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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-03-06 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa' .. -~-------.. _ . ., ---·-· --______ ..... -·--·---··-r~-... ,, .._ __ --··-----or.· ""'" __ .... t ....... , • ' ... • • . .. • "• • ' . . . • .. • ~ • ; ,. .. .. . • ... .. ' ' " • .. • • • . • ,. · . _·esa ~o ice • r ·1·n --.. ·ra ' • ... • . . " ,.: ..... . .. •••• ' " .. . e ~on·n1e, .. .. ... .. . .. ' ·e ' • ·" " .. . , . . , " " " • Ocea~ Pounds Ho~es on Capo ,. . . . .. ' 17 . ( . . -} .. ·Nix on. Says .:"i'.., . " . . I ( '·-. ..... ·., r)?l~ll tfu 6{:.' . ' 1'' ' ·::;, .. ,_ {·~':· '·· · Menm Laos ... <.. .,. •• ,. -' • • . . ,.~ ' ~ "· • =icEor illsCA'YNE: Fl;, !AP) -Pres;. dent .Nixon made ,a detaUed, 3,~word •, · def~nse ~ Americirn involvement in Lao~ . 1-0t:laY. aOO announced he Is .asking help from, the,Soviet Union and .Btilain lo help restOre.peaee in tfiat eollntry. · • -Nixon acknowledged tbat in recent days· '"there. has been. lnten$e ·public spec\Jla- tioo:-10 the effect ·tbet the Uniled States involvement .in Laos has 'sub~tanlially 1;n'.r · crease'd, in vlolatioo-or the Geneva -ac- , C:or:ds·. that :American 'ground forces are : ·engaged in combat in Laos and that our air activity has had the effect of escalating the conflici " .• 'Describing thrse re.ports as "grossly in-..,_ 11.ecurat~,''. Nixon stated·. "l· have con- cluded that our national interest will be served by putting the subject into perspective through a precise description • of-our-current-aCtivities in b&os." -· - I--'-· -'--·~chter--e~e:cutive""!3kt-lhe.r:~e no · American ground combat troops in nw..~-.... ~.-="-' - and ~·1\'e ha ve no plan!! for introducing · grouQd com bar rorce9 into Laos." · Hr also stated that "no American sla· (iohed ln t.aos has ever been killed in gfoun~C1?robal operations.·· ·,Giving preci:!e•Hgures. Nixon said thete .• *ere currenll}i. · 1,1)49 AmeriCans •. OOQI · service · pefs&nnel II' rid oivjlian~, ·in t:aOi· bul that on1y 6lp of these ar'e dir~l g<ivernment emjjlaycs. "'i . ·:u.s: personnel in 4iqs during the past - ... ·i tar"tlas nof:increa scd." he said. '.'while ·~« ·~ . . . ¥during the past few 1T1onths, North, Vi~t-. ~. -; ( ,,,_,-, J? · ·-~.ntifn·:Jlas ¥nt ove_r 13,00I) additional com· · ·• ~" :;:~ tq .bat grOjJng troops ihto L3Qt... ... _, ..:4tt~f.f':" · ... ~.President l aid U.S. air pperatiolJ., _:;,;_ ·l'.,_ ... ~ .t'D~ in th!;i -.Southeast Asia CO\lhtry have as r ,, lbeir first · priority Uie intCrdiction:nr a :COOtii11Jing flow or North Vietnluncse ., OAILf P ILOT Stiff P~ troops and. sµppljes aCros~ thC Ho Chi Minh Trail cOmplex in Laos to join the fighting in $oµ!h VJ~tnam. He reported lhat In 1969, this flow totaled about 10.000 men. SURF BOllNE ON HIGH TIDE POUNDS POCHE AREA Wooden Se•wall Frenting Beach Road Hc:imts Reduced to Splinters • "In addition to air operations on the Ho Chi Minh Trail ," he said, "we have con- tinued lo carry out reconnaissance flight~ in northern Laos and fly combat support La guna·LSD Ring Cracked; tSee LAOS, Page t) Hickel Heckle<l At Princeton Police Vow More Arrests By BARBARA Kl\ETBICH Of ""' Delll' l'!ilt Sllff PRINCETON, N.J. tAP l _ Studen t F'ederal authorities today prcdicled ••--•• ts-•-·t-" d -h by Us more arrests will come art.er they <illl.IUen "'""" l;\j own a spe.,.,. . . · Be Th Tnt.erffir .Secrelaiy Walter J. Hk:liel=1n'-~swooped--tnlo-beguna aeh ursday and claimed lo have knocked over a $3 !'t which he proposed a federally funded en -million nationwide ring dealing in vlronment corps modeled arter the Peace manufa cture and distribulion of illici t Cor~. <l The se~etary managed to finish his rup. 1alk in Pf.loceton University's .Jadwin Raiding officers alleged that a Laguna Gymnasium Thursday night but many In home in Ateh Beach ileights was hca<l- the audience of 1,800 were unable to hear quarters for the illegal drug lrafrlc. him . In a seri es ot raids beginning at 10:4~ A'bout l(llJ'students. some dre.sscd a.s In-a.m .. 30 federal narcolk:s agents ar- dlans wearing buckskins. realhers and rested fi ve men and a \\'Oman .n LagLna vrar paint. tJ>artlclpatcd ln the protest. U~acr.. South l,,.1gu11a and Orange. ac- Son\c accusbd Hickel or 111nkl ng public ct.1rdinn to Daniel I'. Casey, \vcslcrn pronouncements on Ille ncCtl ror cri· rcg1q<1al d1rcclor of. the Fetlcrel Bureau ''ironn1cntal controls while privattily liefl· or Nnrc:otirr and Da11gcrou11 Drugs. ing out the cn,•ironmcnl 10 private Ju. The mispcl'lll are ch a r p: c d 1\•lth dustrJ, operating an LSD ''factory,~• " "cannln1 ,. pJan1'' 11nd n tlrug distribution network tha1 supplied LSD, hashish, marijuana Rnd PCP, a psychedelic drug les.s potent than LSD to._outletJ In Arizona, New York City. Boston, New-Orleans and Seatlle. Casey said that liP' from outside the st<ite set oU the seven-month in- vestigation lhat led to lhe headquarter~ of lhe drug operation in the Laguna area. The fedt ral officers. he said. were assisted by the Orange Co unty Olstrk:t Attorney's orfice, the Orange County Sherifr's Ofrice and the Orange Police Deparllncnt. Which 1nadc two of Thursday's arrests, Th r Laguna Bench P,ollce Dcrmrtmcnl ditl not particip ate In tl}e investig:ilion. f1Qr "1'3~ ii nollricd or I.he impendln~ raids, aCC1>rdlna to Police O\lef Kenneth Huck. • I • P1•ope.11ies. ~-.. -. ~ . .. .. • ••.(· 1. . . . Gum·ded ;DAI l Y Pl LOT By Boulders * * * 10' * * * • A crane and bu 1.1d01.1 e ·r· conUnUed fashioni ng• boulder bulwark +hill!\!< sea today to 1 protect . ~ '100,flOO Capistrano Be1oh properties ·or John .... FRIDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 6. 1970 Reynard, ~787 Stach RQad. • Rl!}inafd'1 home and nearby properties have been under Sil!ge from .the sea for days, pounded by a higti tide surf in a peculiar localized situation. · "· Orange County jail prisoner~ brought in for the emergency, neighbors. the.ifounty Harbor District and a contractor have worked to steru the tidal a'ction that han\- rnered away !Pursday night· and again !his morning. 3 Get $450,000 Fro~i Shot Clinics ' Reynard's seawall began to br"eak apart before his eyes and water swirled toward his door step. The house is atxiut 25 f~t from the: mean t\igf\ Ude tine. About 350 tons of rocks ' have been trucked Jn from Riverside at Reynard~s order with another 350 t.oris onihe way to make a permanent protec~e, barr1~r. "It hit us the worst,n said Reynar~. Three men ·, whOse lawyers told ia Superior Court jury that their ·doctors' vitamin shot clinic bad converted them into almost incurable drug addi cts were awarded a total of $435,000 in damages Thursday at the end of a five n1onth trial. • The panel filed back inlo the courtroom of Judge \Villiam S. Lee lo award $420.000 to insur..ance broker William R. Stevms or Anaheim, $106,000 to Santa Ana attorney Richard Cody and $10,000 to Joe Leves- que. 3 Garaen Grove contractor. Those damages must be paid , in vary- In( a~nts, by ·four ·doctors. who ·n~-e nperat~ ·,the Katella~Palmwood Micheal : Center in Anaheim. Judge.-Lee's ruling . .went againsl On .. Arthur J. Reynaud. "It's been about seven years slr>ee we ·were hit. It hits one place. one year and another the next. lt was a combination of current and tide right in fro nt or our place. ll did a litUe damage <ibout 1,000 feet north. It. undercut a . couple of patios." Reynard, a retired liquified petroleum 'Bonille, ·Clyde. ' gas company owner, estimated that seven feet of sand had been lost Jrom the beach In fron t of his properties, three lots Gang Captw .. · ·ed and two houses. • . Chris.Klinger, chief 9f operations at the . county nood co ntrol district, ,.;d 1wo .. or . In Mesa Roundup· three homes may be 1n danier depending - on how fast they work to sandbag or take ' ·· · other proteclfve measures.· Dy·ARTHUR.R. VINSEL He said 12 or t3 house.I were badly Oft~• 0•1" ~~"' 11111 ..... damaged In the area about five years Surrounded and facing 3 to I edds, four ago. criminal Suspects Including a BoMle and ?.1ansour Roshan, S. L. Yerington. and_p Bernard Keyser. ·Renaud and Roshan are today prar- tiring together in Carden Grove. Yer.· ington is retired and Keyser is now r.racticing in Los Angeles. - All four physicians formerly operat!d what was described during the trial.as "a shot factory run purely for profit .and gain .• , They were a c c u s e d of ad· minis~rJ!l.g_ highly _potefil v l t a m I n treatments to the point that tilt three: plainli(fs . ~ame ~d~ic.ted to ~ ·• .amphetam111e. . ~ -..-:i · ll was.! ·te&tified: that · thc1 inj~pona ... 'o[ ... ' amphetamine were . much higher thin'fft;~ normally• admjnisJ;ered .lo pa tiel"!t!-who ; use the drug · ~o. COJllbat appetite ·or<'.tot,' relieve mild ,depression. , · . ,.. All three men becariie unabli! to work L aii~ had to · undergo lerifithy• hospital treatment-. Stevens lord his '·insuranc~' , license and his business and'• Cody.,· described by his lawyers as "a Very .sick,· man." is today· confined lo a ·v:eteraos . hospital. . All three men, il·wai lestifled. went tl'.'I the clinic with the assurance by the ~sicians that the series or vitamin ·-trealrnenls·prescrlbea Would enable them to fose .welghl. · , 1 Clyde-st)'le coo pie waf'lted f r o m .. Instead. lh'er lawyers argued, th' y almosl lost their ininds and became dtul( addicts, "unable lo 'work; unab le to ef· rectively carty on their lives and bu.sines~ Aircraft Worker Shot _in Fig ht Over Game Bets An aircraft worker was shol early this morning In Santa Ana following an argu- ment over pool game bets. police re- ported. Douglas SCott. !6, of 1704 W. Chestnut St.. told officers that he had been play- ing pool In the Soul Club, 1820 W. Isl St., and left about 2 a.m. As he walked lo his car he was con- tronted-by an unidentified man-he hltd- reportedly won motley Crom Jn lhe po0I game \\'ho pulled t gun and demanded !ht winninas and any olher money he hsd. Thr victim told police he grabbed the Jrun and hit hiJ antagonlst In the face. The gun wenL o!f and Scott v.•as hlt In lhr rlghl arm. He said the gun was rtred threl' more times during the struggle before his as- sailant and several friends fled the scene . Scot( 11•as trcoted at the Otange County ~ledlci'll Cenlt'r for a nlinor fl esh \\'()unrl nod released. Police arc looklng ror the olher m•n on chargs of assault with in· lent to t..'OrnmH murder. ·- • lndependenCe, Mo. westward surrendered wiutout a fight today in Costa Mesa. Police . said an arsl!nal of loaded wea- pons, cash and1other -loot·Hnking them to' a series of holdups and burglaries was confiscated from their little rented house. and a sto len car parked outs ide. A large cache of d~ngcrou~ drug~ ~ more tha n 300 benzedrine tablets -1vas also seized in the 9:30 a.m. raid, during which the young woman suspect tried to escape. The trio of men was booked Into Costa t\1esa City Jail and the girl, captured by Det eolive Sergeant Clif(·McBride. was laken to Orange County Jail to await local charges_aod extradition. "They 'll probably be Wflntcd all over the coUntTYtiy lhe-trme e-gtneletypct $en!." said Detective Sgt. John Regan, one of a dozen lawmen involved in the. sudden raid . The suspect~ were captured at 514}:: Bernard St., where the young woman was apparently staying with one of I.he other dc[endnnls. according to initial In· vcsliga tion. They were identlrfed as Howard fl. Tl'Chlrhart, JI , and Pa tricio A. Jackson, 21. of the Bernard Street addres.s1 plus .James !!:, .Jackson, 25, or Independence. 1\fo., anti Jack C. 1\tatney. n. of Denver , Colo .. Police sa id. Sgl. Regan said I~ Jackson couple are • !Se• FUGmVES, r11< I) I and unable to really comprehend, until it was too late. what had happened to · 1 them." Orange Coast Weather The weatherman 's rnnking up for last weekend, promising sun- ny skies and a big temperaturr. boo$t, aided by gusty northeast winds. into the balmy 70's. iNSTbE TODi\l' The 49tll state tokes tl1c spot- llgh! OS ,,,, Ala.tkOll sholD oC Costa ftfe.•a's South .Coast Plo.m nears .• '1 /l tlt.e details are in to- rlo1/11 \\ltckenaer 6t Ction. h•llllt II c 1n11n1i. ' C"'9cll'lllt \I• 1 (l,llllllM )1·0 C1'"1c, ft (ftl1a ... •• II OMlll Nelkt• t ll .. lt•i.1 P.,. I "h• ... t• ,..,, ...... ltlN I~ "'-"" t.Al!Cltrl IS Mllllllo I Mttlllllt • ' I • • 1 . '· ,. ; r·-= • I DAILY "LDT 't FrldQ, M1rtll 6, 1910 , --UPI T•i.Mle Double .Jeopardy .. ···-·--· ... ,... --- Toro 'Wile 'i11 Capital . Mrs, Hanson , Oihers See k Word on Husbands From Wtn Sen1~1 \VASHJNGTON, D.C. -Four Soutbtrn California military wives who made an unprecederited trip around the world trylng lo learn U their captive husblUlds are dea<t or alive testified today in COnaress. The review of their early 1970 mercy mia110n before a aympathetlc House commit~ was also the flrlt time Wives of tu1pected prisoner• of. war held by North Vietnam spoke ln a form1J hear- ing. Mrs. Carole Hanton, of 24112 Blrdrock 0t1ve, El Toro, and her thr~e 1loQe-glrdl· tng companiohs were to speak during the day, along wllh Pentagon officials. Mrs. Han.soo's husband, Y..larine Corps Capt'. Stephen P. Hamon, was shot down .•une 3, 1967, on a helicopter medical evacuation mis.5ion over Laos. Neither be nor the other three mlltln1 n1ers. shot down in lhe war zone have been heard from, bul Mrs. Hinson believes she saw him in a monitored llanoi telecast. The women -undaunted by getUn&: on. ly sympathy and no actual help on their tiring trip -said upon return tn late January that they believe the mlaslon will 1).lve Ion,·raniina: humanitarian ef· fectl. • They were Invited to tell of their odyssey to major cities of the e11t and west, Convnunist BJoc and Fret World capltal1, by Rep. L. Mendel Rivera (0. S.C.) the comm\Uee chairman. f\1embers of his Armed Servich Com- mittee ~re also scheduled to hear As.sis.. tant Defense Secrttary Richard G. Capen ~r. release a Pentagon report on POW negotiations. Shaky Bandit ·Finds Guts, -'. Both U.S. and North Vietnam peace delegates are deadlock'ed on the emo- tional Issue involving the husbands of the four military wives and more ll1an 1,000 otter men held captive. Tiie four women, Mcluding Mrs. John K. Hardy Jr .. ol Covina , 1'1rs. Rooeevtlt Hestle Jr,, and /\-lrs. Arthur S. Mearns, both of Los Angeles, left Jan. 3, be~dlna east They vtalted Pope Paul in Rome, plus Egypt, Romania, India, LaOI, Japan and Russia 011 the relatively unproductive trip, llponsored by Twin Circles, a U.S. Catholic magazine. Efforts to re ach Hanoi failed and Mrs. llanson, Yi'hose husband has never setn their three-year.old son Stephen Jr., was rebuffed aa she sough t information from Ille PaU1et Lao. in Vientiane, LaOI. North Vietnamese authorities said Capt. llanson's fate v.• .. s no ca~cem of· theirs, since he \\'!ls shot ckM·n in Laos. and she was only made to stand in the drlvev.·ay of rtd headquarters there. The women never gained entry to the Sovlel capitol or Moscow either, beinJ forced to wait 12 miles oul!ide town in &· , shabby airport .transit hote!. . ' The town of Cordele, Ga ., twice escaped tragedy Thursday. Heavy \Vhile clouds of ammonia from a leaking tank car blow across the highway while, at the same time, a black piUar o! smoke rises from a Navy jet trainer that crashed' a few miles away, killing one airman. Hits Mesa Sto1·e £01· $347 ' The third time was a chann for a courage to pull a lun. None had official entry visas, but thell' quest was honored else1vhere and the1 hoped to be admitted to ftl oscow and talk wl{h officials, perhaps bringing indirect pressure on Hanoi. ·• LBJ's Chest Pains Vanish; First 'Good Night' Related SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) ·-The severe pain near the heart of Lyndon B. Johnson dJsappeared today and the former president had hi.II first "very sood night" or sleep since he entered Brooke General HospitaJ . Cardiologists were so encouraged by Johnson's progress in his battle against analna pectorls they quit watching hi1 every heartbeat with 1 n elec- trocardlograph monitor, "'.l'he doctor• plan to allow tht preai· dent more. limited activity today, depen- ding on how be reels,.. a mld~orntng medlc11 bulletJn said. "This would mean. gome walldn& around the bo1plt1l room." The advliory 11kl doclon ,.ported "'There bad brttn no epleode of 1tvtri pain In the pu\ 24 hours. "Prealdent Johnson hid 1 very good night. sleeping comfortably lhr.oughout the 11:30 p.m. lhrough 6 a.m. period. The doctors advised that President Johnson had some minimal discomfort In the left arm and chest after awakening this m o r n i 11 g but described it as a feeling of mlld toren!!I more than anything else.'' An electrocardiogram Wren l'I n Johnson, 61, was unchanged from the past two days. Doctors conUnued the former president an dru11 to thin his l)lood and lmootb his heartbeat and prescribed iS050rblde dlnitrate. 1 drug similar to nitroglycerine to dilate the blood vessels. · Johnson's pain hu been caused by a reduced flow or blood to hi• heart resulting from a farm of hardenlng of the arteries. Johnson"s wife Lady B.lrd, who left her huaband's se"enth floor hospital suitt for the first time slnce he was admitted ~1onday, said the fonner president was ''doing what his doctors tell him." But the physicians 1a1d the cheat pains, the reason Johnson entered the hotSpitll. prevented him from resUng. Johnson suffered the pains again early Thursday. The doctors described them as "severe" and 1ald he spent 1 "bad nlaht." But the doctors saJd the pains d\d not mean Johnson's condition w11 worse. ~y saJd it merely inttrfered with his rest. 11There Is no evidence of a worsening of the underlyln1 Mart dlae11e," said Lt. Col. Robert L. North, tile chief cardiologist at Brooke Gtntral Hospital. "I would like to emphasize again that our concern la 1lway1 that lhe pruldent 1et adequate rest and relax1tlon," North said. "Anything th.at interferes with that rest, such u last night's pa.in .tn the chest and ltft arm, is something we want to control." The fact Mrs. Johnson lert the hospital at al) reflected the fonner president's condition y;·as aa North described - ''satisfactory." "He ia feellng pn?tty comfortable," f\tra . Johnson 51ld. "I came into hia room 11everal limes (during the night) to tell him who sent greellngs an"d Clowers. .. There was some pain," she said. "Tl kept. him Crom having a comfortable night. He's a pretty lnttlllgent man and he's doing what his doctors tell him." She said the "doctors veey carefully" don't say when Johnson might leave the hospital "because they don't· know for sure." Mom Abandons Two Childre1t In Fullerton Two young children were abandoned by their mother at a Fullerton motel Wednes- day. She left a note saying, "they de- serve betler than me." Police aald the woman registered at the Country Place Motel IMO W. Orange- t~orpe Ave. Tuesday night. She gave her name as Theresa McDonald and her ad- dress as Houston, Teii:as. Police believe both the name an~ address are raise. The unsigned "to whom it may con· cern" note read: "I can't give them the things. they need on $125 a month. Plbse take care of them. They deserve better than me. Thank you." She listed the names !Ind ages of the children as David Wayne, 1, and Share.I Reene, 2. Mrs. l.fildred Purviance, owner of the molel, discovered the children Wednes- day morning when she noUced thal the mother's car was missing. "The bables were asleep," she said, "and f thoughl the mother h11d 1one for some food. When she had not returned an hour later l went back to the room and dlacovered the note." Fullerton paUce Sergeant Robert Braucht, head of the juvenl1e bureau, urged anyone with lnfonn1tion on the woman and children cotltad hl1 depart· ment .• The babies have bffn placed In protec-- tive custody at the county's Albert Sitton Home in Orange. Guard Called Out CHAMPAIGN, ILL. (UPI) -Gov. Richard B. Oc:llvie today recalled the 7:i0 National Guardsmen he had ordered to the University of llllnoia: ctmpw to control violent student demonstrations. nervous young bandit Who kept coming back to a Costa Mesa liquor store Thurs- day night · and linaJly worked up the Fron• Page 1· FUGITIVES ... wanted an warr1nl.9 l111Ued by authorities in · Independence, chdrglng her with forgery·aiid him with Armed robbery. A car reported sto_len at Kansas City. Mo. was Impounded too. He was alto booked on Suspicion of ,;ale ol dangerous drup at a result gf the amphetamine drug cache .found in the · Bernard Street home. AddiLional charges under which the four were booked include armed robbery. burglary, auto theft, and more counts may be coming berore the investigation winds UJ>. Detective Capt. Bob Green said today the four suspects are believed responsible for a wave of holdups and burglaries in Costa Pt1esa and probably elsewhere in the Southland. The exact evkience confiscated -and specific crlme11 involved -Vi'ere not !lated, pendlna further prosecutlon or the case. ~ "We picked up assorted stuff from burglaries .and robberies in Costa Mesa," said Sgt. Reaan, adding that a check was under way today to determine if they ire suspecta in any atber cases. Four guns, including two .32 caliber automatic pistols, a .32 caliber revolver and a 1awed-ofr 12-gauge shotgun were seized along with the other items. No reslstance wu offered. although the Jackson woman tried to get away and was halted with a sharp, gunpoint com- mand by Sgl McBride, Sgt. Regan said. "It would have been pretty difficult to struggle;" be said, noting the 12 armed policemen took the four by surprise. Sgt. Regan uld they had hffn sought for the pa!t ieveral da ys, but it was only this morning that they checked the Bernard Street address and found their quarry. He came 111 so often that clerk Gerald K. Kal6er, 26, hung up on police moments after being robbed ot $347, when he heard the front door buzzer sound off again. Ka iser told Officer Harry Ehrlich the balding. twenty-ish robber entered Mesa Verde Liquor, 1520 Baker St., three Umes during the evening. He came in about 8 p.m., askt d for an unusual brand of eastern beer the st6re doesn·t stock and then left. He returned at 8 :4~ p.m .. sel ected a common western brand and was refused .servi~e when he e<1uld not furni'h iden· tlfication to establish that he was old enoug.I) to buy. Kaiser said the shaky youth came back stilt another lime at 10 :50 p.m. and bought two IO-cent bags of candy, then shovi'ed a .38 caliber revolver and deman- ded all the money. The victim said he was ordered into I.he back room and called police when he tieard the bandit exit, but hWll up when the buzzu went off again. Kaiser \\'BS on the phone with his wile \\.'he n Officer Ehrlich arrived. Mysterious Fire Hits Viejo Home A mysterious fire did $15,000 damage to a new home In Ptllssion Viejo Thurs- day afternoon just before the new owners had planned Lo move in. Twenty-one Orange County firemen batUed the blaie at 26571 Morena Drive, for almost an hour before contalninl ii. for a time it threatened a ntw $35,000 home next door. The >iouse had been purchase! by Mr·. and P..1ra.Richard Graff of Fullerton who had planned to move in next week . Firemen said fa ulty wiring may have been the cause or the blaze but they could not be certain. An Investigation is under'" \Vay , The Ptfission Vltjo Company. which still had custody of the home, said they would make other arrangement3 for the Fullerton coople. North Vietnamese .pollry ca 11 a American PO\\'s war criminals who must ~dealt y;lth In direct fl('ace negotiations, while the U.S. government contends this i1 a violation of the Genev a Convention .• Only rarely does North Vietnam release the nan1es of its PO\V populace or allow them to write home, v.·hile It wi~ not make formal lists a\·ai\able to · responsible international organizations such as the Red Cross. Beach Families Protect Houses From Demolition Tllree familie s saved their homes from demolition \\'ith successfu l a pp ea Is Wednesday night against the Huntington Beach builatn'i . department's finding6 that they \vere unsafe. The Housing Board of Appra\s found that none of the houses in the old \Vin· tcrsburg area of the city was in danger of collapse and dlsmisi;ed charges against them. The owners, James \\'ood, 752l \Vashington Ave .. John R. Contreras. 16912 Lyndon St., and Louis Ortiz; lGt.!2 Lyndon St., agreed to make certain repairs to the structures. Unsafe wiring, unvented gas heaters. and dry rot in the eaves were among lhe conditions they agreed to correct. A fourth home the appeals board did find unsafe . The boan:I was told the owner, Mrs. Aurelia Luna of Santa Ana. was agreeable to having the house, at · _7522 \Vashington Ave ., burned down by the tire department but she didn 't know how to evict the tenants. The board instructed the city attorney's of!lct to advise Mrs. Luna on how this might be done. The board will hear appeals on three more condemned homes in the Win. tersburg area at 7:30 p.m .. March 15. They will be the final three in the group of 12 originally condemned by the building depa rtment. Small Fire Causes $2,500 in Damages Six Na'bbed in Separate A small flro. wt\ich ipread from the kitchen 1tove to nearby cupboards caua~ 52,500 worth of damage to the home of Ruth Dorward, 16621 1'11r\e L a n e , Huntington Beach, Thunday nigh!. firemen said the blate was 1mothered with two fire extinguishers. ~tost ·of the damage wa1 caused by lmOke and oo one was lnjured. DAILY PILOT H111tltttfM '"4ll ... ""9111 'eflrt Sn Cl.....,.. aJtAHQE COMT PUllllHIHG COMll'AHY R•btrt N. Weed il'rhlllitllf "'" il'lllllllhtr Jee~ JI , Cu riel Vkt Pr .. ldent encl 0-t M1n111r lhort111 Ke1~11 ldl!or Tlunl'\1 1 A. M11rphi11t M1r1ttlflD EdllOr Riclt11rl P. Nell lolltll.O••"flt Count, IEdlttr o ...... . Cotti MtH' aJ0 W•I lt'I' ltr..t Htwporl ltt(t>t !111 Wt11 81lboA lllllll•vl •CI l.11111>1 ltttfl: m F-1 Avtnue Hllfttlng-auctri: 1711S lt•U. llou!tvttl Stn Cltmtnlt: _. Hel-11'1 I t '""troo lletl MARCH UPHOLSTERY SALE BY DREXEL Narco Raids on Motel Featurlnq Drexel's Shelby Collection five adults and a 16-year-old glrl were arrested Thurtday night by Laguna Beach narcotics officers In two aeparate incidents coincidentally related by a motel address. At t :lO p.m. ofnce:rs arrcllted Charles Paul Hammond, 20, of Camp Pendleton and Mfchael Alexander Antonetz, 19, wh<> said he lived at the Ocean View Motel, IBM S. Coast Highway. The two were followed from the Taco Bell rertaur1nt to the etepl leading to the he11ch at the end of St. Ann'1 Drive where lhe arresl was made and six 'lids' (six ounces) of marijuana taken from Antoneti:, police claimed. Hammond was charaed with poa.se&1ion of marijuana and Antonetz w I t h poa1esaion of marijuana for ia\e. Pt1eanwhlle. the Los An11ele1 County Sheriff's Office advised the Laaun• Beach pollce department th at suspect& Mrested In Lei Angtles County with a stolen car, 1 COOCf;1\ed weapon and 34 Ilda of marijuana s1\d they had purchas- ed the drua at the 1™ S. Coast Hlahway address. Lagfna officers went to the motel at 10: 15. p.m., knocked on the dealgnaled d6' and wert greet with 1 powtrful .aroma oi marijuana, they report R~nnjpg Child Killed by Auto Barbara A. Shorey, 7, of Cypttss, was killed Thurad1y anernoon "'hen 11n1ck by a c11r on W1lktr Street, the California JUghway Patrol reported. CHP officers said o\'ltneast! told of seelna the child run Jnto tht> strtct fron1 behind a hedge •nd bel"g hll by a car dri ven by Ktnnt:th \\'. Allgate, 16, of La Palma. He was not cited. Tht girl, daughtti of ~1r. and Ptlrs. Ray Shor~dltd af a fr•c\lJred spine at Lln-eolD :nm.m1mtt.y H01plt.al. Buena Part. A March ~ up a plastic bag ol the drug and several marijuana cigarettes and butt.a, police slate. The officers arrested four occupants af the small room, Charles Thomas Yates, 1a, a transient : Susan Dolge Beek, 18, af Mahelm: Lynne Stephanie 1'111111, 19, of Rancho Santi Fe: and the 18-year-(lld glrl who was booked for lack of parental con- trol. The adult.a are chara:ed with po4session of marijuana. From Page 1 LAOS •.. missions for Uiotian fOrces when re- quested to do so by the ft()yal Laotian government." He said th•t tht tevt<l ~U.S. nperations In the air "has bttn il}Creaaeri only as the number of North Vleln_•mest In Lloe and the level of their aggress ion has in- crea1ed." Declaring that pta.ce remains the. hiirheal priority or the 1dmlni1tr1Uon, Nixon sald he disp1tthed lelters Frid•Y to SoY!t<t Premier Alexei Kosygin and British Prime MlnJster Harold Wilson, \.\'ho are coch1lrmen of the conference. rt.11ponsible for maintalntng the 19Gl GeneYa act'Ofds on Lloa. "I hope th1t I genuJne (iunt ff'lr peace In Woc'hina cln l'HiW btgllf." he Aid. i'YM Lao,, thill will require the: effor11 nl the Genev1 Conference cochalrmtn and the aignatory countrie8. "But moM of 111 It will require rtallsm and re11,onabltne11 from Hanoi. f'or II is the North Vietnamese, not we, who hive Th is exciting coll1ction has m•ny 1d.,•nt•g•s unm•fc.h1d in th• upholstery field, p1rticul1rly when it is f••· tur1d •t 11 11 pric1s. SHELBY ADVANTAGES COM~LITI PAI.IC LINE ... Ovff' 300 to choo1e from. SCOTCH•ARD PAIRIC PROTICTJON ••• •II l1bric.s 1r1 Scotchg•rded at no •ddi· tionel c:o1t. ALL FINI lj)UALITY PAIRICS . .. th e 11m1 price on •ny givtn pi•c• of fut• niture. HAND CONSTRUCTION All chairs & scfas •r• hend con1ttut+•d from th1 ·fram1 to t w•y hind tied 1prin9 C:-On1ftut· tlon. Arm cov1r1 er• provided •f no ••ftt coif. Skirts ar • pr0Yicl1d on many piec.11 at no 1dJition1I cost. Q.,,, 12 dtff1r1nt styles of ch•ir1, end 6 d iff•r•nt 1tyltl of sof11, & lo.,e111ts, 111 1t reduced p~ic11. ~ SALE PRICE $159. u . DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE . ' csc•lated the OghUng. Tod•y tllere "' I N T E R I 0 R S 67,000 l'jorth Vietnamese troops In this iimall country. There are no American ..,. troops then!." . NIWPORT BEACH .rol1t1lon1I Interior LAGUNA BEACH Nixon promised that in future, "We wlll 1727 Wtstcliff Dr., 642·2050 Oeslgntr• 345 North Co11t Hwy. 494-6.551 contlnlK! ta give the Amerk:an people the OPIN •AIDAY 'TIL f Avallabl.,_AID-NSIO OPIN PRIDAT 'JIL t . ' • fullell posalble ln(ormatlon on our In-,,.." T.tt ,.,_ Mett et ON• c .. llf'r 141.121J volvement, consiatent wllb naiUonaJ L--=~~~~~::==~=~~~~:~~:~~~~~~~~~~~:'.'.~~~~~~~=-" security." -· ----- • 1' " .I \ • f Huntington B~a~h EDIT)ON N~ Y. S-toc k s VQL. 63, NO. SS, 4 SECTI ONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA 1 FRIDAY, MAP.CH f 1970 TEN CENTS ; ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-· Beach CD Geared for Natural Disaster By TERRY COVILL~ 01 ""* 01ily ,1 ... S11ff Civil Defense was once an expression that brought forth images of little men in white hats .. blowing • wliistles •nd • of backy_ard bomb i:heltcrs. Now;T4ie' ~r has all but disappeared rromt\)t lillf.af··local resideuts. .. "We1'd:ia\'Jike' the tehn civil defense becauR)l•~ Nt a popular one. We're really .~ mere for.,Jlatural disaster noW:0 • eiplalned '{ince-Colller, who is ci\'il defense coordinator for the City of Huntington Beach. The beach city is one of the few in Orange County with a Iult, active pro- gram. It has $19,393 budgeted' for its of· lice of civil defense and disaster. Fountain Valley is more typica l of other cities. There. $1 .500 Is b11d&eted for civil defense, most of which is used for buyliig suri)lus equipment" from the federal government rather thaa sup- porting a day-to.day program. ' Collier's job involves A lot of pencil pushing,.strategy maki.1g and leaching. "A lot of my "'·ork goes into filling out applications for federal disaster funds ," Collier explained. Of course that only happens after a disaster. Last year one occurred -the heavy rains -and Huntt11glon Beach ex- pects to recover nearly $12.000 from the federal govemment for repa ir work forc- ed by the rains. "To get that money l have lo ""Tile out a series of requests, justify lhose re- quests then file claims with state and federal officials," Collier said. How long does it take to get the f~er1J money? "I don't know. We havena received It yet," Collier J•uahed· · Co°lller is a rather jovial fellow who doesn't take his job quite ao seriously as some men did during the time portable fallout shelters were popul1r. "Wo don'\ ,,.k pub~clty. Thoro'1 no ... sen.st scaring peoRle. tn this buslnM~ when you have an international crisis yoo gel a lot or phone calls." Another facet of Collier's work -when he lays aside the pencils -is plannina: strategy to handle a real emergency. The city his a 30-page disaster relief plan handy, mostly drawn up by Collier, a semi-retired chemist. lt.s use can be explained by ev ents of last year's rain and nooc1 scare. "Wt had !S.. DEFENSE, P•I• ZI Fight Sure Over Future Priorities Eyed Huntington Wo11 't Sign Lih1~ary Pact Of Air Base Council to Decide on Civic Projects A fight appears certain to develop over fuWre. use of Lo& Alamitos Naval Air Sta-oOn, .to be closed by the Pentagon in new d~ense cuts~ The city or Los Alamitos wants lo master plan the area and de\•elop it itseU, ·but Orange County Supervisors may launch action Tuesday to acquire ii as a county aviation site for light aircraft. The countY's Airport Commission has recommended that supervisors take i1n- mediate .steps to acquire the Los Alamitos iacllity for general aviation. The recommenda1ion is on the board 's Tuesday a4'enda. The land Is owned by the l>~edcral r.overnment and it is expected the <..'1>unty will·take its case to Washington to obtain the site for aviation purposes. LM•Alamitos has been ruled out by tht; F' AA -a1. an airport for commercial craft because of conflicting flight patterns with- Long .Beach· Airport. The. Los Alarilitos facility will be closed by JW1e 30, 1971•with the transfers begin· ning June 30. Thtre are 218 civ ilian cmployes at Los Alam.ilos who wlll be tramterred. In ad- dJtion, lhc cutback is expected to elimin- 11te 20 OposiLions al Seal Beach \Vcapons Station. Hickel Heckle d At Prince ton PRINCETON, N.J. !APl -Student dissidents shouted down iii-speech by U.S. Interior Secretary Walter J. Hickel in "'hich he propo5ed a federally funded en- vironment corps modeled aft er the Peace Co'l'O. The secretary managed to finish hi~ talk in Princeton University's .h1dwin r.ymnasium Thursday night but many in the audience of 1.800 were unable to hear him. About 100 students. some dressed as In- dians wearing buckskins, feather s and w::ir pa int, participated in lhe protest. NE W YORK (AP )-Prices on !he stock market continued lo sag in fairly active trading late this afternoon . (See quota - tions. Pages 2Go21 ). Declines outnumbered advances 793 to ~69 on the New York Stock Exchange. ,' • I • By ALAN DlRKlN Of lh1 01llr 1"11111 111H A showdown study session in which councilmen will thrash out Huntington Beach's $13.3' million civic improvements program opens ~1onday at 7:30 p.m. The council will hassle over lhe priority of each project. The climatic battle o; how to pay for the program "'ill follow . h.filiions of dollars and a possible oil tax. are at stake. Essentially, the city's administrative staff is pushing for a pay- as-you-go system while some businesse~ and land·h::ilding interests in the city arc kno "'n lo fa vor a bond program . Ralph Kiser, chamber of commerce manager. confirmed today that the chamber was polling its members this morning (or views on the program and its funding. "\Ye'll make 11 • 'flresentation lo 'the council when "'e get our members· riews" Kiser said. \Villiam Foster. general manager. and other top Huntington Beach Company of- ficials will attend the session although Foster was unsure 1hill morning whether the council ''will be seeking some input" on the program. Tht civic improvements cover the new rivic center ($6.1 mi!Uon). fire 5lations 1$1.27 million). rorporation ya rd 1S380 ,000), ti?ntral library 1$2.1 million ) :ind lhe audilorium and conference center 1S2.3 million ). Finance director Ben Arguello will l"l'Commend tlrat the $13.3 million im· oro\'cmcnts be paid for in a joint cash :ind bond pragram over a !~year period. He figures that. with the interest, thi s 1\·ould cost $18.9 million. The alternative that has been di scussed would be bonding the enlire program over 25 years. This cost has been estimated al $28.7 million. Lhe difference being the greater Interest. $9.7 million. Arguello's 1?9-Y·as-yoo-go system would call for extra taxation. The extra taxes would raise $4.& million revenue and $1.7 million would be bonded. •' Cease and Desist~ Furor Puzzles Scivagc Officials A hear~ on control or alleged cn- \•ironmental pollution emanating from sewage plant downwind from Hun lington .Harbour got under way today, with highly descriptive testi mony. The Santa Ana River Basin Regional \Vater Pollution Cqntrol Bo a r U <SARWPCB) convened in the r.1arina Community Center in Seal Beach to con- sider issuing an imm~iate cease and desist-order. --~ "Cease and desist what ?" is the essen- tial pica of the Sunset Beach Sanitary District. \vhose board contends it has no jurisdiction of the vaporous essences issued, onl y the \\'aler flow . Richard I~. Harrison, supcrinlcndent nf the embattled facilit y at \Varner Avenue and Pacific Coast Migh1vay, read a state· ment delinc::iting hi s board 's position . He suggesll!d the oflensi\'e odors ma y be rising from the posh marina suburb ilselr, noting the expensive homes sit ::itop recla imed marshlands which emh noxious hydrogen sulfide ga5. .. Naturally, there are certain odors in- cident to human waste, but they are fully dissipated before they reach the Huh: tingt::in Harbour :irca ," declared Har- rison . Huntinglon Harbour residents smell a contradiction. A parade of representati ves from seve ral Orange County agencies involved in the _fontinu ing controve rsy over the so· ca lled Jloney Pot testified as the SAR\VPCD Board deliberated. R. L. \Velis. inspeclor for the Orange Coun ty Air Pollution Control District. said he has been making the ro11nds-therr since Janua1r. 1961. encountering slight lo moderafe incfelicacy. "Sort of fl urine-dirty laundry odor," he explained. .Jiln Hobcrts. inl'CSligat ar for the Or::ince Count y 'iVater Pollut ion Control Oist nct. said he ha.~ inspected !hf' plant 71:1 111ncs and on 41 occasions defini tely .~n1clled son1e.thing offensive . .John SUver, 3942 Sirius Dri ve', Hun - tington Beach. subm.itted 18 daily logs kept by 18 different Huntington llarl>our people since F'eb. 9. 1n "'·hich th ey duly rcrorded the alleged laint of the at- mt>sphere . He also handed in a protest petition tSee SE\\.'AGE, Page 21 • UPI Ttll .. 119 CAROLE HANSON !FOURTH FROM Prisoners' Wives , Rep. Hebert LEFT). OTHERS BRING PLEA~ TO WASHIN~TON / ' Look 1t Picture of Enemy'& Humane Tre1tmtnt ·'1 • • Proposals on raisin& the additional revenue include: . -Us.Ing the 11.$0 a month h:ash col· lcction fee. -Using$ percent ol tht property tu. -A groS! r~ipts bus.ipess license fee. -An oil severanct tax of 3 cents a barrel. -.Increasing the hotel bed tax from 4 percent to 5 percent. , The oil tax alone, ll is estima t~. would raise $457.000 a year. One additional proposal that may be considered will be doubling the lrash ree 10 $3 a month and dropping some of the other taxes. When the trash fee was in· lroduced it was pointed out that it was a way of getting the homeowner lo pay for the costs o{ civic improvements. I{ the pay-as-you-go 1ystem i1 adopted " non-profit corpor1tion would likely be lormed. Two fimu r.xptded -to help would be Ult Dilli~m Corp.~ \h• \V. J. Mor111 Co. Ma yor of Beach Gets State Post On Quake Panel J\layor Jack Green of Huntington Beach \\·as appointed today to a state advisory committee on earthquake dangers. lie will serve four yeara as an advit0r to tge Joint Assembly-Senate Committet on'eismic Safety. The mayor will be on one of the group's five advisory com· mittees, the Post-earthquake Recovery and RedevelopL.ent Committee. Senator Alfred E. Alqpist D-San Jose ) who heads the joint com·mJttet, said C:rcen was picked becauSe of his service 111ith the Orange County Division of the League of Cities and because of his ex- perience in redvelopment projects . The committee· has a five-year charge frorn the state legislature lo make • st udy of seismic safety. "i\1y committee will be involved in 11hal we Clo after an earthquake or :;;imilar natural disaster," Green said to- day . Most Huntington Beach city officials .:i re familiar with earthquake studies for severa l faults run through the downtown ;area, including the Jnglewood-Newport fault whlc.h rocked l.Alng Beach in 1933. The city of Huntington Beach rtill Isn 't ready to sign a contract with the architect chosen to design the new $1 million city library. l'v•o weeks ago. the council authorized the admiolstrative staff to go ahead and retain the firm of Richard & Dion Neutr'a & Associates. The retainer fee was set at 11.500. But nothing has been signed yet. Development coordinator Tom Sevems said today that Neutra still is holding out ror ''total control" or development of the library and its environment. T~ city will not sign a letter of intent with the architect until after Monda y night's s.tudy session of the City Council when the capital improvemeat.s program wtll, bt discuued. "'Our 1'&•1 1Laf( has advi&ed us that to sirn •11)'1hinC ~w '!"!I!! i, lo ~iod us to a cpntrict thaf has Dot been fully woiked GI.It." Stvtm. laid. '1 ~ ·~ 1'hf1 t:OUAdl1s l~tlon to OHy Administrator Doyle Miiler that ~retain Nodtra COOllained ·Ult provblon that the .1cqon be subjkt to any condlUons con· 1ldered necessary by Miller. Miller is pu.sbing for schi:matlc desians from the architect on the library, co6t estimates, 1 phaslna: program on how the racllJty may be developed for J980 pr<>- jections and then for 1m needs. - Severns said Neutra '1 fee of 81~ per- cent was accepta~Je but the citf wished to retain more control over the budget, over actual construction and over the library's ~ ... "He is the finest architect in the world," Severn1 said, "but wt want con· trol over the con•trucUon project." The development coordinator eJplained thlt Space Utility ASIOCiates, of Lo~ Angeles, a subsidiary of lhe Dillingham Corporation, bad conduct~ footage studies on ltle size of lhe library and it!! requirements for 1980 and 1m. ;(L Monday's council BeSsion, proposal~ wlll be discussed on how to finance the $2 million library, planned lo overlook Lake Talbert in the 147-acre central park . A tax-exempt non-profit corporation is considered the most likely method. Dion Ne1.1tra confirmed that his firm slands ready to sign for the job. "\Ve regard it as a wonderful oir portunlty," he said. "I don't think there 's anything foreboding in our position. l don'l believe WI!. are asking for full con- trol. We are anxious lo work with the landscape architect and ot):lers involved to coordinate. development.'' Mrs. Hanson Tells Story At Congressional Hearing • From Wlrl!. Servlct8 \VASHJNGTON. O.C. -Four Southern California military wives who made an unprecedented trip around the -world trying to learn If lhcir captive husbands are dead or alive testified today in Congress. The review or their early 1970 mercy 1nlss ion before a sympalhetic HoUSI!. oommlttce was abo the nrst time wives of suspected pris<>ners or war held by North Vietnam spoke in a fonnal hear· jog_ __ • Mrs .• CaroJe. Hanson, ol 24112 Birdrock Drive, "£1 Toro, and her three globe-gird!· ing compan1ons were to apeik durioe Ute day. along with Pentagon offleiall. Mrs. Hanson's husband, Marlne Cof"Pl! Capt. Stephen P. Hanson. "'as shot· down June ,,3, 1.967, on a ~iellropter medical c1•Acuatlon mission qver La os. N,cltM:r he nor the other th~ mlaslDg "*°t down M the war zone have ~ · 'from. but fl1ra. Hanson saw him In a. monitored lecasi. t: wqmen -undi.unted by gelling on- mpathy arid no actu,I help on their g triJ'I -tald upOn return m lat~ uary that thty believe the m1sslo n will have long-ranging humanitarian ef· fects. They were Invited ln tt:l1 of their odyssey to major cities of the cast and 1vest, Communist Bloc and Free World capital.~. by Rep .. L, Mendel Rivers lD- S.C.) the commltlee chairman. r.tembers of his Armed Services Com- mittee were also scheduled to hear Assis· tant Defense secretary ruchard G. Cape11 .Jr. release-i-Pcnt11on Teport;n POW- ncgollations. - ' - BoUi U.S. and Nor~ Vietnam peace delegates are deadlocked on the emo- tiona,l issue involving the husbands of tht four military .wives and mol'e than l,000 other men' held captive. The four Women. Mcludina h.1rs: John l\. Hardy Jr., of Covina. Mrs. Roosevelt Jles,le Jr .. • Mra. Arthur s, ~learns. both al Los "· loll Jon. 3, hoadlng ' X -.. -~- SELDOM HEARD, BUT READY Civil D1f1nH Ch ief Coll ier 3 Families Sa ve Ho1nes By Protests ~ Three familie1 uvcd their homes: trvm tt,emolition with 1ucte1Sful a 'Pp e ~ l 1 Wedneaday ni&ht 11ainst lhe Hun\lnPI\ Beach building departm~nt~a finCUnas that they wert unsafe. Th• Housing Board of Appoa~ found that none or the houses in tbe old Win· tcrsburg area of the city was in d1nger of C1:11lapse and dismissed charges aa:ainst . them. The owners, James Wood, 7521 \Vashinglon Ave., John R. Contreras, 16912 LyndOn St.,· and Louis Ortiz, 16922 Lyndon St., agreed t o make certain repair!! to the structures. Unsafe wiring, unvented gas heaters, and dry rot in the caves were among the conditions they agreed to correct.' , A fourth home the appeals board djd find unsafe. The board was told tbe owner. Mrs. Aurelia Luna of Santa Ana. was agreeable to having the house, t 7522-Washington •Ave .• burned f)awn I})' the fire department but she didn't know how to evict the tenants. The board instructed the city attqrne)l"'s office to advise f\1rs. Luna on how thl:; might be done. The board "''ill hear appeals on three more condemned homes in the Wtn. te rsburg area at 7:30 p.m., ~1arch .25; They Will be the final three in the grou,p nf 12 originally condem~d by the building department. S111all Fire Causes 52,500 in Damages A &mall fire which spread from -U;ie kitchen stove to nearby cupboards eaused S2.Slll l'l'Orth o[ damage to the home of Ruth Dorward,. 16621 Mar ie L a n e , tlunUngtoh Beach, Thlp'sday night. Firemen said lhe blaze was smothered with lwo fire extinguishers. Most of the damage "''as caused by smoke .and no one was inj1,1red . Oran•e Coast 'M'eatller Tfle weatherman's makinc · up ror last weekend, promising sun· ny skies and a big temperature boost. aided by gusty northeast winds, Into the balm)' 70's . • -INSIDE -TODi\ Y --.- The 49th 11.btt tnkei the ..-poi. liah 1 as U1e Alo.fkon show at Costa ~r ew 11 South Coast Plo.to ' nears. All illc details ore in to- day's Weekendtf section. 111tll'll 1' Mlllllt 1.,_H C•Hlltllt J Mtii..I 'vHt H C11te•lflt U• r NtOMll ,.._I +,J C1'1111HIM 11"'7 Ofllllt C_,., t CMl'llCI 1" "tilt-It -.ti CrtH--' 7t S-'t l .. 11 Dull\ "''"'" • ,IOtelt ,,..,.. ... "'" i<tltwlll "'"' • 'T ... •ltltll " .,.·r:.::--... • .. :l ~= tr·i: """' """"'" 'l we--. """' , .. ~. Mtllll~ W111f N""" M Mtttllltl t WM...., »• ------~-" I I. H f1d'\¥-March 6, 1970 Feds V Ow More Laguna ~g Factory A ' es ts ly BARBAltA KREIBICR rtsted five men and 1 woman .n Laguna °' .,,. D.il'f '"'' '''" Betch., South 'lla11una aod Orangt, ao- F"'*-l .. -loday prtdlcted cotdlnli lo Daniel P. Caley, western nxn ar...u will come alt.r they reatonal director of the Fed<ral Bureau swoo-.a lnto Lamn'ia Beach Thur&dly ol NarcoUu: anil O,ngerowi ~· ~'" o-· The surpec1.s are ch 1 r Ced "ilh and cliiJQld to have knocked over a $3.S opi:rating an LSD "factory " a Hca.nnlng mllllon natlonwkle ring dealing in ' plant" and a drug dlslrtbt'iuon network mam1racmre and distribution of Ulicit ' that supplied LSD, hashlf;h, marijuana odrup. and PCP, a psyc.hedeJlc drug JeS3 potent ~ olncer~ alleged that a Laguna than LSD lo outlet! In Arizona, New York ~. f.n ~h Beach Heights was head· City, Boston, Ni:w Or Jeana and Seatlle. quartera'for the illegal drui traffic. Casey said that tips from outside the In a ltries of rakls beginning 1t lO:•S state set ofl the seven-month in- 1.m., 'IO Federal narcoUca agents ar· vestlgation that led to Lhe headquarters 'Bonnie, Clyde' Suspects Held . . . · In Costa :Me sa- .17 Al\TllUll 11. VINSEL . ~,_ p...y. ,."' s,.., Sumxmdid arid facing n. 1 odd•, four crimlnaf auspecll Including ·, Bcmnle and Clyde-ttyle couple wanted ( r o m Indeperidenoe, Mo. Westward surrendered without a fight today in Coata Meaa. Police 11ld an arsenal of ~ded Wta· ponal ~•sh and ~~r loot linking them to a· l«lff ~· bol!lllps and-burglari~ was conflscated·from ·their little rtnted house. aiid. i stolen car pa,rked outside. A ·1~1e cache .. of dangerous dnlga - more th4n 300 benudrine tablets -was 1Jso seized in tbe 9:.10 a.m. raid, during whicli-ille )'OOng'woiiiiii ;u;p.ct ·frie<no escape. "!be trio of i1'fli WU boofced inlo Costa Meaa City Jail aod the girl. captured by Detectfve Sergeant Cliff McBride, was taken to Orange County Jail to await local charges aDd extradition. Double Jeopardy of th! dru1 operat.ion in the La«una area. The ledural ofJicer1, he 51:id, were assi.ted by Ille Orange County l>lltrlct. Attorney"• Office. the Orange County S!Jerilf'I Office and lilt. l'!rJl!i9 Polle< Department, wlliCh made two of Thursday's arrests. The Laguna Beach Polict., Department did not participate in the Investigation, nor v.·as it notified of the Impending raid!, according to Police Chief Kenneth Huck. An extraordinary array or drug pro- cessing and s.hlppiflg equipment Btized in the raids iµcluded a comple~ laboratory for \be prod11<1lop of LSDI found In the be<lroc.m of a home 1t S8 Glas!l!ll St .. OrW1ge : a c&MJ.na machine, Used to &Ul drugs Jn pint cans for shipment across the country, found al 31401 F1tst Ave., South Laguna : and two hydrauUc presses tor shaping marijuana and hashish into kilogram bricks, found at 1094 Miramar SL In Arch Beach .ffolghl&. Casey s111ld the equipment was moved around the county at frequent ·intervaJ3, bul headquarters of I.he operation was alleged to be at tbe Miramar Street ad~ drtNl where two of the au!pects, Dennis Ingham, 26 and Jeffrey Newman, 21, v.·ere arrested. 'Arrested at the South Laguna address were Jessie Metbh, 11, abd hla )'fife, Ann tifeehiz, zo. The two suspects arrested at th Gla.ssell Street address in Orange 'A'ere Paul H. Newton, 23, and Stephen ti1cCarthy. 31. They are being held in that city. The other four suspects were taken directly to Los Angele5. Equipment selii:,d in the raids v.'as taken to the Federal Bureau of Narcotics q.fllce al 714 W. OIYJ'11pic Blvd., Las A:flgeles, along with drugs taken ..,.s evidence. These included 5,000 ~ I A tiswers Critics lets, and undetermined quantities of ar1Juana. hashlsh and PCP. Chemlcal1 used Jn the, manl.lf-_chlrt of the Mlluclnogenl were obtained frem legitimate drug supply hou5es , Clsey said, using invoices ltolen from the Jill! Brothers Chemical Company. "Early descripllons of HUI Brothers as a 'bogm' firm were tnmrrec:t," CUe.y said today. "It is a le.1it1mate finn and the Invoices were stolen.'' He said that one of the su.spectl!i, Meehii, is facing trial in Phoen.i,K on a charge of possess.Ing lt,000 LSD tablets and was free on bail. Nixon Says No Troops KEY BISCAYNE. Fla. (AP) -Pr.,i· dent Nixon made a detailed , 3,000·Word defense of American involvement in Lao! today and announced he il asking help 'ront Page 1 ~~~:~~a~ns!a .. lh: recrca· lion building, Dwyer School and the old high 5chool already selected if people near the Santa Ana River had to be evacauted,' .. he said. When the river was raging at ib worst. . • • Ill Laos from the Soviet Union and Britain to help restore peace in that country. Nixon a.cknowledged that in recent day! "there ha5 been intense public specula· lion to the effect that the United Slate.s in\'olvement in Laos has subst.anlially In· crea5ed in violation of the Geneva ac- cords. that American ground force5 are engaged in combat in Laos and that our air activity has had the effect (If escalating the conflict.·• Describing these reports as "grossly In· accurate," Nixon stated, "I have con· eluded that our fiational interest Will be served by putting the subject into pt:rspectJve through a precise description of oor current, aCUvities in LaOS." "They11 probably be wanted all ove:r the country by the time we get teletypes Rnt," said Detective Sgt . John Regan, one of a dozen lawmen involved in the sudden raid. The town of Cordele, Ga., twice escaped tragedy Thursday. Heavy \V hite clouds of ammonia from a leaking tank car blow across the highway while , at th~ same time. a black pillar of smoke rises from a Navy jet trainer that crashed a fe'v miles away, killing one airman. Collier had police and fire units ready 1" v.·am residents and evacuate them if nece5sary. "We al~ had people keeping a constant watch on the river. There was some rear it might break near the San Diego Freeway.'' The third major aspect of Collier's work is !raining. The chief executive ·said th!re are no American ground combat troops in Lace: and "we have no plans for introducing ground combat forces into Laos." He also stated that "no American sta· Uoned in Laos ha! ever been killed in ground combat operations." The suspects were captured at s141,'1 Bernard SL. where the young woman was apparently staying with one of the other defendants, aceording to initial in· \'tstigation. They were identified as Howard R. 1'schirhart, 31, and Pattlcia A . .l•ckson. 24, of the Bernard Street address. plus James E. Jackson, 25, of Independence, Mo., and Jack C. Matney, 32, o! Denver, Colo,, police a.Id. Sgt. Regan aaid the Jackson couple are wanted on warrants Jswed by authorities in Independence, c.barging her with forgery and him with armed robbery. A car reported 1tolm at Kansas City, P,fo. WIS Impounded too. He was al.!JO booked on suspicion of ti:ale ol dangerous drugs as a result ol the amphttamine drug cache found in the Bernard Street home. GWC's Theater Group Performs "The Case of the Golden Sagel" will be presented today and Saturday to Anaheim and San Die go School children by Golden West College's popular children's theater group. 'l1le first road tour of the eight.member group was made possible by a $75 gift to lhe college drama department by the HunU nl(lon Beach Junior Woman'a Club. Written by former Golden West student Peter Conway. the play will be performed at Baden Powell School in Anaheim and the San Diego Public Library and San Diego ChJldrens The'ater. !\faking the trip with Charles Mitchell. drama in1tructor, are Kria Wilson. Renata Florin, Roland Barajas. Barbara Shore5, l\farion Christie. Larry Goldberg. and Laurel Burne. DAILY PILOT OtA.Nt;I COAST l'UILllHING COMl'AN'f Jtob•rt N. W11d l'r9tldt lll '"' F'lltllb~ ... J1,1r JI. Cv1l1v Vitt l'rtsld.,..I t!\11' Gt111rt! M1n101r Tliom11 let.1~a Edi to• lh1m11 A. ~vtpliino M1,...g;ftg ffltof • Alb1rl W , 11111 ~UOCltlt f~• O' H111th19te• '"'lrl Offl1• 1717S lo•cli loi;l1Y1r.J M•ili11g 1t.dd11t1: ,,0 . 101 1•0. •1~~1 Ottiet Off11" L~Ou"" l111:t1: U2 F'orttl ~"'~"' (0111 M-; nG Wftt l1y """ lolrwpo<t llllCll' n11 WHI llllloit llOUl•ver~ 141" Cltrnwii.: JOJ North Iii (.amltlO II.M l OAll.."l'-1'11..0T. wt1l'I ~le. ~ n.. I Ntwt·P'rn&. S -''*"" dt llV «t"t '""' '"" Ill ... r111 ldlt""-flt' l..tt~ 1.-cf!, H"""'°"' MKJI, CO." ~. H\llltlftttorl -..Cti lllf ,_Nin Vtlley, lloftt wllfl M t11llMI .. !!......, Of•"ft CM1t hlilltfll"I CtmMny ,,111ttn1 lllt"lt ,,.. at '211 W..t 81111H IM,. NtWflOl'I ho<fl, 11\d UO Wttt 11'1' •trttt. (es.11 Mttt. T1l.,.1M f714J '42...fJJI ""'Wllf•••r C.tl 140·1 221 Cl..wJM A'-'tbt11t M2·1671 e.vr""i. •••· Ot•• ua11 l'\lllll•fll!lf ""'"""'· Ht flfl0'9 ""ltt, 1111.osltOlllM. •Uotlll 1'1111111' et H-1'-11-. Plwtll'I -v .. f....-Wof W!rriout 1111«111 ,.,.. """ .... ef CW'J'l'llflt -· JttW tlffl ....... 1'1111 ol NtWMn a.di •llf '8tl• ,,.,...,. (llllf"!'llll. Sl/lllKl'ltttlM W ctffltr ftM l'l'lll'lttil'(1 'Y !NII U.to "*'lflf'tl ~u1.,., ,...~-&Ult 111111111ur. LBJ's Chest Pains Vanish; Fir~t 'Good Night' Related r SAN ANTONIO. Tex. (UPI). -·The severe P{lin near the he.art or Lyndon B. Johnson disappeared today and the former president had his first "very good night'' of sleep 11ince he entered Brooke General Hospital. cardiologists were so encouraged by Johnson's progre5s in his battle against angina pectorls th'Y quit watching his every heartbeat wilh an elec- trocardiograph monitor. "The doctoNr plan to allow the presi· dent more limited activity today, depen~ ding on how he fee.ls." a mid.morning medical bulletin said. "This would mean some walking around lhe ho5pilal room." The advisory said doctors reported "There h·ad been no episode of severe pain in the past 24 hou!'ll. "Preaidenl Johnson had a very good night. sleeping comfortably throughout the 11 :30 p.m. through 6 a.m. period. The doctors advised that Pre5ident Johnson had .some minimal di5COmfort in the left arm and chest after awakening this m o r n I n g but described it as a reeling of mild soreness more than anything else." An electrocardiogram f.;lken on .fohnson. 61. was unchanged from the past l\'.'o days. Doctors continu~ t~e fonner president on drugs to thin hi~ blood and timooth his heartbeat and prescribed i50.!lorbide dinitrate, a drug ~Jmilar 10 nitroglycerine to dilate the blood Ve!5el.!!. Johnson '5 pain has been caused by a reduced flow of blood to his heart result ing from a form of hardening or the artertes. Johnson's wife Lady Bird, who left her hu5band's seventh floor hospital suite for the fir5t time since he wa! admitted ~1onday, said the ronner president was "doing what hi! doctors tell him.''. But Battle of Bands Auditions Set AudJtlons ~\.art Saturday at Golden We.5t College for a ~larch 2& "battle of the bands" show at the school. Local bands will put their best sound fo~·ard in an effort to gain a spot on the li~t of five for the J\1arch 28 $how. lnc::en- Uve for the battle Is the promise of aJ1 -audition with a major recording company for the winner. . li.larch IS-is-the last chance ~nds will ha r~ to enter the local auditions. The bend battle j5 h911dled by Ken Frawley and Chuck Fareno. They may be phoned at 5~9-3586 an<I 637·5106, re5pectively. for further audition information . Tl'le ~tarch 28 sho'A'. a "Come Tc.ge.ther," 'A111 feature five bands playing conlinuous:ly from 8 p.m. to mid· nl&hl for the dancina pleasure of all high school and colleg8 sludents in Oranae COu\1ly Ad mhsion prlc:e to the dance tif11rch 28 la n ptr couple. All proettds will 10 10 the ti1arcb o[ Dtmta batUe aaalnst birth delecta. the phy5iclans aaid the chest pains. the reason Johnson entered the hospital, prevented him from resting. Johnson suffered ON! pains qain early Thursday. The doctors described them 85 •·severe" and said he spent a "bad night." Jaycees Name Bonf a to Head DSA Program City attorney Don Bonfa has befn nam· ed chairman of the judges panel for the Huntington Beach Jaycees distinguished service av.·ard.s. The awards will be. presented al a ban· quet scheduled for 7:30 p.m. March 24 at lhe Sheraton Beach Inn. Dr. Max ftaf. ferty, state superintendent of public In· struclion. will be the keynote 5peaker. Other judges wUI be Dr. R. Dudley Boyce. president or Golden We5l College. Peter Horton. president of the chamber or commerce. and tilayor Jack Green. Jerry Vaniman. chainnan of the Jaycee project. said· the award Is made to men and v.·omen between the ages of 21 and ~. who have made exceptional community contributions. One winner and two runner5..up will be selected . Fourtli of July Parade w Ho1ior Deecls of Youth ''Achievements of Our American Youth' 'is the Iheme 11elec1ed for this year's Fou rth of July Parade in llun· linglon Beach, according to the Jaycees. coordinators of the parade. Banner headings in arts, sciences, com· munity ser\'ice, patrioUsm. education, religion. history and sports will divide en· tries in California's second largest parade. 110\V In its 66th year. "E:.:lfa effort will be placed on decorated floab and free parking for spectators this year," Jack Tatham, publicity chairman for the Jaycees, an- nounced. Starting limt Is ti a.m., with parade m•J>S 1vailable al ~kW tnromatton booths. "A longer fireworks display -one hour .as approved by the city council -will also be featured," Tatham old. The city of Huntington Beach pays for the parade while the Jaycets run it. The budget b: $14,00l'.l this year. Help during the parade I! provldtd by v~rious local clubs 85 well as the El Toro ~larines and HuntlngtOn Beach Police Otpartmen~. f"or Information on ·iht parade or the 'A'tek of celebration, write to Jaycees. At· tenUon : Parade, P.O. Box 289, Hun· t[Jjglon Beach, Cilllornll Cll613. ·--··---·--· ---· F ro11a Page J SEWAG E ... bearing signatures of 230 dO'A'Tiwind re5idents of Huntington Harbour an d the more picturesque Sunset Beach area. Those documents urge l5suance of an immediate cea5e and desist order. but the Sunset Beach Sanitation Di!trict :say5 it can only act against water. not air pollution. Harrison, as its spokesman. said the occasional rotten egg odor his board blame5 on Hunlington Harbour's pungent marsh foundation is supplemented by animal life and indu5lrial waste in the shimmering waterways. Some of it, he charged. comes from the U.S. Naval Weapons Station to the. northwest . - Huntington Harbour residents whose trim sailboats and cruisers have OC· casionally1collided with floating objeets know the pollution comes f r o m somewhere and want it stopped. Te5tlmony v.·as scheduled to rt5wne after lunch, which was anticipated to be light, based on the heavy texture of the morning's debate. .. You know, every employe of 1 tax~ supported in5titution i5 automatically a civil defense "-'orker. So we have to train them in finit aid, re5Ctlf: Opeations and other useful item5," Collier explained . He also gives lecture5 and shows films for boy scouts, girls scouts, and many civic groups. Stored in Collier'5 little office in fire i;tation headquarter5, are suc:h items a5 gciger counters. maps, and various elec. tronic equipment. "We also have equipment to se t up an army-type fitld ho5pital with 200 cot.a and equipment for sutgery. Some of it is stored here and some at Los Alamitos race track.·· Los AlamUos race track'? "Well , It's hard to get storage for these thing!," he explained. \Vlth the war and bomb shelter panics subsidJng. Collier 5ays he doesn't need to concentrafe on war.type civil defen5e. "A disa5ter Is a dl!aster, no matter what the cause. If you are prepared for one you can react to the other," he said. A shortage of basements In Orange County ha5 also stunted the fall-out 5helter panic. In Fountain Valley 8 high water table prevents construction of many basements -they'd be flooded. Giving pre<:ise figures, Nixon said there were currently. 1.040 AmeMcans,' both service personnel and cNjliaos, in Li.OS but that only 616 of the!e are dir~ government employes. · -·· ") "U.S. personnel in Laos during the pest year has not increased," he eaid, "while during the past few months. North Viet. nam has sent over 13,000 additional com: bat ground troops into Laos." The President 5ald U.S:alr opei'aliotls In that Southeast Asia country have ·as their first priority the interdiction Of a conUnuing flow of North Vietnam!se. troops and supplies across the Ho 'Chi Minlt Trail complex in Laos to 'join the fighting in South Vietnam. '.He reported that in 1969. this flow totaled about 10,~ men. "In addition to air operations on the Ho Chi tiUnh Trail." he said, "We have cool tinu ed to carry out recoonaissance flight! in northern Laos and fly combat support mis5ions for Laotian force! when re· quested to do so by tbe Royal Laotian government ." 1 He said that the level of U.S. operations in the air "has been increased only aa the number of North Vietnamese in Laos and the level ot their aggression hu in· creased." MARCH UPHOLSTERY SALE BY DREXEL Featu rinCJ Drexel's Shelby Conectlon Th is exciting c~ll•ct ion h11 many 1cfvanl19es unm etc hecf in the upholitery f i•lcf perlicu/t rly 'Wh•n it is f1a. tur1cf et 11J1 pr1ce1. ' SHELBY ADVANTAGES COM,LITI FAHIC LI NE • .• over 300 to choo11 from. S~OTCHliARD FAIR IC PROTECTION · .• ell fabrics ere Scotchgerd•d tf no ecfcfj. t ional co1t. ALL FINI QUALITY FAIRICS • : . the same pric• on a ny given pi•c• of fur-n1tur1. , HAND CONSTRUCTION All ch1irs & sof11 ere tl and construct•cl from t~1 freme to 8 w•y ht 11d tied 1prin9 c&n1tr1.1c· t1on. Arm Cover~ •r• provid1d et no. 1rlr1 co1t. Slcirts a r• provided on m4ny piec•• et no aclditionel cost. Over 12 different 1tylts of ch1ir1, end l difftrtnf 1tyl11 of t of11 , A leve•••t•, a ll at reduced prices. .. SALE PRICE $159. .... DEALERS FOR: HENREOON DREXEL -HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH , 1727 W11tclllf Or., 642·2050 •. OPI N 'llOAY 'TIL t ' -· \ INTERIORS Pr0l111lentl fnt1rler LAGUNA llACH ' Desl9ner1 34.S Nt rlh Coett H'wy Aval!abfo-AID-NSID OPIN "'°'' ill t r1t ... Tll1 "-M• ef ~ C...., 14 .. 12'1 494-6551 I' I I ' ·I i , I 'I ·I i ' SURF BORNE ON HIGH TIDE POUNDS POCHE AREA Wooden S.aw1ll Fronting Beach Ro.a Homt1 Reduc:td to Splinters I W orkmenContinueFight l Against High Capo Seas • -. A crane and b u 11 d oz e r continued fashioning a boulder bulwark against the &ea today to protect the $100,000 Capistrano Beach properties of John Reynard, 35787 Beach Road: Reynard's home and nearby properties Jiave been under siege from the sea for days, pounded by a high tide surf in a peculiar localized siUJallon. Orange C.ounty jail prisoners brought in for the emergency, neighbors, the county ljarbor District and a contractor have 9/0rlred to .stem tl1e tidal action that hahl· mered away . Thursday night and again thi!: morning. · Reynard's seawall began to break -.part before his eyes and water swirled toward ,his door step. The. house is about 2S feet trom the mean high tide line. About 350 tons of rocks have been trucked ·in ·from Riverside at Reynard's crdtr with another 350 tons on the way to make a permanent protective ba rrier. ·'It hit us the worst," said Reynard. "It's been about seven years since we were hit. It hits one place one year and another ttie next. It was a combination of current and tide right in front of our place. It did a little damage about 1,000 feet north, it undercu t a couple of patios." Reynard; a retired liquified petroleum gas company • owner, estimated that seven feet of sand had been lost from the beach fn U:ont of his properties.".three lob ·and tWo bouseS. C!u'is K'linger, chief of operations at the C"Ounly fiood C'Ontrol district. said two or three homes may be in danger depending on how fast they work lo sandbag or take Other protective measures. He said 12 or 13 houses were badly damaged in the area about five years ago. Rallies Quiet at ·uc1, OCC De~pite Speakers' Urging Two rallies held at Orange Coast OIUeee and UC Irvine Thursday failed to spark any student demonstrations as 11peak~rs exhorted the crowds "lo do something -don't ·just sit around and talk about political repression and police brutality." Both rallie!, prompted by Sherwood Forest, an underground newspaper now beinl published in Santa Ana, u·ere con· ducted peacefully. About 700 students at OCC and 300 at UCt heard a variety of militant speakers discuss police arrests in campus disorders at UC Santa Barba'ra and Cal State Fullerton. · · The OCC rally broke up after •s m!Out.es when Dean or Students Joseph Krolli told organize rs they would not be Allowed tO OO!d a discussion with students from .. Santa Barbara and CSF in the auditorium . 'nle UCI raOy was held adjacent to a \ Bank of America branch at the Irvine Town Center. Organizers. who called thtmse.lve! Praxis Axis Action Faction, llid the bank site wa1 chosen to un· dencore protest against the arrests in ·Closure of UC Asked by Groups ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two conserva. tNe yout h groups are demanding lhal the UniVe11lty or Calilomla. described by Uterp JU the setting for recent "abortive Bol.Shevlk upriaings," be closed down. Jn statements made hert Thursday by Scott Winchester of, the Orange Coonty Y.uog. Americins !Of Freedom, ·he also ~.for abolition of property taxes and "separation or school, media, church and ace:.•• . HI.I vie:Wa were shared by Frederick Yiiune Ind Pau! Croshler of 5anta Bar· bat• County'• Committee OppoSJng Big· Ot;ry and ~clsm In America (COBRA). , YOunj •and Croshler both are sophomores at UC Santa Barbara. Wincheater asserted the gove:rnment is lhe, liaiic enemy or lhe people. adding: ''The' abortive Bblshevlk uprisings stagL'd by tupayera' money at !he uni versity wUI no Jongf.l' be tolerated." fnitead, the 2S-year-old dent.altuppllu •lemur iuaeattd that parents send Ihm dllldren to private ICbools. connection with last week's disturbances at UC Santa Barbara, when a Bank of Amtrica office was burned down . Th roughout I.he rally. the bank did a br;isk business wi th student customtrs cashing checks, and depoiiUng funds. At one point during the 90-minutes of speeches liberally sprinkled with four-let· ler words, a spcaker ·urged the crowd to stage a ''loOk·iil" al the bank. The crowd had dwindled to about 150 and they prtss- ed their noses lo the bullding'a plate glass "'indows for a few minutes before strag- gling off. Santa Ana Black Panther Mike Lynem urged the Cf'Dwd to attend a Panther rally scheduled Sunday aft"emoon at Jerome Park in Santa Ana In preparation for the trial of Arthur League who is charged in I.be killing June 4, 1069 of Santa Ana policeman Nelson Sasscer. Lynem called upon students t o demonstrate a show of (orce by attending League 's trial which opens Monday morning Jn Santa Aoa superior court. "The people are going to keep tbe pigs from committing constitutional murder on brother Arthur .League," he stated. Other spea~ers, including Donovan Dorsey, a UCI student and Don Elder, alleged publisher of Sherwl)Od Fortsl, called upon the lisUess audience to "moJ:>llze and organize for the reveJu(lon against police brutality and political repression." At the conclusion of the two-hour pro- gram, about 20 students were left ia the audience . .· B1~nning . Child -. Killed by Auto Barbara A. Shorey; 7, ol Cypreu, was killed Thursday a!ternoOt\ wh<n struck by a car on Walker Street. the California Highway Patrol reported. Cf!P officers said -N1l1)esscs told of seeing the child run Into the street from behind a hedge and being hit by a car driven by Kenneth W. AJgate, 18, or La Palma. He was nol cited. The &ld.-daugbter-o! Mr. and Mrs. Re)' Shorey, died of a frKtured 1pint at Lin- coln Community HOBPlta~ Buena Part. . . . . . " 2 Children Abandoned By Motlier .Two Younc chUdren were abandoned by thtlr mother 1t a Fullerton m<>UJ Wednes- day. 5be !ell a note aaylll(, "they de- .serve betlu than me.'' Police said tbe woman rqt.,tered a,t the Country Place Motel IMO w. Oraoge- thorpe Av~. Tuesday nll:ht. She gave her Qllme as Theresa McDonald I.rid her ad· dreu u Houston. Tu1s. "Pollet beHeve both the name and address are false. The unsigned "to whom it may con· cern" note read: "I can't give them the things they need on. $125 a month. Please take care ol them. They deserve better than me. Thank you." · She listed the name1 and ages of the children as·David Wayne, l, and Share! Reene, 2. ,. Mrs. Mlldrtd Purviance. owner of th~ motel, dJJcovered .the clrlldren Wt'(fne,.. day morning· when ahe nolked that the mother'1 car wu m.lsaing. "The babi.S were aslf;f:p," she said, .. and I thought the rripther had &OJle for . some food. When she had not returned an hour later 1 went back to ·the room and discovered the note ." Reds Make Demands BERLIN (AP) -Communiat Easl Germany disclosed today It has demand- ed that Chancellor Willy Brandt at.ay out ol West Berlin if he comes lo East Berlin to talk with Premiei Willy Stoph. The E1:st German disclosure revealf.d the point over which pce.limlnary la.lks for a Braadt-Stoph meeti!ll are deadlock· . cd and indicated that the suspension of those talks may be inderinite, unless the West-Germans give in~ • f•fd!'/, Mor<! 6, 1970 I H OAILY PILOT 3 •vitamin~ Add~~~, SA Man Shot 3 Get $450,000 From Sliot Cl' 1 ics In· Battle Three mM whose lawyers told a Superior Court jury that their doclors' vitamin shot clinic had converted them into aimost Incurable drug addicts were awarded a total or $435,000 In damages Thursday at the end of a five month trial. The panel flied back into the CQurtroom of judge William S. Lee tQ award $4.20,000 to insurance broker Willlam R. Stevens of Anaheim, $105,000 to Santa Ari.a attorney Richard Cody and $19.000 to Joe Leves-" que, a Garden Grove contractor. Those dama ges must be paid, in vary· ing amounts, by four doctors who once operated the Katella-Palmwood l\.1edi~al Center in Anaheim. Judge Lee's ruling ?.'ent against Or!. Arthur J. Reynaud. l\.fansour Roshan, S. L. Yerington and Bernard Keyser. Re,naud and Roshan are today prac- ticing together in Garden Grove, Yer· ington ls retired aod Keyser ts now practicing In Lo6 Angeles. All four physicians formerly operated what Was described during the trial as."a shot factory run purely for profit and gain." They were a c c u s e d of ad· ministering highly potent v i t a m i n treatments to the point that the three plainWfs became addicted to liquid amphetamine. tt wa s . testified that the injections of amphetami~ were much higher thu is normally administered to patients who use the dnig to combat appetite or to relieve mild depression. All three men became unable to "'ork and bad to undergo lengthy hospital treatment. Stevens lost his insurance Uctnse and his business and Cody, described by his lawyers as "a very sick ma;," is today confined lo a veterans hosp_ital. .AIJ tbiee men, it was testitled, went to the cllnlc: with the ass ance by the physicians that lhe sc es of vitamin treatmentJ prescribed uld enable them to lose weight. Instead, thf:r lawyers argu!d, th 'y almost Jost their minds Ind became drug Addicl.S, "unable to work, unable to ef- fectively carry on their lives and business illld unable to really comprehend, untQ It was too late, what had happened to them ." Their action 1gainst the four doctors was riled five years ago and de.ma.oded at that time a total of $13 million in damages from the defendantll. Stolen Pendleton Rifles Recovered Ten M-1 4 rifles stolen Feb. 28 from a barrack5 at Camp Pendleton were turned up by Los Angeles poll«: Wed nesday night. Officers of the Southwest Division, who had participated in an investigation con· du"cted by the FBI, stopped a car in the ij2_00 block of Crenshaw Boulevard and placed the occupants, a young ~farinc and three other men, under arrest alter finding the missing weapons in the vehi- cle. Pvt. John H. Piper, 21 , of Los Angeles, 1vas charged with reeeiving the stolen rifles which disappeared from a rack in a barracks building near the Camp Pendleton air field. A spokesman at Camp Pendleton said today that Piper, who has been staUoned at the Marine base, bas been on · leave since March a. Over Betting An aircraft worker wu shot early this morning in Sama Apa following.an argu, ment over pool gamo bets, polioe n .. P,Orted. • • · llo<Jglaa S<ott, is, of 111H w. CbtslnUt St., told oHken that be hid l!ffll pl•Y· Ill( pool In the Soul Club, ·1a20 w. lot '$1., and left about 2 a.m. , As he walked to his car he wu ~n· fronted by an unidentified man he liad reportedly won money from in U>e ~ game who pulled a gun. and demarided the wtnrUngs and any other money be. had. The victim told police he grabbed the 1 gun and hit his antagonist in the face. The gun went o!J and Scott wu hit in the right ann. He said the gun was fired three: more limes during the .strUggle before bit U· sailant and several frl~nds fled the acenf.. Scott was treated at the Oran1e County Medical Center for a minor fleeh 1JOUnd and rt1e.ased. Police are look1ng for the other man on charp of assault with in- tent to comm.it murder. Laos Officials Okay More News Coverage VIENTIANE, Laoo (AP) -The Lao- tian government has ea.led ill restric- tions on r.ews coverap of the war in Laos and organliod a trip by tlO foreign co.,...pandenb to •II five mllttuy regions of the country. Thi b1p tbrtl Saturday . Plymouth thinks when you pay close to $2,000 for -a-car, you're entitled to nearly 50% more brake lining than Maverick! . \ More slopping power at your . rommand.Duster's safety s1my begins with its 153.4 square inches of effective brake lining il181. Stacked up a~t Maverick's I~:~ inches, it adds up to plenty of braking authority when you f)ced il Bui thars Only the slart! Tonion bar suspension. Duster offenr the added luxury of tor.;ion bar suspension up fron t inslea d of coils like you get on mast cars. A gas iank thars protected by lhe lrunk floor, instead of a gas lank that is lhe lrunk floor. Bonded· brakes for · exlra-safety. A longer wheelbase. ~er tires. And 352 pounds of extra weig1ii for stability! More horsepower. Dusrer ' gives you 16% more horsepower than Maverick; 5 ~ seating ins1ead oi 4 and nearly liaJI again as much trunk spare. More colors, more options, more of everything. So order yourself a Duster-the one with safety thars built-in. • ' DUS'I 'El{ Plymouth makes it! FOR A DARING DEAL-SEE lllA T DARING YOUNG MAN-YOUR PLYMOl!IH DEALER-lODA'll ' I I 1 --. --------·------------,--·---------.. ---- 4 DtJlV PILOT 1 frldiJ", Marth t., 1970 Rap• Governor . • Thurmond Blasts -• Attack on Bus · t(~I... ., tlMo 0.llY f"I.. tt1ff) LAMAR, S.C. (UPI) -Sen. Slrom Thurmond (R-S.C.), charged te(lay the governor could have called for federal ass~tance in dealing with a howling mob Foilowing an · alteieation be· of whiles that attacked and overturned · tween two young v.·omen over the school buses carrying Negro students to treatment of animals, · Nevada their classrooms. Chief Justice Jon Collins was A spokesman for Gov. Robert E. heard to comment, "It is pretty re--McNair, however, contended a federal volUng when one person in the marshal sat in' his car and \\'atched while the mob. armed with chains and ax course Of a fight bites off another handles, attacked the bwies. person~s ear and then spits it out." "The ,spectacle of a school bus filled e with students being attacked by adults has sickened South Carolina and the na-.. Si% NeW York button paakerS tlon," ThurmO'nd said . in a statement were bU.rted Wider hundreds of released in Columbia. "The situation in thousands of buttons w.ben a metal Lamar was tragic." stOfage Shelf collapsed and fell on The criticism by Thurmond, who once them. Poll~e aod coworkers .dug headed.a political revolt over civil rights them out and three had to be treat-anit' sta'tes rights, came while school ()f-ed at BeUvue Hospital for back in-· ficials' sCheduled a special meeting to juries ·deal with the reopening of Lamar Hi1h · • School, closed by Tuesday's violence. COIUally sipping a glass of cham- pagne, ;azz trumpeter Al Hirt told n.ewsmen ·that he has resumed play· tng .. his horn just one month after he was hit in tli.e lip by a brick at the Mardi Gras. The cut required 16 stitches, but the trum pete,. fee!s well enough to pla;y in his band eve1~ th<lugh. he cannot hit llis fut! ta11ge <lf notes: • Al the opening of the Wednesday session of the Iowa State Senate. Methodist minister Larry ~Suggs gave1his invocation; • ._From parti• san debate and ministers \vho pray for us until we're tired, deliver us Oh Lord, Amen." 8 \Vhen Mrs. Chrittene Afc- Dooold, 75, receivtd a tax bilt for one · cent at her Ontario, Canad4, home she went down to the town office and insist.ed the clerk take a check for the amount. "lt may cost me 15 cents to write the check," she [ said, "but lf tltey are g() /1ard up fo,. pennies, I'll feel safer with a cancel.ed check." ~ Letter writers to \Varsa\v, Po. land, newspapers have complain· ed of a painful shortage of toilet seats in the city stores. A reporter of the paper .Zycie \Varzawy did some digging and found that he had to go to half a dozen depart· inent stores before one \Vas found. G If a want ad in the Ne\v York Times can be believed. someone \vill soon be out of the dog breed- ing business. The ad read, "Ger· man Shepherd pups for sale, beau· tiful coloring. very reasonable (I 've had it)," The Darlington County School Board met Thursday afternoon but reached no decision on reopening the school. Another meeting wu scheduled for Monday. Twenty-eight men. identified b y photographs taken during the melee, have been arrested in the mob action. Authorities said some women may be charged in the violence so fierce officers had to ·use tear gas and nightsticks to rescue the student!. Thntmond, outspoke.n critic of "forctd school bus.inf," said he believed recent federal rulings on school integration are "unjust and , should be vigorously op- posed" but ()niy through legal a\'enues. He defended the federal government against criticism of laxness in law en- f orcement, saying the responsibility for preventing the \'ioleoce rested with McNair. 1 "lf with all the resources at hls (McNalr's) command he was unable to control the actions of a mph of 150 people then, of course, he could have ()fficlaUy requested federal assistance," Thurmond said. .Wayne Seal, McNair's news secretary, U.S. Turns Over Largest Port . . To South Viets ·SAIGON (UPI) -The Unitid SIAtff U>- day turned over Ila bigg.st port facility iri' the Mekong Delta to South Vietnamese troops, giving the Saigon government responsibility for most of the auppties coming into the region by sea. The 134-man U.S. • ffOth Terminal Transfer Company. waa reduced to a skelei'on crew of 30 men ~who stayed around temporarily for what the U.S. command called "documenUng and securing U.S. cargo" at Can Tho, 75 miles southwest of Sll!gon. The withdrawal of U.S. troops from the port at Can Tho, at a1;000 the delta's big. gest city, further expanded South Viel· namese responsibility -Jn th e nation·~ southern quarter, already the most Viet· namized area in the war zone. The U.S. 9th Jnfantry Di\lision has already withdrawn and only scattered groups of American units and advisers remain in the delta, where seven million of Soul.h Vietnam's 17 million people live. " The Can Tho port has two landing ship slips and a pier capable of handling two barges and ut!Uty landing craft. Ground fighting remained al its lowest level in four months and the U.S. com- mand reported eight shelling attacks overnight.. Allied spokesmen said one civilian was killed and 47 others wounded Thursday night in a guerrilla mortar attaek. 11W the 10.,.ernor had telephoned At- torney Gtneral John Mitchell kf' complain that lne chief U.S. marahal for South Carolina, EUiott Wllliams, ut ln hil car while state police battled the mob. Senate Defeats Southerners' Vote Proposals Fro~ W1re Service• WASRINGTON -The Senate dtleatod, · 58-19, Friday the first of a aeries of amendmenta by Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., (D-N.C.). to aoften t~e impact on the South of the 195S Voting RJghta Act. Ervin's amendment wOuld have chang- ed the automatic coverage formula so that the law would not apply to 1tates or counties in which 50 percent rtr more of the voting a1e populaUon was registered even ii lesg than 50 percent voted in th'e 1964 presidential eleetlon. The amendment, &ides of Ervin sa1d, would have led the effed. of taking 10 of the 39 counties in North Carolina to whk:h the act now applies Out from the. coverage formula. The act now automatically appliu. in addition lo the North Carolina counties, to the state.a of Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mlss~ippl,' South Carolina and Virginia. But none of tbeSto states would have been affected since Jess than 50 percent of their voting aie residents were registered in 1964. Ervin called up his first amendment after temporarily ·1aying aside another that would have based the law's coverage formula on the 1968 rather than the 1964 presidential eleetJon. Jls effect would be to leave only Georgia and South Carolina covered In their entirety. The Southtmers ended fou r days of talk against the measure long enough Thursday to permit a tellt vote on Senate ~ntlmeDt. They were soundly defeated, .47 to 32, Ol'I thelr move lo kill the libe rals' meuure. Written by Republican leader Hu8:h D. Scott Jr., of Pennsylvania and Sen. Philip A. Harl (D-Mich.), the liberals' iiroposal is a substitute for ' the administration· backed and House-passed bill, which Southerne?'! would vastly prefer-If some Jegjslation must be passed. Today's vote was <lO an amendment lo the Scott-Hart proposal changing the "trigger" which would haft s e n t regtstrara south, allqwtd the attorney general to pan judgment on new state or Ioeal l1w1 and outlawed literacy tests and other "devices" wtdcb mlght be used to prevent IOme<me from registering to vote. Jobless · Total Rises to Peak For Four Years WASHINGTON (UPI) -Joblessness mounted to 4.2 percent of the nation's labor force in February, highest level in more lhan four ytars, the government announced today. The unemployment figure for January was 3.9 percent and the February percen- tage was lhe highest since It stood at 4.2 percent in October, 1967. In addition, the Bureau of Labor Stalislics reported that the average fac- tory work week dipped to the lowest ltvel since January, 1962, and overtime earn- lngs fell from an avtr.age of 3.3 hours in January to 3.2 hours for Februlry. Weather Dry Over Nation Light Sno iv Blankets Arizona Border Cit y of Douglas Cal!fomla '4U"'er11 Cet1•or11l• h•d ltl• wetn-..r lo<lt'I' w!!~ JlllJhll'I' ..,,,.,,., t~m,..•· llflt<'n fft _, t•NJ, Trlttt w•r• lll>llY NW!lt1rly •lllllJ t!P«lt llf 1r111Jncll lltt motrnff11" tnd !ht wlnd1 will ote•ttK S•fll•d1•. 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Chaita Gang ' A sign unfurled outside Thompson Hall at the University of Wash· ington shows the condjtion of the building after about 500 students, led by the Black Student Union, chained themselves inside. The siege lasted only a few hours .. POW's Wife Gets Tape Of Husband in Vietnam PARIS <UPl)-Mrs. Raymond Schrump ()f 'Fayetteville, N.C., left {or home today, carrying with heT messages recorded and handwritten by her anny husband, held pi'isoner by the Viet Cong. Mrs. Schrump boarded Pan Am 115 at 12 ;30 p.m. (3 :30 a.m. PST) arid was sched- uled to arrive in New York at 11:30 a.nt PST. She sa id she wanted to be with her family as soon as possible. The attractive blonde mother of three Laos Chief Asks More U.S. Arms VIENTIANE (UPI) -Prince Souvanna Phouma said today he is 1\Sking the United States for more weapons and equipment so his men will be at leut equal to invading North. Vietnamese troops in firepower. He repeated to a newa: conference an earlier disclosure that he might be will· ing to accept North Vietnam's use of the Ho Chi Minh Trail if Hanoi u·itbdraws its other forces from the rest of Laos. The current Communist offensive, Souvanna said. Involves guerrilla troops "superior in numbers and arn1ament" to his own and he wants niore American aid "lo at l~,tst equal the firepower of tilt enemy." The Laotian cbief.of stale refused com· ment on unconfirmed reports that if he accepts the North Vietnamese presence on the Ho Chi Minh Tl'ail and the Com- munists withdraw from other areas, then he will afik the United States to stop its bombing campaign. Metal Workers • Won't Bargain WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sh,.t Metal Workers Uni<ln. blocking set· tlement of the nationwide railroad dispute, refused today to come tG a bargaining session called by the Niion administration under 1 strike delay ordered by Congress. J.W. O'Brien, vice presidtnt and ch.lef negotiator for the union, said the Nixon administration's reqiJe!t to Congress for a forced labor settlement has ruined any chance that the administration can help reach a voluntary settlement. had the memges in her handbag which provided her with the first evidence that her husband was !till alive in enemy hands. She receh'ed the tape ·reco~ng late Thursday Jrom a correspondent of the French Comunist new~paper L'Humanite, Midelene....Riilaud. and the banOwrillen message from Viet Cong diplomats after a one hour 15 minute meeting early Thursday morning. fl.frs. Schrump. the first relative of a prisoner held by the Viet Cong tb receive any communication from her husband, was obviously shaken 'and near ·tears when she heard his voice for the first time since his capture 21 months ago. ''Yes, that was my husband's voice ... Mrs. Schrump <lf Fayettesville. N.C., sJid. "There were sentences he was read- ing that at times he setmed to stumble over as though he didn't want to read them , yet he did." The message Mrs. Schrump heard was the same as the one she received in her hmiband's handwriting from Viet Cong diplomats after a meeting with them Thursd11y. Like so many other wives, she had eome lo Paris !o try to find out whether her husband was a prisr>ner in Vietnam. Madame 11tadelene Riffaud of L'Human- ite provided the tape for Mrs. Schrum~» She said she got the tape from a young Viet Cong officer who guided her on a news gathering assignment in Vietnsm . . Partial Eclips e To Be See n Here LOS ANGELES CAP) -If clouds aren't too thick, Californians will be able to view a partial eclipse of the sun lasting about two hours Saturday morning. The Weather Bureau . today predictl.d partly cloudy weather throughout the state tor eclipse day. Throughout Calif.omia, tl'le ecllpse will begbi abOut 8:30 a.m. with mid- ~Upse -the point of greatest darkness -•t 9:26 a.m. Southern Callfomia "'111 get to see a darl;er sun than north state residents, with Los Angeles gelling a 36 perctnt eclipse, San Francisco only a 27 per· Cent blackout.1be total eclipee band swee.ps through a latge area of eastern statt"S. I . Vote Voiding WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Uniled Mlrie Workers union vowed today to fight a government suit to overturn the ·UMW election. Labor Secretary George P. Shultz, through the Justice Department, brought suit in federal court Thursday to void the Dec. 9 election, won by incumbent presi· dent W.A. ';Tony" Boyle O\'er the stnce4 murdered Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski. The UMW's general counsel, F,p.ward L. CareY. ~aid the union would vigorously fight Shultz' suit. He charged that Shultz, "'by his decision to seek a new election. disenfranchised 81,000 people who voted for-Tony Boyle." Yablonski's running mate: In the elec- tion, Elmer Brown, said the coorts sh<ft.lld not simply void lhe eleeUon but reverse the annOUnc~ result and declare him president, since Yablonski is lead. Brown Said at his home in Mingo Coun- ty, W. Va., that an investigation of the elecllon would show "That a new election Is not necessary but rather that l should be appointed president.'' Shultz also asked the courts to require the union leadership to keep an exact record o{ all e_xpenditures of ~ union money. Shultz, in asking the courts lo order 11 new election, . aceused the UMW <lf "'idespread irrefilllarities and of failing "to provide adqujte safeguards to insure a fair election." Yablonski had accused the UMW <lf similar irregularities during his campaign and aft.er the election . •le was slain' with his wife and their Oaughter on New Year's Eve at their Clarksville, Pa., home. A federal grand jury in Cleveland hils since indicted five persons, including the president of a UMW local in La Follette, Tenn., on con· spiracy charges in the slayings. Murder charges also have been filed against four of those persons in Pennsylvania , and the Cleveland jury in- dicted a sixth person Thursday for allegedly perjuring himself in an ap- pearance befor.e it. * * * Yablonski Case Jm·y Finds~ Fund In UMW Accounts CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -A federal grand jury which has alleged a murder- f or-hire plot behind the slaying of Joseph Yablonski says the United r.fine \Vorkers had a secret committee whic~ main· tained a $20,000 fund. The grand jury, trying tO detennine who financed the slayings o( Yablonski, a union · executive board member, and his wife and daughter, indicted a sixth person Thursday. He is Dillard Couch. 56, a retired miner from Bledsoe. Ky., acCused of perjury when he testified earlier about two checks totaling $93.5 he received from the committee. "I'm sure they·re trying to insinuate the checks. may have been used for the murder fund ," said a UMW District It field representative, William Prater. "But that is not true . Thfre is not..'iing ille~al about the expense ehecks." The Couch indictment brought to light the existence of a secret "22.memher research and information committee tn District 19, v.•hich covers Tennessee and part tJf Kentucky. Prater ~aid checks Couch received \\'ere to pay his expenses as a committee member. Minor iti es Claiming Attacks on Rights NEW YORK CAP) -N'l"O. Indian. Puerto Rica n and Mexican civil rights leaders charge that there exists "a calculated, aggresslve and systematic ef- fort in · the present n~Uonal ad- ministration to wipe out all the civil rights gains made in the 'J95(fs and 1960's." Atnong the 21 signers <lf the statement Thursday were Whitney M. Youn g •Jr., executive director of the National Urban League; Dr . John A. 1\1orsell, assistant execuUve dir.ector or lhe National ·A!if'ociation for the Advancement of COiored People: Dore Schary, acting chairman of tl1e Antl-Deramation ~ague of B'nai B'rll.h, and Dorothy Height. president of the National Council ()f Negro Women. · Negotiators f'Of thrff:· other AFL-CIO Mop craft unions did aUeod the metling, called by Asst. secretary (lf Labor W. J. U8tl)I. "While we h.ave personal respect and affectioo for Mr. Usery, i' is our judg· mtnflhlnhe-eveni. or Ille pist 48 !>our• have efleettvoly destnl)'ed bis uS<fulnw u a mediator In UUs dispute," O'Brien said in I otatemenl Pat Heads Hom,e · Visits Peaceful Ozark Cam-pm Air Aid Study Set along tne peaceful campus with its Wdy trees and limestone buikl.inp 1n the roll- ing Ozark countryside at Point Lookout. C0t1t1t '-"•Mtt ftlllf ''°"" 4' te ... •~i.1111 ""'"''"""' ""'' '""" "'° IO n. Wltw 1*mP1r11lll't ,ff, tllfl\tly ...,.'"'.., f'11111'1' 11111 S.lllrd4v. WIM'I' It tl'l'ft th~ Frklt'f, Hll!'lt F'rc':n'!.:0 '!Ho INTl'ltMIOtATE S1tn, /!loon~ T ides Mnlc:e. • ~!'-Mt Al'lS0111 ...., I 1 .... 1 ....,, tilt. wllll -IPldl '" ~ ......... 11 ,., .. ltol>ltt . _.. Pllbburtl! PM11tlld " " " .. 51 14 :· Guardsmen Recall ed SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (UPI) -F~at Lady Pat Nino winds up btr flvwtai. college tour today after a viait to the School ol the Oiarlc:11 where there are "no antiwar protesta, hippies or campua rebels." The Pmid .. t'• blonde wife he&ds homeward afk!t a farewell coffee.. chat the.Ni were no beards. no minis and no "now" signs to be seen. The cariTion bells pealtd out "Goo Bless America" as eM roiled along an avenue of 011s and each standard held by a MLKlenL A fnuntsin even spewed forth red, white and blue water . • VAUl'YJ-lo.I""' •M tli.ti!IY WI,,_,. "ltlOAY 'rldtv .t1te1 &f~. LOOt!J'lt •llldw' $tcOlld hlfll bel.tiff (JI...,.,.., HI"' lllOd1'1' U lo n . "'(Of!O k1w MO\IHTAIN' Alt(1'S -$l/t!fl't ... I SAfVJIOAY' t is.I 1.111. 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WASIUNGTON (l!Pl) -The Senale wllll Lbe travtlln& Pft,13 cropa. Hor lfU'I· Armed Services Committee l o d a y Ing five-day cmss country joumty to schedaJed hearings for Tuesday on publicize \he work of 5tudenl volunteers Lockheed Aircraft Corp.'s request ror a has bttn marl;td by poigne.ncy, protests lo&J! olmort than half a bllll•n dollars to • and ultrNeCUrlty pre<au11on1. help It t'\Jlflll defen"-contrarts, locludlnc . lt Wis the 1'.1ood old days" tor Mr1. !he aA jtt lrlM])Oll. Nl100 Thurlda;' u sh& amU!n1ly 1troUed ' The only demonstration she saw was when the student firtfighten went into actlott fJ)rller. "It •»as a btaullful dar aD the day," the llral lady said nos1al11ealcy • j I I f I I 11 r { d j Susan_1to Testify? ' Miss Atki Manson Reunwn 'Jo y ful ' LOS ANGELES !UP Suun Atkins. "'ho med police inlornwr in the haron Tate slayings, held a 'joyful" jail meeting Thursday with accuse!f_ mur<ier cull leader Charleii f\1anson. Now the 5trlkh1g brunette must ponder whether to (ollow her former boy fr iend's pro~ &lralegy at their trial. There were indicalioM she was having second thoughts about repeating her grand jury testimony about Manson and other members cl the "~fanson family" cult bffore 1 jury. Deputy District Attorney Vincent Bugl'°"i told new~ the 'prosecution did not. know wh~lher she would testify or not. ~liss At.kins, 211, spent 7i Draft Lottery Ruled 'Fair' by U.S. Judge SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Thf! draft lottery conducted last December "was la all respects based' on random i;eledion a11d was unbiased. fair, equitable and just." ac- cording to a federal judge. U.S. District Judge George B. Harri.~ made the ruling Thursday in refusing to issue an injunction which would have suspended draft call~ on grolmds the lotlery was not a random dra"·ing. The suit was filed by seven young men from the San Franicsco area l\'ith draft numbers below 12? a n d birthdays in the last four months of the year. They contended the fishbowl drawing was biased against those wtth blrthdates i n Septem ber , October Novembe;r aod December. Attorney Joel S h a wn , representing the young men, said experts in statistics - four of whom presented af- fidavits in the case -agreed that the system was not ran- dom . He said the Selective Service should have sought "technical assistance from the myriad government agencies engaged in random sampling." ' minutes eonferrlng w t t b Manson tcr06S a table in the attorney's room ol the Coenlral County Jail. Her lawyer. Rlchard Caballero, w .a s pre&ent. "Th!:y laughed when Uiey saw one another. They were happy ," Caballero said. Ht. said the meeting was "a Joyful one.'' As she wafi led out of the jail en route to the women's jail. l.fiss Atldns was a s k e d l''hether she would take the witness stand and repeat her grisly account of stabbings ind &h<dlngg last August at actress Sharon Tate's home aod the reside~ of 1 wealthy grocer and bis wife. "That's none of y o u r business." she snapped. Caballero saJd Manson had a sharply dijfe"'1t philosophy about how the defense should be cooducled from the course lhe lawyer would take. He said if Miss AtkiM could not follow his advice he would have lo withdraw as her attorney. "Sbe· Is going to think abou t those dUferences," Caballero said. "All of now. 1 am still her attorpey." Crash Vi~ti1n Saved Rescuer Dives Into 'Dirty' River PHll,ADELPHIA !UPI) ~ Eleanor Harden, 22, dived into "the dirtiest water I ever . saw" Thursday when she saw a car containing an elderly >M·oman plunge into t h e Schuylkill River . "I knew I couldn't do anything from shore. \l.'hatever had to be done had to be done in the water," Miss Harden said. ?.tiss ltarden. a clerk-typist at WCAU-1'V, wa.s on her way lo work when she saw the car go out of cootrol. It blew a left tire. slammed into a tree, spu n around, plowed backwards through a stone wall, aod disappeared beneath the swift current, police said. Mrs. Hester Parsley, 75, the driver, was rescoed . Miss Hard.en, a graduate of Alma College near Lansing, Mich .• pulled her car over to the side and ran to the river edge. "I don 't think there wa.s any big decision," she said. "One guy who was there had an arm in a sling, the other guy who was there said he couldn 't swim. so that narrowed it down to me." "It was awfully cold. It was cold enough so that it really took your breath away when you got. in." The water w;u; about 40 degrees, police said. f.1iss Harden, a fonner swimming instructor at Elms Camp for girls in Ham· mondsport. N.Y., made her way over to the car in 10 feet of water. She thought she would have to turn back when Mrs. Parsley bobbtd to the surface. "She was really calm. She get on her back and slarted toward shore and I just helped her. She did .all the work herself." The elderly woman was taken to Wome.ri's l.ftdic:31 College Hospital in satisfac- tory condition. Miss Harden thinks other people would have done the Mme thing in the same situa- tion. "People are really good ," she uid. "lt'a the opportunity to do tomething and it just doesn't lrrlve that often. • • \ ; frtdly, Marth 6, 1970 DAILY l'ILOT 5 4 State Troopers Held " NY Gaming Ri.ng Cracked Ul'I Tti..M" NEW YORK (UPI) -A gambling ring which allegedly bandied more than half a billion dollars a year in bets on sporilng events was broken up Thursday by the P'Bt, which arrested 11 men bt- cluding four New York State troopers. Also taken il)to custody on the gambling and bribery charges was Nicholas Ratten1, 68, of Yonkers. a reputed member of the Vito Genovese / Mina family. who allegedly ·acted as "banker" or the syn. dlcate or;ration. • Daniel P. Hollman, head of the FBI team which crack~ the case, said the "take" from the betUng on baae~l, footr bell, horse racing and other !iiporl.s events reached as blgb as ~ million a year. Hollman said the multlP,1~ arrests nre a body blow to gambling -tn the metropolitan area, especially in suburban Westchester and Rockland counUes where betting may have been "JcnOcked out." The tour arrested trooper• were identified a Lt. Charles Cusioo and aenlor State Pou~ tnvestiJl:atora Eugene cilrieo; Lou SaDatini and Vin- cent Malavarco. ·Th e I r superior, St.ate ~ollc e Superi.,.ndeot WUUam E. Kirwan Jr., said the four ae-- led ill Ille role of f"Ol!!d«·" Twister Hits Florida Arab Amphibious Raid Thwarted by Israelis At Spaceport TEL AVIV <AP> -"' .. 1 says It thwarted an Arab TITUSVILLE. Fla. (UPI) -arnphlhtoos strike tonjg!lt with A tornado struck this dty on a ral<I across the Dead Sea in the fringe of the nation's whlch three Arabs were killed spaceport Thursday, damag-and three were ·captured. ing 72 homes and injuring There also was fighting on Anned Struule Commaod confirmed t.be raid, saying two Israeli helicopters I a n d e d commandos who attacked a number of Al Falah guerrillas. The Israeli spokesman dld not me11Uon the belicoptus. BACK TO BOOT CAMP OR BRIG? Metine McDo;wtll T•k•n From Plane seven persons. the Lebane!e border Tburaday P•ld Pollllt:•I Act ... rtJwne"t Damage was estimated at $1 night whe re guenUJas havel.----------"'I Marine Deserter Back From Sweden, Nabbed million. lnstallattons at nearby stepped up their activity in re- Cape Kennedy were n ot cent wee.ks, prompting Israeli damaged . warnln&s to the Lebanese. One ''ft "'as a miraelt. no one Israeli soldier was killed a was killed ," said Lt. Gov. Ray two were wounded. C. Osborne. An lsaraell spokesman said Twe.lve of the n homes in interrogatlog of the Arab the path of the twister were guerrillas captured in the It.veiled. Damage ranged from Dead Sea rakl 'I1lursday light to heavy 00 the others. disclosed 17 guerrillas were to ,, NEW YORK IUPll -Terry ~1cDowell, a l.farine Corps private Y>'ho deserted boot camp fetr asylum in Sweden, was taken into custody on unspecilted charges Thursday night when be arrived at Ken- nedy lnWnational Airport on a jetlintt from Stockholm. A spokesman for the 3rd Dislrid Naval Headquarters here said McDowell was taken to the "'larine barracks in Brooklyn_ Officers there re£us- ed to disclose any information about McOwell who ls believed to be f{om Illinois. ' The young privt,te's brown hair was cut shdt't and he wore freshly-laundered blue dungaree!, brown loafers and a yellow windtneker over a blue opm-oecked shirt. Red Defector Spills Beans ''come across in two rubber Police Lt. Ernie Bean "'as boats with 130mm. Katyusha one of the lucky homeowners. rockets and special carriers of "I could see all this debris the kind wed in the rocket at. blowing acro!S the back yard tack on Jerusalem ta st (wben the 6tonn hill -strips August." of lumber, roofing, eve.rythlng The JPOkesman 58.id the else," Bean said. guerrillas apparently planned "hfe and my ~ife ran \.0 the lo set up a base in the Hebron front of the house and looked Hills 80Ulh of 1he Israell out the window," he conttnued . capital. "The two houses directly Last Aug. 16, guerrillas fired across from us -the tops of three rockets at a Jerusalem MEXICO CITY (UPI) -A lhem just seemed kl dlM(>-hotel, but no one was injured. Soviet diplomat who defected pear. One second they were Security forces later found 13 in M6ico last month has ac-there and the next second they unfired missiles on a ridge cused the Soviel embassy in were gone. fh•e miles south of the city, this capital of espionage &:Im-"I didn 't hear a thing. no some of Utem Katyushes. Robert Shelton S•ys: "VOTE FOR o .. ROBERT SHELTON N.B. CITY COUNCIL• 111"" C..wt. chm. )(1(11 Kew•"* DI'., CdM VNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH •COA~ PLAZA ' BRANCH ' NOW OPIN SATURDAYS t te 1 P.M. MON.0THUlS. 10.I P:M. Pl I DA n 1 M P.M. 17141140.5211. ~at: So. C"9t Pl-. C... M• Am. Viet ~, E. H. LEVAN An armed forces police first lieutenant boarded the jetliner al Kennedy Airport to take the 6-foot...f McDowell into custody before any of the other passengers disembarked. He had returned voluntarily. eel at "tot.al domination" of roar or anything ." In Amma_n. the Palestine Latin America. _:.::::....:~~~~~--~iiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiil~ili~~~=···~·-1;;::=:=~ Raya Kiselnikova. 30, told a new~ conference Tuesday that I k The officer refused to reveal any informatkin a b o u t Pi-1c~·ell and would not permit newsmen to interview hi.m. McDowell wore a, glum expression as he 1tepped off the plane lo be met by two military policemen. emha'5y •lafl member> have 8 8""' 8 IS ALIVE! "a double role.'' ~ As an example , M is s At "Th• Grandest Man Of All'' Kiselnlkova s a Id. four ~ Betinning Mtrch 12, 1970 members of the Soviet con- sular section spend eight how's ~ fh ft.· Uf 'Dr--- • w .. k isauing viaa• and Ille . OOU \0 J .-a rest of the time on "clan- destine operations." ' I ' OPEN SUNDAYS 12:00to 5:00 {df-e/dd etassic 'Designs --~·Rn n IUER s RAY SR LE! NOW IN PROGRESS AT ALL STORES • ' • 1 DARY PILOT EDITORIAL P A.GE • • • • ' • -• l• ,, , • • • J The Billboard Blight Five yean ago, ·HunUngton Beach passed an all- encompauing ordinance ba.anlng bWboardJ. Tbe law pve &ign companies until Jan. 7, 1870 to pba .. them o\i~ The amortization peripd i• over. Ttie ordinance bas been legally in effect for nearly two months, but YOU' wouldn't know it by drlvinJ along Pacific Cout Highway ftom the Santa Ana River 8nd turning up Beach Boulevard. .~ The signs are still there, except for a couple blown down by the wind • Wby? Part of the answer lies in the underltandable re- luctance of the ·sign coinpanlea Ip remove them . Tbe companies make a living from th e blllboards and they w1ll not-Jive them up wilhout a fjght. The companies have informed the city lhat they w1ll · ftgbt the ordinance In court. It could.frove a long siege, with the firms citing consUtutlon issues and lbreatenlng to take their case to the highest level. There's another aspect to the situation, however. These signs are on land, freeway rlgbt of ·way, owned by the state of California and one might expect Sacra- mento to give a lead here. Indeed, it would seem prop- er for the state itself to take over this batUe, especial· Iy since Sacramento ts expressing interest fn preserv·· Ing coastal environments and bas the power to desig· nate scenic htgbway1. The city of Huntington Beach provided a good ex· ample, removing all the signs on the ocean aide of the highway along the Municipal Beach. Having given credit for that, residents could not be blamed for wondering whether the city shouldn't "lie doing more -whether It sbouldn't be prellurfn( the •lat• to act against the 1lgn1 on tis land. Certainly the city sbould try this tactic. Th• pros· pee! of a draW1H1ut court batUe, following five years of patience, !altos the tolerance of all thooe wbo delight in nstural surroundings. Central Park Questions Three site• have been submitted as possible loca- tions !or a central park tn Fountain Valley. The pro- posal briog1 up a couple of interesting questions. -Is a central park necessary in a city of 30,000 residents (exentually 70,000) where a county regional park is already proposed at Mile Square? -And what crlteria'should be wed in selecting and developing a central park site if one iJ wanted? Tbe lhree sites named by the Parts and Recre• tion Commission were U acres adjacent to Fountain Valley High School, 20 acres In Mile Square and 20 acres on property owned by the Orange County Sanita· tion District. · The last two sites feature the s.ame benefit/draw. back -the land would be leased. Cost of such a eentraJ park would be much che a per, but after sinking money into the park, the city might lose it. The high school l'iite seems the best (and was recommended as such) because it would be city land when bought and is more centrally located than the other sites. Now, is the park a necessity? It's a good question and since the residents will use and pay for it they should express their feeling on it. If people want it - it's an excellent idea. If not, the project should be put on the shelf. .. H _Stranger• in Their Owti Ho11ws .. 11/hey Benefit I Phvsicians, ~ Mor ticians 'Dear Gloomy Gus: 'Television and the Generation.,. Gap · ... Tboogl>ll 1t Larp• '" • The world see.ma divided into those who aren't sick and hiiagine they are, and . those who are alck and tnsist they aren't; ~lei ans benefit from the former, and inorticians from tbe latter. • • • Pollticl should not be an OC\.Upatlon; public admlnlltratloa obould be; for the bealtb of the =unity It ourety u im- 1 portant al the health of lhe individual, )'et nobody would think of "electing" men to be doctors aimply because they pro- claimed themselves doctors. • • • The man who always knows a abortcut finds himsl!:H on more detours than b1I plodding companions who take the customary route. • • • Tbe re.lativlty of .. wea1t~" was acutely expressed by Thoreau , when he said: "1£ you wish to give a man a sense of poverty, give blm a thousand dollars. The next hundred dollars be gets will not be •worth more tban ten that he used to gel" • • • The Qty COUncil won1 let a Christian Youth Center open in downtown Huntington Beach to help drug taerS. tfow do the coun- cilmen plan lo help these •ddkts! -D. A. Ttllt kltwr. f'tfltd'I ,....,,. 'fl...... ""' _ff .. rllY lllnlo .. ,.. __,.,, ,..,., ,_ ,.. _,,. ... ...., -. ~ """· (This lnitaUng habit tends to be truer of oelf-styi.d Intellectuals than of lll)'body elle.) • • • lt'r ll1WlD( bow naturally IP'ICtful mGlf. ehUd.ren ue -uotU they are taken In hand and Jiven Jes.sons In eraceful deportment. • • • 11 there really a generaUon pp? 11 it a serious one? Today I 8ha11 argue that there Is a gap, and that It is: perhaps more serious than any O{ us realize. Let me start by defining what I mean by the "semantic environment." The .semantic environment is lhe world of words and images in which Ill huma~ being! live. It is the environment o! news and information, beliefs, attitudes, Jaws. cultural imperaUves, that constitute your verbal world and mine. A quick way Of describing the semantic environment is to say that it Is that part of the total en- vironment which your pet dot lying, on the rug at your feet haa no inkling of. It is the world of Shakespeare and Mourt and Bugs Bunny and the Beatles; or Mose.sand JeSUJ and Billy Graham : of published battins averages and the clos- ing prices on the New York Stock Ex- Nothlna is better for our character than_ change; of news from Tokyo and Prague to hive IOmeOM ll'OUDd (not lnathing and SaJgon. The eemantic environment ii dawn one's neck, of coune) who doeen't the product of that vast network of com- Jlke UI ud fon:es ua to re-aamine our municatJon which we call clvllizaUon · aWtudes and 1ct!ooi In tl)e light of lhll · harsh judgment (ln such aJtuations, the weak merely succumb to self.pity, the petty try to retaliate, but tbe wiae galn Insight.) • • • 1 IN A WAY WE ALL share a common aemanUc envtroomen~ne created by the major neWJ services. networks, and the intellectual climate of our tlmes. In another way, each o{ us lnhAblt.s a .emantl.c environment not quite. Uke that of anyone else. since we listen to dif. ferent speakers, watch d i f f e r e n t television shows, hear different in· formation and rumors at different places of work. Some of us ·circulate in Catholic circles, some in J»rolatanl. Some read sport& car magazines, some read art journala, others read comic books . For Jn06l o( the history of the human race, tbe semantic environment of children has been created by their parenl5 and close relativd, who pass on to the young their pictures or the world , t ir value sylteml. the.ir standards o( havior. As the children grow older, ir semantic environment is expanded by other influences: friends, neighOOrs, movies, and the big experience of school. Schools c:ontlnu< the proc<5' pmnll have~ THE SEMANTIC envirooment of childreh is never the same u that of their parents, whose mind.s were formed at another time under other lnOuencts. Nevertheless, there is normally some continuity between generations because or shared communicatiOM and ahared values. This proceu of communication by which parenta with more or less IUCCtA :shape their children's ldeas and values has been going on fOt" perhaps the y;bole history Of the human race . We take the proCess so ·much for granted that few of us have awakened to the fsct that , for millions and millions of families ln the United States, it just isn't taking pl3ce any more. In order to describe what is going on today, let me suggest an an_al<>gy. Sup- pose from the time that your .children are old enough to sit up, they are snat'ched awa y from you for three or four hours a · day by a powerful sorcerer. Th is sorcerer is a story-teller and a spinner of dream&. He pla)'s enchanting music; he is an un· failiagly entertaining companion. He makes the children laugh ; he teachts them jingles lo sirl8: he is o;mstantly sug-. gesting good things to eat and wonderful toys for their parents to -buy them. ·- DAV An'ER DAY, year after year, children for a few _hours • day llve in Uie ' wonderful world created by .th e sorctrer-a world of laughter and music and adventures and incredible gOlng&-d'n , llOllletlmes frightening , nsually fun, and · always entrancing. The children grow older. &till under the daily spell of the sorcerer. Parents aJld teachers &Cold and make unreasonable demands. But the sorcerer is always friendly and fasci nating, go that the children sit there and slt there as if drug· ' ' ' I •• ged;. "absorbing measages that their parents did not originate apd often do. not everi' knqw abOut. For one·fO.urth or ~. of their waking hours frori'l infancy on\lard; \hey liwe in a iemanj.ic ,.en- vironment their paren~ dld not create and often m~ke no a'ttempt.to ,cmitroJ .. · · \ . ' ' NICHOLAS JOJINM>N of the Ftderal Communications C o m m i s..~ i i n has · estimatet ch)Jdren get more 'Vetbal im'Pact -rad !O and televl!ion than- from parents, schools, neighbort; ·and church combined~ ''By the .time he enter.s first grade," he.u)s; "the.aveNse ctilld his &pent more hoilrs ln front· ot a television set than tie wjll spend in a col· · lege classroom." . · ... . .. . . ..., The present generation of young people ls the first in history to.have grown up in "' the televisio/I age. ·A· Significant pr~ pmjon cf those born after "IH6, alt.bough· brought up in parents' homes, had their dtuma, ~ ei:pectationl Ind their im· agln~Uve lives created for -lhem by others . .- 1 ~ it any -wonder that some J)f these children, -as ftley grew to adolescence, turned out to be strangers 'bi their own homes? ' By S. L n.yuaWll .. · Presiftet , San Franclsce Stote Ualvontly .. Only U you beUev4!: a thing the second lime around - after having come to . doubt tt -is your belief likely to be grounded in objective realism (those who believe things from birth never really un- derstand them.) • • • Every people imagines that I" ·own language !0und1 "natural" and foreign tongues sound "fWlny" -ind It Is hard lo believe that English 110Unds like "unpleasant UUle news'' to so cultivated a Spaniard as Ortega, or that his regimen for learning the language wa1 to "begin by thrusting the jaw forward , almost clenchlng the teeth, and practlcaUy Im· mobilizing the lipt1." • • • Distinction Between Vietnam, .. · Laos Some men feel so proprietary about their own Ideas that if, in a con venation, you simply restate their own argument with minor modifications, they will fiereeJy disagree with what you say. and ,contradict their o w n earlier po.sition. Mankind cannot stand unorganized aoclety, which e:rposea us to perU, or organlzed society, whch envelops us In dullness; and ill political conflict is • atniggle lo find 111 equilibrium between ri.k and ralety. WASHINGTON -Another Vlel.nam Jn Laos? Well, hardly yet. There Is an im· portant distincUon betwm the military; Richard · 'WillOD operaUons of the Ni.1on Administration bf \. Laos and those In Vietnam. .... ·--._ .. If this dlstinctJon Is not recognized then present outburst arises mainly because a Cost ly Overseas Armies it may as well be said th.at the President few newspapermen have observed first ol the Unlted States is now and hereafter hand what the Foreign Relations Com~ precluded from effectively supporting the mittee has known Ill along was belng naUons of Southeast Asia in resisting el· done in Laos. Then why all the fuss? '11le fuss arises because this is considered the right time to undermine and reverse Pres.ldent Nl'.i· on·s policy in Southeast Asia. It ilJiffaD)' · com ing to be realized that Nixon 11eant 1t v;he.n be said the United States was not .. about to "bug out" and that he intended. to preserve the Independent political in· tegrlty of the nations of Southeast Asia. That is not suflicient for the peace group In the Senate. Some .of them had thought that Nixon was moving toward a tol.al pull-out, regardless of the con- sequences, as a polltJCal necessity. Now they aee that this is not so and they observe that in both Tballand and La.os Nixon has committed the United States to military support of esi!Ung governments. Excepting small task fortes In the Philippines and In Lalin American revolutions, no American troops were 1ent abroad between the 1.1exkan war ln the 1840s and 1917, thrtt..quarter1 of • century. _ Yet in th is period the Unlled States em- erged as a grtal power, commanded the respect of other great powers, and stirred the caution or potential aggressors. big and little. This was accompllsheq_ at negligible money cost. Since 1917, but partiC\.l\arly since 1945, the United States has malntainf'd big armk!s abroad with costs running to tens • or b!Dloos, without enlisting either the •sympathy or the respect of the oultr ~workl. ~tblng !fas to be wrong with this J0p-llded equation, and the Ameritan people are gradually beginning to wtinder , hat II Is. ' PURSUANT TO THE mieary lun In the Vietuot uproar, wblle l're1ldent NllOO 1wora Ga! wlll~e<"-rd><lne he hu~for ,di-gtmenl, membera of Congreq 11re llnflnl for In open debate wlth the 1 admbtlstn-Uon over the grim, inert and unyltldln8 l~l'JS o( occupation troops In Europe Ind roundaboul Tho 1'vel it Dow 310,000 men, Ind h15n't subll tln!l1llv chlln"!d In 20 years. It ia 1Ub)<d to unluUllltd promises of 1 ttductlon, buJ any "rtdeployment," 11 I tho baloney reads has been trtfllnJ. Orlginalfy thfse troops wert. to be 1 shield of wtstm Europe acalnst Ruulln , 1ggression. 1nd NATO waa established lo that end. But thla Rulslan lhMt, ,__4 epnllm ct the CU<:h lncurtlQll, II now an ab1Urdl'1 lo wat Earope1bl •ho 011i1 like the Y1nkeb for tbelr dollar ... change value. Delplll lhll degrading and -le 11tuaUm, the Wuhlngton news la that State Secretary Rogen •nd Defense Secretary Laird are preparing a stand- pat defense against congressional attack lhls spring and aummer. PRUmENT NIXON hi• won a measure of acceptance for h I s gradua1in\ In Vietnam diatngacement, 10mewhat ddlating I.he Vietnam protest ternaJ 1ggresslon. A visitor to Vtentlane u long ago as 'Ibis 11 evldenUy the ba&ic objective of three years could readily see that the the lfOUP In the United States Senate who-United States wu gjving milltary support are now accusing the President of to the govermnent of Laot. Thert was no escalating the war ln Laoa: into another secret about It '!be CIA waa there. Vietnam. American military ldvisen were there. 11le distincUon between Vietnam and They also traveled back and forth Laos, however, is a working demonstra-between the Americln ~leldJ in the Uon of the kind of policy called for by the north of Thailand to Vientiane. NlJ:on doctrine in lieu of the massive di- rect intervention of U.S. forces a11 In Viet- nam. In LaM we are training, equipping and advising a clandestine native anny and probably giving it air support wiUlou t t.he direct involvement in combat or American ground troops. That pattern would undoubtedly be followed in Thailand lf the northern Insurgency re- quired it. It is the developing pattern also In Vietnam and Js called Vietnamliation. INVESTIGATORS FOii the Foreign Rel3tion1 Committee have been supplied with a great deal of informaUoil by state department perJOMel on the operaUon in Laos, so much In fact that there has betn concern at Ult 'White House over the leakage of military WormaUon that wouk1 be of benefi& to the Notth Viet~ name!t invaders. NIXON IS ~ being accused ol duplicl\y and of failing lo hold the con- fidence of the American public by being little franker abOut his objecUves than Jolmson. This on1y means that in a brief time President Nixon will take to the air waves again to give a fuller uplanaUon, but no fuller than is already knoWtl lo the Foreign Relations Committee, •bou\,.what we are doing in Lao•, why it is ln support Se'"'.ttal antl·war Senators (po11tlca1 In• t1goolals of the Pruident) art -qUH-IMPIJCIT IN THE gathering slO<J!I tlonJng hia llncerity, avem111 be really ovtr Laos 11 the Wic quesUon or the "Intends" a troop level at I00,000 tn.. Prtskl,.ent usln1 these methods to Last Frontier: Oceans deflnltely. Amon( them Ir Seoltor pr.-. the poUUcal lntegrtty of In- McGovern, South Dakota. dependent aovernmenll In Laos, Vlet- Sen1lor Fulbrlchl'r r.ntp Rolatlonl n1111, Clmbodll and Thailand. CommJtt.. hao opened new •-·of-'llJW-11-weU understood. In Concress·- 1ttack, aome menbera abrulftJ;y critical The Senate r ... w. Relations Committee of "VletnamizaUoa," whJcb Mr. Nlx011 ii know• what the NIJon Admlnlstratton ls using at 1 yardstick for Vlelnlm dolnc In IAOI and why It It doing ll The withdrawal•. Senator Goodell, New York, called VJetn&mh.ation• a "gmit publk: relations IUCCUI, but not 1 true pollcy o( disengagement." Senator Hughes, low a, cal'_.rf It " "Mm•ntlr: hou.11 Various public flgum,t tom• al'ter bat- Uelront yis1ta, quuUon lf Vtetnamtutlon has •ny sublt.anct ln Itself, or •• 1 base for hope of enct1n1 the war. Mr. Nll<Oll hao bad what may be Cllltd • "H<O!ld haaeymoon," even dovts cooln1 faintly. Theto If! """' tt won't endure beyond "" comln(llUlnmet. - ,---By George ---. Deat C.roge: Do you thlnk Joe Namath Is the right kind of person for • youn& • man to hive u a hero? CONCERNED Dear Cooc<mtd: I moat CC!>Ulnly do, particularly U he allo likes football. llolmbla, '?>IL, Benld• .. ..,,. oce&!ll ~~ve beel!_!&lltd tile_~ f!OllUer. Tbe U.S. CODUnental shelves alone embrace a temtory-.rtlll vtrtu.slly • lerTa 1n-· cognlta-ooe thJrd the ·size ct II e<m- tlguoUs st.ates. Expandlna world popul• Uon makes Inevitable the day when the mineral re30\ll"CeS and food P.Otenttal of that tronUer assume c r u C I • I im· portlnce." Jutdob aty, Ore., nmes : "._.the work of Goodwill lnctuslrl,., largest sheltered worbbop operaUon In the worlcl, dtlervn comment Servln1 all kinds of-blndk:•pptd people without regard to race, or rdtgion, more thin tl,000 lllndJClpptd pol'IOOI recllvad "11ploymeot, training or counaellnc lut year, ind of these, 1,129 wm placed In compeUUve lndustry." Al&avtsta,..:. V1., Joaraal: ''Al lrl ·1ny other vein of thinking, d1uerK can 10 too far and can oerl®sly dlarupt the American lnslltultobl Jooa ,.rponslble for l'l'...,.;1111 the American way of life. 'Ibis dls9'1lt i.s lo be deplottd wben ft offers no construcUve 1UUestlon to improve the lilullloo Ulldei: Jl'Olal." of an·'"independenl gover~~ent, why lt · protecll our troops in Vietnam 'and mak· ing it doubly clear, as S:~etary of Defense Laird already h"as, that lie has nQ intention 'Qf committing gr~ combat forces. If the President does m:it do th.is~ he will merely, play into the hands of those who say tha l he is hiding ~si act_ions in the same deceptive way as PreSldent J orui'sort. ~ IT IS 'of EVEN l\fORE substanti-that 1£ the l>residenl is driv!?n ofl ~ policy~ La<Mi U,, h~ wilt hai.:e retreated from the' aims aOd . objecUves he has so .oft.en- stated in Qie Nixon· .doctrin~. · ' But there is no prese nt pi:ospect that Nixon will be driven off his poU<lll., cer• talnly as long ..as the North Vietnamese · infiltraUon through' La.o!'to Vietnam coti· • · . tlnues. One other aspect of this matter i!-im· portant. The President has assured COngress he v.·ill not send ground troop.~ to fight Jn Laos v.·ithoul congtess ional consent. 1£ this assur ance is to be taken - UttraUy the Presidenl ha! _gone lt step farther than his predecessors in recogniz· lng congressional participation _) n decisions on future mi 11 tar 'Y in- terventions. --lllj-- Friday, March-i, mo ~ tdltonal pag• ., Ill< Doti Pilot lttlr.f to '1iftmn nnd 1tim· Ml.ak reader• b11 pr11fnrino 'tMf M1DJPOPCr'1 opfttlona and com- tnAW:f"V on topics of intert1t and lignificance. b11 protnding o forum for llo• upreuf<m of 01i1r rtodfT's' opfnfont, and b11 prestftdng the div1r11 vfe10> points ·of informtd ob.st"'tr1 end ipokesmn OJl topica of tht ""'· Robert N. Weed, Publisher 11 I. I-' • j J I ' • • • ' I d .. .. ' t • ~ ! r • ,. ., 1 " ~ • 1-.. < , •• -; . J ~: l ~ I ' ,. -'• :;. . ' - . .. . ,. . ... .;f "··. • • • ' . • . - JODEAN HASTINGS, 642-4321 ,rid..,, ~ A. Int M , ... IJ For New Mem bers <;OP Women , ' . ,Pou ·ring ·Tea The distinclive 'waterfront home of Mr. affil·-Mrs. John Mcintire will be· the setting for the fifth annual m~mbership champagne tea sponsored by the Huntingt~n Harbour R~publican Women 's Club. The eve nt \Viii .take place between 2 and 4 p.rn. Wednesday, March 11, ~nd promises to continue the elegant traditions establish- ed by the club in 1965 . . Planning -the affair--are Mrs. Nick Saha gen. hospitality chair· man, and A-1rs. ~oyd Fuglie, membership chairman . . · "Because Ot the recent growth of the Huntington Harbour area it has been difficult for the club to contact each Republican woman, so1Mrs. Robert Heisler, president, stressed that all interested women are .cordially invited to attend. I·. -. , l\frs. Glen Ri chardson, registration chairman, has arranged to have .one or the club's"three deputy registrars pr'esent to register new· 'come.rs o~ those needing to re-register. ,, I - ' I •• ' I ~ ' . -• ,:i--. ' ' -i~"''' ·- J ) . ! I : 1-e v E RYBODY WELCOME -Anticipating ' a record turnout are _ members of the HuntrQgton· Harbour Rtpilblican Woriten's Club . -''t -ing an· e-arly arrival are (left to right) ,Mrs. John ~clntire,'\Vh ·· will hos\.the ev~nf. Mrs. Arthur Davies, new •bee, ana :Mrs. · N,ick Sa1'agen, fiOspitality 'chairman. • : • .•• · . -··• ' who ate· sponsoriiig their _fifth champagne membership tea. Serv· -. • ~· • ' ' . Golden. "Ke y Opens_ Membersnip . ·Gates Spi-ing \viii. it rrive a bit early for ni.embers of Golden Key. ·'l'he supp,ort group for the cru,ld: GlHdance Center or ·Orange County \\ill \velco1ne prospectiVe--membet.f' during UJlring member- ship bn1nch ·rucsday1 March 10, in the Lake Park Clubhouse, Hunting- ton Beach . · · · · First on thC p(og.ram· di.iring the lQ a .m. meeting 'viii be ~1iss JuJia.J<usano. psychiatric socia1W..oikei; Uie center. She \Vill discuss the cl!llter's work ~and in the tub.ire_ , -~ 1'1iss Kusano t nded California Schools and is a graduate of UCLA \Vhcre she rec iVed her masters degree in social work . After serving two years with the Oran·ge County Health Department, she joined (he center in 1969.+ MJS .. James HUghes. president-;_ will-conduct-a brjef bu sines~ ·1neclin'g foltoY.ied by a skit co-a~ored by ~1rs . Cy Peterso1f, third vice prc~ident in charge of membership , and ~1rs. Bob Goodson, ~e· cording sec retary. • • 111e skit, A 1'ypical Da y at the Golden Key Thrift Shop,. will en· tertainingly explain the grouf's thri(t ~h.op duties to ne'v rnemtier5. _ Inclu ded in I.he cast.\vil be tfie aµthor s and.Mf_s. Will~m·oawes, ~lrs. \:Villi a,111 llanna and Mrs. Robert HQhpan. ... !I ·rJ Mrs. Ja111cS Fr3nklin. hosp'1talitycehairman, \viii carfy out the spring theme. in her decorations and refreshments \.vith spring 06Y•el-s, fres-h fruits a11d home)nade~breakfast breads' and pastries brightening the brunch table. EX"pansion of the Child Guidance Center, a~Jow.fee cli nic for the . trea l1nent of emotionally disturbed-children, has been rapid -during the past yea r with satellite offices opening in Garden Grove and San Clemente and a ne}Y facility sCheduled to open soon in the SI. Joseph complex, Orange. . . , · In su pport of the clinic. Golden ~Y stalls !he l~l'ilt shop, whic~ . recentl y moved to 311 Fifth St., Hui!tirlgtOn Beach,-."the-grot1p also sponsors a bowling league, an .anf\ual fashion sho~'. and other -special ev~nt S-su<;!i as th eater' parti es, bazaars. ancfluncheo ns as fund-raisiag .. projec ts. . . . · B~sides the satisfaction of aiding "the center, membership in the "Or~niza~ion provities contact with other women concern~ y,•i!h ccm~ .1 munjty -affa irs ~'Dna the opportwihy ~ hear interestfng speakets. 1 ' • ' ! ' . . . I .,. . ' ' ' I • " ' 'Among the honored' guest~ "''ho have been invited to attend are the .Mmes .. John D. Bowler, Robert Burke, John Schmitz and C. Fulton Shaw . _ -Presiding at the tea table and punch bowl will be the l\1mes. J~ampton 1-lutton, Robert Cooper, Ross Dorsett, Dale Endsley and · /tlbert Herbold, all-former presidents. . . . ' ··Addi~ional in£ormation regardilig the tea or membership in the club may be ob'tained by calling Mrs. Sahagen, ~2185, or Mrs. · Fugµe , 1146-1481. _ Ahr arila women interested in· mem·bershlp information Ire in· -".::i ... ~~'itt?8... to attend the brunch o,r ma·y conta-e-t Mrs. Hughes, ~47-4678:·or ,• ·• Mt-s'":' Peterson, 847-6215. ·•· F!lESH AS SPRING -'Apa all for the. Child Guidance Center of 10. in the Lake Park Cl.ubl\ouse. Area women interested \n \earning Orange ...C.o.u!lls.~ Hus.barid,_James__ a;d:;~rL..Jiyg~--i.res~ --lllore_about u._e act1v1ties of the center's support group are 'invited . .-dent of G.0Jde11~Key of Huntington Beach , with preparations for a 1o a·ltend. · 1 -• • , $pring memtiership br\11\cb which wm ·take place Tuesday, March " ' -' ~ .. · ' . ~ ' . . C:ar~l.e;~ PJacemenf of· A,r.s~.nal L6-ad.s -Ham~. 'Wit·h. • D~AR ANN ~NDERS: ~!Y eyes. ~re 1wollen from wetping but r am determm· -ea Io ... write' this teuer'While the thoughts are fresh in my mlbdi • • • A dear little git!, only 3 years of eke. was shot. lo deatJI yesterday by her-7· year-old brother. lfe 'JBS playing with a gun he had found on 1he closet shelf. The Jlttle girl was a beautiful and 1ova,ble • child. Her parents are dlstraugttt: The mother can't bring herself lo .look at the boy, let alone forgive him. This ls a ter· nl>le thing. Ann. The 'youngster didn 't kn(lw whal he was doing. l~e knoWs he di d a hideous thing, but h<' l"I brlrildered and unable lo comprehend what ·It is all • about. Other members or tht;, family already have shown !!lgn~ of T't'~n!Qlent against the child. lt'is heartbreaking. The girl is dead and her brother will , . ·. "'·" carry the blame for the rest of his life. The guilty Party, in my· opiniort. ls I.he father who lefl his: loaded gun 1''here the boy could get it. Please, Ann, prlnl this: • · lftler for other fathers who own gun!I. Tl coul9 save a whole fami ly a lirelime or regrf:t . -SAO, SAD SAD' DEAR SAD: Here's your letter end r agree compleltly. I hOpe e.very ftttttr who owns • gu will check It be.fort bt Problems ., • f' )..:at-~ ' . ···. •ttfr In your coluimrbut I can'L.mnember lion. Ai"a mother o( lfJ'children ~ yts, I . pie. of aU religiOns, I believe it II unjmt :'"')'OW: answer. W~ need )'Wr'htlp, Ann. said 19. and I wanted 111 O{ them:....f 111,y and unreasonable l_9 inco~ate a COit • .. • -CONCER.i.'IED McrrHER bravo ror you. I am a member of Lhe trovenial religious concept u part of our -~ .. ,. , DEAR MOTHER: Art yoa sure your LOS church'and although I am not aw11e civil law. Just call me . . put• h;, bUd ,.,be jiluow loolght: eo.1~· lhe #!llft Jn your bbme be re~cbed by y~r chll~n, Dad? It U l1>1ded? How abtut It? • • ·:-,. ' ,. DEAR ANN LANDEJ1S : Som• tim• a.go you printtd a Jetter from e: lesbian. Pica~ print It again. \Ve have a.daughter In collei:te \Yho writes that sbe_.has /alien In loYc wilh her roommafe . We are just sick about this and don't know what to do. I .. re~mber reading lhe lesbian'• let- dngbter'a room.D)•tt ts • &frl! Tbtse that 1111e have an oUK:lal position on abOr· -MOTHER FROM PROVO ays OM. 1boaldn1t a11ume taythlng -.. ~ally 'fbert ~ aoder.Z.S group II ii· Uon, I fttl this decision ahould be m,ade DEAR A-IOTHER: Bravo for Pnvt, volVed. .. .. •· by the mother -not the church or the Md thanks for writing. II the roo~mate it ~ glrl,"m}' ad11ice ls to sugge1t that 1be ,get pr11fesslon8I help -thca )'OCI 1hould 1ay off, Therapy can· not be lorcff on a pinon.' rt may be that yoar daughter does not wish to change - In irblcb case, lea11e her alone. D~AR ANN UANDERS : I've rt'll your cOlumn for yea111. Tho only time l have ever f~lt moved to write to Ann Landers was in regard to your position on abor· government. I can think or nothit.g more tragic than a mother who does not want her child - unless, perhaps, It Is the child . r would never consider abortion ror myself, but I feel strongly that any woman who does not want a child should be able to have the pregnancy fennlnated lf!gally Ir htr physician decides the 'abortion will not endanger her health. . Since the government must serve peo- ' I Unsure. or yourself on dates' What's right? What's wrong? Should you? Shouldn't you? Send for Ann Landen' booklet "Dating Dos and Oon'la," e.nclos· lng wl1h your request 35 cents In coin and a long. self-addressed, stamped envelope. Ann Landers will be glad to help you \\1Lh your problems. Send them to her In care Qf the DAILY PILOT, entlosinc a seU·•ddresscd, •tamped •nvelope. • ·-. . , ----------~=-,-.--- Friday, t.1•M ti, 1'~70 • Hemlines Going . Down USC Alum To Marry Meg fakes Long Look Wendy Gambill and Duane Haley will e1change wedding . I " t ' l . /~:· ._, ... f , ~· L• ,, .·~' ' ~ .;) ' '•• .• ·'I''.) By MARGARET SAVILLE LONDON (1.lPI} -Prlnees1 Margaret. Is the first or the British royal women to buy a maxi coat. She chose a grey tweed_ one which she weara to t.ake her two chlldre-n, Lord Linley and Lady Sarah Arm1tro~1 · Jones-for walks and alsf to go shopping and driving . It's a natural for Margaret For some time, lhe faahlon· loving · princess has been choosing long-l!kirted dresses ror private parties as well as 0Hlcl1\ functions. She thinks they make her look taller. Princess Margaret alwaya has been very conscious of the fact that she's only five feet two Inches In shoes. Her husband, Lord Snowdon, likes her In the longer lengths, too. He takes close Interest in everything she v.·ears, offering frank comments and suggstlng alter1Uon1 if he thlnkll they're needed. ' Prince's l\targaret usually accepts hls verdict but there have been occasions when they've disagreed and a lively argument resulted. Tony ha.a done aome work as a designer of women's styles. Once ht arranJed a fashion show of ski clothes and winter sports outfltll. but that wu before his marriage. While Princess Maraaret and Tony were in J1pan last year. o~in4 British Week In Tokyo, the princess'"' w a s. presented with a wall banner of orange and gold em- broidery. Tony dec ided it would make her an evenin& dress. · pledges in the Com1nunity Church Con gregalional, Corona del Mar on June 20. The daughter af Pifr. and "trs. David Gambill of Corona del Mar graduated fron1 Alhambra High School and the University of S o u t h e r n Callfomla where she Y.'as a membe:r of Alpha Gamma .Della. i .. ~ ... Associates Preview Kauffman Exhibition "There's hardly enough for SY.'im suit," !he princess remarked. So Ule dressmaker was told-to use the banner for the top, adding name chUfon folds ta the floor and wide sleeves trimmed with gold embroidery. -Ever since it's been Pr Ince s s Margaret's WENDY GAMBI LL Ena•aod Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. ti. 0 . Haley or South Bend. Ind., received his BS Crom• Ball State Unlversily ~1uncie1 Ind. and was presi- dent of Theta Chi fraterni ty. ' Rosarian Views Bugs .,/' .. •• ~<: ""' ...... """' .. .. ,. ... , Handmade for a Fashionbble Occasion Lovely tablecloths h~ve been mad;-~y f!lt;mbe1·~ -. of the Wo1n~n ·s Ser.vice Guild of the La gr111a 8,..A ch Ch11rch f'f Religious Science for a sprucg bvutiquc I~ faSfuO:" .ShOW·Card party l\lll ~!'rQn, O'~pJ~y ing o.ne Of the liiblcclc.l,~5 art ,(left -. tq right) ~1rs. Glen J.i.obcrts and ~lrs . Uel1a .A..rm1~age. The event '_V~ll be J!in at ~-noon on Wednesday, f\1arch 11, in lhe church with proceeds destined for ·!be I church expansion fund . • .. -'~""----'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ • ,;. Horoscope Be Gracious A preview recf:plion hosted by the University GaUe.ry As.!ioclates Sunday. t.1arch 8. from $to 7 p.m. v.·ill mark the opening of the Craig Kauf- fman exhibit in the UCI Gallery. The exhibition, directed by Jotm Coplans. curator of the Pasadena Art Museum, in· eludes works ranging from Kauffman's plexlglass reli ef palnUngs of lfl63..64 to his most current trans.lucent sprayed v.•all sculptures. The artist's work was in· eluded in the Kompas 4-West Coast USA exhibition which traveled in Europe earlier this year and currently i& being favorite after-dark outfit . seen In the 6!lth Am,riean Ex· She's jusl acquired the very Happenings in the Insect president of Uie Sooth Bay hlbltlon at the Chicago Art ne .... iest craze for day time V.'Orld will be observed when Ro!e Society in additlon t'o Institute. wear-a pair of sort leaU.er James R. Rose addresses the being a consulting rosarlan for One of the first Los Angeles boots, cowboy style, with the American Rose Society. artists to use Ind u 11.t r i a I square sliver heels that ctat· meeting or the Orange County Bugs 'n Stuff ..... 111 be hi s materials and method!! In his ter as she walk!. A sombrero Rose Society at 7:30 p.m. topic and he will show close.up work, he has continued to ex· goes wlt.h them but it's sald Tuesday, March JO, in the slldes of aphids, thrlps, worm~ plore the particular light and the princess was somewhat \Vestmlnster Civic Ce:nter. and plant diseases taken in h1s spatial qualities of his plex· put out when a ceMain Rose, of Granada Hills, is 01vn garden. lglass medium. member of the royal cire]f! past president of the San The public Is invited to al- The exhibition will be open asked : "v.·here'1 your horse~" Ferpando Rose Society and tend the meeting. to the public l\1arch IO.April s.1 ..:::::c:.~:;-·~--~~-~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~,--;:::-Tuesday through Sunday, from I to s p.m. •. k D«orations at the opening a a ..i a IS reception were arranged by ~ ALIVE! Mrs. Erle Hoeg of Laguna Beach and feature the brilliant tones of the ar tist's sculptures. At "Th• Gr•nd•1t M•ll Of All'' Beginning Merch 12, 1970 South Coast ?tua Virgo: SATURDAY MARCH 7 loyal to th06e. who perforn1 !ipeclal services. Strive to be:l· ter understand fellow workers. response lo calls a n d messages. You are more ac· live than usual. There ls al~o a tendency to be careless about detalls. Medical Assistants By SYDNEY Ol'ltARR New moon aDd ttllp1e of 1un art fe1tured. C A N C E R PERSONS MAKE THE BEST CHEFS. SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 21)' Nevi and creative outlook i.!i indicated. You are stimulal.td. There is change. You put together correcL ingredient s. Results could add. up lo greater emotional fulrillmenl. AQUAR IUS !Jan. 20·feb. 181: You add to po~sessions if receptive. J..ct other:i make of· fers. Your bargaining pol!itlon is strengthened i( Impression of coolne:;s is given -no panic, no rush ing. Gavel Changes Hands •• •. TEEN DATING lflNTS ' Tonlgtit theater p1rtles are fe1tured . Rom1ntlc at· mospbue p~v1t11. mo~ 10 ror Scorpk> tban olber 1lgn1. Aqu.ariu11 uuld get ~.tuck with -the clteck, while' Ylrg\ thinks ser1ou1 thought. roncenlnc permanency of a relatton116lp. Aries finds that b.11 for her) date 11 more glamorw1 thin ullclpated. Ge.mtal·· mikes pr"Ogftll with one who cobld b.okl key to fiiture b1pplnea1 •. SAGmARIUS tNov . '2- Dec. 21): There are some restrictions . But you are capable af completing im- portant aSfiignment. Selr-doubl is the only factor standing in your way. Realize this and res- pond accordlngly. CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Aecerit oo short journey, PISC~ (Feb. 19-l\1arch 20): Day features pleasurable ac· tivl ty among new, exciting persons. There is challenge and you rise to the occasion. Take a chance on your own personallly, abilities. You'll succeed. fl.1rs. R. Alan Gauley of corona de! Mar will be in· staTied as president of the Orange County M e d i c a 1 Asslltlnts' AssoclaUon at ' Jn all. a 1ood date 1J1bt for most -but be wary In 1tclud· • ed area1. . California Theme Set For Confab .. I AIRES (March 21·April 19)' New mooµ pO!ltlon coincides with your willingness to shake off sel!-doub!J. ·Go for the dif· rerent, the exciting. Give full play to your innate sense ()f adventure. TAl;itUS (April 20-May 20 \: Emphasis on how receptive you are lo friends. f'ullfllmtnt of deslrts depends u p o n cooperation of those attract ed to you. Excltlng night In· dicated; actept social In· vitations. GEl'lflNJ (f\-1ay 21.June 20 ): Versatile approach c1n gain allies In top positions. You have 1tbililies which many ad- mire. Your sense of alertness, humor is a definite asset. Oii;play it lo good advantage. CANCER (June 21..July 22): Your efforts have more of a chance to gain wide appeal. Put finishing touches o n i;.pecial project . Present format.. ideas, o\·erall plan . Many are surprised by your talent/'. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Slate of financial affairs can be clartlled. There is change, \'ariety. 1dded communication ~ith membe:r af apposite M!X. lnvo\vemenll tonight t'nd to be: serious. Take care. >1RGO' (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)' Lie low; iil1y w1\tlng game . Consult upert -don't at· !empt to be y()\lr o .... n lawyer. Family member ·makes gesture of peace. Accept it. Be gracious. LIBRA (Sepl. 11·0ct. 221: Your perceptivity ls put to test You &re called upon 1n make quality judgment. Be Family Dinner •• .· A dinner for members and (riends ol the M150fllc fam ily ~ t.ill be: served al I p.m. on ..... Sundl)', t.larch 9, in tht Arthur SU:ad r1sldence . .. Tl>os< lntere!le<I in ••• t 'lelldloJ Ute po!luck whlch will ~' provide money for the 'building • 'fund may phone l\lra. Stead al ~~ 4""6« for r,eHrvations. ., Sweet Sale A . bakt .. 1, wUI b• ". 'l>Oi>Jort<I by tht United l P'our,quare Women or Colla t Meaa tomorrow al lO a.m. in • fl'Ol\t er the Alph• Beto m1rket on l 7Ul St. In Co&ta CAROL SMITH Jun• Brid1 News Told At Party · ' Golden California will theme ttie &2nd aMual state con· ference of the California State Society, Daughters of the Am er I c an Revolution, ac- cord.Ing to P.frs. T h o m a s Verncrn Coffee , state regent. The. gathering v:tll take place Tuesday, March 10. through Friday, P.1areh 13, in the Los Angeles Hiiton Hotel. Rep re sentatlves of 85 :r;outhtrn 8nd 63 northern chapters wilt attend the con· fcrence, including the Aliso Canyon Chapter. Laguna Hiils: Col. William Cabell Cha pter, Newport Beach ; Pa· tie nee Wright Chapter, Lagm1a Beach: Richard Bay Id on Chapter, Seal Beach, and San Clemente Chapter, San • PRESIDENT Mrs. G1ul1y Conference ' Reported A report on a l!late. con· ferenct this weekend in Los Angeles will be given to n1embers of the Cavalier Chapter, Calonlal Dames XVII Clemente. Family and friends of Ca rol Century at the Tuesday, J\1arch 10 meeting. Sue Smith learned of he:-G S k President Beatrice Crist will engagement to Donald Le Roy rOU p ee S report on lhe session which Clark during a dlMer party "111 be attended by the ti.Imes. hosted by her parents, h1r. Volunteers Lov.·ry Gallinger. Elinor and 1'-trs. Robert .James Smith. Kr11k, Grant Rymal and In their Costa t.fesa home. l\1embers of the auxJU1ry of Erwin Marks. Costa J'l.1esa Memorial Hospital The meeting v.·ill begin al A mo n g guests cxin. will attend the month 1 y 12: IS p.m. in lhe ,Old Brussels gratulating the couple v.•ere meeting at 10 1.m. on Monday. restaurant. !\Ir. and t.frs. Donald E. Clark l\farch 9, Jn the hospital con-Also included on the agenda of Costa P.1esa, parents of the rerence room . will be a report on the recent benedlct~lecl. rtfembe:rs ire asked to bring Patriot.s' Day parade. and l\liss Smith attends Costa persons who are willing to presentaUon of a ~lale of of· l\lesa l{igh School and her volunteer time . Those In· flcers by J\1rs. Edgar Axtell, Ciance is im alumnus or the terested may phone Mrs. chairman of the nominating same school. Geor1e Thomas, 84&-2031. committtt. They will exchange v.•edd1ng --==;;:"=================== ,.o.,.,·s Jun 29 i n Ch r 1 s t :- Lutheran Church. Mothers Welcomed l\tolhers and children are ln- v\led lo vi!lit the Sou!h Hun· lin,g'lOn D e a c h Community N u r s e r y School "'hen participating parents ho~t a \\'eek long open house bet.,.,·etn 9 and 11 :30 a.m. be(innlng ~londay. March 9. Cltssts are conduc1ed taeh v.·eekriay In SL \l.'11fred's Epl!i«lpal Church. I See by Today's Want Ads • Good for th6 Second JOO )'t&n, llltique ~4 111e kind turned . !IJIOOI bed. Excellent oonditJOn $150. e \Vlnd<lWI ol the &OU.I: an. tiquf! 1tai~ glau do,.•, ZXSi tot ~. • \Vin over tnfl1tlon • . • 1hu. beautiful home. prl· vatt ~th, kitchen a.hd col. or lv privlleael', iaralt'. 1\Iesa Vmte area . dinner on Tuesday, March 10, in the Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana. Others taklns office folloY:· Ing the 7:30 p.m. dinner will be the P.tmes . 0. T. Van ll o u ghton, prtsiden\-elect : Robert Eichenberg, vit1? prtsi- dcnt: Bruce fl.flt c h I': 11. recording secretary; A JI an Quast. corresponding 5ecrtlary ; flarry K i n g . treasurer, and f'rank Farfone and Miss Sharon Buratto, dlrectars. J'l.1rs. Ted Lamb. retiring president, will b e c o m e parllamtntarian. lnstalllng officer will be Mrs. Harry Longstreth, a past president, assisted by hirs. Ray hlcCart.hy. Egg Hunt Colored Easler egfs and Easter foshlons "'11 be discussed when the Huntington Beach ~1rs. Jaycees meet at 7:30 p.m. l'lfonday, l\farch 9, in Li's restaurant . Cocktails .,.,,ill precede din· ner. and final arrangement.s for the citywide Easter egg hunt on Thursday, J'l.1arch 26, will be madt during lhe business meeting. Plans for tho group's annual fashion show April 11 in the Newporter Inn will be review- ed, and the meeting wil l con· elude with an old-fashioned rally for the April election of officer!. Going North Directors and teachers of preschoolera In Oranse County boarded buses this morning and are traveling to Fresno for a conf!.rence. Speakeni will be from state and federal of· fices concerned with the education of young children. SPECIAL SALE JEZEBEL BRASSIERES rl!i V2 ~PRICE S4.00 YALUI ...... " .. _, .... St.00 SS.II VA.LUI '""-·"·-· St.II $6.00 YALUI '""""··~····• Sl.to s1.01 YA.LUI ............... -SJ.II W• b•11t~t lh• c•11111l•t• Ire Stoe~ ,f • See l I•••~ "'''I Nol •ti tl1e1 I ''''" bwl • •••~ ,,1,,+i .. 11! A OHi TIMI ONLY SALE ! MAD FASHIONS 11151 IDllC! ll llilOlltU!ll "UNllNGTON IUCI 1'fesa . Proceeds will benefit .I.he Fouraquare mlaslowy v.·ork. f\Jr1, Glen Thom~n is diret- tor ol th(l p11rent·paUcipaUon, nonprofit and noruecretarlan nursery 'vhlch is -0peraled tor d1ildren betw('en 2 year~. nine moolh! and kindergarten 11ge. Addition al inf()rmatlon may ht obtained from f\.frs . Roger And•non, 002-3191 "==================-' ·--------' PRIDAT AND IATURDAT ONL Tl March 6-7 •.·:·~ .. · ·:~:ti:~j~~:t-~~m-*~m.w~~ ... wu·~-;g>-mre·.--t~.;;.wm··~~x-*M· .. =: ·~ • · .•.• ~:.: .. '-: ~~~ •• -... ·~:. :~w.·: .. .i~r~ "" :::'< ... ?.X;:.'*-:-w;>.:-; .... «<~".<: ., . ·: ·:.. . • . ~~!:..:v.: < ''~:"x ;::•.. ~~}.i.:,·O::=:!:>."':~::::::::.;.M.(':o;,>: ··, • .: .. ,• "•' .; . : .. : -~ .... .<:-~,..·,X'"h.•., ,-, .~.:~··· ~ • : . t:4.: ~:fr~ '..:~i *·:~ ~lj~ I~::: ~~~ ~ .... -~=:: ~~w ~::=~~r fi~~~ 1:.1, >,.,.,.:.;~ ~>;:::;::: ~:~:::~ t:~:~: ~~t:;:: l~:·.,,,,,, . ,, . '-:~:: ~ .:.~; ~~$'.<: :-:::::-:· ;® ~<~ ' .~~ ~ ~~ ~ ... t •• :·:'.-:- , Ladies Vinyl Suede Jackets J.:.tg. 3.97 Come .and· aet 'tm! Popular Yinrlc suede in perky scylu to makt you look ri1ht. T1kt: the c:hill out in blut, anttlopc or Stttn. Sires 10· 18. Charge It.' o ...... ~~ ........ I i~\!~~; ~:;:::::::.1 ~:;::~=:~ :·:·>:·>' I ~~~~~~~~ ' :::::'~:~~ l \~i~l .;-..<t t©.~~~ ~:;t·~ ''iJ ~t~J lfil~ f~~~~ ~&::~:: .. ....... ,. ··}~·'.·'. ~:.:·:·:·:· ::::::=~~ ~-~~~~ f~ci~~ i~1'''' tti fill m,, r'I?' =«*.· ·, ·. ·> . . '( ' M•. T••tM et T•h 11ss •· T11tl11 W11tt11IR1ttr lfflcll .... 11 Mt'•'''" 1M4CI ••• ,. ''"· ····~'·rk ll•c•I• •t Y•lltf Yltw SllS Li1tt•l1 '''· • ., .... ,.rtr h•t• lto•t l•itw.llB J)01 Inell II~. C1st• Mt•• Htr\lt 119'. •I Wll1•11 2200 M•rkr lh'4. Santi A"t llfl,.1tr St. •I lrbt•I 1400 llflrittr F•ll1rtoP1 ,ltct11tlt 11 f•tM li11•1 1 tJCI M. 'l1c•11!11 I.vi. I ' I I l I 1 l I -. Foun ~in Valley I VOL. 6"3, NO. SS, 4 SECTIONS , 42 PAGES ORAN GE COUNTY; CALIFORNl.A: FRIDAY,, MARCH 6, 1970 Beach· CD Geared for Natural Disast-er By TERR V COVILLt: 01 tlt9 D1ltr '"" Jl1ff Civil Defense was once an eipression that brought forth images of liUle men in white hats blowing whistles and of backyard bomb shelters Now the term has all but disappeared [rom the lips of local resident!!. 1·we don't !ike ~e term ch:.it de.f!:.~se beeause il's not a pophlar one. We're really stared more for natural disaster now," e:rplained Vince Collier, who is civil defense coordinator for the City of HunLlngton Beach. The beach city is ooe of the few in Or,ange County with a full, active pro-- grain. It has.. $1B,393 budge'ted for its of- fice of civil defense and disaster. Fountain Valley is more typical of olher cities. There, $1,500 i.9 budgeted for civil defense, m011l ol which is used for buyiiig ~surplus •' equipment from the fede ral • govemrdent rather thao .!IUJ>" portµig a day-to-day program. Collier's job involves a lot of pencil pushing, strategy n:i.aP.1g and teaching. "A lot of my work goes iJito filling out applications for federal disa\ter funds .·· Colller explained. Of course lhal only happens after a disaster. Last year one occuued -the heavy rains -.and llunti11gton Beach ex· pects lo recover nearly $12,000 from the federal government for repair work forc- ed by the rains. "To get that money I have to write out . A series of requests, just.lfy thoae re· quests then file claims with slate and federal officials," Collier said. How long does It take to 1et the federal money? "I don't know. We haven't received it yet," Collier lau1hed. Collier is a rather jovial fellow who doesn't take his job quite so seriously as some men did during the time portable falkl\lt shelters were popular. "We don't aeU: publicity. There's no .. sense scaring people . In this buslnesii when you have an international crisis you 1et a lot of phone calls." Another facet of Collier's work -when he lays aside the pencils -Is planning strategy to handle a re.al emergency , The city has a SO.pagt disaster relief. plan handy , mostly drawn up by Collier. a semi-reUreQ chemist. Its use can be ex:plained by events of last year's rain and flood scare .. "We had tSee DEFENSE, Pase Zl Fight Sure Ove1· Future Priorities Eyed ' . Huntington Won't Sign Lihrai·y Pact Of Air Base Council to Decide on Civic Proj-ects A fight appears certain Ui develop O\'er future use oI Los Alamitos Nava] Air Sta - tion, to be closed by the Pentagon in new defense cuts. The city of Los Alamitoa \\'&nlS to master plan the area and develop it it.wlf, but Orange County Supervisors may launch action Tuesday to acquire It as a county aviation site for light aircraft. T.be county's Airport Commission has recommended that supervisors take im· mediate sitps to acquire the Los Alamitos iacility for general aviation. The recommendalion is on lhe board's Tue!lday agenda. The land is owned . by the Federal Crl>vernmenl aod it is expected the county will take its case to Washington to obtain the site. for aviation purposes. los Alamitos has·been ruled out by lhe FAA as an airport for commercial craft Qecause of conflicting £light patterns with Lo<tg. Beach· Ai_rport. Thf: Los Alamitos facility will be closed hyi Jltne 30, 1971 with the traMfers begin· ning June .30. ' " 'fl\ere are 211 civilian employes al LOll .Alamitos Who .will be transferud. In ad· dition. the·cutback is expected to elimffi.. ate 20 Opo&iliOns at Seal Beach Weapons Station. · · Hickel .Heckled At Princeto1.i PRINCETON. N.J. (AP ) -Sliident di!Sident.s shouted down a speech by U.S. Inferior Secretary \Valier J. Hickel . in 11i•hicb he proposed a federally funded en- \'i~ment cQl'pS modeled after the Peace Corps. The secre.lary ma11aged to rinish his talk in Princeton University's Jadwin Gymnasium Thunday 'night but many in the audience of 1,800 were unable to hear him. About 100 students, some dressed as In- dians wearing buckskins, feathers and war paint, participat«I in the ' protest. Stock Harkels NEW YORK (AP)-Prices on the stock market continued to sag in fa irly acti\'e trading late this afternoon. (See quota· lions, Pages 20-21 ). Declines outnumbered ad va nces 793 to -469 on the New York Stock Exchange . By ALAN DlfUUN ot "" Oallf .... '"" A showdown study session in \.\'hich councilmen will thrash out · Huntington Beach's $13.3 million civic improvements program opens Monday at 7:30 p.m. The council will hassle qver the ptiorily of each project. The climaUc battle of how t.o pay for the pr,ogram will follow. Millions of dollirs arid a possible oil tax, are at slake. Essentially, the city's administrative staff i.9 pushing for a pay· as·you·go system while some businesw and laod·holding interests in the city art known to favor a bond program . Ralph Kiser, chamber or commerce manager, confirmed today that the chamber was polling it.s members this morning for views oo the program and its funding. "We'll make a presentalion lo the rounci/ w~n we get our members' views" Kiser said. Williim Foster, general manager, and other top Huntington Beach Company of- ficlals wlll alt end the , session although Fosler was unsure this mornihg whether lhe council "will be seeking some in puf' on the program. The civic im provements cover the new ci vic center '($6.7 million), fire stations 1$1.27 million), corparalion yard ($880,000), central .library ($2.1 million) and the auditorium and conference center ($2.3 million ). Finance director Ben Arguello will reeommend that the '$13:3 million im· provements be paid for in a joint cash and bond program over a IS.year period. He figures that, with the interest, this would coist $18.9 million. The alternative that has been discussed Yl'OUld be bonding the· entire program over 25 years. This ¢st has been estimated at S2&. 7 million, the difference being the greater interest, $9.7 mlllion. • Arguello's pay-as·yOu·go system would tall for extra taxation. The extra taxe:ii would raise $4.6 million revenue and SB.7 million would be bonded. Cease and "Desist? • • •• c -Furor Puzzles Seivage Offtcials A hearinf on control or alleged r;n- vtrorunental pollUtion emari.fi?g from sewage plant downwind from Huntlrfgton Harbour got under way today, with highly descriptive testimony . The Santa Ana River Basin Regional \Yater PollUUon Control Bo a rd (SARWPCB) C1>nvened in the Marina Community Center in Seal Beach lo con· sider isauing an immediate cease and desist order. ''Cease and desist what?" is the essen- tial plea of the Sunset Beach Sanitary District, whose board contends it has no jurisdiction of the vaporous essences issued, only the water llow. Richard L. Harrison, superintendent of the embattled facility at Warner Avenue and Pacific Coast High\.\·ay, rend a state- ment delineating his board's position . He suggested the offensive odors may be rising from the posh marina suburb i_tse lf, noting the expensi ve homes sit atop reclaimed. marshlands which emit noxious hydrogen sulfide gas. "Naturally, there art certain odors in- cident to human waste, but they are fully dissipated before they reach the Hurr tington Harbour area," declared Har· rison. Huntington Harbour residents smell 11 contradict.ion. A parade or representative!': from !reveral Orange County agencies involved in lhe continuing controversy over the ~ called Honey Pot testified as the SARWPCD Board deliberated. R. L. Wells, inspector for the Orange County Air Pollution Control District. said he has been making the rounds there since January , 1961 , encountering slight to moderate indelicacy. ·'Sort of a urinHirty laundry odor." h, explained. Jim Roberts, investigator for lhe Orange County \Valer Pollution Control l>istrict, said he bas inspected the plant 53 times and on ~I occasions definitely smelled something offensive. John Silver, 3942 Sirius Drivr, 1-lun· tington Beach, submitted 18 daily logs kept by 18 different Huntington Harbour people since Feb. 9, in which they duly recorded the alleged taint of the al· mosphere. He also handed in a protest petition (Set SEWAGE, Page ZI u'r f1lttlMl9 CAROLJ HANSO N (FOU RTH FROM LEFT), OTHERS BRING PL EAS . TO .WASH IN~TON Priloner1' Wive1, Rep. Htbert Look •t Picture of Enemy:•· Hum•ne T.:eet,mtnt • • I Proposals on raiaing the additional revenue Include: --..!_Ising the Sl.50 a month trash col· lection ree. ~ Using 5 percent or the property ta~. -A gross rectipta busine!.1 license fee . -An oil severance tax of 3 cents • barrel. -Increasing the hotel bed tax · from 4 percent lo $ percent. The oil tax alone, it Ls estimated, would raise $457,000 a year. One additional proposal that may be c.'tlnsidered will be doubling the trash fee to $3 a month and dropping some of the other taxes. When the trash fee was in- troduced it was pointed· out that it was a way of getting the homeow.ner to pay for the cosli of civic improvements. If the pay-as..you·go system is adopted a nol\1)rofit corporation would likely be rormed. Two firms e1ptcled lo help would be the Dillingha m Corp. and the W. J . Moran Co. Mavo.-~:~f ll.®eh · . ',, ~; d ~·~~ ). ··~~,,,1. ~ .... Gets ·St~te 'Post On Quake Panel Mayor Jack Green of HunUncton Beach was appointed today to a state advisory committee on earthquake dangers. He will serve four yeara ·as an advisor to the Joint Assembly-Senate Committee on Seismic Safety. The mayor will be on one or the grnup's ·five advisory· com· mittees, the Post-earthquake Recovery1 and Redevelopment Comm.ilttt. Senator Alfred E .. Alquist O.San Jose) v.•ho heads the joint committee, said G.reen was picked because ~f.~s ser~ce with the Orange County Diva1on of lHe - League of CiUes and because of his eJ· perience in redvelopment"projects. , The conunlttee has a five.year chaqe from the state legislature to make a study of seismic safety. "My committee will be involved In what we do after an earlhquake or similar natural disaster," Green said to. day. Most Huntington Beach city officiall'I are familiar with earthquake studies for M!veral fault! run through the downtown area, including the Inglewood·Newport. fawll which rocked Lona Beach in 1933. The city of HuntJngwn Beach still isn't ready to sign a contract with the architect chosen lo design the new $2 million city library. Two weeks ago, the council aulhoriied the administrative staff to go ahead and retain the firm of Richard & Dion Neutra & Associates. The retainer fee was sei at f/.500. But nothing has been signed yet. Development coordinator Tom Severn~ 1ald today that Neutra still is holding out for "total control" ol development of the library and it. environment. The city will not sign .. a letter of intent with the architect until after Monday night's study session of the City Council when the ca pital improvements program will 'be discussed. "Our legal staff has advised us that lo .~ign anything now would be to bind us to a contract that has not been full y worked out:'' ·Severns said. , · . . ~ ·~l's insvuc;:U9n ~t·to: ;City Admlo!Wa(or,Doyle n1er •• At • \fell,. j'lii ll'a: 'Cc .~ ll«l7 . ~ . , , ·.~~t~~ ·' ~· J aidered Dece.sary by Miller. ' ' MIUer a ~for "'hemaUc:ciai~ Ir!>~ tbt architect on the• library. cost estimates, a phasing program an. how the facility m1y b:e deveJoped for 1.0 pro. jectkm and •then for-1995 needs. ~ve.rns said. Neu tr a 's fet of a~ per· cent was acce ptable but .the city wished to retain more control over the bud,et, over actual construction and over the library's size. "He is the finest architect In the world," Severns said, "but we want con- trol over the construction project." 'l'he·development coordinator explained tllat Space Utility Associates, of Los Angeles, a subsidiary of the Dillingham Corporation, had conducted footage studies on the size of the library and its requirements for 1990 and J~. At Monday's council session, proposals will be discussed oo how to finance the $2 mll llon Jlbrary,.planned to ov,erlook Lake Talbert in the l47·acre central park. A tax-exempt non-profit corporation is C1>nsidered the most likely melhod. Dion Neutra conf.irmed that his firm stands ready to sign for the job. "We rega[Jf it aS 1 wonderful ~ portwiity," he said. "I don 't think there'ii anything foreboding in our position. I don't believe we are asking for full C1>n· trol. We are anxious to work with tbe landscape architect and others involved to coordinate development•• Mrs. Hanson Tells Story . . • At Congressional Hearing ·~ . From Wlre Sef')'lces WASHINGTON, D.C. -Four Southem California military wives who made an unP,.ecedented b1p around the · world trying to learn If the.Ir capUve husband! are dead or alive testllled today In Congress. The review of their early tt?O merCy mission before a sympathetic Houu committee W8!1 allO the first time wives of suspected prisoners of war held by North Vietnam spoke in 1 formal hear· Ing. Mrs. Carole Hanson, 1of 24111 Birdrock Drive, El Toro, and be:r three. globt-girdl,. ing fOmpanions were 'to speak during the day, along with Pentaron·ofOclais. Mrs. HanlOn 's husband, Marine Corps C.dpt. Stephen P. Hanson. wu shot down June 3, 1987, on a 'helicopter medical evacuation misston over Laos. Ne:ither he nor the other three missing ruers shot down M the war zone ·have been heard from , but Mrs. Hanson believes she saw him In £ monltortd H11 nol telecast. Tt\le women -undaunted by geltina 01-. ly sympilhy and no actu11I htlp on their Liri~g tr1p -.s•ld upon return trt lalc Ja'l"ary lhal U..y believe lht._!Jllllioa Wiii have long-ranging humanitarian ef. fecta. They were Invited to lell of their odyssey to major cities of U\e east and west, communist Bloc and Free World capitals, by Rep. L. Mendel Rivers (0- S.C.) the commi ttH chairman. Members of his "Armed Servlces Com· mittet were also scheduled to hear Assis· tant Defe nse Secretary Richard G. Capen Jr. release a Pentagon reporl on POW ne1oUations. Bolh tl$. and -Norlh Vielnam R<act dele1ates are .deadlocked on the emo- Uonal Wue lnvolvina the husbands of the four military wives and more than 1,000 other men held captive. The four women, tilCludlng P.frs. John K. Hardy Jr., of Covina, Mrs. Rooaevelt lleslle Jr .. and Mrs. Arthur S. Mearna, both ol Los Angtl,., lelt J1111. I, headini east. They visi ted Pope Paul in Rome, plus Egypt., Romania, India, Laos, Japan and Ru11J1 on the· reJatlvely unproductive trip, sponsored by Twin Circles .. a U.S! Calholic. maaa~lnt. . . ... . . . T •. Oday'11 Flilal: .. I S~· • " ... 'N.Y:. TEN CENTS : ·- DAll'I' PILOT It.ff ....... SELDOM HEARD, BUT READY Clvll Dol.•11 Chief Collier 3 Families Save Hornes .. By Protests' .. . Three families saved their homea (rOm demolition with sqcceasful a p..p Ll'.l s Wednesday nigllt against the ·H~ Belch buiklinl department's findDip that lhey were lq\We •. Tho <lti>U8i"I '.ec.;i;..i, ApPIM>lllJ!ll!I iliil'mne of 61.~lli· aw<•1;r.i.;. te~burg area of the city was ind~ ,Gt collapoe Ind dlsmllsed charitl ·llP)nll . . ' them. • ... • •• The owner1, James WC8>4,r 'i1&SS WashJniton Ave., John R. cdntreru, 16912 Lyndon St., ,and bouis or_:tiz, J"'2 Lynddn St, agreed Io mat.l e.rt.Jn • ! • ' .... repairs to the structures. UD.ufe Wiriri&, unvented gas heaters, and dry roflin t°" eaves were among the coftd}Uons .they agreed to correct. .. A fourth home the appeals boafd.1 dld find. unsale. The board was '~· the owner, P.trs. Aurelia lArna of Sama Ana, was agreeable to having the ·bout at 7522· Washington Ave., bumed •doWril>y the fire department but she ~t~ how to evict the tenants. , , The board·inBtruCted the.city.attorney'I office to advise Mrs. Lun1 on how this might be done. · The board will· hear· appeals on tJne more condemned homes in tM" Wi,n. tersburg area al 7:30 p.m., M~ 25. They will be the final three in the lfOUP nf 12 or.iginally condemned by ,lbe building department. Small Fire Cause! $2,500 in Damages A small fire wh.ich spreld from, tM kitchen stove to nearby cupboards caused $2,500 worth of damage to ·.the home of Ruth Dorwa rd, 15621 Marie La n e , Huntington Beach, 11wttda7 night. Firemen said the blaze was smothered with two fire e1:tingulsber1. Most. of. the damage was caused by smoke' and no one was injured. . OrantCe Weadler The weatherman's" m"kinc up tor last weekend, promiain1 stJn.. ny skies and a big temperatnr. boost, aided by gusly northeaat wind!, into the bab!J1 70't. .·! INSmE TOD~ 't' -( The 49th acate t.2.M1·the:~ lio1at as U1e Alaskan ahoio Cit Cotta Mtsa'1 South COOlt Plam 1 nears. All the detaill a,.« .fn tte>- da11'1 \Veekendcr 1ec&ion. • • l \ ... --· --__ .... -------. ,,, --• ' f OAIL r PILOT H , rrldl1, Mmh 6, 1970 Feds Vow More Laguna Drug Factory Arrests By 11.tRBAllA KREllllCH .. OI 9" Ot!IY r llet '"" . . . ,._., ••lliorlllei loclay i>n!Ucted more llftltt ..UI come after they ~'ooped lnto Laguna Beach Thursday pd claimed to have knocked over Bi $3.~ million naUonwtde ring dealing ln manufacture and distribution of illlclt drop. Raiding officers alleged that a Laguna home in Arch Beach Height.. was bead· quartera for the illegal dru1 traffic. In a teriff of raids beginning at 10:45 LID-,-IO federal narcolka agenta .,. 'Bonnie, Clyde' Suspects Hel~ In Costa Mesa By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of fllle Dtifl1 ru" lttfl Surrounded and facing 3 to 1 odds, four --including • Bonni• and C]ydNtyle couple • wanted from lodepende.nce, Mo. weatward surrendered without a fight today in Colla Mesa. Police said an ar~al of loaded wea- pon!, ca.ah and other loot llnklng them to a lerlea of holdups and burglaries was confiscated from their U!Ue rented house, and a stolen car parked outside. A tarce cache of dangeroua drugs - moit than 300 benzedrine tablets -was .also seited ln the 9:30 a.m. raid, during which the young woman suaped tried to eacape. 'I1>e trio of men wu booktd into Costa Mesa City Jail and the girl, captured by Detectlve Sergeant Cliff McBride, was taken to Orange County Jail to await local charges and extradition. "'lbey'll probably be wanted all over Ule country by the time "'e get teletypes sent," said DttecUve Sgt. John Regan, one of a dcnen lawmen Involved in ~ sudden raid. 'Mie suspects were captured at 514'1: Bernard St., where the youn1 woman wn apparenUy staying with one of the other defendants, according to inlt.iaJ in- vestigation. They were Identified as Howard R. Tschirhart., 31, and Patricia A. Jack&On, 24, of the Bunard Street address. plus Jamet E. Jackson, 25, of Independence, Mo., and Jack C. Matney, 32, oI Denver, Colo., po1ice aaid. Sgt. Regan said the Jackaon couple are wanteci'on warr1nta bsued by authorities in Independence, charging her with forgery and him with anned robbery. A cu reported stolen at Kansas City, Mo. waa impounded too. He was al!o booked on .smplclon of 1ale tJf dangerous drugs as a rernlt of the amphetamlne drug cache found in the Bernard Street home. GWC's Theater . Group Performs "The Case of the Golden Bagel" will be presented today and Saturday t o Anaheim and San Diego School chlld~n by Golden West College'• popular children's theater group. The first road tour of the eight-member group waa made possible by a $7S gift to the college drama department by the HunUngt.on Beach Junior Woman's Club. Written by former Golden West student Peter Conway, the play will be performed at Baden Powell School in Anaheim and the San Diego Public Library and San Dl~go Oilldrens Theater. Making the trip ~·ith Charles ~titchell. drama Instructor. are Kris Wilson, Renata Florin, Roland Barajas, Barbara Shores, Marion Chrislie, Larry ' Goldberg, and Laurtl Burne. DAILY PILOT OltAMGE GO.UT PUILISH!t+G COMl"MIV ltobtrt N. w,.d Prnldent •nd P\lfll11~ ... Jttk ll Curl1y Viet Prnldenl •NI G..,111l Mtn•;u lhol'f'lll kttvll f.dlter Tho"''' A. Mwrphlllt MaMtfflt EfllDI' Allt1rt W, 11111 .t.noci1!1 Ealtor Hntl119,_ hoc• OM&• 17175 lt1ch loult"••d M1rli119 Aclclr11u P.O. lo• 7,0, '2641 Ottl«-Offtc• Ll'11J111 9Hdl: m "'•r•t """"u. (Gtll Mne: UO Wftt 11'1' ltf .. I H"""'I 8Hdl' 2'11 Witt Stl!IN 8oulev1'11 ~n Clwntntt; m HWll'I El Omlllt R .. r ·- D.t.IL'I' ~!LOT. w!!fl ¥If!~ i. -blMll tM Nt ..... l"rlfM, It pu~lt""' flll1 UCttlf SUl'l-11'1' .., ...,.,.,, .,llio"'ll for l.lfl,IM htdl. HIWJllW' hKf!, Olttt M•t , H1111!Jrwtool ~ Ind fl'llUl'lll lft V1!1ty, lltir\I wit!! "'" "91oMI tdllllfl1, Or1f1ft (Mii .. ullU1!111>9 C.-0.llJ prlnllftt PllMt Ir. It ttll WI•! '''"°" erw.. Ntwl!O't llld\, ,.,. a. W.t ••'1 SlrMI, CC.II M __ T..., .... (7141 641-4)21 ft•• W•hM•rw Cell 540·1)20 C'-Mfild A4""bl•t •42·5671 '"1rllftt, 1M, Ortno• f.Ojll! "Ylllltl'llno ~fir, Nt flffOI t~lft. llllJllTf!ltnt, fdl!Orlll _,,,, tr lltvtcrlltf,,,..,11 llv•ln -'1 M r..-odloltlld ~ '411(1111 I*" IJH .. lell ef ~vrlfl\I - hoWlcl cltu ,_, ... -~ ·~ N..,.POt1 hf.ti! ""' C.tt ,,...,,, C:trl"'"'ll SUtll;(""'* 11v Clrl'IW U.00 ""'"ltrty1 W n'llU d.fCI ..... ~t~I ltlllfltl'l' ••!~!""*' U ,el rnMlflly, rested ftve meo and a woman Jt Laguna Seid!, Sooth Laguna and Oran1•, '"' c:on!lng in Danit! P. CNey, ,.,-. r<!gjonal dlr-..:lor of the federal BW'Ull ol Narootlcl and Danproua Dni~ The suspect.a are ch• r I e d with operating an LSD "'faetorY.'' a "ci.nnl.n1 plant" and a <!rug dlstribuUon network that supplied L.5D, hashish, m&rljuana and PCP, a psychedelic drug less potent than LSD to outlets In Ar\tona, New York City, Boston. New Orleans and Seattle. Casey said that tips from outside the !tale se t off the seven·monlb i.n- \•estigaUon lhat led t.o the bead.quarters Double Jeopardy ol the drua operaUon in the Lall\IU aru. The fedual offlcera. he nld1 were Ulltled by tho Oran(• Oollnly lllltnc:I Attomey'1 olllco, the Oranp county ~lll't lllfl<t ~ l!I! Qranp Pollca1 Deportmtn4 wli!Cli illadt two o Thursday'• arrests:. The Laguna Beach POUce Department did not participate in the investigation, nor was it notified of the impending raids, aceordlng to Police C'hlef Kenneth }luck. An extraordinary array or drug pro- cessing and shipping equipment aei.ud in the raids Included a complete Iahoratol)' for tho produc:tloll ol I.ID, low!d in the btdroom of a home et Mt Gl0...U St., Or&Jl(O: a canning machine, ulOd in ... 1 dnlp •ill pinl Cllll 10< lhlpmont acrou the totmtry, found at 31401 First Ave., South Llauna; and .two hydraulic presses f0< alulJ>lnr mlr\luana and h,.hlsb into kilogram bricks, fOUDd at UHM Miramar St in Arch Beach. Heights. Casey said the tquJpment was moved around the county at frequent intervals, but headquarters of the operation was all~ged to be at t\le Miramar Street ad- dress where ™-'<> of the auspecb, OeMis Ingham, 26 and Jeffrey Newman, 211 were arrested. Arrested at the South LalUftl addreu were Jtsdl Melhta. 21, and hll .U,1 4M ' Mtthll, IO. The two suspecta ltl'est.td at the Olassell Street adclrHa tn Orana:e were Paul H. Newton, 13, and Stephtn McCartby, 31. Thty.,. !>ting held Jn thal city. The other four suspects we.re taken directly to Los Angeles. Equipment seized in the raids was taken to the Federal BUNlau of Narcotics office at 714 W. Olympie Blvd., Loi Angeles, •long with drugs take11 as eyjdence. 'Ibesc included J,000 J.40 Ataswers Critics table~. and undetermined quantities of marijuana haahlsh and PCP. · Chtmlc:i\I llH4 In tho manufactun of the balluclJlocw -· obialnod from leglUm1te drug supply houset, Casey old, using lnvolce1 stolen from the Hill Brothers Chem lea I Company. "Early descriptlON ol HW Brnthera as 1 'bogwi' finn. were in co~." Caley said today. ''It ii 1 legtUmate firm ind the invoices were stolen." He said that one cf the suspects, ?iteehiz, Is facin g trial in Phoe!il.J en a charge of poasesslng 14,<KXI LSD tablets and w u free on bail Nixon Says No Troops KEY BISCA \'NE, FI.. (AP) -Presi- dent Nixon made 1 detailed, 3,000-word defense of American involvement in Laos t.oday and announced he is asking help f'rottt Page l DEFENSE ... emergency rescue stations at the recrea· lion building, Dwyer School and the old high school already selected if people near the Santa Ana River had to be evacauted," he said. • Ill Laos frOm the Soviet Union and Britain to help restore peace tn that eountry .. Nixon acknowledged that In. ~nt d1y1 "there has been intense._public specula· lion to the effect that the United St.ates in\'olvement ln Laos has substantially in- crtased in violation of the Geneva ac~ cords, that American ground forces are engaged in combat in Laos and that our air activity has had the effect of escalating the coilnict." Describing these :r~porl! as "grossly in· accurate," Nixon ,stated, "I have con· eluded that our n1tiooal interest will be aen·ed by pulling th~ subject into perspective lhroua:h a precise description of our current activities in Woe." The town of Cordele, Ga., twic e escaped tragedy Thursday. Heavy 'vbite clouds of ammonia fro.m a lea.king tank car blow across the highway while, at the &mne time, a black pillar of smoke rises from a Navy jet trainer that crashed a fe w miles away, killing one airman. When the river was ragin1 a.tits worst, Collier had poUCf: and fire units ready to warn residents and evacuate them if nec:easary. "We also had people keeping a ronstant watch on the river. There was eome fear it mJght break near the San Diego Freeway." The third major aspect of CoWer'a work 111 trab$g. The chief executive said there are no American ground combat·troops in Laos and "we have no plans for introducinc ground combat forces into Lio&." He al!JO stated that "no American st.a· tianed in LaDS ha.a .ever been killed in ~ ground combat ope:raUons." - LBJ's Chest Pains Vanish; First ~Good Night' Related SAN ANTONIQ, Tex. I UPI) -Tbe severe pain near the heart of Lyndon B. Johnton disappeared today and the former president had his first "'·ery good night" of sleep since he entered Brooke General Hosplial. Cardiologist.I were so encouraged by Johnson's progress in hls battle against angina peclorls they quit watchfng his every heartbeat with a n elec· trocardiograpb monitor. "The doctors plan to allow the presi- dent more limited activity today, depen- ding on how he feels," a mid-morning medical bulleUn said. "This would mean sOme walking around the hospital room." The ad visory 1aid doctors reported "11lere had been no episode or severe pain in the pa!t 24 hours. "President Johnson had a very good night. sleeping comfortably throughout the 11:30 p.m. through 6 a.m. period. The doctors advised that President Johnson had some minimal di9comfort in the left arm and che!t after awakening this m o r n I n g but described it as a feeling of mild soreness more than anything else." An electrocardiogram taken n n Johnson, 81, was unchanged from the past two days. Doctors conUnued the former president on drugs to thin his blood and smooth his heartbeat and prescribed lsosorbide dinilrate. a drug simil ar to nltroglycerine to dilate the blood vessels. Johnson's pain h'as been cau!ed.· by • reduced now or blood to his hearl resulting from a fonn of hardening of the arterieB. Johnson's wife Lady Bird, who left her husba nd's seventh floor hospital suite for the first tlme since he was admitted ~1ondav. said the former president "'as "doini what his doctors tell him." But Battle of Bands Auditions Set Auditions start Saturday at Gol~n We.st College for a March 28 "battle of lhe ba:nda" .show at the school. Local bands ~·ill put their best sound forward In an effort to gain 1 spot on the li5l of fi\·e for the ~farch 28 show. lncen- Uve for the battle Is the promise cf an aud ition With 1 major recording company for the winner. ~1ar<'h 15 is the last chance bands will have lo enter the local auditions. The band battle is handled by Ken Frawley and Chuck F11reno. They may be phonfd at 549-3586 and 637-$106, respectively. for funlltt audition Information. The flfarch 23 sbow, a "Come Together." v.·lll featurt five bands playing rontlnuou1 ly lrom 8 p.m. to mid· nlght for the dancing p\f11sure of 8U high school and college sludenls ln Orange County. Admission prk:e tn the d11nC1!: M11rch 28 ts S2 per couple. All procetds will go to the ti.fucll of. Dlm~s ba ttle Bialmt birth dtftela. \ r . the physicians said the chest p&ns, the reason Johnson entered tl\t ho!!ipital, prevented him from re.sting. John!on suffered the pains again early Thursday. The docton described t,htm as . "severe" and said he 1pe11t a '1bad night." Jaycees Name Bonf a to Head DSA Program City altomey Den Bonra has been naJTI· ed chainnan of the judges panel for the Huntington Beach Jaycees distinguished service awards. The awards will be presented at a ban-- quet scheduled for 7:30 p.m. ?ttarch 24 at the Sheraton Beach Inn. Dr. ?tfax Raf· ferty, state rnperintendent of public in- struction, wlll be·the keynote speaker. Other judges will be Dr. R. Dudley Boyce, president of Golden Wei;t College, Peter Horton, president of the chamber of commerce. and Mayor Jack Green. Jerry Vanlman, chalnnan of the Jaycee project, said the award Is made to men and women between the ages of 21 and 35, who have made excepUonal community contributions. One winner and two runners.up will be selected. Fourth of July Parade to Honor Deeds of Youth "Achievement.I oJ Our A m er i ca n Youth' 'is the theme 1e.Jected for this yea r's Fourth of July Parade in Hun- tington Beach, according to the Jaycees, coordinators of the parade. Banner headings in arts, sciences, com· munity service, patriotism educaUon, religion, hilltory and 1ports will divide en-- tries in California's aecond largest parade, now in its 66th year. "Extra effort w\11 be placed on decorated ,floats and free parking for spectators this year," J1ck Tatham, publicity cha.lrman for the Jay«es, an. nounced. Starting time is tl a.m .. with parade maps avail1ble at various informaUon booths. "A longer firework.I display -one hour ft! approved by the city council -fl'il1 aJao ~featured," Tatham 1ald. The cJty _of llunUnrton Beach pay1 for the parade \\'hlie the Jaycees run It. The budgtt is $14.000 this year. Help during the parade la provided by vti rioiJ s local club! as ~·ell as the El Toro ~1arines and ltunt!ngton Death PollCfl Oepnrtmtnt. For lnforrnatlon on tht parade or th6 ,_·ttk of ttltbrallon. write to J~eets, At. tenUoo : P11rade. P.O. Box 289, flun-tlnaton 8-1>, C&Ufornia 81611. Fron• Page 1 SEWAGE .•. bearing signaturea of 230 downwind residents cf Huntington Jiarbour and the more picturesque Sunset Beach area. Those documents urge issuance of an immediate cease and desist order, but the Sunset Beach Sanitation District says it can only act against waler, not air pollution. Harrison, 1s Its spokesman, said the occasional rotten egg odor his board blames on Huntington Harbour's pungent marsh foundation is supplemented by animal life and industrial waste in the ahimmerfng watel"Ways. Some of It, he charged, comes from the U.S .. Naval Weapons Station to the northwest. Huntington !)arbour residents whose trim sailboats and cruiser! have oc- caslonally collided with floating objects know the pollution c<1mes f r o m tomewhere and want it stopped. Testimony was scheduled t.o resume .after lunch, which was anUcipated to be light. based on the heavy texture of the morning's debate. "You know, every employe cf a t.u:· supported institution is automatically a d\il defense ~·orker. So we have t.o train them in first aid, rescue opeauons ind other useful items," comer explained. He also gives lectures and sbows films for boy scout.a, &irls scouts, and many civic eroupa. Stored in Collier's little offict in f11e station headquarters, are such ilems as geiger counters. maps, and various elec· tronlc equipmenl "We also have equipment to aet up an army·type field hospital with 200 cots and equipment for SUT&ery. Some of it Is stored here and some at Los Alamitos race track." Los Alamitos race track? "Well, It's hard to get storage for these things," he explained. \Vith the war and bomb shelter panics .subsiding. Collier says he doesn't need to concentrate on war-type civil defenee. ''A disaster is a disaster, no matter what the cause. If you are prepared for one yOu can react to the other," be aald. A shortage of basements In Orange County has al1e stunted the faJI~t shelter panic. In Fountain Valley a bJlh water table prevents <D1strucUon of many b1semenb-they'd be flooded. Glving precise figures, Nixon said there were ctUTenUy, J,040 Americans, both ser\ict personnel and clvilians, in Laos but that only 618 of these are direct government employee. "U.S. peroonnel Jn La03 during the past ytar has not increased/' he said, '<while during the past few months, North Viet- nam has sent over 13.000 additional com- bat ground troops into Laos." The President said U.S. air operations In that Southeaa;t Asia country have as their first priority the interdiction Df a continuing flow of North Vietnamese troopa: and supplies across the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex in Lao. to join Uie: fighting in South Vietnam. He repcrted that In 1969, th.ls flllw totaled about 10,000 men. "In addition tn air operations on the Ho Chi Minh Trail," he said, "we bave con- tinued to carry out reconnaiu:ance filghl.! in northern Laos and fly c:ombat support missions for Laotian forces when re-- quested to do so by the Royal Laotian government.'' He said that the level of U.S. operations In the air "has been increased only as th~ number of North Vietnamese Jn LaOI and the level of their aggruslon bas in- cn:ased." MARCH UPHOLSTERY, SALE BY. DREXEL: Featuring Drexel's Shelby Colectlon Th it t xciting c~l11ction hes rn•ny •dv•nt•g•• unm•tch•d in th• u1th•littry fitld, p•rticulerly whtn it is fta· tur•d at salt pr1c•1. SHELBY ADVANTACiES C:OMPLITI FAHIC LINE ~ .• ov•r 300 to choo1t from . SCOTCH~ARD fAIRIC: PROTEC:TION ALL FINI 9UALfTT fAIRIC:S •: . tht ••mt pric• on •ny givtn piec.• •f fur· rutur•. . .. •II f•bric.1 •r• Scotchg•rd•d •t no •tldi~ tion•I c.ost. HAND C:ONSTIUC:TIOH All ch t irt &: 1of•1 •r• h•nd con1truct•d from tht fr•m• to I w•y h•!'ltl titd spring c.onsfruc.• tlon. Arm cov•r• •r• provicf•d •t no •rlr• cost. Stirt1 are providttl on rn1ny pi•c•s at no •dditiori•I cost Ov•r 11differtttt1tylt1 of ch•irs, •nd 6 diff•r•nf 1tyl•1 of 1•f•1, &: lov••••f•, all •f r•ductd pric.••· ' ... SALE PRICE $159. "'· DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE NIWl'ORT llACH 1727 Wt1tcllff Or.; 642·2050 OPIN Pll~AT 'I" t INTERIORS Profaulonol Interior LAGUNA llACH Do1l9nora 345 N9'th Coast Hwy. Av1ll1~f.--AID-HSIO OPIN •llDAT 'TIL. t PhM T.tl ,_ M• .t 0,.... c...., 141•1261 • • • I ' 'I I I \ ' I 3 { I I I 'I I ' . , . • • • I : Newport Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. Stocks. EDITION VO L. 63, NO. SS, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES . ORANG ~ COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1970 TEN CENTS Hover Craft May .llSoon Fly on HarhAor Waters Hnvtr craft may be in the future for Newport Harbor. City ·nf Newport Beach olficials h'ave taken a wait and see stance alter a Public Utilities CornmiSliion hearing '11lursday on the air-cushion passenger craft. Ciiy representatives wenl to the hear- ing in Los Angles expecting to oppose !he hover craft application. But the craft in question turned otit to be differ- ent than lhe noisy, water turbulence - creating craft city Harbor and Tidelands Nixon Says No Fighting Men in Laos • KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -Presi- dent Nixon made ' a detailed, 3.000-word defense of American involvement in Laos loday and announced lie is asking help from the Soviet Union and Britain to tielp restore peace in that country. Nixon acknowledged lhat ln recent days .. there has been intense public specula· tion to the effect that the United States involvement in Laos has substantially in· creased in violation of the Geneva ac· cords, lhat Americrln ground forces are engaged in combat in Laos and that our air activity has had the effect· of escalating tM conflict.'' Describing these reports as ';grossly in· Accurate." Nixon stated , "I have con· •eluded that our national interest will be &erved by putting the subject into perspective through a precise description ol our current 1cti__ti1jes. in Laos." The chief executivi said there are no American gr0W1d combal tr0ops in Laos And "we have no plans for introduciD& ground combat forces into Laos." He also stated that "no American st.a· tioned in Laos hall ever been k.illt'd in ground combat operations." Giving precise figures. Nixon sald there were currently, 1,040 Americans, both i;erv!ce personnel and civilians, in Laos but that only 616 of these are dir~t governmerit employes. "U.S. personnel Jn Laos during the past year has not increased,'' he said. "while during the past few mqnths, North Viet· nam has sent over 13,000 additional corn· bal ground troops into Laos." The President said U.S. air operalions In that Southeast Asia country have as I.heir first priority the interdiction of a continuing flow of North Vielnarnese troops and supplies across the Ho Chi ~finh Trail complex in Laos to join the fighting in South Vietnam. He reported that in 1969, this flow totaled about 10,000 men. ''In addition lo air operations on the Ho Chi ~1 inh Trail," he said. "we have con· linued to carry out reconnaissance flights in northern Laos and l\y combat support missions for Laot ian forces when re· riuested to do so by the Royal Laotian ~overnmenl .'' He sa id that the leve l or U.S. operations In the air "has been increased only as the number nf North Vietnamese in Laos an<i the level of their aggression has in· creased.'' Massive Draft Protests Vrged BERKELEY IUPl l -Tom Hayden, a Berkeley rad ical and one of the Chicago Seven. Thursda,r urge<t organ I zed t\emonstratlons against draft boards, R llnits and mjlilary supply ships. ...___. ayden, spcak.1'rg bcfore"an audience ot 1,200 in the Student Union building on the University of California campus. Said, '"\\"e musj 1nobilize the people now ~Aainst the institufions lhat are pr o- moting the war.·· "There should be n1ut iny i'n the Army ." he said. "and one is building right now. It is beyond the scope of logiLimacy ror pen... pie. lo be enrolled in RoTC t in tht Universities. It is beyond the scope nf legitimacy to allow draft boards lo lune· lion." Hayden &aid thr. draft boards were "supply lines to lhc front"' and should be l'losed ;,to prevtnl lhe war from going_ Ofl." Cdi\1 High Principal • i\[ceks StiJI Criti ca l Corona del 1\1ar High School Principal Leon ~feeks was stlll listed in critic11l condition today in lhe cardi•c unit of Hoag Hospila\ In Ne'A'Port Beach. ritecks, SI. was hospltall:ted Feb 23 11f1er ~urferina 11 heart attack in his of· lice. He hAs been principal oJ the 5Chool since It ope~ In September ol 1062. Administrator George Oay,·es was fam i· liar with. The city noYt \viii wa it to be shown hover craft don 't make a racket and create a boating hazard for conventional Pleasure boats. The .demonstration is at least a year away, Dawes said. Thursday's hearing was a pre-eonfer· eoce hearing belore a PUC examiner 1'wo full.blown hearings before th e 'com- 1nission are promised be.fore Pacific International Hover Craft of La Jolla would be given approval -one hearing in its finances and one oo operation. ~teanwhile, Pacific International is moving ahead v.·ith plans to begin pas· sen;cr service called Hoverun between San Pedro, Long Beach or San Diego and Tijua na or Ensenada by ~1ay next year. Such international service does not re· qulre aproval by the PUC, It would be done under the British rlag with British· built hover craft. Dawes said lhfs would be a test of the dclT\ilnd for lhe service. If it proves successfu l, Pacific Inter· 11ational wants to move lnto the domestic OAILY P'tlOT 11•11 1'1Mot9 LIFEGUARD RAY GARVER KEEPS TABS ON BEACH EROSION Newport Guards ·W•tch The ir Footings•• Surf Roll s In Gang Suspects Nabbed 1-n Mesa Police Raid fly ARTHUR R. \l lSSEI. o• 111.-o.n, .. 11o1 11111 Surrounded and fa cing 3; (o I odds. four crimiflal suspects including a Bonnie anrl (;lyde"sty!e couple wan ted f r o m Independence. Mo. westward surrendered without a fighl today in Costa Mesii. Police said an arsenal of loaded wea· pons, cash and other loot linking them lo ~ serifs or holdups and burglaries was confiscated from their little rented house, and a stolen car parked outside. A large cache of dangerotls drugs - more than JOO benzedrine tablets -wa~ also seized in the 9:30 a.m. raid, during which the young woman suspect trie<t lo escape. The trifl of men was booked into Costa ~1~a City Jail and the girl, captured by Detective Sergea nt CliH ~1cBride, wa~ l;iken ·lo Orange Count y Jail to aw ait local charges and extradition. "The y'll probably be wanted all nver thr country by the time· we gct lelclype~ sent." said Detective Sgt. John Regan, one of a dozen lawmen involved in the ~udden raid. The suspecl'> were captured al ~141-: Bernard St, where the young woman was apparently staying with one of the other defendants, according lo iniUal in· , vestigation. They were identified as lfoward R. Tschirhart, 31. and Patricia A. Jackson. 24, of the Bern11ird Street addreM, plus James E. Jackson, 2S. of Independence. J\fo., and Jack C. Matney .. 32, of Denver, ' {See FUGITIVES, Page ZJ market with passenger and luggage ser· vice between the~coastaJ ports of Santa Barbara, Ventura, Santa Monka, Marina rel Ray, San Pedro, Long Beach, New· port Beach. Oceanside and San Diego. To do so it will be required to use ~ah built in the .United States, no\ British imports. ,.,_'O boats of the kind operating be- tween Engli!h coastal cities, 100 feel. long, ~ feel wid and carrying 300 pas- sengers, will be u.~ for tile initial inter· national triali and three more will be built in the U.S. (or the domestic runs if PUC approval is grant.ed. Dawes said there are l'A"O types of ~·raft. One, known as a surface ef· f achine, actually flies a foot or two off e wa ter and can also fly onto land. It has external propellors that make a lot of noise and throws up a tremendous spn1y, Dawes said. That is the hover craft he v.·as familiar with and had ridden in with the U.S. Marine Corps, "A1t4:h Is thinking aboul shii;t.to-short. movements that don'I re· quire troops to gel out al the shoreline. The other variety of hover craft, which Pacific International propoleS to use, is called .a captured air bubble craft. Thi priniclpal is similar but it doe..Bn 't ac· tually leave the v.·ater. can't travel on land. and doesn"t make nearly as much noise or water turbulence, Dawts said he was told, He and Assistant City A1lormy Denni!! o·Neil asked the examiner to mike the city of Newport Beach an interveM.r in the application. "We are no wa perty to it but at the moment we ar1 neither for or against,t• Dawes said. City Threatened Sea Inches to Trees, Lifeguard Site .. By THOMAS FORTUNE 01 tM OellJ' "Iii ! Sttfl A beach erosion threat to a parking lot , palm. trees and lifeguard headquarters ls being weathered in Newport Buch. Newport city workmen knocked oU sand bagging today after filling and plac· Ing 2,500 or the gunny sacks through Thursday. A wall of bags has been buill around palm trees and a comer or thr Newport Pier" pa rking Jot at 22od Street. The advancing sea has now cut sand btlck under the porch of lifeguard head· quarters but the threat has not been con· sidered serious enough for action by city crews. Groins built in fronl of the lifeguard quarters last year have been exposed but are ilowing the advance. The nearest threat to homes in More AtTests • Vowed in Coast 'LSD Factorv' " . By BARBARA KREIBICll 01 l!lt 01/ly ~lltl Siii! Federa l authorities today predicted more arrests will come after they i;;wooped inlo Laguna Beach Thursday and claimed to have knocked over a $3.5 million nation'i'•ide ring dealing in tTianufacture and distribution of illicit drugs. Raiding officers alleged that a Laguna home in Arch Beach Heights was head· quarters for the illegal drug traffic. In a series of raids beglnning at 10:4°5 ::t.m., 30 Federal narcotica agents ar· rcsled five men and a woman .n Laguna Beach, South Laguna and Orange. ac· cording to Danie l P. Calley, western regional director of the Federal Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. The suspects are c h a r g e d with o"perating an LSD "ractory," a "cannin~ plant" and a drug distribution network that supplied LSD, hashish, marijuana and PCP1 a psychedelic drug less potent than LSD lo outlets in Arizona , New York Cily, Boston, New Orleans and Seattle. Casey said that Ups from outside the state set off the seven-monlh in· vestigation that Jed to the headquarters o'f the drug operation in the La guna area. The fedtral officers, he said, were .assisted by the Orange County· District Attorney's office, the Orange County Sheriff's Office and the Orange Police Department; which made two of Thursday's arrests. The Laguna Beach Police Departmtnt rtid not participate in the. investigation. Mr was it notified of the impending (See LSD FACTORY, P•ae Zl NewPort Beach Is no threat at all. At 40th , Street. al the narrowest point, homes are separate<t from the ocean by 16S feet or beach . •ever, the beach ha5 narrowed from ZIO Tel!t when lhe sand haul operalion was concluded three weeks ago and 25 feet has been Jost in just the past two days. according lo Lifeguard Bruce Baird. f'or sand bagging o"perations 'at the parking Jot, city street and concrete repair cre'A'S and beach cleaner operators have been pressed Into service and at one point city street sweeper operators were even down there. "When the situation gets criticel ~nough we just knock everything tlse off and turn to sandbagging~· Assistant Irvine Coneedes General Services Director Wade Beyeler said. A front.wheel loader was being used· to push loose sand against the bags Coday. The escarpment, or drop-off lt!dge, had pushed to within about four fttl of the dory fishing fleet at Newport Pier, but no buttressing action was bei ng ta ken yet there . The westerly swells of Thursday which ran along the shore and ate out the beach had switched lo less damaging southwest swells today. The high tide of the week, si x.feet, four·inche8 was reached at 7:t5 this morn ing. Lifeguard Balrd iaid heavy surf £rom a 11t.orm at sea is expected to hit over the weekend but high tide levels will bt. drop· ping to the five·foot ranae. Newport Approves Land For Homes, Lagoon I Ne"'·port Beach planning commission· Ers won some concessions from Irivne Company aides Thursday night and then approved a tract map for a waterfront community and boating lagoon below Promontory Point. The development. ca lled Promontory Ray, lies in the crook of Bayside Drive as it sweeJ).'! from Coast Highway pa~t Beacon Bay down to the entranct of Bal· boa J1 land. Plans are to cut an Inlet from the nol'lh Balboa Island channel and dredge out a 71-boat slip marina 5Ut· rounded by 6% waterfront homes. • The 24·acre development now goes to the Newport Beach City Council for ap- proval. It also must be approved by the Orange County Harbor Commission . Planning commissioners T h u r s d a y LB.I Pains Gone , Doctors Watch Heart Condition SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UP!) -The 1evere pain near tile heart of Lyndon B. Johnson disappeared todl)' and the fonner president had hi.s first "very good night" or sleep slnu he entere<t Brooke General Hospital . CardiologisU were so encouraged by Johnson's progress in hi.s battle against angina pcctorls they quit watching' hi:i every heartbeat with a n elec· night imposed the condition that tht houses be set back from the street at varied intervals instead or equal dis- tances as Irvine planilers proposed. Also discussed was creating a tront111e road along realigned Bayside Drive. A compromise was reached with the Irvine Company to provide in its plans larger turn.around areas 50 cars wouldn't heve to back out onto Bayside Orlve. Planners expressed concern that plari~ lo cut back the slope from Promontory Point to make room for realigning Bay. side Drive would destroy natural v~e­ tation . Irvine aides said they would I I· tractively replant the cut bank. Irvine spokesmen have said the 61 lots would resemble the waterfront loo on Linda Isle. The lowest price tag on tho11e pieces of property was $68,000. Concern about the pending Promontory Bay development has been expressed by Carl Hage, manager of the Balboa Yacht Basin. 11'1 a letter !his week to city (:{)Un· cilmen he requested a sign directing motorists down what would become a dead.end strl!i!t to the Yacht Bagln, and controls against dust during exca.vation. He note<t that he doesn't see how a 100-foot·wide channel to the bay is going tc be kept clean when big Basin has problems in that respect with a 600-foot~ wide opening, ._,_... Slack ltlarkets NEW YORK (AP)-Prices on the stock \ market continued to sac in falrly active trading late this aft~rnoon . (Ste quota· tions, Pages 20--21 ). Toro Wife • Ill Capital ~ troca rdiogra_ph IJlOnitor. -":}'he doctors plan to allow the presi· dent more limited activity today, depen· ding on how he feels,'' a mid·morning medical bulleti n said. "This would mean c Orange Coa1t Mrs. Hanson , Others See k Word on Husbands From Wirt Servict!' \VASHJNGTON, D.C. -Four Soulhem California mllltary ..... wives who made a.n unpreCedented trip around the world trying to learn if their captive husbandio .-re dead or .alive testified tod.ay in -CongreSs. 'Tht revi~ o( their early 1970 mercy mission berore a sympathetic Hou'! commill~ wm also the firat Ume wive.' • nr spspectcd prisontrs of War held by North Vietnam spoke in 3 formal h<!ar. mg ~!rs. Carole flan son. of 2~112 Blrdrock Dri\'C, El Toro, and her three globe-glrdl· ~.1g con1panions were to tpeak during the day. along-with Pentagon officials. ~trs. Hanson's husband, Marint Corps Capt. Stephen P. H.-nson, was shot down .lune 3. 196'7. on 1 helicopter medical ev&cu atlon mission ovtr Laos. ' Neither he nor the other three. missing fl'i€':rs shot down in the -war zone have been heard from, but ~frs. }fanson believes s -iS'"IW tilm 'ln a monitored ' Hanoi telecast. The women -undaunted by getting on- ly sympathy and no actual help on their tiring trip -said upon return in late Ja.nuary lhat they believe the nU.ssion wilt-have lol)g.,angin& humanitarian et· fectJ. • They were Inv ited to tell ·of !heir Mysscy to major cities of the east ~nd v.•est. Communist Sloe and Free World cApllals, by Rep. L. ~1endcl Rivers (I). S.C.) the committee chairman. J\.1embcrs or hls Armed Services Com· mlltee were also schOOuled to hear Assli- t.ant Defense Secret1'ry Riohart':I C. Capen Jr. rt lease • Pentagon report on POw' ncaoUatlom. Boll1 U.S. and Norlh Vietnam po ace delegates art dtadlocktd on the emo- tional issue invo1vmg the huabandJ of the four military wives and more than t,<M:I> other men htld captive.. The four women. tncluding Mrs. John K. Hardy Jr .. rl Covina. Mrs. Roosevelt HcsUe Jr.1 and Mrs. Arlbur S. Mearns, both' ol Los Angele.a, left Jan. 3. heading CllSt. They vf!lted Pope .Paul in Rome , plus f;gypt, Romlilnl•, India, Laos, Japan and Ru ssia on the relatively unproctucuv·e trip, spansored by Twin Circle.$, .a U.S. Cathohc magulne. Erforts to reacH Hanoi failed and Mrs. Ha nson, whose husband has never seen their three.-year-old aon Stepben Jr., was rebuffed as 11ohe sought lnfonnaUon trom CS.. MRS. HANSON, Pqe ll iiome walking around the hospital room ." Weather The advisory said doctors reported "There had• been no episode of severe The weatherman's making tl1J pain In the past 24 houri . for last weekend, promising sun· . "Prtsiaent Johnaon had. a very good ny skies and · a big temperature n1ghl, sleeping comfortably Uu-_ouihout boost, aided by gusty northent the 11:30 P·f!l· throuah e a.m. period. The .winds into the blllmy '10'• doctors adviled that Preakient-Johneoft----' -· had some minimal di1COm(ort in the lert INSIDE TODA y arm and chest after awakening this m o r n I n g bul described it as a ~e:::ng o!tse~'l,ld aoreneta mqre than An lllect.rocardiogram taken on Johnson, 11 .. was unchanged room the past two days. Doctors coglinued the former prcaident on drugs to thin bi5 bloOd and 1mocith hl1 he.artbeat. and prescribed isosorblde dln lirate. 1 dru& similar to nitroglycerine to dilate the blood vessellll. Johnson) pain has been caused by • reduce<! Clow or blood lo his hurt resullih& from 1 form or btrdenlni of the 1rteriel. '1 I :t OAl.V PILOT From. Paae -J LSD FACTORY .. talds, accordln& to Poli« Oh.let Kenneth Huck. . An extraordinary ·array or drug pr~ ee&!lJ\g and shlpp\n11 equipment seii.ed in !be rlldl lntluojed • complet. laborotory I<>< !be prcductlon of LllD, found In the bedroom or a home It 569 Glassell :St., Orange ; a car.nlng machine. used to seal drup in pint cans for shipment across tl\e country, found al 31401 First Ave., Sooth Laguna; and two hydr.,ullc preues for ahaptna marijuana and bashisb Into kilogram bricks, found at 1094·Miramar St. In Arch Beach Heights. Casey Hid the equ.ipment was moved around the county at freq!Jenl intervals, but htadquarters of the operation was alleged to be al the Miramar Street ad- dress where l\\io of the suspects. Dennis Ingham, 26 and .Jeffrey NeV(nlan, 21, were arri.sted. Arrested at the South Laguna address were Jessie Mtthiz, 21. and bi! wife, Ann Meehli, IO. The two suspects arrested al the Glu.stll Street address In Orange were Paul H. Newton, 23, and Stephen McCarthy. 31. They are being held 111 that city. The other four suspects "'ere taken dlrectly to Loa Angeles. Equipment seized in the ra\ds, was l41<tr1 to the Federal Bureau of N1rcotlcs office at 714 W. Olympic Blvd., Los Angeles, alona with drugs taken as evidence. These included 5,000 LSD tablets, and undelennined quantities of marijuana, hashish and PCP. Chemicals used in the manufaclure of the hallucinogens \Vete oblained "from legitimate drug supply houses, Casey sai~~ using invoices stolen from the l·llll Brothers Chi!mlcal Company. "Early de5Cliptioru of Hill Brothers as a 'bogus' firm "'ere incorrect." Casey said today. "It is a le gitimate firm and the invoices were stolen." He said thal one of the suspects, ?-.teehh:, is facing trial 1n Phoenix on a charge of posst55ing 14 ,000 LSD tablet! and w·as fn'(e on bail. ' Ull'ITt .... Fight Su1·e ! Ove1· FJlture Of Air Base A fight appears certain to develop over I future use of Los Al•mit.os Naval Air Sta· tlon, to be closeO by I.he Pentagon In new defense cuts. The clty of Los Alamitos wanti to mast.er plan the area and develop tt itself, but Orange Coonty Supervisor! may launcl1 action Tuesday to acquire it as a county aviation site for light aircraft. The county's Airport Commission has recommended that supervisors t.al<e im· mediate steps to aCquire the Lo!! Alaipitos iacilily for general avia tion. The recommendation is on the board's Tuesday agenda. The land is owned by the Feder1l Government and it is expected the. county will take its case to Washin1ton to obtain the sile for aviation purposes. I Los Alamitos has been ruled out by fl&... Shaky Bandit Finds Guts, . Hits Mesa Store for $347 CAROLE HANSON (FOURTH FROM LEFT), OTHERS BRING PLEAS TO WASHINGTON Prisoners' Wives, Rep. Hebert Look at ,P icture of Enemy's Hum•ne TrNfmtnt FAA as an airport for commerci1l crift 1 be<:auae of conflltj.ing Oigbl patterns with Loog Beach Airport . Tiie Los Alamitos facllity will be cloeed 1 by June 30. 1971 with the transfera be8.in· ning June 30. The third. time Was a charm for a nervous youni bandit who )(ept coming bat:k to a Costa Mm liquor store Thurs· day night and finally worked up the courage to pull a gun. He came in so often that cle rk Gerald K. Kaiser , 26, hung up on police moments .after being rgbbed of $347, when he htard the front door buzzer sound off again. Kai9U told-OUicer HJirry Ehrlich the bakUng, twenty-ish robber enltred Mesa Vtrde Liquor, 1~20 Bater SL, three lime$ duririg the evening. He came in about a p.m., asked for an unUsua.J. brand of eastern beer the atore doesn't stock and then left. He returned at 8:U p.m., selected a common weate.m brand and was refused From. Page J FUGITIVES ••. Colo., police uid. Sit. Rtgan said lht Jackson couple art wanted on warranta issued by authorities In Independence, charging her with forgery and him with armed robbeory. A car reported stolen at Kansas City. Mo. was impounded too. He wu also booked on SU!picioo of sale ol dangerous drugs as a result of the amphetamine drug cache fouod in the Bernard Street home. Add.iUonal charges under which the four were booked include armed robbery. bw:glary. auto theft. and mote counts may be coming before the investigaUon winds up. Detective Capt. Bob Green said today the four suspect.A are believed responsib le for a wa,•e of holdups and burglaries in Costa Mesa and probably elsewhere in the Southland. The aact evidence confiscated -and specific crimes involved -were not listed, pending further prosecution of the case . "We picked up assorted 11uff from bur1larie1 and robberies in Cost.a Mesa." uid Sgt. Regan, adding that a check was under way today to determ ine if they are su!ipect.s in any other casu. Four guns, including t'A'O .32 caliber automatic pistols, a .32 caliber revolver artd a uwed-off 12-gauge shotgun were seized 1long with the other items. No resistance Wa5 offered. although the Jac)(son v."Oman tried to get away and was halted with a sharp, gunpoint com· mind by Sgt. P.1c8ride, Sgt Regan said. "lt would have been pretty difficult to 1ttuule.." he said, noting the 12 armed policemen took the four hy surprise. Set. Regan st.Id they had been sought fDT Ult past several days. but it was only this morning that they checked the Bernard Street address and foond their quarry. DAILY PILOT OkANtE (.OAST l'UIL.11Jol1NG COMPANY kob••• N. w,,d l'rt1i.tnt and 1'11blllht1 Jt1\ R.. CYrl1y Vit i l"rttlOt'll '"" Gt<otrt! MtnHtl' l"-11 K1tvil ldlle• Thel'lll A Mvrphiftt Mtn"I"' ldl~ T)lel'l11 Fertv~t Newprl lt•(:lo (!IV Edlt•• N_,.,. le.ch Off111 71 I W11f l1lbe 1 8011l1w1rd Me illn9 Addr111: P.O. lor 1176, '1601 OtMf Offltft: (t"' Mt-.. : llO Wt1t leY $1r""I Lt""'t INC~: m ~Otnl ............ 1-1Ulll!"9ton hM:>I: 17'7$ lttd'I I OU19¥t•d "" Clti''*'le: XIS Norlll ll C.tml!'ID II.Ml D1UL.Y l'ILO,., wtffl wllld'I It WO\bitltd ti.. .._,.,_, 11 M1111'19d lklll'I tn.1 S...,. • .., lfl _.,,,. Hil!on1 fer L""'"t 8*efi, ~ .. Kii. (otlt """"'· !fUfll""""' ~ .... ~Ill V1lln', ....... w!"' t1WW NtieMf tdllllM. 0r • ..,. C...11 l'vtlll ... l"' (..,...,.,, t•ltlllflt ,llftt\ IN II J111 WtU ••lllH ........ ~ llldl. .... .uo ·-,..,. .,,....., , ......... , .. T...,htle t714) •41·4121 ~ A4""'Mttt 142·.1•71 (~I, tfff. t!lr•ne-ttMot! '11blltl't!"' ~'· NI "'wt 1ier~1. llklttr11111111. flfllWitl """" .. .. .... r111,,.,..t11h i'lowt!ft ..,.,. Mo tw•ofU<M wlltlflll l.ffC!tl .,_,, ~ t' ~Ith!-· . "'"""' (I* _,... H iii .. Ntw!IO'l IHtll fflf c.+1 ·~. C.!l~t. i1.111Krl1011,. bY u,.,.ltr a .DO IMl'ltl'llVi iw m1ll 1J..f0 IM'llfl!Yi ""lllltn' fttll!'o•ll9"t. $2.1111 INf!lllfr. • service when he could not furnish iden· tification . to establish that he was ·old ellOUgh to buy. Kaiser said the shaky youth came back still another time al 10.50 p.m. and bought two 10-cent bags of candy. then showe<I a .38 caliber re volver and deman- ded all the money. The victim said he was ordered into I.he back room and called poli~ when he heard the bandit exit, but hun1 up when the buzztr went off again. Kaiser was on the phone with his wife when Officer Ehrlich arrh•ed. People to Decid e Freeway Designs Harbor View Hills residents, who cari look forward to two freeways being buil: almost on their doorsteps, want lo hav~ : say on what those freewa ys look like. Newport Beach city councilmen thi!> week received a letter from Ro~rl lngofd Jr. of the Harbor View Hills Homeowners Association board of direc· tors asking that homeowners association representatives be included on an y freeway advisory board. Ingold rtlerred to a wqestlon by c.ounctlman Robert Shelton at the last ci· ly council meeting that architects. landscape.. architects and others of capabili~ nol found on the city staff be named ta a citizen advisory board. The Hirbor View Hllls arPa ju:oi:t north of Corone del Mar \\'ill be bounded on the south by'.'the Pacific Coast Free"·ay along Fifth AVenue and on the west by the Corona del Mar Freeway a I o n g t1acArt6ur Boulevard. _, Guard Recalled CHAMPAIGN, ILL. !UPI) -Gov. Richard 8 . Ogilvie today recalled the 750 NaUonal Guardsmen he had ordered to the University of lllinois campus to control violent student demonslraUons. Busy Rota1·ian s From Pa.ge 1 MRS. HANS.ON .. the PaU1et Lao. in \'ientiane, Laos North Vietnamese author1t1es said Capt. Hanson's fate w .. s nu concen1 of l.beirs, since he was shot do"n in Lao5, and she was only made to stand in the driveway of red headquarters there. The women never gained tntry to the Soviet capitol of P..1oscow either, being forced to wait 12 miles outside town in a shabby airport transit hotel. None had official entry visas, but their quesl was honored e\sev.·here and they hoped to be admitted to ?¥1oscow ~d talk with ofhcials, perhaps bringing indirect pressure on Hanoi. North Vietnamese policy ca 11 s American POWs war criminals who must be dealt. with in direct rieace negotiations, \\'hile the U.S. government contends this is a violation of the Geneva Convention. On ly rarely does North Vietnam release the names Of its POW populace or allow the:m to write home, while: it will not make fo!'nlal list s available lo responsible international organiiations such as the Red Cross. Ne,vport Heights Group to Meet Newport Heights Community A&.soeia· liou wlll hold its annual general mem· bership meeting Wednesday nighl with the 1\vo candidates seeking to represent the area of on the city council present to i;pea)( on alley paving, the Pacific Coast Freeway and other subjeel~. . The two candidates are Carl Kymla Jr. and Roy \\l'oolsey. Outgoing president Stanley Le ~ievre said officers for the next year will be elected. The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. in the cafeteria al Ensign Intermediate School, 2000 CHff Dr.ive. OAILY 'IL.Of S11ft ll'tlllt General Ton1 Riley (foreground ). chairman of Ne\vpo~·Balt?oa Rotary Club Arb or Day Commlll ee. leads CO-\vorkers 1n unload1ng porlion or more th nn S,000 tree!' distributed th;oughout Harbor Area by the club in nb ser\·ancc o( ;\rbor Day. ~lclp1ng (backsround from left)' are JIO\\·ai d ?llorro\'' Norn1 Arbuckle and Dick Dickson. Club distributed more than 2 ooO small 1rees to th ird graders in all Harbor Area ichools -public.'. priva te an d parochial. Another 3,000 trees · u·cnt to various cl vic, cultural and chari table groups. , Action Postponed Report Card Confusion There are 218 civilian employe! at Loi Alamitos who will be. IJ'ansferred. Jn ad· dition, the cutback is expected to ellmin· alf' 200 positions al Seal Beach Weapons Station. Newport Station Gets Certificate From Foundation ' Has Schools Up in Air \ By PAMELA HALLAN Ol 1111 OlllY f'IJrM Steff Result.& of a report card survey in the San Joaquin Elementary School District has Jeff school officials in a temporary quandary. The Board of Tru!tus postponed at-- Lion on accepting the new cards until after the kinks can be worked out. The new card which was sent home with 957 students from 34. selected classes thrOU&hout the district measures effort as well as achievement. It also gives ne.w meaning to the traditional letter grades. A stands for above grade level , B is for at grade level and C is for below grade level. Fifty.five percent of the cards ~'ere: rt-- lumed with the commenb indicating lhal the great majority of paren1:5 be- lieved the card provided a clear picture ol their child's progress. Mo.st aaid they coold understand the .1ehievement section but there was con- siderable confusion about the effort mea· surement. Frank Hurd, an interested p&re:nl, crit. icized the card saying that any report card !hould contain an explanation of what is expected vf the sb.Jdent in spe. clflc areas. For example. at a particular point in time a child should be able to do 100 additional problems in 15 minutes with ·90 percent accuracy. Hurd also said a card should measure the Jevel of a~ievement and should make recommendalions concerning any necessary corrective action. . Dr. William Stocks. assistant superin· le:ndent, said the term grade level indi· cates what is expected of the child. He: said if a fourth grader is making normal progress through ·a fourth grade ma th· book then he is worl<ing at his grade level and i.s doing what is expected. He also said that before a new card JS adopted perhapa the term grade level could be more specifically explained: The new card which has cau1ed a gz;eat deal of controversy during past bOard meetings was originally presen· ted with numbers taking the place o( let· ler grades. The administration belie ved that numerals would helter convey the meanings of above, at or below grade \eve!. Jn favor of t.he new card with the numerals instead of the letter was trus· tee James Nelson wh<i felt that too much competitive interest was placed on letler grades and who was against having an f an on elementary card. In lavor of the old system ol using let· ter grades to mean e:xcellent, good. ~verage, below average and failing was trusle Edward Berry who felt tha t numerals would be too confusing. . · 'Ille cards that we: re sent oUl were a compromise. Chamber Slates Council Fon1m The Corona del Mar Chamber of Com· merce wil !sponsor .a forum for Ne:wport Beach City Council candidates at a break· fast meeting 1t1arch 17. The general public is invited to have breakfast with Corona del Mar Chamber members and hear the candidates. Breakfast will cost $2.75 per person and will be serYed at 7:30 a.m. in lhe Hunter Room at Reuben's Airport Restaurant. . Seating is lim ited. For reservations call the Chamber at 6i3-4050. New~ Beach Fhf radio station KOCM was presented a Freedom FoundaUon Award certificate this week for broed· casting patriotic quotatioru by Ne~· P..1e:sa school children. The radio station recorded and set to music 125 spot messages such as "The only good American is an all-American" and "You must care lo be an American!" They were broadcast during the month of Fe.bruary as they have been for the last five years. Students at each of the Newport·Mes.!1 District eleme:ntary schools were invited to submit sayings and the best 10 from each school were picked by the school district's Americanism Committee. . . Students' names were read on the arr with tbeir patriotic messages. The award certificate was presente:d by Mr1. Robert Pe.tenon of the Free:dom Foundation to Gary Burrill, pre!ide,nt ~d owner of KOCM . Anotber 1970 Freedom Foui'ldaltOl'I 3ward was ~sented to 0 . W. "Dfck .. Richard, owner of Richard's Udo Market in Newport Beach. He was given the award for a speech titled "National Pride has Lost Its Punch and Power." Fin;t gi\·en to the Newport lridustrial Club. Rlchard has since repeated the speech to Kiwanis clubs in Costa Mesa and Indio, the National Newspaper Pub- llshtrs Association and the New York State Grocers Association. Atom Weapons Tested YUCCA FLAT. Nev. (UPT) ....:. T w n atomic weapons tests were detonated to- day at fairly shallow depths beneath the desert floor at the Nevada test site. Both were rated at less than 20 kilotons. MARCH UPHOLSTERY, SALE BY DREXEL FeaturlTKJ Drexel's Shelby Collection Thil ••citing colltction he1 many tdv•nt•g•s UtHn ttchtd in the uphoht•ry field, p•rticvl1111rly when it i1 fe•· +vred tf 1t lt prices. SHELBY ADVANTAGES C:OMPLITI FAIRIC: LINE , . , aver 300 to choo11 from . SC:OTC:HGARD FAIRIC PROTICTION ALL FINI QUALITY FAIRICS •.. th• 1ame price on any 4ivtn piece of fur. nitur•. • •• t ll fabrics •r• Sc:otchgarded at no ac:id i· tiontl cost, HI.ND CONSTRUCTION All cheirs I sofes are hind constructtd from th1 frem1 to i w1y h•"d tit cl spring constn.ic .. ti on. Arm coven tr• provided at no e•tr• ·cost. Skirts ere provided on m•ny piec11 •t no e clclitiontl cost. 0...1r 12 different stylt s of chairi, and 6 different 1tyl11 of 1oft1, I 1ov11eets, ell at red1.1ced pricts. ., SALE PRICE $159 ..... DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE Newro•T B~ACH 1727 W"tcllfl Dr., 642-2010 OPI N PllDAT 'TIL t ... -· • INT ERIORS Prof111iontl Interior LAGUNA l l'ACH 01slgn1r1 345 North Coast Hwy. Avalltbl.._AIO-NSIO OPIN Fll:IDAT 'fll t 494"-'ll l'htH T1h FIW Mftf If Ore11t1 C.wttty 140·1211 t I •· ' 'I .1 I '1 I I .. Susan to Testify? I Miss Atkins, Manson Reunion 'Joyfu,l( LOS ANGELES IUPll -w" having~ u..'.ghu. minutes conlerring /wllh Susan Alkins, "'ho turned about repeaU11g her grand fttanson acroas .a table in the police informer in lhe Sharon ' jury-1estimony ·about Manson Tate slaylngs. held a ''joyfu l" and other members of thfl jail meeting Thursday with "~Janson famJly" cult beJore. a aa:u.~d mur<it>r cult leader jury. Ch~r.les ?t1an:son. Now the Deputy District Attorney striking brunette mu5l ponder Vincent BugliOsi told newsmen whether to follow her former the pr~cutian did oot know boy friend's proposed strategy whether she would testify or at their triaL not. There were indications she 1'1iss Alkins, %1, spent 75 Draft Lottery Ruled '~~iI·' by U.S. Judge SAN FRANCISCO (UPI} - The draft lottery conducted la.:st December ··~·as in all respects based on random selection and wa5 unbiased, fair. equitable and just..'' ac. cording to a federal judge. U.S. District Judge George B. Harris made the ruling Thursday in refusing to issue an injunction whlch would have suspended draft calls on grounds the lottery wa.!> not a random drawing. •i- " The suit was filed by seven young men from the San Franicsco area with draft nUmbers below 122 a n d birthdays, Jn the. last four mooths of the year. They contended the fishbowl drawing was biased against those With birtbdateS i n September, October November and December. Attorney Joel Sb awn , representing the young men, said experts In statistics - four of whom presented · af- fidavits in t.be case -agreed that the system was not ran- dom. He ~id the Selective Service should have sought "technical assistance from the myriad government agencies engaged in random sampling." attorney's room ot the Central County Jail. Hfr lawyer, Richard Caballero, w a s present. "They laughed when they dW one another. They were happy;• Caballero said. He said the meeting w.u "a j-0yful Ont." As she was led out ol the j1H en route to the women's jail. Mis.s Atkins wa s a 11 k e d v.'betber she v.·ould lake the Y.il.ness stand and repeat her grisly account or stabbffigs and shooUngs las t August at actress Sharon Tate's home and the residence or a wealthy grocer .and his wile. ''That's nooe of your business," she snapped. Caballero said ~fansoo had a &barply dillueut philooapby about bow tbe defense shcu.ld be conducted from the course the lawyer would take. He said if Mia Atkins could not follow his advice be wou1d ha ve to withdraw as her attorney. "She is going to think about those differences," C8ballero said. ">.3 of now , I am still her attorney." Crash Vi~tint SaYed Rescuer Dives Into 'Dirty' River PHILADELPHIA fUP!l - Eleanor l:larden. 22, dived into "lhe dirtiest water 1 ·ever saw" Thursday when she sci'w .11 car containing an elderly woman plunge into the Schuylkill River. "f knew I couldn't do an ything fronl shore. Whatever had to be done had to be done in the ~·ater." 1'fi.5s l:larden said. P.fiss Harden, a clerk-lypist at WCAU·TV, was on her way to work when she saw the car go out of control lt blew a left tire, slammed into .a tree, :ii pun around. p low ed backwards through a stone wall, and disappe.ared beneath the swift CUrTenl. police said. Mrs. Hester Parsley, 75,, the '·' driver, was rescued . Mi!iS Harden, a graduate of AJma College near Lansing. Mich., pulled her car over to tile side and ran to the river edge. . ..I d-On'l think there was any big decision," she 11.aid. "One guy who was there had an arm in a •ling, the other guy who was there said he couldn't swim, so that narrowed it down to me.'' "It was awfully cold. J.t was cold enough r.o that it really took your breath away when you got in." 1"le water waa about 40 degrees, police aaid . M'iss Harden. • former :iiwimming instructor at Elms Oamp for girls in Ham- mood.sport.· N.Y .• made her way over to tbe car tn to feet of water, She thought !be would have W turn back when ~lrs. Parsley bobbed to the surface. "She was really calm . She got on her back and started toward shore and I just helped her. She did all the work herself." The elderly -9.,.oman was take.Ii W Women·1 Medics! College HaspitaJ in saUsfac· tory condition. Miss Harden thinks other people woold have done the llame thing In the same situa· lion . "People are really good,'• abe said. "It's the opportunlty to do omielhing and It juot doesn't arrive that often. ' I -... :.·· ,. -• ·' f'r1daJ, Mardi 6, 1970 DAllY l'ltOT :; 4 ltate .Troo ers B NY Gaming ing Cracked NEW YORK !UPll -A gambling ring which allegedly handled more than half a billion dollars a yebr in bets on 1porting events was broken up Thursday by the FB I. which arrested 11 mtn in· eluding four New York State troopers. Al:so taken into custody on the gambling and bribery charge1 was Nicholas Ratte-nl, 63. of Yonker11. a ff.puled member of the Vito Genovese Ttvister Hits Florida Mana f Uy. who allegedly aded a "banker" of the syn· dicate operation. Daniel Hollman. head of the FBI team wh ich cracked the cue, aaid the "take" fro,m the betting on baseball, foot- ball, horse racing and other sport& even~ reached u high as $600 mJUion a year. Hollman said the multiple arrest,, were a body blow to gambling In the metropolitan area, especfally ln suburban WeJtchester and Roct1md counties where betUni may have bee a "knocked oul. '' Tiie four arrested troopers were ldenUfled a U . OWiet CwJno and :ieni-0r State Police lnvestigatora Eugene Curi<o, Lou Slbatini Ind Vin· cent Malavaroo. Th e i r superior, State P o 11 c e Supertntendent WlIUam E. Kirwan Jr .. said the four ac~ led In the role of protector.• • Arab Amphibious Raid Thwarted by Is~aeli,S At Spa.ceport TEL Avrv cAP J -Israel Armed struggle c.mm.nd gays it thwarted an .Arab o:mfirmed the raid. saying two U~I T ... hitM BACK TO BOOT CAMP OR BRIG? TITIISV!LLE , Fla. (UPI) -amphibiou,,.trike tonight with Israeli helicopters I anded A tornado struck this city on a rakl across the Dead Sea in commandos who attacked a the fringe of the· naUon's which three Ara~ Wert killed number of Al Fatab guerril1u. spaceport Thursday, dam.ag· and three were captured. The Israeli spokesman did Ing 72 homes and injuring There also was fighting Otl not. mention the helloopttts. M•rine McDowell T•k•n From Pl•ne seve n persons. the Lebanese border Tburaday ,.1M1 Potttkll ~rftlllt Damage was ~timaled at $1 night where guerrillas havelP".O.::;.:;::;;;;;;;;.;;;oo;::;;;;;;; ___ million . Installations at nearby 5lepped up their activity in rt• Robert Shelton S•ys: Marine Deserter Bacli Fro111 Sweden, Nabbed Cape Kennedy were not cent weeks, prompting Israeli "VOTE FOR .damaged. ' warnings to the Lebanese. One Dr. ROBERT SHEL TON "It was a miracle no one Israeli so\dier was killed and N.a . CITY COUNCIL" ~·as killed,'' :said Lt. Gov. Ray two were wounded. r°"' c-v. crtm. C. Osborne. An lsaraeli spokesman said *' ic-1"* °"" ctM Twelve of the 72 homes in Interrogation or the Arabi~~~~~~~ the path of the twister were guerrUlas captured in the levelled . Damage ranged from Dead Sea raid Thursday light lo heavy on the others. disclosed 17 guerrillas were to NE\V YORK !UPI) -Terry P.1cDowell, a f\farine Corps private who deserted bool camp for asylum in S\\·eden, was take'n into custody on unspecified charge5 Thursday night wben he arrived at Ken- nedy lnie.mational Airport on - a j-eiliner from Stockholm. A spokesman Jor the ~ District Naval lleadquarters here said McDowell was taken to the P.,1arine barracks: in Brooklyn . Officen there refus. ed to discl05e any lnfonnation about McOwell who is believed to be from Illinois. The young private'5 brown hair was cut :short and he wore freshly·laundered blue dungarees, brown loafers and a yellow windbreaker over a blue open-necked shirt. "come 8cros:'I in two rubber Police Lt. Emie Bean. was boats with l:JOmm. Katyusba one of the lucky homeowners. rockets and special carriers of "I could see all this debris the kind used Jn the rocket at. blowing across the back ya rd tack on Jerusalem l as t t when the storm hit) -strips August." of lumber. roofing. everything The. spokesman said the Red Defector else," Bean oaid. guerrillaa appuenUy planned "~1e and my wile ran to the to set up a base in the Hebron front of the house and looked Hilb: aouth of the: Israeli Spills Beaus oul the windo w." he continued. capital. "Tbe two house.< dir<ctly Last Aug. 26. guerrillaa fired across rrom us -the tops of three rockets at a Jerusalem MEXICO CJTY (UPI} -A them just seemed to disap· hotel, but no one was injured. Sovie t diplomat who defected pear. Orie second they were Security force.o; later found 13 in ~fexico last month ha s ac· there and U1e next second they unfired missiles: on a ridge cu.sed tbe Soviet embassy in were gone. . fi~ miles south of the city, this capital of espionage aim· "I didn't hear a thing, no some cf them Kat.yushas. VNl'l'ED S'l'A'l'BS N A'l'lO'N.AL B "ANK SOUTH eoAST PliAp. BRANCH NOW Oml SATURDAYS t .. 1 , .... MON .. THUU. 1M P.M. HIDAYI tN P.M. 1714) M0-5211 . a.-.1 .. h .c..ra....c-. .... .,., . ..,_ ""''* a, E. H. LEVAN An armed force5 police firi;t lieutenant boarded the jetliner at Kennedy Airport to take the 6-foot-4 McDowell into CUlltody before any of the other pa3sengers cUsembarked . He had returned voluntarily. ed at "total domination" of roar or anything." tn Amman, the Palestine Latin America. ..:.:=..==~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~li~~~~~~~~;::~•::'.'"'=' Raya Kliselnikova, 30. told a news confermce TUesday that I k · The officer refused t.o reveal any informatioo a b o u t McDowell and would not permit newsmen to Interview hbn. McDowell wore a glum expres.'rion as he stepped off the plane to be met by two mllilal)' policemen. ~':6;.'~~~bers have 3 ftS ft-IS A.LIVI! ~ an example. ~ti s s At "The Gr•ndest M•ll Of All'' Kiselnikova said. four Itri B•sa!nnlng M•rch 12, 1970 membeni of the Soviet con- su1ar Mrlloo spend eight hours ~ fh t". Uf 4h a ..... k Issuing visas and the . ooa \0 1 .ua rest of the time on "clan· destine operaUOns." OPEN SUNDAYS 12:00to 5:00 (Rrr-gfalet{ --·-R n n I 0 B R s AR y s R LB ! NOW IN PROGRESS AT ALL STORIS , . . I • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • g. Local Power r The environment ts . a suddenly popular political Issue and a fioM of poorly thought out bUls have been tossed into the legislative hopper in Sacramento. Severs.I of these, similar in nature. would crea~e regional commissions to aupervile development of the coastal areas of the state. The commissions would as· IU?lle veto powers over citiu and -where there are no cities along the eoast -county governments. Authors of the biUs appareritly reason that broad· er public bases are needed for such aims as develop- ing shoreline for recreational use, preserving public beach access, saving wildlife estuaries from dredge- and-fiU operations, and etoppiJl.g pollution . The long experience of Newport Beach and its -·neighbors makes it clear that What really is needed Is not more legislation setting up political bureaucratic apparatus of commissions and review boards. What Is desperately needed is for the state to appropriate funds to h~p coastal counties and cities with the fj.. nancially bacl-breaklng job of buying, developing and maintaining beaches and parks for the benefit of all Californians. Development bas long been equated with progress in the American ethic. So now the country bas awaken· ed to the 1ins of it1 past. and 10 have coastal residen'ts and coastal governments. But there ls every reason to believ~ that enlight- ened self interest exists rtgbt here in the city of New• port Beach. The regional comml!s10Ds the proposing 1egisl1'-- ton wollld create are to be comprised of more ap. pointed member• than elected. This is contrary to the principal of representative government. Most of the authors of the bills are from inland communities. But for one bill, introduced by a coastal resident, Assemblyman Pete Wilson (ff...San Diego), gives more say to locally·elected officials. ~ They Benefit Phvsicians, ~ Morticians Tlloughll "' Lorp• Thf> world eeem. divided into those who aren't sick and Imagine they are, and those wbo are sick and in&ist they aren't; physiclant bent.fit from the former, and morticians from the latter. • • • PoUUcl llxKJ1d DOL be an occupation; public admhtlstratton should be: for the bealth of the community Is surely as Im· portant as the health of the individua l, yet nobody would think of "electing" mea to be doctors simply because they pro- claimed tbenue.lve1 docton. • • • The llWl -alwa)'I iq>owl a lbortM find.I hlmleU on more detoun than his plodding companiOlll wbo take the CUJ10mary rout .. • • • The rel&Uvity of "wealth" was acutely expressed by Thoreau, 'A'hen he said : "If you ·wlsh to give a man a sense or poverty, glve him a thousand dollars. The nm hundrtd dollars he gets will not be worth more than ten that be used to get." • • • Only if you believe a thing the second time . around -after having come to doubt it -Is your belief likely to be grounded in objective realism (those who believe things from birth never really un- derstand them.) • • • Some men feel so proprfet.ary about their own ideas tha t if, in a conversallon, you limply restate their own argument wttb minor modifications, they will fitrcely. disagree with v.•hat you say, and contradict lheir o w n earlier position. Dear .Gloomy Gus: wen. sprlnr bu 1pnmg! Come down to the beach In West New· port and IH our crop of weeds-- and rocks! -M. E.H. Tilll "'"" ~ .......... Yltwl, '"' __ ,.tr ...... "" _...,..,, ..,.,, ,_ "' ,.... " • ......, ... Oliff ., .... (This irritating habit tends to be truer of .. ~ .. tyled Int.llectuals than of anybody tb<.) • • • II'• amulng bow naturally sracetul most children are -until they are taken in hand and given lessons in grace.ful deportment. • • • Nothing Is better !or our cbsraoter than to have .......,. around (oot breathing down one's neck, of courte) who doesn't llke us and forcel us to rwa1mine our attitudes and actions in the light of this harsh judgmenl (In !UCb lituations, the weak mere.ly succumb to aeJf.plty, the petty try to retaliate, but the wile gain insight.) • • • Every people imagines that Its own language sounds "natural'' and foreign tongues sound "funny" -and it Is hard to believe that English sounds Uke "unpleasant little news" to so cultivated a Spaniard as Ortega, or that his regimen for learning the language was to "begin by thruating the jaw forward .. almost clenching the le<th, and pracilcally Im· mobilizing the lips." • • • Mankind cannot stand unorganized society, which e~s us to peril, or organized society, whch envelops us in dullness; and all polit.ical conflict Is 1 ltruggle to !ind an equlltbrium between rbk and safety. Costly Overseas Armies Excepting small task forc's In the • PbDipplnes and in LaUn American revolutions, no American troops were sent abroad between th' Mex1can war In t.be JJ40s and 1917. three.quarter1 of a century. Yet in this period the United State! em- ergtd as a grtat power, commanded the respect of other great powers, and 11Urred the caution of potential aggressors , big and lilt!,, This was accomplished at ttfCfflible money CO.SI. Since 1917, but particularly since 1945. tht United States has maintained big arrnJts abroad with costs running to tens of blJUons, without enlisting either the U'lnPIOIY or the respect of the outer World. Somethlnt lw to be wrong with this top.ckkd equation, and the American people m gradually beginning to .,·oridcr whatttb. PlllllUANT TO THE uneuy fllll In the Vletnlm' -· wlllle Prosldeot Nlloo -111 oal whatever tcbeme be lw for ~ memben of Congma .,.. !llnlllll ,.. 1111 open dtbate with the admlnlllntloa ... the srim, 1ntrt and ""1taldlnf leoell ol occupation l1oopt In Europeandl'Clllldal>oul. The leftf II now 310,tlOtl mt11. and huni 111bl1111U.Uy d!an'ed In 20 years. U Is tubjecl to unfulfllled promlm of reduction, hut &111 "rdploymen~" as tile bal<me1 ....,. has -trtfllng. Orig1na1lY tbHe tnq.w wtr. to be a "'1dd ol w-n EUrope oeatnst R"'dan allf<lllon, and NATO wu •llblllbed to th1I end. But tllb -lft thrut, rtgardleu ol tbc Czech Incursion. II - an allturlllb' to weol Earnptll!S who ooly • Uke tbt Yankees for thelr dollar u- ch1nge value. lluplt. !hit dtgndlng and 1n ...... 11 situation, I.be Washington news ii that State Secretary Rogers and Defense Secretary Laird are preJlartng a stand- pat defense against c:ongresslonal attack th.ls spring and summer, PRESIDENT NIXON has won a measure of acceptance for h 1 s gradualism ln Vietnam disengqement, somewhat defl1tln("tbe Vlttnarn ~ Several anU.war Senators (political i.n- tlgool&t.! of the Pmldent) are """ que>· Uonin& bis llncerity, averring he really "lr1tend1" 1 troop level of 300,000 fn. deflnJi.ly. Arnone tbem II S-tor McGovtm, South DW!I. Sala!« Fulhrlg!ll's """1p Relatlmt Commlltle bu opened .... -of attaclt, -memben abrl~ .. b' critical o1 "Vletnamhallon," which Mr. Nboo Is ualng as a YardstJck for Vietnam wlthdrawall. l!ena!« GoodtU, New York, called Vlebwnliatioa 1 "great pubUc rtWtons .._.., hut nol • true policy of disengagement." Senator Hupa, Iowa, c11led It a "tem1nUc boll'." Various public figures, aome after bat- Utfronl vlllta, q ... llon U Vletntmlzallon b11 1:Df rubrtaoce in itself, or •• 1 b&se. !0< bope ol tndlnc the w11-. Mr. Nllon hH hi<! what n>IY be calltd I .. seconcl honeymoon," even doves coolng faintly. ,,,ere art tlcn• tt won't endure beyond the comlnf swnmer. 'lb• bills propose that the regionaf comml11lon1 have veto power over building A!M1 developm~nt P,tT .. mil& within half a mile or one mile of the cout, tliua cl-eating a mountain of paper work. In the city of New .. port Beach alone, from 200 to nearly 400 projects, would have bad to have been reviewed last year. By giving final say to the commission, the legLsla- tion in effect would be stealing the local government agency's zoning authority -the rriajor power of Ioca1 government. And passing it on to appointees or the government wou1d be a serious erosion or local au- thority. Sweeping power lo oversee all developments with- in a zone that is not in public ownership should not be given to any commission. Control over speciJic land uses, however, like the cutrting off of beach ac~ess, filling and dred~ing public tidelands, and polluting, ls a legitimate matter for review. The chance for corruption or incredible bungling through bureaucratic r'ed tape is a good deal greater in the "in between" layer or .st.ate government--com- missions, special boards, e'l.c. -than at the gra~s roots level or municipal or county government. Informed sources in Sacramento say the mood is such with both Republicans and Democrats trying to establish records for "protecting the environment" that some type of bill controlling development adjacent to the coast is almol'lt certain to be adopted. The DAILY PILOT believes the way to get the job done is for the state to set some standards and then give the county and municipal governments the money and the obligation to do the job. Another layer or two of state ~overnment could do more to foul up the en- vironment than to protect it. Citizens of the Oran,l?e Coast communities ought to be sure they make their feelings directly known to their legislators. N Strangers in Their Own Homes Television and the Generation Gap 11 there really 1 generation gap? Is it a serious one? Today I shall argue that there is a gap, and that It is perhaps more serklus than any of us realiie. Let me start by defining what t mean by the "semantic envJronment. ·• The semantic environment ls the world of words and images in which all human beings live. It is the environment of Df:Vo'S and infonnation, beliefs, altitudes, laws, cultural imperatives, that constihrte your verbal world and mine. A quick way of describing the semantic environment is lo 1ay that lt Is that part of the total en- vironment which ).'OUr J1f!t dog lying on the rug at your fttl has no Inkling of. It Is the world of Shakespeare and ?i-1oiart and Bug!! Bunny !Ind the Beatie!; of Moses and Jesus and Billy Graham : of published batting averages and the <'los- ing prices on the New York Stock Ex· change; of news from Tokyo and Prague ind Saigon. The semantic envti:onment Is the product of that vast network of com· munlcaUon whlch we call clvlllzaUon. IN A WAY WE ALL share a common semantic environment--0ne created by the major news services, networks, and the intellectual climate of our times. In another way, each or us inhabits a 1tmanUc environment not quite like that of anyone else, since we listen to dif. ferent speakers. watch d I f f e r e n t teJevision &hows, hear different in· formation and rumors at different places of work. Some of us circulate in Catholic clrcltt, some in Protestant. Some read s¢tts car magulnes, IOllle read art journals, others read comic books. For mOflt of the history of the human race, the semantic environment of childrtn has been created by their parents and C1ose relatives, who pass on to the youna their pictures of the world, their value sy!f.ems. their standards Of behavior. As the children grow older, their semantic environment is expanded by other influencts : friends. nelghbors, movie!, aild tbe big uperience of school. Sdlool1 continue the prnc<11 pvenb have begun. THE SEM4NTIC errvtronment of children is never the same u that of their parents, whole minds were formed at another time under other tnfluenct1. Nevertheless, there Is nonnally some continuity between generaUons because or shared communications and llhared values. This process Of cmnmunicaUon by which parenU! with more or lesa succes.s shape Uieir children'1 Ideas and values has been going on for perhaps the whole history oJ the human race. We take the process so much for granted that few of us have awakened to the fact that, for millions and millions of families in the United States, it just isn"t taking place any more. In order to describe what is going on today, let me suggest an analogy. Sup- pose from the time that your children are old enough to sit up, they are 11natched away from you for thr'e or four hours a day by a powerful sorcerer. This sorcerer is a story.teller and a spinner of dreams. He plays enchanting music; he Is an un· falllngly entutainlng companion. He makes Ute children laugh; he teaches !hem jingles to sing; he is cons41nt1y sug· gesting good things to eat and wonderful toys for their parents to buy them. DAY APTER DAY, year alllr yesr, children for a few boun a diJ Uve in the wonderful world er by th e IOl"Ce?'e?'-a world of laugh r and music and ad tures · · e goings-on. sometimes lghte ing, usually fun , and always entr · Tht children grow older, still under the dally spell of the sorcerer. Parents and teachers scold and make unreasonable demands. But the gorcerer is always friendly and faxinating, so that the children &it there and sit there as if drug· gr.d, absorbing messages that their parents did not originate and oft.en do not even know about. For one.fourth or more of their waking hours from infancy onward, they Jive in a semantic er!4 vtronment their parents did not create and often make no at tempt to control. NICHOLAS JOHNSON of the Federal Communications C o m m i s s i o n has estimated that children get more verbal impact from radio and television than from parents, schools, neighbors, and church combined. "By the time he enters first grade," he says, "the average child ha.s spent more hours in frOOt of a television set than he will spend in I col· lege classroom," The present generation of young people is the first in history to have grown up in the television age. A significant pr1>9 portion of those oorn after 1946, although brought up in parents' homes, had their dreams, tbelr e~tations and their im· aglnative lives created for them by others. · J5 il any wonder that some of the se children. as they grew to adoltseence, turned out to be strangers in their Ol\-11 horn~? By S. J. Hayakawa .. President Sao Fraaclaco State Uaiv•lity .. Urges Going All Out to Win War To the Editor: When my son was around five years old, the Vietnam war wa& just in its in. fancy. It didn't seem at that time, almost nine years ago, that enough boys would have been killed through it ·to fill the· Angel Stadium which seats 43,000 persons. American boys -43,000 -all that had 10mething going for them fr om the time they were born in America. They came from all colors, religions, rich , poor, mid· die class, 90me were drop-outs, some with high college de,_. Tjiey were made up of i. combination or many things. IN SPITE OF all ~ differences , the one most precious thing they all had in common was being born in our sttll great nation of America under FREE00~1. A land wh're there can be a Chicago Seven. I have never heard of a Hanoi Seven or a Moscow Seven! Wonder why? Regardless of Ame rica's faults. It i~ striving to correct and improve them and is showing positive i;teps in the right direction. But it will take tlme. BUT GE1TING back to th' war in Vietnam, America in my opinion is giving too much of her IOCIS. too much sorrow of the parenu and loved ones. America is too powerful to keep giving too much for too long a Ume for too much Jongt:r. U we conUnue to lose not only our ton• but have our country from within being torn and ripped •par! by d~ then ,.. had helter face up to the !act ,.. are a nation w11lch will allow a certain por- tion ol ·our populaUon to be l!eftt over lo be ucriflced In order for the rest of 111 to Uve ol! the ftt ol the land. .---B11 Getwfle ---. Dear Otroge: Do you thin-Joe Namath t1 the right kind or person f0< a young mao to have 11 a hero? CONCERNED Dear Concerned: I most certalnly do, partlcuJarlf ~ be slao likes football. • Mailbc>x • it"' '' ·-... _,, _,, ,., _. I let!tt1 lrom ,....,.,. 1111 wt!-. Noml•llY Wl'lt!l111 mould con""' tri.lr l'lllHwts In IOO wonis fH' len. Tri. rlirhl • COlllHnM ~ te flt .-or t1'"11· 1111'1 llbtl Ill ,...,,,.,., .... ~ ft'tUd lncJuft fl..- 1111 ... rt Inf rllllJlnf ~~ llul MIMI 1'M'f to. wJlflheld Ofl ~ It llJffldillf ~ le 1#1~1. Po.In< wlU Id .. IPUMllfMll. THAT'S THE easier way out-another phrase couJd be the chicken way out. If there Is· ahy doubt In one's mind. I am suggest.In& eotnl completely all out to win this war, that'a eiatrtly what I mean -~oing all out Uu 40,000 other Americans ha .. alr<ady done, or Is that being unfair to the mu!Utudts ol UI living off the fat cl the land when there are still so many more that can be 11.crtficed? AMERICA MUST ot.nd up and. ralse ils head. It still la the greatest nation of all time. We must be prepared to bear our &hare of Its burden, whatever the COfit may be. You see, my boy will '°°" be 14 years old and it won1t be too Jong and the s~ will st.art to fit. Hehr aboul you and your son? I am' World War U. veteran. Amerka backed me 100 percent. GRANT A. PlllLLIPS F_,..letter Wen To the Edit«: Your recenl editorial oa the four-letttr word teacher (who we must presume Is de.scencltd from the Anglo.saxot11) may have been a little roush . Molt ldul!t, looking haclt, ca n rtmember a favorite teacher from b1gh school days -a teodter mlly devottd to teachln&. t have the fondest memories of an estraordlnary teocber of Engllth (now, dear IOUI, deceated) who ii etiU the .Ubject ol nostalgic eonvtnaUoni at hllh school reuntms. Sb• knew bow to ..,cb Enalllh and the knew bow i. teoch 1tude.ntl. She could rip apart a eentenet and pul II back toaeth<r 1g1ln Uke a marine with an M·15. She did not merely teach us literature; we LIVED ll in her class. TO SAY THAT r;he W8l'i unorthodo1 i.9 to understate the case. Everyone wanted in her English clas. And those lucky enough to be iidmilted felt t'OTl'lpelled lo attend , for it was always a wonder what wild thing she might do. On several occasions, groups of ques- Uoning parents tried to get her fired, one group going so far as to suggest thaL she was insane. But to the credit of the school authortlies and tile good fortune of several generations of stu dent.I, ghe re· mained on the facull,y. I HA VE AN idea Ula! the students at Corona del fl.far High School wou ld feel greatly abused if they lost their 'history teacher. And now that l think the matter over more thoroughly, v"hY r;bould we go all the way lo Rome to borrow a nine·lel· ter '>''ord from the Lali n '"-'hen we already have a good , simple, expressive four·lel· ter word in our own native tongue? RALPH PlNTILE Last Frontier: Oceans Col1m.bta, Tea., Herald: 1''1be ocew have been called the last rronuer. T11e U.S. continental shelves alone embrace a territory-still virtually • tena in· cogn.ita-one third the 1li.ie of ta con- Uguous states. Erpandini wor)il pop.ila· lion makes Inevitable the day when U.e mlntral reSOW'Ces and food potenual of Ulat frontier assume c r u c l • 1 Im· port a nee." SulllYaD, n1 .• Progu1: "for many yea~. United Stale! currency was made of. both go ld and silver. Later. it became i.llver alone. However. the coinage act of 1965 now mUea u1 wonder tf we have any klr.d ol Nnclan! at all. Oor money b now bued on the promise ol oar.country to poy. (We can't help hut -wil<R the recml hreaklnC natlanll dtbt tnterl the picture.)'' Jacdu City, Ore.1 "nmttt " .•. tbe work of Good"1U lndultrla, largest thelter..i workshop -aUon In the world, destrves commenL Sf.rvlng an kinds ol handicapped people without regard to race, or rellglon, more than 91 ,000 handicapped pertons received emptoym<n~ training or coun,.llng wt ytar. and of these, S,ti29 were plectd in compeUUve industry." Altavl1ta. Va.1 Joomtl: "Al ln any ' othtt'Vetn"'oNhtnttng, dlucnt can 10 too -- Press CQ.nmients ~ ~ far and can seriously disrupt the American institu tion~ long responsible for preserving the American way of lift . This dJuent is to be deplored wllen it offers no con1trucUve suggestion to improve tlle tit.uation under protest." ..... iiiiiiiil... Friday, March 6, 1970 TM tdl!Orla1 papt o/ tht Doll~ PUol ,.,14 l4"1KfOmrtf!l<ht1..-I-~tl---t­ "'4tf fc4Mr1 b11 pr111fttino t11i~ M1DfPOper'I oplnloni and com- ftW71tcrv on topb: of int1re1t and 1ignif~nct, br proclc.Ung 4 fonlm for ~ t%J)1'111to11 of our readm' opinions: and by prtt'1ttlng th.1 diver.st vit ?O> poinu of in/ormtd ob.servtrs and spoktrmt" on topiU of tht d<Jy. Robert N. Wted, PubUsl1er ' I ' ----~ -p ---·--.----------------------------------~---··~-~ .. --------r--·~-~-------------.-------....... - 1 I I •• I ' ~men ' BEA ANDERSON, Edito r l"rWav. Mwt• f. ttlt H ""' II Eggs C:olo.red Green an .d Gol.d ' ~Iembers of the Tuesday Club of Newport Harbor have thrown cau- tion lo. the wind and 'are going against the advice of old wives and su~er­ stitious people, fat: they are putting all their eggs in ot\e basket. The club wilJ muster all its effort Tuesday, March 24, for its annual benefit. this year a luncheon and card party highlighted with a fashion sho\v, th emed Easter Jamboree. The Newporter Inn will be the setting for the 12 :30 p.m . event, \Vhich will be.a benefit for Services for the Blind. Santa Ana for the second year . -Special projects chairman, Mrs. P. D. Endsley and 'members of her committee made the selection of Services for the Blind following a report from Mrs. Ernest McClelland, philanthropy chairman, on the successful use of equipment purchased for· the school with last year's proceeds. Easter bunnies will decorate caret tables and an Easter Egg tr'ee will provide lb~ focal point. A special prize will be a fluffy bunny with cash concealed under hi s bonnet. Assjsling with decorations and special erranj!ements are tb e ti.:imes. Floyd Buell , decoration committee chairman : Phil E. French, door prizes: William Stephenson, bridge prizes ; John Simpson. reservations: Bert Sewell , cards. tallies and tickets, and Raymond Lewis, special prize .. Coordinating plans for the fashion show is Mrs. Martius King, who al so will serve as commentator. Models will be Tuesday Club members, including the Mmes. Simp. son, !vJcClell and . Benjamin Modesti, Lucas Betts, Robert F1an egin, David Kimbcill , Floyd Buell. Ralph Phelps, Robert Speed, Jack Bayer. Lawrence Kurzka and l\.ti ss Lela Geyer. Background music again will be provided by Mrs. Laurence· Wright of Carlsbad. Ensembles will be sho,vn from the estelle aUe+Jlale shop, Corona del !vlar and will include fashion s for travel and all aspects of club afia'irs. , / . . I ,_ • 1-.f4'1 The words of the song "Love Makes the World Go Round " have been chosen as their theme for the benefit by the Special Projects committee, in keeping with tl:ie thought that "loving means giving." The Tuesday Club has provided scholarsfiips and assisted handicap. ped people for the past 12 years through events such as the Easter Jam· boree . LIVING ,DANGEROUSL ~ ~ Even:tboufh'·lhe olll admonition says "don't rut all your eggs m one baske(' members cf the Tuesday Club o Newport Harbor did just that with their annual benefit Tuesday, Afarch 24, which will aid Services for the Blind. Pre- senting Dr. Wilhelm de Nijs. director, with the eggs,. whldl they hope will be golden -or green are Mrs. P. D. Endsley (left), chairman and Mrs. Benjamin Modesti, president. II Guild Plots Se arch for Pot of Gold . Ready to go In Search or the Pot ot Gold are mem- ber5 of Mt. Carmel \Vomen's Guild and their guests du ring a dinner dance in honor of St. Patrick's Day. The afrair \Yill take place Friday, March 13, at 7 p.m. in the Newport Beach Tennis Club, featuring dancing to the music of the Retrogressive·Ftve. Hid~ ing the ~l 0£ gold is Miss Dorothy DePuy'dt ( cen· ler), while Mrs. Bess Roberson (left)" and Mrs. Robert Pattison begin the search. · 'Artistic ·Confrontation fo r the .Mayo r • I ' Mrs. Rober! Marshall (right). mayo r o[ l)lewport• Beach was: named Woma~f-the.yea r by the Worn· en's .Division of the Chamber of Co mmerce and re--• ~etve<l with .her honor a terracotta portrait bust of bertelf sculptured by Mrs. Gloria Puglsey (left), noted sculptor of small children and famous men a .. nd .women. Ar;rs. ~arshall, a city .councilman for eight years pnor to her term aS rna)'or, also was honoreji for her varied coniriblitions to-'the civic and cultaral acti~ties .of Newport Beach. Ca ·reless .. placement of Arsena;l .Loa·ds Ho.me .With Problems ~ ~ • I ' ,. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My eyes are swollen rrom weeptnt ~at I am detenniqr.· ed t.o write this.Jetter while the thoulhJi • are fresh In my mind. A dear Ultle girl, only 3 years o( ag~ was shot lo death )'esterday by her 7· _,~_yaz....old brolher. lie was playing with a ~n he had round oo the closet shelf. The •· litUe ,girl was a beauUlul and 'lovable .child. lier parents are distraught. 11le mother can't bring her.1elf to look at the bo1. let alone forgive him. This is a ter- rible thing, Ann. The youngsler dido'l k"9W ~·hat he was doing. 111! knows he djd a hideous thing, but he tt bewildered and unable to comprehend what ll Is all 8baut, Other ' members of the family alrtady have ~hown algns of resentment against tha child. tl Is heartbreaklog. 7ht &irl .Is_de&d and her brothet w1ll .. I , ~ tJij! blame [or lhe ~m or hit Ille, The guilty party, In.my opinion, Is the father who le(l his loaded gun where the boy COUld get It. Please, AM, print this letter for other fathers who own gun1, It couJd save a whole family a lifetime of regret. -SAD SAD SAD DEAR SAD: Here's your letter 1od I •sne comptetely. I bope evtry f•tller lilllo ._ a ... wlll .-II W.. .. -' • pub bit 11<111 oo lllt.Jlllow toaipl. C..ld lhe .-ua In yoar bome..bre reatMG by yoar chlldren, Dad? Is it loaded? ltow about ll? DEAR ANN LANDERS; Some time ago you printed a letter rrom a lesblin. Please print it asain. We have a daughter in college Who writes that she has fallen in love wtl.h her roommate. We are just 1lclc: about this ind don't know what lo do, I .....,W ....nna lhelolblan'•·Jel.. • J ' •· ·, , ter in your cohJtt\fl but 1 can't remember )'bur ahswer.,We need your help, Ann. :... CONCERNED MOTHER DEAR MO'J'ilER: Ai-e. yoa Nrt your d1qaMer'1 rwmmate 11 a g1rt? these day• ne 11MMddi't UAlme anythin g - aotdally whm. Ute uder-%5 group U in· vol...i, If lbe roomfttale 11 1 girl, my 1dvict is lo 1a11e1t th1l •be get proieuional help -the1 yog should lay off. Therapy c•n· not be lltttd mt a pert0a. It may be that your da•gbter does not wish to change - In which c11e, ltavt ltrer alone. • DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've read you r column for years. The only lime I have ever felt moved to write to Ann Lande.rs WU ID rtCW lo your poolUon Oii i bor· Uon. As a mother o~J6 children -yes, I said 16. and'I wanted aJI Of them-I say bravo for you, I am '1l member of the LOS church and although I am not aware lhat we .have an o,ffi~laJ position-on abor·. Uon, I feel this decision should be made by the mother -not' the church or the government. l can think or nolhJng more tragic than a mother who does not want her chlld - unless, perhaps. It 1!1 the chUd. I would never consider aborUon for myself, but L fee.I rtrongly that. any woman who does not want a child should be able lo have the pregnancy termln•ted legally lf her physicia n decides the abortion wlll not endanger her health. Since Ille aovemment mllEt aerv• peo- pie 0£ all religions, 1 believe It ls·unjust and unreasonable to incorporate a ·con- troversial religious concept as part of our civil law. Just call me -MOTHER.FROM PROVO DEAR MOTHER : Bravo for Provo. • AIJd~lbanks ror writing. Unsure or yourself on dates? \Vhat's right? What's wrong? Should yoo'? Shouldr'l't YQU? Send for Ann Linders' booklet "Dating Dos and Don1U," enclos- ing with your request 35 ctnts in coin and a: long. self-addressed, sl{\mped envtlopft. Ann Landers will be glad to help you wlUt yoor problems. Send them to her to care 0£ the DAILY PILOT, enclooiDJ a ..U-adW....ed, •lamlled envelope. • .. , ·i-J <f DAil Y PllOT ft!d.y, Marth 6, 1970 • •• ..-':_ . ,, ''· '!i 'I . ~ ~' )' • < ·r"t' • .. . ·' " ..,. ' i· i ' .. . J ' v , • ' • ~.~.l: lo' ' ·•I ' .. , ..• ,' , •' .J· , ; _fa, l.j r,4 '§l \~ . {.( ' .% • If,~'. ~ ,{' • . ..,.: I. f'..f/,/ . ... ' •. ,1 ~ . ~·;#.':;...., .• _,, ~-•.. f .. <; 4""':-.. ' ' .. "" . r .. > " .,, ~~1' , .... '\ .. 1\'!l·""f •• '-J!i, . , Hemlines Going Down kfsc Alum ·To Marry f..Aeg Takes Long Look Weody Gan1bill and Duane ltaley Wiii exchunae ""'El4tdh1g pledges In the Commun.lty Ch 11 r ch Co n gregalional, Corona del litti r on JWle 20. By MARGAR~ SA VILLE LONDON CUP!) -Princes• Margaret ls the first or the British royal women to buy a mail coat. She chose a'grey tweed one which 5he wears to take her two childre'I\, Lord Linley and Lady Sarah Armstrong· Jones-for walks and al.so to go shopping and driving. Il's a natural for Margatet. Fof 11ome time, the fash ion· loving princess has been chc>o1ing long-skirted dresses for private parties as well as official ltmelions. She ,thinks lht:Y make her look taller. Princes& Margaret always has been very conscious or the fact that she 's only five feet two 'Inc ht& Jn shoes. ~ler husband, Lord Snowdon. likes her In the longer lengths, too. He takes close lnteresl In everything !lhe wears, orferlng frank commenu ;uxl sugg1ting alterations if he thinks they're needed . Princess Margaret usually accepts his verdict but there have been occasions when they 've disagreed and a lively argument resulted. Tony has done some work a5 a de.signer of women's styles. Once he arranged a rru;h\on show of ski clothes and wlnler sports ou[fits, but that was before his marriage. \Yh.lle Princess ?i1ttrgaret~ and Tony were in .Japan hist year, Opeiling British Week ln Tokyo, the pri;Jcess w • s presented with a wan banner of orange and gold em· broidery. .Jony decided it ""'ould make her an evening dress. The daughter of t-.1r. and P.1rs. David Gan1bil~ ur Corona del Mar graduated from Alhambra High School and lhc University of Southern • California where sho was 11 memt er or Alpha Gamma Delta. Associates Preview "There's hardly enough for s~·im suit." !ht princess rt'marked. So the dressmaker "'as told to use the banner for the top. adding flame chlrron WENDY GAMBlll Eng•ged Her f1ancc , :;on of Mr. and ?i1rs. lt 0. Hlllt')' or SOuth Bend , Ind., received his BS from Ball State University, liflll1 cie, Ind. and was prtsi· deot or Theta Chi fratern.i~. · Kauffman Exhibition folds to the floor and "'ide s[ee.\'es trimmed "'Ith gold embroidery. Ever since it's been Pr I Yl c es 1 ·Mar~artl '! favorite after-dark outfit. Rosar-ian Views Bugs seen In the 69th American Ex· She's just acquired the very Happenings io I.he insect president of the South Bay hiblllon at the Chicago Art ne"·cst craze for day lime world will be observed when Rose Society in addition to lnslltutt. ,.·ear-a pair of sort leather James R. Rose addresses the being a consulting rosnrian for One of the firs t Los Angeles boots. c-o~·boy sty le, wit.l"l the American fulse Society. artists to use ind u 11 tr i a I square silver heels that clat· muling of the Orange County Bugs 'n St.urr will be his :~ Lovely tablecloths •have been made by members . of the..-Womt:n's Sei:rice ";· Guild o! the Laj?'111'l.a BAA.ch Church (lf Religiou s Science for a spn11g boutique '!'~ 'f1$hto:t 11how·card party lun~t'Pon. D1J.playing o,ne of the tableclc.t.~s art. (left ': to right} Mrs. trlen Roberti' and Mrs . Delia Arm1tage . The event will be~1n at _;-: noon on Wednesday. March 11, in 1he church with proceeds destined for the :: ehurch ei:pan~ion fund. A preview reception h0&ted by the University Gallery Associates Sunday, )i.1arch 8, from 5 to 7 p.m. will mark the opening of the Craig Kauf- fman exhibit in the UC! Gallery. • The exhibit.ion, directed by John Coplans. curator of the Pasadena Art ?\1useum, in· eludes works ranging from Kauffman's p\exlglass rf'lief paintings of 196.l-64 to hi5 mMl current translucent sprayed ~·all :sculptures. materials and methods in his ter as she walks. A sombrero Rost Socli?ty a1. · 7:3o . p.m~ topic and he wlll show cloSe·up v.'otk, he has conllnued to ex-goes .,.•ith them but it'!! :sald Tue~ay, fl.farcti 10, In the slides of aphids, thrlp.<;, worms plore the particular light and the printess was somewhat Westmlf\sler Civic Center. and plant diseases taken in his spatial qualities of his plt'x-put out ""'hen a certain Rose, oI Granada Hiils, is own garden. iglass medium. member ot lhe royal circle past president of the 'San The public ls invited to al- The exhibition will be open asked : "~·here's your horse?" Fernando Rose Society and tend the mf't'tink:. lo the public March IO-April 5. 1 -==~;;;;ill~--~~--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~-,._:-i ~ Horoscope -; Virgo: SATURDAY MARCH 7 By SYDNEY OMAiJt New moon 1Dd ecllpq of sun are feetured . C AN C E R P!llSONS MAK~ THE BEST Cl!El'S, ~ TEEN DATING HINTS: ~ Toatpt tbtettr partitt a.rt fe1tured. Rom1atl c 1t- tt101pbtrt prevails. more 10 for Scorpio tllan other 1lp1. Aqurl111 could 1et stuck wlth •:., tile check. wblle Vir10 thinks ~· 1eriou1 c.hougbb conct:rnlng pennanen1::y of 1 relationsbtp. Arie1 finds that bii'I !or Mr) d1t.e It more al1morous thin antldpated. Gemini makn; progress with one who could ... bold key to future b1pplnts1. Jn 111, a piOd d1te nlallt for ::-· mott -but be wary la aechld· -:.. td are1s. AIRU !March 21·APrll 19): New moon ~itJon . coincides with your wlllin1nea1 to 1h1ke ·~-ofr self-doubt.. Go fOT t.he dif· t ', ferent, the exciting. Give ful1 .... pl1y to your innate sense of advtnt.ure. · TAURUS CAprli ~May 20): -:: Empha1la ·on how recepU\'e ~ you are to friends. FullOlmcnt of desires depends u p on t cooptratJon ot those attracltd "':. to you. Exciting night In- • .• dicated ; accept !IOCial in· vi tat.ions. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): ~ Versatile approach can gain allies in top positions. You have 1bilitles which many ad - mire. Your 1ense of alertness. '· humor is 1 definite asset. Display it to good ad vantage. CANCER (Jun" 21.July 21): Your effort5 have more or a .-chance to ••ln wide appeal. Put finishing touche5 o n speci1l projttt. Present -format. Idea~. overa\l plan : • Many are surprised by your taltnt.s. LEO (July 23·Aua . 22 1; Stal! of financial affairs can be clarlfled. There is change, \'ariety. added communication wi\h member or oppolille sex. tnvoJ\•tments tonight tend to be 11trk>us. Take care. VIRGO C A•i· ~'-Sept. 22): Lie lcm•: play waiting gamf'. Consult 'xpert -don't at- tempt to be ~our ov.·n lav.~·er. Family m('mber m a k, s gesture of peace. Accept ii. Be graciot1~. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct 22 1 Your peret"ptivlt,v is put lo test . ,.ou ;ire called upon to make qua lity judiffie.nl. Be Family Din ner A dinner for member1 and friends Of the l\.fa50TllC family ... will bf': served at t pm. on .. • Sunday. ~larch SI. f n the ~ Arthur SI.tad reJidenc:e. ... ,: T,hae 1Pt.ertsltd in at· !: 'tendJn& the potJuck "''hich will ::: provide money for Ute building t~ fund m~ phoM Mrs. Stead al !~ (•9MM4 or rtserv1Uona. ·-} :: Sweet Sale ·: '.:-A bll<a ulo wUI b • --by tllt United l; y .... lftltt11re Women of Co&t1 .. -·~-.· ~fw tomorrow at 10 a.m. In ·: ;. front of the Alph1 Bela market on 17th SI . In Co!Jta ~fesl. Proceeds wru Oentrh I.ht Four1qu1re missionary \\'otk. Tuesday through Sunday. from The artist's work ""'as in· eluded in the Kompas 4-Wesl Coast USA exhibition which traveled In Europe earlier this year and currently is being I loSp.m. I k Decorations at tho oponing a as a reception were arranged by ~lrs. Eric Hoeg of Laguna Beach and feature the brilliant tones of the 1r tis t 's sculpture5. IS AUVlf Be Gracious loyal to those who perform ·special Mrvtcea:. Strive to btt· ter understand fellow workers. "'po""' 10 call• and , Medical Assistants mesaages. You are more ac· SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): New and creaUve outlook Is indicated. You are atimulated. There ls change. You put together correct ingredients. Results could add up to greater emotional fulfillment. Uve than usual. There is also a tendency to be: careless about details. AQUARIUS (Jon, 20-Feb. 18): You add to poBSessions if receptive. Let .others make of- fers . Your bsrgainina position Is strengthened If lmprusion of eoolness Is given -no panic, no rushing. Gavel Changes Hands SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Ott. 21): There are some restrictions. But you, are capable of completing' "im· portant assignment. Self-doubt 1s the on ly factor standing in your ~·ay. Rea lizf' this and res- pc11'1<1 accordingly . . CAPRICORN !Ott. 22·J.1n. 191 ; Accent on ~hort journey. CAROL SMITH Jun• Bride News Told At Party PJSCU CFeb. 19-March 20); Day features pleasurable ac- tivlly among new, exciting persons. Tht're Is challenge and you rise lo the occasion. Take a chance on your o""'" persQnahty, abilities. You'll succeed. California Theme Set For Confab Golden Callfornla will Iheme the 62nd aMual 1tate con· •ference or the California State Society, D1ughlers of the A m e r i c a n Revolution. ac· cordlng lo f\-1r1. T h o m a s Vernon Cofff'e. stale regent. The gathering wlll take place Tuesday, 1-iarch JO, through Friday, f\tarch 13. in the Lo! Angeles Hilton Hotel . Re pre senlatl\'es of 85 southern and 63 northern chapters v.·lll attend the con· ferenct, Including the Altro Canyon Chapter. Lag u n 11 Hills : Col. William Cabell Chapter. Nev.'l)Ort Beach: Pa· tieoc e \Vright Chapter. Laguna Beach ; ruchard 8 a y I d on Chapter, Seal Beach, and San Clemente Chapter , San ?.1rs. R: Alan Gauley of Corona del fl.1ar will be in· st-ailed as president of the Orange County t.-1 e d I c a I Assistants' Association at a PRESIDENT Mr1. Gauley Conference Reported A report on a state con· ference this ,...·eekend in Lo.s Angeles will be given to members of the Cavalier C11apter, Colonial Dam~ XVII Clemente. Family and friends of Caro! Century at the Tuesday, Sue Sm.it.Ii learned of her G S k ~l~r:~i~~:~:!i::i~e Crlst will engagement to Donald Le Roy rOU p ee S report on the session which Clark during a diMer party \.\i ll be attended by the Mmes. hosted by• htr parenL1. Mr. Volunteers Lowry Gallinitr. E 11 n 0 r dinner on Tuesday, March 10, in the Saddleback lru1, Santa Ana. Others tak.ing office follow. ina lht 7:30 p.m. dinner will be the f\tmes. O. T. Van fl o u ghton, president-elect: Robert Eichenberg, vicf' presi· dent; Bru~ ~111chel l , recording secretary: Allan Quast. co rresponding seeretary: llarry K i n g . treasurer, and Frank Farfone and fl.11ss Sharon Bura tto; directors. J\1rs. Ted Lamb. retiring president. will b e co m t parliament.aritn. Installing officer will be Mrs. Harry Lon1streth, a past president. assisted by Mrs. Ray McCarthy. Egg Hunt Colored Easter eggs and Easter fashions will In discu!Sed when the Huntington Beach ri1rs. Jaycef's meet at 7:30 p.m. Monday, ~1arch 9, in Li's restaur1nt. Cocktails will precede din· ner. and final arrangements for the citywide Easter e1g hunt on Thursday, ri.1arch 26, ~·HJ be made during the business meeting. Plans for the group's annual fashion show April t i in the Newporter Inn ""'ill be review· ed. and the meeting will con· elude with an old-fashioned rally for the April election of officers. Going North and fl.frl. Robert James Smith. Kraak, Grant Rymal and Directors and te1Che.r1 ol in their Costa Mesa home. 1.tember11 of the auxiliary of Erv.in f\1arks. preschoolers in Oranet County Co.o;ta ri1esa ~1emorl1J Hospital The meeting will begin al boarded busea this mornln, Among g u e 1 t 1 con-.... ;u attend the mo n l h l y 12: 15 p.m. In the Old Brusstls and are tra\-eling to Fresno iratulatJng the coople ""'ere meeting at 10 a.m. on Monday. re.slauranf . for a conference:. Speakers will ~fr. •nd !-tr~. Donald E. Clsrk f\1arch 9, in the hospital con· Also included on the agend11 be from state and federal of· of CMlll f\fe5.:a, parent.:s or the rc renct' room. v.'ill ~ a report on the re«nt fi ces concerned \vith the benedict~Ject . ~!embers are a~kt>d to bring PatrioL'' Day parade. and education or yo1.1ng children . rili i-s Sm ith altends Co~ta peri-oni-~·hn are \rilling to presentation of ;i slate of of· ;::;;;;iiiiia""'"'"""'""'""""'o;; ~le!a High School and her \'Olunteer lime. Those In-f!cers by Mrs. Edg8r Axten.11 f11oce is 8'11 alumnus of !hr 1erested may phone ~1rs. chairman of the nominating :1ame school. George Thomas, 64~2031. commi,ltee. Thf'y vdll t'Xchange y:edding .======================,! \'O\\'S Jun 29 In Ch r Is I Lutheran Chu rch Mothers Welcomed ~1otht-r5 and children arr in- vited lo \'l~1t the South Hun· llngton B t a c h Community N u r !. t r y School v.'hen part.lcipatiAg parenl~ host a ,...·eek long optn house bet-A·een 9 and 11 30 am. beginning ~tondty, ~tar<'h 9. ClaSSf!s .i1re conduc,1ed f!'1ch •·eekclay in ~I \\'1lfred's £pbcopal Church I See by Today's Want 'i\ds • Good Jor UX! Second 100 years, antique ~. wite hand turned .spool hed. E'xCf'Jlenl condition S150. • \\'indo"'ll ol the IOU.I. an- ttque &I.l ined glut dO\\. ~57 !or $3.l. ., ... • \\'ln O\tr lnnauori ... shA.re bfaut1tul-hOtTie, pn· \'ate ht.th. k!tchtn and col- or tv prlvilern. 1ara1e. ~If'h \'trdc 8.rf:a, S~ECIAL SALE JEZEBEL BRASSIERES ~Pri~r S4.00 YALU( --.. M--••" SZ.00 SS.00 VALUI ..... ·-··---sz.11 16.00 'Cl.t.LUI .. __ ._ ..... S).00 11.00 'fALUl ............... -SJ.SO W• ltow9~t I~• r.1111pl•I• I•• Stack 11 • S11I l11 th tt1,..1- N1t 111 1•t•I & t.1lor1 ltwl I 901i 1111r.+l111l A "ONE TI Mr ONL y ~At11· MAD FASHIONS 111!5 IOIM.l IT UOOlllU!ll MUICllM6TOH llACI ra .... Glen l'.hom&tlLis dir tor of the p1 rent-paliclpalion. nonprof'i~ and nonseeretarian nurgery which .is operate<! for chlldrtn betwHn 2 years. nine months and kJndtrganrn 11ge. Addltlon11l ln/onnatlon may bt obtained from ?\-1rs. Roger An<leraoo, ~tll •================= ~-------.. , At "The Grend•st Mill Of Al l'' Beginning M1rch 12, 1970 5outh Coast ?tua Ladies Vinyl Suede Jackets $ Rtg . 3.97 Come aQd £et 'em! Popular ''inylc suede io petkj' styles to make you look riaht. Take the chill out i~ blue, ante.lope or 1reen. Si:r:H 10· 18 . CIJarzt /1 .' Or•"I' M•· T11tl11 •t Tift 1i'sfi."'t1'iili W11t"'ht1t1r 1Mc.•l.1tMtr.U•11 ,JW"liiiili llf.I . 111"' Park lh1t•l11 it Y•ll'Y Yi•w -lllTli1til1 A"- Co1tt Mose M1rltff llff. t i Wil1111 J200 M1rll1r 11"1. Senti Ant 14h1,1rSt.11 l rllt1I 140014il191r l••Ra Park ... ,. lt.•tl•1fW•lltr JJl1 IHc.ai II". ••lltrta11 l'l1cntM 1tTerk ll141 lfM N. Pl1cNtl1 A••· ' I I I I ~ I I I Costa Mesa Today's Final N.Y. Stoelis VOL. 63, NO. 55, ~ SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1970 TEN CENTS Police Nab Gang 'Bonnie, Clyde' Suspects Captured OA ILV ••LOT Stell ""''"' POLICE SGT. JOHN REGAN INSPEC TS SAWED-OFF SHOTGUN COLLECTED IN RAID On 8ernerd Street, Four Robbery Su1pt1ct1 end • Cache of WHpon1, Plll1, Cash end Smokes Ner vou s Bandit Finds Courage, Hits Mes a Shop The third lime was a charm for :i nervous young bandit who kept coming back to a Costa Mesa liquor store 1'hurs- tlay night and finaily worked up the cour'age l4? pull a gun. Ht came in so oflcn that clerk Gerald K. ~Aer, 26. h·uog up 9n police moments •lier bt.ing r.oJ>be<I ol'.1311. .~.~·n ~Jie_;ocd the front door buzzer sound off again. Kaiser told Officer Harry Ehrlich the bakllng, twenly·ish robber entered J\1esa Verde Uquor, 152U Baker SI., three limes durln& the evening. He came in about 8 p.n1 .. asked for an unusual brand of eastern beer lhe slorc doesn't s\.Ock and then left. He returned at 8:45 p.n1 .. sclecterl A <'ommon western brand and was reruscd Rervice whl!n he could not furnish iden- lification to establish that he . was old r:nough to buy, Kaiser said the shaky youth came back still another lime at 10:50 p.m. and bought two JO-cent bags nf candy, !hen ~ho\\·ed a .38 caliber revol ver and deman- «led all the money. Tlie victi1n said he was ordered into the back room and called police when hP. heard the bandit exiL but hung up when thP. buzzer went <lff aga in. Kaiser was on the phone with his wile ~·hen Officer Ehrlich arrived. Viets Pass Bu ck On Th.i eu Critic SAIGON (AP\ -A top official In President Nguyen Van Thieu ·~ govern- ment sought today to dh·crl criticism ol the conviction or National Asscmbl.vmRn Tran Ngoc Chau to lhe U.S. Embassy. Ca binet ~linister Cao Van Tuong tolct ,11 ne~·s conference Chau 1night have escaped prosecution if the embassy had confirmed publicly his claim I ha t he 1,1,•orked with !he U.S. Central lntelligenee Agency. Chau WaJ ronvicted Thursday of illegal contacts wilh an admitted Communist Agent -Tran Ngoc Hien , his brother - but claimed he passed on infonnatlon rrom these meetings of the meetings to lhe CIA. He was sentenced lo 10 years In prim. LBJ's Chest Pains V anisl1; First 'Good Night' Related SAN ANTONIO, Tex . {UPI) -The the firsl ttme since he was admitted severe pain near the heart of Lyndon B. Monday, said the former president was .Johnson disappeared today and the .. doing what-his doctors tell him." But former president had his first "very good the physicians said the chest pains. the night" of sleep since he entered Brooke reason Johnson entered the hospi\'al, General Hospital. prevented him from resting. Cardiologists were so encouraged by .lohnson suffered the pains again early Johhson's -progress in his~ battle -against _ ;~.U:~!:l,· ~'.~~0!.5 d.~cr.~~.~!? as angina peetoris they quit watching hi!! ',seve:; arid safil "lie Spent t bad every heartbeat v;ith a..n t it<'-ntRbt. , . . (rocardiograph monitor, But the doctors Maid..UK ·p~1n~ did nnt "Th r . th · mean Johnson's cond1Uon was worSt. e docl_ol1! pan t.o. allow e pres1-Th 'd 't merely interfered with his dent more hmited act1v11y today, depl!n-~y sai 1 dinfl!: on how he feels," a mid-mornini:: res · med ical hullctin said. "This would mean some walking around the hospital room ." The advisory said doctors reported "There had been no epi!Ode of severe pain in the past 24 hours. •·President John son had a very good night, sleeping comfortably throughout the 11 :30 p.m. through 6 a,m. period. The doctors advised that President Johnson had some minimal di scomrort in the left arm and chest after awakening this m " r n i n g but described it a!! ;i fee ling of mild sOrcnes~ more than anything elsC'." An clectrocardiogran) taken n n .!ohn&on. 61. \\'as unchanged from lhe past two days. Doctors continued the fQrmC'r president on drugs lo thin his htood and smooth his heartbeat and prescribed isosorbide dinitratc. a drug si milar to nitroglycerine lo dilate the blood vessels. .John son 's pain has been caused by a reduC'ed now or hlood tn his hearl resulting from a rorm of hardening or the nrteries. Johnson's wife Lady Bird. who left hrr husband's seventh floor hospital suite for \Vo mc 11 in II islorv T opi c of ::-ioc ic ly II takes lwo to tango and the lopic o( the Costa ti.tesa Historical SociP.ly meeting Tuesday "'ill be women who figured along with males in California's colorful history. Speaker will be Harry Rowe i nd tht public is invited lo the general mem- bership session at 7:30 p.m. in Costa Mesa City Council chambers. Battle Loom s On Future Of Alamitos A fight appears certain to develop ovc.r future use. of Los Alamitos Naval Air Sta- lion. to be close<i by the Pentagon In new defense cuts. The city of _Los Alamitos wants In master plan the area and develop ii itseU. but Orange County Supervisor:; may launch aclion Tuesday to acquire It l\S a county aviation sill: for light aircraft. The county's Airport Commission has recommended that supervisors take im· mediate steps to acquire the Lo! Alamitos iacillty for general aviation. The recommendation is on the board's Tuesday agenda. The land is owned by lhe Federal <ri)vernmcnt and it U; expect.Cd the county 1 .... ill take its case to Washb!MtOn to obtain the site for aviation purposes. Los Alamitos has been ruled out by the FAA as an airport for C<lmmercial crafL because of conflicting flight patterns 'll'ith Lo'lg Beach Airport The Los Alamitos facility will be closed by June 30. 1971 with the transfer• begin· nlng June 30. There are 218 civilian cmployes ,11t Los Alamitos v.•ho will be transferred. ln ad· dition, the cutback Is expected to elimin- ate 200 position.5 at Seal Beach Weapons Station. • ID Capital Mr .~. Han son , Others See k Word 011 Husband s · From \Ylrt Servl('eJ Neither ht. nor I.ht other three mluing W;(SHTNGTON. Ii.C, -Four Southern niers shot down in lhe war zone have r.alifornht military wlv~s who made an been, heard 'from, but Mrs. Jh1nson ' . By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of ftl• 0.llY P'lillt lltff Surrounded and facing 3 to ·l odds,'four criminal suspects including a Bonnie ind -Clyde-style couple . wanted r r o m Independence, Mo. westward surrendered without a light today in Costa Mesa. Police said an arsenal or loaded wea- pons. cash and other loot linking them tn a serie.s of holdups and burglaries was confiscated from their little rented house, and a stolen car parked outside. A large cache of dangerous drugs ~ more than 300 b@:ntedrine tablet~ -wa., also seized in the 9:3{) a.m. raid, during G-111en Raid ' LSD Factorv In Laguna By BARBARA KREIBICH . Of t111 Dlllr ,llltt Sttff federal authorities today predicted more arrests will come after they liwooped into Laguna Beach Thursday ;:ind claimed to have knocked over a $3.5 million nationwide ring dealing in manufacture and distribution of illicit drugs. Raiding officers alleged that a Laguna home in Arch Beach Heights was head· quarters for the illegal drug traffic. 1 n a series or raids beginning at 10 : 45 ,11,m., 30 Federal narcotics a1ents ar- rested. five mez'\ aod a wo~ .n ~pa · Beach, -South-IA"4f'a .. .and----'lfange, .at!. cording to Daniel P. Casey. western regional director of the t'ederat Bureau ot Narcotit:; and Dangerous Drug~. The suspect., are c h a r g e d with C)perating an LSD "factory," a "canning plant" and a <.!rug dlsttibution network that su pplied LSD. hashish, marijuana and PCP. a psychedelic drug less potent lhan LSD to outlets in Arizona, New Yorlt- City, Boston, New Orleans and Seattle, Casey ~aid that lips from outside the 1'tate &et off the seven-month in- ,·estigation that led to the headquarters or the drug operation in the Laguna area. The fedt:ral of(icers, he said. were :wisted by the Orange County District Attorney's office, the Orange County Sheriff's Office and the Orange Police Department, whi ch made two o f Thursday's arrest! . The Laguna Beach Police Department ctid not participate in the investigation, nor \\'as it notified of the impending IStt LSD FACJ'OJtY, Page%) Massive Draft Protests Vrged BERKELEY !UPI) -Tom Hayden, a Berkeley radical and one of the Chicago Seven, Thursday urged or g a n 1 i e d ctemonstrations against draft boards, ROTC 1mits.and military su pply ships. Hayden. speaking before an audience or 1,200 in the Student Union building on the University of-CalllornJa campus. said, "We must mobilize the. people now against tht iruitltutions that are pro- moting the war!' "There should be mutiny in the Army." ht &aid, "and one la bulldirJg right now. ft is beyond the scope of legitimacy for peo- ple to be enrolled in ROTC In the Universities. II is beyond the SC<lpe of legitimacy to allow draft boards to tune· lion." Haycten said the draft board., wer, ":,upply lines to the front" and should be closed "to prev<!nt tht war from eoing on." Heaviest Snows Hit E. Germany unp~edented trip around lhe world believes she saw him ln 1 monitored 1ryt ... lo 1e·arn i1 their captive husbands Hanoi telecast. . . Roth U.S. and North Vietnam peact delegates are deadlocked on the emo-- Uonal issue involving the husbends or the fourmilitary wives ind more' than 1 ftM -BERl.IN (AP) ·-Berlin and IUr• .....,. rounding' Eut Oennany batUed the us~ or 1111\Ye tesUCied today In The· women -undaunted by ·geWna·on- Con,m. , ly sympathy and no actual help on their 1'1\(,tev\c~ q( their rarly 1970 mercy tiring trip -said upon rettlrn in late mistlblf-before a ~ympathctlc House .h1nuary that they believe the mission ~~'ri!--alM-the-HP-'t lime-,v.·ty.,.__.,,v· . .11 bru__lonc-raflgIDg humanitarian ef• nr suspctted prisoncr11 of war held by feels, Nortll Viet11an1 spoke In a for1nal ht>sr· They v;crc invited to , tell of their Ing • • ntlysscy to major cities of Lhe c11 st and ~tis. Carole llan~on. uf 21112 Birllrock "·est. Co1nmuN11t Bloc ilnd Free \Vorld On\'e. El Toro, and her three globc-girdl· ra~ital!. by Rep. l., fltendcl Rivers lO. i.1g compan ions "'ere to spc11k during ihe ~.l: f the committee chairmnn. d11y. along with Pentagon olnch1ls. ti.1embcrs of hl$ Armed services Com ~lrs. Hanson 's husband . Marine Corps millee "·ere also se.heduled to hear AuiA- Capt. Stephen P. Harison. "'as shot ®"·n !ant Derense S<!crttary Richard G. Capen .lune 3, 1067, on a htUc:opter nltdicaJ .Ir, rele•se a Pentaaon report °" POW -ev&CU1tion m.lsskln ever l..los. ne1otiaUou. ·• f" ' oth"tr mCn held captive. heaviest 1nowfatl of lht,,lnter today and The four ~·omen, including Mra. Jobn the city itaeJf lay undo the thkkesl K. ~tardy Jr., of Covin11. "1r.-;"Jl"°9evelt carpet Of snow in this cen,tary. !lest.le Jr., and Mrs. Arthur S. -Mearns. A military 1ipok11man report U.S. . olh of Los Angele,, left Jan. 3. heading Army dut..y tralns,.ruMlng lhNuah East rast. Gmnany-hourrbehtnd schedule, ln or out They visited P<>pe Paul in Romt, plu~ or West Berlin. TrJlnt Inbound from Egypt , Ronu1ni a, lndla, J.aos. Japan and Frankfurt and Qrcmerbaven in 'West Russia on the relatively unproductive Oennany were • somr.whtte pa a.t 1rtp. sponsored by Twin Circles, 1 U.S. Magdeburg,-a spokesman said at I p.m .• Catholic magazine. andiduo in Wec;l Bcrlln later in the da)'. EJforu lo reach fianqi' fa11td. 1i>d ~1rs: Normally they arrive at 1 a.m. H~n.son. whose husband 'has. nevtr leE'.n • • Western border 0Uicer1 Teported that their three.year-old ...t0n Slephen Ii wL'i" lrat!ic on accesa roads leading to West rebuffed as ahe 50ught lnlormation-rdm Germany were •eve.rely hMni>ere(f tiy (Seo MM. RANSON, P•I' 21 d•Uta. ' ' l whieti the you!1g woman suspect tried to escapl!. ~ Tl'te lrlo of men was booked Into Costa i\1esa City Jail and the girl. captured by DeteeUve Sergeant Cliff McBride, wa~ taken to Orange County Jail to await local charges and extradition. "They'll pl"l)bably be wanted all ovr.r the country by the time we get teletypes sen!," said Detective Sgt John Regan, one o( a dozen lawmen involved in the sudden raid. The suspects were captured Al 5141-7 Bernard St.. where the youn3 woman was apparently staying with one or the other Answers Critics defendant!. acc<irding to lniUal In· vestigation. They were Identified a~ Howard R Tschirhart, 31 . and Patricia A. Jackson. 24. of lhe Bernard Street addreu, plus James E. Jack50ll, 25, of Independence, Mo., and Jack C. 1t1atney, 32, of Denver, Colo., police said. Sgt. Regan nld the Jackson couple an wanted on warrant.s issued by authoriUts in Independence, charging .her with forgery and him with anned robbery. A car reported stolen at K1nu1 City. (See FUGITIVES, Pap %) Ni~on Says No Troops in Laos KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -Presi- dent Nixon made a detailed, 3,000.woni defense of American involvement in Lao' today and announced he is asking help rrom the Soviet Union and Britain to help restore peace in that country. ' Nixon acknowledged that in recent day' "there has been intense public specula· tion to the effect that the United States involvement in Laos has substantially in· creased in violation of the Geneva ac· cords. that American ground fore~ are e_ngaged jp combat in Laos an(! that our air activity has had lhe effld. o{ cscalating·the conCfttl." Describing these reports as "grossly in- acc1JTale," Nixon stated, "l have con- cluded that our national Interest. will bt served by putting the subject intn perspecUve through 1 precise dtM:ription of our current activilfes in Lao3." . The chief exccuUve said there are nfl American ground combat troops in LaM and "we have no plans for introducing ground combat forces Into Laos." He also stated that "no American sl:.- tioned in Laos has ever been killed In gr<X1nd combat operations." Giving precise figure s, Nixon said Uler'- were currenUy, 1.040 Americans, both service personnel and civilians, in Laos but that only 616 of these are direcL government employcs, "U.S. personnel in La(lS during the past year has not increase<I," he said, "while during the past few months. North Viet- nam has sent over 13,000 additional com- bal ground troops into Laos." The President said U.S. air operalions In that Southeast Asia country have as their first priority the interdiction of a continuing flow of North Vietnamese trooPs and supplies across the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex in Laos t(> join the fighting in SO:uth Vietnam. He reported that In 1969, this flow totaled about 10,000 men. "In addillon to air operali<>ns on the Ho Chi ~finh Trail,'' he said, ''we have con- tinued to carry out reconnaissance flight~ in northern Laos and fly combat support missions for Laotian forces when re· riuested to dn i;o by the Royal Laoi.ian government ." Mys te1ious Fire Hits Viejo Home A mysterious lire did $151000 damage lo a new home In Mission Viejo Thurs- day arternoon just before the ne.w owners had planned to move in. Twenty-one Orange County firemen battled the bla1,e at 2~71 Morena Drlvt, for almost an hour .before contnining it. F'or a lime it threatened 1 new $35,000 home next doo~. ' The 'louse had been purchssd by Mr. 11nd Mrs.Richard Graff of· Fullerton 'vhn had planned to move in next week. FiNJmen said faulty wiring may havt. been the cauae or the blaze but they could not be certain. An investJgaUon Is under way. · The Mission Viejo Company, which sUll """1 custody of tl!e borne, slid tl!<y would !!'-~t other arr~te ror the Full~rton couple. CdM J:U gh Principal Mooks Still Critical Corona del Mar Hlgh School Principal Leon , ~leeks was still liated in cr~Ucal condlUon today In the c.•rdlac unit of Hoaa Hospital In Newport Beach. Mttks, ~I . wa1 b~pltal.l!ed Feb 2.1 itfler surttring a heart attack In hl1 of. flee. Ht has been prlnc1pal of the scboo1 1inc:e It opened Jn September al tll!2. He said U1at the level of U.S. operations in the air "has been inueased only as the nwnber ol North Vietnamese ln·Laos and the level <lf their aggression has in- creased." · - Declaring that peace remains the highest priority of the administtatiOfl, Nixon said he dispatched letters Friday lo Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin aod British Prime P.tinister Harold Wil!IOO, who are cochairmen of the conferenc" responsible [or mainti.liiing , thr 1• Geneva accords on La.OJ. . "I hope that a genuine C{l!est for peact in Indochina can now begin." he aaid. "For Laos lhiJ will require theleffW o{ the Geneva Conference cochainnen and the signatory countries "But most 01 all it will require rea1i1m and reasonablene!s from Hanoi. For it is the North Vietnamese. not we, whO hav• escalated the fighting. Today ~lhere arP.. 67.000 North Vietnamese troops in thi.1 mall country. There are no American troops there." Oops, Wrong Guy Has Airplane In Front Yard To whom it may concern, Coe:ta Mesan James Nute does not have a dismanUed airplane in his rroot yard. It comes as no surprise to his ne:rt.door neighbor. John Kelly. of 3101 Loreo·Lane, who does, Nute, of 3097 Loren Lane. was ln- C<lrrtclly identified in the DAlL Y PILOT Thursday as the man with the mini- airstrip on his driveway in a story on 1 proposed law against it. City Hall sou rces checked the d<wler on the episode when asked just which property was involved In lhe matter, generated by neighborhood complaints. "l thought no names were to be men· t1oned." said Nute, who lives next to the Kelly lot, while Dave Leighton, senior ci· ly planning technician, owns the other a.djactnt property. Stoel• /llarket•. NEW YORK (AP}-Prices on the stock market C<lntlnued to sag In fairly active tr~dlng late this artemoon. (See quota- . lions, Pages 20-21). Decllnes outnumbered advances 793 lo <f69 on lhe New York Stock Exchange, Or11nge Coast Weal her The: weatherman's makin& up - for last weekend, promising sun· ny skies ind a big temperature boost. aidtd by austy northeast winds, into the balmy 70'1. --INSIDE TODAY The 49th state tolr:rs tht••pot. llghi a.s th«. Al4fko.n shotD at Cotln /.lrso's South COOJ& Plaza nears. All tlie de.tails (Sre ira to- da y'• \Vsckrndcr t.icUon~ ' I • I Double .Jeopardy • .... -· ' .. ---· - • . 'Hovering ~t Newport City Aides Jitoory o~ Future of Airborne Ocean C-y6ft Hover craft may be in· 01, futurt r~r Newport Harbor. Clty of N'e't(port Beach off1clals l;lave t4ken a wait aocl .see stance after a Public Utilitit1 COpunisslon hearing 1111.asday on 'the air-cushion passenger craft. CitY representative~ went tc the hear-, ing in Los Angles expectinJ to oppo5e tti!" hover craft-~~pplication. But the craft in que:&tion turned out to be dUfer· ent than lhe noisy, v.·ateT turbulence- creating craft city Harbor and Tidelands Administrator George Dawes was fami- liar with. • The city now will wait to be 11hown hover craft don't make a racket and create a boating hazard for conventional Irvine Concedes pleas4fe boaU. The demorustratioa b al' J~St i yfar aw.y, D~wea qid. Thursday's hearing wu a pre-conftr· ence hearing before a PUC examiner Two full-blown .heartncs before the com- mission are promlsed before Pacific International Hover Craft of La Jolla wou ld be given approval -one hearing in its finances ang one on operation. Meanwhile. Pacific Intematlonql is moving ahead with plans to beRin pa&- senger service called Hoverun betwee.n San Pedro, Long Beach or Saa Diego and Tijilana or Ensenada by May ne1t year. Such ifilirfi'ational service doea not re· quire aproval by the PUC. It would be done under lhe British flag with Brttish- built hover craft. Dawes said this would • N ew_port Approves Land be a test of the demand fol the ~ice. J.f it preves successtul,7P1clfic (~· national wants to rno~e · to the domestic market with passenger and luggage ser· vice between the co al ports ol Santa Barbara, Venfura. Santa Monica , Marina tel Ray , San Pedro, Long Beach~ New. port Beach, Oceanside and San Otego. To do so it v.·ill be required to usr: craft built in the United ·States, not British Imports. Two boats of the kind operating be· tween English coastal cities, 100 feet long, 45 feet wid and carrying 300 pas- sengers, will be used f9r the initial inter· national trials and threl more wjTI be built in the U.S. for the domestic rilns I! PUC approvt1l is. granted. _ Dawes said there are two tms: Of 'iovu craft. One, known as a surfaOCl tf . fecti machine, actually flie.s a foot ~two err the water and can also fly onto tand. Jt has external propellors ttiat make a tot or noise and throws up a tremendous spray, Dawes said. · ' That.:is the hover craft he was faJrtjliar with and had ridden in with the U.S . Marine Corp!, which 11 thinking about ~hip-to-shore movements that don't re- quire troops to get out at the stioreline. The town of Cordele, Ga ., twice escaped tragedy Thursday. fleavy whit• clouds of ammonia from a leaking tank car blow across the high.way while, at the same time. a black pillar of smoke rises from a Navy jet trainer that crashed a few miles away, killing one airman. For ,flomes, Lagoon Newport Beach planning: commiasi.on· t.rs won some concessions from lrivne Company aides Thursday night and then approved a tract map (or a waterfront community and boating lagoon below Promontory Point. · turn-around artas so cars wouldn't have to back out onto Bayside Drive. The other varlety of hover craft, which Pacific tntematlonaf proJ)Oses to use. iJ caJled a captured air bubble craft. Tile prlnicipal is similar but lt doem'' ac .. tually leave the water, can't travel on land, and doesn't make nearly as mueh noille or water turbulence. Dawes said he wa~ told. Newport Station Gets Certificate From Foundation · Newport Beach FJ.f radio station KOCM was pre&ented a Freedom Foundation Award «rtlficate this week for broad- cast.Tllg patriotic quo1ations by Newport- Mesa school children. The radio station recorded and set. tG mu:dc 125 spot rciessages auch as "The only good American ls an all-American" and "You must cart to be an American." . They were broadcast during the month of February as they ha\le been for lhe last five yeara. Students al each of the Newport·ti.1esa Di1trict elementarYi schools were invited to submit sayings and the best 10 from each school were picked by !he school dJstrict's Americanism Committee. Students' names were read on the a.ir with their patriotic messages. ~ The award certificate was presented by Mrs. Robert Peterson cf the Freedom Foundation to Gary Burrill, president and owner of KOCM . Another 1970 Freedom Foundation award was presented to O. W. "Diek" Rlehud owner of Richard's Lido Muket in Newi>ort Beach. He was given the award for a speech titled "'National Pride has Lost It& Punch and Power." J"int jiven to the Newport Industrial Club. Rlchard has since repeated the 1petch to J(iwanis clubs in Co!ta 1-lesa and Indio, the National Newspaper Pu~ Ushers Association and the New York St&te Grocers Alsociation. Hickel Heckled At Princeton P!l!NCETON. N.J. (AP) -Studen\ dissidents shouted down a speech by U.S. Inlerior Secretary \Valter J. Hickel in which he proposed a federa lly funded en- \'ironment carps-modeled aft.er the Peace Corj>o. The aeeretary managed to finish bis tllk in Princeton University's Jadwin· Gymnasium Thursday night but many in the audience ol 1,800 were unable to hear him. Guard Recalled CHAMPAIGN. TLL. (UPI) -Gov. Richard B. Ogilvie today recalled the 750 National Guardsmen l'ie had ordered to the UniverEity of Illinois camJ)Ul to control violent S"tudent demonl5tr&tlons. DAILY PILOT 01.AHGt COAST l'Ulll5MIHG COMPAH V k•btrt N. We•d ,.,..icltnl tlld !"ubU~ Jeclc ~. Curl1y Viet ll'reld.,,l t n<I G•n••tl MtMter Tho11111 K,,.,.;1 1:111ro. lholt'l11 A. Murphi11t M1,..tl"V I!~"'' Ceste MIM Office JJO Wttl l1y Sl1 e1t M1lll119 AdCreni P.O. 101 1560, '2616 0 ..... Offltft Ntwpor1 lttcn: nn Wtt1 l1l11o1 1ou1tv1r1 .... ,,,.. lHO!l m F•·~· Av~·w• Mll'lllllllOll lettll; 11115 Btlt .. I Ollif\r<l/'11 S.11 C'-tnM: lDJ Hortll El Ct!'fllno lt••I D'.llV 'fl.OT, wllll """'ch ll ct~~ '"'' ..,...,...,....u. i. pwbll"*' lltlll' t•ctp1 Ju,,_ Ry Ill •••tit •H!IOlrt ftl ltllll't e .. tll, H....,.,. IM<fl, C.M Mtu. Mlll'lllf!O~ IM<tt """ ,_,.,,. Vtt .. v. •lttlt wlftl ~ rlflMll •ltM. 0•'1199 CO.ti l'Ulllltlll119 (-NflY Jl•ll'lfll'lll llltllh ltt ti ttll Whl ltltM l lYd , Hl'W1lllM IHCl'I, tlld Pl W•I lfV atr..I, Coe.It Mu. Ttf.,~ ... f7141 642·fl21 C~ftH A4nrt1Mitt 64J•5671 ~'ti"> !Mt, 0.11111 CNll '~llllt"!,.. C~11y, .... ,.,... 1te11t,, tlkl\1t•'- .,.rior1t1 INl!Nr w H""•'lt•-tt ,...."' ...... 1rot ~\l(l!f w!ll!ovl 10tl(i.I ... ,.. l'lllN'llM. ... (61!1Vrltf\I ..._,., " ·~ •IHI llOtl ... jMld •I H•'*"'1 ... ell '""' c.. .. ~ •• CtUfol'l'llt. ,.,..,lpll&<\ 11'1 c•,,liW lfM ~ltrl.!YJ. er ""u 11Jt ""°""'"' ---w!lllN1'f Nl~;nn;:-U,lr'MWilll , ' F 1·om J>oge 1 Planners expressed concern that plana: ' to cut back the slope from Promontory· Point to make room fOr realigning Bay. side Drive would destroy natural vege· tation. Trvine aides said they would at· tractively replanl.)the cut bank. He and Ass.istant City Altomey Denni~ O'Neil asked the examiner to make th .. city of Newport Beach an intervener in the application. •·we !lfe no wa party to it but at the moment we are neither for er against," Dawes said. · FUGITIVES • • • ~10. wae: impounded loo. He was also booked on suspicion f'lf sale or dangerous drugs as a result of lhe amphetamine drug cache found in the Bernard Street hon1e, Additional charges under which the four were booked include armed robbery, burglary, auto theft. and more counts. may be coming before lhe 1nvest1gat1on winds up. Detective Capl Bob Green said today the foor suspects are believed respon sible for a wave of holdups and burglaries in Costa ?iifesa and probably elsewhere in the Southland. 1Qe exact evidence confiscated -anrl specific crimes invoh•ed -v•ere not listed, pending further prosecution of the case. "We picked up assorted stuff fron1 buri;lafies and robberies In Costa ltfesa ." sa1r:I Sgt. Regan,-adding that a check v.·as under way today to determine if they are susoect s in any other cases. Four guns. including tiwo .32 caliber aufl!nnatic pistols, a .32 caliber revolver aod a sawed-off 12·gauge shotgun were seized along wilh U1e other ilems. No resistance was offered, although the Jackson woman tried to get aw ay and was halted with a sharp, gunpoint com· inand by Sgt. McBride, Sgt. Regan said. "ft would have been pretty difficult to struggle," he said. noting the 12 armed policemen took the four by surprise. Sgt. Regan said they had been sought fbr the past several days, but it was only 1h1s morning that they ch~ke.d the Bernard Street address and found their quarry. The development. called Promontory . Ray, lies in the. crook of Bayside Drive as it sweeps from · Coast Highway past Beacon Bay down to the entrance of Bal- boa Island. Plans are to cut an inlet from the north Balboa Island channel and dredge out a177-boat slip marina sur- rounded by 62 waterfront homes. The 24-acre development now goes to lhe Newport Beach City Council for ap; proval. fl also ·must be approved by· the Orange County .Harbor Commission. Planning cqmmissioners T h u r s d a Y night tmP.Qsed the condition t.hat the · houses be set back from the street at varied intervals instead of equal dis- tances as Irvine planners proposed. Also cliscussert was creating a front age road along realigned Bayside Drive. A compromise was reached with the Irvine Company to provide in its plans larger Irvine spokesmen have said the 5% Jots would resemble the waterfront lots on Linda Isle. The lowest price tag on those piece$ of property was $68,000. Concern about. the pending Promontm'y Bay development has 'been expressed by Carl Hage, manager of the Balboa Yacht Basin. Iri a letter this week to city coun· cilmen he requested a si,m directing mot.orists down what would become a dead-end strc('t to the Yacht Basin. and <:ontrols against dust during excavatiqn. He no!£'d that he doesn't see bow a 100-foot-wide channel to the bay i1\going tc> he kept clean when his Basin hss problem.~ in thal respect with a 600-foot· \\•ide opening . ( From Poge 1 From Pag~ 1 LSD FACTORY •. raids, according to Police Chief Kenneth Huck. Latest Erosion Threat Mrs. Wallace Services Held MRS. HANSON .. An extraordinary array of drug Pro- cessing and shipping equipment seized tn the raids included a complete laboratory for the production of LSD, found in the bedroc.n1 of a home at 569 GlasseU' SI., Orange: a car.ning machine, used to Rat drugs in pint cans for shipment across the country, found at 31401 First Ave., South Laguna ; and two hydraulic.presses for shaping marijuana and hashish into kilogram bricks, found at 1094 ?-.firamar St in Arch Beach Heights. Casey said the equipment was moved the Pathet Lao, in Vientiane, Laos. around the county at frequent interval1, North Vietnamese authori!Jts 1aid but headquarters or the operation was Capt. Hanson's fat~ w .. s no concern of alleged to be at the Miramar Stree' ad- Met Calmly in Newpor .t lhei rs, since he was shot do"''" in Laos, dre&!l where two or the suspects. Dennis Ingham, 26 and Jeffrey Newman, 21, F~ral 1ervice1 Titre held today for ~11 she waa cnly made to stand in the were arrested. Mrs. Marion Gilbert WaJlace Of' tagtina · ·driveway of red headquarters there. Arrested at the South Laguna addres,, By 'THOJ\.tAS FORTUNE 01 lht 0.fl'f ,,lof 11•11 A beach erosion threat to a parking lot, palm , trees and lifeguard he3dquarters is being \l'eatbered in Ne"'J)Orl Beach. Newport city workmen knocked of! sand bagging today after filling and plac- ing 2,500 of the gunny sacks through Thuroday. A wall of bags has been built around palm trees and a cC1rner of the Ne\vport Pier parking lot at 22nd Slreet. The advancing &ea has now cut sand back under the porch of lifeguard head• quarters but the threat. has net been con· sidered serious enough for action hy city crews, Groin~ built in front of the lifeguard quarters lasl year have been exposed but are slowing the advance. The nearest threat to homes in Newport Beach is no threat at all. At 40th Street, al the narrO\vest point, homes are Beach who died Tuesday at the age of 76.-The women never gained entry to the were Jessie Meehiz, 21, and his .Wife, Arin separated f?1>rD the oc~4n by 165 feet o! li.Jrs. \Vallace, 8 noted eduactor, had IJv. Soviet capitol of Moscow either, befng Meehiz, 20. forced to wait 12 miles outside town in a The two suspects arrested at th1. beach. ed in Laguna for 15 years. shabby ai rport transit hotel. Glassel! Street address in Orange wve Ho11,.ever. the beach ha~ narrowed from She taught English for !he roreign·born None had official entry visas, but their Paul H. Nev.1on, 23, and Stephwi 210 feet \vhen the sand haul operation was at Orange Coast College from 1960 to quest v.·as honored elsewhere and they McCarthy, 31. They are being held in that concluded three weeks ago and 2~ feet T96!l. She also taught at lhe Copre School hoPed to be admitted to Moscow and talk city. The other four suspects were taken has ~en Jost in just lhe past two days, in Balboa in 1968 and 1969. v"ifh officia ls, perhaps bringing indirect directly to Los Angeles. One or I.he 1·1rst women to earn a pressure on Hano·1. Equ1·pmenl seized ·,n the ra1·ds wa• according to Lifeguard Bruce Baird . braduate degree. from Harvard in 192~, North Viet.n,n1ese policy ca 11 s taken to the Federal Bureau of Narcotics For sand bagging operations at the -i;he and her late husband Earl help found American PO\Vs war criminals who must office at 714 W. Olympic Blvd .. Los parking lot. city street and concrete Pierce College in the San Fernando ~dealt with in ~irect peace negotiations, Angeles, along v.·ith drugs taken a.s repai r cre-.vs and beach cleaner operators Vall ey. v.·hiJe the U.S. government contends this evidence . These included S,000 LSD have been pressed into service and at one She is RUVived by a brother, Carl J . is 8 vi013tion of the Geneva Convention. tablets, and undetermined quantities . o! point city street sweeper operators were Gilbert of Washington. D.C .. and two Only rarely does North Vietn1m marijuana. hashish and PCP. even down there. sisters, Elunor Gilbert Montgomery of release the names o{ its POW populace or Chemicals used in the manufacture of "When the situation gets critical Boston, al'CI Harriet Hyde Sand! of allow them Ul v.•rit.e home, while it will the hallucinogens were obtained from enough \l'e just knock everything else off Milton, Mlssachusett.s. not make formal lists available to legitimate drug supply houses. Casey and turn to sandbagging." Assistant Interment will be at Ar Ii n gt on responsible international organizations said, using invoices stolen from thi Hill General Services Director Wade Beyeler Cemetery, Virginia. such as the Red Cross. Brothers Chemical Company. · said . !-~~-'-~--"..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'-.:....~~~ A fron t-wheel loader was being used to push loose sand against the bags today. MARCH UPHOLSTERY: SALE BY. DREXEL Featuri119 Drexel's Shelby Coaec:tion This exciting collection hts mtny •dvenf19e1 unrntfc hed in the uphol1tery field, ptr+icultrly when it Is fet• tured •t st l• prices. SHELBY '.ADVANTAGES C:OMl'l.ITI FAIRIC: LINI , .• over 300 to choo11 from. SC:OTC:HtlAaD FAIRIC: PROTECTION , •. •ll ftbrics tr• Sco+chgtrded •f no t ddi· tio111I c:o1t, ALL FINE QUALITY FAHIC:S • • , the 1tmt price on •ny 9iv1n piet • ef fur• niturt. H.t.ND C:ONSUUC:TCON AU cheirs & sof11 er• htnd constructed frern +he frtmt to 8 w1y he111d tied spring co111truc· fion. :Arm c:ov•rs tN provided tf 110 erltt coif. Skil"fs •r• providtd on mtny pitces 1t PIO 1dditionel c•sf. Char 12 differeflt styles of chtir.s, end 4 different styles of sofas, • lo¥ts11ts, •II •f reduced pri~es, SALE PRIC-E $159, ••· DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE . INTERIORS ."qO .... NEWPORT &EACH Prof•uionil lnt•rlor LAGUN.t, 81ACll 1727 Westcllff Dr., '42·2050 Oe1i9ntr1 345 North Cotst Hwy. OPIN ,.IDA't 'lU. t . Avtiltble-AID-NSIO O'IH •alDJ.'t 'TIL t Pfl11te TeQ ,,... M•~..!,!..Erwte C1•1tty 140·114J LIFEGUARO~AY GARVER KEEPS TABS ON BEACH ERO)!S~IO~N~L.:::~:::=:~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~-Newport Gutrd1 W•lch Their Footin91 •1--Surf ~1..Jn----.. t I t ••• • F•,.•-" •• ... S( ,_ t x:;·••.=e = Susan t~ Testify? ' Miss Atkins, Manson Reunion 'Joyful' LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Susan At.lcin1, who turned police informer In the Sharon Tate &layings, held a "joyful" jail meeting Thursday with accused . murtier cult leader Charles ft1anson. Now the ,;triking brunette must ponder whether to follow tier former boy friend 's proposed strategy at their trial. 111ere. v.·ere indicaUons ahe was having &econd thoughts about repeaUng her grand jury testimony about MBn!on and oLber members cf the "Mamion family" cult before a jury. Depu~y Dlstrlct Attorney Viucent Bugliosi told newsmen Ille prosecution did not Jav>w whether she wouJd testify or not. . Miu Atkin" %1, apenl •'Ii Draft Lottery Ruled 'Fan·' by U.S. Judge SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - The draft lottery conducted last December "was in all respects based on random selection and wa.~ unbiased. fair. equitable and just." ac· cording to.a federal judge. U.S. District Judge George B. ~Iarris made the ruling Thursday in refusing to issue an injunction which would have suspended draft cans on grounds the lottery was not a random drawing. The Sl.Jit ~·as filed by seven young men from the San J<~ranlcsco area \\1th draft numbers below lZZ an d birthdays in the last four months of the year. • They contended the ffshbOwl drawing was biased against those with birthdates I n September , October November and December. Attorney Joel Sb a ~w n , iepresenting tM young men, sald experts In atati!tics - four of whom preaent.ed af- fidavits in the cue -agrttd that the system was not ran- dom. He said the Selective Service should have sought "technical assistance from the myriad government agencies engaged in random sampling." mlnut.a conlerrybg w tt h · ?tfanson ac.ro&s a table in the attorMy's room of the Central County Jail. Her lawyer, Rkhard Cahi!Jero, w a s prt5ent. "They 'laughed when Uiey saw one another. 'Ibey were happy," Caballero said. He sa.14•the meeting was ••a jayful one." AJ she was led out of the jail m r~e to the. women's jail, filiss Atkins was a s k e d "'hether she ~ld take the witness stand and repeat her grisly account of stabbings and shoc:ti.ngs lasl August at actress Sharon Tale's home and tile re sidence of a wealthy grocer and his wife. "That's none of you r bus~.·· she 1napped. Caballero said MiWOll bad a liharply dilferent phllooophy about how the defense should be conducted from the course the lawyer would take. He sald if Miss Atkim could not follow his advice he would have to withdraw as her attorney. "She is going to think about those differences," Caballero 1aid. "As of now, I am still her attorney." Crash Vi~tim Saved Rescuer Dives Into 'Dirty' River 'PHILADELPIDA (UPI) - Eleanor Harden, 22, dived into "the dirtiest water 1 ever saw" ~unday when she saw a car containing an elderly woman plunge into t he Schuylkill River. "I knew I coulcln·l do 11 n y thins from shore . \Vhatever had to be done had fo be done in the water." Miss J{arden said. ft1iss Harden. a clerk-typist at WCAU-TV, w.u on her way to work when she saw the car go out of conlrol. It blew a left Ure. slammed into a tree. sp un around, plOwed backwards through a stone wall, and disappeared beneath ~ swift currtnt. police said. Mrs. Hester Parsley, 75, the driver, wu rescued. Miss Harden. a graduate of Atma College ntar Lansing. Mich .• pulled her ca?· over to the side and ran to the rlve.r edge. ··1don't1.hink there was any big deciaion ... she said. "One guy who 1l-·as there had an arm in a sling. the other guy who was there said he couldn't S\\'im, so that narrowed it down to me." "tt was a'Nfully cold. ll was cold enough ao that it really took your breath away when you got in." 'Mle water was a bout 40 degrees, police said. MiM Harden, a fonnu 1winuning instructor at Elm5 Camp f<r girls in Ham- mond•porl, N.Y .. made her 'way.over to the car bt 10 feet of water. · She thought 1he would have to tum back when ~1rs. Parsley bobbed to the surface. "She was really calm . She got on her back and started toward shore and I just helped her. She did all th~ work herself." The elderly woman \\'as taken lo Women 's Medical College H06J)ilal in sati,;fac· tory condition. Miss Harden thinks other people would have done UJe ea.me thing in tlle aarne silua· tion. "People are really good," she Hid. "It's the opportunily to do !Olllethlng and It just doesn't arrive that often. I -· ·~ ..... -.... ---·---. • u,,, ......... --. . . - Friday, Mirth 6, 1970 DAILY PllOT lj 4 State Troopers Del .. ~ --NY Gaming Ring Cracked NEW YORK IUPll -A gombllng ring which allegedly handled more than half a billion dollars a year in bets on &porting eventa was broktn ' up Tttursday by the FBI, which arrested 11 men in- cluding four New York Slat.e troopers. · Also taken into custody on lhe gambling and bribe'}' eharges was Nicholas Ratten1. 18, of Yonkers, a reputed member of the Vito Gtoovese Mafia family, who aUtgedly acted as "banker" of the syn. dicate OJ)e.raUon. Daniel P. Hollman, bead of the FBI team which cracked lhe case. uid the "take" from the helling on ba"ball, fool- ball, horse racing and other sports events reached as high as 5600 mUUon a year. Hollman said the mu1tlple arrests were a body blow to gambling in the metropolitan area, C3peeiaUy in su~urban ' Westchester aDd Rockland counties where betting ma:r. have be.in "knocked-out." The fouf arrested troopers were idenUOed a Lt. Charles Ca!sino and oenlor Stale Police lnvestlgators ~e CUrico, Lou S,batlni Md Vin· cent Mala"arco. Tb e I r &upe.rtor, State Police Superintendent Wllllam E. Klrwan Jr., said the four ac· ted in the role of pn>tect« ... Tivister Hits Florida Arab Amphibious Raid Thwarted by Israelis At Spaceport rEL Aviv 1APl -i.rae1 says It thwarted an Arab Armed StnJule Command confihned the raid, saYina two Israeli helicopters 1 an a e d commandOs who att.ad:ed a number of Al Fa lab guerrillas. BACK TO BOOT CAMP OR BRIG? M•rint McOowtll Taktn From Plane TITUSVILLE, Fla. (UP?) -amphibioo5 strike tonight with A tornado struck this city on .a ra'id across the Dead sea in the fringe of lhe nation's wtUch th(ee Arabs were killed spaceport Thul'8day, damag-and three werti captured. ing 72 homes and . injuring There also was fighling on The Israeli ·,J>Ok.....n dld DOI mention the beJia'!llen· seven persons. the Lebane$e border Thursday ,1.., Polltkal Adwrt'-"'""' Damage was estimated at$1 · night where guerrillas have lP".;.:;;:.-m;;:;;.,;----., mUllon. Jn11tallatlon11 it nearby stepped up their activity ln ~ Robert SMlton·S.ys: Marine Dese11er Back Fron1 Swede11, Nabbed Cape Kennedy were n o t cent weeks, prompUng I5raeli ''VOTE FOR damaged. waming3 to the Le~. One Dr. ROBERT SHEL TON "It was a miracle ·oo one Israeli soldier was killed and N.8. CITY COUNCIL• was killed." Mid Lt. Gov. Ray two were wowlded. ~ c:-y, cfm't, C. Osborne. An Isaraeli spokesman eald 1001 K•-or .• CdM Twelve of the: 72 home.s in in,terrogatjon of the Arabi~~~~~~~~ the path of the twi ster were -guerrillas captured in the levelled. Damage ranged from Dead Sea raid Thursday light to heavy on the others. disclosed 17 guerrillas were to NEW \'ORK tUP I) -Terry !\JcDo\vell, a P.larine Corvs · private ~'ho deserted boot camp f0r asylum in S·weden, v.·as taken lnio ru stody on unspecified c.harges Thunday night when be arrived at Ken· nedy International Airport on a jetliner from Stockholm. A spokesman for the 3rd District Naval Headquarters here said ltfcOowell wu taken to the ~larine barracks in Brooklyn . Officers there refus- ed to discl06e any information about ft1c0well who is believed to be from nllnois. The young private'& brown hai r was cut short And he wore freshly-laundered blue dungarees, brown loafers and a yellow windbreaker over a blue open-necked shirt. Red Defector Spills Beans "come acrOS!I in two rubber Police Lt. Ernie Bean was boats 'l'rith 130mm. Katyusha one: or the lucky homeowners. rocke!Ji and special carriers of "I could see all this debris tbe kind used in the rocket at. blowing acros,; the back yard tack on Jerusalem 1a1 t (when the storm hit) -strips August.'' or lumber. roofing, everything The. spokesman said the else,·• Bean 1aid. guenillu apparently planned "f\fe and my wife ran to the to seL op a ba8e In the Hebron froot of the house and looked Hills &oath of the Israeli out the wtndow." be. continued. capital "The two bouseo directly Las! Ang., ll, guerriU.. fired acroM from u., -the tops of three rockets at a Jerusalem f\1EXICO CITY (UPI l - A them just seemed to disap-hotel but no one was injured Soviet diplomat who defected J)E'ar. One second they •ere seCurity forces later found 13 in Me.1ito last month has ac-there and the next second they unfired mis!!Ues on a ridae cused the Soviet embassy io \\'ere gone. five miles south of the city, this capital or espionage aim· "I didn't hear a thing, no 50me of thtm Katyushas. •• IJ'NITED STAT'ES 'NATIONAL BANK ' SOUTH COAST PLAZA I RANCH ' NOW OPIN SATURDAYS t ... , P.M. · MON .. THUU. 1M P.M. NIDAYS 1M P.M. (J141140·5211 ......... Im s.. e.-"-< c... ._ At.M. YIU ,,_,oMIM9lf E. H. LEVAN An armed forces police flr1t lieutenant boarded the jetliner at Kennedy Airport t.o take the 6·h~ot..f ft1cDowell into custOdy before any of the other passenger1 disembarked. He had returned voluntarily. ed at "tot.al domination" of roar or anything." tn Amman, the Palestine Latin America. _:.:::...::~-~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~~ii••••·•-:'."=' Raya Kiselnikova, 30, told a new:!! conference Tuesday that I k The officer refused to reveal any inforrnaticrl ab o u l ?tlcDowell and would not permit nemmen to interview him. McDowell wore a tium u)!tt!!'ion as he otepped of! the plane \o be met by two milila!Y pc\Jiamen. embassy staff members have 8 as 8 IS ALIVll "a dwb\e role." At an example, Mt s 5 At "Th• Grand•1t Mall Of All" Kiselnlkova s al d. four • Beginnlnt Mlrch 12, 1970 Members of the Soviet con-. . • wlar .ectlon •pend eight hotu'5 &' -afb · ,. __ _,. "Df-- a week issuing visas and the GU V'UI J JU• rest of the lime on "clan· d~ine operations.': OPEN SUNDAYS 12:00to 5:00 ~!Jfal,d ' . .,., , .. ,. .,. ... R nnlOBRSRRY SALB! NOW IN PROGRESS AT ALL STOUI • r -----=·~ --. • . . • DARY PILOT E.DITOBtAL PAGE ................... -;.._====·=-.::::: .. :: .. -:_:::::-: .. ::: .. =--=-=====-===::-:=-====-: • I ·--;-·---·--.-----· ··-· ... ------ ' ·I I An Adequ~te Answer --..... Some say ii was a symptom of the sil1y seasoq that blow&· in on the March wind P™'~nc annual City · Council elections. Some say it was an aflront lo Coata Mesa tupay- erf an.d one of their elected representatives, a case of discrimination. . l The. subject is the controversial exclu11on of Coun· cilman Willia m L. St. Clair from a recent clty·ltased plane Oighl to El Centro. Crucial city business was in· voived ·the stating of Costa Mesa'• J>!!!itlon on the -~~~~uta'! Freeway, In testim_ony 'belore the State High- way Commission's meeUJtk in EI Centro. Questions of propriety and discrimination were ralJ'll -in the. aftermath by attorney Donald Small· wobd, who safd. ·he spoke es a nonpartislln, tn behalf of good government. T)ie key compllint was that a Newport Beach man representing 'Newport Heights residents .of bOth cities went on the $206 charter Oigbt at city expense. Co11Dcilman St. Cialr )lad to drive to the meeting, With a $55 cost to the city, and he felt a trip to_ El Cen· tro is enough lQ complain abo\!t no matter who foots th• bill. .. t.ooking after Costa Mesa's best interests, a multi· million dollar business, is imperative and the $206 flight was unquestionably justified. The value. based on the fact the Coastal Freeway route question was closed, can't·be calculated. · .. What about -the fifth passenger, the Newport resi- dent? · Y'!ller .<>l!>_•.!-9!'~11!"•W!c_eb!, .h!i•_ rnigh~}•v-~ been_ bumped in favor of °'· Clair, ut e carricu a pelitfoD with 1,700 signatures in favor of Costa Mesa'• position. they Benefit Phvsicians, "' Morticians Tlloughts II Largt: ~world teems divided into those who aren't sick ancj imagine they are, aild those who are iiek 111d insist they aren't; phy!iiciana benefit from the former, and morticiaoa from the latter. • • • Politics should not be an occupation; public administraUoo abou1d be; for tbe health of the commll?llty is surely as im- pcrtant as the health of the individual, yet nobody would think of "electing" men to be doctors simply because they pr~ claimed themselves doctors. • • • The man wbo always knows a shortcut finds hlmae'U on more de.tours than bll plodding companions wbo tue the customary 1Wfe. • • • Thi relativity of "wealth" was acutely e:rpressed by Thottau, when he said : "If you WiJh, to give a man a sense of povett(. give bJm a thousand dollars. The nm lnmdrid dollars he gets will not be wmb more than ten that he used to get." • • • Only 1f you believe a thing the second time around -after having come to doubt it -is your belief likely to be Vounded in objective realism (those who believe things from birth never really un- derstand them.) • • • Some men feel so proprietary about their own ideas that If, in a conv<lrsation, you simply restate their awn argument with minor modifications, they will fiercely disagree with what you say, and ccotradict their own earlier position. Dear Gloomy Gus: Love tbae ducks ·wbo park In the driVt-tbrou&h letter-drop lane at the Harbor Center automated post office. Quack! -S.M. (This irritating habit tends to be truer of seU-atyled intell ectuals than of anjbOOy elat.)" • • • !i's amazi!>g bow naturally sracefu! mo5t cbUdreQ are -unW I.bey are taken in hand and given lessons in grace!ul deportment. • • • NOthing is better for our character than to have someone around (not brtathlpg down one•1 neck, of course) who doe8n't Hire us and forcea ua t.o re-examine our atUtudes and acUons in I.be light of this harsh judgment. (fn such situations. the weak merely succumb to self-pity, the petty try to retaliate, but the wile gain insight.) · • • • • Every people imagines that Its own language sounds "natural'' and· foi'elgn tongues sound "funny" -and it is bard to believe that English sounds like ••unpleasant little news" to so cultivatid a Spaniard as Ortega, or that his regimen for learning the language was to "begin by thrusting the jaw forward , almost clenclUng the teeth, ll!d practically im- mobilizing the lips." • • • Man~ cannot stand unorganized ~ie~~c_b erpoaes us to peril, or orglriu.o;:u ~lety. whch envelops us in dullness: and au political conruct is a atruggle t.o find an equilibrium between rlalc and aafety. <;ostly Overseas Ai:mies Excepting small task forces In the Philippines and in Latin American revolutions, no Ameifuan ·troops were sent abroad between the Mexican war in the 1840s and 1917, lhree-quartera ol a century. 1 Yet tn this period the UnJted Statea em- erged as a great 'Power, commanded the respect of other great powers, and stirred the caution of potential aggressors, big and little. This was icccmpli&hed at negligible money eost. Since 1917, but particularlf since 1!145, the United States has maintained big innies abroad with costs running to tens of billions, without enlisting either the tympathy or the respect of the outer world. Something has to be wrong with this lop.tided equation, and the Amerlcan people are gradually beginning to wonder wb~t it i&. like the Yankets tor tbe1t dollar e1· change valu,. Despite thlJ desroc11n1 and lnse!llate altu•U'!", tbe Washington ...., Is that Stet< Semtary Rogers ind Defenae Secretary Laird are preparing • stand- pat defense agalru:t congreulonal attack this spring and tummer. PRESIDENT NIXON haa won a measure of acct ptanct for h i ~ craduallsm in •Vietnam dlaengqement, aomewhat deflaUna the Vietnam protest. ~veral anti-war Senators (pollUcal an· ti1onilta of the Prtsldent) art now q\l'.f:S-. Uiinlnt bit sincerily, 1vtrrinf be rtllly "Intends'' a troop level of J00.000 in- delJnli.ly.~ la Senator P)llllllANT TO THE -1un In the McGoveni. -Dakota. Vielilam upur, •hlle President Nilon S..ator Flllbrllhl'• F'orelp !lelationl worlll out 'Ollatevor oc:heme be bu for Committee bu apenod hew -ol di_.l!llJl<I!~ member• ol Con""°' attack. oociM·manl>ers 1braalftl1 c:rltlcal are •Clldial for an open debate with lbt of "ViotMmlatlon," which Mr. NIJon ii -tlon ..., tbe lflm, Inert arid m1oc u a yardgUck for Vletnam unytaldlnfl level• or OCCOJ>lllo• .,_ In wltlilrowm 15eaotor Goodell, N .. York, Eu-arid roundabout. eoUed Vi.tllamhaUon a "crut public The left! ii now l!0,000 ..... ind rellllono __,, but nol 1 tnie policy cl basn'toabolantia!ly chonged.in IO!""" c11...,..,emeo1." Sfnator Hugllea, Iowa, It Is .,bject lb unlulfWed promiRI ol called It a "oemanUc hoax." reductloo, but lll)' "rodeploymeo~" u VeriovJ_ l."'bllc lifum,..,.. ofter bet-the llllonor rudl bu"'"" trlfllng;-;-· Uefrorlf"VISlll, qu@Uoii il VletnamlJ&Uon Orfllnall7 -~ -. to be • has •DJ subatance in 11'•U, or 11 a blse shield of-Europe against Rualan for hope o1 ending the wor. Mr. Nlson agoa•oe. .,.S NATO wu •tabl.llbed to hu hid what m1y be c1lled a ••.econd !hot 11111. Bil tbit Rosslln lhnlll. hone)'m()On," even doves cooint fllnily. l<f!ardleol of the c..ectl lncunlon, la -Thtre' lri •Iv• Ii won't" endure beyond an ...._to-~ who onlJ the comm, mer. And St: ·C!alr made his requeg\ for passage late on the night before takeoff and the freeway bearing lime forbacfe chartering a larger plane the next day. • No commercial flights to El Centro were av.Uable from Orange County Airport: Time prohibited going vta Los Angeles lnte_mational Airport. Smallwood argued _that a councilman~s office die. tales that he should be given priority in repre•enting the people and their interests. This is true, but the arg· ument overlooks the fact st. Clair asked to go along only at the last minute. The ques tions he raised were also ~egi~imate, but they have been adequately answered in hght ·pf tl}e other clrcumstances_,um11Dding the El Centro journey. Minor Mir.aCle to Them Five Costa Mesa children are getting a better out· · took on life and the marvelous world around them this month in a very simple, ordinary way. · They are being fitted with glasses to correct visual defecUi . They will read faster and learn more. They may unlock a whole ne\v 'vorld of knowledge, no longer unable to tackle a booi)Yith smaU print Getting eyeglasSeHs not a big thing to·many Chil· dren, but some families si mply can't afford them. Good works are no big thing to many clubs and service organizations -they do them all the time - and this gift of better sight is from the Costa Mesa-Or· ange Coast Lions Club. --Mayb·e .. it•f ·no·big ·tnliig; but it's-a minor miracle tb five locaJ children. c , -~~ ...... "WfA~ l-IELPINu MR. NIXON STA81UZE THE ECONOMY:' Strangers in Their Own Homes Television-and the Generation Gap Is there really a aeneraUon a:ap? ls it a .~erlooa one? Today I ehall argue that there is: a gap, and that it i1 perhaps more serious than any of us realize. Let me start by d'flning wbat I mean by the "semintic environment.'' The semantic environment is the world ?f words and images in which all human beings live. It is the environment of news and infonnaUon, beliefs, attitude1, laws, cultu ral imperatives, that constitute your verbal world and mine. A quick way cf describing the semantic environment is to s,ay that it is that part of the total en· vironment which your pet dog lying on th e rug at your feet has no inkling of. lt is the world cf Shakespeare and Mozart and Bugs Bunny and th' Beatles: cf Moses and Jesus and Billy Graham : or published battiilg averages and the clos- ing prices on the New York Stock Ex· change ; of news from Tokyo and Prague and Saigcn. The semantic environment la the product of that vast network of com· municatton which we call civilization. 1 IN A WAY WE ALL share a common semantic environment-one created by the major news services. network1, and the intellectual clima~ of oor times. In another way, each of us inhabits a atmantic environment not quite like that of anyone else, since we listen lo dif· ferent speakers, watch d i f ( e r e n t television shows, hear different in- " ··' ""''!I',· '1' ' !- '• / fonn ation and rumors at different places of work. Some of us circulate in Catholic circlea, aome in Protestant. Some read «port.I car magazines, some read art journals, others re.ad comic books. For m<>fit or the history cf the human race, the semanUc environment of clUldren has been created by their parents and clcse rela tives, who pass on to the yOUDg their pictures cf the world, their value systems. their standards of behavior. As the children grow older, their semantic environment is 'xpanded by other influences: friends, neighbors, movies, and the big experience of school. School• continue the ~ parents have begun. THE SEMANTIC environment ol children i5 never the same as that of their parents, whose minds ft!'e formed at another time under other ~tnncr~. Nevertheless, there is normally · some conUnuity between generatioqs because ()f shared communications and shared values. " This . process or communication by which parenU with more or Jess aucceas • ghape their children's ideas and values has been going on for perhaps the whole history of the human race. We take the process-so much for granted that few of us have awakened to the . fact that, for millions and millions of families in the United Sta tes, it just Isn't taking place any more. In order to describe what Is going on today, let me suggest an analogy. Su~ pose from the time that your· children are old enough t<> sit up, they .are snatched away from you for thrte or four ,hours a day by a pcrwerful sorcerer. This sorcerer is a stcry-teller and a spinner of dreams. He plays enchanting music·; he is an un.. failingly entertaining companion. He makes the children lapgh; he teaches them jingles tG l'iing: he is constantly sug- gesting good things to eat and wonderful toys for their parents t.o buy them. DAY AnER DAY, ypr after ye.ar, children for a few boon a day llvt in the wonderful world . created by t b e sorcerer-a wotld~ot·taugbter and mt1sic and adventures and incredible ·goings-on. 50metlmes frightening, usually fun, and alwnys entrancing. , · · 'I11e children grow oldtr, still under th' dally spell of th' sorcerer. Parents and teachers scold and make unreasonable demands. But u;, sorcerer is always friendly and fascinating, so that the children sit there and sit there as if drng· ged, absorbing messages tl\lt their parent3 did ' not originate and cf ten do not even know about. For one-fourth or-more of their waking hours from inlancy onward, Uley Jive in a semantic en• vironment their parents did not create and often make no attempt to cGlltrol. NICHOLAS JOHNSON ol the Federal Communications C o m m i a a i c n . has estimated that children get more verbal impact from radio and teltvision than from parents. schools, neighbors, and church combined. ''By the time he enters first grade," he says, "the average child has spent more hours in front of a . television set than h' will spend in a COi· leg' classroom." The present generation of young people is the first in history to have grown up in the televisiOn age. A significant pr~ p<>rtion of those QOTn after 1946, althcugh brought up 1n pattnt&' horms, bad their dream.st their expectations and their im· aginatfVe lives created f<>r them by others. Is it any wonder that some of · tbese children. as they grew to adclescence, turned out to be straoge.ra in their cwn homes? By s. J. Hayakawa .• Prtddent San Frucleco Stste Untvenlli ' Urges Going All Out to Win War To the Editor: When my son was around five years old, the Vietnam war was just in it. in· fancy. It didn't seem at that time, almost rune: years ago, 'that enough boys woold have been killed through it to fill the Angel Stadium whlch stats G,000 persons. American boys -43.000 -all that had tomething going for them from the time they were barn in America. They came from all colors, religions, rich, poor, mid· die class, some were dr<>p-outs, some wtth high college degrees. They were made up of a combination or many thing•. IN SPITE OF all the differences, the one most precious thing they all had In common was being born in our still gr'at naUon of America under FREEOOM. A land where there can be a Chicago Seven. t have never heard of a Hanoi Seven or a Moscow Seveo! Wonder why? Regardless of America·~ faults, it is Wiving to correct and improve them and is 'showing positive steps in the right direetion. But it will take time. BUT GE'iJ'ING back to the war In Vietnam, America ln my cpinion1ia gtving too much of her sons, too much sorrow of the parents and loved ones. America Is tGG powerful to keep giving too much for too long a lime. for too much lon1er. If we continue to lose not cnly our Kins but have. our country from Within being torn ind ripped apart by dissension, then we. had better face up to the fact we are • natlon wh1ch wm allow • ctrtain poT• tlon of our population to be sent over to ht sacrificed in ordtr for the rest of u1 to live off the fat or the lond. .----.,, GH1'9fl -- Dear Geroge: ~ Do you think Joe Namath Is the rll!hl kind of person for 1 youn1 man to have as a hero? CONCE~ED Dear Concerned : I most ctrtalnly do, pertlcululy ~ be elso likes footbl!L . . ·--. ( ' • • . ' Mailbox . . I . ... ' ·<\,., p ' I . ... .c.~1' ' ' •• , Lem-rt '""" .,'°'" ,., w.lclltrlt. Noml•ll'r" wt1,.,. 11\ovld ((l'l\lfY llltlr rMUfltff lft )00 WOl"Clf (Ir ltn. Tht r!gM la ~ ,.,,,.,. 1o flt IPla tit 9111'1'1!- rtlN llblt " """"""· An 1ttJert 1111111 ll'IClvdt i!O· "''"'f afttl rntllll'lli ...... Ill.it -""" bl Wl!l'lht!d Oii NllU'ltt II tllft'klent .....,, Iii .... l'tl!I. P"'"' wl~ Mt tit l'UlllllMd. THAT'S THE easier way out -another phrase could be the. chicken w1y GUI. lf there. is any doubt 1n one's mind, J 2m suggesting going; completely all out to win this war, that's euctly what I mean -goin& all out llke 40,000 other Americana have already done. or is that be.ing unfair to the multttudes of us living off Ule fa t cf the land when there are rUll so many more that CID be aacrifictd? AMERICA llf1lST lland up and raise its head. It st.ill is the greattst nation ol all Ume. We must be p!<pared to bur our share ol ill burden, whate.ver the cO&t may be. , You &ee, my bt>y will aooo bt 14 years old and It won't be too long and the shoe will start to nt. How about yoo and your ""'' I am a Workl Wat II veteran. America backed me 100 percent. GRANT A. PHILLIPS I F-r·letfer Wortl To the Editor: "YO!lr 1-t edltolial .. the fou~l•tttt word ·te.cbtt (wbo we. must presume Js delCOnded from tbe Ansk>Slxons) -ma,y bavt been • tulle ,...,h. . M°'t edulte, lobltlne boclc. c a n . remember a favor1Ja t,.cber from high school da,ve -a !etcher ....Uy devoted lo teachinl. I have the fondest memories of an ellrlordU!ary tucher ol Enallah (now. dear iOijf. dece11ed) wHo Is •1111 the 11.1bject of nostatalc conversations at high ac:hool rtunlons. She .,,.,. bow to teach Englbh and aht ll:new bow lo teach atudenta. She could rip apart a aentenc:e and put it bock io&'tber again like a marine with an M-te. ~did not,merel,y teach us literature; we LIVED-ft ln ~ class. .• TO SAY THAT she WIS unorthodox is to under5tate the case. Everyone wanted in her English class. And those lucky enough t.o be admitted felt compelled to attend. for It was always a W<>nder what wild thing she might do. On several occasions, groups of ques· tioning parents tried to get her fired, one group going So far as to st1ggest that she was insane. But to the credit of the school authorities and the good fortune or &everal generations of student!, she re- mained on the £acuity. I HA VE AN idea that the students at Corona Ciel Mar lligh School would feel gr'atly abused ·if they lost their history tea.cher. And now thal I think the matter Gver mor' thoroughly, \\'hy should we go all the way to Rome to borrow a nine.·let· ter v.·ord from the Latin 11•hen we already have a good , simple, ex.presstve four-let- ter \\1ord in ou r own nat1v' tcngue? RALPH PINTILE Last Frontier: Oceans Oollmbt,. Tun., Bt:rald: ,••111t: oceans have been called the last frontttr. nie U.S. coriUDen~ 1htlve1 a.'lone embral'e a territory-etill Virlually a tena in- cognite-ooe lllird the m. or 13 con- tiguous· states. E~ndhlg world poSiuta. tion. maltta inevitable the day, when the mineral resources: and food potential cf that frontier assume c r u c I a l im· poftanct." Sullivan. UI., Procre11 : "For many years. United States currency was made of both gold 11nd silver. ti'teF.""if bicaiile sUvtt alone. However, Uie coinage act o( 1966 now maPI UI ~ tt we have any kind or etandard 11 1111. OUr m""1·1; now baoe<\ on the pl'llllllle <I .,.. ....,t<y to poy. (We.c:on'I help 1lal --. the rocorcl lnUlnl na~ debt aim the pletllre.)" Jaaettoo ai,, On., ,,_, • ... die -k Of GoodwlU lnd11$tr1oa, lorgut sh<ltmd , workahop operllioo In the world, deservu C<lllU9enl Servin.I all kinds of bandi<apped' P.<OPl•. wfthoul re3trd In race, or reUglon, 'mott than 91,ooo • htndlcaPP!d-~ • reeelved tmpJOymeiit, tra1iilil('ar CoaQiitlng ~ year, and· ol tbm, t,611 -. placed in competitive industry.:' ............... • -· ' I • Press Com1nents I -} far and can seriously disrupt I.he American institutions long responsible for preserving the America n \\·ay of lift. 'Thi! dissent jg to be deplored \\'hen it offers no CQnstruct.ive suggestion to Improve the lituaiUon u.nder protest.'' -... ~w... Friday, March-6, 1970 TM <dllorfol -ot 111< Doilv l'fioi le•ks to mtorm and 111 ... ulatt readn• by prtatntiftQ thi$ nctotpOpt,r'a. opiniom and eom.- m.n.tor~ on Copiu of in.tuctc ond 1lgnlfiamc1. bv providing • fOT'Vm for the: t%J)rtuion of ovr rtadtrt' opiniom. and b11 pr:r1rn.Ung the dit!tr&f "'''°' pofnli -of fn/ormed ®.terverc and 1pokumni on topfu of the dcv. Robert N. Weed, Publi •ber Attavltta, V••t JOIT'Jla): "AJ tn Atl1 ott...veln ol thinking,~ ... 10 ~ '-----------.:...: ' I I I 11 I I ·1 7 I I I 7 Saddlehaek Today's Flital N.Y. Stocks ) VOL. 63, NO. 55 , 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY , MARCH 6, 1970 TEN CENTS • una Ill e mas , s ·ea Peri·Is · Homes:_ Capo Dwellers Hold Back Tides -A crane and b u 11 d o z c r conlinucd fashioning a boulder bulwark against the sea today to proteet the $100,000 Capistrano Beach properties or John Reynard, 35787 Beach Road. Rtynard's home and nearby properties }Jave been under siege from the sea for days. pounded by a high tide surf in a peculiar localized situation. Oranie County jail prisoners brought in for the en1ergency. neighbors, the rounty Harbor District and a contractor have worked to .lllem the tidal action that ham· mered away Thursday night and again this morning. Reynard 's seawall began to break ;1part before his·eyes and watC{ S\virled inward his door step. The house is aboul 25 feet from the mean high tide line. About 350 tons of rocks have· bcc·1 Six Nabbed in Separate . . N arco Raids on Motel Five adult! and a IS.year-old girl were "rrested Thursday night by Laguna Beach narcotics officers in \Y..'Q separate incidents coincidentally related by a motel address. At I : 10 p.m .. ofricers arrested Charles Paul Hammond, 20, of Camp Pendleton and Michael Alexander Antooelz. 19, who 11aid he lived at the Ocean .View ll-1otel , 1154 S. Coast Highway . The two were followed from U1e Taco Bell restaurant to the steps leading lo the beach at the end of St. Ann's Drive where the arrest was made and six 'lids' (six ounces) of marijuana laken from Antonetz, police claimed. '° Hammond was charged with possession ti mi.rijuana and Antonetz w i t h possess.ion of marijuana for sale. ~feanwhilf:, the Los Angeles Counl y Sherlfrs Office advised the Laguna Beach police department tha t suspttll! arrested in Lo.! Angeles County with a stolen car, a concealed weapon and 34 lids of marijuana said they had purchas- ed the drug at the ISM S. Coast Highway address. Laguna officers went lo the motel at 10 : l:> p.m., knocked on the designated door and were greet with a powerful aroma of marijuana, they report. A search turned up a plastic bag of 4he. drug and several marijuana cigarettes and butt.'1, police state. The officers arrested four occupanl.'I of the .small room, Charles 'rl>otpas Yates, 18, a transient ; Susan Dolge .~k. JI, of Anaheim ; Lynne Stephanie Mills, 19, or Rancho Santa Fe: and the 16-year-old girl who was booked for lack of parental con- trol. The adulls are charged with possession of marijuana. No Combat T1·oops in Laos, Preside11t Nixo11 Decla1·es KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. tAP) -Presi- dent Nixon made a detailed . 3,000·\\'0rd defense of American involvement in Laoii today and announced he is asking help from the Soviet Unioh and Britain lo help restore peace in that country. Nixon acknowledged that in recent days "there has been intense public specula- tion to the effect that the Un ited States involvement in Laos has substan tiall y in- c~ased in violation of lhe Geneva ac- cords. that Ameri can ground forcCl'i are ~ngagcd in combat in Laos and that our ;iir aclivl ty has had the effect of cscalatlng the conflict." Describing these reports as ··wossly ln- 11.i;curate," Nixon stated, "t have con- cluded that our nationnl interest \\1ill be served by putting the subject into perspective through a precise description of our current activities in Laos." The chief executive said there are no American ground comba t troops in La os ;ind "\\'t ha ve no plans for int roducing ground combat forccl! Into Laos." He also stated that "no American sta - tioned in Laos has ever been killed in ground combat operations." ·Giving precise figures, Nixol'I said there we.re currently, 1,040 Americans, both service personnel and civilians. In Laos but that only 616 or these are direct government employe!i. "U.S. personnel in Laos during the past vear has not ihcreased .'' he said . "while durin~ the past few months, North Viel· nam has sent over 13,000 additional com - bat gr ound troops int o Laos." The President said U.S. air operation.~ in that Southeast Asia country ha ve as their firsl priorily the interdiction of a continu ing rluw of North \'ietnamese troops and supplies across the Ho Chi ~1 inh Trail complex in LA OS to join the fighti ng in South Vietnam. He reported tha t in 1969. this flow totaled about 10,000 men. "In addition to air operation:s on the Mo Chi tifinh Trail," he said . "we have con- tinued to carry out reconnaissance flights in northern Laos and fly combat support missions for Laotian forces when re- nuested to do so by the Royal Laotian governme nt." · lie said that the level of U.S. operations in the air "has been increased only a~ the number or North Vietnamese in Laos and the le vel of their aggression has in· creased." ... trucked in from RJve.rslde at Reynan:l~~ order with another .350 lom on the way to nlake a permane.nf protective barrier. "It hit us the worst." said Reynard . "It's been about seven years since we were hit. It hit.s ·one place one year and another the next. It was a combination of current and tide right in front of our place. It did a little damage about t,000 feel north. it undercut a couple or patios ... Reynard, a retired liquilied petroleum gas company owner, estimated that .seven feet or sand had been lost from the beach in front of his properties , lhret tots and t\\·o houses. Chris Klinger, chief of operations at thP. county flood Control district, said two or three homes may be in daager de.pending on how fast they work to sandbag or take other protective measures. He said IZ or 13 houses were badlY damaged in the area about five. years ago. Vita1nin Addicts Win $435,000 Court Da1nages Three men whose lay,'Ytf°S told ;i Superior Court, .. Jury .. Jhat their doctors· vitamin shot clinic had converted them into almost incurable drug addicts we.re ;.warded a total of $435.000 in damages Thursday at lhe end nr a five month trial. The panel filed back into lhe courtroom of Judge 'Villiam S. Lee to award $42:0.000 to in.surance. broker Mtliam R. Stevens or Anaheim, $10$,000 to Santa Ana: attorney Richard Cody and $10,000 to Joe Leves- que, a Garden Grove contractor. 'J'hose damages must be paid. In vary- ing amounll!, by four doc tors who onct operated the Katella-Palmwood !\!edical (',enter in Anahe im. Judge Lee's ruling \vent against Ors. Arthur J. Reynaud. Mansour Roshan, s: L. Y~ington and Bernard Keyser. Renaud and Roshan are today prac- ticing together in Garden Grove, Yer - ington is retired and Keyser is now J:oracticing in Lo! Angeles. All f~r physician~ formerl y operated 11·hat was desc ribed during the trial as ";i shot factory run purely for profit and gain." They were .a c c u s e d of ad- ministering hij!hly potent v i tam in freatments to the point that the three plaintiffs became addicted to Hquid amohetamine. . It was testified that the injechons nf amphetami}le were much )ligher than is nonnally administered to ~tients who Use the drug ··10 Combal appetite or lo (See DRUGS, Page ZI Stock lllarl•et• NE\Y YO.RK {APl-Prices on the stock market continued to sag in fai rly active trading late this afternoon. (See quota· lions. Pages 21>-ZI ). Declines outnumbered .1dva~ 793 to 469 on the New York Stock Exchan1e. DAILY ~ILOT Sf ... ~ SURF BORNE ON HIGH TIDE ' POU.NOS POCHE AREA ~ood~n S.1wiill Fronting 811ch Ro1d Homes ~educ9Cf to Splint1rs Mrs. Hanson Tells Story • From Wirt Se.rvicta \YASHTNGTON, O.C. -Four Southern Califon~a military wives who made an unprecedented trip around the world tryl.rig to learn if their captive. husbands are dead or alive testified today iri Congres,,. The review ol their early 1970 mercy mission btfore a sympathetic House committee v.·as also the first time wives or su,specled prisoners of war held by North Vietna m spoke in a forma l hear· ing . Mrs. Carole Hanson, of Z4llZ Blrdrock Drive, El Toro, and her three globe-Bird!· Mc eompanions were to speak during the day, along with Pentajon ofOcials. Mrs. Han.son's husband, Marine Corps Capt. Stephen P .. Hamon, was shot down Ju.ne 3. 1967, on a heli~pter medical evacuation mission ov,er Laos, Neither he nor the other three mis11lng n1ers shot down m the war ione have been heard from. bul Mrs. Hanson believes she aaw him in .a monitored Hanoi ltlecast. Tht women -undaunted by getUng on- Jy sympathy and no actual help on the ir tihng trip -said upon return in late January that they believe the mission will ha ve long-ranging humanitarian ef- fects. They were invited to tell of their odyssey to major cities of the east and west, Communist Bloc a.nd Fret Wor ld capilal s, by Rep, L. ~1cndel Rivers (D· S.C.) the conlmittee chairnlan. ~lembcrs of his Armed Services Com· millee Y..-ere also scheduled lo hear Assis- t.ant Defense Secretary Rir.hard G. Capc'11 Jr, release a Pentagon report on PO\Y negotiations. Bolh U.S. and North Vietnam peact. delegates are deadlocked on the emo- tional ls;iue involvi.og the husbands of the four 'military wi.ve.s and more than 1,000 other .men held captive. The rour women, b1cluding ~frs. Jot"tn K. Hardy Jr., of Covina, ~1rs. Rciosevell Hestle Jr., and Mrs. Arthur S. ~fearns. both of Los Angeles. left Jan. 3, heading cast. Stole11 P e11dleton Rifles Recovered Water Keeps~ All Unhappy They visited, Pope Paul In Ro1nc, plu!'i Egypt, Romania, India, l..aos, Japan and Russia oh the relatively unproductive ISee l\fRS. HANSON, Page ZI Glass Company Plan Rejected Ten !\1-14 rifles stolen r eb. ~6 from A barracks at Camp Penlllcton were turned up by Los Angeles .police \Vedncsday night. Da.na Point Residents Prowst Rate Hike Officers of the Southwest Division. who had participated in an investigation con- ducted by the FBI, stopped a car In the 8200 block of Crenshaw Boulevard and pla.ced the occupants. a you na Marine ftnd thr~ other men, under arrest after finding the missing 11.•e11 pon.i; in the vclli- cl<'. Pvt. John II. Piper. 21. of U>!i Angele,;. \\'as charged \\'ilh rccenrzng lht' ll'tfJ\Cn rifles \\1hich disappeared from a rHck in a barracks buikllnG near the C:un 1> PcndlelGn air field. A 1pol:cs1nan at Can1p Pcl'l'lll'l(ln 1n!d tod11y tlla t Pipe r, \\lr:t 1,:i tr:1 t'.aU n1·d Al tl1c ~larl11~ b .. "~"· h;is bl'f" 1 ""' le~,,. aloe:? i\1crch 2. Arrcalcd 11.ilh hi111 1l'crr (.;utJ.lJ1: t:. .Jones, 21; Jani~ E. Gardner. 27 ~nd ,_., ,, llmilll. 12, aU of Los Allaeles. I • By JOllN V A.LTKRZA 0 1 1111 O•ll~ l'llel Sotfl Scores of Dana Point t1rea homeGwners "·ho are angry over recent 50-perctnt hikes in wa ter rates took. their fight to the board of the South Coast Munici pal Water District Thurtday . Everybody went away unhappy. The group, represented by I h e Thunderbird llornco~·ner'3 A.s'Soclat1on, "'ere met \\'ith a oompromlst propo1al by the grim board members. but the Idea for a •imcdlallon " committee or so rts drew ;:1ngry shool:i-on "n<> ••• no. , .no" from the ou:!\('ncc of aboul 70 water. users. Th(' b:iard voted una nimously 11.nd !\" 1ruy tu ~t :i date for a district com· ml'tre I'> mecl wllh 1 Mmco,ff\cr's (Croup (' 'nut1itlC" lo ". • k n111 1• .~··lutlftfl l•J ll•c ·1>1'0tcsl. The point of cuntc:nl!on which still "':Ill not reaolved, however. aUU plaiuca OK ' ----------- issut -citizen demands ror an Im- mediate drop to la st ye!'-'1 water ratell unlll more studies on the rate Increase art flnishtd . 'the board would not accept that proposal. Angus Smith, vice president of lhe citizen group, presented thelr complaint! about the water rate hike whictt1 he ll8id bc<:amc apparent two months after it was enacted. lfomeowners, Smith said, only knew about lhe rate increases "'Ith the mailing nf the Deetmbcr.January billing !ale in January. ' "\Ve are: deeply disturbed about the re- cent exorbitant Increase in tht waler rates •.. a group of cltb:cn3 from our arta ipcnl a gl'f!at <1tal ol \·al unhlc time ex- amlnlni:i llle dlsti'lct'.11 1009 audit. the [Jleht EvH1\~ 1hi recl oonwlLanU.l rl:!por{ nnd oUlCr lntotmutfoo." he told the. :silent boanl membera. "These 1ood citizens have come to lht unanimous conclusion lhal the.re ill abM>lutely no jus!JflcaUon for the water rate inerea9e/' he added. But an accountant' rOr the Diehl Evanll rinn in Santa Al)• and oth~ members or • the 'd~lrlct atalf diogreed. The rate hikes, •ACcoUntanl -Roborl · .fa<-told tllt angry group, 'lhoui\l go Into t.ffect ~ause. the dl:stri<*--ha1 5'f· tcred from JnnaUon In past years and the prospects \ii•er¢ that C:OSU would conUnue rising. .• , Board ~1ember Robert 'ri-1a10nc, ~who faced \he. most crlt;ct1m ·1..unni the even- ing. ogrctd 1v~I the obvkl;usJy nr""'out nccounl:int n r e m 11' d c d tho .hotnw.,11c:rt ti lhc d'stlh.l's roteJ ~ad, •t:l)'fd, •the .,.. I.fir tbt palO 1i 'l!'f' botorc tl1e bou v9(e<I on th<. ralc Jilkt I~ WtTP. P ... II . ~ A bid by the Owens Illinois G\af$A Com· pany lo operate their plant in Chris· tlanltoa Canyon 24 hours a day was tum- «! down this week by the Orange County Plannina Commi$si0fl. The glass cOmpany cxLracl.'I silica sa]ld . f9r glass· maktng aDd ·true.ks h by 'J;'ltW Road to Ortega . Jllghwa y near, Mlsslpn , ·Viejo. Sand and Grave.I O)'lltict , Reaulaj.lons under wh lc.h lhe. firm operates Uml b , ~fl rrom '6 a.m. to 10 ,'p.m. Comntlssioncr5 noted that thqre are 5ev.eral other aond and sravcJ operations In-tlM! anm and, if ~'CM Jillnola was grariled U"i'llimJled ho\1r11 others could dC.: ll\llnd U1e~1nt . · • , :t'bc co1npp:ny rnilod <1buQt. 18 11ionths ago w. it.,t ... ix11~1o:~QJ.) l!' ~1.n.1 " i;1~1r rallrOi_d tl'ac5 to tnc opcra11011 \\'hl.!n the dty ac, S11 Juan Cilplllrano ol>)ocl<d. Federal Men Say More By BARBARA KREIB!CH 01 Ille O•IW l'llet Sl1!1 Federal authorities today predicted more arrests will come-arter llley swooped into Laguna Beach Thursday and claimed. to have knocked over a $3.l\ million ~ nationwide ring dealing in manufacture ,and distribution of illicit drugs. Raiding officers alleged that a Laguna home in Arch Beach Heights was head· quarters for the illegal drug traffic. In a series or faids beginning at 10 :45 a.m., 30 F'«leral narcotics agent! ar- rested five men and a woman .n Laguna Beach, South Laguna and Orange. ac. cording lo Daniel P. Casey, western regional director of the Federal Bure.au of Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs. The suspects are c h a r g e d with operating an L.50 "lacto ry,'' a "canning plant" and a drug distribution network that supplied LSD, h<!,shish, martju1na and PCP, a psychedelic drug JCSB potent lhan LSD to ouUell! in Arizona, New York City, Boston , New Orleans and SeaUle. Casey said that tips from outside t.,e state set off the: se.ven-m-onlh in- vestigation that led to the headquarters of the dn1g operation in the Laguna arta. The fedt:ral ofCiei!:rs, he said were assisted by the Oranae County District Attorney's office, the Orange County Sheriff's Office ·and the Orange Polic'. Deparbnent, which 1nade two 0 r Thursday's arrests. The Laguna Beach Police. ()(!partment did not parUcipate' in tbe investigation. nor wu it noUfied or the impending raids, acc.:irding to Police Chief Kenneth Huck. An extraordinary array of drug pro- cessing and shipping equipment ~ized in the ralcb included a complete laboratory for the production of LSD, found in the bedroom of a home at 569 Glassell St., Orange ; a canning machine, used to seal drugs in pint cans for shipment aero" the country, found at 31401 First Ave .. South Laguna ; and twp hydraulic pre.Mes for shaping mallijuana and hashish lnlo kilogram bri cks, found al 1094 Miramar St. in Arch Beach Heights, Casey said the equipment was moved around the county at frequeni intervals, !See J.-;D FACTORY;Page I) Mysterious Fire Hits Viejo Home A mysterious fire did $15.000 damage to a new homt in ~1ission Viejo Thurs- day afternoon just be!ore. the new owner1 had planned to move in. Twenty-one Orange County firemen battled the blaze at 26571 Morena Drive, for almoat an hour before containing II. For a time it threatened a new SM,000 home next door. The tiouse had bttn purchasd by ~1r. and ~1rs.RJchard Graff of Fullerton who had planned to move in next week. Firemen s<1id faulty wiring may havt been the cause of the blaze but they' coulrl not be certain. An investigation is under way. The ~1ission Viejo Company, which still had custody of the home, 1aid they would msikc olher arrangement! for . i.h':I Fullerton couple. Oranlf e Coast "'eafller The wealhern11:1n 's rnaking up for last weekend , promising sun- ny skies and a big temperature bootl, aided by 1usty northeast winds, Into the balmy 70'1. INSIDE TODi\Y 'l'lu~ 4!Jtll state takts the spot· lloll t o.• tlie Ala.11ka1i i llow a' Costo illesa'• So uth Coo•t Plo:a rlIDri .. 4U the detaif1 cirt in to- tkiy's WeeketKfe,. section.· ····~· 11 """YI" 11•tl c.i11.,..1. ' M\1111'1 ,l;ftfl tf CllK-lllt 1,1, F <•t•lllM ,,_.J NII~'°''"' .. ! o, .... , C:t1111t1 • ..... " 11: .. "IVftRft tt-lt '''"-· H t..rtt , .. ,. Dfflll ..... lcfl • Slee-MH•tft ,..11 ,.,. .... 1.1 ..... ' Ttteftt..,_ tt •loo•r«-"'" Tlltltto 11·1' H•...-ct"" '' Wtll:!MI t A.llft 'tl!fffl l l M•lni.• 4 wo-·• "'"'' 1.),tt Wt!lll NtW. W Mtlflllll I .. ......., .. ., • • ' ' I Ol.ILV PILOT . SC Friday, Marth fl, 1970 ,, Ul'I T.iwMte CAROLE HANSEN IFOURTH FROM LEFT>, OTHERS BRING PLEAS TO WASHINGTON Prisoners' Wives, Rtp. Hebert Look •t Picture of Enemy's Hum•ne TrNtment From Page 1 MRS. HANSON .. trip, sponsored by Twin Circles, a U.S. €ttholic matazi.ne. > Effort! to reach Hanoi faJled and Mn:. · Hanson . whose husband has never ·seen their three-year.old son Stephtn Jr., \\'1.1 rebuffed as she sought information from U1e Pathet Lao, in Vientiane, Laos. North Vietnamese authoriUe. aaid Capt. Hanson's fate w .. s no concern of theirs, since he was r;hot doY.11 in LIM, and she was only made lo stand In the driveway of red headquarters there. The women never gained e!llry to the Soviet capitol of ~1oscow either, being forced to wait 12 miles outside town in a shabby airport transit hotel. r None had official entry visas, but their quest wu honored elsewhere and they hoped to be admitted to Moscow and talk wilh officials, perhapl! bringing indlrect pressure on Hanoi. North Vietnamese policy ca 11 s American POW1 war crlm1nals who must be deaJt with in direct peace negotiations, v.'hlle the U.S. government contends this is a vi9lati01J oJ the Geneva Convention. Only rarely does North Vietnam release the names o{ its POW populace or allow them io write home, while it will nol make formal Hsts available lo responsible intematio!'lal organiz.ations auch as the Red Cross. From Page 1 DRUGS ••. rtlleve mild depression. All three men became unable to work and had to undergo lengthy hospital trealmenL Stevens lost his Insurance lictntie and his bU11ine.ss and Cocly. deKribed by his lawyers as ''a very sick man." ls today confined to a \'eterans hospital. All three men, it was testified, went to the clinic with the assurance by the physicians that the series of \•ilamin lre.atmenls prescribed would enable them to Jose weight. Instead, the.r lav.11ers argued, the y alm08t lost their minds and became drug addicts, •·unable to y,·ork, unable to ef· fectively carry on their lives and business and unable to really con1prehend, until It l''a!i too late, v.·hat had happened to them." Aton1 Weapons Tested YUCCA FLAT, riev. IUPI) -Two atomic v:eapons test! were del.onated tcr. day at fairly shallow depths beneath the destrt floor at the Nevada t~st sile. Both v•ere rated at less than 20 kilotons. DAILY PILOT Nnpeftt.Kti L .. 111• hoc• CMt• Mn• Hv11tltttte11 hft• fe111t•l11 Volley S111 Cl-1nfl OltAHGE COAST 'Ulll.ISHINI) COM .. AN't Jl:ob11I N. W1.d r •t>lllt nr 1/'ICI P'l/llJ11nu· J1d1 It Curl1v Vie• '•nlll1"1 •rod Otntr11 M1n1ott l lto,,_,., ](,, .. a Etllf'Qf Tlto l!'l11 A. Mu•phin1 Mlnttlfll Ertller Rie~1rd P. Nill $0vl!! Or1n0t Co:>uM¥ E~llOt Offlcn Cn•1 MIMI: :tJO Wa! t1y i11e-1 NtWllGI'• le.o(n: 1711 war llfl-1111111fu1rd LlllllM INCJI; m ,Ol't ll A¥"'11t HUllHl'ICllOfl llUCPI: 1117' lll!Kn llOulfv~·d "" ci.,,,..,, •• ~ NIMPI El Clm•nD 11,,,, OAllY "11..0T, wttll ""ICl'I Is tomfltrO!f "'' N-·l'rht., It "1111;,PI• '*lly to( .. I s.,... dti1 In M$11fllt tclll'°"' fOr L.19'#'1 !11td1. H"""'°" ltld\, Cotlt Mfft, H11•1!l1!9!00'I 9M<fl tl'ld F_,ltlrl VtllfY, •!Ont W!lll """ r111ontl lllHIOnt. OAfltt CMtl "Wiit!> ... '°""""" """" ... plttltt .... t i 1211 Wftt It.... ll'W.. N...,.,I IMdl, t~ ))II WM lly I~ Cotle Msa. , ........ f714J '42·42J1 C1 ... fl .... , .. , ..... 642-1671 S-Cl1 ... 11 Ah hpettwta: , .. e,..1111 4t2-4421 CWl'Ytltl'll, tM, Drangt COW ""°lltl'llt!t c.ni..nr. Ne ,...., 110tlti. UM1r1!11tie, tlJClf\ll ~ .,..,.,. "" t i "'""'°" ~ t llf eo.11 MtM, C:.H'-"'"· $•err.flolll or urt• "*·• """lft'J'; H ,... .. •t.M -1111•1 11111111ri: ... tlrMttetil • ., ... -"'""· •11w111 '""""' ., ~IM!Mflff l'ltl'tlrl ""Y ti. r~ trllt!elll ..,_111 ""' ....... It ~·' """"'· Action Postponed Rep.ort Card Conf~ion Has Schools Up in Air By PAMELA HALLAN Of llM Dtl'1 '11•1 Sf1ff Result.s of a report card lllf'Vey in the San Joaquin Elementary School Distrlci has left school officials in a temporary quandary. The Board of Trusteu pru:tponed ac- tion on accepUng the new cards until after the kinks can be wor~ed out. The new card which was sent home with 957 atudent.s Crom 34 selected clas.ses throughout the district measures elrort as well as achievement. It also gives ne:w meaning lo the traditional lettu grades. A stands for above grade level, B is for at grade level and C is for below grade level. Yi{ty~iv_e percent of the carda were re- turned with the comments indicating that the great majorily of parents be- lieved the card provided a clear picture Of the.Ir cijild's progress. Most uld they could understand the achievement ucUon but there was con- siderable confus:lon about the effort mea· surtment. Frank Hurd, an Interested parent, crit- icized the card saying that any report card should contain an explanation oI what is expected of the student in spe- cific areas. For el:amplc, at a particular point in time a child shoukf be able to do JOO additJonal problems in 15 minutes with 90 percent accuracy. Hurd also sajd a card should measure the level of achievemenl and should make recommendations concerning any necessary corrective action. Dr. William Stocks. assistant super\n. tendent, said the term grade level indi- cates ~·hat is expected of the child. He said if a fou rth grader is making normal progress through a fourth grade math- book then he is working at his grade level and Is doing what Is expected. He also said that before a new card is adopted perhaps the term grade level could be more specifically aplained. The new ca rd which has caused a great deal of controversy dur ing past Crackdo~n Set On Oemente's Dangerous Road San Clemente's steep Avtnida San Juan is in for not only more tralfic signs but more traffic enforrement. The city council decision \Vednesday night followed a petition by 48 residenll of the area and remarks by several persona including George Bowles, plan· ning commission chairman. Bowles, or 123 Avenida San Juan, label· ed It a dangerous area because of drh~r5 \\'ho come around the curve "tires squealing mo ming and evening." He estimated that cars traveled 40 to 50 miles an hour th.rough the 2~mile zone and claimed that school buses travel 30 lo ~miles per hour. He advised that police talk to bus drivers. BO\\'les said a school bus cul In fronl him rectnUy and he had to slam on his brakes. fie said also that he i5 build ing a house in snot.her area or the city and I.hat he caught children i;tealing nails a.nd said U1at they stopped up a sev.·er. t.trs. W. T. Love of 117 Avenida San Juan. suggested no·parklng areas at the points where buses pickup chlldren. The city is to Investigate this. City P.lanager Kenneth Garr~saJd police h11d in\'tstigaged the area and rt!COm· mended both more signing and more ge\. cctl\'c enforcement a;:alnat tr a ff I c v!o1ator1. Petitlontrs had poiTlted out that one •c· cldent recently broke 1t chlld's leg. . Carr said that $lgn~ wuuld be both pole ~gns and thOM. painted on $lrttts. Coun· cihntn authorlied thf ~igns and 1dded enforcement and asked Carr to look into lhe parking re5irlt'lion ~ltuatlon ,.,,d pou1blllty of a talk with bus dri \'eNi. Owners illlO 11skt'd about the city put· U~g ln :\!dl!\l11tlks. Carr pointed oui lhtl Ibis 11 .a property owner JirivUege. A V.'OmM 1sked lf that meant payln11: for all the work. Corr aald, "yoo belclu." board meetings was originally pr!tien- ttd with numbers taking the place of let- ter grades:. The administration believed that numerals would better convey the meanings of abqve , at or below grade level. In favor of the new card with the numerals jnstead of the letter was trus. tee James Nelson who felt that too much competitive interest wu placed on letter grades and who was agairut having an F an on elementary card. In favor of the old system ol using lei· ter grades to me1n n:ctllent, good, 11verage. below average and fall ing was troste Edward Berry who felt that numerals would be loo confwing. Ih.!...~ards that W«Laent out were a compromln. From Page 1 WATER ••• late last year. He al&0 said grbn]y. that romplaints that the homeawner's group was not told about the increases "·ere "puzzling.'' "You. fl1r. Smith, l''ere at the meeting- \\'hen the board discussed the rate in· creases weren't you?" Malone aisked. "Yes, I was, bul the idea \\'35 only discussed .. It wasn't passed," snapped the angry Sm!lh. Malone then delved into the issue ()f notification of water users about the in· crea~ and admitted that perhaps the dlstnct ·'was remiss .. in Mt notifying each member personally as soon as the rate hike went into effect. "We couldn't post a notice in vour area t\t:cause there artn 'l any public· buildings there," he said. "Furthermore, because of complaints by one newspaper in the area that It was not advised of the changes, J can only say that other newspapers serving the arta ran stories on the increases. Why couldn't the MV.'spaper that didn 't get the in· forrnation read it and reprint the in· formation?" be added. Both statements drew loud jeers lrom the audli!!nce. To back up their {Jghl lo lower the rates, the homeowners cited figures which they say show that the district has been and is running in the black. The 1969 fiscal year shoY.·ed a· net in· come to the district's general fund of S46,993, Smith said. The current assets in the 169 audit report shows cash tn tem- porary investments to be $23$,317, he ad· ded . "So far, we have a clear lndicatJon that this district is operatlna: in the black and could even operate at a Joss to the general fund for several years before the red mark is reached." he said. He called for a more "reasonable ad· justment in the rates instead of SO per. Ct'nl.'' But waterdistrict officials have cited soaring costs for prices of wat?r, opera· tion and maintenance, inflation and equipment. Water purchase price for an acre foot from the fltetropolitan Water District has risen from $23 in 1960 lo '45 today - nearly 100 percent. Those concepll of Inflation and detailed examin ation of the fiscal report! and the consultant recommendaUon is txpected lo come In the meeting of the two media· lion committees tentatively acheduled for next Tuesday night Laguna Beach urolog111t Dr . Antholfy Orlru1della. who made the motion to re1tudy the increaee, i• expteled to sit on Ult board's commi ttee. Dr. Orlandel11 hid opposed the ortf1nal proposals to raise tM r1tt1 100 percent fthe original advice given by the con· sultanta). Guard Recalled CHAMPAIGN, ILL. (UPI) . Gov. Rlch&rd B. Ogllvle today recall'd the 7SfJ Nation•! Gu111rd!lmen he hid ordtrtd to the University of Ullnols e:1mpus to conlrol violent llUdtnl danonwallODJ. -. .. ·-- • ---------- Rallies Fail to Ignite Students Peacef/z at OCC , UCI Discussions Two. rallies .held at Orenge Coast COUt&ti and UC lrvltle Thursday falled to spark any Jtudenl demonstrations as speakers exb.orted the crowds "to do something -don't just sit around and talk about Political repression and police brutality." Both rallies, prompted by Shtn\'ood Forest, an .underground newspaper now being published In Sant. Ana, were con· ducted peacdully. About 700 student& cit OCC and 300 It UCI heard a variety of militant speakers dil!JCUSS police am1ts in campus disorders at UC Santa Barbara and Cal SI.ate Fullerton. The OCC rally broke. up alter 4S minutes when Dean of. Student! Joseph Kroll. told organiiers they would not be allov.·ed lo hold a dlscUS!ilon with students from Santa Barbara and CSF in the auditorium. The UCI rally w's held. adjacent to .a Bank of America branch at the Irvine From Page I LSD FACTORY •. but headquarters of the operation was alleged to be !ill the l\1iramar Street ad. dress where two of the suspects, Dennis Ingham, 26 and Jeffrey Newman, 21 , were arrested. Arr.esled at the South Laguna address were Je$Sie l\1tthiz, 21, and his Y.'ife, Ann ~leehiz, 20. ' " The t~·o suspect! arrested at the Glassell Street address in Orange "'ere Paul H. Newton, 23, and Stephen t.fcCarthy, 31. They are being held in that city. The other four suspects were taken directly lo Los Angeles. Equipment 5eJzed in the raids ~·as taken to the Federal Bureau of Narcotics office at 714 \V. Olympic 8\\'d., Los Angelts, along ~'ith drugs taken as evidence. These Included 5,000 LSD . tablets, and undetermined quantities of marijuana, hashish and PCP. Chemicals used in t11e manufacture or the hallucinogerur were obtained from legitimate drug supply houses, Casey said, using invoices stolen from the llill Bruthers Chemical Company. "Early descriptions of Hill Brothtrs as 1 'bogus' firm were incornct," CaS('y said today . "It is a legitimate firm and the: invoices were stolen." He said that one of tht suspects. ~1eehiz, is facing triad in Phoenix 011 a charge cf possessing 14,IXXl LSD tablets and was free on bail. Union Endorses Capo Election The membership of Carpenter's Unicn Local 16411 of Dana Point today unanimously endorsed a yes vote in Tuesday's hood inlerest and tax override election in the Capistrano Unified School District. The local announced that "the proposed financial authorizations for the district are essentJal to avoid lowering the educa· tional $landards for our boys and girls. "Public education is a primary responsibility of the local community." Tutsday's election will decide: the fate of 1 proposal for a SG-cent tax oxerrlde and raising of lnttrest ceiling on unsold district bonds from five to seven percent. Town Center. Orianlztr1, wtio calle<I themselves PrBlis Axis Action f action, said the bank site was chosen to un· dersco{.e protest against the arrests in connection with last week's disturbances at UC Santa Barbara, when a Bank or Afllerlca office .was burned down. Throughout the rally, the bank did a brisk business "'Ith student customers cashing checks, ruid depo!ilting funds. At one point during the 90-minutes of speeches liberally tiprinkled with four-let- ter words, a speaker urged tbe crvwd to stage a "look-In" 1t the bank. The crowd had dwindled to about 150 and they press:. ed their noses lo the building's plate glass v.•indow.s for a few minutes before strag· gling off. Santa Ana Black Panther MU.:e Lynem urged the crowd to attend a Panther rally scheduled Sunday afterncion at Jerome Park in Santa Ana In preparation for the trial of Arthur League \Vho is charged in the killing June 4, 1961 of Santa Ana policeman Nelson Sasscer. Lynen1 called upan students t o demonstrate a show of force by attending League 's trial which opens t.1onday moming in Santa Ana superior court. "The people are going to kffp the pigs from committing constitutional murder on brolhtr Arthur League," he stated. Other speHkers, including Donovan Dorsey, a UCJ student and Don Elder, alleged puhlisher or Sherwood Forest. called upon the listless audience to "mobllze and organiu for the revoluUOI\ against police brutality and political repression." · At the t'Onctusion of the two-hour pro- aram, 11bout 2Q students were left in the .• audience. Council Upholds Denial Df Car Rental Firm Sign Soln Clemente cowx:ilmen have upheld the "Planning commission in deny ing a sign lo adverti5e a car rental agency at a service station . whlch alrtady has an abundance of sfgn.s, 2360 El Camino Reo!. Planning Commission denial had bten appealed to the counCil by A\'i$ Rent A Car Systems. Inc. A corporation executive, Edwin D. Ha le, wearing a "We Try Harder" but- ton, said. "I don't think it's ridiculous req uest." He said a four by six-foot sign Junior Higli Kids Set for Rodeo ~ludcnts at ?.farco Forster Junior High School in San Juan Capistrano will have bucking broncos, \Vild stetrs and elusive calves on their minds starling flfooday. Princi pal \Valt Spencer said ticket s should be available for sale beginning ?.fonday for the Far \Vestern Rod eos shov.• which is being sponsored by the junior high during the Fiesta de las Golondrinas celebration. The rodeo will ta ke place two days, from 3 to 5 p.m. on Saturday, March 21 directly after the swallows day p<1radc ;ind from 2 to 4 p.m on Sunday, March 32 . The. events will be staged both days at Buchheim Field, adjacent to the old Capistrano High School. The junior high will receive 10 percent of all ticket sales up to $4,000 and 50 per· cent of all sales after that point. The school also will provide all concession stand s serving soft drinks, coffee and hot dogs and will receive 100 percent of these profits. Coordinating the e\'enl l''ill be Jim \Valshe director of student activilics. ·Proceeds will go to a project designated by the studtnls. Last year (before the rodeo was rained out) the student.s had deeided to v.·ork ·with the Peace Corps to build a one or tv.·o room school in 1.fexico which would ha\·e their school's name. ~·as nec essary identification for the corn· pany. Counci lmen didn't budge \Vee!· nesday. A history of si gning in the arta w•s read to cooncilman. Co u n c i Im a 11~ TI1omas O'Keefe said. "Lagurfa Beacb has been revie\\'ing ils sign ordinance. They established a three-year morator· ium (on existing non-conforming signs} and are commencing to make signs con- form. (deadline April IS ). "I think rather than poke more holes in our ordina nce. we should commence a pro'tfam similar lo Laguna Beach to review our ordina nce and attempt to get si,ns to conform." He said that 300 square feet is a tremendous amount of signing and SU "· gested the signs on the property might be l'.\'aluated ~·ith an eye to reduction that v.·ould perm it the neW Avis si gn. , Tony Asaro, 401 Via Manzano, als<l op- posed the additional signing. Councilmen unanimously upheld planning commis.slon denial. Marion Wallace Services Held Funeral ser,•ices v.·ere held today for r-.frs. Marion Gilbert \Vailace of Laguna Beach who died Tuesday &t the age of 75. Mrs. \Vallace, a noted eduactor, had liv· ed in Laguna for I~ years. She taught English for the foreign-barn at Orange Coast College from 1960 tn 1969. Sh.e also taught at the Copre School in Balboa Jn 1968 and 1969. One of the first womtn to eam a gradwate degree from flarvard in 1925, she and her late husbllnd F.ar! help found Pierce College in the San Fernando Vallty. She is survived by a brother. Carl J. Gilbert of Washington , O.C., and two sisters, Eleanor Gllberl f\.1ontgomery or B<lslon, and Harriet Hyde Sands of ~1ilton, ?.lassachusetts. Interment will be at Ar lington Cemetery. Virginia. MARCH UPHOLSTERY SALE BY DREXEL Featurinq Drexel's Shelby CoUection This eielting c~llecti on he1 rneny edvtnf•ge1 unm •lc hed in th e uphol1t1ry field, pertic.ulerly ..,hen it i1 f••· lured •t 1ale price1. ~ SHELBY ADVANTAGES COMPLETE FAIRIC: LINE •. , over 300 to choo11 from. SC:OTCHCOA~D FAIRIC PROTICTIO!l ..• ell f1bric1 ere Scotchg erded •f no addi· tionel cost. All FINE QUALITY FAIRICS • : . the ••m• pr iee on eny given pi11ce of fur· n1ture . HAND CONSTRUCTION All cheirs & softs ere hand constructed from t~e frtme to I wey hend tied 1prin9 con1tru c.0 l ion. Arm eover~ ere provided •I no . exlre coif. S~lrts ere provided on meny piec.11 •' ~ additional co if. Over 12 different styl es of che1r1, end 6 differ ent styles of 1of11, & love1eat1, ell et reduc.ad prices, SALE PRICE $159 .... DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HE~ITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wellcllff Dr., 642-2010 O'IN fllDAY 'TIL t -------- INTERIORS Profe1slon1I Interior LAGUNA BEACH De1l9n1rt 345 No rth Co11t Hwy. Av1!11blt--AID-NSID O,IN F•IDAT 'TIL t A11t1 Tell ''" M11t If o,...._ Ce11ttty 140·1JtJ I 1 17 San Cl~menie Capistra110 VOL 63, NO. 55 , ~ SECTIONS, 42 PAGES EDiTION f ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFOR!'!I).' FRIDAY, MARCH 6, '1970 ' . ; Today's Final N.Y. TEN CENTS mas e Sea Perils Homes Capo Dwellers Hold Back Tides A crane and bu 11 do ze r continued fa shioning a boulder bulwark against the "ea today to protect the $100 .000 Capistranc· Beach properties or .John ~ Reynard, 35787 Beach Road. Reynard 's home and nearby proper1ic.~ hav~ been under siege from the sea for ri ays, pounded by a high tide surf in a peculiar localized situation . Orange County jail prisoners brought in for the Cmcrgcncy. neighbors, the county Harbor District and a contractor ha11c worked to stem the tidal action that hin1· inered away Thursda y night and again lhis morning. Reynard's seawall began to break apart before his eyes and water swirled towa rd his door step. The house is about ~feel from the mean high tide line . About 350 tons of rocks have been INSIDE TODAY FEATURED NEWS ALONG THE SOUTHERN ORANGE COAST e Case of Slidi11g Houaes San Cle1nent.c city officials are searching for solutions to a slide area \vhich threatens homes. Story Page 3, e Cle)11e1ate Fi1•e Toll Tallied Despite the huge blaze which gutle4 San Cla- men1e's famed landmark Clubhouse. there is a different story· in total fi gures. Story p·age 3. e How Will Schools Fure? Dr . Robert P . Bea sley has son1e djslurbing pre- dictions if financing fai ls for San Clemente and San J uan Capistrano school s. Story Page 3. No Combat Tro·ops in Laos, President Nixon Declares KEY BISCAY NE, Fla. (AP) -Prcsi· dent Nixon made a detailed, 3,000-\vord defense of American invol vement in Laos today and an nounced he is asking help from the Soviet Union and Britain to help restore peace in that c<>untry. Nixon acknowledged that in recent da ys "there has been intense public specula- tion to the. erfect that the United StatC's lnvoh'ement in Laos has substantially in- creased in violation of the Geneva ac· r.ords, that American grou nd forces are f!ngagecl in combat in Laos and that our 11ir activity has had the effect of escalating the conrticL" Describing these reports as '·grossly in- accurate," Nixon stated. "I ha ve con- clud.ed that our national interest will be served by puttin g the subject into perspective through a precise description of our current activities in Laos.'' The chief executive saict there are no American ground combat troops in Laos and ';we ha ve no plans for introducing ground combat forces into Laos." Re also stated Utat "no American sta. Uoned in Laos bas ever been killed in if°OUnd combat operations.·· Giving precise ligur.es, Nixon said there were currently , 1.040 Americans, both ~crvice personnel and civll ians, in La o!'! but that onl y 616 of these are direct govemmenl cmployes. "U.S. personnel in Laos during the pa st vca r has oot increased." he said, "'vhile during the past few mo nth s. North Viet- nam has sent over 13.000 additional com· bat ground lroops lnto Laos:· The President said U.S. air operations in that Southeast Asia country have as thei r fir~ priority the interdiction of a con tinuing flow of North Vietnamese troops and supplies across the Ho Chi Minh Trail complex in Laos to join the fighting in South Vietnam. He reporled !hat in 1969, thi s llqw totaled about 10.000 men. "In addiLion lo air operations on lhe Ho Chi Minh Trail," he said, "we have con- tinued to carry out reconnaissance flighL~ 1n northern Laos and fly combat sup)Xlrt missions for Laotian forces when re- quested to do so by the ffoyal Laotian government.., He said that the level of U.S. opc1alions. in the air "'has been increased only as the numbe r or North Vietnamese in Laos and lhc level of their aggression has in· creased .'' .. trucked in' from Riverside at Reynard's •Jrder with anolher 350 tons on the way to 1nake a pcr1nanent protective barrier. "It hit us the worst," said Reynard. "It's been about sev en ye ars. since we \1·ere hit. It 11its one place one year and another the next. lt was a combination of current and Ude right in front of our place. It did a little damage about 1,000 feet north. it uOdercut a cou ple of patios.·• Reynard, a retired liquif.ied petroleum gas company owner. estimated. th at seven feet of sand had been los t (rom the beach in fro nt of his properties. three lots and two houses. Chris Klinger, chief of operations at the l'oun ty Uood control d.islTict. said two or three homes may be in danger depending on how fast they work to sandbag or take other protective measures. He said 12 or 13 houses were badly damaged i'n the area about five years ago. Vitaniin Addicts Win $435,000 Court Damages Three men whose lawyers told , 11 Superior Court jury th at their doctors' vitamin sho~ clinic had converted th em into almost incurable drug addjcts were a1'l'arded a tota l of $435,000 in damages Thursday at the end of a five month trial .. The panel filed ba_ck into the. courtroom of .Judge \Villiam S. Lee to award $420,000 to insurance broker Willi am R. Stevens of Anaheim, $105,000 to Santa Ana attorney Richard Cody and · $10,000 to Joe Leves- que , a Garden Grove conr.ractor. Tbose damages must be paid, ·in vary· lng amounts, by four doctors who ()nce operated the KatelJa.Palmwood Medical Center in Anaheim. Ju.dge Lee's ruli ng went against Ors. Arthur J. Reynaud. Mansour Roshan, S. L. Yerington and Berna rd Keyse r. Renaud and Roshan are today prac- ticing together in Garden Grove, Yer· ington is retired and Keyser is now practicing in Los Angeles. All four pffysicians for1ncrly operat<':d what was described during the trial as "a shot. factory run purely for profit and gain .·· They v.•ere a cc use d of ad· minislering highly potent v i t a m in treatments to the point th11t the three plaintiffs became addicted to liqu id amphetamine. It was testified tha t the Injections or amphetamine were much hig her than is oorma\ly administered to patients who use the drug· to combat appetite or to (Ste DRUGS, Page %) Stock llJarl•el• NEW YORK (APJ-Prices on the stock market continued to sag in fairly active trading late this afternoon. (See quota· tions, Pages 20-21 ). Declines outnumbered adva nces 793 to 469 on the New York Stock Exchange. DAILY l"ILOT "'-" ~ . ' SURF BORNE ON HIGH TIDE POUNDS POCHE AREA Woodtt1 Seaw•ll Fronting Bueti Road Homts ~educed to SPiinters Mrs. Hanson Tells Sto1·y At Congressional Hearing From Wire Scr.v\ets WASHINGTON, D:C. -Four Southern Cal ifornia military wives who made an unprecedept.ed trip around the world trying to learn if their captive husband:; are dead or alive testified today in Corigress. · The review c~ their early 1970 mercy mission before a sympathetic House committee was also the first time wiv e! or suspected prisoners of war held by North Vietnam spoke in a form al hear- ing. Mrs. Carole Hanson, of 24112 Birdrock Drive, El Toro, and her three globe-girdl· i".1g companions were to speak during the day, along with Pentagon official!. Mrs. Hanson's husband, Marine Corp5 Capt. Stephen P. Ranson. was shot down June 3, 1967. on a helicopter medical evacuation mission over Laos. ' Neither he nor the other three missing fliers shot down in the war zone have been h1;ard from, but Mrs. Hanson believes she saw him in a monitored Hanoi telecast. The women -undaunted by getting on· ly sympa lhy and no actual help on their tiri ng trip -i1aid upOn return i11 late January that th~y bcUeve the mission. will hav e long-ranging humanitaria n cf· fc<:ts. They were invited to te ll of their odyssey to major cities or the east and west, Communist Bloc and Fr~ World capitals, by Rep. L. Mendel Ri vers (D· S.C.) the committee chairman. Members of his Armed Services Com· mittee were also scheduled to hear Assis- tant Defe rise Secretary Richard G. Capen Jr. release a Pentagon report on POW negotiations. Both U.S. and North Vietnam pear;e delegates are· deadlocked on the emo- tional issue involving the husbands of tl1e lour military wives and more than 1,000 other meri beld captive. The four women, including ·Mrs. Jotin K. Hardy Jr., of Covina, Mrs. Rooseve;lt Hes t\e .(.r., and Mrs. Arthur S. Mearris. both of Los Angeles, left Jan. 3, heading east. Stolen Pendleton Rifles Recovel'ed Water Keeps All Unhappy They visiled Pope Paul In Rome, plus Egypt , Romania, India, LaQs, Japan and Russia on the relatively unproductive (See MRS. HANSON, P11e-ll Glass Campany Plan Rejected Ten M-14 rifles sto len F'eb. 26 from a barracks at Camp Pendleton were turned up by Los Angeles police \Vednesday night. Officers of the So uthw est Division. ''"bo had participated in an in\'cstigalion con- ducted by the FBI. stop\)Cd a car in the 6200 block of Crenshaw Boulevard and placetl the occupants, 11 young 1\-tarinc and three other men. under arrest .after finding tht'.' mlssing v.1eapons in lhe vehi· t ie. Pvl. John H. ftlpcr, 21. of Los Ange!l's, \\'8S charged with-receiving the stolen :rirles .which disappeared fro1n a rack in a bn.n'ocks bulldini; near lhr Cun1 p Pendleton al r fic1d. A spokC11n1an at Ca1n11 Pcn cHetun sn1d 1oday that Piper, v.•ho has been stnlionctt 11t U,c ~1urinc ~sc. 11.:~ btcn Oil h.•ov !iinc::! !\lurch 2. Arrested 1vlth hin1 \1·crr l;iirli~ t .Jones, 21; Jornes E. Gurrlner , 27 11nd 11horus S. Smith. 22. sll or Los Angeles. Dana Point Residents Protest Rate Hike By JOHN VALTERZA 01 lftt Otllf lllJitt $1tfl Scores of Dana Point area ho1neowners 1¥ho arc angry over recent 50-percent · hikes in water rates took their fi ght to Uic board of the South Coast ·Municipal Water District Thursday. Everybody went away u1,1happy. The group, represented by l b e Thunderbird Homcowner's Association. \\'ere rnct with a con1promisc proposal by the grim board member s. but the Idea for .:i ''1nediation" 001nmil\ec or sorts drew an~r)' shout.son ''no ... no. , .no" (rom the nurlicnt.-e of i!bout 70 wa ter u!>en. The baurd voted unaniffiously and s1,,lflly 10 sr1 a dH!c for a district com· mlitce 10 mccl "·il.h a homcowncr's group c-.inHn11tcc lo \1·1>rk uul a solution to the prt\e!'il The JK1int or con1cnllon \\'hlch still wa! not resolved. however, still plague1 the issue -citizen demands for an im· medi3te drop to last year's water rates until more studfes on the rate increase are finished. The board would not accept tha t proposal. Angus Smith, vice president or the citizen group, presented their complainL' about the "'ater rate hike which he said became ap parent two months after it was enacted. Homeo\\•ners, Smith said, only kne w ;about the rate increases wi th the mailing of tbe December.Januaey billing late ill January. , "\Ve arc dctply disturbed about t.he re- cent exorbitant Increase 'in the \vater rates ... a group of citizens rrom our area 9pc.nl a grcnt deal of valuable time ex· an1ining ihc dislrict1s 1969 :iudit. the Dl~ht ~~vttn~ !hi red consultuntsl report and other inJormatlon," he told lhc slleol board membor•. "These good citiU:ns have come to Lhe unanimous conclusion that ere is A bid by the OWens Illinois Glass Com· absolutely no justlfl r the water paay to operate their plant in Chrls- rate increa~;'1 he-ded.-(-t1anit.os-Canyon 24 hours a day~was4urn- But an a~uplant'for Lhe Diehl Evans . ed down this .week by the.Orange County Planning commission. , firm In Santa Ana and other members or The glasi ct1mPariy extracts sillCa sa~d · tbe "district st.al( disagreed. ror glass making and true.ks it by TR\V The· rRle • hikes, AcooW1tant Robert !load to Ortega Highway near Misiipn Jackson told the angry ~P. should go Viejo. . • 1nto effect becaur. the di strict bas suf· Sand ancl..Gravel DI.Strict Regulations fered from Infl ation In past years and the under whTch the firm operates. limits prospects.,. ~ere that costs would continue hours rrom~..a.m. to 10 p.m. rising. · Commis ~ noted that U1t re are Board ~1e1nber Robert Malont, who several ot and and gr11vel operations faced lhe' most crltlclem Gurlng the eve n· Jn tile area and if Owens llllnols was Ing'. agreed wlU1 the obviously nervous granted 1.n1liml tcd hours other11 could <J<:· actounlttnt and r o m i 11 d e d ' U1c mand the same. ho1neowncrs thot the dlstricl'e rates h~d The conipany failed ::iOOUI 18 nlOnths stnyed the iamc for the past 11 year' rigo tu get. perm i,slon to build a spur before the board \'Oted ori the rate hike rnilrotid trllCk to lhe opcratioh v.·t\en the t,Set WATER, Pll' II cily or Sao Juan Cipistr•no ol>je<:led. t :t F ede1·al Men Say More Arrests Due By BARBARA KREIBlCH Of ,,.. 0111>' "'"" lt•lt Federal authori ties today predicted more -arrests will come after they swooped into Laguna Beach Thursday and claimed to have knocked over a $3.5 million nationwide ring dealing in r manufacture and distribution of illicit drugs. Raiding officers alleged that a Laguna home in Arch Beach Heights was head- quarters for the illegal drug traffic .. (p a serie! of r.aids beginning at 10:45 a.m., 30 Federal narcotics agents ar- rested iive men and a woman .n Laguna Beach. South Laguna and Orange, ac· cording lo Daniel P. Casey, western regional director of the Federal Bureau of Narcotk s and Dong~rous Drugs. The !USpects are c h a r g e d with ·operating an ~[j "factory," a "canning plant" and a clrug distribution network that supplied LSD, hashish, marijuana and PCP, a psyched~lic drug less potent · than ~D to outlets in Arizona, New York City, Boston, New Orleans and Seatlle. Casey ·said that tips from ouUide the state set off the seven·montb in- vestigation th<i.t led to the headquattera of the. drug opera lion ln the Laguna .area. The 'fed~ra:i officen, he said, were as.slsted by the Orange County District Alfilmey's office, the Orange County 8herilf'1 Office and the Orange 'Police Department, which 1nade. two o t Thur8daY's. arrests. The Laguna Beach Pollce Department did not participate in the investiga'tlon, nor was it notified of the impending · s, accllrding to Police Chief Kenneth Hue . An e traordinary array or drug pro- cessing fpping equipment seized 1n the raids included a complete .!aboratoey for the production or UO, found in the bedroom of a home at 569 Glassel! St.., Orange ; a canning machine, used to seal drugs in pint cans for shipment across the country, found at 31401 Fir&t Ave., South Laguna: and twp hydraulic presaes ror shaping malijuana and hashish inlet kilogram bricks, found at 1094 Miramar St. in Arch Beach Heights. Casey said the equipment was mov(:d around the e-0unty at frequent intervals. (Set LSD FACTORY, Page!) Mysterious Fi1·e Hits Viejo Home A mysterious_ fire did $15,000 dam3i:e to a new home in P.fiS&ion Viejo Thurs· day afternoon just btfore the new owners had planned to move. in. Twenty-one Orange County firemen battled the blaze at 26571 Morena Dri ve, for ·almost an-hour-before containing. JI, For a time it threatened a new $35,000 home next door , The house had been purchasd by P.tr . and Mrs.Richard Graf! of Fullerton who had planned to move in next week. Firemen said fau lty wiring may have been lhe cause or the blaze but they 'could not be certain. An investigation is under 'way. The. Mission Viejo Company, which still had t'\lstody of the home, said they would make other arrangements for the Fullerton couple. Orange Coast \\'eatber The weatherm an's making up for last weekend, promising tun· ny skies and a big temperature ' boost, aided by gusty northeast winds, into U1e ba'Jrny'*'70's, INSibE TODAY The 49tli. 1tqte takes'the spot. light a.s tile Alaskan show at Costa J11esa'a So11tlt COCl8t Pl.am •itars. AU tltc dc taiU are ill t<>- dau11 \Vetkt'ltdfr ~•ctlon. tltllllt It Clllltrfllll I Clltc11'8' \It t CllllllflHI l l•ll C:•mltt n Cf'tUWl#f n Ottll "'11u , 4 ldl't•lll ""' ' ,,ft,~tl '•" ~,,,_.·CIPI 14 ..... ~ \,f'\ft l't 13 1'\111"9• • Mffllfltl ' ...... ¥... ,,.,. M\tl'llll •ultft 21 fllt!llMI JlttWI ... O•-.. CM!lr t l!••'IUl'lflll D-lt •.mt , .. ,. Stllt~ ~ll'lltl Jt.11 T.,.-.11 111 1't Tll"r,," , V' .. I W .. !Mt I Wtll'l~ft~I MIWt t>.I~ ::r.n:r" u.'i: ' I . ' J UllY PllOl SC UPll•lt!tMtt CAROLE HANSEN !FOURTH FROM LEFT), OTHERS BRING PLEAS TO WASH INGTON Prisoners' Wlvea, Rtp. Hebert Look at Picture of Enemy'• Humane Treatment From Pagel MRS. HANSON .. trip, sponsored by Twin Circlts. a U.S. Cat.hollc mag&Jine. Efforts.,to reach Hanoi fa.iled and Mrs. Hinson, whose hu;band has never ff'e.D their .thr~-year-o!d 1<>n Stephen Jr~. wu rebuffed a:s she sought Information from the Pathet Lao. in Vientiane, Laos. North Vietnamese authoritit1 uid Capt. Hanson's fate w .. a no concern of theirs, since he was shot dm\."Q in Laoa, and 1he was only made to stand in the driveway of red headquarters there. The women never galned entry to the Soviet capitol of ~1oscow either, being forttd to wait 12 mJles out.side to~11 in a 1habby airport transit hotel. None had o(ficlal entry visas, but their quest wu honored elsewhere and they hoped to be admitted to lifoscow and talk with of/iclals, perhaps bringing indirect prusure on Hanoi. North Vlet.namtse policy c a 11 s American POWs war crtmlnal1 who must be dealt wllh in direct peace negotiations, while the U.S. govunment contends this ts a vtolatlon of the Geneva Convention. Only rarely does North Vietnam releaH the names Of Its POW populace or 111low them to write home, while lt will not make formal lists available to ruponsible international organtuUons auch is tbe Red Cro&s. From Page l DRUGS ..• relie\'e mild depression . All three men became unable lo work and had to undergo lengthy hospital treatment. Stevens lost hls Insurance license and his business and Cody, described by his Jay,'Yers as "a very sick man," is today confined to a veterans hospital. AU three men, it was testiried, went lo the clinic with the assurance by the physicians that the series of ''itamln treatmenta prescribed would enable them to lose weight. Instead, ther la\\·yers argued, th e y almO!t lost their minds and became drug addicts, "unable to work, unable to ef- feelively carry on their lives and business and unable to really comprehend, until it "'BS too late, y,·hat had happened to them." Atom Weapons Tested YUCCA FLAT, Nev. {UPI) -Ty,· o atomic weapons tests were detonated t~ day at fairly shallow depths beneath the desert. floor at the Ne\'ad a test site. Botll were rated at less Ulan 20 kilotons. DAILY PILOT Hllfltlllft" .... , Fow11t1h1 'f'•ll•'I So• Cl•lllMltl OIU.HGI COAST l"Ulll$HING COMl'.&.HY Rob.rt N. w •• d Pth,.tM In(! Pul>!l1r..r J1e~ R.. Curl•v Viet l""'ld.,.I •nd 0-rtl Mto~ttt Thom11 Kt•vil e1111t1r Tho..,11 A. Murphi11• Mtflftfn; Edlter Rich 1•d P. Ntll SOvlli Ot•t1t1 cov~1, 11111tr OHie" Cotti Mtu: a. Wtt.1 tlty llrHI 'H""pOtl lMtll: 2111 Wu! t•lt>oO l!lou11,..1ll ~ IOK1'11 111 ,_....,,, Avtl'uf ~UllllPltHlll IHCll: 1111' ltfctl flll\lteVf •d Ian C'-'*ltt: JIU Nortl'I ll C1mlf!ll It.Ml . DAll V ,ILOT, ~ Wl'lfcl'I b Clll!lt!llid .,_. H_,,..., It ,.,,.it.llM •Illy IK,tp! limo ltY In .-.r1t9 •i!IWll lor L..tlllr\8 l1tc11, Ht....,., lkKJI. C0.11 M•tl, H11f1U11110t1 a..ctt 11111 ,_'9111 Vlllty, •lent wllll two ,...111111 .,....... ~ C..11 l'liltlilolllrtq CoonMnt' IN'ltltlllf ,..,.,. .... II nu """' a1ftl0f 11 ..... , HtwWI 111(11. ll!f DI W.I hy itrH!, e... "'9&1. Ttt•11• ... f714'J &42·4211 a~ ,u,.,w .. '42.1111 S.. C....,.... All o.,.rt"'"tt: Ttl*fk••• 4tJ ... 420 (""""""" ,..,, Ut11199 , ... 1 'Wlltlllflt c.m.n.. Ht ""°"' 1Mfft. llMtr1111M, ...... t..t. ....... Hill 11 Htw..., ... ~II •M '"'' ......... GtllfONllt • .SllillKrltOOll t>r ""lt'P·• -111rv1 ., ll'lfHNte """""'~· mlllttirf Mllntllr4. ».ot PllOlllll~. .. ltor191 ol'lol'1W W ltWrfl"lfltlltl """''~ 1'141 .. ,.,..WM WllMVI .... IM ,,_. 11'1.._. llf ~'*"' •wt1tr. ~-~ ..... I • Action Postponed Report Card Confusion Has Schools Vp in Air By P.UfELA HALLA.~ board meetings was originally pregen- ot "" o.uy "1111 1111t ted with number! talcing the place ol let- Re.rult.s of a repart card 1urvey Jn the ter grades. The admlnlstraUon believed San Joaquin Elementary Scllool District that numerals wou1d better convey the has left school officials in a temporary meanings of above, at or below grade quandary. level. The Board of Trust eta postponed ac-. ,, _ In favor of the new card with the tion on acceR,t.lng the new cards until numerals instead of the letter was ltus· after the kinks can be worked out. tee James Nelson who felt that too much The new card which was sent liome competitive interest was .Placed !>" leltt"; with 957 students from u selected classes grades and who was agauut having an f throughout the district measures effort as an on elementary card. _ well 81 achievement. It also gives new In favor of the old system of wing Jet· meaning to the trad!Uonal letter grades. ter grades to mean excellent. good, A stands for above grade level, B is for a.verage. below average and falling was at srade level and C is for below grade trusteo Edward Berry who felt that level. numerals would be too confusing. Fifty·five percent of the cards were re· The cards that were aent out were a turned with the comments indicating compromlsr.. that the great majority of parents be- lleved the card provided a clear picture of their child's prop"ess. .. Most said they could understand the achievement sedlon but there was con- siderable confusian about the effort mea- surement. . Frank Hurd, an interested parent. crit- lclz.ed the card saying that any report card should contaln an explanation of what i1 erpteted of the student in spe. cific areas. For example. al a particular point in time a chUd should be able to do 100 addlUona-1 problems in 15 minutes with 90 percent accuracy. Hurd also said a card should measure the Je\'el of achievement and should make recommendations concerning any necmary corrective actlon. Or. William Stocks. assistant superin- tendent, s&ld the term grade le\•el indi· cates v.•hat is expecled of the child. He said if a fou rth gr:ider is making normal progres1 through a fourth grade ma th- book then he is working at his grade level and is doing what is expected. He .also said that before a new card i~ adopted perhaps the term grade level could be more 11peclflcally explained. ihe new card which ha5 caused a grtat deal of controversy during past Crackdo,vn Set On Oemente's Dan gerous Road San Clemente'11teep Avenida San Juan is in for not only more tratnc signs but more Lrafric enforcement. The city council decision Wednesday night followed a petition by 48 residents of the area and remarks by several persons including George Bowles, plan- ning commission chairman. Boy,·Jes, of 123 Avenida San Juan, label- ed lt a dangerous area because of drive.rs \\'ho come around the curve "tires !queallng morning and evening." He estimated that cars traveled 4a to SO miles an hour through the 25-mlle zone and claimed that school buses travel 30 to ~miles per hour. He advised that police talk to bus drivers. . Dov.•les said a school bus cut in front him recently and he had to slam on his brakes. lfe said also lhal he Is buildinG a house in another area of lhe clly and that he caught children stealing nails and said I.hat lhey .slopped up a sC\ver. f\trs. W. T. Love Of 117 Avenlda San Juan. suggested no parking areas at the points where buses pickup children . The city Is to Investigate lh\s. City ?\tanager Kenneth Carr said police had investlgaged the area and re.com· mended both more signing and more sel- ricll\'e enforcement against tr a r f I c violators. Petitioners had pointed out that one ac- cident recently broke a child 's leg. Carr Slid that sign~ ''1ould be both polr signs and those palnled on stretts. Coon. c:ltmen 11utl'lorlzed lht> ~lgns ind 1ddPd enforcrment ind asked Carr io look Into lhe parking r~frlcLinn sllualinn and po~lblllty of a talk \\'llh bus drtver~. 01''ntrs also 1tsktd 11ho11l !he t"ity put· ting in ~lde"·alks. Carr polnttd oot that this I~ a properly O\\'ntr ~lvllege. A "·oman asktd 1f 1h111 mea nt payin~ for aJl I.ht \\'Ork. Cm said, "you betcha.' From Page J WATER ••• I late Jut )'ear. He also said arimJy that complaint.'\ that the homeowner's group was not told about the increases were "puzzling." "You. f.fr. Smith. were at the meeting "'hen the board discussed the rate in- creases weren't you?" Malone asked. "Yes, l "'as, but the idea y,·as only discussed. ll v.·asn't passed," snapped the ailgry Sn1ilh. lttaJbne then delved inlo the Issue of notification of "-'lier users about Lhe in- crease and admitted that perhaps the distticl "v.•as remiss .. in not notifying each member personally as soon as the ratt hlke went Into effect. "\Ve couldn't post a notice In your area because there aren't any public buildings there,'' he said. "Furthermore, because of complaints by one newspaper in the area that It was not advised of the changes, I can only say that other newspapers serving the area. ran stories on the lncreasea. \Vhy couldn't the newspaper that didn 't get the in- formation read It and reprint the in- formation?" he 411dded. Both statement.I drew loud jters from the audience. To back up their fight to lower the rates. the homeowners cited flrures which they say show that !he district has been and is running in the black. The 1969 fiscal year showed a net in- come to the district's general fund of $4.6,993, Smith said. The current assets In the 169 audit report shows cash in tern. porary investments to be SW,367, he ad· ded. •"So far. we have a clear indicatlon that this district Js operating tn the black and could tven operate al .a loss to the general fund for seve.raJ years before the red mark la reached," h& said. He called for a more "re1sonable ad· justment in the rates instead of 50 per· cent.'' But waterdistricl officials have cited "°'ring costs for prices of waler. opera- tion and maintenanct, Inflation and equipment. Water purchase price for an acre foot from the ~fetropolitan Water District has risen from $23 In 1960 to $45 today - nearly 100 per~nt.. Those conctpli of lnflat.lon and detailed examinalion of the fiscal reports and the consultant recommendation is expected lo come In the meeting of the two media- tion committees tentatively scheduled for next Tuesd.!f ~laht. Laguna BeaCh urologl1t Dr. Anthony Orlandella. who made the motion to rl!study the lncre•ae, 111 expectedto1it on the board's c<1mmittff. Dr. Orlandelle had oppowl the ortiln.tl proposals to raise the r11te1 100 percent (the original advice given by the con- sultants). f.uard Recall ed CHAMPAIGN. 11.L. (UPI) -Gov. Rlch111rd B. Ogilvie today re.catted the i~ NstJon1l Gunrdsn1en he. bad ordered to tht L'nlvtr11ty or Jlllnola campu1 to con!.rol violent 1tude.nt demonsttaUons, Rallies Eail to Ignite • Students P eac I ul at OCC , VCI Discussions Two raUle1 held at Oranae: Coast Colltge and UC lnilne Thursday failed to 1park any stud«lt deruonstratlons as speakers exhoi'ted the crowds "to do something -don't just sit around and talk about polltlca.l repression and police brutality." Both rall ies, promplcd by Sherwood Forest, an underground newspaper now being published in Santa Ana, were con· ducted peacefully. About 700 stud,ntS" at OCC and '300 at UCI heard a variety ·or militant speakers discuss police arrests in campus disorders at UC Santa Barbara !Ind Cal State Fullerton. The OCC rally broke up after 45 minutes when Dean or Students Joseph Kroll, told organizers they would not be allowed to hold a discuS5ion with students from Sailta Barbara and CSF in the auditorium. 'l't!e UCJ rally was held adjacent to a Bank of America branch a~ the Irvine From Page 1 LSD FACTORY .. but headquarters or the operation was alleged to be at the Miramar Street ad- dress where two of the suspects, Dennis lnghan1, 26 and Jeffrey Newman, 21, "·ere arrested. Arrested at tile South Laguna address were Jessie 1'1eehiz. 21, and his wife, AM ~teehlz, 20. The l\.li'O suspects arresled at the Glassel! Street address in Orange v.·ere Paul . H. Newton, 23, and Stephen ~h:Carthy, 31. They are being held in that city. The other four suspects were taken directly to Los Angeles. Equipment seized in the raids was taken to the Federal Bureau of NarcOtiC! office at 714 W. Olympic Blvd .. Los Angeles , along v;ith drugs taken as evidence. These included 5,000 LSD tablets, and undetermined quantities of marijuana . hashish and PCP. Chemicals used in the manufacture of the hallucinogens were obtained fron1 legitimate drug supply houses, Casey said. using invoices stolen from the Hill Brothers Chemical Company. "Early descriptions of Hill Brothers as a 'bogus' firm were incorrecl," Casey said today. "It Is a le111tlmate firm and the invoices wrre stolen.'' He said thal one of the suspects, l\leehiz, is facing lriad in Phoenix on a charge of possessing 14,000_LSD tablets and was free on bat!. Union Endorses Capo Election The membershlp of Carpenter's Union Local 1648 of Dana Point today unanimously endorsed a 'yes vote in Tuesday's bond interest and tax override election in the Capistrano Unified School District. The local announced that "the proposed financial authorizations for the district are essential to avoid lowering the educa- tional standards for our boys and girls. "Public education is a primary responsibility of the local community." Tuesday'• rlectlon v.i \I decide the fate of a proposal for a !JG.cent· tax oxerride and raising of Interest celling on unsold district bonds from live to seven percent. Town Center. Orsanlaers, who called themselve.s Praxis Axla Action Faction. said the bank site was chosen to un· derscore protest again.st the arrests in connection with last week's disturbances at UC Santa Barbara. when a Bank of America office was burned down. Throughout Ule rally. the bank did a brisk business with student customers cashin1 checks, and depositing funds. At one point during the OO·minutes of spHches liberally sprinkled with four-Jet- ter words, a speaker urged the crowd to stage a "look-in" at the bank. Tht crowd had dwindled to about 150 and they preu- ed their 11oses to the JNilding 's plate class \vindows for a few minutes b<!tore strag- gling ofr. · Santa Ana Black Panther J\.1ike Lynem urged the crowd to attend a Panther rally scheduled Sunday afternoon at Jerome • Park ln Santa Ana In preparation for the trial of Arthur Lea(Ue \~ho is charged ln the killing June 4, 196t ol Santa Ana policeman Nelson SJ1s1ce1. Lyn'em called upon students t o demonstrate a show of force by attending Leque's trial \\'hlch opens Monday morning in Santa Ana superior court. "The people are going to keep the pias from committing constitutional murder on brother Arthur League." he stated. Olher speakers. including Donovao Dorsey, a UCI student and Don Elder, alleged publisher of Sherwood Forest,· called upon the listless audience to "mobllze and organlit for Ule revoluUon against palice brut(llity and politlcal repression.'' At the l'Oflcluskln of the l\\'o-hour pro-, gram, aboul 20 students .... ·ere left in the • ~ audience. Council Vplwlds Denial '!Jf Car. Rental Firm Sign ·. San Clemente councilmen have upheld the planning commission in denying a sign to advertise• car rental agency at a ser\•lce station which already has an abundance or signs, 2360 El Camino Real. Planning Commission denltl.I had 1>een appealed to !he council by Avis Rent A Car Systems. Inc. A corpo ration executive. Edwin O. tia!e, v.•earing a "We Try Harder" but- ton. said. "I don't think it's ridiculous request." He said a four by six-foot sign Junior High Kids Se t for Rodeo Students at l\farco Forster Junior High School in San Juan Capistrano ·will hare bucking broncos, v.'ild steers and elusive c:alv<'s on their rninds starting Monday. Principal \\'alt Spencer said tickets should be available for sale beginning t.1onday fo r the far 'Vestcrn Rodl':Os ~how \\'hlch is bc>ing sponsored by the junior high during the Fiesta de las Golondrinas celebration. The rodeo v.·ill take place two days., frqm 3 to·S p.m. on Saturday, March 21 directly after the swallows day parad~ and from 2 to 4 p.m on Sunday, March 22. '(he events will be staged both days at Buchheim Field, adjacent to the old Capistrano High School. The junior high.will receive JO perCf'nt of all ticket sales up to $4.000 and 50 per· cent of all sales after that point. The school also v.•ill provide all concession Sta nds serving soft driO'll:s, coffee and hot dogs and will receive 100 Percent of these profits. Coordinating the event wilt be Jim \Valshe director of student activities. Proceeds wlll go to a project designated by lhe students. Last year (before !he rodeo was rained out) the students had decided lo work with the Peace Corps to build a one or two room school in Mexi co which would have their schoors name . w11a n~es1ary Identification for the com- pany. Councilmen didn 't budge Wed· nesday. A history of signing in the area waJ rf'ad to councilman. C o u n c i 1 m a n Thomas O'Keefe said. '·Laguna Beach has been reviewing its sign ordinance. '.fhey established a three-year morator· 1um (on. existing non-conforming signs) and are commencing to make slgns con- form. (deadline April 15). ''I think rather than poke more holes fn our ordinanc:e. we should commence a program similar lo Laguna Beach to review our ordinance and attempt to get si,l!'ns to conform." He said thoit 300 square feet is a lren1endous an1ount of signing and sug· gested the signs on the property might be e1·alualed with an eye to re:duction that v.·outd permit the new Avis sign. Tony Asaro, 401 Via Manzano, also op- posed the additional signing. Councilmel\ unanimously upheld planning commission denial. Mario11 Wallace Services Held runeral services were held today for f\trs. tl-farion Gilbert Wallace of Laguna Beach who died Tuesday at the age of 76. lltrs. \Vallace, a noted eduactor. had !iv.' '· eel m Laguna for 15 years. She taught English for the foreign-born at Orange Coast College from 1960 to 1969. She also taught at lhe Coprc School in Balboa in 1963 and 1969. One or the first women lo earn a graduate degree from Harvard in 1925, she and her late husband Earl help fourxl Pince College in the San Fernando Valley. She is survived by a brother, Carl Y. Gilbert of \Vashington. D.C., and two sisters, Eleanor Gilbert Montgomery of 8oslon1 and Harriet Hyde Sands of f.fllton. Massachusetts. Interment will be at Arlington Cemetery, Virginia. MARCH UPHOLSTERY. SALE BY DREXEL: Featurin9 Drexel's Shelby Collection This t:rcitint c~lltction hes m1ny •dvtnft gt' unmt tc htd in th• uphoht1ry fitltJ , pt rticult tly wh t n it is f11· tured •f 1t l1 pr1ctt. · SHELBY ADVANTAGES COM,l.ITI FAIRIC LINE ... o¥et JOO to choose from. SCOTCHGARD FAIRIC 'ROTICTION A~L FINI 9U.t.LITY F.t.HICS • .• th• 1tme ptic1 on t ny g ivtn pi1c• of fur- nitur1 . •.. all f1bric1 a rt Scotc;;hgtrded at no 1ddi· tiontl co1t. . H.t.ND CONSTRUCTION All ch1ir1 &-softs •rt ht nd con1frucftd fr om t~· frt mt to a wty htnd titd 1pring construe. tion. Arm cov•~ trt providod ti no. •xfrt coif. Skirts t rt providtd on rn1ny pi1cos •f no t clditiont l cos!, Ov1r 12 d1fft t t nt sfyl •s of ch•1r1, t nd 6 difftr1nt 1tylt 1 of soft 1, & lovesotts, •II tf rt ductd ptic11, SALE PRICE $159 .... DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -HERITAGE N !WPO ~T B!ACH 1727 w .. 1c1111 Or., 642·2050 Ol'I N llllDAY 'TIL t INTERIORS Prof111lon•I Interior LAGUNA.· BI A.CH Dt1lgn1r1 345 North Cot1t Hwy. Av•lltbl1-AID-NSID • Ol'EN FRID.AT 'TIL t "•lie Tell,,. M••' tf Or"f'O C ••fltf l~t·12•J \ 494-6551 •' ' Congressional Cup Top Competitors . Entered in Race · t . ~ 1'1le laraest gathering of tcboa1'-i Long Beaeh Harbor since the arrival of the Queen ~ary· In 1967 Is predicled for 1!the w e e k e n d competillon -~1arch 19·22 in the 6th annual ,tong Beach Congressional Cup m;itch ra!:e sailing series. Ten leading skippers from :"311 over North America will ! r'iict in Columbia·50 sloops jn •nine sets of individual matches ~ iil rompelition sponsored by '~pg Beach Yacht Club . ls an exciting, colorful spec· · tacle.'' Boat assignments for spec- tators will be made in the yacht club foyer each morn- ing. Specators are asked to \\'ear rullbcr-soled shoes and tO bring their own lunches for about fi ve hours or racing each day. "It's also suagested that visitors brlf)g sweaters or light jackets -it <:an get chilly out there," Leslie said. A r.ive-mil~ windward· ) F'rldat, Marth 6, 1970 ••• J DAILY PILOT r9 APBAMan ) inds· Their K .i11d·· Officiates ' Eagle Captur es Miami-Nass A. ' · :...iJ" 'R ASSAlJ, Bahamas (AP) -Other apparent class win-honors on the Grea . Lakel' In P.. ac e •d Turner'a 17-1001 Aq>trican ners included : B-Cosetle,,_•96_9. ___ _,,, __ _ • • 1 , • • Eagle~ second aerau the Jinl11h skippered by llalsey Herre-PlllT TIMl,,OIPlll D Ross Hiii Jr. ol'Seal Beach line, was the apparent winner shore or Rhode hland; C-LE~E A Amei-icM Po w·e r 8 t Wednesday on unofficial cor· Cayenne, captained by Don-. 1 70 · 'Association Region '11 reeled times in the tM-mlle aid Tate or AMapalis, P..tld.; chairman aliilmemoor of one Miami-to-Nassau Oc<!an race. and D-Hustler, by D.B. Flit' TOYOTA CORON>: of bqating'sJir~.f f~ilies, will The American Eagle's time nian of Miami. 69'$ rereree tbe April II second an-was 15.4177 hours, nearly an The south!rn ocean i'acing ''It MO. nual I:Qng Beach-Ensenada championship will be seiUed •. 'Au~n',.°'11~~ .. ~. an hour better than second-place "' .. ' ....... Jntei"national , it was an-Bay Bea, a 49400t craft skitr Friday wilh the 3 0 • m 11 e e Radio & Heater nounced by the 11ponsorinf ""red by Paf Haggerty of Nassau Cup race the tut • 'Fully Tinted Cluii • Paclflc Offshore Power Boat ,... 1 1 he ' • Wtwalls &. Whtel Cover• Dallas. Bay Bea's time was even o t season. nacin~ Association. ~ •O!t• ·Hill, a data proc~ssing ex-.i;v...... · Turner said he won the 32nd , ecutivl!, Is the son of a famed They were· followed in Oeet annual race because he en- " racer-administrator, Russ Hill and class A standings by the countered "our kind of wind". S f G ·c1e G d · first boat 'to Unisb Tuesday. r. o ar n ro~. an 1s k J·" • w· d d American Egale's corrected also the older brother or Mar vunson s in war t.EASE DffiECTLY FROM A TOtOTA DEALER • CAL L &,IASI MANAOl l .,.7.9555 • .-The Congressional Cup has ~~me on~ of. the world's moat important match race ,4i_eries -seconP, only to the ~l\Illerica's Cup. Trophy fo.r the ,ievent ws deeded to the LBYC ~ b~ an act of Congress in 1965. .., The vast spectator fleet for ·: thfs year's races is expected ·:to include sailboalS, power ..:cruisers and even dinghies ·:rrom all of Souther n 'California's aquatic Jl.l:Orls oenlers. Aboard the~ill be not only members of area yacht club!. but also the general public-interested in seeing what yacht racing is like. leeward twice around course N'Ew BOARD BOAT -AMF Alcort's new J:'J.Yi!ig· will be set j_L1St o(f the fish sailboat -a sister lo the famed Sunfish· and Alamitos Bay enlrance to Sailfish -moves out smartly wi'th three ;perSons Long Beach Ha~bor. The first aboard. The boat was designed for a crew of two. race each day is planryed for Flyingfish will be among hundreds of boats display· t1_:30 a.m. -depe.ndi~g -"-ed· at the Western Natic>na1 Boat and Manne Show wind and "''eather conditi~-~ ~naheim Convention Center March 13-22. Sundav, March 22, has been . BILL MAx .. Y-. Gltrden Grove's ~Ron·' Hill, Passage ou,t of Hwa ii. decimal Ume of 25.4177 for the perennlally among the na· .Windward Passage's corrected 184-mile voyage was more_ tion'-s outboard· racing leaders i.ime was 26.8939. than an hour better than the and .a second place ·finisher in Bfisk 25 ml.le an hour runner-up .boat in the hlstor:l- the 1967 Qut.6oard • World easterly winds co'ntinued lo cal sail. Championship .at Lake ,Havasu l1old back the neet and several Second was Bay Bea, Pat 11811 leoch...11¥11. City. • ¢1 the s11oteweWrednboalSsdstill were Haggertyeo's t9-!oot1 'thloopywhlc~ • HuntllM)toe a..dt LEASING As regiona l chairman, Hill is 1 ~•;.;s;••~·~';;;;~• ~·Y~·==~w~on~::"~a~t~o~~·~~ea~r~========:;~ responsible for supervising 1 · one of APBA 's mosr acUve and varied areas of boiltl.\ll - Southern California, Southern Nevada, Arizona and Ha)¥aii. "There 'll be space aboard boats on a firsl com'!...first served basis leaving LBYC · eaCll racing day at 10 a.m.," according to Bob Leslie, · reneral chairman of this 'Year's Congressional Cup. 1"People who join us will see )hat this kind of yacht racing set aSide in the event that weather problems prohibit racing any of the first three days. The entry list includes fam- ed -deslgner-sailmaker-racer Ted Turner, Atlanta, Ga. YC; Barnty Flam. Long Beach YC: Cy Gillette, Waikiki YC: Ted Turner, Atlanta. Ga YC; Buzz Boettcher, calUomia YC: Argyle Campbell. Balboa YC ; Ches Rickard, Royal Van- couver YC ; WllUam J. lbs Jr .. New Orleans YC ; Patrick O'Neal, Larchmont (N,Y.) YC, and Tom Fisher, Grosse Point Mich, First alternate is Tom Hazlehurst, East Gretn- \\'iCh, R.t Local Sailboat Con1pany ' . ~Announces New Dealers " .... __ Appoin~ent of authorized In the fast growing yachting ·Qealershlps in C@nada, Texas, region near Houston, Tex. the ·and Minnesota for the com-new dealer is Ankers &. Moore, plete line of Ericson sailboats Inc., located at Watergate has been announced by Del Yachting Center, League City, ·WaJton, ''ice president of Tex . Ericson yachts, Santa Ana. In the Gre.al Lakes country, .: The new dealers rurlher Superior Yachts, Inc. in the Strengthen a sales network ~1inneapolis-St. Paul region, > ' that is now represented in has been named exclu.sive yirtually every yachting area Ericson dealer for the state of in the U.S., Walton said.. Minnesota. The namiiJ,g or a dealership -Ericson Yachts manufac- in Canada is Ericson's first tures a complete line of seven such venture outside the U.S. fiberglass sailing yacht.a from Ericsol) ..!. Yachts is n IJW 23 to 41 feet overall length. repr:esented In North Van-Designed by Bruce King, couver, B.C. by Geoff Newport Beach naval COleman Yacht Sales, Ltd. architect, the line i~ now unveiling a new Ericson·29 Funeral Set sloop to add to the new Ericson-35 and preexisting 23, 26. 30, 32 and tls. For Famed Yachtsman -Ericson is a subsidiary of Pacific American industries, Los Angeles. Buddy Ebsen Places 2nd Funeral sef'V-i~s for Eugene (Fritz) Overton. widely knot,1,'n Southern Ca l i£ornia yachtsman, will be held Satur- day at ·2 p.n1. at the Buddy Ebsen, skippering Annstrong Family Mortuary, his catamaran Polynesian 1201' S. Hope St., Los Angeles. Concept, was second boat to J\.tr. Overton died Thursday !inis~ in _the Lipton ·Cup Race after an illness of about IO . tn M1am1. days. He would have been 90 ~The SS-foot Polycon ~ame in years old in May. 45 seconds after Wind.w~rd Mr. Overton was a founder Passage, the: first · to f1n1sh, and past commodore o f and !ive minutes ~ e I o r e. California Ya cht Club, Los Arryer1can E.agle, winner on Angel es Yacht Club Catalina corrected tlllle over 1 2 7 Island Yacht Club ' and the starters, five of which were Southern California Yachting dismasted and all . of "';'hich, Association. except Ebsen's, were 63 or 73- Fritz, as he was af-loot boats. fectlona~\y kno.,..•n to South-Winds gusted at ~ knots, land yachtsmen, s a i 1 e d in not favorable. conditions for the first Honolulu race in 1906 the Polycon. an unofficial en· and sailed his own yacht in the try. first Tahiti race In 1927. Order of arrival were California Yachl CI u b 1 s \Vindward Passage, Polycon seallOn-lo ng blue-water ocean (unofficial entry ),. Kialoa II, rac)ng series is named after America n Eagle, Ondine and the veteran yachtsman. Baccara. M~11Mdt Pner MIC f, This Is Xmsrle1'1ftsltsl11111~ diain s1w lftd !he world'• li1ht1st. Its the oqly ft in th• 6-ptulld Ctn•• I You'll Ctll It tM mo.t vtr111Jl1 pow1r toot )'Oii tVU awned. Cub firewood, lo&a. h1mW. TIM prKl•lan- l!ullt IMOUn• 11111ne dtftlaps pl•~IY (If llO'ltr for bitlldllll hundttd• of lhln1s'. Ctmts oompltl• With 12" bfr alld special ch1J11. MASTER SERVICE DEALER SANTA ANA L. W. Bemis Tractor & Implement Co. 1629 E11t h t StrH t-543-2639 SANTA ANA Clark Dye Hardwar.e 210 s. Mlin-547-1633 HUNTINGTON BEACH Ron's Mini-Cycle City 17216 Bttch Bl.-842-2111 New Boat Displayed In Anaheim Showing The Flyingfish, new sister of ~ vantage of superior airfoil the popular on e·design characteristics usually sailboats Sunfish and Sailfish a s s o c i a t e d with high by AMF's Alcort Divlsion, will performance multi·hllls. be among many new boalS The Fly ingfish has a com- feah.1red Jn H. Werner Buck's Jortable fam11y-size cockpit, Western National Boat and simple' sheeting, ·-convenient Marine Show at Anaheim kick-up rudder a n d cen- Convention Center, March JJ. terboard and built-in flotation Jn au. there are 20 APBA regions in the U.S. and Canada. All regional chainnen . are automatically members of the APBA Council, t h e organization's highest policy· setting body. The Long Beach-Ensenada International, a 180-mile race between 'U)ng Beach and the 1$aja California resort.' is the -second race-on the 1970 .APBA · national championship points calendar . -lhe fourth !or members of POPBRA. 22. among other features. Measuring 14 ft. overall, and Buck's show will feature;===:;::::=====::;;! with a 5 ft 8 in. beam , the Fly· everything in the way of Make a. SharA... ingfish carries a single 120 sq. sailboats, from dinghies to Trade: Use . .._ ft. sail on the latest in masts luxury yachts, all displayed ....:. flexible fiberglass. under ruu sail in the high-ceil-Dime-A~Lines A full-batten sail takes ad-inged Arena. NEW WIDE, FLAT TREAD DESIGN- $ 3 5 95 "" "" Fff. E11. T•io: 1i1• F71Xl 4 lu b•l•11 whif•w•U. TWIN-PLY FIBERGLASS BELT ._:rY/IN POLYESTER . CORD PLIES GUARANTEED ADJUSTMENT "'"' -... .,,.II•• t•'" lo""'"'•' •OI• .............. -.;---~-.. <" ....... -~-.... -........ ....... 111 ......... -..... -.. •• • Agelnst l lowoui. • Af1ln1I Cull • Ag1lnst Bru!M l ro1k& 1 Atllntl Puncture• • Apln&t Work"'9n.tdp • AtlltMt Metorlet Defoct& o.r1e11 • No Umll on Mllff • No Umll on Monthl ._ .... , •• , ...... " .. ! ........... ,, •• ~-··-· .. .,; .. -----i ·-•••;••<o•t 11 too,,,. ...... •I -·---..... --.. -· .;.,,_ -loo ... -•lto<l IO ........... . ~ .... •t..-·•-.......... ... --IOOO .......... llt TIC II.I.A. 'IRES ' ,,,., ... typo • 17" '70XIS fet 2.IS SS/8000 Super Sport MAG • Mlrror0 poll1h chrome II/Caal 1lumlnum C9111er WHEELS ,~ Th•lt·prool hvb cap _ • Other atylw milllble JUST ,$2995 lickets on Sale Now! PACIFIC . INDOOR aa1 · AMERICA'S BEST FAMILY tNTEITAINMENT _LONG~BEACH ARENA MARCH 13·14-15 Prl. I p.11.: $at. 2 • I pm: Swi, J A I ,_. SI.OD nni $2.DO. 16 yn ' ..... 1/1 11rlu •I ,.m. 50 yn .Ji • ...,_ 1/1 price Set. M-9. TICKETS: LoAt a.-. A,.u: W•ll!c.11'1 M•'& City Stom; All M1t19' Tkli:et At*"''-· Ce11to p1Tlc.ket ••II Tlc.ltltrff 01tlett. MAIL OIDll: Self·•d4rntff, 1r1M,M •••I•,. ... d clleck to lODIO, LON• IUCH All.INA, LON• llACH 90102 • •......, e • ....,,, ••• t cw""" COMPLETE BRAl(E RELINE s2 ,495 fORD-CHEYY--IL YMOUTH Rell" •II 4 WHeh Adldl' lr•kn . ,...,_, Dni-. Cyllltden. Add Frill If Nffdff PREMIUM 'PLY NYLON OTHER BRANDS blemished -white·side·wall T I RES 6SOX1J $13.95 775X14 $15.95 77SX15 12SX14 $16.95 125X1S 155X14 $17.95 llSX14 toOXIS $19.95 tlSX1S LARGER SIZES Jiet 1.86 Fet 2.20 Fet 2.37 Fct 2.57 Fct· 2.98 855 x 14 855 x 15 BLACK TUBELESS JUST $15 9~ ... "~ I 1hke Y(JU,r Pick! USED TIRES 11)11 of non·aklcl treld $595 ~~~~~ COMPLETE CAR CARE If yovr Car Sh1•es I-Sh immys SEE US FOR EXPE RT TIR E TRUEINGI - Add .mil1s to ·your Tit•• with our ptofttsion•I WHEEL BALANCING!" •--~Since 1959 Hours: 7:30 646-5033 (Don Swedlund to 6:00 Dally- 540.5710 " • • \ • I JO DAILY PILOT • LEGAL )lOTlCE LEGAL ~OTICE D1"' " "' Mttd> 4 I) ,, .. LEGAL NOTICE • • • Lt;GAL NOTICE ... utn Cl.•Tl,l(Afl OP I UJIMllll PICTITIOUI M .. MI 'rho unotrW•"l'CI doU Cttlltf ... It "" 011ctlJlt • M nm •I 1UOt •n•r A~•­wn11tki Loi •11t•ln Counl• CtHtornl1 11.W,1 11\f I (1 tiOlll 11.,., -01 llYl· W"-V PAJNf NG Incl 11111 W d llrfl'I Iii oml'OtfCI OI "'' 1o11owin. .. ,-. ~ ntmt \II tull •!Id tie<e ol f"Q!clell<t It ft IO low1 Otor" A Mtrtll\, I l)l)t llleJ 4"111111 Wl\111181' C1/llor11I• 'I06GS DllM J ... ~,.,. 1• 100 GPO<tt A Ml(llll S!11t ol Ce1 lo n!1 l-et Ant1le1 c-•Y Oii J•ll. lf 1•11. klort ,,.. t Nott'"' l'lllllk n ~ !or ttlCI S!tlf !H"loNll~ •-td Geor.1 A ~tlln ~ fe "" 19 ~ tt>t lftlOl'I .....,. ....... l• t11ii..c1lb- " to ll>t w t~!n "'""""Ml •IWI ld<'"IW~rcl lie ettClllH 11\f: Wm'! C$P.L) llt,1!1\ ''""' No'"' P11r. '< DALTON Pins 1'101100(1( & ICANI! Atiotf ... Jt , .. , I , ..... , JI"' ''' D l tll!i.-t CMiHonlle ttftf "' •n" P111Mt""°' 0 '"" Ca.i Dtll• Ftb<Ut"' 1), JO, 21 tnd M.lft~ '"'" ClllTl•1CATll Oil' I UStNt:ll il'ICTITIOU'I NAMI TM lf><l•,,l11Md do urlHv tlltY 1,. conclu<I "' I bul.t~t If 716 W Wiisen .... , c C~I• MHI c••Ho•"'' ufld• Ill• llclltlcws fir"' "'"" ol I CVCLE DV NAMIC$ (wtlh dlvl11M1 l!tl f (VCLll!; MAGS l"d 1 AUTONAM (5 o\nd tNt u~ flt"' It c""'l>(IW<:i o1 1M hlllow"" 1••l0Jli Wllolt "lme$ J" fuH .,.., P f<ll of rft"-• •rP 11 lo ~ lotn SPtr.tlle< 1M W W IM"' ... , C (oslt MH41 Ct llOt!\11 , .... " l !fie HI Wrll W loor> Apt C Celi MPSI Ct l forl!lt Dt1ft<I Fetl 11i 1•10 1""' SP•Ml•r 8 1•"ll ~ 5lAf£ OF C.Al lFORN A ORANGE C00NfV On FH t lt'9 ""41r• "'"i • ,.,..,.., ., Putlrk I" 1nll to wlo 511 f 11 ..i1 IV ~f'Pf!•.....:I Ton'! m .... lf tnd &tin l Hlo k11011n lo fM lo M I~• ..,_ wll0$I "'""'' ,,. wtltlcrlbed 1'11 n11 wlllll" 1,,.. 9ll"umll!f •NI t Qnowledtlltl Ill•~ eJ;KUled .... M~ (O!li(J1t S.1 l ,.,... ' I( ... ~.,.., ~ t"V Putlt c C.tlllotn t PtlMil>lll Otf <• In O•IMP CovnlY MY Comm sslor> E o "' Nov 11 1'11 Pull! 1M(I 0 '""~ Co.11 lttbtUI ' 1t ·~a Mt cl\ I o~ '' ,. 1ot l 111 lflt l !6 10 LEGAL NOTICE r Guzak Joins Dean Wittel' llo1ne Sales Chief Pickecl ... NASO Lltlln91 for Thursday M1rch 5, 1970 ·---11Yt 11111r•11w .wt11i.n1 " ••• ,.u,.1 .. tly . I Ill ,...,... NASO h k •• ..... ""' ... "''" ., ''"""" lnltl.:Nw~ ., ""'"'~""" • - 'a V\ 'I'~ ·~ -'• .. fii 1!~ .... llf • 41• ffi .. l.n~ tt . a ,r; ,.., -· l"~tb +\ If!"·-· ' SI -I ' 111/1 11, '\-• •o' m1 u~ 1t -• I' 13\i n ,,\~ + lo ' ·i I~ tP• 1"44 + \~ 16 210 11J o "' 1 100 10 1 IQ.I -' ,6S'l61 ~61 '"'' !Iii l~ 111 ... :16 1,U~l .t•t :ten 31 '"' n • -~. -SC'/•I'-• "H I'?' ,.,, 16 . f •I 1100 11\ 11lolo 11~ ,, >J ~·• 20~ 11" l o I ._1,;*to 0 ,~ u, u · 1 "l2t14.U o •o 11 IU 11 1i "'' ,, ,, ••t~ ., .. t . UI '1~• i!: J'211 o ' li!l" !" • .. ,,, no ''•-•• 21 f.H,1!1 -1~ 1 llh 1111 ,, .. -.. '10.11 10~+ 11 ftl\ t)t, -o JI Ull) 11) 1'14.-, IU d•~ IJ\O D'-, ~ .o~ • .., 41»&+•· " 431 1?1 1 :r.· + • "! ~h il• » -• •1•1 •-J '" l<~:i.s.+1 • 1•t1 16~~ 16 \ -•• 1 •i~ 16\lo ,,._ -• • u »•• 37 :n -J, )Ill ai.;, ,,,. ti -ts u"" t 4t<. 11\.\ t , " -!!"1 »i~ lltl 2). llGJ u..\ 1~ ~~ t' • 167 t!!: ira 21-. , it 1~: l~ li!? -' 2» ""' ..au 11'1. -,, 1'1arhet ' " • • ' ; , • • , " " ··! '• • '• '• • ' ' ' ' • I r • • Fndu llllCll 6 1970 SC DAILY PILOT ll Friday's Closing Prices-Co1nplete New York Stock Excliange List , ... , Ht11-------------- 4htllt I H1111 L•w tltH tlll S loek l..eodc r • lluolot• ~ il:Yd1 Sfl Jd Stlt1 "•'111 .. 111 .. l!!lll .. IOIOlll"'!!'"'""'""'"'"'""'"''"'lllOIO .. ll .. lllO"'I 01'' I H 111 ~IW (lfH (llf S.ltt "~ IM .. I Hit/I LIW (IHe Cllf I Sllft "" U1•• I Hftll Llw ClfM Clllt. 11 ,, •• )f llU -S- 141, u. \ .... •11• •1 • -\) 21\o "-t tf't -I\ .u ... ,, :U\o -Ill t.,,, -t lfl -,. Jf -\~ 'I ' lo -It "" 11 f ... \o I{ '1" -l'o "·-. 1(1 \ + I Jt>a -1o .,_ ,,~ -1 1! -•• tlo -~ n i :1 ti -• Wall Street Hit By Profit-talri11g • 1ll;. 't=;. 1"1t -1, 00\V JONES AVERJ\(1£S w~ ,~ co •j ).1 1 J•\,\ JA\'l + ~, t fOFtll I IOI '8 ' ,t ~ ,tll N~"l Vw,IAP)l'llWll OOW-J-1 IVWltu t cl>Ovt. I If I• u•• !f;~ + i.. Sl°'IU O"n Hl II L w Clole tW \l/l'ttMfl 1 y ~: 7'~ H t! 1 le ~1111 '!"·~' lfi tl tlf-~ IM 12 -Bl Wt "11C9 M "' n"' fO'l oi:lh -I 11 " '! li "t lll M -W•tn (O l.M ' '• '-"t. "t. -j "' ' ! ll I 111!1 -'°W•rL•m 110 -. "" ) SUt 1' "'°' »ll'll-1 4 1 ~. 21 Jt -'1 Trt11••<I Giii n llOCU vMll In IVM'ffill W1rn Sw I 10 -f _ lnclu1 500 w11G•• I rt Tron J ~ WtW>IH JO Ji~.~TJ~• ~ *·: It~: ;f~ ~1 ~! ~111;,~ , :tt. ::~i!''J~ Tt/TIPt E II n: U"I 11 1l Wt•ll G01 1t 1111,i~ C11tt 61 U 1 61 ... \ \¥11" Un 1 T1ppe11C1 .i ~ »'.l 20 • 1~o -h Stltl JUI /vt htd IJ TttM\al llt ~ il.40 t•1 f > i 1 th•t I Hlfll ~OW C IM (#19 Wt~ Ot ~ NE \V YORK (UPI) -Profit taking turned the lK1111~1111 c11 '° ~1, JO~ 5' • -1. ~ "'!!"" u !tl<trtnl1 111 ... U • .:J•o t 1 UOCtl fl SO 161 4 t ~ o1 -1 Wt 111 111 ~tock market lo\ver Friday 1n moderate turnover ~i:tn111\0: ~ 1Uh 1fr ,lit' -""8111,e( 1 f' "1 ~· ~· -1 , z: •Ft 11:1t~ The ur1 market\v1de indicator \va s o!r o 45 per T•Jeo~I'}.· 111• l ,. 1s " -•u~m•c,.. 1111 Q ~' d' ~·· *1: _ 1,w,:n •• so. t I ••9 t tJ t Of lh 832 d Ttt• LO•P If tlll'I U1'1111 1 -'hUnrov•1 10 I t o WPP of 150 cen OJ1 '"' llUIS on 1e ape ese e T•mp1e1n 1J '° 22 11•. 11 • vnroY• 01 1 ii 11., 1 1 111 wPf> •'~" • ,'',,",'",,' f'!A}G ).j jl l l IJ. -• J\IAI ( L.'! I I • l6h -~ .,,.,,. Qljll.d •nd ·1s advanced t.Moto," 101 ,,~~ JJJ. n . -(.I"~""°' «I rul· ~ 1. -,, I::"" 01 le Tht Dow Jones lnduslrla.I average the blue !"IT 11 i«r ~ l~l· ~!: 11~ + 1~ ~, ~Pl" ?;1 ' 1 : ~1: I,\, -u tz~ ~.~ 1_; chip barometer showed a loss of 3 63 at 783 92 T:: •1 1'o.l: 13 3~~! ~· .. ]~ -11 ~rf'~...:. ·~!t· ~ ~, J d~ =', ~:.~/r.M~.JM u -n near the close ''" wr '° 2 ... " 111, 11. -1un1MM i n, 1 1 • ._ i,,,u,, /• ") le••~ Ind lb 111 11 1 11 1 ~ , U~N~lr .fll! If ~ ,wn n 1> • 311 + 1, A turnover of around 11 m1lhon shares com par ~:;~r~:' 0~ 1Jl 1~!t! 1~ 1J~ -'• 8 ~.:;~ ,~ o fttl ~·: ~· ~ -':~ ~~E :1: S U11 +1-.. ed \\Ith 11 370 000 shares Thur:sday J,", ,f,•, ,•x• ~ 11 n ~ l/ -1• 8 cf;:,,, 1: 1H i! ~ 1 , t , w::11 ~~.., 'Ir. -" ' " " ,. • \\ , -" ,... ~ • H + """~ I u • ,_..,, f\1any \Vall Street analysts s.n1d lhe maikct was .::::::i~,;a°' 1: lJ,• »''.Jl~ u l'lycn • 1 Hu •• ..,_ W•Y•• 1 • .n: m: -'• digesting its recent gains but they noted that some T .... rn ~fl .0 I 1• 1· • 1• ...... H PSI\ ti\ : 1 . 1 \: + ~ ~·=~'"'!111i $ + • Tf\JolioJ <Ill 11 1 1 1 1 I, o t~1 1• I ~ l,_,,.,.,:Ji .. ,,tl $1 ,. • -•• constructive economlc ne1v s n1ay be needed 1o Tt-.Ii'' • °" • u u • .... • -1 u sm'.r'1ff 1 ·~ • ' • '' + • i!~co 1 6Q 111~ _, turn the 111ar'~et around ag••n \nom w •o. l 30 JO• xr 1 -4 u sit 1tt 31 • 31 t• -'! w en "'lll l2 -K g.o nrlll~Or .a l !:"" 'f~ lt 8 T,ob~fi 1 1 if "~ 1111 \ -• w n olA J g: = " There "as '' 1despread belief that ma1or bank s f1~:Th:1~~ •} Jt• }/' ~~ = •: 8~8~l1ir1 '1 1 ~ !1~ ~ ~ ~":: \ ~ 1~£ :~.~}, u • -•· w tU reduce the pnme interest rate 1n the next t11 o l11n~ 11111 1.to Js » , 301., :ioo~ .... • u .... ._,lit.. • nu r.•1 , .-. tl ~ri. Mo1 J ~,1 ~ .±. : or three months Ne1vton Z1nder sen ior analyst for :it ,,"'rk14 1f ti·· l~. l~ + "H~l:~;y cm1> U~' ~~ ~. ~!' Jt'::~~o 1 ' I E F H k TC'do~no to I 111, 11"t 11 tlo/"'~1 loll • 1'1 ~ -J tttUlr Jlb lJ" t le utton bro crage said to 1no\ e up frorn To tdEd J 11 nJ 1 , l/'• + , u •a " .o • ~ -1. will 11110" u '"• + \ h h k Too11to • ,.DD ! 1 11 l -v. u11.•J: .<Ml • 1.1 • ~ w r¥'i. Ir~ 11 ,-1, eretemaret"11lneedtheactualcut' TA11ecot0 ,,t ... u,-:i,,uM o•H• IH "n . v.+~'w'"''I>'-'° 311• +1 ... b r I d d T ... ,u,. \, I u ll li 31 -I u M 1111 I 2 t + '~Winn 11 I 6! n~ ,. ., num er o e ectron1cs attracte cons1 erable 1r•111o w Air ,1 ~, 'fi.• , ~ _ i.. u 1nconi Ml '1 ~ -• wl:i DiJ t a ''•-II I d TrtnWI' .tfl ll l . I I 12 ·-··llfJll PL 1'2 111 lll<t :It m~-\4W1 lPw l•o ll•• _ se 111g pressure I\ 11le steel!i motors an chem icals ff•,,..,,,. ati Jlt 2 1, , 1, I"' -~. v 1r11n "'" st l' lf:' l u -1\ wl s .. ~ 1 H " II t d d r t ~ Tr1n1(on ~40 JO"• 10~ 1 +1 1K .... C<1r11 •O l2 ,, • 1\11 WlflCh '' a !+i genera V ra e in 1ac1on s T on1u11n• uo l' 1P1 u .-,vt1dtr lto 1J1 1J •~ 42'•+11 Womeco 1• L kl ed k l d T an1 lrOll "" I 6. ·~· -l y~ Co 40 •1 11•· j!. 1~1 ..... \ WDOM CD •• ff" -oc le n "ea flero space issue a ter a c , 1v11t 1 '° •l1 ll\41 l~ • lt~ -21. ~re1,iCi :.:. i 50 ~l ~. l ! , ,'~.1 -·~ (';Y!;;~ 1h2~0 31•~ -~ layed open1n~ :said 1t \\ ouJd need a loan of more '•vi.ri •11 • ' " '1 • 0 • v1 i'' n 1'4 t>\ "'worr! • .. IJ ' lrif.:! .:,~ Ill If..: ~ 52 f -! V1 IPw I 11 loM '' 21 ?1•1 + \1 WrlQ I• 3.1 l'J>.. ._ than a hal f b1lhon dollars to continue production Tr ,,,,,. '°' 1 n; 15, 1jt:; ..-v1 ,. ..n n 1u1 100 \ 100 ~ 1~ w11•• •1•• '° l? 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' 1 ' o I I l •····-·· JI B Hll o !I I lo J > t o 10'!1 lo<o-o 110 •• ... ll +1 ,, 111-o 1 11 -1i I J o S o ll'o - i l ).II 5ltl lS.1t-1\6 ' ll • 16 ~ 16 • -1 f f o I 1 I t 3' ) I 1-1 1• ! I lo •t -> 111 .. 1 .1•, , ••• •·-+. l 1 1 11 , 111+. I 111 lo I •-•• f 701'1 l•-1 I l o J 1 -l• IONDt 1 111 • 111 • 111 -1 1!t1 fi 'Il''' ll ll ••• + "'l ' 11 .. 11 -· I 6 I I I 1 11'• 'Ito 12 10 U , •1 H J II I I I 11 It 1• )t l l ., l l '"" Ml '~ l'J'°" . : _, _,, I) •I ' *' •J t ' . . J7" ••• ~,-~ !111111 -1 UIJt.1- 1 Ill 1!1 'l' ., lt•l •••jll -\ l•»•j '•l +I.\ )1$ j 'J-~ J?U.JJ 1'~.+4o II iii ll H -o 41lll jj " ll 11 10 • --1-It Otlt•tl-4 2' 111 llJ llt l,.h .. t i 1 92n11 -1 lJ ~t~ »• .,. +' JO n. H 1J -1 1? 11-9 11 t :f ,~2 ~ 'Ito lft& '"•-~ I M U /~ -1 U ll n " U l o J \\ .!-t of ~ " +2 II~ "l!ort ~+' l I!~ 11 I _, 11112 1 Y U l Ill' II +J>~ If J(o S.h ~,+, •ff , U., s1.+,... IO Jto llo !t o + o 1" l)\'J '7 •+ 21 15 , SI i·~ .. ' ~lUIHl-i 11 "''" )1 Xllo 1}11 150 14 ,.. 211 +l 11 .... •• '''• -• 1' 50 it ' f?I• -,,_ )Ill U • 45 ij'I -I 11 it :; • fs'' + It 41 10 I 1' 11 -•\-'I 11 106 101 IQ.I -J.<1 llOilOIO Ill 1J> 14 'I ii ,,.,,,._. nn .10 .10~-• n: 11 ,.,.., 11)1 , _ 1, 0 IJ ll T U t -1~ ,, ,, '' Ul15t$6 11 ilCI II) ·~ I ". " ... , ,,,,.,,.., l .. 6' u I IJ\1 •I 1 11 \ + .. 1 1•••111-1 ; :i~ :1.1:li 11 '1 IO 111 110 ~ I ~~ t " t lSGlt o .. o l"o 11 lJ) l!l ' 1 -Ii ~ fl tl ., +!ff ]j;l}G ft 116161'1--11 lllJ ,,,. 15~ 1et1 I ti 1\ 11C 1'! 11• " l "6'1 u ; - nJ 11 n ' nt< +" 10 56 "'• Jl•-1 1 Tiit: Anot!t 1911 PflH lt"/t Briefs NEIV YORK (lfPI) -Allied Chemical Corp and Gulf Otl Corp have formed a Joint ven lure lo estabhsh a nuclear fuel recovery plant at Barnwell, S C at a cost of $70 million Operations will start In 1973 The plant will adJOlll the Atomic Energy Commission 1 Savannah River Plant ind win be the laraest plant or Its kind in the 'vorld NEW YORK (U.fl.L -~~--' J Ju ae has bffn named p1 csldcnt of Lorillard division oC Loew 1 Corp He hu beea vice president ror marketln.c of R J Reynolds Tobacco Co SAN AN1'0NIO (UPI) - Church s Fried Chicken Inc , Annoonctd a lhrte for-t.. split iiJ comrnon stock subJttt lo sh.archoldtr approval at the •Mual meeting ~ratch is TM company's tamlnp lncre.,ed last year to SI 413 mllllon or $1 16 a share from •1•13 or 36 cent' 11 share on a 147 pell> Cetl~ sale.a tnertue ''S PECIALIZING IN QU ALITY'' HERE IS WHERE YOU SHOULD BUY YOUR ' - NEW-BUICK! OUR STOCK IS GREAT! SKYLARKS e G • .S. 455 PERFO~MANCE SPECIAL e LE SABRES WILDCA1S e ELECTRAS 9 RIVIERAS e ALL NEW ESTATE WAGONS • . How To Spend The Money You Were Going To Spend JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS On Ao Ordinary Car. . . FOR THE ENTIRE HARBOR AREA THE ONLY AUTHORIZED Jaguar DEALER IN THE ENTIRE HARBOR AREA Complete Sales, Service Parts Departments 9 IN STOCK c!!"~~ .. o~~.,E ,.!!!~:m $ DISC BRAKES, LEATHER BUCKET SEA TS (421 ASG) ONLY 129 ACTUAL -MILES 1970 . OPEL GT WE HA VE A TREMENDOUS SELECTION of th e FABULOUS G T's RIGHT NOW. ALL COLORS & EQUIPMENT TO SELECT FROM! BRAND NEW 1970 UICK RALLY KADETT • SPORT SEDAN • STATION WAGONS • ALL ARE READY FOR DELIVERY TODAY! BRAND NEW 1970 MODEL . KADETT ltiulpptd with 6J h.p. 1111 econo K• .. •tt 9"tlno, 4 .,_., fully •1nchronl1eil traftsmlui.n, helter, llt.tlrM luM chault. 2 lpMll ......... & wlptt1, ,.., Wt-. Hckwp ll1hts. (J1'261111J $1888 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 2 ·door coupe, euto. trans., conceeled radio antenna, fibre glass belted tires, padded desh, seat belts, beck-up rotes, duol speed electric wipers ~33270Z600154 52 8 ALL OF THESE CARS CARRY OUR OWN WARRANTJ 1 68 ~.~~!~~~E,!. ... .,, '";•, $2195 h111l•r. pow1r lle1ri119' b,•lr11, f1 clorv t i•. l1mboo C•11m1 bl11d1 inl1rior. (WJM I I'l l -·I '6 7 ~~~:~;~~~~ ~:~::'\:·,;:;;·· $199 5 1ir. l UJl9121. Thi• w•1k 011lv. '66 ~~·~:~:~~~~!-~~~.;~.:::·:·, .. $2195 12,000 mil11. IRUJ275 l .. 68 ~~.!!~~.~,. ... '''"'"· ....... ,,~3 3 9 5 pow•• tl•1n119-br•k1J, f•tlorv •ir. Thi1 c•r 1how1 011hl•11di119 t•••· IVI U59l l '69 ~~.~!~!~'"'"'""~···· s3495 · lom1l1c, r.1d10. h1•+1r, pow1r ••••flll!I· br1k11·wiitdow1, 1l1r10 AM.fM, 1•,000 mil11. ronti•t'• top of th1 lin•. l.1l.111c• of f.1ctory w1rr1ntv. 'Iii-· ~~.~.!~.~~~! ........... $16 95 power 1t11ri"'!I, pow1r br1k11, r1dio, h11l1r. l&J,7lll E1tcell1nt buy. '68 ~~?~.~ .. ~! ......... , .... 52695 br.1k11, f1ctorv .1ir. onlv 12 ,000 mil11. l1l1nc1 of f1clory w1rr1nly • I 66 ~~.1 ~~'1'~'~"dio,hut ... I" $179 5 forv 1ir condilio11i11g. ! RRW775 ) AUTHORIZED BUICK-OPEL-JAGUAR DEALER ' . 234 th STREET • ' ) 17 I ' 17 I -- Laguna Beaeh I VOL. 63, NO. 55, 4 SECTIONS, 42 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA • FRIDAY, MAR.CH 6, 197cf · . Today's Fl,al N.Y. Sto ks TEN CENTS ' l Ill mas e r. sea Perils Homes • • I Capo Dwellers Hold Ba~k Tides / A crane and b u 11 d o z e r continued fashioning a boulder bulwark against the sea today to protect tt:e $100,000 Capistrano Beach properties of .John Reynard, 35787 Beach Road. Reynard's home and neart>y properUe~ have been under siege from the sea for days, pc.unded by a high tide surf in a peculiar localized situation. Orange County jail prisoners brought in for the emergency, neighbors, the county Harbor District and a contractor have wo rked to stem the tidal aclion that ham- myed al''ay Thursday night and again tti1s morning. Reynard's sea\vall began to break apart before his eyes and water swjrJed toward his door step. The house is about 25 feet from the mean high tide line. About 350 ton.!I of rocks have been ... trucked in from Rlverside at Reynard 's order with another 350 tons ()n the way to make a permanent protective barrier. "It hit us the worst ," said Reynard. ''It's been about seven years since we were hit. tt hits on e place one year and another the next. -It was a·combinaHon of curren1 and tide right in fr<>nt of ()Ur place. II did a little' damage about 1,000 feet north. ii undercut a couple of patios." $ix Nabbed in Separate Narco Raids on Motel Reynard , a retired liquifie<I petroleun1 gas company owner. estimated that seven feet of sand had been lost from the beach in front of his properties: three Jots and two houses. Cilris Klinger, chief of ()perations at the county flood control district, said two or lh ree homes may be in danger depending on how fast they work to sandbag or take other protective measures. Five adult! and a !6·year-0ld girl were arrested Thursday night by Laguna Beach narcotics officers in t11.·o separate Incidents coincidentally related by a motel address. At 8: 10 p.m. officers arrested Charles Paul Hammond , 2tl, of Camp Pendleton :tnd Michael Alexander Antonetz. 19, who said he lived at the Ocean View ~lotel. 1854 S. Coast Highway. 'nle. t11.·o were followed from the Taco Bell restaurant to the steps leading to the beach at the end of St. Ann's Drive where the arrest wl! made and six 'lids' (Six nunces) of marijuana taken from Antoneu. police claimed. ,, Hammond was char@e<I with posses.<1ion nf marijuana and Antonetz w i I h possession of marijuana for sale. '-feanwhile, the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Office advised the Laguna Beach poli ce department that suSJ)f'Cts arrested in Los Angeles County with a stolen car, a concealed weapon and 34 !ids of marijuana said they had purchas- ed U1e drug at the 1854 S. Coast Highway address. Laguna officers l'.'ent to the motel at JO: 15 p.m .. knocked on the designated door and were greel wilh a powerful aroma of marijuana. they reporl. .. A search turned up a plastic bag of I.he drug and several marijuan• cigarettes and butts. police slate. The· oHicers arrested rour occupants of the small room, Charle! Thomas Vates. ·18, a transienl: Susan Dolge Beek, 18, ol Anaheim ; Lynne Stephanie Mills, 19, of Rancho Santa Fe; and the IS-year-old girl \\'ho was booked for lack of parental con· lrol. The adults are charged with possession of marijuana. He said 12 or 13 houses were badly damaged in the area about five years ago. Vitamin Addicts . Win $435,000 Court Damages Three men whose lawyer!! told 111 Superior Court jury that their doctors' vitamin shot clinic had converted them into almost incurable dl'Ug addicts wert awarded a total or $435,000 in damages Thursday at the end ()f a five month trial. DA.IL Y PILOT Sl9tf "'"" • • SURF BORNE ON HIGH TIDE POUNDS POCHE AREA Woodin S.a~ell Fret1tlnt le•ch Rod Homes Reduced to Splinter• No Con1hat T1·oops in Laos, President Nixon Declares The panel filed back into the courtroom of Judge William S. Lee to award $420,000 to insurance broker William R. Stevens of Anaheim , $105,000 to Santa Ana attorney Richard Cody and $10.000 to Joe Leves- que, a Garden Grove contractor. Those damages must be paid, In vary- ing amount!, by four doctors who once operated the l<atella-Palmwood ~1edical Center in Anaheim . Judge Lee's ruling v.•ent against Ors. Ar1hur J . Reynaud. Mansour Roshan, S. L. Yerington and Bernard Keyser. Mrs. Hanson .Tells Story At Congressional Hearing KEY BISCAYNE. Fla. (AP) -Presi· tlent NJxon made a detailed7 3.000-word defense of American involvement in Laos today and announced he is asking help !from the Soviet Union and Btitain to help restore peace in that country. Nixon acknowledged that in recent days "there has been intense public s~ula­ tion to the effect that the United States involvement in Laos ha s substantially in· creased in violation of the Geneva ac· rords. that American litrOund forces arc engaged in combat in Laos and lhal our 11ir activity has had the effect of escalating the conflicl." Describing these reports as "'grossly in- 11ccurate." Nixon staled. '"I have con- cluded that our national interest 1vill bf' served by putting the subject into perspective through a precise descript ion of our current activities in Laos.'' The chief executil·e said there <lrc nri American ground combat troops in Lao~ 11nd ;•,ve have no plans for introducing ~round combat forces into Laos." He also stated that "no Amer ican sta- tioned in Laos has ever been killed In ground combat operations.·· Giving precise figures, Nixon i;ttid there were currently, J ,040 Americans, both Stolen Pendleton Rifles Recovered Ten M-14 rtflcs stolen Feb. 26 from a barracks <lt Camp Pendleton were turned up by Los Angele!! police \Vcdncsday night. Officer!! of the Southwest Division. who had participated in an inves tigation con- ducted-by the FBI. Slopped a car in the 6200 block Qf -.Crepshaw Boulevard and placed the occupanls. a young Miftife :.nd three other men. under arrest afler linding lhe missing weapons in the tehi· de. Pvl. John It Piper. 21. of Los Ange les. was charged with receiving the stolen rifles which disBppearcd fro1n a rack in a barracks building near the Camp Pendleton air rie1d. A spokcs1nan at Cnmp Pcndlct11n llf!id loday that Piper. who 11111; been sLatlonctl 111 the ~farlne ba~e. ha11 been on IC!avc sine~ ~tarch 1. ArTesled wilh hint 1\'cre Curhs C. .Jones, 21 ; James E. Gn rd ncr. 27 and Tho11111 s. Sml&.h, 22, all of Lo~ Angeles. service personnel and civilians. In Laos bul that only 616 ()f these are direct government employes. "U.S. personnel in Laos during the past year has not increased." he said , •·while durinJ( the past few months. North Viel· nan1 has sent over 13,000 additional com- bat ground troops into Laos.·• The President said U.S. air operations In thal Southeast Asia country have as their first priority the interdiclion of a continuing flow of North Vietnamese troops and supplies across the Ho Chi ~iinh Trail complex in Laos to join the fighling in S()ulh Vietnam . He reported that in 1969. this flow totale<I about 10,000 nlen. 1 "ln addition to air operations on the Ho Chi Minh Trail." he said , "we have con· tinued lo carry out reconnaissance flight, in northern Laos and fly combat support missions for Laotian forces when re· nu estcd to do S<J by the Royal Laotian government." J!e said that the le vel of U.S. operations in the air "has been increased only as lhe number of North Vietnamese in Laos and lhe level of !heir aggression has in- creased." • Renaud and Roshan are today prac- ticing together in Garden Grove, Yer· ington is retired and Keyser is no\v r.racticing in Lo.'i Angeles . All four phys icians formerly operated \\'hat was described during the trial as "a ~hot factory run purely for profit and gain." They were accused of ad- mini stering hiJ!h\y potent v i I am in treatments to the point that the three plaintiffs became addicted to liquid amphetamine. It was lestified that lhe Injections of amphetamine were much higher than ls normally administered to patients w}lo use the drug to combat appetite ()r to ISee bRUGS, Page %) Stock ~larl<el• NE\'/ YORK (AP )-Prices on the ;tock market continued to sag in fa irly active trading late this afternoon. I See quota- tions. Pages 20-21 ). Declines outnumbt:red advances 793 to 469 on the New York Stock Exchange. From Wire Servlct1 WASHINGTON, O.C. -Four S<>uthcm California military wives who made an unprecedented trip around the world trying to learn if their captive husband11 are dead or &live teslified today in Congress. The review of their early 1970 mercy mission before a sympathelic tlouse committee was also the first time wives of suspected prisoners of war he.Id by North Vietnam spoke in a fo rmal hear- ing. Mrs. Carole Hanson, of 14112 Birdrock Drive, El Toro, and her three globe-girdl· illg companioru$ were to speak during the day, along with Pentagon officials. Mrs. Hanson's husband, Marine Corps Capt. Stephen P. Hanson, was shot down June 3. 1967, on a helicopter medical evacuation mission over Laos .. Neither he nor the other three missing £tiers shot down in the war zone ha ve been heard from. but Mrs. Hanson believes she u.w him in • monil<lred Har.oi. telecast. The women -undaunted by 1ettin1 on· Water Keeps All Unhappy Dnnn Point Residents Protest Rate Hike ly sympa'hy and no actual help on their tiring trip -Sflid upon return to . late January that they believe the missi()n '>l'ill have Jong-ranging humanitarian !'£- reclJ . They were invited to tell of their odyssey to major cities or the east and l\'CSt, Cammunist Bloc and Free World capitals, by Rep. L. J\1endel Rivers (0. S.C.) the committee chairman. J\·lembers of his Armed Services Com- mittee '>l'ere also scheduled to hear Assis- tant Defense Secretary Richard G. Capen Jr. release a Pentagon report on PO\'/ negotiations. Bolh ti.S. and North Vietnam peace delegates are deadlocked on the emo- tional i.ssUe involving the husbends of the four .military wives and more than 1,000 other men held ceptive. . The four women. i'11cluding Mrs. John K. Hardy Jr., or Covina. !\.1rs. Roosevelt Heslle Jr., and '-frs. Arthur S. Meams. both.Of Los Angeles, left Jan. 3, heading east They visited Pope Paul In Rome, plul! Egypt, Romania, Tndia, Laos, Japan and Russia on the relatively unproductive (See fttRS. HANSON, Page %) Glass Company Plan Rejected By JOHN VALTERZA issue -citizen demands for an lm· "These good citizens have come l() the o• rM 01111 '"11" s11tt mediate drop to last year's water rates unanimous conclus1on thal there is A bid by" the Owens' tllinols Glass Com· Scores of Dana Point area homeawncrs ·until more studie111 on the rate Increase. absolutely no Justification ror~the water pany to operate their plant in Chrls· "'ho are angry over recent 50--rcent ire finished. The board would not accepl te ·o ,,. " he. dded tlanitos canyon 24 hours I day was turn-r-lhat proposal. ra I ere , a , . hikes in wate r rates took their fight to 8 1 tant f the. 0 hi E cd down this week by the Orange County the board or the South Coast Municipal Angus Smith. vice president of ' I~ , u . an accoun or Je vans Planning Commission. Water Dtstrlct4'hursd1y; -citizen..group,_prcsenl.e thek_comp)J!!il!__ r1~ in ~nta Ana and other members of The glass compa"ny exlracts silica sand Everybody went away unhappy. about the water rate hike wlilCh' bi ' I.be. ~Jtrict.~ff dlaqreed. ..-, 1 , ror~11¥!!$ rp"tJna11na G'QCkS·lt·.b1'TRW The group, represented by t 1i e ~aid became apparent two months after The ' rile hiket,, A~t' ·Rabe.rt · ROad. to Oiteaa Highthy riear. Ml~lon Thunderbird Homeowner's A.uociatlon. it "'{U enacted. I Jackson1 told ~ anlfY gr.:oup,.1hould to: Viejo. '• • , Were met with a compromise proposal by . Hom€owntrs. Smith ~d, 'only ,lme'f" U)~· eltect 1btcarase-tlte 'diltis~ 1\Q, f41; ' Sa.nct.-ahd ,ri"'Jf Dfi\M R.llt!ona , 1.he grim board members, bul lhe Idea for about the rate Increases with U\e·•mli!il)·g ftred from lnnatkm in PMl yeari •flH the ·. ~mwter wl\lch the, 'fri:t" oj)trlter ftrrilt4 a "mediation" committee of sort& drew or the December.January bintna lite In prospects wera that<Oi>N "ft'OiaJd c:On)lmiJ. 'hoUrs fronl f •.m. l<rto p.m." '1 anar~' shouts on "no ... no ... no" from the January. risl~. ~ • 1 ~ Coml}llssloner,J noted that •there 1are auclleflct of about 'iO waler u11ers. "\\re are deeply disturbed 11bout the re-Board fltember Rohen Pilalone, y.·bO several otht"r sani:I and grAvel optratlons The board voted unllnlmously and cenl cxor,Qitant Increase in the water raced the mo!l critlCism Gudng the even· in the area end If ().vcns Jllinols was i;wUlly to s<>I a dnte ror <l <ti~trict com· rates ... a gtoup or citizens from our area lng, ·agreed with the obvlous ly nervous gr.11ntcd U11limlted ~ours others could de- ml'lce 10 mcct 111llh a homeowncr's group spent a great deal or valuable time ex· accountant and rem In d e d the mand the 1amc. com111irtee tu \~ork out a solution to the amininJ! the district's 1969 1udlt. tJ1c homeo\\'lletS ti!Jt the district'• rates bad' The company tailed about 18 monlhs prnlc!;L Diehl Evans 1hlred COl)sult111nts\ r~P.C;!rt 1t.ayed the same for the p1$i 11 -ycirs ago lo gel permission to build a spur The Point of contention which slill was and other Information," he told the &Ucn~ before the boal-d voted on the rate blke rnl)road track to the operation when the nol resolved, howe ver, 1Ull ptaaucs lhe board members. (See WATER. ?att 1) city of San Juen Qlpi&traoo objected. t • • 5 ••.•• .-· -· ·s 1· s·at 't n •m·t or ac=v·---eo: ··- Federal Men Say fttore Ar1·ests Due By BARBARA KREIB!CH Of Ille O.Hr ... llM SllH Federal authorilfes today predicted more arrests will come after they S\vooped il}to Laguna Beach Thursday and claimed to have knocked over a $3.5 million nationwide ring dealing In manufacture and distribUlibn of illicit drugs. Raiding officers allc8ed-that a Laguna home in' Arch Beach Heights 1vas head· quarters for U1e illegal drug traffic. In 1 series of raids beginning at t0:-4:i a.m., 30 Federal narcotics agents ar· rested five men and a woman .n Laguna Beach, South Laguna and Orange, aC· cording lo Daniel P. Casey. weS~ern regional director of the Federal Bureau ol Narcotief: and Dangerous Drugs .... The suspects are e h a r g e d with operating an LSD ;,factory," a "canning plant" and a drug distribution network that supplied LSD, hashish, marijuana and PCP, a psychedelic drug less potent than µ>D to outlets in Arimna, New York . Cit y, Boston, New Orlecins and Seattle. Casey iiaid that lips from out.side thr. state scl off the seven-month in· vesligalion that led In the hcadquarteri; of the drug operation in the Laguna area. The fedi:ral officers, he said, werP. assisted by the Orange County Distrk:l Attorney 's oUice, the Orange County Sheriff's Ofrice and the Orange Potier Department, which 1nade two o f Thur&day's arrests. The Laguna Beach Pollce Department did not partJcipate in the investigation. nor was ii notified or the impending raids, accvrding l() Police Chief Kenneth Huck. An extraordinary array oI drug pro- cessing and shipping equipment seized .in the raids included a complete laboratory for the prcduction of LSD. found in the bedroom or a home at S69 Glassell St.. Orange : a canning machine, used to seal drugs in pint cans for shipment ac·ross the country, found at 31 401 First Ave.., Scluth Laguna : and twp hydraulic prwes for shaping mallijuana and hashish lntri kilogram IJricks. found at 1094 Miramar St. in Arch Beach Heights. Casey sai d the equipment was movr,r! around the county at frequent intervals. fSee UD FACTORY, Page %) · Mys terious Fire Hits Viejo Home A mysterious fire did $1$.000 damage lo a new home in Ati~sion Viejo Tbur11- day afternoon just before the new owners had planned to n1ove in. 1'1'."eilly-one Orange County firemen battled the blaze at 26571 Morena Drive, for almost an hour before containi ng It . For a time it threatened a new p;>,000 home next door. The l-touse had been purchasd by Mr . and flfrs .Richarrl Graff of Fullerton who had planned to move in next week: Firemen said faulty wiring ms.y havP. been the cause of the blaze but they could not be certain. An investigation is under way, The Mi ssion Viejo Company. which still had CU!tody of the home, said they would make other arrangements ror the Fullerton couple . Const Weather The 1veathcrman's nlaking up for last wee.kend , promi!ing sun- ny skies and a big temperature boost. aided by austy northeast wfn(ls, into the balmy 70's. .INSIDt: TODA. l' The .f9th 1tate takes--ihir11~t· liQl1t ru the Ala1kon 1how at Costa Me~;1 Soutl1 Coa1i Plaza "'""· AU: l/U: d'e,!Oi!< pr~ in lo-datt~ \'{eeUnd;, rf~t.i(#i.,, l ~ IHllll• It C•llf'ff111t I CllK•I .. 1.111 -1 (La111tl., Jl-!1 Ctt11kt n ( .. HWll'il fl Dt-'11 N~tltn t S•l:eri.t ''" t fllnl~t• fl·tl w..-" •11• ........ u Mtlltle~ l """""'' . II I • ---. • , " . I O.~IW.PllOl· . SC frld.,, Ml!<ft 6, 1970 ' u ... , ...... CAROLE HANSEN (FOURTH FROM LEFT), OTHERS BRING PLEAS TO WASHINGTON Prisoners' Wives, Rep. Hibert Look at Picture of Enemy's Hum•ne Trutmenf From Page I M~. HANSON .• , •. I tflp, •p0nsored by Twin Circles, a U.S. Catholic m11uln~. Efforts tcrnacb Hanoi failed and Mrs. HansOft. whose husb.tnd has never aeen their thr~.-y~-old.. son Stephen .y ., waa r&buffed as sbe sought infonn1tlon f\'om the Patbet Lao, in Vientiane, Laos. North Vietnamese authorities said C1pt.. Hanson '• fate w .. s no concem of theirs, since he ~·as ahot do¥in in Laoa, and she was only made to stand in the driveway of red headquarters thtre. • ''I"he women never gained entry to the Soviet icapltol er Moscow either, being forced to wait 12 milts Outside town in a ahabby aJiport transll hol<I. None had official eht.ry vlaas, but their quest was hooored elsewhere and they hoood to be admlUed to Moscow and talk 1'fi{h offidala, perhapa bringing indirect presJUte on Hanoi. North Vietnamese poUcy c a 11 s American POWa war criminals who must be dealt with in direct peace negotiations. v.1'1lle the U.S. 1ovunment contends this is 1 vlolaUon of the Geneva Convention. Only rattly doea North Vietnam rtleue the names 0( Its POW populace or allow them to write home, while it will not make formal lists available to responsible tnternatlooal organluiUoos IUCh aa lhe Red Croos. Fro .. Page I DRUGS •.. relle\'! mild depreS!ion. All three men bec1me unable to work and had to underio lengthy hospital treatment. Stevens lost his tnsuranct Ucense and his business and Cody, described by hls lawyers as "a very sick man," Is today confined to 1 veterans hos pl la I. All three men, it was testified, went to tht clinic with the .assurance by the physicians that the series of vitamin treatments prescribed would en1ble them to lase weiaht . Instead, ther lawyers argued, l h e y almost lost their minds and became drug addicts, "unable t-0 work, unable lo ef- fectively carry on their \Ives and business and unable to really comprehend, until it ~·as too lale, whal had happened to them." Atom Weapons Tested YUCCA FLAT, Nev. (UPI) -Two atomic we.aPQns ttsls were detonated to- day at fairly shallow depths beneath the desert floor at the Nevada test site. Both ~·ere rated at less than 20 klloloN. DAILY PILOT H111ttl11tm IHc• P9lil111tei1 Yelley s ... Cl-.rte OltAHGI. COAST l'Ul\.ISklNO COMll'A.H't Rcb111 N. w~,c1 ll'rt>•tt<ll .,,,. ll'llblllol'lt' Je(lc JI. C vrl t-t VlC. ,.mlo!Mt •ncl Oafltrtl Ml fltttl' Tho:"01 11 ICttY!I e:on~ Tho1r11t >.. Mv•,:ihl111 M•nlO!ll!I Edl!I< ltich11rd ~-Ntll $ovllo Ort ftOI '°""''' [dll'&f °"'-Cost• .-.....: )30 W•t S1y )lrHI H"""°"I "9<~: '111 WM! l1it>o• l a.u11vtril Ll9llM SMC!': m hrtsl Aytnv. H unllfto1'11'1 llf('fl: 1111~ ltK~ llC'J .. YI•~ kn ~It; JD;j Nonfl I I '-'"''tit RHt -,a _ !Mil Y "ILOT, W'lftl; -Wllldl II. cel!'lbllltlll ""' N.._.,11',_, II -''"""' M MY t•<tpl ·-.. , Ill ..,..,. .... ltllM .... lttui. Ifft/I, H-1 t..u... C-lt MtM. """''"' .... l..c1I ... ,._.Ill VlllQ, flint wllPI two ntioMI tdllletll. Ottntt Cotll Plll>ll•~lnt ~ ,.rlr\11.... IMOl'llt l rt ft Ull W.11 .,.... •M., H..,._., htcfl, tM a» WW hy ltrMI, Cotto M .... Tilt, .... l71 4l MJ-4121 C._,"'4 A"9fttliitt '42•167a S. ~'""''•-All 0.,.,,......, ,...,~ ••• 492o442t (..,..)ff'lt. 1Hf. Or.,.. Cotti "*"11"'8 C9rNIOltY ,.. -ttwlft. ltMh'•tllN. ~ tM ...... ,.,. .. Id ti NIWW! IHttlfl '"' eo.11 Melt, Gtl"-r111t. HllW.tltlltll •Y t•rr1tr UM ftWlrfll't'1 11{ -H Jt.• -1111r1 l'l'lllflt,., ettfllltl~, I M lftOl'lfl'I,,, ..... , ,,..""' -""'*"....,,..." """" """ .. l"W9IMH ~ ...... ...,.. 1911UIM9f~._. Action Postponed Report Card Confusion Has Schools Up in Air By PAMELA HALLAN ot tlM OtllY "'"' lllff Ruulll of a report card survey in the San Joaquin Elementary School District ha•-left IChool officials in a temporary quandary. • • The Bom of Truslees postponed ac- t.ion on accept.inJ the new cards until after the kinks can be worked out. The new card which was aent home with 957 1tudtnts from 34 selected claases throughout the dlstrict me.asuru effort u well a• achievement. It also gives new mu.ning to the tradlUonal letter grades. A stands for above grade level, B is for 1t grade level and C is for below grade level. Fifty.five percent of the cards were re- turned with the comment.I indicating that the great majority of parents be· lieved the card provided a clear picture of their chlld'a progress. Moat Aid lhey coold undenlaod the achievem111t 'ledklt1&Jt there 1'11 con-. siderable confusion about the effort mea· 1UTemenL _ Frank Burd, IZl interested pattJSt.. crit- lc!Jed Illa card AJ'lng dill any ttpart card should contain an explanaUon of what ls erpected of the student In spe- cific areas. For example, -at a parlicular point in tfme a child should be able to do JOO addJtlonal problems In 15 · minutes with 90 percent accuracy. Hurd also said a card shoulP measure the level of achievement and should make recommendations concerning any necessary corrective action. Dr. William Stocks. as.sistant superin· tendent. said the term grade level indi· cates what is expected of the child. He said if a fourth grader is making normal progress through a fourth grade malh- book then he is working at his grade level and is doing what is expected. He also said that before a new card i8 adopted perhaps the term grade level could be more specifically explained. The new card which has caused a enat deal of controversy during pA.St Crackdown Set On Clemente's Dangerous Road Sttn Clemente's steep Avenid& San Juan is ln for not only more traffic signs but more traffic enforcement. The city COWlCil decision Wednesday nl1ht followed a pt'ltltlon by 48 residents or the .arta and remarks by several persons including George Bowles, pl•n· ning commission chairman. Bowles, o( IZ3 Avenid.a San Juan, label· edit a danierous arta because of drivers ~tho come around the curve ''tires squealinJ morning and evening." He estimated that cars traveled 40 to 50 miles an hour through the 2$-mile ione and claimed that school buses ltavel SO to 3~ miles per hoor. He advised that police talk to bus drivers. Bo~·les said a school bus cut in front hlm recentl y and he had lo r;]a m on his brakes. lie said also that he is buildln& a house tn another area of the city f,nd that he caught thlldren "'tealing nails and said that they stopped up a sn.·er. f\lrs. W. T. Love of 117 Aven\da San Juan, suggested no parking arees al the point.I whe.re buses pickup children. Tbe city is to invesUgate this. City ~!anaaer Kenneth Carr 1aid police had lnvtst.iaaged the area and recom - mtnded both more slrning and more sel· ective enforcement against t r a f f I c \•lolatora. PetiUoners had polnltd out that Ont ac· cidtnt recently broke a child's leg. Carr 11ald that 1dgns woold be both pole r;lgns and those ptlnted on streets. Coun- cilmen aulhorized Ille signs •nd add .. d ,nforct111ent and asked Carr to look tnttl the parkln& re striction slluation and posslbillty of a 131k with bus dri vrrs. . O~~r!I 111&0 I Skl'd aboul tht! cit y put• ting In &ldt"alk~ C~rr pointed oot lhlil lhl;S ls a pN>f'Jtrly O\\'!'lfr ~rlvllege. 1\ ~'Oman aaked if that meant payin~ for all the work. Carr 1aid, ")'OU be le ht.· • I board meetings wa5 orlginalty presen· ted with numbers taking the place of \el· ter grades. The administration belleved that numerals would better convey the meanings qf above, at 'ar below grade level. Jn favor or the new card with the numerals Instead of the Jetter was trus- tee James Nelson who felt that too much compeUUve interest was placed on letter grades and w)\o was against having an F 111 on elemenlary card. In favor of the old system «using let- ter grades to mean excellent, good, average. below average and falling was t.nlStt Edward Be!Ty who felt lhat nume:ralo. would be too confusing. The cards that were 1ent out were a compromise. From Page 1 WATER ••. late lut year. Re a11o lllid lriinJy lhal cnmplaints that the homeowner's Jl'OUP wu not told about the increases \\.'ere "puzzling." "You, ~fr. Smith, were at the meet ing "'hen the board di.seus5e<i the rate in· creases weren't you?" Malone asked. "Yes, I was, but the Idea was only discussed. It wasn't passed,'' snapped the angry Smith. Malone then delved into the issue of notification of water u'sers about the in- c~ease and admitted that perhaps the dtstri ct "\\'as rem iss'' in not notifying each member personally as soon a.s the rate hike went Into effect. ';lVe couldn't post a notice in your area because there aren't any public buildings there," he said. ''Furthermore, because or complaints by one newspaper in the area that lt was not advised of the changes, I can only say that other newspapers serving the area ran stories on the increases. Why couldn't the ne"·spaper that didn't get the in- forma4on read it and reprint the in- formaUon?" he added . Both statements drew loud jeers from the audlen«. To bllck up their fight to lower the ratf:!l, the homeowners cited figures which they say show that the district has been and is running In the black. The 1969 fiscal year showed a net in- come to the district's general fund of $46,993, Smith said. The current assets In the 169 audit report shows cash In tem· porary Investments to be $235,367, he ad- ded . ''So far, we have a clear indication that this district is operating in the black and could even operate at .a Joss to the general fund for aeveral years before the red mark Is reacfttd," be said. He called for a more "reasonable ad· justment in the rates instead of 60 per. cent." But "'aterdistrict officials have cited soaring costs for prices ol water, oper• tioo and maintenance. inllation .tnd equipment Water purchase -price for an acre foot from' the Pi1etropolitan Wat.er District has risen from $23 in 1960 to $4S today - nearly too percent Those concfrts of tnf11Uon a.nd detailed examination ·o the fisc1l reports and the consultant recommendation is expeclf'd to come in the meeting of the two me<tia - tion committees 1ent1Uvely scheduled for next Tuesday nlabL Laguna Beach· urolo£1sl Dr. Anthony Orlandella. who made .. the moUon lo restudy tbe increase, Is upected \o a:lt on the board's committee. Dr. Orlandella had opposed the orlt\n8l propo1als to raise the rates 100 ~rcent (the ori&Inal advice given by tbe con- sul1ant.s). Guard Recalled CHAMPAIGN. ILL. (UP[) -C.ov. Richard B. Ogilvie · today r«allcd 1he 750 Notional Guordsmtn he h&d ordtrtd to the Unlvenlly of Ullnols camptis to conllol Violent 1tudent dtmonat.r1Uon1 . ... __..,.. --- Rallies Fail to Ignite • Students Peacefiil at OCC , UCI Discussio1is Two rallies held at Orange Coast College aad UC lrvlne Thursday failed to spark Jny student demonstrations as speakers exhorted the crowds "to do some thing -don't just sit around and talk about political rq>rtsskln and police brutality." Both rallies. prompted by Sherwood Forest, an underground newspager now being published in Santa Ana, were con· ducted peacefully. About 700 students al OCC and 300 at UCl heard a variety of militant speakers discuss police arrests in campm dJsorder1 at UC Santa Barbara and Cal Stale Fulltrton. The OCC rally broke up after 45 minutes when Dean of Student.s Joseph Kroll, told or.ganizers Uley would not be al\oy,·ed to hold a discussion with students from Santa Barbara and CSF' in the auditorium. The UCI rally was held adjacent to a Bank of America branch at the Irvine ToWTI Center. Or&anizer1. Who called themsel ves Praxis Axis Action Faction, said the bank 11ite was chosen lo un- derscore prolest again5t the arrest.s in conn ection "'ith last ~·eek's disturbances at UC Santa Barbara. when a Bank of America office was burned down. Throughout the rally. the bank did a brisk business with student customers cashing checks, and -depositing funds. At one point during the !JO.minutes of speeches llberally sprinkled with four-let- ter words, a speaker urged tht crowd to stage a. "look-In" at the bank. The crowd had dwindled to about ISO and they press- ed their noses to the butldlng'! plate glass windo~·s for a few minutes before strag· gling ofr. Santa Ana Black Panlher t>.like Lynem urged the crowd to aUend a Panther rally scheduled Sunday afternoon at Jerome -Park in Sarita Ana In preparation fOr tMi trial of Arthur Wiue who is cftarged 1n ' the killing June 4, 118' of Santa Ana policeman Nelson Sasscer. Lynem ca lled upon studenLs t o demonstrate a show of force by attending League's trial which opens ~fonday morning in Santa Ana superior court. "The people are going to keep the pigs from committing constitutional murder on · brolher Arthur League," he stated. Other speakers, including Donovan Dorsey, a UCI student and Don Eldtr,. allq;ed publisher of SherwOod Forest, called upon the list.less audience to "mobllr.e '"d organize for the revoluUon ·~ against police brutalitY and political repression ." Al thfi conclusion of the tv.·G-hour pro- ir11m, about 20 studen ts were left in the audience. From Page I ·'Council Uplwlds Denial· • LSD FACTORY •. but headquarters of the operation was alleged lo be at the Miramar Street 'ad· dress vrhert two of the suspects. Dennis Ingham, 26 and Jeffrey Newman, 21 , were arrested. [)f Car Rental Firm Sign Arrested at the Soutb Laguna address were Jessie Meehiz, 21 , and his wife, Ann Meehiz, 20. , The two s~cls arrested at the Glassell Street address in Orange were Paul H. Newton, 23, and Stephen l\icCarthy, 31. They are being held in that city. The other four suspects were taken directly to Los Angeles. Equipment seized in the raids y,·as taken to the Federal Bureau of Na rcotics office at 714 W. Olympic Bl vd .. Los San Clemente councilmen have upheld the planning commission in deny1ng a sign to advertise a car rental agency al a service station which already has an abundance of sigM, 2360 El Camino Real. Planning Commission denial had been appealed to the ~ouncil by Avis Rent A Car Systems. Inc. A corporation execuUvt. Edwin D. Hal~. wearing a "\\'e Try Harder" but· jon, said. "I don't think it's ridiculous request." 11e said a four by six-foot sign Angeles. along \1'ilh drugs taken as • • • .,id.,rce. These included s.ooo LSD Junior High Kids table'ts, and undetermined quantities or ) marijuana, hashish" and PCP. ~; Chemicals used in the manufacture of Sot for Rodeo -the hallucinogens were obtained from · J-' legttlmate drug supply houses, Casey said, using invoices stolen from the Hill BrotMrs Chemical Company. "Early descriptions of Hill Brothers as a 'bogus• firm were incorrtct." Casey said today. "tt is a legitimate firm and the invoices were stolen ." He said that one of the suspects, \lechiz. is facing triad in Phoe nix on a charge of possessing 14.000 LSD tablets and was free on bail. Union Endorses Capo Election The membership of Carpenter's Union Local 1&43 of Dena Point today unanimously endorsed a yes vole in Tuesday's bond interest and tax override election in the Capistrano Unified School District. The local announced that "the proposed financial authoriz:ations for the district are essential to avoid lowering the educa- tional standards for our boys and girls. "Publ ic education Is a primary responsibility of the local community." Tuesday's election ~ill decide the fate of a proposal for a S<k:ent tax oxerride and raiSing of interest ceiling on unsold district bonds from five to seven percent. · Students at ?.farco rorster Junior High School in San Juan Capistrano vlill have bucking broncos, y,·ild steers and elusi\'e calves on their minds starting l\1onday. Principal Walt Spencer said tickets should be available for sale beginning ~1onday for the Far \Veslern Rodeos show which l~ being sponsored by the 1unior high during the Fiesta de las Golondrinas celebration. The rodeo will take place two day~. from 3 to 5 p.m. on Saturday, March 21 .dirtctly after the swallows day parad~ and from.2·to 4 p.m on Sunday, March 22. The events will be staged both days at Buchheim Field, adjacent to the old Capistrario High School. The junior high will receive 10 percent of all ticke t sales up to $4 ,000 and 50 per- cent of all sales afte r that point. The .school also will provide all concession stands serving soft drinks, coffee and hot dogs and will receive 100 percent of lh~se profits. CoordTnating the event will be Jim \Valshe director of student activities. Proceeds \Viii go to a project designated by the students. Last year {before the rodeo \\.'as rained out) the sludenls had decided to work with the Peace Corps to build a one or t111·0 room school in Mexico which would have their school's name. was necessary identification for the com- pany. Councilme n didn 't budge \Ved·. nesday. · A history of s~gning in the area was rPad to councilman. C o u n c i I m a n · Thomas O'Keefe said, "Laguna Beach ~ has been reviewing its sign ordinance, , .:rhey established a three-year morator· tum (on existing non-conforming signs) .and are commencing to make signs con• form . (deadline April 15). "f lhink rather than poke more hole& in our ord inJince. wt should com mence a pro!;!:ram similar to Laguna Beach to re\·ie1v our ordinance and atten1pt to get siirns to conform." He said that 300 square feel is a tremendous amount of signing and sug. gested the signs on the property might be · evaluated with an eye to reduction that would permit the new Avis sign. Tony Asaro, 401 Via Ptianzano, abo op- posed the additional signing. Councilmen unanimously upheld planning commis&ion denial. Marion Wallace Services Held f<"un~ral ser\·lces were held today for Mrs. Marion Gilbert Wallace of Laf\llla Beach who died Tuesday at the age f,f 76. P..1rs. Wallace, a noted eduactor, had !jv. eel in l..&guna ~or I~ years. · She taught English for the foreipborn at Orange Coast College from 1960 to 1969, She also taught at the Copre School in Balboa in 1968 end 1969. One of the first "·omen to earn a graduate degree from Harvard In 1925, she and her lale hu sband Earl help found Pierce College in the San Fernando Valley. She is 11urvived by a brother, Carl J. Gilbl'!rt of Washington . D.C .. and lwo sister5, Eleanor Gilbert ~lontgomery of Boston, and }larriel }!yde Sands ol Milton. Massachusetts. lntennenl will be at Arlln&lon Cemetery. Vlqiin!a. MARCH UPHOLSTERY SALE BY DREXEL FeaturinCJ Drexel's Shelby CoQection Thia •xcitin g c~ll1ction h11 m•ny •dv1nt•g•1 unm1tc.h•d in th1 uphol1t1r~ fi•ld, p•riicul1rly wh1n it i1 ft•· tured 1t ••le pr1c.11. SHELBY ADVANTAGES COM,Lln ,,URIC LINE •.• over JOO to choo1e frcm. SCOTCHOARD ,AUIC PROTECTION -.• ell f1bric;1 i re Scotc;hg•rdtd •t no •ddi· tion1I coif. ALL ,IHI CjlUALITY FABRICS , .• the 11m• price on 1ny giv1n pi1c;1 of fur· nitur1. •• HAND CONSTRUCTION All ch1ir1 & sof11 •r• hind consftuct•d frcm +~• fr1m1 to t w•y hind +i•d spring con1truc• t 1cn. Arm cov1r~ •t• provided 1f 'no. 1xfr1 co1t. _Skirts ire provided on m1ny pi1c•1 at no 1dclition1I cost, Over 12 d1fftr1nt 1tyl11 of ch11rs, ind 6 d1ff•r1nt 1t1l11 of 1of•1, & lovei••t1, 111 •t r1cluc ed pric.111. SALE PRICE $159. ••· DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE INTERIORS NEW PORT BEACH ProfoHlonol Interior LAGUNA BtACH 1727 We1tcllff Dr., ~2·2050 De1l9ner1 345 North Co•1t ·Hwy. or1N PllDAT i1L t ' • Avallable.-AID-NSIO OPIN JllDAT 'TIL t P~••• T•ll ~ M••' •for-. c •••• , 140.11•> I I .;;o: • ! '~ '",:;:;:::: E .... ... .. Trash Woes Still Exist lnTuguna By RICHARD P. NALL Of t1M O•llY "11•1 91111 Laguna Beach councilmen are ap- parently 11olng to have to seek another · receptacl~ for their trash \\'oe.'i: water dist.rt~ directors Thursday see.med cool to the idea o{ dMng the-city trash billing. Councilmen had sought the 'joint metlin~ with the board of Laguna Beach County Water Di.strict (LBCWD ) in hopes Of An agreement to add trash billing to water bills. . The ctty sought leverage by this means -_through the threat of cutting of! water -. to make trash and garbage pickup mandatory. The city has about 4,600 trash curtomers and the contracior ha.S said another 639 businesSes a n d reaideoce1 are not customers. Director James Schoenleber suggested lhe cl'ty make trash subscription man· datory by ordinaoce. .. "What do yo_u have as a lever?" asked Councilman Richard Goldberg. At the outset, D~rector Richard Jahraus, Aid, "I'm 100 percent against using water, to coDect trash. Maybe a few other areas·do it but 1 don't agree." He said people could haul their own trash but water Ja a necessity. Councilman Charlton Boyd suggested the combined bUilng operaUon would pro- duce a. volume that would make a com- puter operation feasible. "Together we could afford It." he said. Director Paul Beemer said, •·we·ve gol a liUle two.bit Operation that wouldn 't possl~ly justify a computer." Qoyd said, "lt wou'id be more eeooomical billing~for each ot us." Beemer· said , "I'm a little confused. 1 tt.Gught we were talking about en· t.,.-cement and you're talking about put· ting .in compute rs." Jahraus said, "If you can't bill as cheaply as we can, you'd better get somebody else to do your billing." Vice r.1ayor Joseph O'Sullivan said to Boyd, '"We're asking the water C-Ompany to help us reach every home." · Schoenleber said. "Number ooe, you've got to have an ordinance (for compulsofy collection)." O'Sullivan said the city is trying to achieve a sUuation in which the trash col· lector would pick up every barrel witbout having to "on}' about whether it waa a delinquent customer. ~t")'or Glenn Vedder said we'd cer· tainly pay the cost. O'Sullivan estimated that only two-thirds oft· potent I a I customers are customers. Schoenleber said he suspected that 80 pert:ent of the city problem was caused by transient tenants in the town for only a month or two. fie said if the city legislated compulsory pickup the problem would be solved. O'Sutlivan said, "lt's a political thing too. 1£. we say we're going to raise taxes 20 centa for trash we might as well leave town." Councilman disagreed about whether they were talking about the Jever&ge of being able to cut off water. GotdQer1 and Councilman Roy Holm mainlalned they were. Vedder and O'Sullivan said not: Jahraus said he was aure someone ••ould coolest a water shutoff for trash purposes. City Attorney Jack Rimel has told the city in the past it could cut off w1ler in such a situation under a joint pc»yers agreement. He is also the water bolrd attorney. Beemer said, "\Ve have enough billings outside the city that we could really get screwed up." · ~ Alfred Hasty told councilmen thit he was disappointed. "You fellows haven't done your own homework because you don 't agree. I haven't learn· oil · anything." The group parted amiably with tne city agreeing to furnish more figures to the water board. However. it seemed the city was likely barking up tile wrong board. Beemer quipped, "You fellows have had the problem for eight years. You di$i't expect to solve ii tonight." om z;c u --• sccaee •• DAILY PILOT·t tlfl'""" Drillers Drilling Crewmen put state Division of Highways mobile drill rig to work probing under Pacific Coast Highway near El Morro School. High· way engineers this pasl we~k have been seeking th~ cause of some slumping in the highway. Laguna Bowlers Clubhottse Plan Over New Hm·dle Plans for constructing a clubhouse for Laguna Beach lawn bowlers moved a step ahead Wednesday as the City Coun- cil appro\'ed modificallon of its lease agreement wilh the bowlers to accept a new site for ttle ·facility. On recommendation of the planning commission. the council approved a site at the south ·end of the Heisler Park greens and reviewed new plans for the clubhouse prepared by architect P~ter Ostrander. The planning commission had rejected plans prepared for a site oceanward of the greens because or interference with the view across the. park. Tnitiation or the project now depends upon financial arrangements to be agreed upon by the members of the Lawn Bowl· ing A'ssociation. _ Hope wa s expresseartfill the facility ,1 will be completed in time rOr Laguna to host players in a national tournament in September. Closure of UC . Asked by Groups LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two conserva- tive youth groups are demanding that the University of California, described by them as the setting for recent "abortive Bolshevik uprisings," be closed down. In statements made here Thursday by Scott Winchester of the Orange County Young Americans for Freedom, he al5o called for abolition of property taxes and "separation of school, media , church and state." His views were shared by Frederick Young and Paul Croshier of Santa Bal'- bara County's Committee Opposing Big- otry and Racism in America (COBRA). Young and Croshier both are sophomores at UC Santa Barbara. Winchester asserted the government is the basic enemy of the i)eople. adding: .. . . __.. . .. - Frldat, Mwclt-6, 1970 L DAILY PILOT :! Hotel Zo.ne Necessary? Littfe.Response for Main Beach Plans By BAllBARA KREU!ICH Of 1M Oa!" Pli.t lllft Ponderln1 the lack or response to press releases seeking proposals f r o m devek>pers for a revenue-producing hotel· coriference center on the Main Be.ach, Laguna Beach c\ly councilmen speculated Wednesday night that lack o( an official hotel zone might be 3 drawback. Commenting on guidelines prepared by Mayor Glenn Vedder for the information of Interested developers, Councilman Richard Goldberg said, "We should thank the mayor for working to a&semble this information, but I have a feeling we may be putUng \he c a r t before the horse. .. Anyone interested in this would want r: to know more ~Peellic det.ails and we are not now In a position to give them these, partly because we have not yet estahllsh· ed a hotel -motel ione. I feel the council should make up Us mind to develop a hoteJ.motel zone and Instruct the plan· nlng commlsslon to pursue this. We have many qualified people to give us the benefit of their experience ." HITS STALEMATE Councilman Joseph O'Sullivan noted that a previous attempt to develop a hotel wne ordinance reached a stalemanle because of lack of unanimity. The ordlnance, after going into five drafts, was shelved pending completion of the general plan revision. "Possibly we should wait," O'Sullivan suggested. Bernard Syfan of the Chamber of Com· merce land use planning committee said he. would second Goldberg'& proposal. "If we' start now to 1cUvate.'the wne call attention to a communk:1Uon we couldn 't possibly finish ahead of the dlrett.ed to the council by the Taxpaym' planning report," said Syfan. "There's no Association, of which he Is president, excuse to delay. PuttJng off Is the reason noting the need for an expanded tat.base for our problem; if we 'd had a hotel iotJe in the community and urging speedy five years agoA we'd have fewer (!seal estal;>ll5hment ol 1 hotel•motel r.one. problems now. , .. The -®UnCil unanimously adopted Councilman Roy Holm std~ he, tooj Goldberg's motion to request the p1ann- could see no C-Onfllct becau,\e e genera ing corilmisslon to initiate proceedin&!l to p!a~ !_epor~ would be In long befo~ea ~develop a hotel·motel zone ind a aeeond zoning ordinance could'De complet d. motion requesting Wheaton to proceed b}' DIRECT APPROACll dlrect"COntacts to sollclt devtilopmeni of a "There are people in the community 1'!aln Beach hotel facility. who have volunteered to make a direct Guidelines presented by Vedder for the approach to major hotel chains," uid Information or pemns lnqutrtng •bout Goldberg, "but I don't know i£ we'd know such 11 development Included the folJOw. what to tell them." ing: Vedder said he understood various Financial -Developer to have b1plt groups had been studying the. feasibility AAA finaneial st.anding and post cotn. of a Laguna hotel development but "these· pletlon bond. Lease agreement to have things are kept pretty much under bcue rent plus percentage of gross added. cover." AeatheUcs -Structure to ~ b'e "We ·all agree we have to do something • ae!theticatli appropriate. and coordinate to spark up our tax lase,''. gald Goldberg. with park de.sip; develop~~ lo be •·1 feel we should go out after It -not compatible with future character.of \11ait." doWntown basin: local architects to be. Cowicilman Charlton Boyd agreed. consulted on these point!:. "\Ye could ask Mr. Wheaton (city Physical -Development to be within n1anager ) to go all out and seek out in-city property bounded by Boardwalk, El !crested people who could present a Paseo, Laguna Avenue and a line 200 feet developme11t concept," he suggested. north of Laguna Avenue or a boundary \ Boyd said he also would like to have determined by 1 'projection of Forest the Planning Commission pick up the CH· Avenue seaward ; city bulldlng code. in· O zone (commercial hotel-ocean} again. eluding parking requirements \o be The new "ocean" designation bu been · followed; city recognlus need l6 tnereaR added to specify that the zone Is hJghway cum r1dlua near the Shell sta· developed ell'pressly for the are.a between tlon. Coast Highway and the ocean. Tlme -Plans approved and eon· NOTE D NEED strudi-On 11\arted durinC 1111-72; facility Council candidate Edward l.AmrrUle to in optratlOn 1972-73. .. •·' ' . ' "The abortive Bolshevik uprisings staged by taxpayers' money at the university "ill no longer be tolerated ." Instead, the ~year-old dental supplies salesman suggested that parents send their children to private schools. Plymouth thinks when you pay close Laguna Council Orde .. rs Amendments to Sign Law to $2,000 for a car, you're entitled to nearly 50% more brake lining than Maverick! More slopping power at your command.l)u51fr'5 safety Slory'begin.< with its 15.3.4 square iJicl\es of effective '>rake lining area. Stacked up a~t \.faverick'• 106 ·~ inches, 1t adds up '<> plenty of braking authori ty when you 1eed il But.thars Only the start! added luxury of torsion bar suspension up front instead of coils like you get on most cars. A gas tank thars protected by the trunk floor. instead of a gas tank gives you 16% more ~than Maverick, 5 ~ oeating instead of 4 and nearly half again as muCh trunk spaa!. More oolors, more options, mire Laguna Beach city councilmen Wednes. day night followed up a Tuesday study aession on sign ordinance modifications by officially instructing the planning commistlon to prepare n e c e s s a r y amendments. The planners are scheduled to work out Wordlng of the amendments at a Monday evening meeting in time for action by the council at an adjourned session \Ved· nesday, March 11. With modifications ortlclal\y under way. tht city stiff will be inslnlCted to administer the ordinanct as If they were al~ady In effect, although actual a~ tton will oot come until after public hear- lnp have been held. The maneuver wu decided upon to ~It bu!lnes.s firms to bring their signs ' into conformity by tne April 15 deadline without losing advantages given by the ntw amendments. '.J't)e modifications concern placement of' pole signs, methods of measuring &.lgn area and distance• from side propoerty Unu. ·Minor chqel ID wmlllls fl - pertaining 00 shopping centers1 00 allow more flexlblllty in signing, also will be. made. Councilman Charlton Boyd asked that lhe planners also "give due consideration to aesthetics." "That's rather nebulow," said COUn· cilman Joseph O'Sullivan, "but t hope they wou1d do so. Howe\•er, "·e don 't want them to get the Idea "''e want to re· quire any aesthetic rtview." Boyd said he wouldn't want that either. Sign man Earl Secord uid he was working with the. commiulon on oeeded modifications and urged that tbe number of such changes be left open. ''We can settle It easily Monday without making a federal ase out of It," said Secord. "We just nl'ftl to clarify and be speci fic." "Many people already have put up new signs confonning to the ordlnanct as it is," said councilman Roy Holm. "We don't want the Planning COmmlssk>n to undertake any general review of lhe ordinance." The council voted to ask the com- mission to concentrate on five 1pecUic problem .,... u ort&Jn.tly auauled. 1brsion bar suspension. Ouster olfm the · that is the trunk floor. Bonded brakes for extra-safety. A longer wheelbase. Bigger tires. And 352 pounds of extra weight · for stability! More hmsepower. Duster of eveiything. So order Younelf a Duster-the one with safety lhars built-in. DUSTER Plymouth makes it! FOR A DARING DEAL-SEE IBAT DARING YOUNG MAN-YOUR PL¥MOlllll DEALER-lUDA\1 ,\ j ' ' I , Following an altercation b~ tween two young womep over the t reatment of animals, Nevada Chief Justice Jon Colli ns ~'as beard to cominen~ "It is pretty re- vo1Ung when one person in the course of a tight bites off another person's ear and then spits it oU'l." • Siz New York button packers were buried under hundreds of thouaands .of buttons· when a metal 1t.orage shelf collapsed and fell on them. Police and coworkers dug them out and three had to be treat~ ed at Bellvue Hospital for back in- juries. · • Ca.auaUy sipping a glass of cham- pagne, ;azz trumpeter Al flirt t-Ol.d newsmen that he has resumed pl.ay- tng his horn just 01!4! month after he was hit ;n the lip by a brick at t.he Mardi Gras. The cut required 16 stitches, but the trumpeter fee!s welt ~nough to play in his band even though he cannot hit his full range of notes. • At the opening of the WedJ)esday session of the Iowa State Senate, . MethOdist minister Larry Suggs gave this invocation, "From parli· safl detiate' ahd"fii1nl'sters'who ptaf for us until we're tired, deliver us Oh Lord, Amen." ~ \Vhe n f,frs. Christene ~fc­ Donald, 75, ?'eceived. a tax bilt for one cent at her Ont.aria, Canada, home !he went down to r the town office and in3isted the f clerk take a check fo r the amount. "It may cost me 15 cents to write the check," she said, ,..but if they are so Izard up for pennies, I'll feel safer witli a canceled check." • Lett.er writers ~o \.Varsaw, Per land, newspapers have complain· ed of a painful shortage of toilet 6eats in the city stores. A reporter of the paper Zycie \Varzav.•y did some digging and found that he had to go to half a dozen depart- ment stores before one v.1as found. 0 If a "'ant ad in the Neu• York Times can be believed. someone 'vill soon be out of the dog breed· tng business. The ad read, "Ger- man Shepherd pups for sale, beau- tiful coloring. very reasonable (I've had it )." Raps Gov enaor Thurmond,,Blasts Attack on Bus LAMAR, S.C. (UPI) -Sen. Strom Thurmond (R.S.C.), charged today the governor could have called for federal assistance tii dealing with a howling mob of whites that attacked and overturned school buses carrying Negro students to their classrooms. A spokesman for Gov . Robert E. McNalr, however, contended a fede~al marshal sat in bis car and watched wbtle the mob, armed with chains and ax hand les, attacked the bu.ses. "Tbe spectacle (lf a school bus filled with students being attacked ·by adults has sickened South Carolina and the na- tio'n,'' Thurmond said in a statement released in Columbia. ''The situation in Lamar was tragic." ' The crlUcism by Thunnond, who once headed a political revolt ovt!r civil rights and s~tes: rlghls, came while school of- ficials scheduled a special meeting to deal with the reopening of Lamar High School, closed by Tuesday's violence. The Darlington County School Board met ThurSday afternoon but reached nG decision on reopening the school. Another meeting was scheduled for Monday. Twenty-eight men, Identified by photographs taken during the melee, have been arrested in the mob action. Authorities said aome women may be charged in ·the violence 110 fierce officers had to use tear gas and nightsticks to rescue the student!. Thurmond, outspoken critic or "fon:ed school busing, 11 said he believed recent fed eral · rulings on school integration are "unjust and should be vigorously op· posed" but only through legal avenues. He de£ended the federa l government against criticism of laxness In law en· forcement, saying the responsibility £or preventing the violence rested with McNair. • ' "lf with all' the resources at his {McNair's) command he vtas unable to control the actions of a mob of 150 people then, of course, he could have officially requested federal assistance," Thurmond said. Wayne Seal, McNair's news secretary, U.S. Turns Over Largest Port To .South Viets SAIGON (UPI) -The UnlW States to- -da)'-tiitnea Over Jttf biggst port facllity ln the Mekong Delta to South Vietnamese troops, giving the Saigon government responsibility for most of the supplies coming into the region by sea. The 134-man U.S. 440th Terminal Transfer Company was reduced to a skeleton crew of 30 men who 'stayed around temporarily for what the U.S. command called "documenting and securing U.S. cargo" at Can TOO, 75 miles southwest of Saigon. The withdrawal of U.S. troops from the port at Can Tho, at 81 ,000 the delta's big· gest city, further expanded South Viet- namese responsibility in the nation's southern quarl.er, already the mtist Viet- namized area in the war zone. The U.S. 9th Infantry Division has already withdra'4'n and only scattered groups of American units and advisers remain in the dell.a. where seven million of South Vietnam's 17 million pe<iple live. The Can Tho port has two landing ship slips and a pier capable of handling t\\'O barges and ulility landing craft. Ground righting remained at its lowest level in four months and the U.S. com· mand reported eight shelling attacks overnight. Allied spokesmen sald one ci \·ilian was killed and 47 others \Vounded Thursday r:ight in a guerrilla mortar ·attack:. said the goveroor had telephoned At- torney General John Mitchell to complaJn that t.ne chief U.S. marshal for South Carolina, Elliott Williams, &at in his car while state police battled the mob. Senate Defeats I Southerners' Vote Proposals From Wire Services WASIDNGTON -The Senate defeated, 58·19, Friday the first of a series of amendments by Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., (D·N .C.). to soften the impact on the South of the 1965 Voting Rights Act • Ervin's amendment would have chang· ed the automatic coverage formula so that the law would not apply to states or counties in which SO percent or more of the voting age population was reglstered even if less than 50 percent voted in the 1964 presidential election. The amendment, aides of Ervin said. would have led the effect of taking 10 of the 39 counties in North Carolina to which the act now applies out from the coverage formula . The act now automatically applies, in addition to the Nprth Carolina counties, to the stat.es of Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, P..1isslssippi, South Caroli~a and Virginia. But none of these states would have been affected since less than 50 percent of their voting age residents were registered in 1964. Ervin called up his first amendment art.er temporarily laying aside another that would have based the law 's coverage formu la on the 1968 rather than the 1964 presidential election. Its effect would be to leave only Georgia and South Carolina covered In their entirety. The Southerners ended four da ys of talk against Ute measure long enough Thursday to permit a test vote on Senate sentiment They were soundly defeated, <t7 to 32, on their move lo kill the liberals' measure. Written by Republican leader Hugh D. Scott Jr .• of Pennsylv ania and Sen. Philip A. Hart (0.Mich.), the libe.fals' proposal ta a substitute (or the ·adrnlnlstratlon- backed and House-passed bill, which Southerners would vastly prefer if some ·regt!lation must be j>asseO: . - Today's vote was on an amendment to the Scott-Hart proposal changing the "trigger" which would have s e n t regtstran aouth, allowed the attorney general to pass judgment on new state or local laws and outlawed Uteraey tests and other "devices" which mJght be used to prevent &0meone from registering to vote. Jobless Total Rises to Peak .For Four Years \VASHINGTON (UPI) -Joblessness mounted to 4.2 percent of the nauon·s labor force in February, highest level in more than four years, the government announced today . The unemployment figure for January was 3.9 percent and the February percen· tage was the highest since it stood at 4.2 percent in October, 1967. In addition. the Bureau of Labor Statistics reported that the average fac· tory wo rk week dipped to the lowest level since January, 1962, and overtime earn· ings fell from an average of 3.3 hours in January to 3.2 hours for February. Claai1a Gutag A sign unfurled outside Thompson Hall at the University of Wash· ington shows the condition of the building after about 500 students, led by the Black Student Union, chained themselves inside. The siege lasted only a fe\V hours. POW's Wife Gets Tape Of Husband in Vietnam PARIS (UPI)-P..1n;. Raymond Schrump of r~ayetteville. N.C., left ror home today, carrying with her messages rfcorded and handwritten by her army hul!iband, held prisoner by the Viel Cong. Mrs. Schrump boarded Pan Am 115 at 1%:30 p.m. (3 :'1 a.m. PST) and was sched.. uled to arrive in New Yark at 11 :30 a.m. PST. She"·said she wanted to be with her family as soon 8.'I poss.ible. The attracUve blonde matller of three Laos Chief Asks More U.S. Arms VJENTIANE (UPI) -Prince Souvanna Phouma said today he is asking the United States for mare weapons and equipment so his men will be at least equal to invading North Vietnamese troops in firepower. He r?peated to a news conference an earlier disclosure that he might be will· ing to ac cept North Vietnam's use of the Ho Chi ~linh Trail if Hanoi withdraws its other forces from the rest of Laos. The current Communist offensive, Souvanna said, involves guerrilla troops "superior in numbers and armament" to hls 0\\-11 and he wants more American aid "to a~ least equal the firepower of the enemy." The Laotian chief of state refused com· ment on unconfinned reports that if he accepts the North Vietnamese presence on the Ho Chi Minh Trail and the Com· munists withdraw from other areas, then he will ask the United States to stop its bombing campaign. had the messages in her handbag which provided her with the first evidence that her husband was still alive in enemy hands. She received the tape recording late Thursday from a cori'espoDde:nt of the French Comunist newspaper L'Humanite, Madelene ruffaud, and the handwritttn · messag~ fr-0m Viet Cong diplomett afi,er. a one hour 15 minute meeting early Thursday morning. 1'-1rs. Schrump. the first relative of 1 prisoner held by the Viet Cong to receive any coml)lunication from her hmband, was obviously shake n and near tears when she heard his voice for the first time since bir;: capture 21 months ago. "Yes, tha~ was my husband's voice," Mrs. Scbrump of Fayettesville, N.C .• said. "There were sentences he was read- ing that at times he seemed to stumble over as though he didn't want to read them. yet he did." The message Mrs. Schrump heard was the same as the one she received in her hUsband's handwriting from Viet Cong diplomats ·after a meeting with them Thursday. LiJte so many other wives, she had come to Paris to try to find out whether her husband was a prisoner in Vietnam. Madame Madelene Riffaud of L'Human~ ite provided the tape for Mrs. Schrump. She said she got the tape from a young Viet Cong officer who guided her on a news gathering assignment in Vietnam. Partial Eclipse To Be Seen Here Weather Dry Over Nation Metal Workers Won't Bargain LOS ANGELES (AP) -If tlouds aren't too thick, Californians will be able to view a partial eclipse of the sun lasting about two hours Saturday morning. The Weather Bureau to d a y predicted partly cloudy weather throughout the state. for eclipse day. Throughout California. the eclipse "111 begin about 8:30 a.m. with mid· eclipse -the point of greatest darkness -at 9:26 a.m. Light Sno1.v Blankets Arizona Border City of Douglas WASJilNGTON <AP) -The Sheet 1'-tetal Workers Unlon, blocking set- tlement of the nationwide railroad dispute, refused today to come tG a bargaining session called by the Nixon California kvin.rn t•llfor11!1 l'tltd 111• wutl\tl' todtv w!!l't 1!ltl'tHv w1rmtr '•"'Dt'· •'u•tt 111 mot! •rMI. Thtrt "'11•• tllllv llO'll'lf,IY wlll(ll ttl>t<:ll llV t roulld ll'tt l'\Ollnltltlt ind lilt wlnd1 will 6Kt,tll $11\tr!ltV, II will to. ltl• ll't•ovvl't ~.f!u•!ltv If! l,. AnMlel t<ld vklnllV wltl't t llllhllv wtrm.r 6.f~I tl'ld v111rt wl»d1 netr 1i. C:t,,.,.,,.,1 todt Y Incl I011l91't!. Temperature• adminlstrat.ion under a strike delay Htlfrl L.tw l'l'ft. ordered by Coogress. .-,ltlllclut l"fNt An¢ttorttt ""'"" illlktn!lt1cl 11111m1rck 8o!t1 "''~ fl'<rWl'l!Ylll• Cl!lc1110 Cln<111"t1I " " " " " .. • " " " " n • • ., " " .. " " J .W. O'Brien, vice president and chit£ negotiator for the union, said the Nixon administration's request to Congress for a forced labor settlement has ruined any chance that the administration can help reach a voluntary settlement. Southern California will get to see a darker ,sun than north state residents. with Los Angeles getting a 36 percent eclipse. San Francisco only a 27 per· cent blackout. The total eclipse band sweeps through a large area of eastern states. . - Fjght Over ' Vote Voiding . WASHINGTON (UPI) -The un;ted Mine Workers union vowed today to fight a government suit to overturn the UMW election. Labor Secretary George P. Shultz, _ through the Justice Department, bl'(l\Jght suit In federa l court Thursday to void the Dec. 9 election, won by incumbent presi- dent W .A. "Tony" Boyle over the smce.. murdered Joseph A. "Jock " YablOnski~ The UMW's general counsel, Edward L. Carey, said the union ·would vigorously . . fight Shultz' suit. He charged that Shullz, "by his decision to seek. a new election, disenfranchised 81 ,000 people who voted ~for Tony Boyle." YablOnski 's runn!ng mate in the 'elec· tion, Elmer Bro't'n, said the courts should not simply void the election but reverse the announced result and declare him president, since Yablonski is lead. Brown said at his home in J\.1ingo Coun- ty, W. Va., that an in\'estigation of the election would show "That a new election is·nol necessary but rather that I shQUld be appointed president." Shultz also asked the couru ta require the union leadership to keep an exact record of all expenditures of union money. Shultz. in :asking the courts to order a new election, accused the UMW of 'A-idespread lrregularities and of failing ''to provide adquale safeguards to insure a fair election." Yablonski had accu sed the UMW of similar irregularities during bis campaign and after the election. He was slain with bis wife and thelr daughter on New Year's Eve al their Cl!rksville, Pa., home. A federal grand jury in Cleveland has since indicted five persons, including the president of a UMW local in La Follette, Tenn., on con- spiracy charges in the slayings. . Murdet charges also have been filed aga..in.!t four of those per~s . in Pennsylvania, and the Cleveland JUrJ 1n- dlcted a sixth person Thursday for allegedly perjuring himself in an air pearance before it. * ,{( * Yablonski Ca se Jm·y Finds Fund In UMW Accounts .. CLEVELAND, Ohio. (AP) -A federal grand jury which has alleged a murder- for-hire plot behind the slaying of Joseph Yablonski says the United Mine Workers had a secret committee which main- tained a $20,000 fund. The grand jury. trying to determine who fmanced the slayings or Yabkinski, a union executive board member, and his wife and daughter, indicted a 5ixth person Thursday. He is Dillard Couch, 56, a retired miner from Bledsoe, Ky., accused of perjury when he testified earlier about two checks totaling $935 he rec~ived from the committee. "I'm sure they're trying to insinuate... the thecks may have been used for the murder fund ;' said a UMW District 19 .field representative. \\'illiam Prater. "But that is not true. There is nothing illeii:al about the expense checks." The Couch indictment brought lo lisht the existence of a secret 22-member research and information committee ln District 19. Y>hich cavers Tennessee and part of Kentucky. Prater said checks Couch received ·were to pay his expenses as a committee member. Minorities Claim ing Attacks on Ri ghts NEW YORK CAP) -Negro, Tndian. Puerto Rican and ~texican civil rights leaders charge that there exists "a ~alculated, aggressive and systematlc ef· fort in the present national ad · ministration to wipe out all the civil rights gains made in the 1950's and 1960's." Among the 21 signers of the statement Thursday were \Vhitncy ~I. Young J r , executive director of the National Urban League ; Dr. John A. Morsell, assistant executive director of lhe National Association for lhe Advancement ol Colored People : Dore Schary, acting chairman of the Anli-Defamstion League of B'nai B'rilh. and Dorothy Height. J>l'esident of the National Council or Negro \Vomen. T"-credklto!I Civic CM•~• "ltl't w11 19, l!Y• d0!9 retS Ibo.. T~11r1d••'1 mtil""""'· T~ Pf'l'!l!c!t'd 1-w11 •! SOVTl-IEllN c ... Lli<OllNIJ. -1'11r ffl,,,,..tl! S11Ur~v. 511.,,!IY w1r"'f' d•V• ll>OO! t•Ul! Loe.I tuflY lle•!,,1•1\1" wl"4i11 ~•OKllll\I" •round """""'•1n1 "'""'" Ots MolMt "'"'" ,..1 ...... 11:. l'ort WOrlll ,.,..,,,. " " " • " " " ... " Negotiators for three other AFL-CIO shop craft unions did attend thf.'. mttUng, called by Asst. Secretary of Labor W. J . M Usery . Pat Heads Dome l05 ANGl!"LCS Altl!A-l't!r "''"'Oii ----i.tu.rOtl'r s.lltl>ll\' Wl!1'rli""-61Y•. L«~l- 1, WI...,., btiqw c.t,,YOnl. LOW' ne1r as, Hltll i<rld.tlv 1'0. f'OtHT COt\l(fl'1'IOH~To-Mrx1e"1'f l<Ml:OEJl-"""11y ll1n1 v1rl1fllt w1no1 i.i.,n!llll 1no mornl"t hour• bKM11nt .,........,v • to ll _,., r.. '"""°""' l'rid" •nd 5.11\trdal' i...1 loc;tl norf!I te _.,.,.,.., Wlndl 10 lo 711 mPI! bllow CIMllll Ut>VOl'll. F1lf" WHllotr, $119/!lly ·-"''""· IOtlTHttltN N!VAOA -SvNiv 1111! 11)fttfry .. ,,_ Frldtv and S.turdev, WltWf'V 11 llf'l'ltl llll'tutll l'•kl•v. Hlol't1 jlf'ldt' U to fl. COAST•l AHO IN11EtltMl!"01.-,l l! VAl.L.EV$-$j!,1""'° t"" 1tlol'ttty w1•mtr l'rlMY .tnd Slfurd•r. ~llY wJNh' IDflW UllYOl'lf., "fltll Frllll\I" 43 fO n. MQUHTA/fll A!itlAS -Su111W 1ftd 1 ltrtle _,..... '1-•iOW 111(1 $11\l•!I••· ~I Mtv llOl"tl!tiltl wl/ICIJ, Su""l' lodl'!'. Lit!>! ¥tlltbt w!nd1 11i9~I t ll(f rnornl"I "°"'' beeomlnv w•1ltrl• lG lo II k1lols lfl ttle_. lodtr tPld k!11•clty, Hitt! IOdl\" !)Oler 6S. Co.1111 lt1'1Hf"ttll•u ,_ '"""' ., 10 ~. lnl1"4 l'°"'1>er11UrtJ ftft91 lroM «I IO 12-W11tr 1...,,penill/r1 ff. Srnr, ~'"""· Tides tl)d1v but n1M -••• ftlll11t In IP\f -'Ml'ft M~t ,.,_; 11'1o·.vtf'I tM llllllMlortl>owtl'1 °""'"" ff'Ol'l'I ltwt •"" MIMQUrl to Ttllll lflll "11tri1 N .... Mulco. SOullltt-' Arlroo.. ht'll I lltf\I .- 111!, wl!I! ono lnclo .., !flt ef'OllllCI 11 t<arttort •'10 OOl>ll-. l'tltlO•,·V ----~'i,o':,.,,.="tt=•"'"'~"'~"'"';."''<'°" ~ llOl1'I ·~, •• m. J.I Ptelfk: Coe11, !lilts w. ... (IOI.Ill• ·~ 3 Ot '·"'· 0) mt tt~lt•n 1t1tu 1f1tr •1111 tllultd•r w•ll! 1!!1!11 (ltt l'!llf !ipdt v. SATU!tDAV Htl9!\1 H-'11IU K1111.111 C11Y l.t1 Vtt11 l-01I ~l'tftltl Mi11111 Ml,,,,,..POlll N .... Orlt1111 M.,..Yl)flc Horth Plltte 0.kl•Nf Oki•"'°"",,,., ........ l"llM !totl"'I Pno Ro!M1 P'-tl!w Pllllbv~!t P0<1l•'IO lt11>l0 C!l\f "td l luft ,_ S•cll"'tn!o 5t tl L .. ~. (llv l'°"'fltr•tvr11 _, 01e~11111 tt"°"""' l •n Ol"o .. " " " .. " " .. .. " .. .. .. n .. .. " " " n " " " " " .. • .. " " • " " • .. " .. " .. " " .. .. " .. .. .. " " ~ " "While we have personal respect and affecUon for 1'--lr. Usery. it ls our judg· ment that the events of the past 48 hours •1' have tffectively destroy~ his usefulness .n --u-a--meaialOt in tlils dispute,"' O'Brien _,, eatd 1n a statemenL I ... Air Aid Study Si:t ,. Guards1nen Recalled ... ... Visits Peaceful Ozark CaniJJUS SPRJNGFIEl.D, Mo. (UPI) -First Lady Pat Nixon wiods up Mr flve~tate college tour today after a visit to the School ol the Qzarks, wbere there are "no anUwar protests, hippies or campw rebels." aloog~tbt peaceful campus "''ii.hits ghady treu and limestone buildings Jn the roll· lng Ozari countryside at Point Lookout, There were no beards, no minis and no "now" signs to .be seen. The carillon bell." pealed out "God Bless Ame.rlca" as she rolled along an avenue ol Oags and eaclt Nndard held by a student. A fountain: even spewed forth red, white and blue water. ----ffrff-EIHOltl tfilO ~11.a't RJGION$ Fin.I M•~ f !tM llqJ SK!lnd llltll StaM ... 1•JO •oi O• '''"""·'· )OolDl'I\, 1,0 .. ,, •111 Iii 1·1 ••01111 tll,IOiih lt-""Sllll'"l'llntl\tO lt WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate Armed Serviets Commlttee · t o d a y .oi scheduled hearings for Tue$day on Lockheed Aircraft o LI_ttqU!ft o a JI n o more t an alf a billion dollars to T help it fulfiJl ifefense Contracts, including the CM Jct !rampart. The Prtsklent'& blonde wife buds homeward lfttt a fareweJI coffee chat with the traveling press crops. He.r gruel- ing five-day cross country journey to publicize th e work of student volunteers has bc.!n mark by~ancy:. protests and u tra·Setl,U'J y precaut ons. The only demonstration shC saw "'3~ Y.'he.n th~ student Jlrcnghters went lnto action for her . -~ tn.f 1ilftllll" Wl'1'!'1V F ri~Y •!JC Jttv,..,., WI~ rt''°"'" 111ru I'•~ •If. H""' ,.,.... tf .. ff llrtMI' "'· lf'nt M • n __. v1111r .. ....,. .1 .. ''''•·"'· Hb(/(t tltlMI s • .a .,,,,. .. ,, t·P•"'· ._It l:tl 11 m. .. w11 (1110 Ill ll'tt ft(!f!ll C:""!lll f!lltt. $.Ntlt• 1E1rl',o mornlnl le"" NI"'" fl"Olll 14 Sl'Oll1nt btl-1-•I ~.fl'lll F~ .. H.0.. It T~I ff ti ktr wu.1, flt, W1at1l110ton " • .. .. .. " " • • • ·----~~~ tt was the "good old days'' for ~{rs. Nixon Tbta&day as &he amlUngly &trolled ' ' "It W3S a beautiruJ day all the day;• th• !irst lady said no<talgte>lly. • l Capistrano's Top Students . Win Honors Three dcnon !<Mirth and filth ....... student. at Palisades Elementary School ln Cap~ano . ~acll ~ye . rt<ctlved honor. for theirwork durln1 the first hall ol lhe school year. Thty are: FIJITH GRADE (acholarahlp) -Bon· nle Brown, Philip Colell'OVO, Debbie Domingues, Cathy Fields, Sally HudSOI), Patricia Johnson, Debbie Lindsey, Gina Sisca, Bryan Vansell, Hril He5', Wendy Shaver, Janet FOM"eSt.er, RacheJ Carley, Willie RoeoU, Kelly Harrllon, Pally Jan· Ion, Roberta Utl and Stuart SJ)eiicer. FIPl'H GRADE (citiumhlp) -Phillp Colegrove, Pa'tricia Jotin!OO, Gina Sisca, -T --..... -- Friday, Marth 6, 1970 More Taxes N~eded Crisis Looming? Local education faces a downhill road if more tar support is not forthcoming, the president of the Capistrano Unilied School District trustees ~Id today. San Clemente veterinarian Dt. Robert P. Beasley sa id educational advances In local schools since Wlificatlon in 1965 "are being btunled by current economic crises.'' He said that because the unified district's first attempt at an override la!tt year failed, the district faces a deepening financial crisis. s DAILY ,JLOT 3 Down the ·Mi~sion I Trail Nig11el Board . . . Backs Override -rScott-Scbmidt, Nell-Hess, Janet Fon-~ ester,, Raebel Carley, .rtm. Forrester, Chuck Volga, Nell Kalou\sla and Mary Lifeguard Tests Slated Sat1u·day "\Ve have been proud of the district's acco1nplishmeots and have made' the publlc a\vare of these successes ," he said, "but perhaps we are to blame because the cilizem of the area do not fully realize the financial plight facing U1eir schools." LAGUNA NIGUEL -The newly ele<"ted board or dlrtttors for the Laguna Niguel Homeowners and Communtif Assoclaflon has endorsed the Upcoming tax override election in the Capistrano Uriified. Scliool District 1s their first of·· nCial act. OAIL Y PILOT SllH P'titl9 Si1agl11g Saddlebacl~e1•s Tuning up fo r their joint concc11. with the San Cle1nente. ~and .!\'larch 18 are Saddleback eoUege singers Bob Yount and Patricia Finn. At the keyboard is choir dir ector Richard Raub. Assessi11g District Ai1s~~l":. . ,, .... To Clemente Slide Woes? By RICHARD P. NALL 01 tN OlllV Plkll Sltff San Clemente cily officials are looking at an assessment district procedure as the possible solution to the ir most recen l. landslide enigma. Councilmen at the 'Vedncsday nh:ht meeting directed City Engineer Phil Peter to plot a map of the area that may be assessed for soil stabilization. He would spell out like ly boundaries and i£ the council proceeds the next step would be determiJ)ing whether a majority of. the property O\vners in the proposed district are agreeable. lf 51 percent op· posed it, they could hall the assess1nent pr.ocedure. "I'm reasonably confident there would be some opposition. I couldn't say if it would constitute a majority but I wouJdn 't be surprised," said City i·tanager Kenneth Carr. He 9dded, "Frankly, genllemen, I don't know or any other way it could be un- dertaken." The problem' dropped in the city's lap Jan. 23 when the slope behind the Eugene Seets home. 717 Avenida Columbo, beca me a sheer 75.foot cliff. The family av.·akened on a foggy n1orn· ing to find that 30.000 cubic yards of earth had let go and slid into the c~nyon below. The cliff edge is eight or 10 feet rrom the rear master bedroon1 and the family since bas lived in the front part of the house which they now can 't sell or rent. Other property o\11ners are in the same boat as far as the marketability of their homes at the 660-fool level. Councilman Dan Chilton· suggested formu latio n or a 1913 improvement· act procedure which would include a goologie survey. Bonds for such a district wouJd finance \York and become a lien agaiMt the property. - The disadvantage of this procedure, !';aid Councilman Thomas O'Keefe, is that it \\'Ot1ld be a debt that the property owners 111ould ha11e to pay off in addition Lo their mortgages. "The properly owner may have a third or less of the equity, the rest is with the lender (L11guna Feder~! Savings and U:lan Associalion)," said O'Kcefe. He suggested th at legal steps be .tak,en ro protect each by the lender reducing ho111eowne.rs p.aymenl~. "I don't tliink the lender should be left out," said O'keef~. Councilman Stanley Northrup ~­ mented that agreement or the people In- volved in an asse.ssment district might 1vell hang on whether the lender wOu\d fu rnish 40 to 50 percent of necessary funds. · Chilton said. "l don't think it is up to us lo arrange the Hnancil)g. this is a preliminary move.'' 1111rs. Sects said she doubted seriously \\'helher anyone \vo uld be \11i\ling to assess· their property without a geologic survey of the area. "I Just feel that the people up there \vould add to the cost or their hom e .. They paid t.01> dollar and they're very ex· pen sive places to live." The Seets home had been on the 1narket for about a,year when the bottom d'ropped out on therii. Fire Losses Take Sharp Drop in San Clemente ·Fire activity in San Clemenle last year took a sharp dip below figures logged for the previous year. Fire Chief Me rton \V. H.i!cketL has reported and dollar losses .slid by $66,421. In Hackett's annual report su bmitted to the City Counci l 'Vcdncsday, San Clemente's tota l fi re ala rms in 1969 decreased over the previous yea r by 18 mponses, despite a rise in first-aid and rescue (includ ing heart aUack and stroke) calls. The recent devastating blaze at the city's landmark community clubhouse dOes not go on the 1969 report. ·The estimated loss of $75,000 from that fire will appear on the report for 1970, which "·ill be submitted next year. The total of general fire alarms during which all the city's volunteer firemen were summ oned also slipped in 1969. When 22 we:-e logged. co1Dpared to the 49 similar calls in 1968. flackett stressed thal the dip in fire damage dollar sums occurred despi te a $2.Hnlllion increase Jn value of buildings in the city last year. In 1969 105! was '38.-le.;:-it·was-4104,606 in.1968. bther noteworthy, drops in fire actlvlly in 1969 include: 'rwo fire deaths in 1968 and none la.st year: commercial occupancies down from three in 1968 l.o one in 'ti9; public assembly building flte alarmi;, one In '68 and none last year:. multiple dwelling alanm down rfrom seven to three and brush and grass fires down from a dozen lo seven. Bul u San Clcmenle. residents aod Ybltors reported fewer fires, their re· questa £or emergency and tirst-ald service last year increased. .Ruu!dta!Gr l!ld ,.,... >lllhnl - from. !OS in 1968 to 120 in 1969, incJ Udlng a tota l of 15 missions by firemen ·using department vchlcles as an emergency ambulance. 11le firemen answered 69 heart attack and breathing difficulty calls last year and 46 the year before. Pill overdose cases were three last year. There were none the year before. Three persons y,·ere charged with arson last year. None faced those charges ,the year before. Hac kett said that Saturdays were t~ busiest days for the department with an average-of one ca ll each Saturday of the year. Thursdays proved to be the days when lhe least amount of calls came in with a lot.al of 35 for the whole year. Electrical shorts and cigarettes caulled the most fires last year, the chief·Silid, A totaJ or 53 alarms were receJved when no fire personnel were on dl!ty,; .241 ""ere loggeJ when one or more (ull·time firtmen \vere working. V.iejo-Lihr-ary- Bid Opening set Bids will be opeued April 6 ·(or the new Orange County library branch In Mission Viejo. Estimated cost of the structure--Is $236,000. The land was donated by the Mi!ision Viejo Co. with the understanding that the library be compatible archliec- turally wllh other buildings In-the 1hop- ping center at 24851 Chrtsanta Drive. Miss ion architecture with a tUe rd aud IWOCO walls WU I~ McMlchael. . FOURTH GRADE (citiienship) -Dee Ann Weibel, Nancy Hess; Tom Conroy, David Ramirez~ Sally Estep, Annett Ebargary and Mark Cable. Biafra Slides· Slated At 'Lutheran, Church A missionary doctor'• color 1Udes. on the "Lut Days of Blafra" will fci'rJh the subject of a seminar program Tuesday at 8 p.m. in Capistrano Beacll's Chrilt·the Shepherd Lutheran Church. Dr. Donald R. Wilson, an Australian Surgeon With the Loma.Linda Univtr~lty Medical Cent.er, will present :bis .photos and his description of four month&' service in the starving nation defeated in the recent Nigerian Civll War. ; Potential lifeguards for the city of San Clemen~e will ' try out for the job Satur- day morning in a grueling series of physical and merital tests. The uptrant guards will meet at the lifeguard headquarters north of the municipal pfer at 8 a.m. for the following test -exercises: Swim 880 yards, 'run 200 yards. swim 200 yards, rescue and tow a "victim" 200 yards, bring him through the sur f to the high-tide line. then again run for 400 yards, swim 400 yards, and run 400 yards more. After the physical parts of the tes t are 011er, the applicants will be gi onevarl testing to determine mental capabilities. Lifeguard spokesmen said the technical criteria for city guards include "excellenl physical condition'' and the Saturday e:'I:· erclses are ample to determine who can qualify. 'fhe doctor, San Clement e's Citizen of the Year ir. 1966, said that Tuesday's SO. cent tax overrlde measure would add $700,000 tc. district income for only the next two years. The measure defeated last year, which \l'OU\d have amoun ted lo an 8.5-cent over· ride. "would have provided only enough more to prevent budget cutbacks which already have occurred this school year." He added that unless more money can be found soon, the trustees will have to cut even furthe r into an already sparse budget. Proponents of the override measure along with school officials have cited a swiftly rising inflation spiral for the need for more money to operate the district. "But we see a dow nward spiral of resources In relation to the . number of children "'ho will look to our schools for education," Dr. Beasley said. Serving on the 1970 board will be Pat Mancini , president, Charles Johnson, vice president, Bob Cmetak, treasurer, Mrs. Wilmr Bloom, $tCl'etary and Dennil BakU, publicity. Other directors inolude Mike 'oaiinan, Dav& Adams, Robert Burnside, Ma.nuel Avila, Biil King, Vince Wlnningboif and Bob Parstns. e Cookies, An11one7 SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Girl Scout. will he ringing doorbells startlni today. They'll be taking order. for their an- nual cookie sale with deliveries made in April. - Proceeds will benefit campaitea and in· vididual troop treuurles. C o o It 11 chairman for the Saddiehacl< Valley is Sandra Halsy of Mission Viejo. Plymouth thinks when you pay close to $2,000for ·a car, you're entitled to nearly 50% more brake lining than Maverick! ~°:~.power al your . . slft's Y(ety.stO!)' begins with its 153.4 square UlChes of effective brake lining area. Stacked up a~t Maverick's 106 ~are.inches, 1t adds up to plenl)I ol braJcing authority when you need it Buttha(s Only·the start! Tomion 1-·IUlpft'llion. Duster offers the , added luxwy of torsion bar suspension up front instead of coils like you get on most cars. A gas tank thars protected by the trunk floor, instead of a gas tank that is the trunk Door. Bonded brakes for extra safety. A longer wheelbase. Bigger tires. And 352 pounds of extra weighl for st.ability! More horsepower .. Duster gives you 16% more horsepower than Ma*ick, 5 passenl>"' seating instead ol 4 and nearly lialf again as muCh trunk space. More colon;, more options, more of everything. So onier yourself a Duster-~ one with safety thars built·in. DUS'l'El{ _Plymouth makes it! . FOR A DARING DEAL-SEE lHAT DARING YOUNG MAN-YOUR PLYMOUIH DEALER-lODA Yl . . ... (.,.,...."" ...... • I' DAILY PJL.01 Following an altercation be- tween two young women over the treatment of animals, Nevada Chief Justice Jd Colllna was heard to comment, "It is pretty re- volting when one person in lhe course of a fight biles off another person's ear and then spits it out." • -Six New York button packers were buried under hundreds of thousands of buttons when a metal 1torage shelt collapsed· and fell on them. Police and coworkers dug them out and three had to be treat· ed at Bellvue Hospital for back in· juries. • Casuallu 1ipping a glass of cham- pognt, jazz trumpeter At Hirt told newsmen that he hat resumed play· tng hi! horn just one month after he was hit in the lip by a brick at t~ Mardf GrC1$. The cut required 16 1titc~s. but the trumpeter fee!s well enough to play in his band even though hf: can11ot hit his full range of 11otes. • At the opening of the Wednesday se1slon of the Iowa State Senate, Methodist minister Larry Suggs gave this invocation, °From parti· san debate and ministers wJm·pray for us until we're tired, deliver us Oh Lord, Amen." 9 \Vhen flfrs. Christene fllo· Donald, 75, Teceived a tax bill for one cent at her Ontario, Canada. home she Went down to the town office and insisted the clerk take a check for the l amount. "It may cast me 15 etnts to write the check ," she said, "but if they are so hard up for panniei, I'll feel safeT with G canceled check." • Letter writers to \Va rsaw, Po- Jaod. newspapers have complain· ed ol a pa inful shortage of toilet .'5eats in the city stores. A reporter of the paper Zycie \Varzawy did some diggi ng and found that he had to go to half a doze n depa rt· ment stores before one was found. 0 lf a want ad in the New York Times can be believed, someone will soon be out of the dog breed· 1ng business. The ad r ead. "Ger- man Shepherd pups for sale. beau· tifu1 coloring, very reasonable (I've had it).'1 FrldaJ, Marth 6, 1970 Raps Governor Thurmond Blasts ' Attack on Bus LAMAR, S.C. (UPI) -Sen. Strom Thunnond (R.S.C.)1 charged today the governor could have called for federal assistance in dealing with a howling mob of whites thal attacked and overtumtd school buse s carrying Negro students to their classrooms. A spokesman for Gov. Robert E. McNair, however, cont.ended a federal marshal sat In his car and watched while the mob, armed with chains and ai: handles, attacked the buses. "The spectacle of a school bu.s filled with 1tudenls being attacked by adul~ has sickened South Carolina and the na- tion," Thurm ond said in a &'latement rtlfase<! ln Columbi a. "The situation in Lamar was tragi c." The criticism by Thurmond, who once headed a political revolt over civil rights and slates right!, came while school of- ficials scheduled a special meeting to deal with. the reopening of Lamar High School, closed by Tuesday's violence. The Darlington County School Board met Thursday afternoon but reached no decision on re-Opening the school . Another meeting was scheduled for Monday. Twenty-eight men, identified by photographs taken during the melee, have been arre1ted in the mob action. Authorities said some women may be charged in the violence so fierce officers had to use tear gas and nightsticks to rescu e the student.!. Thurmond, outspoken critk of ''forced school busing," said he believed recent federal rulings oo school lnl.egratio n are "unjust and should be vigorously op- posed" but only through legal avenues. He defended the federal government against criticism or laxness in law en- forcement, saying the responsibility for preventing the violence rested with Mc Nair. "lf with all the resources at his (McNair's) command he was unable to control the actions of a mob of 150 people then, of course, he could have officially requested federal assistance," Thurmond said. Wayne Seal, Mc:Nair's news secretary, U.S. Turns Over Largest Port To South Viets SAIGON (UPI) -The United State. to- day turned over its blggst port facility in the Mekong Delta to South Vietnamese troops, giving the Salgon government responsibility for most of the supplies ('Oming into the region by sea. The 134-man U.S. t40th Tenninal Transfer Company was reduced to a skeleton crew of 30 men who stayed around temporarily for what the U.S. command called "documenting and securing U.S. cargo" at Can Tho, 75 miles southwest of Saigon. The withdrawa l of U.S. troops from the port al Can Tho, at 81,000 the delta'• big· gest city, further expanded South Viet- namese responsibility in the nation's southern quarter, already the most Vlet- namized area in the war zone. · The U.S. 9th Infantry Divi5.ion has 1tlready withdrawn and only scattered groups of American units and advisers rema in in the de\la, where seven million of South \-'ietnam 's 17 million people live, The Can Tho port has two landing ship slips and a pier capable of handling two barges and utility la nding craft. Ground fighting remained al its lo~'est level in four month5 and the U.S. com- mand reported eight 5helling att.acks overnight. Allied spokesmen said one civilian wa~ killed and 47 others wounded Th ursday r.igh l in a guerrilla mortar attack. said the 1overnor had telephoned At- torney General John Mitchell to C1.1mplaln that lne chief U.S. marshal for South Carolina, Elliott Wlillams, sat In bl$ car while state police battled the mOb. Senate Defeats ·Southerners' Vote Proposals From Wlre Services WASHINGTON -The Senale defeated, 58-19, Friday the first of a series of amendments by Sen. Sam J. Ervin Jr., (D-N.C.), to soften the Impact on the South of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. Ervin's amendment would have chang .. ed the automatic coverage formula 90 that the law would not apply to states or counties in which 50 percent or more or the voting age popUlaUon waa registered even If less than 50 perttnt voled in the · 1964 presidential election. The amendment. aide.s of Ervin sa1d, would bave led the effect of taldng 10 of the 39 COW\ties in North Carolina to which ,..,the act now applies out from the coverage formula.. The act now automatically applies. In adclition lo the North Carolina counties, to the states ()f Alabama, Geclrgia, Louisi ana, ~fississippi, South ·Ca rolina and Virginia. But oone or these states would have been affected since Je53 than 50 percenl or their voting age residents: were registered in 1964. Ervin ca lled up his first amendment after temporarily laying aside another that would have based the law's coverage formula on the 1968 rather than the 1964 presidential election. Its effect would be to leave only Georgia and South Carolina covered in their entirety. 'Ibe Southerners ended four days of talk against the measure long enough Thursday to pennit a test vote on Senate sentiment. They were soundly defeated, 47 to 32, on their move to kill the liberals' measure. Written by Republican leader Hugh D. Scott Jr., of Pennsylvania and Sen. Philip A. Hart (0-Micb.), the liberals' proposal ls a substitute for the admlnl.stration- backed and House-passed bill, which Soolberners would vastly prefer if some ·Jegislatlon must be pw:ed. Today's vote was on an amendment to the Scott·Hart proposal changing the "trigger" which would have sent registrars south, allowed the attorney general to pass judgme'nt on new state or local laws and outlawed literacy tests and other "devices" which migbt be use.d to prevent some.one from registering to vote. Jobless Total Rises to Peak For Four Years WASHI NGTON (UPI) -Joblessness mounted to •.2 percent of the nalion·s labor force in February, highest level in more than four years, tht go\'ernment announced today, The unemployment figure for J anuary was 3.9 percent and the Febn1ary percen- h1ge v.•as the highest since It stood at •.2 percent in October, 1967. In addition, the Bureau of Labor Statistics repo rted that the average fac- tory work week dipped to the lowest level si nce January, 1962, and overtime earn- ings fell from an average of 3.3 hours in J anuary to 3.2 hours for February. , Chaiti Gatag A sign unfurled outside Thompson Hall al the Universi ty ol \Vash· ington show s the condition or the building after about 500 students, Jed by the Black Student Union, chained themselves inside. Tbe si ege lasted. only a few hours. POW's Wife Gets · Tape Of Husband in Vietnam PARIS IUPl )-~1rs. Raymond Schrump al Fayetteville. N.C., left ior ho me today. ca rrying wilh he r messages recorded and handwritten by her army husband. held prisoner by the Viet Cong. Mrs. Schrump boarded Pan Am 115 at 12:30 p.m. (3:30 a.m. PST) and was sched- uled to arrive in New York at 11 :30 a.m. PST. . She said she \\'anttd to be with her family u soon as possible. The attractive blonde mother of three Laos Chief Asks More U.S. Arms VIE NTIA NE (UPl )-Prince Souvanna Phou ma said today he is as king the United States for more weapons and equipment so his men will be at least eq ual to invading North Vietnamese troops in firepower. He repealed to a ne ws co nference an earlier disclosure that he might be will- irig to accept North Vietnam's use of the llo Chi ~1 inh Trail iI Hanoi withdraws its other forces from the rest of Laos. The current Communist offensive, Souvanna said, involves guerrilla troops "superior in numbers and armament" to his o~·n and he wants more American aid "to at least equal the firepower of the enemy." The Laotian chief of stat~ refused com- ment on unconflnned re port s that lf he accepts the North Vietnamese presence on lhe Ho Ch i Minh Trail and the Com- munists withdraw from other areas. then he will ask the United States to stop it.s bo mbing campaign. had the messag es in htr handba1 which provldtd her with the first evidence that her hus band \\'a! still aUve in enemy hands. She rtteive<I the tape recording late Thursday from a correspondent of the French Comunlst newspaper L'Hum1nite, Madelene Rlffaud, and the handwritten messagaJrom Viet Cong di'plomats altu.. a one hour 15 minute meeting early Thursday morning. l-1rs. Schrump, the rirst relative of a p~isoner held by the Viet Cong to re~tlve any communlcaUon from her husband, wits obviously shaken and near te1trs when she heard his voice for the first time sioee his capture 21 month1 1go. "Yes, that was my husband'• voice." fl.frs. Schrump of Fayettetvllle, N.C., said. "There were sentences he was rtad- ·ing that at times he seemed to 1tumble over as though he didn 't want to read them, yet he did . ., The message Mrs. Schrump heard was the same as the one she received in her husband's handwriting from Viet Cong diplomats after a meetlng wilh them Thursda y. Like so ma ny other wives, she had come to Paris to try to find out whether her husband was a prisoner in Vietnam. Mada me ~ladelene Riffaud of L'Hum•n· lte provided the tape for ftfrs . Schrump. She said she got the tape from a young Viet Cong officer who guided her on a news gathering assignment In Vietnam. Partial Eclipse To Be Seen Here We_ather Dry Over Nation Metal Workers Won't Bargain \VASHINGTON (AP) -The Sheet ~1elal \Yorke rs Union, blocking set- tlement of the nationwide railroad dispute, refused today to come to a ba rgaining fiession called by the Nixon administration under .a strike _.delay ordered by Congress. LOS Ai'JGELES (AP ) -If clouds aren't too Ulick, Californians will be able to view a partial eclipse of the su n lasting about two hours Saturday morning. The Weal her Bureau today predicted partly cloudy weather throughout the state for eclipse day. Throughout Callfomla , the eclipse wtll begin about 1:30 1.m. with mid- eclipse -the point of greattst darkness -at 9:28 a.m. Light Snow Blankets Arizona Border City of Douglas Calltornla So.I""'"' C.llforft!1 llH l1lr w.tlllt• 1'Nt'f w!lll 1/ltllll'I' w1r1Nr """""' •hlru In moll 1"911. Tllt•I w•rt tu11Y norttttt1"1' w1""1 n~llll'I' •!'Wiid II•• mounlt1M •nd IM wll!d• wrn 69<':'"" 11111rc1 .... II will b9 le!r 11'"911911 $tlU•dtY !~ L• Att9t tn 1nd Ykln!IY wltfl 1lltihl!'1' Wl""tr 11f.,.. •"d •11\fY wlndt nt1r 11\t c~s IOdt'I' end IO#li.t>t. COLD \, r ..... perature• :~:.~':"· 41 J2 J ,W. O'Brien. vice president and chief All•n•• ~: : negotiator for the union, said the Nixon lkk1rt1te1d JJ ..a administra tion's request to Congress for l!l11m•rck JS J 1 01-. " )1 11 forced labor setllement has ruined any &o1.1"" J& :1o1 chance thnt the administration can he lp lrllW!\IYlllt 1' 4J CMce10 l' 30 reach a volunUlry settlement. Sauthern California will get to see a darker inm th1tn north state residents. with Los Angeles getting a 341 percent eclipse , San Francl&co only a 21 per- cent blackout. 'Ille total eclipse band sweeps through a Jaret ma. of eastern stat.es. Miners Vow Fight_Ove1· Vote Voiding WASHINGTON (UPll -The United Mlne Workers union vowed\k'd•Y to fight a government suit to over~urn the UMW election. Labor Secretary Gtorge P. Shultz. through Ute Justice Department, brought sult In federal court Thursday to void tbe Dec. 9 election, won by lncum~t pre!i- dent W.A. "Tony" Boyle over the sina- murdered Joseph A. "Jock" Yablonski. The UlifW's general counsel, Edward L. Carey, said the union would vigorously fl&hl Shultz' suit. He charged that Shultz, •iby his decision to Sttk a new election, dl!enfranchised 81,000 people who voted for Tony Boyle." Yablonski's running mfte in the elec- tlon,.Elmer Brown, said lhe rourts should not simply void the ele<:llon but reverse the announced result and declare him president, since Yablonski is lead. Brown flaid at his home in !\.1lngo C.oun- ty, W. Va., that an investigation of the election would show "That a new election ts not necessary but raUter that I should be appointed president." Shultz also a.sktd lhe courb to require the union leadership to keep an exact record of all expenditures of union money. Shultz. in asking the courts to order a neW election, accused the UMW of wldesprtad irregularities and of failing "lo provide adquate. safeguards lo insure a fair election." Yablonski bad accused the UMW of similar irregularities during hb campaign and after the election. He was slain with his wife and their daughter on Ne~· Year's Eve at their Clarksville, Pa., home. A federal grand jury In Cleveland has since Indicted five perso'ns, ilicludlng the president of a UMW local in La Follette, Tenn., on con- Jpiracy charges in the slayings. Murder charges also have been filed against four of those persons in Penn~lvania. and the Cleveland jury in- dicted a sixth person Thursday for allegedly perjuring himself in an ap· pearance before it. * * * Y ahlonski Case Jury Finds Fund In UMW Accounts _.CLEVELAND. Ohio (AP) -A federal grand jury which has alleged a m·ura er-._, for-hlre plot behind the slaying of Joseph Yablonski s1tys the United f\1ioe Workers had a secret committee whic.h main- tained a $20,000 fund. The grand jury, trying to detennlne who financed the slayings of Yablonski, a union executive board member, aiid his wife and daughter, Indicted a sl1th person Thursday. He is 011\ard Couch, 511, a retired miner from Bledsoe, Ky., accused Or perjury when he testified earlier about two checks totaling $935 he received from the committee. "I'm sure they're trying to Insinuate the cheeks may have been used for the murder fund ," said a UMW District 19 field representative, Willlam Prater. "But that is not true. There Is nothinc illeA:•I about the expense. c~·s." The Couch indictment brought to light the ex.istence of a secret 22-member ~search and information committee In District 19. which covers Tennessee and part of Kentucky. Prater said checks Couch received were to pay his ex:penses as a commlttee member. Minorities Claiming Attacks on Rights NEW YORK IAP) -Negro, tndian, Puerto Rican and Mexican civil rights leaders charge that there e1lits: "a c1tlculated, aggressive and system1ttlc ef- fort Jn the present national 1td· ministration tn wipe out all the civil rights gains made in the IDSO's and 1960'1 ... Among the 21 signers of the statement Thursday were \\'hitne y ~1. Young Jr., e1ecutlve director of the National Urban ~ague: Dr. John A. ~torsetl, assistant execullve dire(tor of the National A~oci1ttion for the Ad vancement of Colored People; Dore Schary, acting chairman of the Anti·Oefamallon League of B'nal B'rlth. and Dorot.hy Height., president of the Nat ional Council of Negro Women. Tiii t rtdktH C!Yk Ct"''' 111111 Wll 1', 11'1'1 .,..,_ •baVI 11111....,1y'1 """'""'""· Tl'll ..,Hkl...:1 k1w w11 O IOl.JlH'EltN CALll'ORNIA -l'tlr """""" hlllfdotY. Sllfltll'I' Wtm"<ff M YI "*' -·· LOCtl 9\lllV t>O•lltffl., '#lrtdl tWOdt tl'f _,. _,,t1!n1 c:1r.c1nn111 ~1 ,, Negotiators for three other AFL-CIO g:;-;:~1~ ;! ~; shop craft unions did 1ttlend the meeting , ~:;::,,.,, •1 n called by Asst. Secretary of Labor W. J. f'0t1~ ,! ·!: .ot Usery. Pat Heads Ho1ne LOS A.HGl!Ll!S Altl!A-Pt l" tflrtiW" h l\lrMY, llltltll1' Wt'fll'lt" dtn. Lac,I• "'"""""' Mi.w ,._ L-. -d. H""' l'rlMr 1'0. POINT COl'IClf'Tlotl 10 Ml!lO(.IN lOJtOEll~I., lltl'll Y••L.lllt .. 1,,.,. i.tt 11lfPtl •fld _,.1,.. h0ur1 ti.<Ol"l'l"t _,....,., I i. " ~ In 1nemoon1 ,rift¥ f'fld .. 111.-..., but loc•l l'lllrfll tt --"""ti wllldl 10 to JO 1'11111 below wntel ,....,...._ f'tlr -"""· 11~111' .,,_ l'rldn. M)UTHlllN H~AOA -5-'"" tlltlllfV ..... ,......, l'tldl1' 11'111 11111n1 .... Wlfld¥ et lflMl tfW'lllt'lit ,rkl1'1', Hl'111 FtWl'I' U ,.,.._ COAIT .. l. AHO INTfllMl!Ol.ITE VALLEY~i.11111 11~1'111'1' wtr-r ,t,,,_, ~ .. llll'dotW'. l«•!l'I' Wltlf'I' llttow ~~. "''" ,,Id.., ., to n. M0UN1A./N ~ll lAS -""°"' •lld • tn1i. w.,_, l't!Gn •lld k11Ur11.,. LKtt 91/l,., Mr11'Mt1I wind,, IHll'ltlOlt ANO Ol$111tT •1Gt0N$ -knn'J' tlld •U•f\llY w1rrntr l'rldt~ ,.,. .. "' ... "· vtllldV "' lllMl ltll'\I "'" ,.¥• Hltftl l'r!Mw I.I to ff 1tlllw v•I• ...,., .., • n ._. ... ,,...,. .. Coatal S"""" f(tdn, Lltl'll Ylr\tbt wind'\ n;tM -,......,,,,.. llollr\ ~Int ""9'11••1• l• to II knoh Ill •""-' IOdn Incl h lvnll1, Hlll'I ..., ''''" U. (ColSlt! 1--t M• ~•l'ltl '""" '' II M. ll'lltl>« """1ttr•NfTI .-.-from 4 to 11. Wt!tr '-"'-1111'11 t'. Sun, ~lo0t1. Tlde1 l'lllQAY ,' t ·U t ,,.,, ~' J:06 •·""· 0' JATUllQAY tlltU llltft ,,,., "" I«-"'°" """''" kin Alwt l ttl •.m. MOc111 flh• J:C 1.11'1, •. ,. t 111 • , J·JO •<n, •• t 1111.m. J• l!Cot Pm, 1,0 l•I• s.n o."'. '"' •:•1 '·"'· :~::· JJ ,, "While we have personal respect and H~111u : : affed.l.oa for Mr. Usery, it is our judg-IC•,..., clft " '1 ment that the events of the past 48 hours t:: ~=~ !~ ~ ·1• have effflcllvt!J dertfoyed-hi& usefulness M1..,.,1 n IS .n u a med iator ln ' W. dispute," O'Brien (} .s. s .......... ,, Mlnne.116111 U II .JI .;a1J ln I •••-en• H ... Orfftnl 1S ll ---H:iU t" Mesi .. "" 11111111 "" .,., -·ltl~'-z"';;,,.----";;--'';;' toof'I' OVI 119111 *MW Wl l ftlllfll In C)toltllftd tflt norll'lct'n M"'"l'I •M •'-"" llft4I Oltl•l'lon'HI Clh' ltlu"'llft'-IA M:(llfTld lro'm 10'0>'1 er....l!t 1...:1 M!uo11rl to 111111 llM tltttrn Ntw 1'1111'1 s ... m., Mt•lftl, P1M1 ltObltl ~! Arlr-11111 1 Hill'tl inow-Pl'lotn!J; t1H, wlltl -lrlcll Ofll ll'lt tt'«ll'MI 11 l'llr.bl,lrttl H'rfktf'll 1"4 Ool/tll \, 1'0<11111(1 1t1r>kl Clh' Li.t'lt rtlft a. .. n Kn111 "'-"°'"' f'.cll)C: (;N it. &kit• _,.. clwdV rn , .... Ml!ttrl ll•tt• llttr rein TllUPl<!I Y wl!ll -clHI!"' 1'"'411. lf!!INl•hll'll .,..,.. 11111u1n• '"'~'"'' 0\11 ITIOll llf !I'll "•llon. t llllovll'I !I Wll COi~ !n !!If -•)'I <•nlrl l •l•••I· G1111 rr>O•~IM IOW1 lt<'lttd llOll'I I~ be!ow 1tB 11 (Htflll '0111:" N.O .. lo ff 11 IUw Wtif, p 11, ""' l llltf ·-Sl<••mt<'I~ 5111 Ll~t Ct!Y Stl'IDI"° SI,, F•1nclKO ~9'Ult llM)!l;•n• llltl1Tlt1 W1Wllnf'811 " a .. .. ,6' Air Aid Study Set " " n N " ~ ... JI ,. JS '' ... ~ .. n 'J 51 ,, n ~s ... " . .. Guardstuen RecaUed ·" •• WASHJNGTON (UPI) -The Senate Armed Services Committee t a d a y ,01 scheduled henrings for Tuesday on Lockheed Aircraft Corp. 's request for a loan of more than half a billion dollars to help It fulfill defense con lract.s, including !ht CU jtL lrllltJ>OCL &t 4J .II * " T ~ » .. . Visits Peaceful Ozark Campus SPRl/'IGrlE~O. Mo. (UPI) -Finl Lady Pal Nixon winds up her five-1t.a te colleee tour today after a visit to the School of tht Ouirks, where there are "no an Uwar protestl, hippies or campus rebels." 'Ille Pre1ldent's blonde wife heAd1 homeward after a farewell coffet chat with the tra\.·elln& preN cropl-Hu gruel· inf five-day C1'08S country journey to publicize the work ol student volunteers hH befll morked by polrnancy, protuta ind Qltri«eurlty precauUon1. It was the "good old d!f'" for Mrt. Nlxoo Thurad1y u aho 1111Wnfi¥ •tzolled alo<1& U1e peac<lut eamJ>U3 with lu llllady trtt• 1nd limestone buildings in the roll· 'lng Ourk countryside at Polnt Lookout. The.rt were no beards, DO minis aod no ''now" signa to be 11een. The ~arlllon bells pealed out "God Bless Am~Jca" as aht rolled along an avenue of Oap and e1~h standard held by a student. A foonlfoln even spewed forth red, white and blue water. The only demonstration she 11aw was when the student flrelighllrl went ln t.o llCtion (or her. "It wis a beau Uful ~If all the day, .. U.. lirll )ldy Aid llOljaJ&lcall~" , - • Susan · to Testify? Miss Atkins,Jan~on Re~nion 'io,ful' . LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -was having· •••lC>nd Choushls minutes conferring w ll h Susan Atklns. whO turned about . repeaUng her· grand P.tansOO across a table In the police informe~ in the Sharon Jury testimony about Mlnsdn Tate slaylngs, held a "joyful" and other members of the attorney's room of the Cenltal jail meeting Thursday with "~1amon family" cult before. 1 County Jail. Her lawyer, accused murtier cull leader jury. Rk:hard Ca.ballero, w a s Charle!! l\.1anson. Now the Deputy District Alto~ present. strikffig brunette must l>QDder Vincent Bugliosi told newsmen "They laughed when lhey v.•het~r t~ follow he.r fonner the prosecution did not know anoth Th boy fr!end .s proposed sltategy whether she 'WOUid testify or saw one er. ey were at their trial. not. happy," Caballero said. He There "'ere indications she .Miss Atkins, 21, ape.tit 71 said the meeling was "a joyful Draft Lottery Ruled 'Fair' by U.S. Judge SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - The draft lottery conducted last December "v.·as in all respects based on random selecUon and was unbiased, fair, equitable and just." ac· cording to a fede ral judge. U.S. District Judge George B. Harris made the ruling Thursday in refusi ng to issue an injunction which would have suspended draft calls on grounds the lottery was not a random drawing. The 11uit was filed by seven young men from the San Franicsco area with draft numbers below 122 a n d birthdays in, the last four months of the year. They contended the fishbowl drawing was biased against those with blrtbdates i n Septem be r. O ctober November aod December. Attorney Joel S ha w n , representing the young men, said experts in statistics - four or whom presented af- fidavits in the case: -agreed that the system was not ran- dom. He said the Selective Service should have sought "teclmical assistance from the myriad government agencies engaged in random sampling." one." As she wa 5 led out of the jall en route to.the women's jail. l\11ss Al.klns was as k e d whether she l\'ould take the ~'itnesa stand aod repeat her gr:isly account of stabbings and shootings last August at actress Sharon Tate's home and the resfdenct of a wealthy groce r and his wife. ''That's none or your business,'' she snapped. Caba1Jero said Manson bad a sharply dillerent philosophy about how the defense should be conducted from the course the lawyer would take. He said if MiS! Alkins could not follow his advi~ he would have to withdraw as her attorney. "She is going io· think about those differences,'' Caballero said. "As of now, J am still her attorney." -C-rash Vi~ti1n Saved Rescuer Dives Into 'Dirty' River PHILADELPHIA !UPI) - Eleanor Harden, 22, dived into "the .dirtlesl water 1 e\'er saw" Thursday \\'hen she saw a car containing an elderly woman plunge into t h e Schuylkill River. "I knew I oouldn't do an ything from shore. Whatever had to be done had to be done in the water," !\.1\ss Harden said. 1'.1iss Harden , a clerk-typist at WCAU·TV, was on her way to work when she saw the car io out of control. It blew a lefl Ure, slammed into a tree. l!i pun around. plowed backwards through a stone wall, and diaappeared beneath lhe swift current, police said. Mrs. Hester Parsley, 7S, .the driver, was rescued. Miss Harden, a graduate of Alma College near Lansing, Mich., pulled her car over to the side and ran to the river edge. "I don't think there was any big decision ," she said. "One guy who was there had an ann in a sli ng, the other guy wbo ~·as there sakl he couldn't swim, so that narrowed it down to me." .. It was awfully Cold. It was cold enough so that it really took your bt:eath away when you got in." The water was about 40 degrees, police said. !\.tiss Harden. a fonner swimming instructor at Elms Camp for girls in Ham- mondsport, N:Y., made her way over to lbe·car In 10 feet of v.·ater. She thought she would have to turn back ~'hen Mrs. Parsley bobbed to the surface. "She was really calm. She got on her back and started toward shore and I just helped her. She did all the work herself." The elderly woman ~·as taken to Women's Medical College Hospital In saUsfac- tory condition . Miss Harden thinks other people would ha ve done the same thing in the sa me situa· tion. "People ore really good." she said. "It's the opportunH y to do gomething and it just · doesn't arrive that often. UPI T•"""' .. • Fr~, M~ 6, 1970 DAil Y Pll.OT e 4 State Troopers lleld NY Gaming Rjng Crt;tcked NEW YORK (UPI) - A Mafia family, }"ho allegedly Westchester and Rockland gambling ring which allegedly acted as "banker'' of the syn· counties where betting may handled more than hair a dicate operation. have been "knocked out." billion dollars a year in bets Daniel P. Hollman, head of on sporting events was broktn the FBI t~m which cracked The four arrested troopers up Thursday 'by the FBI, the case, said the "lake'' from were Identified a Lt. Charles: which arrested II men in· the betting on baseball, foot-Cassino and senior Slate eluding four New York State ball, hor!e racing and other Police investigators E"ugene troopers. -sports events reached as high Curlco, Loo Sabatini and Vin- Also taken Into custody on as $600 million a year. cent Malavarco. , The Ir lhe gambling and bribery Hollman said lhe mulUple superior, State Po 11 cc charges was Nicholas Rattenl, arrests were a body blow to Superlntendenl William E. 68, of Yonkers, a reputed gambling in the metropolitan Kirwan Jr., said the foor ac- member of the Vito Genovese area, especially In suburban led in the role of protect.or." Tivister Hits Florida Arab Amphibious Raid ' Thwarted by Israelis At Spaceport TEL AVIV (APl -Israel ' says It thwarted an Arab Anned Stru&ile Command confirmed the rakl, saying two Israeli helicopters I a n d e d commando.! who attacked a number of Al Falah guerrlllu. BACK TO BOOT CAMP OR BRIG? Marine McDow•ll Tak•n Frcm Plane TITUSVILLE, Fla. (UPI) -amphi bious strike tonight witb A tornado slruck this cily on a raid across the Dead Sea in the fringe of the nation's whlcb three Arabs were killed spaceport Thursday, damag. ' and three were captured. ing 72 ho1nes and injuring There also was fighting on The Israeli spo kesman did not mention the helicopters. seven persons. the Lebanese border Thursday P•ld ,.011101 Adv .. 11 ... .._1 Damage "·as estimated at $1 night where guerrillas hivelr..;,;;;;,;,;;;;;;;;;;;,.-;;;.;iiiii-.-""I million. Installations at nelirby stepped up their activity in re-Robert Shelton Says: Mari11e Deserter Back Fron1 Sweden, Nabbed Cape Kennedy were n o t cent weeks, prompting Israeli "VOTE FOR damaged. warnings to the Lebanese. One Dr. ROBERT SHEL TON "It was a miracle no one l5raell soldier was killed and N.B. CITY COUNCIL" was killed," said U.·Gov. Ray twl} l,'ere wounded. c. Osborne. An lsaraell spokesman said Tu1elve of the 72 homes in interrogation of the Arab the path of the twister were guerril las captured In the levelled. Damage ranged from Dead Sea raid Thursday light to heav y on the others. disclosed 17 guerrillas were to Tom C1wy, '""'· 1001 K.-i;r-Or,, CAIM NE W YORK (U PI ) -Terry l\lcDowell, a l\olarine Corps private v.•ho deserted bool <;!Imp fQr: asylum In S\veden, was laken into custody on unspecified charge.~ Thursday night when he arrived al Ken· nedy International Airport on a jetliner from Stockholm. A spokesman for the 3rd District Naval Headquarter!! here said ~1cDowel1 was tak en to the Marine barracks in Brooklyn. Officers there refus- ed to dlsclo.se any information about McDwell who is believed to be from Illinois. An armed forces police firs! lieutenant boarded the jetliner !ii Kennedy Airport to take the 6-foot-4 l\fcDowell into custody before any of the other passengers disembarked, He had returned voluntarily . The officer refused to reveal any information a b o u l l\1cDov.·eH and woukl not permit newiimen to interview him. McDowell wore a glum expr~ion as he stepped oH the plane to be met by two military policemen. The young private's brown hAir was cut short and he \vore freshJy.Jaundered blue dungarees., ..bro....·n loafers and ;:i yellow windbreaker over a blue open.necked shirt. "come acrOlis in two rubber Pollce LL Emie Bean was boats with 130mm. Katyusha one ol lhe lucky homeowners. rocke!S and special carriers of •·t could see all this debris the kind used In the rocket at:. blol'·ing across the back yard tack on Jerusalem I as t {Y.1ten the storm hit) - slrlps August." of lumber. roofing , everything The spokesman said Ule Red Defector else," Bea n said. guerrillas apparently planned "Me and my wife ran to the to set up a base In the Hebron · , front of the house and looked llills south of the lsraell Sp ills· B. ea"Q out the window." be conunued. capital. .1..IO "nie two houses directly 4ast Aug. 26, guerrillas fired across from us -the tops of three rockets al a Jen1salem MEXICO CITY fUP I) -A them just seemed to disap-hotel. but no one was injured. Soviet dii)Jomat who defected pear. One second they were Security forces later found 13 in l\texico last month has ac-there and the next second they . unfired missiles on a ridge cused lhe Soviet embassy in were gone. five miles south of the city, !his capital of espionage aim· "T dldn1l hear a thing. no some of them Katyusha11. VNITED STATES NATIONAL lrAN.K SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS t t. 1 P.M. MOM.·THUIS. 10.1·P.M. PalDAYS 1M P.M. 17141 '40.5211. Loe..., 111: S.. CMlt Pion, Cothl M .. AHi, VIUI f'1".-Mtllll9ff E. H. LEVAN eel at "total domination" of roar or anything." In Amman, the Palestine Latin America. _:.:::__:~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~lii~iiiil~lii~~~===~~~--:==' Raya Kiselnlkova, 30. told a news conferen~ Tuesday that embassy staff members have "a double role ." As an example , l\t Is s Klselnikova i; a Id , foor members of the Soviet con- sular section 11pend eight hours a week issuing visas and the re5t Of the , time on "clan· destine operations." alaska 15 ALIYEI At "Th• Grand•1t M•ll Of All'' Beginning March 12, 1970 South Coast 'Plua ---RnnlOERSRRY s LB! NOW IN PROGRESS AT ALL STORIS ' , I • t ·• DARY PD..OT EDITORIAL PAGE 1 -r----------:--F~~~==:;;;;:~::::1:::;:~~~~"r~ CouncUmen pacified objectors to certain slcn on!-Maybe indoor eatln( even ts also are the best bet lnance requlremenu by devising a method rof making for uncertain February weather. amendmenll without unreveUng tbe entire· !Hue. Then Jn any case, we tip our beret to all the voJuntaera thlf addressed themselves to the undercroundtng dU· -it was a superlative job. •mm~• dectston to ·te•p evertone ·h•ppy by proceed-South Coast Achievement ln( with the Heisler Pert project and also IDltiaUng a citywide study to determine fUture undergroundlng South 'eoaat s~rvice organizations bad good reason pos•lbllltles Is commendable. · to hold their heads blgb this week following the 13th Beautification groups that had . labored to bring annual Disneyland· Community Service Awards lunch-- down the poles along Cliff Drive, and realized to their eon. • joy that the project could be financed with utility com-Four of the local groups received $500 more to fill" pany resel'Ve fund•, were understandably dismayed by ther their good work~ for comm?Dlty bet~nn~nt. The requests for delay. 7 areas of service were both creative and d1vers1fied. At the sime time, the estimate of 146 years to com· -The Kiwanis Cliib of San Clemente was recognized plete citywide undergroundtng unless ,some better pro. for its "Operation Sweet-talk," a telephone call pr°" cedttre is devised was. to say tbe leeat, discouraging. gram to woundea servicemen aboard hospital shiP1 Since undergroundlng costs ·apparenUy are going for which the.club annually budgets $2,500 .ralsed large- down, a atudy of alternate financing methods for a pos· Jy through sale of American flags. stble 10.year program seems very much in order at The Auxiliary of South Coast Community Hospital this time. had been busy in several areas, including raising W Our B $50,000 for the hospital. lt was cited also for tmpres-e Tip . eret slve tnservice assistance and, educational programs. scholarship grants and varied, contributions to the hos· If the rain hQd held oU for a couple more days ii pita!. would ·have been perfect, but even with a tlownpour The Assistance League of Laguna Beach had many washing out Its grand finale, Laguna's Seventh Annual philanthropic prOjects that are continuing and two new Winter Festival was by all odds the most successful to ones. They offer assistance and social readjustment to date. women released from mental in'stitutions. The impact of the opening weekend,, with perfect The group also provides medical direction and weather, a great parade and·the tremeridously, popular counseUne ~o young people with dru~ problems. Friends new rodeo feature was just the mid·wlnter tonic need-of the TJCI Library -which has given over $200 ,000 in ed. by the local motels, restaurant.I and businesses. funds and acquisitions such as books -also encourag- Many who visited the Art Colony th.al weekend will be es autbOrs and encourages students to build personal back &gain. libraries. . -"-"~ ...... ~wE'~6 J.lELPJNu MR. NIXON STA81uzE THE ecoNoMY/'·-It was fortunate that indoor events, like the ballet The community owes a well done to all these and the highly succwlul dll't tournament were groups. S They Benefit Phvsicians, ., Morticians '""""his Ill Large: Thi'! world teems dJvided inlo those who aren't sick and imagine they are, and those who are sick and insist they aren't; pby!lclana benefit from the fonner, aQd m«t.Jciana from the latter. • • • PoUtics should not be an ocaipiUQP; public -1.atton ohould be; far tbe beaJth of the ctim.munity is lllrtJJ II fm.. portanl as lhe health of the individual, yet nobody would think of 11elec:ting" men to be doctors simply because they prt> claimed themselves d~lor1. • • • Thi man who 1lway1 knows a lhortcut find• hlmtelf on mert ·detours thlD hi• ploddill( companions who take the cust<nnuy ronte, • • • The relativity of .. wealth" was acutely erpressed by Thoreau, when he said: "If you wish to give a man a sense of poverty, give him a thousand dollars. The nen hundred dollars he gels will not be worth more than ten that be used to get" • • • Only if you believe a thing the second time around -after having come lo doubt It -is your belief likely to be grounded in objective realism (those who believe things from birth never really un. derstand them.) • • • Some men feel so proprietary about their awn ideas that if, In a a:inversatlon, you limply restate their own argument with mlnor mod ifications, they will fiercely disagree with what you say, and contradict their o w n earlier pos!Uon. Dear Gloomy Gus: • How come San Clemente'• 1etUn1 a eomput.er and Lasuna Buch doeen't have Ot't? It n'Ught help them flCute where lo put the wi!d<ead !raffle. -D. D. """ .....,. """" """" ..... ... ~,, .......... 1 ..... ., .... ,,_,.._ . .,..., ... ~,.... l'!'hiJ lrrilAtini ~bit tends lo be truer of ..it .. tyled lnltU.Ctuala UWI of aeybody elst.) • • • It'• ~ bow naturollJ' ,,_ru1 most d!ildml an --I they an tall<n In band and given lessons in sracerul deportm~t. • • • Notbine II better tor our character than to have tomeone around (not brtathlna down oae11 neck, of ceune) who doesn 't like us od torcea ue: to rHQ.1nlne our attitudes and actlonl In lhe llpt ol thl1 harsh judgment Un suoh slluaUont, the weak merely succumb to 11elf-plty, the petty try lo retaliate, but the wile gain lnslghl. J • • • Every ~ple imagines that !ti own language sounds "natural" and foreign tongues eound "funny" -and It ls hard to believe that English sounds llkl "unpleasant little news" to so culUvated a Spaniard as Ortega, ar that his regimen far Jeamtng the langu1ge was to "begin by lhnlsllng lhe jaw forward, oim..t clenc:hlng the lft1ll, and pn1ctlcolly Im· mobili%lnc the Ups." • • • Mankind cannot · stand urlorganlzed aodety, wbkti espose1, u1 to peril, or orga.nlud society, whch envelops us in dullness; Ind all pollUci.J conflict Is a struggle lo find an equilibrium between rilk and lalety. Costly Overseas Armies Excepting 1maU task forces in tht Phi!lpplnes and in Latln American revolution&, no American troopa were sent abroad between the MWcan war 1n the 1840s .nc1 1111. tbree-quorten o1 a century. Yet In lhlr period the Untied SUia em- trged as 1 great power, comm1J1ded the respect of other 1reat power&, Ind ltirrtd the caution or potential aggressors, big ind Uttle. This was accomplished et negligible money cost. Since 1917, but partfcularlf sirn 1945, the United States has maintained big armies abroad with costs running to tens Gf bllllon1, without enllsUnc eithtr the sympathy or the re1pect of the outer world. Something has to be wtftnl w:lth this lop-sided equation, and the American people.are gradually beg inning to wonder Wbat ft ii. l'IJRSUANT TO '11111 antal!' lnU In Illa Vietnam -·· while Pmideel ·--oat whatever scheme be bas for di-p..,...~ members of Congrtsl an glrdill( for an opeo debate with tho admlnJstraUon aver the srlm. inert and myleidinl l<veis of <ICCUpatlOD troops In Elrclpe and n>Undabout. The level ii ..,.. JI0,000 ,,,.., aod haln' sabltanUally changtd In Ill ,..rs. It II 1Ubjecl lo unlltllWed ,....11es of rtduetlon, but any "redeoloYmen~" u U.• baloney reads bu ~ trlt!in1. ~lly these troops nte ID be I shield ol wcstarn Europe apfnat lllllslao 1gg:rt11kln, •nd NATO Wll est1blilbed to that end. But lhl1 Ruul•n lhnls~ rcprillm of the CMCb lncunlon, II - an 'ablunlity lo west Europeans who only like lht Yank1e1 for their dollar es· dump value. Despite lhlr dllradlng ad 1-te liluaUG!i. the Wuhlnaton ...., 11 lbal Stele Secntary RDprs and Defe.,. Seer~ Latrd are prtparing: a 1fand. pat aefenae q1lnst congress1onal attack this 11prlnJ Ind IW1Ufler. PRESIDENT NIXON bas -a measure o( aoctptlllct for b I 1 gradaalillm In Vletnam d!lenaaaement, lJOmewhat defl1Un1 the Vietnam protest. Several anti-war Stnator1 (pollUcal an- tqonillt of the Pre1kSent) 1rt now que• uoo1n1 bis 11nctr11y, ••«Till( he ,..ny "lntaftds" a tlvop ltvel of lllO,lleO t.. definitely. Mleal them Is s.iator McGovern, South llokolA. . ~·· l')nlpJ!olaj!Gl>I Comm1Uet bu oplllld --of attack, -l'lllnlhen abraltrtlJ crtllcal ol "Vletnamiladoe," wbldl Mr. H .... ls blini .. a )'arilltJck for Vlelllalll wlthdr1Wlil. -ci-o, Hew York, coned V-tloe a "IP'Ul ~c relaU--· but not a trut poilc7 ol di.Mng.tpl'Ml1t." . Stnltor HUl)lel, Iowa, caDed It 1 "temantic hoQ:." Variolla l>Ubllc ~ -aner ba~ tldront vislte, quetUGn fr VltluamllaUon lfas any mbstlnct lrl.1tle1f, er U a ba1e for hoP.O of endlnt the war. Mr. Hixon Ml heel what may be c.Utd a "le<Olld honeymoon, .... n doves cooln1 fain Uy. Thtte are lien• ft won't endutt bey1IOd tho _, IO!lUll•r. Stranger• in Their Own Dome• Television and the Generation Gap Is there really a generation gap? Ia It a serlou& one? Today I shall 1tgue that there i' a gap, and that it is perhaps more suloua: than any or us realize. Let mt start by defining what I mean by the "&emantic environment.'' The. mnanlk environment is the world formalion and rumors 1t difftrent pltceS or words and lmages"tn which all human of work. Some of t11 circulate in Catholic beings Jive. It ia the environment of news circle1, IOfllt in Protestant. Some read and infonnaUon, beliefs, attitudes, laws, cultural imperatives. that consUtute your sporll car magazines, some read art verbal worJd and mine. A quick way of jouroals, others read comk books. describing the semantic envtronmtnt is For moat of the histoey of the human to aay that tt is that part of the total en: race, the stmantic environment of vlronment which your pet dog lying on childrtn has been created by the.ii' the rug at your feet bas no lnkling af. parl!llll and cloae reloltivt1, who pass on It ii the world of Shakespeare ind to the youn1 their pk:tom: of the world, Moiart and Bugs Btmny and the Beatles; ..._ their value ayttems, their standards of of Moaes and Jesus and Billy Graham: of behavior. As the children groW older, published batting average.!! and the clos-their semantic environment is expanded Ing prices on the New York Stock Ex· by other influences: friends, neighbors, cllanRe; of news from Tokyo and Prague movies, and the 'big experience of school. ud Saigon. The semantJc envtronment Is School• continue the process ~ta the proctuet of that vut network of com-have befUn. munlcaUon whJcb we call clvlllzaUon. IN A WAY WE AU. share a common semantic environment-one created by the major news services, networks, Ind the intellectual climate of our times. In another way, each of us inhabits a semantic environment not quite like that of anyone else, since we listen to dif· ferent speakers, watch d i f f e r e n t television abOws, hear different in· THE SEMAN'l'JC eivtronmeil' of children is never the aame as that of their parents, wbo9e minds were formed at anOtber time under other inOuences.- Nevertheless, there is normally IOr'rle continuity between generations because of shared communications and shared values. This process of CQTDJllunication by "'·hJch parents with more or less aueeess shape tbelr children's Ideas and values has been going on for perhaps the whole history of the human race. We take the proce1s so much for granted that few cf us have awakened to the !act that , for millions aod mUllona of famille.s in the United Stat.es, it just Isn't taking place any more. In order to descrlbe what is going on today, let me &Uggest an analogy. Su~ pose from the time tha t your children are old enough to sit up, they are snatched away from you for three or four hours a day by a powerful sorcerer. Th is sorcerer is a story-teller and a s:plnner of drums. He plays enchanting music ; he Is .an un· failingly e.ntertaining companion. He makel the childre.n laugh; he teaches them jingles to sing ; he is constanUy sug~ gestlnr'fled' things to eat and wonderful toys for their par.ents to buy them. DAY An!lR DAY, year after year, childten tor·a· few hours a day Uve in the wonderful world ciuted by the sorcerer~. Workl of laughter and music and itdventures and Incredible goings.on. iolnetirnes frightening, usually run, and always entrancln.g. "Ib:e children grow older, sUll under the dalJy spell of the sorcerer. Parenti and teachers scold and make unreasonable demands. But the sorcerer is always friendly and fucinating, so that the children &lt there and sit there as if drug· ged, absorbing messages that their parents did not originate and often do noL even know about. F'or one·fourth or more of their waking hours from infancy onward, they ·nve in a semantic en- vironment their parents did not create and often make no attempt to control. NICHOLAS JOHNSON of the Federal Communications C o m m i :s s i o n has estimated that children get more verbal impact from r.adio and lelevision than from parents, schools, neighbors, and church combined. "By the time he enters first grade," he says, "the average child has spent more hours in front of a television set than he will spend in a col· lege classroom." The present generation of young people is the first in history to have grown up in the television age. A significant pro- portion of those born after 1946, although brought up in parents' homes, had their dreams, their expectations and their Im· aginalive lives created for them by others. Is it any wonder that some af these children, as they grew to adolescence, turned out to be strangers in their own homes? By S. I. Hayaka\\·a .. Pres!dent San FraDclaco State Un1Yenity Frugality, Foresight Dictate YES To -the Editor: '!ller.'1 lllUe point In arguing the fine points of a ''yes" or "no" vote on the scbool tar override. But U there should be a majority "no" vote in this election. the voters ougbt to be ashamed to th e depths of their greedy souls. for tlley live In an area of well.kept. often hm1r!ous tiomes, where well.dressed people fill the streets in their shiny cars. Ho.w many of these. people really can't afford PO a year more for a new dress, a few dinners out, or -schools? How easy to blame the "schools" for some misguid· ed marcher at Berkeley whose pareot1 ought to bear the responsibility for snatching him out of school and letting h1m work or starve -how easy to penalize 1 t iodergartener in.stead! TIDI DISTRICT doesn't t now "'hat school rpending is. ~fore than 20 years ago I went to high school in an area no more prosperous than this, and high school teachers were then paid $10,000 and •15,000 a year. They wt:re the bt:st. and their puplls won scbolarships to great unlversltres all over the country. Mr. Benedict, our "new" superin- tendent, was school superintendent in San Clemente before the district was unified. San Clementeans knOw that he carefully hired excellent teachers al low oost, was fru1at In hi• expenditures, and. got the 1upa,..,.. much for their monoy. 1111: SHOULD llE given an oppommtty lo ,.1o_k In a taraer fleldand.dispia1 these qua11tiel once more. "Yet" voters, you are out...gbttrtd by hordu ol .. _ .. ;pt to the poUs on 'l\l<ldlly or we will have. 1 sb&mefW achool sltuaUon. ~-Bw George--. Dur Oerop: Do yDll think Joe Hamoth II the rl&hl kind of pel'IOll for • youn1 man Co have as a htro? . -CONCERNED Dear Concerned: I most certainly do, particularly ~ he lloo llkH footbelt ('~~--- . -' ,_ Letters from f'eoder1 art wtlco?M, NonnaUu toritlr1 should convey thtir messages in 300 words 01 lt11. Tht right to cond.tN't lttkr1 to fit .space 01' ttiminatf Ubfl i8 reserved. AU let- ters muat incJudt signature and mail- ing address, but ntn"MI "'411 be toith· held on re~st if su.f/lcitnt rt"ason is apparent. Poetrv toill not bt pub- lished. Maybe ,.. should. If federal or st.tit bureaucrats have to take over the echools for lact of klcal suport, I can hardly wait lo hear the ansul!hed (Ind ~Ve) screams or all the ''tndependeat' penny .. pinchen: who didn 't have the pride to finance their own local wvtcea. Doe!n't anyone mnembtr how we bad lo pay through Ille nose for the-local high school site '\Vhen it was finally acquired, After years of rising prlct~? IF LOCAL "NO" voters mean Uwy in· tend to pay no more toes for schools now or ever they wlll eventually be forc- ed to their knees by even higher taxes or hooligans loose in the streets. How much bell<r lo be ablt lo soy, "Yes, the Presi- dent c1-for his home a community that takes great pride In lie ld!ooll." JUNE Jl'LEMIHG for many new approachte: in the teaching of music to chlldrim. THEN IN APRIL, the override was re- jected by the voters. The music depart,. me.nt was cut back. For a while I tried to teach a third grade, but my major field is mu.sic and my interest Is in music educa- tion for young children. I havt: since resigned so that J can conti nue teaching music on a private, and l migh t add, more lucrative brusis. Salaries are lmportanl, but there are many reasons besides poor salaries for losing good teachers. When tax overrldes are defeated again and again, there is in our schools the sense of tuUtlty and hopelesanesa among teachers. GOOP !DUCATJON does not coine ~apiy. lior does lhe community have the altemaUve to an uadequate" or a "good" education. EducaUon must be good! How much will the c:ommunlty pay In the IDOi run for the child that could have been reached bf a i!)Od teacher but wasn't? M 1 travelln1 music specialist, 1 have taught in practi~ally every elementary school in the district. 1 have seen tile dedlcaUon and the ams!Uvlty Qf your teachers. How Jong will It be before they become discouraged by a community that continually refwea to give them the funds necessary to do their job'! NANCY Al\OOZZA -$lee-M -e-Cll•11eel' . To the Editor: . Wlaw '.l'e-laer• l.eace--I am a·student·t1111enl!r lllendint Sin To the Editor· · Clemente Hip Sdloel, wllo takes much I am ' ~cher. I bave also ~-~ lnlettst In Ille current les<lvmlde bllt -My fll1'n II ol -t lml!>rtance lo me m..tc f<>r u lo111 u I con remember. and I t,..>O lo be able In fulfill my oo-~lt!t': J,. ~= -;..~ m:h CllplUonai mid social clellrt In later lift. lhe C.ptstrsno Unllled School District I Duljllg lbe put lhtte yw1 I have don't lhtnl t ~ ever been &o excited qaged vlacnully Ind enthutlutic1lly to lbe excellent dram• progr1m 1t the _over a ~ Here wu a ~std.<:t,..--i.i.1.-octaool;-and hsvrbeen-1nfluencod-lo . lferltil1, ml-~1fralGtif nnov1te, and sui:h an ottnt that I plan to major In tecurt enoulh to ctve encourqement to drama Jn coueae. the creaUvt endeavor1 of Us tea¢'ers. t was hired on a pirt time baal1 but 1 worked dljl and nl&ht. I he~ 1ttat plw I I WM VERY alarmed lo hw that this program mill' out be retained llilould tho tu-override fail. Whal would happen to me if this program is decreased? \Vould my dream and desire be lihattered hy a mere election? Whal abOut the other teenagers who appreciate this program and have proved so in past perform· ances! Would this. gifted talent go Wldeveloped in myself and others \vho see.k a fulure in the thealre? For a few dollars a year more the la'lf· payer could be helping me and others. Please Mr. Taxpayer, give me a chance! Vote yes on ~1arch ID. JOHN RUSSELL I Workitig J\111cleus To the E<lilo! .. For my underclassmen friends in drama who look forward to a fu ture in the theatrical arts. high school in· strucUon provides a necessary stepping stone. It introduces the student not only to the techniques of dramatic1productlon, but gives him self·responsibihty, an ope n door to friendshi ps and unity, plus self· respect. Orama, in high school. i~ not "just a" extra" to us; it is a working nucleus o( art education and identity. BRONWEN DENTON Thespian President 'iO ---- Frid e,y, March 6, 1970 7'ha tdiloriol page of the Dollv Pilot Itek& to inform ond atim.. ulaU i'eadtr1 bJI prcsmtfngi UtU M1DS'J)CJ)f1"'1 opinkms ond com- mntarv on roplu of inure.st ont1 rignificonce, bv prooidmo a tonim for IM e<preuton o/ our tecultrt' opinioN, ond bv prtsnri11g th• diNru trltlb _polnJI L lnfomud....o!ls1nicr1 ond spokt.mitn on topics of th« ctav. Rober! N. Weed, Puhll•her - - PHECPKING I • u e A Tattoo Proves: Youth Got Drunk Garfield, Grl!I~ Tait, Taylor and Franklin D. Roosevelt. ly Ph11 lnterlandl • 3-b K-.r--.......... ..,;,.ltJ'LW..W.;.Uo-..1.J':i,\'W e,...~: ANY SINGLE Girl who particularly likes tall men might bear In mind the odds run 13 to one she won't marry 11 six-footer •.• "DO THE LADIES e\·er get hernias?" inquires a gentleman subscriber. They do. But only about one-fifth as frequently as men do ..• THAT AGE, AT v."hich a woman Is most apt to commlt su icide, if at all, is 52, I'm told. IT WAS NONE otller than O&car Wilde who said, "Twtn- ty yt.an oC romance makes 1 woman look lite a ruin, tiut 20 years ol marriage makes her look somethini, like a public building." . . . WHEN JS 'SOMEBODY going to awkel a roof guttir oo bil)ges that can be unlatchtd ind Upped down to spill out Ute debris? Should think-that would sell, LANGUAGZ MAN -In old "lt'a fut, but very, very bumpy.~ TAITOOS -Can't go along with the theory you can tell something about a tattooed man's character by the design of his tattoo. Nor t h e widespread nolion that a tal.- tooed man's personality isn't what it ought to be. This com· es up because a medical fellow contentb in a learned paper that most men who wear tat- toos are neurotic. W h a t hogwash! Most men who wear tattoos get drunk in their youth. What's neurotic about that? Italy, a Venetian was rt.fmed --------------------. lO as a Pantaleone, because St. Pantaleooe wu the patron saint of Vertlei. Then one time a clown · in a stage comedy wore a pair. of curious b"oURTI purported to be the atyle in Venice, so they were called pantaloons. It is thus our Language man, that fn.. dustrlous fe llow, traces the origin of the word pants. Dad Still Gone But 2 Little Sisters Identified OPEN QUESTION -Why is it a redhead Is less apt to lose- her hair than a blonde or brunette? MY, HOW FLIP this gets. Your questiona and com· ments are welcomed and will be u.sed whemver pos· sible in "Checking Up." