) 'f 1h. 2~~: 1~!. -H~I -~:: ~= !,nl 1tt 11 ... 1~! 11~ =?: =: ~ :~ ~ ~'t ~ + ,, ~ :1~~ 11 ll'• ll • P~ue1 plllcr 1100 SJ SI P, -·~ AbtrdnP 1)1 1l JI• -... anu:l:J.E~ 11, ,, I)\.< !Ht u ...... HI ........ 11J ,,~ ,,..,. 2!\t -1~1 Hi! Rtdlo C• l 1~. s ' -I,\ 1'pl I" s ,~. I! l IW. rb ::Ii -·· -M-Phl~M11rr 1 i't ::11'1 .»'1 'to + ... AOlll Himll I \o 5 t tll .U 1~ ~l ~11..o ~h.. -l'A ~::!:P~hOI' J 11 lfil • 1 11; 1J""-\\ N Rttlf'f to l 11\.1 11, 11Vi -\~ pl l Cll I 111-Ill. ll't. -\.\ $ ' ! MKAnF 20D 10 13,0 nw 2:11 1:. Phi "' ' t211 ll s.1 J t-''Acme Prtc J '~ ,_., 1\6 '"' 1, , .. lt'•· ''" _, .. ~'r"'''lf.:'' , I \,,, .. 1 ,._ ,, .. _ 'l ~··.•~.,•-,•,• '•'~ •,~ "•'1 --~ E'!.u,••,.." •' .~l'o .t._ .t, = ,.'• I • l'I 1 111 .,. ::t• ''::f:':" .. >l , , , ,:, -""o I',,.'"'•"• 11 ll•o nu 11 -~i ·-• 'r.''' >> t t t _~I o.._ Ill l " ... .. • • " nS I" ,.. "" •• '"" -.--. .. -:1::.."lll. n ~ -• -'"' ,, ,, " '' ,, o"""'~ 'lo ,1h ll -"" lltA '1 • ' • ll"' + I Nftdf\am JO • " 0 If·~ ·-'"' -,,,, ,, ........ -'' • ' ' ,.. • ' ' M • '. -'' ,... ,,, , 16U -\o ,.,,, •• , ' • , -Aerm!rll "' u 1,l. Uh l•tl • ·-,, ,. I" + -n····· r.r • lllt ,.., .. .• -.. " ... .. + ~ ... '"' n ~., ''' ''" '''' o. 'I ::l',l-' o ' • -'''!'' ..--Nt!lt Oo 20e l a• 1'o "\ -~ -,,. '' ('L 1 1'" +'• l~:V,' ::II I .. K, RH I 11 111, " • l',\· -~. ~, .. , '.. ·~ • .• -.• A•'m' Inc I I It 11'< ~. -'' ll: ' ,, • I , ... \Oh ' ' -· "' .,, MK• rrf ,ti 1~ st J9 ..-n •• lO lt>1 11111 lt\~ -'l At•O low .lO I I •1 llj• 1 \~+lo "":" ~ ·~ "'"lltLe JO 'H 1'"" It t -lpeclro JI I I 10/~ l~\ -l\ I' 6~ l\Jlll ' I I \'11 l'I _.,.. !ltltbl.ry 1 ~ 9 '" -'" t ' , ~ ' ••• •• ''' t IJ\o II'', 1J\' -\.o uv n~tA ! 1 2t '' l• -l N ~-N·~tr u 1~1 u ,, .. + \l --• .,, , ,0 • ,, •• ,,,. ., •-•-~ Mid Fd t lie 1 TI ., Int n•~ -t • • • • trot • -om ~v 1 ci 1 22 22 trvrr r 11 J •I• •10 t\1 -\,0 •-•···, .. "• •• ,.. ,,. '' •• ,~..-• .!:. 0 ·• • , • -,-·,·~, '!!j Mad SQ Gir tJ S>o 51.~ ~t t \o lonNGI• !O 11 11 . ll 1J, 1, Afl'Otll:• It llh 11\'t l)'o .i.-" omPOlricl » ... 'j" ,1., t '• "''"''' 1 ll • 11 IJ u ·-,. .., ~1 ..-~ • -'" PttlCt• .......-11 t 1 11'1 111 -• tin 1 WI M 0 •• '_ ''' ,,,_ '" .... ,, IT111y&w d 11 le , JI lt,. "'e<otolT r J ti. f'• t •. 0 ' " Sill 1 " '' 1, New Mt•aAr lJ'~ I>» 1Jvt 5SP Ind 10tl 1S • U I• ~"I !'r(ln!.0. r la I • ~ 1.1:11;-;-1 .o· 1 ;;".,": .W! ~ = ~ ;11:,ri"~' r>1"i •' :,•, ~·, > •"•'' , "''"v9, o 1 '"" •1~ •\• -\o ~~h.e111 ,i ,{! 1''• 111• .... •• '11111 ?, 11 ni; 111~ 11,: _ ~ N1wl'•rt; Mn JO • t 5J14 II\ + '' std Anl111 .IO 1 ", 1r,. u..., -.,., F...,,,.. s11o• 1' ,..l', ff" ~ +••• Mtnlnd.stb t)•••1•¥.11'"--"~"·•••17 l -AICPl>oto n11••10 JO --.om .... tA•PI " ... t I -·· tc1t1'"1:211 11211 .Jo 1,t.+11 "''-'""' l!.'4 u -·~1i.ic ... 11lnr •l~!O~~ 1r•nMPla11 ...... Manpow, n 1' ,dh ~,,, '2~• 1 1.io II " 16 ::.J .... k ... Ind I '• I . ··~ !"'"""'' E 11 II IOr. ·~· + 1. litln!Ckl ,,,., " 1,h \]•\ u -""NYT!mt .... lg lJll\ Jiiii ).I...,-\\, Id Drld 20D • 1t l)h 11•1 -"· revh c ..... n ,,.... • -·1" Mll'IH"1'1IO 10 I ~·o ='~ H1lonl20tl 14tll ~16\,;,IO '•.0.ILffntnc l7ll\i 311t'11•+\,om~T ln~lr h 1. l \1 l~•-'-.mletl•RI~ 161\ioM\ote~-~""°"'S"JIQ '"' t~i , •• ftOrKDll..Orlj,O)OV.20 .... "'"-'"' r-C!IA>ll .,, "'::so,.ron ,, tl'N ~~\Ir ~~\·.!1"~1:,~:rc:. Jt, ~; :;lj, ff•+~!~1:finCY~fl 1~ ;~: ;~ ;~ omPUt '"" I 101• 10 lO~t lltr ~15 130 M t' i• NM! ,,..,utt )!L l?l\ 111t U\.\+••5tdMt ttl 1ff Jj f I>• ·~ Hl G 6tU fl p .,..._,,_ ~.,.~hn 1 IG 106 '1?\<t .)0 ~ 1 Pollrl>ld .l? 3211111~. 1~. HI01 "'l•o•• !I :!O • 15., 11 lSV. ... t\ :::::v':::,... !i n~· ~~ H +l~ 1t'i. 't~ 1n1 : ~· ..... 11 ... ,:\, t ~: ~:::~k501~· w! ~f~ ~~ ~~~ -'I 1lft!~ 'Col: ;, 'l: ~ 2!~ t :~ r~~1c,~1.~·. " Mircorinc, Ji4 211 5t~ s11\=,,P,,.tfC I ll) J 11 11>. 11 t (\"'I' Wu! JO 111 I lj +h"""" 10 s 11 , 11 1111 tl!,,'bttMr 10 10 V. jtftt :is +1.HoAM10,12:e u '~ 2J1\ n•o +l\ tOP•od 120 2 ?IV. 11 '' _,.K;;ec ,l\>1' lltf lt !..11 ~=;~ri:"nf"~: a 1~\~ t:· M~·=~;:r1;;a:F1l1 I~~ lf~ "~-1 !1~-:-1~.IJ~ 11,w: ,:~: k.:+~:c~s~~r ol)CI 10 IJI• 1], n :i.+v.H-;ill.,., ltO 1 2V. i\-2~\'+~~:.:td'r.010,r ,: fi~ l~,l~i +s.11 ':~~~.!!! l 11!o "''· 11•1 -.... l(lnnv ,~··· :, r. . ,tt .. M.' ,0 ,. "In·•• "~•+h P~°",m,,".,~,, Ill ll~o 1JV. U\~-~"'•nWd 160 1 )I 3SU lP0-4'1=,c11ro 14 21lo 71 \t 11'111 -~H:r.t' ... c .... ,o_ is, !ll!'' i•" ,, .. _ ,NceA•IAlrln 1 64 '' S-o -lr l••••• '''' J 12 11\0 ""'-'•Ltr"'°rt~lfl ' ., , ,, ,·,,. ,•,.. ,,L p 1 35 15 35 _1 ..,11111, "''" 19 1o•~ 1ov. 1r• ......... r°" ~ I!'• ui. u~. + \Ii c~n ov • ~ .. , ,, • ,, ,_ "'' ·-· ··, , ' 1 ~. 5lo -v. Ltv!n ifil' ,f " '!'" I! Ml•""~ I • ,,-"P'GlndltO .O.l1k 1 1" -•llYC"" S ttt 6'l 60-l• om...,A SO l~f,t\_l\21~1o-\lt"" ' 'r•, ,,.,."" -ltlltodr.U, "7:1>" 1 1 LfY!n117t .--. M1rlenn1n 1 ::11,0, 0'1 II 4~··· -t"•'• Prtmtlnd to '1 :!?i, ',',:~ :n,,,, 1 • •• 1~~..:.i:J'"{, }50 ',, ',,•:,• ',11 _, Ofln•ex JS u n ljl'I 11~• -~· HomtHom.O'•'°•SO -" l NOWll tnd wt '~\ t •'4 -\o a .. nwlck C• l P • -'*I u• + '• Ltvln 1 l h l o !!: •• M••OIC'm :JO 11\~ 'l' •• , .. .. , , 0 c , ,, '' ~ ,,, _, ' n ... nv. -1 Novo co llO 16..., 1\1' 16 ~ -'' !', ... ,,. oo , '''' '" '''' _ ,, t~·· , .... , ,, .. g • M•rtlotllll llll'lt,\lo .... 1.rtm!nplfO 111141111,_,.•tij, 1fl,l'!o7:0.:. onro~nc H '' Ntl,1.0.m .. , I t ....,,, ., .... l.'n•n ~ "="", ••••"FdllQ Ul! , .. ,,..,_,..Prot!G•2UI ll11J 11114111\4t'·'IA"" mi II'" 'l• ~ .... +.conCdftFl t 11 2'•, 2•1'-11t °''"•'1'0 I) J2 ,•,• •• +~.N::c:~~Otrtt ,,,H ,,'si t 41 t1rd1111 ne 1J 11.o. I ~m"' -" ''.'.' ,,,.,,, ,-,,,,,,,,,,,_ .. ,,:'!RlchH si•o jlV.ll\' u"'•~"''' 10 10,,10v,1 , lonNt1Sn"' 11 , 7\lt 74 HornH•r••t J10'•'°\' N >, '' 10 ''', ,, 'llttSmkllO 110 10 10 -\+L 'I h ·--" '!' '. ,,, ''' ' ''' G •• ''" ''" ••h ' HatklN .. , It ,, .. + \' v '°"' t' " ''ffiri: '"'' ,, ... fl'' ,. _,.,,LTV I l c , ,,-,~ •r, ,1 I> '' '' _ '' ~ c 1!' l!h o, >O'L tt • wt 1 I • "' 1•• + '• on 11 ov -•, , E >I ' " I • •• 'b':i' l'''' l • •:fl \\' >" ..., -... + ,. • " '\ G ' •• ''~ < C :\!:' ' •I'• >I ' •1•, ~ "'~Pr ! ,,. '• -,., ' ""' -._. ' J"' ' '''' '' ''" ":ij' ' l" !~ ' ., .. , 0 0 '' •>" •> ol•l -• •'e'g ~lf"I 115 ?~t 211\ Jllo Ot_rio wr J Uo "• t•o-1~ on uft\llo " " C .,0 • >> '" 00 !>•+ •• ., ,. -'-' ' ,,::..,,, _ ' "';".,, -· I 111016 6S >61 +•1 Al~nE!1'! ?! '"• ?l'o +<o COftlll 1 .JO IQ 1'• u, 1''•-" outtF1rlc l 1'o 1&'1 H l1 -\o !t lt rl" lO IV. 1 11\+\~Mi;'f"•"' .. u lf l h i l .+,• ;.;,;;.-¥ F 'i 10 fl,• i~' ii~ -PSE t' I 1190 $1 SI $1 .; 1 Alllfll Ad a 11 1&>.I. llV't -'4 !°"' M1ltr Jl ,.. 1. 1•• -"~· VIJ ·~ r UI• u tl_ =ii 8::1:: ~~ 1l ~ Iv: J~.:: ;: ltNn Ch .. ) ,, " n -"'N h. ' ' • ... \\IHevF tnl 1 "': l l'o Ult PSEG Pil~ 5 ~llt XI' 10 ~ Alllad Cnnll 40 I"' I'''' 11>•-\ otkEIK JO l 11 IP. 11>,.-\lo 11 111.0. ti ""' "' ~,_,,OU• Ind 10 ?I~ )1•4 )j\'-t'llWI £!Klrl'I I l'o •r.: t~ It. N 11 \< 31 YI J\'jo I..,., r.\11111 n •l 11 '!-II' Pu1>5~1n I Cl !9 ,, 32\~ )J!~ _,., .O.l! -51! •O O'• N' '"'• QC* lfld 10 ' 1!1 I. -.... H:::i't! I '' ' !'9\lt ltlt ~~) -.... ~ltD • 10f' 1100 110 lot . 10t•~ -'II ltrl ,.,, ~ ' 11 ' 1 -• N•I~ ';.'L ™ .. ..,. .., .., -l MtvOStr I Ml 1~, ~:~" :!.: ll" P$1na •II°' .so Ul+ 14'4 ,~,, -) :1m~"' 11lt ~, 1t•1 "-· Jllt -,,. !OO!r.PIV I"'° 1 1t'lt 1•~1 lt\.'I -14 H &.Mtl'I ... , j,O\, j,O\) r,;.. ... krl1'1111 lO • • '. n, + " 11rPrK 2$1 ~ J~ \.'Ir Slit -" Not•tt '":I' lO M M M • M•vO p!lllO fl . 11 ~ ,.llblklnd 'II Jl 71, 1\4 1!4 -'• !fo 1Au Sol u 1fl'• 1(1 211 -JI • so I I(\ 14 t•o H, .. ,,';!!_L~I ",, ',o•, ,'l·' ,, 7""7! -•nd Ind II •O.:. • • l""'M" !O 'l 'Cl '! olDI\ ~-··~·· •• L.. s1,"' '° '° _, -'°Utb suo 10 11"1 ?Ol• 11 'I .... 1~ A/""• lncl~ll I I 5 J ooo ll'I( 11 f, i :UI'> 31 ~ , .. _ .. -,-""" .,. "' ,,.. \:;rnto "' , ... , :Ill\ 211\ ~• " ""'" ' ~ ~ 70 MIYIJW JO S 11'~ 11'~ Jl1~-1 •pJl(tn'!ll >a 11" 1'1\ "'l1ml!Co 1f1 I "I & 1\-''!"''''' ._,, -Hunt(~A l t •7 lll;o '1\'t 11>,o+\oOS\rlllVllfl .SO 3 I I I -V,, ''" '-L _, .. _,L -~"c"'~".1'2 10 7t 7' 7t Mavr"! 11 11 ""' n it n•• + , 0 , 0, , , '"'' '' I' , -JO !\lo 11 21 to +v. , •• ,., o•• • >I '' •r ,,, __ " °"'"''0' " ' "" ,. ~ _.._ -I> P " ••·• •••• ,... ,, '' ,,.. "" '!F MCA "' .., 11 ?J" ?J )3'• -" ,.~H .... ~ 2 llO ~ ... ~t; ~: -.. "'ICOt 01i 1 flOO\ ;r ~ ~l • ~ii· -I ClmodYM 2' 11 10111 10'!. t-..... M~Vt1r Co tO ' • J1 ~ 11\; -~ °""!f. 1!~· 1 l'\lt n • i?": -14 T~ Ct ..... Ui )] .. 36" 36~ -•I Oii I ' n Sol "~ ..... =1,~ M'Cord 1 l'Ob 1 11. 111.j 1,•,• -\, p11,,,,0 1-11:< 11 TI'• '1~ 21\) , "''""'S<o•c u l t•i ,., ,, .._ '• c:~t ;orp• 23 1111 lJ 1J • ...-""Hvcon M'9 11 I'• ~' ••• + v. OlllOI' Em: 11 4'1:o ''• ''• -1.t "~ Wtlli 11 lllo "' *\lo + il .,.,!, 1'1!ff 16 4l ti'-, _ 1, McCrorvl'lQ \l1''•1•~ '' P~roli•r\60 SO .,,;il,11'!,-'o.mcot"d"•t • !'• 5•, J'•-'-< ,_,1. ll1t o71 11 -\1,H'fdl'Omlll n •t • • ~lrdllll'l 11'D Ito l'o l~•-1~~ml,cb!o 11 't~'1 HI.lo ll'klt.111 •11 l1 MC~rmoll 1 lit t1'o Jt r ()10 +l , ,., R .,,,...,.,. 1-;1 '''• '', '', , ,, re1 .... ,,, » •~• •'• •~ H-roo •-'' ''' ''' -, 0 , O"'''' l 011 ' 1'01... !O•> 'J '1 l4 • f\\ "' P.,.ITll' J\tth n ,,.. '' •• ,. McOor>llG Cp HJ Jt • ll'• Jt _..,.,. -"A otv~,;·•111 11 , t ~,, ~, _: ,, CrYlltl 011 11 ti• I o II. -1-. 1itil Toy (j, I 37 .. 11;! ;;,. Otl!'k Altll'lf l1 Sl/lo ! ~ , '" !"" Ell<' ,. 141 2rl~I lt'-" 711-\ -1' Pttll :if. ti "" "" McDonnO 10 110 ll , 72" 11 • -.. llff" °'/ ti 1 06 il , ~ , Amil llrll .O t 1~0 t~ ~ 10 ,1 C11Dlc Coro II !Ill 11<. 11'--I• IHC 111C I 1"" lt\lio 1tvl _ >t P&.F 1".,,11 1 '°" t 1•• +. "' 1111tlr l!leUt J 711 JI\, 1°' -'• Phott1li t117 .! t: ~ t • McGrEd I '° •l ll'• JOI,, ll • -'• lli.510 I Ml •i )Ji; , .. ~~: ' .... ,. <to'ol ,. ' ,, ~ JI ., " ; = l, (11•1!1 Mt Thi ' 6lo ••• •r. IMC Mlt~I I 10!• 10 It• t 11 PIO( C1l P•o• " s '"' ••• -'l ~· Svro Ml l ll'. U\\ ll\\ -li lliOCIUn IV.&&.I rl 71 -· McGHUt ~ 61 Jiil 'H 'H -Vo t"' JO t If I ' It Am PlnA 1 10 •I t<>t 11\0 1"1 L o )uilff A U I 71 o 71 I 1' 1 -I\ 1mocot;. 1111 I 11 'I ! h PGE I.pf l '° 11 11'• ti fl~• +•~ 11~-,. JJ :16I~ M\lo 31\'Ji -2 S.IUICI S~1 15 1' .g· > ~ McGH o!L :rt I ll t1 ,, -\\.\ 1 ••onP 10 16' Jl>o l; ?1 \o -11 Am~ln l&fl 1'D 1 1~ 'o 11 II -•1 o~rff I 4' I ll 20\'I U ~ -t, /'"O On SGt 111 1 ~I I "' I ~ .j. PGE pl 1 ll I 1tt0. lllt IP.or -< l>l'tl'llcl 7 11• -"'° -\\ 51•"" J""'1 la •10 •t + MtGr"Oon I i 'o 9.< Sllo-11Rt•IPonl'O )Jf ... ll'!llJ9to +•,Ahr~•ll 11t 1 S ' I "''-II"' 'Of lJ fl'o th t'-'i+l-.mTGtpl)D S2J1'JJ..111 J.ll+\.PGrdDIA1U 11 .... 1601111\t~:=::-l'l .. •I •:1\!_,•1C:1!.~+"~w,~,.J."H ltSM V.S \'9 Mcln!Tre 1 dlO 111 1 1!4 U"'1 --t 'I Jl1m1cl1 j1 JI ll"' 1 h ,J~ -\i """ Mol'!d 11 " a IQ~ 'I -1 Dimon Corp IO 61U. IG 60\\ -1 .... 1,..,!t n Hi! wl I fl-. t'lt f\1 PG '-IOof\ 10 1 19, l!"o Ut'I \.\ ,, ,.. ,. -1 ~ • - Mt l(" 1.lO t TI'• Jrlo 1l .. -It J11nco Inc n 11 lo 2 ~ 2~ +I "''""" ln1111 ll ,,,, ~, 11 • -" 01mon(r ... I t 1~ l\J -~ llldpltPL of • 1100 JJ SS " Ptcltotcl IGtl ,, !S\.\ 14t• '~ -., !""' Ml "' d lJ\lt I.SO.. 1~· l'"l!L' ,;il .·~ .·a..· 'E·· .. ·~ ~;·:~.· M M,<!:;O\I,,'",,''° 1S ]I\• 2)''9 2:J<'l -'IR1oldAlft 10 l'lo; 11~ t~+I "'"'P•lr 11~ •i J•o J"'i l"•+o0 0•ntelln 21g 111 It,. l II -1 lf'IOl!tH1rd I!' m H•-"'PHokl 1111.20 1 2114 21'1 11l +1" rn1ll9¥ ltt t f ll\ t _,.14 ,. •• ntll t II, Ullo 11 ~ -I-• Jl•o"' 01215 I st 51 51 -10.:. Alft 'r~-.. • 1 I 1 01r¥I ll'ICltu S Sit S J ln!ll!;lh!P »! U 1 to 1 lo 11'• PK ll'IOu1 J ,,. "' I '"i.' .ob "'1 '1 I)';, ~ll -2'• MtldCoro 1 1.111 11~ I~ ll\o -~t R1vbe1!111 l t .. ,. ik ti "'"'JlllT U• I t ; "• t•• \ Dtll Com U 10\• 10~ 10\'th lnlirlCICr «If I , .... "3 I\~ P1CLI 111115 rlOO •1 i!" lfl1 + \ ¥1lfmi E ... :l6J '"9 31~ ~+tl'I ''ti;, MNdDIAJIO •1 () () o.1 Jlavmlnl IO 46 UV. 1 \'I ljl'l-".0.m~~ll!t lo l• >• 11, &o-"011•Prottu ll 1•• J.I\~ l•'I l<>lm.lfOnCtffl 1 t t t P1<LI 1>14141 r<OO 41\oto ·~ +1•1 -T•2.-T-_!'i. •P Mlchn.IC l 10 t 291, 19\lo ,.\, -... lll •tovon M il l'9 o 1 1 I, -l\.'I .0.lftTt(h lo. l7 l<lo 11 1< -\o 01!1Proc:L Co J.16 20<. Ith 20\o +H6 Im.Ir Svo Ht 1 t II 1 U'o 1111 + \o PICNY'Tll I 1 IS J 1 -\\ ·~ ilt , ~ 't 7 U. • MllvSl>o 1 so u "'' 111, n "!Ylh 1111 u l !'9'< 21"-ll"" _, .t.MIC wl 11' P o 1'~ 1• &·· 11\ln !jg n Ulo IH• 1~~ ... ,~ '"'' Ch Nuctr JI •1'• ..... ,, PKP'&l pf ' ''° .. ti ,, " 1•m•r Eltcl • '" '" llt tCA .... 'T' M•mllrtW Co U2 Ull• IOI .. lil"i + ... = : ~ ! I lll j'" j3ll• ",~ '.:j:: ~ .0.mocol•O to 7 11 • lf o "t' + \\ tJlll'I JI IG II• II II\' -l'I 11'11 Conll'Oll t Jl:I\ lt!o 11 PacSWAlr wt ~ lt .. ,,,_ U°' +. •t llfl'a k ,NI I 1~ 1lt< I'°"' -" 1(.0 ,si,... f Mtrc11'1S 1..0 1 •I W\'i 11 i 1 v P ' S 1 • • 111 "'"''"' Coro '" '' , • •, ,,., -l g1,1/n wl lO 1. 1 1 -It '"' CDlll .o, "" * \I. I 11 .. I • P•OC' A n 16 211 .. 1•·~ l'!I -,.. ff<~ At-.f"' IS 7Jt' n IJ -1 u Riv P.<lolt 10', i t" 1 _+ !! M••c• 2• m 105'11 lOJ. 101 + "' =t:CS1~J~ I~ t"11! ~f· •• ~ -+•.,., AflCltrton M ,, lllo 11' 11... (. T<1n .._ I ll• 21. 21'. + ~ lfttProltll'I .10 ., " l1'1o "' Ptnll0'9 "' ' ll't 1\.\ 1\~ -., TKhl'llt ()Mr 11 n•1 tl\'t nq ;. " V~ll'I I " ~ .. Mt•I P•llO d •5 441o">,0+'1411ttOlno'l'"pt ?l i;lhlH .. -•~"'ndf911t~7J I··~ S~I ..,,_~0..f!MlrnCo Utl 1111211'1+\IO ln!StrT<htlf 7 1\'l l \o lo Pa"'1ftl P~t tlO''l"'\0\0 -14TIClltt~TtH J6 !h flt• Sl\-~ .. \ll f lll 1 t 50 Mu 11 "'l" l ll 11 IJ -""' lfitldllld l of I llO,, 1I ll~~ +•I "lAl'lfv Gtrcl l l J l 1--o DeJnoAm JO U 1~0,. '~ t:\ro -~. ll'lltrl!l\011 l1 1~ 10 10 -\.-> '•r\ flt 111 1 10•\ ~ t'l -\(o l1Chl'I te 41111 JI 11\:r. I"'°' 1nt -.. =•r ~;Ar I l~l'l IU"' I -~ ~;~::rt' J~ .~ ~~ •iY.t ·1~ +~ ==~~':' ~ ~ "1s. ij~ 11·~ :t t~ :::r~1cL.11:~~ ': ';:: 1; .. 1~i _: :: &::1~b'cor~ 1!~ llt: ll~ ll'~;:: a :~~l§rt~·~ 1u.:i 5r ~~ lji: ~t·: ~ !! ~:~~= ~: ~: \~ 1t 1~~ + '4 J:r.;;:: J nl~ 11~ u;~ +2"' ;t~~ ,"',I , t:"' :!\'I -... MUll/l\chl 111'12f>-•l1•1 -lt 111etvtl,J,jO 61 !''n -nt"'niulCOSI 1 10~10~1~~ ~~1tor1l1 lJo ll''ij +<,1nvl¥l t$ 6.,,, ·~ l''-''Pt1PP1Pl6 o 1•IOU'1411'• Tt fty Mlt1 I] 1;1 ~ N-'llC. I T'Altt 11" MGM 11 21 'I l~• 2l't + .., Atltl\Ch so 10 I " ""' 1-\ _ tl "'"""'~" tM ' 11 01~ 10•• -" ro sell Dv Ii lllo \t t'IO l'IV 111!11 ~ It J l 111 • 1 1 • -\lo P11oC111 2119 7 ~ J '< J 4 Ttnnt C0t• II 1,.,., ,,,.. 11>;. -t \'o "iiili!i'lloiiiiiOiloillM Molromd ~ Sl IV.1 ll't 11•o -llo Rt!llbS!f 60 , lit' f 'I '" + \ AO llKlu•I •J ''' j ~ '', ~rtl Ph 1 "" ~l -h rcouol1 4tl ti t 1011 t ~l Pttb Gii )fl tt , .. , 1,\, 71'~ -"' T•nntco WI l'!I 1 t<1• P' -'Ar '" Mttfdpllt11111'D51 JO\~Xl '>-~••1j'"/ 10 u !~17'•\"j -~~PllntltO.. l•7?•121 "l1 •-·~ ttc!OS'5 .-.. ~""' 1,.,ln lflCI 061 I!''~ I '"!Elder )1 1401 11 'l:1-t \.'IT,•nr11re:flll 11 6"' f'-" 614 -\• M•oGlC Inv 1t 'l Jt\lo JN sm + R• '" 1 ot J 1 ~ m, '' -1• ..,...,110 l""u•t ~ ''• l . ., •r, APOlr ll II'• H•o 1/ l, '!' lnO • h s • si, -p E ,0 A "' "" 1 • tMO• CD ' 71't 14 7111 '' F• MlchGloUt ' n U h 11 ~ 11 t -.... ,. l•n ofl ,6(1 11 ~'I' 4 1, tlllo -'• .O.noll~ 0••• ,, ,, • l P~ n~~ = ·~ 1:1 II Eoulo 15 ill "' I '"' =1~ I EL (011 SS 11~ ?I 21 • ·i:t.s~0 IOt irlT 1'1 I ll + 1\ j•r HUii •!I t ,~. J•t "" = I~ mance Mich Tul>t 1 I 11 1 ·~ ISO -'lo t~llb~c Co 15 JI• JJ•t Ji\\ -IV. "'oolltd 0-v ., ') ~·, t, .._ ,~ lltrdO 10t 1 ri" 'Ii' ~ -\<t Tl Cort tt (~1 1\.'I ra f>~·••o• '' '' ''' V. V'o -.ore Pit 4 U14 fl'o 1' -'• Mcroc:Lol .og u 111;, 12'1• 11"'4-~i t l!Vl>ll)H l2 )I\, :II ll\•-l''~QIJttl~Cd• ~11'/4 '! "'•~') od,tt"cc 1l '~ \1 _,, -J·M-PE .. ,l lmc 1• 41'11 4 \.'l 4jl't -"Tt•lllr J5 1k\ •1~ 1 -M dCnTel ... 1$ lf~ 11\'9 lfVI -"'RtV(O s u ~ lft'o lt\t + 'll •••11_• lnc I! jl\ ""' ~·i •l'Vl'I oro H ~ I to -.. "' ,,.,, 1 I~ +1 Tedron WI • Ul't 15 1$ -1t Mld$oUlll t6 I It ! "' 20\• J -l'o llevereC l 2 J •J J'\ ,~, '1 'to O.rl1C~ oLO C , U>I 111\ U•I MH '•°'' ' 11+ 1 IS 1 It -\\ Jfclvn ,\\If l I~ i \o nt'4 + ~ ::·1~.·-.:. ll ,41.; Jt 4 74V. + •1 l'' Co Inc )l 1 6'• I~ MldlO • 1 ilCI 12 ljl• u 1]" + \1 a•VIDll I u' • 71•• 1 .. -1 .,,_ 11 .. 1 z ! I~·· """ 1~·~ .J. ·~ I t~o '° 11·· '"" '• +n. Jffllnth• GI SJ 7tf! ifh " rl St " !" a11o 1'.. 1\ ~~u IOI! u 11'~ 11 '4 I''' -\'t Mlaw11 011 l 5 I i! .. ~ ,·· .. i.~7 In ,: J~S~? !tr~ -1~t "''~LG•• 1 ~(I Jt '"· ,, 71 •1 ~1·~1 10 ·~ ): 1i1~ u .. =it j:;:.r~ ~1111 I l~~ .,~ ~~ =1?: ;~ lh:Pcr 11 ,; ' ' It ,,.. ,, = L~ Th I! ml A 1 , ,,., 11'.lo I~ -.... "' lt~lll l 20 lU 710,, r H,o _ .. ,I• ~M '''" ' n•; • , -+ ,. .O.•row Eitel I '~ • '"' 7~ = '• ~ l' ~ t !' , f ' ~· ! • ~ ! --·" •n 1'·0 J" !:: I/I -·~ Tok~.im IG I 17\6 1Wt ,2~ + \Ii M '. • • ' l' r·· flt I " "°' 'Ar l'llltl C ' > ,, l>'" l o ., tj ,•, ,'.!,, -' >o ••-• ' >o '' -> jfl •d _pll.2! •100 .,...,_ "'' ••••· M ,~r nlerg " ft 1 \4 I'• -0.. lt .... v~"'ob 1,IO \ti '1 ,,.,., 41 -., A1~mer1 01f 11 :'!!• :;1" .,..., -" 1' "" 1 r ilCI 11 • 'll" j]' '::m-·· ·-,, ,<,.>+_ l,) ;t~':1~ ~~t~ s,ru 'j" "" I-" Dnk• tp Ml 17 10'. .. 1f'4 itii-,., • M 1 116 1 ·~ 10 \lo 105'• -l" JltvTII l>ltlJ lit 41 '4 " -11' ASPllO , .. ~ 1 1 , '• !• 1 _, ' rtloo '! -•to •rt IS lo '1" \I _ ,•, ••--••-YO '' I " '' '"TOD! lllt1rc~ 1l 11~ 'f'' ''" -'• "I""'-' I • tt"' 'I _.,lt~tlngcld ~ n "'' 111• 21••-·~AM!!J tw"'tfl I "' u•. JI•\-·~ rTut ~ !! , .... t ,·-·1~.,,',•,•,,<•.,, .~,','!!lo'" '• ,.ec-,,,·. r. 11•; 1i't 111.'o -141-1" 10 ~1 • 111, ',.. 11"'-+•.· •• Milfttp2 :t5'oO ""fl ,....,_1,Jllc~rdsontrl su-.111~!1~"'""•'•·•••"••-'",.11•11'•-'• Mlt(!r~ .-. ' ., ....,. U _ ••ro• , I" • ,.. M~ II.Iv I ·-.:i. {~ .... +1.\JllCJ\M•<t"' n O(I St\~ lf14.-l .. .., "' J "• "· ,,._1, E"-t rvtw IH _,.. F ·I~ f'io+tl"'''"'~' .tob n '°"'"" .... ~1-n n IHCOl'I I ... J\t. SV.-\1 MP'c!m 1 11 l!Vo 21 7J _..,, Alt(ll!I Pao 1 '.I.Ml 1.,, 19•, 11>. ",',:',:,"',~ ilCI 1 '''~ 1'" ,.,, ~ 1 -·-ICll'H!! Mhler t f '°'' 1(11\ + \lo Pit WVTr .Sol 10 • I I j rtl'lt Ctrlb 1J 'Vt ! ' -1-. SAN FRANCISCO (UPf),"... =1,5 tllO I t\o lt .. J~t -~~ Jl~llTxl IO H':o 1~, U•~ ·~ 11 lo S'• •• _..,, 1;1.ieClo 15 l 10\• l"' 'lli I ,,1(1MbP'l 10 I! t• It ll>tl Co ll 1111 1D I _,,.., r1n1L~m IG 1' llV, 11111 11'11 I 1 IOI 1!1tJ 411> I01o ti -1. R ·~""' 60 11 ltt\ "'' 1171 ... ~, "'.·.~·oc:1,·1~ 1•1 1"• 1«o 10 , ... .. flflD .. ' l", I" I • + +. k1t1D•u• to l ,.,~ 1••· ltlt Pl•1• G,_ 1• 11 ""' Int -lolo """''' 01• u l~ th ,,, +1'• The newrmabr in 1·-ny IUI l 10 16 ?t., l1' l'9't .... 1, JI rft Pl'° 'tt ••1 ,., ••• ~ '""'" ,, l'lo l ~ P., .... 1, •• ,_,.,,, 10 01 I h ,. -'• 1•ul 111'1! "'' l 111, ,~. l"' ...... •111me Ah<rtld ' 12 lJ I! + ,, ,..,_,m ~ u"•" •,•,,• •,m _-~ -.uil" ~ I• > j41• )0 • ll"' -'• Jiii• Al(! 11 10 7'!o 1t ' Jtl'• + •• A0!!:,,°"'Co ',",. 11 '1 '1'• )!'• -~ IJtn F<I W 3 ~ W \' -' •vl"'V IG 1 rl't 11"< 11,\ -'' P!r ~ lit 11 11 ' 11)" ll -\.\!'!'!A WI -~\ """ "' enlertatnment for 1970, -. nil JI f'' ll 'N ''o + .. Jllv '"'" 90 1 1f•1 'ltV. 29 1 ·~ ,,,... • 1 ,, t '1 \ JI • -1 (~mtr Cl) 'o i'i•"·' •'i'•• + lo =~.2"',," >I ? :•, •, ', >l$I~ -~ =~ .. ~•I.,~ 1~ \;'\ 1::: :::; = ~ +~lsf:iJ ~f ; !tllo .. ,,,, r,,, -! ~ ~ >• ! u:i. 2 h 2jh->1 Ac.n!oel Uo J1J S"'I J._ S\I = \o "'t,•,ll!c.,I wt IJ 1''~ U•• 1'. -•, CL lnG !t "'" 1 '1 ·• •"-! ' '" COrdinf to &lnaer 81n1r Crosb".ft MOll!'OEO j,O I d\'o ""'' I 't -'I Rllboh(on ll ll6 lllo lQ\\ 3I J\'i " 'M ) OS• 7(1 JJ )I ~ 11'• + 1i col'llc S<I 115 ' • '• t l• -l, KNICM '~ 10 l '• llta 11•1-1\ Pollrtd E 11 l't. f ' ,,, r ,... 10 1'1t. lit\ Utl -'• e -:t• Mer11tn 1 '° 'l• W'M ni.. Jl•• _ '• •-·• , ,, , __ '"• '''' = .. ,1,11.-JCb<c "' ,, , , ,,, ,., t111 ora «1 , ,.,, lj" _...,Kt¥ o 1~ "• 1•, 11 _ v, Poloron I.Ht n 21•• 1 n -"11 ,..NI 1t1 M:r 'ltt 'f.' 101'1 Wlll be a "mulU·Visk>n e:t· Mon\t p~.)J " '61· ". -.,. .-"·" " • ·-,-' ;· A1111•t •rt " ,. n JI'~ -... ~--~P'llO lO ~6\. ,, •• 1 '• -,. k•Yll ln41 '° J 10 '" Jn PolYOlr tOt • U\o 'fl~ Utt -+ ·~ Trco ltbt •l I I •• ''"' 1 •• Mon! PW 11 U :II•\ 21\/o H >; nSA.--. 11 31 l ~ l "' -~ "'"'''~' 011 " 7n, l'I , 17' ~,·,-: ~!., 0 l ' 10 l 10, 10 1 _ ~. K!!_tm,bt IJot 11~ I Jt, -\' Poil'tr'ltr Of 1100 11 l 11 ~IP Co•~ J IYI 1l0 '' petlence," Of -1~t, -·....a eeJ MOOt Mc "' l!I IS'• !ti• Ult-Aocl'IOl 1 Jrlb :U ?~ 11 71 I -~ "'v10 111111 •t t 1 .,, .1.-le.., ll ' , '.., t > otm r1 COl'll 11 J't J•, J , _ .... Pottff Intl 112 7''• 1711 "'• -Ii 11t•ctllfd t0 11~ 11\o 11 ~1 -111 ""6" ...,..,.,,,., M"'''IJ IQ 1)G ~·· ll" •1 1-1, ROCftTet 110 " J.lh Jf.'o ~ ........ I "' O•tt ,., IJC ••• ". •I lo + !t lt.:TH-11 ' ''" 'J'• II ... -• l(lnot 1<1119 II 10 \ IG l '!'4 -., Prtlrl• Oii lS 11\:i Ill~ U'" +1\1 ft ll'IVt$f ,. l 1~ I"-' n -., or and light Mor-.l>ol'll 14 I'~ ,7 V, JlockMltllO J7)0 ?O•o1':0..-"""''',.....''llPd 1l1'ol1..., ;.!ltclAHl•t •l to l l}+HIC:l ... ••ll"l!H l11J 1!'>1 +')Pr11fLt"1b l 1Ulollllo111!-U lll'll101ftl0. 61! '"1~\lo-~o Mot·Nor IO fj 1 J.I :if -1 Jllll>mH lllOb 1' n '*"" 1~-'••VC<••• • , ''• '' '' -·w Itel c......, J1 t •• I\• t'• IClf•uL•l 1« ) II\\ )7•• llOto -•,Prff\fMtH 6' J,2 ~ ,., V.-~•U~.O.lrcPd JO J 11, UIAi 11\lo ' "--by··•DavldM ••·•-Metorol• 1 \iii ,\ll1l~l"''l'\RortrCe llO ~ »• ''" 74,.__.,.,vc~CO•Pwl ,. 1,, 11i ,\-1\ Itel lh1<t11 1 t \'Ji t , IC lnnvr,ic M 111 71, !h ~ Prnll.US to n v. ltl~ lf"I u .. 1tA1b(.Ol1 211'~t'' ' -' "'u:i auu •"10\JMI, ~lt/:~\ ,.!i ~ ,: ll'I J1:=:.::::::11"1C~I 1 ~\:ti'• ~'~+~:v11~1.:.,nc , 11 J , l ' l: E~:~:n 1 :r, l~ )~ ::""Ji,., -.IS~r," 0~ JJ 1! 'i11o 1 '!'~.._,,=i:fm1 J:!1, ~ 1r..: 1'i" !\:+~H~::•:.:rt ~ l'! J"' ~h fonner Viet prtlfdent O( t6e. M5LlndfD 10 ~o··~\' .... ,1100•••m10 s1 21 •• 211.a""-"'"'~~·nc1itx:' :1f""1~1•1:1•-••e~1"'"""'' 11 ,, !'• 'l'l""SW~':.."so ion ?t~·,.._-l,ProvG11~ • """" 'Ai-1\UnN~t11nv "''" •V••t·-~ AmerlcanBroedcutinJC):, ~~~:~~·,',,} 1l r'ii; 1:~: 'fi; ~ ,: ~~fg1~, 1; .a ~, .. ~r~ ~f,; + '• :~.!=~~ 11'111~1 l'I ~l.~ 11 II~= •• f~T.::C"1tp lJ ~. ,1; : .... + :: tf~UH .. 1 IO ~ 15'• is'" i;.1 ;~e\!.~C ;: ;? = i1l' ~ =, .. ~~~·~v""'11~ ~ h. ~'• i\j, -·~ 3MOUnctd they art fOl"'fnlug Mut°"Y l"d I •1 '' l• -• AorOul tn7d o JI ~ ll'~ 11 ., 'k ~~ • ?• ?t • U • -\lo l!m1,... In .)0 'l'I 11, 11• 14' 1,1. ICoimoo" ilCI 1 JO• JO•t JO .. -•, P111>tOrt1 l' 71 I '-" 'I 141 -" l'lf'~t IOI 2 1§ U•t 1i't -•11 It ti aJ • Mur•.o"°"•i" ••, "",', •, "", -_,"' 110,11 1n<1 ,, 1o•, 1o, ,0 , _,.. •'·•"'oL"', •2• o, ,.,. 1,•, • ','. ~ Em•"'" 1 211 11 Uh 1 • ' -ICY!ortn .oo. ' ""' 11111 21 ~ 0~co10 •'• s 111 '°" +"' " 1" ..._ 1 1 U"ii 1t1\-..., an n erna on nelwork of Mur 0 1Q 13\ ll ll Tf n •• lo I! I ~ ll. -~ Lt '"'~ I~( JI I s•. s•o -• Pu•ll•l'I Flth ' H 11, u "''"'( -l 'l' ,. N 11. Coro it 1111 11 1~ ltNCo t ,~ f' 1 nt•on"" 11 ••I'• J1•-'•t1f1wJl•d!t 111111,,1,,,_,,o11tntmf$~I 1 1 1~~•1,.1••+\ioU 1111r lll\"''1~_., franch1sedm1nl·th"-"-'•f.1 - -RubrmtL 1 04 S 11 • IO'o ~·o -11 1\1"! Oil II p \ •O'i ~ ',~ ... ~ 1 U • U • lS \ -lo l8t'"" ' '!' 1 P •-N ' '" I ~ 8 ,_ ~ t " --, , , .. ,,, co n ,,,, ,,. ' • ,, , , 1 111uvco 1 ''' 1•• ' , ,,, + , , ., , ,,,,., • 0 ' 101 • -•• v..-• -• • • v • zv. + " where th• who!• family -~:i~~fi~l3 7;tl'.?~'~,·~i:1tiiiiTog1~ 111s1~u,15 \-1:~u~17•1;; i'3~~l~' l~:--~.Oll!l,dlW i1os1•'"'"'-''•LiM•u•Si, 11 \ 1 . Jl\~•,Pv,ollCo:t.I I f\'olO 1\.'lt l•u .. t•tl U !t UV.-1) ..... , Nttl'tl.tl 0 ,, 11 ~ co , '°'' -"Rv<1erSv1 '1 •0 •S•o .u 1 •S•o _.. .. l!ltnner tnd"' ! 6' ,,• 11' -ll r111tEC )QI I 6 • I• 6 •+I• L•,,.,lty t l~ 1l': i:: 31 ' --R·5-0 Jl~:t "™ 1JJ jJ\'I 1IV. -I\\ enJOY this ffiUJUpJe lml&e ~,1 .o.irt" Cl JI n 1•1~ 70 _,. •• -S-l••bL~nn 11 11 " ,,: ,,: -, Ero llldvtl •' " ,,' • ,: • _ • f,','.,"",' '"' • ", 1•1.1, ,:;: +1 \~ Jl•'!I:!,• Ind • JI• J ~ t\.t ~ I.lo U Jiit JE f '9 11 • Jo ~._ ! 1; t rt l NA~Jf11 2• u n\• n' Jii =l~s1f1w1v11~ I• l4't 1l'"• ?l"-'•l1r111>1i:nt 1 IU. ll>o II._.-E,~~~ 11 'i:~ ftO 9 -\'l tee101f1'N111~1'•'•' !ti\ tl1 :•ttrAmwt 17 t~ 4lt •U +-U ~11Jl;ilut!n 11 11 U ene a1nmen . ~~: 1(~( 21': •S ll!I 1~. 10 . -2"i SIJOlld 1 IQ 11) Jll.i J11• •7'~ -·~ 1,· •• ·~·~,llld 1 I • ,,', ,,',. + :' In Jlad '11 ' 11. n. 11l1 -I\ t:i"'•ll ) l?f 11 11•• •• ~ 1,I" +,',•, Jl:v r:.c;'(.. ' 1.i: 1!!t ,~!! -"'u r~111 J!1 ,, 1!!", ,,'" ,•,:; • \.l Electrovls•on Produ-"1--, • .o,,.'", 113 lj 'l'" ~I' ~ · -.. !"''"' ''' ' '' ., '' -· • .. 1 1 ' • • -' '''' 1·-' ••• '' + •· ' " -· • ' "I' ' -" ·~· " .. o· ·• " ~ " ~ ,.. •rrvWrt JO 'S n JI • n ~ IO "~"' • •,• • r •tH~ I 'l\'I 111'1 1 I'> -'\ •rt'!! ,,g JO j 10 • lO~'t 10 • -~ • .,n roc:L! II H l•h 1' U\\ -\ 1. h d d b Cfo•~ Nt!(lll'I 1 J IJ \".I I ~ 1 1 -1 ~l 1Jlrvl•P 1 60 t8 J,.i>, l4 • l• 'I Ber!'ll Ml'd •l ll ' 11,' l ,~ + "1 II ~o« n Co 1 Jlo l '• l l L•lghPr I 1 '> !I'll Ill\_ 1, 11:.!l'dlnt 1~0 •, il: m !il Ul'I Y C 11r I I I t + .ulC, ea e '1 ""':t and N11Ctiem50 • 1 1•n'"+•1os.noG111ot 111 7U.n••-\!\ie•"':s!3i 710 ~ .,• ,1 E~1n1.o.r1"" 1 1\. ••· 111 -~L1!1u .. ·r.c •s11~1 ,6._111 ,,. ••f1,,v1,l'Ofo 1,• 1 1 -~UftCorotoji '! •"' ~' t 1;,-'4 Soc•·,lsde"eiopln•an-"'\llYL Vol 1 1S 14\lo Senl!f'I JO •I 13'1 Jl ?1 \ I\\ fU•!O d ll 10,, ,,,. •O ' 111t11to~ ll " 11 11\lo 111'1 -\~Uno• lf'!c I I " $11.o Ill\=••• Jltlllyf ,JI ll 10 + '' Uftlv Mff I },~ 1$~ 11~ -•L -• o ,..., N1t 111\1 .tG 11 't!\ II 11 -11 S.ngtmo '(I 112 "" ?5 l6t4-1C~!I ~ •" I •-1• Ole~~ .. , al ll• ~' ll~· !lhlt•nt•j' !~ 1J JI, 30't )LI' "'llEDM CCII'• JI •h •• , ·~+11oUltf\IGS;,1 'I IJ 1 .. 1er·-1run tr hi N DI\! tl•jtz. 1:J liol Jf t ~'t _:'::_ ': S1Ft lMtl 1 60 IO U•' 1' ~ Jllt -It 1::~"'1.Jot! J~ !Lo l~'• l~\ -,: Feb l~tluJI It 17 14 11\1 171• + I Lerner If wt 11 11, 11•, 't -" JlllYfJ lnd q Oo t !o t•~ \1Mlt1 !\ H • 't 11 II en Ml en onn W C' h 'a1:1t:~110 ,.111~J,.1 :i.+isF11fldp1so ''" ·~ •'•-"'e,11 e 11l,'" 51 1f.t , ... t"'"•b~a. 1 •u 1•1 1·~ L11111F11ob 1111.11""1:.~-·~~"".,•~.',•,..•c "·'~~ •i.. "'_..,.v.11•• '!" l" .,-1 comblnesmovles,1Ude1 ......... •,•,GpPJ ',Ill Ill 10'\ JO _,~StnF1lnt )(I t1 11!• 21 '1 "'~-lll B•l'ICol Jltl I l&, lO, IO\ F11ltk1 Noll 1 10°' 10" 10'•-ol!•lft 70'MI J 11'~ 1J lJ\ 111111+. 1100> :Jll'li >'J14 J0'4 Vt >111r II 1 ft V, 5~ &Lal lndll JI ''• i. 1-. -'• S.rwtlkl i,o ' Ut~ lt'iO 16\, -\41 llnr\JI Coro 1 ',11· " 2J~. + "'l"tl•Nob llD 11 "" I\\ r•. + " ltvll1 F111n 117 U\t •Jlt 4µ~ +1• •mco lfld \Olt I~• lj. V-111rd '"" • ,.,.. 1"4 HJ +. ,, sound In a comn11ter1zed 11how N•tll'lll ~i:,:s J nn. I \I jl1' + "' SttUrl'I lne • 1)\\ 11 ,, ' -\, ltrtlrul'I ,, ,, 11. ""' -,, Ftk.an Sbd :S It . 11 .. 11 • + ) Lftl Fib 1 UI' ' I' 10" !Ol lllflll .... ... I ! ~h -"v-lllC ,, 1Ho 111, 1Hlo + I.lo ..... N Ltltl 1 1/l l~ 21 ~\> -'"' S.v1ntoE 11) lO 1P' lffi !I.. ltrill (orp I t l\o ... _ "F1mJIKd 60 1 1'1o 1 <o I~ -\Ii Llb9t!Y L1•1 1 l(.o 11'9 1 ii -"":llV(h(ll Cl 107 501'1 ~ IOo t 1V. VMl:P t111tru 21 >01'o "~\ 7•1-to + 1, projected Oil 8 llJO..de-. N1•P .. 11to , ,, .... 21 ,, Sclllt!tr C• ll Sl~ no.,, '''• + ll e'"' c. JLlr I "• t ,,, .... ,, l"ld lt~rctl ~ S'• S•• ,.. Lll!IAftl'I , Jtf I '1'' UV. ,J" -"' tstf'Vt OG ., "' V•nl~ 111111 1 11 11 II • '\ .. -NtlSVClft .. I' 20 1t111••\_,,kt,. .. 1..,1«1 1111~ JI\~ 1111 1uv0tlY Ent 10, '"• ,71, "'•-;iittdtrtl11ft( :n 111'• 10 11 -;,uivtr,..,.o. s 1 i. 11-. ~-~•t•l1ui.,JOb 1•' • ' v"'"'"'" P ~ ~• '°"-"' screen NII 51tnd fS 1 ,,\, jl"' )I 'I -1 klltnl p!l ·~ 71 111' 11"1 11 ~ -I\ 1 1, APPie , ,,, "~ , • _ 1 l"tCIMtrt "2b t IP.lo 11 I I ' Lint! TY91 i 2't '°' .l!. ll•t Jl-ltll'lfl A )1i II 1l ~ lv.t i •\ "'"' Co 1 ti.~ t'' 1\l .... \. u 1151.,.t11 to u 111ro ,.... "'~+\t.ktltnlv Pi,~ 1 11~ nt 1'"+\\111111,A 1 , 11 , 1,..,, i••-\'J"''"*'' oi1 s 1111;, ,,,, 111. Loc1r....-1e , lt\ • :\,+~=:.~\~11 ,, >! 1~ 111 l.1'+~'~",',,0 °'"',..'' "'~" 11\, i~J."" 1lie n e w theaters, des1--' N•I $""'! 1 !II IS Jl'o 3''1t H"' -\l klltt'll'l!i "' 341 11\lt 5t''o Jl'o -N 11.,,.,. Ind u 1, til 1 0 _.. \'i l"tllWIY a? I ''-' ll>• t1•1 "" ""LOCIOt!~ll C I I J \ )\\ lltlr "'-'f. > ., • C ~•H JO t 7~ I.lo _.. \\ ... .-.. ·~•,,t .. !•,•, II ,• ",',",, ",,•,, •,•,1i 7 '·'· fi~',~,,,,. , • ••" ,•,·• •,',• ,•,'• ++J', ·,~·.•,• ,.!!' ,", ,"', '•" ,'!' J. :l ,",'i:'•""•·!,,~ 1• 111-. 10•, 11 + "'LOtllmMt n •• ltl't u i .--.-' ' "' 1 "' 11>-1 -~.J. Vt•wlfW n , l4 ,1 ,, _ ,,. to seat up to 300 people, will "'" It. -., , 7t ., ......, ·-,. ,.. .., "' !I tVt N '11 -·~ Lotwt Tl! wt llJ 11• I ::~~ ~ ~ k\.!.nJ' ,:: 'l 1f. 0 • ~, 1"' -YI VlkH l"'t llO 11'~ 11 1' -t ho -~·-•• 1111111•• ?5 ?SI l'" jllo JJ + \, M ... ''° .!3 " ... ,. ,. ~ rvft>lrd "'' J J J. l -Fl WtY 10d u 1$\lo u ~ 11'• .. "'Loolflkl 11'111 -. ' : : ! .\. -l~ ICO.Vt M... , ,.. '~t ''1. Vl1u11 llll(lr I rn I') "' -It S<.-een s WI Pl\IUll\.'CV~ HIPlllM .1• 11 '\o I 21 -$1 <ltl'll Jlurt 1)9 11 .. 11(o lf'' -V. loll.cl JOf IO :tt 'o ,_. .... ?I , .. , Fll!rOyn a11 ) 1fto HV. 1' LOflll Wiii 111 J "h '4l~ ....... + Ill fl!w MllrSl'I 1) ljl. 'l~ '!' +\lo VK1llnt J.I l ii; S.. 1\11 1..eSbt BUC"'•Dd'& r~ C ""' p""' l.Cll H• 11 n:· ICM1 cleft! JI-. l>I I ,. .. 11 It -"' 011,,, /M IT f P'o 0 ' +•~ Fllll1n81 10 ~ 16'l 11lt 1'11 Loul\ Sherrv t • i:~ • +' .. ,11111' M.on _. ,•, ~I MIJ I• 1 11~ '114 l'"' -<\ Al-41 ...--i N.....,,., i I ff"' ' is -..,. scM c~ IOb 1 l'O'~ "'' 11 -'' llWfl'l•t imi • s, i>.i 1..,, "1"1G"'1 2"" '' 1'"' u u LSI ,,,., , , --. r.: • "'ir.'l' .«r 1 110 1 "_ v. v Merui 10 '' 1•111 u\11 ,,,.. ;. Product.iOll!, a pioneer _, 'f:lff' , n tf "' vi )LI\~ -1 1~ sco.o, 1,.., Oii •• t'"' 16'• 11t' -"" ,_"' ,. , n•• '', , • ., Flr-.1N1I •••' n '" ',._ • ~ tTv Alfa n 111 I•• '"' , ,. I'" a .. , I'' ,,., ... Ill ll'IC 'J 11~ 11 11 _ " _,_,,.... N ',. ' "' """ 21~. +Vo kcl!Uc!F l4 25'1 211. 'l'I -2111 11: v II ii ? ' n·~ "" ,r; -;,~ ~., H •• wl -15 l '"" )II -\Ir TV Atro wt 11 ""' '!\ ~ = ~ "'11 ... " n "" ' ~ .,.~ 1\; -\4 VWkCOl'll 10 7 ·~ , .,., pany m mlJed media lhowt ~tw~nl 1'11 1~l [h ~c ''\! -,. n~:~ : ' ~ :~ ~ h = a rMJ'r: .oe ~ t '! • ~-'t + ,, F-• SLllfl OU 1 11" IJll u•. LTV ••K••ll" " JV. Jt. n -... olllln Ind A 1) \'I "" I"" -u, 1/ilk lrw;: lD ~ I \• .... '"' h h h •,-,m,.••ig !' 1&J ,n -+ ·~ -iP-•, 11 ..... "'· •• .._ ... ,,..,~ ... 1,,, 1,,,' , -\1F,"""•~ '•" x1e1 n ti~ ,,...,.+\'I LTY~Au • ,,,,. 4 • fldtowtr 1t n '•A 11\t, 1 ,,..,_14 W•D•t11"' a ''"' ,n. ,.,,+1 w tc aye been retalnedby ... 02, .... " ..... ... ,,en.O.lrw WI 91 ... lo ''" "' • IS , ... , ... 211 ?Oil LTV ' "" ,, '~ fl\ ,,, -"'•°""' I"' , 1" M :)I -"'wmmu1 30 I xr•• "" )G" +l\.'I Cr by ••• s -·-~·-•l UI\ ~~~-l lll ~OVlllM llCL lJ "°"IQ\\'°"'_.." rnlAlr.O. l.!t 10 10, ,• '' ~l"lllf\1 SelllT 11 •• 21 11 -1'LT"IL llf to I l 1~' "°"+loi ol~1'11 lnll 202,! '' )6 .:! +N Wlftft..., lrlCI ti 11'14 II !l<io-tot 08 ...... l\;llMll #;l'liU'"'f'9. ~'1~l~'Ji l 10 ~ tn,..: Ii~ t.1? =~~:;~tit~ ,I sn , 57\it 1; ... :•" ••SClllLI 11 n IJ(• I~ ,,,: ~,,Fl• Clt("I • 5 m ~· Ls!llC 'I 1 \~ 11 1(14 +114 aoll Ro, Mt , .. J\4o-I u W1110 L.rlt Id ., .. "2lo .,l'I -1 date for the -m··~· ·- ft t1M Pll 10 ·~1\fln 11 -1\.'J ltl!OuoVI 11 1!.~1!~ I ._#,,_.8•aUftEftll 1n1o lloU•·-•,.flull•J•H ,111\ll!'lloll\\ L Corp t sr. s .. .N --·'-"" 's I 5 W1rdtCot11 210\ljl\11111,i +1, "'" t-<•:t u.-.. Nl111M Pl.I IS rl Ullo II 1111 -\~ cuddr p/ 11~ JI n o 7 'i 71~ + I,\ lr"H II lj .. 1 \'I 11\'I -l'i ''°"'1rnl lO II lJ>\ 1'" M 11111 ~ 4 l'; J.'~ \ -: U\I t•'!. lt\o -Wthccr 1• ' ~ ._ I'-production bas hffh lft 1..1.0' N!111 S!'if 11• 1tl\ Utl 11\~ + ,,. SbCLlnd ~ 10 J7 :ll'• l>l :IJl l,j, ~Am Tr $11 ' , ... lf" 12<'t -\'I !"' ~" ' dOO u~ SJ 'J" + ,, M.croo Cllll JO '"" ' 7\l -' !!OWftOrl ,.. ul ""' n " -\Ir W•/I McL IO JS '~ 'lh 2'" -1\T 1-Ui. NOl'IOlllW•I a H l'tlli w. 7 -•1 SllCLWorld Al• ll "" f • ,,: :+' t it Ptt ...ti• 11U 1?1-'1 1 lf'o -~t wHl II tS $0 11•, II \ j It -"I Mtl_ftl 011 11 ~ t , ;owl.Incl Pd 1¥1 1 · t\1r Wt tnfn Co l l:t\lo 1)\t thUI SpriJla fn San FflDcllCOt• • N•>if,I 1111 M I• ltt.i 1 IN + \~ 5 .,,..,. !DO 1 111• '"' "' 1 r P'1'1 '"elf 'H i,>• 'I" \I' ••rill lt lth lf' • t lo -Vi ,,... PllSv 116 ! llti-1a;o, lbU, ~ !O'l'•f .O.mv I" !;: u Wt klTull .O,m t ••~ 1'i I" • • N A • 1 15 I''' I It .... I • • ox' 11'111 :If "' 1 " •i + "' '"""' I ~l ~. Jill. ~ -tllr Mtll"'Y •• " 5t '" th ·~ -°"''""-~ j h ... 'I -W1J~E 10d 1 lot); Jtl14 1 ;II -'• N~ f AO :! ''~ 1, 1, =I' Seltl GO l JO 37' Q IO\t 11 -t\lo •CIO'I' 11 16 1 1•1 lili SO Fr1M /Ill l " ~ U "1~ t i M1"1Ml rt 1f 2l 11 U 17 ~ !_ k U'ICt ''1'::' 10'' 1 1 + Wflllwo,fll J • , 1 • Nor~m~~ ' "'" '!~ U'-'I Sffr-.JI 'r.& 161 tJ\\ ··:· I~ -" ,k~.,. '°" 1 I •• '"' u • ..... I\ Fr•fl!llR ... ,' ,P,,,• rli! •"'1 + " ""'"'' Otl• H lf\io I~ n ... + U'flll' 1 11· ' ' a W111 Ch '6 1••11 ltloo ,.~ -l'o SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - NMmJI I • ffil , 'f" -i• ·~~1r11~ Line ., ~ 11 1 t ·~ -,. • ._,. ~1111r 1 j "" IO'l4 'IO ~ + , ''""'-'"'~ .o 1 "'""~' • ,1 12"' !lit' !£" _ ~ l'-"~M I~· J 1 -w T•~ .i1 tt 1 11 .uv. JJifi _,\~ The San Francl-F~' ~ ...... t 1 r 1 1 , 1 t _ \.'I~ OC:. •, .... " S ,..~ »1., ~ •• -!:',! l•li"F Ill 10 t °' !l't I\~ -Ii Frt"<~p C•~ 10j '"' I I I $1ot711 Mll!Q 60 7 'n lj •• _;: 111 ,,-,, ,.!! ~ >"'=a\ Wnl•ls Pel /1'1 t r.• I" --.. ~ r. U Ji ' • 11\.\ 11:0.:. _ l'I ri n ·~ I JI.I .., "" -... IT l!~t )I IG I 1•1• \~ + ~· ,.,~tl'lll• IOll t 71 1.t 1tl't 2°" -•\Mt~'" '' -' ~ ., ,., 1• 14' Wtl11'1" Flth 10 l-11 •L ,.., S I d Loan .~. '~N,,1~·~, '1 "•4 1 '~' ff" '•'" -• .~,1,••'•I •"•' •'••' ,.,, ~·~· 'ff"'=:~ 11,~""l-'.~, 'I ,''•" I'" ' ,' -11 ",\~,.,,, .. r ~· "' I\(,, +-"M iT "' +.,. •• ,.ft H1v •1• •'• '"' + w Ttc c JO ,. .... +"' av ng.s an As::t\l\; .. tton ., !Ito! n -~ .. lH'lff "' f\(I I "' "'° ' 1 lj\'I I ..,, -\lo M:r ::J111 # ~ lf' ,.'' •Yi -.. ~9\l!',t 1;g "112\'" '#1"' 1:-:.. .... .....~~1111'1 or' ' 1l~ 1l~ ,JU _ .~ I ti Wednelday •Ill II " 1' ,. ,, " + ,, ht ltrGI IO l 21 ~ ' • -\, '"''" J i6 15 ., .,.~ iii ... "' .... 11 ... Afr lJ h •111 + ,, §" f.I M ,, "+ I.lo l'ITI r: ~ Wl'llntHlll ,. ., - -'• annua mce ng Horl"PS !ill ''''•" 11 _,,,ntl!Glo!ll} 1'~1 ,,~+·~111111"1'~1' I •. ,,·~·-"' '°"'"'1r PI 11""1"· 1111 -t''t •rt¥-11"· .. 4 •J i:-11o •~71!{~ , 1. ·~~"-~Wl'lf'llH:li!tr tli"•tv.'t 4=~ reportedl969eamlna•werel\ ~~g·•.,: !I ., IQ IQ\I "°'1 +-"'1~"':r~J ':~ ".~.$ \ u. * ~ _,\j =~~. ~. h11 '1 ir· ll: IU:-~ :~;~..,,~ 11 ~: ,iii 11t;'1~ t n M:r~·!i~ 1i i ~ t"' +. =,i.~r 1'! l w· I \t ~ ~ ,, ::;:rftu"or~~ 1\~ .~ ~II ..!:~ = :: an all Ume record of'2,0&l,317 tlOrf !OJ 100 In -2 l~Jf"MI I 111 t •t = ~' -C-0 -'~111Jtt1 30 t VI lt,, • "•' rorr wi-t 2 =.., :1rn11 .o.'1~~ 1 ,, Jtt ~i -V. W::mt,>bfr ",H' ',' '1',' '°"01 .. '•'':! + 1/lo fter fe<I aJ 0•• ~=~,:it! ~:: ~1 l~!: ~~ ~! 1-. : t l•r<IPIC 17 •• ~ 11 II"' -\\ tblscom 6n ti lit. 11!\ 111~ -'• ,(A Cl 111 6"' n -c W~ » \\ V• " ..,'f f J) :!' O ~~ ff' + ~~ It .. \\ ' ' a er ...... el. NSPw DI• 11 rllf ~, .... S• 51 i.1111c. 1 N '°, "~ m. -... •!ltor ,., 'I l' 11· '!"' -"' •• ~rhlrt 1• 1,0 ',,, ,:_ •tt = ~ ~~ u 011 " ~ l'o ! + ~? w~ ri' I t \', 1, +t\11 =:1:,.. r'i.r.1 1; l~ iti :tt = .~ President D 0 n a Id w '''" '" 10 ztlt llt' u•~ ~',• -• !"l.!!!',t1100 d •,,, '~':?. '1 ,,, t ',•, ,'.""",.,',,,, '!'' ,;~ , ~ '•r:"• -. '~ ~ '°.,'"',,J, ·• ..... ' 1 I 1 l'll ""°" I 11 Wlll!frii 1 J • NSPwJlf•Ot 110 1~"1" I? ~:1 ~1 ,4 \,,.-..,. ... 1..,,,..MW 1 t: ••,. ;;;941u11 Jf 1n?'f~1t..,~~=!'t!:_.w1•1 '!~ 0 =:: ~~ri•': 1f1 12 t,.'t1i1 .,.:+-ihwh111'3.tl'wl .l "2j~'~"'~;~ MltcbtlltoldthemfftlngthaL NSPw •U '° z Of .. VI 411, 1 ' ,1,,,.,,., ~ I} •• I' .. -'• onl!~p 0 0 ~ ·~ I :i.-11 ~ 1 " Cfftel'l'\.t tt ' » ,....... ).fl4 -,,, MFtl Ct ~ l ! l -l"trv J 1 v. l " \m + ~ Wldlll• IN 3I " II.. s-. \'o u ... ··-'adon'a -··-·· .L. No<lhro1 1 .. l11i """ -1,...reo 2 • 100 IOl1 "' ,.,. -"' dn Glkfel ! 111' lot.i I \'I ~ En'l•IW 1' 1,1 •'"' I"' ff'----M~~,"' f ', " I'! nu A 1t 1 t' -t Wlllcfltr Gibb SI , ..._ ,,.., If\\ -'-'Pl'. """°" •U>OllY -""'tt" "'1 q ... •, 11 •• ,. !*"" , ... -1;', Wl nl"4 1 1osl't 1~ ·~ + ,,, .t .. HolntlN 1 fj" tt" lsu 1 '"""i.r I • •. ~ ~ 1 "'' 1' I 1 i, ~ i -wm11ov1t: ,, .er ,. "" -~~ were al an all·llme .. ,.., ol HW1I A\rl •t ., It'-.. -• 1¥ Off l f :16111 ti. -\t l"'"~lt 190 1 1" I -""""'°' JJ J" .m-4 h ll If +11 MOI "• '"' + Wlllfll,.. :nt 51 11t fl\ A -l~ ,,..., -. NwttlflC 1.:rt 11 -"'s-' c.ro tO ' ..... ~ -v. " I Ytlln ~ I 1 <i -l~ 11111 ,, .... "'1~. ·~ ,. I I t -Ill tf•n! l Wll!IOftCo 1 u '° 11\li ' ""' + '4 $10,080,1'74, exceeding lb. N"''' 11111 t1 n \JI\ 11111-'" ~"tl."f 11 ui no "" t-. ~ "' dft 1rcon1 '"' ~ •'• ... "' ff,;"'" n" ,.•:, •"'' ..... "'' l' 1 • ,,\ , '• -.•-1,.• '" lfi•' JI'' t II. wn-111111 c. _w1 ,5 1 ~ .m "II_+ ~ -gulatory r-••-•· of Nwt11111 !'~1 J nlll ;;" !; -~ mllloiiO 1 .er 11 ;r• I(!\~ "'-• •n kl'll ~ 111 »t• 21~ 'U!-l! J""" Int ... ...., $io ! 111 ~ • "~' J ~ ;f ._+ !l~ 1 ·-,.... "' 71\ ..,, ''" .. "l.,.'~JKoO..I._. ~~~iii" l~ !;~ " IT~-: ,, ;;:"'I~!~ r ~~ ~" ~t; = .. .::: :::,ri.,,.. : ~:! ~~ ~ = ~ j~ ,,' .. ~ i51t ~ ~. ~n M ~-• ··~· ·~ ~.~s ~:.. .. u~j:.·. '! l? H.. m'" -"5!$(:1 a ~· ·~·· ~J •• ,1,•E': =, ~ '9,IOD,000 ~= 1.J02 '! ~ ~' ~":.~ It~~ 11o J rmr· l!tt n~!+111 ,:, .. ""Ac~ Jf ~1' ;m"~ ~ =l: 11~:·1o: ff ~ .. -""' • ,~ I wi ... ,, .... "°"'""" '!JI ' " 0" .... t" ht •• l l • • ~·-............. Ll'IC I • :l" + " Crf' , ... 1 ,,, ff:: 1m -a .dt I -··~lfo C• 1 I a -w~ ' ,)I PALO ALTO (UPI) ,,0s'"' ,,, .. •1' ilCI. ci·~ • ''" " H • .... •111!..1 '°' , 1 1°' 11 l~ -i• •i=,,.. t11 1., Ii::'•" " ,/ • ~: :'h ll J.. = ,• • .,." ~u"' , 1; :!: ,, woM1 lu ,• ,,.. ,.. ,, ...... "'"~ c. • u• 11•. u-. • o 1 ft • ,. ••• ..... "'1 1» " -n ,.,. • ,.. .... :: M + •" ,, ,_ ] , • '!" _ ra1 'c" ,, ,.. _ -, _ •• ""-•'ar., fnc, of Palo Alto ~ P-...... •' 11::"" Im Hl''• _.' 'n'--1 .. • r·' :ra :!.': :f!· --:! 1=·"",,, .. ~ i .• -~ ,. ,. . .... -.... .,,,,__. ~ ' ' " " -1 " ''" 'I. -• :W.ii~ !' • tt ~ = i•, ~.t"-''ll ~" 1 !l~ -~ : 'r,•~• " 1 ,..,. ' and Dial Dita tnc. I L1 EIKT W II 11-. 1111 11 .. -'l IM I \II l'"+\41 I ~ l~ 1~1 ,_.,., t"W"' I I l, '"i l It i'Uti'.il! l \l ~ efllll.,,. ) _.. t~ Pll+!A. • ' 1 O 119 t'a .. J a\4 Ml• ,.,, -.. a1~S 1"' J ." '" ,, .. + Yo ";,;' "" "" ... -\'I ;ritlllirfl .3' ,.; ... • ... \4j M 119 I ~ t -1' -w.' lrMI ,, 1 ' + It L• .. 11\ 1111 "' .... lll Newt.oil, Mau ' •QnclUllced Id!!! !'tl I 1111 1 ... n ni. -\o ~ ~· \~ ' i!ii n" n11 +114 ~ ~l M l lJ.. ~11:z ~tl + ;• ttd I ,:u 1ft: 1R',• =. ••• . ''I " ' -~ 11'¥1Kt .. 1j 1 "" ' 1 .. It"'' 1 tl.. "'' "' .. Iii .-... -,_ ... t. .... :e .... 1d~•' Dlill I I'' '1111-1 ~ ~ l>f! 'ti '• 141 fl'llSt<\I, 1 ' 'lf 1! -1¥ " l ffi I" Ill I •Coro -YO'* JI• .... T 141' 11l! 1•"" •• ~ ....... QI~ w .-~ O<<,~P •"'•"•• M , ... 1111 -Ht 'Ot,ll• I! I I 't"" J\\li •--'if'" ~ " II -0• "'~ I • ., • ~ :l:'i -l In I t , ... Me .1• U I" 1\io t" me~ to f ~ Oc "'' • n " M !E"',.•ll I '° , U\I .,,. -Ill ~ u I -Id wt l .. ,. -oYiel ... \'-"' • It :+:. " lrM"r.: t 4 11 ir.-, 21.. \lo •• er arm C. to 11 ,... ,, 1 ''" ••c 16 i. PfJ 1""' 111~ "''" M ) 24"' ?C 1k -"' ,_., "'" l j" I"" Ill< ""°'' 1 "-= ' " ~' --1 ~-•• .., '--·+ 1-H-....-a.. .. • •1" , " tt ~ •• s 11)1 •• i.!lt ...... """ -" !!!!!7, M ' ll' t... ·•"""•' ,., !l I " I "' ,..., -1\ Mon • 11 ~'I \' +" ~ 1 ;, -" -~· .. r.-compu~ ~ .. f'ru a ,;a ff?. a·: ~:: 11~ r1~!J.~~ .. ~ ·~ . .11~*"'1 lim~ ~ ~~ ::~~~ 11 ;,,~ ;rm~ ;i~ ~ ~ '~~~ ~·1 ~ :a 'b ~ ~ i~ ... ~ 11 ~ • • ~ • ~::: ~ ~· .. '" • 11 ~· 11:! 1 = 11 :i~ ;1 • =rt~ I ·a~=~ "'!F.'f'ri,~~ ..... ~ °' .. , ~ "' " ~' f; lh -.. , '"" ,. ! tt' .... -,. i'' "!!!' -.. • ~~· ! ' I" ' l ... +" ... ,M ~ r ~. ~ ·~ ~i 1·n 1' 1, ..... ::1. ""--'ai. aod L. c ~-:i O'; C 111 r, ''° ,,...,, 1, I'~ -'' ~~"'" , ~ ~ ~ JS,.= ,.,.,'?: 1wr ' 11 1~ -~ ~....,:., ..-. ! /!fl \ • I + • ""'• !•,w," 1 '!:t" '!:tl.i 1:1 " 11'°"s1~:1l 1 1·L " "A l ~ " +1 •:t"'°'' 1 • -~ 0 • ·~ 11\li ·~ ,~, '""1'¥" .. ) ~ lf.' t 'Ii~ .i.tvi hrltlltll OH 1~ I'' u 1'1 ~ c (llOtl ' MllO. •\• • ,, SI"' "'" flt":.: " r .. ~I Wl ' t l n ~ .. presldtnl ol Dil,.o.ta. .. 11N 1 11/ I"' ,,,. \' -'• ,,,..,... 1t '" 1 , ~ r: 1 -" Iner'""• • '• -"'GrPC:I" ,~• ,,, ~14 ti'-j + ~~ ¥111111.0.m "' I I 1 1'\i -"' Slni11t11 w~ 's ~ ml +'-', ~ y• I,, ,, ' sh·-•·lde--·Id bo -tr" Cort "' "' '"" -11 ~orm1 -s !!" 1111 '"11 "' Ill rctot ~ <IC 'll:' '"'· f -111 "''""'~ m 'I "' "' • -~-Muttr co '"' "' ,-, + ,, 51"<V...011 2 , ~ 'I Jt\'I -1' .., • ,J} wnw •• ·-~fo'!(;i' ~· il {111• Hr: i1';., -'' ::11~·~1~! :ll ~t; 1!1\ ,a;t _ •1 ~!f1f.:t:r,1 1t 1'j 1 ~ll ft14 t l1' 2~'" ~.,,: ,~ t:: t...'l J~ -N~ l~~o~~.!I J..1:.' ,.i:: /l" + 1'11-i! "' • "' u, \; +4 to apptove lht p r o po a a ti °"If"-•' •1 '' 1 l"l•tMr•l"' 1•••' ll i; ,.,~;tD01"''° ••• t1 -•-~T1 -1 J-1 i•1' S1\-''IH•nct 1"" •flt.' •·1•.s1ici1.coro.n 1022 nttni\._.,,r.;, ,•• ~201, eo'° -r1 meraer . DJ Av,e1·age Dip s To 3-ye ai· Nadi1· -American Stoek Exc hange Li st Briefs • ' • (I' llUl.Y I'll.OT, WtdiwsdJ:y, January 28, 1970 PILOT -ADVERTISElt 3 •: Wrdntsdav, January 28, iq10 ' Service Around the Wo rld r ' I ::~etting. .. . Coast Area Men • Ill m Bed Two Huntington Beach men Wiiheim, USN. of 6841 Eagle Lane, ll p ntinaton maintenance \.eclmlclan ls a son ol Mr. end Mrs. 0. M. d1stlnctlve servlce ribbon tn Volden or 89'.ll McFad<len I :,. ;' art aervmg with the Firll Laurelhurst, Hul'!Lln1ton Beach, l111eJ"VJng 1t the'>\J.S. member of,the ltth Tactical Carlson , Of 8201 Deerfield mark bi! affiliotian whh lhc A\·t . Westminster, ~as ~n j, . . T d lt!arine Di•lsior\ in Vietnam. Beach, b servin& w It b. Naval Statlod. Rota. Spain. AlrUit Support Sq u • d r on t Drive, HunUnaton 'Beacl:I; ls a wing, a part ot tbe Aerospace 1tt-"" I 11 uton Al'"B ' •••••. > r. age .y They are Pfc. Dan• n. Oceanographic Development headquarters for air opera-member of a unit that earned Defense' Cdmmand, -ass'6,n;u 0 . IUll t Craig, sOO of Afr. and Mn. Squardron Eight. at the U.S. Tech. Sgt. Rebtrl C • Uons Jn ·Southeast Asia, the the U.S. Air l''orct Qui.Stan-Ile Is a graduale or Soun· 18th Field ~1 a 1 n t e D a c e Craig, 97.llU Grand Drive, and Naval Air Station, l»atuxent Williams, son .of Mrs. ·Lucy Far Eut and Pacific Area. dtng Unit Award. liful lJigh Schoo\1 Utah, and Squadron · ··1.~· J. S&elecroU, MD Lt. JloDakl w. Coslello, son oC River, Md. Williams or 7$3 W. 19th St.. The sergeant is a 1951 The cap\ain, an aircraft earned ltls B.S,M.E. degree al The sergeanl , M aircrarl , · DR. STEINCROHN: P.1r. and Mrs. William Costello Costa Mesa, hu been ualgned graduate of Kiowa HJ g h maihte~e oCficer in Ui! the University of Wyoming. mtt:ha.nic previously served ML • >tianu ti nurly 11 years old. of %0782 Collma 1..ane. PO. 3. C. Rkbard L. Cokr r, 1 for duty at Bien Hoa AB, Viet..,·. School, Okla. 55.S2nd Alrboroe Early Warn-can1 Ranh Bay AB, Vietoa"tn . ·~ · 1k la a neighbor. His mother USN, son of P.1r. and Atrs. nam. • Ing and Control Wing at" Sgt. Gaey L. Volden, USAF, lie L'I a gr~duale or : ieDa me he wtls the bed. She Airman Apprcn. Floyd R. Richard C. Caker, of 18061 The sergeant, an aircraf'.1 Capt. StepMn C. Camon, McClellan AFB. wl ll wear tbt! son of Mr. and lt1r!i. llurvcy G. \\'e!;tminser lligh School, lfloo. ~hlmf®lt.~doeshls" _ _::;.:.:::.:::...:::::::...:~-=-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--.~~-,-~~~~~~~~~--'-~~~~~~~-'-~~~~~...o__~~-t- ,....._. Tiiey rldlcule him in b:oot of other chJldren. It la" pl!ilul. Besides, he'• i¢ttia& · very rat. l'm con- vinced · that the child needs ~ treatment, but his rHtber" pooh.poohs the idea. '-'He's juit bein£ mean. He well hia bed because be wanb IOcet back at us." He loves foolban. At 8 he played Jt well with one of the UUle Football league teams. 'Jbe foUowtng year he was turned down because he wa5 ovenmgbt. His coach was disappointed because he plan- ned to build the team ~around him. Last year he had him on a. diet and on steam batM. lie ·ttit1n't make il And he's'been ptUng faltu by the day. •A rew days ~go Jimmy nm nay from home. He left early in the morning and they found hibt 10 hours later. AJI he said was, "Everybody's picking on ' . DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE ~-n Jle probably got a good spanking for scaring the fami- Jy:-1 hope, Dr. Steincrohn, you can give · these poop le some good advice. l hope Jimmy's prrents read it.-Mrs. B. COMMENT: Jimmy's sick -emotionally, at least. His inCrea&e in welght attests to £hat. All J can do is ask· his J,&rents to take him to the fafnily doctor for h e I p . Meanwhile, I make these points' I. Children who wet lhe bed ••are not trying to get back at thflr parents." It's an awfully ftlgh price to pay for "'airing Up In wet smelly bed-sheets every night and morning. 2. Ni!•er spank a ch.lid for bed- weUtng. 3. Never berate him Or shame him in front of Jt;angers -or before oUier ~mbers of th ~ fa mily. ~-4. First, have him examh1ed tl>·make sure th e re is· no «garuc reaSon why he -can't held his urine. 5. Ir there's no jlhysicaJ reason except that he jJu a small bladder capacity, · tktn your doctor '4'ili ex plain ho4f he can increase it by teaching Jimmy how to hold bls wioe longer than usual. 6fter a few months of these ~. th e bed-wetting mt,y stop. 6. In some cases. \lie of electrical "Wake-up" m,chine11 have helped. '7. Last. but not Jess i m-Jic!i'tan~ parents •hould be l)'mpatbetic and t.elpf\11 to the ~PPY child. I know of no Otftr ·childhood ailment Jn 9'ftich youngsters suffer so iDoch emotional torment and irlef. I. Once aud for all, lei's ilmember tllat bedwetling Is C,: complex problem ·which Meda the help of a doctor and tbC cooperation of parents. \yllen Jimmy becomes aware if'. this turnabout in his P!lftnts' understandlng, he will tO be running away from &sme -or getting so rat. Now lv.l likely he eats tn ~orget, &:I to satisfy his emotional P.fOl>!ems, "'MEOICALETl'ES (Replies to Readers) For M~. U.: f'Ollt-herpetic neuralgia in the ekferly can be stubborn and !lst for many month s. §!!ngles, as many have found fil\. ls nO joke. Unfortunately, fi~-have no specific medici ne ftiit will help every patient. \'Dur doctor will keep trying i1th this medl:clne and that. i&nul he finds a way ot makh1g 111!' -• comfortable. • 'FOi\ MR. Y.: If I ...,. 22 Ud had aa: large an tnsulnal hernia u you say you have, ""cholce:-ld be operaUon t:rltber tban wearing a SU~ i1J!rt day in and day out. Most lliich patients come lo opera- fip. maay yean later. after )fan of discomfort, because tJi!ft l51dang!r or the hernia ~teWnc caught" and cutting .a. 'the cirtu1aUon to the ~L :· ! ·toys Sought ' ' ' :F.or Indians . ' '1To,s deal:lned ror distrtbu- llOo to the Hopi h>lu ~ m North e rn Ar!looa .,.. ~· coTitcled by U. ~ C..st YMCA, for dltlr1butloa ~!lb Indian od>ooll. 'l1le _,..,-old program· ~ ~ -c'i the Dirtctor fll ,..... Educajlon In Arizona ..,i.....,.. """°""hove IMrodlllOd,·ICCOnflnc loYMCA a-.1 Jlfrecil)r Rollen Broo- ..,i.. Mditloolll lnlormollon may lie· oblOlo<d br camni the v ~ 112300 Unl,.nl· 11:om.. Newport Bach. • t SCHKll "Breck" SHAMPOO 'II M1w S~1tt1r· rLus Platinum rr••I Plastic ltt- lts •.. c ... ui lrt•JFtr•IK. !Jll•J.lirt 66 c · eraens EXTRA DRY Skin Formula ~ lJi1 Beauty Salon Ptr11111I CIJt He••i Stl• EJcllliftlJ It S,...I Batll Oil Concentrate w/Cocoanul Oil Base IOI' Dry Skin .• ~ sootbing to th! most tender s~iR. l.aa'l'!S tub clean. Milk B~ w/Clll CREAM •.• Soo!lles alld fel~es tired 11111scles wit~ c1Wessing. lrtlrant foam ~ Choose 110111 "lanohn" ar "E1g" lormwl1s that reilllJ lwe llait clean, manageable. Cra1111 Riase 1.-CtllllfftOMER -IOI' beau· liluLme ~llageable hair. "Extra Ri~',' 1:ci s~ • ., •• tritll 1;11nd1tiCH!ef tti~t age promotes heaHtiy sulp-leave!; hiir clUll, soft Qt Slzts flew. improved • ,, . wate< "'°l11able, never leaves hair sticky '« stiff. Choose from 3 lw1111lls. l.11. 51t 13 11. bcl 1.23 ~er1st11ft ••• No-irOll polyester-collo• st1ys fresh all day tong. Short sleeve style. lull c11 !or comfort. l pockets. spread collar. Sizes 14 ~ ti 17. le1. 7.3' 1.98 lVER BLOOMING Hybrid Tea • Certifid C.iilania Field GroWft. 2!1111 Old • Fully Matured • Moist1rize--N1t11 rized P1cki1t1 witti Pl.11ti111 instr1ctioJ11. 2 Cawts 1r More EcallOlllJ Group Siniard Group Patented Bushes CWID!te Armstronl • Coun11•s Vandal • I I G18de -Choose Cri!llSOll Gloly • ed Show Girl • Gcldetl lrom Amerit;ina • Radi1111Ce • ltew lol~el' Chaim • fDrlJ Niner • C-arrOllsel • OlplorN1 afld others. ;ind others • El C'..Joitail & othefs 69~. 98~ .. 1.98 .. · w11• Hand Tools Garden Hose Wa!1111l stained woocl , I ~nd\!Pw1th lt'lher thon,11s-stainless stttl blades. "Si11at111" Ill~ 5/r ltre • ltl'lltl • ••••• , • C1ltifat1r • Tr11s,111ltt 59~. H n .-fleJible • ,"'1'"'""ilh •lt low hetYY IH'ass coup1iftg$. 11 ,,,, , ..... 3.69 Lignapeat l1•w11f F111st 1 09 111ca ••• '1Jithed Pelt Mass. 2 c1. ft • "Yigoro" ,.,._,,, I :,~f.:1~~07~,; 1 29 bloom. Slur0t Cant$. 1 Azalea-Camellia ,f flll -"111111" ..,,, • 1111int11• tlle 6gc riall oc~ °""" >or W Hlrt ftOW~. 5 l~L . ®-~ Filler Paper •. Vinyl, J.11111 oote-- booksw~hassOft­ ed des11ns 1n Head & Shoulders SHAMPOO !tr ElltcliYt I Da1l111f C11lro~! 1.15 tl 1r. Tu•c ANTISEPTIC Kills Cums hy M1l- li~ns on Conla'I ! IA9 2011. S11t "Colgate" DENTAL CRIAM wiU1 Cttdol plu~ MfP 1115 6~ az. i111 I • 3-Hr»tl !Dr looseleaf Notebooks Wide or Narrow Jlile ••1."lk ''* ,, .• "Mod" colOfs. Ooub~ lloosters. --. 'YJ"&T"AiitSizt 11/z"Ri11Sirt 1.09 .. 1~19 Theme !looks ..~rt-,.lat"wiUI 311~j1ct jiTi"'.,. Ho•""'""'' 69 side $pit1I bollnd in yuur C ciloici of wide, narrow rule. Asst. Cfllors, II. Steno Book "~rl-~1l1l" , • , Gfeg1 rul 29 el 6x9" whit! papef with C stiff ca~!fS 1n assorted solid colofs. 3-Ring Binders Choose lfom !,?"or I" s11r Clip Folio with l1TS11le Pocket ~or loo~ papers. S11U,leatfler ifa1Re11 v111yl cover rn assorted d~r~, 29 colors. sinx l l'' ~11e wilh strong chp, for pitd, papers • 3-Ring Binder Shmhne Heiible si2r !J" vinvl 1n ym1r choice of Ll" ggc ~r l" ring site w1lh double boo51ers. Ass'! coHl•". INFANTS' Diaper SITS 11ngs with double booster. &9c flel1ble vinyl cover in as- .. ~ed calors. 11. "Wee Winnie" -).1ri1abi• two p.er e ~el lOf b~ys ~nd .i;1rl~ ~""f ro1,1:tu1 ~I/I'~ f1l111'1 '·"''~ rn rOQO'.f' S11t1 0 to IS "lO~tt•. Slide-Lock Folio 81hx J l" st1e of clear. de.1 luxe vinyl. Slide bar sec11te-7c Iv bin ds-ii materi1I, removes la1ily. Sinatra 'a u alone' LP SRRIO ALIUM wilt th wrlh IH •sit •f McJUEI iftchldinc Ille new hit sin(lt "l.oV"e's Bttft 3 99 Good hi Me' & many otllers, Jlq. tJI I ... / •Yt•"" Sheet Protectors ,! 3-bole punched clear snee!s 2·9 1 98 ' { that will prot ect oaoer ~. C - pllotos, elr.. from rertm~ • 11. ij'...>--'...J soiltfl & 11orn P1k 115 l'::==~===:=.~ "Stri-Dex" MEDICATED PADS •.• helps wipe 0\11 pin>· p~s and prevent new ones from IOfmin1. ~per-~lean5es, helps 59c unblock JK)fes. !It '2's . - Elt1r•1sc11t A1tacld-An atd tor the pleasant rtfi!f of m1oor upset s!ooiath. ne.- vovs tenslOll. llmaches. t .19 'V.. ll. Sizt Wheat 'Germ 011 1 69 Pantothen1c Aci d 1 69 t1~1111r I !S lD0'1 • 180 m1 . 1 f~ lDD's • lecithin , 1 98 Tri'Potent C 4 49 19 'r1in1 Z.15 IDG'i • ~1111111~ C 4 9~ 1G0'1 • Rose Hips C V1t.1m1n [(Natl 4 98 flDD Ill&) ¥11111111 t 208 10 S 95 100·1 • 1 li lN's l.25 I I i H1!11r.1I A I Cod Lim Oil 1 39 c.1,s1l1s 1.'0 IDD'!. • All Nat11ralwlte J 19 lhllUI Of(l~IC J.5(1 90'1 • High Polencr 11tut111t1• r1n1 3 59 AtlfJlOIG1111 · l. i 1Cl'1 • ~~-"" " . Wheal C11m Oil 4 49 ll•~ ).II 11 11. • SOy lecithin 2 98 lflllllll S.H l II • '011tro11' Quick 2 59 lttrlJ W1ln 11s1a1·1 • t2~ DOii 11"111 119 ......... '""I . I Des1cc1ted Beel 2 59 l1111 h•s 2 IS 1SG'1 • P1ote1n Table ts 2 29 t~tll'Jb!I 1 aq 10f I • Protein Powder 4 49 J&~o PIH 5 Gt II ti • "G1ti!llts" ,, ' ''""! !