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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-01-30 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• . -,- . • Police Say ~'!_t:'_~~n ·_'l!~gift - Got Kids to Peddle Drugs .. $500,000 Bond Theft __ • oar • • 0 0 I I-e ' -------------- Modern a s ' Former Tycoon Mu st Serve La,vye1· Sought In Newport Thefi -Nahbed Accused ·of Using KiJ.Drug-Pztshe rs--2 -More · Years An attorney actused of stealing nearly $500,000 In bonds from the estate or an ailing Newport Beach man is today being held in. a Texa.s jail accused or interstate traMpOrtation of slolen pi-oi>erty. Federal oficials in Brownsville. Texas. said today they were hoping to schedule further court action for Escondido lawyer Patrick S. M. Mitton, 47, "for possibly Monday or Tuesday." Mitton ts in custody tn lieu of $500.000 ball following his ;irraignment ·Thursday night. . Federal officers. lipped off by ti.Iexican a\it.horilies, 1noved in on U1e elusive 47- year-olcl lawyer \Vednesday as he al· tempted to return to the U.S. he left more than two months ago. He allegedly crossed the border laat November with nearly $500,000 worth of btftlds filched from the estate of John Sal· mood, 79, of 2164 Vista Entrada, Newport Beach, a retired Union Oil Company ex· ecutive. FBI agents and inv~igators from the San Diego County District Attorney 's of. flee took up th! chase after being ad vised of the theft by Salmond's son, John Sa l- mond Jr. of 16921 Bedford Lane, Hun· tington Beach. The younger Salmond and his mother, 1\1.rs. Helen Salmond of the family home, are conservators of 'the subslanlial est.ate. Mitton was appointed as lawyer for the estate by Sa lmond and shortly al· terwards, it ls alleged, disappeared with m08t of the bonds entrusted to his care. HI!: allegedly wrote a Jetter to lhe younger Salmond in which he w1:1rned the con· scrvator thu1 the bonds v.·oukl not be returned unclss he (~1itlun) received half their value. That letter suggested a mei!ting between the l.wo men at which details or Ille transfer of funds could be discussed. Federal oficials today said there is "absolutely no doubl." lhal the letter 'ame from fl.fltton. Tt was also revealed today that P.lex· can ofCicials had been watching l\fitt.on's rogress through four l\1exlcan provinces nr &Orne lime prior to Mitlon'g arrest. A cderal agenl woukt only !ay that lhe ar est of the Cree spending lawyer had been clayed "in the lnterem or recovering as uch of the st.olen money as possible and ·e th ink our methods havr been ~uc· Mful." The FBI rcro\'ered an c.5t.imated ,000 or U1e stolen boods rrom • Swiss nk and charge J\.1H ton with mi.glneering deal that took lhe bonds out of lhc 1n(ry. That transfer was rffected while ilton w11s living In Mexico, ft w1t1 learn· today. NEW YORK (AP)-AuthoriUes say a father of four who was arrested on drug charges used teams of children to peddle narcotics. Victor Santiago. 39, was taken before Judge l\1ichael Gagliano in Brooklyn Criminal Court where Asst. Dist. Atty. David Epstein said: "This man conducts a Fagin-like activity in the S'ale of drugs, using teams of children in these sales." About 500 spectators in the courtroom applauded when Gagliano ordered San· tiago held in $100,000 bail for a hearing Feb. 5. •·Jf these charges are true," Judge Gagliano said, ''then this man is worse than Jesse -James. If they're true. he may have ruined the health and morals of children and i( any o( them are ad· 'dieted I think he should not spend a. peaceful day the rest of his life." Police said they found 14 decks of heroin, a quantity of marijuana and . equipment used in the narcotics trade Jn ;i Brooklyn basement · laboratory when they picked up Santiago Thursday. They charged him wilh possession of narcotics wilh inlenl to sell. Authorities were tip~ off lo San· tiago's whereabouts earry Tuesday after arresting three boYs -11, 13 and 15 yea rs old -as heroin peddlers on the sidewalks of Coney Island . The boys were cba rged _with.. juyenile .delinquency. .. and.. held for a hearing in Children's Court. The three I.old police they each sold an average of 90 bags of heroin at $10 apiece every day and each cleared about $50 daily . The rest went to the collector. Bay Swap Fo e Claims Public Wary of Deal By JOHN VALTERZA OI 1!11 O.llY l'lltt lll'ft A leader in the coort fight against the Upper Bay land exchange sold today the Jrvir.e Company's formal statement on the is:Sue Thursday "lacked merit and Is a. reaction to a. rising tide of public con· cern." Frank Robinson, one of those In· terven ing in the Superior Court suit brougt:l to test the constitullonallty or the land exchange. said the public, includ ing government orficial~. are steadily be· coining wary of the IO.year-0ld exchange idea. "The !&.st 10 years have teen an ex· plosive increase In awarentss of the ,value and proper use of public lands~ \Vhat some ·officials ha vi!:' thought ' was beneficial JO years ago clearly is seen not to be beneficial now," Robinson aaid. The Weslcliff aerospace engineer added thal two cour,ty supervisors already op- pose the exchange Idea, and hat! one more member of the board voted with them last week, the exchange would have failed. The Robinson statementa followed the Counsulalc Bo1ubed FUKUOKA, Japan (UPI) -fl.1o\otov coc ktails smashtd Wlndowa In the U.S. con.c;ulate berore dawn Thursd111y, police said. Damage wu slight. Police said the pttlOnS wbo threw the firebomb! r~ .. 1"1.,1•1!. comments Thursday by Irvine Company President William Mason, who attacked "self.interest" groups for spurring doubts about the value of the swap. Mason also said Suprvlsor Robert Bat-- lin'1 alternate plans were hastily con· ceived without·technical studies or public hearings. "We opponents are criticized for ha\'- lng an inadequate plan -or no plan - for bay development This is curiouiit, bec:tuse the proponents (the Irvine Com· pany and the county) have .no plan or supporting e n g I n e e r i n g studies themselves," Robinson said. He said the Irvine statement lmplies that oppo1dtion to their proposal ls led by a·smaU 5Clf..iD~est group. "President Nixon, Governor Reagan, Lt. Governor Ed Reinecke and Senators Alan l.'ranston and George Murphy all have made very strong statement& about the need to protect and pre serve ecoJogical values. U joining wllh them to further Olis goal -by going to court to keep the Upper Bay in lhe public trust - makes us a !ltlf·lnterest group, we are proud to accept the label," Robinson said. "We believe that the Irvine Company ultimately will realize that its own In- terests are best served by more a con.- temPorary and/or generous altitude. "Maximum expklltation of tile Upper Newport Bay waterfront is surely not in th& •p~Jl <>! lho •;os as expre....i by Prtslden l Nixon In his Sta1e of tho Union ~'"Sq~He:1 flobinson added. ---·t WASHINGTON (AP) -Billie Sol Estes. a one-Ume fertilizer tycoon whose financial dealings became a national scandal. lost today his first bid for parole (ram a JS.yea~ r~eral prison term. The U.S. Parole Board rejected the a~ plication or Estes, 45, who would have been eligible March 5 after serving one· third of his tenn, imposed for swirtdling fin ance companies. Parole Board Chairman George J. Reed said the full eight-member board made the · decis ion after a complete . reyiew of the record . In the Est~s case •. The board set December 1971 for its next review of the decision. The Pecos, Tex., businessman Is serv· Ing his sentence for mail fra'ud and con· spiraey to defraud lhe finance companie11 al the federal correcllonal Institution at Sandstone, Minn. lie has been in· carceralcd-therc since·Dec.-15, 1966, after begiMing his prison life as a convict at Leavenworth, Kan.~ federal prison. Lltlle has been heard of him since he entered prison. Thrre remains little of the Estes magic tha t made him a ·millionaire· in ·his 20s and extended Ills tnnuence far beyond his Texas home. Estes arrived in Pecos, Tex .• in 1951, in debt and lot.Ing a battered brief case but In five years he had made bis first ntililon and was on the way to building a mlJ]tlmilllon-<follar empire· on fraudulent credit. 'nle emplre-lnc1uding fertilizer, graih e I e \. a lo r 1 , cotton allotments and a variety cf VI.her businesses -collapsed in l!lti2 and · the resulting thunder reverberated in Washington and on Wall Slrcet. The Bible.quoting "boy wonder of West Texas agriculture" reached the end of the road on March 29, 1962, when federal agents Jailed him on charges he bad swindled major finance companies across I.he • naUon by peddling $24 R}.illion in worthleu pa per, DR.HAYAKAWA NOW JN PILOT San Franclaco'1 sharp-tongued educa- tor, Dr. S. l ... Hayakawa, 1Ull has .a lot to say, And, starting today, be'• going to say ~e ·or It Inca. weekly column which will puhllshed by lhe DAlLY PILOT. Dr. layakawa's first column appe.tts todl\y on the editorial page (Page 8). Jt wlll conUnu9 as a regular feature 101 tbe edilorial·P•ie each Fridaytrrthe OAIU"'Y rum. ·, -• • -.. .' • A ·,L , UPI T ACCUSED_NA OTICY FAGIN'•TAKEN TO COURT. Edwaril '-BIHlo ~ogod Supplier of Chllld' Drug Poddlora DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * FRIDAY -AFTERNOON, JANUARY 30, 1970 VOL. il. NO. U. 4 l l!CTIONI, 42 l'AGll • 'Is -Daddy Coming?' Wives of POW s R~turn . to U.S. ' Knowing a· . -· tbm ·whea Jhey depwd, f Southoin,c • ll 1 ~ r n h women arriv In Los Anplu ~.en­ ding a roundot.tie-world merey mlulon in behalf of men Itliulng Jn the Vietnam war and tjJelr fa.niilie5. r.frs. Carole Hanson of 24112 Blrdrock Drive, El TOro, and her three traveling ct,mpanions landtct at 9:25 a.m. &board Pan American fll~t 846 from Tokyo. "Js daddy comihg·home?!'. a!iked-TOOd Hanson •. 3, who 1has never seen Marine Corps Capt. Stephen P. Hanson, believed held as a prisoner of ·war by North ·Viet· nam . His weary mother burst into tear1 at the unhappy underli:nJng of the POW "·ives' quest ln search of word of their pilot husbands' fate. The homecoming wiu deeply emotional, compared to the cool reception the party received in some Communist nations and the tK:lpless ,.ympatby· they w~re .offered · elsewhere. • '"The Norlh Vietnamese officials were completely ~nyleldlng,"· she .told ·news· men .-at ~ p r e s 11 conference. The AEC Disclo ses Exp.erts Testing Bizarre Bomb • women came back wiillou1 kamiq .. abloluttly anytbtng." !fowovet, &he &lid ihey felt Ibey bad spread "a Jot of ond tr:1t1 ndlng everywhere we went . , , Jt was a long Urf)'lg ttfp but [ think it WU worth Jt." . Mrs. Hanton f!l!:W here from J apan along with· Mrs. Jack' Hartty or Covina a.nd MrS. Roosevelt Hestle a'nd Mrs. Arthur Mearns boh ·or tos Angeles. The ·worilen bad flown to Japan after a trip to Vieqtiane, Laos, where they con- , tc.cted .. Vietnamese. authorities~ but ·were refµsed entry to North Vietnam. T·wo Fullerton Fliers e~cape _ Two Fuiierton men were In satisfactory condiUon at St. Jude H06pital today after their plane craahed this morninr at Fullerton Municipal IAJrport. ·The crash is the secood' lnJthree day1 lnvolvtng. Fullerton Airport. · Police said pilot Ray L. Stoddard,.4't, of 748 E. La.s P'alrnas Drive ·and lits passenger George E. Ferguson, 50, of m E. Hennosa· Dr~ were apprGSChing the airport for landing in tffelr 1949 Stinson 150 w~n the mishap occurred. "They apparently came in too tow and caught the fence at the end of the runway with the lan~lng gear," o(flcers said. The p)ane flipped ,over and .came . to rest upside down on the runway , The two oCeupants suffered face. and seal? JaceraUons and mulUple bruises, a WASHINGTON (AP) -The United hospital spok .. man said, State.! disclosed today 1ts nuclear Wednesday afternoon a La Habra pilot. weapons ei:perts have lately been testing Gleno Foss was killed on his landing ap- •• ·~~ ..... 1wi1>1y .~-to.~l•kt ·when !iii plaM nlded ·a~ "bitam!~""""<'"°"'"" !llO.~-ol.J!FI radlo•llltrallllTltttlng !l"b .nejl""!~'adiwl'•t<!Wet:and crashed>th•••pming lot near sl;;.\:i!i;b rog$9b., ,.,i~;i'., Ule'Santa Ana Freeway. go ~ re.vea"':'l' :t:re • • . wou · soinet' 11.YJ 1~Pletmg iei; .. , · pa ' . facUIUet for producing' some of : Oraage ·C:Oan its ~ st modhn present wetpoo!I -tn.i clulg warheads for the 'Safeguard'• a.n llistlc missile system. · . T .. atomic ·energy commJssion told a~ bo\h·pJ'9[«ts.ln lls annual r•l)Orl·to Co · iess' lowering the tlreviqus1 12 m ths·~ ·,. _··. '· The commjss)on gave no detalls about the new weapons concepts. But AEC weapons ot:ficlala have previously disclos- ed to Jhe Auoclated Press Jhat: -The United States Is trying to develop "pure fusion "'.eapons" -that ia. hydrogen bombs and mlsslle-wartieod! lhat would not r.qulre an A-bomb fission trigger and-would therefore be: free of radioactive fallout. -The -AEC Is alJo still trying the develop the fearsome .. neutron bomb," which bas been deacrlbed u a kind ol death-ray-weapon, --commJsslon adtnUsts malnlaln a DeW klnd or hydrogen bomb -I "later bomb~ -ls a lheonoUcal pQOSlblllt,y, hilt a highly remote one. A laser bomb would be 1n H-bomb In which the intense heat of a IMer beam - perhaps the most powerful and con· centrated form of light In the universe - would be used to trlggerthe hydrogen ex· 'J)loslves, Instead of t.he A·bomb trigger now rtqulred. W~ther ' Gusty northeast wind1 wUI send weekend highs into the low 70'1 along the Orange Coast, While'cold weather gear is prekrlbed for ~ nighttime hours. · ' I INSIDE TODAY How do tht, ntw changes fn t1te MoUon Picture A.uociation'1 movit raUng code afftct ~ou, err 11our kida1 A complttt 1zplano- tWn ii giveM In todOJ(I Wee"" end1r .tectJon. MelNt• ""'* ,. MIHIMlel J1i1tWt .. --" ... __.. 1t It... """ II ....,.. . ..,,. ''"" ~· , .. ,, --" --.... w-. Wllltl ,,.... 11 w ............. , .. , WW ....... .. w ......... " .. ' • • l I DAl\.Y "I.Of $ Frida)', Jant;Jl) JO, 1970 ;::Morris Bu ys Viejo Co. • •• •• -i~ ·~~ Corporate Control Sold for $20 Million ~ Tbt Mlalao ~Company, whkh last .,:. fur outpocod oil otb<r Oranse County ': ""'dlwetofen la lllt tl new home.s, hu sold ~;, corporate coatrol to Philip Morris Inc. 't for .. mllllon. ·~~ 'n>I • mllilon investment, said ·:· Millkm Viejo Company spokesman to- :; fllJ, wtD be the working capltal to insure :; • contlnuaUoa or construction on schedule :l' dupite tbe expensive money market. : Tama Jiving the cigarette company :£ · caatrol of the volln.g stock of Mission Vie· ~ jo required the cash investment for coo- ';_{ vertJble debentures, stock and options. "§. • Under the agreement. Philip Morris :! · ruy al&O purchase a majority of all '.-! outltaoding stoci: by exercising options :t .. and paying an additional $13.5 mUllon. 'Itle options may not be exe.rclstd sooner Ulan three years or later than five years. Mission Viejo will continue lo ORCrate autonomously, It was announced, headed by James E. West, chairman. and Phlllp Reilly, president and chief operating o(· ficer. Policies will not change, lt was an· nounced. AC"Guisltion of Pt1lsslon VlejtJ Company control, was the first expansion ,by Philip Morris into the ('(Immunity development field. The cigarette company has in· terests in brewing. razor blades, packag· ing, chewing gum, specialty chemicals and papers, plastics and hospital sUp- plies., Organized in 1988, the 11,000 acre land development has already built, sold and fllled 2800 homes on 2,000 acres where cattle grazed four years ago. PopulaUon of the-planned community ts now about 11 ,000 and ls expected to be more than 50,000 by the end o( lhe decade anC 100,000 by 1990. Five housing projects are now under t'Onslrucllon and a sixth ls to open soon. House prices currently range from 521,900, said a company spokesman, to 163.000. The ~1ission Viejo Company also has ln its development a shopping center, schools. and parls. * * * i~President Writes Surplus Signal Bares ~In $201 Billion Budget Bolsa Chica Land Purcha se WASlllNGTON (UPI) -President Nl.i will propose Monday a llOll.17 billion bud(tt for the year beginning July . l, with 1 surplus of ,l.'33 billion. A cut of nearly fl billion ls planned In milltary ,, spendln(. '!be o,ur.., which we .. confirmed by th< Whlle B-. ue contained In the Pmident\ annual ecooomlc m~ to coog;.u. Al oruniaOd frequet11 In recent weW. Nixon planl to-I baJancod . budget. there was no breakdown of the budget in the eeonomic report. The detailed figures will be sent to Congress in a separate message Monday. The economic report did show Nixon envisions a modest l5Urplu11. The economic report Jists projected ex· penditures ror the federal spending year running to mld·l971 of $200,711,000,000, with receipts totaling $202,103,000,-000. That would leave a ~rplus o r ,1,331,000,000. White House Presa Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler told reporte:ra: "It ls considered to be a soUd balanced budget whfch h3s taken into account the need for restraint in federal spending in today's economy. "It Ls responsive to n8'1onal needs while keeping in mind that the major priority facing the ·counlJ'y ls the health or the economy ... Under the general heading or national defense, the report of the President's ecooomJC •dvlllera U!ts p r o j e c l e d military 1!1<1ldlns totaling $73.58 billion in the ne\f fiscal year, Thla would be a cut ol 1$.15 bUIJon lnJln die level of the cur·· rent yur. More than offRtUng this would be a rtae of some $6.5 billion in the second big· gelt category of spending -"income security," including Social Security. That would push the totll to an estimated $50.31 billion. An increase In Social Security payments went into effect Jan. J. Spendlq on health programs Is ex· pected to rl.6e, according to the economic Dynamite Blast Hurts T een ager An orange teenager· WIS at home today foUowina: a dynamite accident Thursday in the El Toro area that sent him to South Coast Community Hospital iT!. South Laguna with a gou~ wound in his right side. SberUra deputies said Harry C. Muncberyan, 18, o( 1735 Morning Side, :appa.renlly drove to a remote area near Cook'a Comer lo explode six dynam ite caps. He hooked them to i n old car bal· tery on lhe back of his pickup truck and wu adjusUng them when one exploded. A Marine Corps demolition team from El Toro Air St.aUan picked lip the \ID· detonated caps at the scene and 10 more from his home, depuUes sa id. DAILY PILOT ....,... ..... " ... "", ...... --_,..., C-M- OltMGI. co.lit l"Ull.IU41HG C<W.f"AMY' ••ll1rt N. W~..f l'rt•-..w 1'11111"~ . Jtc\o II:, c ... 1 • ., 'll<t l'l'nOHrll lfMI 6-r., ,,,........, The111•1 IC1e•ll ••Uw . Tlie111t1 A. M11r,lii111 ~"""-••nw -c. .. ~l "' Wlllf .., ''"'" ~ lff<:.11; nu w.1 ta-. ,., .. .,,,.. ~ 1 .. tti1 1n ,_t _.._ .. .,_........, hK'lt l!t'I HtCJI a.111..,.,,.. oa.a.'I" .. II.OT, •1111 ,..IOI 11 ~ lllf Ill ........... ""'"lot' ,,u., ---._ • ..., llt _.. ..... it ..... -~ .""" .._, .,.... '-•• ~-. tft!Mllll .... 9'loCll .. "WI!""' \ltllty, ........... -,...._. .......... °''""" (-1 Jl\olj1'11lr19 ~ iww1111 ,...,,. ,.., •• :nn Wtt• ..... • .... M "'-' k«lll. ..w "' w......., ........ '"" .......... Ttl•li1•1 f,141 64Jo41S1 C1 .......... , ...... 661·1671 ~ 1tff • .,,.,.. (•"' ~ '*""""'· ... -.... i... l illltoret ..... fllfillrltl -« t4YWllW_,. ,........ _., i. ,.,..a.tt11 w11Mwt .,,.,.111 "'" ......... ~--· ~ ( ......... ,.111 .. '"-' l•tt'-.... CMll M-. C.IN«11Lf, ~°"-.., ...,....,. u.• -"'"' .,. ,,.. .. .,_. , ...... ,, _ • ._,., ...,, .. ,_, t.IM _ ... IV. \ adviaers, by 11.7 billion lo Just under 11s billlon. The "education and lnanpbtrerlf caleROl1' shoWS>l IQ.I bll~op rise to ~.I bUUon. i tDesldea defen.se. major act1viUes beJng dlt will be the space anJ farm programs -space by nearly half a billion lo SS.4 billion lind agriculture by almost ' Ml bUllon lo 1,1.3-~Ulloo.' '., · ' ' ' Coutract Review News Sm·prises Douglas Aircraft A surprise announcement that award of the $7 billion F ..JS aircraft contract to McDonnell-Douglas Aircraft Corporation may face a review came as just that to the firm's Huntington Beach aerospace branch today. Penl.agon officials in \Yashington an· nounced they arc dC<'ply concerned abut the company's hiring policies, based Qn provisions of federal equal opportunity employment laws. ''Hrnnunm." pondered Larry Vllsky, public relations director at McDonnell· Douglas Astronautics Company. whi ch would have no direct role in production of the lighter-bomber. "l koow absolutely nolh· g about It," he said. addini that he wo d consult ex· ecutives in Santa ti.1onica o at the Onn's headquarte;rs in St. Louis. The Air Force disclos that before the contract was awarde(f last month, of· flcials railed, as required by law, to con- duct an audit or McDonnell-Douglas to make sure the C<1mpany was fully com· plying with equal opportunity slandards. A Defense Department spokesman said it was basically an Air Force responsibility to conduct the audit. The spokesman, Jerry Friedheim, said he would not go so far as to say that f\.1cDonnell -Doug\as was in danger of los- ing the contract. but it was obvious the matter was being given unusual attention by the Pentagon. Secretary of lhe Air Force Robert c. Seamans Jr. broke off a visit to Rainey Air Force Base in Puerto Ri co and flew to St. Louis to meet with company of· ficlals about the contract provisions. A Pentagon statement po r t r a y e d Seamans as deeply concerned that the p1econtract audit of the company's hiring procedures had n:t been conducted. Fricdheim declined to say specifically that the hiring of Negro e1nployes was in· \'Olved. Friedhein1 said lhe lack of the hiring review \Vas called to the atlenllon of Seamans 8nd Secretary of Defense l\1elvin R. Laird by the Rev. Theodore l\1. Hesburgh. chainnan of the President's civil rights commission. Friedhein1 did not say how the matter came before J~csburgh . By JACK BROBACK Of tM o.llY f'lltt Stefl Purchase or approxim&~ly 1,900 acres of the Bolsa Chica propP.rty was an· nouoced today by the Signal Companies. Forrest N. Shumway, preslder.t, said the purchase of the potential marina development was made by t w o subsidiaries, Signal Oil and Gas Company Purchase was made from the five Bolsa Co1 porations, owners of the real proper\)'. and Bolsa Tenant~ in Common, owners of royalty and net profi ts in· terests under existing oil and gM leases \vith Si gnal Oil. No sales figures was disclosed. Shumway said Signal p1ar.s to develop the property into a water-0riented com· 1nunil y, relocating oil and gas ope.rations compatibly with the planned urban development. Long regarded as the most choice potential marina property on the Orange Coast, the more than three square miles is almost completely surrour.ded by llun- li ngton Beach but r emains unin- corporated. Site of a turn ol the century gun club, the property presented a particularly dlf· fi cult problem for development. Heirs to gun club members who held shares were sca ttered throughout the world. The live Bolsa Corporatil,)ns were put together and acquired title to the pro- perties about four years ago. Since then. plans for development hav.: been recur· rent rumor&. Signal Oii holds Qi\ and gas leases on most of the property and developinent by the company is considered the only prac. tical method. Signal will cluster oil wells, similar to the Huntington Beach Com· pany meth<>d, on the Huntington Seacllff Properly directly east of the Bolsa Chica lands. Shumway said planning has begun for the Crt!ation Qf an urban complex estim11tt'd to provide commur.ity services and housing for approximately 50.000 peo- ple. One big stumbling block lo proper marina de\·eJopment is an opening to the Pacific Ocean. This has been under study by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for several years. A large portion of the 1,900 acres is TJGW covered with lagoons. Sau Juan Readies For Swallow Return Plans are well under way today for celebration Qr the return of the swallows 10 San Juan Capistrano in ~farch. The annual Fiesta de las Golondrinas is scheduled for ~1arch 18 thorugh 22. J\·lembers of the San Juan Capistrano Fiesta Association are seeking assistance of any residents interested in helping \\'ith the five-day event, y,•hich includes an aqlieslrian parade, trail ride, barbe. l'Ue and program in the mission . S·uaothe1·ed lfitfa Gr atittade Show business promoter Frank \Verber (left) embraces comedian T.01nmy Smothers afte r lhe latter testified in his behalf during \Verber's n1arijuana possession triAL tSec story, Page 9) . • • ' • • • • • • • • ' • ... ~,. .. • ,!! Sl .. • • • ... • ' • -• < • • • ' • ~ ~ • • • ' ~. ~ • . • • ' .,, ,. ,, ,.,.._,. :;;.,.; •;.->~ ,,. ~ .. .,. .... :,.....-' \ B i rds of a Feathet• . • •• • • .. • • • • "~ •• .. . • • • ·'• J .I' • • • .. Uncounted thousands of black starlings (with the a ppropriate Latin name of Sturnus Vulgaris) line the phone wires in Redding, Calif., around sunset each day, splattering sidewalks, parked cars and some unlucky pedes1rians. Massive use of shotguns to disperse the birds has been considered, but as yet no solution has been lound. A Groovier Pad Police Expect More Arrests ' Nixon's Florida Heliport Costly I n School Oash Special to the DAlLY PILOT KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. -What does the waterfront White llouse here have lhat the· Western 'Vhile House in Orange County doesn't? A surer-sophlstica.led helicopter pad that cost ~7 ,358 more than the 1M>dest, if larger one, adjacent lo President Nix· on's San Clemente villa, that's what. The chopper pad built out over the placid Atlantic tidelands makes the one .atop Cotton's Point look like nothing but a few square yards of concrete poured ove r a bulldozed dirt area. And that's precisely what it is, with a mere $15,000 construction cost to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. An executive of the firm which built ~ixon '3 new l.SQ..square-foot pad al Key Biscayne, with a CQmparaUve $342,258 rricetag, revealed the cost today in Florida . EC:mtnd Thornton , vice president and director of the Atlantic Foundation Co ..... pany, said much of the expense results from deep-drl .. en concrete pilings lo st:~· port the structure. He said ii lies offshore from a two.acre heliport only J,OOC feet from the property Jin~ of President Nixon's bay!ront com· pound. Nol only that, but the Key Biscayne heliport is equipped \lo'ith such James Bond paraphernalia as electric eyes, sonar gear to detect underwate r swim· mers or suspi-:lous watercraft. Thorntcn didn't say ho1v the President v.·ill hit the beach , howe,•er. Santa Ana investigators said they havt arrested a teenage girl on assault charges and expect more arrests in the \Yednesday attacks by Negroes on white sltJdents near Santa Ana Valley High School. Juvenile investigators Larry Nemelka and Harold Graves said they anUclpate r.1ore arrests of "both blacks and whites" in the street assaulls which have taken place around the school since last week. One youth was arrested Thursday and is j,! custody at Juvenile Hall. Officers said the incidents were ap- parently sparked by the beating lasl week of a white boy by Negro youths. The boy's olde r brother, who attends the high school and four or five friends Tues· day attacked 14-year-0ld Leon Williams near Jerome Park in retaliation for the beating. Victim of Westminster •·we hope to have the kids involved in Tcesday's incident in custody soon," said Nemelka. . Wednesday momlng random gangs of black teenagers totallin g nearly 100 roamed the streets nea r the school .. beating on any white kids who got In U,elr way or couldn't run," the in.. vestigator& stated. Carburetor Fire Critical A 29-year old \Yilmlngton man Is in cril!fal condition today at the Orange County t-.1edlcal Cente r burn unit from in· juries suffered Wednesday night in a carburetor flre near a Westminsler filling station. Charle! Hae!linger suffered bums on his upper torso, arms and face around 7:46 p.m. when gasoline he was pouring into the carburetor of his stalled automobile suddenly Ignited, Westminster lire investigators said. Haefllnger's brother. 'Yllliam. ol 8402 Sterling SI., \Vestminster, n.lso received bums and \lo"as listed in good condition al Westminster Community Hosp l ta l . William Haeflinger's wife. Charlotte, was treated and released from the same hospilal. An alert service station operator who witnessed the accklent at 8 4 6 O \Yestminster Blvd. ma11aged to put out Charles Haeflinger's burning clothing wilh a fire extinguisher, saving him from further injury, firemen disclosed. Firemen said the man. Pete Lindgren, ran across the street, meeting Haefiinger headon and at the same time blasting away with the extinguisher. Officials at Valley High said they will instigate: a full scale investigation o['the incidents. Dr. Charles Hess, principal of the school, said the attacks have all been off campus and have not been reflected 1n student behavior on campus. Santa Ana Valley has a student enroll· rr.ent of 2,050, a third of which arc Negroes and Mexican Americans. Bel Air Fire Probed BEL AIR (UPI) -The cause o{ a fire which blackened two acres of brush in the mountainous regions north ol here was being invesUgaled Thursday. S ale WITHIN A S ale COMFORT & STYLE AT A PRICE CHAIR STARTS AT 5129. AVAIL ABLE IN A LARGE SELECTION OF COVERS AT TH E UNBELI EVABLE PRI CE OP $129. COMMODI ON SALi AT 1159 DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE Nl!WPORT .BEACH 1727 Wostdlff Or., 642·2050 OHH PllDAJ 'flL t INTERIOR S Proft11lon1I Interior 0.1lgntr1 Avallabl...-AID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 Norlh Coast Hwy. ONN ,.llAY 'tlL f ,, I I I i I ,I I I ! . ... .. • > : .. •, J ----=---· ~· _, . VOL. 63, NO. 25, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PA§ES .-. -.,. ORANGE .COUNTYi.'CAUFORNIA • FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1970 ' fugitive C ~ ;·-. ----. d' ap~ure ·. Beach Man 's Tip LedtoHunt inJ:Texas An attorney accused of stealing nearly $500,000 in bonds from the estate of an ailing Newport Beach man ls today being held In a Texas jail accused of interstate transportation of stolen property. Federal oficials In Brownsville, Texas , said tod.ay th.ey were ho])iog to sch~ule ftlrther court action for Escondido lawyer :Patrick S. M. Mitton, 47, "for possibly Monday or Tuesday." "Mitton is in custody in lieu of $500,000 bail following his arraignment Thursday night. Felferal officers, tipped qff by-Mexican authorltlea, moved in on ihe--elusive ~J. year~ld lawyer Wednesday as he at- tempted to return lo the U.S. he left ~ than two months ago. ·Re allegedly crossed the border last No~·ember with nearly $500,000 worth of bonds filchtd from the estate of .Jobn Sal- mond, 79, of 21M Vista Enlrada. Newport Beach.. a retired Union Oil Complny tx· ecutive. · FBI agents and investigators from the San Diego Count)r District A.ttomeY'• of- fice took up the chase after bein1 advJsed or the theft by Salmond'• son, Johll S.r- mond Jr, of 16921 Bedford Lane; Hun- tington Beach. The YOWll!er Salmond and bJJ motller, Mrs. Helen Sabnond of Ibo family home. are conservators of the substantial estate, • · Mitton was appOinted as .lawyer for the estate by Salmond and s'hort!y af- terwards. it is alleged, disappeared with most of the bonds entrusted to hJs care . He allegedly wrote a ld.tf!r to the younger Salmond in which he warned the con· Pentagon £oncerned Douglas Firm Puzzled Over Contract .Review ' :· , ... servator that iJ!e ~s would net ·be returned unelss·he (Mltton),nceived half tbeii' Vi lui.·· · ~~ ·· .. · - -, That·.: ·1euer · sngtsted -• metUng betW~:~ .two..,.,, •I whi<b 4elalls of. the transfer ol fuodf Could be dlscuued. Fed8'1J oflclal.-toc1ay aald lilere 'fs "a~~IJ.-~;~·. M the :J.<t1er camf; from ¥1tt.Qn. . It WJS also revealed· today that Me1:- t1an. olflcla)I bad .. -walcblng Mitton'.• Ptoll;'f' thn>ulh four Mexican province• r<ir-aom•·'i6ne' J"lor lo Mllloot's arre11.· A federal a1t11t WoWd only aay that the ar- rest of fhe· ffet SJ)endi.ng lawyer had been delayed "in the .tntere.sl.of recoW:rlng as much of the stolen mODey u pot!ible and ~·e think oUr ·methods . have. been iuc· cissful." Edison Plant -- . . He&rfug 6pens . ~~iµ T;ue~day 11 ·-W:Ji!~·~ -... ~ ~.:, ' C~;-Com"'1'f appllol!Qo . • . sa A.sur;prise announ~ment.tbat award of the $7 billion F-15 airctiift contract to MCDonnell-Oouglas A.lraaft C:OrporaUon may face a review came as just that to tf!t ·finn's Huntington Beach aerospace branch today. it ·wos basically an Air Force tol@ahlf:lli,Jioo!lr;Jlllo!!Ja•Hant ...... -lbittty to COl1'll<:I the .audit. -,.;n, .............. _ \ ""-'-" .. , • -·Tb,·spobsman, Je1TY Rriidlieiln, said -"'~ .. ,,_r t'' ~ J ' Ul"I 'nl""91tlt Pentagon officials In Washington an- nounced they are deeply concerned about ~-company's hiring pollcies, based on provisions of federal equal opportunity employment laws. .. Hrnmmm," pondered Larry Vitsky, · pt.1blic relations director at McDonnell- Douglas Astronautics Company, Which would have no direct role In production or the fighter-bomber . "I know absolutely nothing about it," he said, adding that he would COflsult ex- ~~~ves.ln Santa Monica or at the rirm 's ~uarters in St. Louis. ·'1be Air Force disclosed that before the ci!itract was awarded last month. of- ficials failed, as required by law, to con· d!ict an audit of McDonnelWooglas to rfla:Ke sure the company was fully com- plying wllb equal opportunity standards. A Defense Department spokesman said ho would not I•"' Ill ••to1ia71thal ~· · · • ' ' ' '· " McflolUlell·DllUglas was la ....,....., Joo. ~ Olanty• .. m ' t!ftd elihl Wit· ing the conlract. butll·w• ·-the neuea to U..10 a.m.· -OD called by·tlle , matter was being iJven wwual attenUon Catltomla ~. UtiUtlet ~n by the Pentagon. (PUC). '!be hWinc will tab place Ir. the Secretary or the Air Force Robert.. C. commiuitn'* Lol·.Angeles offices,1 S~ Seamans Jr. broke olf a .v:tstt ·to Ramey Office BtdJ4ias.10f s. Bl'OldWay. ~ Air Force Bue in Puerto Rico and· flew All100i ,_ !Clleduled ·to.ie.tlfy are: to St Lolli< to meel with ...,~ ... 1. Willl.un .. FUd>eo), • OrlnJO Couqty Air fidala abool the contract provisions. PoUuUon. Ci>ntroi ·Officet ~· IWO, ol: l\i> A Pentagon statement p Or l r a Ye d engineers; Dr.-0.,C. T~ylor, a:ctln&'Cilrec· Seamans as deeply cllncomed that the tor of the Unj~11ty · of CaUlornla'a precontract audit of the corfipatiy's hiring stateWide A.tr PolJQUoD Retearch iCtnter procedures bad n:t be<n conducted. •t.·U.C, ·JU..mte .. ·aftd Georp J, Taylar, Friedbelm declioe<f to say specifically adrnijllal(a~ of the .Catllornia Atr that the hiring of Negro employ.,.,.., In-Resoun:n J!oard'• .air quaUty manqe- volved. mtnt1 (ll'Olrtm. , · Friedhelm ssld. the tack .ol •tlle'b~inl Alto· IClleduled l<l'ip~· are Ill!. A. J. · review was called to &be · attention of ~ dlalrman;alrtbe ~ Seamans •od Sectttary of ,Delen,. /Jr 1Uloun:U l!oard and Ci!. Tech P"" lo1elvin R. Laird by·the Rev.-Theodore M. feMOrwho .ia 1cknowltdged catiomride u Hesbutab..._olilinnlo of the Presi<lenl'1 ""'~ ln·the alr-pollullOn field; Dr' civil riilhts<&nm1"1on. Friedhelm did John -II. .GoJclmilh, head of the llate not say bow the matter came before Depanlnerit .. of~ Htlltl\'1 Environmclital Hesbur1h. EpldemlololJ. Unil ii1d meteorologltl Erwin KJ~. -The Ecll!Qt1 Company ·Is ... king PUC perm.Lssion to build two·Jle'i\'·unlti at Jt1 iSll'U'l'Y ROB ERTO OE ~A PAZ ESCORTS MIT TON ,..jiill l'lnd1 Ml11lot1 Attornoy In Br0wn1vlll1, Tex, Billie Sol Estes Loses First Appeal for Parol e WASHINGTON (AP) -Billie Sol Estes, a one-time ferUllur tycoon whose financial dealings. became a natlOnal ~aodal, bt.tod~y hhi first J:>ld for parole fr9fn a 16-yeJr .federal prl!on t,rm. 'M>e U::S. Parole Board rejected the-ap- plication of Es'.cs, 45, ·who W011ld have been eligible'March 5 after 6ervlng one. third of hill term, imposed; for &windling finance compinies. Parole Board' Chatrman George J. the road on March 29, 1962, when federal agents ·jailed him on charges he had swindled major finance ~mpanies across the nation by peddling $24 million in worthlese paper. The government said Estes. indUtm fannen .and others to sian mort.ga1es listing mythical fertilizer lan~s as col- lateral and then ·sold the mortgages. to finance companies. He reputedly listed 33,500 nonexistent tanks. valued at about $1,000 each,. for a It-county area tha t could use no mare than 400. McDonnell Dougla s Earns $117 Million During '69 . - HttnUngton -Bud! plant. -Fttchen hos denied a county license . on the O'OtJnds that expanalon will lead to. violaUon of the county'1·amo1 control law. Reed aid t6e f1~1J eight-member board made the · decision after a• complete re.Vfri"'Of the record"in the Esteii-case. The'boilrd set December 19?1 for its next review of the decision. City :f uts_ P arks Off Jjniits During Buil.µiig -W ork The Pecos, Tex., businessman is serv- ini hls sentence for mail fraud and con· .... spiracy to defraud ~e finance companies at" the rederal correctional Institution at Sa'nilstone, Minn. He has been in· carcerated there since Dec. 15, 1966, after beJinnlng his prison life as a convict at Letvenworth; Kan., federal prison. He was convicted on lttarch 28, 1963, and sen tenced to 15 years In prison but actually did not enter pris'ln until Mari:h 5, 1!!6.S, when he walked thrOllgh the gates at Leavenworth, Kan., with his hands handcuffed in front of him. Three Men Enter Race f or Valley Council Seat,s jlio highest earnings ill the bislofy of Uie. aerospace industry were announced today by McDonnell Douglas Corporation. A fijure of $117,645,437 after taxes, or 14.06 per share for the fiacal year ended Dec. )I, was announced by James S. PifcDormelJ, chairman. 'rte figure marks the first time in the :.erospace Industry 's history th.at the •100 million mark has been exceeded. Fourth quarter ·earnings w e: r e: U6,147,865. or 56 cents per share, after having been reduced by $14,411,679, or 49 cents per sha re due to fourth quarter los11es reported by Conductron Corp., a subsidiary whose financial statements are Included tn the 1t1cDonnell Dooglas consolldaUon report. McDonnell Dougta• aaleilbr the fourth quarter were 5715,347,193. ComparaUve DR. HAYAKAWA NQW IN PILOT San Francisco's sharp-tongued educa- lar, Dr. S. J. Hayakawa, still has a lol to say: And. 11laffing today,~he's going to !ay ~ ol It in·a weekly column which 'Wiii bO publilhe.l by the DAILY P!llOT. Dr. Jlay&klwa's flrat column appears loday m the editorial page (Pace !). II will conUnue aa a n:gular feature o1 the editor11I pace .. ch Friday In the DAILY PILOT. figuru for the fourth quarler of l!lel ollowe<I eamlnp ol ~.llll,1187.afler Ill· es. at $1.20 ·per ~ lhare on· siles of 1861,011,U Sales on a .consolidated buia for 1969 wen 13,023,829,161, <i whicll 47 pertfht were commercial and 53 percent govefn. ment. Sales in 19M were $3,609,295,227. The -corpora™"' had a funded backlog oo Dec. 31 of $2.588)184:843 compared with $3,579,127,403 a year earlier. This b&ck)Qg, of which 59 ·percent .111 commercial and 41 percent 1ovemment buslneM, excludes government orders not yet funded and onlen being negotiated aa continuallons of authclt1ted programs, and alto es.eludes commtrclaJ orden not under .!Inn contract. The Iota! bactiol. lu"lle<f and .... funded, amooms to about ta,11$,000,lllO compared to a ·total •·Of ·about ~.555,00l,toO a year earlier. HllhUghta of the yoar llir MCDonnell Doogta1 Included the nan! of the A~ Force P'·l5'air superiority fishier con- tr•ct, advanceaJo the DC-10 jumbo trl-jet with ordtn anid opUOl'll at )'f'ar'a mt totalling 201 from t•.attlinu, continuation of Dooglaa Alraafl Company•1-Skyhawk program. and the comptnyt1 major rota. In man'• Dl'll landlttp OI\ the inoon. The S.fVB·th~d llqe ol the Salurn .v rock•~ which placed the Apollo U and ~2 -111 In arth orblt,and burled Utcm lnlo lunar trl)eclor)', perfGnned flawl.,.. ly m lour lunar mlulOlll chlrlq the yur. Ullle'boyt.can'l .... flahlni or wading anymore Jn lfuaUngtOn" and Talbert La"8. Neitber <•n anyone .e11e: The city of Huntlngtm 11..,cb b11 pU\ both lake1 of£ limit.I unUI the P million central park surioondinf .Golden West Sir.et· and Telbtrt Avenue ii but1t. No-trespauinR: i1ins are up and the police·· depattment 11 lfatninc persona who go near the lake•, not to. Monday, police will start. lsiuln1 . dtatlons to -. ''W• do'nol want a cblld 1o drown In u-labs Ulna .!hit· period of ·con-atiuclf<ln. . When. thO ~k 11 C9111Pieted aQd.liqperylled ,llli!Ule; we:wm wel<ome :the filbermen 1and water Ullft. baeki'' PoUce Cblef Earle RGbltallle Al4. OM 00, did drown In HIRllli>gton tate in ' 19119. Buth 1ftea: have been pOpular spota for flihing and 10me youths have been explond them by raft. SIOC'k llf"'*et · Litt.le has ·been ~:a.rd of him Since he entered prl!I~. 1l1ere remalna little of the E1tes magic that made him a mtlUonair'e In his1 20! and extended his influence far beyond his Te'xas home. - E'ms arrived in Pecos, Tex .. in 1951. in debt ·arid toting a battered brief case but In . five years· he had made his• first millton'and was on' the way to building a mUltlmllllon-<klllllr empire on fraudulent credit. - 'the empire·lncluding fertilizer. grain elev·atora , c0tton allotments and a variety of other businesses -collapsed In 196: and the re.sulllng t h u n d er reverberated in Washington and on Wall Street. The Bible.quoUng "boy wonder of West Texas agrlcultw'e" reached the end or ,. . l Studenls to Look At Modjeska Canyon Fifty conservaUon-minMd 1tudtnt& of Fountain Vallot High1i<:hool wlll travel lo Modjeaka Canyon Saturday to help reP-'"lr flood dam1;a at the Tucki:r Wild. Llfe SanCluar)'. The flfly ltudenr. 1re part ol a group• of 1!11 al llu tcbool lnvolv.d In the study of~ . .,. Scl&nce lnslruc:tor Ken Fries will lead th• 51).meinber group. " • Three men have now entered the race for three positions open April 14· on·the Fountain ·Valley City Council. · Incumbent City COl,lncilman Bernie Svalstad, 9803 El TuliJ)8n Ave. was the rirst to pick up application papen Thur1- day from City Clerk Mrs. Mary tolt. Thursday afternoon, papers were iaken out by Burton Taubman, ·18732 Redwood St., and John J . Mangano, 960$ La Granada Ave. Two incwnbent councilmen, Mayor Edward Just and George Soctt, bave not yel picked up appljcallon pspers btll-are ~·todo1 ao.toon. • , )!laniiano ls. cbalnnan or the c•.ber of commerce legl.Slative cornmtUee and regularly attends counc.11 meetings. He Is al&0 a former Wllllcct.Slful candidate for Huntirudon Beach City Council. Taubman is a poT!tlcal unknown In thP. city.· Svalstad was elected to the council last September during tlie city's recall elec· Uan as was ScotL Jus:. was an incumbent not involved ln the recall. Councilmen Ron Shenkman and John ~rare not up for re-el~Uon .,,prJI 14. , S~n ,.., the thad new race on the couodl ellA!r .the l'eClll whlch removed the fopner mayor and two othtn from oCflcer. J -- Today'e-· Flnal N.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS er ' 1,900· Acres For Marina Project By JACK BIOBACK Of IM CMllr ,l'\19t tt1" Purchase of approximE.tcly 1,900-Ures of . the. Bolsa Chica · propP.r1y wtL811· nounced today by tlje Signal Conipallld. Forrest N. Shwnwa)!, ·presldeclt 1&1d lhe purchase of the potential maljna development was .made by t w o subsidiaries, Signal Oil and Gu Company Purchase was made from the, five &Isa CotporaUons, owners ot the Rat property, and Bolsa Teoanl< io Common, ownus of royalty and net pro(itl;-ln· terests under existing oil.aod.ps'.leaHs with ·Signal OU •. No sales.1lgurea·.w:u disclosed. • Shwnway said Signal pLans to develop the property into a water-oriented ' com· munitf. relocating oil and gaa operations compatibly with the planned urban development. Long regarded as 1he moist choice potential marina property on the Orange Coast,. the more ·than three square miles is almost completely surro1.u~ded by· Hun- tington Beach but r e m a I D..8 wtin· corporat.ed. Site of a turn or the century. KU:n clu~>, the property presenled,a partl.cularly dif· (icult problem for developmcnl Heirs .to gun club members who held sharel were scattertd. throughout ttie world. ·• 1'J'M--five Bola!· CcrporaUv11.i w~· put lolethet ~ acquimFOlle· <o ·111e )II'<> pi , ' t f?4f r. . 'I'-~iq till1!o pla~or evelopme::iJv~ ~ ftiC'Ur· rent: rumm. 1 t ' · . Signal .QJi holds oil..,. W_~ ~ on most of the properly iM.te..lopm"'1 by· the company ls cons!~ ffleQ\ly Jll:IC- llcalin-. Signal Will 'cililt8-·i111 .. .0lll, similar lo the Huotin~ Beach ,eom. ptnY metbod, OO '\hl liimiJqtoo ~f Property mr.ctly east ol tbe flolaa 'Clil<a lands. · ,Shumway said planning hu·begun ror the creation of an ' urban complex estimated to provide.comm.unlty·servfcea and housin& for approximately 501000 peo- ple. '"" One · big •tumbling · blqck to .proper marina development is an opellfne.to ~ Pacific Ocean. This has been under atudy by the U.S. Army·Corps of Engineen·for several years. A. large portion ol the t,900 ams i,i; nc.w covered with-lagoons. .. 4 Take Papers-· In Huntington Fo~ persona have taken out nomina- tion papers for Huntington Beach City COOnciT seats, City Clerk Paul Jones said this morning. In addition to Realtor Phyllis Galkin, fit:st to fake out ' pS.pers Thursday, the aspirants for four council seats up {or electon ioclude Roger Slates, Realtor and chalrtnan of the cit)r Planning Com- mission , Joe Ferm, chairman of the Property Owners Protedlve· IA:ague,•and englneP.r Glenr. Ford. • Candidates have until riOon f(b. 19·to return nominatlOn papers. The four counclJ-seal6 up this year.cur· rently are held by Mayor Jack Green, Ted BarlleU, AMn Coeo mt Dr. Henry Kaufman. Oraage Cou&. Wead\e" Gusty northeast winds will send weekend highs Into the low 79'1• along the Orange Cout. while cold weather gear is prescribed for' the nighttime hours. INSIDE T8D-''l' How do t~•--Mw•ch"anoirfn· the Motiqn Picl1're1A.ttodallon'• ·movie roting code t1Jfec& 1IOU. or your kicU1 A complete eiptaM- tion U glveit in todo11'• Wefk.. ender aection. ' l I ' 11-.':.. -I DAO.Y PILOT H Frlqr, ,h11ill'7 .lO, 197P ~ . •• '1Irvine Co .. ~TeHs Stand . •' ' ;;:QnBay·swap r.;:.., •• • lrvtQe Company President \Villiam MUOll has broken his long-standing ol- ;,H~lal silence on the Upper Bay land swap ~l~ ~nd charaed th11t new alternate c pl.Ins b)' its foes were made Without study and hearings and he said the rnarinl ecology ot lhe estuary already : hattbetp.litlestroyed by nature. . - M*"1 attacked County Supervisor Robert Battin's new alternate plans as :-.;~ "'hasUiy conceived" Thursd3y. • ;..t, He alao said that last ye a r 1 s devastating rloods destroyed t~ marine . , eevirorunent of the contested estuary by -'.J _.·depositing two.to-tive-feet of mud and silt • '· on tile bay's floor. · ·• :·'~ 1.la&On 5taunchly uplleld his company"s ... .:. • role tn the JO-year-old exchange plan with Orange County and said opposiUon -in-- , , • eluding Superior Court intervention - ~; .. -;has -tome from a •·small, a6lf-intemt \..~o:-gmups." . . ·':~ He said the original state grant of the . . tidelands of the bay was made ·with the :: ~ l ·intention af build.in& a harbor, and that -.·:-.. 1-because the county cannot afford to, the ·':~ Irvine Company could. do It. ;i!~ ~· "We feel tbat the legal questions should be "determined through lhe present case 1:. : •rather than a delay for anot.her five years ~. __ while 60me oth~ plan ts proposed which, ---: _-. .:in tum, \fill probably be attacked by -other sell-interest groups." Mason said. " •: 'Nie statement drew responses by foes of the el'ch&nge char11ting that Mason's comments lacked merit. Frank Robinsoo of Newport Beach. a leader of the fOf".s of the swap. said he and his aroup were proud to be called a self-Interest group, because their ideas are the same as those of President Nixon. Governor Reagan and Se.nators Alan Cranston and George Murphy. "All of them have come out str-Ql)gly In favor of preservation of pjJbUc ~lines for the public and savtnR ·eoologlcal values, and we're ·proud to be a group with this 11ame interest ," he said. Joe Scherman, 1st Fire Marshal '~£ County, Dies Joe .5r.l><rm111. ~ Counly's first fire marlhal died fuday at St.. JOieph Hmpital after suffering a heart attack. Hewu61._-:=--__ His deatlf , ........ , In ilie """"" \vhich be&an in 1930 when ht wu ap- painti!d Orange County's first U.S. Farest Service ranger. Al the time the cwnty's flre fighting equipment CMl\sttd ":Pf six boxes of tools wllll:h the fir• flptdi Ink· ged to the blaze. When he retired in August, 1963, he left 2~ fire 1talions, 400 paid volunteer! and 150 regulars on the fire fighting staff. Followln& hl S retlremen"t he moved to 1dytlwild and then to Yucaipa . He •had suffered a ierle1 of heart attacks before being hospitalized shortly before his death. He ts survived bh his wlfe, Ruth, and. a !iOn, David. Little League Signup Slated Baseball starti Saturday with signups In the Huntington Valley Little League from 9 a.m. to noon at Bushard School, 19699 Education Lane, Huntington Beach. Boys eight.years-old before Aug. 1. 1970, and not. 13 before July 31, 1970, can play liU.le league ball. The Jiunlington Valley Little League covers the area between Ellis and Adams Avenues and Beach ·Boulevard and the Santa Ana ruver. Further slgnups will be held from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m .• Sunday at Bushard School. For further Information call Tom Boardman, 962--03-47. DAILY PILOT ORiHGl!i Co.Alf ru•Ll5hl"'G '°"""."'" Rober! N. W1.d , ... -"""-"""'- J.de R. Cwr!•v Vici-'"9i.llllt INI ~·I MIMter Tho,..1• Ke1~il 1.tnor T~o,,,1t A. M1.nphi~• ,..,......,. Etltlr All>11f W. 11••• >.-T•t• litllor H~11tl• ... 11 t fftlt Offlct 1Jt1~ 111,\. l1wl1~1•ill M1ih119 Mill·••u ,,o. 1011 190, tz••• O'"'° OH!Mt l .. .,... .. ~,,, m ,.,..,, """""" CO'UI Mt .. • »I Wnl ••Y '""'' !'llW"1'1 ·lloK~I h11 WHI .. lllN hultvlrti . \ • • .. ; ~-~ _.... --.. ,, . " .. .. •• • -. " . . .. ; . • • ' -• ' ;.. .. -, -.. Birds of a Feather • ' • • -.. • • • • ' ,.. " Uri T11111Ml1 Uncoun\ed thousands of. black ~tariinas (wltb the appropriate Latin name of Sturnus Vulgarls) line the phone wires in i;:ted,dlng, Calif., arOund sunset each· day, splattering sidf:walks, parked cars and soine unlucky pedestriins. Mas11ive use ol·sbotguns to dlaperse the birds has been considered, but as yet no aoluUon has been found. Meeting Site Victim of Westminster Too 'Kitcl1eny'; Change Pondered ·Carburetor Fire Critical . Trustees of;the Huntington Beach Union Hijh School District are, ponderin& • a move from thelr current meeUne place at-clistrU:t bead®llrters to "8 l>Ortloa of the HunUAiton1 !leach Higb' School c.ate-- teria. -· Boai-d Chainnin MatlheW Weyuk'r ,;uggested the . change to provide. a more "businesslike atpiosphere" for trustees to meet. • He said li)e .current meeting room at dietrict headqua~rs Is too "kitCheny" ::;inoe those in attendance get up 11t will to serve themselves coffee al the perco- lator. A 29-year old Wilmington man la in crltkal condition today at. the Orange County Medical Center bum 'unit from In- Last 3 Suspects . 111 Camp~ Drug Raids captured Weyuk~ _pointed out the need for better parking facilities, iJ)st.allation of a perma-The last tllree amone a tar&~ number nent public address system, ~tter acou-· of suspected campus .narcotiCI dealers sties and _larger gathering room in ask· . named in arrest warrants were picked up 1ng for the change.: --by Cos:ta . Mesa poll ct 'Jbunday night, Th_e .pro~! is now: under .study by the brin&lng to 25 te tot.al number in custody. admi!ll.stral!on who ~ill prov1ed the trust· Detective Sgt. John Regan sakl the itlo ~ a~t es\ll"ate of ~· • 11 ,.~ .ith 'fl•--~ dr\11• or mariJUana. with two 'ef them JuvenU.1. Women Realtors Robert 1'1orrll, 18, of 937 Strra Way. .. ... . .,. Council Slates 1st Installation I CMlli M~a •• was chargtd in a warrant ."11"tJn~ $6l5 bail with sale of marijuana. ~ ,.. Six 'afihe "suspecbl'tn the .aeaed dta\. ing at both Co11ta Mesa and Estancia hjgh ~hools are adults and face arraignment or preliminary hearings in Harbor Dislrlct Judicial Court next week. The installation luncheon of the newly· formed H 11 n·t i n g I on Beach-fountain Valley Women's Council of Rea ltors will be-held Feb. 20. 'Phyllis Galkin k presidenl of lhe new gtoup. Other officers are Shirley Comon.s, vice president; Doran a l\1 c L e y , secretar;i-treasurer : l\,ary EI a In e '-fartin, leglsL1tlve chalnniln; Pa t RoberUon, finance and budget chairman, and Eleanor Baker, publicity chairman. The Installation luncheon Wiii be held at the Sherntan-Beach 1nn. ?tt o n th I y roeetings _arc scheduled ro:r the rourth Friday of each month at Francis llestaurant, Huntington Beach. All '"'.Qmen members of the lluntin&ton Bt>aoh·Fountain Valley Board of Realtor~ are eligible to join the women 's council which is an educational affiliate of the National Association of Real Estate Boards. Union Asks Law Over Layoffs LOS ANGELES (AP )-The United Autc> and Aerospace \\'orkers Union called Thursday for federa l legislation that would resiutre either guaran teed incomes ar re-training for other jobs for defense v.·orkers hit by gO\'ernn1ent cutbacks. Paul Schrade, the un ion's western re- gional director, said: "Defe nse contrac- lors have a .special obligation. They are engaged • in an industry with limited r-ompetitlon and guaranteed proUts. And the profits are de iived solely from tax dollars. "Yet when a do,vnturn in war produc- tion occurs. defense \vorkcrs are lht first 10 be hurl." The remaining 19 bOys and girlll face Juvenile: Court action.in coming wteks. Investigators confiscated about $10,000 v.·orth of marijuana and narcotics durina the six-wffk probe of campus activities, lncJVJiing nearly every type on the Illicit marltet. Detective Capt. Bob Green said earller that the alleged narcotics trafficking was not whaL-one \Yould call an organit:ed ring, but most defendant11 knew each ot her. Complaint1 charging another group of rive youn& men arr~ed Wedne'8y night at a Costa Mesa apartment. Jnunwhlle, were being sought from the Orange Coun· ty District Attorney today. Authorities in Wooster, Ohio, lipped Off local police by emera:ency, cross.:country telttype mes.sage that two known narcotics suspect! were in Costa Mesa and gave the address:. A tt!llm of· detective• went to 792 i:ihalima r l>rlve, where they and a third Ohioan were arrested. along with two Anaheim youths attending college ln Ohio. Before police could enter, someone tried to flu.sh a dozen plastic bags of marijuana down a toilet"!'" clagglng It - and the soggy weed was conlJS<:ated as evidence. All five were charged with. posseS!ion of marijuana for sale . and ordinary possession of marijuana counts. Bel Air Fire Probed BEL AIR (UPI) -The cause of a fire \\•hich blackened two acrts of bru.sh in the , mountainous realons north ol here was being investigated Thursday. Seven companies of city firemen anc1 l\VO hellcOpte.rs brought the fire under control in 30 minutes . No homes were damaged. M1·s. Hanson Back in U.S. jurles 11uffered Wednesday night in .a carburetor fire near a Westminster filling station. · Charlel Haeflinger suffered burns on hi! upper torso, anns and face around 7:46 p.m. when gasoline he was pouring into the carburetor of his stalled automobile suddenly ignited, Westminster fire invesligators said. Haenlnf[er's brother, 'Villiam. of 8402 Sterling St., Westminster, also received bums and was listed in good condition at \Vestminste r Community Ho s p It a I . \V illiam Haefllnger's wife. Charlotte, was treated and .released from the same hospital. ~ An alert sirvicc station operator who witnessed the acckient at 8 4 6,0 Wtstmiluiter Blvd. managed to put out Charles Haellinger's burning clathing • l>llh' 1 Cir• e.llil!guilh<r, '"v/"J hlin Jrp ~'njury, firemen dt!clo!ed. • Firemen said the man, Pele Lfndgren, ran acron the street, meeting Haeflinger headon and at the sa~ time blasting ~wa7 with the extinguisher. Valley Schedules Music Festival About 60 students are tuning up violin and cellc> for the Fountain Valley School Dtstrict'1 Solo and Ensemble Music Fes- tival preliminaries scheduled Saturday at Fountain Valley School. The event gets under way at 8:45 a.m. be.fore a panel of judges consist.in& o! Fountain Valley ~fusic teachers. ~e who finish in the top ten will be eh11ble to compete for 2 music ICbolar- shlp In the district'• 1il'tb aMual Solo Contest Feb. 18. Pretervatlon Cmaf ab • Delay Requested . . . ' ·In Coastal ·work ~n ctincert with commer'.J made Thurs- day by Newport Beach · City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt. Lt, Gov. Ed Reine cke today oaUed for a mor-atorium on advetMl coastal development in C:.lifornla until state master plans are finllt:ed. Both ·the men , speakin& at the Governor's Conference on California Coastal Shoreline Preserva,tion, qretd that !Tlaster plan projecU related to the coastline would need the voluntary com· pliance by 1ocal agencies. Phillip ~Iorris :·~U.ys Control Of Viejo Co. The Mission Viejo Company, which last year outpaced all other Orange Gounty developers in sale of new homes, has sold corporate control to Philip Morris Inc. for $20 miOlan. The · $20 million inve.stment, said l\11ssion Viejo Company spokesman to- day. will be the v;orking capital to insure continuation of construction on schedule dtspite the expensivt money market. 1'erms giving the cigarette company c..:inlrol of the voting stock of Mission Vie- jo required the cash investment for con· vertible debentures, stock and opUons. Under the agreement, Philip Morris may also purchase a majority of all outstanding stock by es:ercislng options and paying an additional $13.5 million. The options may not be es:ercised sooner than three years or later than five ye11.rs. Mission Viejo will conlinue to operate aulonomously, it was announced, headed by James E. West, chairman, and Philip Reilly. president anc! chief operating -of· ficer. Policies v.·ill not change, it was an- nounced. Areiuisition of l\1ission Vieji> Company control. v.·as the first expansion by Philip l\111rris into the community development fi eld. ·The cigarette company ha1 in- te rests in brewing. razor blade.s. packag- ing. chewing gum, speclalty chemicals and papers. plastics and hospital sup- plies., Organized in 1966, the 11 ,000 acre land development has already built, sold and f1lled 21IOO' homes on 1,000 acres where cattle grazed four years ago. Population of the planned community is now about 11,000 and Ls expected to be more thah 50,000 by the end of the decade and 11111,IXlll by 1990. Five housing projects are now under coni;truction and a &lxth lJ to open soon. House prices currently range from $2\,900, said a company spokesman, to 163.000. The Mission Viejo Company also has In its development a shopping center. schools, and parks. Tot Listed Crjtical REDDING CAP)-A 2~~-year-old-boy was re5C.1.led with grapplln& hooks from the bottom of a raln·swollen, murky creek near h~ home Thursday. Eric Wahl was lbted In "critical" con· ditlon in Mercy Hospital, Redding, Thurs- day night. Hurlbun, addressi'ng the San Francisco Conference Thursday afternoon, calla! on more state help in the matter. Including money and legislation lo insure the preservation of th~ coastline for the public. ·Hurlburt told the conference that Orange County already has 11tarted its own coaslline master plan which will be de.Jeloped with the full cooperation and woTk of Orange Coast cities . MORATORIUM PLAN Reinecke·s proposal for ;:i moratorium on uncoordinated develop- ment -includes an outline for an ag- gressive plan for state and local zoning of tbe shorel.'.ne . His master plan idea would prevent in· discriminate filling and dredging and would preserve "our spectacular and uncluttered views of the beaches and ocean," he said. Hurlburt saJd that during the past yea/' communities and counties along the coast have "made a massive effort to obtain more stringent legislation to prolect the C<last against oil problems." Hurlburt scored state legislators for not helping more in the local anti-oil-drilling t:f£orts. "We could have used more help from the state lel{islators and government leaders," Hurlburt sald. EXPENSIVE PURCHASE He adde.d that the Orange Coaat cll1es' efforls toward preserving the coastline included the expensive purchase of 900 feet of sandy beach Jn Laguna Beach last year at a large expense to the city. "The county 's major land owner, th e Irvine Company, has recently voluntarily established .a coordinating committee for devekipmenl of its 311.z mile11 of cossUine between !iewport Beach and Laiuna Beach," he related. San Clemente has embarked on a pro- gram to buy 1.3 mile11 of beachfront at a cost of $1.5 million. "l believe that these example11 t f· fectlvely illustrate the willingness snd desire of the communities to preserve the coastline for p!lLlic use," he said. Bu t the communities cannot do It alone, he added . They need money. legislation and plan· ning cooperation from the state to ht:lp in the projects. DRACN ON BUDGET He said that Ney,•port"s playing host to 100,000 beach visitors on any single aurn- mer day is a d~ain on the city's budget - a burden which has become increasingly difficult to cope with in swelling city budgets. Swnmatizing his kleas f o r im· provement of the situation Hurlburt pro- posed' -That the state, working in concert '~Ith 1ocal goverrunent. "take whatever legi slative and administrative steps necessary lo help government preserve the coastal areas for public enjoyment." -That the state help local governments in financing measures to preserve the coastal zones. -That the state design minimum stan- dards, policies and plans to preserve I.he shoreline. -That regional water quality control boards have-more member1hip represen· ting the conservation elements of the society and less members espousing in· dustrial Interests. -That the st.ate allow local govem- m1_nt to plan and administer shoreline mailers through ils own resources and agencies. Sale WITHIN A Sale COMFORT & STYLE At A PRICE CHAIR STARTS AT ~29. AVAILABLE IN A LARGE SELECTION OF COVERS AT THE UNBELIEVABLE PRICE OF $12'. COMMOOI ON IALI .. '159 Witl1 Little W 01·d on Mate DEALERS FOR: HENREOON DREXEL -HERITAGE l\ntlwlng tittle l'n{)re than when they depArted. four Southern C a 11 for n I • "''omen arrived in Los Angeles loday, en· ding a round·lhe-world merty n1bslon In behalf of men missing 1n the Vietnam v.·ar and lheir ramilics. ti1rs. Carole Hanson of 2·1112 Birdrock Drive , El Toro. and htr thret 1r11,·eltng ctmpanion!I landtd al 9:2~ am. "board Pan American Olihl 846 from Tokyo. "1$1 cfBddy comlnir hon1e~" a!lked Todd llnn!ion, 3, "ho hAs nerer seen t<.larlne Corps Capt. Stephen P. Hll\JOO, btll1Yed h~ld as a prisont!'I' of war by North Viet· nam. lils weary mother burst into tears at the unhappy underlinina of the POW 't'".ves' quest In se•rch of word of their pilot husbands' fate . The homet0mlr11 was deeply emoUon•I, compared to the cool recepdon the party recel\'Cd In som e Communist nations and lhe helpless $i}'Tnpathy lhey were offered else"''herc. NIWl'O~T BEACH 1717 W•ttcllfl Dr., 642·2050 0,IN PJIDAl 'TIL t INTl!ltlORS Pr•fe,slonal Interior D11l9ner1 Av11l1blo-AID-NSID LAGU'4A BEACH 345 N•rth CoHt Hwy. OP'IN NIDAY 'Tll t f'll•11• f •ft frM MMt et o,_,. C-nwty 14 .. IJIJ 4t4-'5l1 f'rlNy, Janu111 30, 1970 DAILY PIUIY 5 U,I T.....,t Main BuriJt Floods Montreal One of Montreal's busiest streets la knee high with rushing water after a main broke ftursday caus· Ing severe flooding and traffic·Jlll!!I in the down· town area. Hardest hit was the 47-story Stock Ex- change Tower when water flowed through the twcr story shopping prom enade and caused the entire building to ·be-evacuated when the power went out and elevators stopped. Israel Sets New Rules Borman Quits Space To Focus on Earth Of Judaism Students Storm Hayakawa Girl Plans to W ed ••• . . ' SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -'The astronaut who JERUSALEM (UPI ) -commanded the first manned Government 0 f f I c 1 a J s ex· orbiting of the moon plans to blems and opportunities and to get the American people to ac- tively participate in fiolvingJ .----------------------------------------------i~~.· . these problems.'' Borman said in a statement releised by the retire from the space proeram pressed confidence today a and head a (oundatloo that cabinet agrtement defining will attack Amerlca's pro- who is a Jew will Win the ap-blems on earth. space agency. Oay Blasts Militants proval of Israel's 126-member Frank Borman, a 41-year-old parliament, lhe Knesset. Air Force colonel who directed Premler Go(da M e i r' s the Apollo 8 flight around the moon on Chrislmu Eve in government averted a political 1968, announced Thursday he crisis Thursday by agreeing is resigning from the service Israel will make rabbinical and the space agency on July ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) - law the basis of determining 1. He said he and Datlu "Yoo niggers give me mol'f: who is a Jew, but will register millionaire H. Ross Perot are trouble than the whites!" members of families by mixed establishing a fou n d 8 l i 0 n Cassius Clay shouted to about marriags as Irraelis. which will attack pressing na· 100 black milllant hecklers. lional problems. The Supreme Court touched nie astronaut said he would The. group had interrupted off the controversy last Friday become vice pre!ildent of Elec-the defrocked heavyweight by ordering lhe Is r a e'I i tronlc Data Systems, Inc., a boxing champion's lecture at Interior Ministry to register computer services company 1t1uhlenberg College Thursday as Jews the three children· of owned by Perot, who tried last night Israeli naval commander Ben-Christmas to deliver parcels The hecklers, some wearing jamin Shabit and his non· to war prisoners In North African dashikas, criticized Jewish wife. Vietnam. Clay -who prefers the Black The court ruling brought Borman said he and Perot Muslim name Muhammad Ali angry protests from orthodox will establish the American -for buying a $75,000 home in Jews here and abroad, from Horizons Foundation. Philadelphia. the Israeli rabbinate and from "I.t ts our hope through the "Do you want me to buy a Israel'& nation a 1 religious U3e of mass media, particular· heme in the ghetto?" Clay party_headed by interior ly television, to fully Inform countered. ''Why do I want to minisler'Moshe Shapiro. the American people about our Jive ln a rat bin and have a rat A five.hour cabinet meeting moat pressing national pro-bite my child?" called to settle the c r is i slj ii<iiii..,,aiiiiiiiiiiii:iliiiiiuiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiieiii Thursday agreed by what l~ government sources said was a compromise.. -That a person will be ! registered formally as a Jew only U his or her mother was . Jewish and If he had not adapted another religion, or If he converted to Judaism, in line wilh rabbinical law. -That non.Jewish husbands or wives and the children of their mixed marriages will en- joy the sai:ne rights as Jews in Israel but will not be fonnally registered as Jew&. British War Strategist Hart Dies ,. MARLOW. England (AP) -. Sir Basil Liddell Hart~ a Bri&h army captain In World War I who had more influence on modern warfare lhan many generals, died at hls home Thursday night. He was 74 and one o( the world's leading military writers and theorists. Gassed in the 1916 Battle of , the Somme, invalided in 1924 and retired in 1927, Capt. Lid-1I dell Hart wag convinced by his months in the trenches or tile need for surpri11e and mobility In future wars. He was an ear· 1111 ly exponent of "Bir power and 1111 armored forces and in his ~ \vriting developed the "ex· · panding torrent" tactic of at· 111ck. The British army paid him li ttle heed: the Germans took up his idea11 and on them bas- ed their victoriou11 blitzkrieg through France in 1940. Gen. Hans Guderia'll, who led that Panzer charge, called him "the creator or the theory of I he conduct of mechanized war.'' All on Board Escape Sinking A THENS (UPll -A Greek pa51enger ship struck a reef Slnd caught fire today in the Aegean Sea but all a 4 pa.56en.ger11 and 54 crewmen t scai>ed without Injury. A Ministry of Merchanl ~ta rine spokesman said the 2.®ton Jplros, owned by the l'lnilti Steamship Co.. wfl~ I ' ,, : !' ~·(',I. i?Jwtft~N~~ MID-WINTER SALE SUITS & SPORTCOATS REDUCED 4 0 MID-WINTER CLEARANCE FROM OU R WOMEN'S SHOP ~L.. BIDTIQUE e H.t.S. e LADYIUG e TOOTIOU~ e JODY e DON SOPHI STICAflS REDUCED 400/o AND MORE DRlSSlS PANTS SWEATlRS VESTS SKIRTS ILOUSlS 3467 Vie l ido • N•wport lt•ch • Phcn•: 6]] ... 510 f Plt11ly of Fttt P•1 ~l~4 For,S•I• o • .,. -All Ott.tr D•yt; let) EARN MORE. • • With Bank Sa ety! First Notional now offers new higher rates of interest · with full bank safety -and your deposits ore insured to $20,000. • 4Y2°/o on regular passbook savings accounts. • 5% on Gold Passbook accounts on all funds kept on deposit fora full calendar quarter-minimum balance of $500. • Certificates of Deposits under $100,000: 5% on Certificates with matur ity dates from 30 days to 1 year. 5Y2% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 1 to 2 years, 53,4% on Certificates with maturity dates for 2 years or more. • Certificates of Deposits of $100,000 or more: 6Y4% on Certif icate s with maturity dates fro m 30 to 59 days. 6Y2% on Certif icates with maturity dotes from 60 to 89 days. 63,4% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 90 to 179 da ys. 7% on Certificates with maturity dotes fro m 180 to 1 year. 7Vi% on Certificate s with maturity dates for 1 year or more . As alu·ays, yo11r sa i·ings ea rn the maximum bank in- terest at First National. Stop in at any of 011r 5 con- venient locations and select the acco11nt that fits yo11r needs best. F First National N Bank oF oRANGE couNTv B MAIN OFftCl AT THE PLUI, IN DOWNTOWN OillAHGE • •llANCH OfftCll: Oft.AlllO'I; T\1$T1H •COLLINS : CHAl'"4A M·"illOSPI CT SNO,.,.tNG CEMTEJll • COSTA MllA: "IESA VElllOE Oill!'ll AT AOAMS AVE •• '"""~ AfrrfA! I 7T" sr .. AT TUSTIH A.Vl ........ " f.D.1.c. First in Per.sona l Banking Service Since 1906 '·. ... '' ..... ,. , .. ,, '. ,. •'I• ... ~ ' . .· . - · .... :• ~· '~ ~. y-1 • . .. _,; ., ·-. >: ... ' .. : ~ ... - .. ' • f"l ••• •• ,! .. .; .. . :-. ,_ •,• • • • DADiY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • A Mobile Home Hazard Two Hundngton Beach women -both of them In- valids -have already perished this month In mobile home tires. According to fire prevention officials, there may be more if greater care is not exercised. by mobile home occupants. HOU!e trailer:;; have been declared fire traps by those men who know -the firemen who have twice arrived to save Jives but were left to clean up the rubble. Lightweight and flame propagating materials are often used to construct them. Add to that the fact that a maJ.orl.ty of the trailers hav~ qn1y one entranc~ af!d exit ahd the result ts a potentially deadly situation 1n event of a fire. Amendments to the State Fire Coda will ultimately force construction of safer mobile bomes, with multiple oil!& and fire resistaot walls, tire ofOcials predicl • Bt1t even then, the new rules will not protect the current population of mobile tiomeownen. Jt would be advisable for any trailer dweller to in· st.all a fire extinguisher and to be extra careful w h e n 1------smo1c1n,g, cooking -or-overloading electrical -systems. Women Realtors Win Big Women scored Jieavily in the world of commerce In Huntington Beach recently. . They walked off with all the awards at the annual banquet of the Huntington Beach-Fountain Valley Board of Reall<>rs. Two notable firsts were chalked up. For the first time in the eight..year history of the awards a woman One Reason for Campus Rebellion By S. I. HAYAKAWA PrtslMnl, San Francisco State University All over the country people have been &arely puzzled by the violent rebellion of young men and women in our best col· leg es and unh1ersilies -Berkeley, Harvard, Columbia, Swarthmore, Stan- ford -I hesitate to mention San Fran· cisco St.ate in the context of these more prestigious institutions. Many of the general public are infuriated that the mo.!t highly privileged young should be the lea!l grateful for their privileges. I loo have been sorely puzzled. But, I want to submit a possible explanation. Ptrhaps we are having these troubles not because our colleges have failed us, but because they have in sam1 ways done the.tr work loo well. Most student rebel• are of the upper- middle class. They are to be found large- ly in the liberal arts departments and the. social sciences -disciplines ln which \•erbal facility Is highly prized, and in whkh it is not alway1 necessary to check one's words against the stubborn facts of life (U you have to in chemistry or home economics) in order to pull down an "A." THE CARDS ARE STACKED in favor of the verballsls. Tests of scholastic ap- titude are easy for those with a ready flow of words. Those who do well In such tests are courted, sometimes by two or more presligio•Js colleges. They can hardly be blamed If they begi n to feel a little superior. From there on they can succeed In college without really lrying. All they have to do is ma}or in English or IOclology. (t majored In English myself .) Furthermore, the liberal arts student is heir to a tradition that goes back to the ancient Greeks ..:f distinguishing bet~·een the "liberal" and the "servile" arts. 11le libera1 arts curriculum was for the education of gentlemen, who by definition did not work for a living. The ''servile'' arts -from cooking to barbering to com· merce to engineering -were for working people end slaves. THE ANCIENT GREEK prejudice against work is reflected lo this day In the American university In the scorn of many liberal arts professors or "voca· liona1ism" and in the contt.mpt of many English majors for such subjects _all com· 1'1'er~ engineering, or ag11culture. Laden' with such prejudices. I ~ e \•erb1lists find It easy to de.fine themselves as an Intellectual ar!slocrary -an elite class -and to begin to act 1ike one. Man elite. these students (I speak of the white stude nt activists -the blacks art another problem) believe themselves Slo'v Courts Pre88 c~m ments ~ N.M., S..: ·~t Is fru.ltraUn1 lo i>w4blding cltlttnt lo OO"''" 1 the t«lolll-likt pace of our courts, ano. it must bo particularly rrustratlng lo those i.w entcn:ement officer• charged with &Ulerln,g evtdence and miking I.he ar· ~ It mUll bo Vtrf ,.tlsfying lo 11-charfed, for tht. longtt the ca&eJJ are deJ1yed lhe better thelr chaoces of being acquitted. Shoot up a couple of lawmen. kidnap two people and !8'3ult the courtbouse and )'OU go frtie. But beware ol 1fU1n1 CJIU&ht Saturday n11ht afltr lmblblna a bit too much. The rourts mow quite quJctJy Jn cases such as U-." ' to be above the conventions and restraints of everyday life. They despise the t1seful citizen and take pleasure in shocking the lowe r and mid· die classes by outrageous speech. dress. and behavior. They will not be bothered discussing or arguing matters with those with whom they disagree -they simply \Vant their own way at once, by force if necessary. to11XED WITH r rus arrogan« is a sentimental idenUficalion with t h e dtlwntrodden, nol unlike the JdealizatJon of the peasant among Russian student revolutionaries In qarist Russia. This sympathy for the underdog gives a veneer of moral jUJtification lo their v>olent tactics. <Let me add that the nonviolent ma- jority also identify with the underdog. The present student generation is seriously concerned with society. It is lhi::: seriousness thal makes them susce p- tible to revolutionary propaganda, with the result that many young people who genuinely believe in democracy are sometimes Jed around by those who do f101 .) Of course many professors are elitists too. indoctrinating r;tudents In the re· jection of middleclass standards and en- couraging resish1nce to adminlstrallon. government. and police. At San Francisco State in the fall of 1968, student gangsterism was rampant and bricks \\'ere flying UtroU,gh classroom windows. RADICAL PRESSURE g r o u p s dominating faculty meetings blocked the introduction bolh of resolutions con- demning student violence and of resolu- tions calling for police protectkm againllt that violence, presumably feeling that the elfte ought tn settle things among themselves "'ithout the intervention of the lower classes. So the big queslions of quality educa- tior. ha\•e lo do with both professors and sturients. Can professors. luxuriating in their ;icademic freedom, stop short of an egutistic irresponsibility that threatens the very existence of the academy? And can young people of outstanding talents be given a superior education \Vithout their ending up believing that they are a superior order of being, im- mune to control by custom or law. ex- empt from the responsibilities of rational discourse and debate, possessed or the right to dictate to others through non· nego!iable demands. and entlUed to amnesty the moment they get loto trouble? Perhapll it Is harder to leach democracy than we ever imagined, e!tpecia\ly to those "'ho have mMt rlchly enjoyed its blessings. B11 Geor ge ---• Dear George : What's the best way to write a \tlter to a girl you would really like to (let. to know belier? (She's mar- ried.) CAUTIOUS Oear Cautious: The best v.•ay to write to a maro fled woman'! Jn the 1and, right ht.fore the tide comes In. CONFIDENTIAL TO NASSER: I don 'l stt why yuu ketp a.'k.1na: me. You never llrttn. (Write to George for uselw ad- vk!e. Three cha!n; no waiting.) was named Realtor of the Year. And for the first time in the same eight years the women made a clean sweep of lhe awards. Honored by their fellow real estate brokers and salesmen were Phyllis Galkin, Realtor of the Yeari Shirley Commons, Associate of the Year, and Mary- anne L. Boozan, top salesman and top lister. \Ve doff our cap to these capable \vomen. Educational Innovation Through the operation of the Curriculum Materials Center, Lhe Fountain Valley School District has once again shown leadership in educational iMovation. The supermarket concept of storing all classroom aids under one roof saves valuable teacher time and al· lows him to choose from a wide variety of materials. One of "the center's attendant Junctions -that of serving as a construction laboratory for "home-built" materia1s -saved taxpayers $20,000 last year alone, since parent volunteers donated freely of their time to build new aids, district officials say. Its daily use represents a saving of thousands of dol· la rs annually because the volunteers are supplied the tools and facilities to construct materials which would carry a high price tag if they had to be purchased. The CMC laboratory also allows school officials to put their own ideas into practice, to create new teach· ing tools which are not available on the market. Fountain Valley's administrators are to be com· mended in·their consistent efforts to provide education· al innovation at the least possible expense. H Naked Body Has Many Meanings Co•ite1nplated for Febr11ary A young lady. whom t take to be a stu- dent at the University of Wisconsin, writes to me, apropos a recent pa ragraph in which J said that the people who present nudity on the stage and the peo- ple who object to it are "both vicUms or the same fallacy, imagining that a naked body is a sexual object .•. " Her question: "If a naked body ls not. a sexual object, what is?" I could tell her, but not within the moralistic confines of a family newspaper. Actually, her atlitude is exactly the kind of thin11: I was writing about -lhe reduction of the body to o~ ject, or merchandise. A NAKED BODY CAN be, and Is, many things to many persons : to the doc· tor, an anatomical or physiological enUty to be restored to wholesome functioning: to the artist, a living piece of fonn anti structure to be captured In pen or oil or clay or stone; to the maa,eur or masseuse, a complicated netWork of muscles and tissue and nerve-ends to be rejuvenated; ta the photographer, a subtle and strikingly lovely study in plane and contour and sQadow. And even to the Jover, H Uie naked body is a mere sexual object, or mostly a sexual object, then the "love" is in the loins and cannot outlast such transitory needs. Love must include sex, but the more exclusive it is of other qualittes, the - faster It tires and dies. L'JDEED, THE BODY in term1 or a Hsexual object" as such is largely a cultural product and an act of the mind. As Ortega put it: "Nine-tenths of that which is attributed to sexuality is the work of our magnificient ability to im- agine, which is no longer an instinct, but exactly the apposite : a creation." This is why, of course, naked bodies on the stage are not erotically stimulating, even in our severely repressed society. After the first moment of shock, thfl:y are just bodies, laden with no more sexual significance than the naked body of any other species of creature. FOR WHEN THE cultural taboo is lifted, and the mind can no longer do il<i imaginative work, thtn the body Ct!.ases to be a mystery (as in most primitive societies\ and beeomes simply an organism which can be us...."'d In many dir· ferent ways, for protection, for profit, or for pleasure. It has become largely a seux.al object for us because, first, it IS exploited com· mercially to an almo.<;t pathologlcal degree, and, second, because of o u r hypocrisy In promoting tts desirability while at the same timt prohibiting its free functioning . We have managed, in this way, to obtain the v;orst of both possible worlds -neither the moral satisfaction of our Puritan forebears, nor the innocent engagements of t h e primitives, but the frustrations of the former and the promiscuity of the lat· ter. This is wbf l .called UI "victims." Quotes R. G. 1.oftu&da, 1\1.D., Plllsburc - "F'tar ind vtolence are 50 prevaltnt In our country that I wonder lf that might not be one of th& factors contributing to our drug dtptndtnt liOCiety .. , H. l'i'llll•m W•y, S.F. -"There are those who demean the press as distorted, slanted, and untruthful. The problem the prtN has Is that all of its personnel must be rrcruittd from the human r11ce." More SDS~Plotted Violence \V ASHlNGTON -f\fore maniacal violence Is being plotted by the berserk Weatherman faction of the revolutiona ry Students for a Democratic Society (SOS). Two characteristic run-amok outbreak$ are contemplated for February. One is aimed at a big university th at has ~n "racked by SOS-instigated destructive disorders en several occasions. Negro participation Is being sought. Particularly wanted are black ex- tremisl3, especially the gun-loting and shooting-prone Black Panthers. The groundwork for these new out- breaks was laid at the recent four-day mee.Ung of the Weatherman's national cOOncll at Flint, Mich. -from which the press and photographers "·ere forcibly excluded. "VIOLENCE" was the theJ)le from the beginning to the end of lhis truculently guarded gathering. , 1 • ·1 It began on that in~ndiary note with an obscenity-interlarded haranaue by: Bernardine Dohrn. former lnter.:Organiza· Honal secretary of SOS, and closed the same way with an eqUally fur ious diatribe by John Jacobs, a leading \Veatherman agitator. Virtually all the speeches and most of the di scussions were replete wilb the kind of dillgusting obscenities favored by Cx· tremist.s -while and black. They seem to consider the frequent and IOtJd use of these putrid expressions as evidence of revolutionary fervor and defiance. This applies to the sloppy women as well as the bushy·haired and unkempt males. In fact, the squalid females appear to take special delight in the loathsome obscenities. Oohro's "keynote address" was full of them. Allen·Goldsrn itli THE llALL \\'AS d~corated in keeping 1111h th e '·\'iolence" theme and the revolting obscenities. Hanging from the celling \\·ere large p<irtraits of revolutionary rulers and l"aders -Ho Chi Minh, Fidel Castro, Che Guevara, P.1alcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver, the bail-jumping Black Panther official now a fugiti ve in Algeria. Also hanging irom the ceiling was a huge cardboard machine gun, with a placard reading ''Learn How To Use It." One wall was covered With alternating black and red posters of another Black P~r.ther leadeJ, Fred Hampton. killed in a shoot-out with police. On another \Vall was a 20-ft. po&ter with big draw ings or diUerenl caliber bullets, "'ith a full description of each. Also on this poster 'vere pictures ol Weatherman "enemies·• -for'emost among them Ch.icago's Mayor Daley. 1NFLA!\1MATORY TALK -In the opening fulmination, Bernardine Dohm clamored for more . violence. Derisively she berated her fellow Weathennen for ha ving (obsce nity, obscenity) a lot and being ·'motivated by a white guilt trip." "\Ve didn't fight around Bobby Seale \Yhen he was shackled at the conspiracy t Chjcago seven) trial," she screeched lhrough lhe loudspeaker. "We should have lorn that (obscenity) courtroom apart. \Ve didn't smash lhem when the (obscenity) P.1'>be peace creeps hissed David Hilliard on Moratorium Day in San f'rancisco. We didn 't burn Chicago down when (Black Panther) Fred. Hilliard was killed (in a shootout with police ). "We have been (obscenity) wimpy on armed struggle. We talk about being a fighting force alongside the blacks, but a lot of us are still (obscenity) honkies and we're still scared of fighting. We have to get inta the armed struggle. Violence is our aim and motto." TH IS EDICT WAS stridently edloed by f\·lark Rudd, top Weathennan leader and vete'ran of numerous disorders .and demonstrations. "We look for pitched battles between tnilitant groups and the pigs {police)," ht bellowed, "on a scale and i;i,;ilh a vlolenc1 tha t will make those in the past look like Sunday school picnics. Violence is the way to the revolution ." How to g.o about "ma king the American re\'olution" was discussed and argued at great length. More time was devoted lo th i!' topic lhan anything else. Ted Gold, a prominent Weatherman, asserted that "an agency of the people of the ¥;orld would be set up to run U.S. society and economy after the defea t o! U.S. imperialism abroad." This brought a rejoinder from the floor , "Does that mean that if the people of the world suc- ceed in liberating ·themselves before American radicals make the American revolution, then Chinese, Africans and others will take rver here and run things for white America?" "Well ,'' replied Gold, "If It take! fascism to bring about the Amerk:an revolution, T guess we'll have to have fascism." By Rebert S. AD" and John A. Goldsmith At Dear Old Hudson High A young man I know is bored '"ith high school. He says it isn't relevant. He's absolutely right. 11ow can life in high school be relevanl to our mature adu!t society'! Yet I can·t help recalling my years ot dear old Hudson High with the requisite glow of nostalgia. Th~ Were ~he days! How happy we were 1n our innocence before we had to go out and face the real world. In my day, the boys all wore cashmere sweaters. dirty cords and saddle shoes, while the girls \\'ore cardigans, plaid skirts and saddle shoes. Well, come to think of It, not all the klds dressed like that. THERE WERE poorer kids and a few blacks and Orientals who wore ... I can't remember what they wore. \Ve never paid much attention to lhem. But an)"\l•ay. we kids In saddle shoes pretty much ran things. We u·ere known rather vaguely as ''The Group." Most of Dear Gloomy Gns: Isn't it a bit late to teach adults about st:< in lhe Huntington Beach UnJon lllgh School District? Looks like our l"duc.ators have come up with another of th06e hlghly·toul· ed "innovations" ... this one to avoid the hot potato of such cdu- caUon for our children, who need IL -J.L.t". Art Hoppe didn't go out~ ror the team or root for Hud- > son High at the rallies and games. We really shunned them . they were guilty of the worst crime we knew: they ''lacked ~hool spirit." us lived in the fancier Eastern Section of IO\Vn. We controlled the school paper and elected the student body office.rs ... Not always, though. I remember the '38 election when Nick Dickson v:on for Pres- jdent. •. He really wasn't one of us. NICK ALWAYS wanted to be part of The Group, but he wall never quite ac- cepted, probably because he tried to o hard. lie was a short, curly-haired kid with a funny nose. His clothes weren't euctly right and he carrJed hi• books ln a tJNf. case. He was kind of a grind. And lilsman- ner was very sincere. T0o alric:tte, most or us thought. Anyway, he'd been beatl!n for PrtSiden't before and alter that he l<m for Cafeteria Manager. So we didn ·t thln k him n1uch of :i. threat. Our candidate was Hubert ..• \Vhat was bis name? He was a boUncy. en- thusiastic kid who worked in the Prtncl- pal 's Office. A real comle. But, trouble was, nobody took him 5trlously. So Nick won. TED WON FOR vice prt'sidcnt that year. Just an,honorary job. lfe was a bl&, nice kid -bil l>ut dumb. I mn<mber he got tn a flghf~h the edit.or of the p.'lper, who was one Of 11s. Arter that "" piclted on Ted mercilessly, m1tktng him the bt.1tt oC all our Jokes. 1 supt>03e the majority of kids not in The Group admired him for tak· Ing us on. But, then, they never spoke up. Barry was the cheer leader, a real gung·ho type. "Go team. go!" he'd )'ell as our bays went aff to battle -even when they were behind U lo nothing. Of coorse, there were 1 few kids who THEN T REME!\1BER the Head P.1oni· tor. Jay Edgar. What. a fink ! Alwa)ll re- porting us for this little thing or that. Seems like he'd had that job fcrever. Then there Was Eugene. the dreamy class poet, and George. the tough kid from the Southside who gave us the creeps, and Teddy, who got expelled after a wild escapade one night and ••• But there I go, prattling on abOut the good old days. And what I started ·OUt to say is that my bored young friend Is not only absolutely right about high school not being re1tv8nt, but he should be glad of ii. After all. what kind ol adult mJiture.16- ciety would thJS be If those who ran It be· haved like a bunch of high school kid&~ ---- Friday, January 30, 1970 The editori<ll Poo• of U.. Dollf PUoe seek& to inform " and rmn.. tdate rta.dtrs bl/' prticnting tlli1 '1f1Dl"J)aPfr 11 optnlom aM com. met1tnru on topic:r of intere1£ ond ligniflcanc<, by proflldhtg o forum for the f%J1f'C:uion ot our rtadtn' Opfnfon.r. and bg im1mttng tilt divtrst vftw- J')OinU of informed cb1uvtn Cftd 1pake1mrn on topics of the dag. Robert N. Weed, Publisher / .. . ' . .. ' -, ' JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4311 Fr1c11~. J_.,., »., 1t111 " '•"·U Emergencies Overcome Know ing what to do in an emergency can mean the difference between life or death, so sponsoring instruction in first aid care are 1nembers of the I-luntington Beach Junior Woman's Club. A five-\veek Red Cross course will be offered to the public Irom 7:30 to 9:30 P;m. beginning Monday, Feb. 2, ·and continuing t~rough March. · Classes \\'ill be conducted in Robtnwood School, lluntington Beach. and there wilt be no charge. At the conclusion of the c01:1rje certificates,' good for three years. will be awarded . . .<\nyone interested in enrolling in the course ~~Y ca~ Mrs. J~ck 1-lall. Juniors safety chairman, j!l 847-6151 for add1t1onal 1nfonnat1on and reservations. Health puppet shov,.s for fourth and fifth grade stude.nts wiU be- gin next month, and Mrs. Jamey Jacobsen, health ch~rman, has announced that 1he puppets will portray diUerent organs 1n a human body. Other activities being sponsored by the Juniors include letter's to congressmen urging them to stamp out smog, and a donation of fund s for the Pennies for Pines proiect. . • . l\1rs. John Flanagan , rriental health c&ainnan, announced a donation to 1.he Save-a-child progra1n. and tfle women also are selling cookbooks to earn funds for the South Coast Child Guidance Clinic. l\'fe1nber s of the mental health committee sponsor parties for young patient s in Fairview State Hospital and now are planning a Valentine party for the children . WHAT TO DO? -Emergencies arise, and the ability lo cope with them may be a matter of life or death for a fellow ~uman being. Informing the public will be a five-week course being sponsored by the Huntington Beach Junior Woman's Club. and wishing they had signed up for the Red Cross course are Mrs. Jack Hall (l ert) and Mrs. Frank Pizza·ta, who would like to aid a fainting Mrs. Gerald Merigold . • • .. Carnival Beat Roc ·ks Fo~ntain Valley . ~ , ,., • • . A '' ' Both Rio de Janeiro -and Fountain Valley will be rock-~ ing to the r~yUun o( Latin American music when the ~ Fountain Valley American ,...._..., Field Service chapter sponsors a Bra:r.ilian Ca rpival. The carnival \Viii take place between 5 and 9 p.m. Satur- day, Feb. 7, in Fountain Valley High School, and attending as honored su.esls will be LRaul Stnande1{. ·Brazilian consul in Los Angeles. and all Brazilian AFS students studying in Southern California h I g h schools during the curre nt yYT• Other special guests will in- clude Americans A b r o.a d students who have studied in Brazil. The carnival, patterned after the annual event which takes place In Rio during festival, coinCides whh the be~i nning or Iesli't'.11 Um~ In Brazil. . Jn addition to a chicken din- ner, there wUI b e· eno- tertalnmenL provided by-,,the Brazilian students tncluding native dancing, slides of their homeland and a display or Br:;zlfian products. The public Is Invited ·10 at· tend the carnival, and tickets v.·111 be $1 each for adults and children. Deadline for reserva· 'ii.idrl.ildi&...i.~~ lions is tomorrow: and inyone 11! wishing to attend Is Invited lo can >1rs. RiC:hard Lyddon, AFS ;>resident, at ~1 . No tlcketa w:IJI be sold at the Color It Bright and Pretty ... FESTIVAL TIME IN RIO -Adriana Tagliari (left) from Sao Leopoldo and Paulo R. Caron from Ere. chim, Brazil. will be among Southland foreign ex· change students alending a Brazilian Carnival tak· nlval, patterned after the ·annual affair: in Rio de Janeiro, is being sponsored by the Fountain Valley American Field Service chapter and will featur e · ·door-1md admlsslon·will be br advanct reservations only, Serving as general chairman for the cirnival which benefits the AFS program is Mrs. Joseph Sekera . Adding a cheerful touch to a girls' ward in Fairview State Hospital are Mrs. Geerge ·Keller (left) and Mrs. Eleanor Ruppel , members of Fountain Valley's Beta Gamma chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha sorority. The \Yard bas beerf adopted by the group as its principal philanthropy and the first project was 1up- plying perky new bed spreads. In addition to other ward furnishings , the women plan monthly visits lo present personal gifts to the girls. "'" in g place in Fountain Valley Hi gh School. The car- · entertainment by the youthful visitors. ~ Mid:vvest Custom: Newl-yw_eds· Get· Charge Out of Receptions DEAR ANN LANDERS: ll 's obvious T you are a big city gal born and raised-a Jong way from rural folks. Your amaie- nt at the rnooey·raislng weddings urprised me. OUl here in SL Cloud, Minn. -in fact. all over Steams County ('\ ._ it's an 1cceptcd practice for a newly n1arried cwple to hokt a public dance nd charge admission. This m:tkes a kll re sense than having a big retel)tion · &nd feeding m•erybody ror nothing. Trs a ·~ -no""" fact !hat many a bride sets tier .wr edding date acconJing to the availabili · !Y of the dance hall or beer joint. Many Miples celebrate wedding annivenaries this 'vay. too. Jl's a great way to en- lcrlain friends nnd mak e a little money ;it lhc .~amc time. Almost every daily I ' newspaper cardei these announctment!i. I'm enclqting a pqe rrom lhe St. Cloud Daily Tlme1 to proV< It. -A. C. OF S. C. DEAR A. C.: '1'116 tMap I le1n1 frem my readenl I wu fucfu6ed to "KO'\'er lbat tbete weddlnp ud Ullversary celebratloas feature 1pedal tYtllJ 1ucb as poultry •ucUoes, prf1e1 for 1to1 c•ll· Ing. yodeling and pri1e11 for tbt bc1t dressed. I note, too, that one couple .. advertlstd, "Nt admluhw cb111e If, JOU brtag Y'*' deer liuater'• hceast." Juel to keep l}e ~ straight, 1 wn born •od raised I• S&oas City, Iowa, whlcll 11 ;11 miles from St. Cloud. storm when we are ridinc in the car she , lnalsta on 1etttni out. and Btanding under JA tree! J1 tbb advlaable or not? - WORLA!ID, WYO. DSAR 1tW.i YOI -Id' lnUI lllat you wile 1lay t. the ur dvrblg u *c· trtul 1torm. lt'1 •ctuallJ one ff die safeet plaCH .. lat. 11 fACt, Ji\le ut'itr beant or a perton II a car being: stnitk by ll .. lala1. HM u1one? · DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 read with ii> ......... terest yoor column :.bout "10 Ways to DEAR !-NN LN,':'E~: My wife Is Keep a MaJe Interested." The man who .wcared to ~eath of ___ lig.hln1ng. 'f!tten .ah!. "" made up the !ls~ ~w his onions. Jtµle was a child. her cousin was struck and No. 3 was especially interesting to me. it killed at a family outing. lf it starts to was. "Don't call me. I'll call you." Some time ago I met a girl I thought w.s the one for me.. .She WjlS attractive, well .edYCaled, am I able, ,etc. Unfortunately, she turned out lo be a 'J)Ulhov.r. On our third date we went to bed. After a month I was bored and decided to break it off. Well, Ann. you wouldn't believe the letters and lhc phone calls. She pestered me at the office, call· eC.: me'al home. tracked me down at my mother's place and even cc1.llcd n\)' slater. She chased me so shamelessly, I couldn't poss~IY have ao oullt'e o( respect (or her. Please le.II the girls thot lhe so-ciillcd new morality Is a man's gimmick. It a chick wants to go "long with It. she should accept the conscqtienCe~ (like gel- ling dumped) and let the guy orr the hook gracefully. Every man wants a wife be can be proud of. -PHJLADELPHIA · DEAR PHIL.: Yt1 S011Dd Uke'Mcl .e,., to me but your ltUer ii wortll prtadac: Some girls nttd to be ,:.i:.,lmdtd &N& llaere we lots of heell lOOle ...; dlsgq'8t4 as men. "' Do you feel iU at ease .•. out of It 7 '8 everybody h3vlng a good time bo~ ~? Wtl~ for Ann Landers' bOoklet. •ifrhe t:ey to Popularity," cnclosln1 with your request 35 cenla in coin and I king. sell· addressed . 1tamped envel.:>pe. Ann Landers wUJ ge glad· to help you: v.·lth your problems. Send them to her lft Care of the DATLV PIL01','tnclosi111 a, sell-addressed, stamped enve.lopt. • 041lY PllO! Friday, Januif7 30, 1910 GIVING EXTRA CARE -Showing their malhe'8 how much the.y care are members of the Natlooal Charity League Ticktockers. The coeds are hosting a Valentine tea party for moms Saturday, Feb. 7, Glimpse Into 70s Offered Insights for the 70s will lhtme the 17th annual national confert:nee of the Electrical \\'omen's Round Table Tues. day. Feb: 3, in the Grand ilotel, Anaheim. Speakers for the one-day event \Viii include \\'illiam Lane, Sunset t<lagazine : liliss ,\nna Fisher Rush. l\1t'Call·s rilagaz.ine: lilike n.oy, rood editor. KNX.CBS radio; li1iss Carolyn Heine. Advisory Com- mission of the St:itus of \Vomen. State or California: a inanager of an app!iant'e firm. and Dan 1t1oore, Los Angeles Times. The event will begin with breakfast at 7 a.m. and cm-- elude with a banquet at 7 p.m. The Electrical \V o m e n ' s Round table is open to women v.·hose occupations are allied \\ith the electrical Industry or related fields. Exchange Students Tapped Members of the Ebell Club of Laguna Beach will learn a little more abool foreign coun· tries as three members of the American Field Service at Laguna Beach High School present the lttonday, Feb. 2 program. Spealting tD the group al 7:30 p.m. in Laguna Beach Art Gallery will be li1argle le Roux or South Africa, Fernando Ga- ja of Spain and Manfred llehie or Germany. _ A brief business meeting will precede the program. Rerreshments will be .ser\'ed by Mrs. Louis Zitnik and com· mittee mem berii the Mmes. Douglas Kenaslon. Larry Hunt, Gordon Bro .... ·o. Howard Hinrick!. Edward Nell and \Vallace Scolt. Author Speaks For Pen Women Frances Grant Nachant. author of 1'Song of Peace." \l'ill be guest speaker for the r.londay, Feb, 2. meeting of Laguna Beach Pen Women . The author, president of tne San Diego Branch of the Na- tional League of American Pen \Vomen. is listed in "'lnlematlonal \Vho·s \\1ho In Poetry" and In the t968 edition of "Who's Who of American \Vomen." Widely published In this country and abroad. she .... ·as represented in the "Centennial Anlhology" in her native state of Aluka. Tht meeting conducted by 1-fiu Anne Maguire will Mgin 11t 10 a.m. in the boardroom of the Laguna Beach High School administration building. MooH Group New Stew Miss Sandra Sullivan, daughter of Mrs. Palri· cia Sullivan of Costa Mesa and John E. Sul- livan of Cypress, is a Hraduate of Delta Air4 lines stewardess train· ing school in Atlarrta, Ga. She currently is based at Houston Inter· national Airport. Miss Sullivan is a graduate of Mater Dei lligh School and attended Or· ange Coast College. Dads View Activities Fathers y;ere Invited to share nursery school activities with their preschoolers when llilllop Nurseij' School of Costa ~1esa hosted an open house. They wa I c h ed their youngsters at ,.,,·ork and play hi all areas of school instruction inc I ud i ng musi c, art. dramatics, indoor and outdoor free play, juice and slory ti1nc. llilltop is anon profit . nonsectarian parent partlcipa· tion school .,..·hich is licensed by the State Department of Social Welfare and a member of the Orange County Council of Parent Participation Nur· sery Schools. During the gener3J nieeting nc:-.t !tlonth, Don Boy.·lus, a p~~l·hologist. wlll di sc u 111 ::: F':ithcr 's 1iotc \\'ith th c Preschoolers. Laguna Artist Will Address Art League Portrillt arti~t Lrslie B. Oe ti1ille ol Lngu11a Beach wil l demonstrate hi :<> techoique ror members of lluntlngton Bearh Art League on r.tondny. Feb. 2. al 7:30 p.1n . in the Hecrea· lion Center. De Mill e. third cousin of the late cecil B. De Mille, won his first prJ.ze in art comp rlltlon at tM age of eight . He. studied in his home country of Canoda btifore attending Art Students League in New York Cil y. An exhibitor In Laguna's Fe~·tival of Arts. De Mille also I.~ known for s!ill life pain· llnrs. and also invited are the American Field Service students. Working "heartily" are Miss Debra Kil· mer and Miss l~olly Anderson (left to right). In Tr ibute of Mothers Girls Working Hard National Charity League Ticktockers play host to their mothers each year with a ValenUne tea. The Dover Shores home of Mrs. Melvin Daniel Kilmer Ill will be the party setting Satur· day, Feb. 7, y.•hcre the young girls and mothers w i 11 welcome several American Field Se rv ice students. In the receiving line at 2 p.m. y.•ill be tilrs. Ed\vard Leisy Corlett, chapter presi- dent and her daughter Deborah: Mrs. llerbert John ti1cany, Tickl ocker coordinator aod daughters Debbie and Claudine, and Mrs. Kilmer and daughter Debra. Presidents of each grade level and their mothers will pour. They are Tracy Ewald, seventh grade, Mrs. Brian Albert Ewald; Th e r ese r.1a rkel, eighlh grade, Mrs. Louis Dillon Markel: Patricia Rooke, ninth grade, Mrs. Robert Curtis Rooke: Robin r.1iner. 10th grade, Mrs. Guy Everett t.1iner Jr.: Carol Coo· nally, !Ith grad<', ti1rs. Paul Connally, and Debbc Dean. 12th grade, r.1rs. Frank Brooks Dean. Role of Women Seen By African Princess Your Horoscope Tomorrow Scorpio: Stress Versatility SATURDAY JANUARY 31 By SYDNEY O~IARR ARIES (March 21-April 19): Commun I ca lions are highlighted. Imperative that you catch up o n cor· respondcnce. There may be much busy work. But im· portant task 11 to outline format. to clarify opinions 4nd posilions. TAURUS (April 20-Mey IO)' vour feelings run dee p. to deny U1em would be at· ten1ptlng to deceive yourself. Get affairs at home In order. Give and receive love. This wilt make your world go around-In a merry way! GEMINI (May i t.June IO), /\ccent on resolving le1al questions. You relate to most persons in meaningful manner today. But don 't expect to have It all your own way. In marriage, you will make ma- jor concession. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Traveler's Impressions Pay heed to die t health re.- quirements. Key is moderation -which means avoid emss. \Vhat appears to be setk>ua dilemma will be solved -in your faV'Or. Added money is ;'on the way." Russian By BEA ANDERSON ·--·· ••!"" Since his recent tour behJnd tho ir011 cu.rtaio, Grant C. Buller concludes there even- tually will be a revoluUon in RuS§ia. Speaking before the Wedne11· day Morning Club of Costa Mesa, the world traveler and international affairs lecturer said that he felt there Is a grtat deal of unrest among lbe people. "They have no freedom as they are completely re1Ulated by government," be explained, addi.ng "You can't keep them down fore ver." His Impressions of Russia were m o s l l y unfavorable. Even on the plus side he found disadvantages. lie rated merchandise as in- Mermaids Eye Role LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): ferior and over pric e d : Also coming under crlticil'm Good lunar aspect today coin· service, poor; food and hotel ror dlst.ortlna: the American cides with romance, creative accon1modations, fair to poor, image were the news media, endeavors. You make needed and felt that a free enterprise which he said, only report the changes: you get going on pet system would Unprove them. seamy side of America. "The project. You enjoy what you \V hat he liked the least was image slowly is being erased do and opposite sex is drawn the oppressive feeling of a though. as Voice or America to you. Revolt Ahead? poli ce slate. and Radio Free Europe are VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): The plus side included no gelUng l.hrough to a lot af peo-Spotllght on home, praperty • unemployment and hausing pie. care for elderly individual. a·.ld food far everyone. but the ''American tourists alsa are New outlook is desirable. helping to create a better pie· Don't hang onto pas! •· pro-price they paid for this pro-· oc lure." lie advised everyone to gress1've or•.•'nal and 1·n •ress was givin~ up their · .. • I'> tour behind the iron curtain, d nd t freedom, he asser d. epe en . warning that "It wao't be the LIB"• (S pt "~t ~i · • T h e i r c u 1 l u r a 1 be st vacation, but ce rtainly A ~, ' ho. rt~ · " : achievements are many," he the most educational." ccen an s Joumey, said. "Perh8p.11 their greatest lie also feels that if all the special n1 es s a i e involving Contrl.buUon to the w-Id 1·, close relative. Yoor hw'lcb "' dissidents would make the ff h·~ to ·1 Le what they have given to space, tour and compa re th ey'd be pays 0 : pay =v 1 · am bu' agal·n the people pai'd an ho by teaching. Mean!! express more satisfied at me. · J J · t bar expensive price. w1 tngness o s e knowledge. "To root the bill the govern-,~.,,.,,,.~J::h'LA......:.;....:!J SCORPJO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): ment took from the people t ..... 1'-1oney. personal possessions y:hich lowered their living dominate. Your potenlial for standard." he added . Peeri·ng success is stressed throuih Another positive point is the versatile approach. Display lack of crime. Butler said he your unique abilities -and felt safe at all limes walking A d sense of humor. city streets at night and !hat rou n SAGITTAIUUS (Nov. 22- he saw no pornographi c Dec. 21 ): Cycle high; lite rature for sale. ' ' 0 f """''-""'"'"'""' ""'"'°'...:tl"""··i circumstances turn in your course," he added, '•the favor. Your judgment, in· penalty in a police state for a T™E OUT from duties at tuition berome more reliable. The role of Mermaids In crime does serve as a deter· Jioag Memorial Ho sp i la I, Initiate projects. Buy some rommunity projects will be rent.'' On the other hand. he Presbyterian, wtll be taken by new wearing apparel. Brighltn I nd F b was surprised to see so many appearance. surroundm' gs. discussed al the l>' o ay. e . I h 1· membe rs of the Auxiliary as a co O Les. CAPRICORN (~. -'an. 2, meeting of the \Vomen's H d d the' ed a h ti d th Cal•'fom1·a ~ ~ e commen e Ir uc • t ey a en e 19): What is hidden needs at· Division of the Laguna Beach tional systen1, saying that "It H 0 s pit a I Association Con· le r M d 't Chamber of Commerce. is impossible to have a drop· n ion. eans on sweep Social hour at 11 :30 a.m. In oul there. Students don't at· vention in San Francisoo·s problemsundertherug.Come Surr 'n S11nd will precede the ta ck teachers or riot, and if Jack Tar Hotel, Tuesday, Feb. out in open; say what you luncheon. Mrs. Robert Turner, their 5ystem had a teacher J throguh Fri., Feb. 6. mean. Cooperate with one who program chairman, w I 11 like Angela Davis she'd either Traveling north will be is conducting charily drlve. discuss upcoming r.1ennaid be shot or sent to Siberia." president r.1rs. \Vi l Ii a n1 AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. projects including the Flea He criticized campus Langston and the r.1mes. t.1at-18 ): Accent on friend who Market, a float for the \Vinter libraries ror the lack of good thew Kenney , William Brown· shows appreciation with lovely Festival next month, and the Amer ic a n l i le r alure, ing. Donald Fuller and gift. f\.1ake peace. Gesture of state convention of chambe r maa:ai.ines and newspapers. William Hudson. goodwill will give you a women to be hosted by While talking to students be tremendous boost. Act ac· Laguna Beach in the fall. learned that represent.alive cordingly. Presiding officer Mr s . newspapers or the U.S. were CM Overeaters PISCES (Feb. 19-t.tarch 20): Thomas Johnston welcomes the Daily worker, Los Angelts Study Aquarius message. Ac· women interested In joining Free Press and the New York Overt:aters An 0 n y m 0 u s cept invltations. Elevate aelf4 The role of women today In both Africa and America will be discussed by Princess All ee Siwundh\a, nallve or east cen- tral Africa, for the Women's Auxilia ry lo the Oarnge Coun· ty Medical As.wdation Tues· day, 1'~eb. 3. the Mermaids to phone the Post and that novelists were gather every Wednesday even-esteem. You &re worthy of to work a1nong their people. chamber office at 494.·1011 [or Eldridge Cleaver, Jame 1 Ing at a in Bear Street School, reward. Feel this ts 50 and it r.1rs. Laurance t.losicr. aux. reservations. l Baldwin and Norman Malle.i;. Costa Mesa. will be -especially today. ilia ry president, will conduct a 1 ----------- brief business meellng during .----------, the tl a.m. gatherin1 in the Ornnge County Medic a I\ INTRODUCING Association buil ding. Orange. FROG LOVIRS t.1rs. Kenneth t.lcNlecc or Princess Alice, an author and scholar as well as public speaker, made her first ap- pearance in this country on the Ralph Edwards television show "This ls Yoor Life." Santa Barbara, president·elect 1 TO CHOPINI of the Women·s Auxiliary to the California lif e d i c a I Association will be Introduced during the meeting, a n d special guests will b e 1 men1bers of the women·s aux· iliaril's of the dental. phar· maceutical and veterinary so- citics of Orange County. She has written two books Including "Alice Princess," her first, and •·Between T\VO World!," a sequel to be published shortly. The speaker is married and is the mother of three children. She and her husband hope to obtain their PhD degrees and return to Africa li1rs. Loren Heather \Yill serve as hospitality chairman, assisted by the Mme.11. Morris Fier. John Granzcll:i. Jack }lag:idorn and }''rank Ken· dri ck. Semi-Annual QualiCraft • • • • • • • • • • • • • were 8.99 to 10.99 ~ ... • • • • • • • • • • • • • were 5.99 to 7.99 ......-4 ~v• now on QualiCr11t·s f1shlon shot PflCt••ttorf.I Choo•• severtl 11 !hast terrlOc p1lce1, 8 ut huriy tor • fOOd selecllon. Nc.1 ell •tylt• In every •·~•. PARENTS'. DON"T WAIT UNTIL YOUR CHILO IS OUT OF THE FROG LOVERS AGE BEFOR E YOU GIVE THEM THE Giff OF MUSIC -YOU WAIT ANO IT MAY BE TOO lAtll Childrtn In tht fro; loving Sltgt (4·11) 1rt !ht perftcl 1Qt for letrnlng m1,1sic. 'f•m•h•, t lttr y,1rs of rtu1rth dtsign1d the Y 1m1 h • MIJSi<: Courst to 1ss1,1rt 11111 ill childrtn ctn l11rn music. Miiiions of Y1m1h1 gr1dv1lts from 111 over lht world tes!ily ro !ht success of !tit YAMAHA MUSIC COUll:SE. You do 1101 h1vt to b•JY 1n in· slrumt nl. there 11 no hornt •tudY -jusl loll of furi for your ch1ld,e11 while they ltarri music. DON'T DENY YOUR CHllD THE CHANCl YOU MAY HAV[ Ml~[D IN YOUR (HllOHOOO. Cl11sn 1r1 now 1nrolling-won't you plet!t givt i..1 • c11I 111d 111 u5 show you th• whole story of tht YAMAH A MUSIC COURSE!, YOUR BIGGEST REWARD Will BE WHEN YOUR FROG lOVlR lOOKS UP Al YOU AND TRlS YOU ••• "t GAV[ MY fROG A N(W NAME, BEETHOVEN.'' Don't D1l•y-C1ll T ocl1y 642-1844 DEPENDABILITY MAKES THE GREAT MAYTAG AGO& and Matching Dryer Your Best Buy! Maytar Automallc Wn~ir. 2 speeds for all·fabric washlnf. Automatic fabric softener dispenser. Power·Fln ~ltator for washln1 action thlf• r,nuo, thoroo1h. Sptcl1I soak cycle ma es re.ally dirt)' clothes 1 cinch to get clean. MtJlll lloctronlc Control Dryer. Fost dry clathu In gentle, low ttmper1tur11 whila electronic sensors constantly "feel" moisture in clotM!" Shub au when clothes are dried just right. Ont uttlnc -no gu1ssJnr for time and temp. Per· manent press satUric removes wrlnk11s. Slnet 1'47 DAVIS- BROWN 411 E. 17th St. Sar. '·' \Vomen of the f\.1005f, 11~ assemble the fir11l and third Thursday or ea ch month for mccUngs In f\.fOOR •rome. Co!lta litesa. The prcgrams begin at 8 p.m.. Tickets for 1hc me-elln~ v.h1{'h i~ nptn to the publlc 11.t no char1c wlll entitle the \\'in· F .. 1 1 ~' H ,1 , c , 5,, •• c , •• , ''••• I Int d •1"'0" I '""' W" ~9 0" I~ •r " nrr to a frtt portra l pa e Ni ... p•rl •••ch Hunt!11g10 11 B1•ch Coil• /ro\1•• YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL IN COSTA MESA Dolly f·' by the MrUst. 1----'--------'------------ I I. I * , .. • . . . Valley . , • \ VOL. 63, NO. 25, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES OR;&.NGj COUNTY. C~UFOl\NIA FRIDAY, JANUARY 30, 1970 w .. J U . s • .. .Fugitive C .. ·f ·. :21 · .. aptµreu ~ Beach Man's Tip LedtoHunJ,in Texa.s An attorney aceused of stealing nearly $500,000 In bonds from the estate of an ailing Newport Beaqi man Is today being held jn a Texas jail accused of interstale transportation cf stolen property. Federal o!icials in Brownsville, Texas, said today they were hoping to schedule further court action for Escondido lawyer P..itrick S. At. rifltton, 47, "for possibly Monday or Tuesday." ?t11tton is in custOOy In lieu of $500,000 bail following his arraign1nent Thursday night. P'ederal officers. lipped off by lifexican aUlhoritles, moved in on the elusive 47- year~ld lawyer Wednesday as he al· tempted to return to the U.S. he left more than two months ago. He allegedly crossed the border la.st November wilh nearly $500,000 worth of bonds !ilched lrom the estate of JOhn Sal- mond, 79, ol 2164 Vista Entrada, Newport Beach, a retired Union 011 Company .ex· eeutive. · FBI agents and investigators from the San Diego County Diatrlct Attorney's of. fice tooli: up the clWe alter being advised of the theft by Sal.mond's 50fl, John Sal- mond Jr. of 16921 Bedford Lane, Hun- tington Beach. The younger Salmond and 'his mother, Mrs. llelen Salmond of the family home, are conservators Of the sUbstantial estate. 'Mitton was appointed as lawyer for the estate by Salmond and shortly af- terwards, It is alleged, disappeared with most of the bonds entrusted to his care. He allegedly wrote a letter t.o the younger Salmond In wbicll he ·warned the con- Pentagon Concerned Douglas Firm Puzzled Over Contract Revfutv A surprise announcement ijlat award of the $7 billion F-15 aircraft contrac:t to McDonnell-Douglas Aircraft Corporation may face a review came as just that to the firm's llWltington Beach aerospace branch today. Pentagon officials in Washington an- nounced they are deeply concerned about t.br<:ompany'li hi ring policies. based on provisions of federal equal opportunity employment laws. "Hmmmm," pondered Larry Vitsky, public relations director at McDonnell- Douglas Astronautics Company, which would have no direct role in production of the fighter-bomber. "I know absolutely nothing about It," be said, adding that he would consult ex- ecutives in Santa Monica or at the firm's hee.dquarters in St. L<luis. 'Ille Air Force disclosed that before the contract was ,awarded last month, of· ficlals failed, as required by law, to con- duct an audit of McDonnell-Douglas to make sure the company was fully com· plying with equal opportunity standards. A Defense Oepart1nent ipokesman said • it was basically an Air 'JI' o r c e respcinslblllly lo conduct thi audiL The sp6kesman1 Jerry Ffledhelm, sa.Jd he would not go so tar as to Hy th'at McDonneJl-Douglas was In danger of. los- ing the cootract, but It was obvious the matter was belng given unusual attention by the Pent.a·gon. Secretary of the Air Foret Rebert c. Seamans Jr. broke of[ a visit 'to Ramey Air ·Force Bage in.Puerto ruco and rlew to SL Louis to meet With company of· Uci11ls about the contract provisions. A Pentagon statement p o r t r 1 y e d Seamans as deeply cmctrned that the pref;(lntract audit of the company's hiring procedures had n:t been conducted. 1 Friedbelm declined to say specifically that the hiring of.Negro employea,wa1 in- volved. Friedhelm said the lack of the hiring • review was called to the attenUon of Seamans and Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird by the Rev. TheOdore M. Hesburgh, chairman of the President:s civil rights cormnlsslo11. Frledh\ilin did not say how the matter came before Hesburgh. McDonnell Douglas Earns $117 Million During '69 ~e highest e~nings In the history ol the aerospace industry were announced today by McDonnell Douglas Corporation. A llgurc of $117,645,437 after taxes, or S4.06 per share for the Uscal year ended Dec. 31 , wa ... announced by James S. ~f.cOonnell. chainnan. The figure marks the rlrst time in lhe aerospace industry's history that the $100 mi!Uon mark has been exceeded. Fourth quarter earnings w e r e S16,147,865, or 56 cents per share, after having betn reduced by $14,411.679, or 49 cents per share due to fourth quarter lo.sses reported by Canductron Corp., a subsidiary whose financial statements Are lnclufled in the A-lcOonnell Douglas con50lidation report. PiicDonncll Douslas sales for the fourth guar~ were $715,347,193. Comparallve DR. HAYAKAIVA NOW. IN PILOT San Francisco's: sharp-tongued edftea: tor, Dr. s. 1. Hayakawa, 1tn1 has, lot to say. And, starting t9day, he's going to r.ay 80llle of It in a weekly column whlcll will be publlsh<d by th< DAILY PILOT. Or. J-layakawa-,: first column appean loday on the edllorl•I page (Page 6). It will continue as a regaler feature of the edilori&I paae "ch l'ridly In th< DAILY PILOT. figures for the fourth qUarter of 1981 showed earnings of $34,69S,867 ·after taz· ' es. or $1.20 per share-on sales of $861 ,019,908. Sales on a consolidated!-basls for 1969 were $3 \023,829.861. or wlilch ii7 percenl were commercial and 53 percent govern- ment. Sales In 1968 were $3,600,295,227. The corporation had a· funded backloa on Dec. 31 of $2,588,184,843 compared with $3,579,127,403 a year earlier. This backlog. of whlch ·59 perooit Is commercial and 41 percent government business, excludes gov.emment.order11 not yet funded and orders being negotiated as continuations of authortied programs, and also excludes commercial ordera not under finn contract The total baCklogi funded and un- (unded, am0W1ls to .about $6,18$,000,000 compared to a 1.olal of a b o u t $S.SM.OOO.OOO a year earlier. HlghUghll ol th< year for McDonn•ll Doulf(u Included Ille award of .[he Air FOl'C< F·15 air "'f"lority llihter - Ind, lld>a""" lo ... !JC.JO Jm\lbo lri·Jel with orilcrs and MJt.lon11 at year'a end totalling 201 from II airlln<a. c:onUnuallon of Douglas Aircraft Complmy'1 Sl<yh•wk program, and the ~pa.n1'1 major role In man'11 fl~t landlngs on Ule moon. Th e S.IVB lh;;,i •tage of the Solum V rockel, which placed the Apollo 11 and 12 sparicr1ft fn earth orbit and. hurled them Iulo lun-r lt1Jtclory. ptrlorrned n~wle ... ly on four lunar. mia.slons durlna the year. ~ . ... serv~y;-that the bonds ·would not be retu~ Wietss·~ (Mitton) received half their value. · • _ · Th# Jetter suggtsted a meeUng bet+n"·the two.men at which detllls of the fansfer oI,Iwids coold be di&<:twed. F«iFal Ofklal.s · too,y aiid \here la "a!Jtolufe))' no · doubt" !hat \be letler c?'lfe from Mitton; rq-was also revealed ·today that Mex- ica.n'O[(IClals bad been Watching Milton's pro&1'ess Ulrough ·raur Mexican provl~s for tNne·tfme prier-to Mltton's affest. A fe<Wtal agent would anly say that the-lir--.ol U.. rr ... apendlng llwyer.had been del!)'ed "ln·the interest of recovering a1 m"ln of \be atolen·money u pooslble and ~lrthlrik .our metboda have been auc- ul" , ¢ruson ··Plant ·i ' llear~g."Opeus· ~ . ~ ~. "I ~ • ' ' . 'l 1 ' .1 • I . . Publfc • '-"""' °" tbe ISoulhtm Ci!lll~.J!diM!ltjCompai>j'1 appllcaUon lo exp1ncl-lla .,,._ Plan! in ilunlmg1ml ~ 'iom rellin!e Tlletciay 'in Loa Angeles. Ora11g10 County will .. nd eight wit· ~sea t.o Qle" 10 a.m. teHloo called by the · CalUornla P1d>llc · UUUU., Comnll"lon (PUC):Tbe bearing will lake 'place Ir. the commlasllill'11AB"Anl<lei offices State Office Bnlldl,.."11'7;8..-ay. . Among 1 thoae sthlduled to telltif;y are : William Ftlcbeo, • Orang< CountY· ~Ir Pollution Control' OffiCer and 1w·o of Ws engineer•; Dr. O.tC. T8ylor,•acUng direc· tor of the Uni•era:lty of Callfurnla's Statewide· Alr -Pollut1on "Research' Center z.t UC, Riverside. and.George J.,Taylor, administrator: -0f the· · California Alr ~· B9ard'• air •quality inanage- men( program.. ' · · ·- Also llCheduled ·to-1ppe.i! are Dr. A. J. i!llligen-Smlt, cllalnnan of \be California /Jr Reaourcts Board and ·Cal'Tech pro-·ressorwM ls acknowledged r.atJonwlde as ·an mqierl In the ·air pa1hrtlori field: Dr. Jolin 11. Goldimlth, beod of th< stale Department of~ Realfh'I Environm'!Trtal Epidemloloty Unit ind meteorologist Erwin Kauper. - . · ~·- The E<l)oon Company Is seeklng PUC permission to build two -new units .at U. Huntington Beach planL Fitchen ha1 denied a county lice"" on th< grounds that expansion will lead to violation of the county'& 11110f ooalrol'law. City Puts Parks Off I.imits During B~~g Work tlttle1!Dyl cmi't I" fishing or wading anymore In Huntington and T•lliert Lakes. Neither cin anyone else. The cily of Huntington Be&c;h.l!u put bot!' .lakes off limits· unUI the .$3 miflkm central part &U'l'Olindlng Golden West Slreet and Talbert Avenue is bulll. No ·trt!PaSilng 1lgn1 are up and the poilc:t' d~I la warning perllOllO who go near the lake1l not to. Monday, pollc< "ill •tart L<aulna citallons lo trespaaen. · · · • "Wi do not want a chHd 'to -drown In th<se fak'9 during thla pertod of con- 5lrUction. When the park Is conu>leted and supervlaed and 6are, we wUI welcomt tHe fi1hennen and water users back," Police Chief Earle-'Robitaille said. One boY dkt drown. In Huntington Lake In 19". Bath lake• have been popular -•pols for Utblnf and aome ,Youlha• have ileOn explciied them by rail ' " .. . Stork Market NEW YORK (Al') -Slocb continued lo slide ttUY 1•"11-llely adlft tr14- lng •fter an torlkr tlcbnlcal.rally ev•i> or•ted. (See quotations, Pages !!loll). A~1!1S J1Y fnv<1lor1 st!U ,_ on u.. llldeline1, ]ltlllimllllo •bout flM ...... omlc outlook and walUn& out th• decline. • •· o ·sa • • ro ,., I Ul'l'TI ........ QIP.UTY ROBERTO' DI!· I.A P.U.·EscoRT5,MtnON , FBI Flnd1 ~f~slfll, Attorney In BfoW:nlvfll•,. Tex. 'l B.illie Sol Estes Loses . . First Appeal for Parole ' . . .WASHINGTQN CAP\. -Billie Sol Estes, a one-Ume fertilizer tycoon W.hose , flhanclal dealings became a · national scindal, lost today his ftrrt.·bld for parole from' a 15-yeat federal ·prison term. The·u.5. Parole Board' rejected .the·a~ plication of Estes, 45; who would have !>ten· ell,11:it>le March 5 afler seiving one· tli.ird of his tenn, imposed for· swindling finance" companies. P.iiroli Bd3fd -Chalnn1n George--J. Reed 8ald the full eight-membtt bo8rd . njad~ 'the de'ciSion arter . a C1.lmPlete review of lhe record In the Elles case. The board set December 1971 for its next r!..-lew of the decision. The ~epos, Te!'l'.,. buslnessplap Is serv· Ing his 11ent~nce for ma:u . fr;u<i .ahd con· spiracy to defraud the fiIJ~nce corrlpanleiri at the federal' cOrrectlonal ln!titution at Sandstone, r.1inn. lie ha~ Deen .In- carcerated tlJere since Dec. 15, 1966, al~r beginning his pri¥JD llf.e ~'·a "cOi'ivjet at Leavenworth, Kan., federal pJ1son, Little ha! bien heard of hfin 'since he enter~ prllon. There rtmains UtUe-of ~Estes magic tJiat made htm· a mlllionafre In his 20s and. extended his Influence far ~yond hi,s rexas home. the road on March 29, 1962·,. when federal Bien1s jailed him· on charges he· had swindled major finance companies acrou the nalloo ' by •peddling 121 ·million In wotthless-paper. The goven:imeht 11ald Elte'I. ·indticed ranners. and others• to sign mortgages listing mythical fertilizer tanis as Col- lateral and UM!n sold the mortgages. 'to ftnanCe companies. -He-reputedly llstea 33,500 normlst~t taw:.valued at abotit $1,000 re.ich, for a l l@UJlly 1 area that. coold use no rriore lhan 400. He was convicted on March 28, 1963, and sentenced to IS years ln prison bu.t actually did not enter. prill'm uqtlliMattb 5, 1965,·when he-walked·through•the gates at Leavenworth, Kan ., with his hands handcuf[ed,ln front of rum: Three Mei~ etiier . . Race for · V aJley Council Seats · E~tes arr1ved in Pecos. Te:x., fn 1951, in · Tbree...men rulve now enter,ed tbe ·race dibt and toting a battered brltf ciise but for three pogltlons open· A,prt1 tit on. Qle in fi ve years he had made his. first Folintaih Valley City Cotincil.' · roilllon and was on.the way to)'Uilding a Incumbent. City ·Councilman Bernie multln'tllUon-dollar empire on fraudulent S_v~l$tad, SB03 Et ~llJ>ilfl Ave. wa11 the credit. · ' 1 firtt to pick up application pa~n Thurs- The empire-Including ferUlizei', grain day .frtm City Clerk-Mrs. Mary Colt. e I e v a to r s , cotton allotments and a Thursday afternoon, papers were taken variety of other busint:Mes-Collapsed, in out by Bw1on Taubman; 18732 Red.wood 196Z and lhe resulting-thunder St.,• and~ Jahn J .. Mangano.-te05 U. reverberated In Wllshtnaton and.ion Wall . Granada ·Ave. ·. r ~ , Street. Tw9 incumbent councllinen, Mayor The Bible-quoting "boy wonder of West Edward Just and George Soctl, have not Texas ~grlctdture" reached I.he end of Y,eYpicktd up aJ>Plicatton i,~•· blkare I · upected, \o do •noon. ' , Stud~nts to Lopk At ,Modjeska Caitf.oiJ : Fifty conservation-minded studenll ~of · Fountaln'Valley High Scl\ool-rrill tra.e11o Mod)e!ka canyon Satutday lo htlp repalc• flood damage at the Tucker. -Wild · Life Sanctuary. • 'l'he1If\y sllldenll ue port of a group of.!lllO al !he achool lnvolvJd.ln,lbe llll<iy . I Of t!COIOIY... ' ' . ·-lnlll'\!(lor Ken Eria wt!lltad lh .. illlomember JP'OUP· , \Mangano.. t1 .cbair111an .of the .. chambtr or commerce legislative coinmittee-and regulatJY attends council meetlngai fie ls aiso·:a ,former.-Utisuccesslut•candidate for lluntlqglon Beach City C.Uocll. Taubma~ la it pilllr~al unknown In th•i cfl)I. ' Svalatad waa olecf.d ti> !he councll last sei>tem~r during \ho. •lty'1 · l'tCall el"" tlon,11 wu Scdtt. J\11~ w811 an1nt'Utnbent not Involved In tho recall. " "Codncllmen Rbn ShenkO'.an and. JObn l!arper au not up for ,....lt<UoitA(>fil t4. Shenkman was till Jhln!• r.ew face qn lhe Ct'Uncll efter the: recall wh!c~.~·ed tM: Conner mayor and two ouicrt from ofOc.r. ..... i • £'ittkM1"'•3 •H •'£' d ·•1y7 . • 'W'? +el i . :• '?> t • TEN CENTS er .1 ~900 A~res For ·Marina Project .. By JACK BROBACK· · OflllltDfilY• ............ , •·' .• l'1irclia<e of appioxim&tcly l.tOO"lcre• Of• \be Bo!A 'Chica Pl'<ll""tY· ..... IO· nouilced today by the Sipl Compenlei. FO!Tf.St N. Shumway,· ,pt:Widelit, · llkl \be purchase of lbe-polonliat marlo& development was made by-t w o lllibi!ldlarj.,, Slgrtal Oii anil-G• Comileny Purchase "WU made 'from ibj'i ft\l'e Bolia. Coi:poraUons. ownera ol ·ttw · ft'.al property, and Bo!A ·Tenant<-lrl Common, owners-. of royalty and· ·net profits · in· terests under existing oil and '8" teases With Signal OU. rio sak!1 f~ 'was discloled . -· Shwnway aald Signal p11r.s to ,deyelQp the PrQperty Into a• water-orten~ icom· munity, relocatina oU and pa operations compatibly wtUt th< planned urban development LoniI regarded .. \be most cl!oic< pot.ntlal marllia property Oii \be Oraop Coast, the more than three' aqllare miles ls almoet completely !WTOunded ~f· Hun- Ungt(n Beach but· r•e m a'.fD s·_,.uflln- coipor&lid. Site ot a turn of the century .gun club, lhe'property preaented • pert1cu1arl1 di!, ficult problem for development. Helfs to gun club .members w~ held shares were ICI~ thro\iihoui,lho 'rifkl. : · Tlif'lj•e Bo!A Cor~itl,_ ...... n• tngetbet· and ~ lftl;kr '&"'"" J?"rilel about four Y.8" ail•· Sb"'41·il:. J)lllM f<ir develOpment havi:: been ·ftCUr- rerit iinndr1. ' · 1 · · Si .... Ofi holds oil aDd ' au li!U.. on m90\ Cf llie prop<rty oad ••'"'........,. by the ' 'la cOMlder'ecMho~"'"" tJCaf "m Signal~wlll <tuaier'Oft ~ similar to \be HunUnglon 'llNdt COm· pariy methoCj,' on llie• Huntington SeoclUI ~ dlrectlY, wt Of~ ~-~ca Sliumway •aid planning b!Y·bi!gun,for the creauon or an ~ ui'ben.. Complex esUma:ted to provide community, iefvlCts •:-i hou,slng for appioidma(ely•50,ii0o~ Pe. ·~ -· One ,bi& slumblilJg: bfook Jo ,proper mariQa del·e.lopmen.t is an ope,q;,q,rjp ,the PaciilcOcean. Thia h ... been und<r studl' by th< U.S. Army Corps of En8lneera for sev.eral years. · .. , • A large .porUon Of ~· 1,000 acres Is oow covered with• lagoons. 4 Take Papers In . Huntingion · Fou: per1JOns• have taken .out nomlna· lion ~PJPU•• fol'-Hvnt~ Beach_JCfty Coupcll 'seats, City Clerk Paul JOnes aa\d this rriomlng. · ' In addition lo Realtor Phyllla 'Galkin, firg)·lo lake out papera 'l'burs!i~· tbe a1pfranl1 for four counCU seats qp r'f)? eledon inclu~e Reger Slates, Realtor aDd chalrmiln of Ille city, Planning Com- mission, Joe . Ferm, chatnnan-of "the irol!"rty OWUetir Protective !.ugUe>and en~P.r Gleiv. Font: · · • CaOOidatea have~ IHIUl,noon Feb. 19 to return nomination -papen:. 1 The four coimcU seals _up thi1.yeJrJ cur~ rently are held . by Mayor Jack ·Green, Ted Bartlet~ Alvin Coen.r.nd .Dr. Henry Kaufman. • Or•nlfe ' . Weatfaer Gusty northeiiii windl 0 will eend W..kend high> Into· !he •'°" 7''1 along th< Oranp'Cout, while cold weaUJer ge~ la jlreacrfbed fof tbe nfghtUme hour11. . INSIDE TOJ;J!\ y ~ -.. How do the MID cha•• in the Motiora "pictUre:~'• movie ry>tlng "pdo'<l//ICI•-~ ' yO.,.kidlY,A .~omp!etf (~ tlon ts grvtn lrModav't'Wecol> tmfer 14!!Ction. • f l ·. . . .. .. 1 t -' u -I 'DAil y PltOT ff '""'· Jo""lll' JQ, 1'70 • • Irvine Ce. Tells Stand ' . . i~ Qn'Bay SwaP, "i'- 1"1Dt Company President William Muon has broi:@n hia Joni-standing of· Dclal allenet oh \he Upper Bay land i;wap lsaue and charged that new allernale plll\I by its foes were made without 1tudy and hearings and he said ' lhe rnartr,e ecotoa of the estuary already · 11o• .._ c1eo1royi!d by .;..,r~ _ Muon 1ttacbd County Supervisor ~ Robert Battin'• new alternate plans as Ci • ''hutllJ conctlvtd" Thursday. £> He llao said that last y e • r • a devastaUng floods destroyed the marine 'l'> ... environment cf the contested estuary by . ~ deJ)Olltiog two-to-Uve-feet of mud and liill -·on the bly'a floor. ~.:.. Muon'at.atmchly upheld his company's -: ·-role In the 10-tear-old uchange plan with Orange County and said opj>OSition -in· :. ..: . ~ludir,a: Superior Court intervention - 1., has t;eme .from a "small, self-Interest :; gT(IUJll." He said the original state grant or the !• , tidelands Of the bay WB! made Wilh the ._. inteDUon of building a harbor, and that -;; beciuse the county cannot afford to, the ·~·· l rvine Company could doll "We fttl that the legal questions should • 2-be detennined through the present case --rather than adeJ.Y for another five years while some olh!r plan Is proposed which, ~r in tum. will probably be aUacked by • other self-lnlerest groups." Ma.son old. ... , TM statement drew responses by foe! !'! of the exchange charging that Mason's t~ comment.a lacked merit. • Frank Robimon of Newport Beach. a '' leader of the foes of the swap, said he }~ and his group were. proud to be called a • , self-Interest group, because their ldea5 are the utne u those of President Nixon, Governor Reagan and Senator! Alan cranst.on and George Murphy. ••All of them have come out strongly in .. : favor of preservation of public shorelines 'l for the public and saving ecological values, and we're proud to be a group w:ltb1thls aame interest," he said. ' . Joe Scherman, 1 1st Fire Marshal Of County, Dies JOf, ~' Qrans• .count~:· fin! fire marMal\difd today at SL Jostph Hoqital alter !Ulfering a heart attack. He WU 68. His death ended a career ln the county which began in 1030 when be fa a~ pointed Orange County's fint U.Sf,.Forest Service ranger. At the time the dlunty'• fire fighting equlPl!l~nt consisled of six f boxes of tools which the fire fighters lug· 1 ged to the blaze. (. Wben he 1'tlred in August, 1963. he left ~ 2$ fire stations, 400 paid volunteers and 150 regulal"ll on the fire fighting staff. 1 Following his retirement he moved to I ldyllwtld and then to Yucaipa . He had wffertd a series or heart attacks before f beln&: hospitalized 1horUy before his death . _,.. He Is survived bh hla wife, Ruth, and a IOll, Davld. r . Little League ; Signup Slated Baseban starts Saturday with signups !n the Huntington Valley Lill.le 1"ague from 9 1.m. to noon at Bushard School, 19'99 Education Lane, Hwnington Beach. Bo)"I eight-years-old before Aug. I, 1910. and not ll before July 31, 1970, can play JitUe league ball. The Huntington Valley Little League covers lhe area between Ellis and Adams Avenues and Beach Boulevard and the Santa Ana River. Further 'ignups wlll be held from t p.m. to 4 p.m., Sunday al Bushard School. For .further Information call Tom Boardman, 962-0347. DAILY PILOT Oll'-N~E COA•T l"UllllMING COMl"AH.'1' '-o"'9tt N. WaM .. ,.~, -l'llbllllllr J .c.i. •· c •• 1,., Yb ,,_...,, ""' ~•I M.,,.atr Tli•flll•' Kt••ll E'lltf' Tli•"'•• A. Mut~lil~• ""'""Int E••lol( Alltt•1• W. 11 .. • """°'~'' Edllw H•ttftlttl• '"'11 Offk• I 1t1J ..... i. 101111••1• M.ifl111 Mtlr1ui P.O. 1111 7t0, 11,41 --L.,... -..cii: m fll'ftl A- C..11 M-: -Wftl ••Y $~.___, "'""*'' kkll: m1 waoi ... ""' _....... .. , • • . • • .. . .... . . ·-· .. .. • ... • -· • -• •• • . ·- • -.. ~ .. .: .. : • • • -• Bit'ds of a Feather .. -' .,.._ -' • ' ' , " ............ - " ., ... '!' i r .. • • • • •• " ., I . . Unl!bunltd thousands of black starlinss (with the apptopfiale Latin name of Slurnus VOJgar'is) line the phone wires in Redding, Calif., around sunset each dB)'.., splafterlng sidewalks, patked cars and some unlucky pedestrians. Massive use of shotguns to dlsper•fi the birds his been considered , ltut as yet n£1 aoluUon has been found. Meeting Site Victim of Westminster Too 'Kitcheny'; ChangePondered CarburetDr Fire Critical TrUJtees of the HunUngton Buch Union High School District are pondering a move from their cunent mettlt!i' place at (ijstrkt headQuart.ers to 1 pOrtion of the Huntiniton Beach Hi&h School cafe- teria. Board Chairman MaUhew .. Weyuker suggested the change to provide a more "bu&lntu:llke atmosP;here" for tru1teea to me'.tt. · • • He uld the current meeting room at diotrfet headquaMrl Is too "kltcheny" • since those in atttndance get up al wilJ to serve themselves coflee at the perco- lator. · Weyuktr polnted out the need for betttr parking faclllilea. inltaU.Uoa of a perma- nent pubtil! ,addtess system, better 1eou· stl,cs and lfrger gathering room ln uk- Uia for ~lhur•. · ·nie propo.al ts now under stuay-sy-Uie AdmlrtistraUon who will provled the tnuJl· ~s with a cost eaumate of the move. .. .. W oqien Realtors Council Slates 1st Installation The installation luncheon of the newly· fo;rmed Hunt i n g I on Btach·fountain Valley Women's Council of Realtors will be held Feb. 20. Phyllis Galkin Is president of the new group. Other oHlcers are Shirley Comons, vice -president; Dorana M c L e y , st-cr~tary·lrt;:isurer; Mary EI a in e Martin, legislative chainnan; Pal Robertson. finance and budget chairman, and Eleanor Baker. publicity chairman. The installaUon luncheon will be hekt al lhe Sheraton-Beach Inn. Month I y meetings are scheduled for the fourth Friday o( each month at Francis Restaurant, Huntington Beach. All women members of the Hl{l'llington Beach-Fountain Vallty Board of Realtors are eligible to join the women's council which )s an educational affiliate ()f tbe National Association ()f Real Estale Boards. Union Asks La'v Over Layoffs LOS ANGELES ( AP)-The United Auto and Aerospace Workl!!nl Union called Thursday for federal legislation that ~·ould require either gusranleed incomes or retraining for ()!her jobs for defenie ~·or kers hit by government cutbacks. Paul Schrade, the union's western r~ gional direetor, said: "Deferu;e contrac- tors ha\·e a special obligation. They are en1aged in an industry with llmlted competition and guaranleed profits. And the proflis are derived solely from tax dollars. ••vet wben a downturn in war produ c· lion occuni. defense "'orkers are the fir1t to be hurt." A 29-year old Wilmington man Is In critical condition today •l the Orange County Medical Center burn unit from In· .. Last 3 Suspects In Camp.us Drug Raids Captured 1be last thrtt among a large number ()[ suspected. camp111 narcoUca dealers named in arrest warrants were ~ked up by Costa M.,a poUce 'f'hun"'1 nl1ht, bringing to 25 te total number tn custody. Detective Sit. John Regan said the trio fs char~ with sale ol dangerous drucs « marijuana, with two of them-juveniles • .• Robert MorTts, 18, of 117 ~· Way, Costa Mesa. was charged' In 1a warrant carryiD,C $625 bail wit.h slle er marijuana. Six of the suspec:L!I In the alleged dtal· ing at both Costa Mesa and Estancia high schools art adult.I and face arraignment or 1 preliminary hearings , in Harbor District Judicial Court next Wttk. The rtmaining 19 boys and girlll face Juvenile Coort acUon in coming weeks. Investigators confiscated abOut $10.000 worth of marijuana and narcotics during the shc•\\'etk -probe of campus activities. Including nearly every type on the illicit market. Detective Capt. Bob Gretn said earlier that the alleged narcotics trafficking ~·as not what one \\1ould call an or1anlzed ring, but most defendants knew each other. Complain~ charging another group of rive young men arrested Wednesly ni1ht at a Costa Pi-tesa apartment, meanwhile, wert being sought from the Orange Coun- ty District Attorney today. • Authorities in Wooster. Ohio, tipped off local police by emergency, cross-country teletype message that t\\·o known narcotics suspects wert in Coiita Mesa and cave the address. A team of detectives went to 79'l Shalimar Drive, where they and a tl1lrd Ohioan were arrested, along wilh two Anaheim youths attending college in Ohio. Before police could enter. someone tried to nush a doun plastic bags of mtrlJuana down a loiltt -clogging it - and the soggy "'eed was confiscated as evidence. All five were charged with poslltlllion of marijuana for sale and ordinary possession of marijuana counu. Bel Air Fire Probed BEL AtR (UPI) -The cause Of a fire i1·hich blackened two acres of brush in the mountainous regions north of here was being investlgaled Thursday. Stven companles of city firemen and two hellcopter11. brought the fire under con1rt1l in 30 minutes. No homts were damaged. M1·s. Hanso11 Back in U.S. 1ur1es suffered Wednesday night in a carburetor fire near a Westminster filling station. Charles Haeflinger suffered burns on his upper torso, arms and face around 7:46 p.m. when gaM>line he was pouring into the carburetor of his stalled automobile suddenly ignited , Westminster fire investigators said. Haeflln~er's brother. William. ()f 8402 Sterling St., Westminster, also recei ved bums and was llsted in good condiUon at Westminster Community Hosp it a I. 'Vllliam Haeflinger's wife, Charlotte, wat treated and released from ·the-llolme hospital. An alert service station ()perator whO wilnessed the aceident at S 4 6 O Westmio.ljer Blvd. managed to put out Charles Haenlnjer's burning elothing with a fire extinguisher, saving him from further injury. firemen dJsclosed. · Firemen said the ma!], Pete Lindgren, ran across the street, mttUng Haeflinge r headon and a\ the same time blasting awa~· "'Ith the extinguisher. Valley Schedules Music Festival About 60 students are tuning up violin and cello for the: Fountain Valley School District's Solo and Ensemble ?o1usic Fes- tival preUminaries l!Cheduled Saturday at Fountain Valley School. The event gets under way at 8:45 a.m. betore a panel of judges consisting of Fountain Valley '-1usic teachers. Those who finish in the top ten will be eli&lble to compete for z. music scholar· ship in the district's sixth annual Solo Contest Feb. 18. Preservation Confab Delay Requested . ' In Coastal Work !n ooncert with commer~ made Thurs- day by Newport Beach City Manager Harvey L. Hu rlburt, Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke today called for a moratorium on adverse: coastal development in C:ilifornla wiUI state masler plans art finished, Both the men, speakinl at the G<lvernor11 Confertnce on California Coastal Shoreline Preservation, agreed that '.Tlaster plan projects related to the coastline would need the voluntary com· pliance by local agencies. Phillip Morris Buys Control Of Viejo Co. The Mission Viejo Companr, which last year outpaced all other Orange County developers in sale of new homes, has sold corporate control lo Philip Morris lnc. for '20 million. The $20 million investment. said ?iflssion Viejo Company spokesman Ur day, "'ill be the 'i\'Orking capital to insure continuation of construction on schedule despite the e:rpenslve money market. Terms givlng the: cigarette company control of the voting stock of Mission Vie· jo required the cash investment for oon· verlible debentures, stock :ind options. Under the agreement, Philip Morris may also purchase a majority of all outstanding stocK by exercising options and paying an additlonal $13.S million. 1'he options may not be exercised sooner than three years or later than five years. Mission Viejo will continue to operate autonomously, it was announced, headed by James E. West, chairman, and Philip Reilly. president and chief operating of· firer. Policitis wlll not change, it was an· nounced. ArGuisition of ?itission Viej11 Company rontrol , was the first expansion by Philip :r.torris Into the community development field. The cigarelte company has in· tcrcsts in brewing. raior blades. packag· ing. chewing gum, specialty chemicals and papers, plastics and hospital sup- plies .. Organized in 1966, the 11,000 acre land de.,.elopment has already built, sold aDd filled 2800 homes on 2,000 acres where cattle grazed four years ago. Population of the planned communily is now about 11,000 and is expected to be more than 50,000 by the end ()f the decade anc:' 100,000 by 1990. Five housing projecU are: now under C'Onstruction and a sixth is to open soon. House prices currently range from S2!,900. said a company spokesman, to $63.000. The Missinn Viejo Company also has In its development a shopping center, schools, and parks. Tot Listed Critical REDOING (AP)-A 21k-ytar-0ld·boy "'as rescued with grappling hooks from the bottom of a rain·swollen, murky creek near his home Thursday. Eric Wahl was listed in "critical" con· dition in Mercy Hospllal, Redding, Thurs- day night. Hurlburi, addressing the San Francisco Conference Thursday afternoon, called on more stale help in the matter, includinJ; money and legislation to insurt the preservation of the coastline for the public. Hurlburt told the conference . tha t Orange County already has started ib own coastline master plan which will be developed with the run cooperltion and work of Orange Coast cities. MORATORIUM PLAN Reinecke's proposal for " moratorium on uncoordinated develop· ment -includes an outline for an ag- gressive Jilan for state and local zoning ol the shoretne. · His mastu plan ide:a would prevent in· discriminate filling and dredging an<I would preserve "our apeclacular and uncluttered views of the beaches and ocean," he said. Hurlburt said that during the past year conununlties and counties along lhe coalit have "made a massive effort to obtain more stringent legislaUon to protect tht coaat against oil problems." · . Hurlburt scoi"fli slate legislators for no1 helping more in the local anti-0il-drilling t:fforts. ~ •·we could have used more help from the state legislators and government leaders," Hurlburt sa_id. EXPENSIVE PURCHASE He added that the Orange Coast cities' efforts toward preserving the coMlllne included the expensive purchase or llOO feet of sandy beach in Laguna Beach last yea r at a large expense to the city . "The county's major land owner, the Irvine Company, has recently voluntarily established a coordinating committee for devclopn1ent of its 31.i miles of co:isUlne bet\\·een T{ewport Beach and Laguna Bearh," he related. · San Clemente has embarked on a pro· gram to buy 1.3 miles or beachfront a\ a cost of $1.S million. "I believe that these examples ef- fectively illustrate the willingness and desi re of the communities to preserve the coastline for p1JL1ic use," he said. But the communities cannot do It alone, he added . \ They need money, legislation and plan- ning C<Y.1peralion from the stale to b::lp in the projects. DRAIN ON BUDGET He said that Newport's playing host to 100,000 beach visitors on any single 111m· mer day is a drain on the city's budget - a burden which has becoiw increasingly difficult to cope with in swelling city budgets. Swnmarizing hi$ ideas f o r im- provement of lhe: situation Hurlburt pro- posed : -That the state, working in concert \·1ith local government, "take whatever legislative and ad1ninlsttative steps neetssary to help government preserve the coastal areas for public enjoyment:" -That the stale help local govemmen~ in financing measures to preserve the coastal zones. -That the state design minimum stan- dards, policies and plans to preserve Jn: .shoreline. -Tilat refional water quality control boards have more membership represen· ting the conservation elements of the society and less members espousing in- dustrial interests. -That the state allow local govern· mP.nt to plan and administer shoreline , matters through i~ own resources and agencies. Sale WITHIN A Sale COMFORT & STYLE AT A PRICE CHAIR STARTS AT ~29. AVAILABLE IN A LARGE SILECTION OF COVERS AT THE UNIELllVABLE PRICE OF $121. COMMODI ON ULI AT '159 With Little W 01·d on Mate DEALERS FOR: HENREOON DREXEL -HERITAGE Kilowtng little more than whtn thty departed, four Southern C 1 11 for n I a "·omen arrived in Los Al\gtles today, tn· dine a round·the-world mercy ml.tslon in bthalf of rntn mining in the Vletnan1 ~·ar and thei r families . Mrs. Carole llan!IOfl of 24112 Birdrock Drive, El Toro. and htr three traveltna: et01pan.lons landed at 9:2S 1.m. aboard Pin American fHaht 846 from Tokyo. ··1~ daddy coming home?'' asked Todd Ha.nsun. 3. who hns nc1·er 11cen ?ilarine Corps Capt. Sttphen P. Hinson. believed held 11 a prl10ner of war by North Vitt· nam. His weary mother burst lnto tears at lhe unhappy underlining of the POW "'h·es' quest In search of word of their pilot husb1nd1' (alt . The homtl-omlng was detply emotlonaf. compared to lhe cool rectpOon th~ party rt:ctlved In some Communist nations and the helpl,ss !lympathy they "·ert olftf'M f!lsrwhtrc. NIWl'OllT llACH 1727 w .. tcllff Dr., 642-2050 OPIN •llDAT 'T1L f INTElllOllS Prof111lonal lnttrl1r 0.1lgn1r1 Av11l1bl<-AID-NSID LAGUNA llACH 345 North c .. 11 Hwy. OPIN PllMT 'tlL t ' •• -. --< . ----- .. Saddlehae;k , ,· e MJsiion VJejo CGmpiny, whlch last y~ outpaced all other Orange County (fevelop;ers _in sale of new bom.ea.Jw sold coryorato control to Pi)illp. Morris Int. for $20 million. The '20 million Investment, said l\fllsion Viejo -Company spokesman ti>- d , .will be the working capital to insure " ' Os trand.er I . Seeks Seat . ~ . ~ . On .Council ~ Laguna Bea~-architect Peter H. Ostrander, 33, loday announced · hi~ in- tention to enter the City Council race to be decided April II. "During the past two years, as one. of • ou~ ll<!J:it ]l)hextrcblnr ,.,tlG!!s and poym1 "' ~u"lal $13.! mllll9n. .The oPtlon:I. may not be ei:erciaed .aooner'tblD Ulr.ee ,years or later than five yea'ts. ... --.. -. . Mbilcln• V!<Jo wllf conllnue to oiiorale autonoinowlly, it w11 announced, headed by J~ E. W¢, chairman, and Philip Reil17,1presidtnt and chief upe~ating of· ficer. P~icles will.not change, ii was an-- nounced. Aeq_uisitlon of Mission Vieji> Company control, was the first upanslon by Phlllp Morris into the community deveJopment field. The cigarette company has in- terests In brewing. razor blades, ~kag­ ing, Chewing gum, specialty chimlcals or and papers, plastics and hospital sup- plies., Organized ln 1966, the 11,000 ·acre land de•elopm~t has already buill. IQfd and filled 2800 homes on 2,000 acres where cattJe grazed four years q:o. Population of the planped ~rpmunity ts oow about 11JIOO and is expected to be mort thari 50,000 by the end of the deCade • ·1· .. ' _· ' .1ellay'1 FIUI N.Y. Steeb ll1C! 'I00,000 by IllO. Fi•e· houllq ~)let& are -under con.stfµcUon and a ailt,b 1s1to open llOOQ, Houao prices c¢ently _ range from $21,900, sale! a COJ11pany spokesman, to $63,000. Th< Mlsslnn Viejo Company alao l!aJ.ln Its de.elopment a sbopplq cenler. schools, and parks. • • O·: • -. Board NiXes Fr~edomfor Ex-tycoon . WASHINGTON (AP) -Billie . BO! Estes, a on~·lime fertilizer tycoon whose financial dealings became a national :!Canciai, lost today his first bid 1\!i 'jlirole from a 15-year federal pcisOn term:·. The U.S. Parole Board rejected the ap- plication of Estes,. 45, who would. have been eliglble·March s alter smliis ·~ third al his lerm, Imposed for swlndliDg finartee -companies. 25 persons named by t' .e City Councif to serve on the :Citizen's Advisory Com· mlttee," said ()ftrander, "I have become deeply. inYOly..i, with and commit~d 'to tho future ol ta,,... :Jllach, 'lll""lll ooa,..., ~ Mi l lllf Wiliiiite, I'"' gained ao lnllpt tnto ttle Im~ ol tho -lillhldaal" cltlRn'• contfllirilon to 1 Parole Board {lh•Jin1u ~,J. Jleocl '1al4 the.fill!~· . made the declllon after a . camp! re.1 .... ol the reCord In ·u;e I!laW ·me. The bolu\i set· December1971 for itsliUI rtYiewilthedeclllon. JOINING CO~IL. llACE tl!O -ral .P111t .~ hla ii1fj1 to :i..come _:~·· __ A_rclt_floct_• __ ,......., _ _.__ __ · ·Bit lmjlortant tail 'Iii tho 'dWP ol his future physical and sodahnvtronm<iil" · I Goldberg First ,. 'f:h File Papers In Council Race ~ sucCtS6 'tir failure or the genera! plan, said Ostr~der, will be dlrectly con- tributed to the dve men on the city coun- ci1. "I feel ,n elcitement 3.t the pro&pect of these next:few dynamic years. I also feel .a thallenle in seeing the new general plan bttng 'cltlmtlzed,' II be a4ded. "( feel ~-that La~ Beach b a very special place, whtre I u an in- 1 • Councilman Richard Goldberg o f divldual can ma!ntain my own ,identity L11•11na Beach was first in the '"'Colony and Make a raeanlngful and creaUve con-.... -~· tribuUoa. •' ' • to· take oui nomination papers for ·the , A rt.ldealofLaguna·Beach llinco ,I962, Afjll-J4 election to fill three councll ostraq~ filakes his home at 471 POplar • ~---M~~~ !Jotdber.1. who bas served one term and cbJ\~ren, _i..ptte, 11, Craig, 10, and isj former Chamber of Commerce presi-, Phillip, 9. : . . ' Laguna !Dgh ;Sclfool Prine!~· Rober! Reeves re- ·laxes' at hls'ilesk·in .attire that will be in style Feb: 21 and 22 when the Winter Festival Rodeo takes plact on the high school ' auiletic fieJa. ·Event lea· luring I®. cowboys' and assorted animals ·ls spbt1' sored by ,student body and school administrators appear to be getting into the spirit of things. dent. picked up bis papers late 'l'nursday~ In May of 1169, he moved his ·firm, Q.ndidates.Jiave~until Feb. 19 at ooon to Ostrander, ·crtsSman aod Associat~ rewm the p!pers with not less than five architects from CoVlill"to"l\.s new Lagtma slgDatu{es of registered voters nor more Beach location, 333 3rd SL · than 10. A native of Illinois, Ostrander was In San Clemente, where three cOuncil gradqated from .South Pasadena-San ~ifls also occur, Artbui:..J.-HolJTIU .:. Martno..Jjigl:h.Scbool.and obtained his BSc ~2\a Avenida San Pablo, who has .been in archttecture at the . University of acttfe ln the Jaycees, picked up nomina4 Idaho, • tion papert Thursday. , Active.in the Laguna Beich Chamber or Llgun•·clDdidates thus far line up a.s C!>mmerte;be·is a meniber-of the board ~ts Goldberg and Vice Mayor of Cliredon abet the Mast.en, chalrman of Joseph O'Sullivan. P I a n n I n g eotn.._· lbe]ilaiiiiini ~ zoning commillee and a tnisa:ioner Joseph 'I'grochak and arthltect member of the Chamber's beauUfication Peter Ostrander •ho · declared today. and downtown redevelopment commit4 rlltjer Glenn Vedde I~ silek re-tees. . :. • . eledion. He is a 'director and. third. vice presi· ~ three._ San Clemen Le -tzw:urobentS, dent of. the Laguna Bea& L~ Club, a May9r Wade tower and_9ouncilmft-Qen di~t~r 8!"1 sec_re~ of the Civic Chilton and Thoma!·O]<eefe have not yet -Lea~.~'!!'· holds member-abl~. in the indicated whether they "Ul seek re-elec· nafioUI. and county·1 chapt,era ·of the liM.--.._ Amerlciui W:tltute of Architec:tu.re, the DynaJJJ.i~-:9Jast __ Clfllii! A(.ioori j;ommlflee, the LlllUJla CoordlniitTnj Collncll, Frlenda ol the :;..i:.ac-.: =:::.and the Mrs. Hanson Back in U.S. With Little Word on -Mate Knowing little . more than when they departed, four Southern C a 11 f o r n I a ~·omen arrived·ln Los Angeles today, en. ding a round-the-world mercy mission \n behalf of men misting in the Vietnam war and their families. , Mrs. Carole J{arison .oi'24112 BlrdroCk Drive, -El Toro,. and h·er three tra~· :11hg ct mpanions 1aPlied ·at 9:25 a.m. aboard Pan AmvJcan filgbt 818 fn>m Tokyo. · "15 daddy comtng·hotne?" asked Todd Hanaoo;:.3 -who Jw never' seen Marine Corps Capt. Stephen P. Hafl:SOn. J>i!lieved held as a prisoner of war by North Viet· nam. llis weary mother burst Into tears at · : the unhappy underlining of ttie ·mw \\i ves' quest in search.ol .word of their pilOt }Jusbands:' fa:te. 'The·homecomiiig was' deeply emoUonal, compared to the cool reception.the party . rectived 1n some Cdmmunlst baUOns and the heJplesa aympathy1 they were offered elsewhere. :...--:-:-,, Hu1:tsJ'eenager -Co F • • C d 1a1t'..?~n:ed~:~f~~1::n~ur~~ -~_-!3_ -st _ ug:-1t1ve ap·. ture in tht El Toro area that sent-.hlm to · ~ South Coast C:Ommunlty Hospital tn Sooth d --=--· · :::ir'· with a gauge wound In his right man .w ~ .f!!r~J..SOQ,OQO T heft Held in Texas Sheriff's d"epulies said Harry C. --................. -- 1'tuncberyan, 18, or l73S Morning Slde. An attorney, accuied. of 1te"all; niar1y . ~s-~ron\ the esta.te of John Sat-servator that the bonds would not be apptrenUy drove' to a remole aru near •Ulll In ~ ~ eoq~1 Comer to explode si% dynamlle -.ooo -q~u.lb< esl>ti ol •n mand~ Entrada, Nowport returned unelu he (Mittan) received ball Cap .. U-1..~i.ec1 them lo 1.n old w bat. ailing N~ 8eacb. mM'k~Y. \)ting Beadz...-a7M!raJ::Ufilon on Company a.. th•'• Yalu• nc: •IVllllO held In a Tu.u Jall..accuiid 'oC""liiWW{e ecatJ\".e. · · ...... • -~'!: ~.:O~i:e~ ::e~i=~:i::~ transportatiorf1of stOlen propeitj,-.nr ~}and lnvesUgitora from the Tbat letter suag~ted a meeUng A Marine Corps d<molltlot1 Jeam from Federal ollclab In Br._.,,,.ttlle, Tena, San 'eff_,.Ollbty..1liltrlcl Attorney's of-between.the•two m'tn at which detallJ ol El Toro Air Siation picked up the ll1Jo f"d tod~~ ~\loWll:lo lldl«IWe f!C'e ~~ thise oflir being a<\Ylsed the tranaler of funds could be d!llCU!!ed. detonated caps at the scene and IO men · urther_ouun ~ :.,.ot tllnbolt:;by'Silrif<iiMl'i'-oon, Jolm Sal-Federal -ollclala .today said there ls from Ms home. deputies salo. Patrlcli '-.. M. ~"47.'~for poi!lbly -J1)0lld Jr. Ol:JIDll Bedford L&..,., "'"" "absoluJely no doubt" that the le\ter : ------------' Mood111 or Tuelday. • . tlnJ<lon U..Ch. . • come Irom.Mlnan. -· • Mitton ts·ln ~ lri-ol'Jlit_).ltltl Tho 7auJilel-Salmonil ond his n10tber '1t was Jbo reyealed today that Ma·· ' Stock Jtl arket NEW YORK (AP) -Stoclts conUnued k> alide today tn moderately active tract.. tni after an earlier technical rally eVap. 0<4"'1. (See quo"1Uo111, Paga 10-11). Afi1lyst1 say mvestor1 aUD -remain ,on the 1ldellne1, .pe11lmlstlc aboul !he eeon- nmlc outlook and walUng out the decl.lnt. bail lolloW1hg Iill amllf!1111<1i\>'fttuiiday Mn. 11<1.., Saln\ond ol the lamily home: lean oUlclals had betn walchlng Mittan'• rughL , . ~ -are o>nHrVatort of the substanUal progress through four Mexican pnwUK:a Federal -Oflictr11 tlpPed oU by '¥ulcan eltate. , for tome .time prior to "fitton'1 arrest. A authorities, movtil In on the e!Ultve 47.. 1'-fitton was appointed as lawyer for the federal a,ge11t would onl¥ u.y tblt the ar- year-old lawy<r Wcdlleaday as be at· estate by Salmond •nd ohortly al-real of the free spending_bwyer'ted been templed ·lo return to tho tr.~ he left lerwards. It Is 1Heged, dlsappiaJed with delayed 'lin the lntertsl of r<COYerin1 ••. more than two months,.,,_ mOll.of lbe bondt .. sted to ~Is care. ntuch of the stolen money as postible,and He allegedly Cl'Olled the banter last He 11llegedly wrotsa teuer to the1)'oungtr we think our me~oda have been sue.. NOYember with ...-Jy $5(11),000 worth or Sahnond In which he worned7'1"' con-cessful." ' •' • I J • • • Tw o FAA-Agents Hurt in Freak Sea plane Cras h A forgetful pilot who left the landing wheels down escaped injury today when his seaplane nJpped over upon. touchdown in the sea off Catalina1Ii land, but three other men aboard were hurt. The victims Included two Fetten.l Avia· lion Administration en'lployes pf.obing an earlier Avalon Hafbor seaplane crash that killed ·two Orange County. bQaters· recenUy. FAA agents vln<:eiit Mulrooney; M, and Kenl D .. Wlllaon, 28, were li~ In 8<JOd · cooditlon at Avalon C:Ommunlty Hosplt&l, along with !As Angel.S County Conilable Johnny Windle, 60, the island's clllef lawman. •· The Catalina Sea Planes tnc: aircraft piloted by Charles Kirck, of San Pedro, was on a landing approach when-the overlooked wheels, protruding below the pontoons, hll waler. Th< tw!IHl!gine ·plane on a flight from Loog B .. ch Airport to the bland, WU on- ly slightly damaged, · .aCCSJnilq t9 •pokesmen for.the operaUng firm. DR. H:AY:AK~WA . NOW ' I iv f l iiO'f . . , San Fr~·.: !harp-toogu~· Od.lca-' tor. 'llr. s. I. lla)']lkawA,.sUll llOI • lollO uy. And, ""1tln& • tollaf. he'•. aolng IO sa.y some.of It ln • weet!y ·column·wfdch Will be publllhed by the DAILY PILOT. Dr. ltayakawa'1r fir!l column appears today Oii the editorial page (l'qe t). n will conunu~ 11' a regular foatdie o1 tile edltoml page'tach Fiiday In tho lli\ILY PILOT. • ' Tlll·~·Ttl:., balltleasmao ~ ,.... 111!1 ~ 1111tM ror man lliu4 ml ~ splraey io•dtfraud the flnance.compenles at the r.dersl correctional !natl~ it ~. Minn. He . bas bee1i !no carcerated there,alnct Dec. 15, 1916,.after beginning hi!:' prison l~e p ,a :COl'lvict at Leavenworth; Kan., federal prisop. Utue !IOI been heard ol him llince ho entered prison. . Tllere remalnl lltue or .the Estel. mqic that made him a millionaire In Jlil Ill and extended his Influence far beyonil his Texn borne. Estes arrl•ed In Pecos, Ter., ln-I95I, bl debt ~ toting f battered btlef caee but in five years :he, ball 1inade, JUs. . .fJl'8t mllilon and was .on u.., .. ay ·to bulldlnf • mulUIJlillion-<lollar empire Qll fi:i!ld1ilent credit " The empl~Incllldlng lerUlizer, lf8ln t 1 e v a t o r s , Cotton allotmeiita: and -a variety of either lwi......, -collapsed In IS62 ind the, ""'!Ung t,b u.n d e,r reverberMted 1n Washington aDd on Wall Streel San J uan Readies . For Swallow Remrn · Plans are well under way tcKtay for ' celebration ol the return ol tk .....Uaws to San Juan CaplstrariO in M'arch-:- The annual Ftata de las ·GoJoudtlnu is scheduled for March Ii tborugh . ~· Members Of the San Juan Capistrano Fiesta Association are seeking· asalstance of any reilide:nts interested in helptnc with the flVe-day event, wlUcq lnctUdes an .aquestrian. P!U'•~; . tr~il rt~. :barbe-cue and program fn ·the mislion. · Oruge • I • ' • •• I ' ' ,,. I DAJl.Y Pfl.DT L Frldli1, Jiniwy lO. 1970 :: $1.33 Billion Surplus • . ; • • . ' ' Irvine Co. Tells Stand . •• ' • • Seen in Nixon 'Budget • ' • ' . On Bay Swap • ' W.MftlN!lTON (UPll -President Nbm ..lib 1Jl'OJlOS< Monday a 12Q0.77 • bH.Hon budtet for the year begjnntn1rJnly l, wllb a !U'PIUS of $1.3:! billion. A cut of neat\r ~ billion is planned in milit.tiry n1e economl~ report Usts projected e:r- peodlh1res for the federal spending ~oear running to mld-1971 of $200,771 ,000,000, v>ith receipts totaling $200.103.000,000. That would leave a surplus o l lt,3.11 ,000,000. ""'"""' · Tbt tlaures, which were OOl!finned by the· White ff003e, are contained in the .Pft~ent's annual economic message to Ca!gr<ss. As promlsed frequently in rccrnt w~ks, Nixon plans to propose a balanced bud&tt. There was no breakdown of the tiudgtt In the economic report. The -lied Ogum will be S<nt lo Congre!l.'I ht a separate message ~fonday. The economic report did shqw Nixon envisions I modal aurplus. White House Pren Secretary Ronald L. Zleglcr tokl reporters: "It is considcrtd lo be a solid balanced budget which has taken into account 1he. need for restraint in federal spending in loday's economy. ''It is responslYe to national needs· whi!e .keeping In mind that the ~ajor priority facing ·the country is the heallh of the economy." under the gene'ral heading o{ national derense, the report of the President's econon1ic advisers lists p r o f e c t e d nJilil~ry spending totaling S73.S8 billion in Ii"'" "If fiscal year. This v.·ould be a cul A Groovie .. Pad 'Nixon's Florida Heliport Costly lpedol to Ill< DAJLY PILOT KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. -Whal does the waterfront White Hruse here have that the Western Whit e ~louse in Orange County doesn't? A surer-sophisticated helicopter pad that cost '327,358 more than the ''.l00est, If larger one, adjacent to President Nix- on 's San c:emente villa, that's what. The chopper pad built ouL over the placid AtlanUc tidelands makes the one atop Cotton's Point look like nothing bul a few square yards of concrete poured O\'er a bulldozed dirt area. Aod that's precisely what it is. with a mere $15,000 construction cost to the U.S. Army Corp! of Engineers. An CI~Utive or !he firm which buill NlJon'1 new 150-square-foot pad at Key B!~ayne. with a comparative $342,258 rricetag, revealed the cost today in Florida. Ec-;mund Thornton, vice president and direckl r o~ the Atlantic Foundation Co-- pany, ~aid much or !he expense res ult s from deep..drit1en concrele pilings lo s1·1.· port lhe slructurc. He said it li es offshore from a two-acre heliport t•nly 1,oor feet from the property line of President Nixon'1 bayfront com- pound. Not only that, but the Key Biscayne heliport is equlpped wllh such James Bond paraphernalia a! electric eyes, sonar gear to detect underwater swim- mers or 8Uipi-ei0us watercraft. Thornton didn't say how the President will hit the beach, however. Hanoi's Top ·Negotiator Back, No Concessions Due PARIS (uPtl -Tho-'1lpervlsor ol North Vietnam's peact delegation return- ed today from Hanoi consultaUons and said his gotemment is ready for "serious negoUaUons." Bu\ he>'<laid Hal would make no conce"1ons al tlie i\esollat!N table under"t.%. military pressure.·· Le: Due Tho, member of the Hanoi polilbureau. told newsmen at Le Bourget Airfield that President Nixon was pursu- ing a "double [aced policy'' fn Vietnam. "On the one hand, he speaks of peace," Tho said. "But ·on the other hand he Is pushing the llO-Cllted Vl,.lnamiiation and trying to prolong the war." The politbureau member refused to say Clemente Grad Comes Back Hero Tim Anaya, a 20-year-<lld San Cemente High School graduate, has returned Crom an Army combat tour with a Impressive coUecUon of medals awarded him for heroi.tn. Tm, son of Ron Anaya of Canynn Road and Mrs. Mary Dunay of Tustin, won lwo Bronze Star medals for heroism in com· bat, the Soldier's Medal, awarded for heroi!m when not in direct contact \vith the enemy -in this case rescuini; a bud· dy from a stream under snipe lire, and the Army Commendation Medal. Honorably discharged with the rank of .&er11:eant. Anaya will attend Orange Coast College. DAILY PILOT Olt.AH06 CO.UT"PIJSLliH1NG CDMl'AN'I' lo9•rt N. W,2J ,. ....... ..., .... lil!Mt' J.,. II. C111l•v VU ..... INn! -Genlr•I M• ... ltf' n ..... , ko ewll ElllW Th1M1t A. M11r,hi•t M~ .... l•ltw llc.~1nl P. Nill .._ ..... Cllr l"dlW 1 ........... '""" l ll fo1•1I Aw111•• Molli"I A'41tt1t P.O. lo• •t6. l l,11 °""' ""'"' CWt. #o9w: ut W.I l•r llftft ~ '9M11: mt -''""" Mo111¥1,.. fwllt ... lifl'I 9Mdl: .,.,, It .... ,,.,.. •••• .. ,'4, Ot.lLY PILOT. wiw. -.Ml1I ... ~ 111• ~ II ... Wit, ••llJ •UPI '"" • .,, 1i11 ~lte .. I,_. fir ~ ltlffl,' ~ .. M:ll. Ca.. ,,_., "11•1111'1!111 ~ .,,,_ ,_.,."' v111tv, '*" •!Ito 1 .. i ~ fllflf,..., °"""" CMtt ~lttolnt ~ (lll'loiliflt O'l'°'ll •re " 2211 Wtll ..... llW.. "".......... ..:tll. .... ))II w.I ... , S ...... I. C... ,r.\nf, , .. 10' 11 l (114) 494•t4•• en.Mt'-o.,t. '4J-4Jlt ~ tMt. °'..... C.-•• l'lltll"''"' ~""'· ,,.. -·--Iii.ti•••~ • ,....... ........ flt j • .....,~ ""'"" _, .. ~... ...!Molt --· ...... ......... ,~ ......... ....... c:IM& ....... I>'• 411 Newff/11 ltx h .... (Al.lo ........ (.t!_,,lt, 5*c,r,.,.».• It 1•fl'fw ll'to """""IVI OY llUll SJJI ,..._,,,,,, ~,, .,......,.,., n.ot 111111ii.1,. what Hanoi's latest political line might be. He shrugged off queaUons about his instructions from his government and said he would outline Hanoi's position at thla French Communist Party Congress •t,:inr>f<eb. 'U N!i\>n uiily wants peace, fie must eM hiS aggression and start serlOU• neiotiatlons," Tho told newsmen. "We are ready for such negotiations." But he charged that "Nixon is diminishing the Importance of the _Paris ta:ks,'' and "is sabotaging the conl'erence step by step.'' "President Nixon must decide whether he want.'.I war or peace," the Hanoi delegate said. "lf be wants to put presslll't! on us he will never succttd and in this respect we shall make no con- cessions.'' Tho sharply assailed Thursday's U.S. air allack on a Communist missile site inside North Vietnam . made after rockets \Vere: fired at nn unarmed American reconnaissance plane. He hotly deniod there had b e e n any tacit unde1slanding permitting the U.S. Air Foree to rly reconnaissance flights north of the den1ilitarized zone. lie said U.S. r.egolialor Philip C. Habib's claim tt at there was such an accord amounted to "fallacious. misleading v.·ords." ''Following the Jan. 28 U.S. Ai! Force. bon1bing on Nortn Vietnam -the slrongest in 1nany months -one must CQncludr that Nixon wants to step up the war," Tho i;aid. Edison Expansion Hearings Resume In LA Tueday Public hearings on the Southern California Edison Compa11y's applicalion lo expand its power plant in Huntington Beach .v.•ill resume Tuesday in Los Angeles. Orange Counly wU\ send eight ·wit· nesses to the 10 a.m. session called by the Ct1llfomia Public Utilities CommlS8lon f PUC). The hearing will take place. ir. the ('(lmmission's Los Angeles orfices, State Office Building. 107 S. Broadway. Among thQse !!Cheduled: to leslify arP : William Filchtn, Orange County Air Polluti on Control Officer and two of his l'nginecrli; Dr. 0 . C. Taylor. acting direc· tor of the University of Californ\a '!i i;talcwide Air Pollution Research Center ~.l UC , Rfvtrside. and George J. Taylor, -adminlstritor or the Callfornia Air Re.wurces 'Board's air quality manage- ment program. Also scheduled to appe.1!' are Dr. A. J. }laagcn.Smil. chairman of the California /Jr Jlcsourccs Board and Cal Tech pro- fessOr who ls acknow ledged r.allonwide as an exprrt In the air pollution field ; Dr. John R. Gold smllh. head of the 6tatc De~rtment or lfea1th ·s Environmental Epidemloloay Unll and meteorologist Erwin Kuuper. Tbe Edison Company Is seeking PUC pttmisslon to bUlld two new units at it,, HunUngton Beach plant. Fitchtn has denied a county license on the grounds that ex}!:1nsion wlll leiad to violation of the county s smtlg cunlrol l:l\'.' of $S.8~ billion from the level ()f the cur. rent year. More than offsetting this v.·ould be a rise of some $6.5 billion In the second big. gest category of spending - ''income security." Including Social Security. That would push the total to an estimated $50.38 bUlion. An increase in Social Security payments went ink! effect Jan. I. Spending on health programs Is ex~ peeled lo rise, according to the economic advisers, by $1.7 billion to just under $1~ billion. The "education and manpower" category shows a $0.6 billion rise to $8.1 billion. Desides defense. major activities being cut will be the space anJ farm programs -space by nearly half a billion t.o $3.4 billion and agriculture by almost a full billion to $5.3 billion. The report shows the administration es!ln1ates a $1.5 billion surplus in the year ending:-June 30, with income of $199.38 billion and spending of $197 .88 billion. Last 3 Suspects ·In Campus Drug Raids Capll·ued The last three among a large number of suspected campus narcotics dealers named In arrest waM'ants were picked up by Costa Mesa police Thursday night, bringing to Z5 te tOtal number in custody. DetecUYe Sgt. John Regan said the trio I! cbarged with sale or dangerous drup or mar'ijuana, with two Of lht'm juveniles. Robert Morris, 18, of 937 Serra Way, c.osta Mt!a, was charged In a warrll!t · carrying $625 ball with aale of marijuana . Six of the suspects in the alleged deal· Ing at both Costa Mesa and Estancia high schools are adults and race arraignment or preliminary hearings in HarbOr District Judicial Court ne1t week . The remaining l9_boy1 and girls face J uvenile Court action in coming weeks. Jnvesllgators confiscated about SI0,000 worth of marijuana and narcotics du ring the six-week probe of campus acUvltiu, jncluding nearly every type on the illicit market. Detective Capt. Bob Green said ea rlier t.hat the alleged narcotics trafflckln& was ~ not what one would call an organized., r ing, bul most defendant! knew each 7 ~ ' -., . • • • UJ'tT1~ ACCUSED NARCOTICS 'FAGIN' TAKEN TO COURT Edward Blasie Alleged Supplier of Chilld Drug Peddlers Modern 'Fagin~ Accused of Using Kid Drug Pusli.ers NEW YORK (AP)-Authorities say a father o( fou r who was arrested on drug charges used teams of children to peddle narcotics. Victor Santiago, 39, was taken before Judge Michael Gagliano In Brooklyn Criminal Court where Asst. Dist. Atty. David Epstein said: "This man conducts a· Fagin-like actlvlty in the sale of drugs, using ~ams of children lo Uiese sales." About 500 spectators in Ule courµ-oom applauded when Gagliano ordered San- tiago held in $100,000 bail Jor a bearing Feb. 5. "If these charges arc true;• Judge Gaglrailo said, ''then this man is -worse - than 'Jesse James. If lhe:Y're true, be may have ruined the health and morals of children and if any of them are ad- dieted I think he should not spend a. peaceful day the rest of hi s life.'' Police said they found I~ decks of heroin. a quantity of marijuana and equi1J111ent used In the narcotics trade in a Brooklyn basement laboratory "'hen they picked up Santiago Thursday. They charged him with possession of narcotics v.·ith intent to sell. Authorities were lipped off to San· tiago's whereabouts early Tuesday after arresling three boys -II. 13 and 15 years old - as heroin peddlers on the sidewalks of Coney Island. The boys were charged with juvenile delinquency and held for a hearing in Children's Cou rt. The three told police they each sold an average of 90 bags of heroin at $10 apiece ~very day and each cleared about $50 dally, The rest went to the collector. Lawn Bowlers Present JVew PrQposals Monday oth~plalnls charging anollffr grou~ or Laguna Beach lawn bowlers will brin~ end or the greens to the ocean side, but ~ clubhouse back to the Planoinl Commi&-f kin five YOUllK ~n arr-'-'· l:Y gin plans for their pro~ new Heisler Par requesttd detailed architectural plans be- at a-Cc9Ca . sa ap8tUite meanw lie, 1ion for review at the commission's reg-ore ma g a recommendation to the city were being sought frorit;the ange Coun-ular Monday night session. council. ty District Attorney today. · commissioners earlier approved site Three property owners will be seeking Authorities In Wooster, Ohio, tipped of( relocat.ion of .the facility fro m the north permission to resubdivide lots lo create loca l police by emergency, cross-country larger bullding sites. teletype message that two known Carl ~tien, 2673 Victoria Drive, wishes 'l"fcot!" suspe<:ts were in Costa Mesa Wed s All th or's Girl ,, acqwre four feet from an adjacent and gaYe the addresa. La.gu.na Jlelghl.s parcel lo enlarge an A team of detecllves went to 792 existing 30-fOQt lot. Rpy and Dorothea Shalimar Drive, v.·here they and a third LONDON (AP) -Field l\tarsbal Vis· Ashe. 860 and 880 Baja Slreet seek per- Ohioan were arrested, along with two count Montgomery's son married author mi ssion to ~ubdivide three lots Jnlo Anaheim youths attendlug college in Daphne Du ~laurier's daughter today in a tv.·o building sites and John Caroline,' 735 Irvine Company President William Mason has broken his long-standing of· flcial silence on the Upper Bay land swap Issue and charged thal new alternate plans by its foes were n1adt without tludy and hearings and he said the fll3J'ine ecology or the estuary already has been destroyed by nature. Mason attacked County Supervisor Robert Battin's 'new alternate plans as ''hastily conceived" Thursday. He ·also said that last ye a r 's devastating floods deitroyed the marine enVironment of the contested·estuary by depositing twi>to-tlve·feet of mud and slit on the bay's floor. P.1ason staunchly upheld his company's role ih the IG-year~ld exchange plan with Orange County and sald opposition -in- cluding Superior Court intervention - has come from a "small. self-interest groups.-" He said the original state granr of the tidelands of the bay was made with the Intention of building a harbor, and that because the county cannot afford to, the Irvine Company could do It. · "We feel that the ·legal questions should 'be determined through the present case rt'llher than a delay for another live years 'vhile some other plan is proposed which, in turn. will probably be atlacke~ by other self-interest groups." P.1ason said. The statement drew responses by foe~ of the exchange charging that f\1ason's com 1nents \ackeJ merit. Frank Robinson of Newport Beach, a leader of the fOf'.s of the swap, said he and his group were proud to be called a selt-lnterest group, because theif ideas are the same as those of President Nixon. GoYemor Reagan and Senators Alan crlllSt.On and George Murphy. . "All of them have come out strongly 1Y favor of preserYatlon of public shore11.nes for the public and saving ecolog1c&1 values and we're proud to be a grou; u·itb this same interest,'' he said. 'Instant' Fire Kills County Man Stanton fire department spokesman said today they are investigating the source of a blaze which look the life of Stanton resident DelUno B~enrostel ear~y thi~ morning. Battalion Chief Charles Clark said the department rtcelved the eall at U :44 a.m. and bad the Ore at 10802 Date Sl. was controlled within minutes. ApparenUy Buenrostel and a friend were moving a mattresS into tht single room structure when he struck a match to light a cigaretle, instantly sctUng the entire room ablaze. "The only door was blocked by the mattress" Chief Clark said. "I ima gine he was d~ad by tne lime we got the call .'' A natural gas leak was indicat~ by the chief as probable cause for the fire. Bel .<\ir Fit·e Probed Ohio. KeMington registry office. . and 755 Pearl St .. wants to make two It was the second marriage for both bu1'ld1'ng s1'tcs out of four exist· l t BEL AIR fUPl) -The cause of a f1're Before police could enter, someone 1ng o s. tried to flush a dozen plastic bal1'C of David f\1 ontgomery and Tessa Browning, For the first lime. the commission \Viii v.·hich blackened two acres of brush in the .,... and each has two children. Lord underlake a prelun· ·,nary revle·· of plan-mounta1'nous reglo•• north of here was marijuana down a toilet -clonning It -· .. '"' and the SO""Y weed was conf~aled ns Montgomery did not attend the ceremony ning departmen't budget needs for 1970-71, being investigated Thursday. evidence. "° because the weather was bad .. The bride's \vlth a view to determining which projects Seven companies of city firemen and All fi ve were charged with nn~ssiorl father also was a military man, the late they would like to activate In the coming two helicopters brought the fire under r-~--~ Lt. Gen . Sir f<"rederick Browning. He year so budgeUng can be dbne accord· control in 30 minutes. No homes were of marijuana for sa le and ordinary served Jn Southeast Asia in World War Jl. ingly. damaged. ;: 00;::::::.l, 1------------=--=-------------"=------="+-c I 1st Fire Marshal ( Sale WITHIN A Sale I Of County, Dies J oe Scherman , Orange County's first fire marshal died today at St. Joseph · llospilal after suffering a heart attack. He v.•as 68. llls death ended a career in the county u•hich began in 1930 when he was ap.. pointed Orange County's lint U.S. }'~orest Servlce ranger. At lhe time the cou nty's fire fighting equipment consisted or six boxes of tools which the flre fighters lug. ged to the blaze. When he retired tn August. 1963, he left 2S fire stations, 400 paid volunteers and 150 regulars on the fire fighting staff, following his retirement he moved to Jdyllwild and then to Yucaipa. lie had suffered a ~ries of heart attacks before being hospitalized shortly before his death. lie is survived bh his wife, Ruth, and a liOn, David. Deputy Seeks Tax Boss Post Deputy Tiu collector Joe R. Grtene. 48. of 13391 Ellzabeth Way, Tustin, threw his hot In the ring today tor the poSt of rellr· ing tax collcclor Don Mozley. He Is t:1e steond candld&te to declare for the of. flee. Greene, a retired f\l arint Cor~ mnJor with 21 years service as a pilot. has been in the tax collttt.or's office since 1963. "I am runnlna because t lhlnk t can do a ~ood Job since 1 am familiar with the workings of the office ." he isald. Grttne has served as president of the Santa Ana Exchange Cfub and Is cur· renHy arta govern or for E:ast Oran~\! Counl y Exchange club.~. COMFORT & STYLE AT A PRICE -- ' . CHAIR STARTS AT 5129. AVAILABLE IN A LARGE SELECTION OF COVERS AT THE UNBELIEVABLE PRICI O~ $12'. COM MODI ON IAU .. '159 DEALERS FOR : HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NlWPORT BEACH 1727 W•stcllff Dr., 642·2050 Of'IN PllDAY 'TtL t INTERIORS Prof111lonal lnt1ri.r 0..1 ..... Avoil1ble-AID-NSID LAGUNA 8!ACH 34S Norlh CHot Hwy. 4'4-4551 O"" NII.AT 'TtL f ~ '.i1 "" M• et o...... c.._, 14e.11u • . . Laguna , Beaeh ' . Totlay's Fa.al .N.t'. Steeks -. ~VOL¥· NO. 25, 4 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES ORANGE ·COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, JAN UARY 30, 1970 TEN CENTS -. .. Philip Morris Buys Viejo Company . COlitrol ' . The Mission Viejo Company, wbich last yea outpaced all other Oral1£e County de~loper1 ln sale of new homes, has sold Coriiorate control to Philip Morris Inc. lot *20 million. ''the J30 million investment. said l\fiffion VJejG Company spokesman to-~af! will be the working capital to insure ~ conUnuaUon of construction on schedule de.spite the expensive 'money market. Terma giving the cigarette company control ol the voUng stock of Mission Vie- jo required the cash investment for con-- ver!lbte debentures, stock and options. Under the agreement. Philip Morris may ·also purchase a majority of all outstanding stock by exercising opUona and paying .111 additional $13.5 million. Tbe opUons may not be exercised. sooner Uian three years or Jater than five -' _yean.~-· Mission Viejo will conUnue to opel_'ate autooomously, it 1'&S announced, ~ by James E. West, chalnnan, and PhlUp Reilly, president and thief operating of- llcer. Policies will not cha nae. it was. an· nounced. Acqui&ilion of Mission Viejl.l Company control, was the first eipansion by Philip Morris Into the rommunlty development field. The cigarette company bas in· tcrest! In brewing. razor blades, packag· Ing, chewing gum, specialty chemlcalJ and papers; pl.,tics and hoepiW 1111p- plles., . Organl:.ed In .1966, ,the 11,ooo·acre land develdpment has alrudy bulll, sold and filled 2800· homes on Z,000 acres where cattle grazed four yeah: ago. POpulaUon of the planned community is now about 11,000 and Ir'~~ lo be more than ll0.0001>y the end of Ure decade •• • -·-· a~ 100.ooil by 1V10:· • Five housing projects are now under construCtlon and a 'sbth ls ·to open1100n. House prku. currently-rll\I• ·.from SZt,900, said a company spolel:{1l811, to '63,006. . The Mls:slnn Viejo Company 1Jao ba!l In Its development a shoppin1 'Center, schools, and parkll. " . .aro e or I .. -1.e 0 40INING,COUNCIL RAGE Architect O.tranclor Goldberg First To File Papers In· Council Race C41.J.nci1man Richard Goldberg o f Lquna Beach was fint in the Art Colony to take out nomination papers for the April 14 election to fill three council sq:ts. f'Pldberg, who has served one term and Is<& fOrmer Chamber or Commerce presi- dtnl.-plcked up his papers late Tliursday. Cuxl.idates have until Feb. 19 at noon to rewrn tbe papers with not less than five ~ignab.Ires or registered volers nor more than 10. In San CJemente, where three council vsCAncies also occur, Arthur J. llolmes ot 113 Avenida San Pablo, who has been adtve in the Jaycees, picked up nomina· Ucii\'. papers Thursday. ~a candidates thus far Une up al!I inCilmbents Goldberg and Vice Mayor J~h O'Sullivan, P I a n n l n g Com- miMloner Joseph Tomehak and architect Peter Ostrander who declared today. Jv.t,ter Glenn Vedder will not seek re- elfPion. The three San Cle1nente incumbents, Mafor Wade L-Ower and Councilmen Dan Clfttton and Thomas O'Keefe have not yet indltaed whether they will seek re-elec· uoo. Qynamite Blast Hurts Teenager ,.. -ArJ Orange teenager·wu at home today tOucriving a dynamite acciden t 'liiursday In the El Toro area that sent him to South Coast Community Ho.51>ital in Soulh Lftguna wllh a gouge wound In his right aide. .Sherif('s deputies said llarty C. lifiincheryan 18, of 173$ Morning Side, apparently drove to a remote area near Cbok's Comer to es:plode six dynamite caps. Hi hooked them to ;_n old car ,bat. tery "" the back o( hb pickup truck and w,u: adjusUng them when one exploded. ).·Marine Corps demollUon team from · El Toro Air StaUoo picked up the ... detopatcd caps at the scene and 10 JD(ft fl'.Ora hls home. depufles salci. ., . , StMk Market NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks continued '9 slid• today tn moderately active trad· fi'w afitr an earlier ~nical r1lly eva~ orated. (See quotation-;, Pages 13-11). Analysts uy investors sUll remain on Ille aldellnea. pcl!!lmlstlc about the econ-""'~ outlook and welting out the: decline. Ostrander Seeks Seat On Council ... Laguna Beach archltect Peter H. Ostrander, 33, today announced hll'I In- tention to enter the City Council raci! to be decided April 14. ''During the past two years, as one of 25 persons named by t' .e City Council to serve on the Citizen's Advisory Com- mittee," said Ostrander, "I have become deeplf Involved. with '!"d i»mmll~ lo the future of Laguna Bea!i. ~ hours of study, discussion and debate, I gained o\i Insight iolo the lmportaoce. of the individual ciUzen's contributkxl to . the _., plan -his rl!lhl lo -me an lmportanl part io the design or his future phy&ical and social environment." 1be suctess or faihlre of the general plan, said Ostrander, will be directly con- tributed lo the five men on the city coun- cil. ''I feel an excitement at the prospect of these next few dynamic years. I also feel a challenge in seeing the new general plan being 'ci.Uzenized,1 " he added . "l Jee.I pef80l181ly that Laguna Beach Is a very special place, where I as an In- dividual can maintain my own Identity and make a meaningful and creative con- tribution. A resident of Laguna Beach since 196Z, Ostrander makes his home at 477 POplar St., with his wife, Pat, and their three children, Lynette, II, Craig, 10, and Phillip. 9. In May of 1969, he moved his firm, Ostrander. "'Cressman and Associates, architects from Covina to its new taguna Beach location, 333 3rd St. A native o[ Illinois, Ostrander wal'I graduated from South Pasadena-San Marioo· lllgh School and obtained hb BSc in architecture at the University of Idaho. Active in the Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce, he ii a member of the board of directors and the Masters, chainnan of the planning arid zoning committee and a member of the Chamber's beautification and downtown redevelopment commit- tees. · He il'I a director and third vice presi- dent of the Laguna Beach Lions Club, a director and secretary of the Civic League, and holds memberships in the national and county chapters of the Amt.rican lnstitule of Architecture, the Citi!ens Advisory Committee, the Laguna Coordinating ~uncil, Friends... of the Library, Laguna 1980 Commtttee and the Downtown Buslness Association. , , , OAILY '".OT.lftlfl ....... , Getting in the Mood . ·, . · : ,'. · · " . · La gun .. ID~ ;gc11.;Q°1• 'Prine~ Rob~~ i Re~es ~e-. ! luring' ;ild, cdwtinys ~' ~;sorlet\!anim8Js, f~ ,~p;,rj~ ~ laxes al•his deslt ,In atUre that will be Jn style Fe)l. sor.ed )>y :·•tudehl· body and sch"ool ·admlnlstralors• 21 and 22· wben the Winter Festival Rodeo .takes appear to' be getting ·into ·tlte spirit of things.: · place·on the 'high ·school athletic field. Event lea· · Mrs~ Hanson Back in U.S. With Little Word on Mate Knowing lltUe more than when thef departed, four Southern Ca I i f o •n ta women arrived in Los Angeles today, en- ding a round-the-world mercy mission· in behalf or men missing in the Vietnam war and their families. · ' MI'S. Carole Hanson of Z411Z Birdrock Drive, Et Toro, and htr three traveling ctmpaqion' landed-at '9:2$ a.m. aboar4 Pan Amer~n fli&ht Me ~rom Tokyo. "Is daddy comi!J1 home?" asked Todd Hanson,. 3, who bu never seen M;arine . Corps Capt. Stephen P. Hanson. believed held as a prisoner of war by North Vlet· nam . His weary mother burst lnto tears al the unhappy underlining of the POW v.'i.vel'I' que!f. in search of word of their pilot husbands' fate. · The homecoming wu: deeply emoUonal, compared lo the cool reception µi~_PW*Y received ln some C.Ommunlst naUons and the helpless sympathy they were offered elsewhere. - Ti:vo FAA Agenis Hurt in Freak Seaplane Cras,_h _A fo~Uul pilot who left lbe \in.ting wheels down escaped injury today -when hll'I seaplane flipped over upon toucbdgwn Jn the sea ·off·Catallna lsland;'"but-three olh'r men aboard were hurt. Tht victims included two Federal·AvJa·· ti on A.cfmiriil'ltr8Uon erriployes · j>fOblng .an earlier Avalon Harbor seaplane crash that killed two Oran&e County boaters recently. Coast Fugitive Captured FAA agents Vincent Mulrooney, 53, aDd Kent D. Wiiison, 28, were lilted .I• good condltJon at '.Avalon Community Hosplt.al, along with Los Angeles Couilti Collstablt Johnny Windle, 60, the Island's cblef lawman. The ·Caialfna •Sea Planes tnc-~ aircraft piloted by. Charles Klrck, of San Pedro, wal on 1 landing approach when the overlooked Whetls, protruding bt\ow the pontoons, hfi water. Man Jf anted for $500,000 .Theft Held in Texa s An attorney accused of Mealing nearly $500,000 In bonds frcmi ~he estate or an ailing Newport Beach man ts today beina: held In a Texas Jail accused of lnlmtata transportation of stolen pr<>perty. federal of:lclaJ1 In Bl'OWlllVUle, Tei:as, said today they were hoi>lna ~ IChedult further court action !cir EacOiidido lawyer Patrick S. M. Mttton, 17, "!or j>osslblj Monday or 'l'Ueada7." Mttton is in Cllllody In lltu ol lll00,000 ball lollowlnc his arrligoment. Thursday night. Federal officers, tipped off by Mexican authoriUe.s. moved In on the elusive 47· year-old lawyer Wednesday as he 1t- t.empled lo ttlUro lo the U.S. he left more than two months ago. . He allegedly """"" the bonltr lut Nov,mbtr with nearly '500,000 worth of bond• filched <rom the .. tale o( John Sal· mond, 79, of 2164 Vjsta Entrada, NewP91"t Beach. • retlrad Union Oil Company ez. ecutive. FBI qenta and lnvestlgalon !run the San Dlqo County l'llstrlcl Atlornj:y's ol- llce look up the chat< altar belnc advll<d of the theft by Salmond'• ""'· Jolm Sal-mQ!l!l Jr. or 16921 Bedford ~ llun- tlnRfon Beach. . Tiie yoonaer Salmond and his molhtr, Mn. Helen Salntond of the family home. are .conservators of tht substantial e.ltate. MlUon w,. appointed aa lawyer for the estata by sahiioM and ohortly II· tcrwards, It II 1nege<1, dllappwed with mo1t ol the bonda entrusted lo hi• care. lie oiltgtdly wro!t a letter 1o the younger S11lmond In which he wamtd lhe eon- servator that the bonds would not be returned unelss he {Mitton) received half their valpe. That letter suggested a meeting between the two men at which details ot f'1e tr.111Sler of funds could be diJcussed. Federal ollcla!J today said thert II "absolutel7 no doubt'' that the letter c~"l'le from Mitton. ll was aJso reveal.ed toda7 that• Mex~ lean olllcf.U had been watching Milton'• progresa through four Mexican provinces for some Orne prior to Mitton's arrest. A federal a.gent "'1ld only say thil1' the ar· reat of the free 1pending lawyer h~ been rtelayed "in the Interest ol recovtrlna 11 much of the stolen money as possible and we think our metbodl have been, SOC• cec;sful.'1 The twin-engine plane, on-a fQ11ht from Long Beach Airport lo !he Island. was on· ly __ '1lght1y .damaged, according lo spokesmen for .the opt!ratirfg finn. ... DR; HAYAKAWA .. . 'JVOJf IN ·p1LOT ---- • San ·Francisco's abatp.ton,Ued edUCA· tor r lll\ S. I. Hayaklwo, itlll ha1 a lot to say. And, llartiog lodaY. he '• 1olng lo aaj some of it in a wtekly. coh.lmn 1whlcb will be pUblilhe~ by the DAILY PILO'l'. Dr. Hayakawa•s flnt column appem today oo the editorial page (P1ge I). It will continue u a. regular feature of Ute editorial paje each Friday lo the DAll,Y PILOT. ' " --. .. ------ Board Nixes Freedom·for Ex-tjcoon WAS!UNGTON (AP) -BllUe Sol Es~s. a one-time fertilizer iycoon '\'hose financial d'alings became a nation~} sc'andal, lost today his first bid for p~ from a..l~year federal prison terrri. · . The U.S. Parole Board rejected the ap- plication or Estes, 45, who· would have been fllgible Miirch 5 after servipg,Or,e. third of ht• term. 11111"1'"". r!>' s!indllo& fin1J1~e aimpa~e1.. , Pmto ·Board Clhalrnlln Geora• ~. -lllild Ille fl!Q ligh~ .boii\I made the decisJon after a compW:te review ot tbe record in ~-Eatet~ The· board ad DOcember 19'll l0r'~oext review of the decislon,- The Pf:C!Xi, Tex., bus"inesm'l~n ~ aerv- Int h11 llJ'0"'1ce 0lot mlll.ltlud .and con. &PfracY to defraud the finence'companiet at the fedtral correctional institution at Sandstone, Minn. He ~as been ln- Carcerated there since Dec. 15,-1068, after ~ginning bis prison life as a convlct at Leavenworth, Kan .• federal priJon. Little has been' heard of him since· he entered prison. • There remains UUle of the Estes magic that made him a mllllooa~e In his 20s and e1tended hla lnfluence far beyond his Texas home. Esta airl\'ed in Pecos, Tex., In 1151, In debt and toting a ballered brief cue hal in five ye1rs he had.,_ made . his , flllt- . mUUoil .ind vias 0. the lfay lo lJllildlni t multJmilliorHiollar empire on fraOOulent credit. The emplr .. includinr rertJUzer; ·grajn e I e v a to rs , cottoa allotment& and a variety or other bualneues-coUapoed io 1!162 and the re.Wting th under nVtrberitted in Wuhfugton ·and on Wall Streel San Juan Reaaies For Swallow Return Plans are well under way. today for celebration of the return of the swallows w_ San Juan Capistrano in March. Tiie annual Fleata de las G-Olondrlnae Is si:heduled 'foi 1\lirCll 18 thorugb-23. Members of tl)e San Juan Capistrano Flem AssoclaU~n ~ seeking assistance ol any residents Interested ~q helping with the· five.day event, ,.hich (Delude& arr aquestrian parade, trail ride, barbe- cue and program brthe ~i~ .. - Orange -... Weadler · Gusty ~airwioda wlU ¥Dd , weekend highs Into the low ,.,., 1 along lbe orin(e t:oaii. "'1Jle cold weather geac. ii prescribed ·for"tlte nlghtUme ho\Jri, · - INSmE TO~AY . HOw do .'&he 1V1D changff'in the Motion PfcMt A.MOdadotl'1 movie roUng tocta a//<Cl llO)i.' dt uour kidl? ~ .. c"'"P~'< ...,.,,..... tlon II gi1'< In lodaJ'r IVHk- <nd<r .. ctton. • . (' . l ; • .t , . , / ,:__ J DAll.V PILOT L --.... '"""· "'""".JO, 19'10 ' • ~~ $1.3·3 Billion Surplus ' . :--een in Nixon Budget .. '-.!'o ~ . •• . 'ft'~GTON (UPI) -President Nli6Q w11l propose Monday a $300.77 bttllbii bud1et for lhe year beginning July J, Whb a 11.1rplus or $1.3.3 billion. A cut of • ~ .$6 billion 1' plliMed in mililary spoodl~ Tbt ft&wu, which were confirmed by the "'White House, are contained tn the , President's annual economic message to :;~ Congress. !· As promised frequenUy in recent ·.. ..,eeks, Nixon plans to propose a balanced • • bud&tL There w11 no breakdown of the ·! · b!Jd&tt In the economic teP.!'.!!'it. The ,:. delalled figures will be senflii"Cooiieu ::. In a separate message Monday. The ~:: economic report did show Nixon envlslons • .. , a modest surplus. ·-~· '• ... t'he economic report U1t1 projected ex· pencliWres for the federal spending year running lo mld·l9'11 of $200,771,ooo,ooo, "'Ith receipts totaling $202,103,000,000. That would leave a surplus o r {I ,331,000,llllO. White Ho1lleiPress Secretary Ronald L. Zieale:r told reporters: 1'It ls considered to be a solid balanced budget which has taken. into account lhe need for i:estraint 1n federals~ in today's economy. "ll is responsive lo national needs while keepin~ -In mind that the major priority facing the t.-ountty is the health of the economy." J,b:\_d§r~lhe .. -1ieneraJ hel!fing or national defeme, !he report of the President's economic advisers liata p r o j e c t e d military speriding totaling S73.58 bUUon in the OO'ol.' fiscal year. Thi& would be a cut •• ~· ... . A Groovier Pad Nixon's Florida Heliport Costly Spedll CO Ille DAILY PILOT KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. -Whai does lhe waterfront Whlte House here have that the We.tern While House in Orange County doesn't? A R.lper-IOphlsticated helicopter pad that cost $327 ~ more than the · !lQdest, if larger one, adjacent to President Nix- on's San Clemente villa, that's what. 1be chopper pad built out over the placid Atlantic Udelands makes the one atop Cotton's Point look like nothing but a few square yards of concrete poured over a bulldozed dirt area. And lhll'a precisely.whal 1118, Wilh • mere '15,000 construction <mt to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. An executive of the firm which built Nixon's new 15()..square.foot pad at Key Biscayne, with a comparative '342,258 rriceiag, revealed the cost today in Florida. l'kmund Thornton, vice president and director o~ the Atlantic Foundation {!or-. pany, said rnuch or the expense results from deep-dri,1en ,:oncrete pilin gs lo s•:1.· port the structure. He aald it lies offshore from a two.acre heliport only 1,00C feet from the property line of President Nixon's bayfronl com- pound. Not only that., but the Key Biscayne heliport is equipped with such James Bond paraphernalia as electric eyes, sonar ~ar to detect underwater swim- mers or 'usplclous watcrcrafl Thamtcn didn't say how tbe President will hit the beach, however •. Hanoi's Top Negotiator Back, No Concessions Due ' . -. . ~ ~- "i>Alus CUPll :::_ .Tiie suporv~ J'" North Vietnam'• peace deleaaUon return- ed today from Hanoi consultaUons and said his government ls rudy for "&erious negoUaUons.• But he •id, "'°91!l!'oqjd mile no <g!IC<Sfltm• • th<, nic'i!l'lllJI Jabie under.\J.s. mUIJary P"""1<· Le Due Tho, member o( the Hanoi politbureau. tokt newsmen at Le Bourget Airfield that President Nixon was pursu- ing a "double faced pollcy" ln Vietnam. "On the one hand, he speaks of peace," Tho said ... But on the other hand he-ill pushing the so-called Vl,.tnamliation and \trying to prolong the war." ) The polltbureau member refU!ed lo say Oemente Grad Comes Back Hero Tim Anaya, a 20-year-<ild san Cemente Hla:h School craduate, has returned from an Army combat tour with a lmpressh·e collec:tloo of medals awarded hlm for herolm>. Tm son of Ron Anaya of Canyon Road "' and Mrs. Mary Dunay of 'l\r!tin, won two Bronze Star medals for heroi.spl in com· bat the Soldier's Medal, awarded for her~lsm when not in direct contact with the enemy -in this case rescuin i; a bud- dy lrom a stream under snipe fire, and the Anny Commendation Medal. Honorably chschargcd with the rank of s111eant, Anaya will iltend Orange Coast College. DAILY PILOT OltANGE ce.UT ,Ulfi.lstflMG t0M'AHY 11.elotrt N. w,94 ''"lffftf #14 ,~~ J1c.i R... Cerl1y Yl(I Prftldtnl -C0-11 MM\lllf" The,..11 IC11vil 1:•11or Tlooe"''' A. Mwr,h i"• .111..,..r.., 1.•119r Aiclr.efli P. Nill .......... -" Cl!• I.el• L .... .._, OHk• 222 Fer11I ,t.vtflW• Melli .. Atltl,.n• P.O. ••• ttl, t?•sz °"'"'Offk" C.le Mn11 Jlt W.1 a1 v l!'Wtt """"" a..tJll; m1 w..1 ,,.,.. aeui..~ j.,11"'!~ ... U>I 11111 llldo .llll .. "41. • "i)·1.1 .l1· -•bat Hanoi's l1wi p6Uaca Im ml1ht be. He shrugged off que1Uon1 about his instructiom from his government and said he would outline Hanoi's position at the French, Communist Party Oonir,u ~t~eb. 6. 'If N~n ttiJ,ly wanis peace, bi must . end his :-aggre.ssion and start ~ wious ne10U11tlons," Tho told newsmen. "We are ready for such negotiations." , Bu( he charged that "Nixon is diminishing the importance of the Paris ta!ks," and "Is sabotaging the conference step by step." "Pm!dent Nixon must decide whether he wanl.l war or peace,'' the Hanoi delegate said. "If he wants lo put pressure on us be will neve r suceffd and in this respect we shall make no COD· cessions.'' , Tho sharply assailed Thursday's U.S. air attack on a Communist mis3ile site Inside North, Vietnam. mflde after rockt'l~ Y.'ere fired at an unanned American reconnaissance plane. lie holly denied there had b e e n any tacit understanding permitting the U.S. Air Force to fly reconnaissance (lights north or the dcmilitarizeO zone. He said U.S. r.egoliator Philip C. Habib's claim that there was such an accord amounted to "fallacious. misleading words." ''Following the Jan. 28 U.S. Air Force bombing on Nortn Vietn11n1 -the strongest ln 1nany 1nonths -one mu st conclude that Nixon \\'ants lo step up the war.'' Tho said. Edison Expansion Hearings Resume In LA Tueday Public hearings on the SOutht'rn California Edison Compariy's application lo expand its power plant in lluntlnglon Beach y.·111 resume Tuesday In Los Angeles. Orange County "'ill send eight wit· nesses to the JO a.m. session called by the Call!DrnlA Public UUlilies Commission <PUC). The hearing "'ill take place ir. lhe c:o-mnUssion's Los Angeles offiets. State Olflc.e Building, 107 S. Broadway. Among tllose scheduled to telilify are : \Vllllam Fitchen, Orange: County Air Polluti on Control Officer and 11vo of his engineers: Dr. O. C. Taylor. acting dlrec· tor o[ lhe University of Calif()rnia's statewide Air Pollu!lon Research Center r..t UC. Riverside. ancl George J. Taylor. administrator or the California Air Rc.'JOUrtes Board's air quality manage· ment progr.1m. Also scheduled to apper are Or. A. J. Haagen-SmU. chairman of the Ca\lfornlR /.Ir Resources Board and CAI Tech pro- fe&SOr who ia ac.knOWledged r.atlonwlde as an txpcrl In the •ir pollut ion fleld; Dr. John R. Goldsmith, head of the state Department of lle1lth'1 Environml'.!ntal J;:pldemlology Unit and meteorologist Erwin Kaupcr. The Edison Company is seeking PUC perml11ton to build two new units at It$ Huntington Beach plant. Filchcn has denied a county license on the arounds thal expansion w\ll 1esd t.o viol1llon of the t'<>unty's sn1og control la"" • o( $5.8$; billion from the level of the cur- rent ye.ar. More than offsetting this would be a rise of some $6.5 billion in the second big- gei;t category or spending -"income security," Including Social Security. That would push the total to 8n estimated sso.sa billion. An increase in Social Security payments went inlo effect Jan. I. Spending on health programs is ex- pected to rise, .according to the economic advisers, by '1.7 billion to just under SIS billion. The "education and manpower" category shows a S0.6 billion rise to $8.1 billion. · Besides deleNe, major activities being cut will be the space anJ farm programs -space by nearly half a billion to $3.4 billlon and agriculture by almost a full billion to $5.3 bllllon . The report shows the administration estimate& a $1.5 billion surplus in the year ending ,June 30, with income or Sl99.38 billion and spending of '197.88 billion. Last 3 Suspects In Campus D1·ug Raids Captrued The last three among a large number of suspected campus narcotics dealers named tn arrest warTants were picked up by Costa Mesa police Thursday night, bringing to 25 te totatnumbu In custody. Detective Sgt. John Regan sald the trio is charged with sale of dangerous drup · or marijuana, with two otth8n juveniles. Robert Morris, 18, of 937 .Sura Way. Costa Mesa. was charged in a w~ant ca111.ing '625 bail 'ltjlJl· 1~le of marijuana. Six of the suspects In the alleged deal· lng at both Costa Mesa and Estancia high schools are adults and race arraignment or preliminary hearings in Harbor District Judicial Court next.week. The remaining 19 boys and girls face Juvenile. Court adion in comi111 weeks. Investigators confiscated about •10,000 worth ol marijuana and narcotics durlng the six-week probe of campus activities, lncluding nearly every type on the illicit market. • DelecUY1!caP11 ·~rH1 M)d eariler at the ifttged iia/t611CitlafhCkin1 wa!I not what one would call an organlzed ring, but most defendants kne.w each olher. ~Pll,iills char15· nother group of llv1'yo4n1 iien WedaeSay nl11:ht at a Colti. Mesfai _ ent, rrl"eanwhile, were being sought !romlhe Orange Coun- ty District Attorney today. Authorltles in Wooster, Ohio, Upped off local police by emergency, cress-country teletype message that two known nareoUcs suspects wet._e in Costa Mei& and gave the addrtls. · A' team of detecUves went to 792 Shalimar Drive, where they and a third Ohioan Witt arrested, along with tv.•o Anaheim youths attending college in O~lo. Before police eould enter, someone tried lo flush a dozen plastic bags o( n1arijuana down a toilet -clogging it - and the soggy weed was confiscated as evidence. All five were charged with JlOS6CSSion of marijuana for sale and ordlnary possession Of marijuana counts. Joe Sch_e~an, 1st Fire Marshal Of County, Dies · J oe Schennan, Orange County's first lire marshal died today at SL Joseph Hospital after suffering a heart attack. He was 68. llis death ended a career In lbe county which began in 1930 when he was ap- pointed Orange County's first U.S. Forest Service ranger. At the time the county's fire fighting equipment consisted of six boxes of tools which the fire fighters lug. tied lo the blaze. When he retii"ed in August, 1963. he left 2S fire stations. 400 paid volunteers and 150 regulars on the fire fighting staff. Follo\\1ing his retirement he moved to ldylly.·ild and then to Yucaipa. He had suffered a series of heart attacks before being hospllallzed shortly before his death . lie is i::ur\"ived bh his \vife. Ruth, and a son, Da\'id. Deputy Seeks Tax Boss Post Deputy Tax collector Joe R. Greene. 48, of 13391 Elizabeth Way, TusUn, threw his h;it in the ring today for the posl of rtlir- ing t.ax collector Don Mozley. He Is l~ sa-ond Cindldate to declare (or tl'le. of· fic<. Greene, a retired ~tarine Corps major \\1th 21 ~·cars service as a pilot, has beftfl in the tax collector's office 1lnce 1963. "I am runntna because 1 think I can do a good job since I am famlUar with the workings of the of(ice," he said. Greene has served as president of the Santa Ann Exchange Club and Is cur. rcntl)' area govern or for East Otange County Exrhangr clubs -- 0 0 . ' . ...., ~ " J.' Ul'I T•lttlflel• ACCUSED NARCOTICS 'FAG IN' TAKEN TO COURT Edward Blasie Alleged Supplier of Chllld Drug Peddlers Modern '"Fagin' Accused of Vsing Kid Drug Pushers NEW YORI\ ( AP)-Authorilies say a father of four who was arrested on drug cha,rges used teams o! children to peddle narcotics. Victor Santiago, 39, was t.aken before Judge Michael Gagliano in Brooklyn Criminal Court. where Asst. Dist. Atty. David Epsteµl said: "This man conducts a Fagin-like activicy in the sale of drugs, using teams of children in these sales." About 500 spectators In the courtroom applauded when Gagliano ordered San- tlago held in $100,000 bail for a hearing Feb. S. "If these charges are true," Judge Gagliano said, ;'then this man is worse than Jesse Jame!. If they're true, he may have ruined the ·heallh and morals or children and if any of them are ad· dieted I think he should not spend a peaceful day the rest of his life." Police said they found 14 decks of heroin. a quantity of marijuana and equipment used In the. narcotics trade in a Brooklyn basement laboratory \\•hen they picked up Santiago Thursday. They charged him with possession of narcotics "'ilh intent to seU. Authorities were lipped off to San- tiago's whereabouts early t'uesday after arresting three. boys -II . 13 and 15 yea rs old -as heroin peddlers on the sidewalks of Coney Island. The boys were charged with juvenile delinquency and held for a hearing In Children's Court. The three told police they each 'sold an average of 90 bags or heroin at $10 apiece every day and each cleared about $50 daily . The rest went to-the collector. Lawn Bowlers Present New Proposals Monday Laguna Beach lawn ~wlers will bring plans for Qlt.lr proposed new Heisler Park clubhouse back to the PlaMing Commis- sion for review at the commission's reg· ular Monday night session. Commissioners earlier approved site relocaUon of the facility from the north Weds Autho1·1s Girl LONDON (AP) -Field Marshal Vis· count Montgomery's son married" author Daphne Du Maurier's daughter today in a · Kensington registry office. It was the second marriage for both David f\Iontgomcry and Tessa Browning, and each has l'ol.'O children. Lord fl.fontgomcry did not attend the ceremuny because the weather was bad. The bride's father also was a military man, the late Lt. Gen. Sir Frederick Browning. He served in Southeast Asia in World War 11. end of the greens to the ocean aide, but req~ested detailed architectural plans be- fore making a recommendation to the city council. Three property owners wtll be seeking permission to resubdivide lots to create larger building sites. Ca rl Allen, 2673 Vlctoria Drive, wishes l.o acquire four feet from an adjacent ~gu.na . Heights paretl to tnlarge an existing JO.foot lot. Roy and Dorothea Ashe. 860 and 880 Baja Street seek per- mission to resubdivide three lots into l'l''O building sites and John Caroline, 735 and 755 Pearl St.. wants to make two building sites out of foor existing lots. For the first lime. the commission will undertaJle a preliminary review or plan- ning department budget needs for 1970-71, 1vlth a view to determining which projects !hey v.·oold like to activate in the coming year so btidgeting can be done accord- ingly. Irvine Co. Tell·s Stand On Bay Swap Irvine Company Prtsident William Mason ha s brokt>n his long·standing or· Ciclal silence on the Upper Bay land swa1) issue and charged that new alternate plans by its foes were made without study and hearings and he said the mlrine ecology of tho estuary already has been destroyed by nature. ~tason atlacktd County Supervisor Robert Battin's new alternate plans a<> "hastily conceived" Thursday. He also said that last )' e a r ' s devastating noocts destroyed the . marine environment or the contested estuary by depositing tw1>to-tive·feet of mud and silt on the bay's Ooor . r.taso n staunchly upheld his company's role in the 10-year-oW exchange plan with Orange County and said ~position. -in- cluding Superior Court 1nterven~1on - has come from a ··small, self·tntercst groups ." He said lhe o~iginal stale grant of the tidelands of the bay \Vas made with the intention of building a harbor, and that because the cou nty cannot afford to , the Irvine Company could do it. "We feel that the legal questi ons should be determined through the pre!tent case r<ither than a delay for another five years while some other plan is proposed which. in turn, will probably be attacke~ by other self·interest groups ," r.1ason said. The statement drew responses by foes of the exchange chari::ing that r.tason's co1nments lacked merit. Frank Robinson of Newport Beach, a !ceder of the foes of lhe swap, said he and his group were proud to be called a self·interest group, because their Ideas are the same as those of President Nixon, Governor Reagan and Senators Alan Cr1u1ston and George Murphy. "AU of them have come out strongly in faYOr of J71'eservation of public shorelines for the public and saving ecological valueg, and we're proud to be a group with this same interest," he said. 'Instant' Fire KiJJs County Man Stanton fire department spokesman said today they are investigating the source of a blau which took the. We of Stanton resident Dellino Buenroslel early thilii iporning. Battalion Chief Charles Clark said the department received the call at 12:44 a.m. and had the fire at 10802 D~ St. was controlled within minutes. Apparently Buenrastel and. a friend were movlng a mattress into the single room structure when he struck a matcll tcr light a cigarette, instantly setting the entire room abluze. ''The only door wa.11 blocked by the mattress," Chief Clark said. "I lmagln.~ he was dead by tne time \Ve got the call. A natural gas leak was indicated by the chief as probable cause for the fire. Bel Air Fire Probed BEL AIR (UPI) -The cause or a fire which blackened two acres of brush in the mount.a.lnous regions north of here was being investigated Thursday. Seven companies of city firemen and two helicopters brought the fire under control in 30 minutes. No homes were damaged. ! ... / Sale WITHIN A Sale COMFORT & STYLE AT A PRICE _., CHAIR STARTS AT $129. AVAILABLE IN A LARGE SELECTION OF COVERS AT THE UNBELIEVABLE PRICE OP $12t. COM MODI ON SALi ., '159 DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH . 1727 WHttllff Dr., 642·2050 OPIN PalDAf 'TIL t INTERIORS Profff&lonal Interior D11lgn•ra Avoll1blo-AID-N51D LAGUNA IEACH 345 North C011t Hwy. 4'4"6551 OPIN RIDAf 'TIL t I .. • • J I • ... = -• J ' .... --e.zzc a a a s a a a a a a e 0 0 • • Fr!Ut, Jan1W1 30, 1970 OAILY PllOI' If! • f ¥ ,._ ti I V1t'1l §tctlsli~s for tlae Oranf&e Coo~t Arefl • WORLD' PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT "f~•r •"' IHtty .t ..,_., bnt" -LA. T!1n11 -l•111911tk Co-41- Marriage Licenses . US VEGA$, Nev. -Merrlilt 1.c1nMI luued lltr• IMluOe: '"''UN.TRIPP -Jiii 1&. ~Ml' ,A,. ol Cosll Miu, 1ni/ Vllll111 M , Lot An91l9t. • IAUMHOEFEHEA·HARLOW -Jin 11. John C., U. or N1wPOrt ... ch' 1ftd Joyce A. 24. or Santa AM. ' ' R~.FD-UTT -Jtn. 1[• Aobffi f:dwlld v .. ::, :.o::r• ou, :w. both of SEVIRNS.-ROllNSON -Jan. t2, W•~~~""'""°' S.. ..._of WestmlMtw, 11111 • f'_ll'.1._n. ot i.-... di. YOUNO.HARn:ll -J'11. n J1mn , ... , '"re' ................ " c 1 "· of r111ttnon 1tu&3 :L1tf.IJSE H -Jan.· 211, Rav· W .• ~,..,., Glotl• LN, -bolti Hfi 1,'ll'~D¢NN~Y -..lfn, U. J-W., 51, ttl I l>lll'k. Md w~IJ1f.~H~f'{it4".:' Jif:t 2'l:"i11· , 23. Ho.mlln•lon Bttch. and P~l1 (1..:~~ A~ ... M. N IE-GlllSON -J1n. 2•, R•llll'I VI Ir l It' of f•la MDI, and wtsf1:1t~H~L~1'.'.:. J.... u. • "'""' luch. ·~~~""""""' S K ·HOWAlll -Jan. 24, lffflltn Oatlnl'r', 23. Ind" T-Marlt 20~111 of Hewi>f>'t 811dl. fAVAllb-R E -Jin. 24. M1rl1;1 A., 3'. llf Hunt nt'ltln l.Hdl. •ncl SlllrltJ' An11, )I, ol ~llthllfft. MACHAOO.MOOllE -Jan. 24, e ....... d L., tr. -of H""""'ton etadl, and J1111n1 K1ttilftn. If, ol' Lot it.111nltos. THOMASoSULllV,lN -Jan, 16, Dorwld "~Jot•~' Lakewood. •1111 Ltnclll J ., 2', c&H~nlN""-'ru"~ Jell. 1,, W!1111m P1tr '";" ol Cotti Mill arid EllJ Ill Jane, lt f/If G1rcltn GroYr CLAllllC·VAN ALSTYNE -J111, 11, G10• Charin, 21, of J.lnlt Morolc1. end J.lrl Stll1N11. "· ol' Lnuna lfl~ll MtLL'ER·ASHING -Jin. 14, llont1cl J .• JS, of l-leach, Ind JoAM, lf, tf Hunll"'ton Incl! JOHNSTON·WILSON-J1n, 17 T1ctdf' """"'· 21. 11111 81¥er!Y 25-ball! of C•ta Mew. P'OHL..WAllOIE -J'1\. 17 Htrotr Frtntll, 41, and Oor!1 W. :U, bolt! ol IUN Y .... GADO -J11'1. 17. Roberilt ,J, "~" .. K, of ttbDI hllnd. lftd llltkl Jo, , llf Cn 1 Mt11 MAltTIN-WAOONEll-Jm. 17, Robttt J ., $1, IM DtrltM I>., ~1, bath ol' C•ta Mlt9. GUNN.CMAM•l!llS -Jin. 17, Wlll11 G .. 4. IM ,.1rlcl1 """'· ,., llolh ol' CMll,1MI\~ TOICA1JUK;;~HA .. lilt -J1n6 17, Defn· ~~':1c.·v~ -.,r :~1-:.. .. a.. and MtlLIGAM·!1AbE1t -,,n. 17, SI~ Oal1, n . of LM l.nlell1;, IM L•ll '!',!"" 'b°' lfVl'ltll\flOfl 9t.c:fl OW N·WEll IER -Jen. 171_ Gtr11d E 1rcl , of Weotn1ln1111r, ind ·~~t,~llftl, lf, ol N-11k MILLI! RONIN -Jin. 17, Cl'l1rlfl L1r,..,, 1, alld S111r111 Merllns, 29. llolll of COllll M~" GIBSON.MC CONN lL -Jen. 17, Ar .. vr. )4, cl I Mua, IM K1m ~' 'IJ of Arte1lt H L·AlL~•AuoM -Jin. ~11 111 " 27, ttl Co.ta Miu.. tna rta If. It, of lon11 le•d'I HA ll.OU~AN -J1n. 17, Ch1r1t1 fli r'd Jr .. n. 1rid L~""'· :12, bol'1I ,,, ,. _ _. ••ldl SMOKE CHOKE CROAK! or ... QUIT, and ' LIVE · LIVE -LIVE JAJrn how. FREE con.au!· taUon and det&lla. Spon· tend by Nlltt.MI A"tf. lmfkl"I Ceuncll. Ql1 tor appolntmtnl ~2_.1.1 ., •7M127 I Gu.nntttd to help you quit: wlthln 10 daya ! No PfOblt lNI ' 4x8 FOOT SHEET ROCK 127 M111Sc. l0Mfa. tld1 ls rock. hea\'Y 1hdf, ure for drf walling that nhcr room.11'1 no bl~ d~I cmcl Cl Ng\llar ;11y COii do It. HEAVY DUTY VIJIYL RUGRUQEB 77c Lllf. FT. lloD 11W: out durlnr.!tcrd wecrther. St1l haadl• drippy rolacocrU. muddy •bO... •loppp -..,"'" akilly •hll'1 MlriD.sr TOIU c~t .ar trelllr mopped noor. 3 PIECE BLACK Br . BRASS FIRES ET 1488 Compact' set ls priced to flt lh• budget b11t look good. EtchM black and bra•• fillllh with trM sta:adlng serMn. The mlltthiiig pobr crad htu1h :bcnit' up out ol lh• w«'f. U •"'ftfbodr rememb.r1. GAS LOG SET 11 8 ~- A 9a~ losr Mt lh1t proctkallf PCJT8 for u .. lf ha lbu mad work MrftCI from cl91mlng. cboppl~ la.woo4 01:1d othw •11ch frlYlU. Steady ana heat l• smobl••• and odor frt1•. CHAIM DOOR FASTENER 27c ' anat 11af•ty f""1r9 MJ*Sallr U JOU'N bom• oloaM at nl;bt {IO. trr er com.put•~ dcrting ••me.), Tan. MCOAdB to put up. vhn ~of m.lnd worth bO'lln. BALL CASTERS 87:. • 100 FOOT CLOTHESLINE 57c klll11. RlcMrS 0.. a, ~I .. Delodv, C.rol J .. 11 t. Jolln K11b MDl ....... Ol'f, VIVI H, .. G-J, l(,tmp, JP#lh A ... Jel"t'!' A. 51YI<. Corel L. a. 0!"1Ule W, Kolcllf, ~rv Fr1nc:11 a. Fr1nll 0, McGu!rk. F•11Ket knd•• a. Jolltl J••-Ram ..... Ntoeh',.. #M~ I. HU911 J a.tMl. "-'t· .. .,_'°A. lhonl, Jr..,Gtolf'"' J. a P11f~ M; T_,., Ylrtlf111 GenruM a. w11t11m 11111)' NtwLlnd, Lu'' o. t. ~rv e. N111or\, LYM &' J-It. Svtvll!, ~rl Ktllll & TMnW~ J1m11 Mcl'arC.flf, ~r1ir. i..oU • ,,.,..... SltWll1 •-JlOA I!:, " a1ttr sv. Rim. Jloldl111 Y. I. J°"' I . lenlct, Jr., Jore• C. & TMOdore S. Slevin. Jr., Chrl1lhw f'lltt a. W1r11t lltldlard SCO!t, 11ttokl 1 ... JM1kt E. THU", Viet M .. s.mutl E!ctw.rd 01rHntloll, Loll J ... Eitw1r R, Leith, Nll\Cf L. I. MIWtl J, Roni, Can)I AM • Victor Louis 811mot\lt, Cllrl1lln1 AMt & E6mund Th0m1>!.0I\, Nano I. H-rlt• llv!,,...loi-d $tlf, WHU1m LIPYll & M1rl1 K1tlllrl111 c .. han. 0w ..... 1 ...,... 1. ~ '""'' Walklf' ic....., I. & 1.M F. Slrana. flVt All(f .. Ootvlll• 8ovcl Nl'!l•lt~. Jr., SleYt I. Ele1nor J~•n Hubblra, M41r!lyn &. R111>11 llurnl. L1wll I. P1!rkll JUM Boalltr, IClllM f . I. fr..t A. Fllhtf', ClrMf! & llllbtr! N. Bird, Jr,, HoM C. I. Doutll1 Mfr!lll Mutray, MlrUMol &. INrl IEa-trll Lawrt<nC•, Wlllllm A. & NotlT\I F. H1lkt1, Loreltl I. F••,. w. Vautl!n. Tirri <t. I. Wllllln1 C. Coel1, 5111'1 M, I. llowll H. K.low. Mtrw VldOtiol & J9tln Wllllam t-.tnt. hrMk• L. I. P'IO'lll C. Tlf'IOr, Mllrtn I. ltldllrd R1~, Charto111 A-I. D•flll AllXll!lltf' Holllt .. ~ M. I. llobtt t E. $dl1nt1L NlllQ' L I. EclWlrd L. l•Mll, C1tol Lu I. Jac:t WIM Bo~o, Ellen A. I. OOMlcl E. ltedlloll,. P1trldl AM I. Paul Eowa•d Aikin.. Cuol ANlt .. J1ma Minor "n~•lt, l!llM ..... $1m1HI E. '•rk1r, Mldll!!ll o . • llo&trt e . Jedl1111!1.. Run•H Mkhall & Junt Jtntl· " JKkSOll, Carlton Helt • Jud~ l.,. a ... nar111, E1Tlllr I. Marlo M. ""°'' "'°'' ""°'' c~~UL L•wl• Wiiiiam .. Ell!tbllll Powtl!, or,rt!ha " L111111 LOYtlcrr. DIM•! C. I. Loll Shtron (Please, no letters, we cry very easily) MET IL BUILDING Th• old woodahed nenr looked ltett•r or more durable circa 1970. Glv•• aerric• ·for year1. handles garden tools. large.toy•. outgrown dre•• forms. bikes. motorcycle•. minlbi1ce1, Could double nicely .al kiddie playhou1e or pool changing room. Ten by alx outside dimension. (Telegrams we love) 10 FOOT BY 6 FD.OT Ad .. •rtlMd •pedal• rood th.nt Fsbnaary L 1170. and chock our lawn cctt9 1poc:lal1. now It tho tlmo to do It. DAISY FOOTLOCKER tlli~,,--fClM"'1S EJ~tla-Wanen Taylor • Beatty The~ Game ba'lbwn ' m.ra111~ ORANGE DRIVE·IN • LIDO THEATRE, Newport F11stest in ~est Buy it. St!I IL Try tht f.slt~l rt$ponse In the Wt1l agalnsl yo11r own clock. T tst Dlmt·il·llne Ads, whtft tkt Ktlon Is, In SittUrdaf s 041l Y PILOT. YOURCHOIC& SURE llLLS •ROSE SPRAY •BUG KILLER • YEGETATIOK KILLER Our d.cl includ11o1poc:lal gunnoulo,tboch•m.1.cal 197 It somotbillg •lff. It d o1tror• gard•n 1pollor1 and doo• II 11i1porbly. l Qt., 10 OL INCLUDES SPECIAL GUN NOZZLE SULPHATE OF AMMOlflA 67c 20 LB.BAG ··-·· . -·-··· . ........ __ _ Mo1! lcnms go! pol• O"Y•r th• hoUdcrp (that'• nothing. I turUd pal• wh•a l got tM illlls),' so hft.'• 90m9 lnltG11t sr-up that J'OGllf meau iNllnn•. SCOTTS SUPER BONUS •2.00 OFF 1095 REG. 12.95 Wbj ~t gin ro1i1r dicbondra lawn o good 1tort and .Oft sa.oo a dOll't wan.no, thof• wbr.J Supor loa1i1• prr-t• 1pottN 1purg• and crahgru11 -d Jwttlt.n cit tho 1G1D• ti.mo. AJITI FREEZE 11!. Jlroaldng dowa a111 a ha trip to U. ~or . m01i1ntola1 I• llO fua (npoc:lally with mr fa:allr• J'd go buG11a1). A 11111• pr.troY•l Pff"alloa I• wgrth U.. oUotl. PEIJIZOIL lUTO JACK STUD 167' A friend In need. Indeed, if you gOtta lotter Junk that isn't quit• big enOugh 37c YOUR CHOICE DWARF FRUIT TREES OR BEGULIR SIZE CITRUS Hen'• a Hlectlon that Snow White would have turn.d down. the Prince for, chOOH from cherry. peach. apple. or cltrut varlet!••· All atrong. all healthy. t'he cltrut 1• burlap wrapp.d. Plant now and ea.}oy lu1eiou1 eatlng all summer long. YOUR 299 CHOICE for th• metal atorage shed or •mall enough to Jtutf ln th• bureau drawers. Mak•• a ' great hJpp(e hope chH~ 1he c~ ol bead1. . ...,.7 FREE CLASIEI -BECliTEB IOW • DOOR PRIZEI • RE[BEIDEITS. F•lt. t -"How to Pcmol A Wall" Georgia Paclllc Fab. 11 -'1~ o1 h1,,.odod. C11lla;1 and C.Wng tu.•" ltullao CO-.PGllY (Ana1ttoag Auoc:} F•lt. II -"'Wor\iag wltla lt•tln1 and Olh•r Hobby It.as" 11..,1 rs.noD Coapciny · ' tOCJ1' 100 PEUO!fl CLASS ll!tD 7:30. 1130 Pat J.A MIJllJ)A ITOllJI ONLY QT. Oa• of tM lllc ... I d9al8 lD tOW1L 9GJ1W oil for a: &octloa of what rou'd PCIJ' Cll t!M local ttclllon. . . . FDRIC COLOR' t±~tt;:· ~~' SPRAY 127 CAN •. • • .. ,. •' ,, •" • ~ •• ~ ~ •" •• ~ . . •• ':.\ • ~ ~ ~ .. ' , • ' • .. .. . ·• ' • ' • --- Jf OAll. Y PILOT L FrldQ, JalllWJ 30, 1'170 • "Your ltloney's Worth ' NY Telephone Postpones Bonds Health Car.e Needs Reform BJ SYLVIA PORTER fP' ...... hi I ltritl of fh1e) Our methods of delivering medlcll care range. in the maJorjty of U.S. hospitals, lrom outmoded to obsolete. Most or us are NOT receiving lncrusio;ly high q u a I i I y health ure in relurn ror our lncttasingly 1nnated health care bills. We have reached U1e crisi$ point -and now virtually all experts agree we must com· pletely overhaul our boSplto.ls or face even steeper spiraling of our heaJth care costs. And tbis. overhaul must come SOON. WHAT'S NEEDED ' -Really effective llfU·'Yide and dty.wlde heallh ptannlnc. Thi& is a desperati..need, for while thert art more than 90 Federally backed r e g i o n a I health planning agencies in operation. almost all are virtually powerless to force hospitals to follow t h e i r r eeommendaUons. Wasteful duplication of coslly facilities a n d little-used specialized services are commonplace the nation over. provided. One approach would be "utilization review commit· tees" which ~een unneees· 5ary admissions., overuse or services, other costly ex· r:esses. tn hospitals which have such committees, the ave rage hospital st.tty has been redu~d by as much as a full day. _,.1ort! Incentives to hospitals to reduce costs or at least lo hold the line. For in· slance. on a pilot basis. the Social Security Ad1nlnistrallon Is now offering to hoapltal1 serving Medicart pat I en t s cash reimbursements for up, to 50 pel'tf:nt of the savlng1 the hospilals can achieve I n various ' lypes of terVicts. Other luclnatin.; experiments In this area or iqcenUves l$hould be J?Utsued. -Much .d~r txploration of the "campus" approach to health care, in which health facilities -hospitals, doctors' offices, mental health centers. etc. -are grouped in one pla~. This would make the maximum use of available manpower. -S~ULARLV , mulliplica· lion of neighborhood heallh centers to provide in one place a lull range of outpatient services -·especially in areas where no decent medical facillties now exist. -And we must design and actually build new types of health care facilities for ¥lhich there i.!! a proven need. ll':s -Automation in our hospitals. Then! is absolutely no reason why computers ~hould not take over a wide variety of chores -ranging from laboratory record keep- ing to inventory control. In many cases. hospitals in a given area can band together to share computer services and achieve big savings ()n costs. -FAR GREATER controls over hospital costs by representatives of I a r g e r users -the federal government, health insurers. labor unions. Amounts paid for hospital services should not be simply the amounts I h c hospitals happen to charge but should be directly linked to the amount and quality of the care General Motors Reports VNITED STATES NATIONAL BA NK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW orEN SATURDAYS Coming Jan. 31 Family ff.ee.kly Is My Husband Deod or Alive? This story is wrilfen by Candace Perish, the wife of a Navy fl ier who was shot down over North Vietnom a year an'?'G half ego. Mrs. Parish tells of her trip to the North Vietnamese delega~ tio.n heodquotters in Paris end of the night- mare she five5. • NO .,CT -1 1'~ 1101 all :ictln~ \vhen yo u see Robert Redford spra1,.ing snow all over the screen in "Oo,\·nhill Rac~r" T·IP ~ays he gels more fun out or skiing than :iclin g . • AT·HOME PAY -,\ professor's idea lhat th e_ government ~honld p;iv mom a salary for \Vhat she has al\vavs done rree -taking care of the house -stiri up a national controversy. • REALLY SWEET HEARTS -Family Weekly Cookbook tells hon' 10 make S\veet hearts that are edible. AU COMING SATURDAY IN THE I DAILY PILOT I HAWAII LAND SALE! HANA.WALi ISTATIS EASY MONTHLY PAYMINTS Aftw NIM'IMI O.Wri Pay!IMf'lt tun GOOD PROPIUY IN PAIADJSI JOll,.. 1. HUNTU, Lk......i 1 .. 111t1tt INll.., SVltt JI 1, 14fl1 YMtVr• l lM., PhllM .......... lhermtn Oab. Calff•etl• tl40J ----·-~··· Mall Cev,.n T-'•1------ ...... ..................................... .. .. .................. '" ............... , .... , , .. ,,.,_ Complete-New York Stock List ttiill Mii (Mt.I Mltll LtW c• at . L DAILY PILOT J J American. Stock Exchange List Briefs BOSTON (UPI) -Av c.o Corp. uld It will llart mal<101 quaUty Jcny coet m o du 1 a r homes in April to stll In ~e 115,000 to ll0.000 rangt. CHULA VISTA, Cal~. (UPI) -Rohr Corp. h•s obtained :a 198 mn11 .. conb'ect to niod;fy lhe mail handllna sy1tem at the huge 3UIHtgioall Pollo!• tire al Omaha to speed the flo\v of bulk mail Jn parUculai-. ' SBA Offers · Workshop I I • f-ndar. Jal\llM}' 31.J,. l~/O ·IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1970 MO NTEGO 52352 f OHOt\.S121111o I t.pl Ji1•1¥fl · IVA Me"•hly t-1719---~8""2 ''"" l"oymflll . '•YlntRI Y", vou r110 <orrtCll'I' 111' h 111-10111 do....., p1ymt11t, t/IG2 h lht ltl!tl "*<ffll'I' PAV""'nl lnc!ud<nCI ru, IOC:tnM •nd 111 carrying clMrpj .on •PPf'Clwod crtdl! for JI .-,flH. Or. <f '!'IN l"••!u re p.oy '''"· The rvH pril:t 11 .,,,1., S25lt.60 lncludfl>g 8!1 le•fl, 11c: ... oe, lrtl!lhl Incl llHltr prtporlliooit. D.il-~ In LOl'lg 8HCll. Nothifl!I R'Cft ro l'IY. O.ltrrHI l'lvment price lt U911.11 l11cludln11 111 c•"Yl"8 cllfirvn. Tt•"• !Jcense. l•t'9M •r.d de1l1r prtp.ot1llOn, Nothing !TIOl'I to Pl'I'• Oellvtrt.:I In lOf'll & .. ell. ANNUAL l"f1tC•NTAGli ltATf 11.U"fo ,. ~,,,,,"ri · WE DECI DE ON YOUR CRE DIT~ ' Drive home ,thi_~= car of your choice ro·o·Atl '·~ ~~~, MURPHY'S SHAMROCK CARS ARE 100% UNCONDITIONALLY GUAR ANTE ED AGAINST MECHANICAL DEF'tCTS Sure, and here's the facts, clearly SfMlled out in black and white : This gu•rantH is good for 100 days, or 4000 miles, the parts •nd labor to maintain this guarantee cost you nothing. Murphy 9u-.ran~ tffs the car 100°/o against mechanical defects, for 'lOO days and 4000 miles after purchase, whichever comes first. This lnclude1 all parts, both mechanical and electrical, yes, even the battery and tires, on all Murphy's Shamrock cars -look for the shamrock on tht win- dow. All work will be done in our service facility in L'ong Beach. MURPHYIZED USED CARS ARE Fully Recondition ed Look for tho car• wlt.h tho 1mblem. It'• your lte1t automotive buy. e N•w brakes • Tr1nsmlsslon checked at neceswry • Rear end checked fi New filter element • Upholstery completely tt,; New spark plugs · renovated 4t=-)gnitfon points • Smog device installed -Engine tuned • Horn, lights, safety Oil ch1nge features inspected ~ Fr,nt ·end Inspected • High luster polish lubrication e Complete road test • • MURPHY U$£.!> CARS 1 1 GU ARA'NTEED SATISFACTION WITHOUT ADO ITIO NAL COST TO YOU 10 DA Y TRIA L EXC HANGE! • ··~ " . ' ' ., IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1970 COUGARS 52762 IOF91HS246391 111cl IOF9H526279 l $179 '"'' s92s4 '"" Oow" Monrhly ,aymenl '•Y"ltnt Yes, you rtld corrttflV slit It ''"' 10111 dOwn 1>1ym.nt, ,rl,$1 Is ltlt 10111 "'°"lfl!y .,..,.....,, lncludlnv !llJ<. !lt111"• •nd ell c•rrylno thargn on '1>11rovt11 (redll ~r 36 "-I~!. Or, If 'IOU ~reftr kl llllY CAlft. Tnt full prkt 11 only $2967.10 ln!!udlnq tll t•x11 , lktn11, IN!>gn t lf\lt cl.aler pr-rellol'll. o.llv....., In L,ang Se1cn. Notnr1111 more lo ply. O.lttrecl p1yme111 lllrk• 11 UU0.4-1 lncllldlnv 111 <•rrvlrit cn•rg.n, l•~n. llceortse. trtlghl lnCI dhl« 11'-••tlO!'I. No!11>119 rnort lo llllY. o.llY11r~ In Lang Sucll. AHlfUAL l'•llCEHTAGE JI.ATE 11.tl% ... -. /t ~ ·v· /' • " :1 ..... , .. . MARQUIS 2 DR. HARDTOP COUGAR XR-7 2 DR. H.T. MONTEREY 2 DR. HARDTOP 4)9 \II, 11l1ct shift htn1., WSW, pow1r sidt window1, twin comfort 1011119• •••h , pow1r d itc lir1k11, pcno11r 1t.1ri119, t ir c0Mliti•11i119, r1dio, li11!1d .91111, r1mot• mirtw. 9Z66K61 l9 IS ·]S I V-1 1119i111, 1utom1fic tre111 ., whitt w1ll1, 1porh con1ol1, pow1r 1!11ri119 l front ifi1c br1k11, f1clorv t ir corid., ••dio, tinf1d 91111, •le. Dirk •qut . 'F93HS74747 390 VI 1n9in1, 11l1cl 1hift tr1n1mi11ion, 1 15 1l IS tir11, ,..,..,, st11rin9, tinltd 9l111-compl1!1, h11d r11tr 1inh, r1dio, ¥invl t.p. 9Z46Y5l9611 ' . . ' ' { ·,Jl~N D NEW BRAND NEW . ' COUGAR XR·7 2 DR. H.T. Jll V;1 1iiifl11, ~·1111f&Miic: k'"''•• .,II\', ·""~ ·~>C!-"1li. whittwt!lt1 po••r 1t1tri119 l frtnf dl1! bt1k•!r ft,fery' ,;, c:on •. , r•1lio, r••• tp11ktr, tint•' 9111., 1!c.~M1rool'I. 9F.JH576446 BRAND NEW . ' BRAND NEW ' COUGAR XR;7 .Z DR. H:f. COUGAR 2 DR. HARDTOP COUGAR XR-7 .2 DR. H.T. . ~ ' .. 1$1 v.1 1119in-. 111ton:11tic frt fll ., 'I.it ...... u •. 1p h c:oruol1, poW1r 1t1•ri11t 11141 fro4'1 dl1c ,btt kJt", ftctor;v ,;, onel., r1dio, r11r 1•11 1p11ktr, tiflltcl 91•11, 1fc. lri9hf 1.1111. tF9.3M.5l204i9 1 l51 V.I 1119i111, 1ulom1tic h1n1., 1porh con•ol1, pow•r 1+11ri119 111d front c:li_tc br1k11, f1clory ,;, concl., rtclio, r11r 1111 sp•••· t r, tinted 9l1u, •le. tF91M56747 Z 151 Vt. 1ulometic t•1111mi11ion, wkit• w1ll1, 1porh co111ol1, power 1t11rin9 , d j1c br1k11, lilt 1w1y 1!11ri119 wh11I, f,c:tory t ir coricl., tinted 91111, ftclory •h•th, t ic. Dirk 1q111. •F9JMS1- 61 Ill BRAND MEW 'BRAND NEW BRAND NEW '63 COMET S22 ' llr .• '· IMIN .• It .. H. t!r ctnd. IOZlt nn $386 TO TAL DOWN PAYMEN T '62 CHEVROLET lmpe,lt 2 .ctr. H,T. t . auto .• It &-H, P,S~ l',J ., t i•. !EMW ISU $386 '60 MERCURY 4 Coor Sed•~. t, tulo. 111.H, P,S., ... I. {l(GL '751 $386 TOTAL MONTHlY PAYMENT '60 EALCON ' ' Ooor Sld111. ' tyllne11r, radio, 1111'-!'. fQf'I( 70!1 $386 YH, )'Ill rfff ctrrttll'I'• IU ls 1111 lehll ..... ,.'1'1111111, IH II fllt 1111•1 -!Illy ,.~mflll lnclvflnt II~ lkHM •lld "' <•rryin. clllfW" '" ,..,..,.. crt1111 !If" t• _,,,., Dtl•rrM """""' ll'k • k sue.• 1111:111'1111 1u c1rrylnt <h••tH· 111;11. lk1111t, trtltlll .,,. d"ltr ~rlfitM. ,.,u cnl! llfk• Mn. l't""lnf ""*-It ,.,. ANNUAL PEltCINTAGE ltATI 21.S'1. $38 TOTAL $38 PAYMfNT DOWN TOTAL PAYMENT MONTHLY · '65 MUSTANG '64 FORD '64 MERCURY '61 CADILLAC H1r~l'OO Stele~. I. 111to .• OtV!I~ H.T Std I, wto, I. 1uffl., It lo M. oower Custom DI. ~ Or 5N. VJ, It A H, P.51 P.8. t lr It " H, P.$., P.e •• el•. 1tHrl"11 !OWi Ill! •adkl, l'l•l!er. ISIU 1601 t-1¥\/N 'Jll P.W, P. IHI. (l'GS .iul $68 $686 $686 $686 Vis . .,.,, Alt ttrr•ll'/'. tJI K lllt t.tll ftwn ,.ymH!. t• It tllt ltl1t 111tnlllly ,.y1111n1 lntltdl"I I••· llctn!I -t M c1rry111t Clllf1IH 1111 t,.n-fll C .... ll !tr H 111111t111. Defl1"rM ,.ymlllf il'l"lct ii ,,Sf ... IMhHll"'I 111 ''"'""' c.,.,.,.... tun. lk•""' ,......,., ffll -.~ l"f'l"•lfltlli. 1'•11 ,,,,. "1'<• '1H. "'"""" .._. .. ,.,,, ANNUAL 'lRCENTAGE ltATE 21 .S% LINCOLN CONTINENTALS 1969 MARK Ill 1968 LINGOLN J "' '"'"' lrtm. LtlMd. AP 11<•1 1 •WMr ctn h'"Hed In 111 Ult rntcltll. (S+IW 6nl Std., Auto., lt&-tf, WSW, l'.S., l'.I .• 1111 tnlttl, AM/l"M., '·~Hh, ONr llfki, l11!11tt' lnll1". IWIU MU $6688 $3686 1967 GONTINENTAL H.T. CH. Auto., It I H, WSW, ... S., ... I ., tir, l•nd111 "''· 1Hlh11" lftltl'". ITUJ 1tll $2786 1966 LINGOLN 1965 LINGOLtf '65 MERCURY • Slillffl ......... lll•lller lftl .. •Ir, lt&H, WSW, '·'·· ...... 1111 -.t. ISUL tHl A•t.., ltAH, P.$., l'.I~ lt•tlltr Int., dfl.r "'ki, P·wlndOWI .. ''"·IHI •llffl .. •Ir. !l'IN m l MERCURY'S $2286 $1286 '67 MERCURY '67 COUGAR '68 MERCURY P10d•n1 ~ Or. HT. 51111. H•rdlop Cpe. Monl900 MK. VI, "uro., R &-H, P.$., P. ' OOOr (omtr. VI, t u!a., Htl"lllO!> CP". VI, It A H, VI, 1uto .. R & H, P.5., I ., Hit wbl .• 1lr. ~Z61Z.S21'16 It &-H, t lr, P.S .. !\IEO 4J1l 11d. !rant. CVOA DIO P.8,, WSW, i.ni11111 fQp. $786 $986 $1586 '""$1n786 '66 FORD . (lhlOfrt Se<:!~ "'· """'' 11: I. H, PS (51CV "9) FORDS '67 FORD · '68 FORD '67 T·BIRD Mtr'lllOp ('pt, l"lllM J.0Ct VI, M1rdtoo Cl>t. Fltlll )GO Htnflot't C"9. Vt, t lrlt .• '""'·· It • .... P.S. •••lb9ct. Vt. •ulG. II. ' H, It ... H, P.$ .......... w. '"'$l 286 ,, $"19S6 r;~~1986" MERCURY LINCOLN 1 1 l \ ' I t 1 I ;s ~azz . 2 Ct t 422;a:pc a a s a a ;s ;e 1 F •• . ""'. ' . -· . "r -~~wpor.t Darhor ,'l'edaY"• ·~. N. Y. Stoel'!!r • • vQ.L 63, NO. 25, 4 SECTIONS, 42 P.AGES ORANGE -COUNTY, CALIFOl\NIA Fl\IDAY, JANUARY· 30, ,197,0 · 'TEN"CENTS ' ' Coast Fugitive Corralled Attorney Sought for Newpor·t-Theft Held in Texas An aUorney accused of stealing. nearly $500;000 in bonds from the estate of an ailing Newport Beach man is today being held in a Texas jail accused of interstate transportation of stolen property. .. Federal ()ficlals in Brownsville, Texas., said today they were hoping to schedule further coort action for Escondido lawyer Patrlck S. M. ~fitton, 47, "for possibly M~ay or Tuesday." Mitton is in custody in lieu of $500,000 bail following his arraignment Thursday -hJ. !.&teral officers, tipped ofr by Mexican . '• Q~y Swap Foe Savs Public .t Wary of Plan By JOHN VALTERZA 01 tMi OtllY l'llel IClff A leader in the court fight against the l!i>Per Ba) land exchange 11aid today the lri'ir..e Company's formal st atement on tJie lisue Thursday "lacked merit and is a re.ction to a rising tide of public con-cern." ·Frank Robinson, one of those in- ~ing in the Superior Court suit brougt.t to test the constituUonallty of the la:Qd exchange, said the public, including government officials, are steadily be- c~g wary or the l().year-old exchange ldeL '11,be I~ ta Jtl{1 Jl4vf affp a!J. e1-plo.Jive increase in aware.nP.sS of the vaJiie 100 prt>per ·useor puimc J.1aU. What some official1 have thducht wla beneficial 10 years •f~ clearly Is~ not lo bO benell~lal 00\f, • Robtnsori Uld. ~ Westclift aerospace engineer adClid tQat two cour.ty supervisors already op. pose the ex:change idea, and haJ one more member of the board voted with them last week , the exchange would have railed. The Robinson statementl followed the com1Ttents Thursday by Irvine Company Pr.elident William Meson, who atfa:cked "sett-fntc.rest" groups for spurring doubts abotit the value of the swap. Mason also said Suprvlsor Robert Bat- tin'a: aJternat.e plans were. hastily con- ceiVed without technical studies ot public heirlngs. -We opponents are criticized for hav-lni an inadequate plan - or no pla!J. -f~. bay developmenL Th111 l& curiOus, ~use the p..'"Oponents (the Irvine Com-Poiit and the county) have no plan or s~ing !nglneering studie.'l th~selves," ~obinS()n said. He said lhe Irvine statement implies IQat opposition to their proposal is led by a &mall ~lf-1nterest group. "President Nixon. Governor Reagan. LL Governor Ed Reinecke and Senators AJari: 1..'rar.ston and George Murphy all have made very strong statements about the. need to protect and ·preserve ecolo,a:ical values. If joining with them lo turther this goal -by going to court to keep Ole Upper Bay in the public trust - makea us a self-interest group, we are pt6ud to accept the label," Robinson said. ..-we believe that the Irvine Company uUfmately will realize that its own in- c.: (Ste SWAP, Pap !) authoritlo, moVf}lt in on the elll!ive 47· year-old .lawyer Wednesday as he at· tempted to return lo the U.S. he left more than two month! ago. He allegedly crMJied the border 'last November wllh neat#Y $500,IXKI worth of bond~ filched from Ule estate of ·John Sal· mond, 79, of 2164.·Visti: Entrada, ·Newport Beach. a retired UrUoo Oil Company ex· ecutive. FBI agentll and invutigators from the San Diego County District Atlorney'1 of. fice took up the chase al(er being advised of the theft by Salm<>nq's son, John Sal· .. mond Jr. of 16921 Bedford Lane, Hun- I tin.1Zton Beach. . 'J'.b.e: yqunger Salmond and his mother. Mrs. Helen 5almond of llie family home, are conservators o[ the substantial estate. Mitton was app:>inted as lawyer far the estate by Sahnood and 1horUy af. terwards, l~ is alleged,• disappeared with most of the bonds entrusted lo his care. He allegedly wrote a leUer to the younger Salmond in which he warned the con· servator that Ute bonds would not be returned unelss he (Mitton) received half their value. That Jetter suggested a meeting 'oAILYl?IL01i Steff l'Mle ' DELEGATES ~PAllT. -Representative from Orange Coast YMCA to ·aMual Y Model Legislature prepare to board plane for trip to Sacramento. From left ate. Estancia High ~hool students Carl Stev- ens, Steve \Vlnnett arid Marilyn Waterman, who left Thursday. Reagan Tells Y Youth . . He · Backs Birth Contt.()I Convening in Sacramento, the 22nd An· nual YMCA MGC!el Legislature today he~rd Gov. Rc!Pald Reagan endorse birth control, but only Ir such programs are not run by the government. The governor's speech to 500 assembled delegates -including a lai:ge number from the Orattge .Coast YMCA -noted concern over the world's rapid population explosion and the need to control it. "lf by this, they (proponents) mean a wide.scale eUort on the part of pubUc and private organizations to inform the peo- ple.on the need for birth control -based on individual end family decisions -I would be in accord," he told the teenagers and advisors. ' ''If, however, ~y are adyc:catlng some form of compulsory sterility on a mass basis," he continued, "then I would be opposed." · lie warned that to give government • power to decide those intimate personal 1natlers would amount to giving govem- meiit power to control every other as::::ct of personal lire. "Who would play God? J.; it iess barbaric to stop a life from starting than it is to stop a llie from continuing?" he asked. Gov. Reagan offered remarks on the Idealism of·young people, urging theM to maintaln it always, but use It wisely, also (St<l'MODEL, Page I) - Mason, Battin in Feud Bay Sivap Statements S park Hot Exchanges • The latest public sLltements on the con- twersial Upper Bay Land exchange ate 1pa\titlng a feud between Irvlne Com- paRy"President William Mason and C.OUn-ll. Supervisor Robert Battin, a strong foe O{Cfle swap. tfte Jatesl blow came from Mason this momin,. lie !eized on Battin'• brief statements made Thursday. Ttle Super· yp aaid he was confident this new al· teT{_la~ plan . for the county to buy the maJor1(y of UW:"l>ay and develop it as a pilb~ harbor would work. ttHt added that he doesn't contend lhli ll).e_ preseni exchange agreement is un- ~stlW\i(Nla!, rut he -claimed again that It h_as be(n -llO sub&tantially altered in recent years that it no longer resembles Ll\t original covenant. ~But Mason hotly replied this mom.Ing thit B'ittin Is "confused." :'I am glad that Battin agreu lhal the ttc~e is conslituUonal. "8owever, he previously claimed Iha! bl' new plan 1ras made to utisfy those interisted In preserving the Upper Bay in_ fB: n1tur1I st.ate.. "Now he says that he SUfie$led his ' new plan because the previous agreement hu been altered in the past two years since the state Lands C:Omm.lsiion ap- proved It in 1967," Muon said. · He described the alterations being lhe lrvine C:Ompany's "sl).Called ta1 holiday" "' lands involved in the trado and the county glvijlg up Ill riaht to unllat<rally get out of the trade with 90 days' noUce. "Some of the confu5ion in Mr. BaUin's mind Is understandable because he was not. slUJng as a supe.rvleor consJdering the original trade,' nor the consk!eratlons leading to the amendment ol the original ..agreement," Mason said. Mam deJended the rm.O'f'-1 trom the Ill r<llli ol 111e adl8J11<Janda "' a nor· mal con5eqUm:e ot coode.mnatlon aC<- tions. , He likened the tax. freeze actions to the county conde.ml\l"&;.tbe 181]1e·property for a road and the agreement became Involved In Utlgatjon, over prices or oth- er·matlera. If, , ... instance, the dlsputed land be- came Involved In IIUgaUon, thw: tying up It.a chances tor development by•Ute own-u, then M.uoo speculated 11111 Ballin would nafurally "ll&ht vigorously to have • the property taken from the tax rolls as being the only fair and equitable thing to do under the circumstances." Al. to the other cbange >Jn the original eXchqe agreement, Ma30n said the al· leraUon was at the coonty'1 tnsi11tence and the lnrlne company fought har"t for retention or the 91).day notJce for aban- doning the· trade; aigreement. MaM111-a<ided that hll llnn has treated lsaiea Of ecology as "a way of life for the past 100 years." Ma90l'I ciW 1the firm's work with UC Jrvtoe for the institution's rece;..;. pur- chase of the 200-acre marsh nearby as a wildlife preserW. .. ,The Irvine Company also is conduc· ting an ftt.enstve study on the prcserva- Uon ind enhancement of the marine ecolOiY al Upper Bay lo be camed oot before and after lhe dredging of a har- bor." he said. "We have clveb di!« l,L* acrtJ <I. land and lakes i.f Ille <OOnlJ an., to the jleople to tteato"' bdler IOclal ..,.1ogy. When we gave the laat &UCh ac~ -3311 acres far UnlVf:lllty Rel!lonal Pork -the pro-I drew objecUOlll from Supervi6or Battin," Mason said. ' • nn e··•g· '••sn tef&iF '""' between the two men at which detallll of the transfer of funds could be discussed. Federal oficials today said 1here is "absolutely no doubt" that the letter carne from Mitton. It was also revealed today that Mei:· lean officials had been watching MiUon's progress through four Mexican provinces for some time prior to Mitton's arrest. A federal agent would only say that the ar· rest of the-free spending lawyer had been delayed "in the interest of recoveri_ng as much of the stolen money as wssible end we th.ink our methods have 1 been sue· cessful." Lido Educator To Seek City Council Post ' It Lido ·lsle' educator, Dr. Jerrell T. Richariia, his liken Out nomination pa- pers for the Newport Beach City Council race. He ts expected to seek lhe post left vacant by Mayor Doreen ·Mars~ll. who has ~need the will not seek r~lec­ Uon next April t t. Richards, 355 Via Lido Soud, took out the ·documents this morning: He Is a counselor and pl'}'Chology teacher at Or· ange Coast College. ' He and Newport businessman Al For- git have 4?1nounced they will seek elec- tion. Tbe.lr ,papers have not yet been filed. Thus far two other Newport Beach men ti,,,..""'" DEPUTY ROBJ;RTO DE ·LA PAZ ESCORTS MITTON FBI Finds Ml11i"9 Attorney· In Brownsville, Tix. · ·· i&:Z~~~~twi MeM:t C.,iamber Endorses- llarahall on the council) and P~r~t Com-. ~~-1\'.ily..Xocb oLWeslcllfk_ ~ _ _ ~ , " . ·Fif4!1"8• cfeelar<d be wilf cliaOenge p -dB d 0 ---•d' £:£ii~F.:i~ .:~·~ ~. ~~': . ropose ' on ' -verri e JW,era: said he plans to file for reelec-• """ lion early next week. Koch will run for the council po.!t left vacant by fcirmer Mayor Paul J . Gruber, who also has announced he will retire at the end Qf bis present term. One olher council seat will also bt left vacant -that of Corona de! Mar resident Robert Shelton, who reiterated today he will not seek another term. Shelton today said he hoped tha t resi· dents of his dllltrict -Eastbluff, lrvlne Terrace and partl of Corona del Mar "come forth with worthy contender• for the seal" He tald he plans IO l!ave the council to devote rriore time-to otfler l11terellt1. Billie Sol Estes Loses First Bid For Freedom WASHINGTON (AP) -Billie Sol Estes, a one-time fertilizer tycoon whose financial dealings became a national scandal, Jost today his first bid for parole from a 15-year federal prison term. The U.S. Parole Board rejected the ap- plication of Estes,~ 45, who would have been eligible March 5 after serving one- third of hls ierm, Imposed for awlj>dllng finance companies. Parole · Boaid Chairman Geotge J. Reed aald the full eight-member board made the decision after a complete review of the record In the Estes case. The board &et December 1971 for its -next review ()f the decision. The PeoJ,-Tex.~ buslnessm11n I.'! 1erv· Ing his set\t!nce for mail fraud and con· spira cy to defraud the finance companies at the feder"I correctional Institution 1at Sandstone. Minn. lfe has been In· carcerated there since Dec. 15, 1966, after beginning his prison life as a ·convict at Leavenworth, Kan .. federal prison. µttle has been h~rd of him since he entered prison. There remains little of the Estes magic tJiat made him a millionaire in his 20s and extended hi1 lnfiuence·far·beyond his Texall home. DR. HA.YA.KAW:.( NOW' IN PILO T . ~n Pranclsco'a &harp-tongued educ•· tor, Dr:S. Ir Hayakaw1, 1Ull . .har a lot to aay. And, st.irtlng todlf, heir going to say some of it In a weekly cOlumn •hlch wllH>e pubUsh«I by the DAILY PILOT. Dr. lfayakawa 's flnt column 1p):lear1 • today on the editorial Pli• (P•&• 6). It will continue as a regular future of t1le «lltor11I page each .Friday In lhe'DAlllY PILOT. .. • c ' By THOMAS FOJIJ'lll'!E . 01 IM 0111Y l'lltt Slt fl Costa Mesa Chamber · of Commerce direct.ors ' Thursday endorsed t h-e Newport-Mesa Unified School District's proposed tax override and bond ,lntere&t rale increase. The vote was 12 lo 5 to endorse the tax override. On the bond interest hlke·C~am­ ber ditectors v()f.ed unanimous 1upp0rt - 17-0. TJ!e override Is for a tu rate tiiettue of up to 87 centl per $i00 of ·aws~ed viluatlon.. The <lther ·measure 'would ll'J· crease from five to seven percent the permissible interest rate on $9 million in bonds. Electlon day is Feb. 10 -a week from TuHd.ay. Chamber directors· heard speakers pro and con Thursday before arriving at their decision. ·non Huddleston and former Costa Mesa mayor Claire Nelson both argued against the override because il does not have an exptratton date. "I have confidence In the school board but I don't know I could give a blanket order binding our children a n d grandchildren," Nelson said. S c h o o 1 · Superlntendent CuMingham answered his .objection, saying, "l. · Uke you in your business. need: to have ~e preroga'tlve of long.term planning. ·That s good business." . 'He s&id tile· acliool boa.rd. has shown that It does not a!Ways use all ·the tax · available to It. Tiiis ts the first year·Slnce * * * Newport CofC Scliool Decision ' Y ote Calwd Off A pou1ng, of Newport Harbor Cliam1>er of eomnlerce 'directors on whether they endorse Ille upcoming school elec\fon has ' bten 1called ,off 'tn favor ,of a ieri~ral , membership me.Ung oo the oubje,c~ In ~lieckint .wtth1 direc~r1, Chamber M.ana8V ·Jack Barnell 'leim\ect many of ' them lei( they dldD'I kJ>ow enduah abQut · N"'1J10r~Mesa ,,Ualli~'s se~I finarl<jt , measure• to , make a ~udginent. , ~· i tirealcl..t meellng to whic~ .. Oie . whole cflamber membetshlp Is' invited will b< btld feb. 6, for the purpOa< of hearing pro and con '#rgurilenta and ta· king a vote' on endorsement'.· • The ochool propooals will be decid«t by HarllQr W r'5ldents Feb: ID. One Pl1lP' osal 11 tor an override fa'i tnCreise or Up to_87 ooiti per 1100 o! ........i 1111ua110 .. ,,,._.~ 111 .. rnc:r ..... tM ~~1a . lnl!ffi\ rale !" Ii mllllon ln .bOndl<I'!'"' · II e to aeven percenL The bOnda: were ap-· proved al (Ive, perqnt • Y,Ur. •KO• \>iii money Jendlng rates: "have 11,,ce gone hlgheT.' . , .. __._. . ' ~ unUicallon It has leVied pern\issible teies to tbe full, he said. He said the override amount 13' i;ro- jected on a continued inflaU()nary spi ral. Huddle.ton wanted to know ·lf the, over- ride measure were defeated why It couldn't be resubmitted 0 under .a dll· ferent basis." · Or. Cunningham said by law jhert v.·wld have to bt a !llklay wait between election1. He said that woukl delay .the date beyond Mar¢\ 15 , when, • alJO by law, school employes must be. notified il they' are not going to have a job the followlrig September. . He p'revK>mly ha4 been asked · by Werner Escher what would happen if-the override.Jost. Dr. Cunnhigham repued: "The only all!We'r ] Can give •you in 81? honesty sounds like a threat. We would have to ellnlinate $1.25 and $1.5 million in programs we have this year. lr ®n't want to preempt the board: It would be the board's 'decision what would go: But obvipusly we ~e tal~ng about peoJJle <sa1a.-rl~s). You can't1neke up that much. in pencils and books." · Former Costa Mesa city manilger Robert Unger said maintaining g.o o d schools Is essential · to the he81thy economic growth of Costa Mesa. He·said the city council hired tum In 1956· roi lhe job of putUng an economic base, under the 'city and he toTd lhem 'before .tN!y could begin· to do' !hat l!>eY' !iid lo jack up the school-dlstrid. "I &Imply' want to call ·your attention to the fact the job is only half done,''i he said. He contended if residents don't,fllwr (Ste ENDORS!:, Page !) Orange Coast Weat!£er Gqaiy nor)heast wind•"•llriend wtiek'end • highs 'into' ·the low '10'• i along the Orqe' Coast. "While cOld , w .. ther gelii ll'prewlbed'for'.tbo nighttime hours.· .. • H .' ' : " .... ._, ., . . . . 'i .... ' . . . :ho-reline Plan • . . -· ~~rt W\lh <:<>mmer'• mod• Thurs-miorvat:on of the COlilUll• for the K llfwllart. ~ C!IY M•nqer p11~Uc. ,1<:· C 'lllillluit; Lt; Gov. f;d· Hul1bgrt told 'the ...,....... lhat. ..:~. lodar ctlled {or a moratorium ~; C!lo!!llY~ 11u· .Ital''" 111 ..c .. QO ldvuee coastal deveJoprnent in own ~ 11:1-n which 'trlll be "''' 'C:Jllmua .unlil stat. mas!er p]aps are deveJel>!ill .wl.lh. . lull _.Uon and Huribiltl Hid tllat during Ult pa•t year lrvi!I<. Company,.ti,1 rcceptly vvlttntarily ·tj)I proje<U. CO!Jll!lllllillea and countleo along lhe CoaJI •Jla~ibei •·cMfdl!\llth\J CO!lllillti.t lot , ,. ~')i!d lillt-pOt,I'~ ~ 'lialt to bave' "'made a masolvt.'ellort to obtain.,: devdopn1ent •of 111 )I> miles of c:o1'tlbie : M ·b,och vlAllln GOA ~ 11:m· .=.l =Y'~irt~~::',.~ pro~ Ill~. ~tiel)Nen llewpm Beach and i.aguna : .mer .doY is a d<aln ".".,tl\< city" ~get - liUl'lbuft scored atate le&lal~tor1 ro,r not ~~" be ~lated. ;: ·a. b~r*n which ha_S ·~me ln~~ingly ' -11'1at the state help local govtrnment11 1n f1IMpclnc mtuuru . to .preaerve tbe f . ' . ---· -That the state d~i&n minimum stan· darcls, policies and plans to preserve ~he shor.eline. "'Ji finJ,thed. .wOr~.oJ O~ange Coasl clues. Both the men. speaking ~t the Relnecke's proposal ror a Go-.emar'a OOnfttence on California moratorium on uncoordlriated develo~ COlltal Shoreline Prese.rvat.ion. agreed ment -includes an outline for an ag· ~ !1'Mler Jllaft projects related to the gresslve pl11n ror itate and local zoning ol e -,need lhe voll1111arY -..;' lbe aboclel:llt. . • local qenclea. -' · . ) Rl&~oi1'8 Idea would prevent ln- addreaalng lhe San Franclaco c!IJCrimlnate tllUlli and dredging and ecm.tnean'burldty afternoon, callee.I on would. weserve 0 our spectacular and :=:--belp ln·lbe matter. lnclud!Jic: ~tiered views of. tile beacbes and Al\d'1e1111tU6n to lilsllre tbO • own," he said. ' . ~·" '> ' . ·~. . . .. . ::. ~~·i!lip Morris '; '. .· ?:: l!:;iys Contr~I. · .. ' ~:'. (i}f: Viejo Co.~ , "' ·~f.iwiiin ~o cOm(Jlll)',,whlch last. "> , ~ '!'lllpaeed . olh~ Ortlip Coll!lty , ~J In ute oi new bomts, hU sold '" corporate <:<>nlrci--lo Philip M9rrii Inc. ~· for.• mtllJon. ~ "' Tit• $IO mlllloh lnvatmen~. 11id ,,. ~-Viejo ComP.l!lY t~Oll!loft to-•. • d'7, wln. be the working capital to lnaure ..._ contlnuatlon of construcUon on schedule ( t..: dt~te the expensive money market. Tttms giving U>e clgaretle <:<>mpany control of the voting stock of Mlasion Vie- jo required the cash investment for con· vertlble debentures, stock and apUOna. !' .. Under the acreement. Phllip Morris moy aloo purchaae a majority of all oulllandlng stoci< by exerclslng opilona and pa:ylng an add!Uonal 113.5 million. Tb• opUona mlY not be uerciaed sCIOner thaQ.thrte years or later than flve years. • Mission Viejo will c:qnUnue to operate " autonomously, It wu announced, ~td by Jam" E. West, chairman. and Philip ltellly. president and cblef operatlng. of· ficer. Policies will not change, it will an· nounced. helpl.ng more in the local anti-oil-drdllng San·Clement e has embarked on a pro· d1lhcull to cope with 1n sweUing city tffo.'"'ls. gram to buy J.3 mile& of beachfront at a budgetS, / "We could have used more help from ~t of *!·5 million. , 1iurndvuizi.!'IB his ideas r or im· the l'ltate legislators. aod government I beb~ve that these .e~amples e.· prove-~t or the sHuaUon ffu,.lburt pro- leaders," Hurlburt sa:d. fectively illustri.te the wilhngness and 11 "' ~ He added that the Orange .C.Oa.sl cities' desire of the communiUes to preserve the posed: t . effort& lowi:lrd preservlhg tht coastUne coastline for put.lie ~se." he said" .. -1'bal1itbe state, wor~ U\ concert · included the expensive purchase of 900 .. Bu' the communlt1es cannot do tl alone, \111!'1 IQCaa, goVetpQ'lent, take .. "';bateyer feet of sandy beach in Laguna Beach last. • he 1d4ed. ' 1eg1slatlva1 and l.dmlnl5$r,.Uve steps · year at a large expense to the cit.y; Tttey need money, legislation and plan· neeeaa~to .help goverz:in:fn~ Ptesery,e "The county's major land owner, the : nlng coop~ratlon from the state to htilp In the coastal areas for public inJOymtnt. -Thal regional water quality control boaids have more membersh'ip represen· tine the cohserVation elements of the society and Jess members espousing in· dual.rial interests. -That the state allow local govern· Olf nt to plan aJld. admizUSter $hOreJlng rriattera throu&h Its own resources and agencie&. 'ls Dadd11 ~Cotning?' OAll Y f'llOT Sllll iJiii~'' Wives of POWs Return to U.S. Knowing little more than when they departed, four Southern C a 11 f or n i a women arrived In Los Angeles today, en· ding a round·the-'forld mercy mission in behalf of men mlssing In · the Vietnam war and their families. I\olrs. Carole Hanson of 24112 Birdrock Last 3 Suspects In Campus Drug Raids Captured Drive, El Toro, and her three traveling e<mpanions landed at 9:2$ a.m. aboard Pan Ame rican flight 848 from 'Tokyo. "Is daddy coming home?" asked Todd Hanson, 3, who has never seen Marine Corps Capl. Stephen P. Hanson, believed held _as a prisoner of wa_r by North Viet· nam. His weary mother burst into tears 1t the unhappy underlining of the POW "·ives' quest in search of word of their pilot husbands'. fate.· The homecoining was deeply emotional. compared to lhe cool reception the party recejved in some Communist nations and the helples& sympathy they were offered elsewhere. From Pqe l 'ENDORSE ... . The last· thrt& among • large number of suspected campus narcotic• dealers named in arrest warrants were picked up by Costa Mesa police Thursday tUght, brlngin(t'to.25 te total nunibu ln custody. ~-Detective Sgt. ~obn ·Re8a'"n said the trio is charged with sale of dangerous drugs cially support the schools. they can look . forward to more and more taxes because or marijuana , with two Of them juveniles. industry that provides a tax base won't Robert .Morris, 18, of 937 Serra Way, come to the area. ,Costa Mesa, was charged in a warrant Ex.mayor Nelson said he believes the Acqullttlon of Mission Viejo Company contr01,~wu the firat expansJon by PhlllP. Morris Into-the community development field. Tht ciaarette company has In- terests In brewing. razor 'blades. packag· ing, cheWina: gum, specialty chemicals and papers, P.la.stics and hospital sup-Ba11w«rd of the Bulkhead Line carrying $625 bail with sale of marijuana. use of an override should be to meet an Six o(~the suspects In the alleged deal· emergency-that is an override over the Jng at both COlila Mesa and Estancia high "legal limit." plies., • . Qrgaigi.;ed in 1966 •. the 11 ,~ acre la~d dey<!Qpinent has a\ttady buil~ sold· a)ld \ liilld llOO\bomts on J,000 •cw whore ' catlle grazta'fobry ea'h lgo. ' · Crews on 'huge fl oating crane have been replacing section. of rust-weakened bulkhead al end o! Balboa ., Penin.(~lajQs\ inside w'isl jeijy ~I Newport Harbor. Project involves ripping out s·teel buµffiead on bay and replacing it w1lh large botllders floated in on barge._ Population of the planned community is now about lt,000 and is expected to be ~ :;,~~~~so;i:_lh""'\0f:ed;•~i -M0;;~; ;Page 1 ; ~t11•dents Get Dav Off ' I ,, ·l J -1".f. ;w~. • • ' ~f \ t.-'r I r: :. Mesa Bi~yclisl's .~ ~·~~~~~.:;~:·•ffluence~pared ,f ·w--:-: -h. ·z r · h '• LI, " '. i -"Ours is •n over-spent society," he l, e eac e f S ea f n i~ Rites Seheduled sa~e Governor also otfered the se • Catholic funeral aervkes will be held Saturday for a Calta 'Me~ boy ~truck by a car as he rode his bicycle Wednesd&y afternoon. Requiem Mass Jw Jeffrey J. Dletri<;~. 9. will be Saturday at 9 a.m. in St. John ~: lhe Baptist Catholic Churcl11 with in· ~· tennent in Good Shepherd •cemetery, 1: Huntington Beach. J· Survivors include his parents, Mr. and ·• Mrs. Franklyn Dietrich, of 3111 Platte .;: Drive, brOlhen Thomas and Peter. a \; sister Susan, grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. l •, " John B. Hamilton, of Clam Lake, Wisc .• and a creat.awit, lwtrs. Lloyd Dietrich, of Vista. The victim died Thursday at Costa Mm Memorial Hospital of be.ad injuries suffered about 12 hours earlier when l'itruck on Paularino Avenue near the 6lreet on which he lived. PoUce said he veered from the dirl 6houlder of the road. hidden by a parked car. into the path of a sports car driven by a 17-yur-old girl who was unable to st.op in Ume. Investlgators said lt appear1 she was not at fault. DAILY PILOT . OU.Hell c.oAIT ~1.llHING 4:0M"ANV llob•1t N. w.9' P'rul!MM .... .f'ulllt11!tr Jaclr ~. c.,,,1 • ., Vlcit .. ........, ..... "-"-' ,,.,. .... 9 ... l•offl•• ic:., .. a lfl~r Tito"''' A. M•tplil~• M1...C.i.o. M'iW Ne.,1pMt ~II OHke 2111 Wtd l1!bo1 hwl•"''' M1i1i119 A44r•••i P.O. 801: 117!, t!66) -.o-QI .. #&N: »I Wt•I &.'I' Slrl"Jf ....,. Wdo: m '°"'' ,.......,.,. lollll'llifll"'" •ttd\: l'!I} tffdl &Jll .. VlrC guideline~ to the young legislators, in· eluding .u. senator• and Assemblymen rrom the Harbor Area, plus numerous Amerlc;an field Service exchange student observers: -''Never ask government to do somethinc for you that you, personally, would not be willing to do yourself." -"Never ask government to do anything to anyone else that )'OU would not want the government to do lo you." -"Never ask government to spend the public money in a way j.hat you would n<>t be wllling to have lt spend your money." -"Never ask government to do for you \vhat you know you can and should do for yourself.'' The Harbor Area delegation enplaned for the capitol Thursday at Orange Coun· ty Airport , departing aboard an Air California jetliner for the convention "'hich winds up Stmday. Estancia High School delegate Kay Hunt, 17, authored a bill Qn a social tragedy -ehlld abuse -which will be brought to the Model Legislature floor to- day for possible adoption. The legislation provides for curbs on the groy,1ng problem of child abuse and also for rehabllltatlon for children who have suffered b.eaUnes and·other neglect within their families . Selected for the trip were Carl Steven Jr., 16, senator, Estaicia High School; Assemblymen Marilyn Wa~rman, 15 • aild Steve \Vinnott. 16. Estancia High School, and Dennis Fox. 16, Newport Harbor High School. De1cgateii, besides f\1iss Hunt. from Estancia High School are K a t h y Hildebrand. 16, and. rrom Newport Harbor High School. Carolyn Anderson, 17; Sheri de Wolf, 17; Sue Havens1 t7 ; Diane Larzelere, 17. and Janice Wh1tins. J7. Sle\•e Feskanich, 17, Estancia High School, was elected Sgt.-at·Arms of the Stnate at the elections conference held recently on the Long Beach State COiiege Campus. Dennis Fox \VIII serve as a committee chairman for the Education and Cur· riculum Committee during the presen· t&tion Of bills in the capitol today. t-.tonday y,·iU be a day off ·trom school for 27,000 Harbor Area school children. It isn't a holiday. but their teachers will be otherwise occupied. Instead or spendi11g Monday teaching, Newport-Mes& Unified'! school teacheri; will themselves be the learners. The day \YIU be devoted to bringing them new knowledge in educ'ation techniques. 'l'lle day of ~peakers and conferences was agreed to by the school board during salary negotiations last spring with the Newport·f.feSa Education Association . Fees for speakers will cost between $1,200 and $1,SOO and will be paid for by the school district. Don Hout. director of instructional service5. said. Students, he said. will derive the benefit ftom the teachers· new knowledge. Bart Hake. executive secretary of the teachers association, said he Is tremen- dously excited at the opportunity the school districl is providing. He said teach· ers will have a chance to sharpen their skills. And he said he is llopeful the day can be used as a spri~board to the design of "a comprellensive. In-service' pro- gram." Speakers have been arranged for on eight 5ubjects with teachers divided ac· cording to their interest, Hout said. Topics will include expanding human Jack Collapses- So Does Theft Pla11 for Pah· Trouble Is when you're working under a car on a lonely dirt road at 11 p.m. and the vehicle collapses on you. \Vorse trouble is when the car belongs to someone who reported it stolen a few hours earlier. Suspicious California llighway Patrol officers ran a routine check on lhe auto- mobile Thursday, after racing to the re- mote spot oif Canada Road in the El Toro area, lo save the victim. awareness, individualized instruction. the strategy of teaching, staffing needs, cur. riculum relevance and student partici- pation, diagnostic and presc riptive teach· ing, space science education. and $peciaJ education. LecUtres will be for an hour and then ror the rest of the morning teachers will break into small groups to di6Cuss lhe topics in depth. During the af~ernoon they will regroup by teaching subject matter, or grade level for the elementary teach· crs. and discuss how what they learned can be applied in their classrooms. The sessions will be held at Corona del Mar and Estancia high schools. ~.chools are adult.f and face .arr~igmnent Dr. CunnlnghaIJl said that is.not so and or prelin\inary hearings in Harbor he doesn't know of one other school District Judicial Court next week . district in the entire state,· unless it is 'M'le remaining 19 boy• and girll fac~ Emeryville . ''which is ·nothing but • Juvenne· court action brcoming-weeks. · Smokestacks, 11 that operates on a .basic Investigators _COQf!Jcat~ .about $10,~ · la:C . . worth or marijuana and fiarcotics during· : -He said ·in 1953 the state' of· California lhe 11ix0week probe of campus activities, cOntrlbUted « percent or the cost of including nearly ever.Y,· tYpC 00 f.he Illicit educaUon to Harbor Area school districts fnarket. i .. ·· 1 • and today it is down to 19 percent with Detective Capt. Bob 'Green said earlier local propertY. taxpayers beiiring most of that the alleged narcotics trafficking was the rest .of the load. not what one would call an organized HUddlestort said the area's assessed ring, but most defendants knew each valuation (on which tax revenue is based) other. has grown 40 percent in the last t,hree Complaints charging another · group of years. five young men arrested Wednesay night Dr. CUntUngham said en r o I Im en t al a Costa Mesa apartment. meanwhile, growth has eaten into lhat so the assess· \vere being sought from the, Orange Coun-ed valuation increase per student has ty District Attorney today . been ·29 percent. But more importantly, Authorities In Wooster, Ohio, tipped off he said, u'nder school finance law the local police by· emergency, cross.country wealthier a district gtl.s the less money it teletype n1essage that two known receives from the state. ... narcotics suspects were in Costa Mesa "You lose dam near as much from.the and gave the address. state as you gain in local taxes," he said. A team of detectives went to 792 Lucille Pinkley said she doem't think Shalimar Drive, where they and a thlrd money Is the big question and that Ohioan were arrested, along with two persons who vote "no" will do so because Anaheim youths altending college in they don't Uke the education the schools Ohio. are giving, WITHIN A Safe COMFORT & STYLE AT A PRICE CHAIR STARTS AT 5129. AVAILABLE IN A LARGE SELECTION OF COVERS AT THE UNBELIEVABLE PRICE O~ $12'. COMMODI OM SALi AT '159 Les Doak, community program direc- tor ror--&he Orange Coast YMCA a·nt1 one oi the stair advisors for the Youth and Government Prosram will be the advisor One man told the investigators the car fell off a Jack while they were clu1nglng a tire, but CHP officers wondered why they ~·ere changlna the transmission 1nd other gear. Ibo. DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERn'~GE ' to the commJttee. From Page 1 BAY SWAP ••. tere1t1 art: best ftrvtd by more a con· temporary and/or &tnerous a!Utude. "Ma.c:lmt1m uploitatlon or the Upper Newpor. Bay waterfront is surely not II\. the spirit of the '70s u expreRSed by Prtsfden: Nixon in his Sta1e of the Union ~ft:SSd"e," Robinson addl':d. They decided it had all the earmarks of a car.stripping. Auto record~ checked ::ind reporttt'I the 1967 sport ttdan had been stolen from Lee E. Newman, of Costa M,sa, t&rlier in the day and both_men were placed under 1rrMt. Gerald 0. Giireath and Cary N. Ptr· kins, whose ages and addru&ei were not Immediately available t(!:day, were book· cd Into Orange County Jail, Which. In some ways, Is bftter than !y. lng pinned under a car on a dark, cold J"ntiarv nlr,hl. • ( 7td11111 ' '" NEWPORT BIACH 1727 We1tcliff Dr., 642·2050 OPIM •llDAY "TtL t INTIRIORS LAGUNA BIACH 345 North Coast Hwy, Pro,...lonal Interior O.lign•r• Av11i1bla-AID-NSID OPIN PllDAl' 'TIL f ,.._Teti PNll Men ef 0,..,. c....., 14t-12'1 • ----------------------~-----------------~~--=-·=~==---'"'~"-'-'!· Students Storm ' Hayakawa Friday, January 30~ 1970 DAILY PILOT 5 .J: Girl Plans to Wed 'Kidnaping' Suspect ,;: MANILA (UPI) · - A Lecaroi will be charg<d with :;J : CalifomJa girl told police t~ abduction, illegal dl6Charge of ~: daft, she ptatined to marry the a weapon and trespass, ac-~~ ~ ~ BOSTON (UPI) _ More Fi ipllio they liaid lildnaped cording to Police Chief Tomas : · her from a suburban college B. Karlngal or suburban • ~ • than 2S perso111 were Injured dormitory three days ago. Quezon Cit:Y, where the in- and 30 arrested Thunday Police put Debor a h ddtnt occurred. iiight when hundreds of Stevenson, 20, of south San Detectives f~d M i s s : · youthful demonstrators, block-Francbco in protect l v e Stevenson Th u1r s day. inft.: · ed from enter t n g a custody and continued the Cani:letarla, 60 miles southeast ~I" Northeastern u n i v e r s I t y search for her suitor, Cris of Manila, and brought her to • building where educ&t'lr s. r. Lecaroi, 23, nephew of a pro-Manila for questioning today. Hayakawa was s p e 8 k Ing, aeat auditor ium was filled and vincial governor and con· Lecaroz, who had been with . clashed with police l'lnd went no more peo ple would be 1....:gr_e_ss_m_an_. _______ her_, •_llp.:..ped;..__th_•_dr_a-'g-ne_l __ on a rock-throwing spree. allowed inside. At least 13 police anO more Shouting ''Everyone gets than a dozen youths were in-in," "People in, pip: out," and jured in the clash that spread "Ru.sh the door," the youths into a business district. Police l'lald at 1 e a s t 30 or the attempted to battle their way demonstrators were arrested past the officers who beat In the protest over the San them back with nightstick!. Franci&CO State c o 11 e g e The demons trators hurled I • .- 1 Ul'I "'"'"''' President's appearance. rock!, chunks of ice and Main Burst Floods JJl..htreal .!': th:'r~ = ';;;1'::1 snowballs, breaking several -~~ ID force lheir way Into the Ell windows In the student center. ~-One of Montreal's busiest streets is knee high Wlfll change Tower when water flowed throu&h the twe>-Student center where the eon-The doors to the ctnter were rushing water after a main broke 'I11ursday cau~-$}.ory shopping promenade and caused the entire troverslal Hayakawa was smuhed . 1ng severe .flooding and traffic jams in the dowt building to be evacuated when tl)e power went out delivering a s~h en.Utl~ About .ts minutes tater the town area. Hardest hit. was the 47~story Stock E~ fnd elevators stopped. "Can the UniverSJty SurvJve m • . • 1 lhe 20th Century?" as part of youths aga~ a.ttempted to get I Who C•res? the university's distinguished Into the bu1ld1ng, but pollc.e B ~ • s lecture .series. drove them into the un\v~rsity orman uit:s, pace No othtf """P'Pf' lo lh< -Id A force of nearly 100 police quadranle and onto busy Hun· cares about yoor community llke officers aided by trained dogs l i n gt o n A v en u e • T h e your community dally ntWSP•Ptl' barred entrance to t h e demonstrators ran down the .. . . ' Israel Sets New Rules Of Judaism T F '1 • E h dots. It's the DAILY PILOT. demonstrators when school of· street breaking windows in 0 OCUS pn :. art l'========~fic::1a~1·....:•~nnou~nc~oo~th~e~t,soo-~....:·~1o~res~an~d ~"~"::...· ----========'=========~ SPACE CENTER, Houston t t blelll.l'l l.nd opportunities and to JERUSALEM (UPI) - Government officials ex- preased confidence today a cabinet agreement defining who is a Jew will win the ap- proval or Israel's 126-member parliament, the Knisset. CAP) -The astronaut who J get the1American people to ac- comrnanded the ftrst manned ~lively participate 'in solving I,.---------------------------------------------; orbiUng of the moon plans to ,, these ~terns," Borman said retire from the space program I in a s+ment released by the and head a foundation that I space ageney. Premler Golda M e I r ' s government averted a political crisis Thur&day by agreeing Israel will make rabbinical law the basis of determining who Is a Jew, but will register members of families by mixed maniags as Irraelis. The Supreme Court touched off the controversy last Friday by ordering the I s r a e I i Interior Ministry to register as Jews the three children of Israeli naval commander Ben- jamin Shabit and his non- Jewish wife. The court ruling brought angry protests from orthodox Jews here and abroad, from the Jsr_!l~li rabbinate and from lsratl's n a t ion a 1 religious party headed by interior minister Moshe Shapiro. A flve·hour cabinet meeting called to settle the c r i s i s Thursday agreed by what will attack America's ·pro-~ · blems on earth. Oay Blasts Militants Frank Borman, a 41-year-old Air Force colonel who dirtcted the Apollo 8 flight around the moon on Christmas Eve in 1968, announced Thursday he is resigning from the service and the space agency on July ALLENTOWN, Pa. CAP) - 1. He said he and Dallas , "You niggers give me more mHllonaire H. Ross Perot are ' trouble than the whites!" es~blish_ing a fo u n d ~ l i 0 n Cassius Clay shouted to about whlch will attack pressing na· .. tional problems. JOO black m1htant hecklers. The astronaul said he would 1 The group had interrvpted become vice president of Elec· the defrocked heavyweight Ironic Data Systems, Inc., a boxing champion's lecture at computer services company Muhlenberg College Thumlay owned by Perot, who tried last nighl Christmas to deliver pareels The hecklers. some wearing to war prisoners In North African daahikas, criticized Vietnam. Clay -who prefers the Black Borman said he and Perot Muslim name Muhammad Ali will establish the American -for buying a •75,000 home in Horizons Foundation, Philadelphia. "It Is our hope through the "Do you want me to bu y a use of mass media , particular· heme In the ghetto?" Clay ly television, to fully Wonn countered. "Why do I want to the American people about our live in a rat bin and have a rat most pressing national pro-bite my child?" ::€~1~;: :;;!:~. ,0,D . ~nn J,AfJJ,,lh--.1-~~~ h~n~' rth~0\:':J i:: p.urwew ·o ,,,,_OJ()VJ adopted an6ther religion, or U -:i he cooverled to Judaism, in line with rabbinical law. -That non.Jewish husbands I or wives and the childrtn of ' their mixed marriages wUI en-· joy lhl! same rights as Jews in . Israel but will not be formally regl.stered as Jew!. , British War Strategist Hart Dies ' • MARLOW, England (AP) - Sir Basil Liddell Hart, a British army captain in World War 1 who had more Influence on modem warfare than many generals, died at his home r Thur:i:day night. He was 74 and one of the world's leadina military writers and theorists. Gassed in the 1916 Battle of ~ the Somme, inva1\ded in 1924 and retired in 1927, Capt. Lid· ~ dell Hart was convinced by his 1f months in the trenches of the 'f need for surprise and mobility in fu ture wars. He was an ear- ly exponent of air power and armored forces and in his writing developed the "ex- panding torrent" tactic or at- tack. The British army paid him 1 little heed : 1he Germans took up his Ideas and on them bas- rd their victorious blitzktteg :; through France in 1940. Gen. / l-Tans Guderian, who Jed that P"nzer charge, called him "the creator of the theory or 1 lhe conduct or mechanized on Board Escape Sinking A THENS (UPI! -A Grttk ssenger ship struck a rttr caught fire today in the gean Sea but all 3 4 1Senge:rs and 54 crewmen aped wlthoot Injury. MID-WINTER SALE • SUITS & SPORTCOATS REDUCED 4 MID-WINTER CLEARANCE FROM OUR WOMEN 'S SHOP ~k BIDTIQUE e H.l.S. e LADYIUG e TOOTIOUl e JODY e DON $0,HISTICAlfS RE OU CEO 40"/o ANO MORE DI!: ESSES PANTS SWEATERS VE~TS SKIRT S ILOUSlS Ministry of ~terch•nt no spokesman s11ld the ' 3467 Vie l ido • Ntwport 8tech • Phone : 673-~510 ton lplros, owned by the · IPf,,,lv of Ft•• P•rkin; For s,1, D•v• -Atl Oth•r D•v• T1ol ~I ~lf'amship Co., w11s "-:::==:_ ~oJ_ - ----·--------- • EARN MORE. • • With Bank Sa ety! First Notional now offers new higher rates of interest • with full bank safety-and your deposits ore insured to $20,000. • 4V2% on regular passbook savings accounts. • S% on.Gold Passbook accounts on oil funds kept on deposit for o full co lendo r quarter -minimum balance of $500. • Certificates of Deposits under $100,000: 5% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 30 days to 1 year. 5V2% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 1 to 2 years. S3f.i0/o on Certificates with maturity dotes for 2 years or more. • Certificates of Deposits of $100,000 or more: 6V4 % on Certificates with maturity dotes from 30 to 59 days. 6V2% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 60 to 89 days. 6%% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 90 to 179 days. 7% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 180 to 1 year. 7V2% on Certificates with maturity dotes for 1 year or more. As alu·ays, yo11r sai·ings earn the maxim11m bank in- terest at First National. Stop in at any of 011r 5 con· venient locations and select the acco11nt that fits yo11r needs best. • F First National N Bank oF oRANGE couNTv B MAIN o,,JCI At TH[ 'L•l • IN DOWNTOWN 0"ANGG • ·-~llllCH o,,,CI•: OAANOI: First i n TUSTIH lo COLLINS: C .. APMAN-Pill0 $P(C1' SMOl'l'ING CINTlfll • COIYA M•IA1 MUA vtfllO[ OlllVl At AOAMS AVf;:. • tAflllTA ANA: 17l H ST,.AT TVlllN AVI. MIMllR J ,0.1.C. Per.sonal Banking Ser-.ice Since 1906 ~·----------· ---------· ------------------ ~. ·~ • ' -< .. .. .. ' . . .. ~ . ' '. I , • ' .. :j . .. -! : . . I . 1 : '' .- .. ·~·' . -.· · .. J.:. '~: · . .. ~:..I·. . . . .. . . " • . ' .. ' '" .. ,. .. • • ~ ' , ' . " •• • ••An.y .PILOT EDJTORIM.. PAGE Face the • Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce put a lot o! Ume and a lot cit effort Into a school sex education survey in Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. The survey sent to 8,250 parents and reJ;umed by 2 019 provides the best data available on what Harbor Arta i.parents think about the schools taking on the re- aponsibiUty o! sex education. Careful reading of the results leads to the con· Clusions: -A majority or parents are interested In a school sex education for their children if they, the parents, are given an opportunity to be involved. -Most parents believe they did not receive ad&- quate sex education as a child, yet ~o~t say th~y ~e adequately infonned and can be sufftc1ently objective and detached to ins1ruct their chil dren. Tabulated resuJts of the questionnaire will be usefuJ to school board members as indicative of•, the opinion of parents on matters of sex and drug education . Also to be taken Into reckoning by the school board wm be the forthcoming recommendations on "family life education" by the Newport Harbor Chamber's education committee. The committee, under Chairman Nolan Frlzzelle, heard testimony over a six-month period from teachers, professors, doctors, juvenile officers, school adrnini· strators, pollticaJ opponents and proponerrt.s -and stu· dents -before surveying the parents. Committee members devoted many hours drawing out these people and then the chamber put up about $500 to mail the survey and women's division members prepared the mailings. The school ·board is understandably preoccupied right now with the district financing election coming up Feb. 10. But the school finance measures soon will be decided and the Chamber of Commerce will present its One Reason for Campus Rebellion By S. I. HAYAKAWA President, San Francisco State University All over the country people have been eorely puzzled by the violent rebeJlion of young men and women in our be.st col· Jegea and universities -Berkeley, Harvard,· Columbia, Swarthmore, Stan~ ford -J hesitate to mention San Fran- cisco State in tile context of these more prestigious institutions. Many of the general public are infuriated that the most highly privileged young should be the least grateful for their privileges. I too have betn sorely puzzled. But I want to submit a possible explanatlon. Perhaps we ut having these troubles not betause our colleges have railed us, but because they have in some ways done their work loo well. Most student rebels are of tht: upper· middle class. They are to be found large· Jy in the liberal arts departments and the i;ocial sciences -disciplines in which v-erbal faclllty Is highly prized, and in which It is not always necessary to check one's words against the stubborn facts of life (as you have to in chemistry or home economics) in order to pull down an "A.'' THE CARDS ARE ST ACK.ED in favor of the verbalists. Tests <lf scholasllc ap· tltude are easy for those with a ready flow of words. Those who do well in such teslll are courted, sometimes by two or more prestigious colleges. They can hardly be blamed If they begin to feel a little superior. From there on they can 11uccetd in college without really trying. All they have to do Is major in English or 50Ciok>gy. (I majored Jn English myself'.) Furthermore. the liberal arts student is 11eir to a tradition that goes back to the ancient Greeks ,.i-distinguishing between the "liberal'' and the ''servile" arts.. The liberal arts curriculum was for lhe education of gentlemen. who by deflnition di<! not work for a living. The "servile" arts -£rom cooking to barbering to c~nl· merce to engineering -were for working people and slaves. THE ANCIENT GREEK prejudi~ against work is ~ene<;ted. to this day 1n the American un1vers1ty 1n the scorn or many liberal arts professors <lf "voca· tlonaliam" and in the contei:npt of many English majors for such subJects .as com· merce engineering, or agriculture .. Laden' with such prejudices, the verballsts find It easy to. define themselves as an intellectual ar!stocra cy _... an elite class -and to begin to act like one. As an elite. these students (I speak or the white student acti\'is1s -the blacks are ao<lthtr problem) believe themselves I Pre;tll! Comments -Espanola, NM., S111: "It is rrustraUng to 11.,.ablding clti:ens to obsm·e the tortoise-like pace of our courts. 8rid it must be particularly fmtraling to those law entorcemtnt 0Wcer1 charged with gathering ev1dence and making the ar· rest4. It must be very satisfying to those charged for the Jonie:t the cues are dela)'<d 't11e better their cbancH of being acquiUtd. Shoot up 1 couple of lawmen. kidnap two people and a.11<1ult the courthouse and you ao free. But beware of getting caught Saturday nlaht after imblbtng a bit loo much. The courts move quite qWckly in casea auch a.s thoM!." to be above the conventions and restraints of everyday life. They despise the useful citizen and take pleasure in shocking the lower and mid· die classes by outrageous speech, drw, and behavior. They will not be bothered discussing <lr arguing matters with those with whom they disagree -they simply 'vant their own way at once, by force if netf!ssary. l\UXED WITH TWS arrogance is a sentimental idenU!ication with the cl'lwntrodden, not ualiie Utt idealization .,.of the peasant among RusaJan student revolutionaries in czarist Russia. Th is sympathy for the underdog gives a veneer or moral justification to their violent tactics. (Let me add that the nonviolent ma· jority also identify with the underdog. The present student generation is seriously concerned with society. It is this seriousnes.~ that makes them suscep- tible to revolutionary propaganda, with the result that mar\>' young people who genuinely believe In democracy are somelime3 led around by those ·who do not.) Of course many professors are elitists too, indoctrinating students in the re· jection of mlddleclass standards and en- couraging resist.ance lo administration, .i;overnment. and police. At San Francisco State in the fall <lf 1968, student gangsterism was rampant and bricks \fere flying through classroom windows. RADICAL P.RmuRE g r o u P s dominating faculty meetings blocked the in!roduclion bo1h of resolutions con· de1nning student violence and of resolu· lions calling for police protection again st th;it violence, presumably feeling that. the elite ought to settle things among themselves v.•ithou t the intervention of the lower classC's. So the big questions of quality educa- tion have to do ·with both professors and students. Can professors. luxurialing in their academic freedom. stop short of an tgotistic irresponsibility that threatens 1he very existence of the academy? And can young people of ou1standing tn1ents be given a superior educiition without their ending up belie\·ing that they are a superio r order of being, im- mune lo control by custom or law. ex· empt from the responsib11itles of rationa l discourse and debate, possessed of the right to dictate to others through non· negotiable demands. and er.tilled to amnestv the momtnt they get Into I rouble? Perhap!'I it is harder to teach democracy than we ever imagined. e~recially to those who have mo.~t richly t>njoyed Jts blessings. Bii George ---. Dear Georgt:: What's the best way to write a letter to• girl you would really like to get to know belier? <Sht's mar· rled.) CAUTIOUS t>ear Cautious: Tht: be.'lt way to write to a mar· ritd woman? Jn the sand. right before the tide comes in. CONl'IJJENTIAL TO NASSER: I don 't Jee why )"OU keep a.sklnc me. You never listen. rWrltc to Georg• for ...i ... ad· vice. Thrtt ch1ira:; no walUn1.) Issue Soon recommendations to the school board. School trustee1 then should face the iz:sue. The survey gives them a handle on parenta1 opin- ion. 1Vlth that to go, plus whatever soundings they want to make of the broader community, they should be able to reach some decision. The board has gingerly skirted sex education for a couple of years now. lntelligenUy handled and gulded by the feeling of parents, a curriculum could be worked out to serve a worthwhile purpose without creating an emotional war. PSA 's Record at Stake Paclfic Southwest Airlines appears to be moving successfulJy in its bid to acquire Orange County's home- grown airline, Air California, d•spite the feelings o{ some· Air Cal per&Onnel who'd rather leave things as tliey are. , If the sale goes through, PSA should have ample warning of the tempers of Orange County folks when it comes to additional flights, air pollution and aircraft noise .. The Orange County Board of Supervisors is on re<.i>rd as opposing any more flight schedules in and out of the county.owned airport -and oppo-!!ing as well use of any heaVIer aircraft than are now in use there. And, city councils of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach are on record opposing any night flights or use of any aircraft that makes more noise than the Boeing 737s now used by Air Cal. In fact, they indicate, some noise reduction could very well be in order. PSA has a good record of community relations in other cities it serves. To preserve that record, PSA had better be paying close attention to the Orange County people it intends to serve. • INl Naked Body H·as Many Meanings Content plated for Febrtiary · A young lady, whom I take to be a stu· dent at the University or Wisconsin, writes .to me, apropos a recent paragraph in which I said that the people who present nudity on the stage and the peo- ple who object to it are "both victims of the same fallacy, imagining that a naked body is a sexual object .•• " Her question: "If a-naked h9dY is not a sexual object, what is?" I.could tell her, but not within the moralistic confine! of a family new!paper. Actually, her attitude is exactly the kind of lhinl I was ,writing t :SycJn!'r Ji If.,.,_. ' about -the reduction of the body to ob- ject, or merchandise. ·A NAKED BODY CAN be, and Is, many things to many persons: to the doe· tor, an anatomical ·or physiologieal entity to be restored to wholesome functioning: to the artist. a living piece of form and stn1cture to be captured in pen or <lil or clay or stone: to the masseur or masseuse, a ~mplicated network of muscles and tissue and nerve-ends to be rejuvenated; to the photogiapher, a subUe and strikingly lovely study in plane and contour and shadow. And even to the !Over, U the naked body is a mere sexual <lbjeet, or mostly a sexual object, then the "love" is in the loins and cannot outlast such transitory needs. Love must include sex. but the more exclusive it is of other qualities, the faster it tires and die11. L~DEED, THE BODY in terms of a "sexual object" as such is largely a cultural product and an act of the mind. A'!'. Orlega put ii: "Nine-tenths of that v.'hich is attributed to sexuality is the work of our magnificlent ability to im· agi'll', which is no longer an iaslincl, but exaclly the opposite: a creation." This is why, of course, naked bodies <ln the stage are not erotically stimulating, even in <lUr severely repressed society. After the first moment of shock. they are just bodies. laden with no more sexual significance than the naked body of any other species of creature. FOR WHEN THE cultural taboo Is lifted. and the mind can no longer do Its imaginative work, thtn the body ceases lo be a mystery (15 in most primitive societies) and becomes simply an <lrganism which can be us.."tl In many dif- ferent ways, for protection. for profit. or for pleasure. ll has become largely a seuxa l objttt for us because, first , il is exploited com· merclally to an almost palhological degree, and, second, because of our hypocrisy in promoting its desirability while at the same time prohibiting Its free functioning . We have managed, In this way, to obtain the worst or both possible worlds -neitlier the mor11J satisfaction of our Puritan forebears, nor the Innocent engagements of t h e primitivu, but the frustralion:i: of the former and the promiscuity of the lat- ltr. Tbis is why J called us "victims.'' Quotes IL G. Lowust.efn, M.D .. ptUsburs - "Fear and vk>~nct ere JO prevalent in our coanlty that I wondtt if that might not bt one of the (actors contrlbutfng to our dnJI dept'1dent oocltty." H. WRllun Way. •.r. -"There art tho5e who demf:an the prtss as di.torted, slanted. ind tmt.nithM. The problem the prw hu t1 that 1n of tl.s permne:l must be recruited from the tnunan race." More SDS-Plotted Violence WASHINGTON -ri.1ore man iacal violence is being plotted by the berserk Weatherman faction o! the revolutionary Students for a Democratic Society (SOS). Two characteristic run·amok outbreaks are contempiatcd for February. One is aimed at a big university that has been "racked by SOS-instigated destructive disorders <ln several occasions. , Negro participation is being sought. ParUcularly wanted are black ex- tremists, especially the gun-toting and sh:>0ting·prone Black Panlhers. The groundwork for these new out· breaks was laid at the recent four.day meeting ()f the Weatherman 's national council al Flint, Mich. -from Which the press and photographers were forcibly excluded. "VIOLENCE·• was the theme from the beginning lo the end of this truculei:iUy guarded gathering. It began on that incendiary note with an <lbscenity·interlarded harangue by Bernardine Dohrn, former inter-organiza. Ilona! secretary of SOS, and closed the same way with an equally furious diatribe by John Jacobs, a leading \Veatherman agitalor. Virtually all the speeches and most of the discussions were replete with the kind of disgusting obscenities favored by ex· tremists -v.·hite and black. They seem to consider the frequent and loud use or these putrid expressions as evidence of revolutionary fervor and defiance. This applies to the sloppy women as well as the bushy-haired and unkempt males. In fact, the squalid females appear to take special delight in the loathsome obscenities. Oohrn's "keynote address" v.•as full of then1. .. AUen-G~ldsµ1ith THE HALL WAS decorated in keeping \1 ith the ''violence" theme and the revolting obscenities.. Hanging from th~ ceiling were large portraits of revolutionary rulers and leaders -Ho Chi Minh, Fidel Ca!tro, Che Guevara. Malcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver, the bail-jum ping Black Panther <lfficial now a fugitive in Algeria. Also hanging from the ceiling was a huge cardboard machine gun. with a placard reading ''Learn How To Use It." One wall was covered with allernaling black and red posters oC another Black Pzr.ther leader. Fred Hampton, killed in a shoot-out with police. On another lva\1 was: a 20-ft. poster with big drawings of clltferent caliber bullets, with a full description of each. Also on this poster were pictures of Weatherman "enemle•" -foremosl among them Chicago's fl.1ayor Daley. INFLA!\1MATORY TALK -In the opening fulmination, Bernardine Dohm clamored for more violence. Derisively !lhe berated her fellow Weathermen for having (obscenity. obsCertity) a lot and being .. motivated by a white guilt trip." •·\\'c didn't fight around Bobby Seale. when he was shackled at the conspiracy (Chicago seven) ltjal." !he screeched through the loudsPeaker. "We should have torn !hat (obscenity) courtroom apart. \Ve didn't smash them when the fohscenily) f\.t'lbe pea.Ci! creeps hissed David lfilliard on Moratorium Day In San Francisco. We didn't burn Chltago down when (Black Panther) Fred Hilliard was killed (in a shootout with police). "We have been (obscenity) wimpy on armed struggle. We talk about being a fighting force alongside the black:s, but a Jot of us are still (obscenity) honkies and we're still scared or fighting. We have to gel into the armed struggle. ViolenC2 is our aim and motto." TJUS EDICT WAS stridently echoed by Mark Rudd, top Weatherman leader and veteran of numerous disorders and demonstrations. "\Ve look for pitched battles between militant groups and the pigs (police)," he i>f.llowed, "o n a scale and with a violence that ~ill make those in the past look like Sunday school picnics. Violence is the way to the revolution." How to go about "making the American revolution" was discussed and argued at great length. More time was devoted to thi!i topic than anything else. Ted Gold, a prominent Weatherman, asserted that "an agency of the people or the world would be set up to run U.S. society and economy after the defeat o[ U.S. imperialism abroad." This brought a rejoinder from the floor, "Does that mean that if the people of the world suc· ceed in liberating themselves before Ameri can radicals make the American re,·olulion, then Chinese, Africans and others will take <'Ver here and run things for white America?" .. Well," replied Gold, "If lt takes fascism to bring about the American revolution, I guess we'll have to have fascism ." By Robert S. AUett itnd Jobn A. Gold!milh At-·.Dear Old Hudson High A young man I know is bored with high school. He says it isn·t relevant. He's absolutely right. liow can life in high school be relevant lo our mature adult society? Yet I can·t help recalling my years at dear old Hudson High with the requisite glow of nostalgia. Those were the days! How happy v.·e were in our innocence before we had lo go out and face the re;il world. Jn my da~. the boys all wore cashmere sweaters. dirty cords and saddle shoes. v.·hile the girls wore cardigans, plaid skirts and saddle :;hoes. \Veil, come to think or it. not all the kids dressed like that. THERE \\.ERE poorer kids and a ft'W blac~s and Orient.11s who wore ... 1 can"l remember what they v.'Ore. \Ve never paid much attt'ntion lo them. But anyway. we kids in saddle shoes pretty much ran things. We v.·ere known rather vaguely as "The Group." 1o1ost of Dear Gloonn· Gus: T'lllt , .. ,~,. '911ttll ,_.,.. •l•wt. 1111 _...,.,,.., """ .. "" lllWJ!Mfltt. , .... ,.... ,.r '""' " "'"""' 0V.. 0.!IJ "!IOI. Jfarvey Pe!lSC!. the perennial school bood !oe, should have made a re- cording 15 years ago. Would have u.vtd a lot of time and Ink. -D. O'L. .Art Hoppe us lived in the fancier Eastern Section of town. We controlled the school paper and elected the student body officers •.. Not always. though. I remember lhe ·33 rleclion when Nick Dickson won for Pres- ident .•. He really wasn 't one of us. NICK ALWAYS wanted to be part or The Group, but he \Vas never quite ac- cepted, probably because he tried loo hard. lie was a short. curly-haired kid with a funny nose. lfis clothes weren:t exactly right and he carried his books in a brief· case. He was kind of a grind. And hl1 man· ner was very sincere. Too 6lnctrt. most of us thought. Anyw11y, he·d been beaten for President before and after that he lost for Cafeteria Manager. So we didn't think him much of a threat Our candid.ate was Hubert ••• What was his name? He wu a bouncy, en- thusiastic kid who worked in the Prlnci· pars Offiet. A real comic. But. trouble was. nobody took him seriously. So Nick "'Oil. TED \\'ON FOR vice president thn1 year. Just an honorary job. •Ie w#s s big, ni~ kld -bis but dumb. t remflmber he 11.ot in a fight with the editor of the 1»1per. who was one of us. After that we picked on Ted mercilessly. making him the butt of ~ll our jokes. 1 suppo5;e the majority or kids not In The Group admired him for U!k. lng us on. But, then, thty never spoke up. Barry was the cheer leader, 111 real gung·ho type. "Go team. go!" he'd yell as oor boys went off to ball~ -even when they were behind 48 to nothing. or course, there wete 1 few kids who didn't go out for the team <lr root for Hud· son High at the rallies and games. We really shunned them. They were guilty of the worst crime 've knew : they '1acked school 'Spirit." THEN l REMErt1BER the ~Head Moni- tor , Jay Edgar. What a link! Always re· porting us for this little thing or thal Seems like he'd had that job forever. Then there was Eugene~ the dreamy class poet, and George. the tough kid from the Southside who gave us the creeps, and Teddy, who got expelled alter a wild escapade one night and ••. But there t go. prattling on about lhe i;::ood old days. And what I started out lo say is that my bored yoong friend is not only absolutely right about high school not being relevant. but he should be glad of ii . After all. what kind of adult mature'°'" ciety would this be if those who ran it be- haved like a bunch of high school kids?' -""I-- Friday, January 30, 19i0 Tltt li-ditorlal page of the Dall11 Pilot steA:s to inform and 1tim- tdatt readers by f"resenting this '1ew8paPfr'1 opinlo111 and corn.. tMntaru on topics of interest cmd sioniftcance. bu providtno a forum for '114 ezpr1uion of our renderr' opinfons, and 611 prt!mtlng iM diotrsa trittD- pointl of inftm'ftCd. ob11roers and .spoMtmn on topict of the dav. Robert N. Weed, Publisher 3 7 7 ---------------------------·-------------- Early Arrival A waited by Fan s of Cupid Friday. F eb. 13, has been set apart on the calendar with a big heart, indicating that it is the date chosen ·by the !hursday Morn- ing Club of Ntwport Beach ror its annual danc~. this year a .sweet- heart Dinner Dance. 'fhe Balboa Bay Club will be the setting be- ginning \Vith a no-host cocktail hour at 7 p.m., according to Mrs. Ivan .W. Sturgis, spectal events cha1rman. Zeroing Jn on the date with the assistance of Cupid are Junior Section members (left to right) l\1rs. Bess Roberson and Mrs. William La Plante. . '• .- ~men " BEA ANDERSON , l;dltor ,rl.it•l'· ""'*" M. 111' M ,..,. 11 Big fop Borrowed for Party Capitalizing on the ready. made theme offered by Valen- tine's Day, members of the ._ Alla Bahia Comm ittee or the Orange Counly Philharmonic Society will gather fo r a bit of their ow.1 hearts-and-flowers merrymaking. The occasion will be the firth annual social event to raise funds for the Orange County Philharmonic Society's con- cert season which brings the finest in music to the county. 11-1r. and Mrs. Ed wa r d Schumacher y,•ill open lheir hom e for the black-li e event. which will be a coc ktail buffet dinner dance under a giant circus tent. To begin the e veni n g, meynbers· and guests will gather in the dining room far dinner, where !able linens in red and \Vhitc and a center- piece of flowers and red hearts y,•iU carry out the color scheme. Followi·11g dinner and the cocktail hour, guests will migrate to the huge tent overlooking the pool area. comPlete with chandeliers and festoo ns or whitt; balloons and red Valentine hearts providing a festive atmosphere . Serving as hostesses will be members or the ways and means commiUee. the J\fmes. Kenneth Smith. chairman. and \Vill iam M . La i n g . Schumacher. Ray1nond C . Dost&, Donal~ J. Ferguso.1 and Luis Law. • • . . ' SWEET 'THOUGHT -Chivalry !$n't dea( or at least according to Carl Boss, 8, it isn 't. Carl and pis VaJentint:. Sbecyl·Odegaard, 6, are_ amon~ Girls Clu b and Boys Club members hoping"tha1 many commun1ty_res1· dents make the clubs their Valen tine by attending the ~nual benefit party Thursday, Feb. 12, in the Newpotter Inn, • 11 • • Fund-raising Event Valentines Need·ed For Girls and Boys Harbor Arca residc nls \Vill be able to give a Valentine to 'I.he Girls and Boys clubs on the eveni ng of Thursday. Feb. 12. when the clubs host their fifth annual capital fund-raising party .in the Newporter Inn. In return for the $25-a-p\ate charge. partygoe rs will enjoy a social hour at 7 p.m .. music by the Los Bajorttos Baja Marimba Band arid din· ner, according to the chairman. Mrs. F~ed W. John son . Special bonu ses \viii be 0. W. Richard as master of ceren1onies and . a Lalk by former television and movie star, Dick Lane. . Dance mu sic will be P.rovided bY the RetroBressive Five pfus Three, and other entertainment will feature the Four Bits of Harmony, billed as "21 years of harmon ious hilarity." Capping the evening will be the presentation of awards lo outstand· iog citizens for their contributions to help~ng the youth of the Harbor Area. Sponsoring the awards wil l be both the Boys and Girl s clubs. Men and \vomen ol the area interested in supporting ei ther of the _ Clubs are Invited by Willard C. Courtney, Boys Club presiden~. and Ron Hardy, Girls Club president, to make reservations for the dinner. Tickets may be purchased at the Girls Club, 1815 Anaheim St.. Costa Mesa , phone 646-7181 , or the Boys Club, 594 Center St. and 2131 Tustin, Costa' Mesa, phone 548-9387. Mrs. Laing. Alta Bahia chairman. will greet members and guesl'\ as they arrive for the invita liona! affair at 6:30 p.m. SHALL WE DANCE? -Mr. Ai:nold O'Bass (ccn· ter i. leading member of the Philharmonic Orchestra. can't be induced to dance with either l\.1rs. Perry Gill (l eft) o'r ~lrs. Paul Queyrel, 1nembers ol the Al la Bahia Co mmittee of the Orange County Phll· harmonic Society, so he'll bave to "go solo" dur- ing the fifth annua l black-tie din ner dance planned by the co mmittee for Saturday, Feb. 14. Proceeds will be divided evenlY between the t\vo clubs so that their services may be expanded. Midwest Custom: Newlyweds Get Charge Out of Receptions DEAR A.NN LANDERS : ll"s obvious you are a big city gal born and raised a Ion& way from nrral folks. Your amaze- ment at the money-raising weddings surprised me. Out here in St. Cloud. J\tlm. -in tact, all over Steams COunt y -it's an accepted pradict for a new ly married couple to hold a public dance and charge adm ission. this makes a lot .more IC:nse than having a big reception "nd feeding e\o'etybody for nothing. Ifs a ;.nown fact that many a brkfe sets her 'cddlng date according to lhe. avallabill· y of UN! dance ball or beer joint. Many pies celebrate wedding anniversaries Is way, too. lt'11 a s;rcat way tn en· rtaln frienq., and mokc a 11UJe monC'y the same time. Altnost every dally ANN LANDERS ~ nc,\vspapcr carries lhe.te announct!ments. I'm encl~ing a page Crom the St Cloud Daily Timt!s to prov~ it. -A. C. OP S. C. DEAR. A. C.: The tllla11 J lt1r1· fn>m my readers! I was fasclatted to dl11covu Uu.1 lbese wedding• ud aa1Uver111ry celebrations Jeatwre 1~clnl evcn11 1uclt 115 poullry fluctlons, prhcs for boa: can. ina:. yCldcling and prf•tcs (or Iha best drt!ilied. J nolc, too. lhnl ont eouplt 1dvtrli1ed, "No a4ml11loo cbar1e U yoo brlag yo ur detr lt1alcr'11Jcerust." Just to keep the recent ttr:Aight, t was bora tnd raised la Stoux ctty, Iowa, •ltkb Is =1 mllt1 rrom St. Cloud. DEAR ANN I.ANDERS : My w~e 11 1JCared to death of "lightning. When she wa~ ll child, her cousin was st.ruck a_nd klflcit 111 11 fomlfy ouilng. ·1r II stnrts In storm when we are riding Jn the car she lnsiata on 1etUna out and.atandina under ft tree. ls this advisable or not! - WORLAND, WYO. • Dj!:AR W.W.: v .. tlopl(d lltbl Illa! you wire stay 11 die car dlll"lllc u eJeo. t.rlcal 1torrn. Jr1 aciually ooe of tbe 1afe1t placu to be. la fact, I've aever heard ti a "r110a I• a cw bel•c struck by U1hto1o1. ku uyone? DEAR ANN LANDERS; I read wit!I in· 'tereat your column "bout "JO Ways to Keep a Miit Interested." The man who mad< up t!le Ila! knew hi3 onions. Rule No. 3 wi.s e$peclally interesting to me. It 1rP11. "Don 't cnll 111c. I'll Cdll you." Some time ago l met a gir l I thought wu the one for me. She was auracUve, Well educlted. a 111 I a t 1 e·. etc. Uhlortunately, she \Urned out to be ._ pushover. On our third d8le we weht to tied. Alter a monlh I was bored and decided 1.o break it oft Well, Ann, you wouldn't believe the letters and the phone calls. She pestered Tne at the ol£1ce, call· ec. me al home, tracked me down a~ my mother's place and even cai1ec' my slstcr. She chased me so shart1ele~Jy, I couldn 't pos.11lbly have an ounce ·o1 respect for her. PleaH: tell the girls lh.il the so-called new morality is a man's glmmicll:. If a chick we:nls to go along with It, she should accept. the cqnsequcace11 tllke gct- l!"'tt <h1111pcrl ) nnrt l<'t the r.•:y orr the hoo k gracefully. Every man wants a wtfe he can be pJOud ol. -Pffit.ADELPiUA DEAR PHIL., You -U11t Mi-. lo me but yt.r teUtr 11 "~ "'1altal:. &me ,pis 9ffd t9 be nmlD41d ..at there are Iota of lrletlf runala& .... _ dJsgulted u mea. • Do you feel Ill at ease .•. ~tut· 1•1 lit cverybod)' having· 1 good llrrie bul you? Write ror Ann Landers' book'8l ·•n... 1:e7 .to Popularity,'' enc:loslr.f ifiih )'OUt request 35 centa tn coin and a lbn&t tell· addressed. stamped envtl:>pe. Ann Land<rs wUI ge gh1cl to boiP you With your pfflblemtt. SCnd them to 'her In care of the DAILY Plf.QT, encl01ln1 1 • .~111r.:-rl1!rr1nc•I ~!tt 1·" ('d c.n\iel1•r~·· I GIVING EXTRA CARE -Showing their mothers how much they care are mem bers of the National Charity League Ticktockers. The coeds are hosting a Valentine tea party for moms Saturday, Feb. 7, Glimpse Into 70s Offered Insights for the 70s wilt / Iheme the 17th annual national ainference of the E leetrical \Vomen's Round Table Tues- day, Feb. 3, in the Grand Hotel, Anaheim . Speakers for the one.day event will include William Lane, Sunset Magazine; Miss Anna Fisher Rush, McCall 's ?\1agazine; ?i.tlke Roy, food editor, KNX.CBS radio; Miss Carolyn Heine, Advisory Com· mission of the Status of \Vomen, State of CaWomla; a manager of an appliance firm, and Dan Moore, Los Angeles Times. The event will be&in with breakfast at 7 a.m. and corf.. elude with a banquet at 7 p.m. The Eledrical W o m e n ' s Round table ls open to !'omen whose occupations are allied with the electrical Industry or related fields. Exchange Students Tapped ?i.fembers or the Ebell Club of Laguna Be.a.ch will learn a little more about foreign coun· tries as three members o( the American Field Service at Laguna Beach lligh School pre.sent the Mond<iy, Feb. 2 program. Speaking to the group at 7:30 p.m. Jn l.aguna Beach Arl Gallery will be Marcie le Roux: of South Africa, Fernando Ga- ja of Spain and Manfred IIelnc of Germany. A brief business meeting will precede the program. Refreshments will be served by 1'1rs. Louis Zltnik and co1n· mittee members the ?i.hnes. Douglas Kenaston, L. a r r y Hunt. Gordon Bro\vn, HO\l•ard Hl11J'icks. Ed.,.,·ard Nell and \Yallace Scott. Author Speaks For Pen Women Fr1nct5 Grant Nachant. author or "SOng of Peace,'' will be guest speaker for lhe ~1onday, Feb. 2, meeting of Laguna Beach Pen Women. The author, president of lne San Diego Branch of the Na· tional League of American Pen Women, l:ii ll11ttd in "lnttrnaUonal Who's \\fho ln Poetry" and in the 1968 edition of "\\'ho's Who of Alncrlcan \Vomen." Widely published In thiii country and 1br0&d. she v.·as rtpresenled In the "C<'fllenn1al Anthology" In her native state o! Aluka. The mr-ettna conducted by ~tiss Anne Magulrt will begin at 10 1.m. In the bolrdroon1 or the 1-na s .. ch mgh School administration building. Moose Group \Vomen of the ?\foose. 115' ~lf.wmblc the first and third Thund&)' of each nlonth for n1ctllngs in flf006B llon1c, Costa ltle&a. The programs begin al a p.m. New Stew Mils Sandra Sullivan, daughter ol Mrs. Patrl· cia Sullivan of· Costa Mesa and John E. Sul· llvan of Cypress: is a graduate of Delta Air- lines stewardess train· ing school 1n Atlanta, Ga. She currently is based at ~louston Inter· national Airport. ~1iss Sullivan is a graduate of Mater Oei High School and attended Or- ange Coast College. Dads View Activities Fathers v.·crr Invited to share nursery school activities with thei r preschoolers when •lilltop Nufsei'y School of Costa ~tesa hosted an open house. They wat ch ed their youngsters at v.·ork and p!ay In all areas of school instruc!ion inc I u ding music, art. dramatics, indoor and outdoor free play, juice and story tin1c. •lilltop is a nonprofll. nonsectarian parent participa· lion school which is licensed by lhe State Department of Social \Velfare and a member of the Orange County Council of Parent Participation Nur· sery Schools. During the general nieeting nett monlh, Don Bowlus, a psyt'holo~ist, will d i s c u s & Father's Role \\'ilh the Preschoolers. Laguna Artist Will Address Art League Port ritit artist Le!:\ie B. De t.lillc ol Laguna Beach v.·111 demonstrate his technique for members or Huntington Beach Art Le&:gue on t.1onday. f eb. 2. at 7:30 p.m. in the Recrta· ti on Center. De 1.Wle. third cousin or the late Cecil B. De MJ\le, v.-on his first prize In art compelltion at the a.ge of eight. He studied In his home country of Canada before au.ending Art Students Ltague in New York City. Ao exhibitor In t.agun11's Festival of Aft!. Ot Mille alM> 1~ known fof't.,stlll life pain· tlni;!s i1ckeL, ror. the mettlng \\ h1l'h Is optn to the public 1t no ch<1t'gl' ''Ill entitle the win · oer 10 a lrco portrait painted by lhc ~rtist. and also lnVlted are the American Field Service students. Working "heartily" are r.1iss Debra Kil· mer and Miss Ji.oily Anderson (left to right). . Q In Tribute of Mothers Girls Working Hard National Charityr League Tlcktoc~s play host lo lhelr mothers each year wilh a Valentine tea. ' The Dover Shores home of Mrs. Melvin Daniel Kilmer III will be the party selling Satur· cfay, Feb. 7. 'fh~re the young girls and mother! w I I I welcome several American Field Service students. In the receiving line at 2 p.m. will be Mrs. Edward Leisy Coriell, chapter presi- dent and her daught er Deborah ; Mrs. Herbert John f\.ieany, Ticktocker coordinator and daughters Debbie and Claudine, and Mrs. Kilmer and daughter Debra. -Presidents of each grade level and their mothers will pour. They are Tracy Ewald, seventh grade, Mrs. Brian Albert E\11ald ; The r cs e r-.1arkel. eighth grade, !\1rs. Loul.~ Dillon Markel: Patri cia Rooke. ninth grade, Mrs. Robert Curtis Rooke: Robin !\1iner, 10th grede, Mrs. Guy Everett Miner Jr.; Carol Con- nally, !Ith grade, !\1rs. Paul Connally. and Oebbe Dean. 12th grade, ft1rs. Frank Brooks Dean. Role of Women Seen 'By African Princess I Your Horoscope Tomorrow Scorpio; Stress Versa ti I ity SATURDAY JANUARY 31 By SYDNEY 0~1ARR ARIES (March zt.April 19): Commun i ca tions are highlighted. Imperatl11c that ' you cat.ch up o n cor· respondence. There may be much busy work. But Im· portant task Is lo oulllne format, to clarUy opinions and positions. TAURUS (AprU IQ.May 20): Your fee.Jin&~ run deep. To deny them l\'OUld be at- tempting to deceive yourself. Gel affalrs at home In order. Give and receive love. This will make your world go around -in a merry way! GE~UNI (ftfiy 21..June 20): Accent on resolving legal quesllons. You relate to most persons in meaningful manner today , But don't expect to have It all your own way. In marriage, you will make ma· jor concession. CANCER (June 21.July 2:1): Traveler's Impressions Pay heed to diet health r&- qui.rtment.s. Key is moderaUon -which means avoid excess. What appears to be serious dilemma will be solved -In your favor. Added money Is "on the way.'' Russian By BEA ANDERSON W-tR'I ldlltr Since his recent tour behind the iron curtain. Grant c. Butler concludes there even- tually will be a revolution In RuMia. Speaking before the Wednes- .day Morning Club of Costa Mesa, the world lraveler and international affairs lecturer salci that he fell there Is a great deal of unrest among the peo1Jle. "They have no freedom as they are completely regulated. by government," he explained, adding "You can't keep them dov.~1 forever." •Us impressions of Russia '"ere mos 11 y unfavorable. Even on the plus side lie found disad vantages. He rated merchandise as in· Mermaids Eye Role LEO (July 23-Aug. %2l : ferior and over pr I c e-d : Also coming unrier criticism Good lunar aspect today coin· service, poor; food and bot el for distorting the American cides with roma~. creaUve accommodatloru, fair lo poor, Image we re the news media , endeavors. You make needed and felt that a free enterprise which be said, only report the changes; you get going on pet system would improve them. seamv side of America. '"f'he project. You enjoy what you What he liked the least was Image slowly Is being erased do and opposite sex is drawn the oppressive feeling of a though, as Voice of America to you. Revolt Ahead? police state. and Radio Free Eu rope are VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): The plus side included no geUina lhrough lo a lot of peo-SpoUight on home, property, unemployment and housing pie. care for elderly Individual. and food for everyone, but the ''American tourists also are New outlook is desirable. price thev paid for this pro-helplna: to create a belier pl~· Don't hang onto past. Be pro- " ture." He advised ev•"'one to gress1···e or1'glnal and 1·n gress was givi';f, up their .... " • • • tour behind the iron curtain, d nd t freedom, he asse ed. epe en · warning that "11 won't be the LIBRA (Sept ••0ct ~)· ' ' T h e i r c u I tu r a 1 best vacation, but certainly A t ho0 rt~ · · "" · achievements are many '" he the moat educational." ccen on s JOUrney • said. "Perhaps their greatest He also feels that if all the special mess a I e Involving Con"l.bu"on •· the world ls close relative. Your hunch u ..., dlasidents would make the ff heed t JI Lea what they have gl,en to spac<, pays o ; pay o . rn tour and comp&:re they'd be b t ch' M but ag.l·n the peop'· paid an y ea 1ng. eans express tc more satisfied at home . · 11 · t •· expensive price. w 1 1 n g n es s o Ina.re knowledge. "To foot the blll the govern· -..-------"' SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): ment took from the people &."3 y.·hlch lowered their living Money, personal possessions standard," he added . p • dominate. Your potenUal for eerl ng success is &tressed thfouch Another posill" point ls the versatile approach. Dlsplay tack of crime. Butler said he your unique abiliUes -and fell safe at all Umes walking Around sen .. of humor. city stree1' al night and that SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22- he saw no porno graph 1 c Dec 21) C I hi h literature for &ale. • • O f mm __ "".., .. ,.. .. """ · : ye e I ; course," he added, ••the circumstances turn In. your favor. Your judgment. in· penalty in a police r;tate for a TIME OUT from duties at tuition become more reliable. crime does serve as a deter· I · I The role of Mermaids In rent." On the other hand, he Hoag Memoria Ho s Pt ta , Initiate proje<::ts. Buy some cnn1munily projects \11ill be Presbyterian, will be taken by new wearJng apparel. Brighten d I M d 0 b v.•ar; su rprised to see so ma11y ap~arance. surroundi'n•s. discusse at t 1c on ay. 1·e. I h 1· n1embers of the Auxiliary as I''" 11 . a co o ics. CAPRICORN (n·c. -•an . 2. 1neeting ·or !he \Vonien s ll d d Jhe' ed th t d th C !'I . ~ ~ e commen e ir uca· ey at en e a I orn1a 191: Whal is hidden needs al· Division of the Li:!guna Beach tional system , saying that "It H 0 spi t a J Associalion Con· t · r.1 d Chambe r of Commerce. is impossible to have a drop· ent1on. eans on't sweep Social hour at 11:30 a.m. Jn out there. Students don't at--vention In San Francisco's problems under the rug. Come Surf 'n Sand will precede the tack teachers or riot, and if Jack Tar Hotel, Tuesday, Feb. out in open: say what you luncheon. !\irs. Robert Turner, their system had a teacher 3 lhroguh Fri., Feb. 6. mean. Cooperate with one who program chairman. w i 11 like Angela Davis she'd either Traveling north will be is conducting charity drive. discuss upcoming ~1ermaid be shot or sent to Siberia." president t.lrs. \Vi 11 i am AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()..Feb. projects including lhe Flea He criticized campus Langston and the !\-1mes. !\-1al· 18): Accent on friend who !\1arket. a float for the \Vlnter libraries lor the lack of good thew Kenney, William Brown· shows appreciation v.•ith lovely :restival ne,;t month, and the A mer i can Ii t er ature, ing. Donald Fuller a n d gift. Make peace. Gesture of state convention of chamber magazines and newspapers. \Villiam Hudson. goodwill will give you a won1en to be hosted by While talking lo studen~ he tremendous boost. Act ac· Laguna Beach in the fall. learned that representative cordingly. Presiding officer ll-f r s. newspapers or the U.S. were CM Overeaters PlSCES CFeb.19-MarchZO): Thomas Johnston \11elcomes the Daily Worker. Los Angeles Study Aquari us message. Ac· women lnleresled In joining Fret Press and the New York Qvereaters An 0 n y.m 0 us cept invitations. Elevate self· 'The role of women today in both Africa and America will be discussed by Princess Alice Siwundhla, native of east cen- tral Africa, for the Women's Auxiliary lo tbe Oarnge Coun· ty !\1edlcal Association Tues· day, }o~cb. 3. the t.1Cnnaids to phone the .PoSt and that novelists were gather every Wednesday even-esteem. You arc worthy of to 1vork among their people. chamber oCflce at 494·1-018 for Eldridge Cleaver, Ja mes ing at 8 in Bear Street School, reward. Feel this Is so and it !\1rs. Laurance r-.1osier, aux-reservations. Baldwin and Norman Mailer. Costa Mesa. will be-especially today. i\iary president, will conduct a-----------;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. brief business meeting during Princess Alice, an author and scholar as well as public speaker, made her first ap- pearance in this country on the Ralph Edwards television show "This Is Your Life." She has y,•ritten tv.·o books including "Allee Princess," her first, and "Betv.·ecn T1•io \Vorlds," a sequel to be published shortly. The speaker is married and is the mother of three children. She and her husband hope to obtain their PhD degre€'s and return to Africa the 11 a.m. gathering in the Orange County M e d i c a I Assoc iation bu ilding, Orange. Mrs. Kenneth ~fcNiece of Santa Barbara, president-elect of the Women's Auxiliary to the California M e d I c a I Association will be inlroduced1 during the meeting. a n d special guests will b e members of the women's aux· iliaries ol the dental. phar· maceutical and veterinary so- cities of Orange County. Mrs. Loren Heather v.·ill serve as hospltaUty cha irman, assisted by the !\tmes. fl.1orris F'ier. John Granzella, Jack llagadorn and Frank Ken· drick. Semi-Annual QualiCraft • • • • • • • • • • • • • were 8.99 to 10.99 ..A .... • • • • • • • • • • • • • were 5.99 to 7.99 ....-.4 wv• now nn Qu•l•Cr8ft'1 f1sh10n 11!0. p1t•1Jell•r•l Choo,• ••v1r1I "' lli•1t t1rr1!ic. p•!cei;, But hurry lor I aood s.elec:tlon Nol •II 'lYI'' In 1v1ry size Ft1hio 11 l1lt 11d N,wpo1t 1,,,11 H11111!119lt11 c.~+., H1111••n91ort B11 th Sou•ll Co••• Plt1• Coit• ,v,,,, INTRODUCING FROG LOVERS TO CHOPIN! PARENTS'. DON'T WAIT UNTll YOUR CHllO IS OUT OF lHE fROG LOVERS AGE. BEFORE YOU GIVE THEM THE Giff OF MUSIC -YOU W.t.IT AND IT MAY I E TOO 1.ATEI Children In th1 frog loving 1t1g1 lit·B) 1r• tht perfec:t tgt for l••rning music. Yem1h1, 1f'1r y11r1 of rt111rc:h dnign1d th1 Y 1m1h1 Musit Courat to eu ur• 1h1t all ckildrt n c1n leern musit. Miiiion• of Y1m1h1 gr1du1t11 from ell ov1r the world 1eu1fy lo lh• I UCC:l51 of th• YAMAHA MUSIC COURSE. You do not '11v1 lo b•1v 1n In· 1lrum1n1, th1re is no home !tvdv -just loh of Ion for your children whUt th1v le•rn music. DON'T 0£NV YOUR CHILD THE CHANCE YOU MAY HAVE MISSED IN YOUR CHllOHOOD. Cl11s11 •r• now 1nrolllng-won'1 vou pit••• g!v1 UI I t i ll 1nd let u• show vou th1 whole story of th• YA.1,\AH A MUSIC COURSEt 'l'OUR l lGGEST REWARD Will IE WHEN YOUR FROG lOVER tOOKS UP AT YOU ANO TEllS YOU,,. "I GAVE /..IV fROG .t. NEW NA.Mt. Bl fTHOVEN." Don't Del1y-C1ll Today 642·1144 YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL IN COSTA MESA . DEPENDABILITY MAKES TllE GREAT MAYTAG AGOG and Matching Dryer Your Best Buy! ( M•ytlf lutomallc WHhtr. 2 speeds for all·fabrlc washing. Automatic fabric softener dispenser. Pow1r.fln A&ft1tor for washlna action thlt's a1ntl1, thor• Spec~! ,..; cycle maku rtolly dlr1)' clothes 1 cillCh to get cle•n. M..,Uc EIKtronlc Control Pryer. r HI dry clothes ln 1•ntl11 low ttmperaturts while 1ltctronic S1nsors constantly 1'f1el .. moisture Jn clothes. Shuts otf whtn clothes are dried just ril'ht Ont aettina -no guesslnf tor time 1nd temp. Per· minent prus 11Wnc remove wrln~u. ' .· Sine• 1'47 DAVIS- BROWN 411 I. 17th St. Delly f.f Sat. ,_, I 3 , 3 3 . l • • • •• --· • ' ' • esa ' . . ~ -. • '.... .. f Tauy'• l'lul .. -' " . •1 • " ' w ..,.. •su:..-~ ... , ·J."t•&:• .. ~-. ·VOL. 63, NO. 25, .4 SECTIONS, 42. PAGES ORANGE C<OUHTY."CALIFORNIA . ' . FRI DAY, JANUARY 30, 1970 . . ' T~N CENTS .. .. . , . --- t.•' :".. ~ 1-.... Mes.a. CofC:. Backs .. :Sehool Tax Overrid~ .. By moMAS FORTUNE 01 t11t Ot1W ,..... Ma" Costa ?i.fesa Chamber of Commercl!! dir-edars Thursday endorsed t h e tfewporl·Mtsa l1nlfied School District's proposed tax override· and bond interest rite increa~e. The vote was 12 to 5 to , endorse the tax oVerride.. On the bond interest hike cham· ber directors voted unanimous support - l-~he override is for ii tax rate .increase Drug Raid ·· Finale Nabs 3 Teenagers '' The last three amoni a larlte number of. aus_pected campus nJllcotics dealers named in arrest warrants were picked up by .Costa fl1esa police Thursday night, bringing to~ te tot.al number I~ custody. Detective Sgt. John Regan said the trio Is charged with sale of dange~s d!'JJS or-marijuana, with two of them Juveniles. Robert Morris, 18. o{ 937 Serra Way. Costa Mesa, was charged in a warrant carrying $625 bail wilh sale of marijuana. ~lx of the suspects in the alleged deal· tncat both Costa Mesa and Estancia high schools are adults and face arraignment or preliminary hearings in Harbor Pistrict Judicial Court next week. The-remaining 19 boys and girl• face ,h>venilf Court action in coming weeks. Investigators confiscated about $10.cm worth of marijuana and narcoti~ during the w..,. .. ~ probe of g~~ill!I. ~l1.1ding nearly every tytk 08 tht nueu markel ~ ' 11 ~ 1• .. Dttttlive Capt. Bob Green said earlier that Lhe alleged narcotics .tr!Jlfficking was 1\ol what ODtt would MU. ln oraantzeid tltg. but moil de!Olidinl! knew ucb other. · C!omplalnll cbatginf.anather ..,,.P of five young men arreated. Wednesay night at a Co5ta. Mesa apartment. meanwhile, were belng 50Ught from the Orange Coon· ty District Attorney today. Authorities In Wooster, Ohio, tipped off lctil police by emergency. crO&l-COUJrtry teletype message that two known narcotics 11uspecls were in CoSta Me.sa and gave the address. A team Of detectives went to 19'J Shalimar Drive, where they and a thlrd OhiOan were arrelied, alora& with two Atiaheim youths atte.nalng' college in Ohio. _Be:fo~ Police could tnter. &0meone tr1eil to flush a dozen plastic bags of m8/ijuana down a toilet -clogging it - and "the soggy weed was confiscated as evidence. All five were charged with possession of' marijuana ror sale and ordinary po&Session of marijuaha counts. l\'.f esa Bicyclist's . ' Rites Scheduled lCatholic runeral services-will be held Silurday £or 1 Costa Mesa boy struck by t?car as he rode hi"s 6icycle Wednesday irt2moon. Requiem Mass tot Jeffrey \I'. Dietrich, ft; will be Saturday at 9 a.m. in St. John t~ Baptist . Catholic Church, with in- libnent In Good Sbephetd C....tery, FillntingtOn Beach. Survivors Include his parenlll. Mr. and Mrt. Franklyn Dietrich, of 3111 Plalle DrlVe, brothers Thomas and Peter, a &J.;ter Susan, grandparents, -Mr. arfd Mr11. .rahn B. Uamlltoo. of Clam Lake, Wisc .• and a great-aunt, Mrs. t.1oyd Dietrich, of Vista. 'The victim died Thursday at Costa Mesa MemorlaJ Hospital of head injurfes 8Uffered about 12 •hours earlier •hen struck on PaUJarinO' 'Avenue· near the itreet on which be lived. Police said he veert!d from the dirt shoulder or the road,. hidden by 1 perked ear; into the path of a &porb car driven hy a 17-year-old girl who was unable to stop In time. , tnvestigators said tt appean she was not at fault. DR. HAYAKAWA NOW. IN PILOT " san Fronclsco's dlatp-tongued educa-iof, Or. S. I. Hayakawa, still has • lot to 111· And, starting tod01. he'• 1olnf to 1a)' &Orne of it in 1 weekly column which wm be published by the PAIL y PILOT. Dr. Hajakaw1'1 first -column appe.an 10dl)' on the edilorial paft (Pqe-1). It wUJ continue ai 1, regular feature of the ~ltorial P•J• each f'iid01 in !he DAILY PILOT. · .. · I \ or up '" 17 cent ... per 1100 ol · • .,._ v•illl!t!On. ~ other me.....,..~ ii\" cruse from fi'i;e · to ~ven pert-en\ the· pernussible Interest rate on $9 million in bonds. iElection day ls Feb.· 10, -a week from Tuesday. ~ , . ' Chamber directors heard, epeakers pro and con Thursday before arrJving at their decision. Don Huddleston and former Costa A-fesa mayor Claire. Nelson both .argued a.gaimt the override because it does not have an ....... .~ ..... .. ..... -. . l: •• e--.d•te. • ' "r·bm' confJdence·ID the ldlool'boanf ba.1.1 ·ilon1 Im!"' ( C9Uld stve • b.lanllet order· ~indlnr · our chlldren 1· a d gnmdcblldnin.'' Nelson sakl: -Se h o o I SUpeftntendent Cunnlnaham answered his 11bjectlon, Uying, "I, like you in yoUr ·buslne&s, rieed to have the pmonUve·'Of-long-lttm. phmnlng. Th1t'1 good busiQeSS. ,, He sald ~the school board has shown that it does not always uae all tbe tu . IVlil,ble to IL Tlifs brthe.ffrlt )'Nr.11nc. unlficaUon ll·has llYleCI pmi\laible taxes tO the fttll, he 11aid. · . He said the ovcrrlde amoon~ b pro- jected on a continued lnflaUopary 1piraJ. Huddleston wanted to knoW' tr·the over· ride measure were defeated why· lt couldn't be resubmitted "under a dlf· ferent basis." , Dr. Cunningham &aid by law there •llUld.-bave to be a 90:dsy wJ.it between elections. He n.ld that would delay the . -. " date lte)(Olld' MarCb 1$ -._ alJo by law, lchoolemptoy" moat'be DOtlfled u they are ·not 1oing to !ha'vt a · job 'the following September.' He previously had been asked by Werner Esl;het what would happen if the ovtirl.de· lost .. Dr. Cunningham replied: "The only ·anrwer 1 can give you ltr all· honesty sounds like a threat. We would have to e1Jminate $1.2S •arid $1.5 million Jn-programs we have this yW. I don't want to preempt the bOard: it would be B.id . . \!>< bolt<l'I· ciecrafOil Wl\ll WOuld ... But ob""""11 ....... i.na.a --people (&ai.p..J;You qnl rn04up 1!111 milch In 'pencils .and boob.:• · . Former 'costs · Mesa-city manaatr Robert Vni'r, ~. IJlaintalninf· 10 o d •c!J>ots, ,la e..entlol , to the h1•£!hy , econoni\c. arowth..Qf Costa Mesa. He aaJd the city counclJ hll'ed him In \11:11 for the job of putlfnl an economlc bllO under the city .aOd he.told theln-litfoni' Ibey . £Ste CHAMBER. hp I) ,·. · . . Dress -Co:de Ba.eked L . • - ' . But Only. Fifth of Parents Reply • . ~ , I ,.;· . • • • .,, io.-'· ~,.!,.. -' Reagaµ: TeHs Y Yonth He Backs Birth Control eon,•ning ,ln SacramenlO. the 22nd An- nual YMCA Model l.t!gisJalilre today heard Gov. Reinald Reagan eridorse birth cOntroT, but only if such programs are not run by the 1overnment. 1be govemor11 iipeedl .to SOD usembled dele1ates -including a Jar~ number from the Oran1e Coast YMCA -noted concern over "the world's rapid population explosion and the need to control Jt, "1£ by this, they (proponents) mean a wide«a1e ·effort-an the ,part-Of public ·and private organizalion11 to infonn the pea.. pie on the need for birth control -based on individual and family . decisions -I would be in accord,'' ' he told the ~'.and advt.ors. 11U, hOwever ,· f.beY' art advoc"ating Mime rcrm of compulsory sterility on a mass basis;" 'be cot&t.ltlued, "then I wo•.lld be opp:ised." He warnett that to give· govemmew pawer to ~ide those intimate personal matters would amount to giving govern- ment power to control every other aspect of personal. life. • . "ll'lio WO\'ld play .GQC!t. b It less barbaric to stop a 1Uti~lrom s~. than il Is to stop a· life bun contlnuing?" he asked. the ,crowlng1 problttn of child , atiuse .and also for rehabllit.Uion for children who have suf!Ued beatings and other neglect with1n their families. Selected for the trip, Yt"ere Carl Steven Jr., 16, aenator. Estaicla Jllgh S<ihooJ: Mse.mblymen ?t1arilyn Waterman, IS. and Steve· Winnott, 16, Estancia High School, and Dennis Fox, 16. Newport Harbor High School. Delegates, beside• Miss Hunt.. from ~stancla !Dgh Scbool are K a I b y Hildebr~nd, 16, and, from Newport. Harbor Htih Scbool,1 Carolyn Anderson. 17: Sheri de Wolf, J 7: SUe Havens, 17; Diane Larzelere, 17, and Janice Whiling, 17. Steve Feskanich, 17, Estancia High School, wa11 elected Sgt~at-Arms of the SE.nate at the elections conference held recenUy oa the Long Beach·state College Campus. Dennis Fox ·will serve as a committee chairman for · the Education and · CUr· rlculum Committee during the prefen- tation of bills in the capitol today. Les Doak, community program· dir~· tor. for the OraDge Coast YMCA and aoe o; tbe .atal~ lldviaots !or the Youth 111d (Mrernment Program will.be the advisor to the committee. Pamls of ~ M.,. l!Jih School students have voted 203 to 173 lfl favor o( returning to a student dress code. But tiec:ause ol the less than 20 percent response and the narrowneu of · the decl!ion, Princlpil Frank Lopes said the poll doesn't tell him much. One thlnK he said .it indicates lo him is that 80 percent of the parents are not too concerned one way or the other. He said most or the ballota came· by mail and he admitted "he had no -way of kriowinl if any ballot& parents gave to students to hand carry w~e thrown away. . Lopef said ,he will be sitting down in a week or two with the student Educational P.~o}e .. '30~.d .. !jp· :.Otf ~ Rej ects Plea · . Of .BHie ·Sol . ' WASHINGTON cAPl -BW!e 661 Ems, a ont.Ume fertilizer tycoOn w• finaJ?Clal 4'allngs became. a naUOnal scandal, losttoday his flrlt bid for parole from a 15-yeat federal priaon terin. · The U.S. ParOle Board rejected tbe a~ pllcaUon of Ertes, 45, who wouJd have been elljrlblt· Morch s after oerVlng <ine- thlrd of hia term, Imposed £or aW!ndling finance companies. ' PSrole Board · Chalrman George J. Reed said the' full eight-member board made the decl.$lon after a complete review of ttte record in the Estes case:. The board set bectmMr 19'11 for its ntxl revie" of tbt decision. The PW>J, Ttx., businessman is serv· ing his 11entence for mall frii.ud and con- spiracy to defraud the finB:nc~ companle1 et the federal correct~onal ' Institution at Sandstone, MiM. • Re h811 ~en 1n· carcerated there sihce Dec. IS, 1966, after begtruilng his pril!Orl life as a convict at Leavehworth, Kan .• federal priMln .. Little has been heard of him since he entered prison. There remains little of the Estes tnagic that made him a millionaire in his 20s and extended his influence far beyond his Texas borne. StOf!k ltlarket NEW YORK (AP) -Stock3 continued to slide today jn moderatety active trad• Ing after--~1l'e-.r1le.r tethnk:aLrally~evap­ orated. CSee quotaUons, Pa1es 10.U). AllalyitS 11.Y Jnv:utors still remain on the -s.ideliri"es; ptSllmiltlc about the econ· omic outlook aritl 'Waiting out the decline. . Gov. Reaa:an offered remarb on the idealism of joung people, urPig them to maintain JI always, but ·use·lt Wisely, alllO discussing America's affluence compared to its extravaeanc::e. "Oun ls an over.spent aocitty," he &aid. Students Get Day Off The Governor also ot'fertd ~ t be I e g'uidelines to the. youq leelslatOrs, in- clud!ng IJ Senators •and Auemblfm'n Crom the Harbor Arta plus' ·numerous American fie1d Service cil'Chlnp student observers: -"Never ask government to do something for you Iha! ~ pOnonllly, would not be willing to 'dO yoanell.'' -"Never ask government to do anything to anyone el1t tJlll ""1 would not want the aovemment to do to you." -''Never ask aovenJme:nt to epeod ·the public money in a way that YoU would not be willing to have lt spend your money." .-"Never ask government to do for yoo whll you know ~ou can'llld '"""'d do (or younelf.'~ ' " ;"";\- Tiit H-'or~ dtlep)ion tnpllned r ... iht capitol Thursday at Orange Coun- ty Airporj, departing aboard an Air Cllifamla jetliner for the convention which winds up &mda7. · ' Elland• HJp School delo1ate Koy Hunt. 17, •uf!!Ored 1 bill on a IOC!al tragedy -child abuse -which will be btoulht lo U.. Mod•l J,eiialiture floor to- day for poaslble adoption. Th~ lct islatlon prqvJdes for curb.s on • While Teachers Learn ' Mondi)' will be a . .Uy <M' from school £<k 17,000 llMbor Area IChool children. ll isn't a holiday, but tbefr teache~ will be olherwbe occupied. rnstud of spending Mondi)' leaching, Newport.Mesa Unj£1ed'a &thool teacben will themaelvu be-the l1amers.•Tbe day will be devoted to brlnJlng them new knowtedae in education \edlnique1. The daf. of speaken and conferences "" •ll'ffd ID by lhe school board dutlug salary We;otfaUont la1t 1prin1 with the Newport-Mesa Education Association. reu for JJ)eaker1 will cost tietween 11 ,200 tncl,ltPIO and will be paid !or by the achoo! district, Don Hou~ director of Instructional sm'ICt'S, uld. Studtn~ be said, wtll den~ Jht , benefit rrom . the teecbtr1' l'ltJf knowledl•· Bin Hake. executm Hcrt!irY ol the leach<n. l!NQCllUan, ..., he II tntlien- dously -.cited , II !be oPPOrtUnity the school district la p(OVJdlnf. He ... kt te1ch- tl'1 will hive a Chance to• eMrpen their !ikllls. And he said ht·1s hopeful the·dsy, c111 be used n a rprtngboanl to the 'dealgn ol 1'il comprehen11lve, ln-urvice pro- gram." Speakers have been arranged .for on el,:ht Mlbjects wUh teacben. divided ac- cording to their inter~t; Hout nld. Topics will include riJi.Pdinl' human awareness, tndlviduaUEon, the strategy ci \elchlnf, neoda. cur- riculum relevance and partlci- patlotf. dlap0stic and.pUve t .. ch-lng, .110act.tdence ed ,•and s~al edlication • .z .. ' . ; . Lectures-. will be for Jn 'holir and then £04' the reiti<>l-lhe mornfn& lelcb•rt will bruk Into' 1m1'1. lfOllpa ·to dilcua !he topics In deptli.-.Dort~g Ilia afternoon they •IJI "ll'OUP~ 1(111Cht~bject ~"'r. DI" IVldt.lovtl £or the \elch- en, llld. dlocu .. how ""'I theJ amed an be applf!Cf In· theil'rr;o;:~_. , Tbc -iOM Will he h /II Cofdoo 4el Mar ind' Estanci. hllh liooll • • r'. • .... w ' ' • Development C.OOnctl and a erOup of faculty to analyze commerits made on ballots ~ discuss wpst to do about a . . . dress cOOe. Pi.fesa High's dre11 code was done away with last spl'l.ng after parent.a narrowly voted it out to a&aume the responlllbllfty themselves. Ballots were sent only to every 10th parent ln that vote. Tha student-designed-IUTVeJ lent It.self to · loslng1 · tndu.!ttial arts· teaclfer V. Oona1d Buell clal:!l\ed,. and so a new hlllot was sent out a couple of w_..aio ·with Buell'• argument on one side an<f an argument by EnJUsh Depart m,e n t Chairman Bill , Clarke for contlnulni without a drtu code on ~.otbtr."iide. : i;,pts uld ,..,,;,.,,i. fuaJcaW • certain Unanimity of oplnloii betwffn Patents wh~ vot<!d OJfboth llidei of.t!ie wUe· that gltla should be protllbtted Jrotit wMi;!ng certain clothes, "i>ld j~ana speclfical1y." Most of the comments dealt with sids attire, Lope11 said, afld there were sur:1>ri11lngly rew on boya! hair lailf.h-or 11ideburns. "Some 11aid·they w9'lld rather aee nice slacks and .-capris ~ J.tl~ shOrt dres11e1." · · Lopes 11aid while at pr.eaent ·U. ldxiot has no dress code on ha tr or type , of ctothea, it 11till l& required clothes be.. clean-and in good repair. "Maybe Wt~i'e not en!orcina what we have,'' he aid. "Tl:lis Is tbt area we 're eo1nl to ba.ve io really work over;" . ~~ -~ B.eg jn .... In CoStjt Mesa Thursday ' ' , I~ " l>tlMJy of lwo co.Ii 'hi.,,.8.t hellcOptera 11 scheduled next Thµr11!1y, when ·the whirlybirds will be flown• tilto the-dty for inspection and acc:t'ptancie •. The Hupes Tool Cbinp1ny>Of El Sefun-· do w!ll 1ioit a lunchtoo lot city offlcfel• at the ,Costa M•aa Goll •nd Country club, aite of the landing.a. Police Chief Roger E. Netli ielof.'tod•y the delivery ' Ind luncheon Will fornlialJY Inaugurate the helicop concept, including a six-monUI• pilot and observer trainln& ' . . .. program. During that time, seven men chosen for the helicopter patro~ will eapi,nd their eight-hour sh.lits training at Southland Helicopters, adjactnt to Long Beach.Airp:1:rt.:. • The.men will spend a1half~y in flight instruction "ind the mnalnder. of th¢ir time studying classroom-style, in· JU!trol techniques, maintenance and other facet.I of life .with a hellcopter." Pilots will 'be Officer• Frank Upham, Carl Jackson and Randy Nutt. Observers . "'.ill be .P~tiolrnen Jrm Wlgrier, Charles O..,vall Ind J .f m Strickland, with Officer 'Rim 1'1lmer aeleCted ·as~ alternate-duty obael'J'er. Baaed . on the pn>jected .training echedule, Costa Me.sa'J helicop patrol w\11 go Jnto &erVlct: over· the cf tr late· ~xt summer. · 'J'he . .aeVe11;;pfflcers ch_OStJI after ~ed screening of. a larp rrumber Of applk:aiits wlth!n Ute department will &peDd ·1 pot· BrQ"wn Asks Aid For Sta~e J~ . " . .. ' " '. SACRAMENTO (UPI)'-El!mund G. Bro'!" Jr,;:the·31.,..,...ld '!OD of the· forme.r_ ~auc: ioytmQr Th~Y­ nid· the. 1'g!1latll!'e, should approve' ad- dlt!cml IUPt'Ori funds 'for junltX'. col· Jeges. · . 1 Brown, ·a· Los· Anples '-JWlior college· bo.\rd."" trmtea mt1nber, told nrwamen he had'met wtth sevttaJ lawmaktfll .. to put a little heat'' on them' for lddWonal financln& bt:cauae the .junior coJJeges ar• 1'the· backhone" of C&llfoinla higher educallon. · A>ked ii he were eolng·to rim !oMec- rttar)' of ttatt, 'l'Brown replied: "I'm def· lnitely·fookinl.at thlt oUlct.'' .New-Offic~s Slated For Beauti(ication A new pon<I ol 0££1cer1 · to· Ind the Colla M"' S..ul\flcatlon CoinmiUte !Of Jl)O has been 81ected ""' ~ed. Chalnnan • w!ll be J .. cm.II,· vtoo chaf11111A '1"UI ;oe iifui1 Smjth, Mn'illl lie~ -itnn, 1iid l~ll!e"'tlll bo. Rj>Y Jt~kJml. !. , , ' :All ~!0111 wer1 un,1linou1., ' '1 ' ' ~ jl , L..1r ~ --· tft!nflli lri Odo1' ¥~' . _ TheY wm bt l•l'IDI out patrol patleml and otherwise prepa1'!ng forowhat'wlll bo th! .JeCOJid Mii., sy!RIJI In ~ .. County, Jon!ng the Huntington Bolcb H.B. Eye patrol. . '.. (' Captives' Wi;ves ·~ Biick i'n States . . . . ' . With Little Word KnowinJ little more than When, they depu;te,d, four .Southern C a,J i ·f o l"D I a Womeh•atrJv~ ln Los A:ngele1 today, en. dint • round·lhe--world mercy mlaalon In WMlf ·or men "miS!ing in lhe Vietnam war ind tl'le!r fanillies. ' · Mrs.· Carole Hanson or UIU Blrdrock I?"•e,'EJ'Tom, ll1d her three travollnc . ctmp'11io01 la~d at .9,25 ""'· .i.o.rd Pab Amedan filglit 84t Irom .Tok}'.o. "11 ·daddy coming· hoine?'~ askej:i..Todcf Hamon,· 3, who . hu ne.yer .. .een: Mldnl CoTP5 C.pl. Stepben P. llanron..bell- ~d u a prisoner ·of war, bJ North"\'let-nam. . . Hi1 witary ~tiler buii;t into turi at th!! unhilpPy ~untterUning of the POW "'}ye!'. que&t bi .iieareb "\M .word of °'elf'/ PP~t husbands' file. Tbe homecomllil w11·deeRIY ~onal, compared to the cool reception b 'porty rtcdved in some Communist naflons and the. belpless sympathy the.y were offered elffWMre. . · Or••lfe ·' • Ii .... ' • c Frtdlr, ,,,,_ ·10.-1970 •Irvine ' ' ' ' Swap F~---~Ia{ms ' ' . • t • • ' .. . { . . ~ .... . ._, ·-.. •. , •':.i . . lllic·, 'W';arj . ,...:. .. By JOllN VALTERZA Of tM Dlt"' l'llM Sllff A le'!kr in the court !lghi against, the U~ Bio) llild nchinge said lod•Y Ille ~ ··Company'1 fonnal 6tntement on the lime Thunday "lacked merit and Is .a raetloa to a rl!llng tidtl-of public con- certi." Frank R.Obinson, one of those• in· .. terw.nbig ill the Superior C.Ourt suit ~ '.J::'l:I to !QI the constltutlonallty of tbe .. , .... .., •• aid the public. including aovermntnt offlcla.ts, are steadily be-. .• -#"'in& wary of the 11)..year-old exchange '·ldel. --"The lut 10 y~rs have seen an ' ex· r. tiloalve increase in awareMss of the . nlae and proper use of public land&. What some officials have thought was .i ... li;eDeflcJal to years ago clearly Is seen not . -lo be beneficial now," Robinson .llald. ·~ ·. ~ Westcllff aerospace enginf!er ad':'.led · ·"that two <..'Our,ty supervisors alresdy op- pose the exchange idea, and hau one -;: m<n ·member of the board voted with '-tbein last week, the excftange would have i.-~·fa.Ued. ·,: The Rob!nton 1tatetnents followed the ,, commeata Thunday by Irvine Company .. "J>ruiilent WIIlfam Mason; who attacked _"stlf-lfltcre.st" groups for i;purring doubt! !rlbOui the value of the swap. l\1a.son also &{I.id Suprvisor Robert Bat.- tin's ' aftf!rnalt: plans were hastily con- ceived wlthOut ~hnlcal studles or public hearings. ''\Ye oppoaentl are crllJclztd ror hav- lnJ an inadiq6&te plan -or no plan - for bay developmenl Thia is curious, btc3use the JX'Oponents (lhe Irvine Com· pany and the county) have no plan or su pporting ! n g l n e e r J n g studies themselves." SQbinson said. lie said the ·1rv1ne alakment Implies that opj>o<ltlm lo their propoaal II led by a srnaU Jitll-i.nttresl group. "Presidenl Nixon, Governor Reagan, LL GOvernor Ed Reinecke and Senators Alai;t t...'raLSton and Georre Murphy all have made very strong at.atements about the need to prol«t and pruerve eeological values. U joinin1 with th~ Lo fw1her this goal -by golng to court to keep the Upper Bay in the :•ubllc trust - makes us a self.-lriterest group. we are proud to accept the label." Robin11on said. "We believe that the Irvine. Company ulttmrtely will realize that its own in- terest!: are best served by more a con· temporary ani:l./or aenerous atUtude. "Ma.timum exploltatlon qi the Upper ~ewpor: Bay waterfront ls IW'ely not in the spirit of th e '70s as erpressed by Presiden~ Nixon in hill Sta•e of the Union Mess.ige," Robinson added. ~**-ff *** " ~ Swap Feud Grows : Irvine Chief, Supervisor at Odds The late5t public statemen ts on the con· "However, he previously claimed that '~ traver&lal Upper Bay Land exchange are his new plan was made to utlafy those spawnJng a feud between Irvine Corii-interested In pre.serving the Upper Bay p.any Presiden t William Mason and €oun-in its natural state. 1 ty Supervisor Robert BaUin, a strong foe "Now he says that be sugge sted his of the swap. new plan because the previous agreement ~ The latest blow came from Mason this has been allered ln the past two years I mamlng. He seized on Battln'a.-brlef since the state Lands Commission ap- statementa made Thursday. The Super-proved It in 1967," Mason "said. \ visor &aid he wu confident this MW at-' He described . the alterations being the I ternate plan for the county to buy the Irvine Company 's "ao-called tax holiday" ;j majority of the bay and develop It-as a on laDds Involved in the trade and the 1 public harbor would work. county giving up its: right to unilaterally He added that he doesn't contend that get out of the trade with 90 days' notice. .., the prestnt exchanJ;e agreement Is un-"Some of the confusion iD Mr. Battin's constitutional, bat be claimed agaln tbat _ m_ind is under&tanc1able becawe be wa1 ;-it has been ao sUbstant:iatly al~ Jn not aittlng .u a auperviaior oonsldertng recent year1 Ullt It DO Jogger reaem~ the ~r1gfndtr¥e. J11?r the conslder~Uon.s the original covenarit. leading to l1ie amen(hnent of the original But ltfason hotly replied this morning agreement." Mason said. that Battin Is "confused." !\fa.son defended the removal from the "l 1m Clad that BatUn agnea .that the . ta.x rolll of tht exchqe lands as a nor;- exchange ls constltuUonal. : ma\. con~uendi of condemnation ac- L' Uon"'· , ' , 'I ' . , ' ' H,f'fikel.tci llil I.Ix rleeze action• lo T FAA ;.',4 ' #;,,"" 'lllel'OllnlJ cond!'inning the •ami property WO · -tt.ge i.n far a road and the agree ment became involved in litigation, over prlcts or oth· Hurt in Freak Seaplane Crasli t £. rorptlul pilot who left the landing • whetll down. escaped Injury today when hill seaplane flipped over upon louchdown ; in the sea off catallna J1Jand, but three other men aboard were burt. J TTle victims included two Fedtra1 Avia· l tlon Adminlstralion employes probing an • earlier Avalon Harbor 11eaplane crash : that killed two Ora.nae. County beaters " recently. FAA :1gent.s Vincent Mulrooney, "· and Kent D. WWaon, 28, were ll•ted In good conditJon at Avalon Community Hospital, alenc with Uls Angelu County .Constable Johnny Windle, eo, the island's chief lawman. & 'I1le Catalina Sea Planes Inc. aircraft : piloted by Chorltt K~ck, of San Pedro, was an a landing approach when the . ove-looked wheel!!, protrUdlng below the ; pontoon~ hll water. · The twhHnctne plane, on a fllahl'from · IA>nt Beach Airport to 11>e l1land. w11 Oil· ly aupuy damaged. accordtn1 to spoktsm.en fot the operating firm. . ' -• • • ' ' ' • ' • ' ,• l ' DAILY PILOT -ol>ttt N. w,,, .. ,..., ••• " •"' 1"1*11tl'ttf J.,., l . C11•lrt V!<A ,.,_...,., -G-1 IMMft" lli• .. •• k'•e•il ..... T"'"''' A-Mw11ki11• M-.ll'lf l 4JW c-.--IJO Wetf 11., Stot•t M.m .. A,J4,..,, P.O. IOJl 1160, t261• --~ IMtell: nu w.1 ••1-. Mu!Mf't ....._. '-"'' m ,._, •- tt~ ... di; 1>111 tMCll l'llltw•t4 ' er matters . If, for instance, Jhe disputed land be- came iilvolved ln llUgatlon. thu1 tytna up lta chancea for development by the own- er, then Maaon speculated that Battin would naturally 1'flght vigorously to have the property taken from the tax rolls as being tflt only fair' and equitable thing to dci under the circum1tance1." Contract Review Ne,vs Surprises Douglas Aircraft A surprise announcement that award or the $7 billion F·15 aircraft contract lo McDonneJl.Douglas Alrcraft Corporation may face a review came aa ju1t that to the finn's HunUng\on Beach aer~pace branch today, Pentagon officials In Washington an· nounced they are deeply concerned about the company's hlrln& pollcles, baled on provisions of fedtral equal oppQrtunity employment laws. "Hmmmm.'' pondered Larry Vltsky. public relations direct.or at McJ>onnell- Duuglas Astronautics Company, which would have no direct role ln production of the fighter-bomber . "I knOw absolutely nothing Rbout It."' he sai d, adding that he would consult ex- ecutives in Santa ti.fonlca or at the firm 's he adquarters ln SL Lou.11. The Air Force disclosed that before lhe contract was awarded last month, of· ficials failed, as rtC{Ulrtd by law. to con- duct an audit of Mc.Donnell·Ooualas to make sure the company was fully com· plying with equal opportunity standards. A Defense Department 1poke1man said it was basically an Air F o r c e responsibUlty to conduct the audit. The spokesman, Jerry Friedheim, 11ld he would not go IO far aa to say that ti.fcDormell·nou,111 wu In danger of 1<11-Ina the contrad, but It w11 obvlow the matttt was belna alvtn unusual attcnUon by Ille Pentaaon. Secretary of the Air Force Robert C. Seamefts Jr. broke off a vi!lit to Ramey Air Fortt Base In Puerto Rlco and flew to SL Louis to meet with cornp1ny of· !icial~ .rt>out the contract provlalons. A Penlagon stalement p o r t r a y , d Seamans as deei)ly conctmed that the preeontnct audit of the comp1ny'1 hlrln& proceduru had n I been conducted. Frledhelm declined to ~ 1ptclf1ClliY that the hiring of Ne1ro employes w1s In· volved. Frledhelm said the lack of Ille hlrlJlg review wu called to the tttt:ntlon of Seamw and ~ry of Del1nie Melvin R. Laird by the Rev. Theodore M. HesbtU&h. chalrmtn of the Pre1ldent'1 civil rights tomml!slon. Frledhelm did nol say how the matter came before Hesburgh. Ca$"~ ·~ T~~flB f\.ttorney H·eld · ·1:n:~:Estate · Thett .... An attorney accused of stealln& pearly $500,000 tn bonds fron\ the estate of an ailing Newpurt ~ach ~an Is today being held in a. Texu jail aCCUJed ol Interstate tra0$portaUon of stolen property. PederaJ oficlal1 in Bi'ownsville, Tex as, u id today they were hoping to "schedule further court action for Escondido lawyer Patrick s. M. Millon. 47, "for: possibly Monday or TUeJday." Mitton II In cultody In fleu of 15Q0,000 ball following his arralJM>ent Tburoday nlghl Federal officers. tipped oU ~ Meiican authortties. moved in on tht 'Muth'e 47· year~d tawyer Wednelday u he at- tempted to return to the U.S. be left more than two months ago. He allegedly crossed the border last November with nearly f500,000 worth or bonds filched from the estate of John Sal· mond, 79. of 2164 Vista Entrada, NeY•port Beach, a retired Union Oil Company ex· ecuUve. FBI agents and lnvest11ator1 from the San Diego County District Attomey 's of. lice took up the chase afttr being advised ol the theft by Salmond'• son, John Sal- mond Jr. of 18121 Bedford Lane, Hun- tington Be:ach. Tbe YOllllitr Salmond and his mother, Mr•. Helen Salmond of the flllnlly.bom<. are CODlltrvatorl of the tub'1tntlal UPI ,,__.. eJtate. ' Salrllond io which he wa rned the con- servator that the bonds Wtiuld not be retumed unelss he (Mitton ) reCeived half their va lue. That letter suggested t1 mee:tin~ between the two men at which details of the transfer of funds could be discussed . Federal oficlals today ssld there is "absolutely no doubt" that the letter ce rne from Mitton. It was also revealed today Ulat fl.fex- ican officialJ bad been watching Mltlon'5 prtigress through four Mtxican provincei ror 10me Ume pri°" to Milton's anesl A federal agent would only say that the ar- reat of the free spending la}VYer had been delayed "fn the interest of recovering as much of tbe stolen money as posstble and we think our methods have be.en Soc· cessful." Phillip Morris Buys Control Of ''iejo Co. DEPUTY ROBERTO DE lA PAZ ESCORTS MITTON Mltoon wu appointed u la...,or !or Ille eotai. by Salinood. and ahorlly 1!- The Mission Viejo Company, wh.leh last year outpaced all other Orange County developers in sale of new homes, has sold ~ate control lo Philip Morris Inc. for $20 million. · ____ F_B_I _F_lnd_1_M_;;,_1_in..:g:_A_11_o_rn_1_:y_l_n_B_row_n_cv~l.ll_a;_, _T_•_•·----... terwards, It II allelfd, dlaappe.ared with mO!t of.the-bondt: entrulted to ht• cart. He allegedly ~a letter ·io th• younger The $20 million investment. said h1ission Viejo Cempany spoke&man to- day, will be the working capital to bl.sure continuation of C<lnstructlon on schedule dlspite the expensive m9ney market . Fron• Page l CJIAMBER VOTE •.. could begin to do that they had to jack up the school district. ··r simply want to call y·our attenti on to the fact the job Is only half done," he said. He contended if residents don'l fina n- cially support the school!! they can look forward to more and more taxes because industry that provides a tu: base won 'l come to the area, Ex·mayor Nelson said he believes the use of an override should be to meet an emergency -that Is an override over the * -{:{ * Neivport CofC Scliapl D~wn Vote Called Off A Polling of Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce directors on y,·b~ther they endorse the upcoming school election has been celled off in fa vor of a general membership meeting on the subject. In checking with directors, Chamber Manager Jack Barnett learned many or' them felt they didn't know. enough about NewpQrt-~fesa Uni!ied's school finance mea5ures to make a judgment . So a breakfast meeting to which the whole cham ber memberihip is invited will be held Feb. 6. for the purpose of hea ring pro and con argume nts and ta · kins a vote on endorsement. The school proposals will"be decided by lfarbor Area residents Feb. 10. One prop- osa l is for an override tax increase of up to 87 cents per $100 of assessed valuation. The other is to increase the permissible interest rate on $9 million in bonds from five to seven percent. The bonds were ap· proved at fi ve percent a-year ago but money lending rates have aince aone higher. Jack Collapses- S«:> Does Theft Pla11 for Pail· Trouble ts when you're workini under a car on a lonely dirt road at It p.m. and the vehicle collapses on you . \Vorse trouble is whtn the car belongs lo someone y,.·ho reported it s!olen a few hour s earlier. Suspicious California Highway Pairol officers ran a routJne check on the aut(>. mobile Thursday. after racing to the re- mote spot off Canada Road in the El Toro area, to save the victim. One man told the Jnvtstigators the cer fell orf a Jack while they were changing a tire, but CHP officers wondered why they were changing the transmission and other aear. too. They decided it had all the earmarks of a car.stripping. "legal llmlt." Dr .. Cunnlnghim said that Is not so and ~ he doesn't know of one othe r echool district in the · entire state. unless it ts . Emeryville ''Which. is nothing but· smokestacka," that operates on a ha.sic tu. He aald in 1953 the state ol California contributed 44 perctlrt of the cost of education to Harbor Area school diatricls and today it is down to 19 percent .. wlt;h local property tupayers bearing most or the rest or the load. , • ' lluddlcston sai d the area's assessed ·.'a\uation (on which tax revenue is based) has grown 40 percenl in the last three ye:.irs. _ Dr. Cunningham Sawt n r o 11 men t grO\Ylh has eaten lnto that so the assess- ed vsluation increase per student has been 2~ percenL Bul more importantly, he said, under ' school ftnancl!" \ay,· the \1·ealthier a district gets the less nioney it receives rrom the state. "You lose darn near as much from the state as you gain in local taxeS." he said . Lucille Pinkley said she doesn't think money is the big q4eiition and that persons who vote "no" l"ill do so because they, don't like th!) educat lqn the schools arc giving. "Lucy, this business of education is getting to be a kick," Dr. Cunningham 53\d. "Some people are saying, 'What are these !IChools doing?' Others are saying. 'They aren't doing enough.' We can ne.ver satisfy everyone. My criteria for a pro- gram is always, 'What's good for the kids.' " The chamber of commerce directors voted by secret ballot in deciding to en· dorsc . Edison Expansion Hearings Resmne In LA Tuesday Public bearinp on tht southern CaUfornia Edison Compal'I)''• appUcaUon to expand Its power plant In Huntlncton Beach will reawne Tue!lday In Im: Angele1. ·Orange County will send elaht wit· nessea to the 10 a.m. aeuion call.ct by the Ca.Mfornia Public Utilities Commis~ion (PUC). The bearina will take place ir. the commission's Los Angi!1les offices, State Office Building, 107 S. Broadway. Amoni those scheduled to ldltlfy are : William Ftlehen, Orangt.. County Air Pollution Control Officer and two of his engint:ers; Dr. O. C. Taylor, act1ng direc· tor of the University of Califorpla's stateWide Air Pollution Research 'Center t.t UC, Riverside, and George J . Taylor, administrator of the California Air Resources Board's air quality manage- ment program. Also sched\lled to appe.i:-are Dr. A. J. Hnaaen-Smlt, chairman of the CIUlornla /.ir Resources Board and Cal Tech pro- fessor who Is acknowled&ed r.ationwlde as an e:ipert in the air pollution fl~ld ;' Dr. John R. Goldsmith, heed of the state Department of Health's EnVtronm~ntal Epidemiology Unit and meteorologist Erwin Kauper. The Edison Company Is seeking PUC penniaslon to build two nevo units at Its Huntintton Beach plant. Fitchen has denied a county license on the. grounds that exp1nsion will lead to violation of the county'!! smog control law. 1~rms giving the cigarette company control of the voting stock of Mission Vie· jo required thef rash investment for con- vertible debenture5, stock "nd optlonS'. Uni:ter the agreement. Phlllp Morris may al!JO purchase a majority of' all outstanding stoc K by exercising . options.- and paying an additional $13 .5 million. 1'he cptlons ma y not ·be. exercised sooner than three yesrs or lat.er than five years. Mission Viejo will continue to operate autonomously. it was annoull~d', headed by James E. West. chairman. and Philip Reilly. president -and chief oper,atlng of· ricer. Policies will not changt, it w1s an· nounctd . A~uisitlon of Mission Viejo Compan y control. was the tint.expansion by Philip hiorris Into the community development fie ld. The dgarttte company has · In· ter~t1 in brewing.-razor blades. pacll:ag· tna. ch~h11 gum. apecla.lty chemiCal~ and papers, pla!ltics and hospital IUP· plies., Organized In 1966, the 11 ,000 acre land development has elready built, aold 'and filled 2800 homes on 2,000 acres \\lhere cattle grazed four years ago. Population of the planned communlfy Is now about li,000 and I!! expecled td. he more than 50,000 by the end of the decade an~ 100,000 by 1900. Bel Air Fire Probed BEL AIR (UPI) -The cause. of a1!re which blackened two seres of brll.!h in thi m.ounlainous regions north of here Wa~ be.in& iDvestigated Thursday. · . : Seven companies of city flrtmen and two helicopters brought the fire uttder control in 30 minutes. No homes wert damaged . WITHIN A Safe COMFORT & STYLE AT A PRICE CHAIR STARTS AT 5129. AVAILABLE IN A LAROE SELECTION O' COVE RS AT THI! UNIELIEVAILI! PRICE O' $12'. COMMODI ON SALi AT '159 Auto records check~ and reporttd the 1967 sport sedan had been stolen from Lte E. Newman. or Costa A1esa. etirller in the day and both men were pla('ed under arrest.. Gerald 0. Gilreath 1nd Gary N. Per- kins , whose airs and addres1e.1 v.·ere llOt immediately available today, were boo'k· ed lnLo oran1e County JaU. DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -DREXEL -H!~ITAGE \Vhlch. in some y,.•aya, Is better than Jy. tn1 pinned under .1 car on a dark. cold January niaht. Tot Listed Critical REDDING I AP )-A 1\\-yen-old·boy w11 rescued wllh grapp11ng hooks from the bottom of a r1ln..swollrn, murlcy crtek near ht. home Thursday. Erie Wahl w111 llsttd In "critical" con· d1tion in f\fercy Hospital. Reddin,:. . ' NEWl'ORT llACH 1727 W11tcllff Dr. 642·2050 Omt flllAT 'TIL f --~- INTlltlORS Pr•feulonal lftterler 0..1, .... Avallalof-.All>-NSID LAGUNA llACH 34.! North C-Hwy. OPIM JllllM.Y 'TIL t , ..... '•" ,.,_ .... e4 .,.... c...., ..... ,,,. l I 1. I l I . .. . I I 1. I • • I 3 I I ----. • Malta Bur•t Floods Montreal ' - Students Storm L • It , . ' . '\ Hayakawa BOS'l'OM <UP!l -More than 25 persons were lnjul'f'd aud 30 arre5ted Thursday night when hundreds o f youthful demonstrators, block· ed from entering a Northeastern U n t v e r s I t y building where educnt'lr S. I. Hayakawa was s p e a It I n g , clash::.:: with police ftnd went on a rock.throwing spree. llf:at auditorium was filled and no more people would be allowed Inside. • Shouting "Everyone gel! In,'' "People in, pigs out," ,and "Rush the door." the youlha at~mpted lo battle thelr way put the offiei!rs who beat thtm back with nightsticks. The demonstrators hurled At least 13 police anrl more t"::n a doien youthl were in· f\!r.'XI In the clash that sprtad into a business district. Poli~ i ald . at lea s t 30 or the derooristratort were arrested In the protest over the San FranclliCO State co 11 e g e President's appearance. The turmoil started when rocks, chunks ~r Ice and Friday, J~U'1Y 30, 1970 OAIL V PILDT 5 Girl Plans to Wed 'Kidnapillg' Siispect ' MAMILA '(UPI) _ -A Le<aroz will be charged wit~ California girl told police to-ahduetion, Illegal dltcharge ot day she plaMed to marry the a weapon and trr?spass. ac-: Filipino they 1aJd ltldnaped cording to Police Chief Tomaa: her from a euburban oollege -e . Karin1al o( su burban ~ dormitory three days 8'0• Quezon City, •here the in- Pollce put D e b or a h cident occurred. ~ Steven.son, 20, o{ south San '0etectlve1 found M I s Ii Francisco ln pro,ectlve Stevert90n Thur s d ay~ custody and continued UMt Candelaria, 60 rnlles southe ~ search for her suitor, Cris of Manila, and brought her ': Leearoz, 23, nephew of a pro. Manila for questioning today. vincial governor and ~ Lecaroz, who had been wilh gressman. her, slipped the dragnet. " One of Montreal's buslest:-atreeta Is knee hJgb.wilh rushing water after a main broke Thursday caus- ing severe flooding and \raffic jams in the down- town area. Hardest hit was the 47·atory Stock Ex· change Tower when water flowed through the twC>-- slory 1hoppi.ng promenade and caused the entire building to be evacuated when the power went out and elevators stopped . rricre than 1,000 perstJM -tried : ~wballs.' breaking sc':'..eral to force their way Into the Ell wlii!ows Jn the sWdenl center. Student Center ~·here the con· The doors to the center were lroversial Hayakawa was smashed . d~llve:-ing ~ s1>4:ech enUUed About 45 min utes later, the "Can the Un1 vers1ly Survive In • . the 20th Century?" as part or youths aga1~ a.ttempted to get t~e university's distinguished into the bu1 l<hng, but police lecture series. dro\'e them into the univ.:?rsity Israel Sets ·New Rules Of Judaism ' Borman Quits Space To Focus on Earth • blema.llld opportunlU•• llld to pt the Amerk:an people to ac- Who C.res? No othtr newspa,ptr In the world uim aboUt )'OIJf' communlty Hke your comm11nrty datly M'WSPIP'f' dots. It's Ult DAILY PU.OT • A force or nearly 100 police quadranle and onto busy Hun· officers aided by trained dogs tin glon Avenue. The barred entrance to th e demonstrators ran down the demonstrators when school of. street breaking windows in ficlal1 announced the 1,30(). at.eris and cars . JERUSALEM (UP!) - Government off I e-1 a Is ex· pn'JA6ed confidence today a cabinet agreement defining who ls a Jew will win the ap- proval of Israel's 121J..rnember parliament, the Kne,s.,eL SPACE CENTER, Hotuton (AP) -'!be astzonaut who commanded the fir.it manned ocblling of the moon plans to retire from the space program and head a foundaUon that wl.U attack America's pro- blems on earth. tively ·participate in solving I ---------------------------------------------, tbeae problems," Borman .aid II in a statement released by the space agency. Premier Golda M e I r ' s pemment averted a political crisis Thursday by agreeing Israel will make rabbinical Jaw the ba5is of detennlning who is a Jew, but will register member1 of families by mlJed marriags as lrraelis. The Supreme Court touched off the controverty last Friday by ordering the t1raell Interior Ministry to register as Jews the three children of Israeli naval commander Ben- jamin Shabit and his non. Jewish wife. Frank Borman, a 41-year-old Air Force colonel who directed the Apollo 8 Olght al'Qllnd the moon on-Christmas Eve in 1968, announced Thursday he is resigning from the service and the space agency on July t. He said he and Dallas millionaire H. Roee Perot are establishing a fo Ub d a t I o n which will attack preMlng na- tional problem.!!. The astronaut said he would become vice president of Elec· ironic Data Systems, tnc., a computer services company owned by Perot, who tried Ian Christmas to deliver parcels to war prisoners In North Vietnam . Borman said he and Perot will establish lhe American Horir.ons Foundation. Oay Blasts Militants ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) - "You niggers give me more trouble than the whites!'' Casr;lus Clay shouted to about 100 black mllltant hecklers. The group had interrupted the defrocked heavyweight boxing champion's lecture at Muhlenberg College Thursday night. . The hecklers, some wearing African dashikas, criticized Clay -who prefer:i the Black Muslim name MuiJammad All -for buying a $'15,000 home in Philadelphia. 'Ille court ruling brought angry protests fron1 orthodox Jews here and abroad, from the Israeli rabbinate and from Israel's n a t lo n a I religious party headed by interior minister Moshe Shapiro. A five.hour cabinet meeting called to seltle the c r I s I & Thursday agreed by what government sources said was "Jt is our hope through the use of mass media, particular· ly television, to fully lnfonn the American people· about our most pressing national pro- "Do you want me to buy a heme In the ghetto?" Cla y countered. "Why do I want to Jive In a rat bin and have a rat bite my child?" a compromise. -That a person will be rtglat.ered fonnally as a Jew only if his or her mother was Jewish and Jf he had not adopted another religion, or if he converted to Judaism, in line with rabbinical law. ~ -'That non.Jewish husbands or wives and the children of ~ t.helr mixed marriages will en· joy the same ri ghts as Jews in Israel but will not be formally 1 registered as Jey.·s. • i British War Strategist Hart Dies ·~ MARLOW, England (AP) - Sir Basil Liddell llart, a I Brltlsb army captain in World ~ War I who had more influence on modem warfare than many generals, died al his home Thursday night. He was 74 and one of the world's leading mllltary writers. and theorists . Gassed In the llH6 Battle of • the Somme, invalided in 1924 t and retired Jn 1927, Ca pt. Lid-I dell Hart was convinced by his l months In the trenches of the need for surprise and mobility in fu ture wars. He was an ear- ly exponent or air power and armored fore~ and in his writing developed the "ex- panding torrent'' tactic of It· tack. ·-· ~eiteifNOOlfJ~ MID-WINTER SALE SUITS & SPORTCOATS REDUCED 4 The British army paid him 1111.le heed: the G<nnans took up his Ideas and on them bas- ed their victorious blitzkrieg through France in 1940. Gen. HMS GuderiaTl, who led that c=;;;z=-----------.,.,_.. Panzer charge, called him 1• "the creator ot the theory of I he conduct of mechaniz.ed ~ war.". . .\II on Board Escape Sinking ATilE NS !UPI) -A Greek pauenger 5hlp struck a reef and cau&hl fi re today In lhe Aegean Sea but all 3 4 pal'lsengers and 54 crewmen r?ICaped without Injury. A Ministry of t.1erchant Marine 11pokesman said the r 2.llllO-ton lplros, owned by the lonlkl Steam:iihlp Co.. was destroyed. MID-WINTER CLEARANCE FROM OUR WOMEN'S SHOP Vk BIDTIQUB ' e H.l.S. e LADYIUt; e TOOTIOUl e JODY e DON SOPHIST tCATlS REDUCED 4()0/o AND MORE DllSSl.S PANTS SWlATllS VESTS SIClllTS l lOUSlS 3467 Vi• l ido • Newport 9e•ch e Phone 1 67].45 I 0 IPltritv off,•• Par.Int For Stlt D•v• -All Ot~er Div• Toa) : \ . EARN MORE. • • With Bank Sa ety! first Notional now offers new higher rates of interest • with full be1nk safety-and your deposits ore insured to $20,000. • 4Y2% on regular passbook savings accounts. • 5% on Gold Passbook accounts on all funds kept on deposit for o full calendar quarter-minimum balance of $500. • • Certificates of Deposits under $100,000: 5% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 30 days to 1 year. 5V2% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 1 to 2 years. 53J4o/o on Certificates with maturity dotes for 2 years or more. • Certificates of Deposits of $100,000 or more: 6V4% on Certificates w it h maturity dotes from 30 to 59 days. 6V2% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 60 to 89 days. 63;4% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 90 to 179 days. 1% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 180 to 1 yeor. 7Y2% on Certificates with maturity dates for 1 year or more . As alu·ays, your sai·ings earn the maximum hank in- terest at First National. Stop in at any of our 5 con- venient locations and select the account that/its your needs best. , F First National N Bank oF oRANGE coum B MAIN OP•JCt AT TH[ l't.AZA IN OOWHTOWN OJllAMGf • eJll._.CH O•PICll1 O"AN011 T\ISTIH I COi.LiNS: CHA.PMAJ\l ·PPIOSPlCt SJ\IOll'PIJ\IG Cl!N,.TEPI •COSTA MllAI MllA =~· VtflOf OfllYI AT ADA MS AV[.• IANtA ANA111TH I T •• A;r T\J)r.t INI. WIMll" ,.0.1.C. First in Per.sonal Banking Ser•lce Since 1906 ,, • . - • , l .:, .• ·:-: ,· ,}'; ',· ; •,, • '•.r. ... ~ ··. ·, ,,. . ... .. .. r • . .,_ ., -• .. . • 't •• ----~~~~~~~~-----------------..;. __________________________ _ • DMI'.Y 1,'ILO'm EDITORIAL PAGE -. >. • Face the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce put a lot of 1ime and a lot or effort into a school sex education aurvey ln Costa Mesa and Newport Beach. The survey ~ent to 8,250 parents a nd returned by 2,0i9 provide! ihe best data available on what Harbor Area parents think about the schools taking on the re· sponsibility of sex education. Careful reading of the resuJts leads to the con· clusions : -A majority of parents are interested i.n a school sex education for their children il they, the parents, are given an opportunity to be involved. -1'1ost parents believe they did not receive ade- quate aex education as a child, yet most say they are -adequately infonned. and can be suUiciently objective and detached to instruct their children. Tatiulated results of the questionnaire will be usefuJ to school board members as indicaUve of the opinion of parents on matters of sex and drug education. ,. -Also to be taken into reckoning by the school board will be the forthcoming recommendations on "family life education" by the Newport Harbor Chamber's education committee. •.. The committee, ·under Chairman Nolan Frizzelle, heard testimony over a six-month period from teachers. professors, doctors, juvenile oUicers,~ school admini- stratoris, political opponent• and proponents -and stu- dents -before surveying fhe parents. • Committee members deVoted many hours drawing out these _people and thtlll the chamber · put up about $500 lo m!lll the survey afld women's division members prepared the mailings. The school board is understandably pieoccupied right now wtth the district financing election coming up · Feb. lQ. But the school finance measures soon will be decided and the Chamber o( Commerce will present its One . Reason for Campus Rebellion By S. L HAYAKAWA President, San Francisco State Unlveralty All over the country people have been !otely puzzled by the violent rebellion of young men and women in our best col· Jq:u. and universities -Berkeley, Harvard, Columbia, Swarthmore, Stan· ford -I hesitate to mention San Fran- cisCo State in the context of lhese more pr~gjous inltitullons. Many or the general Jlt!blic are Infuriated that the most highly privileged young should be the least grateful for their privileges. I too have been sorely puzzled. But I want to submit a possible explanation. Perhaps we are having these troubles not because our colleges have failed m. but because they have In &ame ways done their work too well. Most student rebel! art of the upper· middle class. They are to be found large· Jy in the liberal arts departments and the social sciences -disciplines in which \·erbal facility Is highly prized. and in which it is not always nettaSary to check one's words against the stubbom factJ of life (as you have to in chemistry or home economics) in order lo pull down an "A." THE CARDS ARE STACKED in favor of the verba\isls. Tests of scholastic ap- titude are easy for those with a ready flow or words. Those who do well in such tests are courted, sometimes by two or more prestigio•Js colleges. They can hardly be blamed if they begin to feel a little superior. From there on they can suceffd in college without really trying. All they have to do ia major in English or sociology. (l majored in English myself.) Furthermore, the liberal arts student is heir to a tradition that goes back to the ancient Greeks .:f distinguishing between the "liberal" and the "servile" arts. 'I'IM!liberal arts curriculum was for the education of genUemen, who by definition did not work for a living. The "servile" arts -from coo.king to barbering to c:om· merce to engineering -were for working people and slaves. THE ANCIENT CREEK prejudice against work is reflected to this day In the American university in the scorn of many liberal arts professors of "voca· tionalism".and in the contempt of many English majors for auch subjects .as com· rrerce, engineerinir:, or. ~griculturc. Laden with such pre1ud1ces, I h e verbalists find it easy to define themselves as an intellectual aristocracy -an elite class -and to begin to act like one. AJ an elite, these students Ct speak of the white student acti vists -the blacks are another problem) belitve themselves Slow Courts ~ Com111ent8 FApa.ola. N.M., Su: "ll is frustnt1ng to law-abiding dtlzens to <lbserve th.e tortolse-llke eac;e of our courts, and 1\ must be partacularl,y fruatrating to those tJw enforcement offlcen charged with gatbtrtna: evidence and • making the •r· mi.. It mllll be very ~tying lo those cblrpd for the loftier the cases are dtll)'9d 'the bt«tr Uielr chances of btlng KqUI&ted. smot. up a couple ol lawmen. Dlnop two _.. ond ..-u11 lh• f.'OUl'tbaUle al JOu Co fret. But bewart · of t'UJni WICll' saturdey nlgbl at1<r bnli.blac a bit too much. The court11 rqm quill qllid<b' ID ~ IUCb "' U-" to bt above the conventions and restraints of everyday life. They despise the useful citizen and take pleasure in shocking the lower and mid· die classes by otttrageous speech, dress, and behavior. They will not be bothered disclWling or arguing matters wilh those witb whom they disagrtt -they simply want their own w13 al once, by force: if necessary: ... I r ; MIXED WITH THIS 1rrogance is a sentimental identification wlth t h e downtrodden, not unlike the idealitallcm of the peau.rit Among Russian student revolutionaries in czarist Russia. This sympathy tor the underdog gives a veneer of moral justification to their violent tactics. (Let me add that the nonviolent ma- jQtity also identify with the ullderdog. The present student generation is serious.ly concerned Vt'llh society. It is this seriousne:i,., that makes them suscep- lible to revoluUonary propaganda, with tile result :that m,any young people who genuinely believe in democracy are sometimes led around by those who do not.) Of cOurse many professor$ are elitists too, indoctrinating students Jn the re· Jecti on of middteclass standards and en- couraging resistance lo administration. bovernment, and police. At San Francisco State in the fail of 1968, student gangsterism 1ovas rampant and bTlcks were flying through c.lassroom 1vindows. RADICAL PRESSURE g r o u p s dominating faculty meetings blocked the introduction both of resolutions e<>n· demning student violence and of resolu- tions calling for police protection against that violence, presumably feeling that the elite ought to seltle things among themselves "-'ithoul the intervention of the lower classes. So the big qu estions of quality educa· lion have to do with both professors and students. Can professors. luxuriating in their atademic freedom, stop shorl of an egotistic irresponsibility !hat threatens the verv existence or the academy ? And Can younJ people of outstanding talents be p:iven a superior tducallon without thei r ending up bt?lieving that !hey are a superior order of being, i1n· n1une to control by custom or law. ex- empt from the responsibilities of rational discourse and debate , possessed of the right to dictate to others through non· negotiable demands. and entitled to an1nesty the moment they get Into trouble? Perhaps It Is harder to teach democracy than we ever im agined, especially to those who have most richly enjoyed its blessings. B ii George ---. Otar George : What's the btst way to wrlle a letter to a girl vou v.·ould rtally ll);a to get to know· bttl er? CShe'1 m•r· riod.I CAUTIOUS Dear Cautious: The best way to write to 1 mar- ried woman? ~ In th~ ~1nd. right befor'e lhe tide) comes 1ni CONFIDENTtAL TO NASSER ' t don'l ... why you keep Uidnl me. You never lllten. (\\It~ to Gtor1e for ustlua ad· vice. Tbret cb1lr1; nb-•altint.) Issue Soon ...,,.mmendaUons to th• school board. School trustees tl!en should faca the issue. The survey gives them a handle on parental opin· Ion. With that to go, plus whatever soundings they want to -make of the broader community, they should be able to reach. some decision. The board has gingerly skirted sex ectucaUon for a couple of years now. Intelligently ~ndled and guided by the feeling of parents, a curriculum could be worked out to serve a worthwhile purpose without creating an emotion.al war. P SA's Record at Stake Pacific Southwest Airlines appears to be moving successfully·ln Its bid to acquire Orange County'1 )>ome- grown airline, Air California, despite the feelings of some Air Cal personnel who'd rather leave things as they are. If the sale goes through, PSA should have ample warning of the tempers of Orange County folks when it comes to additional flights, air pollution and aircraft noise. The Orange County Board of Supervisors is on record as opposing any piore flight schedules in and out of the county·owned airport -and opposing as well use or any heavier aircraft than are now in use there. And, city councils of Costa Mesa and Newport Beach are on record opposing any night flights or use of any aircraft that makes more noise than the Boeing 737s now used by Air Cal. ln fact, they indicate, some noise reduction could very well be in order. PSA has a good record Qf' community relations ·in other cities it serves. To preserve that record, PSA had better be paying close attention to the Orange County people it intends to serve. . . ' (Cl Naked Body Ha s Many Meanings Cont~11aplated for February Ii, jroU~g lady, whom I take to be a stu· dent at the University of Wisconsin, writes to me, apropos a rerenl paragraph in which I said that the people who prt!sent nudity on the stage and the peer pie who object to It are "both victims of :the same fallacy, imagining that 1 naked body is a sexual object ... " Her question: "U a naked body 'is not a seiual object, what is?" I oould tell her, but not within the moralistic confines of a family newspaper. Actuall), ~r attitude 1a exactly the kind of thin.i I w~ writing A -l./"'' •. ' '"1;-j Sydney ~. Harris about -the reduction of the body to ob- ject, or merchandise. A NAKED BODY CAN be, and is, many things to many persons: to the lloc· tor; ao ana tomical or phy.sJologlcaJ entity to be restored to wholesome functi oni ng : to the artist, a llv:lng piece of form and structure to be captllrtd in = oil or clay or st<lne; to Uie "m ur or masseu se, a e<>mplicated · work of muscles and 'tissue and nerve-elms to be rejuvenated ; to lhe photographer, a subtle and strikingly lovely~studf ln plane and contour and shadow. . And e\·en to lhe lover, tr the naked body Is a mere sexual object, or mostly a sexual <lbject, then the "love" is in the loins and cannot outlast such transitory needs. Love must include sex, but the more exclusive it i& of other qualitlea, tbe faster it tires and dies. • · lNDEED, THE BODY in terms of a "sexual object" as such Is largely a cultural product and an act of the mind. As Ortega put it: "Nine-tenths of that which Js attributed to sexuality i!l the work of our magniflcient ·ability to im- agine, which la no longer an instinct, but exactly the opposite : a creation. '1 This is why, <lf course, naked bodies on the 'Stage are not eroUcally stimulating, even In our severely repreased society . After the first moment of shock, they are just bodies. laden with no more gexual significance than the naked body of any other species of creature. FOR \\IHEN THE cultural taboo is lifted, and the mind can no longer do its imaginative work, l~n the body ceases to be a mystery (as in most primitive societies) and becomes simply an organism whlch can be us~d in n1anv dil· feren~ ways. for protection, for profit. or for pleasure. · It has become largely a seuxal object for as becal.L!e., first. it is exploited com· mercially lo an almost pathological degree, and, second, because of o u r hypocrisy In promoting its desirability while at the same time prohibiting Its free functioning. We have managed. in this way, to obtain the worst of both possible worlds -neither the moral satisfaction of our Puritan forebears, nor the innocent engagements of t h e primitives, but the frustrations of the former ind the promiscuity of the lat- ter, 'Tbls 11wby 1 called us "vlctln1s." Quotes ff. G. Lowtn1&el1, l\t.D., PHtsburi - "P'eir and violence are so prevalent In our countcy that I v.·onder if lho\t might not be.one GI: the factors contrlbt1Un1 to our druf"dependent aociet_,.0 II. Wllll•rD Way. S.F. -.. There art lhooe whe demun lhe PftM " dlllorted, slanted. •nd untruthful. The prol>lem the pm,\ haa la that all of ttt perlOTttltl mutt bt recruited from the: hwnan race:." More SDS-Plotted Violence \YASHINGTON -h-~ore maniacal violeru:e Js being plotted by the berserk \Veatherman faction of the revi:>lutionary Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Two characteristic run-amok <lutbreaks are contemplated for February. One is aimed at a big university that has been "'racked by SOS-Wt.igated destructive disorders on several occasions. Negro participation is being sought. ParUcularly wanted are black ex· trtmlals, especially the gun-toting and sh:>ollng·prone Black Panthers. The ifOUndwnrk · for these new out- brdb·1.tl;tas laid at the recent fOllf-day meeting of lhe Weatherman's national council at Flint, 11.tich. -from which the press and photographers \Vere forcibly excluded. .. VIOLENCE" was the theme 1rom Lhe beginning to the end of this truculently guarded gathering. It began on that incendiary note with an obscenity-interlarded harangue by Bernardine Dohrn, former inlel':-OTganiza· tional secretary of SOS, and closed the same way with an equally furious d1alribe by John Jacobs, a leading \Vea the rm an agitator. Virtually all the speeches and most of the discussions were replete with the kind of di sgusting obscenities favored by ex· tremists -white and black. They see.rn to consider the frequent and loud use of these putrid expressions as evidence of revolutionary fervor and defiance. This applie s to the sloppy W<lmen as well as the bushy-haired and unkempt males. In fact, the squalid females appear to take special delight in the loathso1ne obscenities. Dohrn's "keynote addres5" "·as full of them. AUeri·G~ltlsi.u@i ' ' , TltE JIAU WAS decorated in keeping "lth th!? "violence" theme arld the revolting obscenities. , Hanging from the ceiling were large portraits of revolutionary ruJe.rs and leaders -Ho CN Minh, Fidel Castro. Che Guevara. ~1ale<>lm X. Eldridge Cleaver, the bail-jumping Black Panther . ol9clal now a fugitive in Algeria. Also hanging from the celling was a huge cardboard machine gun, with a placard r<'.:iding "Learn How To Use It" One wall was covered with alternating black and red posters of another Black Pc:-r.ther leader., Fred Hamptun,,killed in a shoot-out witn police. On another wall was a 20-fl. poster with big drawings of different caliber bullets, with a full description oC eacb. Also on this poster were pictures of Weatherman "enemies" -foremost a.mong: them Chicago's Mayor Daley. INFLA~ll\1ATORY TALK -In the opening fulmination, Bernardine Dohrn clamored for niore violence. Derisively she berated her fellow Weathermen for having (obscenity, obscenity) a lot and being "motivated by a white guilt trip."' "\Ve didn't fight around Bobby Seale \\'hen he was shackled at the co9spiracy .. (Chicago seven) trial ," she screeched through the loudspeaker. "We should' ha\'e lorn that (obscenity) courtroom apart. We didn't miash them when the (obscenity) M'lbe peace creeps~ hissed David Hilliard on tl<loratorium Day in San F'rz.ncisco. We didn·t burn Chicago down when (Black Panther) Fred Hilliard was killed (in a shoutout with police ). "We have been (obscenity) wimpy on armed struggle. We talk about being a fighting force alongside the blacks, but a lot of us are still (obscenity) honltiu and we're still scared of fighting. We have to get Into the armed struggle. Violence: 11 our aim and motto." THIS EDICT WAS stridently echoed by Mark Rudd, top Weatherman leader and veteran of numerous disorders and demonstrations. "We look for pitched battles between militant groups and the pigs (police)," he Oellowed, "on a scale and with a violence that win make those in the past Jook like Sunday school picnics:. Violence is the way to the revolution." How to go about "making the American revolution '' was discussed and argued at great length. More time was devoted to thi!': topic than anything else. Ted Gold, a prominent Weatherman, asserted that "an agency of tbe people or !he world would be set up to run U.S. society and economy after the defeat of U.S. imperialism abroad." This brought a rejoinder from the floor. "Does that mean that if the people of the world suc- ceed in liberating themselves before American radicals make the American re\'olution. then Chinese, Africans and others wili take rver here and run things for white America ?" "\Vell,'' replied Gold. ..Tf ii takes fai.c ism to bring about the American revolution, I guess we'll have to have fascism." By Robtr! S. An .. and John A. Gold1mlt'° At ··n e ar Old Hudson High A young man I know is bored witb high school. He says ii isn·L relevant. He's absolutely right. How can life in high school be relevant to our mature adult society ~ Vet t can 't help recalling my years at dear old Hudson High ~·ith the requisite glow of nostalgia. Those were the days ! Ho'v happy \1·e \vere in our innocence before we had to go out and face the real 11·orld Jn my day. the boys all wore cashnt<'re :1v.·eater.s, dirty e<>rds and soddle shoes. \Vhile the girls v.•ore cardigans. plaid skirts and saddle shoes. \Vell. come to 1hink of it, nQI all the kids dressed like thal. THERE WERE poorer kids and a few blacks and Orientals who wore .. .I can't remember what they 1vore. We never paid much attention to them. But anyway. we kids in saddle shoes prelly much ran things. We were known rather vaguely as ''The Group ." "'fost or Dear (;100111' Gu : fftlt , .. ,.... ltllKll ·~·~· "-" "'' M(ft .. tll'f "'-ti .... IMWl'f-, ~ .... ~ ,.. llffVI i. GIMfllf Gvt. O.!IJ ~lie!, llarviy Pease, the percnniaJ .school bond foe, should have made a re- cordln& ts-vears ago. Would have saved • lot of lime and ink. -D. O'L. • Art Hoppe u:i; lived in !he fancier Eastern Section or IO\\"n. \Ve controlled the school paper and clf'Cted lhe student bod y officers ... Not <ilv.·ays, though. 1 r<'member the '38 election \\•hen Nick Dickson won for Pres- ident. .. He really wasn 't one of us. NICK AL\VAVS v.•nnted to be part of The Gtoup, but he was never quite ac. cep1ed, probably because ht!. tried too hard. He was a short. curly·haired kid with a funny nose. His clothea: wereQ't -exactly right and he earrled his boob in a bdef- case. He was ldnd of a grind. And 11.lii tiaan- ner was very sincere . Tao aifice~ mmt of us thought. ·.• Anyway, he'd been beaten for ffresidenl before and alter that he lost for Cafeteria 1'.1anager. So we didn't think him much of a threat. Our candidate was Hubert ... What "-'as his name ? He was a bouncy, en· l hu.siastic kid who worked In the PrirK'I· p11l "s Office. A real comic. Bul, troUbl~ wa~. nobody took him seriously. So Nick woo TED \\'0:-.l FOi\ \ 1ct p;resident that ~'l!ar. JLttit an honorary job. He 'fl'U a big. nice kid -big but dumb . I remembe r he got in a figtil With the editor or the paper, 1vho W8S one of us. After that V.'e picked on Ted mt>rciles.'>ly, making him tht butt ol all our jokes. J 1UPPQ$f., the majorilv of kldJ not In The Group admired him for lak- ing us on. But, then. they nevu spoke up. Barry was tht cheer leader. a real gung-ho type. "Go team, go!" ht'd yell as our boys went of( to battle -even when they wert 6thind 48 to nothing. Of course, thcrt wm a few kids who didn't go out for the team or root for Hud- son High at the ralli es and games. We really shunned them. They were guilty of the worst crime we knew : thev "lacked school spirit." · THEN I REMEMBER the Head Moni- tor. Jay Edgar . What a fink ! Always re. porting us for thi s little thing or that. Seems like he'd had that job forever. Then there was Eugene. the dreamy class poet. and George. the tough kid fmm the S<luthside who gave us the creeps, and Teddy, who got expelled after a wild escapade one night and •.. But there I go, prattling on abo~t the. J::ood old days. And what I started out to say is that my bored young friend is not only absolutely right about high school not being relevant, but he should be clad ()f it. After all. what kind of adult mature ~ ciety would this be if those who ran k be- haved like a bunch of high school kids'!' ----- Friday, January 30, 1970 Tl~e edltorkzt page Ot tM DttUu Pilot seeks to in form rtnd stim· ulate readers by prea:enlitlQ' IJl.11 newspaper'• opinions and cmn- mentary Otl tor>ica of it1lcresl and slgntflconct, by prooottngr o forum for lht txpre1s1on of 01tr rtadtrs• opinfona. and by prtstntma tht diver.st vfew- f)Olnt1 of fn/ormtd obsffffra and rpokcrrnn on topici of lht """· Robert N. Wffd, Publisher I • • r - I I ' ' L I ·--~---------------------------- -------- ------ - ------ -- DAILY PILOY 3 3 Overrides on Ballo t Laguna Schools Seek Huge Bond Issue ·Oliay By BARBARA KREIBICll ot tM CMltY 1'11.t Slltl Looking ahead to district needs for the next live years, the Laguna Beach Uni.fled School District will seek. voter ap- proval on Feb. 24 or three separate tax override proposals and a $400,000 bond issue. The four items will be listed separately on the ballots to permit voters to con- sider them individually. Each of the lax override proposals may be approved by a Harbor District Vote Urged by Solon Briggs A bill calling for affected v o t e r s themselves to decide the question of whet.her to dissolve the Orange County }larbor District will be introduced Mon- day in Sacramento, it was announced to- day. Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R· l'Ullerton) will introduce the legislation at the request of the Orange County League of Cities. lo an end," declared Briggs, a staunch and critical foe of the districts' conUnued existence. The impending action carries out a threat Briggs made to the Orange County Board of Supervisors Ia.st October in urg- ing that they put the quesUon to voters themselves. simple majority vote. The bond issue will require a two-thirds majority for ap- proval. To provide voters with more fn· formation than can be included on the ballot, the school district has prepared an analysis of proposed expenditures under each of ihe four proposals. ProposiUon A calls for a 65-cent (on $100 assessed valuation) override for five years beginning In the 1970-71 fiscal year. Jt would provide revenue for the follow- ing needs: U brary Books: An initial outlay of $60,000 for the high school plus $250 per year for periodicals and $8,000 for microfilms. The junior high school needs 5,000 volumes costing $25,000, Aliso and El Mc::o schools need t,000 volumes COS• ting $5,000 and Top of the World school, 2,500 volumes for $12,500. t . A Shot i1a Ti111e Emerald Bay resident David Anderson, 10 , ob-fire station, 501 Forest' Ave. Veterinarian Loge, Classroom rt1aterlals: These include serve~ Dr. ~1. \V. Loge's technique 'vith needle. The along with colleagues G. R. Ekeberg and E. ~·ork books, records, maps, charts, patient is David's collie, Jill. They're getting a pre-Douglas Tignor. will be on hand to administer vac· globes, art supplies, pencils and paper. view ol annual Laguna Lions Club rabies clinics cinations to dogs four months of age or older. Fee "It Is time for this controversy ltl come The League of Cities had asked for SoJCh action, withcut respor.se by supervisors, so the county-wide group asked on Jan. 8 for Briggs to intervene in the capitol. Estimated increased needs per student scheduled Cor 7 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Tuesday at main 'vill be $2 p_er ani1nal. per year is $5 for the high school and Jf;;iji.iii,i;:iii;r.iiiiiiiiliL.· ;x::~;;:;:, c:.::::.: .. :;-.;;,,;;~.=-;;..,u_i;;;:_;;;;;o.o;.;;;.iftj,;;;,,;:;·•C:~~·::::P.el'.'t\iiii~·"iiaiiio':>:>:..'=mi::='i<:i·i1#';;mm:?=;i•.;:;2ii·ii·"Ci1.ii:111. .. :i·iii:.!':~iii:ii~ junior high, $3 for the elementary schools. Dowta tlae M •• ISSI OD Trail Mission Viejo Subdividing OK'd hOSSION VIEJO -Orange County Planning Commissioners have approved 92 acres at the corner of Alicia ParkWay and Jeronimo Road for subdivision inm industrial and commercial lots. Mission Viejo Company spokesntan said the acreage will be divided into 44 Jots. e AFS lll eetlng Set MISSION VIEJO -An organizational meet Ing for the formation of an American Field Service chapter al Mis- i;ion Viejo High School will be held Tues· day. Anyone inlerested in belonging to the organization may attend the even t at 1 p.m. at the high school. AF.S is a program formed to promote lntemat1ona1 unu1::1 ;-o,,.,..;:, • .,, :.:::~ !1''- dent programs 'vhich bring foreign students to this country and send American students abroad. e Sopr flno In Concert LAGUNA lltLLS -Mezzo soprano Jane Westbrook will be presented in con- cert Sunday. Feb. 8. The 8 p.m. concert \Viii take place in Geneva Presbyterian Church, 24301 El Toro Road. Proceeds vdll be used for the purchase of a pipe organ. Performance fees will be $1.50 for adults and $1 for students. Tickets can be purchased at the door or advanced re- servations can be n1ade by calling the church office at 8.17-2323. · e Smo/,.e Cl.ha le Sia le d CAPISTRANO VALLEY -If your New Year's resolution was to stop smoking but you haven't yet. here's your chance. A five-day smoking clinic will be sponsored by the Laguna Niguel Sevenlh Day Adventist Church in the San Clemente High School litlle theater Feb. $ through 9. Co-sponsor of the clinic is the El Camino Junior \I/omen's Club. The session begins at 7:30 p.m. e lload Cl1a119 c 1Vlxcd LAKE FORE.5T -Aeling on rro:im- inendations from property O\vncrs and the planning con1mission. the county Board of Supervisors was turned down the request by Deane Brothers lo change Canada Road which runs through the Lake Forest development to Lake Forest Parkway. Assislant Planning Director Stuart Bailey said a precedent had been set when a similar request made by the Laguna Niguel Corporation to change Crown Valley Parkway to Laguna Niguel Parkway was denied by the board. e 1lezo11l119 A11pr oved EL TORO -The Board of Supervisors has approved the rezoning of 124 acres in the El Toro area for development by Deane Brothers. The area, \Vhich was changed from an agricultural zone to a residential tone. will become part of the Lake Forest community. e R egistra r APPol n ted SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Col. John B. Sweeney. U.S. ~1arine Corp!! (rcl.), has been named re11:lstrar or Cal State College in Los Angeles. . A career o(riC<?r with 27 years service, $wttney 51 of 27101 Mission Hills Dri ve f'ttlred ,:.om the Corps in 1967. He then 1ervcd 11 community relations director for Ohio Dominican Colltge. Columbus, Ohio. "The League of Cities wants a dissolu· tion election," said Briggs. "The Board of Supervisors opposes it." "In ca~ like this," he continued, "the only log!cal place for a final decision is at the polls where the taxpay~rs can make the decision." Great controversy has been generated in the past over the idea of dissolvin& the district, to which all Orange County cities contribute, in favor of ano~her method of control. Lag tma 'Revival' Sets Happening For Teenager s Saturday night will mark grand open· ir:; for the Laguna Beach Teen Center, now known by the kids as "Revival." The center, which has had two pre-- opening dances, was succ<:sslul in raising funds lo hold the big event Saturday night. The •·eoogaloo Juice Realm" will pro- vide music for the happening stheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. and last unUI mid- night. It is en1phasiz.ed by the coordinating comn1ittee for Revival that only junior and senior high school sudents and persons to the age of twent)' will be ad- mitted. Students who hold membership cards 'Viii be admitted tree, while those without cards will be charged 75c. Membership applicatioru. are available at the fu:'-":~~I between 4 and 6 p.m. to- day and Saturday. Membership fee is $1 per year. Parent's sig nature on the ap- plication form is required. 'Sunshine' LSD Fom1d on Girl The kids call it "orange sunshine" but Laguna Beach police take a dark view of LSD, even when It's pakaged in pretty orange-colored tablets. fifty of the colorful pills turned up in th( purse of a Hi-year-old Chula Vista girl Thursday night when officers stopped to check suspicious behavior of a group of young people in a car parked on \Voodland Drive. When the girl thrust her hand into her purse and refused to take it out. officers suspected she might have a concealed v•e<1pon. It turned out to be no more than ::i plastic bag of the "sunshine" pills, but Lhat 'vas· enough to bring about her ar· rest. The glrl later was turned over to her parents. police reported. Candidate's Son Taken to ·c6..trt ' NEW YORK (UPI) -The 17-year-<>ld son of Democratic gubernatorial aspirant floward J. Samuels was referred to the Youth Counsel Bureau today In con- nection with his arrest on drug possession charge!!. Sanluels stood with his arm around his \\"ifc Barbara, as their son, froward Jr .. appeared before Judge Aloysius J . Melia in fl<tanhatlen Youth Court The youth was arrested Nov. 2 in the East Village and charged with possession of a hashish pipe and three capsules con· lalning amphetamines, a drug which re- quires a prescription. Indians on Alcatraz Seek Foc1nc1ation Aid SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The American Indian Invaders of Alcatraz are preparing requests for grants (rom some of the nation's biggest philanthropic foun· d:uions to help build their cultural and education center on the old prison Island. The proposals probably will be sub- n1iftcd to the Fot'd and Rockt.fcUer foun. dations and other large funds, aCl!ordlng lo Grace Thorpe, a Sac and Fox Indian who ts one or the Island's 114 occupants. ' Texts and Supplementary Texts: An · l estimated $3 per student per year in- crease is needed for basic reading ,, materials, supplementary texts, an-~, thologies and materials for remedial and ! 1 gifted programs. In-service Training: Present ex-1 penditure of $15,000, less than half of one ~ percent of the budget. is below average 11 and should be doubled. l ' •suRE • • • MERCURY SAVINGS llealtb Service: The district has for Y~:lrs been below the county average with only one school nurse. A full-time high school nurse, elementary school nurse and _health education program would be financed by increasing the present budget of $14,000 a year to $30,000. ~ HAS ALL OF THE ' ) 1: Addlllooal Staff for Growth : Average growth of t~e .district has been five per- cenl and this 1s expected to continue in ' the next five years. To meet staff needs i~ lVi~I be necessary to employ 1 ~2 • librarians, a high school llbrary clerk, thr~ elementary library aides. two special reading teacpers, at J.east one elemenlafY counselor, a gifted program t teacher and three high school aides. 1.i . Salaries: A conservalive Inflationary •' 1n~rease. plus regular annual increments ' I NEW HIGHER INTEREST ~ "'Ill requtre $150.000. Transporlat.lon: An increase of 5 per-:) cent will be needed to cover salaries gas SAVINGS ACCOUNTS! and oll, bus repair and payments on iease r,' purcha£cs. '*' 'MAX I NT' ' k I Approval or Proposition A the school ma es SU re district •taies. will provid~ sufficient l • • funds to meet aU the above needs for the ne;~:i:,~~~'~allotit<m.PropositlonB. ~,·~1j ''MAX-INT'' ·1s Mercury's calls for a .W.Cent override increase for ;11 the period. It may be approved separate· 1¥ or with the other proposals. Proposl-~;~n !;:;~~Id pl'Ovide funds for the follow· 1. copyrighted high interest 'fransportallon: Buses should be replaced every 16 years and the first or 1• h four such replacemt:nts is planned next I po ICY ass res t e year when a 19-year-<>ld bus wi!; be ~ U retired. Three moro buses will be needed . • • • • in the following three years, for a total . '1lSlolllOt,t;OO.Threedislrielautos vin-~' highest legal rate to tage 1951-57, should be retired beca~se of high :naintcnance costs and an estimated JO ~ars ~ill be ne'?Ced in the five.year 1 period. Eight ..i ucks for gardening, mov-' M ' I ingsuppliesele.wlllbeneededandal956 ·,i ercury s savers. tr~ctor s~!:t be replaced. Approval of lhlS proposition also would provide funds to resume field trips, which were cut when the last override failed. 1 Maintenance: Present expenditure on ~ bullding maintenance is four percent of ~he budget. And additional $20,000 a year 1s needed at the high school and $5.000 a : 1 the other schools. 1 Operation: Custodial limes at all ·J schooll; now is at a minimum and ~; teachers and administrators sometimes step in to take over emergency duties. An estimated $10,000 ls required to increase ,J the custodial sta!i. Replacement of Equlpmeat: Funds wlll be needed "to replace furniture , playground equlrn1ent. office and ehop equipment in the amount of $11.000 for the elementary schOols, $3,000 for the juior high and $5,000 for the high school. Additional staff and salaries: In order to attain the average in other districts a five percent Increase will be needed in lhe $585,000 now paid annually in salaries for non-teaching personnel. Proposition C. the third lax override proposal. calls for a 20-cent tax rate In- crease to be used for capital ouUay needs. This would include purchase of • • . three bw:es al $25,000 each, autos worth $17,000, trucks worth $20,000 and a small rJ passenger van for $4,000. It aleo would I provide some funds for needed e:qulpmcnt at the schools. Proposition 0 on the ballot is the bond issue which will require a two-thirds 1na· jorlty for approval. The dl!lrlct has an opportunity to purchase additional land at To;:i of the World which would augment I.he recenUy purchased 6.7 aCl'f: riarcel to a total 1Jf 20 acre1. The aite would cost an estimated $150,000, plu& $100,000 for level- ing and $50.000 for .nalntenancc. The rt· molnlng 111111,000 of the llOQ,000 bond issue would go toward other site ac- quisitions and Improvement of existing facilities. Purchase of available land now. the aistrict malnt.alns, would re.suit In :. sub.'itantial saving. ./, __. .................................................................................... Transfer your savings to Mercury Savings now! OPEN EVERY SATURDAY 10. A.M.-4 P.M. Open Mon.·Thurs., 9 A.M.·4 P.M.; Friday. 9 A.M.-6 P.M. MERCURY SAVINGS EXECUTIVE OFFICES: The Mercury Sivln91 Bulldlng 7112 Edinger Avenue Huntlnoton B"t1ch and loan association HOME OFFICE: Tho Mercury S1vlng1 Bulldlng 1955 V1lloy View Str"I Buena Perk ,. I r I • •• • • Do\ILV PILOT Ftldl1, J1n11atJ 30, 1970 Carswell Vote Tuesday Wife Admits Hll·ing Man To Kill Mate GOP Leader Prediets Heavy Confir1natio11 ~llf ~1 ""' D•lly l'l•t l ttlfl R~lph Nureyev, the Russian ballot dan .. r who defected to Eng- laN! Jn 1961, has been 5igned to plq the part of his famous dancer co1'tt.ryman, th e late Vaslav Nljln- ~ in a movie. It '''ill be Nu re- yeV'J first screen role. Producer H.-.,.Y S.lh:man said in London thti! movie J.vould be directed by B~ director Tony Richard1on '1a.;tfng in July. ~ . Julie Schultz. born Jan. 12, yaw11s as parents ft.Jr. and fitrs. Gary Schultz. of If i1isd-O.le, fl/ .. take her horne frtml Childre11's !t1ernarial Hospital i1L Chi- cago last \Vednesday. Born witlt a congenital heart condition, she und· erwent a four-hour open heart oper· ation wlien four dnys old to become tlte youngest person to survive cor· rective lieart surgery. • U.S. District Court Judge J•me1 Paarson has issued a n order tern· porarily permitting 'vomen to tend bar in Chicago. A city law permits only women who are members al the tavern owner's family f r o m tending bar, and Miss Carolyn Mc- Cri mmon said women have h a d .!heir·fill of this inequali ty. Parsons issued a temporary restraining or· ~er, preventing police from arrest~ ing women ba rtend ers until th e matter ca n be revie\ved. • --·---;-:-r .. Periurns who donate $10,000 or niore to the Li1tcoln Park " Zoo in Ch icauo for tile construe. ' tion of a t1ew r11011ke11 l1ottsc should be l1011ored by lu1vin!1 011 ape named after then1. it It a s been suggested. 'flie ad11ertilbif1 i f irrn of Neednn1 , Harpe r nnd Steers, I nc., n1nde llic suogestinn and added t 11 a t perso1ts who give lesser an1ounts .~hould be given certificates of adoption for ape babies. • Opera 5oprano Maria Callas v.on HOUSTON (UPI) -Billie Clodlell<r, a plump, blonde, 40-year~ld widow, kneel- ed tG plat"e a yellow chrysanthemum on her husbaod'1 grave Wed llf!sday. She was arrested Thursday and charged with hav- ing him murdered so she could collect $250,000 in in5Ul'ance. Her husband, auto dealer• Tony W. Clodfelter, wi.s shot to death Jan. I ln the office ol his l"'<i car lot. Police detettive Jim Pierce said Thurs- day Mrs. Clodfelter hlred Wesley Leon Colbert, $6, to kill her husband. Cclbut was charged With tlie mun:ler. He wa9 al.. ~ady In custddy in Harris County Jail on a variety of cdminal charges. At first *s. Clodfelter sobbln&IY denied hiring ·~yone to kill her husband, but la.tcr _admip_edJo Pierce she had paid $20,000 to Colbfrt. "l tolci him that I did .iot want it done around the bouie, and I did not want him to suffer," she said In a statement to police. "He a'greed to tbe;e term s. "f didn't car1 about the insurance, no matter if I had~ work every day to sup.. port my children. I justed wanted to be rid of him." Pierce said Mrs. Clod feitc1 's bes t friend, a 38-yea~-old sales woman, gave police a written statement. "She began teUing me of her p.roblem w:th her hus- band and sai d she wanted to get rid ot hi m," the informant said. , She said she Introduced f\.trs. Clodfelter to Colbert In f\.1ay. "I have been the gi>- bety.•een carrying mrssag('! back and forth ," she said. The informant said Colbert was to receive $20,000, but that as far as she knew be only got $900, which was Palace Siege • Ul"I T,..,_.., PLOTTED MATE'S DEATH? Mrs. Billie Clodfelter dtlivered the day after the slaying. ft.1rs. Clodfe lter began s o b b i n g hysterically when police came Thursday to arrest her. "No, no, no," she cried. "I didn't kill him . I was at my husband's grave yesterday . I put a plant there." "I just thought they'd come to ask so1ne more questions about hi s murder " she said, telling of he r reaction w~n police arrived. "Please spare my children anything you can ," she asked weakly, choking and sobbing. The children are 15, 11. and 10. Manila S(udents Attack Marcos for Second Time ~1ANILA (UPI ) -Students led, by a left-wing youth group attacked the presi- dential palace for three hours tonight be- rore being driven back by police and Mar- ines. One group stole a fire truck, ~mash­ ed it through the palace gates and set it a/ire. At least one student demonstrator was reported dead of head wounds in the bat- tl e in which the studenls attacked with Molotov bombs, stones and bottles and were beaten back with clubs, waler can- non and tear gas. Electric U1tlo11s Vote to Accept GE Wa ge Off er NEW YORK <UPI) Un Ion negotiators decided today to recommend membership acceptance of a new con- tract wiUt the General Electric Co. which wou ld provide a 25 per~nl wage increase and end the 1on~est strike in GE history. President Ferdinand E. ~!arcos and his family were inside the old Spanish Mala- canang Palace but the students were driv· en back before they could reach the living quarters. It was the second attack on Marcos in a week. The street fighting spread toward the heart of Manila early Saturday (Manila time) and there were reports of looting, harassing motorists and burned cars more than,.a mile from the palace. ft.far- cos threatened to fire the Manila mayor. Anned Forces Chief Gen. ManueJrYan said "nol Jess than 100 were arrested;" Hospital checks indicated al least 100 injured. A preside ntial spokesman, Francisco Tatad , said in an official statement the attack was the y.·ork of "subversive ele- ments." lie said the students set fire to Lhe Malacanan g Clinic, burned a firt: truck and two olher vehicles and wounded m~mbers of the presidential security Unit. The demonstration by 3,000 youth s was called to protest alleged police bru· tali ty in their first attack a wee k ago in y.•hieh police beat off students who hurled botlles. sticks and stones at Marcos and his wife as they left congres,,. ~1arcos was not hurt in that aUack either. WAS HINGTON (UPI).-The Seoate Judiciary Commiltee decided \od ay lo cut ufr public hear.ogs lilto the Supreme ColU'l nomlnaUon or . .fudge G. ttarrold Carswell and begln closed-door delibera- tions M Tuesday. Chair1nan James 0. Easlland (0. Miss,}, predided that the Carswell nom- ination would be approved at the Tuesday meeting but Senate GOP Leader Hu gh Scott said no time for a vote was set. "The committee Will recommend his conflrmatlon by a good margin,•• Eastland said. "I will have the majority report ready within 24 hours." Scott said the vote would come TUesday or Wednesday. lie predicted only four o embets of the committee. at most. wou1d vote against Carswell. · -Scottp redlcted Senate conllnnatlon by a v ... t ! of 85 to 15 or 80 to 20. 1'he GOP lea1er sald he did not expect any "new and dev astating revelations" in the Carswell .:ase. At a news conference, Sen. Walter F. Mondale (0-Mlnn.), announced he would vote against Carswell. Sen. William Prox- mire (0.Wis.), also has aMounced his opposition. A new civil rights charge was raised Thursday against Carswell, and was deiicrlbed by Sen. Birch Bayb (D-Ind .), as "the most damaging testimony so far." John I.Dwenthal, professor of law at the Newark, N.J., campus of Rutgers University, accused Carswell or hostility td volunteers \rying to register black voters and to their northern lawyers. He recited a personal experience he said bore out Carswell's 1948 pledge that he yielded to no one in "the firm , vigorous belief in the principl~s of whi\e supre- macy and I shall always be so govern- ned.'' Since his nomination Carswell has repudiated that statement, made In a campaign s p e e c h for the Georgia leitlslature 22 ye ars ago. He said that philosophy now is "obnoxious and abhor- rent." Lowenthal testified before the Senate Judiciary Ccmmittee Thursday, however, that when he went to Tallahassee, Fla .. Carswell 's home town, to get seven volun- teers out or jail, he ran Into re~itance from Carsy.·ell . then a U.S. District· Court. judge. 0 He used all th e lit tle ways which a re- Bomb Exploded In Saigon Theater By Terrorists SAIGON (UPI) -Terrorists tonight exploded a pla.itic bomb in Saigon's lar&est movie theater. The blast ripped a ho!P-through a wall Into a huge American bachelor officers' club next door. U.S. military police said "a few" persons apparently were injured. They said all of the injured appe&red to be Vietna mese. Security forces sealed off the area which Is on one of Saigon's principal strt!t l intersecti ons In the business dh1trlct. Hundr eds or spectators gathered. The explosion in a rest room on the se.- c<ind fl oor of the theater cam~ during an intermission at the Rei Theater which had about 250 patrons at the time. The Rex adjoins the six-story Rex bachelor o[Cicer!>' club which houses several hundred field grade Amrican of- ficers. a standi ng ovation rrom a socialite aud ience \vhich saw he r in her first straight acting role in the movie of the Greek tragedy "1'.1e- dea" in Paris. The audience in- cluded singer Maurice Chevalier, Mrs. Sargent Shriver, \Vifc of the U.S. ambasszdor to F'rancc, an d Mr5. Georg•• Pompidou, wife of the president of France. Miss Call· as was escorted by the film's di- rector, Pier-Paolo P a~olinl. Officials for the International Union of Electrical Workers (JUE) and the United Electrical Workers (UE) announced their decision following morning-long separate meetlngs. Twelve other unions involved in the strike are expected to follow the pattern of the agreen1ent in local negotia- ti ons with GE. The agreement now 111usl be <icceptcd by the full membership of the UE ancl the tUE to end the 14·week strike against the nation's fourth largest industrial firm . conference board. the union decided to submit this pacL to lhe membership be· cause "we think it is our working n1em- bership that has made this st rike sue· c~slu\, '' an JUE spokesman said. Anne Baxte1· Marriage Dissolved hy Judge The club. which has a swimming pool on the roof, Is about a block from the Cara vell e Hotel. It was the second bombing of a theater in downtown .Saigon In 10 days. Terrorists exploded a p\asti~ charge at the Dai Nam Theater, the city's second largest, on J An. 20 but the theater was empty and there were nG injur ies. SANTA MONICA (AP) -A judge h8' dissolved the 10-year marriage of ac tress Anne Baxter and Randolph Galt on her complaint citing irreconcilable differe n- ces. Galt, 40, and ~1iss Baxter, 46, ended the ntarriage Thursday in Superior Court. 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'4itr1m911IO Sitt Like C.!tr Sin 019'0 s .. 11'r1"'IKO io~u•• Si1M1ne l~nT>ll WlllllntlO~ Hl111 Lew l'rtoe, ~l 15 C1$VELAND (AP) -A fe<leral grand jury says three men were hired to kill UnlteJ Mine Workers insur gen t Joseph Yablon.sk., but has left open the question or who financed the aJleged plul. 6$ :U .H M " " . " " " . " " n " 1' . " j( lJ ·1~ ~J ') i• . " . " . " H " . " . " " .. ~ .. H n SI ~t . " " ff 0 " • ti " . M H M " ,, 11 " " . " • • 0 tJ . " ... " . • ff 'I H » H . " " " The gi and jury, which ind icted the three Thursday on cnarges of conspiracy, .o.i reported that one of the men, Paul E. Gilly, 36. was ln charge o( a special fund from which the other two were pai<i. .. The source of the fund was not men· !toned. Aiw missing from Oie indictincnt w1s any mention of the deaths of uie union of- ficial's wife, Margaret, 57, and daughter. Charlotte, 14, whose bodies were found with Y1blonski's In their Clar ksville, Pa .• " hotne Jan. ~-Al! had been sboL lnd;cted with Giily 'l\'ete Aubran ,V, .t1 MarUn, 2:, and Claude E. Veacy. 2$. The grand jury said MnrUn received 11.700 And Vealty 11.000 cash llld had a 1750 1ebt to Gilly canceled. ·" All are frGm the C.:lcveland area. Each ll held h1 lieu of $250,0vll bond. The Indictment speclllrally charged them with conspiring to commit moMf'r and C011Sl-lrlng to obstn1ct jus:UCt\ ln the m staying oF Yablonski, who y.•as schedultd to lesUfy before a federal grand jury ln \Vast-JngWn which was lnvtsllgating .11 union activities. ., deral j1,1dge can to rn11.ke life diffi cult," Lowenthal said. At issue ill the case was release of Ui~ volUflteers from the Ci adsden County Jail on a writ of habeas corpus (a legal device providing freedom for those held ii· legally). Uiwenthal said Carswell issued the writ ' because he had no choice" wider federal court rules, But, he said, Carswell refus· ed to have a marshal serve the writ on Ult Gadsden Ccunty sher!lff, as would be cus.tomary. "He told me to serve it myself," Lu.,i:enthnl said. 1'he lawyer testified that he drove 25 miles to lhe jail. served the ,.ril and the prieoners were freed. But. he said, tht~y \vere lmmed.iah:ly rearrested be~ause Carswell had remanded them to the coun- ty, in efl'ect canceling the writ. The re- 1nand. also set bail. The volunteers later obtained bail and Curswcll's actions in the case \\'ere revt:rsed by the ~th U.S. Circuit Court, Lowenthal said. Carswell was appointed to the circuit bench by President Nixon last May. PRESIDENT CONGRATULATES RED SKELTON AND WIFE Comedia n Ente rtained VIP Ga thering at Wh ite House Nixons See Red S kelton Clo ·wns at Wliite House \\'ASHINGTON 1UPIJ -Red Skelton played a one night stand Thursday night and hod 'em rolling in the aisles. His one night staOC: y.·as at the White House, the inaugurJtion of a new series of theatrical evenings to be held monthly at the xetutive mansion. "If I h3d kmwf. it wasn't permanent." he wiS1.?CiackeJ, 'I wouldn't have come.'' President Nixon headed the guest list of 300 top government offic ials and. frienJs gathered in the East Room. And he obviously enjoyed himself. The Pres ident sl<1~·ped his thighs and heid his bead as he leughcd al such Skelton trademarks as the guzzler's sketch in which an announcer becomes progressively tipsier after sampling the alcohoJ;c wares he is advertising. Nixon, it. int roducing Skelto1., tried nis own branti of humor -he said the co1nic has been a t~lcvision performe:-for 19 years but "the vice presidtnt has never had an unkind \\'o:-d t.o say of him." The President and his wife Pat sat In the front row of the dimlv lit ballroom with Vice President Spiro T. Agnew .:ind his wi!e Judy. He often turned around lo see if the re5t of the audience was enjoying the perf9rmance as much as ll-: was. Mrs. Nixon, who wore a white satin gov.•n with a rhinstone standup neckline, also was convulsed by the Skelton shena~igi1ns. A dancP, y.·hict-the Nixons did not at- tend , fulh,\\'Cd the perforn111nce . The East Room was decl)rated to suggest t cabaret atmosohere wilh round tables, a buffet .ir,d charr.pagne. Similar evening entertainment is plan· ned for the \Vhitc lfouse every month or so featuring American and International entertainers. Israel 'Boo~s·' Ove1e Syria 111 Mideast War of Nerve s By United Press Internation al Israel said its warplanes rocked five Syrian cities, including Dama scus, with sonic booms early today in retaliation for a similar sonic boont altntks on Haifa by ti Syrian MIG on Thursday. Israeli planes also attacked Egyptian Suez Cana: posi- tions. A military spokesman in Cairo said its jet fighters intercepted the attacking Israeli planes and forced thcn1 to flee eastward. He said all Egyptian planes COI N FLIPPED, BUT BO T IJ LOSE ' LANCASTER (UPI) -T"·o men were in jail today because they stopped In the middle of a robbery to toss a coin lo see \\'hieh go t the honor of beating II lhcir victim. · Sheriff's 1lcpuUcs said the In· tended vlcti1n. George \Valson, ' 21, was an Air Force sergeant who \vorked afler hours at the Classic Cat bor. Depulies s.1id \Vatson had clos· cd the bar and was cleaning up whtn Uiere Y.U a knock on the door. He opened the door o crack and wa~nfronted by Larry F. Slllgc:'· and Peter J. Ro1ncro, who v.·c armed. The)' said they wert going to rob him . Deputies said lhe pair of woold- be robbers then got Into a discussion over who would have the honor of beating \\'atson. As they wtre fllppinG • coin, WAl!on drew hl1 own .45-callbt:r aut<r matlc and shot each of then1 in the leg. The two suspects were l•ken to Counly·USC Medical Center and booked on suspicion of anned robbery. dctr>ils. Syria's penetr.Jtion of Israeli air space Thursrl<iy 11·as the first since the 1967 1var. The Israeli planes retali;1\td quick- 1.' The jrls pcn<:lrafcd as far as 230 miles iuto lhe Arab nation in the flights ju~1 aftr.r midnight "1vithout ene<Jur.tering ac· live Syrian resistance," tr e an- no11ncemcnt said. They returned safely. A Syrian communique from Damascus said one Israeli jet flew over "'some" cities, shattering a nun1ber of window!. J,;rael said the jets' son ic booms rocked Da1nascus, 91 miles into SyriA: lt ama. 193 m!les; Hims, 160 miles: Latakiya, '00 miles . and Aleppo, 293 ntiles into Syria. Late Thursday, an Israeli Jct had flown a similar mission over Damascus as an i1nmediate reSP'.Jnse to the M (G flight over Haifa, the first hGstile Arab penetrt1- tion of Israeli air space since the 1967 \1•ar. The MIG 1nad~ one low-Jcvl'l pass over Haila , on the 1nediterrancan. after a1>- prcoC'hing fro111f the sea under Israeli radar. liundreds of window~ 1~ere shat· tered and lsra~ll interceptors scrambled to lhc scene ,oo late. This new aspe::• of the ~illidle East war of nt'rvcs co•ncided with a Cairo newspaper editor'!: warnin~ to E~pllans Ou11 l~raeli raids inlo the Cairo hcarUiind are "only the beginnln~." ~1ohammed H:isS8nein llaikal, In h\11 1A'eekly column in lhf' ~mlolfic:lal ncv.·spaper Al Ahram, said lsrstl might au.empt now to stage commando raids In- to Cairo's suburb3. ''Our haired of thr en t:my should he '"ithout limits." hr said. "Our rcadineu lo fight him should be cnrrled to the t.I.· trcme. Our preparedness IQ kilt hlm- $hould be ""'ll ho:1t ht!'!ll.&tlon, "This Is the truth about the conflict of clc~tiny in which we are \nvolvC!d -elthtr "'c ba or they t:K-." An ggyptlan military spoke!men said <l'1e civiiian WR!' killed A1ttl 11 '"C!Tt \~oundt.'<I ln Israel 's air aUack 1'hursday ngsilnst Port SutL on the Suei C11n;:il. I l Main Burst Floods Montreal Students Storm . Hayakawa BOSTON (UPI) -More than 25 pereons were lnjl.atd and 30 arrested Thursday night when hundreds 0 r youthlul d<monatr-•, block- ed from entering a Northeastern U n i v er s I t y buildltl& where .,ctucct'U' S. t. Hayakawa was a p e a t t n I , aeat auditorium was fllled and clashed with police Md went no more people would be on a rock-throwing spree. aUowed inside. At least 13 police amt more tl\l.n a dozen youths were iJI.. jured in the club lhal •pread into a buslnesa: district. Police aald at least 30 or the demonstrators were arrested in the prot.ut over the San Franclaco Slate c o 11 e g e Preslden\'s appearance. Shouting "Everyone get.I ln," "Peaple In, pigs out," and "Rush ~ door," the youths attempted to battle thelr way past the 9£J~rs who beat them back With nightatlck1. The demonstrators hurled frldaJ, JantWJ 30, 1970 QAIL y Pilar Iii Girl Plans to Wed 'Kidnaping' Suspect MANILA (UPI! -A Calllornla girl inld police to. day she planned in marry the FWplfto they said kidnap«! her from a suburban college donnlinry lhr<e days ago. Police put Deborah StevenlOn, 20, of south San Francisco in protective custody and continued the search for her suitor, Cria Lecaroz, 23, nephew of a pro- vincial governor and ~ grnsman. Lecaroz will be charged with : abduct.Jon, Illegal discharge of · a weapon and trespass, ac- cording to Police Chief Tomas 8. Karin.gal or suburban Queion City, whe re the in· cldent occurred. Ottectlvea found M i s s Stevenson Thur s d ay In Candelaria, 60 miles 8outhea~l of Mantia, and brought her to Manila for questioning today,. LecJroz, who had been with. her, allpped the dragnet, One of Montreal's busiest streets is knee high wlth ~ushing water alter a main broke Thursday caus· 1ng isevere flooding and traffic jams in the down- town area. Hardest bit was the 47-story Stock Ex· change Tower when water flowed through the two- story shopping promenade and caused the entire building to be evacuated when the power went out and elevators slopped. Tbe turmoil started when rock&, chunks of tee and more than 1,000 persons tried snowballs, breaking several to force lbelr way into lhe Ell windows ln the student center. Student Center where lbe COD· The doora to the center were troverslal Hayakawa w a s smashed. delivering a speech entJtled About ts minutes later the ''Can the University Survive in • ' the 1)1.h Century?" as part of youths again attempted to get the university's distinguished Into the building, bul police lecture series. drove them into the unlv.:!rslty Israel Sets New Rules Of Judaism Borman Quits Space To Focus on Earth blems and opportunities and to get the American people to ac- Who C..res7 No other ntWSPltlfl' ln tht world eam about your community like your community dally news~ dotS. It's tht DAILY PILOT. A force of nearly 100 police quadranle and onto bu!}' Hun- officer11 aided by tralned dogs tington Avenue. The !::irred enttance to th e demonstrators ran doWn lhe demonstrators when school of. street breaking windows in flcials announced the 1.~ stores and cars. Dl•l•ltovt.11 ilf TN A.UM M1rt eo..,~_.y • 10 'root • 100% Or•l~ N1111,.1 61>Jr1u.°t'• ------------------· SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) -The astronaut who JERUSALEM (UPI) -eommanded the first maMed Govunmenl of f J c i 8 I 5 ex· crbiting of the moon plans to tively particlpate ln solving !.-----------------------------------------------. these problems," Borman said in a statement released by the . ---- retire from the space program pressed confidence today a and head a foundation that cabinet agreement defining will attack America's pro- who is a Jew will win the ap-blems on earth. space agency, Oay Blasts Militants proval of Israel's 120-member Frank Borman, a 41-year~ld parliament, the Knesset. Air Force colonel who directed Premier Golda M e 1 r , 5 the Apollo 8 flight around lhe moon on Christmas Eve in government averted a Political 1968, announced Thursday he crisis Thursday by agreeing is resigning from the service Israel will make rabt)Wcal and the !pace agency on July ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP} - law the basis of determining 1. He said be and Dallas "You niggers give me more who ls a Jew, but will register millionaire H. Ross Perot are trouble than the whites!" members of families by mixed establishing a fo u n d a 1 i 0 n Cassius Clay shouted to about marrtags as lrraells. which will attack pressing na· 100 black militant hecklers. tional problems. Tbe Supreme Court touched The astronaut said he would The group had Interrupted off the controversy last Friday become vice president of Elec-the defrocked heavyweight by ordering the I s r a e Ii Ironic Data Systems, Inc., a boxing champion's lecture at Interior Ministry to register computer services company Muhlenberg College Thursday as Jews the three children of owned by Perot, who tried last night. Israeli naval commander Ben-Christmas to deliver parcels The heckl,rs, some wearing jamin Shablt and his non-to war prisoners in North African dashikas, criticlied Jewish wife. Vietnam. Clay !-'Who pref,r:i the Black The court ruling brought Borman said he and Perot Muslim name Muha·mmad Ali angry protests from orthodox will establish the American -for buying a $7~,000 home in Jews here and abroad, from Horizons Foundation. Philadelphia. the Israeli rabbinate and from "It Is our hope through the "Do you want me to buy a Israel's nation a I religious use of mass media, particular· heme in the ghetto?" Clay party headed by interior Jy television, to fully infonn countered. "Why do I want to mJnlster Moshe Shapiro. the American people about our live in a rat bin and have a rat A five-hour cabinet meeting most pressing national pro-bite my child?" called to settle lhe c r i s i s l'j:&;;;i::;ia;~;;;;;~:;;;;i;iit:;;;;;:;;iliii~Uiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiii~I Thursday agreed by whatl ~; government sources said was a compromise. -That a person will be registered formally as a Jew onty If his or her mother was Jewish and If he had not adopted another religion, or if he converted to Judaism, in ll line with rabbinical law. -That non.Jewish husbands • or wives and the children of 1 their mixed marriages will en- joy the same rights as Jews in Israel but will not be formally regls~red as Jews. British War Strategist Hart Dies l\1ARLOW, England (AP) -~ Sir Basil Liddell Hart, a British army captain in World t.I War l who had more Influence ~ on modern warfare than many ' generals, died at his home Thursday night. He was 74 and one of the world's leading military writers and theorists. Gassed in the 1916 Battle o( the Somme, invalided in 1924 and retired In 1927, Capt. Lld- dell Hart was convinced by hi! months in the trenches of the need for surprise and mobility in future wars. He was an ear· ly exponent of air power and armored forces and in his writing developed the "ex· paneling torrent" tactic of a\. tack. The British army paid him little heed : the Germans took up his ideas and on them bat- ed their victorious blitzkrieg through France In 1940. Gen . ! Hans Guderian, who led that Panzer charge, called him "the creator of the theory of the conduct of mechanized war." All on Board Escape Sinking A THENS (UPI) -A Greek passenger ship struck a retf and caught fire today in the Aegean Sea but All 3 4 paS1engers and 54 crewmen escaped w\ltiout Injury. A Ministry of Merchant Marine .spoktsman ('laid the 2,000-ton lplros, owned by the i?Jwef£~N~&W MID-WINTER SALE SUITS & SPORTCOATS e H.l.S. 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S3f.i% on Certificates with maturity dates for 2 years or more. • Certificates of Deposits of $100,000 or more: 6Y4% on Certificates with maturity dates from 30 to 59 days. 6Y2% on Certific ates with maturity dotes from 60 to 89 days. 63f.i% on Certificates with maturity dates from 9,0 to 1 79 days. 7% on Certificates with maturity dotes from 180 to 1 year. 71/2% on Certificates with maturity dotes for 1 year or more. As aiu·ays, yo11r sai·ings earn the maxim11m hank in- terest at First National. Stop in at any of 011r 5 CO f· venient locations and select the acco11nt that fits yo11r needs best. ', f Firtt in Per.tonal Banking Service Since 1906 Innlki SteamshJp Co., was I'."~'!""'~~~~~~~~~~~~~"!!~~' .,--------------------------------------------....J '"'"tmyed. I · • ... ,• '· ··.· ... -' . ... • • • • " I. ' I • Di\D.Y PU.OT EDITORIAL PAGE • • • • More Public Beache s • .. •• • " The environmental emphasis of the 1970s verY ' clearly will include both protection and acqulslU~ of ., beaches -a recreational asset that is in increasmatr· short supply . • • San Clemente is one coastal city that can, as th•" "' old bromide goes, point wi th pride in this category. Well launched in 1928 by a developer's gilt o! 3,000 lineal feel or beach beside the pier, San Clemente Ln 1961 began to improve on this. 1'he city acquired -and lhis should bring a whisUe of admiration -3,000 more Upeal feet for $209,· 256. Another 3,948 reel was picked up !or $1,237,720 be- ginning with a bond Issue or $955,000 in 1963. The result is city ownership of 10~ f~et (close to two miles ) of beacb. Add another 6,'022 lineal feet of state beach and )'l>U !ind that or 4.6 miles or beach with- in the city limits, more th~ three rhiles are m public ownership. , , Laguna Beach doesn't have nearly this much beach but it can point with pride to the willin·gness late in the game to plunk down more than '3 Ji:lillion for 1,000 feet of prime downtown beach. This was done by executive actlOI after, in the 1950s. bond issues to raise the funds twice narrowly laileil to gain the needed two-lhirds vote. San Clemente with about 18,000 populaUon and La· guna Beach-With about 14,000 should be examples grav· en in rock tQ other public agencies. . They went out on a ,financial limb to acquire beach which is a regional fac ility. It would seem patently unfair if additional beach in the South Coast area is not acquired and put into public use to take some of the growing load of beachgoers One Reason for Campus Rehellio~ By S. J. HAYAKAWA Pre1ident, San Francisco State University All over lhe C<>Untry people have been sorely puzzled by the \'iolenl rebeU ion of young men and women in our best col- leges and universities -Berkeley, Harvard . Columbia. Swarthmore, Stan- ford -I hesitate to n1ention San Fran. cisco State in the context of these more prestigious institutions. Many of the general public are infuriated that the most highly privileged young should be the lea st grateful for their privileges. I too have been so rely puzzled. But I want to submit a possible explanation. Perhaps we are having these troubles not because our colleges have failed us, but because they have in some ways done their work too well. ' ~lost student rebels are of the upper· middle class. They are to be found large· Jy in the liberal arts departments and the social sciences -disci plines in which \'e rbaJ facility is highly prized, and in which it is not always necessary lo check one's words against the stubborn facts of life {as you have lo in chc1nistry or home el.'Onomics) in order to pull down an ''A." to be above the conventions , and re:-traints of everyday life. They despise the useful ciUzen and take pleasure in shocking the lower and mid· dle classes by 01.ttraceous speech, dl'f:ss, and behavior. They ~·ill nol be bothered discussing or arguing matters with those with whom ·they disagree -they Simply \\'ant their O\\'n way al once, by force if necessary. AUXEO WITH THIS arrogance Is a senLimenlal identification with l he cll)wntrodden, not unlikt the idealization of the peasant among Rus,sian student revolutionaries in czarist Russia. This sympathy for the underdog gives a Vt!neer of moral justification to their violent tactics·. (Let me add that the nonviolent ma- jvrily also identify with .the underdog. The present student generation Is serious ly concen1ed with society. It is t"ii~ seriousness that make5 them suscep- tible lo revolutionary propaganda, with the result that many younf people who genuinely believe in democracy are ~ometimes led around by those who do 001 I Of C<>urse many profes50rs are elitists too, indoctrinating studenla in the re· ject1on of midd leclass standards and en- couraging resistance to administration, i;overnment. and police. At San Francisco State in the fall of 1968, student gangsterism was rampant and bricks v.·ere flying through classroom ·windows. THE CA.RDS ARE STACKED in favor of the verba\ist.s. Tests of scholastic ap- titude are easy for those with a ready flnw of words. Those who do \veil in such tests are courted. sometimes by t\\'O or n1ore prestigio'ls colleges. They can hardly be blamed If t'l'ley begin to feel a little superior. From there on they can succeed in colley,e without really tryin g. All they have to do is major in English or a>ociology. (I majored In English myself.) RADICAL PRESSURE gr o u p s Furthermore, the liberal arts student is du1ninating faculty meetings blocked the heir to a tradition that goes back lo the in1roduction both or resolutions con. ancient Greeks \.r distingui shing between demoing student violence and of resolu· the "liberal" and the "servile" arts. tjnns,..celling for police protection ·against The liberal arts C'f'riculum was for the t1i~olence, presumably feeling that the eclucat1 on of gentlemen. who by definlli ,,,;..~,"Clilr ought to settle things among did not work for a li ving. The "servile'' themselves without the Intervention of a,.ts -from cooking to barbering to com-the lower classes. ~erce to engineering -were for working So the big questions of quality educa· people and slaves . lion have to do with both professors and ~t.1tients. THE ANCIENT GREEK prejudice Can professors. luxuriating In their 2gainst work is reflected to this day 10 <icademic freedom. sto p short of an the American university in the scorn of many liberal arts professors of "voca· egotistic irresponsibility that threatens ' .10 .. .,11sm" and in the contempt of many thr very existence o~ the academy~ ,,.. And can young people of outstanding English majors tor such subjects .as com· talt>nts be given a superior education Jrerce engineering, or agriculture nd bel' · th , -den' with such prejudices. the \Vilhout their e ing up 1ev1ng at L;Oj d f they are a superior order of being, Im· verballsls find it easy 10 e ine mune to control by custom or la"', ex· themselves as an Intellectual aristocracy empt from the responsibilities of rational -an elite class -and 10 begin to act dis1:ourse and debate. possessed' of the IJkAesoanne. elite. these students (I speak of ri~ht to dictate to others through non· 1 k negotiable demanrls. and er.titled to tlie white student activists -the b ac s aninesty the moment they get Into arc another problem) believe themselves trouble? Slow Courts r fress Connnents .. E1panola, N.~t.. Su.o: "II ls frustrating 10 Jaw-abiding citizens to observe the 1or1oise-like pact of our courts. and it must be particularly frustr aling to !hose Jaw enforctmen\ officers charged with J:&therlng evidence and making lhe ar· rest.. Jt must be very aatlsfylng 10 lhMe chara:ed, for I.he Ion.fer UM! cases are delayed th' better \belt chaDCf'Ji or ~ing acquitted. Shoot up a couple of la"'mcn , tidnap two people and .usault the courthouse and you 10 free. Bui btware M gelling caughl Saturday night after ~bibins a bit loo much. Tht courts 'l'KIVt quite qulckJy )n casts Buch as "-" Perhaps it Is harder to teach 1!emocracy than "'' ever imagined, e~recially to those who have most richly e11joyed its blessings. flll George Dear Geor'(e': What's the best \lo'ay to write a letter to a 'girl you v,.ould really like to get to know better! (She's mar- rkd.) CAUTIOUS Dl'ar CauUou~: 111e best way to write to a nuir- ritd woman? Tn the sand, right ~c:rre the tide comes ln. CONF!OENTIAL TO NASSER: I don't &ee why you ketp uktng me. You nevtt lilten. (Write to George for useless ad· vice. Thrct chairs; no wailtng.) I 'Vf'I lwmeled down the !r0eway1 to the beaebe• of these two small clues . Static Over Art-A-Fair An apparenUy routine requelt for a city pennll to open La~ria's outdoor . Ait·A·Fair on N. Coast Hl«h- way during the W\nter FesUval and again dwing iho. summer run of the Festival of Arts produced some stattc al city ball recenUy. Going 1nlo ill third year as one of the Art Colony'• popular outdoor exhibits, Art-A-Fatr wu viewed with alarm by some of iii neighbors -art gf!]lerl .. fearing Joss of business and-real eitate and othe~ firm1 bewail· ing· summer parking pioblems. · Since they pay ta1es the year around, it's unfair, said the neighbors, to authorize a temporary art show just, When all their potenti:al customers are fn town. 'Ibe complain! i$ undef!lanllabte, but it also may be short-sighted. A lot of summu visitors . would not be here at all were it not for Laguna's national reputation as an art festival center. · If a town is famed for its fine restaurants, chances are it 'will attract an infux of visitors with 1ouimet tastes and everyone's business will benefit. So a town that's famed as an art mart is likely to iattract art Jov· ers· and potential buyers~not only of art, bti of food , lodging and other amenllles. The range of art displayed In Laguna during the summer is widely varied in quality and price. The weu. heeled collector attracted by the colorful festivals Is more than likely to find his way to the galleries as well, buy a few meals and gifts -and maybe even dedde to become a property owning citizen . s Na Jr,ed Bod y Has Many Meanings Co1ate1nplated for Feb1•11u1•y A young-lady, whom I lake to be a stu· dent at the University of Wisconsin, writes to me, apropos a recent paragraph in which I said that the people who present nudity on the stage and the pe«i>- ple who object to it ~ "both victims of the same fallacy, bnaginlng U\al •naked body is a sexual object. •• " Her question: "U a naked body is not a sexual object, what is?" I colild tell her, but not within the m::>ralistic confines of a family ~·spaper. Actually, her attitude is exactly the kind al thin.: I was Writing about -the reduction of the body to ob- ject, or merchandise. A NAKED BODY CAN be, and Is, many things to many persons: to the doc- tor, an anatomical or physiological entity to be restored to wholesome functioning; to the artist, a living piece of form and structure to be e&pttired in pen or oil or elay or stone; to the museur or masseuse. a complicated · network or muscles and tl.ssue and nerve.axis to be rejuvenated: to the photographer, a subtle and strikingly lovely study tn plane and contour and shadow. And even to the lover, lf the naked body is a mere sexual objec:l, or mostly a sexual object, then the "love" is in the loim and cannot ouUast such transitory needs. Love must include sex, but the ""°'e e1clusive it ii of other quaUUes, the raster it tires and dies. INDEED, THE BODY in terms of a "sexual object" as such is largely a cultural product and an act of the mind. As Ortega put it: "Nine-tenths of that which is attributed to sexuality is the work of our magnificient ability to im· aglne, which Is no longer an instinct, but exactly the opposite: a creation." This is why, of course, naked bodies on the stage are not erotically stimu18ting, even in our severely repressed society. After the ·first moment of shock, they are just bodies, la<len with no more sexual Eignificance than the naked body ol any other species of creature. FOR WHEN THE cultural taboo is lifted, and the mind can no longer do it.s imaginative work, tl)tn the body ceases to be a mystery (u in· most primklve soclelies) and becomes simply ,an organism wtUeh can be u~ in manv dll· ferent ways, for protection, for profit. or for pleasure. lt has become largely a aeu1al object for us because, first, It ii exploited com· mercially to an almost pathological degree, and, second, btc,ause ·of our hypocrisy in promoting its desirability \\'hile at the same time prohfbjllng its free functioning. We have managed. In this way. to obtain the: worst of both possible \\'Orlds -neithe r the moral satisfaction of our Puritan forebears, nor the innocent engagements or t h e primitives, but the frustra0ofl5 of the former and the promiscuJty of the lat- ter. This t1 wh,J l called us "victims." , Quotes • H. G. t.oweuwti, M.D .. P! .. lMu1 - "Fear and vfofeoce are so prevalent In our country that I ~er If that might not be one ol tht factors contributing to our drua dependent aoclety." 11. WUllam Way, S.F. -''There are thoH who demean the press as di.started, slanted, •nd untruthful. Tht problttn the press haa: ls \hat all of Its penon.rMI must be recruited from the human ract ... More SDS-Plotted Vi ole n ce WASHINGTON -1ifore maniacal violence Is being plotted by the berserk Weatherman faction o( the revolutionary Sturlents for a Democratic Society (SDS ). Two characteristic run-amok outbreaks are contempiated for February. One is aimed i:t a big university that has been ~racked by SOS-instigated destructive disorders on several occasions. . mgro participation is be.in~ sought. Particularly wanted are black ex· tremist!, especially the gun-totine and sti.:>0Ung-prone Black Panthers. 'nle groundwnrk for these ne\Y out- br'eaks was laid at the recent four-day meeting ,of the Weatherman's national council at Flint, Mich. -from whlch ~e press and photographers were forcibly ucluded. "VIOLENCE" was the theme from lbe beginning to the end of thls truculently gua.rded gathering. It began on that Incendiary note with an obscenlty·interlarded harangue by · Bernardine Dohrn, former lnter-organiz.a· tional secretary of SOS, and closed the same way with an equally furious diatribe by John Jacobs, a leading \Veatherman agitator. Virtually all the speeches and most of the discussions were replete with the kind of disgusting obscenities fa vored by e1· tremlsts -white and black. They seem to consider the frequent and loud use of these putrid expressions as evidence of revolutionary fervor and defiance. This applies to the sloppy women as well as the bushy·haired and unkempt males. In fact, . the squalid females appear to take special delight in the loathsome obscenities. Dohrn's "keynote address" ""as full of them. ,. .J\llen·Golds1nith THE HALL \\'AS deC<>rated in keeping 1~ilh the "violence" them e and lhe revolting obscenilies. Hanging from the ceiling were large portraits of revolutionary rulers and . leaders -jlo Chi fl.1inh, f<'idel Castro, die Guevara, fl1alcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver, the bail-jumping Black Panther official now a fugitive in Algeria. Also hanging from the ceiling "'as a huge cardboard machine gun, with a placard !'eading "Learn How To Use It.'' One walJ was covered \\'ith alternating black and red posters of another Black Panther leader, Fred Hampton, killed in a shOOt~ut with police. On another \val\ was a 20-ft. poster with big dra\vings of dilferenl calib:er bullets. with a full description of each. Also on this poster were pictures of Weatherman "enemies" -foremost among them Chicago's Mayor Daley. INFLAflll\1ATORY TALI\ -In tile opening fu lmination, Bernardin~ Dohrn clamored for more violence. Derisively she berated her felklw Weathermen for having (obscenity, obscenity! a lot and being "motivated by a white guilt trip." "We didn't fight around Bobby Seale v1he n he was sh11ckled at the conspiracy (Chicago seven) trial." she screeched through the loud!peaker. "\Ve should have tom that (obsceriity) courtroom . apart. We didn't smash them when the (obscenity) M'lbe peace creeps hissed David Hilliard on Moratorium Day in San Frr.ncjsco. \Ve didn't burn Chicago down \vhen (BlRck Panther) Fred J.lilliard was kill ed (in a sh()(ilou1 with police!. "\\'e hRVC' been <obscenity) 1vim py on anned struggle. Vie talk about being a fightlng force along!iide the blacks, but a lot of us are still (obscenity) honkies and we're still scared of fighting. \\1e have to gel into the armed struggle. \7iolence Is o:.ir aim <1nd motto.·· Tll.IS EDICT WAS stridently echoed by ~l ark Hut1d, top \\'e:ilherinan leader and ~t:leran o/ numerous disorclers and dcmor.stralions. .. \\'e look for pitched ball les bel\\'cen m!litant 1.;roups and the pigs (police)." he bt.llowed , "on a scale and with a Yiolent'i! that will make those in the past look like Sunday school picnics. Violence is the way to the re\'olution ." How to go about ''n1aking th e American revolution" was discussed and. argued at greal length. fl.1ore time was devoted to • thi::· topic than anything else. Ted Gold. a prominent \Veatherman, a<;serted that "an agency of the people nf the world wnuld be set up to run U.S. ~nciely and econon1y after the defeat or U.S. i~rialism abroad.'' This brought a r..-j()indOr from the floor. '·Does that 1nra n that if the people of the world suc· ceed in liberating themselves be.fore American radicals make the American revolution. then Chinese, Africans and o!hfrs wil; take rver here and run things for 1\'hite An1erica?" '"\Veil .'' replied Golrl. "If ii takes fascis m to bring about the Arn eri can revolution , I guess \\•e'll ha ve to have fasci~m ·· By Robert S. Allen and John A. Goldsmith At Dear Old Huds on High A young man 1 know Is bored with high school. He says it Isn't relevant. He 's absolutely right. How can life in high s!J}lool be relevant to ouf mature adult society? Yet I can't help recalling my years at dear old Hudson High with the requisite glow of nostalgia. Those were the days! How happy \\'e were in our innocence before we 'had to go out and fact the real world. In my day, the boys all wore cashmere sweaters. dirty mrds and saddle shoes, while the glrJ5 "·ore cardlglllUI, plaid skirts and saddle shoes. Well. come to think of It, not all the kids dressed like lilaL T,llERE WERE poorer kids and a lew b1ackt and Oriental& who wore .. .I can't remember what they \\"Ore. We never plW much 11ttenUon to them. But ariyway, wt kids In saddle shoes pretty much ran things. We were kno"'" rather vaguely as "The Group." Most of Dear Gloomy Gus: Tait ... tvn f'Mltelt "'"'"° •llwl. lllf ......,.,, ...... .. .... ...,...,, ,.... ,,_ ,.. '"" .. .......,, .... o.a, f't191. Ld '• cet on with the proddin& o( •the Public UU!lty Commission to rnake t.aruna phone rates fair and oqutlabl•. I'm UMld o! paying IOfll dlslanee charges for what shoukt be leca1 calls. -J. D. D. Art Hoppe us lived in the fanci er Eastern Section of town. We controlled the school paper and elected the student body officers ... Not always. though. l remember the '38 election when Nick Dickson won ror Pres- ident. .. He really wasn 't one of us. NICK ALWAYS wanted to be part or The Group, but he was never quite ac- cepted, 'Probably because he tried too hard. He "·as a short, curly-haired kid wilh a funny nose. His clollles weren't exJctl y right and he carried his books in a brief· case. He \\'15 klr.i of a grind. And his man- ner "'as very sincere. Too sincere, most of us thought. AnyWay, he'd been beaten for Pre!lldent before aod after that he Jost for Cafetcrl~ Manager. So we didn't think him n1uch of a threat. Our candidate was llubcrl ... \\/hat was his name? He was a bouncy, en- thusiastit kid who worked in the Princl· pal's Office. A real comij::_ But, trouble was, nobody took him serlously. So Nick won. TED WON FOi\ vice president th;it )'eal'. Just an honorary job. He was a big. nice kki -big 6ut duml>. I remember he got In a fight with the editor or the paper. who was one or us. A(ter that "°' plckta on Ttd mercileuly, m11king him the butt of-all our jokes. I suppose the majority of kids not Ln The Group admired him for tak. in,; us on. Bul, then, they never llpoke up. bany was the cheer lender, a real gung-ho type. "Go ~am, go!" he 'd yell ns our boya Wtnl orf to battle -evtn \\•hen they were behind ta to nothing. ()( coon@, there v."re a few kids 'ol'hO didn't go out for the team or rool for liud- son High at the rall ies and games. \Ve rt>ally shunned them . They were guilty of the worst crime '~'e knew : they "lacked ::;chool spirit.·· THEN t RE~1E~IBER the Head Moni· tor. J;;iy Edgar. \\'hat a fink! Al..-·ays re· porting us ror this little thing or that. Seems like he'd had that job forever . Then there was Eugene. the dreamy class poet. and George . the tough kid from the Southsidl' who gave us lhr creeps. and Teddy, who got expelled after a \.1•ild escapade one ni~hl and ... But I.here I go. prattling on about the j!ood old days. And IV hat I started out to sav is .that my bored young friend is not nnl .v <1b.~olutely right aboul high school not being relevant. bul he should be glad of it. After all. \\'hat kind of adult mt1ture s<>- cicly 1~·nuld this be U those 'll'ho ran it be· h;;ived llkt a bunch of high school kids~ /·-rm- Friday, January 30, 1970 The edltorlol page of llie Dail11 Pilot seeks to Inform and slim. ulote f'f!'aders by ere.tet1tlng this 11etcspaper's opinions and com- mentary on tOpk$ of Interest a11d significance. bu providiilg a forum f01' the t%prds&lon of our rtndtrs' opiniom, and b~ pt'«Sen!ina the divcr.!e vie~ points of informed obstrver.t and spakesmen on topics ti} the day, Robert N. Weed , Publisher I • FtldlJ, .laJluary 30, 1970 OAJLV PJLCT, 7 QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandl Nurse Home Fire Deaths Pr bed Senate Wonders Why Modern "Striucture Had Sucli T agedy WASHINGTON (AP) -A tesUmony from "represen· eQntalMd the ti.rt. The smoke recehtly, Is · it al!iO true or froi:n e broken bones that Senale panel is planning hear-tatives or a firm which su~ Oowed down the corridors many others!" can dangerous in old age. ings to probe the puzzling plied some or the furnishing toward open doors end wln-Hair ot the nursing home In d d J t I 0 n to the death of 31 patients in a sud-materials used in the nursing dows, lnvesUiitorS said. facilities In the nation have furnis tgs, the probe may den fire in a modern nursing home." He did not identify the ThfiJire marshall listed the been built in the last seven .. l')uch 81'> on federal regula· home bu.ill to be (ire resistant. firm. prol;la'ble cause as a discarded years. The Marietta blue was Uoos on·t,rsing homes. Fire experts and Senate in· The 31 deaths in the fire cigarette in a patient's room. the first major fire in the Medicei:f regulaUons ex- vestlgators indicated today the Jan. 9 at the Haf'1Jler 'House alt~gti th~ patient survi-country in such a modern empt one story. fire-resistant death toll_ secQncl\highl!sl In Center Jn Marietta were at-ved, casualUes were spre_ad nursing home. buildings uch as the ~1arietta a nursing ~e bl!ze in• the tributcd by hospital officials to throughout all parts of the Carpeting is used ex-fa clllty f m requlrements to lastdecilde-may have'been smoke inhalation and ·suf-smoke·choked building. tenslvcly in the corridors and haves kier systems. caused by heavy black smoke location. Sen. Mo5s said In a state· rooms of many new nursing ].1edicare requiremeri'.ts for WANTED IOYS I.ND GIRLS AGES J TO 19 W.ii!tll 19 AllfllloM Oii C ...... Cln:ltll TV anti 0..Uty ,., ~llrwtM T•'-1 ,...,, AUDITIONS WILL IE HELD THIS WEEK IN ORANGE COUNTY ,ti' "'" 011 • c-·• , .. ,.,...;..;,, Call 547-625 JNowl Talent S1arch ltfn9 Conduct.cl ~Y TAKE I PRODUCTIONS HOLLYWOOD. CALIF. traced lo the carpeting in the The Ohio. Stare Fl re ment that evacuation of pa-homes because it softens falls sprinkle also pcnnlt discre- facillty at Marietta, Ohio. Marsh.=ill said Jn ·a report last lien ls fr<;.m the mo<i~rn fa cl Ii-_.':'""~_i:p~ro~lec~ts'-"e~ld~er~ly~pa~li~en~l~s ~i.~·o'.':"'~'!Y_'''f~Pl~io~n~•·...,,.·:_~~=========== . J~nically, the fire.resis~anl week, "It Is the reeling or the ty, built less than five years construction, considered • 50 i nvest i g a tor s that the ago, "should have been poss!· good th.at no sprinkler system carpeting and the rubber ble within a few moments." , was 4·equired for the home, backing on the· ca~ting con-· He asked, "Why lhco was , may have trapped the smoki; tributed to the~ of fthe the death and injury toll~so Inside the brick building, in-' Ure and was the 4cau.se of t~ high? There is evidence to vestigators said. henvy, dense black smoke." sugge:;t that great amounts of The Se.nat! subconimiUee 00 The fire marshall, Samuel smoke caused the greatest P. Sides. said the car.vetlng hazard to patients and caused long-term care wiU open the was found in tests to )>um the greatest loss. If this Is · hearings jn Washf~ Feb. 9. very rapidly. He repo~ed {he trut about such a substantial Sen. Frank E. Moss (0-;Olli Utah), s ub c 0 mm it tee _co_n_s_tru_ct_lo_n_•~f _t_h_e_buildl._·..,,..n~g_,,bu~·-;,..,,...111_. _cons_·_tru_. ~'c..'"'~-fa-ir_ly_1 chainnan, said he wants to know 'how wldesPreAd the R d danger or fire deaths may be ea in similar new facilities. Moss said he has_ asked for ,. . the Stars ·With Oma .j: ,. • • • • -, CHECKl~G . '' . ~.. .. .. '·. ', .~ . I ' '' • uP RCA Once-a:Year Arthritis Victims Ca11 P1·edict Rain By L. ].I, BOYD IF YOU 'RE AVERAGE, 25 of your original 32 teeth will be bad, fixed or gone by the time you're 65 ... RALF the suicidal gunners, who try to shoot then1selves in the heart. miss ... MAN FOR MAN, in the last 100 years, U.S. citizens are drinkh1g less whiskey and more wine. Why? ••• CERTAINLY, IT'S true your brain starts to shrink at about the age or 30. but that doesn't mean you get dumber .•. OH. BEFORE I FORGET, the only nesting population of skylarks left in rjorth America is near Victoria on Vancouver Island. CONSIDER THIS -How can a fellow with arthritis predict a change in the weather? Simple, . Writes ;m Omaha doctor. "Boyle's Law states: 'The volume of a liquid or a gas ih a clo.5ed container varies inversely with the barometric pr;essure.' ln other words, when the barometric pressure falls, fluids in closed containers expand . That hap- pens to the synovial fluids enclosed in capsular ligaments in sensitive joints, creating pain, which signals the drop in the baromelric pressure and foretells a change i n the weather.·• CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "Do lobsters walk sidewa ys like crabs?'' A. No, they walk forwards. but swim backwards ... Q. "IS THERE ANY one year of• our ILves when we're sup~sed to be able to learn thlngsi fa~?" A. Age 22 is said to be th at' year. but not all the science boys agree ... Q, "WHAT'S THE VALUE of a Stradiv&rius violin?" A. Costliest of ' them all -the "Messie" in the Ashmolean Museum at O:dord, England -is said lo be worth about $34,000 , .. Q. "IN A FIGHT between an alligator and a python, which \\•ould win?" A. Bet on the snake. Russians, did you? Likewise . However, it's now reported the Peruvian Indians were malting vodka in bie year 88 ·A. D. And sa'.ld Vodka, it's r u r I her reported, somehow got from them to the Ohio Indians, who passed it on to the Iroquois, from whom the Vikings picked ii up, returning it forthwith across Scandinavia, and on in· to Russia. No, I can't vouch for the veracity of this histo rical note, but it is the serious claim of s e v e r a I anthropologists. Your q1u:.,tions and com- rnents are welcomed and will be used whe1·ever pos· Sible in "Cllecking .Up." Plt!ase address your mail to 'L. ~M. Boyd, in care oj DMLY PIWT, Box 1875, Newport Beach, Cali./., 92663. Now Parents Must Pay MADISON HE IGHTS, Mich. (AP) -A new city ordinance will give parents in the Detroit suburb of• Madison HeLghta legal responsibility !or crime! committed l>Y their minor · children. It provides that the parents of a min6r child who commits tlvo or mnr'e crimes in a 12· month period are subject to a maximum pe nalty of ?I) days in jail and a $500 fine . Eugene Arttjur ~1 o o r e . 08k1and County probate court judge, said "the ordinance may help in some c<ise3, but the primary problem is for the parents to accept t h e rcspGnsibilily. lf they don't. I'm not sure the threat of a l fine or jail will motivate them ." Moore added that "if this is a way to get parents to fulfill their duty to rai9C their kids. it's fine." 8 Transport Ships Retiring Look for the Golden Circle Tags and save up to • on RCA Color TV ., • Model Gl·61 l 23"' di11 .• 295 1q. in. poct u•e THE HALIFAX -RCA New Vista• Television console desl11ned to save space and money! Big·screenl Powerful 25,000"'1ott New Vista Colorchassisl Simpli· •. 4209~ fled oolo,.q,;ck ton· Cl inel One.set VHF fine tuning "remembers" to select '11 best picture! BIG COlORI lid VALUE -Big features . too! RCA·s Transistorized New Vista• VHF tuner is !he mostflowerfu! in the TV indus· try. 25.000·vott COior chassis with Su'j>er Bright Hi·Lite COior picture tube. A 1r•· mendous buy! Model Gl·676 23• d1•1 .• 295 sq. i11. P•tturl THE PAMARO -RCA's New Vista• Color TV featuring Automatic Fine TUi'll ng (A.T.F.)with an RCA solid integrated circuit ... electror'lical!y •45ge3 locks '" ''"' '""'"• Cl on VHF and UHr channels! 25,000· volt New ViSta Color chassis! See it! THE HANCOCK sion of RCA'~ Ne frt!fl tuning) R s599~ I These are not'floor samples or demonstrator models, they are exciting Color TV's and Stereos from RCA 's regular line. Your once-a- year opportunity to get the best for less! Modet GM·52l 20" di1(., 227 tq. lrl. p1ctu1t "" ma gnificent e~pres· sta• Color-TV! Fll'.tdle· dvanced A.F.T. with soli d inte11rated circuit. Acfvan ced 25.000·volt New Vista Color TV chassis! A bu~ beyond compare! 23" diilf .• 295 sq, ht. pietur1 THE BREMANGER -RCA's advanced Color TV features in th is smart. conle~ rary New Vista " model·include the glare· •599 9~ ~:~:· .~;,~' ~.'~;~; IP pictur!l tube; 25 ,000· volt New Vista Color TV chassis and Fid· die.free luning! TAPS -'·in "hich state was that ' haunting bugle call known as 'Taps· first heard?'' inquires a customer. Virginia was the place. Specifically, on the cild Berkeley Plantation by the James River near Tidewater. Va. It was there. between Civil War battles. that Gen . Daniel Butterfield wrote those notes. RAPID REPLY -Yes. ~1iss v.,.yoor friend. that Los Angeles 'obstetrician named Dr. Sto~k. also deserves ad- 1nlttaNce i11 the Proper Job Club, certaii1ly! WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Navy says it is retiring eight transport ships that ~ played a role in the early stages of the Vietnam War. -~~;~i~~~~;~---------:RCA~:H~O~M~E~E~N~T~E~R~TA~l~N:M~E~N~T:C~E~N~T~ER~T~h;~s;m~a~g~oo~'li~<fSp;.,~,~"~h·~J---------~~~~~~~~~~;-The Rose, Patch, Darby, Buckner, Gordon and Walker slyled credenza embraces RCA's Trans Vista Solid S • Color will move next summer from TV ... Solid State Stereo Ph0no1raph .. , and Compute tted At1' moorlnga in New York to the FM·FM Stereo Radio tuner. And you.sa'lf up 10 $l j H uy 11 with !\1 a r it Im e Administrative lhe Golden Circle Tag attached! Looi( for it! Model H,.,1.855 VODKA -So you thought vodka was invented by the Rese.rve F leet In SUisun Bay, Calif. The Weigel and. the Pope will go from San Fran· cisoo lo the James River Fleet in Virginia. .. , BAHA'I FIRESIDE Feb. Z-8:00 p.m t "UN9UESTIONAIL Y THiii MUST IE A•REEMINT 1nwnN TRUE RELIGION AND SCIENCE ••. " laha'I Wririnq1 . . 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' I I • ' f • j ' • • DA.D,Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE • More Publ ic B.eaches • ' •• The environmenlaJ emphasis of the 1970s ver)r clearly wlU Include bolh protection and acquisition of beaches - a recreaUonal asset that is in increasinglf short •upply. San Clemente is one coastal city that can, as the oJd bromjde goes, point with pride in this category. Well lnunched in 1928 by a developer's gilt of 3,000 lineal feet of beach beside the pier, San Clemente in 1961 began to improve on this. The city ac quired -and this should bring a whisUe or admiration -3>000 more lineal feet for $1.09,· 256. Another 31948 feet was picked up for $1,237,720 b~ ginning with a bond issue of '955,000 In 1963: The result is city ownership of 10ps4 feet (close tp two miJes) of beacb. Add another 6,022 lineal feet of state beach and you find that of 4.6 miles of.beach with· ... in the city limits, more than three mHes are in public ownership. . · • •· Laguna Beach doesn't baVe neMly thi~ much beach but it can point With pride to ·the willingness late in th.e game to plunk dow~ more· than $3 · rbillipn for, 1,000 ' feet .of _prim.e downtown. beach. · Tltis was done by exectiUve a~ti91 after, i.n the 1950s, bond issues to raise the funsfs twice narrowly falled l-0 gain the needed t)'o-thirds. vote.. - San Clemente with about 181000 j>opUJatio11; a,nd La- guna Beach-with about 14,000 should-~ examples grav· en in rock to other public agencies;' ·~ ; . They \verit out orl a financial 'limb t.o acquire beach which is a region&.! facility. · .. · . It would seem patently unfair if addi~jonal beach in the South Co.ast area is not acquired and put intb _public use to 1ake some of the ·growing load of beacbgoers One Reason for Campus Rehelli~~ By S. I. lfAVAKAWA President, San Francisco Stale University All ove r the country people have been sorely puzzled by the violent rebellion of young men and women in our best col· Jeges and uni versities -Berkeley, Harvard , Columbia. Swarthmore, Stan· ford -r hesitate to inentiOn San Fran· cisco State in the context of these more prestigious institutions. hfany of the general public are infuri ated that the mos t highly privileged young should be the least grateful for their privileges. I too have been sorely puzzled. But I ~·ant to submit a possible explanation. Perhaps we are having these troubles rlot because our colleges have failed us, tlut because they have in some ways done thei r work too well. Most student rebels are of the upper· middle class. Thef are to be found large· Jy in the liberal arts departments and the social sciences -disciplines in which \·erbal facility is highly prized, and in \vhich it is not always necessary to check llne's words against the stubborn facts of lift: (as you have to in chemistry or home el."Onomics) in orde r to pull down an ''A." THE CARDS ARE STACKED in favor of the verbalists. Tests of scholastic ap- titude are easy for those wilh a ready flow of ·wo rds. Those who do v:el\ in such tests are courted, sometimes by two or n1ore prestigio•Js colleges. They can hardly be blamed If they begin lo feel a little superior. From the re on they can succeed in collep.e without really trying. All they have to do is major in English or 1>0Ciology. (I majored In English myself. I Furthermore. the liberal arts studen~ is heir to a tradition that goes back to the ancient Greeks .,f distinguishing betv•een the "liberal'' and the "servile" arts. The liberal arts curriculum was for the education of gentlemen. who by definition did not work for a living. The "servile"' a~ls -from cooldng to barbering to com- merce to engineering -were lor working pe ople and slaves. THE ANCIENT GREEK prejudice i:igainst work is reflected to this day in the American university in the scorn of inany liberal arts professors of .. voca- tionalism" and in the contempt of many English majors for such subjects as con1- trer~ englneerinl!;, or agriculture . Laden' with such prtjudices. the verbalists find it easy to define themselves as an intellectual ar!stocracy -an elite class -and to begin to act like one. As an elite, these students (I s~ak of tl-ie white student acUvists -lhe blacks are another problem) belie"e themselves Slow Courts r Press Con1ments Espanol•. N.rtf., San ~ "II ls frustraUng to Jaw-abiding clUzens to obi:;erve the 1ortoise-like pace of our courts. and it must be parUculsrly fru.c;trating 10 those law enforcement orfi~rs charged wilh ga lherJng evidence and making the ar- reslo. Jt must be very saUsfylng lo those thargtd, for the Jonger U:ie cases are delayed the better tbe:ir chancet of being pequitted. Shoot up a couple of la\ol·mrn , kidnap two people and assault the courthouJt and you go fret. Bui, beware I)( getting caught Saturday ni ght after '":Jbibln1 a bit too much. The courts "10Vt quite quickly In cai;:e1 such as h~" - lo be above the conventions and rei:;traints of everyday life·. They despise the useful citizen and take pleasure in shock ing the lower and mid· die classes by outrageous speech, dress, and behavior. They will not be bothered discussing or arguing matters with those \.,.ith whom they disagree -they simply ,,·ant their own \\'ay at once, by force it necessary. AtlXED WITH THIS arrogam:e is 1 sentimental identification with t h e tlllwntrodden, not unlikt the ideallulion of the peasant among Russian student revolutionaries in ciarlst Russia. This sympathy for the underdog gives a ''cneer of moral justification to their violent tacti cs. (Let me add that the nonviolent ma- jority also identify with the underdog. The present student generation is seriously conce{Tied with society. ft is 11is seriousness that makes them suscep. 1ible to reyolutionary propaganda, with the result that many youna people who genuinely believe in democracy are i.ometirnes led around by those who do not.) Of course many professors are elitisll too, indoctrinating students in the re- jection or middleclass standards and eflo couraging resistance to administration, go,·ernm('nl. and police. At San FrancisCD State in th(' fall or 1961, sludent gangsterism was rampant and bricks \vere flying through class room windows. RADICAL PRESSURE g' r o u p s do1ninaling faculty meetings blocked the in!roduct ion bu1h or resolutions con- demning studenl viole nce and of resolu- ticins calling for police protection against lhat violence, presun1ably feeling that the t>litt> ought to settle things among lhl·mse lves without the Intervention of Lhe lower classes. So the big qul'stions or quality educa· tior. have to do with both professors and s1>1dcnls. . Can professors, luxuriating In their <1c~den1ic freedon1, stop short or an egotistic irresponsibility that threatens th<' l'ery existence of the academy~ And can youn11 pc:Dple of outstanding ta ltnls be gi\'en a superior education wilhout their ending up believing that lhey are a superior order of being, Im- mune to control by custom or la\\'. ex. en1 pt from the responsibilities of rational discourse and debate. possess ed of the r1Rhl to dictate to others through non· negotiable demands, and er.titled to amnesty the moment lhey get Into trouble? Perhaps It Is harde r lo teach democracy than we ever imagined, C!-pecially to those who ha\•e most richly enjoyed Its blessings. By 6eor9e ---, Dear George : What's the best way to write a letter to a 'girl you \\'OUld really like to Ret to know belier? (She's mar-. ritd.) CAlITIOUS Dear Cautious: The ~t way It> \.\'rite to a m•r· tied woman1 ln tht sand, right ht'rore t~ llde comes in. CONFIDENTIAL TO NASSER : I don't see why you keep Ukinl mt. You nevu listen. (Write to George for useless •d- vlce. Thrtt chairs; no wilting,) . """ funneled down the freeway1 to the buchea of these two •mall c!Ues. " Static Over Art-A-Fair An appl!fenlly routine nqueet'for a. city pennlt to open Laguna's outdoor Art-A-Fair on N. Coast 11,lgh- way during the Wlnter'FesUvat and again dur!Dg ihe. summer run of tht' Fe.stfval of Art.1 produced some static at city 4all recently. Going into its thii'd year .as one of the Art Colony's popular outdoor exhibits, Arl·A-Falr was viewed with alai:m by some of its' neighbors -art galleries fearing loss of business and real eslate and othe~ ,firms bewail- ing· swnmer parking pi'obloms. ' Since they pay taxes the yea_r around , it'1 unfair. said the neighbors, to authorize a temporary art show Just.when all their potential customers are in'town. The complaint ii understandable, but It also may be short·sighted. A lot of swiuner visitors would not be here at all were it not for Laguna's naUonal reputation as an art·~estival center. ·If a town is famed for its fine restaurants, chances are it, will attract an infux of visitors with gourmet tastes and everyon~'s business will benefit. So a town that'• fam~ as an art mart is likely toiettract art lov· ers and potential buyers-not only of art, bu of food, lodging and other amenities. The range of art displayed in Laguna during the summer is widely varied in quaUty and 'price. The well- heeled collector attracted by the colorful festivals Is more than likely to find his way to the galleries as wen. buy a few meals and gifts -and maybe even decide to become a property owning citizen. s Naff,e d Body Has Many Meanings Conte1npl.ated f 0 1· Feb1·11a1•y A young1ady, whom t take to be a stu. dent at the. University of Wisconsin, writes to me, apropos a recent paragraph in which I said that the people who present nudity on the stage and the pe<>- ple who object to It are "both victims of the same fallacy, hnaginlng ui;at 1 naked body is a sexual object. .• " Her question: "U a naked body is not a sexual object, what is?" 1 could tell her, but not within the moralistic confines of a famlly ne\\'Spaper. Actually, her attitude is exacUy the kind of thine: J was WrlHng about -the reduction of the body to ob- ject, or merchandise. A NAKED BODY CAN b<, and la, many things to many persons: to the. doc- tor, an anato~lcal or physiological entity to be restored to wholesome funcUonJng; to the artist, a livin' piece of form and structure to be captured in pen or oil or clay or stone; to the J'nasseur or masseuse , a complicated ' network of muscles and tissue and aerve~s to be rejuvenated ; to the photographer, a subtle and strikingl y lovely study 1n plane and contour and shadow. · And even to the lover, lC lhe naked body is a mere sexual' object, or mostly a sexual object, then the "love" is in the loins and c::annot ouUast such transitory needs. Love must include se1., but the ~ eJ:clus.ive it is of other quaUtles, the faster it tires and dies. INDEED, THE BODY in terms of a "sexual object" as such is largely a cultural product and an act of the mind. As Ortega put it: "Nine-tenths of. that which ia attributed to sexuality is· the work of our magni!icient ability to im- agine. which is no longer an iruttinct, but exactly the opposite : a cre_ation. '' This ls why, of cour~. naked bod its on the stage an not erotically sUmultiting, even in our severely repressed society. Aft.er the ·first moment of shock, they are just bodies, laden with no more sexual significance than the naked body or any other spec ies or creature. FOR WHEN THE cultural taboo is lifted. and the nUnd can no longer do itJ imaginative work, ~n the body ceases to be a mystery (as ln· mo.st primitive societies) and become.a simply an organism which can be usad ln manv dif- ferent \\'aya, for protection, for profit. or for pleasure. It has beeome largely a seu1al object for us because, rirst, Jt is e1ploited com- mercially to an alm0$l pathologicJt;I degree, and; aecond1 btcause or o u r hypocri11y in promoting its dealrabllity \\'hile at the same time prohlbjUng it.s free functioning. We have managed, In this way, to obtain the worst of both possible worlds -neiU1er the moral satlslaction of our Puritan forebears, nor the innocent engagements of th 1 primitives, but the frustraUons of the former and the promJJCUJty of the lat. ter. This JI why 1 called us "victims." Quotes I H. G. Lweuldl; M.D., Plt1Nar1 - "Fear and' vlokoct are to prtva lent In our country that t wonder If that might not be one ol the factora contributln1 to our drug dependent "'!tty." H. WUllam W11, S.F. -"Thert are who demean the press as distorted, • and untruthful. The problem the ptt Ill is that all of tts· peraonntl must be recruited from the human rice.•• More SDS-Plotted Vi ole nce WASHINGTON -P.fore maniacal violence 11· being plotted by the berserk Weathennan faction of the revolutionary Students for a Democratic Society (SDS). Two characteristic run-amok outbreaks are contemplated for February. One is aimed at a big university that has been Yrracked by SOS-Instigated destructive dlsarden an several occasions. ~gro participation is be.in~ sought ParUcularly wanted are blaci ex- ttetniSts, especially the gun-totina: and sfl:>otlng-prone Black Panthers. 1be groundwnrk for these new out- brU ks was laid at the recent four-day meeting ,.Gf the Weatherman's national council ai Fllnt, P,fJch. -from which the press and photographers were forcibly excluded. "VIOLENCE" was the theme from the beginning to the end of Utis truculently guarded gathering. Jt began on that Jncendiary note with an obscenity-interlarded harangue by Bernardine Dohrn, former Inter-organiza- tional secretary of SOS, and closed the same way with an equ~lly furioUs diatribe by John Jacobs, a lead ing \Vea therm an agitator. Virtually all the speeches and most of the discussions were replete with the kind of disgusting obscenities favored by ex- tremists -white and black. They seem to consider the frequent and loud we of these putrid expressions as evidence of revoluUonary fervor and defianct. This applies to the sloppy women as well as the bushy-haired and unkempt males. tn fact, , the squalid females appear to take special delight in the loathsome obscenities. Dohrn's "keynote add ress" was full of them. .AJleu-Golds1uitb TllE HALL WAS decorated in keeping \\-ilh the "violence" them! and the revolting obscenities. Hanging fro1.n the ceiling were large portraits of revolutionary rulers and leaders -)'lo Chi fl·linh, Fidel Castro, Che Guevara. ~1alcolm X, -Eldridge Cleaver, the bail-jumping Black Panther official now a fugitive in Algeria. Also hanging from the ceiling was a huge cardboard machine gun. wi!h a placard 1eading "Learn How To Use It." One wal.1 was covered with alternating black and red posters of another Black Panther leader, Fred Hamplun, killed in a shoot.out with police. On another \val\ was a 20-ft. poster "A'ith big drawings of dil ferent caliber bull ets, with a full description ot each. Also on this poster were pictures of Weatherman "enemies" -foremost among them Chicago's Mayor Daley. INFLA!\li,tATORV TALK -In !ht'.' opening fulm ination, Bernardine Dohrn clamored for more violence. Derisively she berated her fellow Weat hermen for having (obscenity. obscenity) a Jot and being "motivated by a white guilt trip." "We didn't fight around Bobby SeaJe \•1hen he was shackled at the conspiracy (Chicago seven) trial." she screeched through the loudspeaker. ""'e should have torn that (obscenity) courtroom apart. We didn't smash them when the (obscenity) M'lbe peace creeps hissed David Hilliard on Moratorium Day in San Fr.:;ncisco. We didn't burn Chicago down 'vhen (Black Panther) Fred tli lliard was ktHed (in u shootout with police). '"t\'e ha ve been (obscenity) 1vi1n py on arn1cd struggl('. We talk about being a fighting force alongside the b\aeks, but a lot of us are slill (obscenity) honkies and we're still scared of fighting . We have to get into the armed struggle. Violence is our aim and motto." THIS EDICT WAS stridently echoed by ~lark kuod, top Weatherrnan leader and \.t.leran of numerous disorders and demonstrations. "\\'e look for pitched battles between 1nilitant ~roups and the pigs (police)," he bl.l/01ved, "on a scale and with a violence tha t will make those in the past. look like Sunday school picnics. Violence is the way to the re\'olution." lfow to go about .. making the American revolution" was discussed and argued at gr!'at length. More time was devoted to !hi~· topic than anything else. Ted Gold. a prominent \Veat herman, asserted that •·an agency of th e peop le o( the world would be set up to run U.S. i.r.ciety and econon1y after the defeat or U.S. imperialism abroad." Th is brought a r..'Joindcr from the fl oor, ';Does that 1nran that if the peo ple of the world suc· ceed in liberating themselves before American radicals make the American re\'olution, then Chinese, Africans and olhE-rs wil; take rver here and run things for 1vhite America'?" '·\Vell." replied Gold, ''If ii takes ft1scism lo bring about the An1erican re,·olution. I guf'ss \\•e'll have to have r;:iscism.·· By Robert S. AUen and John A. Goldsmllh At Dear Old Hudso n High A young man I know is bored with high school. He says It isn't relevant. He'I' absolutely right. How can life in high s¢iool be relevant to our mature adult society? .Vet t can't help ~ailing my years at dear old Hudson High with the requisite glow of nostalgia. Those were the days ! How happy we weu in our innocence before we had to go oot and face the re al world. Jn my day, the boys all \\.'Ore cashmere sy,.·eaters, dirty cords and saddle shoes, while the girls wore cardigans, plaid skirts and saddle shoes. Well, come to think of It, not all the kids dressed like lhaL 11IER.E WERE poorer kids and a few blacks and Orientals who wore. , . .1 can't rtmember what they wore. We never pekl muCh attenUon to them . 1 But ariyway, we kids in saddle shoes pretty mu ch ran things. We were known rather vaguely as "The Group." Most of Dear Gloomy GWI: I.d's get on with the proddinl ol tbe Public UUUty Commiaslon to ma kt IA.guna phone rites fair and tquttlble. I'm Ured of PIYin& Jona: dlttance charges for whit ahould be local calls. -J. D. D. '. Art Hoppe us lived in the fancier Eastern Section of town. We controlled the schoo l paper and elecled lhe student body officers ... Not always, though. I remember the '38 election when Nick Dickson won for Pres· idenl. •. He reaUy wasn 't one of us. NICK ALWAYS wanted to be part of The Group, but he was never quite ac- cepted, 'Probably becau se he tried too hard. He was a short, curly-haired kid "'ith a funny nose. His clothes weren't exactly right and he Carried his books in a brief- ca!e. He \\'lS kim;t of a grind. And his man· ner \\'~ very sincere. Too sincere, mosl of us lhooght. Anyway, he 'd been beaten for President before and after that he Josl for Cafereri11 M111nager. So we didn 't lhlnk hlm much of a threat. Our candidate was llubert ... \Vhat was his name? He was a bouncy. en- lhuslastic kid who worked in the Prlncl· pal's Office. A real comic. But, trouble \\'as, nobody took hin1 seriously. So Nick won . TED "'ON FOR vice president 1h:it yeal'. Just en honorary job . He was a big. nlce kid -big but dumb. f rffnember he got ln a fight with lhe tdllor of the paper. who was one of us. After that wt picket! on Ted me rcilessly , making him !he butt of aU our jokes. 1 suppose the maj oritv of kids not ln "The Group admired him for I.alt. ing us on. But, then, they never spoke up. Barry ~·as the cheer lender. a real gung-ho type. "Go team. go!" he'd yell a" aur boys wtnt off tn battle -even when they were behind 48 to nothing. ot course, lhert were a few kids "'ho didn't go out !or the team or root for J.Iud. son High at the rall ies and games. \Ve really shunned them . They were guilly of the "·orst crime 1ve knew : they "lacked school spirit." TH EN 1 REi\1Ei\1BER the lfead Moni- tor. Jay Edgar. What a fink! Always re- porting us for this little thing or that. ~ms like he 'd had that job forever. Then there 1vas Eugene. the dreamy class poet. and George. the tough kid from the Southside "'ho gave us the creeps. and Teddv, "'ho got expelled after a ""ild escapade One night and ... Bit! there I go. prattling on about the ,!:"Ood old daJs. And what I started out lo say is that my bored young friend is not only absotulely right aboul hi gh school not being relevant. but he should be glad of it. Afler all, \\'ha l. kind of adult mature so- ciety \\10l1ld this be if those who ran ii be- haved like a bunch of hi gh school k'ids'! Friday, January 30, 1970 The tditorlal page of t11t Daily Pilot seeks to inform and trim- ulate rendttr1 bu prc.!ttnting th11 11ewsrxrr>er'1 opinion1 and com- mtnt.ary on topics of interest and ~ignificance, by vrot.riding <1 foru m for the czprtts.tion of our readers' opinion&, and bu presenting the diverse view- points of informed. observe,., nnd spokesmtn on topics of tlltt day. Robert N. \Veed. Publisher • .I wn ·as ·On a :a nd to is by nd nd en he " ke lY '" at to n. ol s. or a at ,. ·e m ~ :s " n ' n b l ' I j CIUEENIE , By Phil lnterlandl Nurse Home Fire Deaths ·Probed Senate Wonders Why · Modern · .~tr.ucture Had Such Tragedy WASHINGTON (AP) -A tesUmony from ''represen-contarn·ed the lire. The smoke recently, I• 'It also true or !rom the broken bones that Senate panel is plannin& bear-tatives of a firm which sup-flowed down tbe corridors many otherS?" can bedin~rous in old age. ings to probe the puzzling plied some of the furnishing toward open doors and wln-Half or the nursing home Jn 1 d d I t l o n to the death of 31 patients ln a sud-materiaJs used in the nursing dows, lnvesti8:itors said. faciliUes'· in the natioo have fumlshlhgs, tbe probe may den fire in a modern nursing home." He did not identify the The Ure marshal.I listed the been built In the last se ven • touch llJO on federal regula· home ~It to be fire resistant. firm. probab le cause as a discarded years. The Mariella blaze was Uons oft ursing hon;ies. Fire experts and Senate In· The 31 deaths in the fire cigarette In a patient's rOOm. the first major fire In the Mfdlc1 d regul"'tions ex· vestlgators indicated today the Ja·n. 9 at the Harmer .'11ouse although th~· patient survi· country in such a modern empt onu stol'y, lire-resis tant death loll _ secQna'lhighest in Center In Marietta were at-ved, casualties were spread nursing home. buildings such as the t.1arietta a nursing-hqme bhlze in· •the tributcd by hospUal officials to lhrougho4t all parts of the Carpeting is u s e d ex-raclllty from reqW,rements to last deciide'-may have' been smoke inhalaUon and . sul· smoke·choked bullding. · tensively in the COITidors and have SJM;'lhkler a y s ~ems . caused by heavy black smoke focation. Sen. MoSs said in a state· rooms of many new nursing ~1edlcare requirements for OAll V PILC'f WANTED IOYS I .ND GIRLS AGES l TO 1' w.,.tt1 .. ••u ... Oto C...._. CWc1111 TY -Owllty ,, .. W.11.,._ T11tot1 , .. ._ AUDITIONS WILL IE HELD THIS WEEK IN ORANGE COUNTY Fer l'r" 011 C•-• lnltr~i.w cau 547 ·625 lNowl Talent Search 8eln9 Conducted lly TAKE I PRODUCTIONS HOLLYWOOD, CALIF. traced lo the carpeting in the The Ohio, Stare FI r ~ ment that 'evacuation of pa· homes because it soflens falls sprinklers also Pt!rffiJt dlscre- facillty at Marietta, Ohlo. Marsh::ill said ln a report last tients from Uie modem faclJi· ~an"'.dl_."p~ro~te~c:"ts~e~ld~er~ly~p~a~ti~en~t•"_~tl~o~na~ry!_'.e~xc~e:!'.p~tl~°'~"· .;.·:__...!:=:========= · 1.:0nically, the fire-resi~ant week. "It is the feeling of the ty, built less than five years , ''This one is designed especially for watching prof'"'8ional basketball" t' , construction, considered • 50 i n v e s t i g a t o r s that the ago, "should have been possi- carpetin. g and the rubber hie within a few moments." good that no sprinkler system was required for the hople, backing on the·cat"peUngl~n~r He asked, ."Why theo was may have trapped the smok~ tributed to the jpread o , the the death and injury toll .. so Inside the brick building, in-' fire and was lhe~cause or Ur.: high? Then! is evilence to vestigators said. beavy, dense black smoke." sugge:.t that great amounts of The Senate subcom'm iUee -00-The fire marshall, ·Samuel ·smoke caused the greatest long-tt!rm care will open th~ P. Sides, said the .cu.peting haz.ard lo patients and cau.sed was found in tests to )M.im the greatest loss. If this is hearings in Wa$hfn~riFeb. 9. very·rapldly. He reported the ~about such a substantial Sen. Frank E. Mo~ (I}. construction of the building _tJulDIJng, eorlstJu~ted fairly Utah), s u b com m 1 t tee ---------..,,.'-•"-""~---~<--,.._, __ chainnan, said he. wf{1ts to know 'how wld~sPreid the R. d danger of fire deaths may be ea in similar new facilities. Moss said he has asked for • ~ ":-+ -tlie St&·s ·With Oma~i;' '-• ,;. t ··\" ·"" -. • CHECKING · . ~· · . \ · . · · . · • uP • RCA''Once !a¥ear'' ArthFitis Victim s Ca11 P1·edict Rain By L. M. BOYD IF YOU'RE AVERAGE, 25 or your original 32 teeth will be bad, fixed or gone by the time you're 65 ... HALF the suicidal gunners. v!'l10 try to shoot themselves in the heart. miss . , . MAN FOR MAN, in lhe last 100 years, U.S. ci tizens are drinking less whiskey and more wine. Why? ..• CERTAINLY, IT'S true your brain starts to shrink at about the age of 30, but that doesn't mean you get dumber ... OH, BEFORE I FORGET, the only nesting population of skylarks left in ~orth America is near Victoria on Vancouver Island. CONSIDER THIS -How can a fellow with arthritis predict a change in the \veather? Simple, , writes w. Oma ha doctor. "BOyle's Law stales : 'The volume of a liquid or a gas 1n a closed container varies tnVersely with the barometric pr.essure.' In other words, when the barometric pressure falls, fluids in closed containers expand. That hap- pens to the synovial fluids enclosed ln capsular ligaments in sensitive joints, creating pain, which signals the drop in the barometric pressure and foretells a change i n the weather." CUSTOMER SERVICE-Q. "Do lobste rs walk sideways like crabs?" A. No, they walk forwards, but swim backwards . , . Q. "IS THERE ANY one year or our Uves when we're Supposed to' be able to learn things1·fastest?" A. Age 22 is said to be U!at •yeat. but not all the science boys agree ... Q. "WHAT'S THE VALUE or a Stradiv8rius violin?" A. Costliest of 'them all -the "Messie" in the Ashmolean Museum at Ox(ord, England -is said to be worth about $84,000, .. Q. "IN A FIGHT between an alligator and a python, which would win?" A. Bet on the snake. TAPS -"In "'hich state was that haunting bugle call known as 'Taps' firsl heard?" inquires a customer. Virginia was the place. SpecificaJly, on lhe old Berkeley Plantation by the James River near Tidewater. Va. It was there, betwCt"n Civil War battles, that Gen. Daniel Butterfield wrote those notes. RAPID REPLY -Yes, ~1iss v,,'your friend, that Los Angeles ' obstetrician named Or. Stotk, also deserves ad· 1nlttancc i11 the Proper Job Club, t~rlaJi'1ly: VODKA -So you thought vodka was invented by the ' Russians, did you? Like'l•:ise . However, it's now reported the Peruvian Indians were malµng vodka in fhe year 88 A. O:ind said vodka, it's f urth er reported, somehow got from them to the Ohio Indians, who passed it on to the Iroquois, from whom the Vikings picked it up, returning it forthwith across Scandinavia, and on in- to Russia. No, I can't vouch for the veracity of this itlstorical note, but it is the serious claim of s e v e r a I anthropologists. Your questions and com· nients are welcomed and wiU be used wherever pos- siblt in "Checking .Up." Please address your mall to 'L. Af. Boyd, in care of DMLY PELOT, Bo.t 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92663. Now Parents Must Pay MADISON HEIGHTS, Mich. (AP) -A new city ordinance will give parents in the Detroit suburb of Madison He~h~ legal responsibility for crimes committed by their minor children. • It provides that the parents of a mindr child who commlta two or more crimes in a 12- monlb period are subject to a maxirrium penalty of 90 days in jail and a $500 fine . ~ugene Artl}ur ~1 o o r e • Oakland County probate court judge, said "the ordinance may help in some cases. but the primary problem is for the parents to accept t h e responsibility. If they don't, 1 l'm not sure the threat of a I fine or jail will motivate .them." Moore added that "U thi! Is a way to get parents to fulfill their duty to raise their kids. it's fine." BAHA'I FIRESIDE Feb. 2-8:00 p.m. ...;;~~~~~~~~- "U N9UHTIONAIL T THEIE MUST IE AtUEEMENT IElWIEN TRU~ RELIGION AND SCIENCI ••• " laho'I Writlog1 SPEAKER ..:_ RICHARD MDKOVICH I Cost• Ric• ind Bolivi• Bth•'i Pion11r I 985 VICTORIA, COSTA MESA Look for the Golden Circle Tags and save up to " on RCA Col0r TV Model FM·489 20" d~a .. 227 sq. i1t. Pich':'• THE ALUN -RCA's finest table model 20" diaaonal New Vista• COior TV! Advanced Automatic "lo,ked•i n" Fine T.u nlne $449 • 95 (A.F.T.). 25,000·YOlt • New Vista COior chas- sis and powerful tuner * ,,,.,., •<nHant, lrue-to·Ufe color! Savings have nl{Ver been brighter. .. 0 optiona l with dealer . , " BIG COLOR:J 8.0 VALUE - Big features, tool RCA's Trensfstorized New Vista• VHF tuner is th e mostl>owerful in 11ie TV indus- try. 25,000·volt COior · ctiassis with Suj)er Bright Hi·lite Cblor picture tube. A lre· mendous buy! ' • I, I . •• '· , ,• . . These are not floor samples or demonstrator models, they are exciting Color TV's and Stereos from RCA's regular line. Your once-a~ year opportunity to get the best for less! Model GM·52l 20· di1(, 227 sq, ifl. pocturt Model EM·465 • ur df'1 .. 1ao sq. In. p;ctu•e RCA New Vista' Sportabout Colo,. TV fea· turine ~dvanced Automat ic "locked·ln" Fine Tunlne (A.F.T.)! Adva nced 21 .SOO·volt S~ AVE I New Vista Colo. cha" sis and super.power• fut New V1s!W VHF, ~ Solid State UHF tuner:i:. Save at your participating dealers now/ .. r •" ··. -. ·' •. ... .. . ~ .. '··. . '•. ... ',•, . .... '. . . .. •.· '.' • ... ·-.. ,. • ·; .. . ' •• ·' ' -~ • l l l DAii. Y I'll.OT ---• " MR.MUM~~ Frida,, Jimwy lO, 1970 , . . ' .. ,_ &.GC&%1Ett @p& &£ -- Smothers Testifies He Used Pot, LSD SAN RAFAEL (UPI) -sp<>rts coat said he had ilnOk· "I &et. all my religious had e\'tr llhn cocaine and he "Generally, people lay ll on~~~~~~~~~~~ Comedian Tommy Smothers ed pot. "four or live tlmes" at vlbr1tUons (rom Frank replied "No." you, gifll, what.ever. Llke love says he has smoked marijuana Werber' a' home in Richardson Werber," said Smothers. "He "Have you ever t a k e n beads:.'' at least 1 hair doz.en Umet1 and Bay and "two or three tlnlel" also taken 8 couple or LSD athisownhomeinMJUValley. Is one or the few people you heroin?" asked Ba1es. The defense won ooe point trips. Smothers said 1?13 religious run into in life who can touch "Well, years ago, but 1 quit Thursday when Mc G u i r e Smothers testified Thursday ram!Dcations from marijuana you. He slmpll!les my pro-because all my vtlns col-ordered all seabap filled with on behalf of show business had escaped him, but said he blems." lapsed," replied Smothers as 251 pounds of marijuana to be promoter Frank Werber, who had noted a tre111endowl Smothers also admitted 8 courtroom spectators laughed. removed from the courtroom ls being tried ror marijuana change in \Yerber's personall-and all testimony relati .... to · couple of LS D ll1ps "w'-n 1·1 "No of course not," he ad-.. ,. possession. Werber's detense ty in the last fou r years. iri; them to be disregard ed. They is that he grows and uses He said he thought Werber was legal." Marin Superior ded quickly. were found under Werber'• A THOUGHT FOR TODAY Al-. tH .... """'-.... ..,, "' tMll Uf, _. .... ClRlfl' l"ltiSrlftlO AS A l"UI LIC se1tVIC£ IVEltY OAY I YI marijuana for re 11 g Io us was the typical "hilstllng, up-Court Judge E. Warren Mc· The prosecutor also asked house in a raid In October, purposes and la thus protected tlght" show business promoter Guire did not allow Inquiry in-Smothers where he had ob-1968. Werber later was ac-LEE ROOflNG CO. by the first amendment. when he first met him in 196$, to the "effecU" they had no taJned Pot. but Smothers, half qu.ltted of smuggling 'and t4 v .. ,. .. ,,, .... The crew· c ut Smothers, but then noted ''stro n g'' Smothers' mind. of the Smothers Brothers com. posseulon charges in U.S. 1m ~.., ..... ~·nn l-~d~r~es~se~d~l~n~b~e~t~l ~·;bfo~t~t~o~m~~c~~a:n~g=es~m~W~e=rbe:::r~·s~per:::ao::nalJ~-__:~D~lsll1~Cl~~A:tto~mey~~B~r~uJc~e~~ed~y~t:eam~~w~it~h;hl~s_;_bro~th~e~r~Di~·~,u~l~Cl~co~u~r~t.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ trousers and a rust-colored ty. Bales asked Smothers tr he Dick. oommented on I y : The trial resumes Tuesday. ~ ff I Demo Urges Probe On Reagan Re1ital SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A the living room of her rented Democratic assemblyman says home to exp!a!n "'hY ~he sollcl-. . . ted $125 000 in furn iture and the legislature should 1nvest1-paintings' for the Governor's gate whether Gov. and Mrs. Ron· residence and office. aid Reagan are guilty of conflict Mrs. Reagan said she conski- of interest for renting their $170,· crs the project her "most impor. 000 home from wealthy friends tant contribution'' to the state and soliciting fW'ni ture from pri-because she ~ants to tum ~e . . governor's reSJdeoce and office vate c1liiens. into a "show 1>1ace" of wtucb Assemblyman John L. Button CIUfomiam can be "proud.'' of San Francisco aald 1'lunday She alio Aid she ii ''IPMt" that only througb "an impartial becauae the reakience and furn. bi-partian investipUon can we iahin&s ha~e became a "polllJcaJ hope to get at the tnlth." , !oetball" during the elecUoa Earlier In the day. Mn. Rea·.Yfar: gan held • new1 conference in Burton noted that A1Nribly minority leader Jess UIU'lft, 1 Nudes Get Custom Fit Sentences candida te for the Democratic gubernatorial nomination, has raised "I.be question of impropri· ety" in Reagan 's arrangem~t wil.h his landlords. "The legislative inquiry sh~d concern itself with one issue aiid one issue alone -did any of tbe contributors stand to profit fin- ancially n a result of caring for BERKELEY (AP) -A the governor's persona'l"lleeds!\' . Municipal Court judge, at. Burton said. tempting to make the punish· ment fit the crime, says he us- ed a little imagination in sent.encing a couple convicted of throwing frisbees while nude on the University or California campus. Judge Mario Ba r sotti senteneed Reginald Gulick, 21, to IO days of Planting trees for the dty, adding: "Hopefully, they will be rig trees ... he could have borrowed a lea f of two" before the arrest. The sentence for Della Striker, 19, was 10 days of sewing clothes for the needy with a church organization. After passing sentence Thurs- day the judge said, "If she can help some one else, if not herself, to rtalize that it's a good thing to wear clothes - fine!" The co u p 1 c , nonstudenl!i , was arrestetl Sept. 23 and con· \•icted of lewd conduct. A lresbee is a rolortd plastic disc that can be tossed back a~ forth in a game of catch. Injured Girl Wins Title SANTA ROSA (AP) - Donelle Nelaon, 17, of Dinuba, wearing bandaps on a sprain· ed knee, won the polte and •P. pearance tllle '"1ursda)' nlaht in the California Junior MJs1 pageant. MW Nelson fell Sunday night and was released from a hospital Wednesday. The overall wiMer will be crowned Saturday night. Other Thursday night win.. ners were Karen Swisher, San- ta Maria, who took the talent prize with a poetry reading, and Dawna Singleton, Salinas, physical fitness. A top prize for scholastic achievement will be given Saturday along with the Junior Miss crown. . -. I~··· =---- 9 • 'J'bc lllD!Wa' i.1 i'M:" And DOW .,.,..,,, goins to obop ""' ,_ <liamoocl - togetlwr. Tho(• wti,. ...... --... h~Jp )'Oil. We're mtftlben cl tbe Am.rimn c... ScdMJ'-,...----thatin omwld.11'1:t••100 wiD diaoover onlJ'b d!......ms, ~, priced. w. -"""' i.oo,.. pmblems, -0.. .. ad -... CHARLES R BARR ' PRICES . EFFECTIVE thru FEB. 6! ~·· 0 CAMELLIAS • • • \' ' 0 • .. • \ • • Z·Gallon 5.95 Yalu• s11a ILltnll_, '9 "'"'t M IUMI,) Come in •nd I'll t ive }'OU a fraa " Lawn •nd &1rdK botk to help 1ri1wtr your 91rcfoft n1edt. Al10 dol'l't for9't to ask about J1.,~sc4lpin9 for hom• owners, ;. Our stl•smen will be lwip,y to e11i1t, you. Fer all •prln•ler nee~• we recommerid Aqu• Due~. Call 675-7760. Now is the time to plant. ChooM from our large. selec- tion of .•. boysenberry , .. artichoke , .. youngberry ••• raspberry , , , rhubarb ..• blackberry , , • slraw- b_,rry •.• horseradish ... also see our selection of bore- root trees. 0 G•rmaln'.s Vitamin 11 :~.s~1:, ·····---··-··········--· 59« G•rmain's Ros. Guard 5 lb. site . ................ $2" Co11po11 for f,,, p1cli•t• of 49¢ Sw11t p,, s,,.; with ••ch 5 10. "'"'' 6 u•rl. Germains Gaod RiddanC9 $141 16 oz. size .... $1.91 ......... .. Get rid of •~h. ro•che1, 1pid•r1, •le. f(JeA~ '"FEJ<l ILIZER PATIO SHOP GPRAYE~ Ceme In encl ne eur tiurnlnw fir• lctt dl1pl•Y· All lets 1pecl•Oy ,rlclcl . PET SHOP Neon Tetro tropical fish lll'l'lll .. ,. ·*-""' ~.... S ' I Wllfl "Is ad only ........ for .... sz.n ' I st Vltamhtt for dots mtd coh •• Coil• Me1• eM 6 •'4111 Gro~• 011ly 1~iJf/Jilf \ SAVINGS UP TO 50°/o 011 artlflclal flowers ond 9lft !tams. REMEMIER YOUR SWEnH!lART Pl,ce your o"'" "Nriy for Velentinf'1 Dey AZALEAS .... ..., . . _...... .. . 99c 5 .. ,. '4'5 Rot. $7.'5 ....... NOW 11801 """'°' llY4. Green H•.,•n'1 own liquid fertilirer sprayer 79' • • • ' ~ ... , .. CHne • ~1.. 514-6174 2123 N•wport llvd. Costa M•sa 646-3925 I Nt wporl I Vlcl•rlt I fSo•th of Diwi•yl111dJ • ' • •• • ; • GLADIOLUS BULBS Germein's Glad. Bulba 20 lulbs Only 99' TAM JUNIPER .... 9AI $1.7' .... 7• • \ • a • ·' , 120J1 leach lllvcl., St-ltJ·l551 tC,t wtord'• Eceowmy Ml/t,tll CUDIT TUMS AYAILAIL! lm11!Amorl- M .. ter Chart..,_GrMn Hften'• 0... CNcllt "- " .. .· .. :· : . " .· • • t • DAILY PILOf ---~- Vital ~tatisti~s for tlae Ct1•ange Const • 1·ea . I WORL.D PREMIERE •NOAGEMENT ''To,ler •itd kotty •' ~r Hit" -LA Tim•• -R•111e,.tlc C•Medf - ""·~' .... Ellzabeth Warren Dissol1iti o1as of Mart•iage f'IHAL Dl!Cl.•IS Klampc, Don.Id F. VI Ilene Mio• H~rrle. 81rblr1 Allll vs Johll L. C\)(tl•, Tl!'rlt J. VI JOMl>ll Afitt\erlV l1wrtnc:e, SOnd•• Let VI AuHeH Ken-,.. e1c11i.r, Dwr1 1...,. .... w11111m o. Brvotr, JIM! R. VI Jtmn c . H111edom, 0onithl' J, VI .......,,llWlll A. JotlnlOll. Ellubslh 0. \II k-lh W, T,,r .... 11,.._ M1ry L. VI Clar~ A•l' C..rrOJ!Mr1, •-A11Mf11 ..,. Rtlpll H. Wllsrft. Vl'11l11i. L. VI Robert Ctl¥11\ Dlehl, &emao.111 H. ,,. Mld!Mt A. S.h'IClalr, Vlttlnlt LH VI WtlKlll Rt"f Wlnltr, Mtrlan A. VI Roltnd l . L~, Juarth A. ,,. J11rv J. $4111. Dor!nt lO<ifN VI Mtrk Rhlner, Ctr111Vn Ann v1 J1rne1 L. Whlhl, Normt l. 111 Ae>b9r1 w V09ter, Ctrol'Vn YI Rot>erl Lft EIHl\botl'v, !Yv Vl Satn!H!I Vtrnlff, Ntn<Y LH .,. Aolerw:I D. Pt~oos. P1n.el1 D. 'ii H1trbe<1 o....,,.....,,.t, Frink a .• v1 Pene J. L1911ltf, DltN Kty VI ltt!le AllM llovd, J1.mn P. vs Tt~ M, JuUll. El1Ubelh Irene ... II-Id Jtmn Car,...,, Sltllt MH n Orvil Henry ElnYre, Normt G. v1 Oleberl M.. Owiln, Terry $. YI Ol~ttr L. Gt.han, JOhn BoYa VI Barl)ere Jean "'"'"'' Nor• K<ftllrvn K•MedT YI Robert Rkh1rd Jacobsen, Ju ... Mlrle Y• H1rt1er1 John 'r.· F1 rlrf, John WllllMr! Y• K1t~rlne Ll'dll Co1t, MlrJorlf I:. YI R9Koe D Mundt, 01wn ~ JUcri.ra Ems' Me•shlmer, 811/erly A11n v1 J.tme1 ··~ t~llom, Jr111 I. YI M1rotd M. Johnlton, 5&mm!e Lff v1 G~nn E Cool\, Je1n R..O.rt v1 Jo.an LOtllse· Klte, Vlctorl1 Prl1cllle "" John Edward Wulnn 8U<l'lter, Stt'l>hen VI P1trl(l1 J Anclrirws, Kellllfttl Jo YI 0.r~111 Trlsl•f\. s.nr.,..,.., G1rie YI Francl1ea 0.1ve1 JUDGMENTS Hi111>ler, Vlrtlnla M1rl011 VI Cllirtei CnuUl1'YI CornelllJon, Tio T11u11 YI John J ay Tem11e, Eltlel L. YI Riibert TvrrrH Sebth, Lllll•n A ..... Hh1!1m K lOHI, Glorl1 J ..... Joi.e . H ... i~tron. 5Ylv•lr1n VI Ern.:11 Robert "· Wells, 8111 0. v1 J•nel Christine JCJIPHI, Marv R, VI Giibert F W1r~, Carrol Anti vs CurNs "ttt Blaclr., ~II Olrl1Una VI Mlcl!HI RIV Ferr, M!Jry C. v1 Dotiikl L Powe., Carina Vt Anttianv · Wide, Jane VH v1 Hubert Ct>r!Jtensen, lv11<1<11 v1 R~t p .. 11 JC1nu-. Mvrn• l . v1 L•wrtnce Pr;J:~n M1rl1n 6'rlrlldt! VI Rlcllird Co;!llt/• on, Wl!ll1m Krnr vs Liur~ Cwrr tr, Lll'lda Sur v1 Bruce Clvdr En1Jn, NordellA JCH VI Wi11111m 8urn1 RCfl!le', 81r1Nlr1 AnM YS Lemberl w Winkler, Irwin vs Ellr&belll R!Kol! · Slm1rd, P"9¥ Helen VI w..,ne Haet M1nlo"', C11ral Ann vs Gary w1111.,,,s Welter[ Judith Lvnn v1 o .... 1a Ruslel! 51>~"::..•;d Jen Fr1ndl vs Rotioer1 Andt>rson, RH vs M1d'l1tl Cros11tv. Tllorn11 W. 111 """" Marie Morg11n. Coll9rt. A. v1 Ste~ Cralo Hullord. Rubv L. v1 How11rd E, ~ulkersan, Glfllf'I K. VS Pllllll~ J. •IYJor, Jo Ann Off..., Jt'.ll!n Smllll, P11mel1 L vi Garv O Kuclra, Sur lorrilM YI Cll1f1f1 Tam Marriage Licenses LAS \IEGAS, N..,, -M1rrl1111 1;cen111 IH\le<I 111r1 lncl\fde: FREIMMAH·TRIPP -J1n. II, °"ntlll A. 1:1, of Cosll Mew, 1flcl Vlvl1nt M. 21, of Los Antrln. l!AUMtfOEFENER·HARLOW -Jin II. JOl'ln C., lS, QI Ntwl>ll!'I 8eKh. Incl Jff'IQ A. 24 or S1n11 Arlil. • REED-UTT -J1a. lt, R~rt Edward 5J, Uld ll:ob"'°ll Lou, Jt, both o1 New_.! 8r1c11. SEVERNS.R081ft90N ':_ Jan 21. Wii/;"' Eu~.li., 44. ol Wt!itmlns1,,..., I Bever,.,, 32, ol L-Beith. YOU (;.HARPER -Jin. tl, Jllinft J'!.'1!11. lJ,· of Ll,UNI lleKll, •flcl P .. rr~1 A. 36. ol ul!.rton. RUOOLPH·SKEEN -J1n. n,. RIV· moncl W .. C?\ -Gloria Let. '6, bolt> of Wnrml111 er. HALLSTONE·OOHNELlY -Jen. n. Jtml'I W., ll, of llytna Park. Incl Betty M .. l9 of Hu!T!lnt!lltl BNch. WllSON·SHAf!FER -Jan. 24, Jttrv, 2l. cf Hunrlnttcn 8t1Cll. incl PhYllll I" :n.t ol An1llelm N WHuUSE-G1asoN -Jin. 2•. ll:1ll>tl Edw.trd. 11, ol COit& MK.t, Incl Vickie Ann, 11 cf Tu111n. WE&STER·GRANILLO -Jin. ''· James Thomas. 21. 111C1 PllrlC.11 Ann, '2, bol1I d Hunt!ngtor> 8tKt>. STOCKlOH·HOWARD -Jin. 2•. SllPften D1bniY, n. 11'1d TerttM Merit, 2(1, bait> of """'"""' Btlcll. FAVAll:O.ROCHE -J&l'I. 14, M.erlo A., ~. ol Hunllntton 8Ncll, al'ld ShJrtcy Ann, 3'. of Anallflm. MACHADQ.MOORE -J11n. 2~, Edwerd l ., 21, of Huntln1ton Ile.Kii, ~rid Jnne!le JCl!Meen, 19, of LOI Al11ml!os. THOMA5·SULLIVAN -Ja~. 16, Donolld R .• ;M, o! LP.ewood, ll'ld Lind.I J., 7', c8::~~~1~'1.'ru~:~ Jan. 16, W1U11m P1trlck, Mo of Cosr1 Mtse, and Ellr~belh J1nf, t•. ol Garden G"""' ClARJC·VAN ALSTYNE -Jen. II, Gary Ch1rlfs. 11, ol Ji1nh1 Monlc1. nnd Seri Sur•""'· n. cf L&111 ... seacll MILLER..t.SH!NG -J1n. 16. R0111!d J .. 25. of Lant 8e1c11. ind JoAnn, 1•. o! Hun!lnolon Be1cll JOHNSTON·WILSON-Jan. 11 Teddv Hu_., l?, Ind 8t1v1rly 25, bo!n cl CoHll Meu. POHl·HAROIE -Jan. 17, Hare>er Franc~ 0 , ilflcl Dorl• w, 4l, bolll at a~:R°.rA~1~ -Jan. n . Robert, u . ol 8elbol rs11nc1. el'ld Ricki Jo, 2J, of Ca<l~ M"!'I MARflH·WAGONER-Jan. 17, Roberl J., 37, el'ld Oarltne P .• 31 bo'tll ot Centi ~11. GUNN.CHAMBERS -Jan. j1, WUllP G., •J, 11'1d P•lr!cla Ann, 2 , boll\ of Co11a Mesa TOJCARUJC·SCHAFER • Jaf'. 17. Dem· 1tro U .. 7'. or Hunll1111ton B~aCll, and J1nlct v ., Jt, or S1nt1 An1 M!lllG.&N·BAOER -Jin. 17, S!t!Pl>efl ~~~~·11°' 01Lft11n~1~~·B:~ loll OWEN·WEBS'fER -Jin. 17/ Gerald ~~:irdbil~. ,'( ofw~~=~ '" 1nc1 MtllE~.C~ONIN -Jin. 17, Cherin L1rrv, 31, 1n0 Sl'laron Mari.ne, 7', both of Colli M~la Gl850N·MC CONNl!:LL -Jan. 17, Arlllur, 34, o! Co•l• Mesa, encl l(fm M .. f.IL of Arin!•. NEEL.A LEHBAUGH -Jin. 111 Sltlll!ltll R., 21, of C01t1 Ml'll, 1na R~rl• Merl ... lt. DI L-Se...:!I HAEHl!:R·DUR-'lt J•"· 11, Cherin Ectw&fll Jr., "' end lvn01, 2:1, boll! of Ntwl>Orl Beadl SMOKE CHOKE CROAK! or . . QUIT, and LIVE · LIVE · LIVE Learn ho\v, FtlEE consul- tatlon and dclai1s. Spon- sored by N•tlon•I Antf- Smeklnt Ce11ncll. call for appolnt1nenL '42-41U er 67W127 Guaranteed to holp you quit within 10 da)"I! No probltmt! ~/8 INCH 4x8 FOOT SHEET ROCK 127 Mu.le lov•r1. lh\1 \1 roc:k, hlayY 1tulf. ute lor dry wollillg thcit 11:tra room. 11'1 llO big d•ol and: a regular guy can. do lt. HEAVY DUTY VINYL RUG RUNNER 77c LIN: FT. Roll th!• ou t during bad weother. U'll . hand!• drippy rolncoa11. muddy 1hot1. beannle1 nJc•ly whl11' 1<:1vlng your carptt sloppy or lr••hly mopped lloor. , 3 PIECE BLACK 8r . BRASS FIRE SET 14ee Compact 11\ 11 priced. lo lit lh• budp•I but look good. Etched black oqd'bfo11 finish wUh Jr" stOlldisig ltrffn. Thi rnolching pok•r ood brush hmig up out o! lh• woy. il ••erybody r•.1D•mblir1. GAS LOG SET 11aa .A ;01 log ••I tho! proctlccilly pays for ll1elf Jljl tlm• and -.vork IG'fed from cleaning. chopping tlr•wood. ond olhtr 1uch triYla. Steody •Y•l1 heat 11 1molr.•l111 ai:id odor .lr11. CRAIN DOOR FASTENER 27c Gr•11I ta!tty l1olur• 11pecl11lly 11 you'r• hom• cilon• ot night (10. try o computor dci\lllg ••rvic•). Tokt11Kond1 to put up, gins Jl9GC• ol 1Dlnd worth houri. BALL CASTERS 87J. 11'1 o !or. lar b.tt•r thing you'll b9 doing for yo\lr hack by 1p•ndillg a Uttlt coill lo mok• th• furnlhare aa1i•r to mo••· Your wlf• will b9 pl.c1Md. too. 100 FOOT CLOTHESLINE 57c Olc11umffr yafd pH1v1rb l({f· "knln9 clotbe1lh1• •oft droopy clotht.'"lf Cl n•'f' on• II JaMded. •hf p<tf DION, tbil wlpel d..:m with o dctap cloth. o: 1tron9 on•. oh y••· P~atk iroat. •tffl ecir .. ICl1>1>, Rlch&r11 OM I. Mltht-111 Ot!1<1v, C1rol Jfln I. JD1!!1 K1•!• Molk'ni<OI>!, VIVI H I. Glenn J . IC1mt, JllO'r A. I. Jer"' A. StY•'• C1rol l I. O"'l!lt W. Kololl, Mary Fr1nc11 I. Fr-0. Mc011!•-· F•anc-. $1nclr1 & John Jtrome Rlm>ev, Nlcl1nt Merl• I. Huth J. Ba11no1, Rot11 v. I. L,eanclo o\. lhMn. J r .. Gt'Drge J , & Pelrkl1 M. To-, \llrtll'll• Gtrlruot I. Wlll11m 811~1 N•wl1nU, lucv D. & G1r¥ £. Nelwln. Lvnn & J1rnn It. ~vr.11, S..!"111 1(1\lll • T~O(llol!~ J;>tpl• McFATllnf, MlrM.,. LOU I. Jame$ Stewart Bl'fl_,, ROK E. • 8tllf 5utl R1m, JUOitll V, &. JOltr 8. 8en~e, Jr., Joy(e C. & TNtdore S. Sll>llfl. Jr.. Cl!rl$1iM Pal" .. W1vot Rlthlrd koll, k1rold I. & J1nlc1 I!. TIHltt, Vici So.Ir .. S..muel E'OwllrV 01rlh111ton, Loll J ... Edu1r R. l t lell, N.ncY l. & M!(~fl J ROS\!, C&rol AM I. Vlclor LOul1 Bttmoni., Clwbl!,... Anne &. Eom1111a Tllllm!I-. H1ncv I. H&rlr'I Rulflett<><d Sttr, WIUlarn LIOvd I. M1rl~ KalM<ioe Cl'9!!111, Cllervl Ann I. J-11 P&ul Wa\l<1tl' ~•n I. I. l• F. StrM>d, Faye Alid! .. Dorv\Mt 9oYd N~rlcll, Jr., S!ev~ a. Ehlllnor Jtd" t1ub!Mrd, Marllvn & R•l~ll Bvr11 .. L1vall & P1lrk:l1 June 8aohfr, lcln111 I', I. FrKI "' Fhlllr, C1ralv1 I. R-r1 N, Bard, Jr., HoM C. & Dout111 Mtrlu• M11<r1,, Mffilane I. S~rl Edwvd Ll•,.rw:•, Wlllllm A. I. Norma F. HtlllK. Lortltl I. Fr1nl! W. V1111111>n, Terr! G. I. Wlllllm C. Cllllll. SlllY M. I. LloYd !l. H111w. Mlf' \l!CIOr!lr &,John Wllll•m T-!flll, BtrMl~a L. & FIOVO C T1,10f, fllltron & Rlt1111<1 RLckmond, C!llrlot11 AnM & D1vlll AltKlnder Hoa9Ms. °'"'* M, & ~"°"" E. Scllt nlrtL H111t.• L. I. IOOV.1ra l , B••nt, Ca•OI Lu & J111:1r w~ Salclr.o. Elltn A, I. OOl\8kl E. Raol1ll, P1trlclo A1111 & Paul Eow1r11 At•1~, Carol A.llM &. Jamn MlllOI'" Anotll. Ellf'fl F. I. 1~mu•! E P1r•rr, MldltHe D & Robtrl e. Jl<ll110~, Ruuell Mlthtt! & J11n• Jf1~t· " Je(~iOft, C1rll0fl Hall I. JIJll~ t" l!tfn11rdl, E1llltr & MArlo M Mot-e more mote CJ>~rcl!UL L1wl1 Wllllem I. flll&l)flll ... Pow•U, O~lll• & Lew .. lOVtJOf, Rol)ltrl C I. Liil• Sller11n I (Ple ase, n0 lellers, we cry very easi ly) METAL BUILDING The old woodshed never looked better or more durable circa 1970. Gives service ·for years, handles garden tools, large toys. outgrown dress forms. bikes. motorcycles. minibikes. Could double nicely . as kiddie playhou1e or pool changing room. Ten by six outside dimension. (Telegram s we love) 10 root BY 6 FOOT Adv•rti1ed ,•PKla\1 good thru ftbruary '· Hl?O, and chock our lo .. n cdff 1p.ch:il1, now 11 tht llm• lo do tt. DAISY FOOTLOCKER 'll'aylor • Beatty ; fh• Oamly Game ln'l'own C.lut~ O!Ulll' ORANGe DRIVE·IN • LIDO THEATRE, Newport Fastest in '(Vest Buy 1t. Sell IL lry th' fastt)l res~rlse ln the West against your own clock. Test Dlrnt-a-1ine Ads, ~hert the action i5, in SaturdQ'I DAILY PILOT. N""""""~­,, ... , cwu.r t11•er Our deal lnclud11 a IJl9"io.l liJUll noult. th• chtmlccil YOURCHOIC& SURE KILLS •ROSE SPRAY •BUG KILLER • VEGETATIOll KILLER 11 1omtlhlng •I••· It dt1troy1 gord•n 1poU•r1 and dOff' · l Qt .. 10 Ot, lt IUptrbly. INCLUDES SPECIAL GUN NOZZLE SULPHATE or AMMONIA 67c 20 LB. BAG Most lawnt 9•1 pol• O•tr the holldoya ltho1'1 nothing. I lurn.d pol• when I gal tht bills), 1(1her•'•10me in1tont gr-ll up that r.ally m•an1 bu1in•11. ·-· ' ... scons ' • SUPER BONUS-...... ..-s2.oo OFF •SUPER 1095 SONU5 .. ...... ...... ----REG. 12.95 Why not glv1 your dlchcindro la,.n o good slort and aa•• $2.00 (I don't waono. that.'1 •hy,) Sup•r Bonu1 pr•••nll •potted 1purg• ond crobgro11 orid l•rtll1M1 ot th• tam• Um•. ANTI FREEZE lill 47 I GAL. Br.a king down. on Cl fu n lrlp lo lh• ••••rt or . mouriloln• 11 rio fun (•1,.clally'•llh my fcimlly. I'd go bcinallo1). A 111111 pr•lro••I pr•••nlloll 11 worth th• tflort. Am JACI STUD 1'7 Standard oulo lt•m lbafll 11•••r Jea.,. you flat., Safe way to wcirk on lh• car. adju1tablt htlgbl. ccla bti u19d to work on th• boot loo. '° h<fff at 11, Commodor•, PElfNZOIL A frloa d in need, Indeed, If you gotta Jolla junk that isn't quite big enough YOUR CHOICE DWARF FRUIT TREES OR REGULAR SIZE CITRUS Here' 1 a 1electlon thal Snow White 'would have turned down lhe Prince for, choo1e from cherry. peach, apple. or cltru1 varietie1. All 1trong. all healthy. the citrus Is burlap wrapped. Plant now and enjoy luscious eating all summtr long. YOUR 299 CHOICE _ for the metal storage shed or small enough to 1tuff l~ th• burecu.i drawers. Makes a great hippie hope che11, she can fill it full of bead.i, J77 FREE CLASSES -REGISTER llOW • DOOR PRIZES • RE[ll~SBlllENTS fell, 4 -"How to P(lfl•I A Woll .. Oeorvlo Paclllc F•b. 11 -"ln .. tullotlon of 8~1pnded Ctltln;• and. CtUlu; Tiie•" Stonlln• Company (Armtlrong A11C)C.) ftb. 11 -"Wortlllg" with R••l .. and Olh•r Hobby llept" JIOMl Plenoa Cotnpally LIMIT 100 PERSOKS CLAS! HELD 7:30 • 1:311 PM LA MIRADA STORE ONLY QT. On• cil th• 1llci•1t d•ol1 In town. 1up•r o!I tor• lrcictlori ot whal rou'd pay at 1b. tacol 1latioEJ. FDRIC COLOR • , SPRAY 127' CAK tobulou1 lobrk 1prcry lot puttla,g th• fn1bnfft beret: 'PA. your laded hmlitu.rti lot 1 ... tbu 0 n•w •OCUU• attoc:hme11t. Ju1t •Pl'GY· ltt dry, 110Ad bodl ctld c~. Mcmy Hlor&: I • . .. . • ' • • : • • • • • • • • ' ~ • • ! • ' • . . • It DAllY l'ILOT s Year Money's Wort lt NY Telephone Postpone• Bonds Complete-New York Stock List NEW YORK' (UPfJ -New nounced It b ..itlna llloO mU· York TtleJihone Co. has post-non tn new common stock to Nf'N vo1uc '~'lo""""".,.., ftlfl•"1t s.1111 "'' Us partnt f I r m , Ammican Ntw Yd' ti• lll(llt1111 ..-1cn: t11&1 M••R '-"' o.. CM· poned untll titay 20 the noauna T I "'-•. Te .... rapb r. as .... ,... ~ .. 11.-· • s , .. ~ l~ '°"' ,.~,, I.Ml IM n•• u !ftl + ~ ol 11~ mllt'·· In ..... fl-' e e,.. ......... • ..... """·• ~ .. ...,. L.-c.-.u.. 11rt1 Q i:.. ,. nl< n ttv. ;;·~ •lr.tet 1• 1Mt • .. Health Care Needs Reform a, SYLVIA l'OllTER ......... •rt.ts of nve) Our methods or dcliverinc medlall care nn1e. in the JM.)Ori\y &! U.S. hospltal11, ftorn QUtmodcd to ob:MJlete. Moat of u1 are NOT receiving trv;r .. slngly high q u a 11 t y health care 111 return for our lncreulnaly inflated health care bills. W& have reached the crl!1l8: point -and now vlrtually all experts agree we must com- pletely overhaul our hospitals or r~ e:vto steeper spiraling or our htaltb care costs. And lhb overhaul must come SOON. WllAT'S NEEDED: -ReaUy dfecUve: al't!il·Wide • and dty."1de health planning. "nlb Is , a desperate need, for while there are more than 90 Federally bac ked r e g Io n a 1 health planning agencies in opera tion, almost all are virtually powerless to force hospitals to follow t h e I r r ecommendaUons. Wasteful duplk:atton of cosUy fecilities a n d llttle--used specialized services are commonplace the nation over. provided. One approach would be "utUliation review commit· tees" whlch screen unneces· sary admissions, ovti:use or service11. other costly ex- cesses. Jr1 hospitals which have such committees, U1e average hospital stay has bet!n reduced by as much as a full day. -fl.fore Inc en tive s lo hospitals to reduce costs or al least to hold tho line. For in· stance. Oh a pilot basis, Ole Social Security AdminlstraUoo is now offerlng to hospitals serving ti1edicare p a 11 e n t s cash reimbursements for up to 50 percent of the uvlngs the hospitals can achieve I n various types of services. Other fascinatin.; e1pertmenll in this area of incentives sbould be pursued. -Much deeper e:rploratlon of lhe "campus" app~ach to health care, in which health facilities -hospitals, doctors' cffices, mental health centers, etc. -are grouped in ont place. This would make the maximum use of available manpower. ~IMILARLY. multiplica· lion of neighborhood health centers to provide in one piece a lull range of ou,tpetienl services -especially fri iireas where"' no decent medical faciUUe:s now exist. -And we must design and actually build new types of health care facilities for which there is a proven need. It's -11.111 ....... 11•~~ of June 30, and an eddltloo.al i.i-11 oi1 AO '" 11va JI 31 -w. •1' l1~ '{!1 ,rut 1 ~'TI ,::~·~ n"tOrtgage bonds orlglnolly sel 1150 mlllton in stock \ as of -"-ltYEllM '·" " 11 J:.~ ~?: ='~ 11i'1"7:!f ~ l"& ff.It •tt + \• tstlm11.ted tha t 1$ many as for AprU 21. the company an-Sept. 30. ~':. ~,, ~ ~ r) 11~ :!: ~ ea'::-'"~ ~' ~ ffu ffu +114 • Ole1.30 ,~, th ~.a ~" !'1 • vne·half of the pa11ent.s now mJ.':'!' f:: u, • ~\\ ff~ =1"' s=~ "11,:t: 11 ~!" 1t nw. -1\& , .. ·r, 4 ff nn ~l -~ conrlned al enormous cost in, ~' 10 2'J "" ... « ~-' ri 0.1 '°', •1 :11o !" = ~ 1't "it: 1ft r; ~~, t1~ · · I ho Ital l . ~Ell ,t6e 1t '!' f; -!so. llf1.lt .. u ~ + \~ ~~ j 1 111: fli, _·,, our ge11ere sp s are on yr _,, .v.11111 .10 " 1 :t--"' 1 n 10e u11o !* -"'" tMil"4P11 , "~ .u, •11• -1· hnlf·slck and could be well :::-~ "l,41) .,\i ~:?' . . = ~ P•I i., 2t4 n ..... ntt 22\'li ::It: :,.:cf<;plr.:. 111 ill,' ·~Sh :1h :!: ·! served by leas intensive "ex· OVER THE' COU NTER t!:l:U ~1 ''t .... 1t 1' +1~ 111::h.~1~.t •n g if~ ir: ±'~ •P•c f i.~ J ~i• ~t ft'1:-:· tended care" facllltic..'S. 1 "' "[t"• co "' 1 1111 1ru -"" 01 1~ 1a so 2•"' §~ ,.!~ f "' ri~n ·~!., ;,1 4!:i.. 4 4! 1 + •• A•t•Od .lOb .,. :16'• ,.~ ~_, oll/n pf(.15 ~ t\li ... _.,., etlY Pl'l.20 lD l ·.~ "'' 111; .• 11le American Hospital Sup.I 'I.... ~~If~ '/tl: ll 1~,t 111 I m = tt ii 1 . .:~·60 ~ ~"" ~ ~ ::.~ !~!~p~1ii'° H 11"' ,:~: 1:~ = :: p1y Corp. projects a demand/1 • 1 -................... ,:1. 3!~1·11.~ '1, tt' l;:tt,, ,1•\0 = "'!! I~ er.~ I. .. ·:11 n: 21 11~ + ~ 1:!:n • .,,'°. l !1' 1'11~ ll~ Utt=:: for 50,000 to 200,000 extended! NASO l i1ti-1 for Wtdnetday, J •"""'Y 21, 1t70 AlberioC .11 • •• J 1~-111>1t.1 .1s. '' U'h ~ 1~• -'""' mi:.11r I 1~ 5J lt -111 ••• Aluft.t.lfll 1.20 t2' 14 4w it + SoOll 1.16 11: 12~ !!14 Jl\fo -\\ I::: AIOltl I°' h JV. 1~ -'• care hospital beds in the U.S. I a1pfflllllatl.,. ......... .., M latlfll• •I ,......_llMftty t A.M • ._MAIO, :~ .~ 1" fl lW. ~ !, ~ 11 l-: 11f ~~ 2\lil ~ + ~ ~~M:rfn s! flU f'Wi D11i• ='•o \Vlthln the next five years. In "rk" .. "'' IMlllM rt1•1i •• -'*• IMfMlwll .,. ~..._ • Alle9 c.. ,201 "' 1111r. !Mt. ll -"' .., l.w Ml~ 2•u 1~ =1~ :drli" eo 11 16Y1 ~Yt •~ -'• response to this need, it bas ~ Yll:.)' ''.:'' ,,. ,,, r:··· ,. '"' \]\' Pllll\'Y Dlt I"' 1' :::=:::: ~-l 18 w~ ~-0 =1 " omwEdpff:: 1al lll~tt ~~ .. .~ ':,~ t:Z u:: ri: "tt,U =t~ f lllTI h~11 Ul~ UV. ... 01• 1' 2:M P1.-.w H Jd 4Q Ill/~• l:' •1 :!OYt 2t ,. .... ····· mwE _pl A 14 lit 2m ~Y,; :.:_•;,; ll'A . • IS 2 H' 'Iii -~. collaborated with the orflce o -'°' it111 14 ::; T:f m • ftd Miid ~ .w.<t P•wiel' P 1u ,1, A.1 tc1a. 1.'° »1 ~· ~jffi' U .. -'"' °"'""DI\ ,.. 1M ...,. "°"' '°'"' ..... inc 1 • .a ~s Iii ~ J l't ti .. IOI< •-h1•tec\ ~"eHan der ~ nll9dRlf-':Y Hiii! jllll I~,...,._ 4 ''"' P1 .... llt 17 II Al Ab 1 ""' . ~ -~ "" id •'r-H iii 2'\6 • ._ -1'-'st U• • ~ ff 2"' -lo ..... u Ni'!1 cl• "l' l li'4i lftff•rd !" r. "-i.t T n MVI AllltGMlll .ls • "' !!.I!' \It _,, 1 t3 3"' x 31'' -IV. r 1.~ U V. 1~ llh ~ '• Rohe to design a prototype ~--~m; Cm S\~ • 1111 c~ 1 1\ 1 PJft Obit. ~ S\li Allied ,.. ... fT ~ ~ R,i; -Mlltt. 1 ~ 1m IS'A u.... ..... ''nii.J" stli i: ~\\ ;~ till!;~=:: •·packaged hospital." tn this ~.a11_.1i~-~ ,1,., ~t? lRf \:.."m •\ft 1~ i~ :: ~ Jtt J,. :11~,-~ 'J ~ tm.ji: "" j~ + 1l ~~ 11: 1t! Ui? ~~ iJ:-Z + t:: G~:~11cv111 1~ u ' 'I~ 1 -'• U lh tloM but -re. Ttc 11\ N Int IW.ii i\'t N p-,..C 3" , A , a..11111 fl 1 . ' "'' ,,. -<\o dOlt:J.i • U\'i II~ II"'" + \<j Gr•ntW 1 . .0 JS 4 1'1 ' \• 'It + '• new type faci ty, !a)'S e rt11'nl1!Nt "''" ·~"" l) • I' MVllll :"f\ft 21"i'll p-llE 11 l!"ll ,. 10t J" l lnt lffli 011 s I• 6)\lo '2111 v. -1 gr•nl pf f.IS 110 m. S!W. i211o -'I AHah~ltathelbedcostcouor1rod~s1-:t'"~;~:,~~F-l~:J~~~ft ~ •• ~!fur:: fi"lin ~im:"w. :lJ:$~~~lo.o 1J I ff~~~~: ..,l•ptlJ: ~~1h1n~t2t:gf~!1~~ ~ ~ ?k: ri:~.~: ~,. UC tlMI '90lrlll11$ WllWI Qintr,.., ~t. !: l:il ¥.: 5 ' "'ll'! .. 5, " ""'""" ~~~ .. UVI fl~ mt _, ..,Frflllhl I n ll 1-Mlo )J t t~ gmoP•p 1j! • •\ti •Vt 4'41 -'. to $t7,000 -half the cost. of a hi",..•• m;"/ ~ -!'', t. ?'1~ JJiAi rnl•>tJ '•rn 11u Ph-n IJb ''~ 22'.\ ""*" Dl:l.lll 2l ~ Milt ~--2~ LN•lll!I 1• l \'J • •·~ -\~ 1 Mor Rv J ',',, "1'1t .. ~\•'• -,~,-+\! f.!C .., ,.. ... · ,4 It l'Dll'i: f1 I' It 1~ M1f1111tr .IO llt .W 52 UQ •• 1.. IG 1,76 5' ~t ~ Uti -V. GI Wttl Finl .. bed I •• g ... -o ho~Jlai -1111 (b 1 ntef· ' Yr !?"nu· '' '"' n -·• :• -' .. ,.., Ml Altlllt .10 011 U llo 1'1'1 t.m -~ .-0.,... 2 ti 31'ii )!\\ JI"--'" GtWnUnlt .N 4 11\i 11 2!'11-11• <& 7• d dH • f!'llrlltll rwt•d ,. v• "'" n• n" ..=i! "'" ,.._ 51 ,,.,... Ult 11'.4 -\~ on .... , ti iHO 62\i '21'1 61\lt -1 Jl'."Un Jtfl.11 ~ 21"' n• 21 1 -" nd the cost I nt ay 111 I• 1~ I tecoDt F 1:.:z I~\~ ,::i;~~ 2) ~ ,AlrlNk_.,.10 l'2 S)l,4 ~ J3 .... -\It Alrl~ HI 11 ~ »:-"'I !!Weshln :fl ' IJI• 13~ 1Uf. -la :ISOCOUldbesram::hall. :i~~'l'·,$ =~~ 4~flltJlitj:,.•;,.£ J l~\Pnr Go 1~' ~::::~J,:I ,y ~ )f'h ~l'I=~ on1~:.s:: ~ tt:t f~\ 1o~+t;Gr::~lll1 :10 : ~ i~ ,,~=·'• • rtl•ll matk ..... N " R ~It J_. F' ,. ~ ..... ~~ ~~ m 10 ACtn •pf I.Ji $ ll\~ H ''"' + " onl 'tp f -1n ,,~ 41111 ""-I t:'""°"fld I •1' 14ff l• 'I -.. ( (:ANN<rf resist crying O\ll mr,rto:-..,, .r <Otl'>' l'P'"ti C l VI "I\ J1m10Y "~ ~,.vb$ t!M Ul~ '!%'Am C«n .40 :M l!Vt 11 11\t-\, Cl CP 111/J.SO 22 i! '314 «1!~ + h rOlltr .to 11 71V. MVt 2 \It -11• m ulOll. .rill' M I ~~ Jllll' Fdt 11$ N 2~~ 141.i A Chain J.tO • 21"" t1\il 211 -\0 Con! Mw· 1..W •1 -431'1: 41U. •lU -2 '~II 1 l2 2•~• 2414 24'-'" ... · In print. when will we stop AAA El'lt 4>11 M -:1~·· 0,d 1~ ''"' IC Iller It r.1\ 'm =~ s N~ 121-') ,, AmC1 ... l.ll n• '1(~ ~"' 2U\ -VJ on! M wl J 211'1: 21141 21W. -~1 GllLIHold .., I}' » .. " ~ •• '• ·.·.~ =':~. . .. t _,.,. ...... 1 Cor• J:t I at.in ,. 1~. rn Kflll&I ,,, 31 )'l\'t "ubllt!r I~ Tm .AOls1Te1 .«19 ,. 'H\fl ~ l•I~ -"' r. 1,1 ,._, 2.11• 1'V. .. ' GHMOtl l-1111 I'll "' "studying ways o '""'uce AF.fiPr s •Jil 2 v. 1v11 rd I ,i~ K•lv•• ,u J\~ fur• 4'i 7'll AOv•Nt .ue u t\!o 1, 1 ..... on 01 1 ' :kt:.. :k\ft 34\11 _ .,., GullMOh ~J 1 ••"' 14'/il Ml'I + '• h SpltaJ costs and start ap. Al~ l"C I.I ll' Mir l 1 It'' KIM 01n 4U ~ p StMet , :)(I lt AO~I 111.MI 1 12\!t I \II lt"' .. . . . on fll ) 'HU = 26\0 -n 8ulf 011 JO It'll 2Slli 2i 2m -" Polylng methods wh'·h we ~.~·.• tt.1 l~ Ull •, 1 J,~ ~~ d" ::."rr 1> 1J~• P~r1tv s1 1s u·~ ::: ~~ 1.t: u~ U" J,? 2 .. ~ = ~ :'1r01'10~!~ ,m il 15 W-~ Gr,~~R~l{~ ~ :i"' 11~ ~i., :!. :~ ~ ~ f VI jf:'2.., " •~>,< ~I KtU1lt Slli 6 Pl>llO Cp SU '"" All'I E•P Incl ll ~\(o 14~\ U'l1 -~ nOtl pf41jj)CI 11111 il .UV. Ml~+"• Gull$!1UI .ff. 10• ?O 11\k If\~ -'1 al ... dyknowtobeelfectlve? ~~.!"tt· ,","··~ ttc .. ,.,r 1•v.1 1(11111' 2J·A114lllOll;il CM ""llAI AGenlnt so ·n 2 1\ ~. 21 +1~ °"~ l. 1 ,,,. l2!i W1i f 'l\iul!Wln . .0. 5l5 11\fJ 1"'9 11\I ~ • ., , .,. .. r:: . ., &I I 20\• '1 K•u I: 15 I lltd Ov" 11 ' AGnlil p1i IO \.'I i l 3lV. -Vt ook Uni! . • 31\l 31~;, -\~ Ullw pf1.1J 2 » SS JS -' "~· .11 ~·rt t a)ly Alber H 1\11 t CY A"T> Ill~ 17» Ktl'I f'lb l:tii 4~ lltll Tr•/ 11"1 IJ Am~1I Jii I 0 ~' I ••' '"', --'•' rln IAOI 21 3DV. 3G :lO'h + Vr ullW oll.50 I 73 7J 7l -1" n11.::n WI we DUI ac u Alberts . N 10\~ Wtl' '! 71• ' Kn• C111 tt ,, 1l1n1b E 3J 33 A ttorne. 1.«I ' l!tl -Tit !II ,,,, 19'Ai ,, .... -I• ulfW plJ.11 l • ..,, .. "' - to bu.lid "''' ty~ facilities ~.·1.~ .. l~ u,'."·'~" ,-,, ,!:! '!P.,",~ 'S' PC l'h '"" lll Ydl Ci> t2I 2:U A Horne pt l ' \It t "' • -1 oeDT "'\·15 s lt\'J lt\'I lt\l ····· ulto11 Ind l6 141 ,(o llli IJ~· -1· ,.~ .. • ,... . 1 K f'O '"' , "~ ........ • CP 21,Vi n Nn WJP .2• 514 ""' 1 v. ·.~ -1~ -M .:o s " ,.,. 3o11~ . . H 1 Which we Imo. w w t 11 A•"'• •,~,, •,. ~, ~~,,f·• ,~'"' ' IC 1 £1 •'-" 11< R..:oir Eq •• " Ami""• 1.10 12 1 ,~~ •>.• + "" -"-'f .SOtt 21' 11 ,,\>\ 10 +2~• -• -"" -1-:J ri:: Cp ,,\. 1Sllt lli! MIQ UV. !Ill ArnM"' "I .to '°" 11• 11\/a 17h -'~ -S! L.l'Ol'O 11 lRt 1m 11\~ .... Htc~Wll 7.70 , 1G Jot 3' dramaticaJly slash health e'"' ",,'!.'!d,~ lla 'HI .",1 ~·~ ~· voi 1tv. '°"' 1t Cred .ut~ •ru AMttCI• l.'° '° :ui. WA 34~ -~' llll"ln111s . ,, 11 '214 11v. 3l\:o-v. H•ll Prt 1 611 1101 ,411r. 3•"i'• '•iv. :.._··1:, .... -iil kl ~V. 71 rtlilr 5~ ,..,. ll ltY t;10 14 26 AMllChc: llf 4 2 'fVt II 11 -1 orGW tJH -4l 220V111f 21t -1 "' tburt 1'01 'II penses? ~~""" 1t~ 1fi: e!!:;," 8~ 6 \a LJ,',C ori1 J ,m_ =~ E,l Il ~' :Z:N~':', ~t ,yt% ~~ ~~ = ~ :.t:'':;.·22 ~,.2~~ 'ft? 2:i? = ~ ~•mo;.1,i .i0t n 11 10 '!u + '~ \vh ·11 t ... !;I L•O SV1I 6 is:.;; In I) ,,.. .... 1 "'L6MI I\ 10\11 11 llll'Mlotl 1ll ·~~ Am Photo .12 16f U V. """' n·~ -YI ox &des! ... 1 ,, ''" '5'~ _,,~ 1mm t P ' l1 ,, .... 'J '·~ -h en WI we s & p ""' ElPr ••.. -""'''"'ton 'ID 1 Ltl!d llfl 1 2'il llOI' C•ll • •I'll .4111:~'9.w_ .Ok U2 tO\'i II\:. 17\\ --21'1 '1•.&o~ll WI 1 23'-'t ~J>'I 2J\~ •\ H•mmno .10 jf '' 11U "~ -21. dissipating the extra billions :'"Gf.:;" ,JV-~ l!ii'"\~"' ':l: 2"" t::::'w: 11,... u • ll111 s111w 21 " ::;: ~Ir' ~ J ~. r'.!! ~20\o -,", PC 1n11•.J.10 as, !!I~ J,'.., ,•,,, = ~ t!:~1W;, 12 ,•,1 1,~ ~'! ~l'i + !~ • oo·ng for health Arn lrad » , J7V. (Oft 1•11 7f 21 t.lf-Sl'i •16 R.Yltl MD ll~ ~. A $Mfr f fO 'll ~ ff\; · + ,,_ ~=II fin I 1 -r...... l•V. 16,; -\? HllWICP .fo llU 1Jl~ 1)11 -~. \\e are spe 1 '·Molo , ,., ,.. '"' !• 51i11 f U urwn M 1n. 11 SMiier ' ·-n:· ,., , II '' '' , , . 1 1 -• H1nll6M IJQ • 'loll •I\• """ -1~ d .. ~ ,. ··~ IS II " n k!\oll In ' 1·~ ..... " -"'1\.Jll(n .IO ·~· ...... ~~ -') H1rc011rt 1 2J j1 ~\Ir ~ I Care in Ineffldency a n A Media. 31 1ru hi'' .1 12 l Le• on ,, •.• "' ,_, ,., n o ~ A5•,•, "• .10 z " j h ''"' .... . CM.1$1H1NI 1 s 20v. 20'4 20~ + \. ~ 1 ,. ,. , , • -• A SI Gob ~I n\11 St t• lji Lt•O\I Ld .. ,.. ...... 5' 2i'O ~ ft'" -\\ owCol 1 Oi't at n H1'1. 7l + ~. 1"' tnl I ..,. a, • ' -2' • duplication -and start using~ G 0 • ,.6~! 1 •' 'i .. :!! 1•,,~ 1 • !-r!'u.c,•,1 ~ 'r. k l 11\d s1:. !\~ Afl!ISld pit.IS 11 ~ Ii •;. -N own c~ 1,5 1 .. _ fii 11 _.., "'~co 11 11.i.~ "~' 1t1~ -'" ""' T Jv ., -•w~ , .... -1' lO 5';111 $-M\'J ""' A~1ttU A IS lil: r z. II 1 tO lll j'• :IO'\ 301~ -1•~ HinSMrx .10 I~ 30 2'9h r.l• -\1 them instead to raise the Amtton 'l1 n cltllY 41~ SI.'/ t.tvln Tn ' I S<;r!llP( H 21'4, HI\ A 1.611 11 1• 4 4\li :_:·t;, .;snC~ Al .1f1 1 11\l 1'\'t _ ~ Hlrv .Al 1.711 ll lt'o 19 .... "• • Ameut e ).U ,,~ ltt-tm ~)'I~ Uwl• '"' 111\ 11 Scrlp!O A '" m Am ' ... t J ' -~ ud9~1' '.l.t JO 11 11 \, 11•• .. Hit Corp ,«I 1 II• ,~ .~. +· .. Wh 1 W•· ! ...,0 Ind 1 f .11 ' Loh •w '"' 1 Stl1 Cmp 111~ 1114 ~'if -" ,,.' *'"· ,•,u iE··! -+ ~,· ulll-.ii x *h' 10 20•~ -1 tt.o~n Alb I I 'j" 'l'it ~lit -CU 1~n 'rden M 10\\ 11 I '-'.edlul \fl .11..· toll (d¥ JI~ I s.ntlfn lJ lttli 1.U r ,,, ,·• .\~ umm!n .too 11 1' 34 lol _ 1~ HtJ,lllM 21 I \lo I \f) Ill--> Atdt'll of 3' 37 ~IK Ca.. 21 • Ill Etrn ,,. 2• S.Vlft UP •N -~ AWi.i l.4l 'Ji .. , 1 •• ·, ••' :;-,~ ......,or~ ,10 ' lOIT l::t "'• \~ HKllM"" ,)0 101 311 2 '.I. 211:. +la -Automat i on in our hospitals. There Is absolutely n<> reason why computers should not take over a wide variety of chores -ranging from laboratory record keep- ing lo inventory control. Jn many cases, hospitals in a given area can band together to .share computer service5 and achieve big savings on """· -FAR GREATER controls quaUly Of medical Cate? Anken C IU "° ~l>CD • "' ' •1 -.1 Liii! Ell lOI ttt 5e•r1e Ill' IS lS" Anl & 2.60 121t 0 \\ 41'\ + \~ ~hy pll 2S 1 Inti 1Ali 11~• t 4i i-Wwll El l.J:I 11 2'lt '9 n -1 Ark ... ,. U••" ~,s OH ,, ~ •••• ~ , •. , M •••• NII " lt ...,,,et~ .Ml.I ru • i .,. • ,, ' ' .• '' •• , .. , -_ ,, Htlru HJ .t'l •• n•. n 111 l2'oo + •• -' ,. C 31 •"-· >t• 13 ~··· -o <o I "I $} 1~ .IO • ~ i! ~1 -1• vr u r -...,. , ..... <••O 10 10,. OOI o••· , Art'<IW M "' " ,,., Mid G t ·~ ... f,'; .JO 11, 1S ?Slit -~ 111"1 Wr A 2 , 211~ 21·~ 21':~ -+-·~ Holl ,., ... • l .... -• Arvldt ll IJVI IF.Hr• "• 411' JV. Mt~lc: h 1 1 15'1! •I Wit UI\ l!Sti q " ~t'li Jllh _ • l:l H 1.10 43 30 ffi\ :rte._ 1.1; .... 11 23 27lo n•i -P. G ) M R -"'CC Sol 2j(\ ""' nnl• • l.' 11 Ml '"' 71' I ....... E Tel 17'' sno. ) . ,.. ,, !!::'. + -,, •• • -• ll "'I~ '"II_, •. , ~ler In! .t4 •• nv. 11~. , •• -'• t ts Aufll 5';1 1]\, Ut~ ntwl~I lj'4 14 ,,.,, ~'t 111;" 5oUt1 Gs 211\ 21'\ ~-:!:!' ~ -,1 ~ • ij' _ :;1' Cl'l•l'UIM "1':4o a ~ SS\o ;h -\4 H•'•"°'•", •.,.1 ' 11 17}1 11\lt -~. enel·a 0 01·s ep-01· Aweme9 1!0 t on Cor• -· l\t · • .,, s• 5 •o( >•" 1"' '.«I • ~·~ 1,1 U..., 161'1 111-'J -I• .... '" -ru ••11 011 " nu Mom • ~·.. w .. " .,.. ... 1 \.'I -~ D "' 1 c '' s·~ l' l!lilrd Al u: ti-\ l!'til 111( t •V. Mini" M l~ 4\, SW E1$vc: IS 1$11\ ~ 1.90 ti n 21l• 2P o + ti --m 10 IP J n: ?~a ~: + ·\, lliktr :W\ 25\' !iler•n "' '' Mll!OI" C t\O lt\11 SNCt•I' ll\lt llV. .Alld\Modl .Ill SJ la "14 JSl<o -3 ~nlllw .l.k 21 llVJ 11':. 11v, -t~ ~~\~llCl~ 101 24 23'1> n>t _ •• over hospital costs b y rep~sentatives or I a r g er u se r s-t h e federal government, health insurers. labor unions. Amounts paid for hospital services should not be s imply the amounts I h e hospitals happen to charge but shou1d be directly linked to the amount and quality of the care s.1 Paltlt 11<o ti1 "'' Ceco 4Ji j~ Mir Mtll 12'.4 11\lt !Id llt'lllS '7"'" 2'\>\ Meor°"Sw 1 I If'\ It lt -1\ .,,. CP l."d ,u,0 22 21._ 21\1 -~. M.-,t1Fd · 1:ro )I ?42,1 ?1'> ?l,,. 111 6 E e l!linl~I~ C 7'ii tU en 'rt• 61-'o \\ Mir"' 0~ 10 11 hi Sc:rw )(!\~ 31 And C!t;y I 2t 11 ""' 31\~ :H\'o -1 rt 1~ ·r.i 4t ...... 41\0 -\ Mevbltln .10 12 4G\l 3tJ,O olO'.-'t + '• D • 19 9 ''""'° 101\ 111-'l Ftlrl/d T ~"• M lltowr 1!\'J j' $ten HPd ~$V> 21 APl<heCP '2s lt 2Ui 1• 24 -II\ '' l\d 2 11 5'1i .W 5'. -1 HewP1CJi: .10 2'1 1otjll 100 IOH• _,,,_ l·op Ill arnmn.s j'.~!!.,P ~~\ .. I" ~t"'•"•• ,,•,•·.~.·,.~1 ~.J:.!.'", 0 "" H~ Sle•IO srr 12~· 13'/il ,Ape:o(l!I 1,31t 13 »1.t 3WI J)\~ _,.. IY'OCP .I• " 1Ho '20 '°""-Hi Hl11! Voll•.. " I u IS -,, " V -·· _ 35 • Id ,.,.._ :M JS Slr1w Cl "1 '> 4' .APL Corp 71 26';li 25\\ 'SI\ -I~ tY~ ol4.2S ?20 IJ'"' NV. l)Yr -TV. HlltonHclol 1 )12 ) .ffl't jt -2 ll'ltss 11\'o 1n; rrr,;;,,1~y 1~·.9 11~ tdt~ H 14'-"116 SUb'IC" 1¥ 110 ••.~ APL pf Cl.°' 3 2111• 211\ 2Ho + '"' IY Hud .SO B I\ ..., ""• -\~ HOO•rl 1.20 ?6 •/ ''"° •2:u. -'4 IJ N ITED S T A TES N ATIO NA L BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH DETROIT (AP) -General f\1otors Corp., the naUon's largest industrial firm, an- nounced Thursday that its net income dropped $21 mllllon in 1969 despite record worldwide dollar sales of $!4.3 billion. The firm reported earning $1,711,000,000, or $5.95 per share or common stock, in 1969 compared to $1,732,000,000, or $6.02 per share in 1!16&. NOW OPIN Last year's sales of 124.3 billion compared to $22.I billion in 1968, the company'• prtvious record sales. SATURDAYS During the fourth quarter. Gllif's net sales · w e r e . .. P.M . S6,S37,000,000 compared to MON,..fMU l S. ,., ... ,., 10·5 P,M, 11·6 P.M. $6,763,0001000 ii year earlier. Earnings ror · the l o u r t h quarter we re $510 mllllon compared to $596 million in 1968. Per share earnings drop- ped from $2.06 a year ago to $1.78 for the rourlh quarter of 1969. 17141140-5111. l••'-4 lit: s.. c.... "-· c •• , ... _ r Au l. '1)(:1 Pl'fl.·M•n•••• E. H. LEVAN Coming Jan. 31 Family weekly Is My Rasband Deod or Alive? Th;. story is written by Condoce Pari1h, the wife of a Novy flie r w ho w as shot down ove< North Vietnam o year and a half ogo. Mrs. Parish t•lla of her trip to the North Vietnomete deleg o-- tK>n heodquorter1 in Paris ond of th • night· mare sh• lives. e NO ACT -:--It's• not all acting when you see Robert RedJord spraying snow aU over the screen in .. Downhill Racer..'' He says he gets more fun out of skUng than acting. e AT·HOME PAY -A professor's idea that the government should pay mom a sl!ary for \\·hat she bu al"'&J-'S done free -taking care of the house -stirs up a national controversy. ... e REALLY SWEET· HEARTS -Family Weeldv Cookbook tells how lo make sweet hearu that are edible. ALL COMl,.G SATURDAY IN THE I DAILY PILOT ] .. Setdvn JI 3S F11 l :ist Al '7\ll M1flrn 4f'll 41\lt S1111dll "' 1~ I I• APl pl 8.58 1 l'O'~ 1'1'1 111'> -\\ fY PL 1,.0 U •,, 1''°' 20~ -~ Hoet"nW•I .tO 16 1 'A 21 21141 -» 81111 l•le 11 1711 Fs G l'!I! 2)'11 'nl'I Mlllllf' t S11bc Fd 6~0 I\' Aqu• °"'m 11 $6'1\ 5$1~ ~'Iii -~· PL P'IO 7.'41 zl ffY, ts fll'I +1 Holl Eltctrn 41 1j~ JU 71"J ~. Auto Sales tumbled during 1111"' lf\CI t f "1IM l"V 24 ~4Y, M/11~ Cl 11 11~< Tunp• 220 ~2l ARA 5vc .9' lilt 105 lo:J'fl 1~1-l " tt•• Co 2 31 411-t ~ «r11•1 -.I'~ HolldYlnn .711 1i2 !19, n\.• 31\11 =1, Strtl HI """ •l "'" ltePu ,,. 3llo M dtt• 4,a s•.~ T1ngtr ,,~ I"• Aru1•N .1411 jj ;o~· ,,.,,, «t -1 etm.rP ,.u • ·~t , ... ~.·. ~ \\ HOlldA l.70b ,, SI'/; .... ~\~ + •• th I rth art.' Of I-•nd ~11 Lib ~11'1 (9\lii "I' WFln 31/i W. MldW Gf 11'.~ 1914 1•uete ~O "'U Arcll•N pl 1 I S3\i Sll\ 5l\~ -~a I M"le .10 1•,1,J ll}~ 21'h -~ HollySug 1.711 11 II~ I 11 -•o e OU QU """• ... , 811111" W ll't t "'lcknl1 161• 11 Moll G•1 ~ jl'h Taylor W lO 12 Arci'IO•n 1.60 J S'""' 5'I s• -1 tl!tAlr .40 ,.,, :rtt• 7'1< • • H0t1~11kt .40 •1 11"• 11\~ Ill~ + ~. the industry ended the year Bird 501\ ffl-'t 3lV. F,"' <0•11 ••"' 1s Miu via. 111~ 1~\ TtMtn! l2 2'1~\ Arr1Psvc 1.ot 1so 20i.., lt'/• n•.'o -1 llec Int 2• 10 tu, u ·. + l'< HOneYwl 1 70 2Dt 1l7\4 lll\lo 1jl'4 -2 with a 2 percent decline from i.ct H1 so :IOVt For"':' '•<ii ··2n. MOd Sci .. ,., I0'/1 7~erm A s l'° A•moost 1.60 t7 u..,. 1s j5\'I! +•o ~~~:, P.~ 1 lrv. 11'-i U•'o -•1 Hos1 lnU .3' 1 41~• ' ~• • i. -•• f d aU t El • ~'A For! Grnl 31'1 31 ... Moh'oWlr. It ,, 2J Tll"'' Co U fa. It\" Armco$ '1WI 16! m~ ?t 1 -~ ntialw I 1<1• 21 1"9 lltl 11'.'t -~I HQ1tl CP Am U 10 t i,, f;o -" ~, 6 ''A Ofll """'MO llK~ , •• 5'6. 1e~•· AS • Jl'i Ar11ns OS .to J1 14'4 1• 14 -'h omn Mf1 .•o '' 17~~ llW. 17'io + i;, Hoov Ill 1.211. 11 ,,,. 1111o ~ -1 1968. The Slump has Orce ltr 9 10 Fotxhr 1V. ~I~ Mol'lm Pk lJ\11 UV. Tiff"" ln 1~~ 11 Armour 1.60 6 " 4' 4' ..... nRGr ) IO l~ ffi! 41' :~~ -1 Maud lfld ,Ill •l IJ\\ ll'" 1i11> -lo . Thr k "" c 2'I ,, Fo!om 14'.~ lJ -· p 101-'1 11 Tlt1n GJJ ,,, l \'j, ArmJtCk ··~ ,,, 321~ lO:u. JI -1 tr«o p1"e '"~ ~+\\Hout Mitt .•O 21 27~ 21 ~ 1 ~'1 or the Big ee automa ers cio 10,. 10;• F~ur S•• "9'• 2JVJ Moort 1 111., 1> T•K c,,.. s1o 1v, Armllub l.IO 11 1111t 31 11 _ t1 Sollllnc: "' ~J ff~ t,~ 54~ -'4 Hou~'hF 1.10 11 •tfli ••"' '° -'• IO lay off 'A'Orkers thjg month llrtl'N1 i ~·~ nv. ~~::tln C~ 11 ~ '!a'~ ~~kh,,,.M 'V. 1 Trncnt G 11<\ 1Ni Aro Coro .90 . 2 11ta Jnlt Ult -\I jEdli 1.40 l U 11't 111\ iftt =; ~::::~~ o~~ ~I~\~ 1~.f I:(:. =''.•1 od . and --' lrlli kl ::COi 2!~ Fu!wtw l ..,.., 1]U IJI.< Trncnl 0 2'< 3'~ Arvl~ Ind 1 11 2'11. 2' 2'1'o ... Ed PIS,-'O ) 7'\~ 1001~ 7'''o -l o Hwt.F ot2.lr ,7 ilO~'t Jt jf" -I\, to cut pr uct1on ...... uce rwn Ar ll~ \'~ Fucru• n ,.. 1· ~:::r El 10 lMi Trice Pd ~ .... XI\/) Ml\ld OH I.to Ill 1'1• ?J\o 24\'o -~ I !lt•I 2• 11\i II 11 -•• HOUl!LP 1.l'O d Jli\ 31:1t J/'11 + '• !OOWlting inventories of Unsold ~~¥1~ ~,0 1~ ~~~r:~1'° 1~~ 1~"1 HCC Let !11 m ~:~sZ. ~'\ ~t • .::,0111.'~;o ~ ~l,, t\1~ f],, ~'... f:1'lfn1i'.50 '1 r~ l:~ \1!~ = ~: =~~G~1:t' ~ ~~'n :~ :-a =.1 ~~ " -·• s --• ••• 5,-, lS'o ''' N1rr411 I 2' 25 T¥ton Fd lSt'o 1• °'Sid OG 1.211 lt4 llllt 31~ Jl'i -It j""lntl 1.10 '' 40\~ J9•• :tt·• .,__ ,Ah 1, ''' '' ,,,. '"" cars. u:'i.e•• 'it~ 'tv. G .a1rc11 ,,, .i, NII ''" J\\ l'4 Utol!K 1v1 t 1u.o SPO 1.70 ll Jllo JH~ JI,_. •. .. •Shem 1.io 1 04 1~ti 17U 1n i ::_.;~ HO;.;;fln .io 111 '°"' u~! :io~ :.·,,; 11 W S ~ ?~· G IClnt!lc ~'!I J.I' H1tC•r R. U lN Un Do!!r "10 ?1 ASM!Tr•n .10 U ~. tV. ''' .+\' 011~ft pf,., I 21 " tt + t;-Huctl.nll J Ci! 2 I!'' •jl\ llli' + J • The rour major dornestlc ffl'IC.0 ¥ 111\ 1t I Ill <£11 ··~ ·~ NC ... o co J'' •1\ Un 111!,1... 211\ :!II~ AllCtvEI 1.34 f l 2J 2'2h ttl'I + 11 g t5 Df 01.)11 61 ,, .. 1AUI 161~ -., 1'1uah Hll . ,40 n , • 1 .. rod Id 6 ~· ,.. tnoro M ,, 71 -~ti , •• "" H" El'S () Un Mc(;lt 11\!o n All RkM'lll 1 111 l•l'I 72h n\'o -J1.~ <'•"""" " Jt 16'\ !!',1 ,, ... ld•hoP• , IO d '>! 211. b +·;. p ucersso ,oNJ,w new lnnMI II 7• 'i/lltn "''IS HttGO 151\ISllUSS•no! 1• ll\:oAtlRlchpfJ llll\~UlllJ T2''11 -i•~Ottbold .UI'> 1n ,6!.L-,._.~llttl8••1t 0 I ?4 1 '1111-'t ~-·· · th first '"-• rte inrtd ~i Siii ,1 ,,,,., 00'4 410 N•I L ~I "V. US Crwn 11lo l All Rd• 1>!2.llO 201 !!\'t lO'... ~ -J\>o ~IGlor<t!o ·'° 11 .._ l"I! 1~ -•\ IU Crnt l.14 l2 21•• 2114 211'< -• ~ C&f'! In e I 1-l"'°"' qua rs "" ;ow ll-" ,,, \f:1'lttll ~Vt U N1!1 Mtcl a.~ M"~ US Enwt 11 lt\lo Atta Chem I 11 11\11 261-o 70ft -1'1 fll1'"h"' .«I It '~'° 2~ 1-' -~ IUGtn Pll.SO l2 fi'I '61, mJ -l'a I 1969 compared w Ith -l~tA ~·· I •le un \V S• j< M•I Pt'! JI\ l/il us s ...... r .. IS'(J Allt$ Corp '° :Pi l-1• J>-' •••.• om: :; ~ ! ' ., ., •1 II/ Pfl'fl•r ' 131) •• 30'1 • -Ito 0 • ••Tdl 4\' 1 ~IOO Ru~ m l\'l N1t S.CR U•\ 1J US Tf'llL 1111 3' ATO Inc .oat 141 tli t\o ru ..... /"°'"'' " •3 '' ~1 •1 +1~ II Pw Pl'l.lS •~ '1 SI>.. f" .. 6 275 829 In the same 1116& 1ne 111 fl' ~· i>old C.Yt It 11 HI! Shew .i' 5''1 uo P•nP ttio 'D Awrort P1'i l 11 1~. IM -~• ntre1v~·~ 111\ 1'"" i~·~ Imo CP .,m 1~1 r.,-10 o~ + '• ' • 1rtr Cd 1ru "~ l:ood l!: •f• 11•.t Nlf SllYr ,,~ "IU Ut•h SL~ _,.., I A'KO Cp 1.211 •• 22'1l fllo Hit ..... l1nev :'00 ~· ll>!i 111, "' + -•• INA Cp ,... t5' ~1. 'fit 10"1 11• period By the end of the year, IS( NG 11 11~• ~ c Jr..< .~.· NEn OE 1•·· 17'1• UIFI Ind 26'11 ,. AVCO pfl 211 " Slh 10'4 -''"' + YI lwrs!riil 1' '!! 1:;t 1rl11. '~, +'\{ lt~or:,ell' C•tult 1: i:;~ :,: l~1\ :.'.· . ed enl&lt 371'13!\ll < ... ..,~cn .-.--. i\NJ NlfG !! e"'~~t.•,. ,,,.'"••"•'••'w",':'! ·.~ ••" ~u.~ , .. ,.~ ?:m_-1,. 1,.vrMI• .>i• lftl ,,,.~"'ti,, iidl1nH•. 'l r, Y'" 21--.-•. how'Ytr, Sales amount tO ~\'PS 17h 11 t-Mk >0 s,1 j,>0 Nllfttll I"" ~• v.,_ YMI ,... "" "' "' """ "' --11 s•• >• • • • th llA ~ 11'1 ~"" I ' • Mltll A :ii'' ""Vl,tlrOl'I 42'h 4v. Awon Pd 1.W n• I \'.I U2'~ 1$516 -1"" Ml~ 80 '" \.\ SIV,-1 \MD!tPt. I. l l 'lo 1'1\\ -\1 only a,464,375, coc11pared wi n o n\ w. ~" 1te 11•, tfl.• N1t11 1 :111tt w1d1w , n J4 "''re 011 G• n , 111a ntli-\.\ """ .-kt-~t fi fl fl -1~~ I~~~ 'J ,r., 1t~ 2f,1 "''; 1,624.119 for 1961. E b~ 111~ '!5 rwr~ ~: ,rli u~ =~llm l~~ I~ w~.~!* ru li.; -B-DOl'~T'1~: :# •; ~m. p"' mi+·:~ ::r:-·~1 ;{ a1• ·n'.tt ri~i .:1:: Among the Big Three ~ra.l111 m~ 1'1« u~'dr~~"' ::_, ,, ,",~~DOE I'" ' Wiii! NG ·~·· 161• 8Rek w I ,. .. 11>• lll\ ?Sl\ -.. OllVf<" 11 11'\ ta~ 11<it + " lnl•l\d tu 1 it( fl1, S'.i >. -•• , r!il 5 ,1 l'l"Olln ttil ·~ . " •• 1 " W•ilr llE 11 11~• 8"'-rOltT ii m 201. Uh u~. -ll\ e•hC11 .?ti 1• ,... 3'.'0 3P~• -ll\ 1nmontCo ·" IJ U la ~ .... Chrysler Suffered m<>St With a ~rlsl pf ff, tf •'l!IO'tr S 10\lt ~I\ NHWW Hp"s" t -'t t~I W•I Tr ISJ;a HV. l1l!GE I 10 .... ~ 27h 1no -~ "'r~·-""'o r: 131 61'~ ~11-'t ti! -~ Miko .70b • 20\ft -'• 68 percent drop Its layoffs ntc1e1 1 1V.l:l~''"" 1 1tlt 1'"N11<1 M.; ~"f1;~::f':rrnll• lR~~l~l:~~~-:i, 11 ~ 1'i• '1 ~~1~+1\,o,,1;-,,,:10 11 it~~ fm=~l~~c'f.1031 '!~ ffi? ~ '11\=t: . . ttlJ u... 21~\ 231~ Hriv•n In 1 m Ohio Ari ~~,. 11'11 Wtllftll M "'' 10\lo ..... p pl 2" _, 2S ~m ,v, -\\ Ort1sr pl 1!12 1 11· ... "'" 111/j -·~ lnttrlkSI 1.IO ,, 11·~ ;;,,. ~ .. have been most severe and l~;t vM' i~U f't '1•~~;, U!t b~v. otiie w11 '' "~ we111R G 1m 1.uo 11rtt ot c11 2 • 39v+ Ji-I.~ u _ ,, .• DrtYlllSCP ,,. 10 n,,.. '5'~ n ~·· 111M •·• j• 34H• ll4•1o ~:ia ..... -2• ·· -ently budget cu" of 10 to 15 ~,',":-'li' , ,',~ '~Ill'• ~,~, '.•,, "l,•, J"•• 2!'!.......~, n 10 •• w11c11 ,. lo.ti 11)'.l &•nt °'MY 2 11 ,•,,, "-',~ .,.1~ _ ,,.. ovttPw 1.10 ' 21 u·~ 21 + h l"'"'~1Fr '.Ji ti ll" ~N(.; ti~·· =1" t d d H,11• 01•• 1 "· Olter TP 111., 11 YO!n Mrn 11.0 1 81tbOll 1.011 I 45•1 "4\'t """-1 Ou!111n Co .., ~,.. ,,.. " •I • ''"' l>l ~-·-, E uo··~· 111 IV.Wlln NA I l'/il S..M;Tr 2.'4 41 oui '0>~-1 Ot.lnJ\rd 1,10. J.G1 tt..._ ~',', ',,•-_•,, .~·,.,.,~.,, ~ ,, Ill fJ, + \• th I t th corporaUun c_ 0 ·~ .. ~er 1S'll :.0 0•¥Cll ,. 1 WlnQ w~ Sl11 ••• lllllC Inc .H ' 1 'l'' ll + "' dul'cnf p14.!~ 11 •4!/i. '3'1t 6(1,'f -.... t~1 1:1n::1·10 n,~ (\ I'" I perccn were 0 r ere ~~~one.. dU , • ...., Hohn""e:,. ~" .. Ovtr N.-. 5\~ I Wsln PYb IJl-) 101 Bird CR .!S ... 1~· ·~ 1.01 _, ... dul>ont s,,5<: 15' .,,~ ., •• ,,., -'l 1"1 f!dll~ ·~~ u;~ U'AI ::1 .• roug lOU e • c.:~~ r 1: 1;1~ H~rd 01 11\'J 11 PEC 11r1 " n wmt:i.o 11·.., 111~ hie' ,,.,,. • 11 ~• •~• ..... ~.P._ont olJ.~o 7 S? 5~ 5' -·~ tnl MN! •Ga s 14 ~, n, :;-~ l'.o!im "t "' w. '"''"'To; ~I 17 \21', P1bsl I r •I'.'•••~~ W/n'!w T 2•• 3 l1lei Ml of 1 1 12'1i 17~1 17'• ••... uvu Lt I.II llS 24 'll'-'t '3'a + •; I"' Nlcll i 10 lll6 •,'j'••' ll"' ~.~ --•',', ~•r 2)\\ ,,. ""' Gii U"1 U lll PK FtE JO S7 Wrdlw E lVi m a.mrn oil.~ 2 .... HV. _,,,., O<r .non.Ir 1!Clri' 26'li ,, .. '~ +"' In! Pto ~I • r1'0 s ~· -1 Col!ln' I' 20~ 21'~ Hiid Pl' l21 > 3411i Pie ,t,u«t l 5 W !t PL 70 ~ Sllh Ind ll l'o" ~~ 20'!~ ..... 0uQ\I '"' 7 1'00 '' 11\'t 29'•\ -•.~ nt Pip 1.IO ~6' 14 12- II '" '' Htwll p u·'J , • ...., P1kco Ct i 511 WrlQht w 22 '214 &luKhLD .IO ?l n"'t IU nu-"' Oo tlGDfl-lG rl"'O "'"• ,..,. ""• -11'1 Jnll A:Kll! 11 121' 111/J l?tli -•• Advcl·t1'sm· g Cir 421, .. Hl'•IJCp XRl ll'.~PltltOI J"1 4 Vrdn1E fl\fVi l'llUfl.lb ,10 11J'j 'I ji\-lltOl'molnd.Of ll1S"'t 15'•1J"\ .. 1n1Stll\.l0 tll ll'.-'t :ll'h-'• S.yu_C .. JQ S n ~ ~ -Vt Oyn•Am .Ml 41 1014 ,;, 10•1 + ·~ 1nl T .. l Kl OS ut $61-'o sm im-1•0 Bt>1rlnn \ '4 "1.11 41'1. o '''" '',. > I' ll!l!!!!M ... !l!!Ol! .. •Bl"11• ... "•"""""'""_,_,,.,.,,,....,.,., .. ,,...,. llttl Pos lOS l7U ll 37" +· tio -E-F-:w•r 1 ':.so4 1h 1Mlf: 10S,;; lOSV. =7" · II.Umin .SO IO 41'~ #'I •1•1 ·· ftgl1Pcil .lo 31 21!• n1;, 711 I !Tt~ ptJ l 1 ffV. tf tt;) + "t Ch • f P' keel "'• I Olde .'.ICI 720 lll'• \'o '9t~ -l\\ il':tKO Ci> .to 1t '2 ?l'i. 11l1 -~\ l~IT T tK• )Q ti'\ ti~ '6\~ -!'• le lechAr .71tl 70 161• """ 1'\lt .. '''' ''' , ,, ''' ,,, -• 1 '' , 1 -·>• "'' 11 n·· + ,, le M al F d &.Ito P~ .SO 13 XI\~ 31111\ JOI\ ->.; " ·I IH .. 12',0 + \lo n P ·"" • .. t &<!IOntH ·'°b • 11li , ... 1"11-h E•1I GI' .111 41 ?! ~'-\ m 1 -\It Int um 1.40 3 1')l~ ,,.~ ,,.., -'• U U Un S lt!I Mow ·'° 110 3'\lii 33\-\ u -m Eilll U111 I 'O 1 ,. ltlk 1"4 -... Int Utll ... • ?J\o! 2l'' ?l'll -'• l~1~n~~ccr '1 ~~i; ~~~ l!tt = ~ i:!i~ •. ~ m y~ tt..~ ~ ='~ :~:ts~:.: ~'° t lll': ~~~ t:\1 + :: George H. Oatman will "'""'• 1.60 " ~ ,..,, • 30111 +" EcflllnMI .n •1 30 m. JCI _ ,~ 1~11ros1.-.60 ~• 1•111 2• 2••.i. -l't be d·r tor DI advert1·s1na aenci1. pf 1 1 ... s1 -1 Et*trd J .70 .u "'• ,, 21 -'l" 1n1t11Pw 1.1• 1s 11 t~ 11 . come I ec ei. 11_1,,,ln 1,60 100 "!')' <!$>' •11 + 1~ EdlJonBrOI 1 • 21\~ !5 tS"• +'I\ IOWI 8t~ t ]] l'I\\ 31'\ -\t and sales promotion for Alpha t:n'1l" s "I#~ r1.3 ~Ii: Jr· nt~ = t f:ll'J;1«'.~11i 1tt 1!tk 1:t: 1:;: -+~ :: ~I '3~ 1~ 1% ~r:~ Jf Jr1' -•• D-ta Ac1ne -darkets ac NEW ' 'l'OllK fAPl rurid 10,12 II.ff ONTC t,1t \O.U DmfQt 1.n 1.5' 1-1° 2d 11t• Ii 10 ..... El•d Assoc; 5'I •v. It• • 1ow1PLt 1.60 l 1} 24>4 21•~ .. o..-' • ·-f"n.lolkrwtne-Grwtl\ ~"'·$! Grwln i .t.l •.t•lllOFd 1l.D14S1 -~tn ' v. •I~ fl:. ... EIMemM.e, ;m 2-0 ll>; .u•······1 PS 116' ll 'IO'~ 1t:t.O. 1"1-i1 C-rdlng to comp""Y Pres i·deot 1111co .... '""r11e11 b~ ..,..,, ~.os '·" u·u j·u 6.l• 101 Fd •.01 •.•1 !•"'Pho 11, m llt• ,,~ 'D'~ _ ·~ eiMM., " .. '''·'• .. ,, ~· • -'fr ,-•u.w ·,, ''• ,~,'•' '••'•" ,tt,,',' !: ,•; ·" ... , the Nlllonl As*I--·OI CCrllo 17.'' l).i. lncwn .!Ni j:2f One Wm.$ 14.2S 14,U trm-C~o ltr "o + ,., E~l,HOI o·• --, ,..•;; -'0 oc:o ""'° · \ylnlam R ~·i•y lllon 1//1 Stcurlffrrs omrnc I M t .46 Fr~m ,I' ,)I O'Wtll 14.llH.°' 1·· -SOI r.oo )._ -'' l '"' M 1\o 11~ -l'i ITE Imp .!S • """"' · Dttltn, Inc., I•" ComS 9'1 • ~· S,10 Fd Ir/AUi t .M f.M 0-rih 7,07 1.1l IO Three Ml 2lO ~'lit ti?~ 'IU -\~ El ''°NG 1 73 1 ~-. 1 1'~ ITVJ -'1t U•k Corp 1014 1' 1~ 71~ +••r Oatman formerly w a 5 IR:,/'1Ct! :Cu~m~ •1t1111 !: ~ 6t";.tl ~~~ s:.~ ;~f ;11 ~~ ~~ '}fl 1~~ ll~J:n I~ 1U 7• "ff~ nu=,~ ~=-1:':~·21 ~ u~ :ir: ~'to :..:.1·· ITT $y ,,._,, J lll'll ll2\lt 111"' -l>"• advertising manager for Alpha (OUld ~·V• bee~ lncom 1.n f.53 ~!br1!1.. 1•.ta 12.to P• Mui ,:,1 7.31 8Hu L-I u n~ Jl 2ll~ + \? ~=f1J.,: IOU '°~ 56 $6 _,~, -J·K-told !bid or boulhl ·~Vt!! I ?0 t.tl '°"'' ~: • Phil• 13 rs IS 01 Ii Hit 2• IU '""' 11'/il -., l""'°l•I i" 1; #r" •o •v. -\\ JKlt1nAll ·'· •J n~ 17v;, 11~ -.... Bela. (l~ed) IMl ... Y .• h S~AI f·~ti·~ t:::!f~1f,,1'=1 Pllqrlm t'.4'10:11 lwl!ltl11•.IO S ll 1·~ ml'•-~\ mporC fi1 .4 ,~i 76\\ 26!,a-~I JIO.All pf . .O 2 I'~ 9\~ ''•-'• H J · .• , th any ·n l ld A ... !" · '.!. " :3 .2J · Piiot t.n 7 S1 no Co A 516 2ijl: "" _1,4 End JohnSn 1 ,,t" 14\'o 2""' -v, Jatft'f .10 1 ftt. n-'"" .. . 958 I k d l<dmlr•!tv FvMd1· omit As l•:'tll. ~rlh 1 . ·"" p•-'" 1 -1·.. t Irk! o o >" '* '"'' 111 ·-1U 111~ 12 J1Pln ln•Ue •• "" e 011"""' e comp I ADerdn 1.,. 2.u wtth co 1.51 11 ·",, .... Pine st 10.1110"11 ~1 as _ajn m ~\ 1-~ , ... ,..,_ ,. • n,,,", n>.• -~• Jap1t1F •.1k "s ~ .. •,•,~ •,•, • ... • I a_s a grocery c er an Grw1h !·» t.n omper 1.1' .l! '''*'~ 1 . 1~.211 Pi; """ 12 O:C 13·H ono sir• , !'" iii: \Ii = ''• ~i:JM, 11.~'-~ ' 133 u,'•• m111 .:.:.f· Jtll"P11o1 ·.eo •• ,,,, nt~ !''" -'" has held many positions with /~:':' 7;~ 1:1: ~: l3 ~~~:U :~7"11an; ·••n.•4 P,•~ '...-"."Y.:n11:«1 ~w".r'·,"i• .~ 1/"' ,.,.,~ ,, -',•, fqutG11''2:iO i; ll'~ 31 %, 31t -. )~ ~1.~,,',".'"' .... .10, 1' ni• 11'" 2'11 -~~ I h n. • I di I ,Allvl;n '!~ I 10 Otl'llt• 4 1~ J It HF •.10 •.41 r ... t r -..,.•· ormtrll .t 11 lj 'IB' 'I · ESEI lllC 1.211 I} 71\o n '2 " • .. ,.. i~O 5•11i S•lr'I 5•v. ··••· Apa ucta, 1ncu ng s oreAlll!ltrd 6'.n1:21 encord 11.~111:E Giii 1.0•1.M e'E'h 'l·~23.lliosEdl)2.!lt .. t'~ t~ l \/)~·t,ilQU!rt .lCI 2110 19\1) 19V. 'v.JewrlCol.!O 2j~ 41>.!l~ ~ln ffi~--~ 5upcr.lsor ln 1960 he was "'l'Jtrt ,,31 t.3111:~' ,1" 10,., 1,1. H•,~,.!, 1·~ !·',,' N ~~ u·"'.!·~ ourns'l'l''~~ 'ii 111 1i •••.. s1c:oo 1t111,1,.20 35 31•1 .10i~ JI',.::,,, ~~ww!~1 to40 n ,,1 1,,11 :tt~~. · • At.Am F .H .&! onou ~ .. H """' , , · •-7Jn r , I 10\\f o ~Miii P .• I 42'4 41J,.i •1>1-~: •imw •1.·20 1 n n n S.1-ted by Alpha Beta to A1llfll Fd ll.J11'.•• .on! Gt~ • I •. I a!i.~~ I .•• , .• , P,•o Fu~d 9.ts •.ts rlllO I t.• 2J ff 5 '" '''"' ::.11, E.lhY/ Cp .M 100 11~~ 19 lflt -VJ ~ •• ,.,, ''' •• 11 ?11-'t ?l\'t ::.· •• <A .Ame•! s,n j·" Corp Ld I'·' .o~• tw .ff 1 .96 royd"I •.lS 4.15 rlsl MY l .26' ,., n ' -1\ E1hv Pr1.40 IS J -.~ ll'•'t ~\ ' • n • 1 .. ''' 1,1, ... 160 _,1, receive: a scholarship tO the Am 11s 1,t6 ·'° Cn!V CID 1.J• U. ~ 0 or '·!j .H Purll1n 9.?I 10.U r11 Mv 1,20 ??6 lrl'lli f6 -,.. ,urolno:r l.30t 4 11\~ II\' 11(' -i~ JollnJhn .llll ,. ., A,m Ol'ln t 47 10 'll Crn wg1v 5. t 1. tcl't n. 1,.21 Putn1m FUlllll! Ir )!My ol 2 1! " •j 41 _ \~ v•n1P .IOb 40 :is :1o111: :M\; -i,; JM!nl Svc .JO !O 30~ JO'l'I 301" t '\ School of Food Distribution at A.Ell "'' ... 02 . Cr" w ~I •.ts 10,1 at<ltOt 1.71 .O<I Eou!t .... J.Sll !"""¥ Hiie l ~" l '' ~·~ Wt<llMfP 171 :IOl"t 211-. 21 ~·=n~ Joll"Svc pf, I 51 l' 57 '1 . "'"Grit\ SU s •5w.V'J~ M ... 34'1 .~ M•n" 11 ~1 ·" Gforq ll .S11'.ll ~tvnUG 1.11 4 lit 01o . :.·1\ ~C•llO l.2S 61 ;.-13 2Jtk + \\ JO<ILOPln .to ll S1 Hi 51 . the University of Southern Am In• ,:10 •:10 fll Inc 10.n 11. ub~m" ~.o• .60 Otero 1.m u .11 row" Co u 1 •'• '' -1; ........ ..o 51 2'\-\ 2t ,.~, Ii J-L•u l.lS 111 11~1 111. ,,.~ -11 "'"' M~t 111 I 54 ~11,.r• l1 .SS 12.ll "/ Gf!I 4.•I S.•l GNh 9.'2 10,30 ,_ Co or 4 1 '' u· ·~~ -14 l'K'!Or .-, .51 t •l' ''" •>t -Jontt&L Of S r1000 ~ •• 6311! '' +2 California. AmN Giii 1'. 4 j:'! 'f11• Tr 1.11 I • 1$ Inc 1 't •·" 1nc:om 7.lll 1.07 1-,shirp, f I ~1 1 ~ I • + 'i "/rctlC so 751 111: • +II• JOI"~"'" 1.)0 2J. 7l~ 23\• A"'P.e 7.DO .10 \ldS~r J.H,. ln•1>1'1,''·1u 1·" ln•tll 7.307,91 w,n~J;SO l ll'~ ''l'.i +~ FtrMflt .• 159 ,, 1oio lo':,•>,tVi --4:itJMl.,,1 .j,0' 16~··~™\+•o 'E Grou•· ,_,_~, F f.n .t~ rm-11 a11 . .1, Vhlt , n '°'C unu., ... 11 1:11 ••\ 1'\t •l'i -" F•tr"""'' 1 31 11i. "' -" JOI' Mi. 1.«r 11 •l'• j'l~~ 4~~. -1o •• ' • •. , 'l '>te.<JI 14,'7 1~.d Imp •1k 1,f? """•O 0·0, o ll<Jcl'E:r 1.10 50 tl,!o t lt -•\ '•OloOO oO IO lo• •,•,,• ,11'111 · ·, "t"" Al 1 6t, j','°,., .~,,•., 1•,,, _ •• ·,, rwl~ 11:1111:1 .,fn"t F~ 11Jl11)i!nc Fd8 ·" 1.7' R;i'Ttc11 .:n S:i, =llOCl~ ... c~ .to :JI IP• 111; 1S11-li F .... F"''1.10 •O I:''~ 1 la=1t IC.ts 17~U.IS ll'K-I"! 1.5• t.l2Q~rl L• 1T.OO•:J.•J ,ndtPnd ·u ·· .. llt¥ffe 11 .nn.11 l!I ~· "·" 5'I 11'k 16•\ 11•1-1•1o "'·~1!1tl tnc I ,rl, 12 12 I IC• I pf4,U I lfVt !flli "'..,,+ .... FO lnw 1.)J '-" ;::.• ""A-Howr·d· nd Trl'IOI ll. 1,.0 1to1tnlll I '9 I Sl O Ol"O I.Id 11 '8 17 •7>~ -.... F~r Yf'lol Fin \! 1\.l, 17 1l" + ~· k1! •.7Sol'l l l 110 U\.o fi\\ :111' 1• APOiio F~ 'n 141! 1!1,1., t.1' "·ll nd~l•Y . ,IJ Stllm Fd s'51 6.03 ulov• w .60 44 ll'I ll''o 31 -\~ Farlol\MI .IOll JI 41\) "'' ,,.~ +11~ 11;111 Cll'll .~ 11 ?l" t'I 711• -'• Standard ASilOCll (T1 1~1 GtoYI~ 11.61 ll., 'n'/• StM .I .51 khui lr JiO'l 16:_.. lulowt\Yll rt "7 1·:12 1-32 l·l2-1 l'I FAS Intl .Ill 61 20'~ lttr. If.+\-•• ~:\~ ~7·j, l g4 ~! ~ ~ -l' l AJtron IM 6.lt ln.:on S.•~ 6.~ IN GN l .114 '! ... ""°""' ,,,_. 11,111'\k lt:•mo ,,, 1n. ,, 121, _\, Feddtri ,40 to 111a 21'~ 2n.~ -11. ,.,, Pwl ! 1 II ' ~" JO' ' T lls I AJ"t,,,:l°"':"'r~ I H ~~ 1t::i::n !~: ~~" 11'·17i 1 :ri Int Inv u .• ·lf.13 l~~:tl 11: ~;? y~ ~~ = ~: ~=~ i·: ,1 'if·! '~ ll\~ + ·~ KC Soull\d , t .~ ri ff ,,=.: e ncome FuM II 1:3' •:00 ~tot··· , ... ti 11?? 'nw l""lt I I 1011 s,~,· ',~-!! 1,',·!! Slll'ftdy .10 ,. 23'/il 72 n -,, Fed,.fil&d I 1J ,,~ ~. ~,.~, -h K•n GE , j(I "' \~ ~ -1' Slid. 6.0( '&O li!""" 1~.H 13 .. 1 "'Y!I l!los '·" n .31 I ... ·" llllf'tOhl ·'° 240 1'0 lSSV) urn -'l't ,.~ ... s Ml ,. ?1l1 . . ... K•~F'wL 1,11 12 lt"i ,~ ,,.,l -1• S.CI CP 'J S s:11 Mr. Sc .•l P.I' ll!ftston Groui>: Co... St 10.1310.0'l ll~Vnv .111 1 11\l 11 II _ '·' ·~ Sff o >•I ,,, ~~ '™,' -'Ii Kttv Ind ?J J!)< lG~l IO\li -t, '""'°" l,41 t.•1 f!ntrtY Ii t lt'll. I IOS "II! , ... S.'H 5.1, Eoutt l.S1 :l.14 ,. Fed 19 Inv ' I ....... 3'> -1 ·~ Klllf Srd ·'' lS ~1 su. 511~ -;; SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -j!:nni 1l:lf '~:lf ,~'W' l:~ C;lf ~~Jo .:H 1tvi t°'1..:1":m !:n ,~:&~ c.bot c -~-/t1r:..1/ 7r 1: Ji7: rJ':: db + ~ ~:;r;,\:J·~ ~J 1•~ ~\? iii: :ff . Standard Oil Co of California ••Ir Fd 11 3111.n tut ~·h 111:; 1t ,n Stock '!" 1•.n St1 s11t<S 11.» 1,.n c11 Ftn!'n1·"° 77 31 :iou ,, -•\ F elok1M \,40 ',f :it ,, 21 -Ket0llt' .20 ,, .,.. Dlt n 141 -•\ ' knd•ll! 1~• ,.., 5"-rt 16,,7 .. $fleet " f d Sh Oetn lt.14 11.14 C 11 hM 7ll' !l ~ ~ 1S...::; }! FHlro-1 1 :11\'t JM 31y, :..:_·.\· Ktller I .SO 11 2Hlt '°'~ U" -•• \Vedoesday reported estimated ~ s1 :n 1.111 w'"' '" u ? u.~ V•• PY :12 1:11 s111e •.tt 10.11 c!m'PllL · u. 11 ,~. It'• 1 .. ~ + ...,. Fin F9d«1rn .~ 16 . 1~. 1SJI' + ,~ ~:l~ 11o60 1! ;n: ~~! #11~ ! ~: 969 . f '"'700000 ~II Fdn 10 . .i:i11.~ t lt1d 1~~11i~lftv llt"" , .. S.ttSlcriN •.BlO.•c1mp.So i10 :Jt )I nh >lit Ftr~lnt '·'° .• 49!0 ,,.,. 4'/I -l'Ktndlll .60 0 '3'11 «II~ «r•o -7\o I eanunai1 o .,...,..., • • 1ot1on 1,14 M "'•"" "u 10,i.• I• 11111 1'.'u '°·" s~ 1t11 n .11 1'.10 !08, .o, n 1111 ,.. 1,, +·h Fu ..,.1 2_,... 11' '1~~ 114 1f'A t •• ICt!nl'l!l'>f'l '° 2 31·~ tt'~ 311~ _ ., .. 35 shart compared l~td St 12.$4 13.M "rJ Gtl'I n . .a · Jf IVI' I.Ii f ., SlillN Tr t.11 '·'' " iw . 3.2'0 II ""' " \'t Fst Clll' 2.40 2lS 6214 ''"" 11'• -1•1 Krn!l<Oll 2,40 10l ... 1 lo .. 1, + '• or .,... a • 8ul0Ck u .5-114.16 ~~ ,c.to •,o·~! ',,'-,, J Hl'l<llCll '·fl 1'.•1 !lnllm 11 •.n •.,1 d';.K 'f"\'' ,, !'" ~-. '''". -... '!!~..-~! .a..,s. ' 31 -. lOll• -" ''~D•• 10 370 •l , 1• 4j~• + '• Ith "51 llOO 000 $' 33 ~ F~ t.n •·r, d "l\d 4 -c · Johnllll :tO 20.n SWrl lnw 111 I u · • .. ' , ~, ..... ., 1 JI ll · 1' "' · W '!'"' • ' • Or "" a •nacln 11.un. I' Trl\d )).;l~A.i K,v1N1r• ,,..;,,,,. ~wlnv Ct J)I 1:91 r-•tos .lO I U11 ''M0-1 l'lll!rFd 05d 27 U'lt 16 ' .:,:.·4;. ::"U~ ll~~ ~ ir.~ 1! ~ =1~! share In 1968. -••• •'n ,.,.,' 'i·J ,.. ~~·1 p·~: .,11 Cul II 11.U ;._,5 Sowtr Inv 1'.S113.7' c.:m.n fW n SO·~ .. ~? ~1? =1~ .'l!!!'.kl ·_,, I 1? ... \'1"1~ lfl-ltrrM pU ~ , !"1 ~ 7tU ti • w · ·•• / . • •> Cui Bt 11:11 11 07 IOK!ft t .U t,d •rllo• --r.•· H '''' 1 •. ,. I .loll 172 13'• ,-12 -iv, '""'C-1n· II 01~ 21 110 •• Salt:s and other revenues :11t /~: 13·# 11·~ ~~ i 90 6" CuJ e• :,, .:,. ''"'"' c1 11111v111 •rol'LI 1.,. ~ 1 ~ :?O"• -1 F•"•""" ,•,,'., u nu 11111. tll'li -1. K!ddtCO'' 1 "' IGi W• ff 36VI + ( · bllll m ,.. ,· v 1 11.,.~ s:u1ic1 .<161.U't•t•!l 43.,,~.so 1rPTc1tl.60 u 41-'J '•1~ ·,,I' .!c ·· 131 tl J2 -1v.i~"" d'l'lli 'h •OV.-1•: wereestlma.tedat$4.67 on, 8;1~• 1~~'i1 ~l"~'rJ~ 0:?~1t' ~u• Kt 4.1-1 s.1••t>t•dm•n i:un111: 1rntreo .'O n ~ ~·• 33 +1: ~~ Q, °''' Ir r,r. ~:1 r,,~+:: "'~'ti'.: ft" tt"-'~ a 6 percent gain over 1968. ~~51 k" 1:37 ~;1'~ ~~ fa ;: c:! j~ 1~:~ 1i·ti =~~nd '~:l 1;:~ !r1G'121~lo. '~ " Hu pn ··· ,r. ,..,":, ·,i:o" •1 ~ 'W. no,;.-t\ t'tNS u 1, 1l.H~ ,n,• '• .~~ =.t! · • SPt<I 7.$9 lU "• lu•ll t. 1.15 C111 S 4.14 5.7'S~ln R"' Fd1: 11t~k1 ·'° 1 .. 6 23\~-1 ~ l )IT 2• 1; i ~• 1 =~Kl""'' flLjl· ll ""' • Bo.rd chelm1an 0 N 11flller Inc.cm .:~ ,:s, F•f " lk 1:!1 ~:., Cul l 1.11 1'.la Sclen ,_,1 •.fl tner~ ,«11 ' ~ 1-'t ~~-= ~ 1~"JWL ? I~ , ti' tr--\Z ""'"" pt(JS 160 01 •• ~?'-0.7 .• -IA predicted th et pressure on c"t::i, Grooil~l ;01 ~~l s~~. ~-.~ ,!ji ic:i:~~o' .J.~1~~1t ~:i op l~:;; l!:;: \t' c;,J ·20 20J 1~" Jt\fo 3'\'J -~! . ~r ·e. 'n t~·· f\• j~t~ -•· ~af°A f 4., n 31~ fi~~ ~:! +,:; earnings WOUJd Continue ln Fund 10·.~111 :,1 ~It! C•P '·" ... '(nl(lo, (lt ~rwvtll SIOCk ll.M l~.M ~.o Coro ·'°> , 1 \.'t 'II~ 21\~ = '4 t-1) o'5.i 1°'111:.Z fi" n''4 = ~? i("llht N :11e ii '° JI~ "'i -'~ I In r.tn'I llU92.!JFltt """ IJJ lt• Orlll I·" 10.~ lull tnGt '·" 1.n t 11e1:5_0 130 J .tu .,(\ -21' ~'•Ir .0 2 II' j .,.1-------------1970 because Of coenerl • "~d 10:09 11,0 F1' Gffl .to s'·n lt• l~wli .11 1,tg ~QDl"SI t.!1 10,'1 ~ /.t ·~. t Tl'! IV. )l\IJ + ~ OO!t Cl Ill •' u\~ V; :i:'. '• at1on, 16 ertaxtsan a rchemcl 11.w1•·°'~11111Wtn l10 1 L'"'"" 1·•56.11TMllA11 l'.Nl• . .1~ :;:1~~dV 1 ·:l ,, t~ ,, " '"" 4 M\ u1'*"'+'-' fl . h'•h D dibo NCI P.16•.,FndC!n \'l · Ltxlltellf1,Ul6,"S'MtGt10.tl11.ll •. ..,_,,"'"' ~tf.~lj·\• ~l:'~!'',·;'°~",'i.M~I·,, °''t It 4Vi+•~ Ill o. re clJ•d in !MIO Co!onltl: O~ ... I ,!ft t , Llhr Sn .ti J,6l 1tte~T1 •115 t.4'1 t I IU 1 • 4 :M 1 \Ii .Ii lei -w~ )1\a t• -·~ LI°" Nil .4 10." ftcllnof '·" l.•I tri/1~ 1 12 -6 ~ • K Ill 'h ffi' ~ U -lrl Se emeno.a I ""'~· liQul'r ''9 Of Jnll•ln Grou1t! LIPt fnl' .ti 1,f. T•c~nc:t J.11 •.31 11 t ot.i~ 1.a ~ ' :~ ~... mllf I~ :ti ~ ~~· tt'J I' -1• iflarket S9111bols \.oem11 5•¥flH! Towr Mil 6.fl!I •.'6 tWoM .11 1 I~ ...,. I .. -.1,,. •.40 5.~ T""D r.1 14.61 '""' • i'"I 'f I h = \; : .tt; ''lo·" 11""' I _a.·. ~ __ .. ",,' c ..... d !'·Ill n.111 l .. " Ctp 1 ,. 1.1' s w .to II ,. It .:..: ·r Oll!MM"JI ~ ~ H Aw-A 1-1 '"" l·"ij·~ ,,., Eo fstlt.n '""-.Ill .. ~ 1~ rf>ftl\)tt , 1 ': '~~ ,~;.;.°' , Miii I .1' 1 .!? T\IOO<' Ft! 15.,<1 !'-.ti tn t!U"i: 'I \1 \lo n11 -u, M•t1MA '·°" ... T....C GI l .N c.n trro I 10 ~-\~ ' -1\'1 ••» ,, ltls 11 .to T"""' IPoC l .tt 4.ll :t'-' . O t T -G-The 111110..-in. " , trr 19 ll'fllbclt lllld ~\1'4 Ill , l lt.ll Uftll Mui t. 'tl 10.,., !'!_!'f. o~ lg ,,~'I f \'J ii! :;. ·r lfl t'-Ii.ck mtn:et NPWt11 ··•~• r 1 "'n.11 Ul'lld •.1110.n J"'lii' .lo. ~ I I 'rl i" '"' ~ ::Jil !illn fltlll'tl .,, ~1c1ti, LAND SALE! NANAWA\.I UTATI S EAST MONTHLY PAYMENTS Aftw Nennal Dlwn ''"""'' IUTS GOOD PlDPHTY IN PARADISE JOllPH I . HUNTllt. Lktt1 ... lt .. 1 ht ... lnktr Sutt• 111. T4tJ7V.,.twni llYtl .. PheM ",....... ShenMn Oakt.. Callt.mloa t 14U ------·~·~'°''II cw,_ T .. •y·------, ......................... A"'911 .................................... , li, ••••••••·••••••••• .................................... f 'dt..,_ .......... ., ••.. ' ..... :=='.,.. I~ t~f: u'A':'rn """:'l, 1.11 ·rnc M,t id !~ ~·l•j 1 • ~ t + " ....,...tt.o "''' or ~.-ir11. ~I rtl• M<Oon • t:oe l°"orn lt.,1 14,IJl:I rwtri-~·'I t i\4 ,y" 4 r-: 0 I i. '' 1l ... ~ llOCll dlwlcltf!I!, c-Lllllldtllflt lflvj. ~~ ... "t"-it it~ er:; 11:rii:ri ,~·1r 1·~ ~\ ·~ ,, .. t .&,· i''l lli ~ ·-1~= :i..=.'"..:.i:-i...,~~=~ M_., <~ UFd CM! .!t t,)I NY 2.61 ~ [: ..;..&. , = I': ""tttlt Ill 1111Cl! lfllrlnt 1..,, """"'"' Mt, l""f • t Vtllll! llfta ~d: .)(iii ' + I j , ff::! , -j\-1 ulll ¥1111t '" ... _,...,hltnd or t'l·•hTrlbw-Mll' Oil\ s." , VII Lin •.•• 1.tl V• 1.60 I 11 • 1 + ~ ,. • ,. _ tlan Cl•ttt. -0.c!Mtod .,. ''" •• 1,, Mu OlrlO 4.1' t l!l(Ofl' '--' 1.0S Ot>lo ' 1 1-t \Ii 1' -I "'' • -Mii Olnt11 •.01 t:I! Sal 511 ,.'4 1.21 I 4'/ 4 4 \oi -~ ~ '· U "' ........ r....otc,._, or •1111 •ntf' ""' ""' 'f" IS. \11\ttS ~ A i·'' tc••tt n t 1 19 It I t, .,.. 1 = ~' 110Ca dl'fld11'1d ., ... 111 "'· •-Ootci.trfd '-WI Trtt .)t 2. 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I • t. .. ·,··~ -~. •, .. •.10.•• "'"'·~· • ' ~ "'" "" l ~ -"' " ]~ !t'l . .: ' -~ (~lllH, •-fx>dlvldt!'tcl. l'-bilhrlo "°*" ti Bt ~l 11.JI jt.6"1 rr~ trl 1ifu 11:,., I i• :·:_:; ~;t.M ~ ?!:! !~ =·~ ::i..en:r~~·~ ,:~:u11;.:.~~;.:~~~~ ~~I~~' ·5 ::fl t!Un 10.tl t:tJ !tlr> ,al~ fl ,ft ~ ll"' -,.. iitil -~ lj\1 \li -.. r1n~ --Wiii! Wfrrtnlt. WG-hen ~: ~t':\, ltn w~~=t,11•"' 'f~U 1i:i ~11 JJ 1l jk" fiU ~~ ::·tt ~i1~r.'!ff , !r • =1~! =~~:::r...w!i"~~,!':..~ o~:.~ Vent I ,n '°'!! !'IC• If A t." IJ,lfl I.Ill 116 w·' ~ -411 ~ ... ! • ....... • _ "1; '"'°'Ill Of btlf111 tffrtenlrr:: ulldlt !ht wl011 1 ._. "· "'' 11 • 1•1 .. svc: '·" " "' h -11' 5 I n _,._ 11111~r.,01it'I' .ao . or •ew• 11•~ bl' IU<!'t ~: 'l~ 1;:~ ;;~ ~· tn i:I: ~ri:1n':' ei'n tti b1' ll'• M'·t • ; II :,.r..:': I f#:: t.:: ill: -.. ;o:;-~1 .... ~n.li:f't~'( !H..-.; 'UOi.tt ,. , • • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • '. '· ,, " :.'. '• '. " '• '· '• ~:. ., .• •• •• .. ., '> ., " .. '• .. " ••• " " •• " ,, .. ~ "• " •• " .. ,, .. " ''• " " " " " ~ " •• " ''• .. " " ,, ,, • '• L'o " ' . •• • .. • • ' • • ,. ' ' • • ' • • • • • ' ' -- -----------------------------------,,.------------------------- American Stock Exchange List ·' \ l j I t I I ) I • • • . • . ' ~ ~ l'· l! • -' • • . .. • . .. 'l' ·r· . . ' -• • 1 l, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1970 MONTEGO . 52352 IOHOILS12J,6) $179 '""' $7802 '"'' Dow11 li!lfltthh l"•~ll'IMlt '111_1111111 Yl!S, yov rftd torreclly $17' i, ltw 111!•1 "°"""' PIYmtnl, Ul .02 \\ !tit 19111 .._lhlY P9Y"*"I lllch.od lftlll 111, llCcitMI 1na 111 c•rrvll!ll cllll"Cl"I on 1pproWd credl! IOr 3' monm•. Or, 11 you prl'ler to .,.., t l•ll. Tiii lull prkt 1, only Stuf.60 lnd ucilrig 111 ''""• lk.eroae, lreli!lll 1r.d """' 1><ep1r1Hon1. Dlllvered ln Long e ... c11. Nothing mart to pey. Dei.,.red pav,_,,I prk 1 Ir s:m1.n l11Cju!lint 111 c1rrvl"11 CM~. T11tn, Ut en1e, frtlgllt UICI Mel ... P'el••••tlon, Noltllng rnor1 to P&V . Oe!!ftl'ed In LONJ Bt•V'I . ANNUAL 'lllCENTAGll ltitiT• II.,~ Drive home the oar of your choice TODAY! 1 ..... ~PHY'S SHAMROCK CARS ARE , 100% UNCONDITIONAll Y GUARANTEED AGAINST MECHANICAL DEAlCTS Sure, and here's the f•cts, cle•rly spelled out in black and wh ite : This guarantee is g~ for 100 d•ys, or 4000 miles, the parts and labor to m•intain this guarantee cost you nothing. Murphy guar•n· f!tes th• c•r 100'/e ag•inst mechanic•! defects, for 100 d•Y• and 4000 miles after purch•se, whichever comes first. This includes all parts, both mechanical and electric•!, yes, even the battery and tires, on all Murphy's Shamrock cars -look for the shamrock on the win· dow. All work will be done in our service f•cility in Long Be•ch. MURPHYIZED USED CARS ARE Fully Reconditioned Look for th• c.11r1 with th• e rnbl1m. It's your best 11utomotlY& bu y. e New brakes • Transmission checked - as neces11ry • Rear end checked •~ New fllter element • Uphol stery completely • New sp.1rk plu~ renov1ted .. Ignition points • Smog device inst•lled • Engine tuned • Horn, lights, safety e. Oil change fe1tures inspected • Front end inspected • High luster pol ish .t. lubrication • Complete road test -• MURPHY USED CARS GUARANTEED SATISFACTION WI THOUT ADD ITIONAL COST TO YOU 10 DAY TRIAL EXCHANGE! ' ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY .1970 COUGARS $2762 IOF91H52'46l9) t nd IOF-9HS26279 l Oow• ~Nthl'r ·$17· 9 r. .. , s92s4 ,,,., l'•ymcftt P'-,in~nt Yt" you reed corr1<:!1y Slit II Ill! to!tl down payment. St2.J~ b tt>e 1111•1 manTll!y i»Vmtnl lnclu<llng t1i, llcirn1e •NI •JI c•HY1"9 t l'lilrgH on 1pprovld credlT tw l6 ..-lhs. Or, If YO!J prl!'fe.-IO PIY celh. Tiit lull price I• °"'' t?Nl.10 lndudll'!I 111 l••es, ncenw. lrtlvl\t 1N1 dHie• pr~ralionl. Di'llwtred i.. Long BQC!I. Nollllf'll "'°'"' lo Pl'i'. Ot!.,red PIYmtfll IN"lc• II "510 . .U Including tU carrying <l>aflll'l, lt•tt, Jk"'11t. trt19hl 1..0 dojef" prejNrt!ltn. Nolh111g "'°'' lo PIV. Olollwull(I' in llll!ll Be1cll. MARQUIS 2 DR : HARDTOP , 4)9 VI , 11l1cl 1li1ff lrtnt., WSW, pow1r 1id1 wi!Mlow1, fw ifl comfort louni;it 111h, power di1c br1k11. pow1r 1+11ri119, 1ir conditio11j119, fftdio, linltd 91111, r1mot1 mirror. 9Zl:il:iK61)915 lS I \I.I 1119in1 , 1ulom1+ic lr1n1 .. whil1 w1 ll1, 1porh co111ole, pow1• 1t11rin11 l front di1c br1k11 , fec!O f'j' 1ir cond., r1dio, tinted 9!111, '''·Der~ 1qu1. 9F9JH574747 BRAND NEW ' ' BRAND NEW COUGAR XR-7 2 DR. H.T. l COUGAR 2 DR. HARDTOP 35 r v.1 1ni9n1, •ulom1tic ........ clock, whit1w1ll1, 1porh con· ·-------· ' . MONTEREY 2 DR. HARDTOP l•O Vt 1n9i111, select shift h111imiuion, 115 11 15 fir1s, pow1r 1!11ri119, ti11t1d 9l111-compl1l1, h11d r11ir1int1, t1dio, ¥inyl top. tZ41:iY539611 BRAND NEW COUGAR XR·7 2 DR. H.T. lil V-1 ·11111iri1, 1ulometic +r1n1., "Winy/ roo,, 1por+s;ton1ol1, wh<lew1U., power •+11rin9 l fro11t di1c br1k11, l1ctory •ir cond., r1dio, r••r ip11k1r, tinted 91111, etc. M1roon, 9F9JHS764<46 sol1, power 1!11rl11ci rind front di1c btftk11, f1 clory 1ir eond., AM /fM r1dio, d1cor 9roup, tinted 9l1n, etc. Stock No. 9RJ.- -M5029J I. M1 roon. _ ]51 v.1 •n9i11t, 1utom1tic fre11·1 .• ¥i nyl roof, wh il•w1U1, 1porh con1olt. pow1r 1l•erint l fro11! diic br1k11, l•clory ,;, co11d., r•dio, ti11t1d 91111, r11r IP•••••· •le, Yellow. •F9JH515Jll BRAND NEW BRAND NEW BRAND NEW COUGAR XR·7 2 DR. H.T COUGAR 2 DR. HARDTOP COUGAR XR·7 2 DR. H.T. lS I V.9 1119l11e, 1ulom1tic tr1111 ., white w1ll1, 1porh con1ol1 , pow1r 1te11i119 ind front diie br1k11, f1clory 1lr col!cl., r1dio, •••• 111! 1pt1~1r, ti11t1d 9!111, etc. lright blue. 9f9JM5710b9 351 V-1 1nqin1. •ulomtlic tr1n1., 1porh coniol1, power 1!11rin9 1111d front di1c br1lr11. f1elory 1ir 'ond., rtdio, r11r 111t 1p11•· ,,, tinted 91111, etc. tF•IM56747). ]5 1 VI, 1utom1lic ir11111niuio11, white w1ll1, 1porh con1ol1, power 1l11rint, disc brek11, tilt 1w1y 1!1erin9 wheel. f1ctory 1ir cond., ti11t1d 9!111, f1ctory wh11l1, etc. Dirk 1qu1 . 9FtlM52· 61 bl BRAND NEW BRAND NEW BRAND NEW $22 TOT AL $22 TOTA L DOWN MO NTHL Y PAYME NT PAYMENT '63 COMET S22 I '62 CHEVROLET ' '60 MERCURY '60 FALCON Impa le 1 dr. HT I, auto. ) dt, A. •ote. ll I. H, "'' R & H, P,5 .• P.8 . tlr. ~ Door Setl~n. I. aulo, 1 Ooor SllG'e11. ' tY1i~~r. cO<ld IOlll. 211! !EMW I JI! 11.1.H, P.S .. P.8. fKG L 61'1 r&d!o, lltellr. IQFI( 10!) $386 $386 $386 $38 6 Y••· yo1 reff ctrr1dly, tn 11 lh• lol•l dtwn ll•Ymtf!t. 1n It "" hllll mon1~1y ..-yml!ll ln<!lllllnt1 t1x. li<ll'ltt ,,,.. •II c1rrym, cft•'ll' ... •PP~ ...... <t'IClll ftr ,. "'''""'· OtltrrM IMl¥1111111 prk• 11 IJJ•.• 1tKlullln1 •II ctf1'YI~ Chtrltt, II•"' lktllK• l•tltfil 11111 """' pr1p1r1111111, ,.~ti cltll prkt 1422. No!lllnt mon Ill ,..,. ANNUAL l'ERCENTAGE RATE 21.5% $38 TOTAL $38 PAYMENT DOWN TOTAL PAYMEN T MONTHLY '65 MUSTANG '64 FORD '64 MERCURY '61 CAOlllAC Hll'd[W Sed1n. I. IUIO., 0.V:!IC' H T Sed I. 111!0. I, •UIO, II & H. ll0""9' Custom Dl -Dr Std VI, It & H, P,S .. Pl . 11lr It & H. PS , P B . air, 1tr~r1"9 {OWB OJt r8'11D, ~Nier. (SBV 160) cond. (Y\IN jJI\ PW , P 1111t (!'GS olMl $686 $686 $686 I· $686 Y ... YR rtllll CllTICfl\I, s• II tlM fl"l II._ .. JfM!lt. ta It. 1111 tlhl -1111, .. Jll'ltltt }11(1..cllflt ti•• lklMI "1'41 "' c1rryl111 c ... ,." '41 IP,,. ... c .... 11 to~ ,. "*'4'llt. Dlftrnlf .. Y-1 llM'k• II •• ,., .. lllehtlll!ll Ill clr,.,.lnf <111111"' tU ... lktllte. frtllhl 11111 dttltt ,,.,.l'llllllJ. ,.,II Cllll "kt llU, HOlftlt\t mini I• ,_.,, ~ ANNUAL PERCINTAOI RATE 21.5,., • • LlNCOLN CONTINENTALS 1869 MARK Ill 1968 LINCOLN J IO CllHK '"'"'· ltad .. , "'" llc•I 1 •-r c•n , ..... In 1n 1'11 moOttt. tlHW •111 s.ii .. Aule., 11.&H. WSW, l'.S., ...... lllt W~ttl, AM/,.M.. P·Y"'111., Door lldlt, IHlllll' l!lltf'. (WIU JU) $6586 $3686 1961 CONTINENTAL H.T. C". Avlll., It & H, WSW, l',S., l'.I ., 11r, lll!dlV lop. ltall!lr lnlt r. CTUJ 2 .. 1 $2186 1966 LINCOLN 1965 LINCOLN s '65 MERCURY Std111 • .lvi. .. INllMr 1111., t it, ltl H, WSW, P'.S., P.I ., 1111 Wllftl. !SUL IHI A1'9., lt6M, P.S., P.I ., IH!lltr l11t., -11tJ1. P'·..,IMffn & Hll. 1111 Whffl & tlr. (PIN tfl) MERCURY'S '$2286 $1286 '67 MERCURY '67 COUGAR '68 MERCURY P1r~llr>C! • Or. H.T. Std. H~rd:otl C11t. '-'ant~ MX. VI. l~IO., II & H, P S .. P. ' Door (om1t. \II, 111lo., H1f'd!OI> (;>t \It, II I. H, VI, •ulO, 11. & H, ,.5 .. a ' 1111 ""'I· ••• Jl611.nl,16 II. .. H. air, p s .. (\IED 0 /) ~hi. t~•nt. (YOA Old P.8 .• WSW, llndtu top. $786 $986 $1586 'fi1'786 FOllDS '66 FORD '61 FORD '68 FORD '67 T·BIRD MERCURY LINCOLN •• I ~men BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466 Frlda1, .lanv«Y )0, 1t1t S , ... U Cupid Aims At Elegance A night of hearts, ·flo,vers and valentines (who 1nay be stung by cupid's arrow) all will be part of the 11th annual Valentine Ball on Feb. 14 in the Newporter Inn. Add to this a galaxy of glittering lights, music. dinner. dancing and a sparkling cro,vd, and the event is Sure to be one of the most lavish of the ~eason .. Award of door prizes \Viii be one of the highlights of the evening and is being kept a secret to add to the excitement. Mrs. Bertrand Kampert. chairman of prizes, \vi!J reveal, however, that one comes from such an un· expected place as the steaming Panama tropics, others \viH add splendor to recei ve rs , eit.her in wearing apparel or for the hon1e. Assisting Mrs. Gertrude Carroll, hostess chairman, in greeting guests \viii be the Mmes. Basil Johnson, Lowell Phillips, George Parker, Spencer Vay , Jack Graham, Arthur Briggs, Gary Peacock, Stanley Oppegard, Lowell Heacock, Richard Hague and Edward Kriss. Tables for 10 and a few for 12 will be covered with pale pink cloths graced by centerpieces of red net and see-through hearts decorated with red rosebuds. cherry blossoms and baby's breath, according to decoration chairman Mrs. Robert De Ford . Response to mailing of invitations has been heart-warming, right in the spirit of the ball, according to Mrs. Harold Ekman, Mrs. Mont Mc¥il- len, patron chairman, and Mrs. \Villiam Imhoff, reservation chairman. . . . All benefits fro1n the ball \viii go toward the $100 ,000 pledge of South Coast Community J-lospital's Silver and Gold Chapter of the Auxiliary. Miss Fern Randolph, chapter chairman, praised the support already given the Valentine Ball and invites residents to join hospital supporters for an ele- gant evening. CONFERRING OVER COFFEE -Members of lhe Valentine Ball committee (Jf:'ft to rigtit ), the Mmes. Jack Graham,. Spencer Vay and Basil Joh1iSon confer on plans for the upcoming February . ' . event at a coffee in the hillside home of Mrs. Bertrand Kampert in Niguel Terrace. Reports reveal everything it takes to make a beautiful and entertaining evening is falling smoothly into place. Mr. C/eoh May Co me Madcap Mardi Gras Dresses Up Evening Picture Cleopatra arriving at the Mardi Gras in a sedan chair borne by four slaves: :rvlr. Clean sporting a shiny pate, or the Red Baron zero-- ing in on fes tivities. .... 1'hey were al l there last year and may 8rrive again this year for Co ral Key's madcap preLenten celebration getting under way at 7:30 on the evening of Feb. 7 in San Clemente M.unic1pal Golf Club. Dress, a s would be expe:<;ted, is stric'lly informal, and member~ will ci rriv.e in the guise of their favorite or unfavorite character. Fo1Jow1ng a 9 p.m. dinner, a king and queen of the Ma,rdi Gras will be crowned. Music \viii be Provided by the Moonglows With prizes going to U1ose \vho don the .best costumes in the eyes of the judges. A limi1ed number of tickets is available and should be purchased thi.i:; \veek from Coral Key member's or from' Mrs. William Moffatt at 495-- 4276. In ch arge of co1nn1ittees f'or the dinner dance are the Mmes. David Ka\vasaki. general chairman; ~loffatt, reservaions ; Herbert Glazer, hors d' oeuvres; Donald McCa.nne and Robert HilUs , decorations; Lelhand Clifton, 1treasure chest prizes; Dean Milligan and Truman Benedict, script tickets. and James Manning, publicity. 'fhe Mardi Gras. one of the fund-raising projects of the group which supports U1e Child Guidance Center of O~nge County, was initiated last year. Other projects include F'irS'l Nighter ·parties. progressive dinners, bridge parties. fashion sho\vs, member.ship teas and operation of the Thrift Shop which opened in July of 1964. Bundle teas are held to stock the shop which is the primary source ot income for Coral Ke y. ll is staffed by members who cohtribute coun·Uess hours to its operation. Having gro\vn fro1n an original group of eight women, the active club nun1bers nearly 100 women \Vho donate their time to Ute pu~te of estab- lishing a low·(ee psychiatric center for diagnosis an~ treatrne !.emotion- ally disturbed children and adolescents. • , The group has been working recently on decorating a San Clemente office and hopes to open the facility for the South Coast area next month. MASQUERADING FOR THE MARDI GRAS -Mrs. William Moffatt, chairman of reservations for Coral Key's Feb. 7 Mardi Gras, studies papier mache mask held by Mrs. Anthony Orlan· della through glittering mask. Between them is a treasure chest which will be filled with prizes to be awarded during the evening. \Vhen emptied, the chest will be given to the holder of a lucky. ticket. ;Midwest Custom: Newlyweds Get Charge O~t of Receptions • • DEAR ANN LANDER.5 : It's obvious )'ot'I: are a big city gal born end raised a lo(fg way from rural folks. Your amaze. menl al thC money-raising weddings s urprised me. Out here in St. C}oud. f\1ipn. -in fact, all over St.esrns County -:it's an accepte<I practice for a newly 1narried couple tb hold a public dance' and charge admis!tion. This makes·a _lot 1uqre sense lhan having a big reccptior1 -.na feerling everybody fbr nothing. it's a known fact Chol .many a bride sets her \Vedding rl:ile according tn the a ailabili- ty of lhc dance hall or beer joint Many couples celebrate wedding anniversaries this way~ too. 1t's a !(real way •lo tn- tcrtain frlerlds ahd mnke a IJtlle money ~1 the same lime. Almost every daily I newspaper cam-les the9e: announcements. ·I'm enclosing a page from the St. Cloud Daily Times to prove it. -A. C. OF S. c. DEAR A. C.1 The thin.gs I lean from my readers ! I was fasclaaled to dJ&CG\'ef that these-weddings and aaalverury celebrations feature special events aucb as poultry auctions, prltes for bo& call· Ing:· yodellnit and prizes for the bci;t dresscil. I note, ton, lhot on., co11ple • advertised, 11No admission charge U you bring your deer buntt:r'1 llcense." Ju11t to keep the r~rd Slr3lght, I war JM,m and raised ln Sioux City. Iowa, wblcti is l31 mites from· SI. Cloud. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My wife ;, seated to dealh of Ughlning. WhP!l she was a child , her cousln \¥as stM.1ck '™' kllletl at a family outing. Ii it sturl.11 to storm when we are riding in tile Car she insists on getting out and standing under a tree. rs this advisabl e or not? - l'IORl.AND. W.YO. DEAR W.W.: VGu *bOuld Insist lhol you wire stay Jn the car durlag an el~ lrical storm. It's actually one or the aate1t pla.ce11 to be. Ia f&l1, I've never heard or a pt.rson in a car being struck by llgblnlog. Jh~• abyont? DEAR ANN LANDERS: I rcod with 111· tcrest your column 'lbout "10 Wuys to Keep a Male Interested." The man who made up the list knew his onions . Rule No. 3 wait especially Interesting to me . It was. "Dun't call me. I'll e.il! you." Some ti1ne ago 1 tnet a girl I U10ught "'as the one for me. She-was attractive, well educated. am i a L 1 e, etc. Unrortunately,"'1he turned Out lo be a pushover. On our third date we went tu bed. After a n1onlh I was bored and decided lo break ll orr. Well . Ann, you wouldn 't believe the letters and the phone calls. She pestered me ar the o!Uce, CBll- <'t. me ot home. tracked me down at my mother's place and even ca.lied my sister. She c)lased n1c so shamelessly, I couldn:t possibly have an ounce of respect for h¢r. Plense tell the glrls that lhc so-culled nc\v 1nora.lity is a man's gimmick. Jr a chick wants lo go nlong with It, she 1;hould tl.l'CCPt the const-que11cc~ (like get. ·t!ng dutnpcd) nnd let the gcy off the hook gracefully. Every man wants a wire he can be pl'OUd or. -PIULADELPHIA DEAR PlllL.: You ·IOVnd like Nd leW$ ht me but >;our leUtr iii worth prlatlag. Some girls need to be reminded 41tat there are lots of betl1 ruruallg 'looM - dh1gulserl a.'I men. -Do you reel ill at ease .•• out ul it? b everybod) having 11 good tl1nt but you~ W'lte /or Ann Lonllers' book~!. "The 1:c1 to P"opularlt~." enc::l~ir.g with your N.'(tue81. 35 cents 1n coin and a tong. atH• kddrcS;Setl. s.tamped envcl~pe. AM Landers wt/I ge g/Jd to hdp yw with your problems. Send thcn1 to tltr cart ol the DAILY PILOT, tncJo&bt • ,.....lf.,dttrtssed. st111l'!rie<I cnxtll.\C)I!. • .. ' DAil Y PILOT F1fdl7, JMUlt7 .10. 1970 GIVING EXTRA CARE -Showing their mothers how much they care are members of the National Charily League Ticktockers. The coeds are hosting a \'ale ntine tea party for moms Saturday, Feb. 7, Glimpse Into 70s Offered Jnsighls for the 10s will theme the l7lh annual national conference of the Electrical \Vomen's Round Table Tues. day. Feb. 3, in the Grand Hotel. Anaheim. Speaker! for the on~ay f\'tnl will include \\'illiam Lane. Sunset ~lagatine: ~tiss Anna Fisher Rush . ~lc:CaU 's J.1agaltine; Mike Roy, food edltor. KNX.CBS radio: ~tiss Carolyn Heine, Advisory Com- mis&ion of the Status of \Vomen, State of California: a manager of an appliance firm. and Dan Moore, Los Angeles Times. The event will begin 1111Lh breakfast at 7 a.m. and con- clude wiU! a banquet al 7 p.m. The Electrical W o m e n ' s Round tabJe is open to women \\'hose occupations are alLied \\'Ith the electrical industry or related (ields. Exchange Students Tapped !\!embers of the Ebell Club of Laguna Beach "-'ill lean1 a little more about foreign coun- tries as three members of U1e American Field Service al Laguna Beach High School present the ~fonday, Feb. 2 vrogram. Speaking lo the group 41 7:30 p.m. in Laguna Beach'K'rt Gallery will be ~largie le Roux of South Africa, Fernando Ga- J3 of Spain and Manfred Heme of Germany. A brief business meeting "ill precede the program. Refreshments will be served by Mrs. Louis Zit.n.ik and c<>m- n1ittee members the ~lmes. Douglas Kenaston, L a r r y llunt, Gordon Brown. lloward llinricks. Edward Nell and \Vallace Scott. Author Speaks For Pen Women Frances Grant Nachant. author or "Sona ol Peace." v. 111 be guest speaker for the "ilonday, Feb. 2, meeting of Laguna Bt!ach Pen '\'omen'."' The author, presiden1 of tne San Dieg1J Branch of the Na- tional Lc:.guc of Americ;.in Pen Women. L~ listed 111 "International \\"ho·~ \\'ho In l'ot'try" nnd 1n th<' 1968 edt\Jon of "Who's \Vho of American \Vomen." Widely pi.1bll~hed in this country and :ibrnad. ~e v.:1s repn:seQted in th\: ··cen1ennial Antholnty"' I~ her natn·c stall' of Alaska. The n1ecting i:onduC'ted by Min Anoe ttiaguire ·will be&in t1l 10 a.m. In the boardroom of the L•guna Beath 11\gh ScJ1ool ;,dn1lniltralion bLLilding Moose Group 9.'omeri of the P.foose. 115' 11Mtmble the first and thi rd 'lllursd.; of e.ach monlh for meeUn11 In ~toose llomr, CostJ; Meu. The proarams becln at 8 p.m. t New Stew f\Iiss Sandra SulliYan . daughter of .1\1.rs. Patri· cia Sullivan of Costa iiesa and John E. Sul· llvan of Cypress, is a ~raduate of Delta Air· lines stewardess train· ing school in Atlanta, Ga. She currently is based at Houston lnlcr· national Airport . i1iss Sullivan is a graduate of .l\1ater Dei High School and attended Or· ange Coast College. Dads V iew Activities Fathers "·ere tnvited to sha re nursery school activities v1ilh their preschoolers when Hilltop Nursery School of Costa P.iesa hosled an open house. They w a I ch e d their youngsters at work and piny ht all areas of school instruction inc I u d in g music. art. dramatics, indoor and outdDor fr~ play, juice and story time . Hilltop is a nonprofit: nonsectarian parent participa· !Lon school "-"hich is licensed by the Slate Department o( Social Welfare and a member of the Orange County Council of Parent Participation Nur· sery Schools. During the general meeting nexl month, Don Bo"-'IUS, a psychologist. "'ill d i s c u s s father"s Role \\'ith l h c Preschoolers. Laguna Artist Will Address • Art League Your Horoscope Tomorrow Scorpio: Stress Versatility SATURDAY JANUARY 31 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March %1-Aprll II), Communicatlont are highlighted. Imperative that you catch up o n cor· rapaodenoe. ,,,.,,, ... , be much bw!y -•· But Im- portant lall< ls lo wtllne format. to clarlty oplnlcm and posltloo1. TAUllVll (April ~M>y Ill)' Your feelings Nn detp. To deny them woukl bt al· tempting: to decelve yoursell. Gd affairs at home in Ofdtr. Give and receive love. This will make your world go around -in a merry way ! Traveler's Impressions • Russian By BEA ANDERSON ........... Since his recent tour behq,d the Iron curtain, Grant c. Buller concludes there even- tually will be a revolution in Rusaia. Revolt Ahead? ferkr and over priced : service, poor; food and hotel acccmmodallooa, fair lo poor, and felt that a free enttrprlse system would Improve them. What be liked the least was the oppl'ellive leelloe of a police otate. Abo coming under crltlciJm for di3torting the American image were the news media, which he said, only report the aeamy side of America. "The Image slowly is being erased though. as Voice of America and Radio Free Europe are getting through to a lot of peo- ple. and also invited arc the American Field Service students. \Vorking "heartily" are ~liss Debra Kil· mer and i 1iss Holly .-\ndcrson tleft to right). SpeaJdna before the Weolnes- day Morning Club of Costa ?iiesa, the world traveler and international alfain lecturer said that be felt there is ·a great deal of unrest amon1 the people. "They btlve no freedom as they are completely regulaltd by government,'' he explained, adding "You can't ktep them down forever." The plus 1ide lncluded no unemployment and housing and food for everyone, but the price tbey paid f~ this pro- gress was giving u~ their rreedom, be auerted. ''Their cultural achievements a.re many," he said. "Perhap1 their greatest coolrfbutJon to the world is what they have given to space, but aaain the people paid an expensive price. "American tourists also are. ltelpina: to create a better pie· ture." He advised everyone to tour behind the iron curtain, warn.big that "lt won't be the belt vacation, but certainly the. most educational." He al.so feels that if all the dissidents would make the tour and compare tbey 'd be more satllfied at home. In Tribute of Mothers His impressloru: of Ru3Sia we?'!: m o s t I y unfavorable., Even on the plus side hti found disadvantages. "To foot the bill the govern· ,...,.., .. .,. • .,,....,....,"" Girls Working Hard He rated merchandise as in- ment took frorn Ute people which lowered their living standard," he added. Another positive point is the Peering Around NaUonal Charity t.eagut: Tlcktockers play host to the ir mothers each ~ear "'1th J Valentine tea The Dover Shores home r1f J\1rs. Melvin Daniel Kilmer Ill will be the party selling S11tur- day, Feb. 7, v.·here the young girls and mot.hers v.· i I I "'elcome several American Fie.Id Service students. In the rel'el\"lng line at 2 p.m. will be ~l rs. Edward LelSy Coriell, chapter presi- dent and her da u g hter Deborah: !\!rs llcrber1 John ~lcany. Ticktocker coordinalor M 'd tack of crime. Blltler said he and daughters 0ebb1e and er ma I 5 1,11 .a1. at a11 times watking Claudine. and Mrs. Kilmer city streets at night and that he saw ooporno1 ra phi c and daughter Debra. R I literature for &ale. • • 0 r .,..., ............ ,., ..... '""-Presidents of each grade Eye 0 e course," be added ••• the level and their mothers will penalty in a polic:l state lor a pour They are Tracy Ewald, crime doe.a urve as a deter· seventh grade, ~frs. Brian ibe role of Mermaids In renl" On the other hand, he Albert E\vald : The r e s'e community projects will be was surprised to see so many P.larkel. eighlh grade, Mrs. di&cu.ssed at the Monday, Feb. alcoholics. Louis Dillon !\1arkel; Patricia 2, meeting of the Women's He commended their cduca· Rooke, ninth grade, Mrs. Division or the Lagun• Beach Uonal system, saying that "It Robert Curtis Rooke ; Robin Chamber of Commerce. Ls impossible lo have a drop- Miner. 10th grade, 'Mrs. Guy Social hour at 11 :30 a.m. in out thert. Studenta don't at- Everelt ~finer Jr.; Carol Con-Surf 'n Sand will precede the tack teachers or riot, and if nally, 11th grade, P.lrs. Paul luncheon. Mrs. Robert Turner, their system had a teacher Connally. and Debbe Dean. , program chairman. v.· i 11 like Angela Da'iis she'd either 12th grade. ~trs. Frank Brooks discuss upcoming ~1ermaid be shot or sent to Siberia." Dean. projects including the Flea He criticized c a m p u s TIME OUT from duties at Hoag Memorial Hosp it a I, Presbyterian, will be taken by members of the Aus:iliary as they attend the California H o s p i t a I Association Con- \•ention in San Franci5co's Jack Tar Hotel, Tuesday, Feb. 3 lhroguh Fri., Feb. 6. Role of Women Seen By African Princess ~iarkel. a float for lhe \Vintcr libraries for the lack of good Festival next month, and the Amer i can Ii t er ature, state convention of chamber magazines and newspapers. women to be hosted by \Vhile talking to studenls he Laguna Beach In the fall . learned that representative. Prtiiding officer M r s . newspaper:& of the u .S. were Thomas Johnston welcomes the Daily Worker. Los Angeles women interested ln joining Free Press and the New York. the Menn&Jds to phone the Post and that novelists Wi!re Traveling north "1i\I be prtsident Mn. W i 11 J a m Langston and the P.1me.s. A1at· thew Kenney, \Viltiam Brown· ing, Donald fuller a n d \\'illiam Hudson. CM Overeaters Overeaters An on y mo us gather every Wednesday even- ing at B in Beat Street School, Costa Mesa. The role of women today in both Africa and America will be discusst?d by Prince.ss Alice Si"'·undhla, native of east cen· !ral Africa, for the \\'omen's Auxiliary lo the Oamge Coun. ty ~fedical Association Tues- day, Feb. 3. Princess Alice. an author and scholar as "'ell as public speaker, made her first ap- pearance in lhis country on lhc Ralph Edwards television show "This Is Your Life." She has "'l'itlen two books including "Alice Princess," her first, and "8et1A·een T'4'0 \Vorlds," a sequel to be published ~hortly. The speaker is married and is the mother of three children. She and her husband hope to obtain their PhD degrees and return tn Africa to work among their people. chamber office at Df-1011 for Eldridge. Cle.aver, Jame. s ~trs. Lallrance Mosier, aux. reservatlom. l Baldwin and Norman ~tailer iliary presjdent, wil l conduct a · brief business meeting during ..---------...,.,. the u a.io. gathering tn the INTRODUCING · Orange County Ai e d I c a I Association building. Orange. flOG LOV!RS ~lrs. Kenneth ?.1cNiece of Santa Barbara. president-elect TO CHOPIN! of the Women's Auxiliary to the California ~f e d i c a I Association will be introduced during the: meeting, and special guests will b e 1 members of the women's aux- iliaries of the dent.al, phar· maceutical and veterinary so- cllles of Orange County. Mrs. Loren Heather will serve as hospitality chairman , assisted by .the Mmes. Morrls F1er, John Granzella. Jack Hagadorn and frank Ken· drick. DEPENDABILITY MAKES THE GREAT ~ MAYTAG A606 ~ and Matching Dryer ~· Your '· Best Buy! Semi-Annual QualiCraft PARENTS', DON'T \'IAIT UNTIL YOUR CHILO IS OUT Of THE fll.OG LOVERS AGE llEFOAf YOU GIVE THEM THE GIFT OF MU51C -YOU WAIT Af<IO IT MAY If TOO lATEl •• ••• • • • • were 8.99 to 10.99 ..A • • • • • •• • • • • • • • • •• (hildrtn in !ht frog loving 1t19e (A-8) ire lht Pt rftcl 191 for lt1rn1ng mYS•t. Y1m1h1, 1Fter ye1r1 of ttfflrth dtsi~ritd the y I m I h I Mu1lt Course lo asturt the! eU th!ldren c1n !11rn m111ic. M1tl1ons of Y1m1h1 gr1dutlt1 from 111 over !ht world l111 ify ro the success of the YAMAHA MUSIC COURSE. You do not h1v. to b•iy t n In· strument, lhtrt is no hom1 study -iust lots of fun for your thildre11 while lhty learn music. DON'T DENY YOUR (HllO THE CHANCE YOU MAY HAVl MISS[D IN YOUlt CHILDHOOD- Cl•s~s •rt naw 1nrotl in1J-V10n'1 you pie&~ gi'tt us 1 c1ll ind let u~ show you lht whol1 story of rht YAMAHA MUSIC COURS£1 ... ,. GEMINI (May it.June %0)' Accent on ruoJvln1 legal questions. You relate to most pel'IOfll in mea.nlnaful manner today. But don't expect to have It all your own way . In · marrlaae. you wUI make ma· jor concetSkm. CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): Pay heed to diet health re- qQirementJ. Key is moderation -which means avoid esce.sa. What appears to be ssious dilemma wUI be solved -~·n your favor . Added money "on the way." LEO (July %3-Aug. %%)~ Good lunar aspect today coin· ckles with romaoee. creative endeavors. You make. Deeded changes; you get &01n1 on pet project. You enjoy what you do and opposite sex is drawn to )'OU. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. %%) ' "spotliaht on home, property, care for elderly lndMdual. New outlook is desirable.. Don't hana: onto past 8rt pro- gressive, original and in- dependent. UllRA !Sep!. 23-0ct. %1)' Accent on short journey, iipecial m e s s a g e involving cla,,e relative. Your hunch pays off ; pay heed to it. Learn by teachina:. Means express wi ll i ngness to share. knowledge. SCORPIO !Oct. %3-Nov. 21)' Money, personal posaessiona dominate. YOllt potential for success ii stresiied through versatile approach. I>Uplay your unique abilities -and sense of humor. SAGITl'AMJS (Nov. 2Z· Dec. 21)' Cycle h 1 g b : circumstances turn in your favor. Your judgment, In. tuition become more reUable. Initiate projects. Buy !Ome new wearing apparel. Brighten appearance, surrounding•. CAPRICORN (Dec. zi-Jan . 19): What ls hklden needs al· tentlon. Means don't sweep problems under the rug. Come out in open; say what you mean. Cooperate with one who is conducting charity drive, AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Accent on friend who shows appreciation with lovely gift. Make peace. Gesture of i?oodwill will give you a tremendous boost. Act ac· cordingly. PISCES (Feb. !~March 20)' Study Aquarlu1 message. Ac· cept invitation.a. Elevate self· esteem. You are worthy of reward. Feel this b so and it will be -especially today. Since 1'47 were 5.99 .. to 7.99 ~ Q YOUR SIC.GEST RfWARD Will IE WHEN YOUR FROG lOVtR LOOKS UP AT YOU ANO TELLS YOU •• , ''I CAVf MY fROG A NEW NAM[. 8[(1H0VlN." Maytor Ammlllc Was~tr. 2 speeds for • all-fltbrlc wallliltl-. AulOl!lltlc ~ll>rlc soltener dlspen11r. Power.rm A&ilatar for w1ohln11tllon 1hir1 11nll1, tttorou1h. Special soak cycl1 makes really dirty clothes a cinch to get cltan. llaytc Eleclnlllc C1111tl DrJtr. Fasl dry clothes in ''""'' low temperatur•s Whil• tlec~onlc 11nson conatently "fttl" moisture in c~thts. Shllts off w!lon c(oll\es 110 drlod just r~hl. Ont 1tttin1 -no 1uu1ini f0< llm• lltd t...,_ Per- manent Pf"' Mllillc '"'""" wriniju. DAVIS- BROWN ' Nv• now O!"I Qual1Cr.1lt's la1ht0n 'I.ho. Pi'Cesetters! Choos• i.eve;11 11 these 11rrlhc prites But hurry lor • tOoo seltttJon Nol ell styles in every Sile. ' Don't Dtl1y-C1ll T o41y 642-1844 YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL IN COSTA MHA ' 411 •• 17th St. C.,hl M.,. -'46· 1 H4 Dolly ,_, Set. ,,, T .. • • . ' Friday, J&fll.lltY 30, 1970 i DAILV PILDT J$ County Bites Edison Atom Move Liked Court Cutba~ks Scouts Get Training ·' • ID Bar Planning SANTA ANA -Soother" Callforn.la Edison Company 's F'" 1 vnroN -A drullc oppos!Uon ln the ''ullerton I I h -n Fu~lerton Angered by Santa Ana Move 1'USTIN' -Teenage mem-Training ProgrJ.. ~ bers of lhe Oran&e Coun· Sherl!f Muslck satd the Ex-1f ty Sheriff's Explorer Posbl: plorer Scout academ • 1 from orange, Placeot la, Santa Y pro";, ... Ana and TusUn are set to go cram, to be held Friday, Sat-1.: through their own weekend urd.Jy and Sunday at the traiJting academy, styled after Orange County Pe.ace Offittrs"<J the county's Peace 0Ulcer1' Range, Is in Its second year. •'aU-out commltment" t 0 u~ .J' areas at east e g t 'F es 'Law Day USA' nuclear power generaUon was cutback In the handling of area. from an existing court. Cases at the Orange County Superior Court o[flclals and Judge Bruce Sumner of lauded in a resolution passed S . C t ' Full t . dg insist th t It ,_ In th Laguna Beac h, the Superior thiS week by the Orange Coun-uper1or o u r s er ~n JU es a ~ e branch has had the telephonts taxpa yers' interests lo have Court jurist assigned to the For The Record Births Death Nodees DllTll:KH J•rfN.r JolWI Oletrldl. A" t, of Jiit Pit" Drive. Co1t1 M .... 0111 Ill' 6111h, Jtnill"' 1t. SilN11/W ll"r ,.....,, .. Mr. 11\11. M,,. Frtllkl'fn Oletrldl1 two lM'eti.. .,.,,. T~I I nd Peftfi 1lrtw, SVUn1 ••• p....,,, .. Mr. Ind Mn. JoM 8. Ht .,,111on, Clim Ute, Wl1C0111fn1 .,..,,. 1111nt, Mn. L..Joyd Ole.lrlch, Vl111 C11tlor• nit ; 11-i.m Min . Saturdff, t AM, t i. Jahfl thl a...tlst C.ftlollc Ctlureh. lnlt'l'-m~t, Good SttfPllilrd Clt!Wlerv. a.ni MOl"hl•rf· 17AJ s-•· Cn lt ,..,,, Olrec:tor1 •OX Wl1'9m H. FOK. AK IO, of 2n ~ ... 11 51,,1 Hunll"91ot1 S.11;1!. ~-of de1lfl. J•*'l' 27. Sllnrlved bl' .., ... , Marv E. FoC s.rvkn. Salvfde'I', 11 ltM. Sltll!M O. .. I. Final rnllll9 p!Kt, P.c:ffk View M-1•1 Parll:. smtlt!s Mon!NN. DIAC• ·~· : ARBUCKLE a. SON Wes&cllff lfort:uary jri E. 17111 SL, Costa Mesa . - • • ; BALTZ MORTIJARIES Corona del ~tar OR W'58 Costa Mesa . Ml HCH • BELL BROADWAY MOl\TIJAllY Ut Broadway, Costa Mna uwus • DILDAY BROTHERS Bulin .... Valley Monuq lllll BeaU Blvd. Huntbl .... Buch IU.7771 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARX C.mdaT e M-..Y WO P~lew Ori" NewpOrl Bue .. Calllenta 1«-me • PEEK FAMILY COl.ONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7111 lloba An. w ........... -.-• S!tEPf ER MOl\TIJAllV ......... Buch 4tf.llll Su aemente 4Mt• • SMITHS' MORTIJAllY U7 Mala 8L lfunHngtoe Bea - ty Board of Su .... msors. aU Superi'or r -.. ~ matt••s al north county bench., a annnounccd' ,.-.. •• of judges and court olflclnls ...vw \ ... • By TOM BARLEY The resolution, sponsored by feeling the north county area this wttk that court seulons °' "--'" ,..., 1"'H Supervisor Robert Batun or busily ringing this week. heard in the Santa Ana county will be held only on Fridays. SANTA ANA -Orange Fountain Valley' commended Angry north c oun t Y courthouse. Opponents of that Judge Sumner will be work· County's judges and lawyen, the power company's efforts residents see the move as the argument -among them Ing in the Santa An a led by Superior Court Judge to help solve S o u t h e r n first phase of the eventual Third D 1 s t r l c t Supervisor courthouse ri.tonday through ff arm 0 0 s c 0 vi 11 e o f California's air pol lution prob-elimination of Superior Court William J. Phillipa and Thursday handling overflow W •-~-pl · 1ems by comtruction of new liUgaUon from the Fullerton Assemblyman John Briggs (R· matters rrom other courts. He es .. u.a~ter, are anning an "uclear reactors to be ,·-Th I --~ ban Fu!'---) I the 956 h · led t th the ,... area. e ong P•v.,._... a • ierwn po nt to 1 as potn ou at WORLD PREMIERE ENGAG,EMENT "T.ylet -4 ....., • ... M9r'" -LA. 11..,,1 -·-~­M tll'Mr.fCll'IDIS Ellq)etb Warren n..ttor .Beatt7 ID The OnlyG9me Jn'Jbwn l!I m.11 .. m: UI( ORANGE DRIVl·IN e LIDO THEATRE, Newport ambitious May 1 com-sla.lled at the existing San donmen\ of the branch court legis]alion which permitted Fullerton court does not merit memoraUon of Law Day, Onofre Nuclear Gene.rating -in terms of Superior Court establishment of b ra n c h his fu ll-time prese nce at tbt U.S.A. Station. matters -has aroused bltter courts in large populalim facility. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Judge Scoville chaired the l----------H-A_V:.:E:::..Y:.:O:.:U~V~ts-1r=Eo,,---=o-u"R-..,-N"E"'w_s_T_O_R_E~A-'T"'::......'..2.::::::.::.:......:.:.:.:.::::......~,~bu-.-= .. -.-.-.. -,-.. -,--.:c"1•1 " ...... I ......... Urst public meeting of the HUJllTIMGTOJll itACtt-tllJI' tHdl ,...._ tt At&a11•• Orange County Bar Associa-9861 Ad t B . kh rst ·n H ,. t B h IL TOll0-11 T•,. af ltKktltN 11"41 IAHTA AfilA-1• W, ...._ ... .,,.... .. WISTMlfillT.......-n W•Mltw It...._ W•t COSTA MISA-t.lillt "erw I,.,., It...._ fl. COITA Ml........W L 11tfl II. ~c::·~:.i ~.=i~1~ ams a roo u 1 un 1ng on eac ~~~::~~=·::..-::~":.:..::'':.' .. , .... that will include Law Day pro· grams in at least six Orange Coast communities. Backing Judge Scoville were Judge William Speirs of NOWJ!Olt B ea c h, presiding judge of the Superior Court and Robert S. ''Sam" Barnes of Newport Beach, president of the Orange County Bar Association. Bringing the Law Day theme, "Law -Bridge to Justice,'' to their areas will be attorneys Tully H. Seymour (Newport Beach) Bradley K. Schwarz (Costa Mesa ) Anton Dumbart (Westminster-Los Alamitos); C. Willia.m Carlson Jr. (Huntington Beach.Seal Be a ch -Fountain Valley) Municipal Court Judge Frank Domenichini (San Clemente) and Thomas A. Reilly (Laguna · Beach). Highlighting the countywldc observances of Law Day will be school demo!lstrations and addresses by selected judges and lawyers, the shoWing of fllms depicting the Law Day message in school auditoriums and before service clubs and the staging of mock trials before school studeot.s . ... Ibis is where we must make the most effort," com- mented Barnes. "By bringing what we have to say about Law Day borne lo the kids. It is vital that we do this in these turbulent ti.mes and we should concentrate our efforts to that end." . "We must certainly let our youth know our American way of life, our American proc· esses and cur American cruet system," added Judge Scoville. "I b8ve had more than 1,Q students in my own courtroom during the put year and I have made every effort to further talk in them and explain exactly what we are trying to do and how our laws enable ua to do iL" Orange County's high school students are being encouraged by the b a r association's Lawyers' Wives group to com- pete in the annual Law Day esY.Y contest. Deadline for en- tries Is March 6 aJld the com· petition is open to all Orange County high school students . Other contributions to the county's Law Day observances will be in the fonn or panel dlscuS!ions oo the meaning and application of the nation's laws. D\scussloo groups are made available to interested organizatiw and community projects on request, Judge Scoville said. Form a 1 reoogniUon cl. Orange County's contribution t.o Law Day, U.S.A., will al50 come fr o m proclamations l""ed hy the county lloard of SUpervlaors and the mayora of the county 's ~ cities. 6 Countians Win Posts At Chapman ORANGE -Six Orange County residents are the n e w e s t appointments to memberabip oo the Chapman College Board of Governors, ·a statewide group of ad visors to tbe college's trustetts. 'Ibey are : -Robert Garclncr ol Corona del Mar, newly appointed asaoclate justice to the 4th District Court of Appeals. -Nylin Hurd of Santa Ana, president ol tllt Nylin Hurd Coortrucllon Company. -J>mes A. LW:em ol Santa Ana, owner ol Lukens Dairy. -J1mes R. Moore of Santa Ami, an attorney. -·Donald E. Shively of Newport Beach, Orange Coon- ty division manager far the Southern CounUes Gas Com· pony. -Thomas A. Worthy of Huntlqton Beach, a reUrtd rancber • Only One FIRM stocks In an homt cdlOOfls. That's a bf9 dtal? Jt h In °'"* CollntJ, Tht DAILY PILOT ls the onlr c1ar1y ~ tllit. oe1i.- "' OW PICklgt. $2.69 If Porfoctl Ht! W1flr loftlt == • no .,,.., .a.a ,... • !V"• IC!gf b "'-* 1 -· DI Pllnt Stts er PtncH Crall Stts it._. lk. , .. .............. 11t1I~ 66• bmcl. pimue ICl:t ~· CoklC ,.. ••• •z .. &oltltl COra Sldl••lk 1111• 1-.l Hed. t• IMCH , ltftllll. W"ltk Siii I tr1iai111 ~·,:; •1.,,.· .b11i11at r1. I •1• J1httl Dllllll Dll Cut Diii ~~w.::: 4f hpcr-flo tirta.. __ ,.., ... ,. ..... ~ ....... 31!. Enfamll ................ 1 ..... ,. 47-Tampax Reg. 5u•6 for •1• Trend Design Glass Tumblers 39' & 4~ Stuart Hall Tablets & Papers YaurChol• 22' 'I'' Pencil ShwpiMr 99' 89' Crayo a Crayou •• 66' 39' 1500".Ctllo Tapt. 29' Ltgal Size Portfolio •• 79' 89' 3-R111g Bin 111 ••• 66' 39. I CoYlll ;., %1' ......... ,. ._ .... ::.::..-=... •1 • ::=t:=... .. F111t of 1111 1- F1111ttt11 Tltt'lin ~ ........ 2" Js (tsl 11-. Gtmi,Gold. • lsll "* .. . ··"" .................... 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F,f ,0 .. :p.r:,;:.:: •2·Y~ , • --------- .!..!LEA.Ill' PILOT Frl<Wy, JanUll'J' JO, 1970 :Player of Decade Award lncredible--l(oufax LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sandy Koufax bad a one-word reaction when advised he 1 had been named Baseball Athlete of the • ., Decade tn a special poll condoc1ed by the " Assoclated Press. ••tncredible." said the former Los ' Angeles Dodger pllcher, a hard-throwing, so.ft-speaking left-hander many call .the greatest In the annals of baseball. Koufa:r, who retired al 30 after the end of the 1966 season because of a cllronic, ~during arthritic condition in his pitching elbow, U a man ol many al· tributes. False modesty Is not one of them and he elaborated on bis thoughts. ''I think it's incredible bece.use there were. guys like Mays and Mantle and Henry Aaron who were great pleyers for 10 years or more. ••A"fter all, my big years were not spread over a full decade. I only had four or five good years." Sandy had best check the records. In I'll Knock Your Bloc~ Ott ' Basketball being a game of emotions, reserves sometimes are in pet· ter position to react to fan violence than players in the game. There Were 28 seconds remaining on the scoreboard clock Thursday night as Von Steuben .mgh School (Chicago) was leading Roosevelt High, 70- sll years of the pa.st decade, 1961·1966, he won 129 games and lost only 47 and in his flnaJ lour h18: won-loss hist.dry was 25-5, 19-S, 2U and 21-9 -and those were yean when the elbow was in misery. Sandy in his relatively brief but golden years won the Cy Young Award three times and pitched no-hit, no-run gems In successive years, from 1962 through 1965, and one of them was a perfect game. Koufai · Is proud or his success in baseball but he has said perhaps his most satisfying season wu in 1965 when he struck out a major league record 382 bat· ters. Thls, he feels was a sort ol do-it· your.self thing. Ttle Mays and Mantle he referred to, of coorS;e, were Willie and Mickey of the San Francisco Giants and New York Yankees. In the AP poll, Koufax received 225\fe votes from the sports writers and broad· casters. The now-retired Mantle received 65. Von Steuben reserve Brian Collier goes after one of the fans who poured on to the court. Other stu~nts. f.hrew books and chairs and rthe game was never completed. Ven Steuben was awarded the victory anyway. !Bruins Invade • • • 1Berkeley; USC Southern· Hospitality? Ha! • lAt Stanford By ntE ASSOCIATED PRESS : U you happen to reel the earth trembl· ' ~ng beneath your feet this weekend, don ·1 ;worry. It probably won't be an earth· Ee -just California's Pacific.a erence basketball teams trying to each other Into the ground. I The Golden State's four Pac.a entries lgo at each other in the Bay Area , while ihe 1quartel from the Pacific Northwest ~njoy light nonconference schedules. ~ Tonight nationally top-ranked UCLA in.I ~ades Cal and Southern California, tied · )yuh the Bruins for the con ference le.ad )vith a 2-0 mark, visils a frustrated Stan- }ord five. UCLA and USC will trade op- \xinents Saturday, with the UCLA.Stan-tord game on TV, live at 2 p.m. : Oregon is the least acth'e squad this t1eekend while Oregon State will be on Jhe court both nights. The Ducks, sitting In the ceUar with a 1-3 Pac-8 mark -this despite a 9-6 overall record -are Idle. !rhe Beaven, 2·2 and fourth in the con- terence. h06l Hawaii tonight and Portland Saturday. : The entries from the Evergreen State tach have single Saturday games on tile road. Washington's third·place Huskies, J-% and Jl-4, clash wllh Montana's Grizzlies \\'hlle Wa shlngtop State. fifth With 2-3 and tl·S marks, fa ce t.he Vandals it Idaho. Area Man R ecalls '50 Orange Bowl Incident ll has been said that anyone who gets a true sampling of Southern hospitality will never forget the experien~. And so it was for Lido Isle resident Ralph Richley, who recalls his first ex- posure to Southern lrealment. RJchley was a sophomore defensive back for the University of Santa Clara, which was meeling Kentucky in the 1950 Orange Bowl classic at Miami, Fla. It was the fourth quarter and Richley was making his first appearance in the game. Vito Perilli, !he Wild cats' classy quarterback, was directing t~e Kentucky attack. the Babe unloaded a pass. But Richley was there to pick it off, returning it 38 · yards before being belled out of bounds. He recalls being flat on his back, still holding the ball, when he looked up at a man glaring down at him. The fellow, ob- CdM Drive r Top Qualifier P0~10NA -}-lank Westmoreland, the springnationals drag rac ing champion from Corona del Mar, got a jump on of- ficial qualifying for Sunday1s 10th annual National Hot Rod Associalion \Vin· ternationals Thursday. . viously a Soiithemer by his drawl, said si1nply, "you Calirornia son-<1f·a-bitch!.V. Richley remembers the occasion vivid· ly as he prepares for a reunion of that outstanding Sanla Clara team this weekend in the Bay Area. Santa Clara owned a 7-2·1 record with each blem.ish coming from a.bowl·bound team. Oklahoma topped the Broncos. 23- GLENN WHITe -----W'HITE WAS fl ;;,.. ----- 21, breaking a 21·2l<t'leadlock in lhe fourth quarter after a recovery of .a dropped punt. Darrell Royal was the quarterback of the OU outfit, which went on to smother LSU, ~. in the Sugar Bowl. Cal dumped lhe Broncos of coach Len Casanova. 21·7, then lost to Ohio State, 17-14, in the Rose Bo\\·\. And Stanlord tied Santa Clara. 7-7, before going to the Pineapple Bowl to-massacre 'Hawaii, 72· 20. Still, Sant.a Clara was considered an unworthy opponent for KenlL't'ky, a team with only a 6-0 loss to Tennessee to bloteh its record. In fact, a f\.1iami newspaper came out with an edllorial a few days before lhe Orange Bowl classic and said that bowl selection committee members should be fired for Inviting the unknown school from California, which hadn't played anyone. The article went 11n to predict the greatest mismatch in Orange Bowl history. "That editorial won the game for us," Richl6y says. "Casanova niade sure everyone on the team read It. There was~ no pre-game pep talk -but there was a tremendous feeling in the sir." Santa Clara then went about !he business at' hand and spanked the Wildcats, 21·13. Four players from the Broncos went into pro ra1,ks -including Hal Haynes, Jerry J-lennessey, Ellery \Yilliams and 11al J-lock. .ruchley cecalls the blend or personnel which made up that Bronco outfit. It was a combo of World War It veterans in the ~ age brac ket. plus kids fresh out of high school. The latter category included Richley, who had directed Loyola High to a Ctf' runne.rup finish to Alhambra as a prep. '"Casanova i:nade it a perfect blend. TIM! youngtr guys all haC a tremendous respect for the older ones, yet we had great interteam competition. too ." · Richley re(ers to Casanova, who only recently retired as athletic director at the University of Oregon, as "a marvelous coach and a fine gentleman." Obviously he has no such high regard for that Southern fellow who gave him a sample of Southern hospitality that day in the' Orange Bowl. 1$-&lh, Mays 106Y.i:, and Aaron or the Atlanta Braves, 51 ~, trailed next in that order. Koufax after rellrement accepted a fat, Jong tenn contract as a commentator with the National Broadcasting Company. He was advised of the decade designs· t>on aa he prepared to play goU at Riviera Country Club, to which he belongs. GoH has long been a Koufax con- cern. He carries an eight-handicap and said with a grin, "l can't play a lick." A cameraman arrived and Sandy, t.. maculate in dark slacks, pull-over sweater and wh.lte .turtleneck, agreed to pose -but ooJy in reladve seclusion • Koufax could never be called a show-oft Once one of the nation's mo6t ellgible bachelors, Sandy has been married a vear. His private life remains quiet aod quite private. Does he miss the hustle and bustle or baseball1 "Yes and no but things are stlU pretty busWng for me," be said. Nicklaus on Top . Have to Do .Better I Says Open Leader SAN DIEGO (AP) -Jack Nicklaus sounded a warning to his challengers in today's secoild round of the $1&0,000 Andy Williams-San Diego Open: "I have to do better." Nicklaus, the defending champion, opened with a brilliant. seven-under-par 65 in Thursday's first round , one stroke better than fast-closing Tony Jacklin, the British Open title-holder. Four more are at 67 -Canadian Al Baldwin, fonner Masters champion Gay Brewer, 4~year~ld Julius Boros and young Joel Goldstrand. The group of six at 68 includes Gene Littler and Bobby Nichols, ~tiile the cur-• rent Masters champion, George Archer, ~1·as one of six at 69. But Nicklaus, who has the hottest hand en the tour i.n his appearances, remained the man to beat -and the man to catch. Nicklaus• 65 -he also had a 65 in his last previous competitive round -came on the 6, 792·yard Torrey Pines Golf Club course In wha t he called an "Ideal situa- tion for scoring." The temperature was in the 70s, the greens held, the (airways were in ex- cellent condition and the mild breeze didn't kick up until the afternoon, long after big Jack had finished . His round was outstanding enough, but even more remarkable because he did some experimenting along the way. "About my fourth or fifth hole I started having some trouble with my swing," he said. "I wasn't cetting the shoulder turn right. I worked It for about nine holes before I got it back "fhere I wanted it. "It's gratifying to "ork your way out of some trouble and still be able to score well." In that stretch of holes -"I just wasn't hitting the ball close to the bole'' -he had only one birdie, on a par five when he chipped close and made the putt. But he didn't have a bogey. He had two 20-footers and Put irons. within 6·, 5, 4 and l feel for his other birds. 1'I haven't had quite as long a winter layoff as I usually have," he said of his fast start this year . "I watched about 20 movies of myself over the holidaf'I and found some things I wanted to find and firmed up in my mind Dies .From U' 01u1ds Miguel Fuentes, a top pitching prospect for the Seattle Pilots ·9£ the American League, was shot three times, in a Puerto Rico bar by a group of teen· agers with a shotgun. He died Thursday in hjs home town of Loiza Aldea. At 22, he was a top Pilot pitching prospect. what 1 wanted to do.·• Jacklin, the personable y ou ng Englishman who won the British Open last year, closed with a rush to take over the No. 2 spot. He went birdie·birdie~agle on the last three holes, putting a three wood eight feet from tile flag on the par-five linal hole and making the putt. Others had their troubles, however, particularly PGA champ Ray Floyd and Bert Yancey, winner of last week's Bing Crosby Pro-Am. Floyd took a 75, m. eluding four penalty strokes for too many clubs in his bag, and Yancey had a Tl. Billy Casper, Frank Beard and Lee Trevino had 71s. Dave Hill had a 73. Arnold Palmer and U.S. Open tiUe-holder Orville Moody are not competing. Lakers Battle Hawks; Kings Bow Again, 3-2 LOS ANGELES -Bedeviled by ln- jurie:t but riding a six game winning streak paced by comeback·kid Jerry West, the Los Angeles Lakers can pull within a hall game of first with victory No. 7 tonight. The Lakers, idle since their llJ.108 win over San Diego Wednesday night, en- tcrta.in the Atlanta Ha .. ~1ks, clipped to a. mere l lh game lead over Los Angeles by a 111-102 loos to Phoenix'Thnrsday night. • LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles Kings are continuing to have about as much luck against the St. Louis Blues as the Titantic against icebergs. The Blues downed the Kings for the 12th straight time Thursday night, 3·2. • PORTLAND, Ore. -Oregon State basketball coach Paul Valenti will resign at the end of this sea.son, the Oregon Journal reported Thursday. Jim Barratt, OSU athletic director, said he rould not confirm or deny the report but said a news conference would be h~Jd Saturday afternoon following a meeting of the university's athletic board. • TALLAHASSEE. Fla. -Old Jake Gaither, a ~lope-shouldered, pot·bellied football genius who liked his players "agile, mobile and hostile" -and that rhymes with smile -retired Thursday. Jake, born Alonzo S. Gaither, son of a preacher, produced some of the finest ~ootball teams ever to smash an opponent into the dusty playing fields of the South's backwater black colleges in 25 years as coach of the Florida A&M Rat· tiers. His 203·36-4 lifetime coaching record was the best in the nation among active football coaches. Once -but only once-- a Gaither team slipped to a 6-4 record. He never had a losing sea:;on. • MILWAUKEE, Wis. -If Seattle cannot come up "'ilh the cash to save its baseball Pilots by Feb. 6 the team pro- bably will be moved to Milwaukee rather than to Dallas-Fort \Vorth, it we reported Thursday. • LOS ANGELES -Lee Evans, the grand old man of the quarter mile at the age of 22. says he's qultUng track at the end of the 1970 season if he can get 1 junior college coaching position. 1 !--UCLA. whlch brings a 14-0 season ~ Into Berkeley, hasn't played a Pae.fl game In three weeks. "I am pleas· Id to get bacll" into conference play this 1eekend," said ' coach John Wooden, ff.hose Bruins hit their scoring peak last Saturday night with a 1 IS-Tl root of Wyoming. \\'estmoreland led more than 300 qualifiers in the Top Fuel Eliminators class with a top speed of 218.44 miles an hour and an elapsed lime of 6.985 seconds for the quarter.mile. l~e was the only top fueler to break the seven seoood mark. Glen Brown of Phoenit, was second with a 7:514 elapsed 4me and a 153.29 mph top speed. Last. of Thorpe~s Carlisle ~ates Dies : Cal, cte.alocked with Stanrord near the Pae., baaement wiQI a 1-2 record, h1 Crfin& to map a three-game k>lling streak plllcb haa droppect Its '""'°" record to 7· f· AU three _defeeta wcrt by lea than slx- IJIJint marenu. · i Stanford, sulferlnJ through a mlseratVe f.10 teUOn. now must. face a Soulhern Callfom1a squad with an 11-3 record. the best Trojan mldseaaon mark In nearly a d<cact.. "We are playing u well right now as we have at any time this year," said tJllhUSiastlc USC coach Bob Boyd, "and UlCSe next four games Including next wctkend't p1dr In Washington are most ilf!portant to us, IO I see no rea10n why 'tl'f ahooldn't COl'lllnue to play well." Official qualifying runs w e r e n • t l!Cbeduled to start until today. \Vith the _\frge entry list. however, o!Hclals let min than 300 qi.Jalifylng runs off the grid on Thursday in nearly every category at the Los Angeles County Fairground!. In I.ht tunny Car divisi61l, Rich Slroo- nlan of Wliiltler, led the wOf ht~ 1969 Plymouth Barracuda wllh 7.03 ste0nds and 198.07 miles an hour. The top Gas Ellminator qualifier w11.s Carl Holmes or J1averhlll, A1ass.. with 7.171 M!COnd.1 and Ist.87 miles on hour. In I.ht new Pro Stock cl11ss. Biii .lenklna of Malvern, Pa., drovt his 1968 Chevy Camero over the course In 10.214 at 138.03 miles .ao hour. .. BEDFORD. Va. (AP) -Gus Welch, the Chippewa brave who was lhe lasl survivor of the ·Carlisle !Ddisn School teams for whkh the great Jim Thorpe ran hJs way to football glory, Is dead at 78. • A heart attack claimed Welch's life Thursday In Btd(ord Memorial Hospital. not far from the mountainside hpmc near the Peaks of Otttr where he bad lived. hi1 vision dimmed by a.deta ched relin~. since 1951. He wis the varshy quarterback for !he Carlisle team of 1912 on which Thorpe performed 80 unbellcvably thnt he became a legend Jn American football. Weleh was captain of the Indians the neXt • year. Ironically, Wekh died only a few monthS before he was to have been COO· sidered for Installation In the etillege foM.· ball Hall of Fame. He ~had been ·nominated for the honor last year. He remembered Thorpe not on1y a.s perhept lhe fines! runner In the: annals or CQlle!l'e football , but as "one or the most wonderful, goodhearted men I've eve.r known." ti\, \Velch, him~lf, was similarly kMwn among .the neighbors or his decllning yenrs In this area of the Vlrginlo Blue Ridge. He carge here , after a career that in· eluded stints as bead football coach at \Vashlngton State, athletic • director at Randolph·Macon College, lacrosse coach at the University of Virginia, athletic direetor at Haskell Institute, and at American University In Washinglon. ' For 11e.veral years, Wtlch conducted a •camp ror boys tn the Blue Ridge, but was forced to RiV&..up the camp when he was seriously Injured about the head ln an autom obile acddent. One of his keene.st memo ries, in retrospect wa! a 1913 grune between Carlisle and Army In which an Am1y player surrered a broken leg. Welch N"n1embered bccauiie lhe Injured ;>layer • was a young cadet named Dwight D. Eisenhower. He won many games of football, but he lost a battle in 1939 w~ the Na'Uonal Park Service. deciding to extend the Skyline Drive, condemned · 800lt land he owned in the mountains and paki him less than he had paid for the propertJ. . Welch fought the case in court but lost. 3rKJ told I.ht judge who ruled against him : "The white man has been laking t,nd from the lndi3ns so long that It has betome a habit with him. There's nothing an lndlan 'Can do iboot changing the white man's habits." ] ] LI 0 h ti ll ' p E ti c I> c n I \ p 0 p i· E c ' t a I I • ( r ( t I I 1 ' I I I r Estancia, CdMDuel In Crucial By PIDL ROSS OI IM O.lly ,li.t ll•ff The airtight Irvine League basketball race is Only six games old, but, with three schools knolled together at the top of the heap and still another breathing hoUy down the leaders' necks, 11 appears the whole affair will go right down to the wire. Tonight's action could change the pic- ture a llttie, at least temporarily anyhow. In perhaps the most crucial contest this evening and possibly one of lhe most im- portant the entire season. Estancia 's Eagles ( 4-2 and just one game back of the leaders in fourth place) invade the chilly confines or arch·rival Corona del Mar, one of the current tri-leaders at S.I. Tile other two tri-leaders, Loara and Costa Mesa, each sporting a S-1 loop mark, should have it much easier as their foes are Magnolia (2-4) and Sci.nta Ana Valley (D-6). Both of these games rind the pacesetters on the road. The Eagles.Sea Kings tiff matches the offens ive firepower 0£ the league's premier pivolman, Estancia 's 6-6 senior Skip Williams against coach Tandy Gillis ' ball control attack at Corona. Both units also employ a ferocious man- to-man press, the Sea Kings having en· joyed a bit more success with it than Estancia has. Loara, with only a 4M2 decision to Ccn-ona de! Mar against it, faces tradi- tional rival Magnolia up in Anaheim and the Sentinels are geared for an upset, although the Saxons' rugged front line of Rudy Sgontz, Mike Bogdanowicz and 1'-farv Wheeler give Loara a big edge with ~uperior board strength. By the same token, Emil Neeme's Costa Mesa Mustangs should experience no extraordinary problems with the cellar-dwelling Valley Falcons. who are hungry for their initial league victory. Looking at the lailend or the schedule, Jong range prospects would favor Costa Mesa, which finishes out the campaign with Edison, "1agnolia and SA V.aJley. On the other hand, Corona closes out on the rougher end with A1esa, Loara, Valley and Estancia . -r'J'he contenders' remaining schedules: Corona del Mar -Estancia, at Edison. Fountain Valley, Magnolia, at Costa A1esa, at Loara , SA Valley, at Estancia. Loara -at ?ifagnolia, SA Valley, Co6ta Mesa, at F.dison, at Estancia, Corona del Mar, at Fountain Valley, Magnolia. Colta Mesa -at SA Valley, Esta.m::ia, at l.oara, at Fountain Valley, Corona del Mar, F..dison, at Magnolia, SA Valley. GWC Whiz State's No. 7 Cage Scorer Chris ThompSOn or Golden We st College ls the seventh top scorer In the st.ate, according to the latest statistics released by the Junior College Athletic Bureau. Thompson scored 421 points in his first 17 games for a 24. 7 average. Orange Coast College's Jim Kinde\on is 1 Ith in the state with a 22.9 average, scoring 367 points in his first 16 games. Teammate Phil Jordan has scored at a 22.3 clip wilh 3f>8 points to rank 13th. The leader is Mike Hammock of Mer- ritt College who has tossed in 594 points in 20 games for a 29.7 average. The Southern California leader is Mike Pip~ man of West LA. He has a 25.4 average with 382 points in 15 games. San Bernardino Valley's Sam Cash re- maiM the stale rebound leader, although dropping to a 22.0 average from his previous mark of 23.3 0 T, An, ;o 59• 19.J u a 11.• 11 St) 77.t U Jl1 JS.4 11 60S 25.1 ;o 501 75.0 1' 121 2 .. 1 l'O Cl 2•.• 11 121 11.7 11 45 JJ,Q 16 361 22.• 11 l&l 22.4 1• lil 72.l It 121 72.1 21 41 21.1 lt .ot 11.S ,, •70 21.l It J97 20.I " •Jt l'lll 71 4» ?Cl.I II )7j 20.1 Ne,vport -Has Edge n1 Loop Title Derby The Sunset League basketball season Is al the midpoint and nothing has been set· tied. It's hard to imagine a race any closer \vith four teams tied !or first place with 4-2 records. Only Western High's upset or Anaheim kept the Colony from also joining the select circle. \Vith six games each remaining it's time to take a hard look™ !he schl'.'dule3 to see if perhaps a favorite can conie uu t ot thl'.' pack. It's another round robin slate or foes so the only real issue is where the games are played. The home court advanta~e is a big fac· tor in four of the gyms in the seven-team circuit. Newport Harbor. Anaheirn. We<;trrn and Santa Ana enjoy edges v.hen playing at home because of unusual surrounding<; and other small differences that the ho1ne town team is more adapted to. Westminster. Huntington Beach and ~1arina. however, don 't figure to have quite the edge ·at their gyms simply because lhe modern , spacious confines are nearly identical in all Huntingt on Beach District schools. Thus Newport Harbor seen1 s to have the advantage with home ~an1es slated against Anaheim (tonight), \Ves tern, Marina and Huntington Beach The Sailors' away games arl'.' al Sant a Ana and Westminster. Huntington Beach would seem lo have the v.·orst of it, having to travel to the confines of Anaheim and Santa Ana and ending the season at Newport Harbor. The balance of teams involved see1n to have about the same advantage -which is in the middle ol the road. Westminster is at Santa Ana. \\'cstcrn and Huntington Beach : J\1arina is <it Newport Harbor, Huntington Beach and Westminster: and Anaheim is al Newport, Westminster, J\1arina and Western. It figured to be close before it a!! started, and it appears th<it n1atters will not be settled until the final night of com- petition -when Huntington travel<; to Newport and Westminster plays host to Marina, The contenders' schedules : ltuntington Beach (4·21 -bye, Hl Anaheim. at Santa Ana. \Vcslcrn, Marina , Westminster, at Newport. l\1arina 14-Z) -Western, b.vc . ;it Newport Harbor, Santa Ana, at Hun- tington Beach, Anaheim, at \Vcstm1nster. Newport llarbor 14·21 -Anaheim , 11t Santa Ana. Marina, at \Vcstminslcr. Western. bye. Huntington Beach. Westminste r (4-Z I -al Santa Ana, al \\lestern. Anaheim. Nc\vport Harbor, by<'. at Huntington Beach, ~1arina. Anaheim (3-3) -at Nl'.'\vport !·!arbor . Huntington Beach. al \\'estminster, b}C. Santa Ana , al Marina. at Western. Rustlers, ELA Vic; Bucs Test Cypress After a week's re!it. Golrlcn West College's basketball team returns to Southern California Conference play tonight, facing East LA on the Huskies' court. Orange Coast College has a non conference game scheduled lonighl. traveling to Cypr~. Both games get under way at 8. The Rustlers (1-t) ai'e: currently In a four way tie for fourth place in the Southern California standin gs. LA Harbor leads the circuit with a a-0 mark. Orange Coast will lace the state's sixth- ranked team in Cypress. The Chaq::eri;, 16-t for lhe season and 5-1 in Southern California Conference action, arc fed by l-0 center Swen Langeberg. Saturday night. only one area junior college team is in action. Saddlcback. a 76-67 winner over Orange Coast Wc .14 nesday night , hosts Desert Conference rival Mira Costa at Mission Viejo High. -----------..,.----.... ' ' frld.ty, Januat)' 30, 1970 CAIL Y PILOT f 7 Frantic Sunset Race Re·sumes The second half of the 1970 Sunset League basketball season tips off tonight and it seems a safe bet that if anyone of the top four teams in the seven-team af- fair can win rive or its last six games - it will be crowned champion. Four teams are pacing the circuit with 4-2 nuirks followed by Anaheim's 3-3 Colonists. ·And, the Colony invades Newport Harbur. tonight in the feature maj.cb of the evening. Tipoff at all games Is at 8 o'clock. , Other tilts are Marina ( 4--2) hosting Western (1-5) and \Vestmlnster (il-2) at Santa Ana (1-5). Hwitington Beach has a bye. Anaheim dealt Newport's Sailors a 57. 55 loss in the opening round on two tree throws with two seconds left. Westminster nicked the Sailors ln the following game, 60-59, but the Tars have come on strong sint'e those two setbacks. Coach Dave \Va~man's Sailors enjoyed a much-needed bye Wednesday and ap- pear to be In the best physical shape in two weeks. Recent illness to forward Lee Haven TOP SAILOR -Newport 1-larbor High's Ch ris 1-lorpel goes through hi s paces in practice with mate .John Magilavy in preparation for the SunscJ League wrestling finals. He's pinned 22 of his 23 opponents to and center Dave Eccles along with a shoulder injury to Jeff Malinofr have been shaken off and the Tars appear ready for Anaheim's Invasion. Anaheim got back into 1he title picture with a convincing 67-54 rout o( Marina Wednesday on the strength of guard Greg Lewis ' 26-point otuput. Anaheim is known for Its dcllberate style or pattern play and a strong defense . Newpo rt , n1eanwhile, Is a running lean1 and plays best when the pace is rapid. Guards Nels Tahti and Taras Young oomptement the rront hne with cxcelieAl outside shooting and ball handling. wesiminster and Marina had relativcl~ eosy Umes with tonight 's opponcnt.s In first round hostilities. However. the l~ions or Westminster arr still wider the handicap of going without forward Steve McLendon tankle Injury 1 and Marina's offense has ta Ken }I bealini; without ils rine guard. Bob Beal Beal pla;yed briefly against Anahcin1 \Vednesday but hJs ankle inJury slowcrl his moves considerably and he wasn 't able to stem the Colonist Ude. OAtl Y !'!LOT !'lwtle by LH ,,~,.. date and utilizes a special "whizzer" hold In many tnstances. Here he was voted th e outstanding wrestler at Fountain Va!Jey's Five Counties J\!leet last \Veek. Crucials Set Says Spider MacLea11 Tar Wrestler Pins 22 of 23 111 Crestvie'v~ Angelus Pla y r-.1ission Viejo High invades Foothill tonight to try to apply the knockout punch lo the :.1aggering Knights in the kcv Crcst\'iev.· League game of the night. In other action involving Orange Coast flrca teams. San Clemente plays host to El Modena tbotb 3·4.J and Laguna Beach !0-71 starts the first in a series of seven road engagements with a trek to Villa l'ark. Jn Angl'.'lus League play, l\.1aler Del plays host to ccllar-d\velling St. Paul. The host !\1onarchs (2·1) are heavily favored lo add SL Paul to thl'.'ir stre(lk in lheir battle to keep pace with St. Anthony (3--0J in the rugged Angelus circuit All gan1es are at 8. Coach Pal Roberts' Mission Viejo cre\V gave F~thill fils in lhe opening game of ~ the Crestview League season. before fall- ing 56-00. Foolhill has fallen twice rl'.'Cently and trails Villa Park by a full game. A particularly cold shooling spell killed the Diablos· upset chances after playing well defensively against Foothill and its 6-7 center. Bill Boyd . Boyd reinjured his ankle ajlainsl San Cll'.'1nente and the injury is still a factor in Bovd"s play. Anri Boyd 1s the key to Foothill's of. fcnsc -and defense for that matter. l\1issioo Viejo is a team that is entir('ly unpreclict:ihle. H the Diablos arc hilting fron1 outside they seem to be able to stay with ~nyone. Mission Viejo has ripped San Clemente twice by 20 and 33-point margins, a <1uintcl that disposed of Foothill, 67-5.1. Colonists Untouchable Against Beach Schools Tmprovcment over lhc past few years in Orange Coast area football is ap- parently beginning to be noticed. One gets that impression after listening lo Spiller MacLcan's views at the initial South Coast Plaza awards dinner lo r Orange County football players ~1onday night at Saddleback Inn ?-lacLean, of Santa Ana·based !\\VIZ ~------- HOGER CARLSON ---- radio station, told a gathering of 40-plus footba ll players . their dads. coaches and press the follo"'ing: "If you could co1nbinc Ne"·port Harbor \Yi\h Corona del J\'lar. Cosla Mesa. Estan- cia and Huntington Beach you might be able to beat Anaheim ."' At lhe sume festivities. featured speaker Tommy Prothro of UCLA had th.is to say about discipline: "The two best thing s left in these United Stales arc Marine Corps boot camp and spring football praclice." * * * llay llodge , Nthletlc director and vars!· ty football coac h at J\lission Viejo, ho!! been hospilallzed at Sl. Jude In F'uUerton with a kidney 1tone ailment. * * * ~1arina High's baseba ll coach, Ra y Allen. is seeking Blue Chip stamp books from interested Viking fans fo r a pitching machine. Interested parties should send the booty to Allen in care of r--Iarina High. * * * Heaters <ire schednled to be put Into Corona del J\1ar lligh's gyn1 in February according to principal Lton l\1eeks. B:isketball player!! will now be ahle to compete without swealsuits. * * * Laguna Beach High 's switch with Katella Hi gh or the Orange League com· pletes a suggestion this corner made in March of last year * * * \\'Ith so many rruclal basketball tills being decided by tht' margin of a sin~le point or field goal. it's small \Yonder that there appears to be a startlin g 11bcrtage of decenl nerves left. !\later Oci'1 first two Angelu.s League tills were decided by two points each and l\1ission Vlejo's Dlablos. 4-3 in Crestview League play, would ht 6-1 and sharing the leud bad they been able to reverse three- point and two-point decisions to El ti-Jodcna and Villa Park. Op11onents By ROGER C,\RIA~ON Of l!!t O•llY Pi11t Sl•ll Ross Jennings of Edison •ligh School I~ rapidly bt'coming a rarity in prep wrest· ling. He's the only grappler who has met Newport Harbor Hi~h's Chris Horpel and l'.'vaded a pin in the lhri?C two-minute periods of action this season. Horpel was forced to go the limit In clccisioning JcnninRS in the Orange Coast College In vitational finals. . Other than that, Horpel hl\S hcen slight· ly less than sensationa l as he's pinned 22 of his 23 roes this season. Included in that span Is an un- ,precedented four straight pins en route to the 148-pound cro\vn in the prestigiou!l Five Counties lnvita1ional at Founta in Valley High. J~e was named the oul!ltanding wrcsller at the meet. which features the best com· petition available in Southern California. Among his viclirTf at Fountain Valley was Bill Scott of Btpv.·ley 1n 3: 42. Scott was the 1969 CIF champion in the 148- pound clasg_ Now Horpel Is setting his sights on what the Scholastic Wrestling News of \Vorland, \V yo. calls the national prep record for falls in a single season. Thal mark is one n1ore than what 11orpel has already accomplished and the goal seems within easy reach with thr('(' dual n1ects left. the league prclims and final s, along with CIF possibilities. I I 'I I ' • I J Anteaters Battle Matador Cagers F,dhion nlppCd Sn ntn Ana Villley by ont nnd l\1ugnolh1 by three for lt11 two Jrvlne wins. However. it's the Sunset League where things bave really been sllcky. Huntington Beach won by two over Santa Ana. then lost by the vame margin lo Newport Harbor. The Sailors' premiere 148-pound senior was second in the CIF' finals last year a.s a 136-pound entry. , Coach Joe Fox sayi; this about his star: "I-It's really something. Undoubted ly the best I've ever coached.'' Fox h.as been the Tars' mentor for tour years and has been in the coaching bu~iness seven years .. By HOWARD t. HANDY ot ,.. Dtltt' !>!It'! ll•tf Treading water al the .SOO mark, coach Tim Tift's UC Irvine basketball forcts entertain two foes in the friendly eonlines of Crawford Hall thJs weekend. San Femancjo Valley State College (6- IH opens action tonight, followed by Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo, JM) Saturday e\'ening. Both games start al 8 o'clock vdth frea:hman prellmlnary encounters getting under way at 5:45. After gpllUJng rour road games lhe J>llfl two weeks to maintain a brtak even mark (7·7), the Anteaters are looklng to homl!: cooking to better that record. · V3fley State'! fl.1Atadors come In wllh a pair of high scoring stars and a deceptive . . ' • record. Emerson Carr, 11 gunrd, has posted a 23.0 ;tverage in 14 games and teammate J erry Joseph Is c!OS( be.hind at 1a.1. Joseph is also the tcam'5 leading re- bounder with a 12 3 mark . Randy Judd. a 6-3 fqrward , was lnjurrd in a reecnt game wilh Cel Poly I SLO) and may not see acllon. He wlll be replaced in the opening Uncup by Elliou Levin (10.l average). . Other t.1atador 5tart~n include Oruce Pelkey at center and Steve Keith ut th<l other~rd. San Luis Obispo owns a winning percentage but has Jost IU last two CCAA games to teams the Anteoters havo recentl y dcff'Rted. Cal -Poly ! Pnmtin:J I defeated fLO, 86-71 and UC R1vtrlrt1tl1· topped It In conference play, • . Leading scorer for the Mustangs 1s an Anteater freshn1an refugee. Dennis D'Autre monte. He was the leading scorer oo the t;CI yearling team v.•ilh ""-17.5 .average t"·o year:s ago. Now a Junior. the s-.-forward is averaging 13. 7 lor the Jl,lustangs th.is season T aming with . o· AutrcmoOte 11 l forward Is Doug Smith t6-l junior. !1.8 ctveraael. At oenter is Dirk' Stone {6-5 senior. 9.0J. Gary Anderson (5-W junior. 10.6) ant.I l..cw Jackson (5-1 1 junior, 12.SJ will open aJ. lhe guard JX>Rt3 for San Luis ObisPo. Wilh !!Ophomore center Bill George coming lnlo his own · \Vllh a 21).._polnt pcrforinflnct' against RJvcrside S&Lurdny n i~hl, the t;CI slarting quintci will have '• three seniors aod two second ycor 1nen In the opening lineup. -• Jeff Cunningham at forward passed 11 significant milestone Friday night when he became the all-lime leading scorer at Irvine. lie added to the total Saturday evening and now has 1.235 points for a three year career -an average or 18.2 ~r game. Bill ,_1oore, ll lllCadylng tnnuent'C all season a11 a sopho1nore starter, teams \\lilh Cunningham at the forward pt>sts . Jle has been eonsistcnUy around 13 p0ints per game. Steve Sabins, the team's secondJ~adlng ficorer with an 18.9 averngc teams with anothc( senior Mike Sam('., ~l the ~uurds. Ne,vport. of count. sttm11 to find itseJf In close onea every Ume out The Sailors lost a pair of game5 to Anaheim (57·55) and We11mln1ter l&G-S91 btfo~ winning three In 11 row -: lhe last one by a 14-6? eowu ovtr llunllnglon. * * Coach Jerry Fair or Laguna ~nch is llnlng up a 16-tcam basketball tourna- ment next season. It will Include school!! in lhc !J00-1.200 cnrollme!nl class and will take place Dec. 21. 22. 23 and 26. Included In the package to date are Corona. Brethren, Norco, Apple Valley, St1ddleback. Rubidoux, t~allbrook and the host Artists. • 1-lorpcl has a special inaneuvcr called the "Whitter" which ronslst.s ol several Intricate moves btfore splatling the op- pmient on his back. HJs fathtr. lneklcntally, Is Frank 1-lorpel. an extrtmely active type in amateur wrestling. He coached the highly !IUcceMful Or"ange Coolit YMCA lo the. LI,. tie last summer in the NaUonal Junior Class champlonlih.ips in the Gret.'0-fioman division. The younger liorpet finlahl!d with one de(eat al the Nationals and was the nr11t alternate on the Amcrlcap team lha.L competed later at Boulder, Colo. Chris Is eyei11g ~larvard UnlversllJ 11 his choiC'1' lor coll egtnte nctlvlty. ~ I -t ' 1 I J.f OAILV PILOT rrlday, January 30, 1970 by Deke Hou/ga te The \l'ay drag ral·tng-start~d llUt. ll \vas easy to understand . T\\o guys hn ed up at one end or a quarter- mile strip of paverncnt and drovl' as fast as they could to the other end. . Like a 100-ya!'d dash a.t ti track meet the. action ~as !ast and exciting. uncon1plicated a-nd over qwckly. 0 ag ·racing isn't as simpl(" anymore. . To create e4ual con1 petitioll for the many different types of racing car~. the sport has established lots or classes and technical rules to race by. As the sport has grown. so has its coinplexity. . . . . Weathe1~ Cu1·tails Sk iii1g By £STllE!t BILLlNCS Wome11•1 £~11or Balmy "cdthcr has biHen into local custom snow slopes, but operators are pumping out snow whenever it is cold enoughfor snow making. Meanwhile at Mammoai it has ~n snowing, anJ June Moun· ta1n reports ego-type snow. June also announced Ladies' Day Tuesday of every week. except holidays and school vacation periods, when an all- day ski lesson and lift ticket may be purchased for $5. Conditions could have been better elsewhere in the High Sierra for National Ski Week, but the RocJde:s are in no trou· ble at all. c..... No Change In Jaycee Cage Poll After a week of limited ac- Lion, the top 10 remains un· changed in this w e e k ' s California JC basketball rank- ings, released by the J unior College Athletic Bureau. ' • • An unequalled system of eleclron1c starti~g .. t1~~ and judging has grO\.\'TI out of the need to off1_c1ate th ve quick kind of competition._A network of wires, ~lec­tni' eye beams and sensitive .tu:ners. has not only g1v:d drag r acing absolute impartt~hty. i~ has. also creat the ability to handicap machines w1th different speed capabilities so they can race each other. . "Handicapping" is the sort of probl~m tha~ makes it impossible to describe -what is.happerung duringhalfa ~!g r ace tO the average auto racing. fan. About y through the explanation. he loses interest. Ulah, which boasts some of the powder snow heavens o( the world. has received 10 to 20 inches or new snow lhe pa st week. Compton (19-0) r e m ai n s atop the rankings with Long SHOW STOPPERS -Houseboats were big, both in Among those attracting lookers and buyers was this Beach City COiiege (l6·2) in size and interest, in the major boat shows this year. 43-foot Nauta-Line houseboat. · second place. 1-.:.::::..::::::..::::.::.:::::...:::...::.:..::2::..::.::::..:::.:::.:..:::::_:.::::.:._::.::..:::.::.:...:::.::.:;_ ___ _ 1;1imi1urle llandirappin9 This weekend the sport's biggest 1anctionl~ agen-- cy, National H 0 t Rod Assn, wll! d? 10methn~g to eliminate rand icapping from the big time professional classes or drag racing that gets the most exposure among occasional fans. At the NHRA's annual Wintornationals at Pomona, the new clasi of Pro Stock will be unveiled. Like fuel dragsters, 9 a s d ragsters and funny cars, the _pro stock cars will race the good old ~ay ,1,w lthout h~~1cap -or In the jargon of the drag 1tr1p, heads up. Beller Slt011l for Fan• Incentive for the stock car drive rs to giv.e up han- dicaps and make a better show for the fans ts a n e. w purse structure recently. announ~ed by N!!RA. A m,~Jor share of prize money will be pa1~ to the beads ~p or professional classes. and very httle by comparison to the handicap or amateur classes. . . F actory drivers have responded by switching to Pro Stock or by entering both Pro Stock and Super St~k (t h e one with t h e handicaps) classes at the W1n- ternationals. . . Dick Landy Rorinie Sox. Bill Bagshaw. Blll J enkins and Randy Pay~e. all household na"'.'es in the wor,ld of stock car drag racin g. are in the f1eld of 50-plus pro stock car drivers at Pomona. The rules they will run under .are sim ple, even ~or the non·technical fa n to follow. Their cars have~ wetllh more than 2.700 pounds and must look exactly like 1~ 70 model American stock cars as they ~ould a ppear .'" the showroom. Thev m ust use Amen can automo~tle carburetors. not fa nCy fuel injection or superc?arg1ng. and have a steel body shell made just the way it comes from the factory. NHRA officials expect these cars to hit top speeds of 140 to 148 m .p.h. and to cover the quartermilc in a~ut nine lo 10 seconds. A111<1teu1• H'all of l,ife Meanwhile, back in the amateu~ ~la1se1 of Super Stock, Competition and Mod ified Elimtna~or, whe re most of the interest is a mong the participants rather than the spectators, handicap racing is still a way of life. What's wrong with handicapping, aside !rom co_m- plicating the format for fan1 watchin!J the action, Is t"at most competit ors fail to put forth their best effort all the t ime. Br11ke l ,i9f1/0 Bring Boo• A familiar sight is the situation in which o~e.or ~th drivers hit their brakes as they approach the f1~1sh line. T hey do this to avoid setti ng a faste: elapsed rt1me than their handicap call s for . If they drive too f~st (c~~Jed "breaking out" of their handicap), they a re d1squal1f1ed. The sight of too many brake lights has even caused rans to boo. \Vhat is good about handicapping is that it allov.•s Corvettes to race against Vol kswagens an~ dragsters against supercharged coupes on theoretically even terms. NHR.t.. has looked carefully at the handicappin &., problem and decided to '.'l~k~, it ovt '· for the good of ~1g t ime r acing and "leave 1t 1n fo r an1ateur drag racing enthusiasts. 6r1111nf e lli. Rn••i119,s 1'eeel~ When the weather is unbearable in New York, which it wa1 last week, you stay Indoors. Another fellow and I were doing ju1t tha t In a Manhattan refreshment parlor when the subject of auto racin g promoters came up . . "What auto racing needs now is a Bill VP..ck," the oth•r fellow 1aid. I sugge1ted that Roy Hofhei ni of the Houston A1trodome m ight fill the bill. Just then Chris Economa ki, the TV a uto ra'cing com- m entator, came flying in the door. He announced to .one and all that Andy Granatell i's STP Corporation h ad pJst taken control of American Raceways, Inc., the company tht t'owns 1peedways in Michiaan, Texas, Georgia and California and is building another 1,n New Jersey. ''That'• our Bill Veeck," both of us said, almost at the w me time. 1\t1ft111 ·it' ••••• f.i r e nf Cranalelll. the nambovant merchnnd iser or ull and gaso1ine treatment products nnd controver~ial o'vner. or race cars. might not agree lie .1t1ij:tht obJecl to. betn~ compared \Vilh Veeck ( rhyn1es v.·1th \\reek l. but hi s auto racing credentlals are impeccable. I Powder is that fantastically light, dry sno\v that one seldom sees in our mountains, but which is standard at Alta. Utah, probably lhe most famous powder snow spa or all. Alf Engen, many times na· ti on al champion &ncl pas1 U.S. Olympic. team coacbi directs the Alta Ski School. His br«her, Sver re, famous fo r his ski films and a forme r direc tor or the ski school. has joined Alf this seasun as an in- structor. Alta is an intimate area 25 ml les southeast of Salt Lake City with only five lodges. The spot is rich i'J1 history as well as skiing and was firs t discovered by mining people. who found a veritable treasure trove of silver in the Alla Basin. Now Ulah has other fine areas, Beaver J\1 o u n I a i n , Brian Head. Bri r;hton. Gorgoza, Park City. Park City West, Snow Basin, Solitude and Sundance:. the latter af- fording a possible glimpse of actor Robert Redfo rd doubling as owner. Park City. Solitude. Sun- dance and Gorgoza offer night skiing. but don 't forget your down pa rka when you try it. Utah areas have up to 94 inches of snow at this lirne. skiing cxccJJcnt with powder on pack. Bear Valll'y. Cal1L, ha.~ opened ils 3.200 foot long dou- ble Grizzly Chair. "'h i I c Heavenly Valley has inst.ailed a n1itely mill' lift in the "Cretk Stnlion." · A pcrrnit has bt>en issued Lo Sierra Inyo Recreation Co. of Anaheim as the developer of 'frail Peak \\linler Sports Site un the Inyo National Forest. . Trail Peak is located west of Lonl' Pinc in the easlern high Sierra, some 230 n1iles north of Los Angeles. Faeilititics arc expected !o be open to the public during the 1971-72 ski season. Jean-Paul Jallirier, onr ur the f>'rench nntional ski team·:-: supe r skiers sincl' 1962. has Joined !he Aspen Ski School this season as :;pcciul in· strul'tor i.11\d racing cu;ich. 11 (' \\'ii'. offer special training for the expert ::.kier in 1nastl'r classes. teach privalt• lesson:-. and assist in 1<1ki ~chool junior progran1s. Southern Ca!Uornia Con· ference foes LA Harbor (l>-5), Cypress (16-4 ) and LACC (15- 4l are ranked fiflh , si xth and l:ievc nth. Cerritos, which currently shares the South C o a s t Co n ference lead with 1''ullerton, is ranked eighlh. The Falcons have compiled a 14·5 mark thus far. Fullerton · (16-7) dropped from 11th to 15th in the ratin gs. Mira Costa, the second place team in the Desert Conference with a 4-2 record, moved into the top 20 this week. The Spartans are ranked 20th. Desert Conference leader Imperial Valley (6-0) is not ranked in the top 20, primarily because of a 3-12 non con· fe renc..-e record. T~ tlli<lll1' I (omD!on !1·0 1. L-Be«~ ,.,., J Sin Jo.avln Otll• lf.l '· P11a<1en• )9., ~. LA lllrb(lr 15-5 6 (yptl!'U 1(,., I. l°' A<111•lt1 (( lS... I. Crtrillli 14-5 9. S1n FtBMllCO CC 14-S lQ llttlMll lf.J 11. Allen HIMOCk l•S 11 Contr• C0>l1 14-S U. FQQ!hHI 1).5 U Pierce ,,., IS. Ful~lon 111-1 16. Vtnl11r• 14-5 11. Sin Bt•n1tdl"" U·S 11, MttCt<l 15.7 1•. Bul!f 11.6 'XI. Mira Co•!• "-6 C.1••!•" 11~ Jr. Te nnis Play Held Twelvc-ye'a r-old Mary Kolob and 16-year-old Mike Lawler were double winners in the firsl phase of the Newport Beach Parks and Recreation Dept. tennis tourney held Saturday and Sunday a I Newport Harbor liigh . The last phase. being con· tested this Wct!li., consists of the advanced w o m e n · s doubles. men·s doubles, ad- vanl'cd Yi'.Omen·s singles and inte r mediate women's double s. Hesu lt.s '12 Y•. olCI t>o,. 'I""'''· ~1••t M<>to•I (J•I 8•4<1 Lewi•. 6 •. 6 I • I?~· Olli vi•!> '..,.i. •. M• .... Kotol> Cr! £1tI .. N!ll 09flen. I!. 6 ' •.l.•t H ol<I ~.,1, .,..,.i.,, M••• "-Olobl dt•l E•u .. D•m F~uil<Mr, '-1. 6·1. IJ·16 Yr <>Id bOY\ 11"9lf$, Mlllt t,_~· .. t~• (Jrl D"w t~wl-, 60. 6·D. R<"11•Min9 an <I "'' +"1trmeci• .. lf ""<""f"I •lnQ\t Jin K1nlo• ""r. Jo~n llrnt!<)n, t J. o Mfns ,,,.,gle•. Mlk• L•"""°' <1ri s1an '.;cllulll. I! 1'6. ).) M·•e<I <:loullle.. ll•onl •rid Pt"'l• 09d~n ~ F•~n• ~II -J~an V~unq, I~. '< Though there are exceptions.. ~ most of the better putte rs stroke the ball with th e putter· 1 head low to the ground. There /j 1 £ 1s not much lifting of the putter- \ )_ • head during the backstroke. ~ • St roking low to the ground ' ~· •. (1llustralion #1) will help you 10 "finish'' the st roke wit h you r hands. Your hands w1lrbe more lik ely to contin ue fo rw ard, niov- 1n g 1he clubhead out along the tarr,et line (illustration #2), l his conti nuatt0n of the stroke helps ~eep the clubface prop- erly aligned for straight putting. If the stroke ts not low to the Rround. th ere is a tendency -In his book. •·They Call 1\'le fo.1ister 500:' Grnnatelli r eJ a tes ho"' he 'vas pa°ld S50 l.o put toJ?ether his first pro· motjQn. a hot rod race nt Soldier Field. C"hlc~go. Tht> rac~rew 24 .962 paid custo1ners at $2.50 a head. Later. when Granatelll \\'a:; taking home a I.letter cut \ <Jf the gate. he dre\\' up lo 89.000 fans there. lie had ;;1 , 0 ' better gate than lhe AJl·Star Football Gan1e one year, l"t----t·.)--__..,,. It seems Inevitable th;i,t Granatelli \\'Ould get back into the promotion of auto racing events. J.Iead of a su<> to collapse the left wrisl duri ng c essful company that !'iel-'nungly thrives on racin~ s.uc· the t hrough-strolce. lhis will cess. "'hat is he goin~ to do for an encore aft-Or w1nn1ng close the clubfac.e and cause the Indianapolis 500" •. a pulling of the putts to the left. "Aotonlo the Great.·· ,1\ hl' \\•as billed "1hcn he Pr actice a low slrok., for a drove a rocket car. on lh~ l'Ounty fair cir:cull. wo~ld half hour o r so and see ~f your breathe U!e inlo the 1ncreas1ni:ly dull and ununnginat~ve putts don 't start ltnd1ng !he promotion of auto racing <1cross the country. Like r;up more frequently. basebaJJ's Veeck, Granatclll doc..'~n'1 fi gure to make auto radng better. but he sure \\ 11! rrflike 11 more en· ~ o ,... ""1'\, -...,. tcrlairung. 1 ,'-1-----------·-------' • Racing Record Safe? Acapulco Event Start,s on Sunday When the startir.g gun sends 18 sailing yachts off on the 1,430-mile San Diego lo Acapulco race Sunday at noon there will be little hope of a new elapsed time record in the offing. The record er '< days and 10 hou rs was set in 1964 by tt:e late Howard Ahmanson's 83- foot M·boat Si;lus II from Newport Harbor. The record figures out to be a shade ovPr seven knots over the bottom. But the only yacht of Sirius ll 's overa ll <1nd waler·liuc length in ~his }ear's race is John Scripps' 89-foot Navia del Mar which has ntver been a threat for elapsed or handicap Mnors -and she has been in every race. Some San Diego experts ar e picking ·rom Tobin's SS-fool sloop Ram page for ftrst to finish , but she will have her work cul out against such more mod ern speedsters as Robert Beaucha mp's Colum- bia·57 sloop Dorothy 0, Newport Harbor Yachl Ciuo, which .... ·as second to finish behirxl a Sisler ship in the re. cent Long Beach to La Paz race. Dorothy O's crew will have such veterans as George Sturgis, saiUngmaster, and John Hall. owner and skippe r of Co:icerlo, the yacht which beat Dorothy 0 to La Paz. Dorothy 0 could vuy well win first lo finish and han- dicap honors. Local Clubs, Racers Elect New Officers Sf'\·tn Newport H a r b o r y:1rht clubs and one racing assoc1alion are preparing for a Ol'W year of racing and cruis- ing activities with new officers at the helms. I-lea ding Newport llarbor Yachl Club, the oldest in the area. is Richard Seaver as comn1odore. Other flag of· Heers are Peter Davis, vice commodore, and Jack Vance. rear commodore. Donald V. Franklin ls the new commOOore of Balboa Yacht Club, the second oldest yachting organiza!io n in th e !!arbor Area. Other offi cers ar(' f~d1~·in F. Steen Jr .. vice co1nrnoctore, and Jack Baillie, rear commodore. New slales for the other clubs are: BAH IA C 0 RI NTH I A N YACHT CLUB -Dav id Dontanski, commodore: John Hooten. vice commodore. and Brian Carter. r c a r · com· modore. LIDO ISLE YAC HT CLUB -Donald Ray. commodore: Roger McG regor, vice com. modore; Edward Hayes, rear commodore. SHARK ISLAND YACHT CLUB -Robert Balch, com- modo re: Fred Bice, vice com- modo re; Basil Williamson, rear commodore. SOUTH SHORE SAJLING CLUB -Gil Knudson, com- modore: Dale Robinson, vk'e commodore; Dick Bauer, rear commodore. VOYAG ERS YACHT CLUB -Daniel Pike. commodore; Robert Darnell, vice com- modore: Donald Du Sols, rear commodore . NE WPORT OCEAN SAfL.. ING ASSOCI ATION -Ed Ca r p e n te r , president: Guillermo Soisson. J a c k Bai llie. Jack Swart and Victor Stern, vice presidents. Bottdicops Meostired But lurking in a lower claSs is Jolm Biehl's Cal-37 Quasar which was second ove rall 1n the 1967 Transpac race to Honolulu. The boat has a reputation as a time saver when well sailed. Three boats from San Diego and one {rom Newport will act as escort ,vessels. T h e Newport boat is Dic k Steele's Bon Homme Ri chard which was the principal escort in the last Transpac. Progress of !he race will be reported by a ham radio network with Bor · Homme Ricbara and other e~cort vessels serving as mobile sta· lions. · Monitoring in the Newport area will be Carroll D. Hudson, WB6RMA. Four Crews Seek Harbor Congress Bid Four crews will man Colum· bia·50 sloops this weekend in an elimination series t o determine wbo will represent the Newport Area in the Congressional Olp match race se ries at Long Beach. Skippers or the competing yachts will be John Haskell of Newpon Harbor Yacht Club: Argyle Ca mpbell, B a 1 b o a Yacht Club; Harry G. Nye, NHYC: and Jim Sc.als. BYC. The winner of the sail-off will meet Lowell North of San Diego Yacht Cub in a final elimination Feb. 14-15. The sponsoring Long Beach Yacht Club allows only one en- try from the Nc"•port-San Diego area. There will be a total of 10 boats in the Congressional Cup, each meeting the other 1n a lteries of match races over a three day. period. Roat Show Ends Run On Sllllday The l.fth annual Swthem California Boat Show will. close its turnstiles al the Pan Pacific Auditorium Su nday after one of the most sue· cess!ul runs in the history ol 1 U1e exposition. Show hours are from 2 to JI p.m. today, noon to it p.m. Saturday, and noon to 7 p.m. Sunday. Chairman Paul Albrecht reported LTOVl'd figures have run considerably ahead of Ille previou5 record el-1969. Actual figures 1vere not yet available. On display are 500 craft ol all sizes, shapes aod price tags. They range from a three. root .. fun boat" to a luxurlous S7S,000 power yach t equipped wiU1 air conditioning and a fireplace. Biggest increases w e re noted in the houseboat, and eledronic sections. Brightly colored, high-powered s kt boats are also attracting in- terest Mid,vinter Tu11e up Se t Seal Beach Yacht Club is sponsoring a Midwinter Tune· Up regatta Feb. 7-B for certain clas.~es of yachts planning to enter the 4lst aMual SCYA. Midwinter Regatta. Classes invited lo sail In the Seal Bench YC series are ~an Racing Catam arans, S n n t a n a-22, Columbia·Z2, MORF'. f'HRF A & B, Cal-20, Cal-20X and Coronado-15 . Classes musl be cst;:iblished with a minimum of fi ve en· tries rectived by the race committee not later than Fri- day, Fe b. 6. Two races will be sailed Saturday and one on Sunday. New Ocean Rule Discussed Pros and cons of lhP new lnternalional Ocean nulr - under which ocean racing yachts are measured fo r han· dicap purposes -we r e discuSSl'd al length al the an· nual meeting of the Ocean Racing Fleet of Southern California. The IOR will eventually replai:l' the exisHng Cruising C'luh of Arnerica ( CC A ) mtnsur<'mcnt rul(' u n cl t• r which lnQil American yachu ha 1 e been nieasured for many }rars Thi' IOR IS rep11tl't1Jy a t'O!ll· hin11L1on of the CCA nnd 1hr Hoyal OceAn R.'lr ing Club I RORCI rule under which n1ost Brilish yachts rind many F:uropenn yachts ha ve bet?n llll'BSl1 rerl tinder tht' ne"' IOR . ya.::hL\ t'nulcl ral.'e anywherr In the "orld "'tthout t h e In· ennvcnl~nce and expense ()f having lo be remeasured to t'Omply v.•ith A loc1l or re11ion:il rule. Rul tbe new rule ls stlrrinR rontmvPrsv on bnth the Ea~t and West coa~5 of lhP U.S. as well a~ In Gfeat Bri!Rln nnd Europe In' lhe lJ.S: ,ii v.•ill be "d· tnlnl!tercd by· !ht No,. th American Yacht R a cin g Union. Tom Wilder of Newport Harbor 1i' acht Club, who h.as been narned as tht chief nleasurer for NAYRU on tht West Coast. tooi. on tbe task of ei:plaining the IOR to tbe Southland ocean r a c i n g fraternity. a~ well explaining how ii dirfcrs from the CCA. \\'ilcler made it clear from lhe ool.St't th~t his job was not to evaluale the rule.. but to measure a yacht under any rule !hat w11s being used. ln explaining the difference between the !OR and CCA · rules Wilder compared them to t11king the measunmenls of a young lady for a beauty COOlel!l. S.1id he : '•if we were measuring the lady under Lhe CCA rule and found she wM 5 fett 2 inc:hel tall. with olhtr vb.II sllti!tid such air 4:>-4W4 and wdghtd 172 pounds, she woukl be b(g. CCA considers both weight. lenJt:th and Rirt b. "But under tbr IOR n would measure_ onl)' her 11irth dim'ensions to determine if abt was big or sm1n . Weighl is not consldtted under IOR: Asked 1r th!!' r a t ing ctrilllcatt" or yacht" would go up or down under the new rule, Wilder e:rplained that all ratings would go d ow n between nine and 10 percent "This will have no ad· vi ntage for individual owners in most repects. because all ralings will go down.·• Wilder said. Jack Hall. owner of several successful oceRn r a c i n g yachts. rlcfenrll'<t the CCA rule. stating th tt t It had at- tempted to t.QUalli.e boats of an ltinds: under all poinl'I of !!ail down through the: ~11~. but ecpressed the opinion that successful ocean rllcini;: "'as more a matter ol expert skip- pers and crews who raced the.ir bo3U well, ret:ardless of the rule they we.re racing ...... "It's I.be quality of Com· petition that is going to keep long dblaoce ocean racing succtUful," he satd. Hi ll alc;o ex P1 t.-d the opl· nlon that Utt !OR encovr;u:ed bolts wttti higher M~cl ratinci 1nd ll1l®Jy perntlilf'd yawls and ctntttbottn1 v111chl~. ''Under the JOH l'l•Gh aspttl r1ti(l will be the •a.y to go, .. Hin ob$erved. Hall al.!o brougjll up the =t nf measuring under !hr !OR as compared to CCA, stating that .1•oul o cost as much 3.! $!00 lo rncasurc a boat under the n('\'o' rule. I ri rcsponst> to queries from (;eorge Grirfith. a successfuJ ocean racer and f o r m e r measurer, \Vilder said it c11:n not be 11aicl definitely what the co~t of measuring would be un<!er lhc nrw rulf". ~10~1 yachl~. \\'tlder said. ,.,ould be measured for the IOR at a time they 'tl•ere haul· ed out for J!'.ent'T'AI main· tenri ncc <ind boll orn jobs, thus i::a v!ng the co~t of a !ilpeciol h.'lul-out as was generally the CRse for wrighinR purposes un· der the \CA. TI1e CCA rL>quire.s that ) MIU be remeasured e.very thrct years The TOR would require remeasurinR ever.Y f°':lr yen rs. However, W\ld<ir &::i1d that after riroper a:lrth measuremcntJ "ere talr:e11 orij!inil.lly. fore and JI rt f r e t b o 3 r d mtasure.ments cou.ld he n.adc hy 3 computtr, IJ'ius sav1nc mMSurer coats. The onJ ... oth('r mcn:~uremeota rtqulrtd · -every four years wnuld ~ 11ail area, and at1J' ~h~nges that may have been m~rlr 1n !hi!' hull. -~----- Friday, Janu1r7 30, 1970 DAILY PILOT 19 LEGAL NOTICE ·~,, ,..... ..... .,, .. CllTl,ICATI OP a\lllMllS lfOTICI TO CllOITOlll CllTIPICATI 0111 aUJINllt: HOTICI Of' OIPAUlT ,t.NO lllt'YIOH PICTITIOUI NA.Ml IUl'llOOlt COUIT OP Tiii PteY'lflOlfl Ml.Ml TO Ill.I. Ut!Oll 0110 OP Tilt.Irr Tiit' wio.ttl•Md CIO (11'111'1 ~ •r• STATI. OP CAl.1,0llUA POI: Thlo vfldtrflg .... _. ctfllfy nwr 1rt H6TICt It Hl!lltY 01Vl•h THAT c....OUCllN 1 bualnnt t1 ~F ffft Alton. TM I COUNTY o,-OIAMOI c.nckH;hM t , M"-t i 11115 l"etlllc Till.I INIU•AHCE ~ TllUIT (0M- McKeever LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ~ape Shows Entering Boat Race $9~1t ~ CtUfo..11, \lllfHf" the ILthl~ lit ....... ,. CO.ii 1fWY ....._ ~ C..lifonlll, ..... ,. ... , I OWHrllloo\ II 9111\f ~Ill.el r .. m -· ol tNTIERffATIOHAL ll'Hlltl EH•I• Of lULJt. STOKIEI COCltli, llftllRt ,... 1ic1111wt ftf'fl'I -tf KING '"""' ~ • 0,.. of '""' dtltd -' "''' Mid '""' II __.., tt tM ~~'!1i: It Htll•V OIVlH llO ,,. NlPTVNl'I llA ,000 ,.OM...AltOUlitO t:~= ~ :t'•ol'lf',.,,. 'i'u.tt~c ::":\: .. ~~io.~r:":i.i:W.~11 c,...,llo'9 DI !tie ''°"" IWI'*' deC9Hftt !:!., ~~ •::i~:.. M~ i.,.: ~ ~ w1i. n trvmr: tt *"'~ 11..,..11 c H.ltell ms IUcrim.id 11191 111 --"'~1 .. ci.lm1 ... 111111"" ~ in l\lll tl\d 111i.c..i el rHJdtncil ••• .ntlll .,....,.. 1o1 1.-et JAMl!s WIY C:0,11 ·~ .. c1'111oml1 .. Id ~· .,. ,_lttd ID IF!lo l'llM!, " IDltoon· WILSOff JOHlt. Slil ...... U.UllA I'. . Real Luxury Burly middle 110,,.,, J Me<:r1Y ''" 'llt1lf'll. wlll'I lllt ~,., '>'O\;(Mtt. Ill lllt otflc• •kl'I••• L ..... Jtylfl c H•rr~ JOHii, flulolll<W •lld Wiit. •• "'Inf OrlYI, coa1I M•»· c1i1tornl1. : lllt ,,'~':' •• ~": ~...:'""!~-'· ~ 171t1 P.c;lllc 'cM1I HWY .. ...n..1 -..o.. ~ •• u,"'":'~"f'· ~.,.,u.,--r Marlin MrKeever . ouec1 J•-"' 11. 1tJ11. -=., .. ,., _...,,,ID 1111 .,~...,.. 11 c.111or1111. tioo1t ..,,,' ,..: .,,. 111 =., -;:-.. 1~ $! ......... C. Hlota! 1111 oHke ti Ol!lilN ANO IM.IOM At D•t.d Jl'""'rt fl, tt1'.. 1f1t omce " 1t1t lillCOPCltf' Ill O ..... 1·--·-.,, r r ti.-• .., J. MCC•IY ~ I ' ~ ..... , .. , ~ • .'.. • • •11111 c. "'".... , llllilHIC& O ioi; s1111 DI c1111or1111 Dr•not '°""'"'' · ...,,,..,, 1 .._.w, ,. ..... 1rd. lilldllorO L i.ttrrltOn ,_,,.., C1lltorN1, Mo'IM!lt l9lld 1111••111 ' · l</lle .UO. '-1¥ HllK, Cll"°"' tl21t, 0. C . 11: Wa.shington Redskins of the °" J•-N ''· "70. blfllrl .,,., • N• wtildl 11 1111 .. tc• ot ..,,-.. ot 111t ,,,._ °' cit1flOl'flll. '"" tuntY . Lot m o1 Trtct No.. 1sn, 11t _. ..,., !fry PuDlk I" _,., fol' MIO St1t.i, Mr-Ulldtnlt""' 111 111 ..,.119,_ ~r!tlrlllll IO 0... J .... I, lt10, ~e IJll, I Hot.,-, """"" lit I«* llS. ..... :Ill ht ,7 i., ly ALMON LOCKAl&Y By ALMON LOCKABEY ....... •iltw Cabo S1n Lucas, "the cape," "Cabo", Cape San Lucas. By \\'hatever name you call it, this rockbound sandy hook at the Up of Baja California is the crossroads of the in· ternaUonaJ cruising and g1me fishina set. Not to mention the jet sel - many of whom could care leas about boats or fishing -wbo come here by jtt to La Pu and small plane to the cape to bask on the white beaches or v.·hiie away endless hours In 1he bars and swlmmlni pools of one or both Of the two lux- ury hotels In the area. HOTEL CABO San Luca1, inci<tentally, Js not located. at the cape, per se, but about four miles north by sea at Chillel'lll Bay behind Cabeza BaUena. It Ls the last word in n1 o d e r n architecture, lUJ:· u rious accommodations and 11uperb view. Lea1 pretentiou1 but just as luxurious. is the Hacienda del Cabo mort commonly known as the Hacienda - "·h\ch is located on the beach at Cabo San ~ucas. . .It is operated by the same group that owns the Hotel Pahnllla a few miles north of the cape. •·the C1pe" lJ the gathering place · and waiting rta>m for c ruising yachts' and small compuirclal vessels b o u n d north or south along the • Pacific Coast from Panama to the· U .S. and Canada. If you stay Jani ertoUgh at '"the Cape" you will see cruising boats· from virtually every part of the world -and more lhan I few of Your rriends. . \Vhat they are waiting for m os tly ls word abaiut the \\'eather north along the Baja ·California coe.tt or south and east acroas the Gulf qf Californl1 to the "''elt coast of ~lexJco. The word' Is uau1lly tramltted daily from com- mercial fisl1ing vessels which ply the \\'Siers outside Cabo FalSG (false cape) or by ar- riving yachts. Referring to H.'O. 26 : Cape San Lucas is a headland of fahtastic shape, formed by two high, bold rocks or grotes-- que appearance. '!1th a num- ber o( smaller ouUyin& rocks near them. · National Football League \\1lll •11Y 111,..irf'd •o'-•1 J, McCrn" •!'Id 1111 u111 Of 11111 '*ldt"' wltt.11<1 tout ,..,.u, 111 _. for Mid sri1t, lltf'llllllll'r iww 111 M1tc11)tNow ~ 1n th~ • $1t~lletl c;. ~•!Ch kllOWft lit IN to N ""' ~ ... _ I ' ,...,..., 111111 e. H•trltom ·~d lillc;lllrO c 1n f lh enter lhe realm of offshore •''°"' w,.1111 n•met .,. ll,lbi(••btoll too ::I::.' • iwr """ ' ••• ""bllcttklll o1 11111 L. "•""*-11nowoi ro 1J11 •o lit ,.,. !!_~• ,",."'• .,-.,,'!~~~~~ •:,:: perma.Qer'lt m'oof p Qf < 6 ~ boat · Jo' b 7-1 Ille Wlltl!n h'llo lNmtnl IM Kk""'"'"9td Ollod JIMlll'Y 1 lt1tl ""'°"' ~ ,._ ·~ l\11Kulb911 It ;•'t;,, 1f11 trlfi<'"7~"et a•,,. 00 sport.ftJhln« Oeet, many of pow r racing e . '"'y ••'°'""' "" ...... wuuim ~ .. Cocu, Sr. PM w11t1111 ,,.,,__, •nd 1e.._..,_ """' tt1e llti!tflCWI l111tA-' "'*/ ,.,H,, which stay in the vtctnit• .for when he serves as crew (Sl!AL!0 .., , ,.. , Execuior 11111t wu1 ~; ... ~n"L":~1uime. OIH DI T""'' tlld lflt tllflt<lll•" ' be f h W r~ • '1 -·• or 11!t 110ow ,........, dotctdlnl t«llttd !Mrtev '" -unth' lltld b~ month. at a .tiine. Corpora· mem r or I e est \AJas t N01trv Pui.11< 0111N ANO MASON Mn L. >-1 1t1t lll'ICMt'tlollldi m.t, 11tttoi °'· 1ne ti.Os ··-one or more D champion Peter Roth1child or My Comm1"1"' E•11•n .,, Atu: s. U™"'' ~°''7 ~i;:.~<•:""nll 4"!1ult Ill. IM ollllOllloN for wtllctl • ~ t R ' Me¥ I~. ltn p.wJ W11.itlr• lill'Ylll .. Seit• m rllK N c' 11 ~ o... o1 Tt\1111 11 HaOtltr llet «· eleganU"'appoini.d Ip o t ese1• 8, ce Newport Beach ln the second T·fl•J l•nrlY HUIJ. C1111. Miit Dr-'°"""" ,.,,.._., 111 ""' 1t1¥mtllf llh 1111t '-" r I Lo g Beach.Catalina Pybit~ftl'd Ortl>f• ,_, 011!¥ P(lo!. Tth llUI t1WIM. Mf Commt11lon Ea111lt11 mltff (II· Tiit h1&l1llmtillt flf lll'ltl"llll fishing ts at the cape with annua n . '~""''Y 10 •nd F•llrutrv '· n. ~ uu1 2n.us1 IM•tfl 2. t•n iw ,11ot wtilcPI llK.m~ dut t+oYe~r is. ,,.., paid crews aboard to ac· E Island race<ru1se. 1'10 1n.10 •""....,. "" ••••• .>o",!~~ ~··.:: F;::.,.0t u. 19,f 1n<1 .u ~ 1n11.i1M111t11 • in. ---~... -··tomers who xpectm' g -. former USC A 11 . I.EGA' NOTI,.. Publl•hoO O•IMI c-• 0•11~ Pllol, IU.10 IOll'.,. \.I.It CM,_, 2 II .., ... •""· "Vl1UU\AI "" ,...., Ill 1.o ¥&:. J1-ry f, 1 .. 1S, 31), lfl'O "'J!I Tlw tllfTI of $)oll.10 Mfl~O .... tf'CH Ibey Oy ~ from ••-U.S. American is a long time friend LEGAL NOTICE IW 11ot1wtk11,.., lfl ,..,.....,., " *11,.. ~-.. -~ h chi d h d HOTICE TO CliltOrTO•• LEGAL NOTI.CE """"""' Oue Oii ........ "'°""""''!!(' for the fishing. 2 E or Rot s I and as agree su,.E•to• cou•T M THIE 11111 IW ''"°" !Mf'OOf, tnt """""'"''*'· 00 JJt1·ies to race aboard Thunderballs STATE OF CALll'OlilNIA FOlt ,.,,,.,. ,,_, benfflcl.,.., wndlr IUCll o.d"' re~~JN~ste~ ~YE ar~r. the 32·foot twin 482-cl!. in'. TKE coui:i!:A~u.wGI CE1tTll'1CA~-:8.S; •u11N1s1 ClllT~jJ~~~=u~,.""Jft_N•s• :;!fdu~:1,::oi"':~T::!,:'~n.'= Pt1erCruiser-powered Cary in Ett~:t ei C.lllACE s DtMAOGID, , ... .,_, l'IC, TITIOUS ~.~ .. " Tiie llrtdtt•IOnocl Mn°'""'"" II -Otc: ... • ......... , •• , =:~~-o.mt,.,,"" ... ~ nelthtt Hotel Cabo Sin Lucas Prospects are in ~tore for Ot<tllH. ''""'" '""° -''" .• CM-111.M:lln• I .... ,. •• , .,, N ....... _. ,._ wun -·~ f • v.•hlch Rothschild won the 1969 NOTICE 1$ HElilEIY GIVEN 10 tllt M llllO • llvlhle•~ II , .... KtwNrt SJW., SM .• N...-t ktcfl. CllltorflW., 8"*" 1HO!nlff Trvt!rto. WCfl °"' " T"'" nor the Hacienda insist on the largest inland saUboat rac-p ·r· Off h p Bo . cr.Olroro of 1!1t 1bo\lt nll'Nd c1tc-.i1 C:01t1 w .. , C•liforllll, ltllldtf' lllt "I;' 1111 llctllloul llrm 11tn11 ot l"Ago11v IM 111 ~ tWMl!dno •t111· d I r lh d. . ' . . h us I h ac1 IC s ore ower s t 11111 I ll H flQlll llt~h ... d1lm1 18111111 ... tlllout 111'111 llAll'lt GI ltOIEltTS AUTO tElilVICI! Cl!.HTI• .,.. 11111 Miii """ """t.KIWW '~, .N ..... doc:llrM ress ng up or e 1nmg 1ng series in l e . . v.· 1en t c Rucing Association high point t•kl deeedelll •ti '"ulrM 10 r11e ,.....,, 1.t.ll!S •11'11 11111 wld 11rm l• com.OIH " 11 co-..i1 ef 1111 111110 .. 1"' --· •rid M i lllfwr OltteR •M '"""' room. So the boating crowd ls aimua l Desert Re~atla is held . . ... nn 1M fltC:-•Y va•Jd""'· 111 w. otllc• 111t to11ow1111 ••IOl'I. w11o1e 111me ln 1u11 .,..,_ 111,,... i.. 11.111 ...-11\1(1 °' """ ..w•ld ""'"" """'*'"""' .,. •nll 1 charnp1onsh1p. 01 """<'-'' .. 1111 11N>Ye etltllltd ~·1. ,, 111C1 Ila<' ot ""1d.,.c1 11 •• to~iows ~ dlMO ._ •• llllllM• "¥""" lfl'!I ,.., ettC"6 111111 dM• we come. But neither do you at Lake Havasu C ty, Ariz. on Rothschild is an oil companv IQ P•eaen• 1111rn. wu~ 1111 11l!<eH••v 1cti1rd °'"' llollt1'11., 1 Att1nt1 lfftTlcl 01,1111111 Tllon\lltan. iMii 11tr• '.," '•"•". !! ~,,!... ""..!."" .. ' r-•. ,.~ feel U'e going to dinner •"n tho 0 -lo•ado River April 11 12 / vDUmtn. lo the und9,.lgllftl 11 L1w Dt· Avt. Hunl!n111on Buell. 1111· SUl'IOllY Dr H11t1H11t!Oll 1••c11 "' ... ~. '"'" ...... • '""" · • executive and McKeever is an llcH o• F•11nt.lln 1nd Fr1o1111n. 101 E•~• Dlled J1nu.,., n, 1•10 cillfo•lll• ~ ' llC'VrH """4W. SUCh plush hotels looking like Robert P . 1'.1cCulJoch Jr., (( kb k h 11111 Sl•tet. Co.ti Mt11. C1lllotnlt, nn1. ll lcl'ltrct 0-lotle!'" Dllocl ,.,,111,.,. n 1m Otttcl J.1-rt 11, lf11. a dock bwn eve if race chairman. sald a com· o -season stoc ro er w o wtiich .. 111e •l•u .,, 1>u11-DI ""' s1111 fl c.11Mrn11. 0r1,..., c-rv ,,,1r1ae' Dlr1tnt lllotr1lllwi LAKrNOCIO HOME -n you are make~ his home In Southern ... ...,. .. 1,.-Ill •II m•ller. Dl'f'fllllllll to °" Jlft. n . lt1'0, brio•• -· • "°''"' STATE Of" CALll'OltNIA, LOAN co .. INC. staying on a boat. bined fleet of 200 sailboats is lllt ftlllt ol' Nici d~tdtnl ... u111n tour Public Jn •!Id '°" Mid Sitt., ••-th' DIUNGIE COIJNTY· THIS IS A '°'y OP NOTICE California. montlls •"" Ille ll•tl puDl!t.,1on or !I'll• ll'ffl•ett llh:llerd CH1n ·~known "" o~ Jlft. ,, ltl'O . bltoro ..... NO!t'Y llECOllOl!O OH JANUAlilY lli 11170, So how does one get a couple IUtely this year -the seventh Tiie C"'lallno n•n. ex~led noHc•. ""' to 1i1 111e H•1on w11m1 "'""' 1, Pu&!lc In 1,.;.. tor' Mloil 51111,' H00111IP¥ AT THE OFft1ce OF THE o AHG! In the regatta's historv. u ,.~~ Dl™I J&nul•Y JI. 1'10. WtlKrlbed 11! ''" ... uftln \nllf\lf!lfl!t llld •PMIPl(f 811lfltl C.rltnt Tlll'.lmf>saii COUNTY lill!COltOli•. U.HTA ANA. of finicky broads ashore for / lo Include as many as two-ll1,h•td eu.i su1ffv1n. S•. 1ck!IO'#ied9f:tl ftt ••1<ut•d "'" ••me. known fl:t mt ,0 bt "" "'"°" wi.ow CALIFOllNIA. dinnl!.r except bv. a small Classes invited to co1npele d-, .. n entn'•• m' the ,,-, E•e<u1°"' ot 1~1 E11ar• !OFFICIAL IEALI """" h ,ubKr'lbld to !hf w1111111 1,.. Tll'll ''"W911CO a 1'twtt co. , p ·r· c s ' V< " DI rn• •bow• n.om..i de<:•O.nt Miry K, IUnry ··-·--... ···-·-"" ••• -., ..... Nll"fll Mlllo llnll d. b that I be be hed are ac• •c atam'"an, n•~. , •, ,,., •• ,,, '' .... ..,..,, ........... "'"w -mg y mus ac .... ,.... clas5es. will be an ovemig'1t FllAH LIN ,,.,. FlilANKL1N o .,., ...... orn jllf, -· "•'• AM <•Ht nm ••--h t' 1· Interlake, Hobie Cat, and a 111 t:. 1ft~ SI., Prlnci~I °"1'' In tOFFICIAL •EAL! ltK N-. .... J. 4o10 uu..,.UC a some tmes ac JVe 1 th Dese R event s lartlng at 10 a .m. o(f c1111 -· c11H. ti1tr 0t10111 cou11,., Mirr K. Httl,.,. Trt1t ~ °"'· surf? Well, it ain't easy, a s the new c ass to e rt egat-Belmont P•'er 'm Long Beach T11 : OHi ,..._nsi Mt c,•~,,'•nloll t!~1tl•u NPt1rv Pvblk . Ctlltor1111 f'utol!~ orw.e c_, o111 ... "1111. ta, lhe Coronado-IS. Attor111Y• tw ••ecw,., Nov, j. Pd11t1 ... 1011ic1111 J...u1rv '" 1i. • 11111 F1~11•1Y '-saying goes, but m y bride Harbor. PutollllllO 0t1r11N C011t Delly PJlo1, l"llbll11\e(l o.,,.., CO.ti 0.11~ P1~1. Oftllll• '-"" int "''° solved the problem of getting The three-race series -tv.·o f J~~u~rt ~ •nd Fftru1rY -. u. 211. J•1111•1., n. :iG '"" F.iitutrr '· '/t MY ComtfllHlon t:•.ir11 ashore ' ·n a reasonabl• presen· on Saturday and one on Sun-The irst day's leg around it10 111.10 i,10 l:M-N ..... ''· itn LEGAL NNPfC!: , h Id the west end of Catalina and LEGAL NOTICE Put1111Mc1 0r111H Cont 0.1.., f'11ot., _______ .,,...,,,r:""'=:-:---'-bl dill lhJ day -first was e in 1964 LEGAL NOTICE J11111.,., 23. » 1111<1 Fttrru1rr ., u .-wa econ on sway: , into Avalon Harbor will be 60 lt:IQ 117 • .,. NOTICI To C•WDITOlilS >,1·ith se'•en P-CalS entered. su,.11u0tt cou•T o, n• Get decked out in your best miles. A 44-mile sewnd leg 1U,.ltlll011 COUlilT 01' THI! ,-llt21 ST.ITS o• CAl.ll'OflNIA Hit capris or ~lacks, b 1 o u s e , ~~!~.year there were I l8 eil· Y.'ill be from Avalon lo Ship '~~~· c:~N~LtFo~~'.:N::" c111T~riitT~~u~"' N~~NES' .,,, LEGAL NOTICE TN• eou,:_~,:~, OIAN•• s we1ter and whatever other Hock and then back to Long N•. A.f.4t.. Tt>t 11nc1er1'9nt<1 dclH crrtli'f' ~ 11 ,.,. ,-»m E1t1~ ot Tl-tDMAS o.-v1Es. o"911td . bl Largest fleet is expected \() B h NOTICE OF Mll!llillNO 01' 'ETITION Ou(llnt I OU1l11t1t •• 20CU·C s. E11l-. (llilTl,IC,t,TI 01' SUllNllS NOTICE IS HElllE8V GIVl!H ,. lh• appurtenances are accept.a e. be the l'ob•"e Cat wiU1 100 i;kin. eac . FOii PllOIATll! .01' WILL AHD ftOlil 5•n!I Af\,11, C•!llorfti•. llndtr ""lk:IUloy1 ,ICTITIOUS NAMI CrodllOr• ol !lie .... n ..... td dto9cltnl ' • Q f th · 1 f th LETTt:lllS TEST.\MINTAll Y tlrm n1m1 el (ll SWAYLE55 MFG. UI 11111 Ill .. ,._ lllVlllt clllml ... Intl~ • .Thf:n, girls, YOU roll YOUr perS entered, follOwed by the f '!1• O )e SIX C QSSf.SJll beOt the Esllte rJ lllENE ELIZABETH LEE, $WAY liAlillt /11~0. incl !Nol wld tl•f'I !1 .!i~.un;s-~~=-~1::'1~"'... llC= will Hictft!!I lfe f"'111"11d to fill ... l!'I. alacks flt whatever above your P-C ·th 60 t · am1 y sty e event w e 11 ... ,..,...n •• treM o. LH, •Ito "-«irnpglld o1 111e 1o1iow1"' """~ ..._ "'--c Mwlll ~ ftll fklllloUI firm """" ""''*""',.,. vouc""'• 111 t11t -'lie. aLs w1 en r1es. Classic Boals Grand Prix for •• l•tne °""""''· o.c...... ...,,.... 1n ruu 111C11IKe o1 rnlMM.e 11 .. ,..~ flf• GuNN°'Ml'G. co.'""""'',.., .. "" cllrt ol 11'11 •l>Dvt! rn!IOM '*"'·,,, knees and over everything don . Class champions and overall NOTICE 1s HEll:EIY GIVEN T1111 101.....,,: f1 1 ~ °'"" 1o1iow1111 ..,-, 1e •rn.nt ""'"· w1111 !ht -·,., foul weather gear. Those speedboats built prior to World stranen c. L"" 11t1 lllff 11e•t1" • ... 111i... 1,1.,, 11. ''"'· un2 w11111,,... s• .. "''· ~',..me In tvH tfld ,1ace °' ,.,~ -h"'· 10 1t11 undtnkn'lld 1t "" attic. fleel champion are detennir.ed w II E . Ill he lor 11rat>1tt of ... 111 '"d IOI' IHulntt DI la.C, Tullln, C•lll. I lollowl o' /\!1 AtlOl'M\I',, Elltt•. l\1rt'""1'• M~ ... damn dinghies are nearly in the two days of racing. The ar . ntr1es w ac-Lt11er1 Tut1m1"•••Y IQ P"lllantr, 011t<1 J•h111rY n. 1•10. 1 ,,,•l'l<ll '111 Gunn 75" v·1 Ml•IM _. sm1111, uo1 Wttk:!lll °""" 111. o. ccnted through next Tuesdav rtleren<t 10 wtll(" 11 m..it lor tur!~r li•ltn It, &1r~ · c m 1 ' ' lo~ 1m1 N-t e11C'h. c:1nt.rnl• always wet. fleet wlnner is a warded thr, ___ •·-~---~--~~--'··I P1n1lu•••'-1nd 11111 1fte 11r .. e 111e1 Pllce siete c1 c1111or"11, 0•1"" eou"1¥: ~:i':'J..:'~·.-;:,11.:n •1,:11 • "'6a, .... 1Ct. 11 111t '*-et butllWM tf THEN YOU row near shore. 1'.tcCulloch c f ' 1· ol l\oorlng 1111' 11m• ""' bee" Mi for Oii )•~. Ii, 1t1G, btlOl'e '"'· • l'fl11t.l1 '111. Gunn 11111 .,...,., ... Md 111 tll !Miit .. tt"91111f!ct up or one years LEGAL NOTICE ~tll<'u•rv 11. 1t10. ,, t·)ll 1m .. in "" ~111v Pub11t: lft '"" 1or .. ., 11111. !.TATE OF CALtFDllMM. 1e 111, 1111"' "'.-1o1 o.c..oen1. w11111it .._., Wail (hopefully) ror a IU\I in po&Se.!SiOn. Class w j n n er S --------Cou•ffllllm al De,,.rlmti"t No. l of 11ld .,..r..,...Jrt •-rid l rliln ll. 01rr kriown OltANGE COUNTY· . mMtll1 llfftf llw llnl Mllatlloll .r lllil the !111rf and then ride one in . f Jo I If NOTICI! OF fl'UILIC U.Lll <""r1. 11 700 C!vlc Ctnt .. Ori.,,., Wt~1. In 10 mt lo De Ille "'--lit n•n'lll h Ori Jtn. » ltN ' ~t mt 1 Notirv 110lltt ... receive uncl na g ts. NOTICE 1$ HEllE8Y GIVEN '""· 1ftP CllY OI ""'' AllO. C1tllor11llo. i.ul>Krlbld "' lfte w!lllln lft•lfllmffll .... lllo.11111< tn .nd for ' NICI !!llf: Ptrten1lrt 01ti.ii ... ""'" 13. 1'119. -hoping you don't broach or --------------lpursu•nr 10 the 11niv111on1 o1 nio 111 Ille D•1"11 Jtnu••v Jl, ltlG •ckntw!<'CIOtd M "ecutH ll!t "''"'· •P-•ed "••rKll M Gunn k"'ll'*n 10 me 1t1lol'I M. ""'"'' Jr, C.~jze. •-the boat hit the Unlfof!n Commtr~l•I Code 11 .,,1cled In W. E. ST JOHH (OFFICIAL SIAll 10 bl ll!t otn.1 WllO" lltme 11 w~crlb-l•t<vtor ,..,, '1.1> 1~e Stile or C1rtlo•nl1. tllt IH'ldt<tlt~ County c1er11; Ml,.,. K. Htnrv .., to "" wtt11111 lnllrvm•"' 111d of ..,,. Wiii ol beach you jump out ill the w111 ~11 •• 1 Pull!!< 111r en saiurll<I•. J#liMES L. tfUlillilL. Jlt, No11,., Publk.C•lllllrnl• tctnowledotd he rxK111tc1 t11t wm1. "'' •bcMI nlll'llll dkecl1"' ffbr'VIN 21, 1t1(t, 11 11 ·00 4.M. ti JollJ VI• 0..rl9 "rl"CIN I Offkl In (Ol'FICIAL SIALI llLltfl, U•.t..Nelll ankle deep water and wet sand l•Y~lft Vllle1r IOI! L1ul'IC:fti119, 111 We.I Nl'W',.., INCll, <•lllWlll• o·--CD\111,., MltliK. H•"'¥ MTI•• a SMITH and help drag the d inghy to '"''' Highwiv, Ne-•! 1 r1c11 . Tel• (1HI 11i.1tn M• Comrn1 .. 1en Ex1lrt• NII• f'\ltlllc . C•llflr1111 ,,., Wtitkllfl Ort,,. . C•llfomlA, ltlt IOl-1"9 HllONI pr~ 4.H•nl• fir Prtlll-· "'""'· ,., ltn Pr!llC: •! Oltk• In "· o .... '"' sarefy. Take of( the foul I t Perl•· • Publl!~KI Oran" '°''' 0••11 1111\el, Pubn•ll."d O••fttf COIJI 011.., •11111. Or-Couni'f' • N...,_. .... ~11. Ctlflr•ll '*' d I l Ont Ill 16' 1.,.t1o1rd motor """' l>f'•r· Jl llUtrv n, ?•. )(t, 1'70 1«1·10 J•~u1rv U. 1J, )II 1rw! FtDru1rv •· ""' Cornmlnlo!I Exilrts r1h rJ11) MS-lfM weather gear an stow t n 1~11 ce111crni1 .,,r.irtllon No it1G 11·10 Nov. , •. un Att1,....,1 fl• ••KVIW the dinghy. Meanwhile you've c F1111AX LEGAL NOTICE Pu1111111r• o .. nQt '°'" 0111y P1101, Pvb11•111d Or•"'• COit! 011"' l'Jlat, •M LEGAL NOTICE Je~u•IY ti, JO 1na Ftl:lru1rY 6. 13, JA~u••'I 16. ll. » l!ld F1.,....tv 6. had whatever footwear you're 0ne !n bOlt •••ll•r be1r1"0 c1111orn1, sU PER•Oll: cou1tT 0, THI 1t!1 • 1Jt.10 1tJ11 ~7• plannini to wear either on a 11c1nui No. c5.nto or cwtto. STATE oF CALIF011N1A '011 ,.....,, • • . • LEGAL NOTICE nd k • S•kl '°""" i re H !nu Mkr In 11or11• llv fl!E COUNTY 01' OllANGI tltTiFJC,TI OP aus•H•IS LEGAL N0'11CE string arou your nee or 1n H•ttlat v1111~ BOit L1unc:~1,.. !MIC· N• A"4N1 ~ .. or 11! Sm1!1 Cttll. I "'rt""llllo) l<lCI NOTICE 01' M•AlllNC 01' f'•TltlON flCTITIOUS NA.Ml,! . ......, a handbag. lff Drt•t~llv """"e<:I I!• lil!lv A. PMlll01 FOii "llOIATe 01< WILL ANO FOii T~ unotl"\lontd Oo cedlf'ir 1'hff ''' f'·»ttt , COlilll'Oll:,t,TION NO-W find 8 dry rock OU! Of AndlOr' Rlct11rd 11:. C!emtnh, Tru11ot in Lf.TTEJIS TlllTAMElltAltY <-uct1"9 • bu9lnn1. II ll7SI Ciml110 · ' ClllTll'ICATI! OP IUllHlll · ' Cl~T~~·?TT: ... : .. CTIOM Of1 Ban•ru~•cv Es!i!• DI HAltOLO .Y.cCABE CHct••t<I Ciplolflno. Si ft Juin C 1 a It Ir 1 no ' • ' fttCTITIOUI 111,\MI, · HDlll ,ICTITIOUI NAMI reach O( the Surf and rare(uJly BAYSIDE VILLAGE &OAT NOTICE IS HEAEIY GIVEN t~,i ~lllloe~ll, S~,i~.rf'1tge1ii~;;~rrn An11:: T~t unclertl•M<I 'Ori «tl~~loll, •: 1.:-'J~Nlu•Jo~lilltGNEO COll:l"OlilATIO~ wipe your feet and legs dry LAUNCHING J-cob Fr111111111 Mvf>dtrM. 11 ~ .. tiled FLOWE•S 80\d lhal .. 111 nrm 11 ,_ «111(1$ ~.,0,,.1llu•!,~1116'>,... "'1k. dll$ llO!'etw ctttllY llWll 1111 CINflldllll • I Y, WllUam LYDlll ~,rtln I Hiiiian for oroblolt ol '*Ill lftd folloW! wllol.I lrHI 11""'-1 torn I , U bU.HttH locllld II Han. Lt f'.u: "Nd, wilh kleenex, or whatever, pol 111 Wt•t coa,1 Hit-•• •or 1u111nu of L'"''t T."""""''"' to=: ,:;:r tntl ,.,,,': ;",:"'~, ••• 1111o11111r"' ,,.,... 114 l!_AHCHO·SA~•'A~ Mltlloll vl•I•. c.111om••· .,,.,,.,.. tM f\('o · h d are N•WPOr1 Be~h. C1IUornl1 Pr!1h<1111r rtlt~ lo Mlidl !1 IOMldt tor 11 loll(rws• tnd 11111 Mid """ " _.._eo '"'" lftlilul• l)fTW f\,11-'1f l.t "*' Mldlcll on your s oes an you ~ub!!IJ'Md 0•11111e C11t1 0111v Pilot. •u•lfttr 01rtlc~i."' •1111 11111 "'• 11m1 1nd Ellft!I. M ,1111 Ltiltr ..,,n ounc:in i.ffgWI"' ,........,.. whoM ~, lo NH l.lbo•ftor)' 1nd·t111t ... ld """ It um- .ready ror the Jong Climb Up J•!W1•¥ 30 -FtbrU&rt ii. 1t711 lttl-111 Pl~(P OI hll•lllll ll>e tlmt 1111 been Ml llJlll Cu...i.rll<ld lllold, 0 t 1 n, t: ~od II~ of rtlldlme .,. n "'..,.., ~ o1 11'11 tollOwlll'I ~111111. "'- k th t k !or Ftbrv1,.., l J, ltJO, II t;Jll .,,m,. In 1111 Ct Hfornll • Drl Ler 1111 Nil lo I.el l!:m":ll' ltJ fN'll'l<lltl lllce DI bulln<t .... M toOowt: the roe pa o 11'\,\1 e your cOYrt•oom or °'"'"mint Na, ' of .aid 01'" Ji.iu.,., i. uio F1t111on P1r11 St .. Or•"'•· c11 '· n.u. M • • 1 M.'9"1,_,. 1narH11ttc1, entrance into the glamorous LEGAL NOTICE <OUfl, •• 1'00 CIYk Ctnl .. Or1v1 Wt1!, In l!lllfn M Duncln • '. J~11lt Wllbut;ll •'* Oneill ' Ftrll "'''' 110,. 2'l02 L• P11 ...... Mlllloll 1n~ er,., Of $1n11 Ant. C1lllorn1•. Llllil A~n Dunuon £drl'IOll\f1, 130'7 811("11ro SI,. G•""" vi.10. C-lllomll nus. OUtdoot bar Where YOU are im· '·UIN 01!ICI J1nu1ry l'O, lt1'. 5111t ol C11Uor11l1. Or-e C1H1n!Y: g•r.;• JCl!ll, ht~ lt70 WITNl!l5 Ill lltnd th!1 llt!I ·~ « med iately surrounded by an CEllTIFICATE 0" SUSINESS W, (, ST JOHN °" J•_,,. $, 1f)ll, bftort me. I NOll•Y • -1rr • . 0te"'11Jff, lMt. lllCTITIOUI NAME C-IY Cltr!! . ~ubllc 111 lrld tor Mid Slllf, .... r..,..11tv °'1 "'' Ed""°"'' '• l~•l• llllf . ll·piece mariachi band, Tn1 unMttltf\9d 0oet certify lie I> CCII>< HUJIWlfl, l'!UltWITZ tl'Of IE/l\llil, -••Id Ellftn M. 0)1n<1n Ind LHllt Ntll~ LH Edwlor>OI MH!MffWromtnlt • I d'uelinl I bu•lno .. ~I nm C1111,.., AVlnut, 01·1111111 lll"llot Ann Dunc:•~ ,_ lo ml "' l>e 1111 • JtHle Wllbul'ft Edmondt ,_,_.ltd Sountt romant e? Founl1ln V1t1e1, C•lfll)Nl11, V"drr .Jiii NeWIOl"I 111(11, C11HltWl1 Hrtoll• """°'' lllmll 1111 wlllerlbed N O<tlH1 Ftrn ldmoncl1 . .C-lnr( A. J•"'1t, Same• procedure at the Ha· fl<Hllous l!•m n1me of KNIGHT ltfHD-Tel : 41111 ,,,.,.,. "" wl!Mn lnilf\lmllll 1nct 1a1111 ... 11dald II•!' DI c;1111ornli, °'"'" County: Stcttlt,..,.Trffturer GllAPHIC $TUDl05 11111 ll'lef 111<1 llrm Alttr ... y1 fir , .. ltlt111r 1~et tAocu!ea 1111 wmt · On J1nu1ry U, 1'10, before IM, I STATI: Oft CAllFOlilNIA.· ctenda a Couple of nights later, 11 comocned 01 t~t fo~o ... 1ng Ptr1<1n. p.,~!l•l>f<I or~ntt cw11 0111~ Piiot IOl'flCl•L SEA L l · No11rv Pwblle lft •net "" t11d 5t1t1, c;ouNTY OF ORANGE. u . "- e'cepl th.I Don M08S had ... rime 111-Ill t\111 tnd fll(e ol ,.tldlfK't J1nu1ro 1), ~·.JO, lflll ljl•10 Wl!litm JDlln C1•"~y Mn.Ill!• IPIHlrld 011 LH Edmonclt. On ltlll 1'111 dlY 01 J•11U1rtj "'·"• 111(1,• 11 ~~ lcllows: NOtl•Y PubU,<illtornl.,· Ntttlt Lie EOrOOlld1. 4eull WltlliUrn b1fort -Nll\C'I' O. Ardlfl' I fffttry 111E \\'ESTERN rock, con- nected with a wedge-sh4ptd ridge of hllla by a narrow s trip ol sand beach, is 291 feet high and has on Its eastern side an archway through Which the sea rushes with great force. The eastern rock .. wilh near· ly vertical sides 222 feet high is the cape proper. l·oh1ed U!I and there were four \' \ \ Jo~~ w s1c11. noo c111t•~ Aw.. LEGAL NOTtCt Prlncl1111 oi11c1 111 Edrnond1. Oll-11• F1rn £dmolldi -"°""' ~ IMKlc 111 '"" tor 111e11 '""""' Ml '''"· \\ \ F1>11nl11n V~!ltv. Ctll .... nlt, Or1r11N Cou1111 • IM lo bl Ille __ , '*hcse = ••• l'ftlfllll llM"lr!. dlllt' '-I"*"" 111111 ~a~it ~~~~~n~I~ J::~~~~ \\ \ j 5,~:·:Jf.~::1~'.~·~::~tt cw"tv' :~::1•i:= cc:L~:~.~~A ~o~ Pubn~· ~rf~~~0:,:~·::1rv "t101, ~~~1 ::"~~;.w:_~1 111d ~~~:m!:Z:,j~·~ , dH\on, but Don and I railed to ~ I On J1nutN .... 1•111. belott m~. • TME COUNTY OF OU.NOi J1n111ry •• \I, n, 30. ltl'I . »l'O e., ....... M. Gt•l!on ~r;u!N lftl within lnal•llft'llftl Oii ~If Of r h bo t bef ~ Notfry Public ,~ tnd for »lei Sl•ll, Mt. A~tM .flfo!nrv P\lhllc.(1IHOfflil • 1111 ca•1111..,llott 11\lrfln ~nwcl. ind get out 0 t e a ore a ltl!rl0n8tlv IPOft•ed Jol!n w. S~ll kn-n NOTICE OF HEAlllNG OF f'ETIT IQ"I LEGAL NOTICE Pllf'IC.11111 Office In 1(knctW1100td 10 mt 1!'161 IUtfl COfW•llOll ~ r led '•kl v~ FOR PROli"TE OF HDLOGllAPH!C Otl"r. C~' ... • , receding sur star ... ng us \ 1a mt ro bt "" ...,,..." Wllost f'lemt It 1 ••• ,0 , ''''''' 0, ,0 . , 1 tJKutH 1 11mt. , •~bK•lbtd lo Ille ... nhl" Jnur ...... nr Ind WIL . My tmmlHiOn •P ·~ Ill WlllllH W'lllreol, I hlYt he•tvnto ••• San Lucu Bay is a bight in the coast northward of Cape San Lucas about a mile long. It affords anchorage with good shelter from northwe.1terly winds but ls exjJoied to the .!ta from the south and east. 1-·or the latter reaaon, It is con· s idered unsafe daring the s ummer season. out a1aln. . .. __ !.OQ<!d he txKUlld !Ill ~me. MINISTllATIOH WITH·THE·WILL AN· '·»M4 J .. w.,.., f j, 1rn • . my,..,.. Ind tfllx.O mw olflf:l•I ... , "" So THE Gm •• had escorts !DFFICl•L SEAL! NEJl:ED CllTll'IC"TI 01' 1\UIH•.s• ,LOYO • NALV•lil,ON, ~"~"'··· div' tlld ¥11f Ill 1111, urllllClll """ abovf •• l,.;t MIN K. Henry E1l1te ol Mol.ITHA M ... I J 0 I IE l'ICTITIOUI llAMll Sllllt ot.Uftillt ..... '"""' W•lltt". Most small yachts anchor close inshore in depths of abollt fiYe to seven fathoms. The depths increase rapidly a few hundred feet offshore. r..t ost yachts will be anchored Wilh a stern hook close to short and a bow anchor In deeper water. There are a numbtr oC Hull Gets 3 Owners who were wet clear up to here. Not•,., P!lb11c.c1~tor"11 DENIO, '1"° known •• M••lo•lt R D1ttlo. Tile u..o.'""'*' .,_, -•llY tit II (Ol\o or111141, <•litlorlUI""' IPFl"ICIAL ''"LI • P•lf'l<Joal Ollltt r~ D"<t1sed. du<llno 1 ""tlntn 11 15$ St Cltlr Strlll, • P\fbll"'911 Or11111 CO.ti D1llw' 'lttl, · Mincy 0. Afr.ttv But at least We kepi 0Uf O••n~t Cou<'IY NOTICE IS HElllE8Y GIVEN Thtt Cosle Mell. Cilllornll , u.:.ci.r !Ilg tlc· JIPIUIN 16, ». let •rid ~tllnJ•fy I, Noll,.,. f'llbnC-C•lllorn l1 m-e• dry. Mv Conim;•ilon E~ilrn C~•l•1nn Dick Donlo ht• !lied "~rtln I llhOYr llrm f'llrnl o! D I. o !NOINfl!lt· 1'79 '"'° lllrlM.111•1 O!fl(:lt Jn ,,., J Nou. 1•. nn 011111 ..... tor orob1t1 ot H1laor•1>hlc Wiii ING,,., tftil 1110 tl•m I• com-Id o1111.t Orlllff C111J'!IY Everyone slopping a t Cabo PulMlllltd 0 ,1 t ,0.,1 0 ,1.., Piiot •rid lor Ltlltli o! Admlnl11r1t1on wu.,. 1111-1"' ""'"°"· whon ""'"' In lull lflll LEGAL N01iCE: MY cemm1u1o11 Ea.i"' I d JlllllftY lO lrldno l'ettr~•IY f, 11 70• 111-lll·1nne-. rflortnc:e lo wh!(h ls ,.i.tt ot rnleltnc1I II 11 tollowl: JUllt 1, 1'71 San Luc as must C ear an lt70 iiJ.70 mule tor t~rthff 11•r1lcu11,., enct 11111 tl>t it1ct11rd Orllleb. 1s1 st. c111r s1r ... 1, 'ublltl'IH ClrM!fe coonf 01/ly ,11,1, .nl.r -es ........ ially If v. OU are llmt ..,.., plfu °' lle1rl"" lh" 11mo ~., COl tl Mt•• (11110 .. nl•. , . ..., JlllutfY '· II. 21. •• 1'10 ~J!I ,.¥-bHll Mt !gr Ftbn.oltv ll, 1'10. .. t :lO ' t• ltl'I Cllilfll'ICAT!.o' IUllNISI ' going north. Port authorities LEGAL NOTICE ~ m .. 1" llt• 011Url•oom 01 Deo1rtmen1 No. Dllld J•nu.,, • · ftlCflTI I.II NAMI , LEGAL NOTICE --------------IJ of 11lt cavn. ~' 100 c.._lc ''"'" Drlv• lll(ft•nl Ortlltl> tilt undlr1f1nt11 don urtli'f' 11, ·11 con-are extremely courteous and "'*" w··· 1n th• cnv ot 5~M• An1 c.1uor11!1. st1t1 ot C•111o•n1•· •uct1rnr 1 ou.1,. .. 1 11 10 L!nco111 u...-.1------~=o------- coopcratlve and handled our CERTt,!CATE o~ 11u11NEll oiiiec1 .1111111...,. 10. 1•10 ' orJ,,~~.~OYt'Jtv';,10 tH:to•e n1t 1 Not•r• N""lklr' ••ech, C•!Hor~I• '211'. vnd1r <•''''''''•""", •• •••••Ill l'JCTITIOUS N.t.MI W E, ST JOt<N · • ' ' lflt l!clltl°"' trrrn 111m1 ~ IAYClllElT papers without the customary T~t U,,.....J;9neo aoe. <rrll,., lie Is (Oft. co'"""' c ... ,,. Publit In .,., tor 11 14 Sll lt, DertOl'\fltt~ DIVELOl',Y.ENT COMPANY lrld tfl1I FICTl1'10UI HI.Ml fee. They even refused lo ac-du<llng • l><o•l~ttl ., "°' Tff"f D!n Wt~. OONALO A. MCCARTIN :.llllf!~ed~·~0,,!;11~br!~ ..!.cn;t~ Mid firm 11 ~ttOMll °' 1111! lolllWI~ Tiit ..,... .. lltlld do «rllty t!llY. ••.• Nr.,.PO rl e ..... c~, C11Jlorn!1 unt:lff Ille UM .l.d•m1, 511111 HuMMr llt Ill 11\fi wllftln ln•lrum'"t lllll •0:-...... lie•-· wl'IPll 111m1 lfl l\IU fllO '"'.:., DI cond!IClllll 11 llUdllll.!_ ti 1UCVlt N1k:t. cept the proferred ''proptna''. 1111111ou~ firm n•me ot AL'.AN WAR· C11tll Mill C•••••nl• •uu ed '"!Of«' 11111o11ow1: Nrwoort Oldo, ..... 111, 011 R v. · j · Pfl RINGTON, PHOTOG llAPHEll 1fl(f ll\1t tth OHi ",40-1U1 rn~~1t{:t"'~EA~ 11'""· $1mwl K. Grttorv. 10 Lll'l<Dfn C1lllgrnl1, wllder llW llC'llllou• nrm -Fueling and prov1s on1ng VJ~ Solid 11.m It c-....0 OI tltt tollC"*'lng AIM....., IOI' f1'1Ull1Mr c F """' LIM. Ntw-1 lit1eh, CtHI. nn1 o! CAL IFOlilHIA TITAN PllOOuctS Ind stnacks of the same in-,. ""''"°"· ... !>OH "'..,. 1~ iuu ,,,., Pl•<• Pv11!1•h~ or'"'' C01tt 0111¥ P1101, N°Tirv Pu1111,.c;11;rornl~ D•led Jtnu1rt 10. 1•tG. 11L11 111d rirm It '*"IPOSN of 11'11 _.Jow. I a' rt1klentt 11 ,1 IOllcw"' JIOUlrY ,l, 2~ XI. 1t7g 1:1'·10 p cln(IP l otllct In S•mutl K. GretorY lflO NflO!ll. wholl Mmtr Jn IVH Ind convenience as any place.e se I Allin E. W•rrlng!Qn, ,~ , .... pin o' • .,..·c~n!v S11tt ol C1lllor11t1. O••n1e COll(tl~: ,11ct1 of rHldenc:• ire •t tolloWI:• ·,n Baja Calilorm'a and Mexico. w,,, N _ _., '••<ft. cillfornl•. LEGAL NOTICE ,/ c minion c.11,,1 0n J111111rt ,., 1t10, t.elor• mt. • s111111e11 J. Sdtllf, 1n i ·Vl1 NI<•· Otltd Jln~iry )'t, !91'0 /j ,Dj,7l Nolt•Y Publk In Ind lot 11ld Slllt, N-1 llt.U.. C•llfgrnl91 Alltn I. GaiOline js hand carried in A!l•n E. w111 1n;ron Publl•,:J 0.int• Ctl•I Dtlrt Piiot, M'10ntlt~ •-..rtd llmwl K, OrtoOrY Ntlmlfl. lllJD 8'.°""11114 St.,·"""":'11 '' , • C ,,. ' O ,.,. C•·-•• CEllTIFIC"Ti 01' IUSINl!'S , '' >> -'"' •<llfUlf¥ t k_.. to ""' ft bl lllt "'"°" WllOtf D1k1. Ctlllor"l1, L•ff'f Ol*i., ,:.01 ~rry cans from a service sta-•' • •n •· • _,, ; ft1c1T1ous NAMI 111"1'¥ · · "" ._..: 111me 11 w t11c•lbecl 10 1111 wi11t111 1... $0\lth 11re1111 .. ·s11111• #(,.., t11lflt11l1. ~ 0.. J1n111•Y :it, lllO. bttor• '"'· 1 T~ un0tr1lonlll !kl (lt!llY Ille~ •rt 1'10 'v illvmtnt ind ldl.llOWitdffl:I ,.. t•eculf::t 0111d J11111'ry 6, 1~. tJon near the cannery dock. As Nollry PuDllc In 1nO to• 11Td S!ll!. cnM~ctln• 1 b1•1!11et1 ti 1t1D w !ti~ SL 1,.. Mme ·Sltlllltn J, k11tll ' ·n La Paz. y ou drop a bow H"°11111v •PP•~•H All•n £". W•rrlngt°" eo,11 "'''~' c111tor11/t vndtt ttte t1c•lllOY1 C 0 eo,0, a. cuotr 'At)oll I. "'411tr\all know~ lo mt lo be t~r Pt/Son WllOM firm n1me ot Mii. FAT ft !NGEll5 1nd LEGAL NOTI E Nelirv Publ!c Ur,., 011bi. hOOk Off the dock and the dock nlnlf Is tubl;(tl~ lg II!• '*1lhln In· th1t 11ld ll•m II c.1111-..i ~ lftt follaw· MY Cemmlnlon E•rlrtt S!lle II C•lllOtllll, LOI Ant1lt1 C-...ntr: ha J t I 1trum1n! '"" atkn~w!l'agtd ne eoecu!ecl l<'I Hr>anl. W1>0ff "'"'" 1" lull incl l'..afU MIY Jt, 1,1l On JllllllfY 6, 1'711, Mtt•t 1111, 1 Nlllf'I' crew us your s em c ose :i;;"~~C'tii.L SU. I pW,(f • al rl'lldfn<• .,. II •ollow•' Cl!lilTll'ICATI Oft IUllNllS T·Slnt u~lc: In Ind "' 11rcr lt11t, HrlOl'llll~ abo1rd -clost enough to Me•~ K_ 'H~nr¥ Corntll!ll Ptrtt. Jr .. 101' P•••kltlll FICTITJOUI NAMt ,.,bll"" °''"'' C0.1! Otlll' l !lol •• , ... ,.., ~ J, kbfll, Alllrl •• hand lhe Cans Or f•M.I aboard Nol•,., Pub!;c C1h•ornl• Pl .. C.Otll MIU TM .,qdtr1t1rote1 doll <1~11.., M It Cll'I• J1n111rr ll. lO tfld ,tllfvl,.., .. 11, NtlrllM llld LlrYY Oulllt k-" ""' Ito -. P•ir'l<IPtf Dtt!ct !" LWtl llll E Ptru, 107t Prttldent ,, ' Mf!lll 1 bullMr ti '1$1 Visit Dtl Sol !fN IJt.10 bl lllo Hf-~ "'""' lfl "*'<'~ _or pump or :1ypbot. It from 0,"no' coun1" '°'" Mt11. O•tv•, H..,..!lntton 11K11. c111forn11, -111 lo 1t1t w1111111 IMt"""""' •rid Mv co,,.,,.,1111on E~P!rll D••i:a JJ\t>Yarv :>', lll~ wnOer Ille lk:lllilll• firm ntml OI J. AND LEGAL NOTICE •clllOWIHt" lllrf flll(.l/ltd "" Mtf!t. J:tarrt\S, No•. i'-ltJ1 Cornr1tu1 Pe,~z. Jr. M 5ALES 11111 11111 1eld 111m 1, cillfiPosld !OF,ICIA\. Sl!AL) CORONADO (AP) -The So h I y · l to h e 0 L0<r1in1 E Ptru ,, ,.. ,,, .. ,_ ---w ....... N1m1 111 K•"1'k• N••• W 8 . OU VC go 8V Pulllll"~ ••~t CQl ll Dtll't l'llol • '" ""::urn j '""-1 llOW1 NOTICI O" TltUltl•'l SALi Nallr'I' f'ltblk I"" (OOt yacht hull on tbe f'OCkS --t t k •-·t ''""''~ lO lrld F1tlru1rt 6, 13 'JC' St11e ct C1lltornl1, tvll 11111 ,1 ti DI rn..,•11<t •ti o . T. t ,HO . .,_1'01S ••o C-IM ... <••••-""' fuel. It uruy a es auuu a ,.10 ia .. ,.O 01tn9t c~n•v MOt•tll ti"l't, •1Sl v1tt1 0.1 Sol Df., .. , _,,,, .. at the Coronado beach bas d ncl I I I Oii J1nu1r'f :II. ltl'O, tlt!O!~ '"'· I Huntlfttton lueh, C•lllOrnl•. On Mofldty, l'•bt\/tf)' 16, lf;IQ •• 11 !IO JU.., I. ltn hi ..o..t hill a llY a can urn n 0 Nal••v Public 111 ll'ICI '°' Uld ,, ... , O•ltO J1nutrJ h , 1110. A.M .. l'FS CO•f'OltATIOH •• ..,.., lllo TANMINSlilUM. KAf'LAH. three new owners who c Pl""' somewhat of a social event. LEGAL NOnCE "'"°"''Iv 1._,,.., cairne11u1 l'erti. Jr., -••H s1-.r1 ,..,;"'" ,...,..,. llndlr .,.. 111rw1<11 10 1o111MM • 11a11on " t pay the price CJM 1--~~~-~~-~----l•f'ld Lo•rtf,,. E l'utr •nown fol "" 1G Dt llllt 01 C.1Hor"1•, Or1nte COU11ly, Deed of frusl dlt.0 J1111e .. 1'li tXt<ufM AlfwM,. .i WW in 0 --p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I tN THI!! MUNICIP AL COU•T 01' lftt H••O"• ... i.ott "•mtl .,, IUb"C•llltd D" J•n !•, 1011, bttort ,..., I Noll,.,. lry HAlllD• l!ITATES .• C•!llvl'nl• tor· 11• ...... •-w °''" dollar. fl OlllNOE COUNTY KAll&Olt to 111~ wll~lft l111!rumtflf 1NI t(k-ltdMd Publlt l" ''"' '°'" 11lcl' St1!t. •r-ll'r -•!loft Ind rtctrded Jy<W "· ltSS II Ill-....... .., MUii, Cd!. tlJU ~ II K we t JUOICIAL OllTlllCT !flt~ ~•Ku!IO .... 1otmt. ·~•rM MOfrtll 51tllll •-11 " "" fl:t •Ir. No. 6'Jn Ill~'°''"" SU OI OI• T·IU111 v'"'" a we -nown I A Deli".,ht SHOW HOURS: COUNTY o" 01.i.N,1, tTATE oft <OFF ICIAL SEAL! bt '"' ""IOft .,.11o1e 111..,. 11 tulllc•lbH ric111 llKotd• 111 lilt o111c1 ol l"• Cjllmtv f'uto1111'11'd °''""' C01J1 0111r f'llOf, CoUt motor• y~ht, the 8todtfl 11 CALlftlll:NIA JOS""1 I!, 01vh tg !ht .,.jlhln l111trumtnl Incl Kk"'llW!td9-lltCOrlltr ol Ortnot C-...,.,.,., Ctllfor11!1. J1nu1ry JI, n, » •llCI 9'fllr\IM\' '· --··' j •'-• wtEK DAYS, 2·11 PM sow. 11111 St., Ctill Miiot fUU Nall" P11bl1t.C1111or1111 HI hi i•tCUll<I int Mml. WILL &ELL AT "VILIC AUCTION TO lfl'I 71·l'll IV WJS IU-l,IUI. by fire n Ul'I: FOR DINGHIES, c ... Nu,.,ltlr • .,.... lrlnl':l1t1I Olnct In COFI'• IAL 5EALI •OOHIEST llDOER f'Olt CAIH (NJllllt mAL 'NOTICE I I-and brought to San SATURDAYS, sUMMON' Drl ll'l• Ce\lrtTY Jrin L Joll1.I 11 11rnt OI 1111 '" ltwtvt ~ of ,.,. ....:.u ear Y -SAILBOATS •nd ro. ..... 10 MY c"""'"""' 1!•01,., Mottrf Pllblk-C1lltgrn1• U11llod '"'e•I '' Ille """' (ffentJ -Die~ Bay by B. Aahley •isHE"ulN 12 NOON TO 11 PM "'T10NAL Acco u NT AOJU~TE•s. Junt 11, ttl'O Pr1"'1o1t 0t11c1 1.. ir•ntt 10 11w •"' cou11,., Caur'lt'IOute. 100 ".am r ~ SUNDAYS 1NC,. • Co<Jor•tlotl, P111111111 vs. Pul!ll•ftfd o.~ow• c11111 o111v f'llat. O•-• c-•v block, Wut 6111. "nl• Ant, C:•lltorl'tl•, 111 CllilTIFICATI! o, IUStNIU Wa f , • L"'NlilENCE HA"T, DOE !, DOE! I! Uld l•~ulrY )II IP'ld Ftbru••Y t. ll. to, Ml CIM'llm!Hllln t:~,ltta rltl'>I. 11111 ttlf ln~._t COll"~rtl ill lrld ,ICTITIOUS NAM• Walker Wll! trying to fix up 12 NOON TO 7 PM OOf 111. Dtlt"ll•~•• 1•10 , ... ni Mircft ~ 1'n now l'lllld b'f 11 111111•' ulcl Offd or Tr uat Tiie .,.,..,,19Md oo ctrtllY lfltY ••• k THE PEO"LE OP: TUE 5fAlE OF P11bll\ .... d or~ ..... COii! Ot!IY ,,tel, 111 "" ........ IY •llvtftd 1n "" cl!v or tonelu<lllll • lllll!ntu II 1!10 I!.. EOlnttr the hull when moorlnp bro e C•Ltl'OR:NtA, LEC.AL NOTICE Jfn~•,.., , .. 11. JO •rid Ftbl'Ult'Y " Cotti MtH, Countv ot Or•nt•· stilt ol ''" ~.,,,, Alll. (altfor'lll .. lllldlr "" t!r> ·, t---•--' it wtnt Up on tht • To 11111 tllo\'I Nt!Md Otl•ncl1n11: ltl'I 14-1' C•llfor11!a dtttrtbH 1t: llllouJ llrm llllM DI (HAllLlli'S CO,_ n.v;x; -.!.,,. YDU trt •ll'Kll(I ta 1;1t •1111 lllf ,ltr' Liii )I, Ill Trtcl No. 1•. 1s 1fl(N~ Oft, FEE Sl'«>I' I~ 11'111 .. Id llnrl II CW.... , be•ch two months aao. ·ou ITS s I .SO ol 11111 uiun I WllllTEN 'LIADl~G In MOTICI' Oil INTll!MTIOl'I TO •HOAOI 1'..EOAL NOTICE • Mt, •KOt'Otd In loot. "· """ ~I "°'" -1111 "llow1no ""°"• ""'" ... I i.... " "' n -tt lo 11!t eerntlll!ll i1ro119fll ttJ;ml IN T1'll! •ALI 01' ALCOHOLIC rtlt:I n DI Mlttttll-1 Mt11t. rteonl1 l!tmt 111 II.Ill 11111 o\tq of rM~ Is H "We plafl on rtstor ng ncr, vou 11r "" '"""" e1111•1fd •dlon w1111111 ••v•11Aots DI o,_ Cauftry. c1nftrni.. i.ii-., said Davkl Sm11llwood. one ut CH I LOREN : TE N dl¥1 11"1' '"" llf•vltt ....... or 1111, Jll'l,ll•V ,., "" NOTIC~ TO CltlOITO•• S.ld .... Wiii "' ,., ... , ..... wtlfllul CHU It CH, l lt!CKSON • DUNN. IHC .. 111m1110n1. II ttl'Wll!I wlltllft 1111 lboY• m WHOM IT ,.,,.. ... CONCElil N: SUPllillO cou•t Oii' TMI c-n• ,, ......... n,.,, ~~•rt11.,. lmplltO. 1)10 E. 1:•11111r "'"'· Slil'll• Mt. the n1w ownen. "We've nl!vv UN DE l 12, 7 .5 t n•""" ceunlv, or w11111n TH11i1TY o~Y• u sub11c1 10 l•vAnt"' °' th~ h«'llM 10· sTATI o CAl..l,OllNtlil P.o• , .... ,1no 1111t. 00111111on. or '" c1111ornl•. pal~ lhJn lhJ b"I 1711 -\tftl 1llf'*"""· 11191:! IO<, nvllC.O II lltn!bV alvtn '"" tllt THI COUNTY 0, O"AllOI tlll'l'>l!f1nck, la t11 lht '""•lftl'lt orln-01ffd Jl'll,if,., 11, ltlG, rt n:u IUt)' I g I OMLY UNDER 6 fREE ... .., 1,.. nolllltd 1tt.t• 1111..._ vou ,.. lilt ltM9<11..,td •-" Hiii 1lco11otk N•. A..,.n, c1HI wm o1 111e lllle MCVl'ld tw tfld t1111111 c. l•lck-. 1trHIOIM. Ollltt11.1 before but we have worked M JI Lit, n wrlttHt '--'" 11ted1111 ... 111 111111. ""'_.-~, 11 lt>t "'""llH 6HC•ltttd •• E••~~ 11 Ml•I• ,,,.,.. l'llomtMlll. Cttc1 111 Trv11. a1111 1111tta1 .. In t•ld l•k:ll.wi • °""""· Inc. • ,,: boa'" ·•-t Wtre th ,. JA 23 1 1111 Wiil l1t1 lllf""""' lo< "" -· 00' •alkW\ D«f:fttd, ... tff"tl(IMI, Mtvlrten. II ,,,.,., -·· .... ITATE 01' CAl,IFOflNIA !.: smausr .... w1.11 ONLY • f EB d,,... .. , """'"""' i.. ,..., -111n1 1t no 1t1noo1llfl, G1111 M.,.. NOT1C£ 11 HIRllV Gf'tl:M 1e 11111..,_et1111 o.,.i "TM!, 1, ... w,.... COUNTY o, DIUNGE ,. bet fer shape. 11 • LIL • 1rl•lnt ""°" <Ol'lff'KI, or wlM -" to ltlt "Unu•nl II 1UCll lftltn!lon. 1llt lln< <rldllOfl of "" ....... Ml'llM dttd!ll l'nll ·-ol tlll TfUllH .... flf lllt On Jl"llf" U, lf1' lltferit 1119 • "It •"II •• ~ a lot of hard , 0 (l>un tot "" •llltr r.11.i omallllld 1<1 tl'lt dtrti!tntd it 10P1vln9 "" 1111 Ot1t1111ntf1' rtt.11 111 """""" 111v1111 cw.rm. 111lntt !!If trMk cttttld trw 11111 o* "· T"'''· ll!Mltr•lf"'t • Not••• Pvllllc Ill Ol'ld i. WI .-av • Com•l1lnt, Of Alcetiollc 8•"••rt" ClllltOI IOr IHll· Mid dK«ltnl 1r1 ttcNlrod IO flll !llMn, Tiit Mlllll~l•rr ur>lltr Mid 0..ct ol Wkl CO..,i1, ~ Sltle, ,.,_tty .,. 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Ctrttoll, IDO Oe11111t ""' o--ftW ""' tllll ""'lt!Pi wllflltt •"''"""""' Oii btll.on _, ll'IO COi'-s AM~ICAN MAil • WAt lll!AL) °' MIC!! lictnttC•l '"'' 1111 ...... u .... -Nt-' c ... ttr erw.. Htwlll'I. ••Kii. l'ltlc:t of llttl(fl ~1111 ,, tltctllll " cl\IH -·"°" lllo«lrl lllrl'lllll, tl\d tdli.....,. Race tarts . YOlf "'" .... 1M t tv'el II M tltltlln' tnl t i lftJ llffict 01 Ille O.O•rtlMlll Iii Ctl1!otftl1, lll'hltfl II tho Olia o! !11111 ...... Ille llndtr.~ •~ 1"11 ~Ill """.,,., Wt Id IO ,... I'll' Wdt ~.ttflfl ~-COMMANDO MOTORS 11t lfrl' 11\tHW Clift-IN Willl ll'lt """' Aleoh'ollf: ~fft COl'trel, M lw 11111! 11 II 1111 ~ 1'I Ill ~ltl W · •1thf'v Mid 1tott11llMI,. lrld 11\11'111""• Ill lflt Wlllllll IN~ -Wiii! tt ...... •111111 flt 11111 ..... -.. IMlt '"""'I' 1110 D"11rl!Mnl ti AICCf>Ollc lf'Ytf-l1lflll'lll IO ll'lt tt.11" of .-111 Otcfdtlll, 0t-•r 1', Ifft, IM ~lld<lri~ r1"""" llwt Of' i ,_lvllt!I ., llt .. ,. .. If~ ~ ST. PE'r.£1\SBURG·, Fii, #-, H,. •tt•.IO 1/llMllO .. ct!IWl'IM •!•lllot lltt llfM u ... 11 Cenr•ul. UlS 0 ""''· S•c•..m.,,to. •lltlln •our 111111111t tlte1 tltf ""' flllllluo ••If flOllfa Of .,.,~ ~Ml II •k<':1tof'I lo""' ( 'P) y •• w., lrom ti -~ 11;::========-::=-:==::;I''"""' 1'tlf ,_,.._for n111111 • wrm• C•lllair nl• tSll., 10 1' 11! 1>e f'ltl'lv" nen ol' 11111 'lolltf. 11t ~dtd '" '*" tllO "" ltl ot IDF,!C•.l,L lEAl.) n -·~ a 71h H.P SUI It •i.•ll11t It !tit ~·•~l!tl. ... 1t111ft lO Clln.11 lht °'"' 1111 •r-N DtlH J•nulfT It, 1m ''"' OfflN• ll t<'Mll'· l'•lrkl• K. W•lr -,•-r.0.,1 and Hollind ,.nt--• • ON THE TUBE 1to11•t ,,., tflOKDN '"""ltfl .. ,. •lr'M ,..,H, 11111\rll 0o11111 T~-otttu ,~•·~ "· "'°· _,. Hll~f'l!Oflt<~.,,.,. "'' ~ ..,.. 9'J sa..t A Leet a.ft M.-,1 ""°""' If Ll'I' '"91111$ for dtftlll " H'Wlaa "' "'* Etlt'Cllll! o! 1111 Wiii ,.,. C-V•llon. f'rl I OfflCI lt\ ltfltd up ~ (or the 2 p·m, lwifl:t .Mi Tllit -'""ltti 1r• -kftlMd !Of lhl 1 DI !ht tboYt ~ --tdtnl It .... TPUoltt. Or ~' '•-~ Of ,., tMmJlt r-fl'O' m for tilt "l't tui4• Ill wh•I'• •• C""'°" °""' t1i. .. 11ai!iell(. -llewt'-. Tiie fot111 sf JllAlllilY II:. CAllLTOfll. ·~ T,O, IElilVIC1: COMI', ll'f, WAUWO• tlloe\. ~~ UJI! ~ -8aat Island Inc. 'lt....-1 .. ""' """""'' nut _.~ .. ....., "' tillfth'IH ,_ -c'· .et ,,....,.,, ("t'!f °''"' " """"' • c:,~1::----I ..St. Pete:n..,·-io Venk:t. , '''t'"l"t 011 TV. r••tl T"I T11t11WMt Ot•I ....,.,.. 1tco et "" °""'""'""'· i..wttrt •11cs. c1111or111e '~""\ A. ll«tlltrom. 1111 _,.... -. ,.. -· WE K "I ~·• ' 4 'I' 11. An.,,,.., lw f'litlllllff .-..... ~. I . l Ttl1 UUJ ... ~ Vl(o fl'rt1ksettt ....,. ~ 'fhe racl optnJ the teuc.n ltt W. C.-Hwy,. Npt. ... -"'•n•uu ' .. , " "' lllitirl~rtl Ortl'lf" C:Ol'I OIJlr f'Uot. Jal!n c . Cit"" •"'"'11• ..,. '""'* n•11 Mtltlltf. a...,.. c..t °""" PNt. for lb. So.u .. rn Ocean Racing! (714) "1 "30 s.i..1tcl 1v ,dilion of ,~. DAILY .J4nuf"V ll. 11. JC Ind l'tbru••V •. ~ubllll'>ld nr ...... COllol lll+l'r JO'+to•. l'\rD"•'*' Ot-• {Olltl O•!I• f'ltnl "uflllt!W'd o •• ,,.., C!N1l D•Uf f'llel• )lr'IUtFY ••• n. Jll lllf ,...,_.. .. V"I "QO PILOT. 1'10 1'·1' J•'!Y1•¥ '°· 1•1fl IU·IO Jlf!WIN J), lO. l'1D ... 13. 1•111 U.1' JlftU.•Y n. 30 Ind F•t•u••¥ .. ltlll lt).11 ltl'O .,. Conftrtnee. 1,._ _______ .___ ______ _,, _______ _ ' ! ... •' 1 I I I I ' ' ' ! • ;l0 OAILY PILOT Friday, Januar)' JO, 1~70 · *F·REE¥ P.RIZES * · GIFTS ENTERTAINMENT & REFRESHMENTS · FOR ALL! j , \NG ~ 10 '< .. .:i1,' · .. ·!; , LIVE 1\\ESE ;~~ P-ONY RIDES! SOFT DRINKS! . -. ·ENTERTAINMENT! COME JOIN THE FUN! * * * * * * * * * * HEAR SPECIAL RADIO ,,-~E S£SN~E~:c~~~~"RGl\NSDC ·so~~~~El~~ll S1"1v 1. , r 400 (',"RS MUSl V'-l Sl l & SUNOR' , · o0~\~ 'l\l 12 M\O-N\lE:1\\U~~o~~~il1 lo· Rt~tt1 s~~u HOT DOGS! BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY AND STAY ALL DAY ... HAVE A REAL BLAST! BROADCAST ON KEZY GET EXTRA PRICE SPECIALS ALL DAY LONG! ,~. If .lO GWf t~fR10Nf ~N ' FRE E WE LEASE All MAKES AND MODEL 1970's AT LEET ICES! 1969 Ford Torino GT ~~~~.:~~ ... ":'" .::~c::::.1;~ ~T~·~ $2388 aldo wol!1. rodlo and heo~r. !fAOH!1401J. NOW ONLY 1969 Dodge Polara 500 ''" ... ~'" ..... ·-·"~" $2388 <""""'"' cor 11111 o V-1 1"9lne. ou1omo0c Iron• .• DOWtf" l lffr. " b•okn. Focto,..., o•r ~o. OM »Hf0120Ul. NO'/I' ONLY 1969 Toyota Wagon , ..... "'"' .................. s 1288 1pre<ll, rodl• onct healor. (YXW S4ll. NOW ONLY 1969 Dodge Super Bee 1968 Chevrolet Caprice Tlllt l>arlllOll Cornn wll~ °"''°' $ 88 moll<. lrllftllfllH-.. -r llet<· 15 I"°. 1111\dau loo. FACTOllY ,lUI, r .. 11 --ler !WQ5 s.19!. I NOW ONLY • N ea ch City · • lM t.o1te•I <O• on lhe •oad loda• , , • 1111 Ooog1 Cl>Oroe•. l l\11 dtlu•• nl,.... le•n •l•h·nl"' IOw m1leoge Ii °"!DI~ ono rtlXI• tor lm<nealalt deliver• IWld ,...,·11 10•• """"'"'" ot dollon.. ..,.,, .... mo1oc DOwtf" Jl~rlno, roelllo. """''' or!d . "'"~ ore. !Lie. No. ZVC l \( Tank of Gas WITH EVERY CAR PURCHASED NEW 1970 DODGE CHALLENGER Here's the newest sensation by Dodge. lt'i the excit ing Chal- lenger. •You'll have to drive it to reeUy appreciate thi1 fanta s- tic automobile. lt'i factory equipped and priced down by Beach City Dodge fo sell fas t. .I JHlJCDE I OJJSS I s NEW CAR BUYS I TRADE-IN • BRING US YOUR BEST DEAL ON ANY NEW 1970 DODGE IF WE CAN'T BEAT IT WE'LL LATE MODEL SAVINGS•• USED CAR · • • 1968 Pontiac Le Mans 1968 Dodge Monaco • T~I• 1,.0 noor !lard!oa com11 wllti ""®" ....... ., ..... , ... >' $1788 f"lllllf. A 111 CONOIT IONIOf(i. i>ower window•, •l>OIG and ~!!<lier. !XOC 0 •!. NOW ONLY 1968 Dodqe Coronet $1,lTION WAC.ON "-r1<1! nl<o ·-.... o••-"• "~~" s 1 588 I'°"' "°""' \l ... dna. FACTORY AIR COOfOH !ON!NG, rOd!o ond ""'l•r. tWXF 012), NOW ONLY 1967 Ford Mustang Fastback 1967 Mercedes Benz TtilJ 70tl 0 •'4:1on Olo•el ho! tou• $ '°''"· ""oo. '" "'" o•o 1988 ~tOlt• ' .. a ,...... ~Ouh 1 Tll~ 10•1. NOW ONLY s GIVE YOU 00 CASH 8.a<ti (1ty OD<loe Will llQCt: IJO !Ml t lolm IOll"'o. W11" !ht!r tr-HldOc l ,,,110nior11 ana Ol<V<nR Po-• wllh mo laclot• "" 011 """' 1010 Dodou, ltlOY ochJOll• challen111 vou lo bring ~em tilt be!t w"l!tn oiler vou ccn oet !rom onv oull'larh~ Dodo• deGl9' on o """' !910 Dodvt. You will oV11tlfY tor lt.t liQll.00 cash I! &ooch Cily Is oormilled la curcl'las• rne <Dr on vour wrCI>•"• order 01 th• arlcr olferf<t lo vou and if fl<o<l~h Clh doe• I'll>! reM'll thll tor ro you or <1 IOwer or!ce. vou •Hl l'lave !ht l500.0D. Tb•• o!le• l• !load until mtdnlonl. CAMPER CONVERSION G•os• Comi>tr Ct •'!I• 22$ Inc" Eno1ne & 3-•llffd 5""'"'• -U" w~I• & !iru. Avoota~l• l!Jr .,.li•orv naw. Tw• T-Po!nl-Htoter Evoo EmllSW! (ftlllral, A11,l80UI05H2 '3188°~ 1967 Da tsun S,S. ,_, .... w........ ........ s733 1lon. Ol<C~tl l<!OIS. ..,,,.. l•dt •<>lit and tleol0< !YHE Jiil NOW ONLY 1966 Dodge Coronet 500 '"" "'""' ·-· .... ,., ~ $988 D•nt, O'll!Otne":!C tron1m1u1on, - •• •tttrlno, l>ue~tl se<1h, radio and l\eoTer, {RSM UH. NOW ONLY 1967 Dodge Pick-Up :"~,g "1 t~ ~~'.n::10~~1:11~ $1188 mort, 4'11100. NOW ONLY · 1966 Rambler A bas, 880 ,_, .... ,. ·~·~· w...... s733 1ronvnbslon, _, 1t..,.rlno. F - TORY AIR, radio -r. (S!Y 122 ). NOW ONLY 1966 . Ford Gala1ie 500 ~~I .::r,:.or!>O~!~r:.=-F~~ $988 TORY Alli;, whl"' 11<1o wal11, r• dlo ond lwaler. lYEW 103). NOW ONLY 1965 Plymouth Fury Ill Tklt ,...,...._, l'IDrtllOD comeo wll~ ~1!.. •;:cT011~1!7:.1~;:;:: $588 lno, wMle 1l<1t wall1. radio ""d ritol~t. !PIM lU), NOW ONLY 1966 Buick Wildcat • 1965 Chevrolet Bel Air ~~c~ .. ~:la~~ ::::· .~~ s533 ...... rocrlo On<I -··· (lAY 1111. NOW ONLY 1964 Pontiac Le Mans Thi• two.a-h..-d!OD l!o1 Y·I en• $ 88 cine, -· stHrlno, butktt wots, whllt 11.X wo1t1, rodlo 0<1<1 licot· 4 er. !P8E "11. NOW ONLY 1963 Plymouth 1963 Plymouth Valiant Thi! l>ord'OD I• toUlwe<i w 11 h $ 88 •ton• 11,, tJVc•et woh. whl!t \•dt 3 wa111, radio --rr ~GNF "''· NOW ONLY 1965 Ford Mustang c-1 w1m v.a """""' -•• $ otHrfl!g, All! CONOITIONING, 688 Olllon!OI!< !~minion, radio oner lltoler. IUYP '111!. NOW ONLY 1 .. ' HARBOR CENTER'S FIRST llG EVENT OF 1970 ONE DAY. OILY! . . . . .. . SATURDAY JDUlll 31SJ -· 150 Tables Loaded Witll Thousands of Spectaculm--BarCJClms Outside on . Our Mal For Tiiis .o.e Dar ~· HEY KIDS!! . SH 11Nt World Famous · . Ahiha 8lrcl ClllCI Cllhnp Sho*! .. -- ONE DAY OllY SATURDAY, JAN. 31st· 5 ·BIG SHOWS . 11 :0.-12:00.1 :ol-2:00-3:1o . . . ·--... --..._ --- ................. --..... - "THE LAST SIPPEi" SEE ·THIS· FAtir AS11C LRLllE DISPLAY SHOWING FEB. 11-12 -11-14 .. .. ., ' 2--H...._. Center S.•pl•ment to tM DAILY PILOT, PrW.y, J•n. 30, 1970 . . IJ~ Leavl•g l,lhya Wheelus Base Now Silent · 11llPOLl1 Libra (AP) - Onee bustling, noisy Wheelus Air Force Base has faUen al.molt eerily silent in the past four months. Th" roar of jet engines and sonic booms have gone~ and on JUY1e 30 the last American airman will go too. On that date the United States will band over the 2,100. acrt, $100 mllllon base to Libya's revolutionary govern- ment or young officers who seized power in a virtually bloodless coup Sept. 1. One of their !irst acts was to order a halt in the Wheelus training program that taught tens of thousands of U.S. airmen bombing and strafing technl· ques over a 15-year period. Then the military junta ~ tained U.S. agreement to give up the base. 'lbe base's wing of FlOO jet fighters has flown away. Airmen are feverishly packing other gear and p e r s o o a l beloogings. Said Col. Daniel James Jr., the base commander: ••1 hate to see the base dose, that is, from the point of view of our naUonal interest. We are losinc a very valuable tr.aung facility. Places like thls ar-e bard te come by -an empty d&ert at our doorstep and nobody 1round to com- plain about notse." "It has been good duly," said a major. "The weather's good for Oylng. We can prac· tically dive in for a swim from a bedroom window. We have our own golf course. It's more like an 18-bole sandtrap but not so bad. My family likes it here. So do I." Younger unmarried airmen are less entbus1astic. · ''It's boring around here," sald one, "No girls, nothing to do. I'm glad to be leaving." Before the coup, Wheelus, a small town of about 5,000 Americans, was virtuaUy an open suburb of Tripoli, five miles 1way along the coast. It was practically wide open to all comers -foreigners and Ubyant. After the coup, the govern-ment ringed the base with security and customs guanb and tightened the control after :-1\nn~t ALW,.VI ~tA8T QUALITY Harbor Shopplnt Center Costa Mesa . \ ... -~~-. CJi8r8iiJO~·T8: ' .. -Sl,DE·WAlK SILE ·f:· . . . . . . Women's D...Ss.s Reduced tO Clecir . Reduced Girls Wear hip t· 5 88 ~. a.t.00 NOW • . . 6roup II 1 88' Orit. 10.1%.00 NOW • ..... Ill 9 88 Orlt . U-11.00 NOW • Many Items Not Ustecl Drastecally Reduced! Women'$ SUps Full and Half Euy cut 11ylo11 t.'ilored 1tylu with d•ll'lty lace trim1. Ori9, 4-1.00 117 NOW • NOW .1.88 & ~ Reduced Infants Wear 2 Pc. rt_, Sett .......... ....,., NOW 3/5500 AND 3/56" Women's Smart LookinCJ Shoes Youn9 stylt1 of fuhion h .. t. or fltta. °'"· .. ,, .. 10.n Now 4.88 SavinCJS on Rec.iular Size Spreaclt' Prlnh, 1olid1 and •~roll dt1igl'ls, faahlon oolora. °"'· 7.tt t.11.tl Now 6.88-1188 Boys Dress-up Jeans Reduced Faatbac:• 1tyle, btlttd 1limster model. or1,. s ... Now 3/10.00 SHOP MON.-SAT. ~ll 9 P.M. LIKE IT;CHARGE IT • Border Clearers Come Under Fire On Any Comics Page. SIDEWALK SALE-SAT., JAN. 31st WOMEN'S SHOES DRESS CASUAL FLATS GIRL'S SHOES WOMEN'S SLIPPERS , MEN'S SHOES $5 $6 SftlJ DRESS & BOOTS · 0 • : !I !~ HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR e COSTA MESA • miniRtraUve officer for th~ commlsston, said from 250 to 300 persons have phoned or written to complain b a t "about 99 percent of them ar~ conservaUonists who haven't even been lo the border to see what we are doing.'' Consenatlonists are jum- ping to erroneous COltclusions on s o m e misinformation circulated about the scope of the project, she said. Tordon 101, cOJlUllOQ}y call· ed picloram, is used by the commission on 2.47 square miles in the United States, she added. Mrs. Sheehy said t h e chemical ts similar to that US· ed as a defoliant .. by utllfty, highway, n u r s ~ r y and agriculture departments in nearly every state." 1be mixture of the chemical used by the commission ls "suited to tbe conditions along the border and doesn't kill the berry bushes or srus ,, she added. •• ' The 20-f oot strip along the border -half of It on the American side ...,.. 011 not a demllltariled zooe; · it I s becoming more p ar t I It e because the growth ii so low •. "Since the 1925 tiuty, we've been malntainlng the entire boundary -5,5211 miles -and we spray only the extremely wooded areas. We've used Departmentof Agriculture-ap- proved chem.lcals that are widely used commercially for control of undeairable growth" she said. "We iiave always taken all precautions -we haven't had one leftmate complaint in 15 years, she added. Nelson suggested balling the nation's parijcipation in the spraying program until It could be re-evaluated. Tbe senator's researcher, Diet Short, said the State Department responded by glv • log formal details and describ-ing 0 the care-they use in .,.. plying the chemlcals -and to tell us of the need for a well- defined boundary." Mummified Man Found RIDGECREST, C AL I F . (UPI) -The mummified re- mains of a man m1ss1ng since last spring have been found by bunters in the desert 30 mlles south of here and east of Highway 395. Harry Joseph Parker. .51, left bis CoUn home April 11 for a vacation. He called bis f arn1· ly two days later from Ridgecrest and was never hwd from again. A few days later, Parker's van station wagon 1'18 located a Storie Lake about three miles north of Las Vegas, New Mexico. lt was tben real"ed that Ills body might be in lhe lake. J PB I . Hawaii~ Beachhoys Bemoan 'Prow.ess' ~~ HONOLULU (AP) -The sW1 a good life here but you old days were livelier but aaid said. "Before. lf It r 1i.ned too beachboy they call Meoebune aba't tidding, the old dnys are today's salaries provide more lone, you'd starve. lone.,. s--·..ity shoot his lhagy locks as he a.uu • "And besides," he 8d.ied, looked at crowded Walkild Jesse Crawford, I beachboy "11Us way, rain or ~hine, "we don't have to punch 1 Beach aod said: ''The beach is _i_or_1_&_y_ears_, agree<1 __ t_:u1_t _th_e _y_ou_m_ak_e_m_oo_e_y,_·· _c_ra_wf_ord __ ct_oc_k _or_w_ea_r;;...sboes_._·• _ _.;: .Jack Frost Setting Hills in the South Lake Tahoe area now have an abundance ot snow as shown by this scene at Heav- enly Valley. Visitors are ta!cing advantage of the Jack Frost setting by skiing, sledding and just scooting down snow.covered hills. For Top Sports Coverage · Read the DAILY PILOT tired . Very tired." Menehune ls a Cortyish man ·whose Hawaiian nickname means leprechaun. Like many ' of his dwindling breed, he preferred the days when tourists were fewer and richer and the tips were bigger. Today there are only 30 pro- f esslooal beachboys working ln Waik.lkl. They are licensed and have contracts with hotel con- cessions. Their pay is abdut $8'J weekly plus Ups. "Thls ls progress," says beach bOy "Wala" Wt-tanabe, one of the few HawalJans still plying the trade, "just like the jumbo jet." Watanabe, w h o • s ap. proachlng 50, was surfing the December day Pearl HSfbor was bOmbed ln 1941. He is licensed by the state Water Safety Commission to . paddle cilnoes and teach surf- ing. He has a Red Cross senior life saving certificate and takes a refresher course every three years. "Today's beachboys are bet- ter qualified and the job is stlll glamorous," he says, "just like a skl Instructor -but without so many clotheti." "Coconut" WUlle Ahuna, 45. grew up on the Waikiki sands. Now, he's a beach attendant for one of the large hotels. ''We used to help peop~ surf and swim and bring them mats, but we didn't charge them like now," be said. "They'd ask how much and I'd say It was up to them. It ii ~-------~ 1.lt I e I~ 'h]. I .Yl 1 11 SATUIDAY, JANUAIY 31 LIMITID fUANTITID ILDON -l·D HAllOI ,, ttASHO BIG SOUND BOATS .... s3aa 7.tl -------BOAT SET ::.'~." 5211 AUIOIA SPEEDl.INE ACESS. UNND-.... of ' llP4STO• .... s211 4.IJ MAmL MATTIL 'I -J...ty -let· 6.11 \ GOOGLIE~ PILLOWS ~ s1" Strallle Change Machine s3•• ~ \---MAnlL-Sliewc .. Pl..-UMC0-1t.111rtw4 UTILE KIDDLES ~1' 33' SCBCE ms .... oo. 1.4f ~ . MATTIL -SlieWCCIM ~ HAlllO • HOT WHmS ~ 3lc .. KITS =:-44c WHmMAN-$7.to.-. SOUND-A·IOUND TALllNG PUZZLI wltll ldnl lecer4 WOLYlllNt-All Mettll SINK or STOVE -----AMLOID-....... '2" TRUCK ASSORT. HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER 2300 N. Harbor Blvd •. Costa Mesa, Calif. OPEN SUNDAYS 12-5 --illillllm .... • • WINDSOR SHOP .FINAL SALE NOW TREMENDOUS SAVING~ELOW COST NA TIO NALLY _ADVERTISED BRANDS . • ·IN$1DE STORE SALE AS WELL AS SIDEWALK . DRESSES~ .... t• s1·9 NOW .......... . DRESSES ·~to s23 NOW .......... . DRESSES .... '° s29 NOW .......... . ON TABLE OF · a SKIRTS -JACKETS ~ . CA'111S -ILOUSES WHILE THEY LAST CAPRIS SKIRTS SKIRTS SWEATERS SWEATERS NOW .......... . Reg.to$9 NOW .......... . .... to $14 HOW .......... . .... to $14 NOW .......... . Reg. to $19 NOW .......... . Robes and coats aho ••• Terrific Savings -Below cost prices lnicle store. JT1d' '"I Ii 1 r, I" I 1 · 1 l f I • I I SIDEWALK SALE ••• sat. Jaa. 31st · . ' Hush l\a: • ® ........ , PPa!~~ MEN : 2 Beautifu l Styles .......... Reg. $J5.95, NOW $9.88 -5 Styles of JARMAN MEN'S SHOES, .. Reg. $19.95. $2 1.95 Limited Supply -NOW $12.87 -WOMEN: Dress Shoes -Life Stride, Rhythm Step, Joyce, Risqu e, Town & Country, Red Cross ............ -...... . Values to $1 8.00 , NOW $7.87 CASUAL SHOES: Nina , Sbicca , Risque, Lift Stride, Joyce .. Values to $14.00 -NOW $2.00 & $5.00 TEN NIS SHOES: Converse, Blu e, Pink, Yellow, Green & Whi te, Va lu es to $5.99, NOW $2.99 Sav-on Shoes ·BB 2300 HARBOR BLVD. 546-6775 ~0:ft HAllOR SHOPPING CENTER (Next to Thrifty Dfut) ... PTiestly Celibacy :Pushing ~ Catholic Church to CiUis VATICAN CrrY (AP) - Vatican insiders believe that Po,e Paul VI is lteadJy being driven "against tbe wall," as one of them puts it, OD the i .. of priestly celibacy. 1be Dutch bishops' backiDg ol · the Idea ol JDll'1'iqe for p-iesta gave the fl o n t if f another push. Eventually, the Vatiam uperts believe, the Pope will have to do one of two things: Dutcll action escept So ~: '"Ibis Is a matter reprd1ng the bilbopl ... It ... dear Aat with the ward "llilhlpl" be •• ln- dldial the Pope, who ia billlap ol Rome and In tbeory "ftnt among equals'' in tbe beira"dly. AJUwqp only the Du&ch bilbopl 11 • PIP !lave made ad a d>lllenp on cellbaey, die WJue II troubllnc other b!sbopa. ID the U1Uied states groups ct priests have spoken out agalnlt the praeat rule. -Formally reaffirm tbe .rule of OllJKiat«y calibacy for priests ot tlle Bomad Catholic Church's Latin, or Western, rite. This couJd take tbe form of a stem letter to tbe Dutch bishops aimed at cuttinc off debate on cellbar...y there once and for all. Valley Notes U.S. History • --Open up &he celibacy i.smle for debate '-I illl bishops. perhaps in an extraordinary synod c;alled before the one scheduled for 1'71. 'Ibis choice gives an idea of how · deeply the Pope is In· volved in an issue that he bas called his " :rown of thorns." The entire month of February baa been designated •• American History Month'' by Mayor Edward Just <X foun- tain valley. "American Hist.ory Month" Is spomored by the Daughters of the American ReYolution \0 commemorate· the birthdays of p r e s I d e n t s George Washington and Abraham Lin- coin. "rt ls through the study o/. American lllstory that we can best honor our debt So th& wiscbn, faith and aacrifices of those who came before us, .. states the proclamation signed by J ust. All citizens are urged to celebrate the month with ap- propriate ceremonies. If be moves to end all debate be may be accused of acting unilaterally at ii time when the trend in the Church is toward collegiality, or shar· ing of power between Pope and bishops. He could also be listing schism. SIDEWALK special! U be .allows open debite on celibaey be would display what liberals would call an 5-plece .. act of humility'' and what Sal-..1 S • conservatives would 1 a b e I au et'Vlng Set retreat from bis own teachings Sauce Ide, salad eerving fotk and of the past. spoon In ISeamlrc Original Rogers The fact tba\ Dutch bishops, Sitv.tf._ Jllired With~· flut8d not ordinary priests and clear crystal aauce bowl Ind 10- laymeo. spoke in f~vor ol Alad bowt. ·Dry Land Ski Class Scheduled _.A dry land ski class will be sponsored by the Westminstel' Recreation and Parks Depart- ~ at Sigler Park Jan. 29, Feb. 5 and Feb. lJ. · Each meeting begins at 7:30 • p.m. and continues through 9:30 p.m. The last lesson will consist of a trip to a snow area for practice lessons in skiing. Registration rees of '5 are now being taken bx the Recreation and P a r k s Departmeot, 8200 Westminster Ave .. between 8 a.m. L 5 p.m. · weekdays. So nice to 0 t h e r classes currently own being of'ered by the depart ment for adults are Tahitian ·om,, and Hula dances and a Unique J.!X__ Bou~que class which Includes -.-THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY making and remO<!eling of ac· cessories such as purses, hats, · ASI AIOVT OUR gloves and shoes. • CONYIHIBfT CHDIT Pt.\NS for children offered Olis year is a course in the Scottish ~ HARBOR SHOPP,ING CENTER country dance. 4> 23M H_..r IM.. Com 1¥M Additional lnf orm6t.ion about ~ 545-t41S V these and other programs b ... available by phonJt_lg 89M511 . HOURS: ...... n-s.. M. 11 '"' ~T...., w..i., s.t. 11 'tit' ,.111. I -~--;.,..___.llieeups Seare Him ·He Had Puzzling Ailment 8 Years GLENDAJ,-E (AP) -Every time be hiccups, aaya Jack O'Leary, "it acarea me.'' No wonder: He biccupped for eight stralibt years, the longest spell on reccrd. to Disneyland. I never left tbe that such would take my mbl home bt the entire eight )'tall off the hiccups. A o o t b e r ~ to go &o a doctcr 'Or wakd me to d r i o k belpital. And mm after tbe cblorWorm. Yeah, that would hiccups s&opped I didn't llt.e to have done U." . go outside. 1be attact bad left O'Leary sWJ gets hiccups r•~"'l .. rrl*tJ. ... -.u ,,1.~ r .. f'fflt• .. -t \. «• "':-1 ... . Hnor c.....r lu;ipl9;!'*'t to the DAILY PtLOT, F ....... U... ·30, !~· 5 aecand, daJ4n IDd clll;J-..t " O'Leary says. But overall be "rm taankful !or ft ..• so Even today, wbene•er he feels P'ltef\al for his normal thankful," be ~· "It ia 5o hiccups, "it scares me," lite. IOICI to be altvt.' A New and exciting Memorr. Lane It baa .. 13% )'em'I since O'Lee17'1 hiccups abruptly stopped aft.er he bad wasted from 140 to 52 pounds aod beard ~ tell him he was buce dart circles around my ~y. eyes and people would poiot at "Last month I bad them • me and say, "Loot at that several nights in a rew gol:o, to die. The hiecllps started on June H, ~. when O'Leary was workinc in a grocery store in Hollywood. 'lbroucb the nen eight years, and an estimated ltO million hiccups, O'Leary saw 450 doctors _fuim around the world ud received lto,000 let- drunk.'' maybe an hour or two," be Yet <nary says be bad said. never bad a drink in his life. "When I bear him hiccup Neitter does be smoke or uae now, I want to run.'' saiG ~-. O'LearJ's mother, Margaret. He recails the remedies peo-with Whom be lives in I pie sent with humor. , mode 1 t apartment here. "One. suggested to my "Wben he bad them eo bid it mother that she push me out got so I thought I bad them. the second-story window and "You get eo nervous you not tell me there was a fire want to scream •.. to run ... net below," be says. you don't know wbre lo go but "Another thOugbt I should feel like YoU will explOde from shoot myself in tbe b1e toe. that COIJti?ued aouod, every ters, 80,0IO of them offtrlng,.~--~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiil cures. None helped. • O'Leary. DOW 44 years old and 125 pounds, an atteodaot at a cemetery, recalls wilh a laugh bow they stopped. "1be doctors bad told me that when I stopped hJc. cupping I would be dead," be said. "That would be the eod. So, the nisht they stopped, I just sat there for an hour ... didn't say a word. My mother was sitting across the room. She thought I had died in the chair. Finally, I spoke." . The hiccups blocked plans to pay his way lo a seminary and a priestbood. But he is not em- bittered. He is ". . • tbankf ul •.. to be able to eai. For eight years I could not. I was Ced in· traveoously . .. 'lbankful to be able to go on dates, take my girl friend S. Laguna's Firemen Busy in '69 The South Laguna Fire Department, which in 1989 graduakd from a completely volunteer status to a part-paid department. responded to 93 alarms during the year, Chief Art Pollard reports. This is an increase of 16 alarms ever 1968. During last winter's flood,s he says, many man-hours wue expended on rescues and protection of property. The 93 alarms included 23 fires, 24 rescues, 9 public assists, 13 false alanns and 24 mJscellaneous runs. During the year, the depart- ment conducted 36 training meetings and 13 business meetings. All members of the department completed fl'<.lm 15 to 39 hours of first a.id trahltng, with six membtrs becomin; qualilied first aid In- structors. YOUNGLA,N.D. SATURDAY ONLY SPECIALS Gl~LS $100 ST:~.T2~. ~~~~. BOYS $1 A ~~ SHIRTS 1t11 Plaids -Solien .. Val. to 3.50 . . . . . . . . . --., -- ~~!~!SJ.SO . . . . . . . . . $177 --- GIRLS: 88 ~~:!~.00 ......... c ~ ---.__ ::~~~SO ......... $1~, ~~~~~~5.00 ..... ' . . . $19' BOYS . $199 P~,~~~s! . · ... :'~· .. HARBOR SHOPPING ~CENTER . COSTA MESA 545-1440 Many Items Reduced so•/. for Our lntro~ .. rf ... ,.v ~..re -All WOOL SWIARRS . 11018 ALL sms ALL COLORS REG. TO $12.00 ALL SIL:K 95¢ REG. TO $6.00 TIES ONE DAY ONLY! SAT. ONLY . JAN. 31st AllORTID KNIT SHIRTS s388 SHOES Nunn ~h •••••• $1 5. -Jarman • ~. • • • • $10. IH.'TO Hf.fl LAST DAY OF ANNUAL ·CLEARANCE Personnel of the 30-year-olri fire de p a rt men t was I augmented with four paid positions which now places two men on duty at all times , In addition to 17 p~d-<:all fuemen . t1mm1 .............. ~ .... IJlllillmlliJ1"'1~'------------------------------..-...-----~------.._. • • &-Harbor Center s..,ae~nt to the DAILY. PILOT, F•iday, Jan. 30, 1970 . -' .. .- . tAFl\YETTH . .. . ..ELECTRONIC SUPERMARKET .. SPECIALS.!- & SIDEWALK SALE SPECIAL!· ONE DAY ONLY! STEREO HEADPHONES (REG. $9.95) ONL y . $595 Special Prices on Deluxe Head· phones for Tilis Sate Only. , •12tS IUGA Model DR-t2C .. (R ... 19.tS) ............... " .. . '24'5 ELIGA DELUXI Model Dlt-111( .... (R ... U.tS VISIT OUR STORE FOR FREE CATALOG HUNDREDS OF ELECTRONIC BARGAINS LAFAYETTE J-1: /\. 0 I (I I ( 1 H 0"'' l . • 540-4740 Drawinf llp New La.v - F'TC Trying to Shed Liglit 011: BUibs WASHINGTON (AP) - Anyone who thinks all 1()().watt light bulbs give off the same amount of light is completely in the dark.. "The consumer thinks that when he buys a 1()().watt bulb it gives off the same amount of light as any other 1()().watt · bulb, 11 said ~ederal Trade Commlsslon attorney Ray- mond L. Rhine. But, Rhine said, that is not the case. So be and his colleagues at the FTC are putting final touches on a regulatlon to re- q u l r e manufacturers to ~ . specify bow long their bulbs will last and bow much light they put out. The basis of the proposed revisions are lumens -unlts for measuring the amount of light produced by a gl~ing object. A standard 100.watt light bulb, for ex.ample, puts out about 1,600 lumens. A. slan· dard 75-watt tiulb produces about 1,300 lumens. The lumen output among the majoc dandard light bulbs ls fairly corastant, o f f e r l n g purchasers some Idea of bow much light they could expect / !rom · a light bulb. of certain wattage. But with the advent of tbree- way, and long-life bulbs, tbe problem has become more complicated. 1be reason is that lumens and bulb We are like opposite ends of a see-saw. Decreasing the light output of a bulb gives Jt a longer life expectancy. Thus the 1()().watt long-Uf e bulbs last about 2,500 hours compared with the 7~hour life of a standard bulb. But they pu' out 1,400 lumens, or 2,000 lumens less than the standard bulb. IN HARBOR CENTER 8 COSTA· MESA Sew Finey Stitches jt.$1 POP In one of me many Fashion Discs• and you'n be eml;l(oidenng, appli· QUeing. darntng and zig-zagging, Sew Srnooltl Buttonholes-SQuare-end button-. holes of any length by just turning a diatl · Sewll IOl'tsOf flbrlcl-furryorfine, canvas or chiffon, And the bobbin ctope In right in lront without any fumbling. SINGER CLEAN TEAM. 2Vacuums for 588. , :and your choice of ••• Vibrator brtJsh For heavy-duty Attacks dirt taos dirt free. cleaning Has 6" gnt and luzzy TWln ,et tans all·purpase noule, bnt. Five clean· Whisk II ~y. S·pece accessol'y kit. ing attachments The SINGER 1 to 36.Credit Plart js designed tofitYQYrbudget. •Trldemttll ot THE SINGER COMPAHY fluff Crepe Solids. Lightweight fabric in a variety of colors IOI blouses and dreGSeS, ~ Dacron. PQl)'eSler. 45• wide, NOW SJ19 d REG, $t49yd, 'j • Ruff Crepe Prints. Prints to coordinate with Fluff Crepe Solids. 100% Dacron polyester. 45~ wide Originatty $1.98yd. NOW$1.44)'d. Monte Clrto Crepe Prints. · Easy~re prints. 100" Dacron polyester. 45" wide Originally $3.98 yd. NOW '3.22 yd. SINGER ...,;.,,,,/lt-••••1u11"-.·• Fot lddteu ol llOrl nNl'lll )IOIJ .. ~ p.iges ol llhollt book IMldlr SINGER COMPNff A n d standard thr~way light bulbs of the 50-100-150- watt variety, when burning at the 100.watt position, give oft only abOut 1,500 lumens. The long-life bulbs can be a g<?Cfsend, however, for those awkward sta!rway receptacles which can be reached only after mounting a shaky lad- der ~ The major bulb manufac- turers -General Electric. Westinghouse and SylvanJa -have been rating their bulbs by lumens and life expectancy for years and provide the in-' formation in h a n d b o o k s distributed to dealers. The manufacturers did not object when the FTC proposed last September to put the in- . information on the light bulb wrappers, but all three ob- jected to inscribing the same informaton on the liht bulb itself. ' FTC staffers are n o w reviewing the government pro- posals and industry objections and submitting the concluslons for approval of the fi ve com· missionei:s. Explosion Can Produce Natural 'C.as LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) - Scientists predict that 15 years . from now natural gas for cook· ing and for heating homes could well come froQl a cavity deep in the earth by the heat and pressure of a nuclear ex- plosion. Could such gas be danger- ously radioactive? W o u l d burning lt ln the kitchen stove release radiation that could hasten your death? Dr. D. G. Jacobs of the Oak Ridge National Laboratory told the American Nuclear Society T b u r s d a y such fears are groundless. He de.>crlbed a study of Pro- ject Gasbuggy, an under- ground nuclear explosion in New Mexico in 1967 that formed a gas-Cilled cavity thousands of feet b e I o w ground. The gas was slightly radio- active after the explosion, Jacobs said, but he concluded that only minute amounts of this radiation would reach in· dustrial and bouseheld con- sumers. 'The arr.ounts, he said, would be far below the radia- tion safety level for humans. No gas from Gasbuggy was ever introduced into natural gas pipelines. But Jacobs stud- ied what would have happened to the gas if It bad gone from the weU to transcontinental lines and finally to homes and industries. He sald if all the natural gal wells in th1s country had been produced through nu- clear stimulation, the average consumer would still receive only a tiny dose of radiation. WASHINGTON (AP) -The spiny catfish, a gJoomy-looldng creaktre with p r l m a r 11 y southern aJ>Pell, is shedding his regional image and moving into the lJlg-time food market. The Agriculture Department say's it means growth an~ more money for the provincial but thriving industry of the catfish famr-and the grow- ing prominence of fresh-water NEW YORK (AP) - Emergency instnicUons · on how to deliver a baby in school have been sent ~ all city · Public school principals by the Department of Health. ~ lnsttuctions said each schoOt should have "an ap- propriate room with a high table or bench~' and two persons trained ln delivery procedures to help \.DltU a doc- tor reaches the school. says is to call an ambulance through tbe police lftd then to nolily the girl's parents or guardian. "The Implications of this do- it-yourself manual for the-- amateur, occasional school mJdwife are absolutely ter. rifylng -for the pregnant teen-agers in school and for t h e unprepared, . untrained school personnel who are to be assigned to handle the ap- parently Inevitable emergency deliveries In the schools," said Abraham H. Lass, principal of Abraham IJosoln High School in Brooklyn. fish in American dlets. But, it says, many northem consumers need to be con- vinced the catfish 1s as tasty aa the finest bass, trout or The new procedures, made public Wednesday, apparenUy were a response to the Board of Education's action lasl fall to encourage pregnant students to remain in school ii~~~~~~~~iiii~~~;;~;;~ instead of dismJssing them. ocean perch. Alexander Gordeuk, a n animal scientist for Merck le Co .• Rahway, N.J., predicted consumer demand and prices for all kinds of meat will con- tinue to rise and sweep catfish into prominence as a top food within 20 years. By then, the per capita con- sumpdoo oi fresh-water fish will jump to about .even pounds a year, or about the volume oi turkey e a c b Amer1caD now eats on the average. S8"let 1'1a11e11ver• J Low-flying jet fighters make a pass as tank unit moves forward during recent attack training exercise somewhere In the Soviet Union. Tass did not disclose the location. There were 2,437 reported pregnancies last year among wunarried girls iQ 7th through 12th grades In dty sch6ols. Dr. Olive E. Pitkin, director of the Health Department's bureau of school health, said be knew of only two cues In the last 15 years in which a girt gave birth in school. Pitkin said the procedures we.re bued OD police depatt- ment In structions to patrolmtn on what to do to aid a chlldbirth. · They Include le.ssons on how to deliver the child and what to do in cue oi emergency. The Hflrst order 0 f Although Amerlcana are e~ pected to remain primarily~~~~~~_.::..~~~--....-.:~---.;__~~~~~~~~~~:--------~~-:--~~~ buslness." the department beef and pork eaten, there ~~ C~f ~'~ David Plans meat demand, AgrlculUft of. • ficials say. . . U And that 1s why government To Sign p officials are so enthusiastic about the catfi.sb fannklg In· dustry. 1bey have even 1swed For .. Navy the department's first fulkiz. • ed informational bulletin on WASHINGTON (UPI) how to operate a farm, President Nixon's son-in-law, "It's a fabuloua industry," -David Eisenhower, ts expecte4 Olan W. Dillon Jr., Soil to sign up Ior a Navy officer's ConservaUon Service regional training course after bis biologist at Ft. Worth, Tex., graduation Crom Amhersi In said in an interview. "At present catfish are mostly in a June. regional market, but we think The 21-year-old grandson of gradually 1hey will extend P r e s i d e n t Dwtgbt D. beyood the tradfUooal zone." Eisenhower said last week be The department says a would make 1 formal an- carefully managed c 8 t f i s b nouncement on the service be farm can often make much has chosen; but bis friends 'more per acre profit than say bis decision to attend wheat, cotton or corn. A well-Navy officer candidate school, managed farm can produce a three-year commitment, about 1,200 l>ounds a year per already bas been made. acre, ft says. The White House declined to Dillon recommends t h a t conflnn David already hu aspiring farmers start with passed Naval OCS physical 6· five to 10 acres of shallow amlnation. J>Onds. The idea ls to grow In going Into the NaYJ, them faster and more ef-David would be following Nix- flclently than nature, using on'• footsteps. Nixon was a speclaJ commercial feed. Navy lieutenant In World War The evidence is that many U, Both David's grandfather enterprising persons are going 8ftd bis father, a former Army into the business, the depart-colonel, John Eisenhower, now ment says. U.S. amgassador to Belgium, The Idea of cat!ish farming recommended that David take strated in Arkansa4, but now the shorter hitch ln the Navy. David's lottery number ls 30 it has expanded to other Deep which made It almost certain South states and ls making in-that he would be drafted roads ln Oklahoma, Ten-unless he enlisted. nessee, the Carolinas and -=========;II Florida. •· Penny Pincher Ads Turn Sense Into Do~n LADIES Sportswear $199 DRESSES $688 Sidewalk " Sale COATS $1918 LADIES Sporliwea r · $399 REG. $1.59 About 40,000 acres of total ponds In 11 stata 8COJUDt for about 90 percent of the na- tiOn's calf lSh fanning, Dillon ~d. b_..._: ______ ..:......;.;;...;~~1-.------------~--------------------------.... ~ ··wow·· FANTAmc ~lE! ALL REGULAR MERCHANDISE COME EARLY VOILE BLOUSES •• , ••••• J. NOW 2 ,., SS MOW CAPRI'S .... '''· $3.99, $4. 99 IUSH JACKETS a RAINCOATS ~·~ NOW;~"999 ----DRESSES let. te UI. NOW $5. I UP ------BLOUSES !.91 to Sil. NOW '4J• 99 I $4. 99 - "AT HOMI WEAR'' NOW SOo/o Off ___ , PEA COATS NOW JOO/o ~ POL VESTER CAPRI'S .., ... 111. NOW $6.99 ---~ NYLON TOPS NOW $1'9'~ 1$3.'9 "-· SKIRT & VEST SETS • ... us • NOW $9 .. 99 ----------PANTYHOSE Metllu111 I T•ll Only NOW SOo/o OFP e IANIAMntCAll e MASTll CHA161 JJOO HAUOl II.YD. HAllOI CINTll ,._.., awu I t ~ I . -. ,, -.. . .. . -. .. . ---------··· ... • I-Harbor Cettter Supplement .. '"'the DAILY PILOT, ·Friclly, JMt. 30, 1970 ---;.---- AIUSE PireJeet . Big Reading Clinic Slated About 5'lt teachers are ti· pected Feb.· 14 at Fountain Valley High School to partici- pate 1n a daf ·&ong reading wortsbop. Open to all area instructors, from kindergarten through tbe uth grade, the cllnf c ls apon. IOfed by the Aaodation for the h:Qprovement of Readinc InstrudJon (ARISE) in coo- 0 junction with tbe Huntington Beach Union H i I b School District. Tbe morniag lelSion will in- clude addreaes by CoWer Mc- Dermon, aaststant superinten- dent or public instruction, State Department ol Edaea- tion, and Dr. Frank Cbrilt, dJrector ol the study stllll Center, Loyola Univenity. . Ltd. SIDE WALK SALE SPECIALS SATURDAY JAN. 31ST 9:30-6 P.M. REG. TO $9 s2! ONLY SPORT COATS RIGULAR TO ~75 TO-DAY OHL Y SUITS VALUES TO $135 TODAY ONLY . s59&s&9 DUSS SHIRTS LONG SLEEVES VALUES TO $9 $2!4i10 PERM.A PRESS PAllTS VALUES TO $12 s5u Small tecUon ~ wm feelure dilcuaiGa ol partlco- lar readiQg problems, tblelr comcdlD and new ~ lag methods. Tbe aftenaoon leSsioa will be devoted to penel dJlc:ul.. sJom ol &be medlcal. lepl and edacatlooal upedl ol ~ reading IDd learn- ing dfJabJl.Wes. . HAllOR SHOPPIN& CENIER 2300 HAllOR BOULEVARD COSTA MESA SATURDAY, JAN. 31st REMNANT SALE! Slated to appear as panel partidpants are Bruce au. net, St.1perlor Court J\.ldge; Dr. WUl1am Woolbright. read-Jnc d!apotUcian; Dr. Frank Boff1nan, psychiatrist; Dr. WUllam Friend, pedlltricbm, and Dr. Michael Sigband, ~ thalmologist. _ DURING OUll Teacbers intertsted la at- teodlng tht: worbbop ma, ap- ply by cootacting ARISE , care ol T .• Gregory, MG Balsa Ave., Huntington Beach 12147. ·SIDEWALK SALE! ' . REMNANTS 50% OFF Given Honor I , Whittler ~e. a t a d e n t Randy Mt,e from Newport ......_, ALL GOOD USEAILE .LEN&THS-1 to 5 Yar• Cottons. Wools. las, Synthetics Beach bas been selected for II listing in Who's Who Among H ..L Ce I St 0 f Students In American C>lleges IAIUIAMlRIClll • • a r .,,, • er ore I y and lJniversiUes. Seelye, soo of Mr. and Mrs.~~~~!!!!~!!!!~!!!!!~!!!!!!!~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~~ Boward Seelye, 115 Harbor!!!! Island Road, is erecuUve editor of the c o. l le g e w~ Quaker Campus Nearly Everyone Listens ro Landers 2300 HARBOR 5 WOOLWORTH I PAPEI NAPKINS 251 COUNT D ........... 37• & NICI M>OI THIS SAT. & IUll. ONLY w IRREGULAR A IATH .TOWELS VALUES TO $2.tl L wltllc11p•$127 K PllCI •OOD THIS SAT. a SUK. OffLY 5 WOOLWORTH lathroom Tiss1e A 11 ROLLS wltlt c ..... 88' L PIUCI GOOD THIS SAT. a SUM. ONLY E e COSTA MESA . . GOLD FISH VALUES TO 39c wi9' Co.po• 1 O'-. PIJCI $GOD THIS SAT. & SUN. ONLY WOOLWORTH FACIAL TISSUE 200 TWO Pl Y TISSUE ........... 5 ... s100 STYLE HAIR SPIAY 13 OL CAN .... c..,.. 2 fw 97' PllCI SOOI ms SAT •• SUN. ONLY '541'''f11·11"''"1"·1;1·E1111•1!11a1·111;H:1111;•119t1JJ;'14'*'il!·• f'rlday, JMUMY 30, )C)70 DAil V PILOT 2 J • DE A Complete Guitle • • • Where · to go • •• PIANIST ANDRE WATTS TD SOLD ~CHMIDT-ISSERSTEDT RELAXING LA Philharmonic At UCI Fi(th Concert of OC ·Season Carded for Feb. 7 The fifth concert in the Orange County Philharmonic Society's series or seven will be presented in. UCI's Craw~rd Hall, Feb. 7 at 8:30 p.m. It n1arks the Society's J6lh successful sc:ison of bringing fine music to Orange County with lwo ~ coocerts. r.1ar. 7 arld April 14. Ziinfn Mehta conducting, yet to be beaut Otis year. -' · ' On the podium Feb. 7 will be tJans Schmidl·lsserstedl, a favorite of musi· cians and music lovers throughout the world . Appearing as piano soloist. for the first Lime in Orange County, will be the sensational young pianist. Andre \YaUs. The program inc Juries Webern's Passacaglia for Orchestra, Opus I; 8r:ihms' Concerto No. 2 in 8 Flat lt1ajor for Piano and Orchestra . Opus 83, featur· ing the lrilcntcd Andre \Vatts as soloist; Haydn 's Symphony No. 102 in B Flat J\ita· jor. and Till EOlensp1egcl of Strauss. Tickels. at $4.00, are on sale at the Orange County Phllharmonlc office, 20l \V, Coast High\vay, Newport Beach, 92660. 646-6411. SLudcnt tickets are $1.75. He has also managed to sandwich in sensationally · successful appearances with a dozen major U. S. sy mphony orchestras; a European debut with the London Phllhil.rmonic ; a debut with the Berlin Philharn1onic on his 21 st birthday : a world tour with Zubin '-lehta and the Los Angeles Philhannonic for the U.S. State Department in the fall of 1967 thal \\'as a succession of unprecedented tri- W1Jph!, an'd a return to New York to celebrate the fifth anniversary of Ills now hiStoric debut in a reunion performance wilh Leonard Bern&ein and l h e Philhannonic. "The audience," wrote Harold Sc;bonber&--in U;le~nelt day'1. New .! Irville Chorale Lool{s for New Tenor Voices York Times, '"all but tore the house down ." Recently the young mu~ical meteor, Andre Walls, appeared iii a 90 minute special with Zubin ?i-1ehla and ll1e Los Angeles Philhannonic on KCET, Channel 28. Hans Schmidt-tsserstedt. born i n Berlin, has appeared as guest conductor al music centers all over the world. He is no stranger lo Orange County audiences having made his debut here as guest con- ductor of the Los Angeles Phllhannonlc during the Orange County Philhannonic's 1961-62 season. •le returned in the 1966-67 seMOnin the same capacity. Sine~ 1945 he ~ been the chief conductor o( the NOR Sympt?iy Orchestra of Hamburg, which he founded, and the · same orchestra which opened the Orange Coun- ty Philharmonic current season. To date he has conducted more than 30 eoncer\.S in Southern California and ha s been chief conductor of the Stockholm Philharmonic since 1955. RoJl11wood Dyan Canno11 • • Finallv Sheds • 'Grant' Image By VERNON SC01T UPI HollJ-.il c ... ~lflt HOLLYWOOD -They smirked when Mrs. Cary Grant spoke of her acting career. They laughed outright at the titles of her three motion pictures. One film was ~o deplorable It was nev~r released. The others were celluloid abominations. Even the ex-Mrs. Grant can't bring herself to utter the titles publicly. It was \\'ith muffled amusement that 1-lollywood greeted the news that Dyan Cannon {lhis same former Mrs. Cary Grant) \\'as to star in "Bob and Carol and Ted and Alice." The cast was headed by Robert CUip antl Natalie Wood. Supporting them were Dyan and ElliPtl Gould -both unknown factors. The movie is a hit. primarily because of Miss Cannon and Gould . •·1 was delighted by the response," Dyan said the other day. "The phone began ringing. Suddenly 1 was being of· fered lots of movie roles.'' Dyan has been mentioned among critics for a nominatk>n for best sup- porting actress. Odds art she will make IL But prior lo the movie Dyan was prin- cipall1 \dentified as being the fonner Mrs. Cary Graat. Grant has never won an OJtcar and it would be ironic Ir his ex· sJ)Ot.ISe collected an award in her first real opportunity as a Cilm acues.s. Dyan, an exciting brunette with large, luminous eye1 and a fetching smile. wa!> playing stock -"The 90 Day Mistress" -in Chicago when she was of~red a test for her role as Alice at Columbia. "I also,had an ,oUer from Universal to do a picture," she said. "But I decided to lake my chances vdth the screen test.·· ··1 don't think anyone took me seriously ·when t ~aid I wanted to be an actress - before and after I married Cary. No1v 1naybe !'v'e changed a few minds." Dyan was being modest. Produers, directors and agents were astonished at the professionalism of Dyan's ~fonnance. It was as if Mia Farrow disclosed that her stage name i.s Raquel \Yelch. Dyan need not return to the hustings for appearances In road company pro· ductions in the foreseeable future. The new believers already have signed Dyan to a pair of movies, "Doctor's Wives" and "The Tr ave Ii ng Ex- ecutioners." "'It was just a matter or getting a chance to prove what I could do," Dyan sald. "I 1vish that every actress in this town had the same opportunity." The Irvine Master Chorale. which Is rehearsing for it.s performance of Bach's "Saint !11atthew Passion" to be presented in Mek>dyland, Anaheim, on March 27, is in need of some tenor voices for the pro- duction. Intermission What to do • •• Tliis is Alice Dyan Can11on, 1vho plays the role of AJice in the Colum bia Pictures "Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice" is relaxin~ in a Las Vegas scene from the film, before a night on the town. The role may Well earn Dyan an Oscar nomination as best supporting actress. Laguna Art Galle1~y Shows Robert Natl{i11 Paintings A full scale retrospective exhibition of the v.•orks of Robert Natkln, a major con- temporary American painter. will Jc held at the Laguna Beach Art Gallery, Sun- day, Feb. I through Satur9ay, Feb. 28. This will be the onlY Southern California showing of the New York artist's pain- tings and his first in this area in JO years. Natkin wi ll attend the opening on Satur· day evening, Jan. 31. . The Na~kln collection, which was set up by and -comes here from tht San Fran . cisco fl.fuseuht of Art. includes 40 large' oil paintings and 12 watercolors dating from 1957 to the present Jl.1any of the pain-- tings in the show are on loan from private sources. Natkin loves tradition and has been In· fluenced by both Bonnard and Matisse. He also is in!luenced by architecture and textiles and many of his compositions are highly ge<imetric. Natkin expresses emo- tional eJCperience by concentrating It \\'llhin a restricted space in ordet to In· 1 lensify it. The artist prefers large surfaces over which the imagination can range freely and many of trls canvases are huge. Jn February ol Hl63, Leonard Bernstein introduced Andre \\'alts lo televiewers from coast lo co11sl as soloist for a Ne\V Vork Philhannonic Young People's Con1..-ert, a pcrforrnancc so Spectacular that on the strength or it. the 16-year..old \\!alts was engaged just 20 days later as last-miJ1ute substitute for the ailing Glenn Gould al a regular Phi I harm on i c subscripUon concert and received a lively ovation. Auditions are being held at Corona de\ !ltar High School each Monday at 8:30 p.n1., for tenors only, in room 412, the Choral1fs regular rehearsal room. Up to ten tenors are needed to bring the section even \vith lhe sopra00$, all<n and basses. UCI Rep in 4th Year The exhibition covers 13 years ti work beginning in a free style similar to lyrical abstract impressiooism. but developing n1ore formal discipline as thl!: colors gro\¥ higher and bigber in key. In the Intervening years, Andre has been busy growing up personally and musicaliy, graduating from the Lincoln Preparatory School In Philadelphia and study ing at the Peabody Conservatory o[ Jl.lusic In Baltinwre. The ChoraJe rehearses once a week on Monday evenings from 7:30 to 10 p.m. in the high school, 2101 Ea.stbluff Drive, Newport Beach. For further infonnaticn phone Mrs. Jan Unvert, 642·2695. • • Weekend Highlights ·CHILDREN'S THEATER -The Fountain .Valley Thea· ter group is presenting "AJaddin and His Wonderrul Lamp'" tn the Community Ce.nter, 10200 Slater, Fountain Valley, to- night at 7:30 and tomorrow at 10 a.m. and p.1n. On Jan. 31 the Unlve.rsity Park Elementary School PTA is presenting, for pre--school and elementary children, "The Dreadful Dwarf of ~lue fltounlain ." Performances are at 1 and 3 p.m. in Univer· verslty Park school, 4502 Sandberg, Newport Beach. Series llckels only. • DANCE CONCERT ·~ A group or dance educators Is presenting "Dancers In Concert'' in the Little Theater at Calif. Slale College. Fullerton. 800 Stale College Blvd .. Fullerton, at 8 ;30 p.m. tonight and tomorrow night. Jazz, Contemporary and Ethnic dances. YOUTH CONCERTS -Elemenlary school childnm from the lluntington Beach. Fountain Valley Ocean View and \Yest- minister districts n1ay attend a free youth concert, made possi- ble by the Orange County Phllhar1nonic Society, at l·luntinglOI\ Beach High School auditorium on Feb. 6 at 9:45 and 10:45 a .m. Tickcl.5 in advance through the schools only. / See Gulde to Fun, Pag• 22 1' I By TO:.f TITUS Of !ht OtllT PllJI SttO The biggest semester in higher educa· lion is once again under way for a group of hand picked drama students at UC lrvine. The Irvine Repertory Theater has started orr on llS fourth season . Between the first of January and the first of June, members of the !RT live, eat, breathe and probably sleep \healer in one of the most inl~nslve training pro-- J!rams orrercd by a university. Tim year should hardly be any different. Organi~ by drama proressor Bob Cohen in IH7. the IRT has come lo be the elite corps of collegiate theater, offering, in addition to ·invaluable. training, performances several cuts above the normal underjlraduale level.' Past hJgtdights include such difficull shows a~ "Six Characters in.Search of an Author ."' "The Good \Yoman of Setzuan" and "Waiting for Godot," all done to a near· professional turn. FOR THE PAST two seasons Cohen hes been backstopped by, Herbert Macttl1, a well-known Broadway director who his dlrec:tcd a number ot Tenn~ Wiiiiams works. f!Jt1chiz ~tagtd "Dark or the Moon" nnd "The Tickll!h Act'obat " In J>8!l years, and ill 'f!urrently workln11: on lhe repertory group's 1970 opener, "'The ftflsanthrore ." Joining the 1tarf this season Is Curt Conway, a veteran New Y k actor and one of the top ranking acting coaches in the country. Conway is conducting a twice-weekly group session Jn acting with the aim of ,training a repertory ensemble. ''We're working more toward an atmos-- pht:re of Informality this year," says Ci> hen, recallnlg the comparatively rigid structure of the 1967 ,repertory group. "We have several students who have been in repl!:rf,ory in the JW1st -including Betty Tesman, who's in her fourth year with us." Other veterans, entering their third season, are Mlchael Van Landingham and Anne Cohen -who was Anne Pearson last year before marrying her director. Oakley Hall. Pamela Brown and Larry Lott also are returnees. • THE IRT SEASON goes back to three shows this year after a hectic 1969 schedule which saw five productions being prescnlcd. The upcoming agenda includes Jl.follere's "Misanthrope" (open- ing Feb. 11), two weeks of one-act plays and L.anford Wilson 's "The Rimers of Eldriich." "Wllh lh6 exception or 'Misanthrope,• we're concenlrating on American works thla year/' Cohen polnls out. All six or the one·al:t plays (three presented each \veck l ore by American play\1·righl8 and ru n the gamut or contemporary subjects. 'Rhner1' won tlw: Elmer Rke award in 1!167 as the best off BrOAdway production 11nd rocusea on the deceptJve beauty of tile sr.1all town." • Cohen and his 19-mernber company have other things In store for the 1970 season, including a workshop production or "The Serpent" planned for early ti1arch. Some or the one--acts wlll be stu- dent directed. a practice adopted in 1967 but since shelved. The fruits of the lrvine group's labors Bringing the Natkin exhibit to the Laguna Beach Art Gallery is iodicalive of a. major policy change by the Gallery's B o a r d of Directors designed to attract museu m quality exhibits. Hours of the exhibit are daily from noon to $ p.m. with docent tours Sunday al 3 p.m., or by special arrangement for a group. \\.'iU be on display ii) February, April and \"E"'"'"'"""'ED May for twi>week e'ngagements. Judging 'T ~'u by past efforts. lhey should be well worlh INSIDE FEATURES the trip to lhe UCI ca1npus. * * * Friday, January 30, 1171 The JI.lotion Picture Association BACKSTAGE -ll may have been a lot of America has made so mt of v.wk for only two pertonnanccs, buL changes in UM! ti1ovie Rating Code the turnout and the response for the to better inform parents about Costa fl.ftsa Civic Playhouse's teen pro-sultabJlity of films for viewing by ducUon "Nothing But the TPuth" last children. See Page 2S. weekend went a long way toward com· pensaUng for the brevity of the nin. GuJde &o Fian Page rt Pali Tambelllnl's teen·age thespians Travel Page U played to standing room only tllroogs Fri· In the Galltritt Pap n day and Saturday evenings and the. vin· ChlMse Opera Page tt tage comedy proved highly palatable. Oul 'N" Aboul Pages ,U.U Fine performances by D•vld Pigman In the central role. along with Kevin New 1\lovle lliil\Jnp Page U Conroy, Bonnie Singletary and Anita Uve Thuter Page U Knapp as one of the original dumb Gulde I• Movies Pqe ti blondes enUvened the entertaining mix· Ethel Walen on TV Pa1e It ture, Crossword PllUle Pagt 11 The t~n dh·\slon anri the younger (I· Comk.'f Page ll 1~) junior rilvlslon eo1nblne to make the Ci I Pl ho I Queenie r.-%1 v c ay use a tru y eotnplete com· .~ munity theater wllh something for all TY View• Pace Zl age.$. It's 1 prpgram other playhOUM!s. TelevlalDn Loe Pqe 17 would do well l<f' emulate. ·~ l'.:ir-.1' i•mr--""!la•••lJ' • I t JI DAil Y PllOT rridl1. J.anuary JO, 197() Gulde to Fut• Child Actors In 'Aladdin' JAN· 10 . i 1 CtuLDREN'S TRi!l~TtlR -'·Aladdln and His \\'onder[ul Lamp" is bc!:ing staged for children in the Fountain Valley Community Center Bld~ .• 10200 Slater St., }''oufttai.n Valley by the Fountain Valley Cornmunity Theater group. Per. formances are scheduled for Jan. JO al 7:30 p.m.; Jan. 31 at 10 a.m. and 2 p.1n. All tickets SO cents . 11t the door. JAN. 30-21 CHOREOGRAPJfERS CONCERT "Dancers In Concert" is being presented in U1e Little Theater at Cal State Fullerton, 300 State College Blvd., Fullerton, at 8:30 p.m., Jan. 30, 31, by a grou_p of dance educators bringing outstand~ ing dance to Orange County. The program wtU include Co... temporary, Jm and Ethnic <¥.nces wllh each professional individual -or group presenting hls own works. Don BondJ, Robin Bryant, Elsie Dunn, St.even Peck, Larry Richard~ son, Ellen Segal , James A. Smith and Cyndia Thrall will all contribute to lhe two evenings of dance. Tickets, $2, may bt purchased at the door . JAN. 38 • 3l SWllU 1''ESTJVAL -Marina High School in Huntington Beach at 15871 Springdale, is having a synchronized swim featival In the Marina swimming pool al 7 p.m. this Fri. and on Sat. at 2 p.m. Tickets, 25 cents for those 18 and under ; 50 cent& for adults, may be purchased at the door. JAN. 30 • FEB. 11 Trav el Young Travelers in Know • ,,.,....--By STAN DELAPLANE ' POS!TANO, Italy -''We've been . living In Positano -a delightful place -since September. Not too many tourists and beach • weather all throu'h October." (A reporter friend checks in with me.) 'The )own is about 3,000 bul during July and Auguat It swella to 25,000, . "Penslones nib $5 to $10 -with meals -an'd are pretty atractive. The town is on the side of a step mountain, and much of it you can only do on foot using, stone steps. Two or three beaches. Wine is 30 cents a 'bottle. There are several swinging discotheques and restaurants though many are only open in the summer. In the Galleries Huntington Offers Everitt Paintings LAGUNA ART GALLERY -'J07 Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach. Admission $1. Members and one guest free. Hours: 1 to 5 p.m. daily; docent tours Sundays at 3 p.m. CurrenUy on exhibit, a retrospective showing or oil and watercolors from 1957 to present, by New York artist Robert Natkin. Opm- ing Feb. 1 to run through Feb. 26. * "I think th• tuY wht wrt!I ''Ji:u1tp~. 9n '5 a day" had better revise 1))1 ftlUftf. We tpll bikes for ten days in northern P'rt!lot. 'l'h•P shtpPod them lo Marseilles and biked to Q•niYJ, We l'ltild it cost about $20 a day for two of u•- "You could do it for lei1. Blit we smoke and drink though we stayed in $2.50 hotels. "We are now in a first-class pad in Positano, $104 a month with heat included. It's costing us about $400 a rneinth for everything. Incidentally, for biklng over here get a bike with Alpine gears. You can get over almost any hill with these geared down. And there are plenty ol bills ." * ''Wa want to go a round Europe as ch•aply •• possible. What do you think of bicycles?" This friend of mine loves them. But I couldn't make it. True, you never forget bow to ride a bike. What you forget is that most of the world is up. hill. I rented a bike in a little town in Normandy and set of.f for Deauville, 10 kilometers away. I made one kilometer. Came back. Turned in the bike. Took a bu& to Deauvilla and gave Hertz Rent- a--car my action. * You might make it on scooters. You see little Vespas all over E uropean roads. But I saw a lot of riders P.arked under trees in the dripping rain. And baby, 1t looked cold outside! ll you do this, buy some Navy coverall wet weather gear. * ''What •bout staying in Youth Ho1tel1?" A•""TERNOON CONCERn -Fine Arts Bldg., Room 178, Univ. of Call!. Irvine. Fret concerts each Fri. at I p.m. Jan. 30, Franz Schubert. Die Schone Mullerin by vocal studen ts class: Feb. 6, Music for Flutes, Kathy Monohan, Marsha Gemmill, Cindy Gadarian and Laurie Whitcomb : Feb. 13, Schubert Again, Die Winterrei.se by students of vocal class. JAN. JI Shepherds' Dance NEWPORT IIARBOR ART MUSEUM -400 Main St., llaJ- boa. Hours: J to $ p.m. Wed. through Sun.; 6 to 9 p.m. Mon. Closed Tues. On elhiblt, Jan. 28 through Mar. 1, retrospec- tive show of paintings and sculpture by Uya Bolot.o'N1ky. CHALU8 GALLERY -1390 So. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Hours : 11 a.m. -5 p.m. daily. Currently on edllblt through Jan., palnUngs and drawings of Virginia Dan and watercolors by Frank Hamilton. The bike reporter wrote me: "We tried the :youth hostels but they're full of teen.age kids play- ing games of throwing cherry pits at each other. Also they throw you out in the morning -even though you want to stay a few nights_ You have to wander around all day until they open for the eve- ning. I found fair hotels al $2.50 to $3.50." TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recrea tion and Parks Department will bold a Teen Club Dance in the com- munity Center, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for Westminster tee n s) each Sat. from a p.m. to midnight. Admission, $1. for members, $1.50 for non-members. The "illusions" group will play for dancing Jan. 31. Don Green executes a jump over the Shepherd's crook during a dance by the Betyark dance group which wilJ perform during the Choreographers Con- cert tonight and to1norrow night in Fullerton. See Guide to Fun. COSTA MFSA LIBRARY -5&6 Center St., Costa Mesa. On elhiblt during regular library hours thrOUjh Jan. oil paintings by Marian and Burrell Ries. * For young people trying lo find the bargain spots, look for the outdoor cafe where other young people have their morning cokes and coffee. This is the listening end of the grapev~e. lt's usuaUy near American Express -everybody waiti~g for money from home. JAN. 31 • CHILDREN'S ENTERTAINME1''T -The University Park Elementary School PT A is sponsoring monthly entertain- ment to appeal to pre-school and elementary children begin- ning Jan. 31. "The Dreadful Dwarf of Blue Mountain" presented at 1 and 3 p.m. by the Young People's Theatre Guild of Santa Ana on Sat. Jan. 31, will be the first or a six· program seriea. Olher performances will be presented by the Laguna Civic Ballet Co., South Coast Repertory Thea· ter, UCI Symphony, and the 13lh Our. All but the symph~ ny will be held in the multlpurpo!e room of University Park School, 1502 Sandberg, Newport Beach. Tickets are $5 for the series. No individual performance tickets will be sold. Phone 83:J.1497 or 833-0083 for tickets. Chinese Opera Debuts At Cal State Fullerton MlmJAL SAVINGS AND LOAN -2ll61 E. Coast HiJlh- way, Corona del Mar. On exhibit during regular business hours through Jan. pallet knife painUng1 by Gloria Bradeson. !\.IF.SA ART LEAGUE -513 Center St., Costa Me!a. Hours: Sat. and Sun. I lo 5 p.n'l. Continuous exhibit of art work in various media by Art League members. No admission charge. ~lUN11NGTON BEACH UBRARY -525 Main St., Hunt- ington Beach. On txhlblt during regular library hours and Sundays 1-5 p.m. through Jan., oil paintings by Bertha Everitt. * l found these kids know EVERYTil!NG about cheap hotels and restaurants l never heard of. They know all the cheep transportation gimmicks. How to use student cards. How and where-to hitchhike. Some or this is in a boo~ written by students for Pan American -"Wher~ The Fun Is." Buy it at PanAm offices. JAJ°'. 31 • FEB. I AUTO RACING -The Orange County International Race- way. off the Santa Ana Freeway near Laguna Canyon Road, is holding formula and enduro kart racu this Sat. and Sun. from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. with lime trials starting at 8 a.m. each day. Tickets, $2 for adults includeii both days of racing. Children under 12 are admitted free with adults. JAN. 31 • FEB. U WHALE WATCIDNG -The gentle art of whale watching off the Orange County Coast has been resumed with the cruiser ''Island Holiday" going on trips Sal. and Sun. from the Balboa Pavilion. 400 Main St.. Balboa, through the month of Feb. The boat will leave al 9 a.m. and I p.m. Ad- ults $3 and children under 12 years, $2. Phone 673-5245. FEB. 6 YOUTH CONCERT -A youth concert sponsored by the Or- ange Counly Phllharmonic Society will be presented in Hun- tington Beach High School Aud!l.oriu1n with Henri Tamian- ka conducting the Calif. Chamber Symphony on Feb. 6 at 9:45 and 10:45 a.m. for the elementary school children of Huntinglon Beach. Fountain Valley, Ocean View and \Vest- minster Schools. Tickets available In advance lhrough the schools only are fr ee. FEB. 6 GOLDEN \\'~T DANCE -Golden Wesl College, 157'44 Golden West St., Huntington Beach. is holding a "Howdy " dance Feb. 6. al 8 p.m. in the College Center. The Gibson- Shaw group is playing for the event which costs 75 cents per ticket, available at the door. FEB. & TRAVELOGUE -The Newport Harbor Kiwanis Club is presenting John Goddard 's "Congo Conquest" tra vel film al CX:C Auditorium. 2701 Fairview Roud. Costa f\1esa. F'eb. 6, at 8 p.m. Tickets. $2, available at the door. FEB.; 0C PWUIARAtONIC -The Orange County Philharmonic will present the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra under the baton of guest conductor Hans Schmidl-lsscrstedt. on Feb. 7 at 1:30 p.m. in Crawford Hall on UC! campus. Pianist Andre Watts will be soloist in the fifth concert of a seven con- cert series by the Society. Tickets. $4, may be obtained at the Society ofii~, 201 \V. Coast Highw ay, Newport Beach, or at the door if available. Phone 64~11. .... Chinese opera. a new form of entertainment in Orange County, will make its debut al 8 p.m .• Saturday, F'eb. 14, in the Little Theate r of California State C o I I e g e , Fullerton , performed by the So. Calif. Chinese Operr Socie- ty under the sponsorship of the Patrons of tilt Lib rary and CSCF the ate r and music departme:its. The perfonnonce will in- clude "Cheun Chili Pei" (The !lomance or Cheun and Chiu) and "~tei Lung Chen'' (The frolicsome Dragon and the Beautiful Phoenix). which will be narrated before the show begins. Slide projections ex- plaining the action will be shown as the producti on un- folds on stage. TickeL'\ for the event are $3.50. all seats rese rved, and may be purchased frotn the Little Theater be.ix office. Following the performance. a five-member pane l will elaborate on the music, cos-- tumes and sets. then answer questions from the audience. A reception for the troupe y,·111 cap the evening. Panelists v.•ll l be the opera society·s president. M r s. Henry Y. Lee, and members Dr . Frank Lowe and Leonard Tong , all of Los Angeles, and two CSCF' professors. Dr. George C. Chiang of the engineering school and Dr. .Joan V. Greenwood of the English department. Formed last July <1S a non· profit endeavor, the society is composed of music lovers from \•arious occupations. Its purposes include studying. WE SOLD OUT LAST WEEK! BUT WE ARE REPEATING THESE GREAT SPECIALS AGAIN TH IS WEEKI WE HAVE PLENTY NOW' ANO fHANKS TO YOU FOR THE BIGGl!T WEEK IN OUR HISTORY-ANO IT'S ONLY JANUARY' CLIP THESE COUPONS & SAVE! • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • l 1r1• • New Crop • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ICEBERG • FRESH • LETTUCE : CELERY : GIANT Sl.Zi: PINEAPPLE • • • 1oc ... • SC •. 39' Eoch • • l unc h • Limit ' • Limit 5 l\lnchn • LIMIT l • • With this CO\lpclf'I • With thl• CO\lpon • Wlfh thl1 <•upon • , ............................ . C041pons h pire FR. 4, 1970 Con9r1tul1tion1 to th111 fine r11t1ur1nt1 for trading loc.elly with their "fellow merchents," p1troni11 them! LA POSADA, COSTA MESA; GOlt DO NS' "IEAU- TffUL FOOD," LAGUNA NIGUlL; I U KSNIRf"S "IN TN't: SKY," NEW~ORT; REMIRAN DT'S "I UUTlfUL FOOD," PLACENTIA. How aboul you ~•ll lng us 7 "ORANGE COUNTY'S l'ASTEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGANIZATION " I ' r, f I e NEWPORT PRODUCE Phon1 67W711 67)-&711 11 ~ Opttt 7 Doys A Wee• 7 to 8 p.m. 2616 Ntwpott Bowlnorcl 011 Tht Ptnlnawlo "JZ Yturi of ProdNCe Know Ho,w" "\Vllrre Qualfty Ii The Ordtr of the l~ou1e" I COSTA MESA COUNTRY CLUB -1701 Country Club Drive Cotta Mesa. OH paintings by Hester True will be on uhlbii on the club's second Door during the month of Jan. CIVIC CENTER GAU.ERV -3300 We.I Newport Bl•d., Ne~~rt Beach. Houri : 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon .. Fri. On exhibit through Jan. and Feb., Calif. Institute or the a.'1.s ex- hibit. SO. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L. BANK -17122 Beach BI v d. l~untlnrton Beach. On exhibit during regular busine.ss hours' through Feb. ti, oil paintings by Miriam Lutzsky. ' NEWPORT NATIONAL BANK -1090 Baymde Drive, New- port Beach. Currently on exhibit, during regular business hours through Feb., portraits by Leslie De.Mille. * For aJI travelers: Excellent new PanAm folder called "The PanAm Dictionary of Low Cost Travel." This explains new lower fares and much other good stuff on travel. And it's free. From Pan American \Vorld Airways offices. Or write them to send it. Or a travel agent can get it for you. * "I r•ad about a •r'na ll town on the West Co.st of M•xico, San Bl•s ••• '' You couldn't drive me into San Blas again with a pistol. It's small. Tropical (It looks like Tahiti.) A jungle :iver. Dreadful hotels -once good but gone to pieces. And bugs that will bite you until you'll pay to get out. CAAtERA WORK GALLERY -2100 W Coast Highway Newport Beach. Hours : Thurs. and Fri. 5 to 9 p.m.; Sat. and Sun. to 9 p.m. Gallery llmlled to photography with work of * Carl Sesto on exhibit through Jan. ' "What about the gasoline in Europe?" I CORONA DEL ftfAR LIBRARY -420 1t1arigold Corona Just like ours but twice as expensive. You won't WILLIE LING de! Mar. On exhibit through Jan .• during reguta'.r library !ind it under 50 cents a gallon. And more lUtely hours, author • illustrator team exhibit of Cbarle1 Paysant around 80. However, your small E uropean car runs In Chines• Ope;• and Terry Shannon. 30 to 40 mpg. perrorming: and promoling r ••iiii-------.------------=:..:::..::..::'.'.!'.!:.. ______________ _ Chinese opera, Ching Hsi. AUTHOllZID ActlNT Among featured performers fOI MATSON TOUIS are P. C. Chao, a businessman TOWN & COUNTRY who lives in Orange; Eileen Stewart, a nurse who resides '"*' a ... <11 •1wc.., +t111111111M ••c11 in Anaheim, and Willie Ling, a PH f62-146 l 549..0llt graduate student in drama at ~============~! University of Sou th e r n ;1 Calirornia. Chao's wife , • • • • 1 • • • • Rosana , is the director. • For Information Or • G Renrvation1 uest performer in the • • seven-piece orchestra will be On ~•tson'1 Gene Y. Kuo of San Francisco • H•w•il CrulH • on the chin hu, a banjo-shaped I ._ CAL L instrume?t played with a bow. I 673•331 .;:i I Other instruments are the I . ~ I erhu, n1oon guitar. small drum. gongs and cymbal . • LI D 0 • . Guesis 01 hono• will include • TRAVEL SERVICE • Phillip Y. Liu . consul general in Los Angeles for the • Republic of China. and Dr . II "1illiam B. Lan gsdorf, foun· ding president of CSCF. The book collection the event \viii support was presented to the Library in recognition o f Laogsdorf"s first JO years as president. Valued at $10,500, it consists of Grabhorn Press works and Book Club of California selec· lions. DESERT HOT SPRINGS CALl,.ORNIA tk aM ) .. llllMlf •Nft.11 r1wt We hive enough blu• airy, clean air, incf't'dlble '11ews, •nd brilliant Sllra tor evtty· ont ..• plus dozens ol hot mineral pools. mode1n rno- tel•. and excellent moblle home l1cilltie1, o Com• to our hea1thru1 city. o ... rt Hot Spf1nga -tor e wu •. tor • llfetlme-owrlooklng Palm Springs, ttte gOll capl· t1I of the wotJd {only 10 111lnutM away), Wtlft Ht" ,,,,_,,..;.,, I .. '""' ... Chamber of eom-tci1, 0.pt. ON O...rt Hot Sptt"fl, c.lff. 011'11'11 ... t Ofl 1"'91'111 .. 10, "" .-.1111 ao11,.... ,r. 110l'lfl tt1 -" lllt•• 1~1111• • I• Dttt rt Hot ......... :1416 VIA LIDO HI WPOllT IEACH • ········~ DINERS FUGAZY TRA\'El Y OUR MATSON CRUISE AGENTS ttlS lift Jn_.,111 Hifll ltff41 New"l1 INdl, C1lff. tlwt Phone 644-4600 TRAVELING TJUS Winter ? v•• ''"'" >'irM?! -w. ifM!Cial:.1:1 '" colorful islal'ld •1> par11I ••.. cool and f1Yiionabte on board or on short. MISS HAW.All South Cout Plua llr111of "' Ill• SIU! 01...,, ....., Cooiu. M•• i-tf-"'4:t For Advertising In WEEKENDER . . Phone 642-4321 • Fly to the Hotel SS LurfineMarch 12 and cruise the islands of Ho oth•r Haw1ll1n v1c1tion comp1r11! Check into Matson'• sea-going Hotel SS Lurline in Honolulu March 12. Then, over the next 10 leisurely days, cruise to NawiliwHI. 10 the old whaling port ot Lahaina, to Hiio, 10 Kona, and back; to Honolulu, before flying home. Five fascinating ports or call. Four exquisite Islands-Oahu. Kauai, Maul and Hawaii. And starling May 1, th is gr1at cruise-vacation will be offered e't'ery three weeks all year long. Matson's Hotel SS Lurline makes ii an so delightfully easy, too. No worries about packing and unpacking. or transportation from place to place, or more than one hotel reservation. All you do is enjoy the islands in eMry way. And, no matter what you do, everything is arranged for you. From caddies, lo deep •ea fishing excur- aions. lo every imaginable kind ol to ur. So give yourself the perfect .. tw<>-week" vacation. Fly. to the Hotel SS Lurline In Honolulu March 12 • Matson The SS Lurtint 11 reglatered Jn the U.S . • • I' • • Or check into one of Matson's ether Hawaii cruise-vacations. Fares begin af $460. (If you have the time, stay aboard for the delightful five·day return to Callfornla!) CONTACT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT. Or ••nd lhia coupon directly to ua for 1ddit ional information. r--------------------1 l'11H Tho1nt11on, CrvlH C0111ull1nl op nsuo 11 MlllOll LIM .. 523 W11t 8th Slr .. t Lo1Mo-111,CA90014 I Tellptione 21U2f.060f I Pl•••• 11nd me mor1 lnfor1?11t1on about the Hotel SS Lurlln1"1 10-0ly SuPlcr l'cur-J111nd I Cn.1! .. ·V1e11ton1. (Include lnl0f11'11Uon •bout ttle I 1onver c1uilll., too.) 1 NAME I cnv fTJ.Tf '" I 1 t I I l_~AA~~~~~~~M~,..-________ J • 1 • • ' • '· ' . i • .... -· " ~ . ' - ' ' . • OUT 'N' WEEKENDER ABOUT By NOB!tl STANU:\' 'i 0 R ,ANGE COUNTY'S I' '1 Open to Public Several weeks ago we wrote a piece about the restaurant-at a ijuntington Beach Country Club - the Lark Room of Ille Meadowlark -aod noted the often misconstrued public idea that such facilities aren't open to the general populace. A few days after the article appeared we cban· ced into conversation with a genUeman who said he bas had considerable experience in dealing with the Public on this same point. And there can be no doubt about it because the man happened to be af- fable Ben Brown, owner-operator of the Laguna Beach Golf Course and the sterling adjacent restau- rant that bears his name. -'* BEN BROWN'S Ben indicated that scarcely a day goes by without some inquiry regarding the restaurant's policy of public admittance. Seems no matter how widely or regularly the word is circulated that Ben Brown's is indeed open to all. along comes Jones or some other guy who's out or touch with the com- munications media. O t h e r than continuing the slow educational process, Ben feels that a large part o! his problem is nearer to solution thanks to a recent major change in the golfing part of his operation. GOLF COURSE TOO After 19 years in business a s the private mem- bership Laguna Beach Country Club, the popular regulation 9-hole course located in Aliso Canyon, South Laguna, has been renamed the Laguna Beach Golf Course and is open to the public every day. The new policy went into effect January 1. To further insure full service to the public, Ben reports. a [ull line of golfing equipment and clothing has been placed in the pro shop, where electric carts may also be rented. In connection with the Laguna Beach G o I ! ARCADIA ~ SINCE ltll v,ruUY' -AIRPORT ""'"'IO'J Stoak • Chick .. • It-Cultl .. Serving Late Dinners Mell.-Tllolt, 11 A.M.·l::it A,M. 12'2 ~ALISADl!S lllD. CC>tTA MESA .... ., .. l"l'l. ...... 12 ... ,,. it..M. Ul IE. HUNTINGTON DR. AlllCADl4 '47 .. llJ TUE OCEAN AT YOVR TABLE! SEAFOOD, STEAKS AND GOURMET ENTREES SOMETHING SPECIAL IS COMING ! o,.nlnt Soon THI SENSATIONAL WE THREE TR I 0 :117 Peclfk C..t Hwy. H.,...thttf" hoc.Iii lt"erv•tl.nt: 536--2555 COME IN TONIGHT FOR THE PRIME OFi YOUR Llf.E Roast PRIME RIBS OF BEEF ...... -•••NT Ill IOAm ......... -s31s :&pf \f:L fl;;fty -""'" ,........ .....,, • ...-. ... « h ....... ..., "' ....... ..... DIAMOND JIM BRADY CUT ...... 4.U CHILO'S PORTION ................. I.SO l!AllY PllMI 111 DINHll IPICIAL Sl.t' MONDAY THIU JllDAY ONlYt 4-' P.M. Sat. l-Sun. Open 4 p.m. LUNCHEON FIOM 11 A.M. • NCYW Ol'IN COCKTAIL LOUNGE KING-SID COCKY AILS OPEN 7 DAYS l-Ntl ... Ac..,.... 428 EAST 17th STREET COSTA MESA 6,AS-0990 RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB , AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE Course, o~ course, is Ben Brown's restaurant. It Is located in a handsome two-story building next to the <:!)Ill"•• and ls open for breakfast, luncb and din- ner seven days a week. ENTERTAINMENT Ben Brown's also features music for dancing in the lounge 9ix nigbts·a week. Five different meet- ing rooms in the complex accommodate business meetings and-social groups up to 200. And take it from out 'n' about.er, anyone who has labOred under the misapJ_>rthension that. the restaurant is closed to the public hap been missing one of the area's very best dining attractions. We h•ve commented on its wondrous bill of fare 1n this column from time to time but hasten to get the word out again to those who may have started reed· ing these pages only recently. Ben Brown's restaurant, together with a motor hotel and golf course, is located at 31106 South Coast lligbway, South Laguna, Carihe Roon1 lt's always a~tinct pleasure to visit a res- taurant where the food, service and hospitality are consistently good. Like buying the same name- brand product time and again because you can re- ly on dependability. A stable quality is a prized asset in anything these days, but when it turns up in an eatlng es- tablishment's offerings the tendency is to make dining there a habit. As in regularly purchasing a make of shoes that wears well . Being so accustomed to the Caribe Room at the Sheraton-Beach Inn in Huntington Beach, we set sail for the place once again last week. Reli· ability, we concluded, remains the hallmark in all departments here. 'PLEASANT OECOR And there's aJ,vays the room itself which never fails to impress. With its unusual blend of elegance and informality. tke ENTIRTAINMINT • 7 NIGHTS A WOK DANCING * HAP HALL OUO •• ,,... 111...,.. ........ n..ttns. .. MON.-TUIL·WID. * L•rry L•ke Sin&:tt Guitarist R••r-Mlta The•t•r s:i!l:E Cotta Met. 141 L 1M St, J• eff .... ,.,. lh4. -hr Mrly ,.._ ......... ,...,_ o,,1111 • l ,M, .. I 1.M. Diiiy - Welcome to the Wonderful World of OMELETS PRESENTED AT THE EGG AND ALE CHOl~E OF 30 OMELm DeM., htr ... L•11cJi •r Dl11llfl S.nff wltt. lltfltJi Tr11y 11r H11n 'd••••r., '"*· , • .,. s.r-~-.. 11 ,. 2; Dl11Mt' 5·10 s.11.-LuMtl f.J; DlllNt S·f-CLOSID MONDAYS 3101 NEWPORT BLVO., NEWPORT BEACH lollt* tr.. ,.ti .. l11t llM .. ttle ~11 11f THI I•• AND ALI. at11J1c.tnt te Plylfll l11fl11r. 67J..,77 DON JOSE' -,,.,,,, ......,. - Hayden Causey Trio NOW APPEARING ,;. .,. ... ~~ o" #' """ .. ~ ,..t HAYOEN CAUSEY, CHARLIS MURCHISON JOSIPHINE COURRlGIS fforll'l1rly with n., O.C1str11 Slsl1nJ • IN THE F1EST A ROOM FROM 8:30 P.M. to 1:30 A.M. e COCK'!' Al LS e 9093 E. Ad1m1 (1t Mqnoll1) Hunt. ltlch 9'2·7911 ~~C£ouage LOU NORRIS IV swi~illt 11i9~tly f11r your d111tll'lt ,r111ur1 BILL McCLURE ,re1e11h rtl1tll11t ,1,1111 1tyU11t• 11i1Jitly 1:10 t11 I ''"'' One can't help but admire the way restrained tropical decor is conveyed. in an imaginative use of woods , colors, textures. and lighting rather than palm fronds, storm shutters or \Vaterfalls. Further. the almost clrcular. two-level layout of the roo1n pennits an unobstructed view of the bandstand If> cated near the center of the upper level. While there were no surprises In those features we've come to admire as a matter of course in the Catjbe Room , one significant change had taken place since our last visit. This was the introduction of a new menu that retains a number of old favf> rites and offer~ a lot of new and tempting dishes. NEW CHOICES Our final choice of entrees split the votes at one each for old and new. In the first category was the unfailingly good roast Long Island duckling, flambe and served with black bing cherries, $4 .95. In addi- tion to being roasted \Vith consummate skill, the portion was both savory and substantial. The previously untried dish was a superb crab meat au gratin, lighUy sauted in butter and es- sence of sherry wines, topped with a nippy grated cheese and bak.ed to a golden brown, $5.25. As with all Caribe Room entrees, each wa s served with a choice of soup or mixed green salad. potato or rice and choice of beverage. • • .ti: ~ Entrees on Ute new menu are offered qnder four different headings. From the Darning skillet, the glowing coals, the seas and for the connoisseur. Examples of each. in order, are beef tender- loin Diane, $6.75; filet of came asada, '5.75; Monte- rey abalone amandJne, $4. 75; fondue bourguignonne (for two), which enables you to personally fry the tender beet tips in peanut oil, $11. Still more selections of worthy consideration are steak au polvre, $&.95; prime rib of beef, $6.50; veal Oskar, $4.75 ; breast of chicken a la Kiev, $5; NEW AND EXCl;J'IN6 IN OR.41\'6E COVNTY DELANEY'S • SEA SHANTY OYSTER BAR n. ,, __ .... LUNCH e OINNER e SUNDAY BRUNCH ~ ................. '"""°'"'....... . Opten • Cl•• • IM1111p • ~ .. s..,! • Ct.11 .... 630 LIDO PARK DRIVE NEWPORT BEACH The SERVING DAILY Breaktut * Lunch * Dinner FINEST IN FAMILY DINING BUCCANEER CUT OF PRIME Rl8 FLAVOR.CRISP CHICKEN GROUND SIRLOIN STEAK TERIYAKI STEAK STEAK ANO LOBSTER JU~IQ F~IED SHJUMPS OR SCALLOPS . CATALINA BROADBILL SWORDFISH CAPTAIN 'S CHOICE NEW YORK STEAK COMBINATION SEAFOOD> PLATE '· . . • S"CI"~ ~HILDU.tfs;~u FOR ·urtl.1 PlllA'!U UNDU 12 • • All dlnn1r1 s11rv1d with soup or selad, choic:11 ot Fr11nc:h lri•t, whlppecf potete<er W~ed. Hot home· mad• btei1d1. WE" PROUDLY PRESENT EXCITING SOUNDS BY THE MIKF JORDAN DUO IN THE LOUNGE Mond1y thru Saturdiy-8:30 lo I :JO 2300 HARBOR ILVD. Costa M•sa For Advertising in Weekender Out 'N' About Section Phone Nor"l Stanley-642«432 I broiled salmon steak, ,4.95 ; seafood plate a la Sher- aton (a variety of shrimp, oysters. scallops, trout and deviled crab), $5. A LA CAltTE SAUCIS \Vhile our entrees precluded· ordering any, we noted one especially interestin& addition to the new menu. This ls a la carte sauces at 60 cents each. Included are hollandaise, beamaise, bordelaise, teriyakl·aod' llalian. A la carte ·vegetable• are also available, ran&"- ing from string bean• affitndine, SO cent.I, to sauttd mushroom caps, .$1. And stz sterling d~11erta ex- tend from ice cream or sherbet, 50 cents, to ttraw- berries Romanoff (for two). $3.50. CHJLORIN'S DINNElt A $2 children's dinner for youna:sters under 12 provides an entree choice of frled shrimp, a:round sli'loin or fried chicken". "Included are vegetable, potato, Jello and milk or coke. If you choose soup with your entree and your appetite ls up to K, the hearts of palm vinai1rette, $1, makes an ideal pre-dinner salad. But don't over- look the possiblllfy of leading off with one of the In- triguing appetizers. TOP ENTERTA'lNMliNT As always, too, the Sheraton-Beach Inn pre- sents some of. the finest entertainment to be found in the area. Currently on tap Monday throua:h Sa- turday evenings ls the Phil De Santo Trio with Martha Hill , song stylist, lending her talent to the group. Appearing in the lounge ni&htly, Monday lhrough Friday, from 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. ls one of out 'n' abouters all-time favorite entertainers. She's the talented songstress-songwriter, Kate Port- er, \Vhose extraordinary performing magic leaves her listeners emotionally exhilarated. Tbe Sheraton-Beach Inn is located al 21121 Coast Highway, Huntington Beach. Anyone who hasn't made its acquaintance should Initiate an in- troduction at the first possible opportunity. Continued on Pa91 24 Rul C1ntonese Food 11t here or take home.· STAG CHlllSE CASINO 111 2 lot pl., Newport Bt1eh ORlolt 3-9540 0,.11 Y .. .,.._., hlfr 11•11 -M. _, 1.r .... J..., Opon Dilly II~ lttMl'\'ltlona: 4f4.6574 Di wers .... ,"··· e OINNElll • USTAUIANT AND e IUNDAY lllUNCM • COCITAIL lOUNGI I LAT• IUPl'Ell • DINING OCEANFRONT DINING , ATOP TOWERS WING Of SURF And SAND HOTEL Temple Gard.ens' Beautiful New RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE Grand Opening Festivities February 14 and 15 Temple 6ardeiu Clth1e1e ftesta11ra11i lsot Ad•m• IAt H1rw1 c .. ,. MIN S4f-11J7 S4f.1t2J ' Clraott C-,'1 New latllHte w1 Dellt'tfltl FRENCH RESTAllRAHT cronnerl,y Gerard'al Dinner 5:>0 .. 10:00 p.m. Tuesd•y thru Sund•y Cloltd Mond•y C1rner et .. ,....,.. alMll lrl•tel C.... M... S4f.J'41 Open to the Public ~ Newly Enlarged ~~ Popular ... ~ LARK ROOM E11t&tf1l11lft•'lt Nithtly WM1111i41, threutli S1tM141v THI PAIULOUS DICK WEBSTER • IANQU~T FACILITIES FOR 450 * SERVING LUNCH AND DINNER DAILY MEADOWLARK ceuntry cl1b 60ME1t SIMS, CfCI~ HOLLIN$SWOll:TH, C11.0..ften 16712 GllAHAM STlDT HUNTINGTON llACH I For RMOl'\'ltlon1 C11l ... 1116 tr 146-1416 ''-~~~~~~~~~~~~-' ~ . ' \ ... -----------------------------------------------·----·--------·-------. ' 1 • t t • ... • ·. • • j • ' I . • . ~ . t -• . . -·· --·----. ----------· -----24 • DAILY PILOT ) WEEKENDER )' · .... ' .. ' Conutinued fronf Page 23 ' ' ' Chinese New Year The year of the rooster gives way to the year of the dog and 466{! swrngs in a week from today. If yoo Caney holfd:a_xs .an4 are.celebrating Chinese New Year, that is. \Vllich is a very .good ide~ w hen the observance is ·centerecJ.in the rites of feasting. And involves a national food as distinctive as that of- fered by ,the Chinese. Those bent on seeing the dog's year launched \vith proper ceremony can do so next Thursday . February 5. at Li's in Huntington Beach. Starting at 7: 30 p.m .. the restaurant is staging a gala Chinese New Year's Eve dinner and party. The festive event will feature live en- tertaµtmenl and a jumbo 10..,course meal. Admission wm be by tickets which can be purchased in ad· vance for $4.95 per pe"rson. Kick ·off item on the night's sptciaJ menu will be won won ton soup. To be followed by an appetizer ...:.plait.e.coo·si:stin.g-of·..:chi.Gken stick, bar.-b-q .spareribs, beef soo chow and Cried shrimp. FOUR MAIN DISHES Accompan"ied by yanj? chow fried rice. next up will be the rour~~rincipal dishes that signal the oc- casion as being• out·,,p,t.·· the ordjnary. The¥ are paradise chic kl$ •.. st'°.3k Jsew, _, sam, _g~p ta1 and lobster wor. ' ··· ,. ,.-r.;:.., ,. ' Roundilig_;qut·ri qe .~d~J1Q'~r ~ w~u.-be tea and ror.tune_c~k~[:!l,_ :. ~ :-L .: ... ·--···-· DATE ·COMPLICATED The date of Chinese New Year is based on the calendar that existed prior to China's adoption of the Gregorian calendar in 1912., In line \Vith old tradition. thou gh Ne\v Year's Day occurs on the first new moon after the sun enters t~e sis:i:n of Aquarius. llence. it never fall.8 earlier than J an. 21 or later than Feb. 19. . _ -·-· _AH of \vhich' prOvides a perfectly valid reason ·-shOuld one be·necessary -to ring in the· second and to make our welcome more cordial .•• · ·• 1"ieliiiir"'eritree al·regulir piice · 1 ·1 , • Accompanying enlree al ~2 pnce Choose from our regular dinner men u SUNDAY THJl.U THURSDAY EVENING Hunlinglon '1'7,,tf/~1/t/ Seaclilf ~Y0 -;31)00 Palm Avenue 1-funtington ~ath 5$8"6 Half Mile from Pacific Coa st Highway oIT GoJden West Streel ENTfJlTAINMENT TUESDAY THllU SATURDAY "Whm Exciting '@"ings ~~ Happening! Theltt .. f!'-.. Tltrtt'1 c.,,.,,.,,, .. in lite Secille Letl#lrfl! JJi"iffg in the bmiulilul M•fffw RMM Buffet lll'nclteort GRAND HOTEL .__.,r.• P.S. Try a round or golf al our ~blic 18 hole golf cou11e 7 FREEDMAN WAY A SAHEIM , CAWP'. 772-7777 ' ' I ~·1 • KARA MS IS _NQW 501 -30th Street, Newport 675.0300 ~ ··, Our restaurants , the Pac ific Oinin9 Car and Cook's Steak House , have been family -owned and op,rated for three 9en 8r1tions. For almost half a century we have been priv ile 9ed to serve Los An9eles, 'end we hope to do the same for diners in the South Coast area. we offer only prime easferh corn fed beef 19ed in our own meat ~ooler, cut by our own butc~rs and prepared on a 9enuine charcoal broiler. Amon9 other dishes , we also se rve Dover Sole Amandine and Saddle of Prime Lamb. We have a wide selection of the finest imported and domestic wines. Our condiments, dressin9s end cheese cake are made in our own kitchen from old family recipes. We are loo~i"9 forward to servin9 you in N~ort Beach. Please call for reservat ions end come dressed es you are. ( t11 • ', Tht Idol• ' • OUT 'N ·ABOUT Gene Grayson and Co. There's a mighty lively bunch of music at Isadore's in NeYiport Beach on Sunday and Monday fro1n 8 p.m. Gene Grayson. leader, plays gui tar. Charles Ne\v Year of 1970. Li's is localed at 8961 Ada1ns Ave . (at Magnolia), 1-Iuntington Beach. Legacy of Al Gans MONDAY THRU SATURDAY ARLENE SKILES and the DICK POWELL nuo 37 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENTER I. 8etwM" •uffumt £ l!IRlldWI Amoi. P1rkh111 "-"'•tlon• •644-2030• • • • • • • Tii e Laq11uo Beoch Cou,uru Ch•~. after rtittetf'Cll years o/ operotio11, l1ru changed ill name and policy. Our t1ame ls now ll1e Laguna Beach. Golf Cours e -OPEN TO '!'Hf. PUBLIC! FOR STARTING TIMES CALL 499·1919 You ire welcom• to vi1if thi1 be1utiful c1nyon i nd B•n Brow '1 r•1t1ur1nt. Young th e drums and Al Rondon , bass. They all play and sing up a storm. lag1ou s e11thusias1n for the resplendent table d'hotc. Fortunately for the Societe, which meets once a mo nth in a leading restaurant, I\-1rs. l-larriet Gans has indicated she intends to carry on \Vith her late husband's \\'Ork. The February dinner \Vil! be held as scheduled, Monday and Tuesday, the 23rd and 24lh, at the International Hotel Penthouse. Information can be obtained from La Soctete de Bacchus et Epictirus, P. 0 . Box 35014, Los Angeles, 90035. Telephone inquiries can be made to (213) 278-2882 or (213) 272-1459. Ca111e lol lo Debut l\1aking the rounds \ve've picked up word on the impending opening of a new restaurant in Santa Ana th at will display a lavish, castle-like interior. That being the case, the name it is slated to have - c·arnelot -seems si ngularly appropriate. Located at 1100 S. Grand, the premises formerl y occupied by \Vilhelms, ·the building has reportedly undergone extensive alterations in the conversion to a dining establishment with ties lo the days of King Arthur. There's a!So the promise of bright en· tertainment and a wide variety of continental dishes to be served for lunch weekdays and dinner every night except Sunday. Out 'n' abouter hopes to check this one out at an early date . fvancois' CONTINENTAL CUISINE Famous For FLAMING DUCK Open 11 :00 A.M. -Closed Monday HUNTINGTON BEACH , CALIFORNIA 18151 BEACH BLVD. 842-1919 hat•rf119 Tiie FIMlt ITALIAN & AMERICAN FOOD LUNCH DAILY-Mollday thr11 Friday DINNElt DAILY-Mo1uloy tllr• Sot1rdar C (OSED SUNDAY LAltltY ltOGEllS AT THI PIANO I.I.It Nl9llt11 Molldoy tllr1 Satiircla1 THE CASPIAN 1670 Newport Blvd. Costa Mes• BEAUTIFUL Restaurant 642-1293 JI 106 COAST HIGHWAY, SOUTH LAGUNA R•1•rv•tjoni ~99-1641 r • t ' " • DAILY PILOT fl5 New Movie Ratings LisJed ·Live Theater •••••• OFF e • • WEST •• The motion piclure hr dustry's voluntary rilm·rating syst~ has• In one year demonstra ted "a gratifying succeu," ai;t4 Is being furth er sU1m&thcned with clarlfying anll improving wnendn1ents. This announce1ncnt , based on a national scientifically sampled impartial survey and on intensive re-evaluation by theater owners, was made this week, In behalf o! the three organ.izati orus spoosoring the system : Eugene Picker, presi- dent, National Association of Theater Owoer:i; M u n Io Podhorzer, n1ember, Govern- ing Board. lnterr.atlonal J!~ilm Importers and Distributors of America: '"Md Jack Valenti, president , Motion Pictu re Association or America. Their joint statement sa id. ''When the system went into effect on Nov. J, 1968. we said we would keep it coostanUy under review and would make a re.examination at the end of a year's trial period. gram. We have now made such revisions and we huve acted in the light of facts developed in a national public survey and a n8Uon·wide ex- hibitor survey. "The essence of the system remains unchanged. T h e purpose is to rate fil:ns for children, to fumlsh guides to parents to decide on the movie-going or their children. The system does not rate for adults. nor does it pass on the quality or arllslry of a film. YOU'LL ENJOY OUR "\Ve said ~e would not hesitate to make changes if they would improve the pro- PRINCIPAL REV ISIONS MIDDAY FAER SUNDAY 12 P.H. TO 4 l'.'1 . PRlllCE 0,t . "There are two principal revisions. First: The l\I changed to GP. rating is 1be rating GP means all ages admitted. Pare~ gui- dance suggested . • !FM~ wlWes ''This was done becau se the 1\1 category 1va11 found to be lhe least understood by the pub llc in a nalion·wide survey of 2600 people (2000 over 18 years and 600 fro1n ages 12 to 17) conducted for MPAA by Opinion Research Corporation of Princeton, New Jersey. The survey reported that fey.·er than one In 13 persons'liad ac· curate knowledge of t h e specific admissions policy for ~t rilms. Public ronruston and misunderstanding O¥er the word "mature" tended to result. The GP rating seeks to bridge the knowledgt gap by maklng it unmistakable that 1-'ine Du1/11~r Suire /%.1 3801 f.AsT C.uAST lllGll\\'A\" CoRONfl Df.L t.lAR. CAt.ll·OllN1,\ P110Nc: (714) 675-1374 Seafood Restaurant EstcibliOecl 1 t2t I St75 HARIO• ILYD. 839-6770 llAUTlfUL •lSTAUUNT MOUNTAIN /SEA ATMOSl"HflE D•ntin9 Ni9htl., Tu.1d•v tflru Sund•v the theater will admit persons THE NATURAL~lOth Month ~f all ages, but parents may Special S1u1dav lr•Klll -I O:lO • 2:l0 still choose lo obtain more in· 11106 COAST HIGHWAY RESERVATIONS formation on the movie to Soutll La9una 499-2663 guide the attendance or their ~":::::::::::::::::~::J.Y)'.::=:::;::;::=:~~Cr;O:;U~P~O~N~Yo~u~ng~e~' children. GOOD ONLY AT THIS ONE LOCATION 2821_ S. Bristol St., Santa Ana 546-8270 (Coupon Good for up to 8 Adults) THllEE II' DAVs-JAN. ]0·31-FEI. 1 ll• H.lf l"rlce -No Toke Outs REPEAT OF A SELLOUT SIULER SANTA ANA FIGHTS INFLATION Willi ANOTHER GIANT WEEKEND I 1 c ONE CENT SALE 1 c I Order One Of Our Famous Steak Dinners at Menu Price and Get Your SALAD-DRINK·&-PIE ALAMODE For Only "One Cent" (with this coupon} You S•v• 75t GOOD ALL DAV-lune~" Dbl-: 11 .~,,,. M' , • ..,, . COUPON ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• : (S)~~-,,w---~ ~ Caribe Room : • ~ ~~ PRESENTS • • ENTERTAINMENT -DANCING -Mond•y thcu Soturday • • • • Now Appearing • PHIL DE SANTO & HIS TRIO • • • • • • • Featuring Songstress Martha _Hill So'"Jifrn1/S.-.wrlt1r KATE PORTER Buffet Luncheon-Mon. thru Fri . 5:10 to 1:30 p.m. Moll. ttlt11 fri. Fashion Show-Every Tuesday • MURRAY'S COMING ! .... ? ? . •' • 21112 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY-HUNTINGTON BEACH-S36-1421 •' ~································~ PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS CHOW ·BELL GR~ND OPENING WEEKEND SPECIALS ON OUR "BELLRINGER CHICKEN" 3 01y1: Fri.· Sat .• Sun Jon. 30 & 31 -Fob. 1. • .SN~C:K l pcl., roll & honey I Rig. 69c) ······-············-··············-·-·····-···· 4fc • LUNCH 2 pcs., roll & hoqey I R•g. 89c I ·-·····························-··-··········--·· •tc • DINNER l pcs., fri•s, colt slaw, roll & honey I Reg. $1.29 I ···············-··-· He e THRIFT IOX 9 P'" I Re9. $2 .~9 I _,..................... ......... .. ........... _._ $2. lt e PICNIC IASKET 12 pc,., pint cole 1l•w, 6 ro ll1 !Reg. $3.89 1 .............. $3.4t • IUCUT 15 P"· I Re9. $3 .89 .. $3.4' • BARREL l 1 P"· I Ro9. $5 .3' I . $4.69 f'REE Glf'T f'Olt 't'OVlt llO~IE f'REE BALWONS f'OR TUE KIDDIES f,.. CWc.lt.,ri S-"9 Wltlrl A"Y l"ercfl• ALSO flATUlllNCl1 lfffti111...., e flU e "r!111p e ClrlUI e C\1111 Clllowd., 2576 NEWPORT ILVD., COSTA MESA 50·3172 fDl .. ...tlr Ac,... "'9111 Ot•11C11 Co1111tv f.el"1ro1111dtl Pluse11t Dl11l1t9 & T•• O"', TN ~~·~ AGE LIMIT RAISED "'Si>cond : The age limit for the R catei{lry ls raised !rom 16 to 17. "Generation" This obv i ou s ly also 'tat·• d I I 11 A comedy aboul the delivery ncccsSJ. cu es gnat ng ie of a child and r,andchlld, on same age for the X category. "Again, the purni.<:e Is 10 stage et the an Clemente ,.~ Comtnunily Theater, 202 strengthen the rating pro-Avenlda Cab rt 11 o, San gram. Clemente, at 8:30 p . n1 ,. "The movie ratings under Thurs.·Sal. through Feb. 14. lhe program now read : Rcservalions -1-492-0465. G All ages l\dmJtted. 0465. General audieDces. "'The Impossible Years" A gener1:1llon gap' comedy GP All age11 admitted. will be on ~iage at the Hun- parental gu.iduce liuggested. llngton Beach Theater, ZllO R Restricted. Under 17 ~ P.1aln St., Huntington Beach. at quires aeoompanylng partot 8:30 p.m. Jan. 3(l through Feb, or ad.it guardian. 28, Fri . and Sat. Reservations -S31J.386t. X No one--undtr-1·7 admllltd:-"lnvllatton-10-a March" (Ace. limU ma_y Yary le cer-A comedy about marital in· tain areas). di scretion on stage at TO ST ART P.tAP-1, lt'JO Westminster C o m m u n I t y "The Code and Rallng Theatc,, Finley School, t352t "Youttg ltfatt With Hor.it' Administration w i J I im-Edwards, .Westminster, at 8:30 mediately start using th e p.rp, JVi. and Sat., Jan. 30 -Kirk Dou~las and }foagy Carmichael sta·r in the revised ratings and the entire Feb. 14 · Reservations -893-film classic of a brillia nt jazz trumpeter's rise to progra m will become effective S6ll2. the lop, on Feb., 2 at 7:30 on Channel 9. on a nation-wide scale on Mar. "Joe Eq" I. 1970. As In the past. the A comedy·drama of a Santa Clara to Get •••••• TONIGHT Sam Riddle 'lfSENTS \" t ...@..k>) '-0...~o TINY TIM JAN. 30 & 31 •-0\'.§) 'if&'' (,~ SHOW TIMI 10 AND 12 DANCING TQ · THE KNICKE•tOCIUS • DANCING TUES. TM•U THUR. tiO COVIi COMING fEI. 4 & 7 'EVERLY BROS. GRAND HOTEL 7 FRllDMAN WAY ANAHllM PHONE: 772°7777 ratings will be carried in retarded child and his family ad vertisements a n d will be now playing at South Coast posted at all participating Repertory, 1827 N e w p o r t theaters. Blvd .• Costa Mesa. Performances at 8:30 p.m., "A survey conducted by Thurs.-Sun. through Feb. 7. Young NATO. a group of Reservations -64S.i363. younger executives within the National As s o ci atio n of Theater Owners, reported, on the basis or returns from 3,164 theaters througho::>ltt the coun· lry, that 89 percent "always·• or "usually" use the rating symbols in their advertising. ''A Smile ii a Frown Turned Upside Down " 102 Musical Scores 1.1~ ===~ THE BEST An invaluable collection of '·Hello, Dolly!" Sheet music, I R••'•"hiJ' p ~ 111 pro"'• 120 motion picture scores from record albums and st ill photos1 "P11 nuh" it on• af the world', 1947 to 1970 has b e en from lhe film production ac·\ ~od ~o p~l •r eamic •trip•. R1111i ' presented to the University of company each score. ~11 1" 1 " the DAILY l"ILO~:_ I A musical rewe based on Jules Feiffer material will be on stage a\ 8:30 p.m .• Fri.· Sat.; 7:30 Sun., through Feb. 22 al the Open End Theater, 2815 VIiia Way, Newport Beach. Reservations -675- 1120. Santa Clara by L l o n e I Newman, musical director of ~th Century.Fox Studios. Acknowledgement will be made by the university ad· "lbe Owl and Pussycat" ministration February 7 on A comedy abo ut a h N .. TlOt-IAL G£MtRAl COM'ORATION I E!~]~~ BOX OFFICE OPENS Week Days, 6:45 Sat. and Sun,, 5:00 NOW PLAYING "There can be no doubt that the program is a gratifying success when ·u attracts such support on the part of theaters," said tl1e three in- dustry representatives in the joint statement. "The theater stands and speaks for the in· dustry in the local community and it speaks In a reassuring voice in behalf or the rating system." bookworm·s involvement with campus. w en Newman ap· a call gir l, on stage at the pears there as conducto r for l.aguna Moult.on Playhouse, "Daniel ~oone" star Fess 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Parker 's fourth annual Golden Laguna Beach, at 8:30 p.m. Circle 'Jlhealcr Party to raise Tu!!s. • Sat., .Feb. 3-14.. Junds for a new music-drama Reservations -~M-2&50. No One Under 18 Admitted building. To date. Parker, vice "Tbt l\tJsanlhrope" "The public's alt I l u de A Moliere comedy being president of the university's toward the ratings w a 8 presented at lrvlne Repertory Board of Fellows and a reported in the 0 P i n I o n Theater In the Studio Theater member of the Board of Research Corporation Survey. on Campus, Wed. Sat. at 8:30 Regents, has raised $250,000 "Fifty-eight percent of the p.ITI., Feb. 11-21. Reservations toward the project. movie-going public said the -833-6617. Star1ing wilh the score of program was "very useful " to "The Glass Managerle" ' • Roadhouse" incorporating "fairly useful" as a guide for A pereMial favorite on Newman's 1947-48 song hit deciding what movies children stage al Soul~ C o a s t •·Again,·• tlie 5.S-volume col- should see. Tbe favorable at-Repertory . 1827 Ne w p o r t lection inclu des nine musical titude rose to 70 percent Blvd., Costa . Mesa, 'fhurs. -• scores which earned him among movie.going teenagers Sun., 8:30 p.m., Feb. 13-21 . Academy Award nominations, age 12 to 17, who are Reservations -646-1363, and ends with the score of themselves most directly ar·1F=================~==~.I fected by the rating s. THE MOTION PICTURE CODE AND RATING PROGRAM 'iijt " Jbuth Coa st Repertory EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY PREMIERE SHOWING He made evil an art ... From tire country that gave you, "I A WOMAN," "INGA" and "I AM CURIOUS IY£ll11N) ~· Thi Motion Picture Code end R1tin9 A8rnlni•f1'1tian 1ppUe• fhe fotlowin9 r1tin91 to fllm1 didributed In th1 U.S.A. Pie· ture1 r1t1d G, M ar R q111 lifr for the Code S•1l. ... Pich.1r11 r•l•d X do not r•celw• Dice was his vice. e $111. The r1 tin91 1pplr to plctur11 1•l111ed 1fter No¥e111• b.r I, 1961. Piel'" 11 r1le111d b•fo11 th1t defe 1r1 d•1cri\· ed •• pr1¥lo111ly I ..... ' t nd/or SMAI . : I (iJ-SY99•ded for GlNl~L twdi1flc11. ~ 1Ml-Su99e1t•d ~r MAf\!11 1udi1ne•1 IP1r1nt1I dl1· cr1fion 1dwi11d I . · @ -lfSTllCT'ID -1"1rfo"1 und1r 16 1101 tdmlft1d, 11 nl111 •ctamp1n1•d by ~1•1nt or •cir.tit tUtrd-••n . .@_.......... ..... ,, Mt MlllttN4. Thl1 e9• "re· 1trictia11 1111y be hlth•r i11 c1rt1in ere11. Check I TONIGHT ... l :ot -10:0G THE AllVEft: ii e SCOUNOftlL,, .. OPERATOR end• BAAWLEft., •• Steve McQueen 'The Reivers· C:OLOR .. A C:l!'llml Offttef ,llmt ,,_tlllon -A N1tlonlil OeMret l'lctr.tr .. f'l•l•- Otrfff!fblt fltctW """' S•turd1v 1ttd Sund1 .. I 1]0.] !40-5:50·1· I 0 Men hers. · ~· .. ' •• SICOND PIATUH 0"ANGI. ONl.V ------PACIFIC'S -------I ORANGE DRIVE-IN SANTA ANA fRWY. AT CHArMAN 547 "THI ONLY GAMI IN TOWN" ·60l1 • IHOWN ., ''". '"'' "THE ONL y GAME IN TOWN" IANDOLIRO" -SHOWN AT 6,10 & 10:30 Shown Dtllr From 7100 r.M. • L•fl c..,.. .. ,,"'"' Yte •• •:• P.M. w..._'f'I, 1•1• P.M, l.iwm, Suncfey Con uou1 From 2:00 ,.M. '""'-"--'~'-"-"'~·~:-::::.;;~::!.;• •'-'-:!:'C:'::-:......::-::w~•~~=::-":;-=..!;f.:,:•,,-~-!.,:~~~='.!::!!:=~~~-:: 1 _.: _: _ ~ _ ----;--· ,, -2 8 DAILV PILOT Frldif, January 30, 1970 HE LUXURIOUS NEW IA llf)A THEATRE NOW-Z o• THI • SIASON'S TO' RIN HITS ON THE SA.Ml PlOGltAM- SWEET CHARilJ' SHIRLEY MarlAlr-.E • JOHN McMARTIN "SOUTH PACIFIC" "HAWAII" LATE SHOW TONIGHT -All THEATRES SEE IOTH •EATUll.ES AS LATE AS H:)O P.M. -·-· ... _, Pettr l'•nd• • All Ctlor "EAST Jl.IDElt" IJl.I "COLLISION COUii.SE" P'llll H-m•" e llill c.lof sl>ow "IUTCH CASSIDY I THE SUNllANCE 100" (M) "CME" CMI "VIVA M,Alt,. (GI "" "THE WAY WI.ST" "FANNY MILL~ (XI Ctl•r MS·llll "DIE S•DE" IXJ Ctler Mt '"' urMlff 11 KmittlHI R ic~"' lurt-...CUnl EillWOCHI "WHEltE EAGLES D.lltE" IM) CtlOr "101 1111 .. LES" 1111) Color "••"'" EXCLUSIVE AREA SHOWING I SHOW Tl~ES 7,00 & 9,30 MATINEE SUN. 2 THEATU ~ lffl r•n co.o.1r -·• roaooo• Dt1. ""'' .,_, .. "THE SECRET OF SANTh VITfORIA'' -ANTHONY QUINN VlRNA HARDY SERGIO USI 'KRUGER' FRANCHI In ANNA MAGNANI.-1 --10-·~-.......... --.~-.. ·•f(loOl.aC)f""ll'( ____ ..,_..,. ______ .. _.,.,....,.,..,... .... _,. _ _..._.,.._ .. _.._ PANlVISION"T£0tNJCOlOR' I I ~ """'-•0"'"'"'"'"'"""" M ·~!:'JI!','!£ .!e'-~ ._ ... , ... ah;f A;;;. TONIGHT AT 8:30 Show Times Sat. & Sun. 1:30 & 8:30 ·ONLY TWO MEN HAVE WALKED ON THE MOON. FOR THE REST OF U~ "1001" IS AS CLOSE AS WE'RE LIK<L Y TO GET. 2001: a space odyssey T•• hheti'f .... 011 • "kip" ••tll JN'• MrM! it fwiq\ tto••..,. KEIR OULlEA•CIARY lOCkWOOO K~ttlf\• t'l'SlANL['f KUlltlCIC Mt1J AR TM UR C.CLAltk( l lJl'ER P~NAVISIOJt ·~ Ml Tl!OCOLOlt Tlc.llttl .,,0 IOlf offlA .,.,!1•bl1 •t ~f,~;IMll !i~I "Secret of Santa Vittoria' Opens Edilor'1 Nor.t' Th i; movie guide i& prepared by the films committee of Harbor Council PTA. Mf's. Jolin Clark is prtsidmt and 1'1rs. William Ware is committee chalrman. It i.t hitended as a f'tference in determining sui!able film s /of' ce,.tatn a o e groups <Htd wf!l. appear weekly. Your vitW1 are .!olicited. Mau them to Mo- vfe Guide, cart of the Di\/LY PILOT. * * * of Piofislouri farmers and families crosses lo Oregon ac· companied b y speetacular scenery, hardship s and personal problems. MATIJl\E TEENS AND ADUL'll; Butch Cassidy and tbe Sun- dance Kid (M): A deft comedy about two charming legendary band.ill who take the ways of the old west to Bollvia, Paul Newman, Robert Redford and Katharine Ross. T~e The Comic (Ml : trlumpM aod failures of a ADULTS comedy star who was an early Cbe (~t ): Story of Che Hollywood "King'' portrayed Guevara, LaUn A me r i c a n by Dick van Dyke. revolutionary, with Om a r Hawaii: Be au ti f u 11 y Sharif and Jack Palance. pbotographed segment o I DeSade (X)-: Based on the James Piofichener's novel con- sexual and pollttcal ure of the ceming the missionaries or dlisolute Frtnch Marquis De 1800's in Hawaii. Max von Sade. Keir Dullea, J 0 h n Sydow and Julie Andrews star. Huston. Number One (M ): Charlton Heston portrays an aging loot-Eas.Y Rider (R): Peter Fon-ball star with the New Orleans da and Dennis Hopper portray Saints, whi> play themselves. two dropouts who travel the He faces the inevilabl' ques- United States on motorcycles. tion of retirement. · Tht Wreck.IP& Crew (M J: Otatt MarUn ll$ auper-aleulh !lent to Denmark to find a billio111 dollar shipment of hi- jacked gold. A typical Matt llelm comedy-spoor. TEENS AND ADUL'll; The Batlle of Britain (G): Story of heroic pilots of the RAF who held off the Luflwaf· re In World War II, and saved Britain from invasion. Michael Caine, Laurence 0 I i v i e r • Christopher Plummer a n d Michael Redgrave. Funny Glif IG): Lavish musical presentation about the life of Fanny Brice, a child of the slums who became a great comic star. Barbra Streisand, Omar Sharif and Walter Pigeon. Swul Charity (GI: Charity Ethel Waters' Career Got Boost With 'Dinah' Fanny Hiil (X): Swedish On lltr Majesty'& SecrtC fi lm based on the sensaUonal Service (Ml : The newest 007 If you were to ask ramecl acclaim on both sides of the John Cleland novel. caper with a new Bond singing actress star Ethel Atlantic. In 1950, she even· John and Mary (It): Dusti n (George Lazenby), and co-tually won the coveted New H f' d .,. F t Waters what the turning polnl • o iman an i~11a arrow s ar starring Diana Rigg. York DrMna Critic's Award in this contemporary love Only Game in Town (M l: in her career was, she would for her role in "Member of the story about lhe "now" life of a Gambling lilm set in Las answer, ''When a nice, young Wedding,,, which she will young couple who become Vegas stars Elizabeth Taylor composer, Sam SaJvln, handed repeat this February in deeply involved during a 24 and Warren Beatty. me his new song, 'Dinah,' to Chicago's Ivanhoe Theater. hour period. Secret of Santa Vittoria sing in the then famous Plan· Ethel has previously ap- 101 Rlflea (R): Story of the fl\1}: Anthony Quinn plays the talion Club, at Broad way and peared in only one television Mexican government 's at· newly appointed mayor of a 50th Street in New York ." role, in the "Route 66 .. series tempt to annihilate the Yaqui tittle Italian village, which ''Din ah" was the first in· in 1962. Indian& in 1912. Raquel Welch, tries to prevent Nazi con-lernational song hit lo ever Coming Thursday, February Jim Brown and B u r t fiscation of its treasured wine. emerge frorn a nightclub s, on Channel 4, she will once Reynolds. Anna Magnani. revue. again treat her loving fans The Reiver& (Ml : Steve Taitt the Money and Run This caused Ethel to be when she appears as c~star McQueea stars in the filmed (!'it): Woody Allen is author , signed by Columbia Records Hosey Grier's" mother in 20th version of Faulkner's novel director and star of satire of where she made her first sides Cent u r y·Fox Television's The hired man's odyssey leads the life story of a frustrated for that label on April 29, 1925. "Daniel Boone" series him from 8 small town in man who tries vainly to climb Ethel Waters' witty comedy episode, "Mama Cooper." Mississippi to the sinful big the ladder to criminal success. style and great pathos in "Daniel Boone" stars Fess city of Memphis dur ing the -----.,...-=---dramatic songs and her ex Parker, and c~stars Patricia early 1900's. '~111 ""eOAST """"u 1. m1 n. pressive physical mannerisms Blair, Darby Hinton and I Waterhole No. 3: A rowdy and charm won her criUcal ' Dallas McKennon. spoof of tradltlonal Westerns ~ , \'••-------------------= with bawdy satire about ___.!,..._:__ • _ 11 greedy resca~ and stolen TONITE., "" • 10,35 I LAGUNA MOUL TON Tickets gold. James Coburn. The Way w .. t Wagon lrain CHARLTON HESTON p L A y H 0 U S E 494-2550 "NUMBER ONE" ....__ __ - . . . . . 606 LAGUNA CANYON RD. e LAGUNA BEACH I AND AT ''" ONLY LE s LI E J 0 N Es ti'::~~;.~ ~~~~~~--, -.............. JAMES BOND "007" J 0 H N F E R z A c c A ''YIYA MAX-"ON HER MAJESTY'S *Owl ~Pu·••ssrrin·g~l ncai, "ONCI u;'QN A TIMI SECRET SERVICE" IN THI WIST" wltll Htn.., 1'-1 * HEY KIDS! * CDNTtNUOUl SUNDAY -1:• llCi PAL SHOW SAT. l :]O ====s=TA=R=T=S =W;;;,E=DN,,,;E;;SD,;;A;;Y~~~~~11 . ';Jk ~flat WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT! "' BILL MANHOFF 2Qt,Gll!.111' 1111'. ,_it:MS Ellzaltetb Warren . ni1tor Beatty 01 IIORGE STE\'ENS.fREO K™lMAR ~.w .. The Only Game llll 'lbwn ' ,;, od!! 1•0..otlll,ll Do«!M~llOO S!fRS """"'tlrf.,_~0 Dl.llOIM*I• .. IUI '"t l~"'r-ut111lillJIO ;11!!11 m.1J111r fl1~"" llll :::::!1!=I LIDO, NEWPORt-ORANGE DRIVE-IN Cr ossword Puzzle AC.ROS~ I Sp~n[sl1 bull 5 Scotish v" 10 Poor ratl' horse s. Slang l~ "The Good Earth " character 15 Empt(ness or spirit lb Elliptic 17 Tobacco us er 2 word s 19 Schedule 20 Skilled 4~ Roman d~t e 45 Record 4b The song th1ush 48 Area sur1oun(lir· A !JO,ll SO Tune 51 Wil t 53 •·•· ·-to crack· 2 WOid' 57 Kind of car bl Astrln!Jent b2 S2.80 to win, r.g.· 2 words b4 Vein b5 Cctnlcat tent fib Weight person: II SI a owanct 21 ang b7 Numerical TranslateiS ill , suff ii a stcrtt 't\ bB Mort imer····· message '' p , 23 Ad1usted ror 1'"wp~r, resonance 0 10 " 25 Ht>ad covr1ing ZI. Laye1 s Z9 Establ1s!1 solidlr 34 Fruit 35 Ten: Prrruc 37 Hardtn: Var 38 R1diu s: Abbr. 39 Recover(' strengt11 4 l Forbid ~Z "Havr • •..• I"· 2 words J • " OOr/N l Htbre• drum 2 IAecllry 3 Engrosstd 4 ···-· wonder : lod Lieutenant: 2 words ; Cooling drin• • iJ ake · ··-·of: l 'fl'Of dl 1 Cuttlef ish lluid ' " • ~8UT C •u ~~0 1 1 C ( [11 0 [N UCL A T("' O A l/~T P(LI 8 Had regret q Kin d of hit 10 Closed· 2 words l l Gretdy 12 Hunltr's quarry ~ 11 Popula1 Chriltmas present 18 Close 22 Fe ll anwl et~ 24 Clear-c ut lb Small htrrin9 Z1 Impart •nowltdgr 28 Highway patrol d~YIC t 30 Church part 31 Scarf for lht head and shouldtrs 32 Unftel ing 33 The1tfore Ir JO no 3& Sinful 39 Amber. for one 40 Accompanied 43 T1aveling sa1esme11 45 Sends out or the country 47 Is confident 49 Frol ic 52 Mort uncommon 53 Parade ground order 54 Succu lent plant 55 Impol ite Sb At the time spt c1fied 58 Monetary t1111t of lr~n 59 Be!ge &O Judgt bl Unc!ost: Poet. • • 10 11 12 1 " " ,, 19 lO .• 21 n " " 21 H " JI " .. F ~--••lltl!t.11 SOUTH COAST """' DX l"LAZA THEATRE CDllMllOtl San E»tao frHW111t Bristol • 546-2711 MATllllEES ONLY AT 12:30 and 2,30 SAT. I JAN. 3ht. '!'he most .......... , ... f•lnr tale .... -..... °' -•llfdf .... : AIL #EW! AIL LIVE! /IOTA CARTOO#! FEB. 1st SUN. MON. Feb. 2nd lent ltln Sffw• Attrw~tre! ALL SEATS 75c l •e. Skw St.1111 7 P·"'· CONTINUOUS SHOW SAT. AND SUN. FROM 2 P.M. Mot. lfff., Wed. 1 P.M. ALSO 1Hll NEW COMIOT OAYIO NIYt'N JUN PAUL llLMCINDO ILi WA.LU.CH IOURYIL ''THE BRAIN" WID .. 1HaRs... PRI ... lllON .. 1UU-"1AnLI" •t l:~l -~ TROPICAL FISH • Largest Selection of Tropical Fish & Supplies in the area. H-2 LoutlllU Jll W. WILSOM, COSTA MESA fOfl Ftlr~le• Rel., Sol&-"'fl 111.c;, Jtl~en<de Or. -HewllOrf ~otdl (Dtfllr'ld 11\t "°"' Otllct l ~ o~ MllUR -GWll61 Ml!11li lilll1l ~PlllHT !I!illll! A LSO 7th EXCLUSIVE WEEK 20fh CfNTIJRY.FQ){ PRESf NTS Dustin Mia Hoffman Farrow ~! JOHN AND MARY ,.'; .. • 2 Top Comedies * BEACH BLVD . AT ELLIS * * HUNTINGTON BEACH * 847-9608 Exclusive Coast Area Engagement ! (, ' "AN ELOQUENT FILM OF CAUSTIC . CONVICTION -. -·~. · AND LYRICAL BEAUTY !" -ROLAND GELATI. SATURDAY REVIEW ' • TUMBLEWEEDS By Tom I(. Ryan SALLY BANANAS WEIJ..LIMP!P l.11ARP1 ~NIS!j1llE PALEFAO: SCALI' INVEt-l!ORYl' MORNIN(, ··11=-~~-~~.:<:i~· 7J!ll '"'"""".., (t) C.. Y" T .. Tllil? (C) ('30) 7:JO Fubtrt Pl.Mllsls tllls week •rt Morey fW (J} &) ,..,. tM lw (C) Anutlfdl111, D11U9" Thomas Ind Stu Ut'1-,8* Allolll: T•s GJIJl111'.. · 1:00 IS_® TIM JlbOiu (C) D "MANY RIVERS TO ""'ID (Ci' m "'" C.ou "' *' CROSS"-IN COLOR l~Cll !!l-Cltl (C) ROBERT TAYLOR ~"' <ti . U Sil O'Cllc:t llfwiil· (C) ~ Tiiis ti Wflllt Fqt •IWn Te ~ t.dventuri) , l:JO R Cl)lqs 111111/INd I• -Robert Tl)'lof, EIMDDI' Part. lltf ii.r (C) • Diet ''" .,. <30) • .• 9 CI> m ri• ,.., <C> 1\t FHnbloHI (C) (30) Cl•pn P11IU1 st. T~ (C) (60) · MO¥il: "T11 0.,. tt l~ Mlf'I ""'? (30) "Jk Rieb." (11lvHrture) 'S&-Ster1!nc Haydel, ,_. Cltti111 (30) m Cltto Kid ,._. (C) USO) . .lkt Wl\ilL CD Mwlt: ".\lias ~ rmton• 5:JO MIC N....ic. (C) (60) (mystery) '5~ett1 St. John. -Nioo """ m (90) '"° ! ID CII ID ~ ~ """"" m Gueal1 lndud1 Ernest Rodin, Gal Mowll: "f1111r frl11rt1111d P• storm, London L•. Josh Whit. Jr. p • (drJm•) '31 -Herbert Mir· ind Louis "Sawdust" Carnes. shill. Cl1udette Colbert. PERKINS • JUDGE PARKER · Ylll I•• '''" (C} (30) 0 lllJ (])ID Hot WllNlt CCI Mr f...ntl Martian (30) fD M0¥11: "CitJ of SMdoWs" (dtt-.. oc===::::::--::::i====.. . look 1111 (C) (30) m1) '55-Yictor Mcl111tn. Nttldlft K (CJ (60) Clncion• J MllSkl KMll News (t) (30) 9:30 I~ Dlstlrdly & Mrrtlley (C) 7:00 CIS Effllinl News {C) (30) CD l1n1n1 Splits (C) • Rlt'1 MJ U111? (C) (30) aJ The Htrdy lop (C) I ·a... luey (311) C.nt. J C11itlfm lelt tfll Clod (C) (30) Ul:OO OJ (f) f't!MloJt ~ (C) ConinioditJ/Mllblll fl!ld (30) @(f)t;DSly HIWU (C) Ahoni! (30) MCJrir. '1..oftt C1111" (wuttnl) . A""'1c1A Wilt (C) (30) ' -Gtoril Mont1omery. Tllll Clrl {C) (3D) m Mowill: ... londe 1111'' (lll)'Sl1ry} 7:30 ta (I) Ce! s.m (C) (30) ,,,, '56 -Beve1ty Mlchl•ls, Ji111 Dnll. P1 ul1111 cuests IS I wily lnlllrlllCI I hsiell Clt.n• •rent .. ho alffn to help Smalt ID'JD ~ ~5j1;~,r lnrlVtl ttl1 mysttriolls dNtf'll cf I @ 6 €?':) Anllf'l. 11umblr of CONTROL 11111b. Ull R1in Slflu ( ~a ChH· O Quaker Oats Presents dren's festival 1t Lincoln C.nt11.N " HE WORLD OF 0 Mwlt: "Sip or th• R1111" * T (dr1m1) '48 -Sut.1n P1lttL \ THE BEAVER" Dl!ilCll lll•"''' ol"" ,_.IL-~~[!,. WITH HENRY FONDA "'(t) MOON MULLINS ' nm rmmn n.. w.w .. ttM m ..... '"Wiii• •t'ld ti..,. .... 1iiMr (C) (60) Htnry Fond• it Mimi" (dram1) '66-WRliim For· r:::====:::--:;;;;;;;:::--<~ off earner• narrator tor an olltdoor rest,, Louil! Currie. idftnture, filmed In t111 Rocll)o 11:00111The Atcflle SlllW (C) Mollntains near Jatbon Hole, Wyo., ~Ctt 11 T1ptber (C) 8 !i7l (})OJ TM f!Jlnt N~11 (C) 11:30 , UndlrdClt (C) NTIH11 $ Mw1« "T 11t Slco!lds · Amrka11 landsbllCI II Hiii" (drama) '~1tfl Ch.111-· Mlwle! "M• fro• 1.i lit" dltr, Jtet Palance, M1rti111 C.rol. (wultm) '56--Anthon, Quinn, I Tnatll or Con1"!NDCll {C) (30) m Aw1nl Thutn: "l'M StU MJ M•lllf Adtms (611) Lilt." Ttch11ical Comtr (30) ffflldl CW (30) Julll Ch~d. Cru di Alllf (30) • 1:00 9 (IJ l'IDllEIE TI• eon., " S111W ('C) (JD) Tim Conwt)' sbrs IS ll:llO §Cl (I] 1" ....... (C) tf)I dlirf tnd only pilot of I Olll-Hid! Sdltat Bnltetbll (C) pl111t 1lr ~iw, wit11 co-atar Joe Mowlr. "St [Yll MJ I.owl" (mn· f!rnn 11 h11 bosc. tery) '48-lltJ MHllnd, Ann Todd. a ucu BntlCbalt (C) (90) UCl.A I run f••Hllt Bnrlnt YI-UC S.rs d BtrblfY, . s.. tM USA (t) Avt from Berlllley. l~ Qt (I) WtcQ lam (C) a IHI CD m DI lfldy ''"'" Mlrie• "11111 tt LMIM" (C) (i:l) "Tire~! Tlatrl" Th•. Bradys (westein) • '54 -.1ot111 Payne. trt In turmoil when lht1r dot, m Mowltt "Chl111 11:111" (1dven· "jl~~~ Tlftr, disappears. tu re) '57-Gene Bury. ltl T1 t.i1 till Trvtll (C) (30) Ii) @CI) NC8 81 .. rtb&ll (C) Lo- Sllcll M1Rl1/f11bl11 (30) yola et Pepperdine lltlrflt1 (C) {30) (R) I lnlinltt Hori101!1 (C) Llclcb (C) (JD) . H•PPfftint (C) l:lO ~Cl)ffo1a11'1 Htro11 (C) 1:00 OtJ(i)Sup1t111111 (CJ ~ tD N1m1 !' Ult "• ' · Morie: "In Old «utuckJ"" (dft· ( ~ 'The Garden. m1) '3S-Will Ro!"" (W(J)·aJThl Cllolt •lld Mn. ID l'adrt C.mca Mllf (C) (~l "No Hits, No Runs, , s,ora w~ (C) No ()rlten. . Upbul (C) m DM1 fratt Show ft) (9()) Mtu· l:lO 0 9 CJ) Jonny QlllSt (C) mn O'Sullivan, Geor11 Rost, R11 0 Movlt: "Tiit Trtmplers• (w81t- Ntr1Ct, and ISIK Aslmm. ) .,, •••• ' "·tt I Th 111 V1lley (CJ {60) 1rn -_..._.p ....., tn. Officl of tfll l'res!Mnt (30) m Travel' tlll WOfld (C) SM""& Owr tht Roellll {C) 2.11D fJ TIM "" Soc"'1 (C) Ptul Uden (30) (R) hosts. ''SIM!u!d W1 HM Stricl11 AFTfR~JflO', STEVE ROPER ---· ----· J. tsli.h.o 14# '\UU tilt nm u n llUl 11 ( I WAS lWIN~NG IT MIGMT !E 5f5.T IF YOU SAW MIM ALONE WITH MIS. WINT~J"'UPGE! FIJl<I, HUH? CE La ....,, de ,nlvlllo (30) Cun ConltGI l1ws1" Im Prohtlitn1I low1m Toll '-~==-'7':-:-::=s~=-'-'--'"-..:..tJ"-'---' •:ELKE SOMMER AND ,.,,1=. ~:~': .. er., !CJ MUTI AND JEFF * ROBERT VAUGHN IN ' Ptdfk g 81sk1lbtll 1c1 THE CBS MOYIE · W1ro11 Tflin (C) I "VENETIAN AFFAIR." 1 ChlHtr WPiTC.-1 CL.IT, STUPID. ll!HCIJCIS FridtJ Mtwlt: (C) Tiit G1mt lrHkHS Ctl Amu~ '~"7 \ .I'TO'U.C~A ~Ue~~ "'Tilt Vll!llilll Aff•lr• (dri me) •67 can Btsblball A&tDcletlon hlth· "" , '""'"""'""' -«oblrt Vaufhn. Eltt Sontmw, !!!fits. j";~~ 'THE ICE! ftl le11 fm, Kar1 Boehm, Lllci1n1 J·m !Ll ""ca ",,.""!._(t) ~ Ptluul. Boris Ktr1olf. • 1J S ... ,,., D iD Mn Come t11t l!Wa (C) ID lllo.fe: "'hto11 for Hirt" (mys- @) "Th• She-8ea1." tel')') '49-StM Brodll. I-""'" 100J • mr .... Dtril s.at.i!Wl Slln (C) (2 hr) m I ll l'lctwl (C) "°' C. Mona ltll {30) l:JO 0 llNIC Nl'#ll!'riu ltl .... C11111 (Cl (30) Sonny holtJ. with columnist Almy D LEARN from the PROS Arm.cl 1sslst1na. Guests this week * Chevrolet pre5en\5 1rt 0.11 Row1n, Did: M1rtl11, Grew THE ANDY WILLIAMS 111 Jtiwi1 """ (C) (30) D fill (}) al AndJ nil• S.1 HlfM Opera 'GC) Dftp Ofltll Qolf To11J111111tnl (C) G RDO ·1·n::..llMl<Cl~nB~~r:uw.,4. SAN DIEGO GOLF OPEN 11otN1 T_!Plll•s (60) m Wi11p &o Adventurt (C) 10:00 Q 00 Ui) l ttcktft'I WorW (Cl 4:00 0 Mlril: (C) "Tt11 Wtlrttcl Mt11" f~::".'::-:'.::"'"~-------, i A Pertct Pleet of C1st1n1. (western) '$!! -R1ndolph Seott. 1"HB5E IDAM ftl (~) ., ..... , 1m..,1w011Hrt111tta.nct1 d,.,0.~.,, m LM. AMl"IClll _.. I ) . . I sn (C} ,,,....., r-Kro ( ) "LO¥I ind tilt Ntn'Olll fJ:mt· Jctu Slw•ty (t) S1'J ll'PV tM," with Paul L111de, Ctrol Wqnt, Dellus tlld Stntt/hlt!*t tt ~ '/2~~.r Htrt Vo11nd; "Lm and tht Hitch· Profit (CJ "1111.w~ hiklr," Yritll Bob Denwr, Joey •·'81 Olldot11 (C) Ht11hlrtl111, How1~ Stoml; 1ftd . Htlft s,.dtl (C) "lOff 11Mf the GrNt Cttd'I," .. ~" ~ (j) HOtM bdllf ,,.. ... Ad.Im Wilt. Phnette flbrlJ, P~I lltth (t) Ptllll Blldl l"IOI. c..nvn, Gtortt lllllbty, Miry W1I· Q) f..-1 ;·Oellll (C) (60) Motow!I 1ln1t1f 5:00 0 tr1 Actdffnic IC) r.otnpetlnf Ol'lld Rllffl11, T1rry K111111r, Tht hijl! ~hool1 111 Hunlfnfton Btteh, C.J1uon&. tt'ld JtrfJ Vin DJt• tl.IUt. Corntl1~ Co11lltlly (Antllll!'ll), Ind ~""' .._. (60) N1tllt11itf N11110A111 (HtttlOr Cltf), o ......... cJOJ R ~~t....""=.W.., .. 10-.30 ~ (30) ~ '('S1 ~ T"llO-M111 ..,_, 11:11 fC ~(!) ..... (C) Chtmpklllstllp ffM st Morib, Miii•· .,.:;,.. (dr11M) • Switurtand: th1 1n111n1tion11 Clift lllti11.Prl11t1. Jim llC•us. OMnt ~amPlonlhlp from Ac.tpgk:t. i "1tH l'tlcl Mllloo, tnd thl WOftf Outboifj Ml S.W, SM S.M (C) Motor Bolt Rtelnt Clltll!fl~ TM rlllJbi Stp (It) lrom Litt Htt1111 Citt, Arit. ................ (!O) w_;"" ...,... (t) • ll:JO Qt(l)Merrlitffll (C) Gtoflt , llllN: >oltMt'Wt (dttmt) R'"-Gtortt 8ur111. Tl111 Con•IJ'1 TJtOnt Powtr, Dorotl!J Lim., 11'1d ..... ~ .... Wilton tutll 1 P•ttr Oult """"1 . -'*'""" Cl @C>llll"'"" c. ... '"' .............. (RJ sa..iiultd iruats: TOii)' ltMttl lftd Cl le TM'ff lltrtn Wy1111n. · " Ill 0 MM: (C) "ffuu\ u.• (WUI-a,ft s,.drcMllS (C) lrfl) '53-Mtedofltld Cerar. l !IO .... s.tlfttl Wltldtrtlil WtrW llJ Ol<I c ... tt (t) of ··• ........ (t) (RI Mftft: -wllllrlpool" ('"'1stMfj I "lllC ""'9tmct (C) .,.. ntmey, Jolt F.-r.. ltlMl "111 I (C) II) 111tN: (C) .......... f McH•t RlfJ I ii lat.r' {wtlttin1) '51-GM 11,.ct ... ' Moll11!V!Mf1, .....,,,. Tylet, , ............ (Q (Rf 1?fLt.. y Scl-\oot SruvENT CouflT ('44:, ... S"s1oto11 :t C\?N'T l(NOW MOW ,.0 SAY THIS 11\Al<CJA 8UT JNASMU(.µ AS 1 AM ,.HE PLAINTIFF ' ANO YOU Aln! il<E DeFENt>ANT, DON'T" YOU FElil-we .5HOUlD MAVs ANOTME~ suoae-.. ~ -.. , .. ,:-:.,.,.~. ~· By Frank Ba9h11ld -, , " I By Harold By Saunden and OveffJClrd KEEP SLUGGtM' WITH THAT Ftoc:K, BELTER /-SOONER OR LATE.Q TllE LOCK'S GOTTA 61\/E/ .,..._..,,_ ,.,. FMdl)', _,......, )0. 1970 By Charles Banott1 .... PEANUTS TELEVISION VIEWS . Tim Con~ay Series Sef · By RICK DU BROW - ' ' ' HOLL-VWOOD (UP() -CBS-TV tonl(ht offers a midaeason replacement series, "Th.e Tlm Con-- way Show," a weekly half-bOur situation comedy i' about the chief -and only -pilot of a on .. Plina '· airline. The pllot Is ·not too brl&hi and bum~lu a lot. The series Is not likely to be sponsored by a I commercial airline; • ._PIRSONALLY, ! like It when anybody undv- mlnes the Dloneyland·ln.the-sky image projeclld .by the bi~ airlines. There 's an awful lot that's fun11Y ' about flying nowadays, and the Conway series }\Al : a wealth of material to draw on. One of the fqn. nlest moments on t~gbt'o 'Prelriiere !Inds Conway 1l~lng down next 'to.lhe onlr passeng~r on hi• mabt , •IYlnl straight lnto •his Iller. "Good afternoon. Tbi1 " Is your pilot spealdba." . . · The Conway series ql!lto natuplly preseftll quite a bit of tlte usual sfl1iition comedy formuia • approach -from oddball charactets to simpllalic 1 style. But in its own unpretentious way, the d1but does have a reasonable sense of hum.Or. AbOve all • it has a couple of funny fellows in tht chief parts-.'.. and that's half the batUe. · 1 THE LEAD, of course, is Conway, and he's an ~ ! awfully good comedian. He's the best bumbler tel .. "" • vision has hall since Marty Ingel1 in the fine se,.Ie1 i .. I'm Dickens ... He's Fenster," which also star. red John A1Un . Conway's costar la Joe Flynn bola ' of the one-plane servtee. Flynn ed Conway Pl'• i : viou~Jy appeared together In the old aertes "Mc-;. 1 Hele a Navy/' and they are v.ery well suited to • : each other. ; ....... ._ . In thla show, they are the total personnel of ,; j the "Triple A" Service: Anyw?iere, Anytime Airlil'le.• S : Thei_r chief problem, among others, is gettinf tM ~; • plane to fiy. Allor lhit.. thefr major obstll!lle 11 tbe '. • : pilot. He doesn 't fiy too well . · ' • • • TONIGHT'S premiere has some very funny :4 · mo!11ent1 .ip a slapstick, near-catastrophic flight ln .. : which Conway and Flynn think their only passenger ! t ! ts a hijacker because he's from Cuba. The retult ,Ja panic ln the air, with everyone accidentally lock· ,. ed out of the pilot's cabin. and some skillful phydcll comedy combined with Conway's pleasanUy wild, low-key approach. , • l also liked Bablan Dean as an airport lllnch counter proprietor who earnestly tries to run 'hia " .. place with the elegance of the Waldorf despite bll unfortunate tendency to talk like a stevedor~ ... THE CHANNEL SWIM: A DemocraUc Partyi' responae to President Nixon's Jan. 22 Stati, of Uie Union address will be offered in one--hour daytbne broadcasts on aJJ three networks Sunday, Feb. 8 . .. a look at the new wave of moviemaker1 ts set for CBS-TV's 1180 Minutes " Tuesday . • . Di.ck Cavett'• late-nlghl ABC-TV show wlll be devcii.d ' entirely to Noel Coward on Feb. 10. • Denni• tlae Menace ·, .. ·~ •• lilfllf!' • ----~------------ DAILY PILOT . NEW '70 · .. ' Friday, Januaf'J '°· 11!170 CHR¥SLER/PL¥MOVTH! IMJ:!.!J!!;R 0 ~~~!£~. --AN,NUAL __ IT'S ClEAN UP TIME•· Town D . ; ..... _ D ti -•' & Country Station WaCJon . I #CP~6LOC I 107111 s.r11 f'l ut lit. and Ii''"'' Of! of M 1nuf~'h1r1t1 Stid t1r li1! Pri$1. ~~ 'This Is the time of the Y••r when Atl•s Chrysler Plymouth conducts their 1nnu1I clffri" up sale to reduc.• new •JJd used car inventory. Every automobile In stock wlll be clearly red f•gged with the bigg"t Price reductions of the y11r Su Atlas Chrvsfer Plrmouth t0d1y, for -• THE GREATEST SAVINGS EVER! 1969 MERCURY COUGAR VI, heater, power steering, immaculate condition. low miles. f9F91HSl,.552 1 . $1995 1967 OLDSMOBILE 4.4.z H.T. COUPE VS, automatic, AM-FM radio, heater, power steering, bucket seats, like new, IUOE7H J $1795 1965 OLDS 88 4 DOOR HARDTOP 1967 Pl YMOUTH GTX 2 DOOR HARDTOP VB , autor.11tic, radio, heater, power steering, power brakes, vinyl top, fTRH. 396) $1695 1965 Pl YMOUTH FURY 2 DR. HARDTOP Ya, autom1tic, radio, heater, power sfeerin9, power brakes, eir condition. in9. I NOY842 J s995 ~ 1968 CHRYSLER VB , radio, heater, automatic transmis • sion, pp""'er steering . fWIAlOJ J TOWN & COUNTRY WAGON VB, eutomatic, radio, heater, power steering.brakes-windows, fe ctory air conditionifi, WSW. f UZJ325 ) 2795 1967 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN WAGON 390 VS , automatic, radio, heater, pow. er 1feerin9, factory air. I UOK62 I l 1966 CHEVROLET NOVA S.S. H.T. COUPE Automatic, radio, heater, power 1teer- in9, excellent condifion. fYGY2651 1967 CHRYSLER TOWN AND COUNTRY l SEAT WGN. V.8, radio, heater, power steering , pow. er brakes, automatic fren1m i1sion , d uel factory air, split bench reclining seat. Loeded. CE46H76149562 1968 Pl YMOUTH SPORT SATELLITE 2 DR. HARDTOP v.e, automatic transmission, radio, heater, power steering, eir <ond., buc k. et seats etc. REAL SAVINGS. VTP 317 \ ATLAS SERVICE DEPARTMENT We lcomes end honors ell Chrysler Corporation ve. hie/es requirin g service and warranty work regard- less of wh ere cer wes purchased, Authorized Chrys. /er factory trained personnel et your disposal." Chrys- ler, Plymouth, Imperial, Dodge end Dodge trucks. We honor most credit cards. AH Pl'lcll 1'9 plus II• & tk...,11. All •Ulofnobltts lr1 Subltel lo prfllr 1111. Prkts ... Vllld llnlll ~0:00 P~. SWICl1y, "elwv.ry I, 1t111 . CHRYSLER PLl'MOIJTH IMPERIAL , I - rand Exp n --·---NOW 7 'ACRES TO SERVE YOU . ·--- EXT;RA i!OW PRICES IN EVERY DEPT. TO CELEBRATE OUR GROWTH ' . . NEW 197° CUSTOM PJCK-UP NEW 1910 . , ; NEW· 1910 MU STANG ·BIR ~EW.1970 . GALAXiE 500 IMMIDIATI DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DILIVRT Stock No. 0Jl2V 35)35 f ........... '"" <K<W• $ 5 8 8 _, ....... wltll ftl l lt'I t•trl YllU• *tw91, -IMMtY J!dt mtul4· 11111, -Unflitdl saffiy MrtllU• '°"' "II' ll'!'lltll uor111. 2 DOOR HARDTOP. Fully factory equipp~, inf.I. vinyl high back bucke t seat s, color keyed carpel, floor mounted shift lever, instrument gauges & be lted fires. . NEW 1970 FALCON \;~~~R Sil No OROILll7082 ··f -··"'"·n•"" .. "'"' $2188 24 Cruise-0·ma11c. power disc brakes, power sleering. r;-. dio, with concealed anlena, healer, radial pl yYltre'~ vinyl se<1ts, simulated teakwood·gratned appliQue on in!ltrument & door p.tnels. Serial No. OJ83N119787 • .................. ,. ... w .. 5228 YiflJI lffh, <ht'om41 l <1llt, •ttll' •• llthf1., Jlt CtO ell,., MW l•l•"llP)' 11.,,rn., lllMlltHMMt. . ' . . . . . . . .,...... O«ltl"IDnl, , IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIAJE DELIViaY ' , ' SPECIAL PURCHASE !.69 TORINO ·G.T. Spt. Roof $2488 Gold fini sh, 11ir cond. YRX'-'-944ccc··---=-----=---=- l 69 T.~~~.~~":·!;2~pt. Roof $2488 . '69 !h?m~~~?,.,~;,!,~Y~~~ Roof $2488. ''69 TORINOG.T. Spt. Roof $2488 · , · Ntw lime finish, 11ir cond. XTl 495. . . IMPORT SPECIALS '60 MERCEDES BENZ 220S $498 Nice. M'PU 310 .• ~· ~· ~-~---==--=--=- .,....._,6_5_T,ftSPITFIRE Roadster $588 NPH 752 . '66 ~~~SUN Roadste.-,r~l--0:60-=--0--:$=1-=1-=8-=-8 '68 .AUSTIN HEALEY Sprite $1088 • Sh1rp. No. 33 161 . NEW CAR TRADES •68' · PLYMOUTH Fury Ill · Air cond. WCY 760. '68 ~~~J,.~~~od. XOC 078. ~68 RAMBLER American ' Afr toncl. YRT 221. . BRAND NEW MAYER 49 To Choo••· From $ All Colors & E(lulpmtnt Av1il. •• Sor. No. OK91V220433 Immediate Delivery . . . SPECI AL SH IP OF 39 NEW FORD CORTI AS AUTOMATICS Total Down Payment T otcil · Monthly Payment $9 s5 PLUS TAX & LICENSE Feil 36 MONTHS 1'1ymf1'11l lnduck 111 llXtJ l lot ti Hr>«>C~ ~•r7fl of Jlt' ff IOI' 3' montM. i:t~mcor19 t~••tft ti.Md on ANNU,tr,L P'•llC(NT,tr,G• l.,tr,TE O~ IS'!;, Otltrrfd ~tv'l'lrnt P!'kt Of 11'1J,t& To!t! t•ll'I ·rl<'1 lncl\IC!tl t1~ l !ti !lce<1s1 l lllS.ilO BRAND NEW 1970, l,i.f. FORD TRUCK & EL DORADO CAMPER ' FUU PRICE . , '70 F·2&0 .. ' STYLESIDE'· . ·~ ': :;·;_"':~s.~. p~: ~ ~75tU .. EL OOlt,tr,00. Full )!.~b M'I' OTTOW" cmo. No, tcl1.u&. · IMMEDIATE DELIVERY SUPE R $PECIALS ·· '66 '~QUI.RE~ Wa9on . . ·. 1:61~, 11r cond. SAA 197. i 6 7 D.O,D,~'Cof91'!et ·Hardtop Air condl: TGN 211 . . :.. , -~ '67 FORD Galaxie 500 TMG 005 . '65 T-BIRD Hardtop lo1ded. NBY 431 . '67 T-BIRD Landau lo11ded. SXP 706 . , TRANSPQRTATION SPEC IAL '64 CHEVROLET Malibu Autom1tic. FMY 162. ~488 ' '62 FORD Galaxie 500 Y4, 11utom1tic. OGK 061 . '65 ,CHEVROLET Corvair Corsi. SJV 133. '63 ~~.~~' :,~~~~!e 500 '64 FORD Country Sedan St1tlon w1 9on, 1lr cond. HIY 586. TRUCK & CAMP ER SPECIALS '65 CHEVROLET '!2 Ton $788. Pick up. U7479. I ---'611~!~~~~J~~NAL Scout $8~, ~---------:...u-: '66 ~5~r;!?LIN=Ec-=-;;;;;----,$=10_,..S8...,...· ,._ '65 ~~.~~~P?,~!~. ~~s!.0n $1488' • ,, ~ •• •• SPECIAL 'FINANCING AVAILABLE ' ' '68 ~.~~,~~~~65~ Sportroof I . , I '69 ~.~~.~ .. L!~,EN• Hua. $2188 ' ' --~----~~~~~~~--~--------------------------------------'- i I . l .. ~r H0\1111 l'OR SALE HOUSIS FOR SALE HOUllS l'OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR ~LE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUS.S FOR SALE HOUSIS FOR .SALE HOUSES FOR SALE -, 1000 1000 Gtner•I 1000 Gener•I FOREST E. \i°""iliii..,ii1~1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1000iiiiii0.iiiiinii1ii"ii1iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1000iiiiii\~O~o~no~r~•~I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~1 000 ;· ~?~·~ne~r~•~I iiiiiiiiiiiiiii"iiiii~~ ~~-~· Oen• ra I RUSTIC RANCH Srfu READ THIS If you are in the market for a NE \V home. see these outstand- ing customized homes, built by Frank H. Ayres. and Son, locat- td in a prime area very close to Huntington State Beach. The ho1Ties are priced from f27 ,550 to S33.690 and vary in size from .l to 4 bedrooms, 2 to 3 car gar· ages and 2 to S baths, with shake or mission tile roo fs. fire- places. underground utilities, t'.O.ncrete driveways, built-ins. an d carpeting. There is VA and F HA fi nancing availa ble. There are 9 homes available because of credit rejections. Occupancy by ~1arch 1. 1970 in this unit. Our next unit is Jfow on sale for occupancy in May ·and June 1970 and introduces the new 3,000 sq. It. "El Dorado" model priced from $84, 490. Ran;cho La Cuesta Hom•• on 8 .. ookhurst at Atl1nta. Huntington Beach 961-2929 -961-1311 ------- DAILY PILOT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS lOOOGeNral 1000 . Open Houses THIS WEEKEND IMp rtita ._., lliNCt•ry wltti y•• thn _.,.lfefMI • ,.. .. ....._h•11t1J19. All ttt. l.c•tl•11• ll1t-4 Mt•• .. -.CrfttMI .. •'"'-' ...,, ., Hftrthl ..... ........ ...,... DAILT PILOT WANT ADl. ,.,,._ ........ .,.. ...... " ,_ .... 9f' .. '"' .... , ...... .. Hdl ~•11 I• Hilil c•l•111• _. FriHy, 12 Bodroom & f•mily or Denj 330 Poppy, Corona de! ~1ar 67USIO (Sal & Sun 1·5) (l Bedroom) 110 Via Cordova (Street to Strada) Lido Isle, 646-3255 (Fri, Sal & Sun 1-5) 430 Cabrillo, Costa r.1esa 546-8640 !Sun 1-5) 2141 Vista Enlrada !The Bluffs) NB 675-5'30 '(Sat & Sun 1-5) 1519 Bonnie Doone Terrace. CdM 675-4031: 673-0145 (Sat & Sun 1-51 **731 Via Lido Soud (Lido Isle) NB 6'M200 I Sat & Sun 2-5) *5101 Bruce Crescent !Lido Sand s) NB 64MWO (Sun 1-5) 263 Bucknell {College Park) CM 5(6.544-0 (Open Sunday) 723 Cameo Highlands Dr .. C.'crona del Mar 673-= (Sat &Sunl-51 (3 Bedroom & f•mily or De n) . 2298 Waterman \Vay. Costa ft1esa 645-2000 : f>48-6966 Eves. (Sat & Sun 1-51 41151 Brandford St. (Huntington Harbour) HB, 846-0609 (Sal & Sun 12-5) 2304 Fair bill Drive (Back Bay) NB 645-IHI : 548-6683 (Sat & Sun ) 438 Aliso (Newport Heig ht s) NB 675-4600 (Sal 1-4) *1400 Lincoln Lane (\\°estcli U) NB 642-5200 (S un 1-51 316 Ruby, Balboa Isl and 675-7225 (Sun 1-51 I~ Bedroom) 233 Opyx, Balboa Island 87311200 (Sun 1-5 I 9712 C1earbrook, I lunti ngto n Beach 54&-8640 (Sun 1-5) 219 Poppy, Corona del Mar 833-0'IOO : 644-2430 (Sun 1-51 ~ 2901 Cassia (Eastblu(f) NB 833-0700 : 644-2430 (Sun 1-5) I~ Bedroom & Fam ily or Oen) 1921 S&11tiago Drive, Ne\vport Beach 648--(Sat & Sun 11·5) J&'f Santiago Drive fDover Shores) NB '1146-1550 (Sat 1-51 ·~Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) NB 94&-1550 (Daily) 13"11 Antigua (Baycrest ) NB ..WllllO (Sun 1-51 3001 Garfield, North Co•ta Mesa 675-7325 (Sun 1-51 (5 Bt clroom & Family or ~ 11512 Angon Circle, Huntington Beach ~ <Sat & Sun t·5l • . CONDOMINIUM FOR SALE r 12 Bedroom) . Ull Morristown (Moollcello l CM 5*-USI 1Set & Sun 1·5) ' DU,LEXIS FOR SAtl llll Pearl. Balbol lll&nd 67l-7225 (Sat & Sun l-5) IZ Bedroom otchJ 432 F'e)'llleal, Corona del l\l<lr 67l-Sl.10 , • (Sii>&: Sun 1-5 ) ·-............... l'Ml eo4 W-.iMj Pele Barrell f<ea/t'I pre6enli OPEN HOUSE -LIOO BAYFRONT. II you want an exceptional Bay;front you must \ee this spacious 3 bdrm hom'.e \Vllh 2 private pa· tlos. pier & slip. Available immediately. $165,000. Marcia Bents. 731 Via l,ido Soud S•t/Sun '2·5 PRESTIGE AREA -GREAT FINANCING! Near.new 4 bdrm family home. Formal d in· ing room. Family room . 3 Car garage. Lar~e insurance loan assum abl e at ex isting low m· terest. $76.000 1338 Antigua, Baycrest Sunday 1·5 BEACH ORIENTEO -LIDO SANDS. Enjoy Sea & Sur!. Casual living in small beach com· munity with private pool & tennis court. A· Frame with exposed beamed ceilings, 3 bd· r ms 2 baths. 126 ,000. 5101 Brue• Cresc•nt Sunday 1·5 NEW LISTING -IRVINE TERRACE. lm- n1aculate. Adult occupied . 3 bdrms + maid's quarters. POOL & VIEW. Expensive -en· tertainment oriented. $88,750. o•;, FEET -NORTH BAYFRONT -LIDO ISLE. Partially remodeled Bayfront home. Priced near lot val ue . All new baths. Pier & slip. Vacant. Immediate possession. OUTSTANDING HOME -BAYCREST. 4 bd- rms. fa mily room, formal dining room, break· fas t nook. 3lh baths, 3 fireplaces, pool & nu4 merous other outstanding features. Shown by appoin~nt only. $84,500 Office Open S1turd1y1 & S..ndays PETE BARREIT REAL TY 1605 w .. tcllff Dr .. N.B. 642-5200 ------------~ 1000 A MOST SPACIOUS Set on appro.x. Y.t -acre near back bay. Has existing out 6u1ldings. A· 1 zoning for hones. Owner asJCtng $28,6~0. Submit all offers·. JUNK THE LAWN MOWER 2 story spacious two Bd . condominium . Patio kitchen, gas BBQ, plus 420 sq. ft. bonus room \Vith dark room. All this •• and just step's to • sparkling pool. Priced at $26.7~. Owner wil l se ll , lease. or allow a lease purchase. Owner transferred and in a hurry. COMMERCIAL DREAM 164' frontage on Harbor Blvd., suitable for restaurant or medlcal building. $1500 per front ft. or make offer. Additional R·2 prop· erty in rear. DREAMS .... DREAMS ...• DREAMS ••.• Beco me a reality in this 4 or 5 bedroom co- loniaJ castle. Large master bedroom en· dowed. $33.000 and on a cul·de·sac, with large fruit bearing trees. Seller will pay all assumption cost.s. 2629 Harbar Bvd., Costa 546-8640 ---------·--- Gtner•I Mesa 1000 OCEAtl' VIEW HOME Original Har bor View Hills with RAY, har· bor; Catalina & LIGHTS outstandi ng from th is location. 3 lrg Bdrms, 2 BA, tiled gold medallion kitchen, slate entry, quality crpts & drps thruout. Lrg Terraced patio, 2 way frplc, garage opener & more quality EX· TRAS. '55.000 & terms. OPEN SAT & SUN PM. 1014 Sea Lane. Corona del ~Iar. 644-2905 OWNER * . ------------ OLSON Inc. Keal.to~ ~ BDRM. + FAM. & RUMPUS WHAT'S THISI\ $I 8,500 And only 6 years youna. fan. 1.astlc tf'nnl tool Get lo- grthcr $1,300 ana· that's all )'OU l'lffi!! f ' good ~ bdm1s • 2 baths _ kitcbt'n wirh built·1ns. F'am1ly + runiptJ$ room. Bcautilul, \\-'CIJ kept, h'l'C lined COlll- munity. \Vhert' in ~ world can you find a bargain Jike lhia. !\lovr Iaa:t! Dial GU-124) COUNTRY LIVING VIEW! LAGUNA HILLS Thi• beautiful & IMMACULATE shake roof home \vUl leave you breathless! BRAND NE W SHAG CARPETS in all 3 bdrms & in the entire hom~ too!! It's in a prime area near all schools & sho_pping. Open beams, trees & gorgeous landscaping make this a MUST SEE al only '28,750. GOOD GRIEF! Even Charlie Brown would go for a home like this. It bas 2000 sq. ft. & 4 bdrms + eat· ting bar & large dining room . The large yard is arranged for true California living with covered patio & sepbrate s to r a g e shed. BEAUTIFUL CONDITION for $33,950. COATS & WALLACE REALTORS <2·=> 1491 BAKER STREET 546-4141 COSTA MESA, CALIF. General 1000 Gen1rel 1000 Country J1v1nc at its bes!~ 1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,I Unusual 2 story homP with 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I ' view '"' oc"" .,..,.,,., ' $22 950 1 5 Bdrms 3 Baths kin&: 1iied bt'th~m•: 3 lfl'ie t SHAKE ROOF baths. Ranch s1'te -fireplace. Cute 2 bdtm It den. near I N II hoot S37 Huge 'l.i r1. lamily room. downtoWn C.~I. & City Park ~ar ~ •c 5. ,(00 - Sf'ller foN.~d to move. LO\v, Has red' brick H~atilit lo;. 81 0 ltl1nl!. low dov.·o pa.ymcnt . Tl'lliy a !irepl11.:e, f1•u1t ll't't'S & fanta.slic bargain; Don"t be-largr fcrtl'Cd lot. f or ap- , lale! ~hal nou.• 645--1245. po1n1nu.•nt to see. caJI 645-1245 at Harbor Center 2299 Harbor BJvd., C.l\f. Country_ Estate Custom built 3 bdnn bomt • n1any e.'(tra&. Lo1 l 80."il:300' • many, many trees. S75,000. Wells·McCardle, Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. 548--7729 644-0684" eves. Builders Close Out !l S:l7.9M. 7 ROOMS, frplc, $1 ,400 Down S'!. * 642·1771 Anytime * crpts, drps, nu tile It to J.,Q\V. LOW in!ere&t lnl"!~~~~~~~~.:1~;00~l~'"::;m:;;·~l~90~'~°"'~n~1•~A~w~.I Beach Area~ !\1 A SS JV El : BE:DR00!\.1S plus sprawling Gtner•I 1000 General 1000 hvlll&" & 1''A~IILY ROOJ\.f1)================::;:=1 "l\"Jth noor to · e1ling FIRE. P~CE! Bright at sunshine California garden electric k uchrn \\"ilh dish11•asher. I P lush shar carpet~ from ' Coldwell, Banker BEAMED CEILING Hv;n•I OFFERS: roon1 to sPChJdcd niaster Upper Bey EASTSIDE homt> on quiet t..'Ul-<llNl.ll.C, Ex~n­ ll\le carpets, drapes and ex- q ui.lite deooraling gl'eets you a 1 you walk into an el~ g11.11t livinl; room 11ilh raiaro hearth fireplace, 'nltte ~­ lnl l&r1f' bedrooms, 1v.-o pllllman baths. The bria;hl cheery kitchen hils built-ins and dllhwuher, TI)t family room hu llldi,.-glau doon to a huge aluminum Cl'.>Yer- ed ~!io surrounded by .,, beautiful 18.wn, This pridf" of ownenlhip home can be yours lor only $34,950.00. You'll Fell In Love , •• \Vith our r:itclusive \Veslcl i!f home. '.\ large bedrooms, 2 baths: opl"n . beam ceilina:s: double storlf' fireplace. lkst valuf" you'll f'ver find in thl~ lovrly neighborhood! Ulw inierl'S1 loan can be as· 1umf'd S4l.!IOO. General I bedroon1 plus scrumptous 1 1000 General 1000 pullman marble baths . ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I POOL SIZED. block \\•aUed I A FEW OF OUR MANY FINE PROPERTIES FOREST £. 1 • back yard with profess1onaJ . Leis~re Uvinq Iy IancJSf'aped rront \\' i 1 h 0 L S 0 N 'tn THE BLUFFS 'PMokl•n. TITTAL ONLY1 $34.400. !\.JOVE NQ\V ! BeaurifU I view hom(" In top WE SELL A HOME location. l bdrms 2 baths, EVERY 31 MINUTES Inc. Reeltors NEWPORT BEACH DUPLEX EARN S $6,300 '"" d'"'"" .... + ,rn. Walker & lee lar&:e lrnced p&tio. This DOVER SHORES NEW· VIEW! Ivan WtlllJ &. Sons have just L'Omplelf'd 3 brand new homes, rtady !or immedi· ate occupancy, 4 bdm1s, 3 baths plus powder room. Panelled famiJy room w/ fireplace. Formal dinini room-kitchen breakfast area. Luxurious ly carpeted. Land- acaped courtyard po o I s. From $100,ocil. Ivan Wells & Sons Roy J . Ward Co. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS 1430 G1laxy Drive 6-16-IJSO {Open Dai.ly1 Colesworthy & Co. "Agenl"' "For A \ViSf' Buy"' oo.rm Missing The Back 40? Hert!·~ l /:t acrl' PLUS in Back Bay 11·11h .1 bdm 11 2 bath~ & Ijx30" pool 1vith diY· illl:" board. Try FllA or VA or 10'7o do•vn. $27,500 Newport •• '.\ bdnn ~tt'sa Vrl"de Cam· brl<~ae. dble frpk-r. large pool, lorrna! dining and ru11ction11l floor p I 11 n. Does need carprt.«, ~·11e pa i 11 t. Vacaul. $3i,OOO. Out of Al"'('a owllt'r' ')1~,sa\Cn',"J\1 11 t '' 546-5990 Strioo down. l bdnn.~ .1 bath.~. ft1n ily room. S("tvice parch, t\replace " all built·in~. A fantastic bu.,v al la~t ycaral '"""'""'Oiii'""'"""'"ilii .. price or STJ,ij(). CALL 7907 Beker Street 5~().ll;il Heritage R<'al f.~· llct1''s a ~rt':it "'i\frs:1 Vcrdr"" -"~',.' "':'°,."",."~",.",.'1-~-• I h0n1r 1111h rom1al din. n11., -=: ---fam . rn1. & l 1't'al. c;ood siled You'v• Seen the Re 1t bdnns. V11.c11nt 11011. rully Now See The Best pqulppcd Jt11.ndtl1'd pool. A THE BLUFFS, th•t il "Clln1D1·lug~ Serles"' hoo1r . home hl'I~ many added t'X- h~. LiVt'd in b~1 ad u11s. Buy ll for only $-44,250. AcrOll!l tht 11rtt1 from Uwi I OWNER pounding surf. 4 bedroom, 2 , . bii!hs up i ~room do\\ II. \'•JI r1nance 1~1~ 4 bdrm 2 LA.rie kitchen "l\'ilh deluxe lxi~i home ivtth pool. Only bulh -ins in each uni!. On!' 10 •• do"".n . no Joan fe<>s 10 unJt )'f't1.rl leased at $300 ~Y· Ask1ne $42,500. Call off. mo. Lil~ti>:nr:-viciv ol th" tee for particulars. sea. Big 1wnmet rent11 _ II ~u want! Only 15% down a nd prier ~lashed lo S41.500.1 Sf!f> 1od1ty. Dial 64.).0.10.1. 645-0303 lSOO Nl'\\1'01"1 Bl\d .• C'.\1 at Harbor Cf"ntr1 '.!m lhuilor Bh·d .. C.:"lt, I CA.LL 6f6.~9:!S Eves. 6~l·lti.-1.·1 I z::: .. T:H:::::E=A=TR=1u=M= .. = I c !~.~"~ oc~.~?e~ES by !VAN WELLS Fol'l'l'lf'r n1odel . Loadl'd 11·1rh rxtras. Gh1rnorous 14' !11lllS· lure111 l>ean1cd ceiling. No1·. 11111.n brick rfoorl111; & p:irwl· led 11•a ll~. Thi.1 r:otciting atrl- un1 & D1.1!~1anding view al'e ju~t 1 ol !he leatures you will want to sl'<' in this 4 bdrm, 3 bath, :l e.1r garag' bl'auiy. Lu.'<uriou~l)• t·arµE't· ed. draped. larwls1•nf!<·d FuU. priN' S89,000. . Roy J. Ward Co. I (0a~1Tt.'~l OUlc.'l'l 14:m Gn lll\y 636·1i'.>O I Office Bldg. i'.:xpensh•i!ly huilt ho111c a1 463J Ornnr:1u1t .1 Lari;:f" bNl1uon1-. ru11n;il 11111111:; at'(",1 \"II'\\" rn 11ul.1 1·rn1111 11.,:;:i l'o.11 .JU!ll l~Ul'N;i' 011 Ill'!" II 111 flll<l.llLr' Nu\\" S9S.i:,O ()pen lfou "t' suncJa.v 1 j Li!l!M E"<ctu~ivrly \1"1!h REALTORS 673·4400 E\<"l"llt•nt c :\I. t 0 c I I t 0 n. !!!!!!!~"!!"~~!""!!!!!!" ~!Ju.LOO good ltrm9, S1400 $1 Ont Ooll•r 111u. \nco111t. Moves You In 3 Separate Units No Down -No Costs 11>011'1 for mo1·" ~ POOL & Vefl frplca. S.IB.j inromr. SSOOO S lremendou11 bedroom~. 2 d11. pdce Sj(),000. be.WI. Built in Kitc~n: Kermit Rl'ggs Rltr. >'&mny Room' p.i;o '""" en & Dishwasher. Romantlc l5 YEARS IN AREA 546-~ Ev,., 54&2758 Dover Shores 2141 Vlst• Entrede Open S•t., Sun . 1·5 e BOYD REAL TY e 3629 ~:. C'oa~t 1111), Cd~ • 67l·l93C • --11z:::::;:;;z:;==:1 s.ve the: mmmiaaion on rl\ia 7 DUPLEXES I' superbly elegant 4 Br, 3 Ba, fireplace! Carpelis & Drap- <'s! Never livtd in!! A BUlLDER:; a.OSE 0 U T only ~S hour lo t~ Blue Pa. ritic and 1ht snow-tipped mountalN. Jo·uu. PRlCE 125,950. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker& lee 1.J BR .. ~' BR., '·"" "'· LAST OF THE 3000 ., " home. 1.r....,..,, p\'d. \V /w. ;,o1. kHch•" • llG SPLENDORS oondlOon. E"'rylhin& new• bllh, lor Ol\'t1erl n1gr .• Xlnt of f\ne•t quaJitv, Ee.rly oc--loc Nlccly I n lsePd th ~· Lido Isle Bayfront.. Pier v • • 11 ' • 111 t, -'I•. •·-•y •-a~•. Oldor t'upancy. S82.&0 Inc. land. 2790 Htrbcn· Blvd. at Ad11m1 r"ch ~ f<'1i.•,•d.in for prl. '!>' , • ..,..,,u Pol" .. ~ l""" ... tl o N 8 "" ••' • ,, horn · ,,. u·,. .nl .,.n 11.iO r.. · · ~J Orw.n ·1u 9 P1'f 1·acy • Gro&11lne s:,.w • fo1• ni .,y <' 1n • SU.SS& ...- add. intonn. c:all . a1,·a. 3 bdrms, 4 batht + COLLEGE PARK CHIL T ROBINETT m•~·•. '116.000. IALBOA ISLANO A"""" 5~% Joan, no""'" REALTUR 'ti.u.41 2S Roy J. Ward Co. 133 On)l'I: • Open SUn. J.S Sl78 mo. Pa)'I all Pn'f. lm· (Ba~st Otr1ttl l..arat" family~. 4 Bdrm1. mac. 3 bdrm. 2 btllh' tam LA!\Ef"RON'I" ·LAKE roR. l l'JO Gila.'(y 6,46-ll.'IO 2 ~1od, bathl, Bll·ln&. dln. room, 2 flrtpJ.att1. lmmed. [ST. MW 2 br. 2 bai. ca~s f I ~ Ill ·1 l'u • •· "-I "' Mn., .,, • •v l'tl • rn. ~· ...... n IHl -,500. A draPt'•. Bflow mkt. price. VIRGO Dbt ltlr. SSll,000, Good {I~ Pnce m,m Owntr will m1.1 tndt, 494.s.63 ''oil""' prtctlca.I! )nve~ ln afldn1t at &\~~! cerry •ma.I I 2nd. Open f'rl· ' Bft l!rii ba, lam rrn. thi~ C'Oll J rustk: cotttat. RALP11 HlNCE:R, Rctl!M S.1-&n. 124 P'M. 310 We1tcltU Pitt.a area, •hag \\·Ith hf'avy sl'lakt roo(, on 498 PARK AVE. 613-1'00 Bucknell Rd. Ownitr, t'Pll. 1h1dr I~. $29,j()O, ~ck bly lotv•l the com~CR.lf"JCE ! 4 OR. ~ BA, 646-1$43 Ptin. otily. • l(l?lp&rd R.E. ~11 2-2222 Renie ptfce. ot $17.500, ltf) ram rm. 2 It)', lll'd PoOl HUGE BONUS ROO~I IT'S Stach (touJe dme. Bit ent lolnt auum•bl~. l . I .Jlde I: div brd. Nr m.us " Bdrms. Ne11.r an. ~ ll'!lec~1 evtr! Set 1ht Hal Plnd'lin & AnOC. eh o o Is. l3CIXl dn. $'3,?IOO 'f.Tked Jiiht at $29,500. DAltY PILOT \YANT ADS! !900 E. <hlilt HWJ. 6~92 5f0..7573 I n11r. 64~ ~ 54MT20 :noo Harbor Blvd. a! Adams 5·15-!M65 Open "111 9 Pi\1 For Sal•/ Mes• Verde Sharp P;i("('sf'Hrr with a trium en1ry. Nf'11ly painted inter. io1·. ~ho11 s beautifully, Own. er transfl'.'rred &: has reall ncC'd to sell. Quick posscs- i;1on. Olfe1"t"d a! S3.i9.)(). For Lease T JI Rt.: E PROFE~SIO:'ll/\L O~"f'ICE$. Eaeh S\00 01· a111 lhrrt' :1djoi111u.; fur s:t90. Grca1 location on Santa Aoa t\vrnur jusr nfl 17•h Stn'rl z::RA=RE=r=uR=n=E R=oc=K i RESALE Nl':u· UCI. P1'1Zf" 11 111n111g I bdrm 2!..ii bath 1v1th atrium ·1 2100 sq fl \lal'ant &: 1-eady ror ('\<!£'UC1\·r , ~II or lease option ! $42,500 N•wport at Victoria z--. ·-"y= ---- LARGE FAMILY I LOW BUDGET? Then call & l'heck this one out. 4 good 1izl'd bdrms v.·ilh l mal(er bath adjoining bdrn11 + hugr. 18.-.:17' den, ram rm, I pool rm • call it what you like, ewn 1 dormatory. 005«! to ~s & shops. Fits nlOSt borlgt'IS Ill S29,500. PAUL• WBtl'E CARNAHAN t&ALTT CO. tom amr. C.M. ~ INVEST I Yow· 1-ent • own yuur own q>ackn11 3 bdnn 2 bath., ..U builf·im lncludlna: di&htA-""&11).. tr. e&m!U A drapes. $185/ mo Pf.YI all. CAU. JACK HA?.IMOND fleriea~ Real Ellat• ~W1 (optn evtl) ,, r'EEDED: c•• R.Eo SALES PERSONNEL F'loor llMt no( required. l.COro...,. dtl Mar/East Blud~. l·Nc.wpo11 ff•l&hl• / Dover Shore1, 1.t:;octa Meta. l·Lldo lsland~'t\t NewPOrt. Ftank ~tarsh11l Rlty. 675-4600 WATERFRONTS WITH SLIPS 5 Br almost ne \v ......... , .... $175,000 60 ' 4 Br. best area ............ S290,000 60' 3 Br. beauty .............. $139,500 4 Br. den and pool ....... $149,500 Beauli£ul duplex .............. $200,000 · 4 Br. Linda lovely ............. $140,000 3 Br. priv ate commun ity ........ $ 75,000 5 Br. jfee land ) close to jett y .... S195,0o0 3 unit incon1e .......... , .. , , .. $ 63,500 CORONA DEL MAR 4 Br . ocean vie w -Open Sun . 1-5. 21 9 Poppy ............. S 59.500 T\VO level ocean & bay view lots .. $ 89,500 Bea utiful custom + apt. ....... $107,500 Excellen t duplex .............. S 41 ,500 3 Br., 3 Baths + pool . . ....... S 64,500 4 Br. \Vith bay & ocean vic'v . , .. $ 76,500 4 Br . 1-larbor v~·e,v Hill s ........ $ 59,000 4 Br.-+ pool -AA Yie\v ...... $ 67,350 6,000 Ft. 5 Br. p I + view .... $190.000 3 Br. white \Vater view . , , . , , .. $147,500 3 Br. panoramic vie\v ... , , ..... $ 56,000 Vic'v - 3 Br .. Din. Rm .. Fam . + Studio . . . S 72,500 EASTBLUFF 3 Br. 2V, Ba. Lusk ............ S 53,900 5 Br. 3 Ba. -view ....... S 49,000 4 Br. pool and vie\v ........ , ... $ 47.500 4 Br . .;_ viev.• -Open Sun I ·5, 290 I Cassia BAYSHORES · 2 Br. private beach .......... . 4 Br .. 21"2 Ba. boat storage LIDO. ISLE 5 Br. double lot + pool .... , , , .$125,000 4 Br. 13500 sq. fl.I ............. $ 97,500 5 Br. doubl e lot .............. S 79,500 3 Rr. + d>n . rm. .. .......... $ 54,500 Lo i value -3 Bd . -60' lot .... S 59,500 BALBOA 1-l u~e home -3 lots .......... $11 5,000 S Br. near NHYC ........... , .S 70,000 4 units -best location . , ...... $ 62,500 4 Br. -3.000 sq. fl ............ S 44,500 BAYCREST l1nmaculate 3 Br.+ fam . rm ..... S 46,500 4 Br. 14.000 sq. lt.l +pool , . , ... $ll9,500 Beautiful 4 Br. + pool ......... $ 84,500 5 Br. 4 baths -pool .......... S 69,900 5 Br. + new pool ............. $ ~7,500 ~ Br. w /I ar~e 40' pool .......... S 51,500 E<e•llent fin ancing (~ ...... , $ 29.500 DOVER SHORES 5.000 sq. fl custom with view .. $178,000 4 Br. -beam ceilings ......... , 84 ,500 4 Br. -pool -great vi e•• ..... $109.000 3 + maids, exceptional view .... $117,500 LAGUNA IEACH View Lot .................... S 27,500 3 Br., 3 b1. Cond. - view ...... S ~9,500 2 Br. house w/pool & sep. lot ... $115,000 COLDWELL, IANKER & CO. 550 NEWPORT CINTIR DR .. NEWPORT llACH 133.0700 FrldiJ, J.,...., 30, 1910 * OAILY PILOT itJ , ~H-'o"'"u""sE-.s-..F_o;..R"""'SA.;..l.;.;E:...-..;.H..;.o-'u.;..s E;:;.S;c..;..F o"'R-'-"SA.;.;1.;.;E;..,__ l-'H:..;OU=S-"E;:;.s '-F o;:;.R;.;..:.SA'-'L"'E=-.c.H;..o;.;u;.;s.::E.;..s .:..F.:c.O.;..R -"SA'-'L"-'E;:;._ 1 ,H.,o'"'u;.:;s.-E~s ·-F""O""R-"SA=L li=-_H;.;.o;;..u;;..s;.:;E.s , o R SAL a Ho us Es FOR SAL 1 Hous Es FOR SALi HOUll!s POR Ul I General 1000G•n•r•I 1000 University P•ric 1U7Unlverslty Park 1137 ;;H;u;.;n;tl;n11;;';°"~=lle;;•=c~h=l4;00~=H~u;nt~l ng~t~on~Bo~•~c;!!_;,.;;;14;00~riiiG~e~n~e~r•~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~OOO~Gol~~-~,.~r~etiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,~O~-O-~O~G~oinerel 1• GREAT BUY LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS 320 LIDO NORD TODA Y'S BEST BUYS 6 Beauliful units. 6 Car garages & utility room, with 85 rt . fronting on excellent swln1· min~ beach. Units are newly furnished. Ask~ ing ~250,000. Excellent terms available. Unda Isle Development Co. 1080 B•y1ide Dr., N.B. Bill Grundy US.3210 $1500 Under Merk•t ?il!1k_e Uli prove It! BllAND NE\V, aln.tle level Town- house. 3 bdrmi;. 2 bath:i Separ.11 tc dluing roon1. ~1any ~·xlrttll. Only $33.- 930 INCLUDING THI<; LAND: E1·.-~ 675·1\001' Turtle Rock Don't fail to t;t.<e thii onr' I'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!":!!!!!!~!!!!'!!!!!'~!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ J 4 bdrtn~ PLUS ftin1 ll v I' -, -roon1 PLUS fo1·nt11.I dlnin~ Gen1r•I 1000 Costa Mesa 1100 room. 2~~ baths. U1,grad· I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; -· ed thruout &. Ju s1x>U~~ 11 condition. FOREST E. 1 HOUSE PINCHING? MAGNlflCENT vrnw - I ' ' l'lear to Palll5 Vt:1'dr11~ 0 L S 0 N Priced right S46.950 IN· J f\love up to the tum.ton o( a CL.UDJNG THE LAND 1 5 bdnu 2 be.th & family Eve11 833-2819 · room home. Near all schools. Inc. Realtorr N•w 4 6drm1 1 Story, lndlvldual homf' on ltt1'1'c col"ner lot. 1'hls ont· Iii t'CllllY 11peelous! 3 b."tttu •. Lar~~' family roorn. Abund.811(.'I'.' or cablntt~ &: C'l()Sets. 8("1tUtiful vie'>'• fron1 1-JUGE m11.:$tl'I" bdrn1 llullc. Thi~ i~ choit."t' al s·13.m EVf'S. 642-5207 Estate Sale 111is pro111.•rly n1ust be ~"Id lo seltlc estate. 3 bdnn-rAn1ilr room To"·n-huuso·. 2Yt baths. lm1nac· 11lntc cv11diliu11. T1·uly a rin c hUnll' for YOU or t t \l"ill lihOll' All l'.'U"t'llf·n! N.'· turn on 111\'estnl~·nt Rs 1·rnl!tl pru)Jt'l"\y, Askins :.!8.950! E:v1.,; 833-2~19 3 l 4 bedrooms, 2 bath home1 in be1utlf'ul Hun tlngten leact-i. $23,990 Call (714) 962·1353 10 AM 'Ill 7 PM SANDPIPER HOMES On 8rookhurst 1t Atlanta Corona d t l Mar 1250 Huntington B•ach 1400 ---·----6\' 0\VNER: 3 br. 2 bn, oc-ean vle1\t ror. 112 lot. So. of H11y. SG.i.000. :JlS-4403, 846-182".l or 1213) 5!)2...;144. No Gimmicks-$1 Total Down To G.I. Linda Isle SUPt:R Sl\1\RP 3 tx.'(!rov111. ,2 btith with e.ddet.I f'a1nily llootn. F't>a!u1"s CaJifornia bJ'tCk Fireplat't', BBQ, and mudern built-in ki!cl!t!n. Car- FINER HOMES You may th ink we •re Number TWO. M•y we tel you some of John Macnab RHlly Company's 1969 Number ONES. I. Hi9hest pr ice for a 1in9le family lot in Newport Btoch history. 2. Most homes sold on beeutiful H•rbor lslend. 3. Hi9hest price peid for b•yfront leasehold lot. on both Lindo Isle 41nd Dover Shores. 4. Highest pric• paid for e Dover Shores home. 5. Hi9hest price peid for e Linda Isle home. Wo present with pride, the sl•ff who •ccomptished these records. Vacant & clean. Built . in S~•/e lnter•st kitchen, ca1,:iets & drapes Yes, YOU may assumr & tarx:e patio. f'ull pl'ice the existing loan on th\~ $26,950. assume 1'~HA &%.% onl' at 51,!i ~ with only loan . Sl'15/ino pays allot• $15 transrer ftt!! <I bd- 2 Stor y 1306 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I $7 Linda l1le Drive !11uist see -4 BR, ~ BA hon1c I\. pu.llo drck, siltln; 1·n1 & frµlc in n11l8lcr BR sul1r. fan1 1m hali sunken <.-onve1·· satlon pit & frplc. Sl62.COO. Lind a Isle Development pets and CU~IOIU drape!! ........... AUNI t111ooghout. \\'Ul alsu ~ell CAIL IUTLll llRT PIHllN JANI PU.Zll AMY •ASTON MAltY 6lAHAM IYILYH •RAY llLllN """°" IU.INI SflDllM ltlCHAltD A. LAISIN fOM TU1tfi11t COSTA MESA ASSUME 6°/o FHA . · i-ms & family room. 3 This i.~ the ONLY 'l :.ln1·y hu111c available in the dr· si rablc· TUHTLE HOC4\'. lll'<'R~ •I bdrnis • familv ruun1 &. dinin;::-ruon1 . 3 briths. LA·~ than un<' year pJd. $\\'<'Cplni;: vie\\' of LTCt & cuuntrysidf' fron1 11nstairs. ~ ,·ar garesc. F'ull p1'i<·(· ~45.950. lo1v du11•n ~·.1-1.A. $2:1,900 f WE SELL A HOME DA¥I COOK JON llCHAID MACNAI MAllMI WILLIAMS JIANml PIARf W'LQ W. WAUACI. Beautiful custom honie just m!nutrs f1'Clm the IJ(<ach. 3 large bedroom1, :l balhs. Ki1. chen \\'Ith dcilt'(e built -ins. Rich n111-ple panelini;. Cus- ton1 cabinel~ and buill in bookcases. Enormous btlck ti1't'placc. S2D,000 FHA loan at 6~~ annual percentage rate. Low n1onthly pay1ncnts include Taxelli. Prlccd 1)()111 at. $27,j(l(I, Dial &L>-0303 subi:r'1t tcrn1s. ~LL 540-USJ bath.s. Tlle "roof. Exh·u- flentage Real Estate (ypen slvely & beautifully land- evesl scaf)C'd rard. This "Chitn• ~~~~~~~~~~j crllor" is VERY REALfS. EVERY 31 MINUTES CATHY OIXTIR CU.Ill IAYNSFOltD .,~:'::'cc10N1. Walker & Lee '0 " ... , .. - 645-0303 REDUCED BEAUTY TICALLY PR1CED a t just 3001 GARFIELD $34,950. OPEN SUN. l·S EVC'S. ti73-(i094 F.1·f's. 642-5'107 ln1m11c. 4 BR. 2 ba. "control- l~d climate"' home. F11.n1. r111., c.-ov. µalio, 2 car gar. ln lvlesa North IU'CZI.. Low dn .• super financing_ $30,500 PETTIT REAL TY CO. Riddle & Ross Rltrs. :>a35 E. Coast. llwy. ti73.1'l:!a (Bob Pettit, Realtor) 833-0101 at Harbor Center N I H • h ' %.'99 Harbor Blvd., C.i\I. MeH Verde 11101 •wpor •tg t s 1210 I Corona del Mar 1250 1-=======.;.;.;:I 4 BDRhf S-"O 500 -a, r• NEAR 4 Outstanding Buys IMMEO. POSS. •~-umablo ioao. '"'"' '~ HARBOR HIGH , Coro~• del Mor schl! &: lttesa \'erde CC. Charniing C11Cfhavcn homi • 11, 1. ~UP~~'l:ES. Owner "IUJli. 5 BR & fAMJLY S28.500. Ch\•ner. 1861 New an easy 1valk lo Chun,:hrs 0 t'r \V~ Jersey, C~J. ~fr7700 and llarbor ll1gh School. . . , , Bil; G~'tllKly 67:>.3210 7t:i82 Edini::(.>r ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"' I :->-10.:-i1 ~o s.12-<14:i:i Lido Isl• 1351 I HACIENDA HOME 6', CI Assunu1ble Loan, Open House 1 ·5 Thurs/Fri/Sat & Sun. Street to Strada 110 VIA CORDOVA 3 bdrms, double gai-agr. pa- tio. ln1medi11.lc OCCUjlB.IK'Y, Newly painted. ne.111 "'/\11 Ci>rf>"t lni;:. JEAN SMITH REALTOR 646-3255 µ1·!nciple interest la.Xi's & illSU/"lHlC(' includt>d ill tll<' 1nonthly P1ll'n1cn1 of Sl81. •I bdrn1t1 2 btiths, imn1aculatc int("rior. beautiful landscap. ing. Seller "'Ill ll"llnslcr in1· pound 11.1.:t.-ounl to buyt!r fn.'C. Nearly nt•w. Your down pay. nll'n1 "'ill handlr. Don 't pasi; flus one up. 51/4 °/o LOAN This large fam ily home in North Costa Mesa with aU tho! buUt-ins including a wa. tf'r conditioner needs a litlic n.c. Priced 11111.y under mar- ket. P.un-y _ lhl.s won"t last ONLY $30,9J-O FHA, flW VA. PLACE ilnU Dt.·autitul nla· block lo ocran, RARE VACANT LC?T 10 ai;su1ne. Pymnts $167/mo, i\TASSIVE BRICK FIRE· I '! llOU:>E!i 011 (_'Orner lo! l j Newport Beach 1200 tul"C! lands :upin .. T . 1_ Gorgeous. lat-gt', about 6.000 ~ BR, lg lan1 rin. lg, lot. UC in th~ . l'~: 0r· ~11.t BIG 1·anibli11.s:; fan11ly home I SQ, ft., In-cg. sha1>c. Great J-rit..~ ix'loiv n1arkct. Sub-$29,000~ a a a JUii o_n, .J,i' Jut. Owner l'f'ady lo 1;1u'Cl~n & hou~c PGtillibllll.y, n1it down. 2nd TD avail. BIG WE SELL A HOME N::LL! I Q\vnc1· ma.v c111·ry, S80,000 ' BRASHEAR RLTY 1r ON THE OUTSIDE EVERY 31 MINUTES R. C. GREER Realty 16932 Beach Blvd., 111:: Plen!y o( off.11treet parking :! BR. Cull1.1g1', U\vner 1\tiJl I 33.):i Via Lido 673·9JOO 84 ·ll507 Evcll. 968-1178 .,. for can1per, trailer, etc. on Walker & Lee I rin1,1IK"C. :..011'CSI 111·ice in LEASE/OPTION-20x20' OEN 60-foot concrete drive from Cd. I. 1 BDRM, 31 a HATll 4 BORM/21/2 BATHS alley. Double karage and 20t~ \\'estcli[f Dr. SEMPLE HlOO sq. tr . 107 via Eboli. ONL y $29,5001 carpon, too. Small. but 6'16-7711 .. _REAL ESTATE_ 1 :: car i:-ara~c. Ci-pis, drps. r:.~·t.1odel home nr. park&.: - PERRON ' .I • • •• .......,...,.~ ... c~riul, 3 • bedroom homel========== 1 l:!IJ E. Coast llwy_ 67a-2101 I 2 yrs l'Ouni;:. P.l KE OfF-shop8. Gt no dn, !<~HA JO\'' dn. wtrh brick fireplace Good Baycrest 1223 1 BAYADERE 1 ER! 011111cr. !2131 2<11-3101. HAFFDAL REALTY M2-1n1 Anytime Ne"'port Heights lociltion. , 2 Mt-4-105 ONLY $27,000 FINE &yct'(':o.f Jo"our BR \I :RVINE II cves I IJ) :!16-0'iO'J. 1==========- 646.7171 home for si.1lc or lr11tlc. ll'I\' 0 liay. ~ Bit ~ Ba. NE\V S Edru1 4 1 ~ BA Nord • sccludcd lliln.'CI, liul:C' ya.rd. l ~l' ltilch & cat'g, ,. .... a. &y l"t'!Jnl . pier 1u1tl llili p • 1 Huntington 318-0773 f_a1u. ro1. Ohl. r111ll._ Pres-I hnnicdut!<' po sllici;s ion . Harbour 1405 3 UNITS \-0 THE REAL ·~ESTATERS l!i.;c. qu.iet RL\.>a. Children's ,\rc::i.'!li hci;t huy. $159,000. ---------- Dover Shores 1227 I park clusc, 11alking dls1a~l(.'<' t::o1cc1lr~n1 tc1'111!>. 0111 nc r I \VAT ER r RON T hon'le, I to t.ay & shopping S7t500. 491-6•11J cuNl0t11 bit I story on 56' 101 E.u-tside Costa f.1csa. Span. 'c ~~A~M~E~O~~S~H=o~R~E~S~I·---------~673·Ql.il Eves.I 3 en. Den. :l1 l Ba. Con-3(0) sq ft . 3 lxlnns 3 f>ath11. $29,950 t '. ' I "/ I!~ tih! root, rentah on large IMPRESSIVE t 1· 46. 1· · • k SPACIO tl'1n1J01·11ry. Ar<: h It cc t <C'n. JX l\·111g rm .. cc It 77ld5Q' lot. Income S385 Enjoy the ultimate in luxury US I d k · I t · tlcslgned .'( hl1. Lo 11'1. or un n1a1n c lannc tn month. Our best !rl(:ome re-living and entertainirY.!• in 4 B1·. ~1,~ Ba + nut1ds. Full 11 H o .. ,.,. 1•1· !JOO.I transfenl)!" 1 0 a 11 . By · · ~r 1 ice · J, Prm~ tw·n in area. this. gorgeous, custom built, length view • Bay & f\·Jlns. ~. rt · ·1 'l J ~1•nc1·. Phone . 673-~ for I ~ nanc1ng avu1. n r. ones Exclusive With top quality home situated High "l:eilings. 500'.l sq. n . appL 846-~I or <n:n 58.1-600"• Newport on a huge prin1eo corner site built around <."Uu11. ·I car providing the utmost in pli-gc.r. E-z ma Int. lmmed occp. LIDO lslt• &yfl-onl. Trade LIQUTDATION! ! Neo'V 3 level S ~ . . d . 1178 nnn A~-61 ~ l n3 Cameo Highlands $2:1.00'.I "'"'Uity !or clt·ur boat ho~s. Prices s I ashed ! vacy. upe,u 1nter10r esign. ,.......,. •-=Un1r. , ,,, oan. Drive .,, From $1;,.:;oo 10 $3!1.TJU. 4151 ing. 4 Bdrms, den & huge Owner. 548-T.!49. of et1uul valuc. Pri11cir1al~ •• Victoria lanai. master Bdnn 20"x31', e OPEN 1·5 only. Con!acl Mr. Harold Bran(ol'd St. BJ,lrstAgt. SAT & SUN e J h 213 7"" 4 8·16-0600. eves ri57-6151 5 baths & glamourous pwd. University Park 1237 I • · u n11011, i I ~ll rm Secluded pool $!'5 OOJ I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. I r111n1uc. 3 BR .• all \\'ith ,·ic1v. ll'l.nnn _ ;•, BR. :l BA ._._: · ' · Rcdul'ed ro S47,900. I ~ (•nvtim•) ~today. i\frs. Clark. DO 119 VJA VELLA ' \VESLEY TAYLOR CO. Looking NV. FRANKLIN 0\VNER 17141 4."~1-61-18 fTI41 64"910 F A A bl REAL TOR ...,,, or n ssuma e e 67J. \VATERfRONT LOT. 5.ll'-not \VEST,.... !FF _ l' A R B O R 10111 Interest 11i1" Joan ? \VC' 2222 • 11 t ...... ~ ... lseho (. FabuOU!'; Joe . HIGlfLANDS. Beautiful 3 have llvo. Bo1h arc S br. 2'>: VIEW -HIDEAWAY SJ7.500. Jackir BMJns ag1 bdrm 2~ bath home 1vith ba. 2300 sq, 11. pricc<l 11.1 Open Sat., Sun. 1~S 213: 592-2507. large cozy family room over-SJ0.000. &. S37.9.lo. 01vncrs Just a few i;tcp.~ ru bcai:h, GoHer's Paradise Laguna Hills 1700 LEISURE \Vorld Lai.runa 1-lills. Burcclona. Vacant . l111n1l'<f Posscss. 2 Br. Dbl Pulln1an Ba. 511.000. Ph. -19 l-J682 or 837-8330 Bee.ut hOme on !!Ith green of Bermuda D\lncs . finest des- ert cou~e! Roomy 3 BR, 3 BA. Pool. furnished home. lncls 2 ioll cart.11. Club mem· bershi,> avail. Asking S9a.00o . xlnt tem1s. looking delight1ul, healed & have bought other homes :-hops It dining. f\-lodC'rn 1ri· Huntington Beach 1400 I Laguna Beach filtered pool. \Vonderlul <.'Or· make offer. !C'vel hun11• 1vt1h graC'ious 1705 Linda Isle Development 1 Bill Grundy 67S-3210 J'l('r location • beautifully • Red Hill Realty OfX'll feelin~. $3<1,500, lan:lscaped. Sparkling built-Univ. Pa11< Centl'r Irvine 330 POPPY in kitchl>n &:. fo1·maJ dining. Call An)·timc ~l'O Un1vcr5ity Realty G7'....6;JJO Priced for imtncdiate sale 3001 E. Coo.~r H11y .. CdP.I at $39,950 -CALL :»5-8-l2-I --exclusive \Vilh SOUTI{ Back Bay 1240 1519 BONNIE OOONE I WANT A BIG HOME? COAST REAL ESTATE Open Sat/Sun. 1-5 ! ........................... ~ HAPPINESS IS -flXER UPPER _ Creal fo'OR Sal<' by o1vner: 3 br, A honic to bi• proud uf. 3 BR . 4 &>droon1, la1-gl• rnust1•r IJcd- po\enlial. Large 4 bdnn family roon1, 2 ha. :l ri·plc~. 2 Ba .• lg('. liv. mi. & dining roon1. la1i::c complC'tcly p11.n- ILivin:;: In a sputlcss t 61{. 2 Neii""'rt He<g-hts honie _ bltns, Clllls, dr~s. cul-de· 111'\."a. Bar. Beaut garden. t'lcd Fan1lly 1-toom. Kltchl'n ba horn• & '·o··g •ble 10 ~ T I ·' \l;icant. rccidy for ·~·cU"''ll-wi!h spaclouM paling lll'\'«. · ... "" " dining room & rumpus room ~.:._ ca MlUS.: 111 i::urucn. v--''" \Valk to school 1vlth your I _ 2 fireplaces _ 2100 Q" fl or Pl_.~. Open Sat/Swl 2301 cy! St·rurtill' f ur n1 a I tlinini: h'o·•· $'< 9·~ ~ F h ti D '1 '' rtlCHARDSON ltE'LTY room . :l""'' .... It . Price-' .111 ' "''~. """' >N. living area. Pric~ Joi-im-Rlr .1 r. "~-or r.o;, " """ '-"' :u CORBIN · MARTIN ! mediate sale at SS2.500. ~tarv~n, d~s &lrll41. eves 67;}.-l!~ll 673-014."i Sll.!Y.iO. REALTORS ti7a..1662 I Fl-tA/VA available. CALL 5'18-fr683. "FRESH PAINT!" 3036 E. Coast l·hvy, Cd:-.1 ~1~424 (open eves) South I So. of Highway Duplex A Touch of Spanish Coasl Relll Esta1l' Eastbluff 1242 2 Bedroom Units (\Valled patio; 3 BR . ..i... din. FRENCH BLUffo~S _ "Lillfla'" pl<rn. CJ2 Fernleaf ~~family + lg~. room over TOWNHOUSE Choice!f1 gm·nbC'lt 1oc. In Open Sat., Sun. 1-5 r;arage. Redtk:ed lo .1 Bclrms. 2 Baths odull area. l·Story 3 txlrn1.. BOYD REAL TY $47.roCI ! Condominium . Pool 2 baths: lanai. Lgc. walled .162!1 E:. Coasr H"'Y·· CdJ\I Walker Rlty. 675-5200 I Prtvatt> Palio patio. O\VNER . 614-4::..'..S 67.S..5930 S366 Via Lido. NB Open Sun. $32.500 LIDO SANDS LIDO REAL TY INC. Coron• del Mar 1250 5 BEDROOMS 3377 Via Lido 673-TJOO :i Bath!. l.a1 .. c yard. WESTCLIFF 2 BEAUT. VIEWS $29 9$0 !\lost pcrlect. cond. Sa\-c thou. • ASSU:\IE 6~~·~ sands ~ asswning 6~': George Wiiiia mson Beautiful home. prof. det..'Clr-Juan 0r $32.400. 3 BR .. h~c REA .. TOn ated & landscaped. 3 lrg BR, Jiv. &·din. rms. The scller~ 167343.SO 67')..1564 Evtl. 2 custo1n BA, lrg fainily r1n. have upgraded 111051 Cvt'l'Y· 3 INCOME UNITS tmmac cond! 01Yner "Ill U.ing: irs spoth.>liH; Yl'S. 2 t"OR Sale by owrwr, houllt' & t'ura,i:.::e e.pL 1111 1 lot , Each 2 Br. 2 Ba. Tula! incornt! SIOO 1110. with varant !>('fll\rate i.:ucst Bdrm 81 bath. Price S-19.:ol Aft I 11111, 4!14-9$36 INVESTOR'S Spet'ial -2 hi:11JN1'li on 2 lotA. S. ol Hwy. ().1111cr. s;-,s.5110. 671--1169 546-2313 \t-0' THE REAL ~ESTATERS ' • ' •r ~ l'M BY Owner -.1 Br. lam m1, '2 lialh. S2'J.~ NelY paint 2 blkii fron1 bch, o I t Broolrhur s l . 22101 Capi:;trauu Ln. GI loon :-i1._•,f. Only Sl.500 1!11. S:icxx1 2nrl TD. $168 nio. !168-413'.!, or 492--~ 6'{, GI I Bi·. l slory. Shakt! rf, pa1io. likl' nu. $jjOO fln. S189 pn1n1 s. Carry 2nd. Call S47~. 2 & 3 Bdrmli. N!:!w ca1·1K'r~ & help finance. 646-5311 vie111~. of ocea11 s, canyon. dr,.ves. Bit-Ins. Piivatc Pa· 1 e HOMES e Elec. garage floor O(X'ner. Newport Beach 1200 Newport Beach 1200 Uos. r ln>places. Top loca-3 BR. I Bo .••... ., ... S:l7.000 Xlnt lanch;caplng &. huge pa. tlons. O \V n c r. Principals 1 1 BR. 2~t Ba ....... S34.950 !lo. \Vith loday'11 financln!:. only. $17,j()()_ 513-IJ'lj7 ;, BR. 2 Ila . ..i. ram, •. $·15,000 this has to I)(' one or 1hc 3 BR. 2 bu. -plltynn. $47,900 fines! huy11 ill Cdi\f ill Grah•m Rlty. 646-2414 1·17.~. 0111ncr11 "'OUl(I con- Neflr Ne"1>0rt Pus! OUJcc tild!i, can -y\ng 2nd T.D, if CAYFRONT PENn!OUSE lhorl of lmn1ed, cnsh. Panoramic view 2 BR. 2 Ba e BILL HAVEN, Rlt r . Docks. s.;& 500 "10% dn 1% 2111 E. Coast, CdM 673·3:.!11 Int. P.fcKe~e. Rltr 64&-om 1018 S. f\-1aln, !'.A. :;ll-li61'.! 0\VNEn despcratc. Assun1e ~'.4 Joan. opr. ·I Bed1·1n, den. huac t~n1nily rn1. entry hall, full dining rm. bullt-1ns. fln?place, brk .. m.;,oo. lil-0-1720 CIWNER. Tr11ni1fered . -I Bdrm, 1-·11.n1ily rn1 BLUFFS . a BR. 2 BA. •pm. PANORAMIC- 1"''1 condo. S29.500 "I VIEW IN THE lcase/oplion. 644-2039 B/B EASTSIDE-COSTA MESA OPEN HOUSE SAT. & SUN. 1-5 PM 2298 WATERMAN WAY •' Eaqle's Nest 1 t"1"0n1 the 1non1en ~ you sec this house. with its soaring rool lines, you l\'lll feel thal here al lu.~t ill son1ethin~ 1111.ly unusuaJ. Cl'Oss !ht n1od. ~rn enrrancc bridge and find r 'OUrirelf s!Zi.liding under a 30 ft high 'teiling: deset:.'nd the OIH'll slair\vay inl 1 1hc llv - ing 1'00111 wi1h. its 20 fl high walls or glai11;: set• !hc siu·f 1·n1shing on the beach below 01' l'ioud~ drlltlug: !>..·neath lht• wl1)(Jow11. 111 this fur y<M1? Jr ~u. ttlrline pilot "'Ill ~ult I his 3 BR 2 BA "eagle's nest" fur only S4;'i,9C{)_ \Vi1h lhr 'flOS.~ibility ur assun1lng ;i 6:11 ',u mtJrtgai,:e. Owner 1vlll alsu assume '.lnd mo~t;agc if nl:'ressary. 491-1138. 497-1127 0wnl'l' CONDOMIN IU!'l1 by 01\net-. 2 br, 2 ba, buiitim, elevalor. Cliff Drivr '°'5.000. 4!»--8126. DJA1. direct 6-12-J678. Charge your ad. then sit bnck anti lisl<'n lo the phone ring: N<'w! NOW'S THE TIME FOR fifeplacc. entry Mil. foll dinln~ nl1, bullt-ln11. xtra baths. bric .. u:;.:-ioo, a10-1rai H 0 NEYMOON COTTAGE and lnconli! on co~ lot. Both l'IOutts lel1('"". pa!iol, Low downs: 71~~" bl! tni.!LI dt:'ed. Owner aflf'r 6 p.m. $1 ... '394 Newpor t" Heights G.I. LOAN 1210 every room. Only i.;t:ioo '7U550 1 QUICK CASH -Baycrest 1 THROUGH A Custom built three bedroom & den home I Costa f\1esa) 3 Bedrooms, den . dining room, (Corner of 23rd. just East of Sanuii Ana Ave., nice kitchen , covered patio . Owner will ac· cept low down payment from qualified buya er. ~1ighl consfder Sales Contract or lease opubn. Price--$34,500, Availablh !or occu· pancy. (Eves. 546-6966.) JOHN MACHA.I, ·- LISTINGS: For the first time in sixteen years , we have more buyers than home listinqs. We need and cen service your sales Gstin91 in the fo~owing areos: Beyshor•s, H•rbor IJand, Lind• Isle, Oo•er Shores. Boycrosl, Wost• cliff, Irv ine Terr ace, Cameo Shores, Cameo Highlands, E•stbluff, Shoreclilfs, Coron• Highlands. Herbor View Hils, Lido I.lo, l,;,lno Cove, ell V iew and B•yfront homes . We co~oper41te with all brokers. Wo can soil YOUR home. Today we offer sonle of our finer listings: DOVER 'SHORES .. A MINIATUlll IAYf•ONT MOUNT VIRNON -I-Toni thee iraceful curvtnt stairway 1t1 the two story entry you view th~ grassy terrace lndJng lo your nrl- vale float . 3 hearths to wann you and a den that's a man'1 dream. A quiet air or clei,:ancc adtnlred, but dlfflcult to achieve. 3 i;enerous bc!drooms. Will exparif to :'.! if you 1l'i11h. 60 foot of bayfront. $139,500. Open Sunday. 301 Evenlni 5"'$ Lane. ..: 1AYflONT -Brand l'IC\V -completed today. One of the lovellclit 4 B.R. 'rJa:/.. front hon1e1 '''t! have offered In many years. Si tuated on 60' of bayfront. W~ ceilings, maa;nlflcent muter suite, famlb' room, formal dlnl"Jl'. room, more cl~ lhan you can Ul!C. See thl1 beauty. $169,:\00. Open daJly. 503 !'lfornlng Star ~ Vll!W -4000 square feet of luxury "·Ith healed and filtered pool. h1ou ntaJn. bay vie"'-A rral f.11mlly home. 4 bcdroona, 4 baths. family room, for"'!l-1 dinhllt ruon1. Ideal for t'llterlahUng. Only 2% yeaI1: old Beautiful and well priced if. $104,000. By appointment only. VIEW -Bcautltully landscaped home with co~rtyard entry Jeadin~ to ~ l'amic vle11" Ll\rge Jiving room with view of the entire back bay, den, 4 Jarae ~ 1·oomli 4 spacious baths, all eltctrlc kitchen, dining room, marble fireplace. ~ 3000 s~uare feet. $89,500. Open Sat. Ir. Sun. 1130 SanUaao Drlve. ~ CUSTOM IUILT -Our most unique home, decorated by in~rlor De1!~ 011•11e1._ Designed by one of San rrancl&eo's leadin& archl t.ccta. Unusual pool a9) terrat.-c perfect for entertainment and rclaxation. 3 bedrooms, 3% b&thl, w&rilj: family room. Planned tor exparulon. $149,500. can for apt. 2 UNUSUAL -llARI AND llAUTl,UL A truly lovely 4 bedroom home. DI~ roo1n with g11.rden atriun1. 3 baths, powder room. luxurious famlly room, elec~· blackout drapes, cnormou! nl'W pool with jacuzzi. All this In a dramatle le~ f.·lr. and Mrs. bath In master bedroom. 3 enclosed Pa.Hos. Inimense paved, t~ area for p.n1ci;. iiJay·yard or kennel. $95,000. by appointment. :'3 ~: CAMEO SHORES ~ Du yuu want liomethlng special. 111 a 5 bedroom home! \Ve Off!r torm&lity a~ con1fort attractively combined ~n thls cameo Sho~s Estate. Larae fonnal dlnlJtlt roon1, a real fa1nll y roon1 and bookcased Unt>d living room. Swimmtn1 pool ~ h1tnced with boauliful landscaplna at a 1960 price of $79,500. Open Sun. 45.iZ ltoxbut-y. • ~:: • . .,._, < . ' ., EASTBLUFF ::~ -~ Out8 tandlng View I-lomes. 3 BeauLlCll to choose fTom, 3 10 5 bt-droom1. ~ $46,500 to $74,950. Visit our Easlblutf rep["(?sentatlve at 806 Bison. Open h~ Saturday & Sunday. •:..! }j CORONA DEL MAR ~ t'. ~ ~. VIEW -Enjoy ~uslon In the mldlt ot the city. high on a hill with a ~ <."t"nl view of ocean and canyon. A three bedroom masterpiece, thoroua:bly. ,, crn. panelled In nl8ewood, teak and mahogany. Electronlc kitchen. Rdrtaera.tei air wnditlo11Jna. Swlmmlni; pool. And you OlVn the land. \Vtll priced a t $119~· Call for Appointment • VlfW LOT -Excellent large residential lot with magnificent 180 dcittf: ocun_.1 VIC\\'. You own the land. Asklni $35,000.00. •, ., ' LINDA ISLE ISLAND. . ' .• -COLLINS ' We speclallu In bayfront hOml'!s In all prlce ranges. Vl!lt thlt exeepUorillJ bu. ~ . , itain, ~2 feet ot ba,yfront \\tllh 11ier and slip. 3 ~room!ll, eaeh1wlth IU own bat~.' for the low a1klni price of $100,000. Open Monde.y throuirh Sunda)o -No. 108 : Llnda isle 1>1iv1,:. '. -~ ' IAY,llONT LOT -45" on the 111atf'r \Vl lh view down the 1.lland.11 centnl Yacht turning baii:fn, A beautiful walerlronl 11lte. Price: $60.000.·See u.ltl!J1•n at No. 106 i! Unda l11le Drive from 10:00 a.m. to ~:00 p.m. Monday throu'.:h Sunday. • J LINDA llL! IAYPllONT -Beau.Ufut 5 bt'droom, 4\\ beth. '2-story home. Re&I j fnn11ly roo1n to a<.-comodate billiard table. ?i1uter 11uJte wtth flrepl&Ct', formal din. .. In~ room, acparale mai<ls quarter-. All this Cdr $133,000. Open Sat. A Sun. No. 14 .; Undn l.a:le. ,, COLLINS ISLAND IAY,RONT -A realcy txceptlonaJ btyfronl home tor yam;} 60 foot Yacht w1th a breathtekln.i view, Pier A noe,t. Thiw bedrooms. maJd'•"'1 l'\)()fl1. den • fonnal dlnln1 room. Exquisitely dt.'COralm. Truly ma~lflcent. Ofa -, fcred at ~.000. Appl. only. ' .. We wiU also cudom build your pr01ti9e home View & Boyfront Ronl•h from $1,000 Per ltilonth • NE\VPORT Jlc11i;hts ra1nbl- lng raneh 111ylr J ~lrm. Wke roul, rt'J)IC. D !fjQ. Ningaard R.E. ~rr 2--2211 BY O\VNER: 3 Br. 2 83, carpets. '~· lowly y11in:I. 1prinkler.s. nr. Pem·hlal & pnbHc i;chls. l 3 1 , :> 0 n. 5S7-00SI of Sl3.COO hn5 'icen ~pproved \Vith pool. Quick sale needed lo prevent Core· ~.::'·.1.,,"~";.~23~:~ f~i~~~·si~n,~pric• 149,SOO. DAILY PILOT 1·ohn macnab gar~c. Quallfl~d vrt~rans -~~==~==~-~.! thi1 loday! Vogel Co. HARBOR VIEW WANT AD '.-0' THE REAL "'-ESTATERS I ' •" IT'S \VONDEru"Vt. 1 b e many ~I In arplla111't$ !'<N find In lhfl CL!wlfied 1\1ls. ('heck lhtrn1 now! ~.';~\.~~J:;;i· °''" 8 .. ~1\~u~sv;e,. Bay & Beach Realty, Inc. REALTY COMPANY 3 DR. 1.q y>nf. Den. 3 Br., ' ho, ram.8m. S<tl "/ 901 DOVER DRlVE, SUITE Ill , NB 4'642-5678 901 Do .. Dr., S•lte 1.211 121.950. f'1'3,nk tit Mr~ ht 11 I.Mt 0Qlion, ·1 lOO \\'rllt 6'5-2000 ~ l~alty. GTJ-o'tciOO r.~m:':'~w~)~l.~D~1~11i~y~P~l~l•~t.:::::_~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::-~.::::::::::::::::::::.'.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ,...~~---------------------------------------~--------·------------···----~------·---------·· ··-- I • '' HOS Stepc lo Ult Beachll!! 1.r'"Bedmon1 + family room 1 u .. --·s BllhS. POOL. ~ .. J!llri modem kitchrn '11'r-\.1.11tom bit + MUOI, )- ' MUOI MORE! Mu.rt JW •C-to appreciate. SISii,<XKI Vic Stuart, Rell.ltor 494--T;i.lJ or 546-7674 ifu~'r.v! HurrYI Hurry! This older north end duplex lf!,.prime ren1al area conl!ist. !. ol t\Vo l·BR 1 BA units ' '" ' i.n \\'llh OC.'i:an 8.: city -w1. No \"acan,·y lll.·1~~ .outd you behr:v~ $25,SOO? RIV TERA REAL TY 1 , .. -,3al<8 COASf lU\VA Y I,·· ~th. La&:u11a •199-2800 iUion Viejo 170I .. u..:n.. ~ R~~S REl:IT.US , • • .IENT~U -RENTALS M•NTALS Hou-Unlurnishtd . .HoutH Unfurnlshod RENTALS ,Apts. U~furnlshod RENTALS A.i:ttL Unfurnf1Md ~ C urnls~ AplL Furnl~h.od Hit· Fumlshed General 3000 Univ•rslty P•rk n» ckta Mesa •100C01t1 Mitt 410o Hotils 4975 Co1ta Mesa FREE RENTAL BOOK e;Tr~M:Uum;>i'..~OCCUP~UPimi'NCcrYi•i I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJuoo~~snob;,..;Hu .. ;;;.;.,-;.]Mart;!;;;;;:;.,. 5100Co'tt• Me.1• 5100 SHARP Q.EAN 2 s.dlooni. 3 BR 211 .. .., •••••• $32' , REA LL y LIUC Soodal wlntor moo!hly "" 11\0nli):br U15.· Supel' Sharp 3 ,Btl 2 bl.tha ••.•.•... , $300 ~ es: Bt,yltont LJ111tl Suite l Bcdi'ooft\, 2 bath, SQ built. 2 'BR. 1 be.l.hs •••••••••• mo AT I. $462 VWw Studio Su1te: $2a.5. Jiu, nt'ar n1ajur shopping, tRed Hill Realty PALM M.;CA up.' Kltchcnette1. 'Ma I ti, lease $223/Ato. \Vt. have Univ. P&rk Center, Jrvlnc ~~ phoaf, cofltt, lcr. Day-Week. ~~~~'."me look ·throuah ~ Anytlmo -GARDEN APARTMENTS :~.:.~;-°' 613-ll800 WE SELL A HOME Irvine 3131 e PATIO AREAS •-U f 1-•-• EVERY 31 MINUTES • ...,.,.. n urn~-NEW 4 B1•, ' Bo..' Culver 'I e SWl,.,~ING POOL 000 Walker & Lee Dal<-. Poot .~v. Nr u .c .1. • ~A~~t ~~. Gtnor•I 5 7682 Edlngtr ~mo. 6~ ~ ' '-:·.JlWiii BATH$ 5'~5uo 112Ai;.; EHi Bluff 3142 BA'cHELOR, I & 2 BEDROOMS VEN DOME I!oflitEDIATE POSSESSJON. '"Furnlshect & Unfurnished $ Imrnacula1e 3 bdru1 2 bath EXEC. Home~ East Blu1rs. All Electric ~ honie-$190tmo. Also 4 Kear Aeronutronic, 5 Br's. !a. bdnn ' b.lh + '°'""room-$425 w/g""'""''· 644-1.1.>l. HoTpoint Appliances $l1'Al/nl0. A.IAO 3 bdnns 2 baths + bonus r 0 0 ni. Coron• def Mer 3250 Moft Reasonabl• New Rtnf•la $28a/mo. CALL 5-15-842~ SHOWPLACE near ocean, in the Airport Are• 1open rvcsJ SOUTfl COAST 3 BR. forced air ht, 2 ha, Next tQ the .Santa Ana Country Club. REAL ESTATE ba.r. W/w cpl, 2 ftpl cs, lg: J ust East Of 'Santa Ana Ave. on Mesa Drive. IMMACULATE AP'I'S! ADULT&: FAl\.lILY SECTIONS AVAil..ABLE Clon to thopplng, P•rk • Spacious 3 er·1, 2 Ba .,-.,. • Swim Pool, Put/green * J<~rpl, lndlv/lndry f.ac"ls 1345 An•h•lm Ave. 'GRAND OPENIMG!. SEE AWARD WINNING '' MERRIMAC WOODS! . ORANGE COUNTY'S MOST BEA UTlFUC APARTMENT COMPLEX Ju11t c:ompl•t•d, I or 2 RR., 1 BA. with •ir cond., completely soundproofed, self cl••niR9 ovtns, wood c•ilin91, cU1hwtsher1, lush /e ndsc•ping with s+reem1 & w•terfelh, ele.,,•tors, BBQ's, c:lubhouse, 1eune1, J •c:u11i & 1wim pooh, privt 9er Vt/storage. Everything new. St•rting et $I 40. Adult1 pl••••· Ju1t E•st ot 2600 H1r- bor Blvd., nticf to N•bers C•dill•c et 425 M•r· rim•c W•y, Coste Me i•. Mov• In Now. 546-6300 RENTALS ~·· Unfumlshed __ Lt9un • leech 5705 -OCEAN VIEW, 1 BR , RM/ret, cpt, .P.'~...yard, ·Ulil pd. tlii blb bcb .. UE FlRST at 2811 RoU.n&evf!l 1 Tefr, then ph 213: §M.!.s14l ! "'"· . I San Clemente 5710 1 ' i Wt Duplex nn, frplc, carpets. dishwasher. view.~ 492-34G4 or 213/639--1123 REAL ISTATE G.ntrll Rtnt1ls W•nttd 5990 RENT,\L flNDE~S I hMTeLw.ie ... I .• GI W, t .... CMI• ._ .: 641-1111 -:!::".-• .,,_.,.._.,.,1111ut•~ . ---•IDOlllli!I UIYICll ~w '' & FA" R" 1210-•BR. 2 BA . .,..,,,"""· ""' patio. •"· l2'i i... • From c120 Unfurnished r "T fYl fYl range " O\leh. pr, children }'urn Ql' un(. 673-l:JH ., st<n')' ~ B<lr' 3 Ba. Lge weJeome. Bl..ue Beaco.n, 4 BR. 21, ba. ipllt level • From $140 Furnilhed FOR Rent or Ue: PeniMula l •ncUordl & Brok•rsl! 1 COST A MESA 612·282~ Costa Meu • • .J<µn rm w/b1tr. Full crprs &: .,.~"W C •1 Do v F ,]'rps. llt'lr-c1earu11g ovtn. :~r~ ~ . Bcinn. Bltna. n ~ si::.'=·.~ai1or 'CALL: 546·9860 HARBOR GREEHS Pf. 3 Br. 2 Ba on Balboa He.Ip slamr out broken-up J Rooms Furniture . Blvd. at the OCC!an. Crpts, kouses, apts l: urxiersh-ahle 1 RENT ·~ COl"rt'd patio. Pvt Carpe 150 ltih.ib. $39,300. • Callts•uSA ....... N .... ~ ',.: .. ., • CHARMING 3 Br horM, (rpl, $19.95 & UP APARTMENTS Dip•• BIH.,. $285 mo. Call ''"'"'" 548-7'89 *SPEE-DEE NEWS* !:Untn.T0-J\.f1'1'1th Rtontals SPACIOUS A .. -t,t•ly ~--:,'"L• Paz: R.E. 130-0700 V'W"'""" n bit-ins, crpts, drps, immed. / , Safe\\'llY Center, LEASE or VptJo1; to Bu.v 4 occup. S~ nio. 6T.>-4!nl 'IO TWO 2 Br home•, '"""· ~ "" WIDE SELECTION \VNHOUSE LIVING •-" 64'2471 --------- Coste Mesa 4100 Newport Be•ch 4200 !I.fission Viejo BR 3 bath,g, Beautiful. S285 ~ LEASE, Ocewi view, 3 to $350. Delta 646-4414 Bl' 1" B * * _...._ __ SUNNY ACRES "-rrrnds, Back n~ ... 1 "8" F"•b -..,.==~~~,....,-~= NO DEPOSIT 0 .A.C. .,.,parate adult & family com· .,. --v • .... ~ }lfltC Furniture Rentals mllllities. Bachelor 1.2. & 3 l, other Feb 15. AdullJ only. FA?!tILY of 4 de.sires 2 BR 517 w. l.9t.h. CM 54S-34Sl Bdrm!, furn & unrurn apls. Refs. S175. LI 8-2381 houae u n furn , , aar. MESA MOTEL t'J.llCED To Sell! La Pai: I ~=========' I "• '' A, Dir. Rm, pool, liome. CUs1on1 Xtrai;. Very _&""'y=d="'="'=;="'='=· =i;.1=2-=7~07=1=~ * * * LO\V \VEEKLY RATES .. ,--;;;~--;;c;;;;--::::;c-,;-~ SllO. per mo. & up. LAflGE LIDO ISLE 2 Br, Permanent. La_guna, S. Clean. By Own. S..~-9144 Cost• Me11 3100 - Huntington Beach 3400 l\ilchen TV' "d . $12.5. 2 BR, crpts. d1·1i.s. bltns, study, 1~~ ba, crpls, drps, Laguna area. Stoo.Sl75 mo. YI~ Heated ~ool111a1 ser· i~ location. Blue Beacon. • La!ilf' garden patios adulls. Le~. on l-7502. --~-'~"-9----~-- Dan• Point 1730 : DA.'lA POINT. By o\\·ner. Duplex upper &: lov..-er. ·OC:ean 1 ie11-. nr beach & ,$hops. Good concl, $39.500. 496-5914 ~pts. For Sale 1'111 · 6 NE\V de.luxe 2-4-6-9-12 ••• &. :?I unils. \Valk lo ' bro a c h, App1'l'ciatina: area. CM'ner I Bldr. Q Linclborg Co. 536-2579 RENTALS Houses Furnishtd General 2000 llli LOVELY 2 BR triple:ii: \\' J\V crpts. sundeck. kids, 1iets. Bkr. 5.14-6980. Rintals to Shire lOOS DESIRABLE l\IY Beautiful 3 bdrm 2 borh fJOl\IE home, carpi!led & draped, '2 Br., 2 ha, cptd, drps, forced electric built-in& including air heat, Garb-dlsp, bit-ins. dishwasher. S2'n/roo. Lea.sc irplc, patio, garage, "·ater on I y. I n ex c I us · "e fum, Adults only oo pets. l)eighborhood. Bier., :>J6-8S9.I RA TE REASONABLE Eves. 536-9866 ' Ac:rosa from C.Oun11-y Club HOUSE J~Or RCnt. J Br., J'll. 275 Mesa Dr. * Ph. 548-6700 , Ba. 'Encl PaUo. Clo~ to 4 BedroOm, 2 'la f h, Own-• bch. school & shopping ctr. er transferred temporarily. , SZ>o ?!lo + depos. 832-5121 Says, rent my home: Sl98 . aft 5 or Days 540-2.ttl, cxl per n1onth. Great location. 2.Kl. near schools and sbopping.1 $1=.,=.~,~B~R=,~,,,.~~B~A-,-,~,-,, H's in ow· ren lal book at ·,Condo. · Cflrts, drps, s!O\'t, \VALKER& LEE 'patp, carport, ,ppol, 279o !!arbor Blvd. at Adams clu6Me. 963-2631t. or Rent qr Lease Option ='~13~/~342-~·~m=·=t~-~-­ Beauti!ul ~-, new sha.g j BDR.,IS 2 balhs, 2 car gar, cpt. 4 BR !Uew. Verde. $275. cptstdrps. \Valk to shop- 546-9511 or !i4(}.6631 ping. S 2 2 j / 1n o, Bkr. S.16-4141 " * Motel-Apts * 1 signal So. of O.C! Fairgrounds Studio & 1 lelllllrooms $30 WK. & UP Doy, Week, Month • l'itchcns , . TV's incl. • Phone 1erv., hid pool • l\Iaid servi<.'e avail. 2376 NnYPORT, ILYD. 541-9755 * \VINTER RATES If you stay lhnl summer r,1'.:? remainS the sarr.e. J Br f11rn npts $125. Fum Bach aotb Sll:i. See r.tngr, 2135 Eldc11 Ave, Apt 6, C.'rit. Avail Ft!b 1st. . 646-~J ' 6t)....01U. C.AI. e Ope-n beamed ceilings NE\V :i Bdnn 2 bath lri-level e LANDLORDS e -;;c;;;;;;:;n.c:::~-:::'.':::-;::--.ISHl.'i. Large 3 Br. 2 &a, bltns, e FireplP1.:es . Re". Room• =•• RENTAL SERVI~ PLENTY or pr1vllcy, Jrg at-children ok. Blue Beaom, '" Condominium. Pool area & "~ .._.. trac, 2 Br .. 1% B11. btlvn bch S45--0lll, C.i\f. • 2 pools, saunas, nursery fireplace. S2'l5fmo. 642-4744l:c.=~B="'~'~"='34~""82""'_~ It. bay. New crpts, drps,l;;c;;;;--,--=c--c---~~~ iichool. or Bay & Beach Realty BUSINESS J\IAN, &'.I. wantS' modern furn. No peU. SJ.95. SI°':'. 1 BR. SIOV!! t· refrig, IMMED. OCCUPANCY VTE\V apt. Large n>on\S, ref. room & bed or will share. 549-3643 child & pela ok. Bl~ 270o Peterson \Vay stove. bath. Sinilt' adult on-P .O. Box 724, Costa Mesa. Beacon 645--0111 C \\t Costa Mes.a MG-03'in \VATERFRONT 2 Br, 2-0::,1~==·====·=·=' =·= ly. S16J mo. 548-2394 BACH. Apt. Q.I area. Under °"' 1 Nr. Harbor ':: Adams rri;I, crpts. dl'ape-s. Avail Cost• Mes• 5100 oOii0iiOii ... ii0iiii0i""""'' DELUXE 2 Br. \VestcH!f 10(', $90. Utillties pd. 5.17-6388 al~ tl:U. 1 to June 1.J. S290. Pool & bll-lns. Adults. "225. 1 =7P='='======== "'-2341 1;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;; I • ,. • J &inns 2 bath11, n1any eX· No lease. 642-6274 SAIL INN 'lOTEL \Vkl .,., t :-..=~-,--,---c,.-=,,-Rc:om1 for Rent 5995 1 " Y & ARE YOU READY? tras . ., • .:a/month. 1 BDR.'1 near beach. u!ilities1--..;c.. _____ _ monthly rates. 6 7 5-18 4 1 • 4 &irms 2 baths. $2'";J{l/mo. paid. S200 on yearly basis. SLEEPING-rm. tor work'gll f~'Orn. 28th St. & Ne11·Port WE ARE ! Wells-McCardle, Rltrs. 673-4269. man. King-n bed. Nr 17th & Blvd · New. 1nove in l)Olv. \\'~ ha1·c 1810 Newport BlvU .. C.~l Irvine. 64G-S716 3 BR, 1 BA. ~. blk to bea.!h, an adul! con1muni1y that I~ 518-7729 6M-OOSI evrs East Bluf'f 5241 $15 \VK & up v,•/ kitchen $30. 126~~ 40Ui. S240 yearly. close to all. 1 & 2 B<frin. all "'"""""""""""""""""' ii·k studio apt. 2376 Newport 67~9. ulil. paid, pool, shag car-LEASE 2 BR studio _ Rlvd. Sof&-9'ra.i 2 BR furn & unlum. $150 -pets. blt-!ns, drapes, garage Fairway Villa Apts EastbluH. New bldg. 2 car PR! room, kit. priVll. Nr 21st S115. Cpl!!, d""". bltM. pool, iv/storage area. Adults on ly. ~1 h .,.... H garage.. ••UC storage. & Santa Ana. $17 per v.·k. Pa.Ho. 152J P lacentia urry on these. From Sl50. Near Orange Co Airpon & Plush carpets. Built.ins, i\1t>n only! 645-1294. $25. Per Wk •. & Up FOR hvo adults furn 2 Bdr HACIENDA HARBOR I UCL Adults ~nly. 20122 frplc. small patio. $300 per SLEEPING ROO)f, . Bachelor & 1 BR, bld pool. apt. \Vinter $110 per mo. Util 241 Avocario. Costa ?!lcsa Sanla Ana A1·c. 642-4&U mo. M·l-2409. 1 Adult . $~O 5 BR Sol Vista s22·11n1v. maid service. Kitchens & paid. 115 23rd St. NB Between Vict.-.ria &. \\'ilson ::33 \V. Bay St. (0Uictl Avail. 'Iii .July 1st TV avail. 430 Victoria (Nr FURN & unfnm l BR ap:s. just "'eSI ot Newporl Blvd. VILLA MESA APTS Corona del Mer 5250 =~~='-c;..~-'.,--...,.-1 847""'~" B'·-""' •1 ~~ lla•borl -, ...... ,,,~._,,,, ROO~f For rtnt, 1 P'"""-R001.L'tATE Service. f.lale ..._..... "'· ~ .u. ' · Pt.cl. No child1on or pet.,;. rr; '"' .,_.~.,....., 2 BH. unfurn, µri pal io~, hid iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil sobt'r. pvt bath. $18 Wttk. or female lo share apls 2tl BR. Gar, Pat~ ... ~Its, 3 BR house, i::arpets. built· BA~! apt, sun tlt•ck,,t'Oinpl 2-1051 ~ 16th St. N.B. 6-16-466~ NEW O pool, 2 car cncl'J ga1·. Chll· Jj()2 Oranae A•·e ..• C.:\t_. from $7j. Blue Beacon, rps, stove & rclr...,. ~u ct Ins. fenCf"d h1 i·ear, tloul>lc priva('y. SJOO lucl ,kas & DELUXE 2 B \\' tcru 1 P RT RIVIERA drcn we.l,.ou1c. ,,0 fl et s I==""=~--~~~·-'-~~.,... 6-b--OW, C.;<.T. T0••1pical Setting for Adlts garage. Corner lot. 962-80-!7 11·111cr. Et Patio, 130 A Pool & blt. ",· A'1' 1,~ "'~ l'lllS ONE \VON'T LAST please! $Hi0 a!S'O furn 'Sf85. ~ ... :; Ruµi\f, In Cd~f: priv. entry. o y. I Blk Sho~. S175. . ·In · cu...,_ .,..,., LONG F" b J < B T n \V·"· t I .. h •~ FEMALE ~ BE UT < • ho · Broad"'llf. . a u '>US · r own-7lr \\', Wilson. 646-l251 '"'"-'" ...,.. o 5 ores, ac . _, \\/anted To Shart 544-0il52 A . ,..r me, nice .-c-~c--=-No lease. 64~4 hse. A~·ail lmmed. 2~11 Ba, or~• mo. J\lature man. 673-11~8. N'~ Home 11·fsan11'. l •'"-.-Co=-7'--,-~~=-o I area. $22> mci. ls1 & last, Sl--IAR-P Bach('lo1• unit, Close Se d' 1 1 1 * TOWNHOUSE * ~hool age boy OK. $12;; . .$350 J\IO. lease. Avail 2/lj. 3 $100 cleaning dep. 5721 Ven-to OCC & UC!. Sl35 pay~ Coronl def Mir ~250 .. pr tn ng rm. t"ll c. crpt 2 BR, l'i BA, ocp", d•p•. ON TEN AOtES --I C 5997 Br wtw "'P~ drps · "" °""" 1 thru-out, encl n~tio, 2 car ..., • ~ Motels Tr r rts •9610. • '" · • tu1·1 Dr. for appt ...... 1-00~. al. Refl'f!:nce~ required. ,..... patio. Adults. $160. 134 E. l & 2 BR. Furn & Un!um ' • • gardener. Eastside C ?lot· Avail 2111·10. Evl's & "'eek.1----------gfll'. children & pct~ OK. fl.felocly L 6"6S"' FireplRces I priv. patio• I , • GJRL, 27 wsnl! reliable, de· Nice neighborhood. 5-18-3712. Fountain V•lley 3410 ends 54~718 l BR .. partly rurn. Ne1v cpts. Rec. ctr & Olynipic .u pool. SIS-l 76S. an e. ~..-'"· Pools. Tennis. C.Ontnt'I Bk!st. \\ EEKLY rates Sea Lark ~rid. \\'Oman Z-40 lo share ......., •c ·'-··-~. drapes. '\'alk to shopping, i\lc111bcrshi p incl. A1•ail on """' ..... Lan•. CdM .. , ~. U ?-.Iolel. 2301 Ne1vport Blvd .. , 'f'Br'turn apt. 6.J;j..2969 aft 4 A&iblt C4 ~; :11"~ -4 BR. s23,1,;;!R ~10. Sl25 r-.10!DL'< ~Icb1lc Ho.11t>. $135 n1onth incl. utilities. 6 :\lo SUb Lse at S300/Mo To D!::LUXE 2 Br. Crpts, Orps, ~fa-:Arthw-or. :.....,1 u"'::l Corita ~1esa ~f · rit ATE needed. 1· 2 pool D"P<S. Da·"" 1J41..4:l10, E\·eii ... v • • "v • •7'.. ... ,..... .,.....,,.., nspcct a r-.1t'S. La Vole ~ins, pnv paho. Adj. 00 e · rp..... ·µs, rp c, ""mpl Juro l•ld P"'/ •,· -0,· .. p,.,,_ .. ,,.,, 67'-._.,..,., t c ti · bll · · · ~!!!i!iii~~ji!!~'~-!!iji!i''!!I~=~~'.'.'.'.~==~~ Pll. 10· car ;ar, · YT> Adlllls, M ""l'I. I 5eMon·~ ., .. ,. ~'" 1~-.1 'fC4!J81e, Ocean vie.iv, huge 5-16-4377 ;;4~2583 .-2 BR. 1 81\. blk/ocean & ~1 af!er 5 P?-.f. c ......_...., gar. pool, single BRAND NEW Guest Hom" S991 ~p{ .. Priv parking. 673-2187$ 0200=~v~A~c=A-NT~-.-.-,-. ~o.-•. -, """"==:::;=;;==== ~!~Est. :.!3;)9 Nel!o'JllJf!. bay. View. Pri pa Ii 0. ·a=R-~A=N="o"'~N=E=w= ~:~~:'.~~ ~74~fulls only. 2 BR, 2 BA, upstalN -duplex,1--- Ba. OK for Priv. Hm or Hm L•gun• B4i•ch": 3705 Adults. no pct,i;, Sl80 yrly. . 1vith sun deck patio! Cptd., PRIV. Room for elderly lady Cost• Mes• 2100 It B 934 \V 19th 34~1968 MERRIMAC WOODS 673-i629 QUlll', dlx 2 Br, bllns, dri>'d., encl. garage, oompl. Ui lie. guest home. Call 3 BR, 2 BA. house, 6 mos leuc. Avail Feb. 15th. $270 n10. 546-0347 1 BR Guest Hsc. comp! furn. PriVate. Parkg space. SllO nlO: 962-4981 e\'es/v.·lmds $120 2 BR, Gar. Fencccl \'d. ~,9>el!I. Nr 1'7lh >Ir Santa Ana A\1e. a48--3530 .l SR. lge fenced yard, ls!, last. SlOO cleaning. Refs. Sl9."i. &i:>-2469 l Bd11n furnished house. ~130:'. Adults. 333 \V. Bay St. !Office I us. · · · FOR (EASE .rum units avail. See. tld Un. E."\CEPTIONAL l BR, beam $150 & $170 cptsfdrp1. beam cel l . bit-ins. Beaut. ld1epd. 707+2 646--3391. S BR. 3 BA. LM. Immt'd oo--Charming English Tu rl o r dtt class 5100. 42.j N:Elni-clgs. shag crpt. 1 adult, no UTILITIES PAID Adults. no pets. F'rom Sl.l5. Orchid. $125 per mo. 1=======::::;:;::::=. cup. $3()0 mo. Ask for Fern, home. Prime No. end Joe. •I 111ac \Vay. ~15-roOO pets. Sl:i;i yrly. 673-7629 I ,r,, '.! Bdrrn, 2 '"''" pool•. fll&-jJ86 aft 6. Ml R nl•I SUS CASITAS FURN. 2 Br. Near Beach & 1\dt1!1s only. nop ets. 6.f2-J53j 1 & 2 BR uufurn Apts. --, agent 54(}-1720 Bclmis. Flre,,Jace. Bean1 1--~""'~~'°"=,.--·>-< ,7$.,050 0 sc. e s 5999 CLEAN 3 BR ' ft-e yard ceilings. Fo1T!lal din. nn. F d I I D o· h 1 • • -· ...... " · · urn. I BR apls_ A u ti;. :.hopping. s11:1 pci· 1110. C.i!l u~,;. &15-0283 f.Vcs. IS 11·as ler "' stove. Elcc & NI'" jct.,& FULLY enclosed C-llJ'liel. Adults. No pets. Sla;) mo. Spac. gJ'Ounds. only. no pl'ls. 2110 Newport 6T..1-3153. ::L7 Avocado Sr.. C.i\1. ho! l\'alcr paid. Adults only. 63S-7l33 $335 ?!1o. 't• •74· . f.liuion Realty 49.J..0731 . Blvd. 612-iJ2!16 ,-I========== ~ r-.fgr on prcn.ises .~ ~ ·' RENTAL • 3 BR, 2 BA ./Costa r-.tl'sa RENTAL OF'-Balbo.. 4300 (Bchintl l..:·i\la rl o!r Harbor $11.i 2 BR 'I)"i-Ple~. BU-ins, iownhouse. pool & recrea· 2 BR, 1 BA. Vie.w·home in N. FICE, 2UO Newport Blvd. at corner Rutgers l: Avocado garb disp, patio. gar. Perm. tiv11 fac. $215 mo. ~~ end. Lag. Beil.: $300 1no. • Ov('r 100 units avail. Open ----------1 MARTINl"'UE 11.dlls, No pets. 5'18--0039 year·s lease. Eves. 494--9502 CLEAN Bachelor Apls. ,.. Daily 9 'HJ 5. All util incl $8.i up 2 &· 3 BR. Apt's. 2 Ba's. CollllflO P•ik 3115 Mission Viejo 3708 $Ilk': & u1:i -A·rrrtACTIVB, 1 313 E. Balboa Bh•d. LUXURY APTS Redec & Ready lo !\love in. bdr .. pool, util paid. garden BALBOA 673-9M5 Ex('eilent park-like surround. from $15.i Adul!s Only. 18th 4 BR, 3 BA, Fam rm. College Park. Avail imrned. $26.5 _mo. 6.f?-25:l2 NE\V 3 Bclr & rarn nn, crpts li1·ing, atluHs, no pets. llm 3 Br 2 BA + den 1 blk to lngs. POOl_s. Extra parking. & Poniona. 6<1&-1988. & drps. ViC'ii· lo! S2j0. Xlnt '\V1dlace A\·e., C.r-.1. bay· & oc-ean. \Vinter or Nr.1.sho~ping. Adults only. NE\V 2 BR. 1 BA."shag crp\, l'Ond. 3 Bdr ! fHnl r1n. riin LRG l Br. f'urn. No Lsc. No yearly. 'Euiene Ro·bls on A· -& 3 BR AP'I'S Drps, dishwshr, patio, beam ;-;;;;;-=:::::-::::--:::cc--=c-1 s2a per n10. 2 BR uppcl" scp. unit. Cpts, * 543-2971 * drps. tlble frplc bet\\·een liv·l~==='==="====I ing _&: din area !Bil-ins & lncom~ Property 6000 refng. Gar. i\l'a1l Feb. l , 1250 n10, Fri-Sat-Sun-i\1on.1-------.--- 67;j..s;"113 S!ril;e \\'hilc Coffee Is Ho!! COROLIDU Open house Sunday at be&t APTS. 2 BR. investn1enl opportunity In Lower lei-els, s I u d Io s. the \\'est. Elegant 4·Ple;< In Frplcs, pool, Ubl carports, 1 1 b"' 1h tlos. Sl75 • M'VI 673-3378 area o a wous grov. N_e_wport Beach 2200 Newport Be1ch 3200 nn, custon1 crpls & drps. child or pels. $11.i. 641 O 1v n e r-,A gen 1. Assoc. lrn LSO .FURN BACH. C'('iling frplc. gar. Adults, no Near pvt. club S300. Shl1imar Dr., ''A'", (.i\I., 11 /Burr \Vhite Re a It o r Santa Ana Ave, C.i\J. pets. 116.i. 2650 Elden, La Paz R.E. 8;30--0700 TRAILER-Retired or Sip· 6i:H630. i\lgr. Apt 113 646-5541 537-0062 after 7 pm ,\: Sun. pa .,.....,. sl10\vs lop return at $86.000. 3 BR, 2 £A. sto1·e, refrig.. 11081 Grove Circle. HB. avallable f"eb. 2nd . S260. F:ast of Springdale & So. of 675-2698 534-7a.'i8. \Varner. \\' Al'f:RFRONT very priyate 4 1m "Extt. unusual at· rnosphere-. S525 mo. GT5-2717 ~f"R0'.\!1' 3 BR. \\"Inter Slgj. Studenls ok. Garage, yati;I • 6'13-S088 Corona dei Mar 2250 CHINA Cov. view, be.aul. fu nt ~BR, 2 BA. W>0 mo yr!y.-!l11s Shell. 6~ 2 .'.BR. House Furn. f1•plc, ,paejo. Yrly. Adl11. No Pets. $190 !\lo. 6i~2'2 • · Ba lboa Island 23S5 1010 SO. BAYFRONT to 10 yr. lease for best Joe. ~ut. 4 BR. l'ii l>alh hQmr ~2 BR. 2 bath apt. &_ 2 hol.t ii. tlock. F\lm. Sl20tl FURN/UN FURN. \\le have several choice :.!-3-4 Bdrm. homes avail.: clean, vacant & ready for imn1ed. occupancy. Lease rates f1'0n1 $325-$500 per month, includ· tng an. o{ th('. marvelous BLUFFS !eRlurci;. Call us today! Eattbluff Realty 2.U-1 Vis\a l)('l Oro Ne1\'port Beach 641-11:\.1 Lease_, Le•s•/Option, SALE ' Unusual A-f'tamc. pool, BBQ. 3 txinns, family room lat1e coough for billiard table. Large lot. \Vcs!cllU area. OPEN ~UNDAY 1-S 1400 Lincoln Lane Pele Barret1 Rlty. 6·12-5..'00 Safrivay Cehter. dent $67.SO.SSO. CRIJ 548-92$7 LOVELY mod 2 br, bit-ins. 2 BR. Crpl('d. ran11:('. Ol'C'n & l'.!i.'l.'lion Vll'jo afl 4 or 838-7440 art 6. crpts, drps. $180 yl'ly. 203 ORLEANS APTS. dispasal. SJ25. Apt C, 132 E. LO\\'ER Duplex . Newly Pacific Shores Rnlty M'droc. Ocean sirie of hwy. ~ Evcsn 842-8728 Duplexes Unfurn. 3975 HU NTI NGTON BEACH DUPLEX 2 BEDROOi\I. I bath. C'S· cellcnt n:!i ghborhood. Un.furnished. $\Jj n1onth. Call 536-4i602. 2 BR. Oean .. l\tiddle Aged Empl r.ouple Pre(. No Pets. Rens. 646-6142 Sl25 LOVELY 2 BR Duplex. Stow. Yard for family. Pet. Bkr.~. RENTALS Apt1. Furnish1d Gener ii Single Adults 4000 e NAS&\U PAL!\IS e Cypress 5'13-4638. B11y. 494--2792. 1 BR furn apt. Pool .... ,.,. 2 & 3 BR avail. Adults only. LGE: 2 BR. Pool. Crpls & 177 22nd St. ~2-36-lj Huntington Be•ch -vv 1lrps. Kids ok. I~ ?!laple DLX 1·2 BR, nh10 unfum. Adlts. M pets, util incl. 1884 STONEHENGE APTS. li41 Tustin, Custa r-.lcsa l\lgr. l\11'5. Carson, 6i2-1641 P.lonrovia. 5-IS--0336 2 BR. 2 BA, dist111•hr, 1-cc.10....,ccc=--~--~ A'I'TRACTIVE 2 BDR.\1 rn1. Adul1s, ·no pets. 2~20 2 Bedrooni..s. Nev• w/,v $l4j x util . Pool. Adults, no J"lorida. 536-2730 carpel. separate l:tundry pets. xm i\laple. r..t8-{lt57. e DEL-LAKE MANOR 1'00111, patio, ll'nccd yard. Qu!ET 2 n. '"pl-, bltns, 1 "e. 1 BR 11:;;. UlU n.t ........ 1 ('Joscd ill~. \Va1k to Eii.-;t ui •" ...., . -.,.,... ,...... • 17th Shopping Center $140 gv.r, patio, E·side. Adullll. patio. Small eompleit. Adults_ ADULTS ONL\' BJ.: R · no pets. 384 16th Pl. 6~2·1298 , no pets. 5.36-6717. ,642-9lj!j · · Apt 3. 548-2800. 2 BR unfum. Duplex. Crpt t,, 1lrps. ?!!iddle 11.gcd only plcQsc. Pho111' j48-..().122. e BARGAIN -Bcau1iful lge 2 BR apt. 998 El Camino Dr, C.i\I. 5-16--0lj1 BAO~. elec blu1s. r1.'frig. util pd, $120. i\laturc cdl1lt~. no pets. 99;, Valcnria. ~0--9680 $200 t\lo. Atllts. 548-5962 '1"2"e"R".'2"B"A-:-,-;,..,,~-,-,,.,-"'-'Y-,-p7t. I Bu1lnes1 Property 6050 Bltns. S200 mo. 1----------·I 6/J-3-130 Medical Bldg, Site NE\V 2 Br. dl'n. 1 Ba \"lCIV, Crpts. tlrps. suntleek. S285. Across lt'Om Huntill(lon In. 772--0367. 5.1~59!1, 5.'r>-38&1. tcrrommunity Hospital. Call 3 BR. 2 ba.. bltn. range & no1''. 01·en. cp1s, drps. 1-Yr. old. R. D. Sl•tes R1•ltors Vacant. !oio. of hi\")'. $275 5J6.8801 "BIB"' P.EALTY 6r:.i-JOOJI-========= ========= Bu1int11 Rent1I 6060 Huntington Beach 54001 _________ _ $85 &: UP. Nire 1 &-2 BR NE\V QUIET 1 BR, nroceon . ./ 1 BR Duplex w/ priv yl'd. Trlr. 133 E. 16th St., C'1. S150. pri deck or patio. nr UCI, llOO o·o. ----------ATTRACTIVE 1200 sq. fl. • ~' St I & I t ~ 14th ' Newport Be•ch 5200 CHEZ ORO APTS. 8234 room, suitable (or artist. 642-7429, &1.,..1~...... 'ti ('S · cp .'! on Y· 4.Jl ./ Studio t Rm •pl., 1-.~. "'"13<9 673-t~I ·• "" ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I AHanta. 11 .B. Nu, I. 2. 3 profess. or retail buslneu. 2 1 ,\c 2 BR DUPLE.'\. Sll:t & ....,.,. ' '"" · utiJ pd. $1~2 mo. NEWPORT BEACH br's, Priv. gar, pool. Ulil Blks lron1 Lido Isle 67~7~7 Sl.35. Atlulls. fltEE UtiL !urn. 1 Bdrm 548--0630. 6-16-GJOO ~ Phone * ~9-os:l3 apt. Near IX'och. Sl:L up. TERRlt'fC 2 btl l 1• mi. ,i36-SOJ8 or 5.16.Z727 PRJr-.IE bu !ii n e s s Joe. I ~3777 536-7'l82 536-1366 baths, sharp, cai·;:~~dra~ Al"TRAC 2 Br, crpt1. dl"]JS. do\\·nto\vn Cotita r-.t ea a . Newport Beach 4200 2 BOR:'\IS. 2 BA, pvt. patio. es. Approx. 1200 -It ., ,,..... LUXURY LIVING ):?ar, kids ok, S130. 17442 Zlx95". Call 548-J~Ol or ~" ,..._ Qufi'n.'I Ln. 9 6 8 -7 j l 0, 548-3Zi0 ht-Ried pool, \\'Uher & dryer ed. A1·ail. 2/ll'iO Sl55/mo. 8·17-1594. sro=~RE=~ro=R"'~.~ •·=•E"'~,.,-1 Newport Be•ch GRAND .hook up. 962..s9!» F'our Star Rl'alty • 83:>-44l2 NE\V, nl'ver li\'ed in 2 & 3 LoCol\O) bcdroon1, 2 Baths. 12&1 sq, 2 BR. Aµt. CL"J!!&, drps. stove Pamrlc Bide.. next to F"URN. 2 BR Duplex. gnrugc, BEAUT. 2 Br. Nr11•. Drps, r~ .. slu1.g carpeta, linen drap.. gai· 2 &nlatl C'hildren Ok. Berk11hltts Restaurant. Jnq. lrgc yard. close lo shops, rari>"d. slove. carb. displ., es, buil1·ins. Gencivus stor. f\o · pel1. Refer. $135. mo 673-9405 ?-.lr5. Franke freeways. S1:i3/mo. 962-72!12 11r!v y11rd. ~o clilldren or no o.,.,. pels, Sl5(). 61i;..1112 11.ge. heated pool, !lep.~ to ;-4-;;_,;:-:='~~·.,..-,,,-::-:,-.,.,-,,,--;,IHOUSE Zoned for 5to1-e or Santa Ana 4620 D"'U". 'E ' B \\"estclilf Plaza shopping. 2 Br condo. Garage. pslio, 2 oHice, etc. 900 sq. fl. 15 car -----------I "-·" r. 2 Ba, BR.lanced Po\\"cr. rumished pools, re<:rt'aOon facilities. park'g 612-5851. VAIL lmmed. Lowly 3 Br, B/B Ba Hom~ $22:"; Mo. No 2 BR c.:i.r'J)t:ed, aUch'd garage. 2 children & pel , 01<. F.cno..'d ~nr yd. Stove, relrig, ·dllb."·51.lt, car b. 11'\l>-posal, w.a.ttt pd. lU & last mo rent + cleanln& Ccp~ Avtlil lnuned. 54~ eves. 64~1691 day:o; Luxury sinale, t t,, 2 bcrl· l'OOlll apartments, furnish. ed ·and unfurnished, ""Ith ro1nplct~ priVAcy 11nc1 J11nd- s~apcd counlr)< ,club atn-.os· phere includihg S7SO,<XKI ~'Onh ol f(IO"tational facu . lt'es de11lanf!L. and operated juJt for t'ingle people. OPENING IMMEDIATE OCCU~ANCY S13U LARGE. cheerful newly Townhouse Bll-ln.~. crpts, model by Rcal"s. LeaS(!, 5J6...4f>46 f11rn l BR apl Ctf'i..plexl. drps, en~I gar. Clbhsc " 645-02.Sl AVAJLABLE Feb l6th. 1 & 2 Office Rent1I 6070 Rhna, garage. 1 tn(Rnt OK. Pool. Sl!ij. Cs.II 540-!1179 Studt.nlJ. G't>-0223 Adults Only II===.:=======> 13 BR. 2 llaohJ, ~lit le1·cl S263 ·-ti-ton &tKh ?400 2 BR. 2 baths .......... SW ... ., ""' AVAILABLE NO\V Br duplex; 'rrp1; pa!io, ... &y & ~11ch Renliy. lnr. l~mJ,., •mall backyard Sl5l 901 Dover Or. Suite 126 NB oo. $46..nCB 6'&-2000 Eve1. 548-roG6 RENTS Jo'H.O~f 11'4j to i.1X1 amt Point 2744 BR. den. frpl, paUO, fe~ , bltlns, 111. new l\UOOr. TO. 49G-3Tl6 uplexes Furn. 2975 l UT!L J>d, I BR ,,,,.. choice arta. Bk<.- TI)WNHOVSE; ! BR. 2\i DA. frpJc, patio, pool, 2 CAr i::-ar. aU bltna. crplJ, dtp4. ta $2'B .mo. sn..sru or &IZ..2491 eve& or wkends. ' 2 BR. 2M.,1den, dln. room ll' Cllt/ha\~lt S300 (i('l.)r,1:1~ \VUUamaon. ~allor f73.4lio 673-15&1 Ews U£LUXE TOVo'nhouse. 2 BR, 2 BA. t'rnlc, JIO!)I, lae pallo. NEWPORT BEACH 8SO 1RV1NE AVE. IRVtNE ANO 16th 1n4'~ GARDEN' '!&ROVE 13100 Q\apman A\'f', (( bli~ w, ~111a AAa f'\\o)'.l tl)O 636.11\11\ ANAHEIM $2SO. ~tclCtntlc, R 11 r 6t5-m32 NO\\' LEASING t'OR ~I.ARO{ OCCUPANCY otjE~8r .. I: $,'.homes : on frT So. Oroo1<:hu1"!f ( )lf•ri) llt.i_!lll5 to.~ m_o. (1 btk, So, ot J,lncoln) CQ"\\oocl Ke•ltY 5'd-,t2!JO ~ n I -,,_ ~ l t ••:•'tollN nm-sutt NINER Sf1l'S on « DAILY PILOT ll'A'1T ADSI South 'S.y Club >!:¥ o.n.v Pilot l\'"nt Atls .t A,,.entt 1• ota',,f!2i!l!. ,. J .. 1 -·--~------ No pcls. 2230 So. Conlfr St. 3 BR, 7 BA. Ne"' crpts, MARINER B!l'JI. New. Crpta. tll'pll. LAGUNA BEACH IN1 \\'~r1. llnoleum & drape11. Freshly S"'UARE APTS. Lindbof'E Co. 536-2.l'i9 Air Conditioned Lu:o;ury garden apo1·1n11•ntJi I P.,"tlntcd lhn~I. Prl pat io. ..,. 121 NE\V 2 BR apts. Crpts, ON FOREST AVENUE . L•aun• te•th 4705 rncl gar. S19J, 67"'..-3690 1144 h·Tf ... An., N.I. drps. bltn~. Acro&I lrom Desk 5paee ava.Ilable In ()ffctlng co11111lete pn•·t1.cy, ~ n 8 0 !'lhopplng. 842-7062 neiv1ist oHlct bu.Odin.. al -r ~ R. crp1~. drp~. rncl wMd I ......... lly .,. beautUul Jandscapini; & TIIE NE\V VJl..1.AGE JNN gar. AJul!.s only. j';o JK•ts, n. 1m .. c .... ,.., 2 BDR?ltS. 2 BA. 11vt patio, prime locntlon In downtown l.Jtled • r&Uon&l J.~~.el'ly Sa.ldleback Inn, Vic llarbor & Ba.ker Shop'g, i ""'""~~:'!~~:l"""'" I heated pool. v.uhcr & drytt Laauna Beach. Air cond}. WlJ)lU'll4 • . rt'C • I ~NI. t.roin. Pl a \\'tek. EASTBLUF F hook up. 962.-&9!» Ooned. ca.rpcted. beautltW fo.cilltfr.s in a country 1.ovtly art~. All ulll'1.10 1- 1 !;0•0· ~&~"=4389,,--';:;:-.,,,.-,,c:::~ Lg. 2 EIR. 2 Ba , crti'ld, drp"il, NE\V 2 Br Duplex bll•il\S, e.ntratlce.s: Frontaae on "lub 8tmos1lhcf.c No.,.,. 1 11~. nudd, pool. laundry 3 BR apt. blt·in range. 2 ro\"d. ,.3,.,,..f's. Xlnl "·. ~t d 1, • ..., .... 1 0 Fof'l"tt A\-e., rear leads to ' . rn1. SIC!~ to hrh. 696 S. Cst CllfPC!ll, rirapes. I :i52-A • ·-,..... .... ., s, rps, &.N. n•u 1· n-P.tuoclpaJ parklnf Jot.I. $50 leaslni;: In Nt·"·porl &:!Reh. lht.~· -194·9-136/4!U·'l'l01. Corl.ander St. 546-.'I~. nr shopping, schb . ~ churCh.. ly. lJ08 Olive. s.36-8523. .....,. month for·-· Do·'· C'f. 8J6 An1lgo11 \\'11.l· # A. .... "" BE OTif'UL Llu'Rc &ch. I BR Duplex 1v/p r. close to $250 Pt·r nlu, (yl'\y. I •nd chairs available tor $). ftlodtls open 10 am '0 8 prn 11pl . \\"a/king dlstollCT lo shos>'c. no ptlts. Adults only. W1stmin1ter. 5611 Bwilne$1 hOUrs answerinr rurnb;hed or unfurnished beach &t !lhops, Ocean virw. S100. !WS-69:,t ..... ''S-'010 o M.'rvkc avaUable Jor $10. Bil •·· " 1171) <"' ""9 .. --. AlJ utllitle• paid .xcept H<'nt~ r1,-lfl1 $1~ to $.110 -,. .... ~uc · '""'..., ' BR. ptly drtld. bit-IN. gar. -••em CL,& LG DR. cpl.5, drps. bltm. telephone. or 491-M0.1 Adlls, no pe.111. Pa I\ o. pert cpl. 1 child ok. $l3S. DArLY PILOT Oakwood Garden Apartments 1700 16th Street 714: 642-81701 SINGLE cmplcl won1an, 642-12.W. -,.-A=Y:-=FR:=O=N=T=--10090 ~tcraddcn. 839-2267 222 F'OR&ST AVENUE <"hannhia. quk!t apt on 2:·=a~R.~'-"°"-,-,~-k~ .. -,.-..,--"'-,-.. ( 2 LACUNA BEACH Lon1'()ardy IAnr, 4 blklt to ly df't'Ol'9.lt'd.' SI~. Attu1t1. ,.BR, 2 BA luxury aptt, Prl. 5620 ...__ b1:h. ~110 itte u1i1 494-839:2 M6-l71G or !J40-4411 EA'de t met, clO\-.tors. 1ubtet-S1nt1 Ana cn-"'7":::-=-=·=--' · '"'"·" •'''· An clec. Pool, Mod•rn Offic•s l BH i\pt: :1!110 ~JN'p!ng m1~. 3 Rn 2 BA Como; Cl'pts. 1ufl 11·1ter boa! tlcclc1 S350 -------- Lili! pd. F'ree TV & radio. t111>11. bltn~. pool. Pt1tlo, •ip. l l.2I \V'. Con•l lfwy' New'. SIM ID Sill. LARGE 1 k 2 SiS aln,la. S135 2 nn sulte. 1.'00 !i>. Coast Jlwy. '"nlit'· $275 mo. !>1.>-52"i0 port. 612_~(Q • Bt. 11turHo Apts. (lrl-pl~). Air co11d. Stct'y Rrvli.:e, Cri11", drpa, Jrplc. Ip f4ml· rutcln.a. centrall)' loeated. I DR, UIU J)d. Ck'ean Virw. NE\V dlx. 2 Bit 2 BA. Shag 3 BR. 2 BA. Nr oce•h. F'rplc, ly kllche:i w~bUN. l. chlld So, Calif lrt Nat. Bk. Bldr. Slflii('o pen1on t'l'tfllli, drpL Imm,. I OCCUf))'. d~"·hr. ~ mo. yl'ly. 1'o olr, no llCll. Nr -"Ctitioii 22:1) C. Rotl('M J:Lttr'f'q Real1or • 491-7\li!I * $17".>-$1*1. 5'tl}'..973, ~2311 J)t'ls. 545-{m7 wk-da,)'I 9-J $(1. Center&. •M> Wamer). C.18 ~tt.sa t:U-1 l'IS Friday, Januir)' 30, 1970 DAILY PU.OJ SJ ANNOUN'CEMENT5 Jois • IMPloVMiiNT I Joas 1 ElilPCbVMititl * * * * * BUSINESS ind FINANCIAL ind NOTICES . ~11io --~ w-. 7100 Job-n. Wom. net Bui. Opportunllle1 6!00 "•rsonaft '405 . a.ERK • Female """ INl!W • OPPQRtUNl:t; I ' RtU.~ ~plt ,..ru bt llCl~l­ etl In t.hla area le .un-ound· ing cnry·, ~ ret1U & co!let"l tt1o~y from Ne-.v O>ncept ol Vendin& Machines. Co. eatablishes IOC'. Thi.I is a_J:round d~i' OPPQr- tun!ty to Obtain I Ve!)' pro!· ita.b~ l;. new lMllineas. Starl pad or !ull tinie. \Vrl!t When You Wont it done right ..• Call one ff the experts listed below!! CO?l-tMVNICATIONS GROUP or AnnounCMMnh 641 O --'--'= SENS!TIVITY TRAJNING WORK SHOP A gracram· of interpersonal esereil!t's fur small sdt~l· ~led a:roupa, Minimal <'hara;e caU 642-8130. 10 AM· 5 PM. Whoddy1 Wont? Whlddy1 Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spoclol Ro,. or ph. SOU'l'HL.AND VENDING 336 E. 17th St. SERVICE, DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRE'CTORY Accounting 6500 C•rpet"Clnftlnt 6615 JOIS & EMPLOYMENT SERVICE DIRECTORY J ob W•nted, Men 7000 S Lines -S timu -S bucks llUlES -.t.0 Mi.1$T lr+clUOE O>sta ~fesa, Cal, 9'.1627 ( n 4 I 646-0464 Landac1pln1 •11011 ----.:...~~-= YOUNG e.xecutive desb·e!! Associate 1-WNI WU "-.,.. to tnOll. a-wflll yo1,1 Wtlll In lttdt. ,,_YOUR Pnon. _.,./k __,...._ t -.5 Unet .t lfV"'"llll• CC..i\IPLETI-: Personalized A-OK Shampoo Special $1.50 GENE.RAL LANDSCAPE customer relations position rm/Jea.s for hal(t, etc. ~ GARDENER Clean. ups, in Or"nD'e Coun•• Six y•••• '-NOTHING FOii !.M.e -TltA0€S OHL YI To Pl1ce Your Trader's P1r1dlH Ad PHONE 642-5671 Bookkeeping Service. i..A .. I ·~ • ••·-Ir · -... 'J· ... MANUFACTIJREP. Specializing ir1 s ma I I Ct"~p ....... s~ n'a: °""'~182 Renova0M'6 ee trlmnun&", cxper, presently asst. \\lest $1?,000 Investment into the b1IBinesses. P.U, & Dcliv. CARPET STEA.lit CLEAN· prunln:. Cost :P.fgr/Claims adjusting no. 1 Business of the day. 2j 96S-8l00. 536-41.56 ED No 503.p, no bru.shes. 642-821.f for intrntl corp. 49.J.-568:! 1st TRUST UEEDS TO $140,000 Trade for clear view condo. or Home Ne\V• port. or as dolvn pa'yment on lnrome. (TI4) 4SS.3103 lmprov~ 20 acre horse ranch, Northern catir.. for yacht, bouse or apt. $46.000 eQuity, Owner. 50 Spaces i\lobile Home Pk yr. history of Stle<:e'&S, now I=====""=== l''or e!it. 646-S971 RETIRED Chi I ' I Poporh•.-i-e Boatsw.in'1 ?t105C's Lake Washington, e'.11'.paoding operations to So. l•byai'ttin"' 6S50 ······• mate seekin ... em lo t h ' T &d I c.HI Co I ·-·--· . • Floo-6665 P1ln1·., ••50 ·~ p yme.n gOCNi unting etc. r e or --,::-• mp e..., ............ .;, m· ----------, • 1 -in marine type of \\"Ork. Orange Co. or San Diego st&lled & ready to go. \Vill -P O &-344 Cost ~·1 !ram, ~--'pal of u-1. f..tATIJRE \\101nan 11it your • Interior • Exterior e CA. ·~ .. "',· • a '' esa, .P.:.'":,c';,.· e,B.:.'',;''_:_· .:61>-0"-'41=6~~I rl·uou ·~"'' · .. _ CARPET VINYL TILE A ti illn ~~ -abll\tle!. Contact lmmert. 11un1e eves & 'vknd.&, $1.~ eous c ce as ptd, 12 yrs _ :?·I' nybrldge Cabin Q"lliser Once in a1ttetbne oppor. to hr. Alter 6 pl'n _ llpm free estin1ate Lie, Contr, exper, State Uc. Pittsbwi:h ACTIVE Retired, i;::entleman Xlnt cond. Slet>ps 6. Trad<" niake tliat high income most 548-\389.. :l40-1'262 S.1&4478 pnts 543·1787 l!t available as part-time J2'.!00 eq. for trailer boat, """ple dream ot. Startin" 'JO-IER 1 t . ._ INT ; ~--i 0 •· F driver \\'here respol)5ibillty ,..nm ..... , 0, .. , r--.,.. ... ..-o • 1V1s1K,s 10 Girdtnln• "10 • :i:..o.. .,.n,.. 'ree ests · I Im ••• " .,. ..,. ", ..... ,.... . . salarv ll~.000 + substantial • -' . . • !S 0 pot uu .... e . .-.-..WO Call 646-4619 ·~ babysit days n\)' ho111c, Z Loe refs. 30 yrs exp. Lle. &I;;;========= (n41 675-6259 Have lndustri&J Building Want =-""""'=~~.,-.,---1 profits. Call Ke.n Oillord yrs & up. Playroom, Jots of 1----------insrd Call Chuck 645-0809 ~n \ Old est. Gen. "l<"rchandi., 11141 11'1"~ NEIV I .,. J•:m "'o "•""'. Job ntln ff, ·" .... ....,., toys.,Balboalsl.67"".>-16'W a"'ns,re-seedlng. ..... .............. Un its, T.D.'s, 01· submit Nancy J. 1\-loorc Rcal!y 673-3101 store, $1500 \'al, 'Trade for COIN laundties-Frigk!.aire Cwnplete la\17\ care. Clean ' p A 1NT 1 N"!NT/~t. Women 7U20 I t hoU ·1y boat J\IY liomf'. Reas. ldeah1, ...-_... vac._o, seequ; • 'From $6,500 to $42 .500. SuperviS<!d activities. Days up by job or nwnth. i'ree J ack can do that paintin:; SECY. AVAILABLE mobil h~me_, or • . Ane.heim, Costa Me s a , estimates. for into, call 67>7282 Owner Bu•.,. p.,.k, Fu I l e r to 11 , 01· Eves. Sonic nursinz 846-0932 bcf. 9 AJ\I. alter job-la.st, clean & very mas! Fcb. Js1, Excellent skill~. training. Call 673-7:.23 Est. 894-W,l:l, 847-1358 all phases office 'vork. Diet. llave4beaut.viewacresin Garde n Grove, 4;::0Pi\1,oru1eekend11, · Sonar Challenger '62 Shi p To Shore Marine Radio. Good as New. \\/ill trd for Sm. boat, property, C.B. radio. etc, 54G-6997 N. San Diego County, \Vant \Ve s tminster, Huntington BABYSITTING, Near Heller E.'X-PAINTER, no\v schl Type' • Tapes, mimeo, tile. • Park. • ~ Yard, Ho• L"-h. AL'S Garoenlni & La'vn teacher \\ill pafot eve• •. ~or P /Time, Call 64.t.l~OO 1nobil u-ailer home. Beach, Santa Ana, Tustin, .... & ....... • t.taintenance Co ......,,.,.,;01 "" • Lee Pereyda Real Estal<! La Mirada. !\1on.f'ri. &'1~27:l4. industrial • · reild:u;J . ..._ \\"klldS. Xlnt \\'Orkmanshlp, or 6T:i-3833. 499-1990 or 4~·54S8 Call Charlie 5~7833 VERY Reliable t.fother of 2 * 646-3629 * Free tist. 646-4519, 54().-0()62 ·1'A~!~O~E~S~~-l~or-co--,v-.i~,-,..-..,-. S units, 3 stores, res1aura111. vac. C·l Joi, duplex + home. \Vanis Trlr Pk. Ac. or ? • Eq, $200,000 all or part. Prll·e Rlty, 5-m-3209 TO\\INHOUSE: Ne11·po11, Z BR, 2 BA, Nf'\V cpt, igl' pa. tio, pool, $6r.1 Pq\y. \Vant Pl't'scott, Ariz. property or ~ ~ ~ ? Agent 646-0732 HAVEl T REP SHOP \vants babysitting, i\ly C.R. Ke lly pain t ln1. P!derlycai-eorfamilycan:. the sl .D: plus can add SHOE AIR home. PN!f. inlanl • l yrs. GEN'L yd. Clean-up, trtt Complete intel·iors k ex-Homemakers. 547-6681 '.'......,' •~n", .. ~rtp1!~ ... \v0,.'."1y_ln· Call 5'1:>--02Z3 setv. roto-lill. Sp rl '.:lr tcrion. \\'ork ~rantced. '"'" .. "'· '""-· " . 1 repairs. Haul -Reas on. F •>•• Broktir/owner P.O. Box 623 Excellent E. I7th sn·eet o· CHILD care licensed, inlants 64&-5848 ree estJ . ...,_,,}5j South Laguna, 9'.?677 cation, C.l'lf. To see t•all lo :; yrs., t.Ion tluu Fri. BEFORE You paint, eheek c-c=:=:..::'."-::::"":::::_cl GLEN QUEEN 541).llJJ Hc1·· Bristol, Paularino nr. Org. GORDIE'S mo1v & edge, my prices. College itudent Lake(ront, Lake Forest :? >'tage Re-' E•ta•e Po\ver vac. Reasonable! c-•• S ... , "' Coun'" Ai ......... r1. 540-8372 .... !eve: ;r.o-1549 Br. :l Ba, pool, tt'Mi5, fish· $ 'J .,._. 968-1970 or ~5-8734 ing, boating clbhse priv. S S $ CHILD caJ'(' for infants & JAPANESE G d * PAPERHANGING $10,400 eQ. Fo1· Land, Jn. NEED $13;500 Isl Trust l)('ed children (or ivorking exp'd. Count-y~ ~~~;: 'PAINTING * 96$.Wj --e 0, , • .,.. ., • .,.. on con1m I beach h'On\ prop. '-" .. "" lo• ,, ~--ti ., FO """"' · ~. worUi approx $~0.000. \\'ill C•uw ' 0'"'Jtli: ... o 1• Reliable,freeest.642-4389 R Better Pain tin&, Lido Isle Bayfront. Trade S25.000 eQ1,lity for clear boat ot equal value. Principai!'I only. Contact !I.tr. Harold .Johnson, 213/723-0114. '63 Cadillac, Sharp. Ptint· pay 10~ •• ,·n1. 3 Y'' due date. !!L'S. Nurses supervilion, Jll\l'S G"-'-·•-, 1 lnteriol' & exterior, acoustic · lunches & snack&, dinner iC .uu"""''& .: av.11 lil "'"·-ing press & equip. True·, p-•ent ,-"-me !lJO ""r · 1 n-•. oe ngs. v,.,.....,, 1, Insured.. '"g """ ,,... re<J'd. Full time care avail. main enance. ~....,.s. • con1· mtrcyde, niini·bike. \Vant mo. Lindborg Co. a36-2.j79 """·""-I merclal * 540-4831 PAIN11NG-Ext...,Int 18 yrs. limosine boat or what bave l-"=-===O.:."-'-'-'--~ ,~~~=c,_,.-,,,-,.--,--. • •·-LI ~-t you <K·~17 alt 6 ritA?.:lA i\·llA? 01v1lf'r \\•ants lo 1, EXPERT Japanese Gardener xper. ""~ c. '"~= es · • "".rvv • pm. retirr! NiC<" Coi;ta i\ll'-;a \VILL babysit your home 5 rl . job I Aecoust. Ceiling!! 5-18--5325 Have bayfront, pier & f!oal , with .l-story homr, Va.1. 312J.OOO. \\'ant r£'sid .. com· mere. or indust, units. Balboa Bay Prop. 673-7420 ' d?.ys or eve.Ii. You furnish Right P cc, nice & c ean 1 2 ~ Ont-acre lots.,. clear. 1•estaurant. \Viii consider up. Free est.imat~. S.!S-3354 PAINTIN. 'G $12 a veraa:;e l6000 V" ~ ff · 1.l:ansportation. 642-1407 ue. r 1agsta .. A1·1. l<"ase or lease/option. fully room. Reliable. fast, 10 yrs TRADE FO BABYSIITING CLEAN·UP SPEctALIST r.ona. R CaHfor. equipped: ready 10 eook! , my home, in area. 638-7333, ~i\l . -· " CM D il I I I & 1.10\ving, edginr:, odd job!. n1a prope. •J or · Agent. 642-7777 · a );;·'" nc~,0•2 up. Rea80l'lable. 548-695.'.i * PAINTING • InUExt. Owner 57>39;)() RACE CAR DRIVER .,........., Local referer>ees. Immed JOHNSON 'S GARDENING 8'rvi-. eAe.r:'l~., 646-3657 -l * * * * * needs invest backing. Future I · k M on I Yartl cai"C, Cleai1-Up•, Prun· "" ~ l'l!!!!'J!!!J!!!Jl!!!!]!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!~!!!!!!!!,;!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I SSS. Call !\fr. Ed,l'ard \\/hit· rte • as ry, • c.6560 ing, planting. 962-2935 DUNN BY DUNN 1~REAL ESlA'fE REAL ESTATE ed/ Bus t.1gr. 67S.j743 alter· _______ _;;:.::I i:,;~:,=:;:J-:=--=" Painting & Paperhanaing Gener•I Generi'I noon5• FREE E~l. Brick, block, General Services 6612 1''rce est. Reaa. 642-2364 S l\f A L L RESTAURANT. stone, plantcr11 & entry YOU Supply The Paint. S Br, Office Rental 6070 Commercl•I 4015 newly re-decoraled. beach '"a}'..!>. ::.31-4973, State Llc'd, RAIN gutters ln,•talled. Liv JU.1 &: Kitchen Painted, 1----'----~--.,---------I area. SuUs1antial down ,& Rainey season &linost here! $50, Call a;,7.8638, HUNTINGTON BEACH roft sale.686-69S-6l5 \V 19th tcnns. 642-0724 . Business Service 6562 l-'ree.e:it..Reunl ~. PAINTING, Paperini: lT yrs. Air Conditioned 51 B••"·I .,., . A . • 7-11 FOOD Sto-s F'ranchlSes 730 ,--Haebo' ·-a Lie & ON BEACH ILVD. ~•o·ll6S 0, 6407414 ·A , Avail. Call 77S-5870 ~r I " ,_ \' ,_ d booded. Rel!. furn. 60.-2356. u-= ,,,.rs ,,rea ·~ CO~tPUTER printed addrc~s Haullnt , 6 I " "'""' .,, · .. De=k spa~·e available ln 1:;o;;~~===~~::;~·~·~-00 1 49.1•.70_ ,11 6 p'f aoo.,,. our name. "" a · ., ~ • d 1· k Y ARD/G ... r . 1 Cleaoop, newest office building at re:>s 1st. ey punched into · ~ prime location in J~untin:;· lndastri1I Rental 6090 COIN laundry, 20 machine~. 18&1 cards. Files majp. Reniov<" ~s. ivy, traah. l'l1stering, Reptir '810 ton Beach. Air conditioned, 6 dry. 301 Palm. Balboa. (ained &: updated. 61J..81.5S , Grade, backhoe. 96" •• -87~Zi beautiful entrance. Front· i\lake oner. 847-3856. *PATCH'. PLASTERING age on Beach Blvd .. rear NEW BUILDING TYPING by profess . leads to private parking 1260 l.clgan Ave., Costa Mesa Investment Oppor. 6310 secretary. Gener a I & lot. $50 per month !or engineering. Studenr rate!, e HAULING . Have ~i ton pickup, licen'scd & Insured. 494-1003 All types, Free P.stimatt:s Call 54Ms;2j space. Desk ano chairs Each unlt.1725 sq·ft 2 ofi·I----------962-9824. available for S:i. Business ices, ~ rest rooms. llo/220 1005~ RETURN on $1J,OOO • HAVE TYPEWRITER! houn ans,vering service electrtc, Ample pa rking, $2:.,000, sec by llll TD. available for •10. All "l>'I>'-C Ro"~ N ~ R -• \VJLL TRAVEL! " . .. • oen aui"'" e ... tor Choice i11obilc dev. adj. "'·' .., I !Jes paid except telephone. Costa l\1esa 6~2-1485 niaj. college. 646-1234. u'o4-4 a ter 3:30 DAILY PILOT 17175 IEACH BLVD. RENT l\1·1, ll2.'.) sq. fl. $120 Quick action nee! HUNTINGTON BEACH mo . 13:.5 l.clgan, Cl\f. 642-4321 * 67~5116 * Monty to Loin 6320 PRIJ\.tE Office space. 2000 sq ======""==== 1------------ fl in Irvine To\\·Pr. Ne\l'port _L;;O;;T;;s;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;100;;.J lst TD Loan Financ i al Center. Ov. • erlooking N,vpt H11rbor & VIEW LOT Pacific Ocean. SuP<"rb Joe. NE l.cl\r('st lntel't'&I Available ls! class e;.:cc. offices. Avail WPORT HEIGHTS immed. R<"quires rein1· $15,000 2nd TD Loan bursemcnt of $J227 in ex- isting office im provements. Monthly Rental on 5 yr Jse. is $1076.76, or J::c per sq rt . Call 644-5191. NE\V Bldg. Office Rentals. Access to Santa Ana · San Diego Fl~)' & Cro"TI Valley Plnvay. Call (ll 8:::1-1400 or '499-4198 evrs. CONVENIENT C!\1 location, 2000 sq. ft., ai1·-conditioned. \\"ill di vid£'. S275 1110. ldral for accountants, doctors. Agent, 642-m7 AIRPORT CENTER Ne'" l, 2 & 3 roon1 deluxe Terms based on equity. Prrron Realty 642·1771 642·2171 54J..0611 Serving Harbor area Zl yrs. PANORAJ\1IC , ocean vie"' S•ttler Mort9•9e Co. ?Or. lo\, pvt bch. Only 1 left 336 E llth Sb~t 1n i\tonarch Bay, ~99-l.3M,l:o==='======- 49:l-45t9 Mort 1 T.D.'1 6345 LINDA Isle IOI 50x80. 38.0001--::.9.;9":;___• ----- for equity in leasehold. By $1500 2nd TD on e.-.;eellent owner 6TJ.7200. ocean view 101, 10% in· -!crest, due J years, 20 •;;, Mount. & Desert 6210 discount. 493-1706 :J AC. nr Hemet: scenic ANNOUNCEMENTS hideaway, 2700' <'I.. wtr., ind NOTICES game. aioo: $J0 dn 633-7710 8-10 AJ\'I agt, Found (Fru Ads) 6400 6510 RESIDENTIAL &-Comm. ('ugtom Cabinrt & Furn. Furn Re-Finishing. 645--0991 suites. Adj. new motel & R E W ed 62'° FOUND charm bracele! at restaurant, i\lacArt hur Blvd. • ' •nt Fash.ion Island Jan. 23n:I. Cement, Concrete. 6600 From $125. Call ~7843. QUALIFIED bu).er desires Call to identify. 2 13: 1\-TARINER'S CENTER spacious 3 BR, 2 BA, laun.1_4_2'>-_!2'2 ______ _ OUice in Slore Bid. Rcn1 or d1y room. 1 story house FOUND: Near Darrell St. W.. $75. 149 Riverside Ave., 1vith view, approx 2100 sq ft Young hun:i-y female long CONCRETE \\'Ork all lype~. Srn•ing, breaking, haulin,g, Skiploadfng: Lil'. Service & Quality. M2-1010 N.B. 646-Z.114 in Laguna. Niguel Terrace. haired eat. \\'hit!" pa1,'s I: Be1t Location in CdM P .O. Box 573, So. Laguna chest. Call j.18-31i1 Concret ''"011'. all ty!><'s. Pli· 500 & 1000 sq. ff. deluxe \VANT To Buy: Duplex Lot RED l\lale tabby Cilt. \1'ear· tios. Pool decks & block oUice. space!. Avail lnlm<'<l. Anywhere. Will Pay A~ ing red flea collar. Can1eo \VOl'k . Dick &IZ.1797 Phone o1Vner, 6~2-99JO, prox. $6000. G42-6061, behvn ShOl't?$i area. 673-6203 alter 4 * CONCRETE floor s , 3345 NEWPORT BLVD. l&4 Pill pni paHos, etc. Any az job. Reas 300 sq, ft. opposile Newporr ISf TD'S to it40,000. Trade LARGE Black & "'hile bird. & Guaranteed! Don, 642-8514 City Hall. 6~1601 for clear view condo hOme Vic. Harbor View Homes, CEi\fENT "'ORK, no job too OFFICE or DESK rental. or inc."Ome equity.' CTii), _____ 9_______ Small, reasonablt. Free 1610 \V, Coast Hwy., N.D. 455-3103 §LACK Cat \\·/whil~ fac.'I!:, E~thn. H. Stutlick 548-8615 Furn nr unlum. 6464S87 1-IOUSE or duplex Palisade!!, front paws, back legs . 1.Iale. Dana Point or Laguna. Pvt 548-4615 Contr•ctora 6620 COSTA 1\'l~sa orJlces. AIC. crp\1:, drps. Parking. 153:1 partie!t. tS&-3.177 FOUND Sm~ll black kitten, 1Addition~ t Re1nodelini 6190 MOVING,~· Haulitii:, $15 a ton.· ~1091. Best late eve or early A4f ot· ~126 (M) PLUMBING REPAIR. HAULING. deanup, lots etc. No job loo small • 642-3128 • Handyman anytime y o u ==='===='=="-'==-! call. .!..:. .1 • *** &tZ·33$8 '*** Cle1n Up. end "Haut $10 a load, 641)..9 6735 BAY It Beach Janitorial Carpec~. "'indo\vs, noors, etc. Res & Comm<:'l, 646-14.01. ' SmileJ Tax ServiCe e 12th \'EAR. LOCALLY e Qualified • Reasonable ,V, A. {Bill) Si\1U....EY CertiJiN Public Account'!' OO-:l.l'21 .nyti~ 646"9616 Central Business Services •THE TAX ADVISORS Perm. ollice·Reaq Rates l28 No, NewPOrt Ulvd . Opposite-\'Hortif Jfoil'Pttal J"or ApPt. CAii 6454400 H.K. Oark TAX SERVICE 2317 Rutgers Dr. C.i\f. SU..i285 da)'s; 516-7135 eve1, • your home or mine. 9 R1modtl, R1p1lr, 6Mt Add-A-Room Remod•ling Cust•'1'.I D•sign S•rvi c• Fr•• Estimate. ~94-0751 MAKE your home ,more liveable, Carpentry &: remodeling, reliable & reawnable. 642-2235~ ~flng 6950 Sowl"' 6ff0 ALTERATIONS, Reasonable, expertly done. 66--2037 DRESSltlAKING, reasonable rates, fa~t service. 2041 Pomona, C.ilt. • Dres11makin1: • Alterations Deg~ to suit you. €all Jo * 64&644G ALTERATIONS &. Hems, Reu. fMI, profess. 2D662 Reef Lane, H.B. 962-&133 TILE, Cer•mic 6974 * Verne, The Tlle !lfan * Cu•t. work. In8tall It repairs. No job too small. Pla.etcr patch, Leaking 1hower repair. 847-1957/~ up11o1at1,Y 6990 CZ'iKOSKl'S Custm. Uphot E uropean Craftsm11.n1hip 1~~ fin? 642-1454 18.ll Newport Blv, C:\f • Raker, 646-48.13 or 548-4757 BUSINESS ind flea collar vie. 3Sth St .• N.B. · Fred II Ger.vick, Lie. S~tALL OUice on. busy cor. FIMANCIAL 673--64.'W alter 5. 673-6041 , * 549-2170 Wind Cl I I -SlAMESE Cat \\'/flea collar. Ironing~ 6755 ow e•n "I ner Costa l\lesa $5a month Bus. Opportunities 6300 Vic. F'ord & i\tacArthur DAILY PILOT DI 1\1 E ·A · -""'-"''-----.::.;;: ,,., 11tilltie1S; included. Stl-6.'.iGO l;;;;;;~:;;;:~;;;;;i Bl\'d. G11-~S8 LINES. You can use them JRONINC in my hopie.J HAVE large 2 room oUice lor"just pennies a day. Dial $1 Hr. Altuatlon!I k l!;Uite to share ,Y/young FOUND: A \\•hit£' cal, near PILOT C1assified ad. Bab)lsl~. ~S-764 Prof'!. Cdi\f. 6151171 Edinger and Bohsa. qtica, \VINDO\VS CLEANED. Reas. Dependable. Ca.JI 84.7-1464 ------------ Identity. Call S9IHi02f' BEAUT. air oonditioned of· fict. new tarpets k pt1int. Lott 'Mal ANNOUNCEMENTS $110 mo. Cail 645--0545 days 1-,..----.,....--'-"'~ I c 5 Af1NOUNCEMENTS 1nll NOTICES ANNOUNCIMENTS ind NOTICES REWA• RD , ·,, ind NOTI E S)f, OFC. fr:nd stor. l!l'CIL 5S,000 G•llon1 R.emod. to ,iuit tenant. Ltd Mlld Jan. 1970. Humble Oil Very !J.i4'.lndly Q:ray t: '"hlle L0tt 1·ncl litor. Prtfcr to ~hr J.:. R~·f1nit11t~. has thl.111 out. tiaer 11trlped n.1111 ca t. 9 6401 Person•ls 6405 Person•I• 6405 Secy. ldeal loc. SUS Incl stand.Ing $kt 1 tat I 0 fl mo!!, old. Vic. Jame~ SI .. ~u;H~l.=&l>-==1'Z22======'1 "vaUabJe near Cost.a .. J.t,a. c.r.1. 54~4:iJ7 after 6 pin No inves11ne.nt la required LOST: Ft' male Silk)' Puppy . lur tiff's. IMU.,ri~. accn-lif;?sa Verde Arca. C.l\f. ..torles, psol1nu or mOtor oil. Re"·artl! Call Collect {2U) LOST: J<'oremo~t boy'~ bike, vlc. Cosla Atesa IUgh. Lie. 1726.!. Reward. &43-tiSOI 6010 I BUILDER OfFEHS NE\V Zl,300 sq. n. deluxe bl(ta. 1..e•~· choice 0 r a 11 g e Co11n11 area. Pr n p e Tty c-lrar, OY.·ntr \\'/c-arry 1.st TO S~i~C,. Prepd inL ok. 53()...1&1 ant, 8'lfr54S0 pn\. ' GIVE Now -and later U:"J ITEO FUND P1rson•ls 6405 AU ut1Jll1e1 pakt by lh1mb14t. !l~7. ' Equipment ~nted to quail. YOUNG Bl.-ck !It I C.t fled individual.. Part Slamcsc. ~~nlted For lntormallon call rrnl fCl"I Lot!t or Str ed . \\I \V '\loud , a.y tn }.'6-9j2\i Cves/wicr'lds. C.l\T. A~a. M0-49TO START YOUR NEW V'EAR K.i\f. Civiello. LOST Bleck t.ab Pup. No \\'lTH 1'1fl'.: RIGHT 1-Wi. p.6661 ~·kdeys I Collar. Vie. 1-lupllns:~n 81 ., $47-6667 .• H.B. Rc1~ard: ~2880 71 ho.ir ret.~i,1111: • ' _ _;:.:_;=:..==- *Women ---------·------ FATilER i7, Alone 4 * FULLY 1.JCENSED Ir homtl1m 1)'fttfi, t.Gcket d6;:.· Rekim:ntd Hindu Sptrttuallt t d~lttll to 1p11.1 '0)'J mo lot AdVlaes on all tMttm: hOmc, c:_•rt i drive my car. Lovo, t.fania;e, l!utlneu, ~ Courta:~p, lt\.alth , 11ap. ELECTROLYS1S (Unwa11Led plnel'll Cl; &tcctas. No pro- Jlt,11· Perm11nenlly Remov· blem.. 100 tarp or too fd) By Appt. 13700 Main SI, sma.IJ. l CAN HELP YOU. JI.ll. Call 342-1196 Ree.dinrs a:lven T days a wttk. IAM·9PM 311 'N. El 41.(X)HOUCS AhDrQ1moua O.amlno Real San ~~ Bcr.csc.i:1 o.• ';;U•. ti • Otn1tnlt1. 492-9136, '492--0075 1..:.==="-· ~::::::.:;:;;""':::.. Tll>1 QUICKER YOU CALI. GIVE Now -, Unlkd)"und, THE QUICKEn YOU stLL SIYB t~ISH! c L A 5 5 I F I ,I · D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 IRIT llYS! Advertlsinr Ate/lCY Sharp Secret.tJy lor fut. paced NewPOrt ~•ch Aaren. cy, fype 63-70, Shorthand 100, ora:ani%e IJ, toilow thni. Under 3J, Phone: &C-3910. 47;; N( Newport.Blvd., N.B. Al'tTIFIClAL LBfB -~IANUFACT\JRING­ ritATURE; CLEAN.CUT,' H.S. GR. AD, SERVICE COM- PLETED. \\'e \vUI traJn for mold. inJ: of plartic, artificial feet, Phol\t' tor appoint· met>t. PRODUCTION CONTROL CLERK R.equittd by t:ompan,v manu· faeturtnr data Proct•alrc ~uip1nent. Minimum 2 yrs. experience nee. and rt1qulr. es SO wpm typinir:. Xlnt or>- portunity in cJipandini:: to, Apply in person -I Peripheral Bus lne,, Equipment, Inc. • 18ll Reynolds Avenu,. Jivlne Industrial Coinplf'it Sanl,1. Ana. Calif. 92705 COSMmc SALES I Full time. l\lature, e:<pericuc. ed. E.xceUent u.lary, corn. mission a.nd benefit!t, ()U tor appt.; ~51).)o ext. 3IY JOSEPH MAGNIN * KINGSLEY MFG. CO. * 548-6116 lo am to 3 pm ASSEMBLERS for tamptr factory, \\'oodW01•1dn: exp. ~tale or female, Apply !\la· JOrv.·ay, 869 \Y. 18th, c:ri,J. ASSEl\fBLY Trair::ees. Day shift, fema,le. ~e 13-28. No exp. nee buf rnust-bave lfOOd eye~ight &: fi114er de/&rlty. Apply In pet'80n, SA E AdvwiCfll Pack~-ing 1357 E. F.<lin!l"r. Santa An~ Equal opportWlity emplo)'er BABYSJTI'ER for 7 yi· old * COOi{ * Experiend!d. boy, your home Cd l\f Apply: SURF l: SIRLOIN Elementary School Dist. i.5 5930 Pac. Cst. Hwy .. N.B. wkdays, ..,-,..,,. '11 " all DENT AL ASSISTANT-day wknds BABYSITTER wanted, my Chair aide, E:icper, pre_!.· f<· home, 2 bo}'s 2~:i & S, rays. Under 30. Hours l'lf'"s· !\ton-Fri s.~: 30 N e ,v P 1 . thru Sat. S.S. Send resume Shores area. l\tuat have 011,n k rererenecs to P.O, Box transp. 64~14<N aft G. l::l\ So. Laguna. ,<, g--.~B~Y~sm:=~ER/=-~H~,."--.,.,~ •• -.-r>-1 DENTAL ASST. Orthodoni(' Er, Live-In. Gfr! S, boy 3. chairalde ass.is\ruit. Call 642-5192 or 64.Z-5823. &h-1408 t BARMAID. nlrht!, no Dental Assist an t, 'X· bikinis, no . .1a .. ...i .. ~. $2.25 10 perienced or sehool train~. ...... ..... '6 548-7074 . start. No exp. nee. Apply in person bet. 11 am. 2 pm. DE S JGNER Oft / Little Johri's Inn, 20072 N. DRAFTSMAN of Llgbffig Santa Ana Ave., Santa Ana Fi'\tures or Someon e HU. \\'/Talent in This Ffeld. BAR litaid: All ~hifts. Apply In person. &;ottles, 436 £ 17th St., C.M. BELL MAN !\lust be over '..~ Sheraton hach '"" Is no1v acceptini: apPli· cations tor °" position ol bell man·: P/time d11ys, Mon., \\'e~:· fri. 7-3 pm. Othel" shifts also avail. Apply in person, 211l:l Ocean, Hunt. Sch. BLUELINE OPER. F' u 11 time opening in Commel'clal Blueprint Shop. 540-9373. BOOKKEEPER. Xlnt op. portunity for person ,o;;111 good \\'Ork record & interest in self-improvement with "'ell est'd. ~ N.B. con1pany. Top pay, profit sharing !: other fringe benefits. Must have i:ood refs. All rl'pl \l's con· fklenlill.l. P .O. Box 2040, Ne,vport Bch. BOOKKEEPER: 4 Hrs per day. 1\IU.8t be familiar \\'/all phases of Pe~ Bot.re Ac· counting. Call Friday Aft l pm, ask for !\tr. Supnn8Jl, 546-SMJ. llOYS 11 ·14 Carrltt Routei Opea for Lquna Reach, So. Laauna DAILY PILC1r ~. BUSBOYS OR DISHWAS'H. ERs. morninf lhift. Apply in person, 3099 Bristol. C.M. CASHIER: Exper Necess. Pl<"aso Apply \Vood Lll:hJjni: Flxture Co., <&020 Campus Ur, N. B. Display MAY CO. South Coosl Pl11e Store '• hat opening for • DISPLAY MAN'l- EXPERIENCED ONLY ~ Interviewing ?ifon. thMJ Sat. 1Q..J2 noon & 1-4 pm " APPLY :, , E1'1PLOY:P.1ENT OITl~ ~ UPPER LEVEL , • , 3333 BRISTOL SI'REE't· • COST A ~1ESA '_' Equal opportunity emplof.i;r'~ DOCTORS. Experltncrd I1!5t !\led. See. \\"ill do Med\Cal'.f'. m<"dleal and private Ins. 'itl your office. CaU 492--04~" * Dishwe•her &,'.:.' BusbOr ,,.;. t·uu time, dii)'S or ev~i. , APPLY IN PERSOK· .. ; COCO'S "-. ' #78 Fashion II.land ,r Ne1vport Beach Calll. : . ' DISHWASHERS:' '• . ' APPLY IN PERSON. NEJ.i .IN APPEARANCE .• FIVE CROWNSr " RESTAURANTSt-· . " " Apply In person, Delaney's 3801 E. PAcific Coast Hwy,: Sea Shanty, i:l30 Ltdo Park Corona del Alar ,";11,'. Dr. N.B. * RS • CASHIER • c ... tv.,h, DRIVE *. P8.11 ttme posilion. No Experience':'' CALL: 645-2022 CHARr.flNG \Voman Needed Necessary! · 1 - for Fascinating Furniture ?ifust have d ean Calltoml6' Rental Business. :>17 \V, 19th drivlfll record, A~Pb' ,,. 01., C,M, YELLOW CAI CO. COASTAL AGENCY ""C.:.;. 1~'::" , "~ ,Profe11lon•I EXPERrENCED Employment IMPORTEO CA• ,·,· Asslst•nce "' A member ol MECHANIC •''• Snellina: &: Snellin' ll'lc. Jai:uar, Toyota, Volvo, i\171 Z190 l!arbor Bl, 0.1 S4Q..6055 Romeo. call Bob Tbomp!On Harbor Blvd. at Adams at: r-;. COMPANION needed for el. t\IARQUIS MOTORs--.-. derly lady &: lite housekeep-900 So. Coa1t Hiwayit ing for 2 a.dulls. !llust live in. Laguna Beaeh * 494-T;ilf" Ref's nee. 494-7786. CHARCE IT! . -·---,. Jolll Mo~. W0111. 7100Jobo-Mon. Wom. 71!'!!, Burroughs Corp • I . New Com1Mrcl1I CompUt1r P11nt MISSION VIEJP Now t1kln9 1ppllc1tlons for ASSEMIL~RS at our new plant in Mis.slon Vlejo, Calli. So me ell)llrience preferred. Apply 8 am • 4:80 pm Monday through Friday EMPLOYM'NT OFFICE 25725 Jeronimo Rood Mluioft Vl1fo, Collf. "°'3232 • • Bur;ro:ugb.s r·---~·r·~~------.------.-------------------------------~----·-------------·-··--. ___ _ • ~ DAILY PtLOT F"rld11, Jainuifl' 30, l 970 IS & EMPLOYMfNl l OIS i EMPLOYMfNT JOBS l EMPLOYMENT ' JOIS & ll!l'LOYMINT ./(Ill & ~l'LOYMINf; JOIS & IMl'l.OYMINT f.le1ti Men, Wom. 7llOJobo-Men. Wom. 7100 Jobs Mon. w...,, 7100 JObo -· w..,.. 71• Jolll' Mon, 'w-7100 Schoolo-lntlrvctt.n 7600 J. C. PENNEY CO. t'ASHION ISLAND N EWPORT BEACH h•s imm•di•t• opening• for Cooke e Wi1 ltresae1 • Busboys \VIU. son1e experience or will ing lo learn. Top working conditions and en Yiron1nent. Com· petillve wages plus 1neals and tips. Outstand· J ng benefits including hospitalizati on and pro- 'fit sharing. Apply in person 10 a.in. to 9 p .111. J\tondc1y thru Saturday. P•nney'• Faihion Island NURSES Rtailtered • even. Ing dt nl,ght ahlft.s. F;x. benditl. ARpJy Pu1onnd Dlrttto1·. So. Coallt Com· munlcy Hosp.. 31872 Coast Hwy., So. J..aiuni. -400-13U t'XI. l;,& Nursil . .; Experienced Aides All ir;hilts avllllabl• Huntington Valley Convsles- cent HMpital. S3l'J Newman Avf'. Jiunt. Bch. 342-5551 OPERA1'0RS, cxperlenced on dreMe1 & bikini~. Ap.. ply, 863 Production Place, N.B. PI!: 64&-0308 :\n equal opportunity employe r l'!!!!!'!~~~!"'!:!~~~!!'!!~!!"!!!'!!!!"!!!"!!!"!~~ll\1aintf"nance Man. 6 am Lo 11 I' I or U am. Mllil be neat, Joba--Men, 'wom, 7100 Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100 clean. elficient. App. in -. • ·1-per&. 6Jj \V. !9th C.J\.1. Foreign Car Mechanics e e • PIE MAKER GQod co. brnents, rn<'I paid, Responsible. YollllJ: man 10 vacation, group ltL~. un1. MACHINISTS learn !he pie malr.in& busi- fom\1 furnished free, Good neu. 6 days • 48 hr wk, work tldmm. IChedul e. Ask for SECOND SHIFT into good fulu re with if"OW· .!oeo ?iloore Ph. 5-~)76~. i.Jlg comziany. Apply ill ~r- HFRY COOK, "'1lh f'Xper . ~1irutnun1 ~year~ e>cperience. IK>n, Vi's Pies (~U noon) Apply in pt'rson • .Jti:.! \\'. l91h DI• own ~l'l llP!, h<ive O\.\'n 191 E. 16th St., C.M. St. C.~I. tool~. POLICE C~ERK t~eelll'n! g1'011·1h opportun-$474 to $576 Per Mor'tth -(';JRL.>; OVER 11 1'hr Goillery 01scothequf' 810 E. Bal\Joa Blvd. Balboa 67:1-9961 or I 21:; 1 21•1--0956 GUA T\D~: 1;;1n1l'd. pt, tin1l' 1i0sit1on~ a1·;11t 1n So. l..4~Unlt Bt•fu ·ll 11 r f' a - 11n1lnnn,.; ~ <'!!Ulp lurn1shed. <'ar & tl'I. n'ffi.I. Equal Opp. Employrr. 1\pp 1 J !11 2 f'otl(h.•rr•v., ~ulll· ··r ", San- ta l\n11 . HANDYMAN MAINTENANCE f irir11, ovrrtln11', fnnae be n· * Auto. Sc.rew Machine t ~ingle & multipal spindlrl * Punch Press. * Drill Preis * Turr•t L•th• APPLY AT Shur-Lok Corp. CITY OF 0 NEWPORT BEACH One cumnt o p e n i n l" available. Requires ;,o w.p.m, typina:, h lg h 11Chool diploma, ont year ot ~nt i:;CM.ral clerical experience. Apply betort s p.m., Tues- day, P'eb, 3, 1970 t., the Ptr. a:.nnel OUioe, 3300 Newport J300 t::. Norn1andy Pl., Blvd., Newport Beach. Calil. Santa Ana 9'ZG60, tn4) STJ...6633. 1; blk N. or '1cFaddt n, POLICEMAN '1 blk \V. or Grand} l'!!!! ... ~~~~!!!!'!''"'"I S1l2 -S874 a monrh MACHINISTS Al• 21 lo JI, up lo J,; wnh approved expt rie n c e HElGHT. 5' 8" minimum, WEIGHT: 111 p1"t>portion to height .. PHYS} C ~•LR& QUIRE:ilfENTS: High 1chool grddUatt'. valid Calif. oper- SAl..ESW0~1AN Jo'ull timt. Expe!Wnttd pr.. !erred. lad"'' wear. APPLY I.Ii PERSOS • OliSMONO'S • #l t'asNon la.land Newport Btaclt sAi\Ait COVENTRY hu open111£:S for full or part tlrne sale.11. No investment, no dellverle11. ro·r lnteiview, !"14().-0614 . SALES PERSONNEL needed part um~ for adult IUXUl'Y apt. c omplex. Pre\rious u.le1 or leas.in& exp 1-equlred. can OAKWOOD GARDEN AP'l'S (TI4l 642-8170 SAVINGS &: LOAN need11 girl who ls mature, ambitious, and able to ~t 1 hr publlt•, l.f you are, WI! may ha\'" a pern1a.nent position for you u a teller-ne1v account.II clerk. J'rlngt ~neUui. itood Y.llrk· ing conditions. No ex- perience necessary. WORLD SA VlNGS &: LOAN 292 S. Coast, Laguna Bch SALES for Recorded In.formation Phone 835-4009 SECRETARY SECRETARY TO REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER ll'r 81"' looking ror that nN ~ n11111 11 ho 1<1 a jack of :1!J ira<tr. Prrfrr 11. 1n;ir1 11!10 I~ l"f'1JJ'<.'d an<! n('rd~ ~11r1hioi:-to rlri ;i11fl somr rrsponsib1l11 ..... ;-..·r l'd 11 rnan ln !Akr ca1•r ,,f M '!4 hour laundromat "'1 lilh sl1'f'•'t 111 Costa \l<:6a . ,\1lnor ReP<1 11"s to 111ai>h1nr~. 1na1nlr11ancr, keen '1atC'hlul eye-°'' !'il'orr, 1r YOU arr th1~ 1nan. '' l'ltl'" !.· trll u~ Abol!t )'fllll'Sf'lf. \\Ir 1v1ll +'Ofll<1cl yvu for an 1ntrr- 11('\V \Vr11f' ~Ir, F1~hl'1 . f;ru, '\.i\·1.\0 Torn,11ic•1•, Ca!1I. !h'.t1JO /I 11rogressh•e manulact· ut111~ company, with _ex- ··ellrnt ll-'Orki ng eondiOOns ;;inrl. fringe benefits ~· unm<'Cliatr openini;s !or ator!'! llccn.sc, U.S. t•ili"l:cn .. Pl'ef. f.fatUI? Stable Lady w/ File application al City llall, exper. in Rettl Estate, E5- Automatic Sc.rew Ma~· 8200 \Vcstminster A\le., \Vest. crow or J."lnance No Begin. chine Setup Opers -m inste r, Calif. beforf" Feb. nen, Please. 1 ·or Larae.st Brown & Sharpe, J3Lh. 1970 5:00 P.i\!. Written Bldn 1n U.S. Outttandinr Traub, and Acme. • exam Feb. 281h. ~970. (714! fli ng'" benctita, retirtment. 893-4.i ll E>:t. 205. r te. & a Salary eommensu- • POLICEr..tAN . Si11 to S8ll rate w/your t!.'<per. Top Rc!- 21 -.~ yrs., a'9"-6'5", 2().20 r r Req. Call Mrs. MiddJ.eron rorTeC!f"d vision., ~ max. betwn 8 Al\I-5 Pl\T, 5'0-7810. Harding• Hend Screw Ope rs. Gd heallh t., moral 1:harac. S ECRETA RY PT/ime lt'r. i::Xl'l'pl'I. .qual. Jl('rM>n CPetml. Office Detail for T f<: l. EPHOi'llE Answtrina Se:!°Vk'tl Op1;ra1or, ea· p rierucj in metti.na: and talklna: ~ b.witneu people. E\'enln& 11hitt ~11. Call <IW-1 003' 491.2012 or 54!>-0.ip To ••rM.~•u b•tter •I'• JASQN .IEST Employm•nt A9ency 2207 ~· Main, Santa Ana • W..5410 TYPIST CLERK-I I -.CITY OF - NEWPORT BEACH I $452 to $549 po• month 'T\\'O opening~ In tht City Library. Requires Hi&::h School diploma, one year 11'cen1 clerical exJ)'r· it-net, ;,o wpm typing. Apply before 5 pn1. Feb- ruary 3rd., PeriOnncl OU· ice, :1300 Newport Blvd,. NeY.'J)Ort 8 ea l h, Calif. 1714) 673-6633 \VELOER: Apply in person. OE\VEY 'S RIJBl:l l S H SERVICE 2IIJ Carzyon Or., Cl\I Schools.Instruction 7600 111<.~H cahbl'r olflt'<" n1ana1:;rr 1 "llh hookkccpini: k .'('(.Tf'lar1al r.\p. Ass1sta.nt lo thr pres1dt'nl. Call for <1ppl . hrtw Rf.·~'· l\'92-8.114 Bench Mill, d•burr and drill press opera. i f1r~t t St-rond SbihJ may starl above beainnin1: l\lfr"s Rep., Type, S.H. Ex-I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~ep. Call or wrilt l.aguna , per Nee. 4-16 hrs wk. FU:U ,~-}f-O°"""Ti~-1.--,, Al D , 6 11 a y sf w~k. \K'nnancn1 , l..Ji(Una Bt'aeh. • o\~H-1 1!16 * l1rllrs:EKF.EPER 1van1f'd • -t hHur.< only. prrlrr Fnda~s l:••f,. l"nll ~>16-7i07 ;ifl :1::JO 11 rr k 1la~·~. Ii 11 .... 11 ,,, l' 1'•'t•k1·n1J., iiOIJl$1·:1ilil::PER -Li\'r In t11 r }.:ldrrJy Couple. !\laturc \I 111han Prrf. Call 642--6661 JANITOR 111r n1snu<arlur1ni:: 11.rt"fl. J 1u(ic·io; !ncluUr lubnt-at1on nf <:11111prn('nt. a~l!Lstini:: +11itl.mf'nllflt"f" an11 pla111 r lra111ni;:-. Ad1al1Cf'rnerit npeottunitif"~. Al'l'J.Y CADILLAC CONTROLS r>IVISJON OF' l:;X-CELO CORP. J 1.il/ \\'HITI'IER AVE. COSTA r..JESA 6 \6-'.!49l ) APPh' .111 Beach Police Dept., jQj t'or-details to Box ~'1. Daily ST A FAST, INC. r st Ave. 49-l..0831 . .t'Ue bt'fore Pilot, N.B. 9'16 So. Lyon Santa Ana J-~ebruary l5th.5 cECR=~,,,.=A~R~Y~.-.,,..--, .. --s;;,~­ MAIDS WANTED PORTER for ;Janito ri a l Y."Ol"k . Steady. (ood pay. &1.2-8170 rxt_. ,,9''-''-'·.;.'!;---I ----•~64.::6c:·'c."='-·=~-I Real ~stale sales Mng. TrainM $450 \\'" have tilt• only Rral lligh :»t.fiool grad • £re. pd., l'.:~rat r ollltf' ih .{he Univ. l"a!I Ann, \\'e~1cli[f PCl'SOl"I-Park areu. on 1hlo booming nrl Agency, 2043 \Vcstclifl ltvint> Ranch. Wf now need Drivf'. NewpoM Re a ch 1 mo 1· f" ~uccel!Sful real &&2770 (also l<'e jQbi;1 r s ! 11 1 t salesperson 1v/ MANAGEMENT • :!8 Unilll. lntcrl'"l'lt in Hlirbnl· Vie"'· Husband can havf" outside Coronu cil'I l\11r, Turtle Rock t.· Univ. Pa1·k area. job. L I g ht maintenancf". \\'rite Daily Pilot Box l\l·2Cl. Ample lloor Hme:~ten!Sive -adv. & pro1notl(l.Nl p1'0gra n1 See Belty Bruce al mi,,,, l.xec A::;ency for Career Girl• ~10 \V Coast riwy., N.8 . By v.ppoint. 64•3939 oflcrcd. Sec: Le RI.I*>!' at • lled lli ll Realty Univ. Pa.rk Center, ll'\ll t"le ca.U Anyti me W.OS'.!O REAL Estatt Sa.le.11. Young man \\i lh license. lor best sellilll: ne1v hofl\f"&. Sta.rt Immediately. 8J&..;.i"120 REUBEN'S Co~ta Mes• Now intt:rvltWirir e BUSBOYS shot1hand 90. Interesting d iVtttifif!d work lor self-":;~~~ 11tarter. .Sy1trmed Corp f f\lrs. ffayes 540-J77I Sl!."'RVICB station attend11.rit, exp'd. Son1r n1cchan\cal exp., day~. i''ountain Valley I J....!;;ii;;i~~= Texaco. Brookhur1t &: Garfield SEJtVICE StatM>n Attend. Exper. Full Time. Apply Jn ~r10n, ~ Harbor Bl\'i;l,, c.r.1. 646-5.\58. SERVICE Station altcndent. 4-12 pm shift. 6 nites v.·k. Apply 2160 s. Harbor, Of. SITTER -for worktnr mother, In my Cd?.1 honw, ti da V•k. 673-7816 STENO CLERK $102 to $615 Month -OCEAN VIEW - SCHOOL DISTRICT MEN l WOMEN! CO~lPUTER PROGRM1· i1ING IS THE KEY TO YOUR PROPTI'ABLE PUTURE! Classes start soon. Pilot pro::ram offering the finest. equipment. and facil· ities available ~ Real -time computer programming. U•I•• le1ll ltJ••r• _ klltll T •WM S.tte 4t Or•llll•• Cellf., 926'' Coll 547-M71 RADIO NEEDS TRAINED' ANNOUNCERS Wh11n you train with lht INSTITUTE OF BROAOCAST ARTS ·.vu LEARN on pro(etsional 'equij)mcn1, r.rnm workini •ir personalities. CALL 772-3100 lnsutu~ of Broadcast Arts 1681 \V, Broad\.\'ay, A!Wlei.m. Student Loans Ftte Placement Assistance ITS YOUR MOYE Discover • Great New Car••I' With The AIRLINES Furniture IOOO 600 \V. 4th St., Santa Ana Open Daily 9--9 Sat. 9--6 Sun. 11-6 SPECIAL THIS WEEK Spani~h 8 ft 10fa & loveseat Rea. $249. No1v Sl59.9j. Store charse plan, Master Charge, I Bankamericard. ApprovMI Furniture 2159 Harbor, 01 5-18-9660 DINING room table J' x 3·, 6 matching chairs, like ne\v Sl50. 2 matching naugahyde chairs, (1 rocker \ $40 each. Grtl'I• upbolstered rocker. likt' rlf"1v .SG:;. Floor lan1p S2.i 30'! l'o1orninr Canyon Rd. ShoreclifLe; ?.IAPLE bar :.tools, $10 ca. Telephont bench, $20. \\"ood Kitchen tbl. $20. 4 <:hrl!, S5 ea. TV porl. Sl7.JO. Desk & chr, SS. 2 bikes. .S7 ca. ,.._,.,, LOVELY s· sofa , never used, qui)lf'd f 1 o r a I. scotch- i;uarded .S135. matchil'I: lovese11t S8j. Priva!t party. 776-()jfjZ .\!I ,,qual •ippor1 t1n11~· 1•niployl'"r ~!ALE Or female. E>:p. v.wl p~isser. Auton1atic Ajax 1 \av press. Clo\vn Cleaners. lo56 Bayside Or. 673-538."i i\!OfEL As1istat1t n1grs or trs\necs & maid! wanttd. 2376 Nf'\.\'J)Ort Blvd, 54~9755 MOONLIGHT job. \Vil! train t.· pay right par1y to lit.Nice laundromat. fi7~5622 Full Tinv• nay.~. ~lon-Frl. l\h1~ bl' nral iri appt'il.fi\ncr \Viii perfonn a \'anety ot clerical 1vork 111 admiri, off· Ice. Includes part time l tull Hine position!'!. Type 50. ffi-l 90. Requires tl.S. grad., l yr. ('lerical exp., U.S. citi- ~.cnshlp. Applications must be file<i at Personnel Com. mi.~sion OfC"., 7972 \Varner Ave., H11n1irigton Beach, bet hours 12-4 pm by 1'"eb. !lth. TEL. Ans"-eririg Service. Exp preferred or ";u train. Call 540-:a:l52. AUCTIONEERING \\'ROUGHT iron ~hf"tvcs \\'ith J ,\r\ITOR -1\lalto. llunr~ l\th •tta. U/45 )'l'3 old . 11 anl • ~ an1, 7 11i1ei;; rer '"'k Good pay. ~2t::J 43;.1767 or 11\~) S.13-4447. LJTf.; • houst>kecpiug. 11 o babysilling. 9 11.111 lo noon. r..1on. \\'t<I. f 'r•. Balboa l ~and. ;\I r 5. Caning1on li7:t-U32. newpolt. personnel _agency Profe11ion•I Service for the employer and the applic•nt · 133 Dover Dr., N.8 . 642-3170 54,_2743 Job5-Men. Wom. 7100 Jolts Men. Wom. -~ RET AIL TOP EAjlNl,.GS FOR MAJOR 'SALES SPECIALISTS WITH NEW GR"~TS • APPLIANCES e FURNITURE • CUSTOM DR>,-PERIES • CAM ERAS GRANTS APPL\" 1.·w \V. ADA~IS COSTA MESA $75,000? t"or Recorded Info Phone ~ Do \"OU Takf" I SALESMEN WANTED ADSl '-'ilh a zrain of Ml•? Can't say !hat I blame you, I fo). IO\Vf!d a trw myaelf only lo be disappointed. The job !M!ldom livl'd up to ! h ,. cla irns In the ad. DO YOURSELF A FAVOR! .-o EXPLORE THIS ONE! lf you 11ould l1kf to n1akc S300, per 'veck Immediately. \\'Ith an opportunity ror much mo1·, In the ruru 11!. l 1o.wld llkt to 1-iJk to you. Ir your qualllicalions match GIVES You•, "'" ,...,,1,.mon1, "'" t'OWd br 1~ "•~r Yo\I'"~ l>N-11 IS YOUR AD IN CLASSIFIED? Someone \Vilt be lookinz for ii. Dial 6U. 5678 REGULAR 2 \\1EEK TI::Rr.T scroll \.\1lrk, chest of Be in busincsl! for your~lf! dra11·crs. cu.lltom 1n adc. 2 Learn to bo an aoctioneer. l<1mJl'l. 2808 Li.:hthouse Ln, \VEST·BE:S"I' SCHOOL OF Cd~f 644--0438 AUCr-IONEERlNG, 2'06 \V, SAC !l of cost. Nt'1v kingsiie 4th, Santa Ana, ~1000. bed. New custon1 ebony PlANO LESSONS: ~r Oriental table. 8' " 4'. l.cav- ._t"' in£" clly. 646--1 234 tiarher bei;inntng to leach '°"""°"'-=~-=~~ In i\l!'sa Vt"rde a r f' a . l'"RENOf Prov. Philippine ~134::. 11111hog. dining set, 6 chairs,j Jobs-Men, Wom. 1100 Job.......Men, Wom. 7100 buffet &. rorncr cupboard. 3 pc. ~otional. 6"'-l--58:,,S SALES All Departments Work fo r th• new ·Grarft •. GROW with • GO·•h•td cempeny. full time •nd perttlm• potitions 1vallabl•. W• ha.f.e openlng1 for the working h•usewife. Full c:emcopeny beneflta Including dis.count purch11e pl1n. Come In •ncl ... us nowl Mondoy Throuoh f •ldoy 1 O •.m-t. 4:JO p.m. • .. BE Alr'Tlt\JL l\1odtrn 7 Pc. dinottc, $48. Also. Duncan Phyft Dro pleat &: chrs. S3S. Call s;:;..1349 CUS1'0l\t-Built round l~f:" solid birch table lop "·ith 111"0\lghl iron base Sl.25. 541)-4118 or 546-2342 OM. T1vin Oak Bed, Complete. S4J. t>IG-9762 50 fo'OLDING Chairs. Foa1n rubber ~all!, t11 n. SS valu l s:.. Likt Nu. DcJk S80 valu for $.». 673--0971 SPANISH den group 2-7 II. 1110f11, I COf'flCr table, 1 lanip' $14'.93 The Factory, 1113 H.-. !ll0-68<2 QUALITY kin& bH1. • r:iullted mattreas, Complete unuMMI Sl20, "'Orth S'llO. 8-!..~ eves. look1'1Jl ror. C&ll ror ptraonal SEDROO:\I &: Lh·ina Rm. Top tomm. llr.1s (Spec. ~<4\e!i_ comm.) Better lnl('/'\.'lrW ~r. tam to 11· iO ru r n It II r l'. BARGAIN.I tot.al jncon1e. full quality l10e. Opply. for pm w T GRANT :)4~.ll advancemenl. pd. vac .. lloliday & sick pay· G~l • • DrNlNG room 8c1, oval table Jlclirc plan. Group life & med Ins. Emp disc. S.lb " .1 chnin. fruitY.'OOd Sli"l.' rr you ,vant to le a rn more about our money SALESMAN WANTED 644-~ making proposition in one of tbe counties to tuf)l'rvlsc boy11. a,;e t:!-16. GRANT PLAZA :>tudlo Couch, arten. fastest growing retail orgnnlzaal tionkn-cohme In newlll)l.Ptr Ut ld. You will SM. prepared to dlacu.ss your s 111 OW· O\V, tw:>t Mllvtr iw1v~c or MM3$7 and your previous experience. Corrie in end «>Uect. Mu" "" In °"'" Acllims and lraokhmt, H.I. FOR>QCA Dinel10 soi. 6 see us. \V, T. GrantCo.1 Grant Plaza. Adams ~fea 11rca. s100 1P1t1rari1.e. F I h n "· II ehra., brand ntw. $JOO. 9 1. & Brookhurst. Hunt ngton Beac . rtt hvo "et"'> you I l'O!.lch. white. sua. 89WJtl qualify, !\fut hl\'e 111t1on Equal Opportunity Emp oycr JOIN ' THE • 'SELLERS CIRCLE' WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR YOU • • • ~ ~ ~ ~ c-;;-J ~ ~ If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the ha rd way· The Service Directory I classifications 6500 -7000 in the classified ad section daily I g 1 v e s you an advantage you get thro~gh no other adver- tising medium. It reaches customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell . If your service isn't li •ted , we'll start a category just for you . Pick up the phone rig ht now and reserve your space in the "Sellers Circle" Your Direct Line to Directory Results 642-5678 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT Equal orportunlty E mDloy cr M&F. ,,.,._. 0 , .... C.11 Mr. Slf,\MONS SOFABEO "-~~~~~~~_,,..,..,.."...,,.....,,,...,..,o V~dri anytim;~t 5Gl 2'69. !!.!!!"'""'"""'"'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"~ -~-s;;-··_._Ca~ll_61>-00.l3_•~·-·~·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ME RCHA NDIS E FOR SALE AND TRADE r.h;RCH AN CISE FOR SALE ANO TRAl)E ,.e Rt'HANOISE POR SALE AND TRADE FREE TO YOU 1600 LOVABLE Fcmalr. h·nier .. frld~. January JO, 11170 DAILY PILOT 3 ."i PETS and LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTAl'ION I TRANSPORTA r 10N mix, 1 yr. old, anlf' 2 rnixt'd 90 Lb. Ro.I I roof!rl£: •••• $3.9:1 1errier pupries . .a n1u~. old. 4:'1X Panelli~ ... ,,.,, $1.99 need 1..'l>Od homt= ~~th ft•nccct •l.1t~ t ~4 "I Ply>1·00d ... , S1 ~ yrd. J-16-7:.1a.! ~!·ire 11 an1 235 Lb. Compo111ion Shingk's. after 2 pni 1/30 a squarr ·" .. " "" "· $!1.~ UPP~-n I'll h •n C h I Dog'1 1825 1 Boats & Ya chts 9000 Sailboats 9010 J\t1N. Schnauv:r, t<?nw.te • & u· L.Yman w1crey 1nbnt. SPECIAL NOW' mo AKC champlnn aired. Prit't' Incl'• !1llp rcntu.I nr • , ~·~·""'· &1<"385 "'"~''°"· SlSIS. C<ill CORONADO 30 3 8425 9-pc. Mediterranean Bedroom Suite in Pec"ln IR09, f l49.00I ....................... NOW $168.00 Gorgeou$ Spa ni1h Cus tom Built Sofa with matehing Lov e Seat-Choice of beautiful fabrics , IReg . $4'19.9SJ ... -....... HOW $225.00 Spanish Oin in9 Sets ·····························-·····$75.00 Solid Oe ~ End Tebles end Coffee Tebles .. $1 9.50 Tell Decoretor T eble lemps IR •g. $49.951 ........................... NOW $18.00 Speni1h He n9 in9 Swe9 .. •mps I Rog. $49.95 1 ............................ NOW $22.50 CREDIT AVAIL . NO MONEY DOWN mm FURNITURE SPANISH MEDITERRANEAN Show Room -,:iJoor Sa"mples -Factory Closeouts 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE $389. • S pc. authentic Spanish Bdrm. set, • 96 in. quilted sofa with S6 In. matching love seat, or chtlr e 5 pc. Sp1ni1h Dinette, 01k table top e 3 heaivy Mediterranean matching table1, top durable enough for Flamenco Dancing. Will sell pieces individua lly. Sh op Fir,f! The11 See Our Unbelievable Buy'! 1001 other items with terrific savings! Bank Tern1s Store Charge ~1as ler Charge BankAmerlcard All Accepted APPROVED FURNITURE 21S9 HAR80H, COSTA MESA I' y, .ir" "'111t· ! '' ;t!Jt111 -~,I/Ill' <1\l llt'I~ Daily C).9 e Sunday 1().5 e 548-9660 C..'OSTA f\11'.:!'A · ' i: 1 ..t inc ' OUJLDERS SUPPLY Al!'lw.'. Rub~r n!J p.1 d. n101't! 1700 • . ~i ~· "°"" than 10x12. 2 l1ll!r dtlt11·1t, :superior, ...:• ,,..,ij._.., pallf.'I !itylc JO" ,\ 3Z''. t\11 • Ojlen Su1Kl11y~ • Gd conrl. 6"2-31$1 . lj9 ~:. * AUCTION * 2'Jlh, C.M. 212 lt you "111 ~ or buy F'1'ef' lo jj;d hom l' w/fl'.'ncl!(I give \\l!ndy a try • y1il, uutlt' n1L\' IJ•IJ) \\lri1n l Auc:llons Friday 7:30 ll.nt. l.ab1·, S lltol!. olt.I, blkw 1 rro~!­ W indy's Auction Barn Cl' gn1y, hsbJ"k1J. _i1ho11, VC'1'y "'" playful, uldrr e11hl. 8·17·~0ll ~l{l,_,I, Ne"'JXlrt Cl\! 646-86.\'ti l~=~~--·-~-­ Betunc1 Tony'i,: Bldg f\111!'\ COCK-A-Poo I UJl, Io v r g -· · sn1all l'hildren hit ti n1ost AUTUI\IN h;itr n1lnk s!olc, shOts, black, m&le, very l~ke _nl'w. !"r>trorn l·11n1en1 snlall brt'C'd. 832-~P!l9 t.rohc~ teaching n111chi11e rves. 1130 1Span1sh & A1i.:rbra1~=~~-.,-,---7 ('<IUrM!S.I '66 Su7.uki :~·1. only t'R.EE lo i;ood ho1nc ~h'- 16.iO nu., $:ii, open to offer. nu.-.;ed dogs 1 P~1ip1es. 49~-7307 rvl's. i\$soJ1C'\°I colors & s.izes. 6 . ~ "'k~ & 8 nios. o l rl . BA'ITE:RED &: lll'1ttrn !.IU· a36-8121 2/2 dt'1U dl'sk, baby ctw.~1. ON•dsl~~=,-,,..,.-,,-"7'-;:c • 1.1t1i11ting $10 ea. !h-12 wool CALICO Cat. fc111alc. has an.·a nti; \\'/pad. ~h<1tles of ~\1l'f"I dili~i l •nrl, U~'(fs g~ ~rc<'n, goo.I cont/. Si:•. l10111r, 673-3.11'1 aflcr 6 Hl·I-~ prn. 1130 , P R ~ ST I G JOU S Ot·ani;<' T\\°O ~ti 1nallard ducks.; ==========-;[~========= Coun•y Coun1ry Club frlf; ... t)4.,2 2/~ Sewing Machines 8120 Televi5ion 8205 t.lembcrship Feor S.ilr & PETS and LIVESTOCK _S_E_W~IN_G_M_A_C_H_l_N_E_ r~C.\ 17" Talllr iilodr!. New i·runsfcr. Cn 11 efi 6 Ptlt., _________ _ BEDWNGTON Terrier puPfl, ~ t'VeJ, I wllh pulpit, llfe llrM:._ llah111, Al\C. c~mp. all'td, i1how compk-t<' i;alley, ht'ad cu.1.IJ. quality, no~11~. 67~388'1 Sailboal1 9010 ion.;, eng\11(', Exira \x)l\U\' -----·-----1 main f.. Jib $1.il ($j()jl 1111w~ 1 Horsff 8830 I CAL 28 Co Cc 11. Oul1to.nchn~ $13,99J. ----., I rat>lng record. f'ully equip. Yr\CJITS ROYALi:: IN(;. 5 YEA.ll ll!d, 6lt'8>1bcrry fl{'(I fOl' erul~ing. $11111 I') :?912 1\1. Csl llwy, N>1p Bch ro1Jn n1ura. Good ~ho\11 pro-shore, botll hath. raft, etc, 645·0810 l!re<:t:t! ~ J.lunt k JUm call Biii lif'ildden, 6·t6-92T3, CAL 20 No. 747, n1any rnrlni: iw.~t ofr {1.16-62:i,}, ti73.:i2W ol.f!er , ·8~43 & cruigin~ t'xtral'I, Gcnou, BAY GELDiN~ 2, ISLANDER Sip. f .G. lnb. boat btll h, fi ho Evin in<': Pur1 T~t111C11SC'C \Valkrr A :.. A·!. J\lany extras. Slip avail. s:~ (If' ofli'1 S2UO 1vi1t1 IUl'k. 3-18--16:13 Slr1•p 'i. s I i JI ·'62-<!4='=' "='="=======-! I:: NG t. I s HE quit 11 1 f"On availnblf'. S97--03Ll x 5014 - Ll's!!Ons t.ivt'n On Y•l\ll' "krlu ys llOTY. Plruiw e.111 6i5-\1~T OSI·: nf kind -lx-nu1iful •12' tRANSPOR T ATIO~ I S:1u<1n· 1'1£' cr ui ~i ng 5<'h001k'I'. Bit '59. Dit.'M'I . Boats & Yachts 9000 Prrfl'r·• live alioard .tloot. I S1j,IXkJ. Call 67:.-13-19. THf. \\'ORI.D'S LARGEST A'M'l<:NTION. B ca u ti f u I C~TAMARAN Nc'\11 5.Y x "Llol<l 11", 2 M1s sail~. tx1at 20 Sl~11~ 10, Lux Salon, '.! '"\\'r, trailer. ,\fl Ii pn1. tit Cnbuu•, 2 lld~. 2 Queen K2\--0jl:: . beos, Teak ur1·k,, Teak --=--==.-- cablnrl:<. Po1\·f'r 7 kn!,, s11u NEW SABOT 3J knt1'. rne(' Sl 10.000 C•unpl1•1,• II 1ra~·ing ,'<ail Tern1~ -\\IUI tntdc, part SPl'\'.l<ll $1:19. &lj.()2"12 Power Crul11rs 9020, 28' I~ SS l'alrliner tly Bridge, radio, pulph, marlln t halr. swim !lltp. Slcrl'f), oulrlgJ.'t'r:<. $7500. 673--6769 e\•es. 5-18--0897 dayi;. '67 30' CJIRIS -TS. \\'ell (•qulp. \V r 11 maintainC\I t A:sking $12.500. S.'6-1827 aft 6 G Speed-Ski Boats 9030 l'fl8h, pa1•1 l'le11.r rcftl estate. l\1"'kC' ofirr. J36...6o83. P.O. Uox 1913. N.B. 20' Sailbo111. FixC'r·Upper sli p, Nr"1~orl $300. ... 1!1-1117 in 17' l>~ANTASY Outboard t.: !railer. Xtn t Cond. 2 yrs old. s1;i00. 968-2&09 1968, 14' St:u· Cn1!1. j()hi1 Llf)O 11 ~1ilboa!. N•1. 2389, 17' Classic-Century. 1nR m: .• 1844 Newport Blvd.H .. bo~'s1vd.1 Costa Mesa Only Porta\JI,~. piet uro· tubr S.l.J. Park;ird &"! ~I'' Consoli· inodel S:iO. (213/ 5-11-1913. I Cats 8820 J\tr.rr. EZ rrnil1 •r & ski wi lh tr11ilcr. Cnll 837-7039 inbonr<l. Nr~· 283 eng. Tan- SEWING MACHINE ('quip incl. $000. 673-77:!.i iifr 6 P~T dnn1 rrlr. &12--9278 Every Night 'Tll 9 -Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'Til 6 Sl!WS r 0 !' w il. rd, l~\'Crst'' darn~. hul!onhoJr~. ~.\1.~Jlcnr 1'011d1!1on. Only s:;:;. 1'::;7.~2J9 :, li'i--1::~;; Hi-Fi & Stereo 8210 ~iu·s Kc runore Portnble. Sf;ALPOtN"r :-ilnme~P n1a!r, j"======'-"=='-==========.'..="=="=='='==== S.'11·s I o r 1v a r d r'i'\'rl'lil' li ll'('{'ks, lo\'~ childrr n Sl:i. lm1>..'rte.t A11tos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 d11r11s, buttont!OlC's.' E.'<cellcni !l62-TI98 j pmmiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiimiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"!iiiiiii~~------iiij 191i!J !'INGEJ{ 7.1 G ·Z AG . "-alnut consolr. bu 1 ton Furniture ho le s , d rs i ~ n ~ rt c. 'll'bl !'t·ll: 2 Voil'<' or Th" --''-".C.: ____ ;8:000:.: Garage Sale 8022 Guaranteed. S:JG.00 Cash .._,r Thl'<i!r(' ~peakrn:, r1~hrr 2 PIECE Spa.11sh ~ofa & lo\·e SUP!::R Sale; Antique~. skis, easy ll'r111!.! &26-661f;___ ,\tnp, .~ Dual l r n I b I•, rondi1ion. Only $.l5. 8:li-12:i9I-========== BEAUT!t'UL lumd po;,,Jod Dogs 1825 meet the 011 por!ralt of you or your l---------- (•lilldren from 11 pho!ogrnph. At'GHAN HOUND, 18 r-.Jos. y c • •• ,, 1169 9· J · !i l:l~!J!\99 or :1lG-6!Kl6 . .,._ .1. plt'l'I' sci-typc11 n lcr, 5111. appl1anres. . . Spanish -'!end.\ n11:kl<t il TV., !I'S.mes, recorr!..:. inisc. Sewing Machines 8120 !ables S-19.9.l. 2 Spanish tiv-clolhing. toys. dProra1orl---------- i11i; roon1 lamps S2.'i. The itrn11'. ThW"S. thru .Sun. 279 1'~1Nt Srlt"r1iu11 of l f!;Cd Zi:;- Cameras & Equip. 8300 A \\•onderful idea for thal Show DcJs:". l>Llny Ribbon~. Gd n ew spt:c1ar giri. 616-3629 Ilse Pel. P.tusl Sac. $500. QU,\LIT\' king bed • f/llll led Phone -64S--9i21 \ •. t 188 fOTHO~ Elttlrunic camera. ,-nc nry, :i fl a r h u r , AlbC'rt Pl., C.l\I. o[f Santa 7.a::: iilach1nr~. :'\1111 sc111n~ 5-10-6842 Ana A1-e. Co1KI. Prt!'t'd RC'll!iOnitbl.\ T<tk"~ PlC"IUl't'S JJI dark. L1fr11n1r dt'vcloping 0011-USED sofa & chair SG9 !l.i 2 GARAGE: SalP Sat only. ;l(}j Supfll.V Luni~cri. Y<" ~~d,. tra('I eo.~t s~oo. srll $200 or ma!l·h1ng t.phol st('rrd l\largueritl', Cdf.1. Like f)('W ~11'111~ :'llachnir ~hop, ....il9 rnuke offer. 6'1&-Jl78 l"!'.a:iress, Con1plr1c. unulll'd Bt:AGLJ:; l'Uppiei;, 1\'.~C. f ' I $12!1, \\'Orth $2'60. 8.U·fi.536 JICl'lllllllC'lll t;hOIS I rHhll'~ a m I y evrs. \'II cc Int' i rnon ths S ::> O . CHESTS, 111 in bedl'I, modf!rn 5.17 .... !096 6l00 pa tina gre('n prinr ,.11 11 ,r~. apl. rclrij!. $6.l. Orieriral F •. Coa~I llwy, Cd. I ==========- bolh for S!i9.9j. i\nl 1quc ruj!. anllq. china, \\'!>!. ANTIQ UE Sini;.cr !rcadk• Sporting Goods 11·hne PJ1d & <.-ocktn1J tables roaster Sl2. f,lany 111isc. ~11,111::: machine, \1ork\ s:t: .. ('l1ina cab., dinene, brairlrd 1 A·~oo=RA~B~L=e~1,-,-pood-71-,-pu-p.~. pet nu;s. n11ug11h,yde i;o[a. Call 10 wk:o1. Lovinc home prime !>-18--Slill n-qu1slll-. :.l.>-'l:.Z!. $9 c11ch. The Factory, ISS3 ti73-?3jf) aJ&.-0103 ;;;., llarbor, 511)...6.~2 I========== SKrs SI"~ in bu1rl1ni:;s, g1 2 buols .I.: lrcr. poles. Xlnl 1•1111d. SlOO all 5. S·IS-i{l:1!l larpet h1yrr l111s Iii Lo nylons Sl.99 yd. Shags from $.1.JO up -r n1y lulJOr, At'GH \~ JIOUNDS AKf' 1'f'::. Qualit~. SIOO up. 962-9989 DE LUX~ Near Nc11' Sc111ng !\Jach. 11•/ctinsolc. All Ac- ccs~. $7j, Stereo an!p & Garrard turntbt, $40. 6 dra1v romnlodl'. $2j, hidcab!!d, Nf'cci, $97, IWin lxl COl'llr tbl, $20, lHP water pump, new cond, s:i0, 01111 po rt ~ashing mRch, s;JO, Other hseholil i1ems. Call ;ill 6: 30 P~I 646-4070 ASSORTtD end I a. h I cs .V. rocktail laLles $.).50 rach. 2 antique 11·hil<' 11\'in bookcaSf' hearlboarrts $7.95 e;ich. 1 11·11lnul douhl(' bonk casC' hPadboard S9.9j. Th(' t•ac· tory, 1118.i llarbor. 5'Hl-6842 USED as~rtf'd hc.irlboartls S·I ra~h. UM!<I as50rtcd end !ables $..1.50 each. U!l'!I assorted night stands $7.~ each. The Factory, 1SS5 Harbor, ;,4~8'12 l\IOVING inlo trlr. J\lusl Sl'U 1· 8125 h.edi;, t ~l s •. l ani p ~. Musical Inst. I·. very I h 1 n g 1mag1nahle. \\ lLSON GoH Clubs & Bag. P;1rk outsidr. do not <i1stnrb ----------:'l!ni i'Ond. .-,,~'°'=~"-'-o:'"~'~"-· -•~17~·1_5_19_1 2·~ ~Jo Old S11n1o)·cd Puppy, i\IOBILE Radio Phone , J\talf'. Prr!ig rrC'. V cry rransis1orized. four ~hanncl. Lovahlc. Ph, 67;>-3.108 nu:r. l6IO Ne~·porl Blvd., Flli'.:1'CH Sch.11rr lcnor ~:ix. * Ph. ~-I0·1,li8 * C.f\T. No. :: IM•;nrt. eond1hon, ('01nh. Ci•~" cc=~ Xln1 1·l'ccp1ion. Br8t ofler GREAT f':l•n•u{'CS, chnlcc takes. !">'10-9032 n1ulc, A/.:C, Guar. Lovenblc, 6 1i:-S!Nf"7f, i\I 1111. P s s S: Ji1tlr polar )l('or~ GM--0661 SWO Alt 6 pn1 5'18-2:i89 191! H~~,\IJ /'.laster Sk1!i, l.;111gC' SEl'fEE. oval ribbed back. lluf\~ SL, C .. \J. RIMil~. N,..11·. Parkti BngnC':· do111n pit.lo1vs. Sl:il. Lo1·c -:~-,-• . , P;ulls. lii3-1007. SIS-!H!lJ. st>at, \\hite dnnlllsk $..%. HlCK!'.:NB/ICKEH 8 up r 1 cover $10. l\lc8h rla~:pcn \l'ilh pad Sri. j.I0-232 1 af1. 71''1 PART Sl1C11p nng puppil'.<1. Six \\·erki; old. Looking fnr a ii;nnd hon1" $10 646-;'61!:1 · & • ~ I' EL P/llPO ~-··· kn r r Chair, upl>0l.s & c.nne $00. sor11r an111 · ~asr '"":~ 1r ,_., Co!fee l.iWr. rren1:h le~~. S/K'nkC'r nlOI~. No. 47. Gool n1nchinr, <':'ll'f'lll'tl1 eondihun oval , SSJ. ;\li ~c cond. ~0-7418 3i J:1 Cal.I after 6 pn1, 3 B~THRi\1. r or1nlr11 Too~. i\1-\C f\1i11iaturc Dachshund h~.<11ns £. hx tures, 11! 1dzes, pupple~. S7:i. i1ems ~.ll-2900, FEND ER 12 string 9 uiter RETIRED l\1iHrary iilnvini:;. S\00. * li 16·'.:~~ii lnlrrcstine: & Usclul i!rms. Son1e l::uropcan An!Lq 's. • & 0 '130 •16119 lmnwood, Collegc Park Pianos rgans o 1::.-i .. •1, SPnl Brh. 430-&JS6. QUtiLrurn. Ohl. i\latt & bxs11ring~. GartlC'n tools "'- misc. Hun\. Ha rbour. If you are buying a Piano 846-3.J37. or Organ this Y~AR & Appli1ncn :HO-.T.168 $50. 644-0249 * 714/~2-6.180 .. Miscellaneou•~---'-600_ M,·,,, Winlad ---·-8610 * DORETt~l,\N PllJ'liil, m~!Pio;, Bi\RG,\10\:! 611.llG A I N! -------1:: \\'ks, t•mpIJ<'n , ~hots. Unclahnrd suits, practically $ WE BUY $ Trrml'I, t;l2-$6l 11ny1in1!' """' \'i!IUC' $150 "°"' $.10-LOVF.ABL~~ ~1ale mlliC' pup. S1!l !l.i. Spi,rlSC011!~ \'alue $7:1 $ FURNITUR~ $ AKC. ,.ilO!~ & ~urmc•ri, 3 nn w SJ:>.S20. Pants 1•alue S21 APPLIANCES n1'll!. $\flO. &124124 00111 $.).SIC!. Guar. 111 by J\-tr. Al fashion tailor for nien & Color TV1-Pi1no1-St1r101 GERJ\IA.~ Sllt'phen.1 , lrn1r;lt', 1 ""•or Ho ... hll 11,1 month!!, xln t prdigrt .. '<', ladies . Alrerations. Capri CASH IN JD MINUTlS \\Ill SIUTiflce. 642-3139 J\lo1cl An·adc (npp. ilrl e ccnll'rl 14'.l:i S. Coast Hwy., 5'4 1-4531 • SCOTI lES -f'urt'brl"<l, t10 .. ·1M1 Sub111ru van-nibbles gas 1n hamsk;:Pf.oporlions, works like a ho1se, claws roeds like 11 cat, a11d rs as dcvQled as man's bes! fr!endl No turtle either-scoots a1ou nd altty·fi~e without a whimper! Dnve ii anyw hcre-sna~es th•ougl 1c.1!y traffic. or goes 1>ve1land like a mllle. It's !he famil y pol YO\. !'.I bean looking lrir di lhe budgol price ~ou WPrr hco•rig toj '$1 3 9 7 If I pOt. FR. PROV. Dining 1ahlC'. I uphol. chairs. Porl. Ni111::ara Cyclo l\lassagc uni !. 519-3171. arc inll!restcd in some real· a 100 ly great deals, ,.ll'ase shojl \\'/\RD'S BALDWIN sruo10 1819 Nrwport, C.J\r. 6·12-8484 Open Every Nile SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS , .. SlJBARlJ 1-._,,,,.. :--===-~~~---"'""'!'I, 7 "·ks old. $~7. .... ~ " \\'ANT F lnchl'll II n n ,. ...... POOL TABLES parakcel~. no cagc11. \VIII _M-;I 7<~10~"0• ,,,,::;:::::;e;-:::;-- USED sora & chair $69.9'.J. Usen pair red velvet hi·back c:hairs $.)9 each. The Yac· lory, 188~i Harbor. :>40-6842 QUALITY Sofa bc>d, cos1 $3j() :-<"ll $150. '!'-Roll a1\•ay bud S20. Xlnl cond. s;;o....9jlS, 546-9110 Office Furniture 8010 SOX:W \Valnul typcw11ter desk ................. .$.32.50 Po111turc eh.iirs ..• . . . S 7.;,() 5 Drawer G.F. lei;al files ,, ....... , ...... srn.on Uphol stered 111m chairi; SJ'!.5() Mc MAHAN BROS. DESK INC . 1800 Ne\\'flOrt Bh·ri . OJi;ta l\te.~a * 61'!-S l:iO Office Equipment 8011 RI:: iit INGTON Typcwr1tC'r st11ndard. .\tl'll Jong 1:111" r iage, llC'\l'ly recondi11oncd. Gray 111etal !ype\vriter table. folding end.~ & n1atching me1al p o ~ I u r f' chair, like nc\v $7.i •196-2!l48 l"Y PE \VRITER. A d d i n g machine, calculator, very reas .. xlnt rond. 892-247.:. Garage Sale 8022 t :r Household to go. Great Bki; ol \\'ei;/. \Vorld. ~m111l motors, furn . toys, rnisc. \'ll-6119 GIGANTIC Grirugc Sa I<". ltefriJ:", 2 dining sets, ki.:. bed. bcdrn1 ~C'I, i;urfbo;11\I, n1uc:h mol't' .fan :ll lhru 0t"rh 1. 10.5. 18106 Leathcn\'ood, lnnne 83.'l-2738 ANTIQUE furniture & lo!s of f\ln junk. !'\fl.I & Sun 2U Coral A\Y!., Balboa Isl. -BIG GARAGE SALE 317 Poflp)', Cd~f Sat. only 9-5 PO\\IER tools, hllnd lonls, toys. moton:;.tele~. n1 1sc. tr emR., 7~·'12 Qwbrr'. M B. Behind 5 Poin!.1'. l!.1:Z...ifi4:t l'ol•\rl~E Oropleat Table + f:ooct f\fi!IC. f"Uml!Url', 11'41 ~h11rlegton, c.r-1. ESTATE ~It' JO 11.m • 5 pm. Ni t & Sun. 506 Avtnldo Lt<renro, N.B. I GAR.AGE Sele: Color TV, f11rnllure, misc. J 7~5 2 ·A Ger1d(l\llf", lfB. 'i\TIO Sa.le; Snl. !l 11m-!i pn1. MJ San 81'.!mllt'dtno Ave., f\l.B. Nice Uem11 Cht'ap! 1rorA, chair. '"·Ing 51"1: ml~. Items. 472 Ahble \Vay, r ro.t SA1 & Sun. 646-4i38. &. Suuday Afternoor1 Frirze -Chink -Buxon1 -. PIANOS & ORGANS Bodtly -BROOK NE\V .;. USED Ice !.katl.'1'!1 stioul~ remem· e y ;11naha Pianos Organs l.K'r that you can I al~a:>;s e Thon13 ~ Organs !<'ll a BROOK by lls <.'OVl'r. e Kin1txill Pianos * • * * • Kohlrr &. can111•~·ll t:scd Frigidaire "·a~l1er. lair COAST MUSIC niortcl $jf/. Fr ig1d airr Nt\\!J->ORT & llAHBOR l't.'frigc!'alor $.)(), Nor _i:: r Co:.1.1 i\lesa + b:l2·2S.il rlrycr s;;o. Admiral Color TV Open lfl 6 Fri 10-:1 Suu 12.:; $JO. All tllCsc and /'.TORE al January Clearance SALE! e lt,\i\!l\10NlJ • Organ!! • P•:lnos • !'f)('11kers OPtN ~U~. !:I·~ llAMiiIONO Kt:Ni\IOHE \\"ASHER. coo· IJ'" ~ilf' Sl2J 4$40. lr:o1s 1h1111 t·')~!) Nrw condition. used only :l or .J lnncs. Ca!! S37-'12.1'.J in CORONA f)f-:L :'l lAH !(f.:l\i\10 R8 Auto "'asher & ~1851 f;. Coast H11)'. 67:J..S~l.30 ~"r1gl<ln1rr auto 'I' n s h Pr, '"'" '1"1 •. ,.,, "' """ Your Cho .ice ~1 16-1'67:1 or S.Ji-S\l.1 HE~"'RIGF.RATOR . fi~t'l<'r Cabli ··Nl•lson 111· \\'11rl1l1.r1· 111·!. -2 dr Pht!('o 19.6 c·u. fl. nn 1M 1~1nsolr, ":dour 11• i l h lrosl l1k<' n''"· n1ust sC'll n1illl"l11ng bt•11rh $li!l!l. srn. ''""'"" GOULD MUSIC h'.l:N;\IQRE l\lrxlel n1ohdr n1sh~·ashcr. 111oclrl. xhit cond. j l!)..86i2, &17...sl15 Ii 0 0 :lOIJ .~. l\fairi. :-0:,\ ."oli-1'6.~I 1;irr1---------- $0.j. llPRIGH'l' rre rir r t.· ll Pft'l£cr111nr. Reasonabh.•. C<11I Jo.lfl..2GJ I llAJ\1;\·IOND SIC'1n11111y, ram• aha. Nl"w &. u ~cd p111no~ ot inost make:.. B<'st buy~ In !'Q. Calif. a.t St·hn11tll l\l11~1t Co. 1907 N. i\l ~in. S..11111 A11a USED 1\pplia111.'t' g, TV's, 1111 J:u:irantccri, Dunlar·~. l8t5!s'~.,~c~n7"=·1=c=E=·-=11-,-,,=1=,71-,-,, NC'\11J0r1. c.~I. ;.is-nS'i ~pinet Pin n'> Xln't Cond AUTO \\"a!h('r. Iott• model, $425. 67J.3616 or ti7J-2137 ~Int ctu1d. $4~1. 7G91 ~ 20th St. NE\v & 1·sE:n. Pi:im~. ( .. \I. f;lf ... ;~lll Org:u1s, rtrbu11t 1:runds. KE~i\IOH~.: Auto \Vnshcr & \\'nl!ich's C.;\I. 5"10.283o Dryrr. $..ti <'ac:h. :i.'16-&lll Pl1\NO TIJN!Nc--n~rp11ir REFRIGERATOR, CI r a n. E!\i>erl. rr11son11bl••! Good Running Cnndition. Albr.r1 /larnc-..~ 67:Hi!l67 S30. Avail. 2/jl70. 67~7605 \\'llRt.ITZER 400'!. ::;i note f\1 AYTAG Auto \\111 s hrr . Jjj"lat, suslfllll. srp ! 011,_ 1·11tJ. Vrrv Gd . $6.i. ~I. Onlv. lllj S9:lt 1'crn1~. lr~rlr. 1rr ... 1;~'11. Si111in Ana Ave.. N · B · -,.. .DWJN AlTI•~ni1· ~pu1rr ~.1~1G17 '.'\lt11 t'On<I R17--0IH3 JOOl l)onlyn Or llun1 lll'h. 8110 ---STORY & Clari. l lpl'1i,:ht Antiques ANTIQUES & .Junk: :'>larblc ~h~no. Good L'Onlht!on. $li;:i. top commoclr $2J(). Gold leall=''=1""";='======= n1lrrors & Sconce~. mahog 8205 ch<lil, luftcd chn & ('1r. Tele¥i1lon Qiegt & mllple roc:ker!, s1s 1 _________ _ f'11. 64-~17, 6Ta-3121 C(l\!PONENT St,,rM: 2 Ai\LIQ. 1'Urn: Lamps. mir· University lpt•r1ker.1, I rors. cul & l'olored s,::l11ss, Boh.:en 6-62 turnteble. I beaut. china. ~luch ~lore. Soiind Cn1Jlsm11n amp. CMt R!J7-9{J.10 .... ,,...,~ sm, 581' for $J.2:) AN'TIQUE P.lalqany :11l11n1 LI ~136 1op link. c-lrc• t7'611. Al~'l u·"",-,.~0>,.,..1or~iv=-,-,~e~1.-,~,....,& n1 hr>r ~lt>cl ltt:ms. (2131 Y.rtiHe. Option to huy, f'ret' fi!l7~7247 '1!'1'\'iCC. No dCPQlll A·ACUve AivrTQUE PTE SAPE TV RA!'.ntal OJ, llAl.L 11-tlRROR (II 522-U53 642·183.1 :?l .. RCA CoJnr 'TV. \Vorks Le1dtcf Hinging Shades 111X1C1, S7S. Aft 5, t'G-6578 * 541-~!8 • M42 Larkspur ctr, 118. Secard Poo l pay $1 -St.SO a piccr. Coll AKC D11ch~hund !'!ud Subaru Me kes Sense .,, Drive One You'll A11ree SUIARU OF CALIFORNIA , INC. RETAIL DIVISION 1000 WEST COAST HIGHWAY • 64S·0701 NEWPORT BEACH BrtUNS\\'JCJ( ... fu\lf :1Ui-:Ri34 RM. long hni1·rd custom Sla1P Table ;1tG-JS23 After 6 P,tlf, 1"""' 1289 FREE TO YOU AFGHAN PUPPIES IOO'ii Financing SIOO, {714) 538.5210 '* SECARD POOLS * 532-1!192 A'JTN: Loving F11n1ily. f\1 ustl-==========-~ find l>0me fur funy blk pup, 7 rno'.<1. Lo\'es ch!ldrcn, h~<>hrkrn. olhrn1·isc he "'ill hn\C lo gu to th1• llOU/1~1. Can ~~ 323 S 1\.-fiJJ!l SI. 100 IDEA L Dran~e clothe~. Co •11p!1• "l<' l\1•n111<1rr 11a~h 1n;: nlt1••l11111• Sl25, $-10 lr~~ th,1n ,,1~1 11 1~ 111 nr111 rondi. llun. 1 ·~·'<I "Illy J or 4 times. l'all ~:l7-l:!:J9. 1Y C;in1 p1ni.; 1rtr, \Jn! cond, tnnkr ofr CnllC"I' 1bl, dhl 1><'1/ lf.1/ll<' /:< n1iil l1't"~~. !I dr. rlrf'.-.,"•r, kil th!. I l'hri1 .(· h11f1,,1 'lt1~1 ;.f•tl i1nn1l'd, l.o·H\ 111i.: 1··, !J, I 6lG-8:"1Z2 or ~>'.!i-fi'ISl you hclpr Call all 6 6•". :-...:::6 1/31 DOG: Braut , Labrador/Collir, 1 yr. old. Xlnt. for hunllni.:. All .i;hols rte. Nrrrls ~101! ho111e \1•ilh IP ,..~~11 y;ir1I. Ca ll .·~18-Jili2 2/2 t'REE ·ro good ho ni e 1\/lrn1·rd yanl. adur;ib!r f·~:-;y l,n~sic type fen1ale r<illtf' rni\, '1 111oin t h11i. .~~rl-30:.0 1130 ,\Kr REAGLE tr 1-color . lc11u1lr, 2 yr:1 oJrt loves childrl'n. niu.~1 hnve fcner'ri yard. ~I0-8ti38 l'\'rs. j /Jll S£ALPOINT SI A f\1 f: S t:, ('JT!Zt:N B;111r1, 2 .John~n rni;; .. , 11: yr11:. old, J::ood wl!h <'liild1'1'11, IK1uscbroken. 6-16-;'l ! r s~<'Ol!l'I' 11J'i;, l :15!1-I uf!Pr 1·30 11m. ~1r~~r'ni;::••1· 11. X :.uprr 111:..~.1 ,,..,.,.,,.,,"°-:c==-,,,,­ :! rnoh1lr slint:rrs .~. calil!'. V fll.ENTJNF. puppi1•11: need \1111 ,.,111•1. ~;:.·11. Al"° desk lo\'e. Blk or bm. J lrmale11, rn1k1• h·~h·r, ulh(•r i;ooclws. 2 m1lr, Shelri·Bch1lt! tnL'll:. S;u•r1 lir'f'. ;,1(1.....1296 ~I0-13.i7 'J/2. \\ ALNL'T j)l•,k. pad d l' ·I rR·-'e"E'' --.,0~,,.::--:"~.~,,,-:,,,~,~1.~,-,=-.. .. 11:11r bt11h ~.1(1. •I Chau-s, C'OOll t•c male, 8 n1 o ~. lnhh•, 11wk"r !.· lrnn. J !!J....'f.131 1/30 11r;1!hPrll('H1'•n 57. l·;nrl 1ahh• l\llXED Puppirs, 1111 rol~. 4 SI Ski~ Sl.1. Oan11<h leak wk~. old, "-e~. a1:-r~8 1")ll<'h, h!u<' l"r<'"ll S::O. ~lir CUTE friendly Bunnie rn h-1~1,. SL :11lL239-I b its. As!IOr1cd Colon:. C'all TV :-:~r·111n::: nH•eh .. r11rlt> Ct.If· fi.16--800 1130 (1 ·1· 1bl. hinstrr. rlC'•·1 ran I FRJ::F: Puppies, 8 \\ks. 1m&ll nr11•rirr, 11 1 r romrres!ll"r, I I rr>nrrd loy cocker. Sue h1<')TIP. hn•1linJ:; ba J. o<lr ~·. ll~ll-?Oll7 ,l· rnds. li:l7 V.'1li;o11. C.i\I. "'""""'':'.'::;-:-:o==-,., 61:l-llllli YOUNG male "Tubhy' en!, CARPI:.~!' Jnstallrr 1111 ~ (Ille \'rry lo1'f'1hle! 557-i;;gj dayr or ti7:t-J~M evr~ 1/30 mll. 1n 'fX'tirl11 ,,~·!on cnrpet. t~•nhlr ju!C'·h11<'kC'd. \Viii 5 f\fo.~. fern Schn11t1tl'r /JIOO· ~··JJ 1111 or• prul 1:1/yard. dlr, Shots, lovable. 6Ta-l38:1 :110.72l i It.\,) Off"IC~ <lf'sk, c-.;rf'llrnl r·on. 2 LONG h11il'f'd puppleg 8' 11111110 S:.0 Chrrnnc <linl'11c 11«k.,. tlOUl'lehrokcn. , M'I $.'W. !KiB--1562 •8<12-7890 • I GUITAR Amp. Top Concl. 3 BABY crib & mallrr.u, s~t inpu1~. foot saw. rrcm. $35. & blankcls. Alao play-pen '.1 Call ~ pad. M2·579o 11;1 NF.\VPORT Beach Ttnnil RABBITS, 3 fcm&lcn • "''hl. rluh, famil.v membership, blk/whl, bm/~hl. S68Slt $4j(). 54!}.-2286. f'\'1$ 5;1()-.5M4 1111 01\IJNG Tank. 71 cu. fl, vdth 2 VEAV 1fff'CUooata (em.Jr lln A. n\8sk $"B. cals. !'I mos. nmt good 54._Q..0.'AI home. 5'1S-6:nl J(31 ~TINK Stolr, exqu1sitr smoky CUTE onnge &-"''h tt• l{!'CY LutltiA, Emb&., pd $89S. i;lripcrl l11bhy Clll. 3 mo'•· now $14.i. 64Z-9626 ~ CJU 548-7411. 1/:11. i POOL TAble, Bt'1nswick 8' GREY, liger 1trlJll! male faL II\" 11le\,., l~athn' pocket1 GrnO" -~ frtendly. To·~ $.300. 546-f-18t hon1e. 673-1148 :V2 ./ f\fTl Bu~lne•s Certificate, Frt.EE to rood hon1e loviif: ~~:ri~nt or make offel'. ~~~~!t male. Fenced ~ BRAND NEW 1970 BUICK 2 door coupe, auto. trans., conce1ltd r1dio antenna, fibre g lass belted tires, padded da1h, seat belts, b1ck·up lites, d ual speed electric wipe". 4JJ270Z600154 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OPEL GT'S JUST ARRIVED Limited Supply .For IMMEDIATE DELIVERY JAGUARS JAGUARS 2 plus 2's -Coupes -Roadsters ALWAYS A BIG SELECTION '•t!O'~ tlr (-.• 1.,11 .....,.., FrM tJtrto. POwe' wl_...,, llO--II, vinr.I IDOi, tV(L fJ/,, IS•vtr1I mor., 'It It wi.••1.I "65 NOYA Supor Sport Auto. lf"lfll. Pllwt!" •I-., ,-cl.o, !tffltf", ..,1, Tl.a milll. IRGU 431 "67 DATSUN I floOr, j .,...., 117fp,ltW ll'loltAQI, ltt• dJo, 11 .. 1«. fTlJ "41 '67 IUICK LE SA .. E ~ door, "-,,.,,.. .. lirtto ... ~l'C· "'" •Jr ,_, lllWlll(wf>l~t. (V11' 5"1 $3896 $1398 "68 T·llRD YndlOJ. F11ll POWor Mid !~(!Ory '~!I (- OM-· Ntw k ltll' Ir~, No. 2MJ.A "6S CHEVRO•ET 1111 A.1, I llODr lt<i•fl. FKtorY •I• •u•o lrtn,., "°"' ""'" •<Miio. 11.,"' Lo mllffgt, CNlltC Ill) 1 0-r, $3198 $1298 $1277 1:!! :-:-:-:• o=:.!~,,-L ,-_ -... -,,..-.,,.---.-:$:-1-:2:-::9,-:::4 MW Opt! lr..S..lft. CYO' .SI $2085 '.'9 OPEL STATION WAGON $1895 I oPf't!!t r.-.. llt•ltt, beiMlc.t of IK!Of1 Wtrnl,,ty, tYWlt ml I I "' .. .. ' . ' • • ' ' . • \ r:::::::::~:.:-: . . . . -··""--"---~~~,...._..~.~~----------~----.... -------~--~--------------. ------·----... r r-..· ·t -...-..... ,., ... ,.-_ . . .. • • r I' J. r t· I J: ,. l. •• 1 ' 1 I • l • . • • • • • I I SP0RTAT10N TR ANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORrATION TRANSPORTATION . ----~-- 9800New C•n 9800 _N;..;•_w....cCc..".c'----9-800 Speed-Ski Boats 9030 Mobile Ho111es 9200 1 ~ Bikes 9275 Trucks 9500 Imported Cars 9600 Imported Autos 9600 I OVER COST Bill Barry is Celebrating His New 1970 GMC Truck Line by offering to the public the fol!owin9 New 1970 Trucks & New 1970 Pontiac's and Fine used cars at $99 ov er dealer cost, plus t a• and Ii- cense. Dea ler Cost includes preparafion and service from $125 !o $175 NEW 1970 TRUCKS Model i t<ltl No. lht Cost + $99 GMC $2848 3A TON 9454 SJ I JS.SO +$99 PICK UP -GMC-$3672 3,4 TON 6825 $4341.]5 +$99 PICK UP ----GMC-$3333 'A TON 9244 $3701.00 +$99 PICK UP GMC-$3187 'A TON 8394 IJSJ 1.0 0 PICK UP ' +$99 NEW 1970 CARS Mod et Ser. No. List Cost + $99 GTO H.T. Cpe. 6013 54474.13 $3791. + $99 l1M1ns .. Sport 5264 $4234.50 $3591. + Stt 6 P111 Wagon 6137 $5714.93 $4740. + $99 t Pas&. W•gon 2416 $5615.07 54605. + 599 t Piss. W1gon 3176 $5601.33 $4593. + $99 t P••'-Wagon 4~ 55517.07 54527. + Sff 9 P111. Wagon 5410 $5517.07 $4527. + SYi 'E~•~K~.-T=.~T~.~C~pe~.----~,.~l~l,-----;$~54~9~9~.9"1,----$4519. +-$99 9 P111. W.19on 6109 $5517.07 $4527. + Sn '.~,~ .. ~.=,H~.T~.~C~pe~. ----,1 ~61~3,----iS~54~9~9~.9~1,----$4519. + $99 9 Pa11. Wagon 7777 $5797.22 $4741. + $99 6 P111. W.1gon 7675 55541.49 $4561. + $99 9 Pass. Wagon 1054 $5677'.'1~5--7 ... ~53~+-Stf 6 P.ass. Wagon 9526 $5406.70 $4440. + Sff C1t111ina 4 dr. H.T. 1571 $5112.09 $4214. + $9t C11t1llna 4 dr. H.T. 2362 $4712.44 $3954. + $99 Catalina 4 dr. H.T. 3561 $512f.'5-7--S4222-:-+St9 :::.:==:::..c;..;;..;.;..cc.c__~c_~ USED CARS '66 Pontiac °'~' '"' ~114."'i:::r_. 1;,~·. s 1295 br•la, '" c-. ITPW 1}61. TOTAL l"lttCI r x • \ '65 Ford ...... ·~ ;~'"C~vro1$e9t ;9::~5• 1 ''"""''· llllO. ,, ___ lfr. ,..,., 1s:n1. TOTAL 'ltC• _., lt a & llC. '66 Ford r5 ~t'~'s'l. ""·~·­ '0TAL P'lllCf. M w11on1 2-0ff• I 1 ·a • It. '67 CAMARO ' '°' OK"' "'"'$1699 VI, llMllY IOP, rA g,o. ~•~'"' VGU •ll 1Q1AL l"ltl(f ' t•• • I c '68 Pontiac " ..... 2-0d•. H,l , VI, A 1 , 111.H, ~,., ,1-1n9, :..'"'t~111S"r:o"1 TOTA&.. ,IUCI $2195 • It• .. He. OPEN NnES 'TIL 10 P.M. -SUN. I P.M. • 1!11111 I UI "nn ...................... 1111111G1l Ii tit Strttl 11 tht S.nt1 An• fretw1y Phena 541-2681 2000 E, llf SlrHt, Santa Ana I NEED Mi1110011(' to love. 16' inboard 11111hOI(. ski bo:lt. I n11nt run<l. $lii00/hest olfrr. NEW! 61:l-77~1; :!871 Bay.shores, Private Club NB. ,,. Lo'r. ""'' "''" ,. "' 1 1 Greenleaf Park E\'1nrudc l'<'niote 1-onl1'0ls , E.-.:t1·as, ~I $1200 Sacrific(' An Adult Private Club Cj(). ~1r. Jones 84&-2j().I or O ne Mile from the Ocean !2131 58!-Ql66 JN S.\tOG FREE '6!1 VICTOR l\.11ni Bike. Hor.._ cla 50 eng, 811ark Arre11ter. Like Nu, $140, 96S-6215. '62 Chev P lclrup, II" bed. r/h, new paint , overload ~prlngs, 6,';,000 ml. Xlnl co11d. Make oUer4~ MotorcycleJ 9300 68 Chevy 108 Sport V1tn. ----------Auto, lll!o.vy duty sprhl!,'ll. '6'?' Y1\l\1AIJA. IOOtt, dirt.' ~·:w. ltre.!i, run.~ p..>rfect Comp. rise, 1'X/)<11J ch11n1b<'r . (i.l·c?.~.-<5=7-''------- 1\noUbies, Mo10 • X bars. NE\V '69 G!\IC :i, Ion . SJOO. A-1 l.'Qnd. 6-16-1310. Cnmper equipped. Vt!. i\1u.st 1 .6 ...._. • sell. Ser . 2'"J..i00. Call Bill Ap- Marine Equip. 9035 '1 ''111111Ph 6~· nu rcblt plcbee. Dir. ~9640 Costa Mesa AUSTIN AMERICA MERCEDES BENZ I AUSTIN AMERICA Sal~. Service, Parts Imrnl!diate Delivery All litodels .. f2 rtuµort Jhn orts · 1 Pn~. "'/pt,Xlf. Xu-a r.hrun1c ·.::. __ .t_ p;i1·1i. $700 ur bo..st offer I '6-1 ford 1 ~ ton. VI!, 4 SJ)l'C>d. 6l2-9~05 OUTBOAIW !l.lo1or • B1ill~h Newport Harbor 673-02' .. '9 7.1~16 ply lin!S. jJ77i!JCI 11·iJJ AUtllOM?cri :'ITG o.~al1 r Seagull. 1'-i !IP, Jon.: shuf1 I finalX'l'. Call Bill Apph.•bcl'. =======~-= ,\ steal Nr Nu, $100. 2 child life ChUoJ!O<' rrorn :!O i\lurl,•ls 'li'. \'11.n1a~m. ;)IJ;j, &nunbl1·1'. Dir. !"J-10-9640 BMW p1>cS{'NC1'1 s;,!.;J(l f'a. 6~G-2SS:t I ;.,ti cng. J !5pd. :tOOo nil. !:hi:: NEW'b9"GM--C-s-,,-3 ~cal. -------- MG -~ -----r1rf'~ P1•rf i.ha1~ 5100 ••t I Rf'ady ro n101•f' in 1odny! -~· ; ? _ · v V8. auto., \\'ill sacrifice. Boat Slip Mooring 9036 01· ha\1· yours' cu~1on1 niadr' &. I Off('r. 6~--:.Sl!I Ser. 29131. C.oll Bill Ai>- NE\VPOfl'I' Lido Peninsula. 'l:l' rio1\"cr OOat. side tie. s::. p1.•r I!. 67:Hi7ll Tukc ilfll"l.JOr Blv1I. 10 191!1 Sl "L>.~ TR [ U i\I P 11 BON· I pll'lJl'C. Dir. S.10-9&10 D1·1ve 1\1!'.st to 17:-,0 \\h1tt1er NEVILLF:. 6.000 n11l!'s-, Xlnt I '6!1-f:0RD_C_ha_l<_»_"_C_l_"b !714 ) 642-1350 f">nri.Ca!l81'.!-?.872 \\'agon. Con1ple tc ac- Mobile Homes 9200 1 ~----_ 'G!l SCRAi\IBLER 17_ , "/. l'l'Ssuncs, air cond. p,1 ply * * * I slrok!', xlnt coixlillo~(,<'X-1 :l-14}._:2"°=--------·-· ..• -~------ Owner Transfr'd Mud $o~rilice! l SIEULYL Jim NEW tr.as 673-0097 1 LATJ-; "69 302 V-8 Super Yan USED Erunoli ne· T.O.P of $95 n10 Cooper l !~7 llorxla ·1~ :\lust sell , or pay 0r( ~800. 646-4157 xlnt cond, low null'a_gi! ·70 TRAl.LER SALES tlll:s. 89.1-2130 . r"69 FORD Van long E 300 heavy <IUIY.. V-8. $2600. "Buy from a man "I.;() TRIUMPH T1\lphy 650 CC, * G-li'rl<I~ * who lives in one ]" .:'Cl1·a11 1nus1 M'!J S<'J7;>. 01 ~-- 11 L". 'Ef",o'IC'"." I l I . ,,, . ~q·> J r .., r Ji.I "r ..• v--J1. ... eeps 9510 ---ll'llAT \\'E ~ELL~ - ----I--'----------Owner 'Anxious! ~·i. Su. l!;.ullor . .-:i.nti1 ,\1m ·i:~i flr1111.1i. \lini irail 1''· 1962 JEl::P. Sllvi·r. '.!SJ '.!(l 11·it.l', :.! cl. adul1, ""IS. I Hl(·k .~ of lio!~a '>:t-Hlli6 l'l'lll'n! l'Olldlhon. SI lj. ChCV\ •. :.JaflL' t'Xtras. Zl lui;t I" ,.,. 616-\0l 1 I J WA!' S6~J!(i I --BAYH-A-RBOR--Sl'll. 8-12-7771 NOW '55995!! Mobile Home Sa les '6!! YA:'l·IAJIA 12~1 i'.:1KlunJ. K"J\1 '-==~====== * 549-095~~-1 YEAR END J111tr~. prrf1•,·1 cond. S::OO. 1 Campers 9520 20·",-,~,.~_\IOBfE II 0 111 1 .. , CLEARANCE SALE I i\llL'r 6 pnl, :i-l:t--1\il. NE\V 31i"' Camper !o'h<·ll~. fits CapJsln1nu .\;1'a. Ext•lull. ~{)\VON Ul-"PJ.,\Y -.fi!J-llODAKA. \/cry Clean. Ir \Vidr bed p1cku11. Cost Pi1rk. Carpr1, Encl patio. I I:!. !ti, 20. 2-1 Gt :10 \\"1dt•!i Slrrf't or Dlrl. S:\2.J. s:~-,;) sell for S27j. 51\s--0343. Curnt·I" I.UL Lo Space R1·nt. IJp To 6(t t'N'I Lon::: Call 67J-Oj'.JS. "!!! \\'. \VJlson, c.:.1. C<ill t1rt .'1. 111 H 493--1948 14'.!"i ltiklT ."1. C•1i.111 '.\!.•,.a ·1:.,~ h'.A\\",\$,\f\-1 -1:!0-----CC. D B . DF:LUXF: :! 0 ~60'CA-:'ll-'~ hl<:x k Eas r ol Jlorlio1· IJl\d ~ln't't or ,111.1, 1,,\1 inili·s. une u~g1es 9525 BJ'IDG'". L•~ P o•···I• .• ,,·,,. 1 Cosln .\te~1 111.11 j!0-9-170 5 ..... -""Z "l"I 0 '" r ., ,_ " "''J. "" -;, o · "ij~ DUNJ:: BUGGY A i\lags 1n(ts. StrJr ~-~1·r! $11.8.'J(l '67 Vll\ING l'.IX;f::\\'OOD 10 -----912 PorSi.'/H' En!;' l"adio Adult ;, Star Pa1·k, C.:\I ' .'17" Douhlr ""P::trlllo. Trailer, Travel 9425 I n('1C'r un din. ,'ll1nl l.-ond. !il6-S61~ Qual11~ eon,1rui·1 ion. &12-13.-\7 f'o111pll •!C'l1 sk1rl1·rl. \\ln<lo\v -==========-MOBIL~: lh>JrJ1' \\'.!(ii! I 6 I I a11•n1ni::s; 35' ral'pOr1 awn-· 't' Nin1I'I~ H111C'l""I 1 ·111 !'r~~1;;11~~ .. ~'.1·1~r'U:,;: ~i~-~: ing; 9 ' 11•; "l"J'l'Cll{'d h'.aill·r. ,\dd-A-fto .. ;u,--0:.0r1 Imported Autos porl·h 1\ith "las~··rn· 111-;erts: 1·urtaln:.. !>.l<'CJ•~ ~ .. hulanc :t ALPINE hC'forr 10 A:'ll u1· aft b r;..t I • - f.-16--0ii:! I ~hl'fl l\'1("t'ly land.st·:1pt'tl inn hurnl'I" ~10\l', n11w tu1'.~· I---------- F1\:1" Star AduH Pnrk 111 !'parf' 11h('<"I & 11r1•s J-:x1·rl .67 01 , ''-l·"'I Ll::AVINC rur Svulh 111 , Costa :llr~:1. 711--fl!t-ili9!.l I l Sl'l'.I • 1-· •~'"'O fl I' "pinf '"' ~' slf'rt'o I l iuy 11 • • .i ,,....,..,., a ) ' '"d :11JNT COND Sl630 tla~~s~ 11 .. ). .. :.-,_ •. \ BP.. ;~cl~llL ]~,\f.J·: OPPOliTL"Aff\'"-P\! t ~~~~i1-i . . . llC'I.. ~cirfu:c $·l'l.iO .l 'I OBILI·· Ll\'I'" l• 1-==========:o K12-J939 ·' ' · t_; (•ll In "ti"" LITfLI:: Chan1p 18' - -,-,-,,--, h !3£::.-\Cf! 1.11111ll'd ~Jlil<'{'S 111 l.'Ornp. ~lf-eont·d. Lots or 1 AUS ''IN HEALEY .110 f'llUlMt a '°\JS C(J;ic Ill'\\' :uhl!11un tr1 Dr1ft11ood I "11·a.'-. Sip" 6. Used h1Ki: 1 11/ral1ana. DJF~·J-:f{f::NT! Bc;11·h C'luh :'lluilrls nn 1!i<>-SHIDO Q_u:~"!'Y Ill!' tl~.s. E..\'.T!~~.~; plu~' 1;11't'fl!('af \Io h 1 I l' ' . * !K>S-32::>6 "' 62 A If Sprtt<'. ,1r11 cn(l, SJ.1 9 (I T1·1uh· 61 ..... 1 .. ~ Hv1u1• s •le~. :!1 ll:it f\n·1r1c I , . .. ,--. ----blut·. S600 hst offr &>f' 10 I O\VNER \\'1JI 11101 .~ torl;iy• 10 I C'' ll1ch11av. I! B ~i';f,..i.513 T~,AVl'.:LEZt, lO st'Jf cont I bc'l1r1·<' T'lnn l."OI, rebJt " 1"1 fut"n. 1 Bil ,:1dul! pk.,* NE\\;--:t1~60-DEL0XE2 I {h•an. S!r.10 f11,n1. C'll~ :1.~l!ll(i .. ,, S'O o !'2"<• ··1·J ~-2 1 ) Call LI S-3100 o=-'.:_;.:..;C..-----1 r ~ in -" .. -u.> F'll. 2 flA, drn i rp1 s tllru· ----(IQN'T JUST \\'ISll for -B.\R(;,\1:-;-1oxJl:-1 h-,_-1 riu1. 11:.1111 .t ea1·pur1 a1•n~s. lj ~Er:PS 3. A1~11u1~. ''.c11 somcthins to furn1sh your Low N'nl park E .. \tras is· ral"t'd po1Th. !l.lany l'X-Ill'<'~. clC'l" brk~. insul. Xlnl home ... l1nd ~real buys in 19b'7, 21.\lai L"lll\1'1""41 Alt CXll'flS. ~ P.r11ut1lul park, I( 0 11" fi3(i-0fl21 9600 MG Ni les, Se1v1c.i, Par11 luuncil•ate Otl1vccy, AU i\ludels BAYSIDE MOTORS ~JOO \\'. Coast ll\i·y. N.B. 1200 \\'. Coni.1 Jh• y .. N.B. lit:!-9-105 !>IO·li\;l e BMW-.--Aulhori21'd illG J'\1'.LIC'r All..Mode4 in Stock ,\Jt.;(;.GT ·i;,q n1us1 i,.•U~- fu1· ln1n1edultc Dclhct·y lil1•d. Bebl orfer 0 v f' l S.\LES: SERVICE. PAHTS 11hU!csaJi;, \\lht rbtk Jttl1' 1n! T&M MOTORS, INC. i:;12-1:1ij 80.'ll Gar-den Cro1·c Bl\'d. --_31 ~· 0 S d ·;,1 T. D. Cla.ss11.-. l\u int l ;J · -~..,~ Jl('rt. Ull By :s9'i-j,'),Jl I 1 r f' ~. Quite 1·c.1"; $Sij BORG WARD £i.16--681'l2 Ill' j1$-7l(il MGA l!t~ BORG\\'AHO, run~-·--------­ guod, SlOO plu:s n1any c~ll"a l!iliO illGA 1600 Con\'I. Run• parts for salf'. 51:,...S\j'.? guod. $3.'iO or bt>:.t ulf\•r. C,dJ DATSUN :il8--D-llij, l'l."17 i\IG.\ Con\"I l\u .\lotor Tifl'S, hi k;.. & trans. $)j(J Ci!!l Xli-:::l:ll t'llllthllnn "'" ( DA:N )"""' $liOU "' ti I~-l~'.)3 "Ll..•;11.ll't in The ~ar·J1 l h•l'S .----- ZIMMERMAN MGB 284S HARBOR BLVD. 5411-6410 '67 MGB ORANGE COUNTY'S Rrl~tt". 1 S/YI 11l1. \Ill(' 11hl(, NO. J rti.i·1ng 11·11 "'-I., plt1~h bla( Ii DATSUN DEALER int., Xlr!l Cu11•! !ill"u-out' DOT DATSUN Take ull!~·r 1n1J1 •. or ;..rnall down. THB!ll!ti _ Call Ke n. 1!1835 Beal"h Blvd. 4!l-l-97i:i or :-i-r1-fltlJI. 1-!unting ton Beach ·u,-, ;\IGBIB.000-;;~"1,-,_-,-,.-iz~ --="=~~·~18~1~o~'c_::"~IH~\1~<~2:__1 11 ht>('[~. t,,;ood ("1nrl. :'\!UST NEW '70 SELL! $i!l!l. ;i1S-S.'i0:! DATSUN PICKUP 1961 "c&c001roo<1•nm• rarliv 111·11• Pirelh"s S&YI \Vt canipcr. ~l!i hp overhead J<>1-ry 5J6...t;:::s c;un, 4 ~pd, dlr, 6 ply tires, I=="==-====== back up Lights. You nan1e IC .&rial # Pl...5212~TJ. PORSC HE Dir 1~16--0'J!l I 11·a~ S\.i.500: 612-tl:iO I (~•nrl. S.'JOO. tilG--IO!i. today's Classified Ads. ---'--'-=--=~-=-~~co=o=.-==--~-~~~-=--==~~~=--"'===I t•ulJ price $2C99. Take sn1all ---------- Jn ur· 1radc. Call Phil. PORSCHE Used Cars 9900Used Cars ---__ __..;..:..:.;c..,.;:.;.....c_ 9900Used Cars ---'-'-' 9900 Used Cars M t K E M c c A R T H y B u I Full pn ' •••I"'' •1 'N~ '66 BUICK SKYLARK 1 Ooor f 1•a•cc, \/ 8 ,,o,c. to~Ale' ~111oma1<c oowe· '67 CAMAR O $1099 $1999 li.~O•O I<<•~ ~~ i>O.,, .. :)((.•'' 18<">'1, • ~· ''r'' "''''I ,.,,.., ~< •01$6)0 '66 MALIBU WAGON $1299 116 ·~ll·o t~•lr• • .,.,..,,,,, r~•, ·•~··~" """'~' ~' •~• 1~v• ,.,, '66 MALIBU SPORT CPE. $1599 '62 SKYLARK $499 \18 ~·· ~•li: "" ..,,, ..,~ ""wr••lt<" ~··a ~ •• ''"" · ;~~ ~~~~~~~~·~~-""~~ .. ~~!. "'"" "' """"':~~:: li.'0<0 ~•~lft, •">CM 1...-~•Qt ._,.,,,., "~''f"''!T' ~" '1• 'II ,.t '67 DODGE -POLARA-$1099 1 D• tl,.d1 J F~ctO•• ~" •u10..,a1>c 1'~n'"''"'°" "°"''" Ol•• , ,.r .. ,. r•~•• •IMl<O, ~~"' L' llLE \1• '\ '66 PONTIAC-TEMP EST -H.T.- v I '"l'IO ·-~~-... ,1 .. ,. """'~I••·'"· w~~n "'C• ll1•t··•t RllP 1'11' ;:.~ .. 6f oi~o~f Li0"~il~~·f;;m > 111• flfl•lll1\p, ~ ..... , •!H''"Q """"'' b•nl\tl. \I g d11•om•Hr '"'""·•·10~ ,,a, ~ '65-FO'RD -FAIRLANE 500 $999 $499 $1099 1N~ 111~•1 $1099 •u«l..,•11c "''"4ml\•~"· 1><1v.•r •l~~'"ll C>O-• t<~ll• ~"'"" ''''' •·111"' ... ,,,, 1l!r RUF ~'1 '67 OPEL RALL YE $899 (L•c uuc; n1 9900 B u I c K v A L u E c E N T E R 4!.11·9773 01· :HJ-00::1. S.C. COUPE 1964 DATSUN LATE~'"6_7_1 A l'las:;if"~ Chcrr'' LoaliE'll 1\iCO Roads1('t, I "Ptl. dlr. inc·! 1\h:1rlh ~ \ h 11 u ( 1 . Sharp, hdtp .. ~un rt'd, plu~ll Blc.u1Ju11k ,\n1-f 111, :'llr·,\fr.--. h!ack i111 .. ,1111 ('Urld. i\[u~L l\hl'('Js, rui:: l1lc;... eh·. VH.~l·J, "11t-r1!1l't'! SI 1!19. Tttkc older Polak st'r\'icr 1'\clus11·ch .\111cl'lcan t·ar or ;..1nall down $3.~. - l"Rl::GI::. Call Phil 49!-9rr:i PORSCHE 01· 5l.>-Oli34. SPEEDSTER 1957 "6S-Da 1sun Sta \\'ag 18000 Tl1e 1110.•I 1"111.~'<U" Purs"chc of 111i. auton1, P../11.' fal·k. all! \lcr.v Cht'ITY! l.J"Jiu.led : SI \j(J Pvt 11ty. 49'J-:/082 Aharlh 1•,h·111~1 l\'rrf b11r~, . -. . ,. , -~ --ron1pi•111ion ro!J b;u·, !ll'.? 69 0,itsun F_1ck Up. Rad1~ ,t_ f'n~. , lt' \lc•ry qu!{'k \'fl,r·k hct11l'I', <l::AX_> ~1ulc. Xlntl PQl<ik l'•·s!Oo o·d . 5 ;': 8 O 0 l"lJl1d . $149.1. fr!2 -:i619 6"lU '"~·· I· . ,., .... ,,, ' ---------. .r~.~.,., ' a.\~. . . ('\ ('~ l~ki.'! DAT!:.1JN \\'a~. Auto "67-POR!)('JIE-!lll:au 1rans, 11('11· t1r"" ::.;u·nh1·e chronir \\hl~ .• ·' spd :it $1100-$-100 bclo1v book. \\"('"~,.~ Pi~·ili..: \\I '"\l 8:.IJ-1•169 '."-' ·•· '' • ' ' r S.\.\'.: Cohah bhll'. $t9-IO Pnv. pat !y. i~G-~1-,7~ ENGLISH FORD PORSC!IE "liJ t' Cpr·. !l,100-' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.! 1111" ~ \\ tu II'. 1 d 1nt Or:i n SttJ'J:1 Pl'i pt_, 614-211:.'.Jatk Evt·~. LI i'i-160:>: ORANGE COUNTY "S VOLUME ENGLISH ~ORD DEALER SALES. SERVICE OVER 60 JN STOCK • 2 ,I, •I Dr. i\1vdc._ •ts,~ Dr.]) u,~~ • :! & -I Dr. GT :-Ofodel:> • .St1;1t1on \\'a1:011s i\lany 111th flllly a11ton1<1t 1c "!iii POl~S{."Jt~;~-1'.!/~n­ n1aeula It' i·nnrt. r h r ,., n1 11h1'l'ls. A\1-F.\I %2-7GJ.1 J\fl Ii fl.\] r1r 11 k111!~ ---~~--~ "Gli POHSIHL. Blu1• 11 I hi 1111. j ~JJCl·d. P..adio. l'\l'l'1l-. body l!o'Ol"k, lll"CU" nc11 ti.rr. ~3 100 f11111. 67.J-1111 Trans .. air. 1·adial !ires;, ra-·:..-s POHSClll~ CuuJ"' 11·/H1 •ll•J. \"lll)l r<l<Jf. \\~IV IH"l""· "'°f. ro•IJuill ·1;2 •'111.;ll!C \· llHAND hC:\\I !,JD. t Oft li-;111:-:, 11('1\· /):o!Ull ,\; lll"<'S. $1785 f.ULL PRICL harJ::atn rtt Sl.SllO. Q:oi:\-:;lti ORUf::[{ NO\V PORSChl·: 'G~ S !iOO CL" Theodore An1/F il!/Sh1 111;11··· ROBINS FORD Rod/blk. """'" "'"'" ,,,., 2060 llat·bor Blvd. _1'1_Y_· _il_!!::.::9-_HHI c0~1a i\lf'sa 61:.!·00IO ·s:-i POHSCHL: u·1 l1nm"' FERRARI FERRARi Conrl. lfi•1•p P.ul,v Rrol 1nechan d··r11'ntl ~11'i-7ti01 "&I POHSC'l l~:-. -.\11---c;-;:!ra 1111•1 air. S.1c11f1C'C'' j1J-S77'"; \3l7 E. 1;1111 SL. S.A. -----1~16.'1 POl~~('llE n1odrl (' Nrwporl Imports Ltd. Or· 1nge CoWJt)'a only author izcd dealer. Xlnt l•,r11!11inn. 1"1 nff1· SALES-SEnVJCE-PARTS oi·~ s:l(IQO 1"k"~ it :'tl'.!-TTII 3100 \V. Cousl Ji11•y. 19.i8 PORSl'llE 1600S C"'ou1"' Newport Beach ,1n1 1111•1.•h ~·und. $13:iO or nf 6-12-9405 5.J0-1764 ri•i'. !IGS-:-ilifl Au!honzcd 1'"c1r.1.ri [)('aler FIAT ---'SS PORSCHE $950 196-:a;,i.-, . _ RENAULT lfl('>S tl,\T 11.iO f"jl(', branrl 'i ---------- llC'\I' l\"hitc 11'(111 lire~. 111•11 I "6S RE'\,\LlLT r.10 batlrry. Lt!;(' rw11! Call .Jim,,.,. 1~1n1!it1or1t·d. Jo" 111tlf'1t~• bl·t1\l'f'n 10 A.\1 & 6 P.\I. SJ2j(J. tilfi--1911 673-327·1 JAGUAR 1~G.l-P.EN-;1u1 .T-r.uu~~ 111 F:ronrirni<"nl TrJ n~p. SJ'.), C-1:1 i'li-06'111 Joo:! '.;A SED1\N. Elnrk ROVER bcnu1y: l\ool piuK'hni.:. 1!111· - 11phol.. nuto 11":ins., S!rJ·•. Ph. "67 L.1~0 Ru1C'r, '.\Int ((lrttl ;\ff . .ll'l:nC'lt days bl2-1910 ,-.: 1'u 111'\'S. Ltx:ku1;; /1uh;. Call '.!JI. 1'11'!> 11k11d., 6T:,.oo:;9 e>r,_j).i.12 ·;,.1 Ja1n111r Xl\-120S . ------,==~- \\'/Con1pl. l"l'·hlt ·:17 1101 ROVER rni;. Nu i11t. i\lint cotkl. ' t:ll:l• ~27-0:12'..! ;,.~6l'"°"R~O~V~F'.~R'""2000=~T~c'.· ~$1~,,,~,,_.m· 1~r19 il!Afl.J\ IX Ja guar &<Ia n Good 1'01\dillon, $!~ * 6-l&-lilD * /i.><•t l)lf1•r. (lr 11·11dr for 'fi!I V"1\I. 67l-8712. fi71--77!!'.? SPRITE Jl)(j", J,\raJ,\R 3.~ 1!.UIO \111'(' 111i!s, rnd. Ong. Xln 't t11cch I-----------s2100 6i.">-41i7. I!~~; SPRfTI·:. rnpr rlf'r k !..· ri1nny cxlra11 $!1,"iO. nr !11 .. ! ICARMANN GHIA urr I'. Al'ln 1961 fla111blfr, gvod ru1vli111111. SllO. ~11.t-(!117 BUSiEST-n1:u-kcfplR--;:;-Ul '69 l\1\P~illANN Ghi:i, 11 I0\111 Tiic DAll.Y l'rUJ'l' O\\•rw-r, \\bit~. hlk lnl., SI Cl1ut11H1l"!.I u-1•1kln. ~nv r tr.irk 11\pir. mttlo, Hl,000 nil, 111oncy. 111.,,• & rlrnrt IJ••1 mini cond. S:i:Jn. 8 63li f}O\\ • 1 • ------- ~f'!SPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION r r1aay, Janua.r~ JO, lq70 DAILY PILOT ;;t7 TRANSPORTATION I RANSPOR r ATION oRANSPORTA TIOI. •. -·-·"'-·,..· .;_~_.,_R_TA;..;T_l;..;Oc.N:__T;.:R.:;.A.:;.N:.:Sc..P..:O:.:R:.:T;.:Ac..Tl:..:O::.N:..... TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION imported Autos 9600 Import.cl Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 lmDOrted Autos 9600 Antiques, Classics 9615 ~ew C!rs 9800 New Cars 9800 New C•r• 9800New Cars 9800 1931 PifODEL A Jo~ord Sport.~ ......... ~-~o;ii;;i;i;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;iii;.~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ii~;.---~ TOYOTA I VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN LARGE SELECTION Coupe, Chvy n1nnlng gear. Over P*I invested, SUl99 or best oUrr &W-02-18 cveii. * '69 Toyota Hdtop "CORONA'' SP'T CPE wl 11uto I rans. r 'h, 11 l11•all1r. <'le. Unbt>lit'v&bl<' 9,!l.'l(; 1nl. rn:1v 1·ur lradt•·in. Sparkling !\!ikado l'l\'lllC• II fbJk \'illy! i111. A h so l u 1 l' i;ho11•roon1 ronc!! 0 n I y $199:1. i\lt\R- QUJS i\10TOHS. 9CJO ~1. f's1 H11•y . Lai:: u 11 a Bl·arh, ~~-TJ()::, :iW-3 It~\ 1'0YOT.\ Mark 11 Wa gons Hi Lux Pickups Land Cruisers Wa gons PLUS OTllJo:Jt 11.\HO 1'0 GET J\10DELS NO\V IN STOCK Your Besl Orals ,\t·e Still 1\l DEAN LEWIS Jl)6(i ll11rbor, C :\!. 6Hi·9:m * '67 Toyotc1 Spt. Sed. "CORON;\". 1' <iU!o tn1ns. r.th. ctr. sp.arkt!ni; Jcal blue II' likl' 11('111 hluo•, all l'inyl in!. C.11nK'f' l11{•al nr"v (•nr 1radr -in 11 J11s1 21.278 mil. P9! Only :Sl~!J:i. '.\IARQL:IS l\11'R3 !(1(J ~o. c~1 1111)' I.a. i;una lio;;H·ii. 4H1·7:111:1. :140..'1100 BILL l\IAXEY l!J:oiv~ 18881 BEACH BLVD. Hunt, Beach 847-8555 3 ml N of Coa.111 f!lvv. on Bch 1 '6!! 'fOYOTA Cul'\Jlla Jk1u;:r: far! atr, :i.lnt 1'011d. $1800 or Uc~l ilfk·r. •IX-:1Ti6 '67 Tllyo1rt4D1·-~C-m_"_na-.-A-ic C<1nd Pn\·. Ply. J\'[U!)I &JI. :.1G-t.1;;;2 TRIUMPH 1Uli8 Trl11n1ph TR-2Jll. Xln't 1'ond. Bl"~1 OU .. r. ---6:! TP.rt '\JPJ-1 Tl'.~. !3c'11111lfu1 rcrl Dn·•1n1hoal. Only S79.I, f';111 ~1.-._;;;ri1J JOHN CONNELL "NO GIVE!.WAYS NO GIMMICKS" '56 VW BUS Sl2SO. 496-3645 1960 VW BUG SIOO. 540-1193 '69 V\V Can1~r. lo mlles, x.lnt cond. &>:r1t oUer! ...... 548-l71J<1 • i!lM V\V rnust sell. Dark blul'. pil'IStriped , "'tr a!. $14.'i(). 6ia....&all, 537-4329 '63 V\V bU!l, good t-nncf. lll'W clutch. radfo, i,,'OO!l lil'l'S. $85(), ·19-1--5046 ti.'i \~ Su'"o-,-oo~I-. '°lo_w_m-,,-1,.-,,-,. One 0~·1ier $9'li. Originul VW BUGS f'RC1'1 $399 o\\'l'lel', 545-5037 5.19. 3031 Ext. 66 or 67 '68 V\\'. Auto. trans. t.lus1 19i0 llARBO!t BLVD. sell. S I i 11 on war· CT.lSTA t.lESA J"antt:c. Sli'JO. 612·1719 • ·.~ro~v,~v~B~,-,-. ~Sl-creo--.,-..,-. -110 'bi-V\V Bus. On:;:. Owner. I-IP Cr:nvait· cng. $1250. $1700 Cash. Ci.II • Days Gates lir'l'~. llt'W slXM.'ks. 303 61.">-7191. E\'l\S. 671-2332 Pal111 SI. Ap1. I. t\c\\l)Orl Bch. '69 V\V M}uarcback, stirk. 51---~~ n1os. 'old. 5800 rnlh.•s. Priv. '6S VW ply. $2300. 6.J6-Jli9. On1:. 011 nt'I'. surn\IOJ. 1a1·h, .~ 1n:1ny oth<'r l''\lrn~ Si9.J. 6'iJ-11:;~ of VW CAMPERS Harbour V.W. AUTJIORIZE:D SALES & SJo~H.VlCE 18111 BEACH BL., Sl'.!-4~3:> llUNTINGTON BEACH '68 VW BUG Nrar nt•w. honry t'l'en1e e.'\I., plush blafk 1111., 4 spd., dlr. l\Iw;t i;acr1n«'! Take older car in trade 01· sn1atl dO\\'n. VXT132, Call Phil, <t!Jl-9773 or ~:HJti.31. 1970 V\\' '1000 nil. pvt. p1y. $2000. H.al110. lit{' blue. Eu r opea n purchase. 67.~2!)71. -\\'Ar;"T~~D: '69 V\V in trar!c for '67 English Rover 2000 TC. 67:~7.t2 Ot' 6i:i-7i92 VOLVO '66 V\\' Jo'astbac:k inc. 4 111\l'k tape <leek & spk1~.. air corld. S149J. 5-18-6724 ----~~--l.i6 \'\\', blur. 1)7 V\\', i;t\•cn.1 --- 69 lJ111lt' hui::~·y. All :\lnl • Connoisseur's Dcl1ghl! L'Ond. \lust &•ll' 612-03.j(), ·tiJ VOLVO 122-S. 2 DR Auto Leasing 9810 LEASE· RENT Immediate delivery on all 1970 FORDS & FORD TRUCKS All popuh~r n•8'1~.i; f'oi.I aulhorized lca11i1~ .i;yi;1ern, GP.I Our Competitive Ralcll Theodore ROBINS FORD 2(.'Q) llal'bor Ah•d Costa ~lesa 642-00lr "" LEASE "" 'li9 Cad EldoraJo. lull p11 r .. <i ir. vinyl lop, J0,000 1ni .. S179 rier 1110. '6:1 Cndillac Eklor;11tu nuliu. nit·, \'lnyl lop $159, ,, r n10. '67 1'·Bird L11n(iau. full pwr •. 1111', sll'reo tape: Si9. per 1110. 'ti7 Gala){lfo 500, :! ctr llT, air. vin,1.I lflJl: :S5fl. l'"'r ino. SO. COAST LEASING CONSU:\IES 40 tinH·~ i1s \1·eight in ston1nch ncid. 'li3 B11g $630. Call 612-4l:-199 ::>!9-100 1 SPOHT CPE, :1 spcl., r/h. Autos Wanted ·;,g -V\\'. Bent rear axle. '61' V\\' Bus. 8 l"t~Sl'ngf,r, Good motor. !(lea! for Dunc sh;•rp rorHI. Sl67:i. C';;n l1t•lp Buggy. S.12-2jj8. 1v/1ruclr or fin. Pi 1. 11ty. --~---~-·19Mi~:I 11'/"'aUs CIC. Orily 17.8031.·-·---------1 locill n1ll~s -abso lut e sho\\ 1'00111 concl lhl'U-OUI! Sruu·kling fll'lg Royal rl'rl. This c11r is lruly I in 10.000! First S\29:i. l\t AR QUI S i\llri<: 000 So. Cst H11y Lagun11 Beach. 1!»-7303, '61 V\\'. good concl. Crf'a1 school car, '70 tags $j2J. '66 SQli:\!~EB.\CK. G~l-006t Rudio <iir. cu,..101:1 1ra1k·1· hih.:h. 1 011nl'I'. Good l'<nK.1. '&l V.\V. Rrbl! C'l1J::. Sunrl, nu Y!S--lWI upholsled. nu cni; 11 k. S77:i. ------~110-3100 '69 KAH:\!Ai\'N L;/ua-a11111. Ph ~~~. Beau1. b1onie cp•" sz:r;:.. 145 -WAGONS 57 V\V l'l'bll l'ng. Tu·ps, hat-~Pe l\o. 7 B\'a1·on Bu~. i\B 164 -SEDANS lery. gen. btak•'~. paint, Gi:J--Oti:!l 1\\1 ulh1•r rnodcl~ no1v in mulf!C'r, all llC\\'. S.16-132;1. --~---<t~·k. 4 ,.·~ds & , .. , .. ,,,,,,·~s. 1962 V\I'. Ill'\\' bal1C'I). llt'I" -1·~· "u ,_ V\\' bus ·::.s. l'llg rH't'ds work lll'alls. ·70 1ag~. !!ood roni.1. Yuur Iles! Dl.·itls Arr ~:1j1J \\ S243./l I' sallbou1 11'/\rlt· & j\.lu~t St:·l! S.':17~'· 67~.J(',;;() DEAN LEWIS dac's. S39.i. 646-9:il~ _ ---J96j V\\' Bur,: SU/ll'(KJf, xtrA~. 1!lli6 Jladx1r. C.~I 6·1&-9303 tA:t V\\' Can1per Van. Gd xlril 1..i1nclition. 01 ii;: 01\fll'l'. CoOO. Sl"iO or Be~\ QHC'r. Gi3-Gl6.'l '61 VOLVO 4 SJKI. Good cond. Call 891-:,0JS \\'ill lrade for clunc buggy: ':>S V\I'. ~ood P•!l•I. i\P1\• u n1oturcycll' 80 lo 160-CC ·~'5QBACK IY/Nu J.:ng. llrl'S 5:1.)(J or 1~1~1 O[f1·r! ll'i1h t:ush. 673-21&1 Aft. 6 ·rrarric 1ippc>r & ~a~ n1iM'r. 1a::..;~C.:.:l pin SJ~. Call :il~7i1 '69 SQBCK. ;iuto \tra~. 1n -,.,-v01\0122s. 4 dr sedan. *'62 VW-Good Cond-* 'va1Tanl,v. S21!l:i ur 111akl' of-S.~. Xh1t cond. E:ves or CASH for used cars -' !nicks iust call U! 101 trtt "tlmate. Ask for S.'\I~ r.1anai:t'r l.82ll Bearh Blvd. Huntington Beach Kl 9-l3ll L\l?ORTS \\'ANTED Oran&e l'.ountle5 TOP S BUYER Bll.L MAXEY TOY OT A 18881 Beach Bl11d. H. Beach. Pb. 847~ BUSIEST n1arkrlpla('e 111 to11·n. The DAILY PJl..OT $;175. 611.{;170 lei'. Aft j, :.i:1-11:i.i pr. P1y. \\'kt>nds ~!l-1-06G4 Tl()IV!!! ·~==~-~-~~--====-~=-==-~=====--==-! LARGEST SELECTION IN ORANGE COUNTY BRAND NEW ... Jui! 21 Y••rs of Honed Dealing, Selling Chewrol1h. 1970 MONTE CARLO 54081 Fully equipped with turbo hydromatic, air cOltdittonlftCJ, power steerinq, power disc brakes, power windows, vinyl roof, radio w/ rear seat speaker plus much, much more. (138570L127094) IM· MEDIATE DELIVERY Cl~~~~ •• 1969 CAMAROS MUST GOI OYER 11 llAND NEW TllUCKS TO CHOOSE FROM -1/J.TONS • 'l•·TONS • CAltltYALLS '63 MERCEDES '66 STINGRAY '66 CAPRICE '64 RAMBLER "' FASTBACK HARDTOP 2 OR. • ll•. li:i'""' IL. """''"'• 8ir cond_, l>ol ... h. ..:J1 eng • •Pd. lli<lio & ho•lcr CA<U>· ~·"I rf/ll•r & 1lr, lllfD lllK~ soali Au!o ,,1m., rldkl, l!NIN'. !TVS oiiJ) tlll co~D<l•O<I !~MF lJSl !io,,_I U'-CSUA 01~1 . (Str •lS' $895 $2895 $1595 $195 '65 PONTIAC '69 . PLYMOUTH '67 OLDS '67 "1ATSUN GTO • CPE FURY I V-1 DELMONT HARDTOI' CPE. 4 OR. r._to•v •Ir. P.S .. •11ID r11ns., 11010, ~Dr,, 1u10 tra<1,., llOWtr itH•, lle•I •o•I r .. 11orv ~"· P,$., AT., ri<I , hlr. LllW Jl;edio, hNllf, like n9w corid. !THE l•H nc.ii..,. !Hl'L.. 11'111 nlct Ul$1t U..J mtltlgc \UTL titl $895 '68 STINGRAY CONVERTIBLE • ~r'I r<tdoo, hn1!•r. ""' cC'NI. (VQU 6J91 $4395 '64 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL i 0•, !~II llOWtt & lir, -L.o,. ''"ifl9e tOil 411/ $995 $1895 ' $1895 '67 PONTIAC '67 CAPRICE LEMANS CPE. CPE. Au'<I !r~n•., llOW. l!ttr, raalo a. h•·"U 3'16 •"II l~<I 1lr .. pow . .iHr, 11110 !•an1, (TW"I "9•) 'r10>0. ht~•tr. (VOE 12&1 $995 $1695 '64 BUICK '64 CADILLAC SKYLARK CPE . A.uto 1r1n1., DOWtr lletr. r..Oio. ~t"t' (Wl<I Cl). $695 CPE . DEVILLE r 1111 powrr I •Ir, Low m!!t.>go. E•tr1 n•<t (JIE Jd ) $1395 $995 '64 CHEVROLET IEL AIR STATION WGN. "u111, l••n1., llOW. 1tHr, rHio, ht1!fr, (DHl tt11 $895 '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA STATION WON. f-P1u. Alllo Iran,, ,._ s~. It.Mio. Httltr [fWN IN) $1295 '69 CHEV. V-8 '68 CADILLAC '6 7 CHEV. 1/2 TON '68 OLDS 1/1 TON P.U. DE VILLE CONV ERTIBLE 442 HARDTOP ru 'O"' C•b, 'fChO & nt11tr Llt IJJUI Fvll """"'' 1. 1lr, low !ow rr1'1e>, DCi;~ 6 tvl kooQ lltol Oickup, (Vlfll'O) •Seo tt•n1 .. r..Oio. heller. A. rt•! bet~!y, toio<'. ;i.H Urn. fW$H etfl ( TltF Ull $1 795 $4395 $1095 $2295 '66 CHEVY VAN l"I ' oulO....,I'!: t•1n' , ,.,,o(I I ftHI~ 111~•1 '67 ~~NZA F•<•or1 1Jo, 1v10 !rlo•, rid..,. ht~•~• Ll~.I new 111 lhrv iTPL 19'1 $1295 17'12' FIBERGLASS CABIN CRUISER Ml t1,. Joh<!Mll'I 1.IK, mcuor lo 1,1J•~· '67 CHEVROLET EL CAMINO V-1 •11tom. '" <~~~ •ldlD lo hu1.,. Ve•v "lttrr. !!'Ult 161(1) $1495 • \ ~ ' ·---< -Cl' -w OI 0 n g . ~ 3 !! • ~..., : 0 . a. : • • .. c -; • • c z :z .., :.e -co ..... Cl:=! .,. ·- .. .... .. m "' .. z a '1 I I l 1 I " ---·. -··· :J8 DAIL V Pl LOT TRANSPORTATION ft!day, January JO, 1'110 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTPTION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPC.RTATION TRANSPORTATION Autos W•nttd 9700 Used C1r1 9900 Used C•r• 9900 U1ed C1r1 t900 U19d C1r1 9'00 --- ' WE PAY CASH CADILLAC CHEVELLE CHEVROLET HORNETS FOR YOUR CAR '69 CADlLLAC . Sedan De '66 Chevelle Malibu Ville. 1'"'ull P<>~·er, faclory a!1· 2 door hardtvp Sporl Coupe. CONNELL condiUoning, du11.l l'lectrlc "327 VS" automatic lrans- scats. 3,400 aciual n1ile1. n1Jssion, 'pow er stcf'rinli:. CHEVROLEl' Fonner G.t.I. Exttulive's bucki:I seats & ronsol(', l'8· -· l'--bor Bl-~. car, Call Sales fo.l&flaicr dio & healer. Lie. TSN6:W CHEVROLET '58 CHEVY "·agon. Clean in & out. new tire1, trans. gen,· carburetor. just had val1·e job. $300. 544-34.lT '66 Malibu SS Conv. Aut.o PS/PB Yellow/Bk Tnt TrY 488 -- NOW AVAILABLE ·FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY AT ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST AMERICAN s1994 -UU" vu CONNELL TO '67 CAPRICE 4 Dr. Hrdtp. C.O.la Mesa 5f6.1200 DAY'S SPECIAL P/1, P/s P/w & seats. W CHEVROLET $1399 20,000 mi. Beloiv bllK' book E PAY TOP 2828 Harbor Blvd., c to.I. ~ DOLLAR 5'}6.l200 for quick sa.le! 67>-1483 for aood, clean uaed can. 1 -.6.>~C-AD~B:.:ro.:..,=gham:::..._, -,-lim-,to Q ~ ·r.11 CHEV ~fnllbu, sla wag., all maJc::es. See Geoqe flay ront., tilt/tele. 1vhl., S.w ~ V-8, pwr &tttring, r & h, Theodore Robina Ford 1 A'ltF'I N · • 0 fact air. Sl i:il. 83.1-1282 2060 Hatbor ffivd. M!a ' ,. ~ ' ew paint t s Polyglu •ires: 8 r11·r<.1. B C.~t 642..omo I·-' T ,1•19 11 ' '63 CHEVY. 2 Dr. 283·4 spd. · w hu. op cond. 67...-;> • W). ~ 456 posi. BEST OFFER. 9900 e\"e!i. 'I, s.is.oo19 '61 CADILLAC, BI a rk EL Camino, 'Sj Custom. 32'1, • FLEET SALE * Flech\'OOCI, air rond., lull 519·3001 E:ct. 66 or 67 Auto. Ne1v tires. 1200 0o,1·n (5) 1968 Chtvy Impalas pivr. Day& 54:>-2{12(;, Eves 1970 HARBOR BLVD. & T.0.P. Eves. 548-7243. 2 Door •...••.....••• 11100 548-2797 COSTA htESA G l'IPALA o.. 0 _ t {5) l!l68 Oievy ln1palas '66 CADILLAC con1·ertible. · 1 · · .>Upet .,.,..,r · CHEVROLET Air, n:blt eng, good cond. 4 Door .............. Sl6.l0 New tires & pampered. All 673-:l791 (3) 1968 Ford C.ountey acceSllories. fo'ar be Io w _ _c_.:..;.:..::.:.::..:..::=..:_ sedan station ,,·ag . , . , $1000 book. $2450. 8-12-664.l. '60 L'\fPALA, nu paint, trans, 'liO l~IPALA. 2 dr. Nu I ires & (l) 1968 Ford Galaxie I='=======°' inttr. Runs Xlnt. $67i CaJI brk.~. Xln 't Cond. S300. Call Sale! $1099 Salt! Mister "T" 645-1441 2100 llal'bor Blvd,, C.1\1. "6.} CHEVELLE SS. 317·3..'iO l\lunsie 4 spcl. !Tutsi L inka~e . ET !\lai;s. Goodyear !irt's. Nu Paint. hldke Olfr. Call ~2-3706 J!l6.; Conv!. 1-Ull pwr .. xlnl t'Ond. 10'70 abovl' 1v!wlesale . !l6S-364 bef 11 an1, aft \fl pm CllEV '66, auto, pb. ps, .. dr.I r&h, Sl().)(). '65 ~IUSTANG, :;I rlr, tape ft'COrdar. $82:i 01· make offer. 646-j3!!8 c.~I . : 4 0oo, •········ ····• 11000 CAMARO ""'-7000· """-T'"" "" 6· '1>-Jm. '65 EL CAMINO : Dono Moton i' rudy IO 11,w1 yo11 wirll 6 ocrel of Seal" •ltd S.rYlc1 foc:llltln. ~---""-·'.c"'°'-"----'tij CllEV convt. p1vr, Jo '58 CTIEV. Good lransp. car · I ' ----------1 11 •-1 11 Au!o trans, power steering. 1 • miles, xlnt condition, pvt l\1usf se , .,.,i; o e r . BUICK * FUN-N-SUN I ply. $950. 6-12-2079 89+-i>912 kiter 6 hrakei;, air <.'Ond. ' A11d o cornpl1t1 lln1 of 111w 1 f70 1"0del1. Ch~k 011r wid1 Hi.ctl111 of A· I Ulld Con. '66 Buick Riviera, full po~-er, air, vinyl top. Bucket seals. J'ZOOO. 5'1().6091 '69 CAl\lARO "307:" v.s, ·x, CHEVY 4.nr, 3 speed vs; "66 Ii\iIPALA V8, air, all pwr, Sale! $1199 Sale! CONVERT, outs1at1d1ng hug. \\"/overdrive. si2;,. new tires, 1 Ol\.'ner Dr. Xlnt M ister "T" 645·1441 '66 PLYM •.•. IATILLITf gar oranl:e w/black top &. * 518-7901 * cond. $1 J95. 67>-5720 2100 Harbor Sl1·d., c .r.t . plush blal'k vinyl int., AII'.I==~~~~~==-:_,;;;:;:=:;;=====-======'== • AUTOi fTAU 16fJ '68 PONTIAC "· ,'.;'.'r.o'.'' '2099 J '66 DATSUN '''"' T•K• 849 CWIC676) L .. • Nw ITIWffOI 1962 Buick Outitancling con- dition. Ca r e f ul ly 1nain· talnec:f. Reasonable. 646-n77 1964 BUICK Skylark 2 rlr. hardtop, p/s, good tires. $6:JO. 962-4028 PIS, R/H ete. "Note; this car has only 17.631 miles & is sold 1vlth a lrani;fcrrab!e, new car factor)o' warmnty?" Only 12599. i\1 A R Q U t S l\ITRS: 900 So. Cst J·f\.1--y, Laguna .B e a c h, 49~· T:JOJ, 5-ID-3100. ---- '66 LTD YI ........... , •.•.• IWWJ47l) '1499 j '66 CHEVELLE "1~zo~1~1·· 11699 Yl11yl Top, ,.S. CADILLAC '68 CAl\IARO v.s 3T7 e:<· '64 CADILLAC Coupe de Ville cel!cnt conrli!ion, n1aroon. Full factory power: New 1ir· =.,,...-::.""'-~7~80=2==­e~. Runs perfectly. 11250 ·r.s Camaro R. S. $200 Do11 n 6464567 & T.0.P. Call &lfi.7814 alter '67 JAG. XKE 'J.~ ~:'::"" 13899 I fVDT4121 '68 v.w BUS ' ·-·· .. H. IWEH7f7) DOR SA MOTORS ":J6 CAD ILLAC. Good Transp. Car. 190 Or Bcsl Offer. Call 968-6187. :iPl\-1 . CHEVELLE Orange (aunty's Newest American Motors Dealer '63 COUPE Ol'Ville. Londefi. Babied. Sv.·eeL Drt>am lo Drive, $1150. 54j..6771 '59 CADILLAC, 2 door. GOOD cond. :,.39j. .69 CHEVELLE Super Sport 396. Ne1v rolyglas tires. 12425. 5.:31·0607. After 6 prn f'all ~733j, ask for Gary Johnson . 11621 llACH ILVD .... UNTINGTON BEACH MAIN AT IEACH 842-8640 • 892-5146 * ROY CARVER'S ANNUAL BRAND NEW FIREBIRD SUCCESS SALE~ FIREBIRD H•rdtop 'o up e. Autom•lic. fr•nsmission, radio, h•efer, d~· cor group, power steering, fi. bergless whit• wall tires. C•m- 110 whit• with blu• in terior. 22ll79N60227l '65 CHEVROLET lmpal1 4 Of. H.T. VI, hyd•1rn11ic, pow•• 1\c1•i"9· r1d io, ht1l1r. WSW, f1ctory 1ir. ITXU•1 I) '66 BUICK 5~vl1rk 2 01. HT. VI 1ulo.,.,1!1c, power 1 +c~ton9 , radio. h11ler. WSW. f1clory 1ir. !SSJ2qbJ '66 CATALINA 2 Or. HT, VI, hvdral'ltlic. f'CWl t 1i11rP"1• 11dio. h11ter, W SW. rTZKl5l l '65 CATALINA 4 Or. H.T. VS . hyd ram1lic. pow1r de1r<n9, r1dio. +.1 1ler, WSW, l1clo•v ,;,. fNCC20bl '67 BONNEVILLE 4 Or. H.T." Hydr1M1l•t, powRr 1!11ri n9, paw. •• br1\11, •1dio, l11111r. WSW, f1<!ory '"· 4TXS9•5l '66 GTO 2 Or. H.T, VI. hydr1m1l•c. pow1• 1te1r.~q. r~dlo, lie1lt r, WSW, vinvl top, f1 clo•y 1i•. t RZTOOJ I '66 FORD FAIRLANE SOO Co11¥1tl. f11dio, h11!1r, 1utorn1tic, pow• 1< 1+1•rin9. ITl'H7JOJ ROY CARVER HAS ASSEMBLED THE BEST SELECTION· OF BRAND NEW FIREBIRDS JUST FOR THIS GREAT SALE! PRICES HAVE BEEN CUT TO THE MINIMUM FOR THIS ONCE-A-YEAR. EVENT SO ••• BUY NOW AND SAVE NOW! ~--$2 9 7 7 $1177 $1477 $877 $877 $1277 $1277 [ $977 Demo 1969 GTO H. T. Cp•. Air <:ond., power d1•< br1ke<, power 1t1eri"9, con1o!e, iurbo hvd•1m1lic, 11<. 242l79Zl090b7 Demo 1969 LE MANS 2 o._ H. T. Cordovi lop. VI, 1ul1>., '" c11nd , pow1r tl••ti"9 I br1.11, c1>n111l1 ( 1 lo choo1e lrom l 217179Z t 101 1 1 New 1969 GTO Air t.ond., pow1r dist. br1 ~11, power 1111•· in9, t urbo hydr1m1tic. 242J79Zl2bl01 Dem o 1969 CATALINA 1 Or. H. T. ,..;, ca"d .. co•d""'' too, pew•· 1IP1ri119, power dit<: b•1~et, -t urbo hvd••· m1tic, etc. 2S2l7'1Cl 12719 Demo 1969 BONNEVILLE • Or H. T. ,..;, co11d., pow•r window1.1e1I, tl11•in9·br1le1, tu1bo h~d r ~m1tit , e!c. 1&1· 39fCllJ22l Demo 1969 BONNEVILLE 2 Or. H. T. Air <:ond., cordav1 lop, oow•r window1.1l••rin9·brek11, tur bo hvdr1mt lic, et c. 1•2l79CI IS90! Demo 1969 BONNEVILLE 2 Or. H T. Air cond., pow•• wi11do,.1·1+1tr· i119 b•1k11, lu•bo hvdr'"''''" 1tc. 2•2119· C l 1•13 9 $3877 $3727 $3977 $3977 $4177 $4277 $4177 ROY CARVER PQNTIAC 2925 HARBOR BLVD/ COSTA MESA [[J K1~6:.444 '''-~J " - 9900Used C1r1 9900 Used C1rs 9900 1967 FLEETWOOD 8•...,,1>•"'· Sne<MIOd II'"" wllh black IOP •nd !Ilic~ i..ir.e' lnl••lo•. Full 00 ..... l•t'O•Y •Ir. 1111 """"I.,,.,"° AN</FM. POWtr lioor Joc.~1. power ''unk re1e1s1. ere .• tit. !UPS 7lll SALE $3333 PRICE 1968 CADILLAC ~fdtn O.Vlllt. t<mperor bhlt w11n wnire top tnd !Nthtr •n•••ID•. Fun oowtir, !actorv 1lr, pO"r door IOtkl, r11r d.togg1r, AM/FM •dd10 cvr r.1 ll•J SALE $4222 PRICE 1966 BUICK Wildt•! convor!lblt. Fl•• 1nvln• rt•o •~terlor wltf\ bllck •oo tnd bier~ vonvl '"'''''" Full pDWtr, ltctory 1lr c°""ll10nin11. A.M FM r1a;o, Oelu•e ... h<l!t•>. CTRH n1. SALE $1555 PRICE 1968 EL DORADO f!.••0011e 9011' w•ftl belgt IOI) •nd 00111 cll>•h •<"Id le11nu .,,,etlor Full oowt•. !1c10rv •I• c°""11;c,,.1ng. ~•t•oo AM1FM •flllo. C•~• tMtrol. "°"''' dOOr k>tkl, b""" new wnlle 1iO. w111 r1r11, (XSS •11 1 SALE $5111 PRICE 1967 CADILLAC • Ooclr ~••d'OP Mint grftll 111trlof w•"' "'ltlth•"'I clolh & ltt!f\ft lntt •lor Fufl PO,.,,, l•<lo•Y air, Ill! wh"I, PO..,..r l!OOr IOtll.1, tru11' <onl'lll. AM·FM, twillgM 1enl!nrl. CVCL 1711 SALE,$2999 PRICE 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 . - ---...-~-----~-------- TRAHSl'ORTATION U1ed Cars 9900 CHRYSLER Tl!AHSPOltTATIOl'I Tl!ANll'Cil!TATION ---TRANSl'Ol!TATION Md.ly, .littllltY 30, 1970 * DAILY PILOT 38 TRANSl'Ol!TATION I TRANSPORTATION TRANSP~RTATION _ 1 TRANSPOR IATION , Used Cers 9tOO Used C•r• 9900 Used Cera 9900 Used C•rs I ;::.:;::::..;::;;;:..:. __ ..:.;.;; 9900 Usod C•rs 9900 U1td Cers 9900 Us~s 9900 Used Cers 9911 COUGAR MUSTANG --1969 COUGAR XR·7 llrdJp. 11.•1la11dau top, 351 V-3, * '67 MUSTANG a uto trBns. PIS, nower dlae V..jj:, ":r ' SPEED bnike11, power windows, Un i Sparkli~ orig linle Jroat a;laS111 ractory a ir. Xlnt cood. areen. vinyl Int. Brand new Only 11,000 nil, $:/998 or premiu1n "Ttgl!r Pa\Y" w/ 1ru00! -0Jle1·. walls. Tape deck. "Ox>Jce" !><i9-0i't» low rnUeft&e -front a fthe Alh:·r Six home, and only Sl'l99. MAR- QUIS MOTORS, 900 So: Cit DODGE H1vy, Lagu na Beach. 494-7503, Ml)..3100 MUSTANG .. '65 MUltang. Oean. Xla't 4l~1 A runnlr11 cond. 8rttish Green. 39,(0) true nt.1'1. Prtv. Ply, S9 50 . 642-mll. Mon. thru. Fri. 'b7~ANG V-8, Crairer ~'( Conct. Bst Oir Ovr , 54S-1700, Steve. 'OLDSMOllLE OLDSMCllLE '68 WAGON VIit& Q:\ll1tr. 9 pus, while, rAhl &it. auto, lug rk, hvy duty rear 1U1p. Xln't Con<I. Oi'W. Own. $2900 or orr. 644-lGtJ, Cdi\I. OLDSMOBIU '59 OLDS. t:'<Coel nmnlna cond. $2'ffi. \\'ill consider lt'llde on (.'Olor TV. Ca.II aft 6 pm. 349-2596. l'ONTIAC . '59 OLDS ~ • Clean. P/1, ---------P/b, wnd"'•s l seats. Air cond. Radio. Good tires. $295. 2570 Fordh1tm Drive, CM 1964 OONNEVIU.E convt. t'ull P"'"'· Air, nelY aJ.as tires, immac! S8!)9. Aft 4, ·1!17-18.)t! T-BIRD RAMBLER ~7-Thunderiilril ---------1 Fully IUXUt')' l'quJpped tnclud· ·~ RAfl.1BL£R. p/1, plb, I .g factOl'Y air conJ & vln.yl new trana ,\ ti~•. runs root. LI ... VCl..992. "ood. Needs i;ome worl<. illl. IW6-61J7 1'00A YS SPECIAL 51995 I T·BIRD T-BIRD 'M T·BIRD Ua11dau top, f1tt·t all', fuH. j) r, dlr, plush hlock ln1 8,u1k11111 Cell' llo1u::l11 n•• ~·1;11·~ MUa:t .-;t•ll: \\llll firw ll";Y prly. VIX91 I Call Phil 1 l:J.l.!11i3 or !1-IJ-Ut,iJ t VALIANT ---------1 * Impressive lmPfrl•I 1969 CllHY~LJ>:H IMPERIAL 'LE Bi\RON . lwrurlou,, spark/inc: trn.v\ hluck, .f Dr ~. " !andiiu 1up,' plush black ~c·nuu11" l·t1l1 skin lr1 1., a:J spat<t' ai;:L•·JJO'IC!r ass1sls, AM/fi\I s!t'1'l'o .. "DUAL AIR CONDITION ING!" Un. dr.r 1ransfl'rahl1' r~w c•ar WBM'!!lll). N u I p· "\Vhol1•. Sollie" h!111• book 1~ $161Kl liuy lhis r1gh1 for only S.09.l! f.IARQUI:i ~1TR:-O. 9oo So. Cs!, l h111.v. Lagu1m Brach, 4!M-i;i()3 IJI' 54(}.3!()0. '66 Dtu1, r/s, pfb, r&h, 6 '6C MUSI'AN~. Landau top cyl, 55,001 mi, s Io 2 5 . xl~t cond. ~Vkle oval Ure1. 833--2-190 after 6 p111 Sl.300. -494-Sj28, CtlERRY '65 O:ds 4-t!, nla.ny extn.s. . fllust sell th I' v.-eekend. 830-U:.6 '61 Olds \Vllb'Oll. P/S, P/8. Al~ New tnuui. Low mlleli. t.take otter! 8C-8926 11.f1 t ·£7}~1,.'~b~lro~~,oo~. -,-.~,,~~-,-.,,, power 1teerire. $1950, 494-99;,l 1965 T -BIRD, Landau top, t'at•to1'Y alr, full 1iower, nu !rans. Xln! L'Ond, $llj(), 6T3-4!nl or 968-3GTJ Sfl('K Shift l!llH # .1JJtJ;; Vallanl. ~Call a11t4-llifl'lml" 54~2529. DOOCE Phoenix '60 1970 '86 MUSTANG, 6 cyl, auto. t~s. Nu mumer, 1~. ~-lrans. Xln't til't1. Nu bnk, 1!164 OLDS oonvt. pis. p/b, clean $550. Days 646-5639. evu 613-5719 '67 OLDS 442. pl, pl.I, vUtyl '69 Pontiac ~rand top, a /c, all xtru. T.0 .P or I t"'ulb' b.ded. Clc:a.n! cub. Eves. wknds 61~ • ~2448 * Prix. DESPERATI:: ~lW!I Sell A1 Lou. '64 T~Bird. 1''\lll P\\'t, a.c. STJO, bst olr. ~ :;.19.3031 Ext. 66 or ti7 1970 HARBOR Bl.VD, OOST ,\'MESA '66 Valiant. radio, auln Iran&, low mileqe. S1U5 01ig11\ld owner. 548-5013 '68 GOLD N.Y. Lmulcd! All pv.T, tt•t til t 11ht'f•I. A/C, Polygla:.~ , tUTs, t't'Cllner scaUi . S2S7i. Pn•'l'•I S500 u/Blu!' Book. l)11 til"r, HB, 536-7111 Call ~Hi shla. $1295. ~ -=-========:;.-=========== -· ~=---1965 CJIHYSLl::ll \~. lull f111 r. 1111 ll.1!1. tin·~. Orig. 0\111. $1000. &1.2-7690 or 49+-Hl.'f1 '68 CJJRY·~,~-.-. xi=,~t.~t>Ol.,,_Y<-. -,,,-,-, S2T.il. '61 V\V S I j O. Bargu ins. .-~1s-1.~t2. 5 Jt;...3 l22 COMET '63 CO:'llE:T ~tnllo11 1\'ll!!On. radio. good \\tl!'k "lir. SO!j(). ~l&-::8\1 CONTINENTAL "lij co:-. r CLASSIC s1ylc in l''CC. t'llllfhlllJll. l'nix'liC'Vltbly 1·lpa11. l1kt• 111•11. lundau top. i:=old/hlk ll•111h•·1·. :tll 1111 r. air. t'or appt. !Mi~llil ! 6-1 CONT., ll:L'> l\·crythi.n~! Pampen.•d hy local R.t:. Bkr. 6~4--0.;()5 or 644-1133 '62 BEAUT. oond. $693. Black, a ll leather-full pwr, new tirr.~. !)j7-.~400 '6.~LOADED' 1 l()(':\I 011·rl!"r. SliOO D••Y :.r;~;Js I, cvcs &l.)..2221 FOltD '68 LTD B~ham 2 dr. \\'/$/\\!, l"ddio, htr .. fact. <11r. p/s, p11·r disc brakes, t1ntl'd glass, lo mtg. xlnt cond. 673-2394 pvt ply. 19-16 t"ord Sia \Vagon. H~ ch-eds of hourl'I spent cin mc-ticulous re1toralion of \1·ood & exterior. Needs only 1'0utine mech. work. $850. Pvt ply. Eve:.. 494-4870 ·57 FORD Gal j()(), 4 dr. auto, 1i/s, nu tires & l>atl. 1 ciwn. r:.:ccpt. car, lmmac. in & oul. Sl.WO. Call 968-5367 ...... '68 COUNTR'Y Squire station ·wagon 10 paSI., a/c, ''10 lie. $2595. 64.1-22-t!i J96j t"AIRLANE FCltd sed. r:.:cept any reas otr. X1n'l 111rxl. Call 6'1;'>-ll9G. '62 COUNTR\' sed. air. p/b, pis, rack. 2'5<,f belo\v blue bk. $450. 842-4526. * '64 FORD Gal 500, 4 door sed., V-8, auto. Goo<! order. $650. or bC'st ori'er. 51~1052 19&1 Falcon Sta. \Vag. V-8. 11·hitc. Private party. $j2J, 6'14--0410, 644-2382 1961 Ford Gala>:lc 2 dr. pis. I .z=========-p/b, ti.ulo. Good trans. $250. 847-j,'j89 CORVAIR ·55 CORVAJr:. "Ii'' owner. ?l,000 rn1. r:\rt•ll1'n! l.1111· dition S99i 67J-:)UO or 673--.).198 , __ _ l!J6.i COnVAIR. nrw [)Qin! k I !it?.-;, \Int 1·ondihon $.J;l,'.J ~8-fi701 * ·1~; ;,10NZA • R&JI, auto. xllllll shape t $-DI. Prh,at(' parl,y. 675-0!l!U '62 J\10f'<ZA. Engine:. chassi~. tires. Plf'. in xlnt (.'Ond. $300 49-J-150'.l after 6. '69 FORD ECONOLINE 53000 * * 645-1960 UN COLN J9W Linroln Cr.int. 4 dr :st'<.lan. lit(' yel101\', ~old le11lhcr In!., full p11T .• im- 1ral'., :\Int l1lnd . exC'l'pl for tires. Priced at Sl.300 ~t cash far quick sale. This is b ~ Io w 1vholesalc, a ttal S3Yllli;. Pvt pty. 646-9181 ('1.-e .. or wkends.. MERCURY lt!J&j CORVAJI! ,\tonl;i L-on1'. 4 sjll'C(I. Ong 01\ni•r. $6JO. '61 COLONY Park Sta. \Vag. 673.-7030 P/S. P /B, Pf\V. R&H. COUGAR Bes! Ofr. 6T;rl 726 '66 J\Terc Cyclone, V-8, n1ags, 1l'ilh 4 spd. ne\v tires, new trans. $1500. 546-6068 1967 COUt.;,\l~. rrd. XH.7, auto. 2rtl cu, new brakes, shOCks, tires. Sl799. 64-J.<l-183 LUXURY 1960 Mercury, air, ne11· tires, just serviced $2"2.'i. 673-7515 Imported Autos 9600 lmporttd Autos 9600 HARBOUR V.W. '69 DUNE BUGGY 11""1 Or1rt $895 f)(Ylt 1111 '68YW BUG '64 KARMANN GHIA ~~:~·.:.;"" - '64 YW BUG 11a11 ... ~ ...... !OLM llll $1095 '66 TOYOTA WAGON :'.":~;.::;;" $895 '66 DATSUN WAGON :.::~· ':::."' $795 '67 DATSUN 4 .... .....~. • ....... Ilk WI• llr*lo. (VWJ 111) $1195 '66 YW BUG ~::: .~;;"" ~-•.•• $1195 '68 KARMANN GHIA:::~ ~~•w.$1885 '66 "HIA ..... """" .... ..... $1495 t.I 1 Ow,..,. l llVW 7211 '66 YW FASTBACK ~:~ ~7 . $1295 $1295 '65 YW CAMPER ~:.·.;•w $1996 ITWl tll} '67 YW BUG ltHlt, loltti.r. 1iz'° Hll -'60 YW BUG , ............ ". 1o1 .. te<. !OAl 1a1 HARBOUR V.W. AUTHORIZED SALES I. SERVICE 16711 Buch Blvd., Huntington lleoch M2.44lS I I New Cars 9'00NewC•rt 9800 98'0 N.w C•rs 9IOON•wCan 9800 New C•r• 9800 - J'Ob.DSOD+SOD For a better deal on a Lincoln-Mercury product see your local dealer, JOHNSON & SON. AND who else can back the sale with 18 years of Quality Service. • SPECIAL PRICES ON COUGARS AT JOHNSON & SON START AT ONLY BRAND NEW 1970 COUGAR • N-American Cougar wilh a contin•nlal accent. Cougor own•rs will "'"pt.ow" "*"h fvt1 rhey ore 10 d••ve . Thcit hcisn'1 ctionged. 8ut the lo~ks hove. C ornpore i't lo ~ f()!'e r911 sports cors. ~thing tke Evrop.-s COl'I do we con do better. Coogor is now ovciiloble os o corwert•ble. And Covgor continues 10 be the best-eciOipped luxury siport.s car iJt ils-clost. A big 351-Cl.lbic ;tlCh V-S ;, stondord. So ore cof"Ce<;1led neodlomp,, seQ1Jent1ol reor turn s;gnol~ ond buclet secits. Before you-buy any new 1969 get our figures on a brand new 1970. It wiU cost you less than you thini! • ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST USED CARS • lohnsou & Son ffns Tl1e Rep11tatlot1 01 Oltttln11 J!he Finest Selectlo11 or Vsed Cars in the Cotataly! '6' CONTINENTAL C•11P•· -01tweed ll'l•f1llie fiot11h with bl1ck l••tfi1r l whit• l•Ml•u •••'· l11a11rv ·~11ippd, f1e+t,.., t ir, •le. XSR 510 $5495 'H CONTINENTAL 4 Dr, Sid. A•9a111 9014 fi11l1h, brown l1Ml•11 roof, l••lh •r inlarlor. All tk1 luxvrv f.atu,•t incl . f1cl•ry •ir, VTP7J6 $3895 '67 CONTININTAL 4 Or. 514. l1autif11I l•rm..da 11111 m•lallic fi11· hh 'lfith mate.hint lo1tli•r i"t.rior. llack l111d111 tc1of, fully li.rsury •q11lpp•d al'NI f•cfory •i• cOll• tlitioni1t9, AM-FM ••dlo, 1t•,,o ta,.• dick. 0ftt· own1r c i r. l11vtifully in1i11t1iaN . Uc. TTN 020 $3195 '67 CONTINENTAL Conw1rtibl•, Pol•r whlto with bl1•tl l•1fh1r Ir whit• lop. Full pe•Df' ~11/pp1tl wllh li ef. oir. YGY ?S? $2995 'U CONTINENTAL Conw t d lbl•. Car~ln•I r•til wHli 1111t, l•1ih11 I ltlk. lop. Fully lu111ry l'lllip,..d I f1ctorv air. SQA 97! ' $2495. 'it M!ICUR'I' Ma1q11i1 Colo.,., Parlr: 11•. w9n1. ' p1u. Fvll powtr •quipp•i I factory •i•. Y'Wll 14) $3995 '61 MHCURT Col•ny '••k Sta. W110111 . VTM 71• mMlull'I cllre!Tl • v•llow fini1h wilk •" •i11vl inl•rior. Av· lo1111lic lr1.,1., p•w•r 11•••1119 a. br1k••· Ili c· lory ai1 cond. l11ut+f11I colld. $2995 '6' MONTEGO MX 4 dr. 1•til•"1 I] to ck101• frond . All h1•• auto. fr•n• .. ratllo, h•1t1r, p11w1r 1l11r., pow•• ltr•k11, factory air, la11d•11 rool. YWll O•l- 1,000 111il11. $3170 'U DODGE CHARGER c,.,., •11fe..,1tic fr•n1., r•tllo I h•1t•r, ,.ow•1 br1lt1•. f1cl1ry air. lurq11ol1• flfl!th with lfltfck· int l11l1rlor. l ie. SQk 440 $179$ Con••rlibt•. l•111liful c•11dv •PPI• r•d with con · lr11!!119 wh!11 top. Fully aqu!pp•d !11cl11din9 f1 G• tory •Ir condUl011lnt, pe'lf•r ,1a.,Jn9, pow1r tli1c llra••'· ratlle, h1altr. Lie. ZUl 11 l $3195 '6S CONTINENTAL I iDOI. 011•rl l1i9• fi11i1h witk blond laalk•• inl•ri•r. f ully 1u:o:11ry •q11lpp1d ineludln9 f11ll pow•• & f1clo•v 1ir. Unuuoally cl1111. l ie. OUW •Sl $1995 '61 FORD FlOO 8' PICK'J' Rad io, htat.•, purch•t•d new bv John111n l Son. E•c•lla ~t condition. l ie. Q•l,17 $1895 '67 PONTIAC GTO 2-0r. H.T. Gold rni1f 1TO•l1lllc fi11i1" with bl•clt b11ck1t 1tah , 111+0 . lr1n1 , r1d;o ' h11 I••· pow- 1r 1t••ri119, 1.ctory 1ir a.autifut c1111d ition . TR.I SOJ $1995 '67 MERCURY MAR9UIS 2 Or. H.,d+op. l11utif11I 9old boit • f111t1k with m•+c hi119 inl•rior, fully pow1r •Clulpp•d, l•c- tory 1ir, t1nd111 roof, on• ow11•r. Drl••11 o"!¥ 10.000 111il11. UZN 91• $2495 '6' TOYOTA COROLLA ' 2 OSO 4 1pd. I••~• .. '•dio a. ~••••• ..... ~i i• wl bl1c• !11t•rlo1, 11,000 t cl11 1I 111it•1 . l1outif11I cond. XOC S71 $1395 ' '64 CONTINENTAL I doo• itd1 n. V1lvtl bl1ck fini1lt with black t •• tlter l11t1rlo,, Fully l1111\1ry •qulppod it1clud!ft9 full power I f•clorv 1ir. Uc. OYS 115 $1795 BARGAIN CORNER 111 011r hrtGf1t Corwcr, '"' h••• 11111Mre111 v1H C•tt. SotM c~, .. -1tet .. cle..i. Se111e th .. •re 411plK.t!Nt, MIM -·we llCld toe l~lt •"Y owettt th.,. cen oro reM ......... LOOK 'EM O'fEft t '66 '66 '65 MEll(UlllY MCINtCLAllll 'l'O. l ie. UGW 111 C.1tan, flH 1 .. ""'· f'Oll:O 041.AXll HI 4 Of', M,f , Sl.'lf 6'5 CN1<1 tlf'l MEACUll'I' l·OOOA -Ci.ti! lf.T. L'OO HJ I""' Tll L.lntl '66 POttO GAi.AXii M9 > l•Ot. If•,.., I V, IJl (Nlq (Ir) '66 '68 •Ul(JI: n•nAA COHVllTllL• Lie. YPU '4J, Nici Cl,. (NIYSLEll lflWl"OA't Lie. VVU Uf; INiet tfrl '1375 '975 '1275 '1&75 '1675 '2275 '995 '2275 .JobnSOD•SOD · IKi1l ~ rm © M rru w . © ® M ffil £ rru 2626 HARIOR IOULIVARD, COSTA MISA NIW CARS ~ Mlle South of the 140·~630 642-o911 San Dl .. o freeway I UGID CARS 540·56;95 \ ~~~ ................................... ~.,,..11!1----------------------------------------------------------------- • • • J • • • ,• • • ' • • • • :· • • -• , , •• •• - • .• ' • • • . .. • • • . . : ' ·1' : •• • • ; . ! r • I •I . .. ·'' •• ·I . •• .. . , . . , 'This is why we're overstocked . with trade-ins. Look at these Savings on Brand New 1970's. BRAND NEW 1970 OLDS SPORT CPE. f.tlr foctory eq11lpped h1c.l1di199 lleM ,...n., Ifft b.lh. IHKll•11p lights. wi ... lc!ld woalters, elltllff 111irrer, co,..eh, etc.. O•Dl!tt TODAY BRAND NEW 1970 DELTA 88 2 DOOR fully fec:tory equipped h1cl11dh1t lleod rnts. ·Ifft belh, bocll·•P ll11J1hh, wh1chhield wasllen, 011t1ide mirror, c.orpets, etc. O•DEll: TODAY FULL PRICE FULL PRICE . BRAND NEW 1971lJ98 HOLIDAY 4 DR. H.T. $4496 YI, T11rbo hydromotlc, air colld., deli•• ,..i. ll1t- I" 1odlo, pow" dlK b'"kH, ,. ... ,._,,., W-. ••d '"•"•other h1•11rr feot11rn. #ll4JtOM1170ll IMM.EDIATE DELIVERY BRAND NEW 1970 GMC 3/4 TON TRUCK Camper equipped, il90"f duty fro11t I rHr sprinp. 350, 155 H.I', YI •itthM, h""Y d11ty cooler, dol11.10 cab. #Z2S05ll. 52845 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Example Savings On Approved Credit •s6 DOWN •s6 ~~ SS' IS THE TOTAL DOWN PAYMENT 556 IS THE TOTAL MONTHLY PAYMENT 011 tho con litted Mlow illChtdl'"J toir, lie•-011d all corrylnt chortH 011 oppreve4 credit for J6 111011th1, or If yo11 prefer lo PllY cash the f11ll caP price h 011ly $1466.ll l11cludi119 h11r 011d ''•Mfer. Deforrlld poymollt prlco h $2072.00 h1cludlftt •II h1ter11t, toll 011d lro1Uf1r. An1111ol p1rc111to90 rot1 20.24. 1966 OLDS DELTA 88 <4 dr. Sed•n. Autom•tic, air co11ditioning, power steerin g, VB, R&H , WSW, t inted gla11 . !SJR3 10 ) 1966 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 4 dr. Hardtop. Autometic, air conditioning, power 1feering. Vinyl top, VS, R&H , tinted glass. ISLWfl3 I) 1965 OLDS STARFIRE Automatic, air conditioning, power 1feering-br•ke1-windows·s•ats, VB , R&H. I PIZSOS I COSTA MESA ·~-~ --------~---------~--------------------- • WE . MUST CLEAR ALMOST 100 FINE TRADE-INS TO / ·REDUCE OUR IN-. . . VENTOalES . TO NORMAL. ALL' REMAINING '69'·s Now·. SLASHED TO BELOW FACTORY INVOICE! '66 BUICK GRAN UORT V.,, ~. trlM., fklof'y l lr $1588 cDl'ldltionfiolg, ••die." 11N11r, wlllllWllll Urtl, 'tiny! roof. SVL IOS. ' '68 DODGE CORONET 500 V.. '"" '"m., """' '"$2088 aondl!ionlll!I, power 1tHrlrig, r.cllo, hNllt', wf'oll-•lt tire•. ¥1nyl r°"'; ""tld Qian. Pl111 ma11r utrM. vn '"· • '66 l'LYMOUTH VALIANT 6-cyl., 1ut-, tr.rii., ~y $788 pl111 lt,nrury! ll:TT IOl. "68 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill V·I, '"'°· trtm .. l•ctorr 1ir $1988 cDl'ldllil:ll\lnll, po...,.r Jlttrh19, raodio, Flllllf', ""'I-•" !lrn. llntlld gi.u, POwtl' OIK. brlk· n . £VXE GI '66 CORVAIR MONZA Auto. trJ11s .. 1actory 1lr con-$988 dlllonlnO. raodlo. hNllr. wMt.- wall !lrt•, llnred 911n . R11I Oood condition. 'l'PT 361. '66 CHEVROLET CAl'RICE ~ dr. H.T. V·I, 1uto. lr1n1 .. $1788 l1t1orr •Ir cDl'ldltloFllng, PO"""r tleulng, P0""'' dltc br1l11. radio, F\ef119r, whll-111 llt~. ¥Illy! root. llt1ltd 91<1111. RUL 1 .... SU '73 '66 CADILLAC SEDAN DE VILLE VO •... '""'• '"~' '" $ 2 7 88 condllionit\o. lu!t po.,..r, pow- er •i.e<lng, powrr fdiK) bl'•k· n , "°""' ""ll'IClowl, POWff INll, raodlo, ne11er. wlllte- w111 111'11, tln!ed gl1u. _, COYrn.. ROM 21» '65 CADILLAC CPE. DE VILLE ...... "'~-'"'"' "'$2288 ~llion1nt1 •full power, pow-•r llMrlng, pow.r (dlKI brl· kfl, pewtr wlnOows, powtr -ts, rldlo, heller, whll•w1ll Ur11, rllttecl 911u, ""1MI co,,_ eri. Wt\81 1 buy! MOL 96'. '67 CHRYSLER 300 2 DR. H.T. ... '"" "'"'·· ""'" "' $ 2488 cortel!!lonlng, power tteerlng, power wlrKk>ws, r!ldlo, l'lellrer. whltwwall tire>. tinted 11111. ,.WT 541, • '67 RAMBLER AMBASSADOR V-t , 1111o. tr1n1 .. tac!Ort 1lr $1888 condllionlng, pawer sfffl'l"!I, rldio. hHttr. Top cl tM Rim- bl1r lltlt. \/Fil 4ft. . . '67 THUNDERBIRD \ '66 FORD RANCH WAGON ...... I UIO. tr•"'-• IK"'Y 1lt $1988 " '"" '"~ "'~' '" ' $14 8 8 cond111onrno. POW9r 1tw ;,,g, pa-dloc brltn, rl<llo, hrll· concU!IO!!lng, rl<lio. Fltll~r. w. """!t•w•ll ..... '""" ""'11 ..... 11 tlrn , llnll!CI gW.11. QY•o. wh-<•¥«11. l111111ry SVY 17S pll/1. TVV 1lt. '67 FORD FALCON '64 FORD T-BIRD VI. 1uto. l••n1 .. ltdory elr $1388 "·'""'"'m ·~··"-· $1088 conC1ltlonl11g, power 11eerlng, 1,., rHla, hH11r. Ecll!Om~ • power (dl1cl br1~e•, po....,r ~p, VlX 2311. . · w!ndoWI, paw1r 111'1111. rKlo, hret.,., whl-•11 lirH, tinted • gll!•. QXU 6~1 ' '66. MUSTANG '64 FORD l'ICKUP ., $988 ······-"'·"'~ $1588 VI, ~ 11tef'd. JITll'C ll:Hla & tltefW, Wllllt f~t well til'•J. ;; : ' ' . ; '66 .RAMBLER AMERICAN 440 '66 FORD MUSTANG 1 OR. M.T. Auto tr1n1., 1119 $788 VI. IUIO, f .. nJ., flo;!OI''( 1lr $1588 Qll sl~tr. RUA 01$. cDl'ldl1lonl1>11. raodlo, Flearer. "'"'il.o P11uu 'RJll ne,..111,... Tl 1n. • '66 JEEP WAGONEER '63 CHEV. IMPALA $1488 $988 6 cyl,, ~ JPHCI, tor rhr IP<ll'll $11. Wgn. OICJ 12$ but!! OTW 5"4i '68 FORD FAIRLANE '66 CHEV. CAPRICE . ' D• '' "· '"" "•m, $17 88 VI, 1u10. lr1n1 .• fictorv •Ir $1688 flttor'( 1ir condl!lanlng, POW• condlt\oltlng, rldlo. hH!tr, ., •lffrlng, PO ...... (d!K) brA- whlll will tlrn. WJ R I07 krt. PO""'' WlnclOWI, rldio. hHllr, ""hlltWlll !lrH, ¥iny! roar, tltl!ed gJ111. JtUL 14 . '65 DODGE 2 DR. H.T. '65 OLDS VISTA CRUISER $1088 $1788 YI, 111!0. fl'll\J .• rldio, hH!er, Wgn. VI. euto. tr•n•., tectorv Wflllewlll 11,,,, tinted gl1st. 1lr condllionlng. raodio, l>eller. PFA 1•1 wf1Uew1/I flru, t!n!ed gl1ss. 'ICZ lff '63 FORD FALCON '66 OLDS 88 CONVERTIBLE $788 $1488 Auto. fl"1 ru .. radio, hHter, va. 1u!o. tr11u.. 11cta.ry •Ir ...,,111w11l llrts, linlld llllH. conclllionlng, po ... r 11Mring, HIClt ~49 :::•r IOIKJ br1kes. r1dlo. ter, ""11t ... 1ll tire., lh11ed 91111. TBH ltl '66 BUICK SKYLARK '67 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE . $1388 1 Dr, H.T. \II. autc. 1r1n1 .. $1988 V.f. POwer t!ttrl119, POwer ftctory 1lr condlliooilr>g, 11111 1.i1el br1ke1, r1010, he.tier, power, power steering, pow. .....,111w1ll llrr•, vinyl roof, er !di~) btakr1. pawer win- tlntld 91111. SLW J12 dowt, power Sfl 1•, radio, htil· er, \llll!ltwall !lrn, vinyl rll(lf, tinted 11~1. TVT oi01 '65 BUICK SKYLARK CONY. '65 CAD. SED. DE VILLE $1188 ~ '"" "•m .. '""" '"$2288 \If, 1uto. tr1nt .. POWff •I•••· concllllonlnv. ,..._, J1Hrlng, fnv, POWlt' (d!K) llr•~•s .••. pawer Cdllc) br1k11, poM:r dlo, ~ .. ter. w11ue .... 111 11 .. ,, wllldoM. POWer ttl!s. radio. tltt!td gl1n. )CHM '21 l'loellt', ""!tt-11 llru, vl~yl roof, tinted 91111, WltNI COV· .,,, ZltG 6M Remenaber, "WE .4JtE NEVER SATISFIED VN'l'IL YO(I A R E" 2850 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 540-888! • G. M. C. TRUCKS • ;J, .. .' • . .' .· I I i I .' :~ . • .. ;. ~~· ' ..• ... • . ~· --.,,--..,,,.--·---·-~--------' , ... ./ ~ .,,;~ .. . ' . NOT·IC·E!! • We DO NOT require a Minim11m Do.wn Payment, like 'lO down, '25 ·down , ,99-' ·down, etc . We try to arrange down ·pa·Y·' ments and monthly . payments to suit each individual customer. ' '' " 11QUIDAJION SPICIA1S! . ' BRAND . "EW '70 DODGES NEW 70 DODGE MONACO NEW 70 DODGE POLIO DISCOUNT From Factory Stirker Prie1 NEW 70 DODGE DART Cu11om 2.dr. lunhop. Radio rroup, torqvefllte-tnn .. Jr1iaioo, 318 CID encinc 2 bbl., tinted 1lau 1U wlndow1, air condiliouin1, black 'l'inyl roof, pro~io11 poup. (Hrr. No. LH23GOR109405) $ 5 3 2 DISCOUNT From F.elofy Stkkt;r ~rie• NEW "fO IC»DGE CHARGER RIT J dr. H•rdtop. 1.J,ta1"' 1ro•;, dlte br•ke1, itower brakn, con.ole, torqueOhe tr1n1mia1io11, 440 CID en· stne, 4-bbL m4pa.m, till._ted 11.11 •II window., air con· dltioaln1, eledrlc e~ hood Ue down pilt1, t•chometno w/clock, mode m11ter All nd~ power lteerin1, 1port1 type 1teerln1 wheel, bl•ck Tlnyl roof, hGOd: perlorm•nc:• p1int, bl1ek lon1hudln•l t.pe 1tripe, r•llre lype whed1. CMtr. No. XSZ9UOG12S321) s732 DISCOUNT From f•torr Stieker Pric. DISCOUNT Ft-om Factory Stkker Prlre NEW 70 DODGE CHALlENGEI, RIT 2 dr. H1rdtop. Speeill' Edition. Le•thu bneket •eel .. 111111 1roup, r1dlo 1roup, dillC bniku, pow .. r hnikea, cotu0le. torqueflJte lr•DsmU.~ion, 1ure grip dlf· feffi1tl1l, 440 CID en1lne 4 bbl .. 1inted r l••• •II .. :1r. ronv. hacldlte,• def~er rear.window, •Ir condltlonln•• he1dJ•mp time delay, bl1clc vinyl rool, black bumblebee 1tripe. (M1r. No.,JS29UOE11058~) s739 DISCOUNT From F1ctorr ~ticker Price ' I , I ho•• b••11 • ., • ., Dfl ,..,,,, -h•,• l"~ So, Col if. for •••• 20 Y"" & I dooptr oppr.C ... it ,.hen 'f'DU do 1 llu1ln111 with 1110, end I wm p«Mnotly 111ol• •••fY •florl lo solitfy You 111 ••try wOy, Ml that-~ will IHo«.1111 o 9ood fri'"' onll o "°""' for w.,tti;~ Dod... : Slncer•ly, ,., Worffl .. .,... . . ~~ ..C·•SY.Jl ·,- ME.SA ' . Liq~idating •:::D_ 1970 DODGES :~ • !Slightly Damaged) , .Attentienll The {Qllowing cars have be~n slightly domagitd in storage-and in--'-ship•· ~.---: ·'ling._They ore brand n9W Ond under factory Warranty.'Com1 in· today & rTiak9 us' an offer,. .. , ," ,., MAKE OFFER ~:,~~,::~·Lait .. ,~:~ ~ " Brend NtWl970 Dodg• Ch•i"'1ttr 2·dr. Hardtop Ldlo iroup, coil.ale, torqaeOhe tftn1mlulon, 318 CID •• -•sine, lin1M wh•d1ltield, ~vinyl l'OOf. (P•int •er•leh-\ "''• •1'1"1•11 denl klt-re•r qu•rter •nd ri1l11.fron1 rtoor), (Mir. No. Jll23·GOE0l I I 386) ' • ·Make Off•r! ,. , Bn nd New 1970 Dodge Pol1r1 2·dr. Hdtp. Ll1hl 11-oup, power ~~ ·~1te/Ute .lre1n1nl11lon, 3113 CID Milne 2 bbl,f11la.1ed. lla-...e1t. coftdltJonlnr, eleetrle eloilr., S' epeed wind~hield wipere; n111@ie m•1ter AM r•dlo, ' tll~. wheel «Wcr•, power 1teerinj1:_· (P1in1 1cra1ched on rlJht ·· 1ide dour •nd rMker p•nel). (MJr, No. OL23LODI03903) '· Mak• Oflerl Broncl'New 1970 Dodge Coronet 440 Hdtp. 2 door, llfbt 1roup, torquefllll! lnin1mi11lon, 3 18 CID en· tlnf', 8 r.yl.,.tinted gl1 ... , mu1ic rr'laller AM r•dlo, JlO"er 1teer., delu11e wheel r.over1. (Sc-r•lebu on rl1ht & le(I door1 •nd rl1h1 lront lender, 1runk lock ml11in1.) (Mir. Ner Wff23G08~) · · Make Olferl • Bnnd New 1970 Dodge Chlrger 500, H~tp. . 2.dr., c:omele, .aorqu.erlit• tr1n1mfMknt, Sl8 CID'enP.!M( I r.yl, 2 bbl., llnted •lad1hl~, mu.it: mailer AM t'IMilo, ~ 11~rln1, dchui:c ,.·h~I co¥cr1. (SH1bt door cJllr..an4 ......, ttr1tchet oa body), (Mtr. No, XP2,aoG1&2'7 9) -'d Make Offer!. Bnnd New 1970 Dodge Sportsmen Wogon · , 108 w/b axle, rur 3,600 U.1. c1p. ,.65 •de f""11 2IOO Iba. ea,., 318 cu. In. cn1ine, 3 1peed loadfllte tr~ ..... tlntf!d A: 1l1u wtnd1hield, radio. (Rear biimp.,; mb .. nc, lllght fC r•tchea on a.lde11), (Mo-. No. Al3AE01JI086ll..'~ Make Offer! • '· Brend N.tw 1916 Dodge Sweptlint Plck·llp ~.' · '-' 128 w/b, 318 eu. lib. en.sine, 3 1peed loadfltte 1r.a..+-ro"n, - tinted rlflu wlndehleld. (SH1h1 P•lnt l'hi~ oli. Hrht. ""f•lrh o~ 'rl1ht door~. (~U'· No. Dl4AEU101925) ') ~ ' Make OHM'! '~. _ ' llranll Ntw ,97<1 Dedge Chtlltnger Hdtp. · ," 'z, HOP;"".1ol-qu'efilt• 1n111ml11ion, 225 CID e'nrlae, ~ wlnd~hleld. r•dlo--mul le m•11no AM, power 1tett1nr, dlile. "'heel rover1. (l'•lnt ehiJl!I on hood, deck litl ehiPMll, •cra1.che9 on right a left 1ide). (M1r. No. JH2SCOE10l'fl0) Make Offer! Bnnd New 1970 Dodge Ch1llenger Herdtop 2 dOM, 1orqneOlte tnn1ml11lon, 225 CID en1iM, U.te:I ,.·lnd1hlcld, mutlc in111cr AM r11Uo, power 11ett. (Sli.ht dent Jn ri1ht front door, 1mall .cr11chH on rur quanu). (Mtr. No, JH2llGOEl02SS2) Make Offer! --· 1968 Dot11e .ch .. er .............. '""· ....... $1695 . ~ ·, .,. 1967 lulck .. ~Hardtop · 1'69 DOdge Dart GTS =. ·:;~::;: ':.::.~~ 51595 ::~"'~·;~;"·:;..11",~;;;: fl. 595 ' ~966 Mercury ;.._, ,._1111. •vto. '"'"'" nl,,, hlr., WSW 11111, tit1l1cl 11011, •le. (511992) TRANSPORTATION CAR , · SPEClil.S """•·• l&H, WSW, ii"ll4.f!G'1._ , ell ,;"yt ll1t1r, wi'•vtt11 hlh, (!1112n . •"~"-·~"~"~'--'---------- ml., lltr .. WSW, •lt1yl 1e,, ti~llcl • ·elot1, h cl1! ...... •k . Wl~17l 1968 ford 4-door 1969 Dodge Charger 1968 Rambler DPL !::'..:: ... ~r:,:."::~~~: s1 5 :=;:::;~"~"~·.~::~ s199·5 :"·;~~~=:::::7~~~: s1395 .::""::"'::...:•::';:":.;';:k;.. ::••::;";:'::"'~·---...:.;:-<::...:::.. will! •vc:••t ~"· j$!1, OJtn flnttd 9la11, 1t(, fW''J0ll 1967 Plym. Fury ....,, ,.Wtf' 1tffl'in1, ~ "'"'" tHi.. ,_..,., wsW: ;..w;, 14 11o •• •"· cuTY21n :. f967 Olds 81 41•r~ H.T~" 1968 '1,lym. fury , $'1~95 . '4-dr •• fctc1.., •Ir .COl'lcl., pe- ' \ . ,.,,., •••· """'" ""· w•w. ·1in1tcl ,r..11, 11c..,(WXA2121 1968 Dodge Dart AulOMOlk tro111"'ioictft, ll1ol1r, $1095 WSW 1;,.,, tlnll4 91111, t ic. jVOH6.'I) 1967 Ford 'e"' 1 t 11-lii9, •u!o. trot11., 10.ti•, lttol.,, WSW lir11, ti111t~ ,1 .... •k. 1VEH4m 1961 ..... .a.wt.,,,.,..,,""· WSW ti,.., ll"ltd 1l1n, .. (, fP'Pl,1tl 1ffl Chew. '•--lftt, .it .. 114., .,.1t ... _,,""·WSW, 1/ftll<tl ,r.,,. !Wl'fiJI •)• ; 1912 c""· , ,._., "-'~r· -· lltllt .. •UI, \J;IW ti~. lhlto4 ,1 .. ,. l•"•JOO '964 Ply111 ............ . /<•t., •-.. -.,,., Htt,. WS'ff, 1111114 ..... tYU<Oftl '·"" ..... ,_ 1-I~, .. ,,, ~· W .. Ht<., WSW, M"ttd ,1 .... 10t"1S4! ·~95 •595 •295 •495 •395. I ' f ~ • ... ' ' ·WHEI . - Tll~.at .. . ' ROBINS FORD sAYS •. , • Iii z !}· 'f"!' -z ~- m Cit ... ~---·-----~------..,----------------~· -. -------- -• THEODORE ROBINS -• . . ' FORD MEANS ••• • • THE FORD ,MOTOR : COMf.'ANY'.HA·S A SALES MAN4J;ER.'S CON~ TEST IN ·, .PROGRES.S ~ WE WANT OUR MANAGER ~TO BE THE WINNER~ WE HAVE GIVEN .. HIM AN ('OPEN TICKET FOR THIS THURSDAY,·. FRIDAY~ SATURDAY, AND SUN~PAY~ NUMBERS; . NOT . PROFITS, WIN THE . CONT.EST,. .. SO YOU TOO CAN IE A WIN~ NER BY COMING INTO THEODORE ROBINS FORD .THIS WEEK· END~ w . PROMISE · .. you '·WILL 'SAYE A BUNDLE! ' . • I • ' ' EMGLISH • .. • H 47 MAVE~IQ(S .'7 FALC~N S .· 54 MUSTANGS 22 -TORINOS FORDi . -. ' -• THREE SPEEDS • 2·DQOR , e BDSS'S, • STANDARDS • 2-DOORS . . .. • DELUIES • AUTOMATICS • 4-~00R •'MACH l's , • 4-Daors ' •ors ' • 120 ENGINES • 8-CYL. • GRANDE'S. • COBRAS ' ' . • STA. WAGONS • 165 ENGINES • • Y.a's • FASTBACKS • ors MANY WITH FULLY AUTOMATIC ' • FULL SELECTION • 3.SPEED • CONVERTIBLES • FORMAL ROOFS TRANS., AIR COND., RADIO, RADIAL TIRES, ETC. OF FACT. OPTIONS • AUTOMATICS • HARDTOPS • SPORTS ROOFS 96 FORDS OVER 11 T ·BIRDS 600 -FULL SELECTION "2·DOORS • ~DOORS NEW AND USED CARS OF OPTIONS CUSTOMS • CUSTOM TO CHOOSE FROMI AND COLORS BRING THE 500'1 • ·GALAX IE 500's • WHOLE FAMILY IL's • LTD's • LTD UNSURPASSED AND BE READY LUXURY BROUGHAMS • TO DRIVE YOURS AT UNSURPASSED WITH VIRTUAll Y EVERY HOME TODAY! SAYINGS! OPTION MANUFACTURED ' 1,4 RA NCHEROS 24 Econolines 78 TRUCKS 28 CAMPERS OF eRANCHERO STD.'s . • CLUB WAGONS F· 100 • F-250 EL DORADO, FOUR WINDS, USED CARS F-350 CHASSIS BARRACUDA, SUNDIAL, INCLUDED IN THIS SALE. • RANCHERO &OO's • GUST. CLB. WONS. • CAMPER SPECIALS GYPSY, CONTEMPO, COME IN FOR SAVINGS . MINI HOME, BALBOA THAT Will MAKE YOU . •VANS • RANGERS • RANCHERO GT's JUMP • CUSTOMS • MOTOR HOME, GEM TOP • CAMPER • RANCHERO · • EIPl:ORER ' . CHASSIS MOUNTS . CONVERSIONS FOR : SQUIRES 'SPECIALS CHOOSI FROM 'A BIO • . VARIErY' Of . . ' ' 6 CYL TO 429 v.a•s 6 en., v.a, STICKS, 6 ~n • v.a •. 4-SPEEDS • ., FLOOR PLANS AND JOY! AUTOMATICS 3-SPEED e ~ A!llOMA TIC . ': " , FURNISHINGS. . • • I ,_ -·----_ _:._ ·--~-------'"-----'------'-----'---"'-----------