• 1 98 ,11111r1t 11 5 ' • 1'"111111111m11111111mm1mmmMllNftln!lllllft"~UIUlllHtll11!111i!llll>!H<ll. II lllHlll!•111111tlll!llllllifl • . . ~ : '• • l, ~ ' .. ' ,. .. " , '· ,. ,• • I• • .. 1' ' ·' ,I ~l , . • . •' •" •: ;• .. .:,! • < • ;; • ,, ~ 4 • !. t • • " ' ' ·= .•. ~ •• • j • • . ' • . •' • •' ., r • •• • 1963 PLYMOUTH VALIANT 5388 1963 Y.W. SQUARE UCK'·. $588 ,.,, real nlc• 1utom0blle wlttl -II• 1kl• w1tlt. t.Mltr 1i"d tour ~ CPCGWl. NOW ONLY 1965 PLYMOUTH FURY' Ill '"" ... -............. ""' 5588 v.. •!'llll'§b 1~11NNtk 1r11WT1b· slon, FACT' ltY AIR pO'/ftr 1i-"· 1np, whit• 11de w11!1, radio anO 11e11er. CPIMl:Ml. MOW ONLY 1967 DATSUN SSS Cornn wlttl 1utometk trenstn~· 110!' ltud<tl ... 11. wlllll •kM w11( .. end l\el !tr. \'/HE Siil. NOW ONLY $788 1967 VOLKSWGN. Fait Back . -· _., '"' .. ~ .. , -·· ~888 ,,.hl!I 11119 w1!11, r..:llo 1!'CI hNI· tp a(, IUPFMll-NOW ONLY '"" ~!!~ .... ~~IAC LE ~N$ ~.:--.... ,~. • ... ~ 1::• ~1688 CYR& Jdt''I. ·r.alo •rid llt•ler: 'ii' , NOW ONLY 1969 DODGI SUPiR BEE ~ ---~~----------·-----------------~ --~..-----· * * *..:)f * 100"/o . GUARANTEE , All ef 1tr S·Sl1• 11M4, <In <trrY o 100% v11co11dltl111ol ,1111art111lM. Tiii• Slor _, tMt kOch City Dodt• 111aron ... 1 !ht cir 100 % qolnll ... 1chanlcol d1f1<h !tr 100 dciyl ot 4,000 "'1111, width· ...... ,_,, flrtl ..... pvttht ... Thi• lnclutl11 1U ftl1dl111l<ol ,.,h, 11..:lfl<ol 111111lp1M11t, " • I I • r Y • 1,_1clomtter, r1dl1, M1l1r 111 all S·St•• c1u. THIS GUAIANTlf C0\1115 AU PAITS ANO I.AIOI fllf TO YOUI ***** 1966 FORD GALAX!!. 500 11111 -dOOI" twonlklo c11m11 w11ri \I I tr>11ln1, pOW... 11-lng, FAC· T01lY Al R, wMlt 1\cl9 w1n1, r1d!1 1nd Meter. (\lfW lCll. NOW ONLY $988 1967 Merceclei Benz fl\11 2GO o IONdl, FACT~" ... ~1r•'11 ""' POl!r Huter •• 1 '"' bffu..'.. 1•1dlo Incl .,, USzt,l. NOW ONLY $1988 *'** ...... BIG SAVINGS ***** . 1964 CHEVROLET Pkk-Up Tllt1 11-.rfffje moclll ·~• •no " 1 , 1 comet .. Ith '°""'" lw 11111ck w!e. r11:i1rsi~ro.1". Prle9d NGW ONLY 19_63.J»ODGE P.U. 1963 PLYMOUTH Tllll .-din Ml \1-1 ..,.IMo POWlf bf1~11 t nd ~t!tr. CROX Hll. NOW ONLY 5388 1964 PONTIAC U MANS ThlJ ~ d<IQr" harlllOD No Y-1 IM poWef' .iMrit9• bucl<tl ~. imllt 11de w.111, radlO Incl Mat..-. {PIE 6(:1}, NQW ONLY 5488 · 1965 CHEVROLET BIL AIR 5588 Thl1 ""' rM 213 V-1 -""'· 1u•o-,,.,.,k tr1nomlulon. wwer 11~·· 1n9, radio 1nd helttr. !TA VIJll- NOW ONLY 1965 FORD MUSTANG NOW ONLY $688 1966 RAMBLER AMBAS. 880 $788 I ,...,1 !!9 FORD TORINO GT lr1rumln lon OJI llas IUlon\ofk '2 Whit., 1i. 'w:O-1!9Crlnci hfft1r, IJ'-CHl\'!n,)~dlCI 1Nf 388 _ HOW ONLY 1968 PLYMOUTH Barracuda T/111 ti.r111op conws will! 11110-~~lc: tr1"1m1u1on, v.a _,,... ~ 3. . -·· H•'-"'" '"' ... -88 IXEUXl). '"'• NOW ONLY • NOW •·'TOT-Al DISCOU.NTS _ON · ,,,. OVER,4'90._NEW·'·· r_.. & USED -CARS! 1r•s YOUR CHANCI' FO· SA'tf~ MUCH MORI FHAN IYIRf . ~~-·/:,, ~~·:r;.,':"r,'I. 52088 ilOOd ._._ ...,!lo 1nd nH er. TMI 1M• 11dl Ml I~ I tool bed\ v ... 1ntlnt, r1dlo tlld ri.atwr. (Qt~I• J.~ NOW ONLY .$58 .8 IVC01l). NOW ONLY 1968 DODGE CHARGER .RT "" ....... MO V• -OM,.... s-i 88' 8 ~tlc 1r1n1ml11lon.,.-.. ,..·~~-'lG'i' 11ndlu '°"' rid • • • ' KS4QSJ. NOYI ONLY 1968 DODGE MONACO Thlo ... -M-...... '1'188 win. lirolNIU 11-• v ..... F ro.:&1r10M1t2, • • "°""" f'lodilll 11111 llH Ill'. IXOC~ ~). NOW ONLY OPEN EVES"11L' lO 1962 FORD ECONOLINE "" ,, '• ~!~k!P .. ,._.,. $488 ell priel for oulck 1111 c- wllll rellkl I. h"I••· lvn60'IY> NOW OHL ** ¥-'1--lf BIGGER . 1968 DODGE CORONET DISCOUNTS i~;?~f~~fl 588 . * * * * * 1-~1"='963~C:::H:EV::'RO:::LET~l;:'"I -"":'.- 1969 TOYOTA """' ""' '"""'"'" •·-••· $388. WAGON ,1o<1 whll• 11c11 w1 111. r1dl0 i nd .,._j.,, (OJU .00). comes win. whltt •ld9 ••11~" ""' NOW ONLY ~1. r1dlo 11\d /IHlll!', (YXW S.W• NOW ONLY One ,of, the l~rg!Sf stocks of motor homes and campers In Southern California. All 'marked • down ro sell, out pri 0 ce1. Here;s your chance to ~ '. 11v1 during this off~season s11le. j • SAVINGS UP JO S15Q8 ' Explorer Motor Home. Ser. No. 6381-91 -7343 Sn:! $1500 from . fhe, rtgul1r retail price. - • . ~' ''l I • I l[ \ I .} , I I I I I r ' I • . " . ' . , HOUUi1'0ll IALI HOUSIS ,OR SALE HOUSES 'OR SAU! HOUSES FOR SALi Hp!!Sll•FOR SAt l , HOUl ll "OR SALE ........ , 1000G1nor11 11ioo G-r•• ~ooo 9•'!!"' 1000 !!!ft.l-41 ' • 10000 .• n. .. 1 . 1000 ' , HOUlll 'QR IALI HOUSll ,OR~· READ THIS If you are .in the market for a NE\V home, see tbese outstand- ing customized homes, built by Frank H. Ayres and Son, locat· ed in a prime area very close to Huntington State Beach, Tbe homes are priced from $27,550 to '33,690 and vary 1n size from 3 to 4 bedrooms, 2 to 3 car 1ar- a1es and 2 to 3 baths, with shake or mi1slon tile roofs, fire-- places, underground utilities, concrete driveways, built-Ins, and carpeting. There is VA and FHA financing available. There are 9 homes available because of credil rejections. Occupancy by March I, 1910 in this unit. Our next untt is now on sale far occupancy in A-fay and-"" June 1970 and introduces the inew 3.000 sq . ft. "El Dorado" model priced from $34. 490. R•ncho La Cu.1t1 Homes on 8reokhur1t at Atlanta, Huntln9ton lffch Hf.mt -9'1-1»1 .. --·----~------~------ Gtntral 1000 General 1000 MESA DEL MAR lnvest 'Yaur Rent Reilly "ph" New po r I &;;;;,., 10oo Gonorol 1000 Nowet """' 1200 "'' o..m · . · CAMIQ SHOW ~ fl / n /J .. 6.n.• c.ER's. P.A.RAPISE FOREST E. " J=.,~_!""' ~u:.,,111~~~.:~ .. 61..inda .Jj [e . "I':""' , 0 L $ 0 N ...,.,_ ··~ . Beautllul execuUve 3 Bdrlll. 8 Batb home. FOR ONt,Y : :Ji~'°:i!-: PR ESTIGE WATER, FR"'NT HOMES · Tastefully .cupeled, c1r,ped & ,rUl'll. by dee-$10 991 . · "' or&!<>r. Lb,, on tbe l[reen at !Otb bole of Ber· • . on ~hlltt ,Prime"""" lltt • SHOWN BY AP,PO INT/,\JNT muaa Dllnea 27 hofe goU course, 11te of the '""· "'"''" Y~~L[..<:rD ' ~:~=~ .i 11 Linda l'le D.Jr-. Bob Hope Qus\CI. Has 2 Joli C1r11 & 1wlm WHAT? $14,950 -·--•••, inJ,, Bdnm, den a,...·: • ,..... pool..Bormuaa Dunes Coun...,Olub meml>ef-• . ·~·u~•• ... _ _, -··t-lldm> IO'lCI' Nearing completion. Spacioy1 S bedroom.1.-~ ship avail. Ask '9~,000. XJqt'lenn.S avallaJ)le. FANTASTICll • • 1080 ,.. ft. 5';,';,.;--; ;i4m.._ Jllfd' : i.th home wiUi upstairs vteW '·()t Corona oel -ft'• .no mh.1.akei. A bta1.1t!J\d' , • Double' &U'lf' nn. Std,udtd' pOl;ll. JU$, boo. , l Mar hUIS. 'FeiturinR marble flre_pla.ce In large Linda 111,: O.vtlo~nf .Co. 5 •21 0 l ·townbousc ree.d)' 10 ~ In •• AU 11.the and pluttt Set todaY. Mn. ·om. 1 , iivin~room, famtly room with wet bar. 1080 B1Y1ld1 Or., N.B. 8111Grundy 67 ~ !low! Pri<o lnchid•• ta ...... ~·"-·n ~.. WESLEY tArulR CO. ,' •145 . b""'I d-,__ -w ""'· """'" I • , · , , l'!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!""'!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!'!!~'!'!!"., J 1.W..-n raqre, ov11n, • h.~. -~-•· I' ••,iWUhlr, d~r. Drt.lf,a. ..,..\:.,US Wanui.n.-t •/I ' . ' 57 Linda 1111 Drlvt ~-nor'ar' ,.. ' I 1000 ..,. •ti · I b CALL 517.03'0 ,. I M 4 B d , Bath h . h ti "'"' 1000 Gtntr• · CU11t oe. Private pel o, u . WOULD VOO S£LltVE f • , ust see e roon1 " ome wit pa o houle and super pool, NO •rn moat <>ranee Cowif)' and mvPORT JiElG~ ' deck, sitting_ room and fireplac:;:e in master OPEN quallb1ng. Take over tow in. other •PPl'OWd •rtu. $1.9,SOO _"As rat": ~ )>eclroom suite. Family room bas sunken con· Mi' sSing The BLE temt ruA 1oan. r•ntutlc STANCO 11.1 oo1> •l·btdroom "tli" versation pit and fireplaces ........ $162,000. . . • CONYERTI berpln' W•U """'· H11r17. B lid I upper" or :·r.aru-do!'J"r" b B k 40, ~ .... , S ""'-m F•m· n"J,6'5-0300. '. u lrl n.C. but .-. '-"·o II -11 80 Linda Isle rive · ac . • it;-~ &°Di;;'ng ' Room ~ ~PENT Dayt ~ ;.:ntr~will bn~~--at ~; Nearing completion. 6 Bedroom; 5 baths with home mat can be easily al· GUEST HOMES 10666 WMtmlnlter Av•. 1% with no w cblrie 10 : family room & large rumpus room. 3 Fir•· Hert'• 118 acre PLUS In tm!d to 5 Bedroom and a. f•NT•STIC INCO"E , G&fden Grow buyer. . · : places. 4,246 Sq. ft. of living aree; lneluding .Baek S.y with 3 bdmuo ' taml\Y "'°m • A'l¥J• '""' "' <' • m BallJICecl Powtr Hom.. a lo e. di i;tlt f deck & boat slip ................... '159,SOO ~~~2,5«30' pool with div. ny trloleY1:l plan on. a well J'anta1tlc Jncom, .ot 1.9prox. llOl~l.-, ~ ... 11• Y.'J_ nNBc~ · i , ••-•.-Fl!AorVA .... ~-•··lot •M-""'--~··~ .. -~~"''°' · . ., -~-~ -· -·-per yev; ·~ nev . JUST. LISTED '°'0000 . Jl.vn. ,....,o : t0 Linda Isle Drive • / or 10~ dowtt. ' SPACIOUS new 4 bedJ'OO?' fUllt homes •Hot otf.· tbt 'typ9writer and FIXE'ft. UPPER. G • Beautiful 4 Bedroom; 4 Bath home wit!> extra $27,500 CLEAN for tho older IOUcl'c!omple,.. ·,....,, lor,....., mov• In. 3 potenllal .. ~· ·, ~ • 1 large livinJ room & master B~dCQ9Pl. C~ ' VACANT ly furn\~. A 1uper pool. klnphe bedroom• (14xl3 or Newport Helgbtl horoe • pets &: drapes. Land~caped. Boat .slip. Near Newport All the Iate1t alarm and Ja:e'r) ti.tb1-l'6, In brand dininc.room • rumpU.1 room. tennis court &.clubhouse •.......••.. ,185,000 at OPE N'~oUSE =ni~~. 5J:im,,!~ new cond. All bltlns, J':h • 2 llttplacei . noo aq tt of Lindo ltl• Dev1 lofim1nt Co. · 1· Victoria s··-.. t· ,.. _ _.__. '-·-1 Both CJJtl thru-Out. Palot e e llvillJ area. Priced tar fm· Thuniday thru Wlllay 1os. c iuna.1•C .,..., ... n. Rk. Fpl In I.R. Small sew-m~iate aalt at $32 !!00. lOIO 81y1lde Dr., N.B. B II Grundy 675--3210 646-1811 1 pm lo S pm homn·pdced now at f52.500, ini room of! kltchtn. Desir-FHA/VA available. cALL ~ (1nytlm•) 2900 AL TA VISTA ~o see Di .. ~· ed CoUea:e Park are.a. 545-8424 Copen eves) South : EASTBLUFF "-' n.at Eltal• '.: General 1000 G•Mral RARE TURTLE ROCK RESALE FANTASTIC View Lot Overlooklnr China Cove1 OWNE~ WILL FINANCE EASTSIDE & Hartw Entrance Clo1e To Wettcliff 67Ullll NEWPORT B~!-CH B/ 1 DUPLEX EARNS EASTSIDE-COSTA MESA! \R THE REAL , ESTATERS "' '•., ' $~,300 Three bedroonu, den, dining , : ""'" ,.~... room, nice kitchen, eavettd : um s.Jctr, C.M. """"........, patio. Owner will acapt loo.v I down p&)'Jilent !rom ,quali •. • }~ 0 t) R BEDROOMS, l&J'le l!vil\i room, family room and buUt-ln kitchen. Mailer bedroom oU to itself with lta own private bath. Recently prole11k>nally repainted In. aide and out. Fully e&?Pt!t· t!d and dnped. Covered patio and ftnctd yanl, ASSUME LARGE LOW INTEREST V.A. 5~~o LOAN, Priced to seU-!ut at only $28,560. ~ach Condo. 2 bedroom•, Neoar UCJ, Pi;lz• wlnn\ni:; ~ 2 ,s baths, muter suite to bdrm 2~1 bath ·~dlh atrlun1 . tempt a Sultan, iourmet 2100 Ml tt. Vacant I ready kttt:hen1 -Pr1"-le Pali O, for executive Sell ot lease Throw ltWQ' the J.ewnmower op!ion. · ExceUe'n t expoii11tt Dandy 3 Bedroom in excrl· Close to Bay l Ocean beache1 ltnt condition on large tree Cu•tom plant for shaded lot -~th alley access eie1a.nt ~·e included plenty ot roora tor boat &. . S:il.~ . lrailer. -Range, rerngera- L1sted exclusively 'l\'Ll_h tor and washer lncludl'!d. HUGE BEDROOMS If you need a IM.Ily large home, here's <!585 sq. ft. with 4 bdrms P L U S Den & Dinlna; Room &: Across the street fronl the pounding 1urf. 4 bedroom, 2 baths up. 2 bedroom down. Large kitchen with deluxe built-in1 In each unit. One unit yearly leued at $300 mo. Wetime view ot the sea. Bic summer rentl _ U YoU Wantr Only 15% down and price sluhed to S4l ,5(tl, See today, Dial ~- Coit• Meil SOUTH COAST PLAZA 1100 tied Buyer. Price -$34.500. : A va1la ble for occupancy. Boy lo luch Rlty,_ Inc. 801 DovtT Dr, Suite 128 NB 645-:mG Evtt, ~ Eveninrs 545-8308 and enjoy the pool and club. hoU.e! Walk or "jo&:" to Westclitf Plaza. $33,900 Co/esworthy & . Co. $42,500 $25.soo . $3500 down and owner will carcy TD at 7'Ai'Yo 646-nn 1-;0 THF. REAL I'.'.. l~STATERS ..... •)<'" '. ' . ,. •• Victoria -.ap (anytime) l=="""""~~ ...... ~=n:"""~1 I NEW LISTING--College Park Blufh ·Cond<>m lnium For Sale/Mtl•• Verde SharJ Pacesetter with atrium f.fltr)'. Newly (Ulinttd 1ntcr. ior. thows beautifully. Own. Model-4 bOnns -freshly 1)1l1nt~. Or iginally On Cover Of carpel& cleaned. Vacant. Better Homei & S42,$00. call to llCt, EJC:ctus- G1rd.ens , Ive with Family Room & break- fast noolc, too! It's the rno.t home fm-the m onf'y .al only S.36.!IM. l\Jay we s h ow you througtl! ~ "°:TS ~ WALLACI R!ALTO&S _ _..SIMM ... 141- IOpon n.Nnpl ' 645°0303 at Harbor Ct!!ter 2299 Harbor Blvd., C.lif. 3 UNITS $29,950 is jtllll l minutes 'way from this 4 Bedroom. 2 Ba t h Home. A block wall sur- round1 ttw tatve lot, with plenty of room for a pool, If you need a 4 Bedroom home, dose to So. OJI.it Plua, this ii it • call now! Priced at $32,500. 546-2313 Till: REA!. 1Z L~'.TATERS FRENCH TOWNHOUSE s Bdrma, -2 Baths Condominium • Pool Private Patio IJ'l.SOO LIDO REAL TY INC. 3311 V1a Udo 611-TlOll NEID 240 C-2 Ft? Have &-30' lt. lots with vaiy. Ina: improvementt and rtntl, Use "u ls" or build i.e. development. $22.SOO Eacb, R. C. GREER Rulty Unique hu1nt-• 4 hf.droom1 P•te Barrett ~ plus excili~ famlly roo1n. REALTY B•YCREST'S "Agent .. "f°' A \Vise Bnv" ~ ..., er trans!erred ~ has real FINEST i "'""'""'""6t2-iiii717liii_,_.,.1 r1eed to seU. Quick posses. Corona del Mar Enjoy ltduslon In the midst of the d'ty, high on a hill with a magnificent view of ocean · .t: canyon. A J bed- room mast.erple~. thor'Ol.llh- ly modern, paneled in ~ wood, Tcllk A Maho£&1))' . Electronic kitchen, Re{riaer- EUii.ide Costa M!sa. Span. iii' tile roof, rentals on larre 17xl.50' lot. Income $385 month. OUr belt 1ooomc ~ tum In area. 3 INCOMI! UNITS 3356 Via Lido tiT.l-!l(l) 2 I 3 Bdrnu:. New carpet. l DAYFRONT PEN'ntOUSE ifrape1, mt.-tn.. Private Pa. Pa.nonmic view, 2 BR, 2 Ba. tiol. F1ttplace1, Top Joca-Doclca, $56,500 10% dn. 7~ t1on1. O w n e r. PrinclpalJ int, McKenzie, Rltr 646-0732 cmly. $47.500, ~7 BL\.lfTS ~ 3 BR. 2 BA, 1pli\. HONEYMOON corl'AGE level condo. S29,500 ar and income on eomrr lol leuefopUon. 6f4..2039 Custom. elepnce thruout In . t\on. Ottel"lld at $35,%0. thia 4 BR.. 3 Ba. home, de-2907 Btkir: StrMt - 1!gned f=-r l.'\f'il!, active fam-Hrre's a i?'l!•t "Mea·Verde" For L•••• Uy; poril, ram. rm., billiard home with formal d.ln. rm ., THREE PROFESSIONAL rn1, wft ~1. etc. $119,00'.l: tam. rm. l 3 reiJ Sood llUed ornCES. Each $100 or all j.JC! C"'..ai.1.-so1. bdrm•. Vacant now. FUily three adJoin!nr for L?OO. .... ._ .. _ •--equipl)ftl standln'd pool. ·A Gre1t locatlon on Santa Ana -"Cambridie Seriet:''. .bomt. A~nue just oU l7~h Street Bure used brick fireplace "'Ith &r -B. Q 1utlsserle. 16C6 \Vestcllft Dr., NB BcautUul new ca,,,els and 642•5200 ~ drape11. l:.al'lfe ('Orner lot _ room lor boa!, trailer, ~tc.·1.:::m:::::m====~ fl11st pGSleUiOll. $29,950. lii % .iowo . 646-7171 1,0·THEREAL \'.',. ESTATERS , nr•r•. u'll'••'•'•' BUILDER'S REPO Exclutlve With Nowport at Vlctori• -.an (•nytl1 '.e) -------- Both bou•• tenc-·1 patio.. I .:=;;======I , Low downs: 7\i% ht trwit Newport Htl9ht1 deed. Owntt after 6 p.m. I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I 1210 Mi-:1391 OWNER """" ~ 54,·!lllO c.w..n ....... ., ' Co. ,,,. .. I!......... , ......... - ·550 Nowport Centor Dr. OLL~ llEALTY OUEOE ·REALTV N•wport &.1ch,.C1llf. •lilii 11~.CM. WllM1111atttta"".t1t Sl50a down. 3 bdrms 3 balb.'I, aled air-coodit!oning, Swlm- family room, 11:rvlce porclt, mine pool. \Veil priced al fireplace .l all built-Ins. A $119,500. Call for app'l. fan l.UtlC buy at last ye an ° john macnab OiiiiiiiOiiOiiiiiiiiii~iiii•I pMce of S25,750. CALL 5 fldrms 3 liaths 541>11'1 H•ri•••• ""' E" 1714 ) 642,.235 IMMED. POSS. 5 BR & FAMILY BY OWNER: S Br, 2 Ba, cupets. drpa, lowly yard, Will finance thi• 4 bdrm 2 11prlnklen, nr. Parochial & bath hOme with pool. Only JN.bllc schll. 131 , SO O. 10% down • no loan fet• to '. UU7qo 644-2430 I 1!!!!!!!!!,..0!!!!!1!!!!o!!il~1..,.,,_..,.....,....,...,. $28,500' . ./ llEEDW! (4) R.E. SHAKE ROOF tate topen evesl 901 Dover Driv•, Suite 120 Nnr all schools. '31.0C<> .I'"""'""''""'""'""-'"""" I Newport Beach NEED MONEY? 5 Bdrm. + l',irtlly Rm. ,!,~fm=E,!'°!,~~ To buy a new borne? Inve11l-Entry hall openl to ;.e,r uv-1-0:lrona del ;.,tar/Ea.st Blufls, l &1rrn s., scp, dinina: room. be~t of 1crm.o;. GREAT VIEW I a:ate our guaranteed trade inf rm. Picture windows, l./llewport J-leights / Do~l'r ·country Estate 20xJt Liv. _rn1. 1~ Degree IA plan, Let UI answ•r your tull dlnln& rm, Huge family Shores, 1-Costa Mesa, 1-Ltdo custom bullt 3 bdrm hon1..: • e>tpll nsivr. Vlf"WiJ~ 9· home,. qUeltions with no obligation. rm,. natural brk:k rlrcplace, l•land/\Vest Newport. Frank many e:ctrai.:. Lot lS(lx'.':00' . · ~ 4i:~:tioiA j~n ~xs1:~-~ Fa.Ir enough 1 cozy det1/Hbra.ry Xtra eat-Mo.rshall Rtty. 67~4600~ 1nany, many t rt"rs. $7!'i,OOO. please call, you'll love it _ ing 11.rea ln kitchen. Aa.tUme A Touch of Spanish Wells-McC.erdl e, Rltrs. ~.soo. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 1629 HARBOR BLVD. 546 1640 lov.• .interest loan. 540-17:11. Walled patlo: J BR. + din. 1810 NewPOrl Blvd., C.~I. "8 / 8 " REAL TY TARBELL 2955 H•rbor + famlly + li;r. rooot ovtr 548-7729 &M-008·1 ('VCS G{j..JOCIO J:;ves. 6T'.A554 SCORPIO gar14;(', ~~1~= 10 -----DOVER SHORES You'"" careful ot money! Walker Rlty. 675--5200 S2S,SOO 3 Brand New w/View A15um• thi1 low_, low lntu-3300 Via Lido, NB Open Sun. 4 Bdrm. + Family Rm. COURTYARD POOL est loan on builder'• oWl'l $Z 950 Omrmit1g: OJK"n IX'1lmed t:eil· 4 bdrm• 3 baths + po'A-·dcr OPEN EVES T ILL 1:30 4 BR. Spanish contemporary 8, ings 111 {;11n1ly rn1 , fireplnce rooni pWJied tam rm\\.•/ $24 9, 50 "'\ti\ all extras. Corona del Nitd 3 Beths? or naturAl p1·ick, 1·!'ltry h111l, !rptc.' Forn1a1 din rm: From aisumphon ol 6%: ~G N'w listing • S36,950, ·~1 "·1"\'1\···r,·, .,. I .1.:. ·• '' -,,,., 54 6·5990 Th1' larre family home in North C.oata Mesa with all tho;! built-ina lncllldfna" a ,..... teor c-ondlUoner DCtd& a llttle n.c. Priced way und~ mar- ket. HWT)' • thla won t last. ONLY $.10,950 FHA. FHA/ VA. ... --- P E l=IRON ',, .... -.·· . ' .. 642-tnl Anytime OWNER Tr1.naf1red. 4 5,57-9681 pe.y, Alking $42.~. Call OU. MQI Vordo 1110 4 BDR~[ . $20.500 5% '7. auumable loan. Near aood schle: A Mesa Verde CC. '28.~. Owner. 1861 New Jersey, CM. 545-7700 •ee tor partlculan. Lochenmyer Ro lhur 1860 Newport mw .• CM CALL 646-3928 Ev11, 646-2290 I FIXER UPPER e ClOlt to school• l Bdrm.1, • fireplace Triple garage on al lry Aaking S25,000 Gr1h•m Rlty. ~2414 Near Newport. Poll Ottke 0 .1. LOAN • I r.iar HI Dist. $59;~ ~ yoll Large family home, sepnratc t\lll M'Par11.1e d1nln1= rm, S.100.000 Roy J. \Van:! Co, l Bffrm + Oen ow n the land. huge family m1. lirt'pl11ct, ~IQ-U,21) 1430 Gala.xy· Dr. &io.1550 11Uif' family • natural brick Hal Pinch in & A\toc. wet ':8r. bollt·in~. entry hall., ~L l9JO Harbor O\VNEB. rl!!Spt!rate. Auume llreplace entry ball, dinini;: 39CXl E. Coast Hwy. e-m-tm 540-!i2C TIME FOR-J 1•-:;. loan, oPr. 4 Bedrm, rm, built·lnl. Park like yard. BALBOA ISLA,ND TARBELL 2955 Harbor den, hug(' Family mi. entry 25 rt. be1utlful patio. 5to-l'l'20 Seit possible ,t•~ on 3 BR. LUSK·EASTBLUF F QUICK CASH hall, lull dlntn1 rm , built· TARBEL L 2955 Herbor wi very larte be!amed ctll. Owner trana. 4 BR. 21,, ba. THROUGH A ins. fn"t'plal'f', brk., 129,500. LIDO SANDS 5 BEDROOMS 2 Bath.5. Lara:c yard. $29,950 Gtorg• Wiiiiamson REALTOR 67~350 673-IS64 Evt1. Bdrm, family nn fireplace, entry hall, full dining rrf!,, bullt·lnt, xtra bath1, brk .. $25,SOO, M0-1720 0NE\VPORT Htlghta rambl· ing ranch •t)'le 3 k-jrm, i;ha.keo root, ~le. $28,950. Kin;aard R.E. Ml ,._2:122 N1wport Beach· 1200 \vEsrcl.JFF fantast ic pre•tl&t corner location. One ot a kind with large farnlly room w I BBQ, ovmized mister b d rm , ma11jve UMd brick firtplace, 21;' •park 11 n c batha A walk to Mariners School. Petite heated & filtered POOi.. Prieed Co sell at $39,950. CA LL 545-8424 Copen eve1) South Coa1t Real E1tate. -. DUPLEXES e of $33,o:kl ha1 been app~ on th\1 3 bedroom • 2 bl~ ho11'je with pool and l car rarage. Qualified w terafl6 ,• see this today! Voeel O:i. : 2'667 Ea1t O:>a1t •twy, Cbr-: ona ctel Mar. 673-!a» : ' .. OAll.Y PILOT DIME-A· llv. rm. Nice family rm. 4 Fam. rm. w/2nd ft'PI. Lee. c-"-clO-"'lo-'2""0,-,--,,-- walll'd p&Ho. Neat & cle1U1, cOmer Jot. Onb1 ~49.~. DAIL y PILOT 4 BR 1s' lla, lam rm, Si\CRinCE! 4 BR. :? RA, M:P fam rm, 2 sty. Ht"d pool ~·/lllde g, div bnl. Nr achooltt. $5000 dn. $45,500. 540-7573 DAILY PILOT DIME ·A- LINES. You can Ute them for just peMie• a day. Dial Pn..DT Clusttled ad. Newport Island ...... $39,500 Near ocean •.•.•• , , $51,500 Pier It Fkiat ....... , $7.(,500 Gr1h1m Rlty. '46-2Al4 Near Newport Pol1 OUice Newport Shor•• 1220 : UNU You can use them for tut~ pennle• a day. Dial oc.sm $56,000 CORBIN-MA RTIN \VestchH Pl&za area, 1hag IMMACULATE l Sr. Dupl~. $55.950. Frank r.tanhall Realty. 875-4600 Riddle a Ro11 Rltrs. REALTORS 6T;>-l662 WANT AD .cpl&, shade tree'li. US.500. 3335 E. Coast~Ji~'Y. 675-72:25 3036 E. Coa~ H\vy., CdM Kinw-11.ard R.E. Ml 2-2222 GeMral 1000 G•n•ral . lOOOG•n•r.11 10000eneral JOOO Gener1I 1000 Gener1I 1000 General 1000 1000Gonoral 1000 i'ZZil ! :i :.· iUJ'¥4 #f NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646-7711 2043 w .. tcllff Or. 1t lrv lne $1Z,500 YllW LOT Prime rtaldentJaJ nt11hborhood. Awroxtma•ely 9~· X 110' "i th Ocean. mount&ln and valley VlEW ! Just .S~ do~'TI and owner y,·\11 carry on very i:ood terms 1 WHY rA. Y t •/o? Y can e11um• thi1 rnA lo.n •t :5" % pet annum and SAVE S34 EACH MON I Sharp 3 bedroom, 1% ba.tbs \VTJ'lf FORfl.l AL DINING fl.OOP.t 11.nd .SLECJ'RfC bllllt·ln kitchen. All thii and mol'e Cor !131//mo. TOtAL on this ex· ceUtnt Joan. NIAR ' HAllOR HIGH Charmlnlt Clltfhaven homl' is an euy Y.'Blk to Churche& and Harbor Hl1ti School. MASSIVE BRICK nru:Pu,a: and ~auUful mature landaeapin11. Top valu.e In tbe a.re• at Juatti2&,0001 CUSTOM v1tw NO MI 3000 Sq. rt. of tnie custom bu.Ill luxury 111luated on the "Nob ot I.ht hill'' alford· Jnc a MAJ!STJC VIEW of the Blue Pac!llc a.nd moun1 •1n1. Owner \vanl1 to travel and WJU. TRADE for 11maJI house, vacant lot or n ·ust Dttds OR 1ell \\•ilh LOW down! Take a Loo!t I -NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY COSTA MESA OFFICE:--545°9491·545·0465 1790 HARSOR ILVD. , Op11 hoeln91 'Ill t P.lol. IUILDIU, CLOH OUT ll $1 ,400 DOWN S'lo to'LQ\V, LO\V inttrelt ln Beach Anta! l\1ASSIVE 0 BEDR00l\1S phi~ lf>!"mwllnr llvtna It FA?>-llLY R00?-1 with tloor to ce\llfli FIREPLACE! Bright aa 1W11htne californla garden el~trlc kitchen with d.llhY.'Bsher. Plush sha~ carpelll fron1 Jili:.UfED CEIUNO l\Vlnk room to si>cluded maste.r bedroom pltn; 1crutnplou1 PUilman marble bath.I. POOL SIZED. block walled btok yard with profes-slanaJly land.apt'd tron\ Y.1th 1prlnktcn. TOTAL ONLY $34,400. 1'IOVE NO\\'! $1 ONE DOLLAR lo!OYU TOU IN-NO DO'!VN-NO COSTS ~S 5 trtmendou1 bfldrooms1 2 baths. Built in k,ttchen! f'aml\y Jloomt Patio kitchen & Di&hwa1her, Romantic flf'tplacel Carpelll .ti Dre.pts! i';evcrAived·lnr: A BUILDEHS cf..oSE OUT only s,; hoo.r to the Blue Pacific and t he tnow-tfppcd mountaim FUU.. P.RlCE $25,950. HUNTINGTON BEACH OFRCE-841-4455 · 7612 Minter MU"'1::=''c .. tn1• Opon Evonlngi HUNTINCiTON HAllOR 540.5140 . ~tagnlfietnt home IN private ISLAND UVING. 3 plush muter size bedroom~ with 2 pullman baths on Quiet CUJ...D&-SAC 1trcet, "''Ith PRIVATE bo&t dock available, tor REAL Nautlca.l Uvlng, 2<&00 s_q. Ft. U7,'°°. UNIELllVAILE-NIAI THI '11ACH-f710 DOWN TOTAL IUTJ thl• 4 bedroom, 1 bath Beaut)'\ Modern bright kttchen "'Ith bullt-in&. C\034: to ahopptng, 1chool1 and frtt\'''YI· •24,IXICI ruu.. PmCE. , ASSUMI F.H.A. SV,4/. INTEREST-I MIN. TO THE HACH At SJ31 per month total you can own this spadou1 4 bedroom, 2 bath Cotlai;e. Stptrale Dining Room, brick Fireplace. Bullt-ln kitdltn. luah .carpel throua:hout, ""::. art only a few of the extras. See.Ing Is bellevit11-. NO GIMMICKS-$1 TOTAL DOWN TO G.I. SUPER SHARP 3 bedroom, 2 bath wtth added Famlb' Room. Features catifomia 'IMMIDl •TE "OSSESSION brick nrcplace, BBQ, and .modern built-In kitchen. Clr?@t. and cu.tom drapes "' .-throu1hoot. WUI 11.lso lt!ll low down f .H.A. $25,900 On tti.11 t'ute 3 brdroom Ol\lfornla Ranchct wtth floor to ceilln.1 picturt window. ASSUME F.H.A. -/4 INTEREST-S MIN~. TO THI llACH · , 1 2 Baths. Thick nylnn..carpetlng, CI01e 10 school&, shopplni; A: all lrN!waya. g:,?:l,fl()() At $131 per month total you can own this 1p1.ct~. 4 lltdroom. ) 1*lb CGtlap. •1JLL PRICE. OJ. No ct.ah douon or assume low lntertst loan. Total pa)intnts $163 Separate Dtnlfll Room. brick Fireplace. Built-In kll.Glltfl. luth carpet lhroU&tlelut. per monlh. -· art onl)' & few ot the extra.a. Sttlng Is btlievln(. _ f , ' PRR HNTAL IOOW $1 7,tOO FULL 'PR IC(_ . SHARP CLEAN 2 Bedroom, monthly $175. SupM' •h•rp 3 Beidroom, 2 ~th, 1a1 Sharp. 3 bedroom, 2 bath California style ~omr. NEAR Tl!E BE1\CJI. Carl>f'ta A bulll-lnt. ne11.r mitjor lhop1Jlnlt leue Im/Mo. W1 have many othera. coaio 10ok L-~=~~':::§~:-~:~~~1 ~~=~~.,i. ...... ..,...., ....... !!!!!!!1~~~=1;r.,:~~~r!·~~'i~~~L~~F:L~A~';"'1~1 H~tax~~~~~E~EN~~~,~~ub!;!~~~~-~·~!'"!;~pay!"'~'"'!·~=lt~~~~~l;~S~:llu'ou~<h~o:ur~boo~k ............. ~.==~::::~~~~~tr:::~~~~~=~,·J: .. ! • -. --------·-~------·------~----------~-----.. HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS JS PILOT·ADVERTJSER Wrdnrsd.ar, JanLWT 28, 1970 HOUSES FOR SALll lllNTALI Hou-l'urnlohod tt11.1111 UnfvmlahN l!~;;:;;~;;; .. ;•;ch;;;;;14CIO;;;H;unt1;; ... :~to;n;;a.;1;ch;;;l;4CIO;;;jf~;;;!~======jii• "' °"""''' -, .... -GREAT BUY DESIRABLE HOl<E DAILY PILOT 4 RENTA~S Apia. ............. -ll8'1TALS l RINTALI ,..,,,AL~ ..,.._ l'um-Art'-l'umlohod Aft!•· l'"""'ohod _...._... -c--41otColt• -4100 -. 3&41iod-.2bothholllflln bNutfful Huntington &.1Ch. $23,990 11.!S LOVELY 2 BR lrl>fex W/Wcrpb,-ktds, pell. BkrJ 5H-f911D. '!'ii!.~·~·= JUST Rent1ll te Shire 2005 trple, i-tlo. pnp, water turn. Adults only no ~ta. FOR PEOPLE REALLY UVE AT . PALM MESA GARDEN APARTMENTS __ , - NEW 2 ltdrm -... ...... -.... epb, Jndty ana, prqe. $115.. &t6-43I): $1&$. t.up 3 Br, 2 Ba, bltns, Cblldrt:n ok. Blue Beacon, MS-0111. C.M. RATE REASONA&.E ROON.MATE Sl!Mce. MaJe or female to lhatt apta from $15. · Blue Beacon, -n. C-'f. Ctll (7141 '62·1353 :."::..."':.~fry~ SINGLE 10 ""' 'Ill 7 ""' ' ~. 2 q. t h. 0.... FEMALE W&nltd To Share er · tranalerred.temJ)Ol'Uil)'. SAt,IDPIPER HOMES Nice H,... W/aame. 1 s.,, ''"' my home; 119g On ~ ..... hunt •t ~flint• school IJe boy OK. $125. ptl' month. Great location, l"!!!'!~!!!!!~!!!!!!!'!!'ii'l!l~!!!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!:j;1;..,._f.-';;i;:.;;-;;ee;;Jn&t;;;;';;;it. near schoolJ and •hoPPine· 1:: . YG. ma.n teekin& roomate lt'1 ln our rental book at Dovtr Slatroo 1227 Hun"""'"' a.ach 14CIO IM obolee So, Bay Cub 1 B• WALKER • LEE I'"-;....;-------I ·--~-----·I $ll5. M2-41'l3 or 64&-8078 :mo Harbor Blvd. at Adami IMPRISSIV,I -2 HOUSES on LOT NB. t:-SIDE 3 er. "1>1c. new SPACIOUS , IW. 130 x 280' ·'°'· I bdm> apt., d,.., rode< .• i......i 4 Br, 4'N Ba + matdL Full nnch home with bis fun. Coste Meta 2100 yard, pr, 2 cbl.ldn!n, no le"l(tb view _ Baf A Mbll. lly room. 1eput.fe. tel"Yioe pot. HK uo -pordl. tarre kitchen wttb 3 BR. 2 BA. bout, 6 mo1 ' ..,..._ mo, ...,...,,,,), ~ =-c!:. ':· !; eleettontc own. 3 built-in leue. Av&il Feb. 15th. S2'TO A"TrRA==c"'<"""B•'"""~,,.-.,--. pr. &.z maint. lmmed occp. ovena. touter, ranee I: mo. 5*-0MT sublet. Crpts, drpl, frp&c, S17S.CKXI. Aaume ,,,."i\ Joan, more. 3 car sarqe. Stpu-1 BR Guest HJe, compl turn. ~ 2 car pr, pool, Owner. ~'1249. ate ~ IJ:)ug'? with tire-Private, Pulq; space, SllD ='"==,..,.=-=-pl•~. kitchen. bis, b!1 bed· mo. 96M981 evei/wknda Pl> VACANT 4 Br, Den. 2 UnlvanHy P1rk 1237 room. Orchard. Room tor Ba. OK for Priv. Hm or Hm many more units. "'8.000 • Newport leach 2200 I But:93f W. 19th. 56-1.968. Your tenm. DF.N + 3 BR, 2 BA, cpts. Assum•ble If-~ WATERFRONT wry private drps, gar. Ttfts, fenced. nte 1!i~nd·~=~e yard '\ltll/!ffiald2 !x,.S:b@:X~ ~~~~ 2rz:.m~nf~ Garage , )'OUr husband will Jove, You BY Owner - 3 Br, fam rm, 2 OCEANFRONT 3 BR. $300 Xln't Cond. Sl30 Per Mo. wW. love tMl spaciousness Ba\h. $29,500 New paint, 2 incl utU. Yrly Jse. Jmmed Occupancy. 962-6114 ot havinz a lar;e 5 hr home. blU from bch, of I * 673-4724 • 5 BR 3 BA. • --Your children will love the Brookhur1t. ·22101l=========ol ' .....,, lmmed oc- reenbelts and the pooh. Capistrano Ln. Gt loan Corene del Mir 2250 cup. $300 mo. Aak for Fem, The price! Under $40,000. ~%. Only $4,500 dn. $5000 qent 5*-1120 Call us for detaUs. 2nd TD. $lfi8 mo. 968-4132, CH IN A Co v e., vie w, CLEAN 3 BR. Large yard. e Red Hill Re1lty or .f9l-3285 bfo~utifully turn 3 BR. 2 BA, Adults. No petl. $155 mo. Univ. Park Center, Irv!~ 20xl0' DEN $4:i0 mo yrly. 6f4-0906 appt. ,,m.=1333=-...,.-==--,-= cau Anytimo 833<>!20 4 BDRM/21/z BATHS RENTAL • 3 BR. 2 BA Irvine Opportunity Knocks Only One• ONL y $2t,SOOI B.olboo lol1nd 235S T............,. pool & ...,,... tlull fac. $215 mo. 54G-6'784 1131 Ex·Mudo1 -nr. part & 1010 SO. IAYFRONT shops. GI no dn, FHA. low dn. 1 to 10 yr. lease tor beil loc. College ~ark HAFFDAL REAL TY B"ut. < BR. 3\1 bath homo 1115 8UMro &: 2 BR. 2 bath apt, &: 2 boat 4 BR. 3 BA. Fam nn. pier I; dock. Fum. $12>0 College Puk. Avail lmmed. Huntlntfon per month. '26S mo, ~2552 Harbour 1405 Llndli Ille Development • The South Bay Club Apt& are· an apartment/ resort built just for •Ingle adult& The apart. ments are sln&le, one and two -bedroOms. Furnlahed and unfurnished. • Profesalorially decorated· with air condltlOnlng available. Autom1tlc fireplaces available in selected apts. Tho ...rt 11 $7SO,oao wo•th of ,.., .. 11 .... 1 l•cllltlel INlurl,..: Night Llghtttd T11.nl1, Voll1yboU & B.oakotboll C.Urta T ennl1 Pro & Pro Shop Olympic SIM Swhnrnlng Peol •nd Hoatttd. Whirl pool Men'• l Women's Hti•lth Clubs with Sauna latM Indoor Goll Drlvln1 R•"" lllllard, Card, and COftference Roems Porty R-.. With Dinco ArM Buffet and Wet lar Color TV & P:lrepl•ce Loun ... luxury l!lev•tor Bulldlnp· With S.Curlty Gu.rd S.nrico And Ample Parkln1 Models Open Until 8 p.m. Dally R•nt• lrem $145 to $3C10 lmmecll•t• Occupancy SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS \VAT E R FRONT home, BILL GRUNDY 61:>-3210 Newport IHch 3200 custom bit 1 story on 56' lot. $370 ma/yrty. Fum/unfum. 2 BR carpeted, attclt'd 3(Q) gq ft, 3 bdmu 3 baths, Dl!lightful 2 BR. 2 BA. garage. 2 clilldr@n le pet den. 15x46' living nn deck & frplc, 2 car pr, 2 patk>I, OK. Fenced ftar yd. Stove, dock on main channel in dock. Adults only, no pets. refrlg. diahwahr, 1arb. Now Leising In e PATIO ARIAS e SWIMMING POOL e .SAUNA BATHS e STEAM ROOMS e JACUZZI BATHS IACHILOR, 1 & 2 BIDllOO,MS @) furnllhod & Unfumlohttd All El•ctrtc Hotpolnt Appliances Mott Reetonable New Rentals In the Airport Area Next to the Saota Ana Country Club. Just East of Santa Ana Ave. on Mesa Drive. • From $120 Unfurnished • From $140 ·Fumlshed CALL: 546-9160 -·--------~--~---- $100. l BR, 1tove • mrta, child A pets ok. Blue Beacon, ~w. CJ.'f. c..i.-5100 HA• GREENS ~ARTMl!NTS SPACIOUS TOWNIIOUSE UVING Sepuate adult I: family com· mwUtit1. Bachelor 1-2-I: S Bdnns, f\tm • unturn aptl. iµo. per mo. It up. • ~e prden patios • Open beamed cellinp e Fh1!pb\·Je• • Rec. Roonu • 2 pooll, aaunu. nunery O<hooL UAM.ED. OCCUPANCY" 110o Petenon Way 4100 Huntington Beech 4«)0 O>lta Mesa 546-0lnl 1---'· Nr. Harbor• Adami Costa Mete 1-e-N-ASS-AU-PA_LM_S_e_ e DEL-LAKE MANOR MERRIMAC WOODS 1 BR fum apt. Pool Lge 1 BR Sl!io, utU pd, ponl, Jult completed, 1 or 2 BR. 2 177 22nd St. 60-3645 patio. Small complex. Adulta. BA. turn or unfu:rn with air no peta. 5J6.6717. cond, cnmpl lll)Undrproofed, NEW QUIET 1 BR, nr ocean, tell cleantng OYl!Dll wood $150, pr\ deck or patio. ceWnas, dswhn, lUSh land. Singles & cpla only. 202 14th saplna with 1treama le wa- DU 1-:Z BR, al80 unturn. Adlts, f"lJ pets, Ulll lncl. 1884 ~fonrovia. Sts:...o336 . 1 BEDROOM furnis hed SJ&..1319, 673-1784. terlalla:, elavaton. BBQI, apartment for rent. Check cl bboule ' j"""" a ' Mate Apts. 2831 So. Brlltol STONEHENGE APTS. u • 1aunu, ,-;;;;;-7,,,,.--:-.,.-~~ 2 BR :Z BA dlshwbr ~ IWim pool1, riv pr. w/ 1 BR. New Crpts, blt-h11. ' • ' • atorqe. Ever)'thlne n • w. U35 a Mo. West Side. Adlt. nn. Adults, no petJ. 2320 'Startinc at $140.. Adultl Only. 548--2897, aft 5. F1nrlda. 536-2'730 pleue. Just Eut of 2600 185 I UP. Nltt 1 It 2 BR n1.EE UtU. furn. 1 Bdrm Hubor Blvd, next to Naben Trl• 133 E !Tlh St CM apt. Near beach. $125 up. Cadillac at 425 Merrlmac · · ·• · 536-lm SJ6...t!82 536-... .,., g.u..7429, 642-U35 wuv W93, ~ I======== 2 BDRMS. 2 BA. pvt patio, I !!!'!'!~'!!!'!'!I'"'!!'!'!!!!'!'~ N•-.. ICh 4200 ::.!".:,,"."'~ • ..,.., BRAND NEW MESA MOTEL * LOW WEEKLY RATES * Kitchen, 'IV's, maid ser- vice. lleated Pool. ....... , Senta Ane 4620 5150 & $170 UTILITIES PAID Lease:, Jeiue option or pur. chsM this outstanding near- new 3-biedt-oom, family room. 2*-"bath home adjolnln; a park. What could be better for you and your small-fry than this lovely home on a quiet cul-de-sac street. H.H. Sacrifi~ $95,000.terms 67:>--7880 dlsposa], water pd. 1st • l:. financing avail ?.t r. Jones AVAIL Im.med. J.ovely 3 Br, but mo rent + cleaning NEWPORT llACH PLENTY Of privacy. Ira at- 846-2504 or (213) 583-6066 2 Ba Home. $225 Mo. No r!ep, Avall trnmt!d. 546-5348 ... 110 Irvine trac, 2 Br, 1% Ba, btwn bch $130 LARGE, cheerful newly furn 1 BR apt (tri-plex). mtns, gan.ge. 1 Infant OK. No pets. 2230 So. Center St. (Nr Warner). 1 a: :z Bdrm, 2 IWim pooU. Adult. only, nop eta. 6C2..s535 Days, &45-al83 Etts. 307 Awcado St., C.l\I, See Mar on Pi;tlfolRI (Behind K-Mart oU Harbor at corner Rut&"e~ I: Avocado Call U~ About Te1ms Only $31,900 673-8:.60 O THI: RI::AL ''.",. ESTATERS LIQUIDATION!! New l level Students. 675--0223 eve1. 645-1691 days (Irvine and 16th St.) & bay. New crpta, drpa, (7141 64• •sso mod •·-N " .,QI:; L•aune &••th 4705 homes. Prices slashed! 8/8 ~ ern ....... ope . .......,. --'--;.;;...;;.;.;-"'-- From $45,500 to mroo. _.151 Duplexes Furn. 2975 Adults Only 54s.J&U _ 1HE NEW VILLAGE INN Branford St. Bldn/Aat. 3 BR. 2 ba.Jt;, split level. $26S GARDIN GROVE , WATERFRONT 2 Br, 2 Ba, Formerly Saddleback Inn, 146-0609. eves 557-6151 $12i tmL pd, 1 BR. Duplex 2 BR. 2 baths .......... $225 frpl, crpls, drapes. AvaU Laguna, from $28 a week. in cholce art•. AVAil.ABl.E NOW 13100 Chipman Avenue ' Feb. 1 to June 15. $290, Lovely apts. All utll'i, S1nt1 An1 Hgts. 1630 Bkr. 53H980 Bay I: Beach Ru.lty, Inc. (4 l:tlka. W~ Santa Ana Fwy.) ~2341 llnen1, maid, pool, laundry 1244 _ RENTALS 901. Dover Dr, Suite 126 NB (714) ~3030 SAIL INN MOTEL. Wkly &: rm. StePI to bch. 696 S. Cat -----HORSES OR Ul\'ITS·~t ac 2 Houses Unfurnished 645-XQI ~. 54M9G6 monthly rates. 675-1841 Hwy. 6t-M36/4M-7201. El Toro LAKEJ."'RONT • Lake F"otc!.1 Br. fii>lc, htd pool. 2 stalls, TOWNHOUSE: 3 BR. 2% ANAHEIM (corn. 28th St. It Newport 1 BR Apt; also sleeping ma. Ne\Y 2 BR, 2 Ba l.0111e. Lux· tit.ck room!. 0 w NE R . General 3000 BA, frplc, patio, pool, 2 car Blvd Utll pd. F1'tt TV &: radio. tAARTINl(j)UE WXURY Am Excellent park-like llWTOW)d. lna:1. ~-Extra parklnc. Nr. shoppln&. Adultl only. 1·2&.3BRAPI"S AlSJ FURN BACH. IT17 Santa Ana Ave. C.M. Mil', Apr 113 646-&542 urlou!I sh3:: crpts. dr.i.pcs. Sll.500. 545-$48 pr, all bltn&. crpta:, drps. Now leaslnt for March occup11ncy 3 BR. 1 Ba. ~I blk to bea.:h, 2200 So. Coast Hwy. BoaUn:: &. fuhln: In iront FREE 1.Ae $275 mo. Bn-.8811 or 277 S. lrookhurtt St. Di'iS 40th. $240 yearly. 1 BR. Utll pd, Octan View. yard. Pool, tennis, Laguna Beach 1705 RENTAL BOOK 6U-2497evesorwkenda. (1 blk. So. of Lincoln) 67>-3249. Sin&le person. clubhouse privf. Belo iv ---------1SHARP CLEAN 2 Bedroom,1~2~8R.~~,~ .. -.,.....-d"ln-,,..,.-(714) n2-4500 e 3 Bdnns :Z B&. $l!i0/mo HANDY" •N monthly Sl75. SUper ~.-'' uo:n. ' room 2 BR fum A: un!urn. $1SO -* 494-1079 * e 3 bdmu 2 batba, m•~ ••• market price. 494-8-163 """' 3 Bedroo ...... l" In Clitfhawn.. $300 $115.. Cpts, drpl, bltns, pool, --'"# -SPECIAL m, 2 bath, gas built-r--. W""·--·, n-aJtor tio 525 H I -5 t.ru. $225/montb. I 1250 in&, near major shopping ~•" ........,,....,., •""' pa • l Placentia ote s ~71 e 4 Bdrms 2 balhi, •'Kl'l'mo. Corona del Mar l·Ien!'9 a real buy. Otarmlng , ___ • ._!Mo. Wo ••• ,· 61".;r4350 6f3.1564 Eves RENTALS RENTALS FURN • ""tum 1 BR ap•·. --------~ 1_________ ranch st;yte home, smJAT--.... ~-,,. sh Unfu 1..,_ • · ..,. LIOO Shores Hotel & !\Iarillll Welft-McC•rdle, Rltra. I LOVEL y ''LUSK" ED ON I.GE. LOT, NESIL others, come look throU1b ONE 2 Br. It 3 Br. homa: on HouHI U~I ... _ Hout" m Pool. No children or p!!U. Speclal winter monthly rat-ma Newport BlvJ., C.M. ED BENEATH TOWERING our b:Jok. ~ lse. $185 tD $250 mo. H··~ -,-:-··;,_ ~-h-·.,_ Dup-1•-••• Unlum. 3975 240S~l 16th St. N.B. 646-4664 eg: Bt.yfront Lanai Suite 548-il'l9 644.00IW eves In Harbor Viciv llills. Only WE SELL A HOM& "'-•...........t Realty 548--1290 _,"I °" ueac -DELUXE 2 B W tclill loc VI dlo Sul -I,..,_,_ .. ,.,,.., .. .,., I 1 Id 3 BR ' SHADE TREES, WllER.E ..._...,.,... r. es . $462. ew Stu te -· I -yl'. 0 • ·• ant. rm. EVERY 31 MINUTES l reat vie11.·, lndscPQ:., deoor-TIJECOOL GREENOFNA· Hi htt 3210 4 BEDROOM $1251.0vELY 2 BR .Duplex, Pool & blt·ins.-Adults. $250 up. Kitchenette1. Ma d, .""·".all tho upgraded (ea· TURE ABOUNDS JN A Wa Iker & Lee Newport • • Sto y-~ I '·-" p t No lease. 642-6274 phone, c:oUee, ice. Day-Week. "UIET AIR OF SECLUS. $2M mo. No pets ve. ,...., or uw•.,.Y· e . 617 Lido Park Dr. 6734!800 ORWHS APTS. tures niakc111 It better than '"' * 962-1673 * Bkr 534-6980 ===~----ne\\"! An honest value al JON. A pleasant wa1k from 7682 Edinger /L.\.RGE 3 B<tnn, 2 bath It -· · Corone del Mir 4250 RINTALS 2 Ir: 3 BR avail. Adults only. ;;,g,•~/8" REALTY ri:~e ~::~~ned parlor type 540-5140 84'144:>5 ~) .r::1~ S2f«> mo. 2J:-~;:-~e'~~: R:~~~~rnllhe4 1 BR., partly furn, New cpts. , ~· Unfymlthtcf 1741 Tustin, Costa Meu llv. nn. HAS . OAKEN SPACIOUS 2 11tory, large 3 H.B. 493-t:O.S 4: drape1. Walk to 1hopplnl. A~nor•I 5000 u-••-.....__._ .,.~., ...,,~ I~ 67;).576-i E\'CS. bdrm & fa V'9 ..... ~ ~· _...._.... PLANK FLOORS. \VOOD m. rm, all bll·ins, East Bluff 3242 3 BR house, carpe~, built-Gtner1I $155 month Incl. utilltiel. ' ' CAMEO SHORES PANELED \VALL. cozy 'immed. J>Os~. Ne wly ---------1 w, fenced ln rear, double .&!en.le Propertie1 6'1S-.51:a& VACANT LOT LOG BURNING Fm&-deool'llted. U'IO/mo. CALL EXEC. Home East Bluffs, 1arare.Comerlot.962-80CT The GORGEOUS New B ACH ELOR Apt, blk VEN. DOME View Won't Quit PLACE fN ANT IQ u E D Heritage Real E 1 I ate Near Aeronutronic, S Br'1, ocean/b br 11 10' x 160' APPROX. DESIGN. Center hall opens 54~1151 (open evey). $425 w/gardener. 644-1554. '.e:i .. ro.,WNH. ou,~. 21ii Ba. VAL D'ISERE W/W cp':: 1 Ida::. ,: I! pe~'. IMMACULATE AP'I'SJ 4639 C•mden Drive to ~ 2 bdnns., serviced by * HElP! t.rusr RENT * v.... ua: .-per mo. Slngie--1 br.~ hr, l"utli·unf. $100 )'fly. 673-7629 ADULT & FAMILY I R:· C. GREER Re•lty central 4 FIXTURE BATH. 90 Houses & Apts. i\105t Coron• del M•r 3250 Call 213 0 /144o.~ ....... _ ~~·,.!'!'>:~~poo1' ~~~ :z BR. 1 BA. blk/ocean I: SECl'IONS AVAD..ABU! 133.'.Xi Via Lido 673-9300 KOPPER KETI1..E KITCit-areas. 1 Rdnn to 7 Bdnn. $265 M . 3 Br, • story.........,., ,ne ... ,.,.. • -UU>OJ"' C .... te shtppl .. Partc EN \VITTI ELEC. RANGE $75 to $400. Avail imm. SHOWPLACE near ocean. 9082 Bermuda Orivt', H.B. 200J Panons Rd ' .,_y. Vi<'w. Pr1 pa t io. * -3 Br! 28a NEW adult community. 1 I 2 Br, all util pd, pool. lhat crplJI, blt·inl, drapea, gar. q:e w/stor. &nL Adults only. From $150. HACIENDA HA~OR 241 Avocado HARBOR VIEW • OVEN CE '!I 'l1 3 BR. forced air ht, :Z ba, .._, ....... • Adults, no pet.. $11> yrly. a. -, RA\• C LE, * Call Susan 645-:Z.164 * 2 I 1_ ~ 67l-1629 * 2 Bedroom. HILLS ETC. OPEN~ TO SEPAR-$210. 4 BR. 2 BA, crpts. drps, bar, wtw cpt, frp cs, .. Cotta Meta 4100 * SWim Pool, PuVlfM'D 2 Bdrms 11,i baths. bUilf..in B .u,•1ful Vo"e w ATE :J:~ R!\i encl patio, gar, $295 lse. Fount•ln V1lley 3410 FURN. 2 Br. Near Beach • * -· •·•'•"~ '··•-e · · · range & o\·cn. gar, children Fum or uni. 67l-13M 11 .... •up.•-.-~~ 1 67>-31>!.~•--. 11-por mo. Call ,~~~~.:..__ ...... Im' A~· ranee le oven, carpets I: 3 Br .• 2 be., tam. rm. Sell or lbc s cloll'\ rear groW\.ls welcome. Blue Beacon, ..., • ·•'°""'"''~·-"'"'Y"u,. 1 " --.-.--drapeL Oote 'to-.:hools. ha\·e sheltered arbor type 645-mll C.M. 4 BR. $235. Per Mo. I~ pool, OOSTA MESA M2-28:M $1SO!mot)th. Lie Option. $51,SCO. \Vrlte patio, terraced garden pick-Huntington Be1ch 3400 Water & l>rp!. Days bdr,. util paid. prden EXCEPJ'IONAL 1 BR. beam I t•"!'m!!!'!!!!"!!!"!!"!!!""• I Box ~:\I, Daily Pilot. t I THAT LOO. ro 4-r.ENT 2 Bdrm Bltns ..... ·210 Ev•• o:•o: ...,o.. Uvin&. adults, no pets, m DAVIDSON R-lty '"'=-=~cc-=:-c=..,-1 e '""'· KS • . -. . ~ . ~~·~ w-"--A·-., C.M. claa••haa "PL 1 "'"''· "' • RENT • -i..-'OR Sale by O\\'?ler, house 8:. TifE \VOODS & OLD WOOD-Carpet &. drapes. $150. P..1Y Beautiful 3 bdnn 2 bath .... ""'" ... ~ 546-StliO Eves. ~1833 garai:e apt. on 1 lot. Each 2 EN BRIIXiE BELO\V. This * Call SUSAN 6.J;).2464 S{Jn * home, Catpeled & draped, S•nta Ana Heights 3'30 LRG 1 Sr. Furn. No Lse. No petl. $165 yrl)'. ~ Br, 2 Ba.. Total income $400 ha . LE "SE electric built-Ins including child or pell' $12.5 641. •oa c rnung older home needs ~"" or tJphon to Buy 4 dishwasher. $225/mo. Lease all 2 bed ' · lefboa 4• mo. 'vtth vacant separale a little touch up here & there. BR 3 baths. Beautiful. $285 {In 1 )'. 1 n ex c l us . ve ~ Acre~m room -,~Shal~i~m~ar~Dr~·=· ·~··~·=" ,;:c~.M~·=Jl""'.;:;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;:;,;;--1 ~t Bdrm A: bath. Price Tt's an oul!\t.andfng buy for to-$35(1, Delta 64G-f414 neighborhood. Bkr. 53li-889fi den. S 646-G4G9 CLEAN Bachelor Apts. $4.9,500, Aft 4 pm, 494-9831i $25,950 FULL PRICE FOR le~ Feb. 1st. New un-Eves. 536-9866 =========I Cotta M••• 4100 All utll incl $85 up Id 1 I 1•51 LO\l/ER DN. PTI.IT. 0.h:. furn. Valencia. c-upeted. In $180. 3 BR. 1" !!A, 2 •ty L •··ch 3705 ---------1 315 E. Balboa Blvd. ..... ie L o • • • MISSION REAL TY Lolou"' World ""'°' ~ oguna -SUNNY BAIJlOA .,,._ J Rooms Furniture $19.95 & UP ? :ottth-Tt>..Ml.tth..Rentall WIDE SElECI'ION JfO DEPOSIT O.A.C. HJ'RC Furniture Rentals 517 W. 19th. CM 548-J<BI ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;::; 1985 So. Coast llwy., Laguna Condo. Cprt.s, drps, stov~, URIGHT deluxe 2 Bit, 2 BA. * * IT'S Beach" house tune. Dire• Onan House 1·5 Phone (714) 494-0731 Cost• Mesa 3100 ~~hse. ca9r6p2o_r2~·30 ~; Walled patio. Ocean 1!de. ACRES sett aelecUon ever!" See the $125. 2 BR, Cl"J)ts, dtpl, bltnl, Th.r,;/,rl/S•t & Sun. ** OCEAN FRONT** 2 BR. Gar. Patio. Crpm, 213/3U-3531 Leau $295. Owner 499-3638. * * = N~lf1' Oaulfled ~a~~. Blue Beacon, 2 Bedrooms. New w/w carpet, separate laundry room, J*tio, fenced yard, cloaed prq:e. Walk to Eut lTth Shopplnc c.nt.r. 11<0. ADULTS ONLY, BKR. ...._ Fimy Via Apts Street to Strada Pounding sur1 breaking O\'er d~. 1110\"C & refrii;::. Quiet 3 snnri1s 2 baths, 2 car gar, D I u-• 3975 i:;;=~~~==-::=~~=:::==:===::=~=:'" the rock! below your Tropical Setting for Adl!s cptg/~. Wnlk to shop. ue•x•• .•• urn. * MoteJ-Apts * N le.ch 420oNawwt Beach 4200 Nnr Oranp c.o.. Alrport It 110 VIA CORDOVA private balcony, wtth the Only. 1 m1c Shops. Sl75. ping. S22S/mo. Bkr. HUNTINGT ON BEAOI '!'2°'1 . ~ UCI. AdUltl only. 20122 3 ticl~~~ =n:~ sea breeze b~~ your 5"--0452 546-4141 DUPLEX 1 stinal So. ot O.C. medY Oc Santa Ana Aw. M0.21M N"'ly pa.inted, new w/vr ~Uonit~;"'vely 3: "BR e~ $350=~M~o'".°'"r,-,,.-. ~.-.,~11~1~ru~. 3 3 Bdrm~ 2 baths. A bright a:. 2 BEDROOM, I bath, n-Fa.trrroums Grand Opening -Im te cup1ncy Ql11e'ffna. BA 0-Y..O h:ts approx i700 Br, w/w cpts. drp 1, clean home in good family cellent n~l g hbor hood , S"""9 & 1 l•*•••I OAKWOOD JEAN SMITH f t of lllxurloul living, pool p.rdener. Eastsld,. CM. ,., ... n. \"a.cant. $225/mo. Act. Untumished. $135 month. po WK. & UP I: re c r eation area.o:, Nice neighborhood. stS-3782. 546--4141 C&ll 536-QIO'l. Dft'. Week.....,. The best of two WO. rids ·• • REALTOR elevator. double park\~ • K1tcbe111 l. TV'1 incl, '460n5S space '" ""'"· A""''"'"Gen=•;;;•.;:•:...I ----'3000G'-'-'.;:.;;•;:;n•:c•.o•'-I ___ ....;>1.;,;DG;:;~.;:G.;;.•n;;;'"c.'.;;.•I'----• Phono -·· hid poo1 r;our home •nd your country club ownen will finance. EJc.1 · •Maki Rl'Vioe avall. eeptlonal buy at $57,500. 2J76 HIWPOIT K.VD. r your hom•, 11•l•ct from &ift9le, on• end BONUS ROOM RMERA REALTY S.'155 twe b•droom •1Mrtm•nt1. Furnish•d or un· plua 3 brand 2 ba fot only 30ll8 COAsr HIWAY C..filQ"O ..I\' A: f).,'(l bQ.• * Wim'ER RATF.S furnlsh•d, each I• profetslonelly docoratod ~"'50. 18 x 30 BONUS South Laguna 4!&-2800 P~ J.'Qt,J ~ .. -'IJ J;J~ P 11 you •ty thnl tummer rate encl lnclud•• carpotin9, d.reperlo1, •l~oloctrlc ROOM "" ... dorm, • The 'rm'• with the luiH-ln cwi. .. ....... the ...... 1 Br !um We1tln9hou1• 1ppll1ncH, • te r.' • •p•co same room, a den, an omce M1s1ion Vlelo 170I aptl' $125. Funt Bach apts •plonty and privet• belcony p•tlo. or a huae muttr br. II'• -·---------1 ·~~'"" ... ""-L~~-.'1. ~ pl.5. See Mqr. 2135 Elden J114t tf•p• frotn yeur door is • whole world dltfeftnt! PRICED To Sell! La Pu ,...,, llRI-wwu• -I Ave, Apt6, CM. Avail Feb f I I t I b t' Red HHI R lly Home C\lstom Xtru Very low to form foVr llrnplll wordt. r o •xc u1 vo coun ry c u rocre• ion' u!v P&rk <:enter•~rvlne Clean: By Own. 837-9i44 ht. • rrof•ttlonal slse Tonftll Co'°'rt' Cai• Anytlm~ m~o D•n• Point 1710 I· Ltisi·v1 I' I !~:'1~h~ ~ : ~i;~r.·r: :i;:·~:r~~i~~·;:~,··d Shop LIAsl/OPTION • • . . • . • ma1c1 .me.: Kltchenl • • Whir p11I .. th1 4 BDRM 3\1 RATH 2 COMMERCIAL LOTS TV av&l!. Go V~ !Nr • P•ddle Tennil, Volleyboll, luketb•ll mo ... • .. IOI Via Ebo!!. UT ,,.,, .... "" 135· .... to I R D p E K I ·1 II-). Courts 3 car ran1e. ()opts. dips. :,n:i!· =. ~oc:~ I' I' I I SHARP s.chrl« unit Clooe And a· 20,000 squ1N foot clubhouse off•r1 2 Y1'1 yvurw. M ·KE OFT· Priced lower thar alt)' Cl ln • • • • • 10 OCC I: UCJ; S13S PQS th••• ftatur•1: ·ER! Owner~•) r2._(!!.!.?,. 2tl-310l, O.P. at "8.500. Ttnru:. 1 all Jttfeftnca requited. • So,.roto M•n'1 and Womon•s ..., ~ -·-· POINT REAL TY I RY C I L I Anll 2/l/"10. Ev .. •...,.. H .. ~h Cluh1 with SounH Hunt!_,_ a.och i40i 3lli6 °'"'1 Hwy., o.,. Point hanl""-ilr-'-"i-1 ...... -1 A fell-got -of his .... 5<MlllS • Indoor CO.II DrMnt R•ftf•, .... -. mu 4!16-5333 • • • • old Volk-i...klng 1115 MO/DLX Mobtlo Home, llUl•rd1 R .... . 5114 0;. LOAN D"~A POINT. By .....,, -::::::;:::::;:::;:=::'......,downi to ho gaw ~to tho a>mpl tum. htd pool. • ThHtr• TY Loun91, Art Studio, ., .. ..,.. n.-.. ls $161/mo. Mob ~~ M~ N-· • r ""'"" •-6 ........ rl DEAROF 1--'·homt. ·t-19 Adu!b."' ..... ' Seum'o P•""" Room• .-~..... Oc@an view, nr beach I: G eo...i. .. ct.lf. .,-~~ .. -.... ...,.... Mod•I• Open 10 A.M. To I P'.M. Dilly ~~m':ketlc.~~ ~~'Goodomd.i39,:<ll I I' j' I 1,.._loyfi~=.'l:?.:e. MIRRIMACWOODS UNTSNOM$1Hte$J10 mlt dO'#ft . N TD avail. 1.=:=i:i::====== /, ·1~~~~1~;~;8* Aptt. For Sal• 1980 • ~Ulu~~ftS r r r r r r r r I :: f ;, £? ~ ~.~s:m\VONDE=·L ~/:,~ l ~E~ :~~ ~~9-!; I~~~( '°'I I I • I I I I J SUS CASITAS muny buys In apJilhuir'f':I O b c Itc h. Appr«.:i11t!n~ FUm, l BR &Pll. Adulu. )'U\I nnd In lh:· Cl11..'8llieJ iu't"lt, 01\ner Didi . SCRAM LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 1550 only, no Pt'l•, ruo Newport "°'· ~'"'' "'"" ''°"'' g Lloo"'r,; Co, s;JG.2579 • 81 .... -·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·-~~~~~~- OAKWOOD GARDEN APARTMENTS 1700 . 16th Street, Newport l••ch Phono: 642.1170 VILLA.MESA APTS 2 Bl\ lllllUQI. prt potloo, hid pool ' .., encl'! .... Olll- dl'tO welroipe, DO p • t a pieue! $160 &leo turn $185. 719 W. Wllaon. · 646-IZ! Dt:LUXE 2 Br. l:rpb, Drpo, blt-inl, prtv patio. Adj, clooed .... pool. .... .. 1tory. No pet.a, adults only. 1110. Call .... 7'11 TERRIFIC 2 bdrma 1~ ~tha. 1hl.Jp, carpeWdrap- ........... mi .. tt., i...,. ed. Ava.U. :Z/l/"'10, tl55/mo. Four Star l\eal\y ..,._ BEAUT. 2 Br, New. Drps, carp'd, •low:, pri). dilpl., prlv YQd, No chiklru pets. $1$0. &t6-4ll2 I BR 2 BA Cl>ndo. crpo,," """ bl... pool Patio, pnp. S2'l5 mo. 5fS..52'fO NEW dlx. 2 Bii. 2 BA. ""'" drpo, --· 111$.fliO, H>:m, HJ.ml Qurer. cl1x 2 er, .. .., cpWdrpa. beam c et I . Adulb, .. pits. ,...,., '135. 5'&-5381a!t8. f" BR, l Ba, carpets. dtaP". buUt·ll'lal, •Ingle 1era ac , coupk!'• only, no peb, ref&. $125 mo. &16--3432 ---------•' I I ( I I I I l • '' 3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~h Yourself A Pile Of Pennies (01· Even Dolla1·s) Penny Pinchers Pile Up Profits Dial Direct for Details 642-5678 North County, 540·1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS ~. •• ~ .. -----------------------------------------------~--~·~-.,..~-~----...-.---·~-----___..__,, .... __ ., _____ ~-·-.... - Wtdnrsday, January 28, 1970 DON'T PINCH ,. r YOURSELF. (You're Not Dreaming) But You Can PINCH YOUR ' . ' • " PEN~:IES with a PILOT PENNY PINCHER Classified Ad 3 LINES 2 TIME·s· DIAL DIRECT • l-42-5678 YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD U,:C~L NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE "'OTICI!" TO til'OITORt SUliEIUOR COURT 01' THI! STATI Oli CAltl'OltHIA l'Olt THI' COUNTY OF OllANCilE N&, ......... •• E1l•l1 01 JOHN 0. El.KINS, •IM ~-&• JOHN DAVIS EL.KIN$, o .. ''•*· NOTICI!" 15 HEREBY GIVEN lo tht! t•t:dllM~ of !h~ 1bove .,,,,...., dtteck'nl lh•I Ill PtlffOIU 1>1vi111;1 cl•~· M•lnJt "'' Mid IMtt!Mnl ere !,,.,.Ired lol 1111 ll>em, wrll;I tri. ""!'-V VOlldllll' .. In file oltltt: of 11"1 Clolrto: OI the •~ enfll!W tourl, or hi pr~t lhen\ wtll'I the ntcnurv .,_,_ .. lo 1"-~<.a.rsloned •I lhf olflte or ~r A.ltnrfte'f'a, Tvre 1111<1 1(8Mlns. «U N or I h lto~burv Orlve, 8tv"'1v Hills, (lll'Ornla '<>110, wl!ic;h 11 tM pla<;e ol bu1!ness ol 1hc lllldersJ11ned ln 11! """"'' pert11lrl!ne !o rtwt t:!llillt r>t uld dKed""'\· wltl'll" 1""' "'°"1"1 111er Ille fl~I PllbflU· ''°" M 1'1'11\ notice. Oil~ J•'llJllN ~' !910, C1,,.I Cli!'f El~ln• E.-ec~lr!• ol 11>! Wiii of IJ\fl .OO~e NmH de.;o,dr:nl Tl'te 1M K1mln1, ~ Nortll R••IH.o•Y O•lw. lr.trl'f HIH1, C1llforaJ1 "211 T1I: (JU) !11·7f.!S Af'°'"'9'fl for l'::lKr,rtrlr PubU.i...i Or•-C""'•I 01111' f'1k>I, J,.nu.rv 2' 1nd Febru1rv '· II , ti, 1910 l&l-711 LEGAL NOTICE f'-360$0 CEllTtl'ICATE OF IUSINf!SS l'!CTIT IOUS NA.Ml! llle ~h!M<I don cerlllY "" II COl'l-ductf1>11 11 blKI-111 13.! Se"ul1 line. N _ _., Bt1U1. Callforni.I, uncMr !he lie· 11111!1/S firm n""'e of ONE STOP SEl!VIC ES OF Ol!ANGE COUNTY and th•t 11!d firm k ton"Pl!!oed ol the tollow- 1"9 _..,,.,. ~ 1111me '" hl!I 1nd pl1ce or ,...,ldence ts •• follow$: Oon11d O'Brlefl, IJS .»111u:I luic. New1>0t1 8e1Kh, c,.m,...n11 Ol'lt!d J1111u11r,. U.. 191'0. Oonllld O'l•l•n $! .. re OI ( .. ll!ornl .. , O•~"llt ("!l<llV On Jd"u••• 1&. 1910, ~IQ•• ""'• 1 No111rv P ublk '" ilnd !or 111ld St,.!e, l>Pr'IOl>llll• -~red Oor>lld O'Brltn ~l'OWn 10 "'I fo t._ !he Per\On Wl><-w name 11 i;ubscrlb!-d to •lie wl!!\ln ln- 'lrumpnl 1!<11 Mli-lee'!lf!!I "" c~ec11led ... _ tOFFICIAl, 5£.lol) J""•oh E. o~v·' 'iot•r" P11~llc·C•lllorn111 P,IMINI Qlliut In' °'"""e Counlv Mv C1>mml .. lon E11>1rei J11n1 '1, 1910 Pulltl~llM Or1n9e CM•I O~!lv Pll .... Jit~111rr 11 11'1d FebrU11r1 I 11. 1~. 19111 1~10 U:GAL t<OTJCE NOTIC !!: O" INTl!:NTIOH TO CltEllTE SECUll!T'I' !lr(lfll:IST is ..... '10141•1 u.c.c.1 E1cr9W NI. 91·1"' NOT tC.E I~ l>lrlftlv !!"""" fo '"-C-tltor~ f>f !OOl ENTERPRISES. Oft> l~r. wh01e bw1i"'n aO!lreu It 1l10 WP..! Sl•!h S!•""'· Lo. A119•le•. C<111ntv of Lo. An<>tlt•. ~1•11 ol' Citlllornl•. lh•t " ...,.,.,,. Iv infl!~i;: I• •boo! la be crql"' bv D~l'I. l~r and !If-Itel lo LUC ILLE l(AllAM, ~~'urM P1<tv. whMoe bln!neu atklr""' 1, 1 •JO) Wn t e.v Ave11111, N•-rl BtfCh. Cl'Uflly d Or•-· SI•"' Of C.lllr>•nr~. The pr._,.,... In wi>lc,h '"• Security, lnttre•I Wiii be C•Mlfll IS. .,., 9fnt,,1 ,, •. ture., t<>ulom•,,I. 1u ... 11ure • n rl • lurnl>lli-cl O•btor cov•rl"" nror>er"' ""w located •I ~01 -lC!~ Slre11. N•wPt>r! 8•,.th, Coonl• ol O"'nge, .Sl••t 01 C.>lllOfnl•, llnd Dlr.llntu kl'OWn 11 "l(•r•m'• ... The itl~ld ~tturily h&n~•ctln" wlll bo rO<UUmmtt@d on Of alt•r l"lt 6!h dtv fl1 l'et><u~r.,, 1911), If lh•nk of A...erla NT&S,1,, lol~ VII lido, NtwPOrl 8ta<ll,. Calllornl1. So ler "' ~Mwn lo !he Sec11tM PitrtY, .. u M ine"" .... ,., •• """ •OO•Hlel USM bv the Debtor !or lhe lhrH """' litit pest, llr<!: -·· DA.TEO' J1nu11rv !J, 1910. SEC\H!FO PAl!TV l utHlt k11r•rn Publl,hl'd l'l••tlllt Coast 01flv Pllol. Janu•r'f ,._ 1910 161-111 LEGAL NOTICE SUl'l:ltlO" COU"T OF TM I': STATI' o" CALIFOllNIA "o" THE COUNTY Of' O"ANOf: No, A-6S0?1 NOTICE OF Ht:AIUNG OF l'ETITIOM FO!ll f'ROSATI! 0" WILL ANO FOlt LUTF.ltS T•ST..tMl!NTAlt'I' Ell•I• cif Luther Dow I!. M•rr. Of<:tll'· "· . NOTICE IS HF l!f8Y GIVEN Tll~I Juli• lft M.•rr h•• filed !>ere!" • .,.11ucn !or P~~ of wrn •nd '"' l>suenc• "' L•tie .. T6 181'T'•t>l•r'f lo Pt!lllor>et, relt•!'llce t~ wh<ch 11 maM for !urtMr P•rt!<11l11r~, •nd 11111 Tf>e time Mid pl11c• fl1 ~e1•l"11 th• same h•l bt1n "'f:I fer Fer:>r11•ry ll. 1911), •I 9·Jl •.m., 1" ,.,._ coort•norn of Oeo•rl· men! No 3 o• Mid court. •' l'OO Civic Cffiter Drive Whl. In lllt Cllv ol S1nt1 .Ion•, C•llloml9 Da!!'d J"""""' 76. l•ro. W E ~T JOHN, (ou~lv [le-+ L"l~•r !II . Ml", JOO So<!I~ ·-Vkl• SlrHI l'•tr!Ml"ll-C1llforl!'i• IUOS Tel: tlU) tct.J•11 AITOrney for Ptl1tlonw Publl~lll'd Or11n9e (~~11 01111¥ P llpt, J1.,1111rv n, " 11n0 FPbr~•·v '· lt'I) 166-1\t LEGAL NO f)CE NOTICF TO Cltf:OITOns SUPEll/011 (OU"T 01' TH I! STATE 0" CALIFORNIA ~n" THE COUNTY 0" O!llANOfi NO. A-4-4"' E1t11le. Cll Wll!l1m ltoil, OP<t••ld NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVE"' fo IN! creditor•. o1 Ille •boYt nlmef dfcede~t ttw!t •II ""°"' hevllllll ci1lm1 11v111n11 ttit Hkl dec.tOlnl llfl r.ulrld lo !Ill then>, Wiii'! ~ neces••N ~1, 1n IM olfltt Of 1NI clprk ot the "bnv• tnll!ltd coor!, or Ip "'""""' ,~...,. wit~ !he nect"'""' WU<"h•~. In ll'P ~...i·r~l111lPd er !ht olfkt Of hll All-y, T"""'llo W He...,..._, Jr .. HI! Ee<t l/lt\._,!~r..et. Suite "'ta'nbe• 11 1, Cool• M~~ Caftfnew>11 ,,6,7, wtlldl 11 ~ Pi.lee of 1Mn1-.. !he undenltfl'lef "' Ill""'"""' pert111'1lnq IO Ifie •51811"' '-111 ~n!, within !()!Jr "'"""" after !hi r"' wbllc1llon af lhl• """c• . Oiied JM\UlrT 16, ]f1Q, J••M! "~"""" E~ecutar ot tM wm pt thr •bo<oo~ n~ ....... 0.Ced~ll TllOmlt W. Mt ... t('•, M ,. "' 1'111 ,,,~ '''"'· twPt "'""'"-' Ill, C1\ll Mou, C11t1ter11\a t 2•17 t tl!; (1l4) M .. ,,W lifer...., t.r l~K\11°" P~blhhtr! Or~ Clint 'l)lilfr ,llol, '"""''' )t llld 1"1'*'9ry 4 JI, It. t•111 ' 10."f Sany·;, Top Bananas On Any Comic. Pago PUT CASH IN YOUR POCKET Sell umwri\ed llcmtt witJ. I' DAILY PILOT 0. In,! Ad. rHONE 642·5678 .WANT TO UP Olt YOUR CLEAN OUT! FOR FASTI FASTI ACTION! CAU DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R E c T 6 4 2 s 6 7 8 W!dnesdaJ, J1nu1ry 28, 1970 DAILY PILOT ,,. P.5NTALS ~· l/!tfvrnl•.,.. * Ceo!• -"' I IOll * * * * *· RENTALS REAL ESTAT! Apt1. Unlumlohtd Gonorol 1--------. .,... llHch s100 ~1111 w""'"" 59'0 LCE J sn. Plool. Cri•I• A • LANDLORDS • dl"J)5.i Kld11 9k. 1008 Ala()lt: SPACfOUS MW 2 .,.l"m B~A~VJCE API 3. MS-2ms. • 2 bath. Nr, AIWPl"t· J======== 2 BR. Crp\e, poo~ patio. No Mariner SqU•r. A,t1. Roome tor Rent 5995 petJi er children. $135. 313 E. 1244 lrvrne Avt., N.Bt 1--,.,,------- t71h Pl. 642-8499,, 6'S.US% 2 R°6oM Studio For Rent In 2 BR unfurn, Duplex. Crpt &. Prtv, HonM, CdM. $75 r.10. U1 psi 1'.tlddle aged O\tly I !!!!!!~!":'l'!:~~~!!!!!l'l:;,Call~,!6'3-~7~4611~. -.c=-·,--,,- plcase. Phone 5484122. BA YFRONT NE\-\f separate furn studio e BARGAIN -Beautiful lge 2 Blt, 2 BA' lt.m.ury aJ>ll Pt!, l'QQID, bath. Older won1an 2 BR apt. 998 El Cwnino tamtce, elavau.n. 1Ubter. onl;y. m mo. ~l?. • Dr, C.lit . ~ ra11t11t11 pk'i'· All elec, Pool, El\tPt... lady, homu ptivil. S60 2 Bit u.nL NewJ.y dK. New soft water, boat docks. S.'J50. month: •Col!ta Mesa . e1pts & drptj. Adults, no up. :U2l w. Coa:it J.lwy, New. 6C2"o5076 after 4:30 pel:i. 64,2-.:!S;ij, eve5 54&-m6 port. 642-2'lm $15· WK &-up w/•kitchen SJ). BAOI. elec bltns, rt'frlg, ulll FOR Rent or Lse· Penini;Wa v.·k studio apt. 2376 Newport pd. $120. Mature adults, no Pt. 3 Br. 2 Ba ' on Balboa Blvd.' ~9755 Whad4fr• w..,, Whedd'f• .. , '.,,. SPICIAL CLASllPICATION POil NATURAL BORN SWAPPEp· Specl1I Rote s Ll,,..-5 tim.O-s-. •Y':ES -AO M~ ttct.UOE -" pets. 99.i Valencia. ~9tm Bh'd. at U1e Ocean. Crpts, ==•-======= Drps & Bltins. $2&1 nlO. Call Motels, Trlr. Crts. 5997 1--.1 '°" lllW .. rr.-. .......... ~-• -....... Ot.Jlll --~..., .. ...,,...., •.:.t ..... , -t-4+0l'MINO "°"..JAL•-T"fOFS LYf To Pl1ce Yeur TrH-'e,Pir_,tee M Newpor-t Beach PHONE 642·5671 . 51S-7SS9 5 -\VEEl{LY. l'Ull'S Sea Lark 200 LARGE 1.100 ISLE 2 Er, l\lolct. 2301 Ncv•~rt Blvd., ,.. . ' . 1-----------sludy, 1 ~. Ua, crpts, drps, CUlila ~lcsa BAYFRONT luxury apt. 2 adults. Lcuse. OR 3-T;iO'l. CC'11sna TU 200, 1968. 6 "place lUl'bo · ctiarxed. Loaded! Low time&-elcan. $6~1 J'q, Trade for can1per, reaf ~ tale, ch·. !S3T-7U9 J-1~ 4 Honda Moklrcytle1 k 1~ ~!board Sid Bolt. \Va nf FUmilurc, ~Car, Van Or '!, Br, 2 BA. Elevators &: boat 5991 docks. $350. H. !\tc:Kenzic. N I Sh 5220 Guest ~~?'_., ____ _ &16-0732 ~!:_ or-es ~ PRIV. Roon1 fol' eldr1·ly lady Call &17-8218 DELUXE Townhow;c. 2 BR, 2 :;:.A, Frplc. puol, lge patio. $250. ?tlcKenrie, RI t r ..,...,,, VJE\V apt. Large rooms, ref. slove. bath. Sing!~ adult on- ly. $165 nlO. 548-2394 DELUXE 2 Br. West cl ill loc. Pool & bit-Ins. Adults. $225. No lease. 64~4 3 BR, 2 BA. Nr Ol~an. Frplc, d.shwhr. $235 mo/ yrly. No pets. 5.fg..()897 wk.<fnys 9-5 SA\'E tASH! c L A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 llEST DllYSI tJT~ IJ\f.!\IACULATF~ 3 Br. Apt. in Ile:. (:UCSl hon1c. Call Lc.•ase S235 per mo. Frank &16-3391. t.larshall H.ealty, 675-1600 1---------- Llu<u1y far. \V\ll trade tqu. ity for duplex, •partmentll, 01· what have you, Phone 5242 Misc. Rent•ls 5999 -t99-2!tl0 East Bluff ----------l"ULLY enclosed cu.raacs. PALI\ .. SPRINGS .12 mod· VIEW APT. $25 per nio. em wtits, ki1vsize pool, tor Lg, 2 BR, 2 Ba, cl'p'td, drp'd. * a:tS-2921 * 18.l"gc yac,bl (ail or;~~~ 2 oov'd. gllnlgf's, Xlnt Joe. l(b:20 GARAGE "-'est°"'ide ·or ! RtW McCrea. 1'l:f i.: nr shopping, ti4'.:hls. Sr chu1'C~ Costa l\l('sa. Could hold Jee Vista Oiino, P.S. es. 816 Am igos \Vay # A. cPmper. J2a nw, Ml-3392 EQUITY •I UN ITS, STUDIO $235 pt'r mo. (yrly.I APT. C.l\1. TAKE ANY· ; ;; > DERLY 0\VNER. ' ~: ,75.,0•0 0 Business Pr-operty 6050 1't-llNG or VALUE. EL- -...... , ca..... Medical Bldg. Site =-._,c'=-LL~·.,'"":="::7:'°'.,,-..,..,. OnC! Acre lot Fla.gstaU, Ar. iwna sul>-divialon, S3000 val. ue, TR.ADE for Ca1itomia property or 7 O w n e r 644..&188 eves. 1st TRU!'il DEEDS TO $110.000 Trade for clear view condo, or I lomc Ne1v- port. or as down pa'yment on income. (7141 459--3100 * * TR.ADE clear 169 O>Dtlnen. · tal wb.tte laridat1 top,4Whlte lnteriOr, 2 dciot FOR 21' 25' Motor hoole. $18.98<:6 ~ Wl,\NT 213 actt orlrio(e -C.2 01• M·l -Or•na:e Co •. from Gai'CIM G~,, Blvd. scu th. Tradt 10 acres PabD Sprss area.-.VJl]ue $20,000_ 536-1131 50 Spaces"M'obile" Htime Pk MGie& Lalce...-Waahlngion, good huntitlg cl:C. Trade tr Orange Co, or San Diego Prop, Brkr. 67Xll16 24' Flybrklll:e Cabin Cnliaer Xlnt cone\. Sleeps 6. Trade $2'200 eq. for trailer boat, camper or '!! Call 646-4619 Dtd est. Gen. ?iten:handite lito1-e, $7500 1·al. Tre.de for vac. lot. house equity, boat, mobll home, or • 1 b'75-728'.l Owner Ha\•e 4 beaut. view acrn In N. San Diego County. \Vant mobil 1raittr home. Lee Pereyda Real Estate 49'3-1990 or 494-5488 llAVE 1st T.D. plwi can add oth('r Pl'Of>l:lttiea. Want in- oome unit&. Prine. On)y. Broker/oo·ner P.O. Bo.'( 623 South LagUllii, 9'1677 * * * ------ ATTRACTIVE lilUdio apt. 3 Office Rental 6070 REAL ESTATE Gener•I ---------BR, 21..:i BA, crpts, dl'ps, -------- bltns. Avail Feb Ist. LAGUNA BEACH Office Rental 6070 Mount. & Desert I ..c..:.c:..:..__.;_...:.;_ __ 6210 * 615-ID2'1 * Air Conditioned COROLIDU Af7J'S. 2 BR. ON FOREST AVENUE HUNTINGTON BEACH S AC. 11r Hemet; scenic Lo1ver levels, st u d i a 5. Desk space availdble in Frplcs, pool, rlbl i:;irporh;, newest office building at palios. s17.·, • $:!..?(J. ti73-3378 prln1e location in downtown Air Conditioned hideaway. 2700' el .. wtr., ON 1£ACH ILYD. game. $.".000: $50 dn ~7710 Deck spat-e available In 8-10 Al\! ag1. newest office building at ----"'------- 3 BR, 2 BA, slove, t-efrig., available 1-·eb. 2nd. $260. 67:i--'1698 534-Tti"l8. Ln.guna Beach. Alr condi· lloned, carpe:ed, beautllul t'ntrances: Jo"ronl!liN on Forest Ave .• ~ar leads to t.1uncipa) Parking lots. S50 University Pi1r1c: 5237 per month for s{Jllce. De~k ----~-----and chairs nvailablt: for $5. POOL. Tc1111i~ courh;, huge Bw;ineSll hou1-:,; answcrlni;:: n1astt>r Be<lnu s u i I c se:rvice available for flO. 1v/fl-plc, 11a1io, fncd yard, All utilitles pa.Id excepl gar, pr1v h!irh. Shar entire telephone. house w/ J 11tudl'r1ts. Ideal DAILY PILOT for 2 adull.'i or won1a11 \l'ilh 2'l2 FORESf AVENUE child. Pct OK. $135. 832-519'2 LAGUNA BEACJ-1 .... _ Modem Offices 0-IEZ ORO APTS. 8234 $75 ainglc. 11~ :l rm suite. At~nta, 11.B. Nu, J, 2. 3 Air cond. Sec!'y Rrvicc, br s. Prlv. gnr. pool. UUI parklng, cen1rslly' loeatl'd. 1J11. 536-So38 or 536-27?7 So. Calif ls! Nat. Bk, Bldg. li\'lMED. poss. 2 tx:lnns, bl!· C. Robcrt Ilallt'I!&& Realtor ins &: reftlg. Adult.'J only. C.OSta t.'fesa &t:z-14&5 Huntinqton Bei1ch 5400 $150/m? includ. utilities. AIRPORT CENTER Tradew1nds Realty 847·8Sl1 N 1 2 • 3 dcl cw , ruon1 ' wee 2 Br condo. Garage, pa1io, 2 suites. Adj. new n1olcl & pools, recreation lacillllcs. 1-eslauranr MacArthur Blvd. Lease. 536-4:i46 From $125~ Call 546-784.3. 2 RDfu'IS, 2 BA . pvl. patio. Best Location in CdM heated pool. \\'8.'Jher &·dryer 500 &: 1000 sq, n. deluxe hook up. 962-8W4 otrlec spaccll, Avail immod. I & 2 BR apts, crpts & drps fhonc owner, 6(2-9950 brand. new. AcrQSS _ from l\.1AR1NER'S CENTrn !'>hopping ccntcl". 842-ioo:.! Oflice in StOl'I! Bid. Rent or NF:\V 2 Br Duplc:11: bit-ins. t.se. $75. 1~9 Rivensklc Ave., Crpts, dl'Jl'!I. Sl:,O. i\dlta. On-N.B. 646--2414 ly. 1508 Olivr. ~2:!. l OFFICES + lolllly at 1736 Santa Ana 5620 Anaheim St. Sl25. 1 offlct-Iii __________ 1 _1140 Anaheim ot1ly $.'"Al. $10'1 lo $13.i. LARGE 1 &: 2 li7.l-2654 Br. slurlio Apts. (tn-plcxl. SJ"°IA0RE=""r"cmc-,-,c""-,,'";,,.-,-c0=11c;,.c Crpts, drps, tl'plc, lgc ramt-suite. 1125. Cotlta Mesa. ly kitchr11 '"/bll.ns. J chlld 6112-4163 or 67~5121 olr, no pets. Nr ~lkWlls. 2'l30 3345 NEWPORT BLVD. So. Center St. INr Warll('r\. 300 sq, fl. oppoStle Newport prime location in llunling- ton BeacJ1. Air l.'Ond.itioned, beautiful entrance. Front· age on Beach Blvd.. rear leads tQ private parking lot. $50 per month for SJ.18~-Desk RllO ('TialrR avalla.ble fn1· $5. Business hours anBWering service available for SlO. All utlll· ties pe.ld except telephone. DAILY PILOT 17175 IEACH ILVD, HUNTINGTON IEACH 642-4121 sr..tALL OUice on'busy cor. ncr Costa 1'.fesa $SS/month utilities included. s.t2.&560 R. E. W1nted 62~ QUALIFIED bu,yef' del!llrel spacious 3 BR, 2 BA, laun- dry l'OOm, J li'!Ot)' house wlth view, a11prox 2100 aq tl in Lago11a __Niiuel Terrace. P.O. Box ~73, So. Laguna WANT To .Buy: Dupl~ Lot Aeywhrre. W1Q Pay Ap. prox. $6(0). &12-6061. betwn 1&4 PM JST TO'S to U40,000. '?tide tor clear view condo,• home or income cqu.ity. fllf) ""1100 f[AVE lart:e 2 room office suite to share w/yollfl& prol'I. CdM. 615-6171 BUSINESS and s'°E"' ~7u"'r,... -.,~.,-.,.-.. ~,!lo~. -""'--,--,,~_ I FI NA NC IAL fit.(., TIC'W carpels & paint. 1----------- $110 nlO. CaJI 64:;...-0545 days Industrial Prop. 6080 ./ BUILDER OFFER$)/Ew 71,500 sq. H. deluxe bldg. Leased. chOiee Oran ge County area. Prope rty clear. Owner w/~l"f'¥ ls! Tb 81;?0. Pre.pd Int. ok. 530--3645 am, 828-5430 pm. 20' x 30' building for rent, Laguna Canyon. 49-1.&918 or '194-5175 Commercial 6015 FOR sale 68&098-615 \V. 19th St. Bethel Twrs Area. 548-\768 or 64fi.7414, Aat. lndustri•I Rental Bus. Oppcwhlnlliol 63111 COIN laundrte .. f'r!gidaire F1vn1 16,500 to $42,SOO. Anaheim, Costa ?if e 1 a , Buena Park, Fulle rton, Gardl!n Grove , Westminster, Huntington Beach, Santa Ana, Tustin, La Mlntda. Call Charlie REAL STEAL for right person. Immed. oc- cupttncy, FuJJy equlppri. Ready for buRineas. $2000 inventory ext:rM. Women'• Weer shop, Seal Beach. Est. 9 .Yni. Owner retirlnr. (213) 4J0.300t or 598-1227. Laquna Beach 5705 Clly Hall. '"''"'' NEW BUILDING RACE CAR DRIVER nc<'ds invest bac:klf1i, FUture SSS. Call r..1r. Edwaro Whit.. rd/ Bus ~tgr. 675-5743 alter- """''· OFFICE or DESK rental. 1260 Logan Ave .• Costa J.Jca OCEAN VIEW, BR, 1610 \V, Coast Mv.y .• N.B. Each unit. 1725 sq It, 2 otr-l\o1ACHINE stWlp • owner · stove/ref, cpl, patio, yard. Furn or unfu111. 646-4887 Ices, 2 rest roo1ns, UQ/220 ·retiring. Small shop~ nice ulil pd, 2'" blks·bch. SEE COSTA Mt!llB olllce11, A/C, electric, Ample parking. bldg, on 1; al.TC M·l prop. f'~IRSf llt 2817 Ro11nSM1el crpts, ctrps. Parklng. 1555 C. Robert Nallreu Realtor call owner 64:z...26Ul or Terr, then ph 213: !J.14-5141 ,Baker, 646-4833 or 548-4757 Cosla Mesa 642-1485 548-3261 mU. 1=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~::=::=::.I S•n Cl1monie s110J STAR GA'ZEK"~ 2 BR Duplex nn, lrplc, ~~~:g,.;:::.:...:·:::1r CLAY l. 'PO carpch. dl!ihwsshtl", view. w .,_ Doi'1 ~\./fr GWlti M . 49Z-3464 or 213/639-11.23 Y .AcurdY.ai IO llt• Sl•n. Y REAt ESTATE To.t...1cp...,._1orThundoy, Gener ii 'eoct wordl~ingtol'U'llbe!S of 'fOU" Zodioc birth sl""" Rent1ls W1nted 5990 N.ww.1-. CMf• ~ •• .. ... 111 ~. 01.lotlllll' 11 llUlk•I!• _____ ._.,, srmcn Landlords & Brokers!! llelp 11tamr out brokcll-ufl houaea, apr11 &: undr>rslr11blr 1cnanr111. *SPEE-DEE NEWS* Abwlolr>ly Free US.2471 FAMILY of 4 itesires 2 BR hOUllc u nl11rn., iar. Permanent. LG.gun11, S . LAluTIA 1rra. $15l).$175 mo. 400-2179 I FWlhell 31.>N 61 ~ 2 ........-32 Showlr-. 62 A l ..... ilc:tlof 3J f~ olll• 'Qia}. 3• °" .. ~ .5 fCKfl:n 35,...,.... ilS .A(~ .,.,.._. 3'Try .. y_ 7T'1' ..-37Hil.., 41fW " a fNlh »~ 61 f1Jne • .llWNtil8 3' Nat 69 Gilt •IOl'lm• o40w.lt. 10Yo. t ilt .. 1.11 11~ 12A....... ..~,.._ 720tf 13DM'T 4lnr.. 7J~,fod0••••-... !"'""'IE 1•Tmll& -"Will 7•TNI 15v-es..dl ;!'fo.._ 16 Doft't .. " ,. 17~ .C7 A 77 1" 1S'"-W 4.-.CtMWm """" 19 LM 491t 7tNtw . 20 -. ~''""''° n toWlll 21.... .51 WtlMlllPlt ,, .... 22 YW'tle .52 To 112 itlnwitlc '1.._..... $)~ ., ... 1' Whtt'I :1oo1 Out 14 r,.. 25 ~ 350,,, .... 15~ 240f • .56Telo1 Ns--271Wf 57 Hhflr ,, 21r-•"-• 2'Sllsto "c...w "~ lOn. to,,,._ '°'Tit ... ,,/J;Gool. @Ad-{)Nmnl f I I • I I I ' ... llNl.Y PllOT W.......,, J"""121. 1'70 Pll.CIT0 AOVtlTIStl ,,. JOIS & I MPLOYMINT JOIS & IMPLOYMllNT · JOIS i EMPLOY/l\INl JOll I IMPLOVll\t Jolie Mon, W-. 7100 Jolle "'""• W-7100 Joh Min, w ..... 7100 Jolie Mon. W1t11. 7100 - COIMmCSAW LIMITED OFFER Wh en You Wont it done right ••• Apprendce or exp. Silk llCl'H:nin&. can arter 6 PM: 1.J 8-42U BABYsri'TER •>anted. ~ home, 2 boys 2% • ~ :P.1on-Fri &5: SO N e w p t . Shottl area. Must haVt: own lntwp.'4>-140>att5. Nt time. ?tlaturt, ~ritni> ed. Excellent Nlai7. com- rnl1aion and btoellts. can for appl; ~ eXt. 30 J., C. NNNEY C01 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH JOIN NOW SPECIAL Coll one of the experts listed belowll 8 ABYSlTTER/Houat ..... El', Lfve.In. Girl ~ boy 1 JOSEPH MAGNIN 64).0792 .. 642-0823. Eooial """""""' -- BEAUTY Open.tor • Eirper. ; 650i( * ~. Milo Pr<!. a ...... s.lal>' + ApPlyo SUllF • $1RLOIN Comm. Call JfT-9595, Pettr. 5930 Pac. Cat. ~ .• N.B. h11 h'"''"""' opo nlnt• fOf' Coob • WoltrooM1 • lu1looy1 Wlllt IOlll• oxperience or wUUn1 to learn. Top wortin& conclltlono and envtronmenl Com- pellUve wages plus meals and tips. Oubtand· inc benelita including hoepltallzation and pro- fit sharing. Apply In person 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Monday thru Saturday. SEltVICI DlltlCTOllY SIRVICE DIRECTDllY Sillt)llCI DlltEC ltY .BOAT &liPENTERS Cu1tmr. iltv. Cltt k $20 Accountl rtt 6500 Cement, C.ncreti MOO '•r:;rhlnt1"1 ~~~~~:sa 1974 S::!nb!:;';::~.k': C <. h-fM...ETE PenonaJ.ized CEMENT WORK. no job too Pi nttnt 6UO BLUEUNE OPi:R. Fu 11 can.l&ffP htr C60l. VISITS Bookkeeping s.M<t. Small. ..-. ,.,... e lnterler· 1-ler e """"'""ninclnConlmerdal IJ!e bul .....,. .. """",... SpeclaUzlna ln & m a 11 Eslim. H. Stunlck ~ Aoouatic ceillna:• ptd, 12 yn Blueprint Sbop. 541)...1J313. qulnd. 20 Penney's '••hHtn Island An equal opportunity employer LIMITED OffER PROGRAM INCLUDES • JI Vlllh • H-M Pool • llAy Slttl .. e Wiii~ Pool • s. ...... •S•1-lot L- e Sl•m letll • S.ulNI lottrl •M--.e • Dfnolot loothl •P ........ ... c .... .. A PIOU .... SAl.Ofll POil WOMlll e A MIALTM C\.UI ~ll Miii GARDEN SQUARE HEALTH CLUB ~=-----.. ------ bualneDH. P.U. ~ Deliv. expr.r. State lie. Pittll;qp BKPR F/6 Up to date I: Oel Pr ... y/ Acct Otpt Je-~n. Wern. 7100 J1•1 Men. Wom. 7100 963-3100, 536-tla5 _c_o_•.;..l•_a.;,.cton.;c;.c._ __ 66=20 pnta 543-1187 Pf'Oll'tllive Co. BeauUNI S42i Mltl. Looldns Jor well INT ; Ex Pn n e w ~II. Except)ort&l orp.niiH oJ Wlrood know-EXPERIENQ:D 81by1lttln9 6550 Additions · * Remodelinz "' t tc. Free em. opty Reimb lee To $660. lfdse ot bkkps procedure•. IM .. ORTSD CAR HOUSEKEEPER -Sparthh "------F.-.d H. G•mcl<. Lle. Loe ret. . ., yn "'I'· Uc.• cau' """' Beck -· FamUlarily w I _,...~ MECHANIC Spealdnr """·Choo .. y...,. l\fO'lllER of 2 wi.shes to G'13-6041 * 54S..21'71) I~. Call Chuck M>OS09 Othtr hie' fee jobs e.v•ll. 1Md offtce a pJua. AcoUn.W ,.. Own Hr1. Call 6"-411M. babysit dl,)'1 my home, or Jun 548-0405. COASTAL AGENCY typist. Jaauar, Toyota, Volvo, Alla HOUSEKEEPER-Live in for Balboa bl Playroom, lots Carpet Cleaning 6615 ' P AINTINC-INT/Eol So.nint<, Sntllln& SIRVICI CINTlll -·Call lob Thom-bulblou m&JMlnrl•· HB ot toys. m.164<. A-OK Shwn s-•·• $1 50 Jack ""' do that paintfnc mo Harbo< BM! CM Employment Afency at MMQUJS lilOJ'OltS ._ Call lor appt. 7..9 pm, f.lATIJRE Woman ait your poo .,......... . job-fast, clean It wey reu! ~ 00 KEE PER * 500 Newport Ctnttt Or.* tOO So """"' .. Hlw 8<74115 hbme eves &: wtcnds. Sl.25 rm/less for ~· etc. Alao Eal. ~ 347~~ B . K {P'uhian bl) Suite n NB IA ~ ;!,~ 'a"ou'°"'SEKEEPER===--c•,-°"<h""lld hr. After 6 pm -llpm -comp, houttdn& 82'1-3112 EX-PAINTER. now ~ • Part time. ts hour. ~ By appt. &U..ast IW'IA Catt 5% da wk $50 wk + MS-4389. CARPET STEAM CLEAN-teacher wUl paint eves A: c~e. Betch area. DENTAL-Secretary w/mu.-!~·· Car MHttenlc1 rm&: brd. Pd. v~c. 541)..921J I ED No eoe.p, no bru&bes. wknda. Xlnt workmanahlp, Loraine, Westdiff ~raon-.,."-' aw•~. -----t ._..., co. beneft•• lnd ... IA. ---------1 BABYS T infants on I y, F .,..,, e-. net Aa<ncy 2043 We1tclltf ,-.... ., ... .,, ..-~ .. .....,.. -_... week.in•·• my home Balboa or est. '""""l'l'I• Free eat 64M.5llt ~ ' poilition. Newisort Otnttr. vaeatiorl., ll'9tUt lns. um. ......, • • Dr., N.B. &&5-211G (~e and fotma furft1abldi -.. ,._ .. ITT JABSCO Penin. Own traA!ip. Refs. f loo,. .1.1.1.• C. R. Kelly paintin1 .1 -;:";:',,:job~•l=~--==---I 646:'41n ___ ........... ,_.u_A: .. ~ 9512 GAROIN GROVE BLVD. 6'3-IOllS -Com 1 t 1 taton l , ·-·-~-• -!)ARDEN GROVE 537·5410 ' -------. pe• n , ex. BOOKKEEPER F/Co An DENTAL ASSISTANT JOa •!oeN Pb. 540.t!M. ir,~~~';';;:""'"-"";'':!!!~!::!!~~~!!!!! I PABYSCTTING, my home, CA R.PET VINYL TILE tenon. Work paranteed. xint opty io 8Pffd to the top ** FltY COOK: with-. llUSINESS an4 . CM. D~. lnlant & up. Free estimate Lie, Contr. Free ettl. 538-0165 w/ a very reliable Co Good Chair aide. Exper. pref, X· Apply In pet.on, 562 w~ISUi FINANCIAL Lott 6401 616-87W 541).7262 546-4478 iiEFORE You paint, check b:. ~uant 00.. T~ SSMI. rays. Undtr 30. Hourt 'lWL st C.M. ---------1 BABYSlTl'ING, Near Heller my prioe1. ~ student Call Jellll Brown, 54MCM. thnl Sat 1-5. Send ruume~;;_;;;:::.: ____ _ ht. OppwtvnltJe1 6M ELD~~YB1Sick ~ lolt 7 Park. Lr& Yard, Hot Lunch. Glrdenl"I MIO Call Steve: 548-4549 COASTAL AGENCY l refel'lftces to P.O. Box G.neral Laltort r1 mo. uepo l Siamese ?\ton-Fri. 643-21:>-t NEW lawt\11 re-seed Inc * PAPERHANGING Sne.Wne & SnellinS 11:'i, So. t.aiuna. TOP PAY INI W kitten, wearinr nea collar Cc.mplete iawn ......... Cl•an' & PAINTING • 96s.2Ci 2790 Harbor mvd, O f DENTAL ASST. OtthodOnlc Apply nov.·! OPPORTUNITY I 932 Presidio Dr, c . ri.1 . \Vl.LJ., ba.by&it ywr home 5 ....... .. Rdiablepeoplewillbettlttl. S.)6..21Z7 days or e\·es. You furnish up by job or month. Free FOR Betttr Painting, BookkMptir F/C chainlde usi.ltant. Call Temporal')' fd in this &rl!a I: surround· LOsr: Foremost boy's blke, tnn1portation. 642-1401 estimates, For info. call Interior A: exterior, a.c:ouatic Local arN., 1 lh'l otc. swt-1...;6<4'.;c...:l;;c<Ol;;c..._____ VOLT inr cnty's _refill It collect vk. Costa liiesa Hl&:h. Llc. MY Home, fenced yard, hot 8f6.-0932 be.f. 9 .01, after ceilings. 6464077, Insured. in&: a.lary $500. Dental A•1i1ta nt, ex· INSTANT money from Nnr Cl>ncept 17268. Reward. 54M801 meals days only, nr Harbor <1:30 PM. or weekend&. PAINTING-Ext·lnt. 18 y~. lnd•!Mndent perienced °" IChool trained. PIRSONNIL or Vendlna' Ma.chlMs. Co. SOOpping Cntr. 642.-9919. AL'S Garoen1nl il LaWn exper. 1111. Uc. Free est. PerlOMI At•ncy SU.707f 3MI ~ Dr, Suite 106 emblishes loc. Penon•I• 6405 BABYSliTING Y..Jy HonM!. htl.intenance. Commercial, Accourt. Cellinp 541--5325 1718 Oft.nit Ave, Sul~ C * Dlsliwaiher I. llewport Stach 5t6-47U This is a rround ., __ ~,. M-· Venie Area. •nes 2-s indw;trlal I: raidentiaL PAINTING .,., averare C.M. &l24Xl6. 5f5.09T9 lust.-. • ~· ~~ ~ ruu.y u ·--* "" ·~ ~ -_, A--•1 Off'-"' rm tun1ty to obtain a very prof. .,. CENSED • Pref. Call 546--1911 ~ " room. Reliable, fast. 10 yrs BOOKKEEl>ER: 4 Hn per WWW1 ~ ..,._ itable 1: new 1xi.sine1.1. Stut Relmowned Hiodu Splritu.aliat GEN'L yd. aeaJMIP, trtt in atta. 638-7333, 4-6PM de,)'. rt'Iust be familiar w/all Full time, days or· eves. J'fe '*°· Uriusual Co. l pl Pf.rt or lull time. Write Advises on all matters; l rlck,MaMl"lry,etc. aerv. rot~till Sprl~lr * PAINTING -Int/Ext. phue.• of Per~ Ac-otficr.Varl.eddulie1.5t6-M!O or ph. LO\oe, Pi1arriqe, Bu.sineu, '560 repairs. Haul-Reason, Local referenctl. Irnmed counting. Call Friday Aft 1 APPLY JN PERSON JASON IEST hes an immecll•t• openlne for an ENGINEERING -CLERK- Exe-elltnt opportunity for pel'Wl interested in en- r\l'll!t'rinf, blueprintin:, laz·keepln1 and acme typ- lna: duti•1. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER 1415 Dtle Woy Co1t1 M11a, Ctlif. SOtrrHl.AI'.'D VENDING Courtship, Health, Ha~ 64ij..5M8 service. 646-52'2. 646-3657 ~ lor t.tr. SU(annan, COCO'S Employmtnt Aa:epcy 336 E. l7tti St. ~!'._less ~-Succel u, No pro-BUILD, Remodel, repair JAPANESE Gardener, DUNN BY DUNN #11 y--L•--•-•--• mt So. M&ln. Santa Ana (7141 ~1 Colta?ofea.C&J.-"""ms..,., arre or too Brick block concrete ~,......,.., O""'' re""AY '"'---'--H .... (71.) ,,.,, ,.,,,,~il-1 small. 1 CAN HElP YOU. ,. .. -~ ..... ~ ,.. b too small' up'd. Country yard setvice. Painting & Paperhanzing Ne -port BMch Calif. ~l\4.1 "n.tu : i:....u. ..... J ANITOR -Male. Hunt'r .u.octate .,_..,,._. Re d' . 7 d -,-,.~, . Rellable, free ut. 642-4389 I-Tee est. Reu. 641-2.164 BOYS 11·14 "' • Co! Great locat!On! Good Bch a.rtL U/45 )Tl aid. U a u1a:s riven ays a !Jc. Contr. ~5 ==_,,-....,--.,-.,---Carrier Reotea Open Co. bent! U yoo're fut on am • S am, 7 nltes "'"' wk . Y..fANUFACTUltER n1,500 lnveltmeot into the DO, l Bua.ioru of the d.a,y. 2; yr. hiltory Of wccea, new expanding operaUom to So. caiif. Complete f.adory ln- ltalled & ~ady tu ro. WW train Principal of r.timt. abUlties. Contact lmmed. Once in a lifetime oppar. to make that lriab income most ~le dream ol. Startlni ..w,. $U.ID> + 1ubltanlial prol.illl. Call Ken Oifford «n«> 714-7050 SM A L L Jt!:STAURANT, newly re~f!(lOl'ated, btach ana. SU.b!ltantial dov.n It lm>U. 642-412< week. 9AM-9PM 31.2 N. El JIM'S Gardening & lawn YOU Supply The Paint. 3 Br, ~-DISHWASHERS --•-" "-·-· C I FREE Est. Brick, block, In n-•--""" up_,.,e, come ..-r et tM1 Good pay. (213) 4.'J'i-1167 or am no Rea l , San ma tenance. '""'·or: com· LlvRM&.KltchenPainted, , .... Be b.So.' .. -·..... -..._ ... ""'Call Oemente. 492-9136, 492--0076 :atone, planters I,;. entry mereial * 5'fil..4837 -.una ac --one! <>uw• $4111. Sally C213) 833-4447. *Women START YOUR NEW YEAR WITH THE RIGHT AlAN. 547..U7 ways. 531-4973. State Lic'd. $50. Call 557-8838. DAILY PILOT Hart ~ EXPERT Jap~ne~ Gardener PAINTING, Paperina' 17 yrs. "2-4371 APPLY IN PEROON, NEAT COASTAL AGENCY Lrr'E houle:bepin&:. n• lutln... Senl'ce 65'2 Ri&:ht price, mce job I: clean in Harbor area, Lie. & * CASH.IER * Car Wuh. JN AP'PEAR.ANCE Snelllnz 4 Snellini :;-byll~:fd 9 ~ to Bal~ 1.1p. Free eeUmat..:. 548-3354 bonded. Rtfl. turn. ~2356. Part time position. FIVE CROWNS 2'19J Harbor Blvd. CM w°~. '-f~i. ~ CO.\tPUTER printed addttu CLEAN-UP SPECIALlST CALL: GG-at22 lltlSTAUlAN'T'S GIRU OVER 21 675-1532. · labels. Your name I: ad-'-lowine. edginc, odd Jobs. Pl1stering, Repair 6810 CLAIMS REP. $471 The Gal~ry DiatXltheque -~-~---- drei;1 list-key punched into _c.R='""'=na=b'='·,....:,51=8-6955.:="= Fee :-aid 3801 E. Pacitie Oout Hwy. 110 E. Balboa Blvd, Balboa Jr. S.c:retary JB~t cards. Files main-JOHNSON'S GARDENING •PATOi PLASTERING SAfwtANTIIA BARY C'o!'Olta del Mar &Tl-9161 ?r (213) 274-0956 Xlnt firm, li:d bar!ffitl. $400 24 hour recoo!ina: lalned & updat~. 673-81.53 Yard care, Clean-ups. Prun-All ~I =Uma.tes PERSONNEL AGENCY DLSHWASHDtS (l) wanted GUARDS: Im.med. pl time !;,~~rtf~~~.6~~1= SINGLES Dante every Wed. TYPING by profess. ing, planting. 962-2035 ========:.12229 s. 1.taln, S."'.. $41-22e Day or nifht positions avail in so. jobl avail. 8:30 lo 12, fo.x trot, swine:, secretary. General &. 6l90 Also fee }Ob Call &'13-4630 I.guna Beach-area. 1 d nd Latin, Meadowlark Country englneerlnr. Student rales. H1ulln11 6730 Plumbing CLERK • Fimale Uniforms & equip furnished. n eft* ant · Cl•b, H.B. 3 ml. w. ol 96z.982<. '--'-'--=------* Dlsvnt" * Car • 1,1 -·• Equ-' Op Ptnonnel A91ncy Bt!achottWamer~Adm.$2 YARD/G.tr, Cleanup. PLUMBlNGREPAIR PRO~CTION •••tw • ·-~ ..... P· 1n&Ora.rlseA,·a,SWteC HAVE TYPEWRITER! .....__.. No '-b too unall U-&'---Z-.-Employer, App: 139l2 C •M-u•- FATifER 77. alone &; \VILL 1'R.AVEt..! Remove trtts, Ivy, u....... •"' 642-312S e CONTR L CURK "9' ...,..... .. ~ Ponderoaa, Suite "r', San-.Pil. D"V"VWu, _.._,ii hOmeleu with cocker doe. &U-499C after 3: 3D Grade. l>a.ddoe, 962-874S ========:.I Necessary I ta Ana. deslres to pay S200 mo for • HAULING. Have '' ton I IMO •• .., ~ .. -. ~·~· ;:_;;:::;_ ______ I Keypunch horn • drl 1..i.... 1;-n&ed •-· llt'td Remodel, Rape r, Requlrtd by company manu-iri .... ....___ ••• !~<""' • "my car, C1blnetm1klnt 6580 P =•P. -• '"' ' ladurlnr data "'''""'"' dr!Wtr ...-_ Appty HANDYMAN OPERATORS 1Money'=== •• =L .. =R=="20= 1 ,,-=~=,---~~-RESIDENTIAL ' comm. I .=6!-:=,::1003====== "-dd·A·Reom "IUlpmenl Minim""' 2 yn. YILLOW CA& CO. $533 _ $606 NEED RIDE to CIC airport Cl>.stom Cabinet ~ Furn. Houoecloanlnt 67J5 Rt mod11ln9 '""'"""' ""· and _.,. 11& E. tit> St. MAINTENANCE llM KEYPUNCH vie, from li-tiMiOn Viejo dally Furn Re-Finishing. 64&-0991 Custom D•sign S•rvica es 50 wpm typif1&. Xlnt ap----=Coata=~-==---1 HONEYWELL 111 JD Loan l=~~~="'=·=~~'f~-41.1='=7x~"-""~•-Call_ BAY & Bea.ch Jan1torW Fr•• Estim•t•. 4t4.07SI partunuy in ~pandinf co. ELECTRomCS su p~1 ·y KEY TAPE Lowest Intt-relt Avallable 2nd TD Loan Tmn1 'hued on equity. '42·2]71 54$.0lll Servtrig Harbor an:a 21 y~. Sattler Mort1•1• Co. 336 E. 17th Street Ca,.....terlng 6S9G Carpels, windows, floors, 1'1AKE your home more Apply in pel'IOfl -Caunttr Salesman. Expar ELECI'ROLYSJS (Unwanted .;,.:..;,.' ~:..;,..·;.._•....;:....---1 etc. Res &; c 0 mm c' l. C ,_ Not Neeeu. We will train if \Ve are lQOktnr lor that Hair p., u R liveable, arpentry •• · Perl.....,r•I Bu1lne11 ONE man who la a l""k rmanen Y emov· CARPENTRY 646-1401. remodeling. reliable ...,... you have an electronic - ed) By Appt. 18'700 '-lain St, MINOR REPAIRS. No Job Mesa Cleaning Service reasonable. 642--225:5 Equ ipment, 1nc, backin>und. H. W. Wrirht ol all trade. PrMer a H.B. Call 842-7796 Too Sm&ll. Cabinet in pr-Carpets. windows, noon. etc. Co., 1110 N~ Blvd., man who is tt1.ind and ALCX>H6IJCS Anaaymau1 qes A o t b • r eablnat&. Res. & Commc'I. 54Mlll • 1• 6950 17344 Eastman St, ,c:::.M:::;..· ------needs IOl'ftethlni to do PbClne SC.7211 or Mit. to 545-1115, U no answer le.ave ~ ing lrvifte Indullhial Complex INOR MECH to $900 a.nd 1ttme rttponlibWt)'. P.O. Box 1223 O:Mda J.t.!u.. mq: at &t6-a72. H. 0. lnco-T•x 6740 ALL types rock. v.'OOd • Santa Ana.. Calif. 9Z7t! Fee pU! Need a man to take care ·.;,.c...;";.;,._______ AKS • of a 24 hour lalllldrontat AndeNOn -asphall shin&les. LE CONT"OLLER SAMANTHA BARY on 17th strttt in Co3ta Announcement. 6410 Mo<lt•t11. T.l>.'1 634J.l ---Yz--PR-IC_E __ at.500 2J\s. TD on excellent ocean vi'ty.o lot. lO~v in- ttftflt, due 3 years, 00% dilalunL -493-1706 GEN. repair, add., cab. Smifay TaX Service REPAIRED. Work ru&r· RelWTlea heid in confidence PERSONN!:L AGENCY '-fesa. f.Uoor Rtpairs to Formica, paneling, marllte. 847-1136 U now employed. Sl!vual 22'J9 So, Ma.Pi, S.A. 5&%il&3 nw:h,lnts, maintenance, Anything! Dick, 673-4459 e 12th YEAR LOCALLY e years experience and dean• AllO fee job ketp W1tchful e)'t: on REPAIR, Partitions, Small Qualified • Reasonable $ewln1 6960 in Aceountinr required. call ~ liECUflVE * •'°"'· H YOU are thU mod I N·t day IV A (Bill) SMILEY Ann, W"tdlU Pomnnel ALES CAREi• man -~It • -u NEWPORT BEACH ~eu! ciu:~ ~79 Certiried Public Aceount't ALTERATIONS. Reuonable, Arency, 2043 Westclilf Drive, Slart1na: salaey plus ~. abou't ~t( ,v: ~ TINNIS CLUI REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS 642-2221 anytime 646-9666 experUy ~ NP.~d· j64>b mo, (Fee and Fff Fil'lt ye a r ~arnin;:s ol cont&ct you for an inter-MEMIERSHIP • CABINETS. Any size job Central Business Sel"vtCt!S a 0 s sn,ooo • p!UI pouible, 2 yr view, Write fiir, Fisher, MIMy W1nted 6350 2;i yn exper. 54.8-67ll eTHE TAX ADVISORS DRESSMAKING, ~asonable CREDIT CHECKER: ldeall)' trainlnr Pl'OIRn1 by ctntmy Box 3M8 Torr~. Calif. 1--~------Call 842-4435. ?\fr, Chase rates. fast 1erv1ce. 2041 b:. Co. has this ,.. b --'· old ..... __ , _....,.,.,, B·--' 9(1)]0 CARPENTRY Cab. •-Penn. oUice-Rea.o; Ratea •--....r ·-~ ........ ,,_.,, ..... 20% Net Retum-1 yr pa.yoU SENSITIVITY TRAINING • 1ne.... Pomona, C.ftf. for )'OU. U1e It u a steppinJ neu or P• be.ck&round 1" TD -prim• mobil• WO"u 0 Remod. No t...b too small. 328 No. Newport Blvd. Al . t b" •-·-•~-· ''-:;=--.,,,,----.,~--- 7WO YEARS EXPERIENCJ; PREF'ERR.ED. SfART ON SWING SHIFT 3 PM TO 11:30 PM lN LONG BEAOl. OQt.standinr employee bene- tlt1: Medical, Stock pur. chase, D\111.bility, Life in- surance, Sick leave. Retire- ment plan etc. Apply: ThurMl•y, Jan. 29th. t tJO A1A EDISON 538 ?il&ih St., Hunti.nrkm Sch. An"IUaJ-employer "" .. " f'>Z'. SH p Qual work. Ca11 646-257& Oppo&te Hoag Ho1pit.a1 • Drewnakin& -. teraoons •thlto"' Sto ~~ Call& '-'!~~r helpful. No tra.~ .... IMO. op-liuGH caliber office manq;er heme dev. Adj. major col. A pfOII'U1l ol interper90hal for Appl. Call 645-0400 Desl(ned to !Ult you. n1s. an._.. .-i.iy potNnltin. with bookkeeplnii 1e,1 -~-,~-~~~- lere. $25,000 required . exercises for arnaU self-di· REMODELING: Cabi: ·is, can Jo * 64i-&H& Hart, 54()..6(li5. RON SMITH secretarial eXp. Assistant to L19al Secty Trainee Sf&..1234 day or eve. rected itOOPS. t.Unlrnal General Repair. No .fob Too Ironing 6755 COASTAL AGENCY 827-?900 the pretildenl. Call lof appl $450 mo. Xlnt opty m be ANNOUNCEMINTS chaq:e call 642..S730. 10 AM· Small. Reas. An Y t t me, TILE Certmlc 6974 Snelling le Snellfne-Equal opp. emplr: 111/P' betw 3 &: s. 892-8344. •llOC . .,.,;th ftne law ottict and NOTICES ,•.,P.,•.,.'--:-o=""°=== .6<::-3240:;':';:='====== IRONING in my home, ' . 219o Harbor Blvd, 0-1 EXECUTlVE Seoretary -HbTEL M AiD, Ci in hladl city. 546-5410 JOIS & EMPLOYMINT .. ~I Hr. Alterations & * Verne, The Tile ?-.tan * CO~!PANJON needed for Bklrpr. High rupaNibillty d ay1Jweek. -·-JASON II.ST p...,.c1 (frM Adi) 6400 Cement, Concrete 6600 Baby1iuing. 54S-7GU Cu&t. work. fnstall It repairs. elderly lady It lite poeltion. 6'f3.11116 Laauna Beath • .-§i'..i.19'; Empki;yment A&ency YNG. Tan I: grey, sbqzy ~anted, Men 7000 CONCRETE v•o.rk all types. =L=1nd~1;::ca,;:p:;;;:"'=:::;;:::; .. ::::1:::0 I :::h~ i;>~all. ~'::~ r ~;;ekeepi~~~ 2 adults. EXP'D. (irll wanted f~ pt· HOUS~ wanted • 4 2lOT So. Main, Santa Ana Cock .. -Poo type. V \ c REnRED Marine ~r Sawina', bftak1nr, hauling, :::::.:::;:.:;;:::.:;..:::_ _ _;:.:..;,;; ttpa.lr. e s nee. · time, full tinle maid It houri only· pteter Fndays. $75 QQO? Wutmlnater Pl., C.M. de11tts job In sal•s and/or Slc.lploading: Lie. Service A GENERAL LANDSCAPE 847-1957/Mi<CZ06 OOSMETIC SALES H.B. Ex· houncltanlnc jobs. f.fmt Ref1. Call 546-7117 aft 5:30 1 ' ~ customer relalionl. Plea!ll! Quality. 842-1010 GARDENER Clean upa, perienced, for druptore. haw own tnnlp. Start~ week days. anytime 1'0UND: Black Ii: ""hite call 21~7464 aft 5:30 •CONCRETE noon. patios. Renovalin&: tree trimmlJ!&:, Upholstery 6990 Call 5J6.3080 hr. M2..sl6f weekends For R.ecord!d Info Phone 54.l-3191 Spaniel-type dor. v 1 c . P~f or write to l\1ajor etc. Any st job. Reas &; prunin&. - Newland, Hunt. Beach. Call \VWl.am Donovan. 311 N. 7th Guaranteed! Don. &U-8514. 64:.Z-8214 czYKOSKI'S CUltm. Uphot..J~J~obs-Mt~~~·;·~W~om;;;;;· f7~100~J~t~lle;;~Ml~;n.~W~-.!;;7~1~00 ~-~w-. 7100.il•• Mi.4176 St. Apt M, Burbank, Ca. t -"· au ........ Pa European CraJtsmanship II 91501 Concre WW'I\ ..., ""1' • Moving, Ster1ge 6MO ioou-fin•. 642-145< Mon. w-. 7100 ·- rv.BBIT Vic :r.1eaa Dr. & tiol Pool decks & block .,., Blreh. Santa Ana Ha:ht.. GfN. !\faint. Exp. 20 yrs. work . Dick 642-11'7 l\lOVING • Haulin&:, $15 a 1831 Nev.rport Blv, Ot ~3813 Piumbin&, etec. carpentry,0 ~:;rv:;E;.;.;N::.,,;:::..:;and=,:,.;,la-;t-:.,:--ton, 5J&..lO!ll, Best 1a1e ew SUPPORT your United Fuld ?ofALE Ger. Shep, puppy, pajntifla, prdenlnr. Prefer UNITED ruND o.· early AM or 5,36.6126 UN!TED FlJNI)..(bmmunlty vie. Alpha Bet.a. La.pna ~lant or oompany . Bd\. ~10 ===-=.,..,.~-~~I . --~ ------~--------- RETIRED Otief Boatswain's I.ARCE Black • white bird. mate .,.1c1ng •mployment JOBS & EMPLDYMENT JO&S l EMPLOYMINT JOIS & EMPLOYMENT Vie. Harbor View Homfl. in marine type of \voril. =9 cat w/white race. ~0·= 344• Costa l\tesa, Jobt Min, Wem. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs IMro. Wem. 7 100 front pawa, back lt;s. l\.1ale. RETIRED man, reliable, ---------~'4~1&~-46C:01"';~~~~.,..,--1 xlnt ref. Darey, 864 Blueblrd A.cents pay, Clerk FOUND Small blAck kitten, Cn.Jn Dr, Lacuna Beach Ek'ach area. Fee rtlrnbursed. flea eollar vie. 3Slh St.. N.B. $400 to start. Other fee jobs ~ alttt S. Job Wint*', avail. w..... 7020 I ndependt nl l"OUND Larrt: male Collie. Vie. 19th .l °"""'' Call IC--0139&n6PM. Per'°"al A1ency SI CY. AVAILAIL E l71Ci On.nae Avt, Suite C Feb. lit. Excdent akill.s. C.P.I. 642-0016, a.&5-097' L .. t 6411 all phi.Ms ottiee work. Diet ACXX>UNTANT: small if'OW• 1 ~;.;...---·----1 Type, Tapes, mlmeo, t.tc. In& firm ntedi sharp pel"IOn ltEW~ltD f'ull or P/'Tltn<. ~ M<-UOO •·/some '"'· Degree "°' .i. VtrY friendly ll'lY A white ~0.;.',.6.c~,:.:;.;;..,~-~--Wa.)'1 nectMIUY. From $7800. tl;tr 1trlped n.ak cat, 9 DA 1Y\VO'hK . Good Call Joan Marlin, 5of0.60.).l tna1.. old. Vk. Jamrt St., references. Newport-0.t.t. COAST AL AGENCY C.M. ~7 after & pm Me&.J. Own tnn .. ~ SnelllllJ A SnelU111 yb\INo Black ?ilalt Cal AIDES • for convaksotnce. mo Harber Wvd, Cl\1 ,Part Siamese. Ovtnbed e:ldtrly care or tarnUy cart. Acct• Pay•ble to $500 tma ftt:t. L.oat or ~ Jn Komtmak.an. S47"'6Sl F'ff pald c.M, Atta, $4()...1170 SAMAH'MfA BAR\' Jelto Ml<;. )Nwn. 7100 PERSONNO. AGENCY LAbIES Bifocal t e a d ' n I llailt9 lost at Bulloc:k'•, I.A. on Sat, M&-~l LOST Et.ck Leh Pup. No ~lat. Vic. ltuntinfton St., lf.&. Rt\l'•n:il e.36-DSO. ACCOUNTANT, Part~tme. Can be 4th yr aet"OUntlna: ml.)Or, hrs. can be a.r-n-. Call IUoQ&l all< lot ?i1r. Bro,.·n 2m S. Pita.in. S.A. ~1~ Alao tee Job rr·s Beach houae time. Bia· fl!ll ae:Jeci'°'" evtrl Set Iha DAlLY PfLOT \VANT A0.51 Acrrvrrv Director -F\111 Time Opening for Con- vale11eent Hospital. Ca 11 &12-2410. Advertisina Azency Sharp Secretary tor tut. pe.oed Newport Beach Apno cy. 'fype &>70. Shorthand 100, orpniz.e 4 follow tbru. Under 33. Phone: 6'12-3910. 425 N, Ne~110rt Blvd., N.B. Appllcant11, ~mporary URGENTLY NE EDEii: .. Secrtlary * Girl Friday • Typist/Senior • T>'PlsllOerk SERVICE CINTIR &mployment Agency • 500 N•wport Center Dr. * 1Ft$1'1\on l~H Su ite 200 NB By •ppt. i4M981 A FULL-Tll\tE telephone & misc. oHice 'lll'Ofker. Coast Electric ~)U!G ASSD1BLERS for camper factory. \Vood~n&: e~-p. f.lale or female. Apply f.la· ~·ay, 869 W, Uth. C.M. Automative -Tlrto Mark C. Bloome TOP SALARIES *TIRE SAL ESMEN * BllAl<E MECHAN ICS * TIRE MOUNTERS FOR BRAND NEW CXlSTA MEM STORE Rafere1K"H. 51i da1t. \\1U tre.ln. Pitedlca.I insu.ranc.. profit ~ a: red~ment plan, nwiaatmtlll opporfian.. lly, APPLY: 14MO 8rooKhunt Ci11rdrn Ol"OW A11tmbler1 Burroughs Corp. N•w Cemrntrcl1f Computar P11nt MISSION VIEJO Now ta kfn1 ap,llt1tlena ht ASSEMBLERS at our new plant in lllission Viejo, Call!. Some experience preferred. - Apply 8 om • 4:30 pm ~1onday lhrou1h Friday EMPLOYMENT OPlllCE 25725 Jo,....1 ... - Ml11I.., Vlelo. Calif. uo.32n RETAIL TOP EARNINGS FOi MAJOR SAW snc;tAUSTS WITH NIW GIANTS •APPLIANCES • FURNITURE • CUSTOM DRAPERIES •CAMERAS GRANTS GIVES YOU : Top c0111m. P M• (Spec. sales comm.) Better total Income. run quality line. Oppty. for advanctment, pd. vac., Holld4y & sick pay, Retire plan, Group life & med Ins. Emp disc. lf you want tb learn more about our money Jllllkinc l!">l'Olition In oot of the counties futeat (iowlnc relall ortanlutlon -rome prepared lo dlscuu your sales know-how and your previous expertenc.. Come In and •••us, W. T. Grant Co., Gl'Ollt Plaia, Adams & Brookhursl, Huntlllgton Beach. An Equal opPOrtunlty Employer M&F. A prolll'C•slve man~act· urins company, wtth ex~ cellent worklnr c:ondltion• and lrlnp btnefill bis lmmediate openin;s Jor Automatic Scrtw Ma· chi .. Setup Open - Brown & Sh1rpe, Praub, ind ~em•. H1rdl"1• I. Scr.w 0,.. ! era, Bench MIU, d1bUrr •"cl cfrlll pr111 optrs. 1f'1rat '-Second Shiltl Apply at SC& Fut, Inc. 9'l6 So. Lyoo -Ana MAlDS WANT~D * &18-74'5 * MAiNTENANCE f>tan. full time employment. Pa, r k Udo Convalescent HOipltal. pp, 6424410 MAINTENANCE Man lo do Jal'lltorial work, p/Ume. Call 961-7!U. . Or ftm:ale. EXp. wool p~tr. Automatic AJax 1 lay preu. Clown Cleaners, 1056 Baylkle Dr. 673--m5 MECHANIC WANTl!D ASSISTANT " MANAGER Experie~d only. Goad 1a1. &rY. many oompar.y benefits. Apply in person, Grant's GIJU Service, 1740 N~r1 Blvd., C.M. !'i1EOJCAL front oUk~e. top """" MUST BE SHARP Write Dally Pilot Box P-916 01· call 9ft2.2529 after 6. !VINING BUSIDY5 NIGHT DISHWASHERS OAY HOSTl!SSIS APPLY IN PERSON 151 £, 0».11 Hwy. Newport Beach RESTAURANT HELP • WAITR.Ef:liE~ ~ • DISHWASHER . , • P1r1 or lull time. Swiaa Cha. let, (14 N. Newport, N.8. 'REUIEN'S Cosio Me,. Now interviewin1 e BUSIOYS Full"""'" Day1, Moo-Fri. Mlal be neat tn· appearance APPLY l~ W. ADA1'1S OOSTA ME:;A See Betty Bruce at m~ Gx11c A&enq. (or Career Ghia 410 W Coa:sf il'wy,, N..B. By appoL"ll. 646-3939 SALES SAVINGS & LOAN needs airl who Is maturt, ambltklu. Ind able to meet tlul public. U ~ ~. wt may have a permanent poal~n for YoU u a telJfl'-lW:W &CCOUnl$ clerk. Frinet benettts. aood work• Jni condldaM. No ex· perienct nect1S&J'Y. WORLD SAVINGS I: LOAN m s. eout. Laguna Bcb SEC1tETAR!ES: U you b1'e, take SH I waJtt an exctt1na: poi. In a ~Ii ottlct, wt haV• MYl!ral xlnt pOI. To' notch eompanle1. To ·~ Call Jean Brown S4b-6o55 COASTAL AGENCY snaJ1UW A -mo-Blvd, CM TYPIST CLIRK·ll -CITY OP - NEWPORT BIACH $412 to $549 ,.... month Tv.,. •titninc• In the City Llbrery. Rtquim lllsh School diploma, ~ )'Ur ricflnt d ericll txtitr• lfn«, 50 wpm twine. Apply btfore ~. pm. Feb- ruary Jn!., -..i Off. ice, 3300 Ne'W'port 81Yd., Newport Be a ch, 0.W. (Tlf) 613-66U *TYPISTS* Resister for a ten\porary jab lodoy * AUCTION * PUBLIC NOT·ICE IF you are b-a Plano FRIDAY -JAN. 30 or Orx•n thi1 ~ & are lnternted In aome JUI. 1: 30 P .M. -colATOR GETS ~ION ly ..... d'6ll, • i. ... sbop NEW • USED TURNrrURE .,.; WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO Beautiful KL'nt.():)Uee ~ OF 11 WXURY APART S w9 N""'°"· c.M. 64UU4 room Set. llednlOm "" 1n Spanilll & ,._..,it-lllllft ,._ ... _ Open Ewry Hite ..,..,.. A Modem, T Pc Din. mn:i .. ' .... ,.... A SUnday Afternoon Ina Mt 'Y!lh cbina cablael, AU BRAND NEW • .,, Hutches, Cedar eha1t1, Cock. A decorator dream. house on display -3 tan tables. C'redenza3, Din· rooms of 1orgeous Spanish fumilure (was I .. "!!'!!!!!!'~!!'!!'!"!'!'!'!!!.,. I ~~. ~:itre~:,.,i,~11 ': f6J. t1295. PIANOS &: ORGANS et). La n1p1. Pictures, SACRIFICE • • • • • • 1$425 • Y&n~:' ;.~SEgqia111 ~~e.~d!roColoBdlr1!1'. • Thomu Ol"lan• "' ......, 9-pc. M•di+•rr•n••n ll•droom Su ite In Ptc•n : Kimball Plano. or Oimbc>, Vacuum de:uen, IR.,, ,149.00 1 ............... -...... NOW $161.00 Kohl" & Campbell Power mo••or•. Refri(e.,.. GonJ•ou' Sp4ni1h Cu1tom Built Sofa with COAST MUSIC ton, Free:.er. Washets, 0ry. mttchln9 Lov• Sett--Choic• of b•autlf1,1I NE\VPORT A: HARBOR el'I, Sto v e• A MUOI fat,ric1. IR•9. '419.951 •. ...:.-... NOW $225.00 Cort& Mesa i 6J2..28;:i, ?ilOREtll! Sponlsh o;nln9 S•h _ ........................... -... $75.00 Open ,.., Fri 11>9 Sun 12..1 WINDY'S AUCTION Solid O•k End T•blos ond c.11 .. Tobl•s . .$1'.90 January Clearance Ttll Decoretor T 1bl• limp' I R•9 . $49.951 ................. -...... NOW $11.00 Sp•nlsh Han9ln9 Sw•g Jmp• SALE! 1 ~·ai&1;·'l~Aii::-iio .. iiiiNl~~~·50 : ~r;:ONo.: ~:: .. mm RJRNITURE ~ ;~:l'f:.U:~ COME BROWSE AR.OiJND 2mij Newport Blvd. Behind tony·, Bkia: M&t'l1 Cotta Mesa. • M&868tl OPEN DAILY 9 lo 4 1844 Newport Blvd (•I PIANO CLEARANCE I IT'S YOUR MOVE •Hubor Blvd.) • alll noor modeli • Costa Mesa Only : ':.~:~~ • ""• .. BM.CUatiQm J>Jt.. 4 x.:t ... Blaq: padded arm rt.JI, marble formic.II. top, Jock liquor cabinet &: sfOn&"e tor illUMI. Stats 4. L1kt: new. Sacrllke II Prl<e. $1Jlll. M7-T781 Dltcov•r • Or••t Ntw c:.,.., With Th• AIRLINES gvoz Nltt 'Tll 9 -Wod'!,S.t. & Sun. 'Tll 6 ,.:~~~SAMU~!~, --· ---~ -----~-·--......... -- l'umltur• IOOO G1r11• s.r. 8022 HAJ.DtOND Steinway, Yllft\· A natuttl for youna: people --------aha. New &:: uled piano& of PRESTIGIOUS Orangt County Country CI u b !\tembl!rshlp For Sale It Transfer, Ca 11 a.ft 6 P~. {213) 5"l-1913. who want excitement plus! 20 PC. ''MADRID'' SE'ITEE. oval ribbed beak mOil makes. Betit buys in 11cket a1entt A1r frelJht! l R-m Gro~ down plllowa, $130. Lov~ So. Ci.III. at Schmidt Music Slat.len agent! ~&· -seat, while d&maak .$$5. C.O. ~ N: ?tlrln, Santa Ana ttoru1' Ramp or travel f't\O!'it MODEL HO s Chair, uphola 4 cane 'i*l.•..,==·,.._,,.,, .... =="" Wt1t1rn Girl Inc. 2!:et! a~l11m~~~ ~ t~~ lllclude11: Quilttd IOfa and Cbrtee table, Fnnch lq1, 10RGAN CLEARANCE I SEWING MACHINE Se&l'I Kenruore-l?ortabJ.e. Sews f o r w a rd, reverse' dams, butlonhOlea. Excellent condition, Only $35. 8374239 MODELING SCHOOL For Reco1'ded IniormatiOn S£C'Y.t)[i6 Ntw -..S. In& Cl>. Gtt In on tile "°""" floor. Pfttkl•nt. at O>. netd• a rlll'M: arrn w/SH, 11 t e boldcpa', rtsdy to work. Hur. ry. To S700. Call Billie Btck, 540-6066 4Wl ,MacAnhur Blvd. nlte. We'll even atve you c:balr - 2 end lable1 & col· oval, SS!'i, Miac * all floor models * Newport Betch placem•nt auistancil. Qef Jff tabla -2 lllJllps -dre15-Items MS-2900. .. .. • O>nn • Wurlitzer • Allen BEAUTIFUL hand painted oll portrait of you or YOU( children ftom a photograph. A wondertul Idea tor that •peclal a-if!, ~ needs 2 part lime eve. In-Phone 835-4029 struClol'I. Need 1 beautician I ..,.,.,..= ... ioiiiiOoiill;& for hair t;iylinll', 1 cos-Sa.lea COASTAL AGINCV 2790 HarbOr 81\id, CM - __ ...:;-::;::::;. ___ 1wtth 1eturit)'; s:et aw~ •r -mlrror-hladbOard -SUPER Sa.I~· Antiquea Skii e Hamfuond • Lov.•rey ml'!tician for. makeup. Muat be attractive, exp'd. &. able to teach. Call J\fi5s Prim, 962-2666 tor interview. 11,16i'Et. -Aaslstant mzrs . or tralntes &:: maids wanted. 01'1.? of the nation'• lari:e5\ MUTUAL FUNDS Sellin&: Ot-gani1ation1 is now also oH•rim:" LIFE INSURANCE SECRETARY TO R&AL ESTATE SALES MANAGER from dull routine. Travel quilted box •Prina: I-matt-' ' ' GO I TYPISTS I -" for you and famlly. ... -5 pc dlnlnl: niom· lypewrllB. "'" apptlanoes, ULD MUSIC: WOIUC WJltl'f I-table 6 4 hi-back chain. ' TV. trani.ea, recordg, mi&c. ~ N. MaJn, SA Ml-0681 Wff1;R:t \'OU WANT ~~~1:'1°£a1~bf!°j=t1~ COMPARE AT $74.9.~ f,1:!:·+.n'ir.~hru d::i~a~;·i;NEW'=o-'~&...:cu"°SE~D-. ,_;,Planos::..:=. on ~ atlfamnellb Uoq under the federallY $399 Albert P1. CM. oU Santa Oriana. Rebuilt ,Granda. VOLT ~~·.• ••ud•nt loan pro-111r1 ~·s WAREHOUSE Ana Ave. WaUJch'• .c.M. 540.2830 Prrf. Mature Stable L.ad)i w/ lhst&nt P91'10nnel •·-" nu..n exPtr. Jn 'Raal Eatate,'E .. 3848 ~pua .Dt. Sult• 106 pOWER tools, hand tools, T I I I l2 CARPET Installer has one roll, avocado nylon carpet. Double jut&-backed. Will sell all or part $3/yard. ~7245 2378 Newport Blvd', 548-9755 . NEWiPAP~R Auto Roule. 1:;~:1'~~;: f~ I\~~ crow or 'nrlanet. No i!ies1.ft. Ntwpeirt Beach 54M7CJ. Phone now for dftalli. No do"Mt-f#mr. only $16 mo. toy1, mOtDrcycle1, misc. • eY 1 on 05 nen, Plu9e. l Of l..ar'p1t WEU>ER: A~PlY in penon. Altllne Schoell Pacific IOO W. fth St., Santa Ana itema. nl2 Quebec, H.B. COMPONENT Stereo; 2 TV, sewing macb., mple cof· !Pe tbl. toaltar, elect can opener .. odds &: end1 , 64.5-0U6. £1rly AM. (Approx 4-6 1 UC . r you AM}. .7 day y,.•k, X1n't etlme presttae career. Now /time income. Prei' yoU can expand your ~come Jiature M a r r i e d Person by ee:lling BOtH -mutual Bldra in U.S. Outatandint DS:W!:Y '~ RUBBISH 610 E. 17th, Santa Ant Open Daily M University iipeakers, lCH '°"E"'STS=--o-.IWl"'n,--,-becb=,-mod-,,.-em h1n,e benefits, retirement, Sf:rtVJC£ nu c.nyon Dr., S4UJt• 11o Sat.~ Sun 11-6 Appll1nc11 8100 Bol1•n B-62 turntable, 1 china cab., dinette. braided e(c. le a Salary oommenau. CM t.16VINc:::4liW. Kn.I bed, oil-. Sound Cratlliman amp. Cost rug11, na1.1&ahyde 60ta.. CaD call 540-3006. funds·alki We inlu.raJ\ct. ratew/youre,cper.TopRef.1-'::::..-------ed walnut~ cant hdbrd, KENMORE \VASHER, COil· new $275, 11c fol· $125. 5-13-8611 er Req, CaU lotrs. Middleton * WA1Ta!:$6 '* 'two yn. Th• Ntwpert. matchln& oornmode $100. Bx pie 11.ze. S125 ($40. less than Lr s.81.36 betwn 8 .u.r.s PM. 540-781D. ~~r-benoetU~~~ °:~i Sch-' of h1lne11 sprtna• i: matt $150. S.ll all coat) New condition. used 1...e·'= ... ~c.""'1or""'TV;;;;-o"r,...B'°lack,-.....,• SEARS Relriatrator. couple ~ize , LlKE NEW. Prlol!d $-10 under coil. $115 ca 11 83f-4239 NURSES Rertstered • evan- inr-. &:: night ~hilts. Ex. benefits. Apply PeriOnntl Di~. So. Coagt corn. munity Hosp.. 318T2 Const Hwy .. So. Laguna. 499·13ll vet. 356 Nurgir.; I Experienced Aid•• All "lhUts; available llunUllrton. Va!l.e:r Convalelf- ~t Hospital. 8382 Newman Aw . Hunt. Sch. 842-5551 , NU(R Ak1e Training lnd of f>fareh . Tu'O v.·etk cl•sJ. Empleyment offered. Apply, Personnel Dept ., •Hoa&" Hospit&I, N.B. , • * NURSES AIDES * • ElrperieN:td 54"3061 OP'Fl'CER l\IGR: Youth.or- iented &roOV>' ~ need• cltlc gal w/good basic skills to watch '!!..er ottice. Start now to $6600. C&1l Joan Mar. ··lln ~ . COASTAL AGENCY Snelling &: Sn•lling 2790 Harbor Blvd, 0.f POLICE CLERK $474 to $576 Per Month CITY OF NEWPORT BEACH One current o p e nln& available. Requi.tts 50 w.p.m. typing. hi 1 b .!!Choo! diploma. one year ' of recen t 1ene1'al clerie&I experience. Apply belore 5 p.m., Tues- day, Feb. 3, 1970 I') the Per- sonnel Of!ice, 3300 N1!WJ>Or1 ftlvd., Newprn't Beach, Callf. 92660, (TI4) 6n.fi633. \Ve· are one o1 the: l'l&tion'a larie1t and futtJt•il'OWfna: ~utual fund orpnliatlOns. We provlde )"OU with ~ trainlne, group msdic&l in· 11urance, fl'O\IP lik lnsur- ar(,.-e, profit 1harina;, a.ncLex- ceUenl oppol'tunltles to ad· vance In ll8le1 mana.aement. NO TRAVEL· REQUIRED . \Vr\t.e or phone Raymond w. De·~ . Divillon&l !'iflJINer \VADDEL &: itEZO, INC. Ctnlral Towt!r #4-0 Ul,Uon Ba!\k" Square Orange, CalllOrnla Tel : 1n·o 547-~ Interviews: Morn!rt.i• o!JlY Sal .. Do YoU 'Take <SAlEShtEN WANTED ADS> with a &rain ol. All? Cao'! say that I blame you, l fol· loWed a few m)'HU oni, .to be dlsapl)Oi nted. The job seldom lived up to th e claims in the ad. DO YOURSELF, A FAVOR! AND' EXPLORE THIS ONE! SEC'Y EXEc: i..ookini:: for open DOW. Apply IC person 1 • , !:;.!nma~~c::! only 3 or 4 tiints. Call \\'hlte. Optlun to buy. ~ top job? This Ii it! C.0. has P!\I tO 3 PM. Mf; Mo0re, Featul"t1 ~ l"l!frt&hfr · 837"""239 service. No deposit A·Actlve potential + Job for reapo~ 12924 Beach at Carden CO\tt'tWS In tfle llkilll you :~w r:!!i~~-~~· ::i~ ~16RE Auto washer &: TV Ren~ ~115.l alble peJ'iOn. Sta.rt $!.50, Call Grove Frwy., G.G. needt' to &ti tbe job )'()U Slant board $8 Relnlorced Frigljlt.lre auto wash er ·l==='-'=-'-'-""":.....-- SalJy Hart, 5-IO-&OM \V AITRESS Mr LurlC~s On-wan · Snow Kini tire chainll boU( xlnt cond1 ~ eaoh. rorRON Electronic ~ra. COASTAL AGENCY ly. A~ in Pt1fion, l-1)1c. 6'13-2943 a!tns, Lid~ ~7'Jor847-3U5 Takes plctUN"r; In darl<. PAINTING: Boat or Hou.e. Snelltn1 &. snellin&: Delaney's Sea Sh&nty, 630 133 Dover Dr., N.B. Isle. lbEAL 1.,Uetlme developing con. WANTED Quality Whitworth lools lo tit Britllb nuti; & bolts. 546-6380 S..S pm, 2790 Harbor Blvd, C"r\I Lido Park Dr, N. 8 . M2-387o . Oliux'E Near New Sewlna Coup!~ ,tie Sean; p~~s:e1ra40• = ;~:~.S:S::~ $200 or ~aso~~le. ~9 '! ~:J SEC!tETARIES * • \V AITRtiSils-Ex. AUCTIONEERING M&cll W/Ollruiolt All Ao. tor. -· now. ·-&;p;;1 layer has HJ Lo 1 perienced onb' .. Apply, 512 ltEGULA.R 2 WEEK ftrt.M CUI.' $75. Ste~ amp &: under CIMl, $11S. Call 837-4l39 21" RCA Color TV. Worka R)'lons $1.00 yd. Shags Work when & ,.,.here W. 19th SL, Coita Mtaa. in & in bu:alne&& for )'OW'lelf' Garrard turntbl, $40. & draw REFRIGERATOR • fretttr aoo<f, $'15. Alt . S, Ms.6578 tronf $.1.50 up + my labor, you wanl pemn. Learn to be an a'lict!Mffr~ commode, $25. hldeabed, - 2 dt PhUoO 19.6 cu. ft. no &H2 J..arkspur CU", HD. 9lk per yard. 847-1519 Interim WAl'rittMiS _ Cocktail. WESI'·B!:ST saroot. or ~NeL'Ci, $97, twin bd cornr fI'Olt llJl:e new, mllll sell v· ANTE 0 WATERFORD P1r1onnel Service Bus Pis, di&llw11hen. Ap-AUcrtONttJUNO, 208 \f, tbl , S20. lHP wate.r pump, $250. 54&-6227 Sporting Goods 8500 CRYSl'AL. Uzmore pat· 4t5 E. 17th St., CM ply Maible De, 17~ 19th St., fth, S.nta Ana." QS..SOOO. new cond, '50. apt port KENMORE !\lodel 600 SKJS 1tep in bindings, g1,1 tern. Reas. Call~ 642·7523 C.M. wuhine mach, $50. Other mobile dllhwuher. Late boots & tree. poles. Xlnl ----'-...:..."---WOMAN To babysit 2 year PIANO LISSONS hathold 1te1TU1. Call aft 6:30 model, ,.Jnt cond.. sas. cond. SIOO aft s, 54&-i059 DUAL 1lze qlld. bedspread, Sl:CTY' • LEGAL TRAIN!:E: old fir! m,y ~. can aftet All aa;e1. Bef., Int~edl· PM 646-4070 M&-8672, 847-BlU bl/srn. $15. Twin bed, &Oft D y namic exf*lldlng Co. 5 pm 962--~ at••, THEORY'· lMPRO\'lZ-QUA.LitY klna-be<'.· quil ted UPRIGHT Freeze r &:: ~~~:nd~li Clubs & Bag, I =m=a=ttre='"=l30c.="=&-=l='=95=· =~I Don't miss Ibis cpty. to pt WOM~ Full . rt tt ATION. Reuonable. Call mattre11. Complete unused Retri&enlor. R.eaaonable. * Pb 540_7478 * into this enviable hilh PIY· Medfd·f :. chud· 'Pa ·me aft.er S p.m, 546-1$48 S120, wOrth $280. 8'1..2-6536 Call !'i4S..3334 · Misc, W1nted 1610 l.ni; Pi:offlt!rion. Stan SCIO. panlon. ~es ~cue, com-PIANO LEs.soNS: ~· eve1>. USED Appl1-nce & TV's. all lfnoc.ul1r1, Seo-8550 -·------1 C&ll Bil.Ue Seek MOo6055 w Stt Better 1 teacher besfnmna to te&cll itEAilTIFUL Modem 7 Pc. eed o n1 • 1815 ,..-... $ E COASTAL AGENCY Soulh• "-·t ~.:....~. In Mesa Verde are a . dinette, $48. Also. Duncan 1UArant ' u apn• W BUY $ Sntllln ""' ~ -~·, N....,.... c.M. ,.._ as SCRAM LE S mo 11.J.! BJ>d"-• ~· -~ ~""" • """' "'· KENMORE!: WU!lu • • J . $ FURNITURE $ THEATRICAL 7900 roR SllE, Maple Bodroom Drytt, 135 · 536-0l1l ANSWERS APPLIANCCS Secretary To S600 SchMIHnstructlen 7600 ,It, port·dihwalher & bbq, Antl•ue1 llJO Colo1 rv-P1•110-St11'ff1 wltti bookkeepinl:" knowled&"e. -~-------WANT&D: '.'l'V, a~i equip &: mile, Call , 1 ~., ...... M Call Loraine, We51dill Per-BOYS & GIRLS WITH ~T1after1 PM. ANTIQ. FUrn: Lampe, mlr-Valllal -Poker -Lyric -CASH IN JO MINllrU sonnel Agency. 2043 West-... !dora OLD YOLK'S • 5•1 '5) I • clltt Dr .. N.B. "'mo c~.. RADIO A DESIRE TO IE ON QUALITY SOra bed, OOlit $3:A} roni, cul &: oolo1'11d glus, r -~ '1 ~~ • S beaut. cllina. Much J\fore. A fellow aot ttttd of hll 1 ~========I and Fee Paid Joh•l TELEVI ION ·•• tell $150. "-Roll away bed 89?-9940 old Volkswaien breekinr 1' SE CRETARY PT/lmt For Free On Camera Audi· 'fJO. Xlnt oond. 536-9518, down; ao he gave It to tbe FREE TO (Penn). Office Detail for NEEDS TRAINED tlon In Your Area, Call ()r. *-9110 ANTIQUE PIE SAFE OLD VOLK'S home. YOU .. n-anre Cl:Junty, 547-6251. USED sofa &: chair $69.95. HALL MIRROR ••tfr's .... to .. Type, S.H. Ex· ANNOUNCERS 642-1.833 per N•c. 4-16 bn wk. Full MIRCHANDISE fioit Used pair red velvet hi-back 1---------Miscell•neous 1600 LOVABLE Female terrier detail& to Box 53!'it, Dally SALE AND TRADE c1tair11 $59 each. The Fae-Le•d•d Hanging Shade•·i---------I mlx. 1 yr. old, and 2 mixed Pilot, N.B. \Vhen YoU train with the tory, 1885 Harbor, 54IJ..Q42 • SU·Z578 * POOL T BLF.8 terrier puppies, •I mos, old. If you ~:ould like to ma.le• • INSTITUTE OF MUSI' SELL Spanish nod m A n•ed good home with fenced $300. per v.·eek immlldia~iy. SECRF:l'ARY. Typlna; 65. BROADCAST ARTS Fumfture IOOO 1 e S M hi 2 Secard Pool yrd. M6-720'J before 11 ·-\Vith an .... .., ..... ";." tor 1~rthand 90. Intereitifll' ..... ~u •. ~ .• ., furn. Candelabra. hang, •wing •< nts 81 0 BRUNSWICK-AMF ..,., ..,.. ~~-.. ...,. dlver11lfled work for If "'"' ~, lamps, room div. baby furn. eu.tom Sia~ Table after 3 pm. • 1/30 much more in the tutu~. t rt 8 1 •• C '' • on professional equipm•nt. 2 Pl!:CE Spanish .,fa&:: Iovt etc. Call 548--0358 SEWING MACHINE ...._, $"~ l wouldlikolotalk-you. s a er. y1emin1 orp 11 __ _........,. '"00 9S 3 pl •-vnmol'O p '·bl r•vn ..,,., CALICO Cat, female, hu "' M H 540-5m v 1u WU'l·•u . ._ seat ,~ · • ece ·1et-One Twin Oak Bed, .x-ars -.e or-.. e. 100% Financing sweet dispogillon, nfieds good If your qualifications matth I'll. ayes .. . l.ir per90!l&lltiea:. Spanllti -2 end. i cocktail Complete $45 Sew1 forward, reverse, * SECARD POOLS * home. 67J:o3l14 afler 6 our requirements, this could SERVf~ Sta.tlon Attend. tablta $49.95. 2 Spanlllh llv· 6f6...9"iG2 ' dams, buttonholea._Elccellenl !'i32-199'l be the career you've be-en Exper. Full Time. Apply In CALL 772•ll00 Ina room lamps $25. The condlUon. Only S.15. 8.17-4239 323 s. Main St. Orat1P pm. l/!O looklng for.CallforpersoMl Penon, 2096 Harbor BJ.Yd., Factory, 1815 Harbor, ~ .. ESSLlkBodNOtv:!l08ilve ANTIQUE Singer treadl• *CARPET* FREE To good home interview bet. 9 am to 12:30 C.~f. 646-5558. fnitftute ot ~ ..... 1 ..... 54G-M42 • ....:=. e ew, -· . ----i..i ...__ Mi: W/fe~ )'II.rd, adorable -~ ~ Call 64" ""'TI ::., ....,n .... -rw. wo ...... .,...,. LEFT from <Amrnerclal con· fu~ L&5l1e 1""" fe--•-pm ~ SERV Sta .Attlindant, exp. 11&1 \V, Broa.dw&y, Anaheim USED eola &: cl'l&.lr "9.~ 2 =====~=·=== ~ ··~ 'JI"' •UILIC POLICEMAN nee. 467S Campus Or., N.B. Student Loe.111 matchlilg topholttered Of traci1. Sl.98 a yd: $2 .88 a :!,11!,.~mlx, 2 moot~!; Jl32 . $374 & month Sail's Atrpot1 Tt!xaco • aee ~tike Frtt Placement Aulstanoe patina IT'ffn print cha1n, flee Furniture 8010 Stwln9 Mtchlnu 8120 yd:O~fJ19;.:~RY °"-.iu.N ~"" Aae 21. lo 31, up lo 35 with \VHO TS AN AVON I =='-========..:..=.:.i;i'i:=;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:_ both for $69.95. Antique CARPET OlITLET approved ex per ience Someone like you wtio likes Job~n, Wom. 71DOJobs-Men, ·Wom. ·7100 while. end &: coc~tail table• Ol'FICli FURNITURE 1!'9a1nuStrN~ .. 1Ze.'Gb·u\A1.0G0. ·Im Beach Blvd,. H.B. HEIGHT. 5· i" minimum, R.EPRESENTATIV.E't -$9 each. The Factory, 1885 NEW&: USED • delke ho le a, '-d;';i ,na •tc. 847•1114 WEIGHT: in prtoportlon to Somoooe like you ~ likes Harbor, 544)..6842 • ehaira •Wee Guaranteed. $36.00 Cash .Jr IDEAL •helsht. PH y S I C n L RE· people, ha.a IOme IJlll.l'e tfme GIGANTIC JANUARY McMAHAN BROS QUIREMENTS: High scnool & Hires to earn monty. Be SALES , DISK INC. ' eaJy termal !'i2&-6616 Couple size Kenmore uah- ST•uluste, valid Calif. ope'r· an AVON Representatve. CLIAllANCfi SA.Lil lSQZ Nnport mvd. FINE Selection of Uaed Zia:· 1,_ machine $125. $40 ie111 &tors license, U.S. citizen. CaJI All D save up to SO% Cblt& M•.. * 6424f50 Za.r ?ilachinel. Gua'ranlffd than 0011t. It IA ln new condl. File application at City Hall, ~7041 546-3341 epartments U1e Ollt store ch&tp pip Xln'I Sewing Cond, Prloed tlon. UllCd only 3 or -t times. ~Wutminster :\ve .. Wnt. SALESWOP.tAN ':::~~ Office Equipment 8011 Rea1on1bly. Supply Call 837-'1239. in.lnster, Cllif. berort Feb. FUll lime. E.'Cperie:nced pre. ADPrewd ffumftvN Limited. Ye Olde S.win& 15' C&mptnc trlr, xlnt ccnd, 13th. 1970 5:00 PM. Written femd, ladies wear. 2U9' Harbor CM ,..~ .. _ It I!: M INGTON Typewriter Machine Shop, 3519 E. Cout make otr. eouee tbl, dbl AKf" BEAGLE tri-color , female, 2 )"t'I.' old, loves children, must have fenced )'frd._ S40-883S eves. 1/30 $£ALPOINT S I A M E S E: , male, 1 \i )'l'I. old, s:ood with chlld~n. boulebrolwl. 646- 3594 after •~so pm, ABOUT 8 mos., bla.Ck male Cat w/wht spot on • dhelt. N«'ed• Sood home. 61>4215 af.... 6 p.m. 1121 bam Feb, 28th. 1970, (n4l APPLY IN PERSON • .roo-""""' Hwy, CdM. bed frallll: &. mattreu, 9 dr. 1~511 Ext. 200. e DESMOND'S e W•rk ftr the "•w Grants. GR.OW with e ASSORfto tnd t Ab1a11. standard, xtra long car-KENl'o10RE Sewing machlno, dttNet, kit. tbl, 4 Chn &: MOBILE Radio Phone, .~ A ... -L--d p II nd coclrtl:Jl tabltl S3 50 ch 2 ria.ae.~ newb' rwmd!Uoned. ut1 t~n11irlot1zed, tour cha.nnel. QUICK WAY '#3 Fashion T1l•nd VV-."99 comp•ny. u tlMe 1 p1rttlm• · ea · o~~Ypewrtter walnut cabinet_.. 540-S3Sl8 btltttt. Must RU immed. Xlnt reoepHon. e.e.t ;on. I TO BETTER PAY Newport Beach I I II bl antique whit. twin bookcue t11tJe e-"" •. after 4:30. IA&v1nr reb. t. &f&..8522 or ...... 1 po• t OM IYI I •• w. hi .... oponi-for the htadboard• $195 ch l • ' . • .. s .... -l&Ae . by represtnttna: SALES ORDER DESK ··-· ea ' mati:htn.a metal pOst ure sn.._1 1.,=,,.-=~,-,..==-Ttxa1 Olemie&.I Co. $500 .. Put order de1k e,;p. worklnti houMwife. Full cempa"y benefits v.•alnut double bookcase chair, Ub new $15. ~29f8 Musii:1I Inst.. 1115 WALNUT be1k, P• d d ed FREE • One very ro!t~n l'I.• heMfboard $9.95. nie Fae-'. _ ..... ~ both $lO 4 ,..._,_ coon. f'emale, 8 .mo1 . r mail J.A. Crawford Pre•·· lntludlnt di1eeunt purchnl pten. C.... In tory, 188$ Harbor.~ TYPEWRJT!iR, Add l nc FRENOI Selmer tenor tu, "'"'". · ...... MlUD, M9--3!131 111) '°" 52, Fort Worth. Te.ICU. Warehouseman ind ... UI nowt . • wlNTED • macMnt, calculltor, VU)' beaut. oond.itlOn, ~b. QM ::!.~~~:! $1~ ~ r~~ CUTE l"'r'Yndly Bunnie rab-~ Estale s.les. Youna "'50, Ship's .l J"ttV, btck· W,lna: t'hi.1r (pttftt OUppa\-. teal., xlm cood. m.2423. PX). Alt g pm ~ 1911 $4. Skill $15. o.tiilh teak blta. Auorted Colon. cln •~I~,_ wi'!~icc~~ ~ ='. fottditt. Good w/ Monll•y Thro• .. h flrl..i..-... daJ1 styltlo: In netdM of ~ 01r.,. S1~ I022 RI~.~ COUCh. blue/greon $.10, Mfr. &t&-1390 1/30 20 -• -1 ooverinJ .K. u It -~,~~"' I UP• r tof $4. 54&-13:9f TREE Puppln, I wb, small bnmedlattl)'. 83i--Sl E:xpedltor /Gen Helper 10 4 30 tnodtri.ttly priced. J>l«a• SUPER SU:: Antiquu. •kil. tonic amp It cue. Lell\e QUAUTY king l»d quilted mix~ toy cocker. SI.It ~L ESTATE From $2.10 ht. Sharp )4Unc' 1.m. te : p.m. w.3Mt abr f P)f. typewriter, tm. appl.W)cu, speaker mod. No • .C7. Good mattrcu Complete·. U1'.1\L1ed 828-7Wl 11~=~ ~~) i:;! rnan, rood w!ftauht. t:oVELf I' m . newr uwd. T. v .. frame•. record•. n\ltc. t.'Ond. ~7418 s·120, w0rth $.ieO. 842~ ""l"o"ilii"o""'m"a:;le:-;''T=ab"by'.,,.--.ca~ ...... · ... quilled f Io r • l, sc»t· clothln&, 10)'1, decorator FENDER 12 strin9 9ult1r •"'*•· ::'l loWle.hle! SST-'7SSS·d .. J. taaliu.u Hcen11u. r~1 T w T GRANT chlu&rded $135, matchina ttema. Tbuts. lhnl Sun. 279 $100. * 546-2996 ot -···1 ••»• 11-IO· ~1 lilc1Udfl eqWb' Factory r4Jnet1 icwue&t .. Private pvt)' •. Albtrt Pl., C.M. off Santa • RO'JIAAY power mower '35.1,-tt::-::'~-.:::-.··===-,.I lDlns. pa.rant-.:1 saJH. Ftm"1a ~ to Jl.1$ lu'.~lttft1.. • • ~ 1"N-45t2: Ana. Ave. · Pla:Ma a OrftM llJO stereo $35, 8 mm ~jector, 5 l'ito1. fem Schnawtr/i ~ .!:..,.~"' APEX USED UllOIUd lleadboaidt MOVING Into tllr. Muat Mil ...,.,., lilu &40. 84 -42SI. die. -. loYable. f!S.UIS Uolalar ,._.__ Em-.i Aao G.RANT PWA 14 ad>. Ulltd -•nd b•d1 , thl•, lamps. PIANO TONING•~ NEWPORT J!otcl> ~I• l/3o Ila· L llodps, Rily, . 1111'~ ~ table• 13.lO .. c11. u ... Ev.,1 th ta 1 llnaeJnablo ... ~-----de! ~!' ~ !!"~~~; P'REMI ~.,'!bf D'1lc1> rabltlta. ftt bloctt So. or UthY ~ aaaorttd ntatit ltaDdl n J!5 Patti: ov.llddl, dO not dtt~ "'"""' \ ,_,., -. ··-.,_._.. __. l/JD 141.zl; -,• • • •ach. Tiie P'aclory, ms mer. IMO Nowocrt 111"1 .. wtiRLiTitii -32 -DMllG Tallll, n cu. ft. "11)1 2 LONG balrld ............. $4ii1t-p1i.:.111' wwr oolii:!riltV ..:, Alll11M lllltl IN•llh•at, H.I. Hatbor.~ •CM.No.I ...w.wmm,"""""'*b· 11a•nw1<m -u .... -. Ii ,,. ps14 (Al.a 1'e Jobs) OPlniOP tor tulJ or pU1 M1111 don '&n111P 2.f ft. ¢lltl(jr; SALE' -bold • ,..._ .,..._ &e.JJ10. "4MU1 •IG-'lllO* - ean Loralno. w .. 1c11u Pf' time all~ No -·· Cqual Opportunily tmployor ootu. lc:ornortabl•. I lamp --· IW PM Jan. a , SACRIFICP. Wurlltur I ftO a .... 11 Stlrtboud TWOi,.loalnd-1\1 90ftntl Apncy, .2()13 Weit-no dellvtrin. Far tnttmew. n49.95 The FActory. 1W 30 • n. Ol Kamlltoo Apt D 8plnllt P;iano. Xlft'l Cond. ~orU1nt oondlUon $50. .-kl. o Id, ' bout~. cW! Drive, NB r;.t;.mO $111-0J14 • Mari.o., MM842 CM -$125. Call -64&-l014 IC·l!llO Ila • I , ~ ..... ., " --. . -. . " •• Iii DAILY PILOT FREE TO YOU Wfdnfsd'1, ,...,.,., 28, 1970 W•dnesd'1, J,.U"l' 28, 1'70 PILOT-ADVERTISE~ f0 PETS •nd u\IESTOCk TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION • TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATloN TRANSPORfAffON TRANSPORTATf UN Dog s ans BNts & Y1cht1 9000 S.llbo1ts 9010 Mobfl• Homes '200 Trucks 9500 lmparttd C1r1 9600 Imported Autot 9600 Imported Cars '600 Good • .onw, bcautlful whlt1t Jt u I k y female, 1101 At"'tillAN MOUND, 18 !\1Q1;, Sho11' no-~. ~11111y Ribbons. Gd llflf' P1•l ~IUllt Slic. $.;JOO, PllOIW' • ti-IG-972·1 TilE \VORLD'S LARGESf CATAfltARAN. New ~· x :4>' Sleep• 10, Lux Salon, 2 SPECIAL NOW! CORONADO 30 NEW! LATE '69 !02 V-1! SuP« Von FERRARI PORSCHE Ec:onolillc Sport. T.O.P. 01 1------------------quite 1 )"!', C\td, Lovt>E ehfidten. a1641i9 ::i.11 :; pm. vlf29 Free tO lfd honw w/f<'nc~'<l Yr<l, n\Ale mi.x pJp \\'f'l ni l Labr, 5 mo1, Clld, bllnv/frost- ~: gray, hlbrkn. ithvl~. \tery ~rw. older child. 8~7-4004 hf Cu.bins, 2 Hds. 2 Quutn with pulpit, life llDca. lights, bl.'U1, Teak declai. Tt•ak comrllete aalley, bead, ciah. Priv•t• Clul:t \ Greenleaf hrk • D<JBElt~IAN pups. nu1Jes, cabinets. Power 1 knts, St.ii iona, ~urine. Exll'f. bonus: AKC. shots, 11 \1'ks. terms, A Ad II I ' •I Cl b 3J knlJ. Price $110,000. nlain &. Jlb saU ($;.oQ) now! " u riv • u Cull &12~.m t1nyU1n~ O "II f th 0 'I'ernu1 -\\/ill tradt•, part Sl3.995. n• m • 1om • ce1n t.ll'.'11 . Schnauze r, fl!male • 6 cltSh, par! cleitl' real est&tc. ·YACHTS ROYALE INC. $9.> mo. or pay oi1 $2800. FERR.Alli _646--057. N......... Im-l.ld. 0.- 68 Chevy 108 Sport Van. qe Count>"• anb autbot- Auto, heavy duty 1prifla$, lzed dealer. ne\v 1lre1, runll perfect SALES·SERVICE-P ARTS 64~74 3100 W. Coast Hwy. mo AKC chitmpion sired. hfakc oUer. ;,36-0083. P .O. 2912 \V. Crt J:lwy, Nwp Bch IN S.\IOC FREE * hfust Sell • Going 642~~ewport ~O-l764 ovc-neu Ftl. 'j6 Doditi Authorized Fe-rrut Dealer h!ail Truck. $400 I offer.I========== .,...,.., COCK s1101.s, l'l'OVpt.'(I. 61C-6385 IJo 1•1' " • 64' ··10 • Co.+· Mesa -A-Poo pup, Io \' f's x , ,,, · rYllll olUI, small children, h s s n1osl BEDLINGTON' Terrier pops, [ "'======-==== I --~R~A~N7G-°"E~R~26--FIAT shots, hlaek, n1alf'. '"l'Y AKC. cham11. sired, show 9010 North SaUa, O>rysler motor. NeWJ111rf Harbor '69 FORD v 1o E 300, ________ _ amal.J breed. 832 -J~99 quality, 110n-shed. 67~87 S1ilbo1t1 an 11% 1 Simpron radio, Dush-mount heavy duty, V-8. 1968 FIAT 850 cpc, brand ~es. 1/30 BEA',..,..1L1JL Black Pood](',1---------·~mP•• IC 110000 ' ••I ""1458. u •u KE SAILING? ... •,c, , inv . 01-• ~m'-O'lodel• • ~ new white wall tltta, new ~DXED f>uwies, all l'Oklrs. 4 f('Jnai(', 6 \\'eeks old. }lj LI ed. Sacrifiee $8,750. Newport ""'"" "v i.• =========! battery, Like now! Can Jim \\'ks. old, \l't3.ncd. 51~7ll Call :i-t9-1S79. DISLIKE Tl!ESE7 slip. 714/644-4394 or (213) . JMpo 9510 be-10 .. , • g PM -=,'-"0'7-7=-;;,.,,:::;::::::; · t .,.",l7'> Ready to move in today! n ""'" .. , PETS •-• LIVESTOCK '°'1,·c :O.finiutut·c Dachshund e Pay111ents, high tn1e1-es ' .-.r 673-3274 nu " · · 11 ta! -· Or have yours' custom made! puppies. i7:i. depreciation. 5 P rcn · ' CAI. 28 Ce Cc II. Oulstanding Take J-la.rbor Blvd. to 19th SI l9f9 JEEP W.SO™::er 4 \VO. 182S • 114.f~-G3GO • <'leantng, in surance, elc. I cord Full · · JAGUAR PREFER Ti!ESE'!' rdl'"ng re • >'equip.. Drive Wut to 1750 \Vhlttlel' new V-8. P/s, P/b. 1---------PURF'..13RED Doberman pup· • I..o\I• rost, no \YO]tK Ii: 1M!tl for cruililn;. Ship to (714) 642-1350 M.1/Fi\1. Hi not tires. --------- CREAT Dant.', R>'t;-is tcrcd. 3 pies S2i' ;\lu.sl sell by sl10rc, boat bath. raft, etc.,'!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~ ~ve. Comp. reblt. f.fak! * DESPARATE. '65 J .. CAREFREE SAILL°'lG! call Bill Headden, 64G-!l27J,I' * * * XKE yrs old. $7.>. 20:?7 Oi·angc Thursdll)'. ti16-06&l Cal 25 llllle as Sl4, 1~ day 0.,~ ·~ 3 oUer. 494-7182 Rdstr. 4.2 Ltr. MI-FM Ave. C. ill. LOVEABI~E ill&le l'Oll ie> pup, Try Our Club Plan office, "-""""LJ4 IUT J'im NIW flff.LITARY JEEP $9j(} or radio. Oinn wtre whb. >..1nt PORSCHE S.C. COUPE 1164 A classic! Chen')'! Loadt'tl: Incl Abarlh ex hau s t , Blaupunkt Am-Fn1, McAf~·I" v.·heels. f0& Hice:, CIC', Vrusck Polak i,;~vicc ,xelu.sivcly. l3800, PORSCHE SPEEDSTER 1957 The most classic Ponche of all! Very Cherry! Lol:lided: Aba.rtb exhaust, Ned bar11, competition roll bar, 912 eng, etc. Veey quick. Vaaek Polak restored. S 3 8 0 0 . 639-2592 days, 830-G414 eves. 1961 PORSCHE 911 Sportamallc. Call \\lkencls, ?.tr. Jamts 673-9191. Wkda)'s fllra. Brown, TI4-6110. ADORABLE t'Jy poodle pups, AKC. slMJ\s & 1vormcd. :: NE\VPORT 8.AILINC CLUB 24' lSLANDER Sip. F.G. Jnb. SlLL USID make oiler. Gates lire~. cond. ~hsle book $2250. Sac 10 wk&. Loving hon1c prin1c rn.o~. s100. G-12-1·12.J e 673-TIOO • Aux. A-l. r.1any extras. Cooper hvy duty c h r ·o me riln11. S2000 firm. 833-ln7 ext 2J:? '58 PORSCHE Speedster, '64 requisite. a.i5--l:l2'!. CAL 20 No. i.Jl. niany l'acing Sleeps 4. $3995. SI i p 673-779:? aft 6. days, or 968--3787-cves. SC Eng. \Vebor Carl>$, AFGHAN HOUNDS lllO &. cruising e~1ras. Genoa., a\'ailable. 891--0311 x :i014 "BTRA11LER SALES 1962 JEEP. Sih•er. 283 1960 3 4 SEDAN. Black Cherry Body. Less than AKC reJ::. Qualily. Horses boat bath. 6 hp Evin in.:l \1•kdays. uy rom • main Chevy. ~!any extras. l\1ust beauty! \\'ood pane.ling, lthr 1.000 mi's on eng since rc- $100 up. 962-9989 -------Slip a\·all. $3500 or off"r COLU~1BIA Cl:> Flbel'glass who lives in one!" sell. 842-7771 uphol., auto trans., $9$. Pl\. bit. S:?XIO or trtl. 838-6~26 ~t j YEAR old, st1-.11\'ben·y ""'.J n.1.•g Sloop. Coinlortable Day \VE" SERVICE =========I l\1r. Jennett d~s 64249'.10 x 6 :?\~ l'\1o Old S;unoyed Puppy. "" -vN \'"' T -')it --/ lrOO _,_...,,.... 1'.lale. Pcdi~. V c ry roan nu.1J't". Good show J)i'O-NEW SABOT Sailer. $7:-iG 548-4547 ·•nA WE SELL! LD~u~n!!•e!B~u~g!!g~l•!:!•c__~9~52~S'.j:;;-0' ~'i;"";;';;';;':-,';;"c;::'~,.,,,.-·57~·R.SCRE 9ll; air, :;""'ClS~~ llunl & jump • -=========1 32 .. So. Harbor. Sarlla Ana -'54 J ..... ,.ar XK-120S. •-hi 5 d Lo\•ablt". Ph. 67a-330S """ ,.._ 1 1 /•cl ·1 -_.. c1u-ume w s., s p , 13est orr :HG-6'.?:J:t, 67l-2'..jg ....... mp' e \\' 1" TIS sai Power Cruise" 9020 1 Bick So. or Bolu. 531-1066 '69 DU?'.'E BUGGY A l\.fap \V/Compl, re-bit '57 140 \Vebe rs, Pire'tl is, Al\!/ n.t AKC BASSET STUD Spi'cial t.!::9. 6-15-02?'! YEAR E 912 Porsche Eng radio e""'. Nu ;01. •1m· 1 -nd. TRANSPORTATION NL> .... .. .. v S.\\I.; Cobalt blue. $4,940. Trl-co!ur. 5-10-803.'! e SABOT e 28' _ 1955 ~ Fail'l~nt'r ~>'CLEARANCE SALE never on dhi. r>.Iint cond. £213) 427-0322. Priv. party. 5&6-9572 AFGHAN PUPPIES Boats & Y.achts 9000 Con1pletc -S12:i Hri~ge, ra~10, pulpit. n1a.rhn ALL SIZES 642-1357 ·POTJ,SCIIB ,65 C Cpe. 44,wo SIOO. (TI41 J38-:l210 J.llJ..l823 After 6 P .:\T. chai~, swim step. Stereo, NOW ON DISPLAY 9600 MERCEDES BENZ mi'11. Wlille. rd int. Clean. AKC Dachshund s 1ud 1968. 14' Star Crall, j() hp LIDO 14 Sailboat, No. 2389, outri11'~11.:..,J~.i00. 67~69 BAY HARBOR 11'.nported Autos $2995. Pri. pty. 644-2442, Jack Red. long haired :O.ler(", EZ trailer &.· ski \l'ith trailer. Call 837-7039 t-ves, o-vo ays. Mobile Home S•le1 Eve~. LI 8·4608 I ==>J6.~;';18~23~A~lt~"~'~P;::.l\;!·=~"'~"~;p:;;;:"~~·I~. Srotl~~· ;'73-;;• '°'='"'~-':="-'=af='='=p='=' =======I Speed-Ski Baits 9030 lt?.3 Baker St .. Cotta htesa ALPINE '66 PORSCHB. Blue 1\·/ blk I; ~~ block East ol Harbor Blvd, int. 5 speed. Rad\o. Needs 96001mported Autos 9600 tm,.o rte--4 .Autos 9600 ~ , Cosla Mesa (TI4) 5-10.9470 '61 Alpine Ahf-01 stereo body "''Ork. near new tires. fmported Autos SPECIALS OVERSTOCKED WITH LATE MODEL TOYOTA & VOLVO TRADE.INS '66 ALFA ROMEO Sprite GT CJ>P. 5- Speed. Silvl"r finish. Priced a l \1•holrsalc. 696 ACB '66' TOYOTA CrO\l'n Sta. \\'ag. R. IT. overd{h'E'. Blue Onii h. A real buy. sue 098 ·~7 FIAT $1099 850 Cpe. n. II, •1 sprro. nev.• tires, in rPal i;;ood eond. ULR 26 t. '66 MGI . $1599 Rdstr. R, If, 4 spt"rd. .,.,irl" 1\•he"ls, .sharp ~e>llo1v finish & C'lcan. SAA 984 '62 PORSCHE $2499 1600 Cpt". R, H. 4 s!X'C(i. Blul' finish in nice corn:!. . KDB 241 '68 AUSTIN (1399 Ain~r. Sedan. r.. H, auto- matic. Yello1v in color. black interior, Jo,,· milra. XGG 2n '68 TRIUMPH $2399 GT 6 C1>e. R. H. 4 spet'd \\'/red finis~1, black buck· E'l seats, \1·1r<' \1·hecl11. '66 JEEP \Vagoneer. R, 1£, 4 \\'heel drive, P.S., gold fini sh. SVE 368 '67 TOYOTA P.U. 4 speed, R. lf. rrd finish. TXV 004 '67 TOYOTA $1099 Corl?na S_ed . R, H, ~ulo· mat1c, mint green 1n color. TRH 521 '69 TOYOTA $1799 C"''"' 11.T. Ci"-R, H, 4 speed, 10,0CKI miles. Y\\IT 071 '61 KarllMlnn GHIA $1499 Cpe. 4 speed, head er. low miles. Burgundy finish. TYV 408 '60 VOlKS Dune Buio:gy. r.. H. 4 spe(!d. Orange in color. LYJ 248 DEAN LEWIS 1966 HARBOR BLVD. ~EEO sonteonc lo l~ve. 16 RARE OPPORTUNITY radio. li11NT COND. $1650. $3400 firm. 6T:>-U44 inboard mahog. ski boat, • ·owLE LN 64Z....2ll4 nLint cond. $1500/best oUer "1 ING on Ille PORSCftE '63 S 1100 CC. &12-7781· 2871 Bayshores. BEACH, Limited spaces in AUSTIN AMERICA Am/Fl\l/Sht \V&Ye . N.B. ' ' new addition to Driftwood Red/blk. ~fany xtras. Priv Beacll Club. r.Iodel.s on di~ :::;::===::::==== pty. 714/~1671 196.S SEA Ray 17'. Black play! Greenleaf Z..1'obi l e AUSTIN AMERICA 1 I"'======== 11·/red i11.te1'. lnbrd-outbnl Home Sa.lei, 21462 PaCilic t.If'rc ct1JL~'I', 120 J-IP: llO Cs1 HJghv.·ay H.B. 53&7513 lu11;. S3000 11icld!i convt top,.,,..-==.,_-"'====-~ cover &. trailer. 644-2768 67 VIKING EDGEWOOD 10 , • X :i7' Double <!:..'J)aJldO. Sales, Service, Parts Immediate Deliv~ _ All lllodel• 16 SKl or f111h, 100 HP Quality const ruction. Chrys. Ne\v uphols, ne\\' Completely !lkirted; window cover. Benut. Pcrr cond. awnings· 38' carport av.'11· Steal at Sij(I firm. P.od lng; 9' x 111~· screened 675-3949 porch 1Yith glas~l"ne inSerts; llOO w. Cout Hwy., N.B. 14' LONE Star \\i th 20 hp siled. Nicely landscaped in a · 642-940& · M0-1764 J~L'LLIP t.lll 31111p o1 r•, Evinrude !'emote controls. Five Star Adult Park • ln Authorized Z..fG Deall!r BMW MG MG Sale!, Servic..,, P arts Immediate Delivef)', All ~lodell J1rtuporr :il111poll s ---------1 3100 W. Cout Hwy. N..B. RENAULT '68 RENAULT RlO air conditioned, low" n1ileage, $1ZJO. ~~l 'tiO RENAULT. r.totor Run~. Clutch Busted. $45. 400 40!h St .. Newport Island 1960 RENAULT Cara\·elle. Economical Transp, S19:i. Call 847--0690 SPRITE Extras. Cosl $1200 Sacrifice CO!!tu r.tesa. 714-642-7699 $350 . .!\fr. Jone11 8-t6-2J04 or *NEW 2-i:diO DELUXE, 2 (213J 583-Q)66 ER, 2 BA, den, crpts thru· 17' Classic Century, mah~ .• oul, patio &. carport awngs, inboard. Nc-1v 183 eng. Tan-28' raised porcll. r.Jany ex-6-12-9-105 ~176' 1----------Authorized iJG Dealer doin h·lr. 642-9278 tras . .$15,500: 642-;-ll50 B .. t Slip Mooring 9036 Owner Anxious! ---------· l'.!O \\1C:e, 2 BR, aljult, J>Cts. -WAS S6995. NE\VPORT L i do PE'ni1t'lula. 2'2' po11·f'1' boill, NOW $5995!! sidC' tic. $2. per fl. 673-6741 * 549~0959 * Mobile Homes LEAVING 1'~or Soulil'iilj 9200 days! 12 x 55. l BR. adult, ---------pel'!. Sacrificr! J4250. DELUXE 2 0 x 6 0 ' CA.!\1-842-3939 BRIDGE Lrg Porch, Awn-1'o~WN=E=R~W~l~ll-m-0-,.,-tod~.,,-,~IO ings. S1or. sht-d. $14.~. x 45 furn, 1 BR, adult pk, Adult 5 ti lar Pai'k. C.ill. l'f'.nt $40 mo. STl50. 842-W24 646-8612 l\10BILE Honie 1968. Motorcycles Sacrifice! Set Up in Nil'Cl---'------ 9300 Adult Pk., N11lJI Sch. Call '67 Y .UtAHA befnre 10 .A~I or .aft 6 P~f 100 Tu;n $100. 646--0732 Before J. 548-;)571 AfL J. ar AL.JO TrailC'r, Av.11ing " 642--0628 storage cabinel. 327 \Y.1'·~.,~y~,-m-a~ha~305~-~Sc-r._am_bl~ec. \\'ilson. Sp. 26, C.~t. Nu eng. 2000 ml. Big titts. Pert. shape. $400 or Best Offer! 642-5919 '67 YA..,fAHA. lOOcc, dirt. Comp. rise. expan chamber. Knobbies, illoto -X bars. $300. A-1 cond. 6•16-1310. BAYSIDE MOTORS 1200 \V. Coast u .... ·y .. N.B. e BMW e All Models in Stock for. Imrnedlatc Delivery MGA 1958 ~tGA Conve11ible. Good condition. S600 * &l2-18!JJ MGB '67 MGB SALES. SERVICE . PARTS T&M MOTORS, INC. ~!t_r., 4 spd ... dtr. 1vire "·his, ~l Garden Grove Blvd. ~acing !l!d ext., plush blac~ 534·2'284 0 n Sunda 892-5551 int.. Xlnt Cond ilirlJ.-Out. pe Y Take older trat.lc or small DATSUN dO\\'n. TRB006. Call Ken, 4M-9773 or 5'1!'>-0634, '65 P.1GB 48,000 miles, Wire $ wheels, Good t.'Ond . l\fUST a.u..-DATSUN ..,.. SELL! $799. 5-18--8502 1964 i\1GB. Good condition, radio ne1\' Pirc.lli's S8j(), "Leader in The 6eac·11 L .... ~s" Jerry ~ ZIMMERMAN ''7 MGB-GT, newly re- 2845 HARBOR BLVD. painted. pcrf('ct condition, 540-6410 28,000 miles. &la-2853 OPEL 196.j SPRITE, tape deck &. many r..xtra.¥ $9,j(). or be8t otfc!'. Also 1961 Rainbler, i;;ood condition. SliO. 546-0347 TOYOTA TOYOT:\ Mark 11 Wagons. Hi Lux Pickups land Crui1ers W19on1 PLUS OTHER !£ARO TO GET ~10DELS NO\V JN STOCK Your Best Deals Are Still At DEAN LEWIS 1966 Harbor, C.M. 64&-9303 BILL l\fAXEY !TfOIYl§!T!Al 1W1 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. Beach 147-ISSJ S m1 N. of O:IUt Hwy. on Bek '67 Toyota 4 Dr. Corona. Air Cond. Priv. Ply. i\lust Sell. S.IG-0732 VOLKSWAGEN VW BUGS FRC!lt $399 GOOD SELECTION 519. 3031 F~t. 66 or i7 l9i0 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA LARGE SELECTION alVW CAMPERS Harbour V.W. AUTHORIZED ...SAL;f:S__k S~RVICE 187ll BEAClf BL., 8-t2-t435 HUNTINGTON BEACH '68 VW BUG Near nev.'. honey crc-mf' ext., plush black int., 4 spd., dlr. l\l ust sacrifiC<'! Take older car in tradt' or small down. VX1U2, Call Phil, 49-J..9nl or 545-0634. SOLD BUSINESS '59 S325 '58 SJ.25 '68 $11.tJ '62 $495 '63 $35(1 '69 $1195 Salari S845. Vaqero S-150 l'\lini'1' $"1~. 962-227l or 96Z-05J3 '65 vw Orig. 011.·ncr, suru'OOf. tach, &: many C>tller ('Xl.i:as. Si$. bil-1739 '66 SQUARE BACK-: Radio / air, custom trailer hitch. 1 011·nc1" Good cond. 548--4261 '69 KAJu.IAN'N Ghia-auto. &aut. brom.e cpe. $2375. See No. 7 Bet1.r..'On Bay, NB. 67s--062l 1970 V\V 4000 mi, pvt. pty. S:nxl. P..adio, lite blue. European pur c hase . 67~2974. '63 V\\I SEDAN, t'XCCl!ent condition $69:i. * 67::-1676 + ·:is V\\', good cond, New fir\!s. S3:.i0 or best oUeT! 67:'r-3WS 'US VW Bu~ S2J.j(), Call ~tS-2742 a.llt"r ~ pm. '69 V\V sedan, lile blue v.ilh blk \'inyl int., radio &.: olhu xtras. ;;.ig...,1011 aft 6 pm 6.:i V\V. St1n1'00f, lo1v mileage. One 011•ner $9"...,j. 01:ii;lnal O\\'ner. 545-5037 '67 V\V Bu5. Oiig. 0....~. SliOO Cash. Call • DltYI 67:>-2491. Eve~. 673.-2332 '57 V\\', Excellent Chi:iap Transportation. l\lake OUer. Call 962-1782 '66 V\V Fa.,tback inc. 4 track tape deck &. spkrs., air cond. $1495. 54S--fil24 '63 V\V, Clean, ocw brakes, 2 ne1v tires, Rblt. c-ng., radio. 5'6--0270 '66 V\V sunroof, radio, w/w, '65 Triumph 650. nu reblt eng. iv/proof. Xtra chrome parts $700 or best oUer 673-0239 ORANGE COUNTY'S NO. 1 DATSUN DEALER DOT DATSUN '6!) OPEL 0T. Red. \\'/ Blk TRIUMPH x!nt condition. Orig. owner, IO\V mlg. SllOO. 846-2653 inl. 4 speed. 102 1-lP. 11,000 1 __________ --~'-------I BRAND NEW 1970 BUICK 2 door coupe, •uto. tr•ns., conce•led r1dio •ntenna, fibre glass belted tires, padded dash, seat belts, back-up lites, du•I speed electric wiper1. 4332702600154 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OPEL GT'S JUST ARRIVED Limited Supply For IMMEDIATE DELIVERY FINAL DEMONSTRATOR CLEARANCE These were our executives and salesmen's . All are low milea9e and in top notch condition. BETIER HURRY they won't last lon9 at these REDUCED PRICES. BIGGEST SAVINGS Of THE YEAR - 'tf llVIERA l"Kl'tt'l' 1 lf (Ol'llJ,. 1w11 PO•t1', F IM •'C"'"' "9Wfl' wlnllD'""' Pll•tr •NII, v"'r,' --(YCl 011l, lkV•rtt mo~ 'tt R v!t•tl I 'H NOVA S•per Spart Avto, Ir-.. -""'~ rtOio, llHlt•', ..,,, 21,0ll milll. (flGU '111 ''1 DATSUN • ..,,, • "'""· 1ow.1o .. ""''"' flt •• l!Htu. ITU 2'•1 ''7 IUICK ~E SAIRE $3896 $1398 $1277 $2085 'U T·llRD l.rld•ll 1'1111 pe .. •< •II(! IAUIH'y ... CDll<I Orie ewr.er. Ntw 811oc1< lr•a• •~ tlo 1'1l,. '65 CHEVROLET flt! ,t,lr • dOO• 1.-.11. f..:lorr 111 .. 1uto. fft nt,, PGW!'f llffr" ••Olo. hN!tf, Lo m111~ !Nltlt 1111 I o-r '67 OPEL $110•'1. Cou~ iD .. motMQ• OM o .. n ... l'f)W 0Ptl utll"'•"· LVOJ 4051 '65 YOLKS • •~.ct. r.ilo. h'"'" cOflt t;t1 $3198 $1298 $1294 $993 l88l5 Beacb Blvd. HWltinaton Beach 842-nBl or 5'1Q..N.42 ntiles. Immaculate. $299j or \968 Triumph TR-2:"JO. VOLVO trade. 673-0&)9 Xln'I Cond. Best OUer. Call 673-324;;. 145 -WAGONS 164-SEDANS PORSCHE '68 Honda 450cc 5-spced ScrdJllbll.'r. Clean. x In l mcch. cond. SiOO or make offer. 496-9289 '68 TRIUl\1PH BON· NEVILLE. 6,000 miles. Xlnt cond. Call 842-3872 VOLKSWAGEN All ''"" model• oow In \V/can1per, 96 hp overhead 196a POR.SOIE model c. 1----------stock. 4 l>Pl"Cds & automatics. cam, 4 spd, dlr, 6 ply tires, Red. Good condition. Loiv '69 SQBCK, auto + ll.'tras, in Your Be~! Deal8 Are Still At back up lights. You nanle mileage. JI.lust sell. BU-ml 'varranty, $2~9:; or make of. DEAN LEWIS NEW '70 DATSUN PICKUP 66 305" llONDA lt! &!rial # PL52L"08873. 1956 PORSCHE Coupe. 1600 lcr. Aft 5, ~7::,j pr. Pty. 196G llarbor, C.!\1. 6t6-9303 EX. COND. $400 Full prlce $2009, Take small N. Canary Yellow. Chrome '69 V\V Ca1nper, lo n1ilcs, .61 VOLVO 4 spd. Good corn:!. -~-•;.c.>.,;I0-_29~1=8-•~--, I dn or trade. Call Phil, Wbls. CaJI 6T'..-9403. xlnt eond. Bo>st offer! .68~ 11 -• 1-1 1 49+9773 or !>15-063-I. • ;tlS.l7•1 • \\'ill trade for dUile bu~: Onua ia S r e c 1-.,,-===~=~~ '6.J PORSCHE (Cl. Immac .., nwtorcycle 80 to lfiO..CC scrambler xlnt condition DATSUN LATE '67 Cond. Deep Ruby Red, 196S V\V n1ust sell. Dark \1ith cash. 673-2164 Aft. 6 SJj(), PIMlnl" 671-629-t 1600 Roadst er, 4 spd, dlr, mcchan depend. ~S--7601 blue, pinstriped, x Ir a s. pn1 ER 1--2 Sh hd -• I h 11450. 67j....&IJ3, :h:7-t329 ·59 SCRAi\IBL 1..icc, arp, tp, ~un r.,..., Pus '64 PORSCHE All extra '63 Voh'O 122S. 4 dr sedan, strokf', xln! condition, ex-blac~. int. xlnt cond, .!\lust inrl air. Sacrifice:! S41-8773~ '63 V\V bus, 1,'00d cond, new $800. Xlnt cond. Ev~ or "-''°''·-•~73-0091~=-~==--~ 1 sa~e! $1·199. Take older 1327 E. 15th St.. S.A. clutch. radio, good tin s. "'ke11ds 494--0664 •68 Honda :'.05, XLi'Vl' cond. American car or small do\vn $850. 4g.i-5046 URE&t3. Call Phil .a.i-9nj '67 912 PORSCHE. 5 ~ =;,_,,_"'""'~===--l96j VOLVO, 40,000 mi. Ask-·7o regis. S.fjQ. l\fust sell! or S4:;..a:;34. trans. Xln't Cond. aft 6 1960 VW BUG i"t? SllOO. After 6. 5:>7-96&5 j36..78_16~~~...,--c--l·6' 0 673-4386, 673--65-i6 S.100. !'>40-1193 or 833-6027 . . sg-Honda l\.1ini trail ex· atsun Sta \Vag, lS000[-,.========'-1.=========~=========-1 cellent condition, $14:i mi,_ aulom. R/H, rack. Imported Autos 96001mporttd Autos 96"0 Imported Auto1 9600 &16-1014 SI4j(), Pvt pty, 499-2082 ::;;;~--··-·------;;;;;·---------------.. '69 HONDA 350 1969 DATSUN. 12.000 miles. I $.100. 673-7707 Xlnt cond. A!!.kini? $1600. Aft. 6. 5a7-9665 or 833.QJ27 Auto Service '69 Datsun Piek Up. Radio & & P•rts 9400 h~aler. 4.500 mile. XJnt iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I cone!. s1495· 64Z-5SlS 19671 J Datsun 1600 convt. Good cond. RJt:-I, brand new BEAOf Auto Supply Wholes•!• Prl~s to All Cornplcle i\lachlne Shop SP EED EQUIPi\IENT REBUILT ENGINES 1l23 Vlelorla. 0 1 5-lS~ 18SGl Beach Blvd, HS S-17.(991 * OPEN 7 DAYS *' tires. l\take otr. 64~26.% an$ ENGLISH FORD ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLUME ENGLISH FORD DEALER SALES . SERVICE OVER 60 IN STOCK • 2 &. 4 Dr. l\tode!3 e 2 l: of Dr. D ·~~s e 2 & <&Or. GT t.1oclels '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I • Salion '~'•cons 40 llP V\V cng, needs "·ork Many v. Ith tully au1omatie SS~. Al~ many other VW tn.M., air, radial tires. ra.- partr. :'.6-40 hp. 67>1144 dlo, v\n,yJ TOO(. "'SW titt•. BRAND NE\V SrD. 2 DR. Tt1ller, Travel '425 Sl785 FULL PRICE ORDER NOW AIRSI'REAl\I '69 29' Am-Theodore a.saador lntamatlonal. 'i"in O I S FOR bed•. l.'Omp . ..,11 .. :01\l'd, air R B N D cond., :dnt cond. Pvt o~·ner 2060 Harbor Blvd. TI4.: 644-507l Costa ~1e&a 642.0010 '67 LITI'LE Champ 1.8' BUSIEST n1arkttplace in comp. sclf-cunt'd. Lot1 ol l01\·n. The DAILY PILOT >;tn.~. Sips 6. U11«t t1\icc ClassifLCd section. S 1 v t $1800. money, umc It. effort. Look now:!! WI SNOOT llllU •• , //I TNI OTIU 111'1 lllUI o. FREE GAS :ic-ti6i Yfllh Tht Purchase Sunstl I04 ..... lu. .. 1-- Of A New Corli1a IMAGINU Prlc:•, terlll$ & •<1111tlpmeM •11 2 tleer, Meter N•. 1At2JAl0115. l1111~p ... : lrMIH whli.-16H lef. , ........ -4 .,11 .. fl • ., tltlft -frt. tlltt tlrok9l -po.WM er111 rests -l11t. llt~t -"""Y tlety IMttt. -., .. ....,., -ilff"Y Carty •Hter -.Z •'41· wl11. • .. "-l"l -1elf •dl- ch1tch l IH•k-. '"· •layl ~ & trl111. n.4. rl"ltl -f11JH -'Mt. cir. cold 1Nrt ~·Ip. P•• eel •~f. . --- ------. .------~----. --DAILY PILOT Wtdn1Sday1 January ZQ, 1970 TRANSPORTATIO~=-r.~i!!_!~~~~:::l~~~~~!2!![:'; J PILOT·ADVERTISER Wodnnday, J"LWJ 28, 1970 i'RANll'OllTATION TRANSPOltIDION Tlt\NSPORTATION TRANSPORTATI ON TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION --------Auto ......... ttlO !!'!!'.f~rt '900 U1..i Cort '900 Ut..i Cars '900 UMll C•rt '900 UMll C•n '900 UtHCors '900 Utod Cort '900 UMll C•rt ,,.. PONTIAC l -BIRD LIASI • RENT CHEVROLET FORD lmmod.,.lott01dol1 Ivery .,61 "AMARO RS '68 COUNTRY"'""" •tutlon MIRCURY 1 l96S MUSTANG i;ONV. i-------MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC '68 PONTIAC Cata ltna --------·I ._ wagon 10 pus., a/c, 'TO llc. 289. V-1 w/ m11nual J 11>eecl. '11 Old1 Wagon. PIS. P/B, -------- 1'10 ,OROS & 4 Sp, ''327' ... Air ~. 6#-2:48 '61 COLONY Park Sta. Wq. R I H. IMMAC'ULATEll AJ::. New trans. Low miles. Convtrtlble, P /8, P/D, Low MUeap. Xln't C:Onct S198S Or Stet Olltr, '65 T-BIRD FORD TllUCKS .. 1'. """""' '69 FORD ECONOLI NE pis, P/8, P/W. ROH. Black ""· >tllow body, new "'""" ofi"' ~alt 6 AD popular ~. J'ol.1 Str Tro8 SJOOO * * 6·15-1960 Beit Otr. ~lm ~""~"~":!,;,'' ~$9911~. ~-~~~"'I=~~~==:=:== PONTIAC '61 GTO Stick, Air, Ntw TI r e s , G11uae1. Xlnt Oond. $1815. Call !:nil !il'J.:ml Evu & wke11d1. 1~14. "Air" PS/PB/PW Stereo A Beauty YPW 810 Q,~ o!.~~,h..~; Salt! $1999 Saltl '66 MUSTANG y~. Conv. Nu PLYMOUTH Thoodo, N • M1tter ''T' LINCOLN '66 Mere Cyclone, V-8, mags, top, Xtraa, fact air, 41,000 T·llRD Sale! $1099 Sale! Mister 'T' 645-1441 with 4 1pd, new tires, new ml. $WO, 67s.-0684 e11e1. I---------- ROBIN$ FORD 641-1441 196.5 Lincoln 0on1. , dr '-· s~. 5IM068 '61 VALIANT ""° -Blvd. 21111 u.-Blvd., C.M. ......,,, u.. ,..11ow. aold QLDSMOBILE s n WARRANT\' '67 Finblrd .400. a111o trans. power 1tHrlrw, $1850. '94-99Sl '64 T·llllD Landau Kip, ~t air, tun P-tr, dlr, plush black Int. Banken car. Bou&ht new car! Must &ell! Will fine priv prty. VIX9l( Call Pbil Colt• M.,. llMOlO •58 CllEVY .....0. Qean in loather lnL, lull p., .. Im· USTANG CllllUIY '!S 'Ol<ll 40. -·-_ * EOONOlll\' PLU" * • c t1rtt; '-:,~· ~~i •;1":' !; M oxiru. M\lft .. n 'i'h1~ S.111 $1199 Sale! · """ LIASE JJlll ~':'.. Juit bid ·v:;~ CaJlh tor qulCk ..ie. TIU• 11 weekend. 8:M)-11S6 Mister r•r• '67 LeMa05, p/1, p I b , bucktt 1eatt, %3,:IOO mi, xlnt cond. 6f.f..4585 2100 Harl»or )JJvd ., C.M. VALIANT •e Cad Eldor:ado, full pwr .. job. $300. ~T the low wholesale, a real '61 MU5TANG V.fl, Craiger 1964 OLDS oon111. p/•, p/b, 645•1441 :.Un. pevi':'!oo~P, 10,000 mi.. '66 MaUbu SS saving. Pvt pty. 646-9181 ~la.g1. Good Conct. Bst Dir clean $550.' o~s 646-5&9, 49'1·9773 or 545-0&U. 1---------I, :,;:;69,.-;Po=ntta=c-. °'G"•~::nd:::;--;P;:n"°'x. I 'n'-E°'SP'""f"'RA'iTE;:i;;-;M:.Oll-.:,-,.,Sec:;ll,..AI Fully loaded. Clean! • ---'84 T' ••~ -"I ~. -..:Jj.(1,1, "..... pwr, mac Shift oo • "' v.uant. "'° Call a1ter 5 pm !145-"'29. ,.. e\'eli or wkend1. Diii' $1250. ~1 706, Steve. e11ei> 673-5719 'II Cadillac Eldorado Co"v Zl~ Harbor Bl11d., C.l\1. * SU-2448 * ll.C. $750, bst ofr. 5.1&-3J83 radio, air, vinyl top. Au"' PS/PB Yen:w/Bk Int. New C1n J159. :w;!r mo. TIT US 9800 Now c ... 9800 New Ca rs 9800 Now C•rt 9100 -c.,. -New C1r1 9100 -Cort -'61 T·Btrd Landa", loll pwr., Sale! $l 099 Sal I atr, stereo tape: S19. per mo. • ·et c a1a>de soo. 2 dr !IT, Mister "T" air, vinyl top: 119, per mo. ~ l . SO. COAST LIASING t4 ... 144 SQ) W. Cst Hwy.,~ f4l.2ll2 2100 HarboiBlvd .. C.1'.f. 1es CHEVEU.E ss. ·m -350. 9700 Mww.ie ' 1pd. Hu r s I 1---------1 Llnke1e . E"r fl.fap. wr; P>_Y . CASH ---·-,... ciill us w no erumate. . GROTH CHEYROlfJ Goodyear tires. Nu Palnt. PtJU:e Ottr. Call 642-3700 1965 Convt. Full pwr .. :dnl cond. 10% above wholesale. 96l-3G4 bel ll am, aft 10 ... OlEV '66. aulo, p~ ps, 4 dr . r.lh, llmO. '65 MUSTANG, 2 dr, tape recorder. $825 or AP for SUI M'"'Pl make oUer. ~ C.M. , ::1'U::h ~ '66 r,:usr El CamIM. 27SHP. KI 9-333l 327 cu In. New tnn1 4 -==-c=-:-,-.,--=--1 paint. Chr rims, rlh , Wf PAY Wff pooHraction. 11400. 5.1&-1235 '64 IMPALA Super Sport. FOR YOUR CAR ::;:,.;1bl' '""· •""" """'· '55 CHEVY, 2 doot seda• Seit ofter! ·-· CONNELL CHEVROLET 2828 Harbor Blvd. '61 cti.vtfi1, Staticin Wago11 c.osta M@sa ~1200 pwr steeri"8, aulO. trans. l-"""w"E,....PA7Y.....,f"O"'P"""°-·1 ll!M. - DOLLAR II SS 398 Cbewlll, I gp con- t.or rood, -clean Ulld Clftri 10lt, kl mi. $157S. Must Sell! aD makes. See Georse Ra1" I=-======== Theodore Robins Ford 2000 Harbor Bl11d. c.K. 60«JIO CHRYSLER lMPORT:s WAN'I'a> 1963 CHRYSLER Newport, Oranze 0Jlm.t1es full pwr, nu batt, tires. TOP $ BUYER Ori&. Own. '1000. 642-7690 8llJ. MAXEY n!YOTA or 49'-4911 lS88l Beach Wvd. .,~ ===--,_,--,--.,-Ko Beacb. Pb w..-61 CHEVY, xlnt, polys. tires 1::====~·=:::;;1111so. ·u vw '"'· '900 -· 1411 tm, '4&-3122 .Ulod c ... * FLEET SALE * (') 1968 Olevy : .1p.'llas CONTINENTAL J Door .............. $1700 '63 -BEAtmFUL condition. (5) 1968 Oievy Impalu All l1athe r -p o wr-lo 4 Door . . .. .. . . . .. . . . $11350 mileage. &u.-U22 alt 5 pm Cl) 1968 Ford Country A: wkendl Mda.n station wq • , •• $1900 ··"Olc-~OO:NT=."'. ~H-u-Everyth=--,,.,1ng-, (1) 1968 Ford Galaxia Pamptred by local R.E. Bkr. 4 Door ................ $1600 644-0505 or 644-ll33 l-====5.l4-5290=====:::: I '65-LOADEDI 1 local ........ BUICK $1700, Dill 547--6184, ew1 645-.2221. 1---------1 '66. OUTSTANDING. Air, 1 1961 BUICK SfA WAG. Low mileqe. Oean :-A6-3169 owner. $500 uM1r value. $Zl75 Tenna. ~ '66 BUic• Riviera. lUll .-r. CORVIM alt, vinyl top. Ducket &eats. l---------'2t00. ~1 • '64 CORVETTE Co nvrt JIG Buick. Ou lstandini con-w/hrdtp. Xlnt Q>nd. C.ali dltlon. Ca r e f u 11 y mah,.1,-=:::2400='="='=:134=:=== talned. Reuonabl1. 6'&-1317 COltVAIR CADILLAC 1964 CORV AIR.-new paint &: --------·I Urea, xlnt oondltloll $550 '&S CAD BroU&}wn; climate ~. cont., tilt/tele whl., ~w =-""."-,±13~M~O~NZ~A-.-­ lllt. AM/FM, New paint Ir MM, auto, SoOd 1bapel M5Q. Polfglu tires; II pwrd. Private part,y. 61":>-0094 wind. Top cond. 673--75491==""'""""°'=====-~ev"~· Miii:i:AC<;;;nv.;w.:1-~COUGAl '66 CADll.J.AC convertible. New W-.s & pampa"". All 1969 COUGAR XR-7 a.cee11sories. Far be Io w Hrdtp. w/landau top, ~1 V-8, book. $2450. ~L auto tran1, PIS, power disc '&4 CADILLAC Coi,ipe de Ville brakes, power window., dnt FU11 factory powtr. New dr· glass, factory alr, Xlnt oond. es. Runs perfectly, $1250. Only 11.000 mi. $2998 or IW6.4567 make oiler. J '85 Fleetwood Broua;bam, :Stx air cond. all-extru, onc1,,,.....,="",.;.."=...-~~. oW!wr. $2500. ,9,·389% '69 COUGAR .XR.-T. Xlnt between 6 & t pm. cond. Lt am. wht llhr, full '56 CA DILLAC , Good pwr lncl ·""'·tilt 1tr'1, Transp. car, $90 Or Be1t air. Bank fermt:. t7S-65oT Offer. Call 96M1.IT. '59 CADILLAC. 2 c1oor.F _A_L_C_O_N __ GOOD cond. ;395. -* 89Ul4tl * Falcon '81, 2 dr, 6 cyl, auto, aood coliil, DlUlt 1111 CAMARO ·-· FORD .'68 Camaro R. S. llDll Down ---,,;....;:.;_;;;_......,_ Ii. T.O.P. C.U 'iws-.1114. after 1NS Ford" Sta Wqon. Hun. SP~f. . drtd1 of lwl'I 1pent oft CHIYILLE meUculoUI restoration oC wood 6: exterior. Needs only routine mech.. work. l&'50. ---------1 Pvt Pb'· Eve1. 494-4870 '69 OIEVDLE Super Sport '67 FORD Gal 500, 4 dr, aulo, 396. Nt:w po]n!u tires. p/a. na' tirt1 • b&tt. 1 own. $2Gs. 531-080f. After 6 pm ~pt. car. Jmmac. tn • call 53i-7335. ¥k for GU)' out. $1450. c.u. ~ Johneon, eves. CHIYROLET 1964'=c-or"'AlllilN="'"E-.S"t •"t"l~o n Wqi:m, I.Jr oolld. ·r.-bullt motor. llKIJ. -Ev!!<. • IL CAMINO BIT-l'IG .,, . *"' FORD Gal ""· 4 -Auto trans, power at•rlna· lld., v.a, auto. Goad order. brak_u, atr cond. tao. or b..t otter &f!-1002 Salel Sll 99 s.lel 1964 Falcon Sta. w.,. V-<. Ml1'9r "T" ..,.1441 wtdte. Prtvate party. $525" , 2u.:I Harbor Blvd., C.M. ff4...(Mil0. fW..2'8'J ~ 01EVY Sta Wag. Auto. 19&1 J'ord Galule 1 dr. p/1, P/S, Good Br'ake&. SlSO. p/b, auk». Good trlnli. $250. CaU MS-0060 alter 3 PM. 1~81.;.T-=:..,.,.~=,,,..-- '63-QIEV Mal ibu, 1ta WIJ., 11162 F'ORD V-1, pwr 1Mrtt11, r .l. Jl, EcomUne Van. tact air. 11'1111. l3M2l2 l4lO Cdh. ll6MR6. ·13 ciifVY, a nr. m l ...i. •a 'J'ord v .. wl'n ·-· <r.i pool. BtsT OPTEll. !'!ti!)' ,..,, r,1'!81 NII . ~ -llL I J>ll\. Jim EL CU.lllO, •i CulUlm. 12'1. 'II Lffi W ..... 10 - Au ... ""' •• 111111 °""" All/nl .._ """' ... • T.O.P.-. ~TIO. .;;-;:;;;..;;.;•;;.n=---- .1obnsoz, .. son R1m1mltlrl N'o one, absoiut1ly no 0~1 can make you a bitter dul on a Lincoln-Mercury product than your local cllal- er, JOHNSON & SON. AND who efso can back the sale up with 18 years of Cj)uall,Y Service. This Montego is-the iowest-priced intermediate-size 2-door hardtop in America! • Mercury Mont190 Action Speclal ••• In the body style most buyers want ••• at a price that beats any other lntlrme- dlate 2-cloor hardtop1 comparably 141ulpptd. And wo moan •quipped: • Distinctive pow•r-+hru1t 9rl1le • 250 c;ubic-inch 6°cyllndtr en1ine • White sldew•lls • Deluxe wheel cover1 • Nyon-loop door-to-4oor carpeting • Conce eled windshield wipers • Hlt h-lt vtl ve"tllatlon • Wood-grain vinyl p1nelln9 en the ln1tru""e"t panel • D••p foem pedding for extra comfort • Whe•lb1115" lono•rth1 n meny of our c.o mp•tltors for smooth•r ride Monte90 Action Sp•ci1l: the lowest pric•d inttr· mecll1te 2-door h1rdtop you cen buy-tnywh•re. And don't let enybody tell you different. ~ OUR LOW PRICE 1st AT JOHNSON & SON • ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST USED CARS • Joh1ason 4' Son IJas Tl1e Rep11t•tlon Of Ofl.,..lllg T he Fh1 est Sele ct ion of Vsed Cars ha the County! '6' CONTINENTAL CouJ!•. Ro1ewood l'l'letellic flniih .;.ith black leether l while lend•u roof, l u•ury t111111 ipped, fec.l•ry eir, 1tc. XSR S80 $5495 '61 CONTININTAL 4 Or. 5ed. Ae91111 t old f111IJ!1, l»rown le!!deu roof, l1cther inlt rior. All th1 l11•11ry f11tur•• incl. fe clory eir, VTP7l' $3895 ''7 CONTINENTAL 4 Or. Si d, Baeutiful ''"''1141• l lue m1tellle fi n· i1h with ~tchl111 le•tlier interior. l leck l111d111 roof, fully lu•urv equipped encl f1cfi,ry cir con:' dilionin9. AM-FM r1d io, 11•••• t•pf deck. One• owner c•r. Be•utifully rn•inteh1ed. Lie.. n N 020 $3195 '67 CONTININTAL Cen'l'ertlble. ,ol1r white with lileo.i l11th1r A white tap. Full power eq11ipp14 with f•cl, air, vwv 2il $2995 'H CONTINENTAL Celn'ttllllle. Cer4h1•I reG with blk. l11ther I liflt. tap. f ully l1111urv .qwlppMI & feclory •Ir, 5QA 971 $2495 '69 MERCURY Merqul• Colony '••k tie. WCJnt. '9 P•••· Full power 1qulpped I f•ctory elr. Y'WR 1'41 $3995 '61 MIRCURY Ctle ny P11k St e. W19on1. VTM 7'4 !l'ledium chrol'l'l1 yellcw fi 11i1h with ell "inyl l11terler, Au· lo1t1ell1 lr1111., power d eerint l br••••· Fcc - tory elr c1nd. 81111t1ful co11d. $2995 '69 MONTEGO MX 4 dr. 11cl111t (] lo choote frol'l'l l. All h•.,.• •11!0. trel\1., tad!e, heel1r, power 1le1r., power bre~e1, futory elr, lendeu roof. YWR 091- JAOOO mile1. $3170 '66 DODGE CHARGIR c,.., '"'''"'*!• treM .. re41e I heettr, 11•w•t bralt11, feclory •ir, lur~uoJ1e finbh with metch· Ing inferior, Uc;, $QR 440 , $1795 ''7 COUGAR 2·D00l l.l111e f1•1t wlffi 1t11tchl"t "'""' liuckeh, euto., 219 en9lne, ,,S., llH, new c•r lr•d•·ll1, ''" own1r 1114 1er¥lcecl l»y •ur co111pe11y. VD~ 111 $1991 '65 CONTININTAL 4 door. 0111rt J•i1J1 flni1h with l»lo"' l11iher interior. Fully l11•11ty equipped inc.ludin9 full powcr a. f•clory a ir, U11u111elly cleen. L.11, ouw 9ll $1995 '68 FORD FlOO S' PICKUP ledlo, heeler, '11rch•11d 111w by John1on I Sen, b c.1 llent 1onditlen, U1. Q91fl7 $1895 '67 PONTIAC GTO • 2·0r, H.T. Gold "'ill l'l'leiellie fi"i1h with bl,ck buck1t '''"· aute, lren1., redio l he•tet, pow• It 1!11•i119, fcctery elr, lo11i1,1f11I co"ditio11, TRJ JOJ $1995 '67 MERCURY MAR9UIS 2 Dr. H1rclt1p. le•11tlful 1014 l.elt • fh1hh with 1111tchln9 l11!erl11r, fwlly power equipped, fe•• lery eir, l1Mle11 · teof, ~• ew11er, Dri we11 •nly J0,000 1111le1. U1N fl4 •2491 '6' TOYOTA COROLLA t DSD 4 ,,.i, ''""" r•dl• l heeler, white w/ blec~ h1t1rfor, 11,000 ecluel 111ile1. l eeuffful ••"'· xoc 171 $1391 'M C:ONTININTAL 4 deer 1eden. V,f.,.,t bl•ck flnl1h wlth l»lack le•lher l11terfar. Fully lu•ury equlppecl h1slutli119 fu ll ,ow1r I f•c.tory elr. Us. OY'5 5ll $1795 BARGAIN CORNER ,. o., .. ,.,. .. c.r..r, ............... ~ .................................. .,. 4it,llc.ett ............. tMNi '" .... • "'f 9"llf ...._ ..,. .,. ...r ........ LOOI 'I M 0¥1RI '66 Mt•CUltY MONTCL.t.t• 110. Lk. Ut W 111 (llM, W. M ... '66 l'O•O O.t.U.Xll Ml I Dr. ".T. ILW Ml IHlu C.rl • ID,I:, Mi•C:Ull.Y •OOO• uu Mlllltlllf "·'· ,, ..... llllf 1M lMltil 'II ,o•o .,,LAX•• .. "°'· N.,..., IVP • OU• Cftl ... t UICIC I LICTIU. COHVl&Tlll.8 Lit. """ ... " ..... ,. 111:8 CNltYILllt HIWitOIT U8 Uc. VVU 4M INIH C.') •ff "''' W4""'111t ... ..,...°"' ........ ,,. ...... 1,..11. ll:T 1• ... •OlD TOl lHO ce.i wtrt-. ... an. ,...., '1371 17& '127& '1171 '1171 '2271--'2271 Johnson-son ~a im©@~im ©®iro'ii'a~rn~il'&~ • ~&!m fil m • ~rntm©!!DOOW. ©®!!DCW/A\!Rl • GID CARS ····IAI \ • . ' I. ' \I • .. • • VIRTUALLY EVERY COLOR . . AND OPTION MADE NOW IN STOCK AT ROB.l·NS · VOLUME SAVINGS!-- , . I <I .,, . ~ . .. .., .. ,..., .. ~RE E Leoli fer~ Dl.,11ottic c~:-,~ .... :.:: ~;..~.:.:. ~TIEE' 100°/o PARTS AND LABQR W·AllUN.TY , 4000 MILES OR 94 DAYS · • Cowm o/I fl!Kltulcaf ,.m IMh1dl11t "ti .. , trwthllM ~ NM. ~ .-.1 PLUS ' ltfalla. kttetf 1111d 01ll11111t •n....._ Al ,..ir wort ·--·19·'4 ... wrico .~fdl™"'· SPEC l .tL OF TUE WEEK '68 FORD CUSTOM 4 DOOR SEDAN . 190 VI, eulomelic, keeler, 1pp•. ]2,270 ll'lllts. City cf C. M. cl1t1cliY1 Ger. R1mei11cl1r of ftclor'f wt rrt nly •~1 il1b!1. 11121 29 ) Sit #IS20 $990 '64 AUSTIN HEAlEY . SPRITE Appx. 5/,0100 miles. Red. fH CA969 l '69 Ford Custom • IX. Sod. "' va. "''·· '65 DODGE Dqrt P-St I di1c br1ke1, hlr. City of Cosf1 Mei• Pei· 2 Dr. H.T. A11lorn1 tic, r•· lice c•r. Cornplelely m1in-dio, hei fer, eir -c o"". l1ined et Theoclot• ltobin1. IPEP0 7I) R1rn1i~cler of feet. w1rr. 1w1il. 9J51ICI 14017 IStk. No. 1419 ) 1490 '6 7 Galaxie 500 4 DR. SEDAN F1clo1y 1ir, 111!0., P.S., P.8 .. r1ilio, he1l1•,, WSW. IZB E7l21 $13,0 '66 FORD XL 2 Or. H.T. Auforn1tic, r•· dio, h11t1r, AIR CONDI· T!ONING, pow1r 1!11ring. ISVYSll) 4 DR. SEDAN A11torn1tic, P.S .. VI , r1dio, "••ler, low mil11. IRN- 759) Sit 1l8A. $890 $890 '65 Chevrolet IMPALA WA•ON Air con.I., 111!0., P.S., r•· dio, h11!1r. IPFD614 ) $990 2 Dt. H.T. Fief. 1ir, P.S .. 1wh~ .• RlH, 1lc1JI. co~il. IRVJ6121 $1590 '66 Chevro!e' CHEVILLE S.S. CONVT. V-1, pow1r 1!11rl11'), •~lo· m1lit, r1ilio, h11l•r. !TEG 221) $1090 . . : ' ' •66 PONTIAC · 1t--. CATALINA •WAGON ' ' Autom1tlc, poWer stooring , radio, hoator, air condit ion ing. I 588791 I $1290 ; .· .... ·' . . I CONTINENTAL '4· DOOR SIDAN Full powu . FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING. I ULF 779 1 Stod 1600 · ' ' ~ .. . · '65 RAMBLER A11'1l>1 u1dor 990 "W19011.' Air cond., P.ST 1111~ .. RI H. IPllF6211 , $990 '67 Chevrolet MALilU ·w ... a.·o;. . Air c:onil . A11tol!'l1 tlc, P.5., r1di1, h11ter, 1''"· 21,210 l'!'lil11. IC94472) Stk, # 14SA $1590 '67 FORD COUNTllY·SIDA.N 6 p111. W19011. Feel. 1ir, P.S .. 1uto., Rl l;, 190 V.11 ITRT7591 '67 Datsun · St1tion w11••· ·TWU 01.9 $1 090. '67 PONTIAC LI M'ANS 2 Dr. H.T. A11to1111tic:,· RI H, pewer 1t.eri119, low ll'lile19•. IYWS0491 Stk. # 2171 A $1790 l1dl1 111d h1ri1r, 4 ,,e.d fr1 n1rniu l111. lltDW.425 1 $990 ' . ' '66 JEEP 4 WHllL DRIVE St1k1 lruct 1pp11:. 20,000 l'l'lil11. 110512.A.I '67 LTD 4 DI. HARDTOP )90 VI, 1wlom1llc:, RIH, l1c:lory \1ir, power sl•er· :11,. 1uY11•111 • $1590 , • "Have , . THIOflOH ROllNS, SL . . ' • GET; -UNBE'ATAILE VOLUME .. . : .SAV .llG:t ·· AT THE ~~oMC .. OF THE ' I .( ~ "·s,· · P ·z·~ rta rpest e1ict I ti Th e ·w est" . . , . . ·. ·'ENGLA'ND"S NO ~ 1 SALi$1iiEA1>lR -~ e • II' ' . TRUCK -· CAMPER . I TO CHOOSI IROM .,, & ... -'69 Ma~h 1 4 SPllD, 421 COIU. JIT R•ilo 1n; h11f•r. Approl · im~t1ly 6,600 mi111. (YCL Lill NIW."lHI HOT ONI . ilio, he1!1r. Appi'o•i .. 11•· ly 1 7,50~ ~ii•'· l VTP ll•I " '70 MUSTANG SPOltTS aoo• I '67 FALCON STATION WAClON Awfotf'l1lic, r1il io, .h.1l1 r. !UOE•ltl _.$1390 , AMERICA'·S N.O. ENGLISH FORD! • OVER AO ''IN STOCK ' . AT -CLEARANCE DISCOUNT.$ '· STANDARD.5-DILUXIS..:.. GTs STATION WAIOONS. • MANY Wllll FULLY.'AUTOMATlj: TRANS., AIR°COND., RADIAL TIRES, RADIO, Etc. ' SAVINGS~ SAVINGS! SAVINGS! Test l>rive An Enljlish Ford Today! Winner of 500 RoUy and Rac:e Events Thro119hout The World! New 1969'. · F-250 Pickup F25ARF750SJ FULL PRICE JOIN OUR DRAG CLUll! ' \ ' .. ! • I ; .. I' LU S· ' T111s MEW l smo- .. AUJOMATIC TRANS. . ' , .E:Q.-UlA L $. · · 11 ~us 'l'H (i.lt. · ',100 MILU" PIK' HOURI . ' . . . . iP.!lEY~~J , COSTLY RUAIU .. 1 JI wit .. twit hi S.. C.U· t.nlhl'• flnt '-".41 ...... Hcc..._..._..,_11.i .. .... , FULL ~95 ! talC~. ;~7 -r • • AU. lllllAfNIN• .... 196y .• tfOW AT FINAL CLOSE OUT DISCOUNTS • • NEW 1970 " "9"eo $2974'7 ORDll• YOUU TODAY LIAS! A NEW 1'71 •LL POP,ULAI MAklS-MODILI AUTHOllUI PORD LIASIN6 SYSTIMS DAILT KINTA.LS COMmlTIYI IATU '68 DODGE New ·101/2·ft •. EldQrado Camper ., I . '69 CHEV. WAClON Kitt91wood. 196" VI , 1uto., l1ctory 1ir, P.S., P0il i1, br1,e1, lwq91qe rick, 111 -ittyl inter. Appx. 16,900 mil11. 1027414) IStk. # P14l I} $3190 • OUll · FOR MANCE CORNIR She lb ys . ... Mustan9s Fully EqulpPOd en~ LIST '2014 . Ready for Your PaJC:l P!Ckup or •-New 70. ,',~~~ '1395 OVER 4Q' _ • DISCO,U_l'.fT CAMPERS IN STOCKI ' $619 ,, . ' . I " . '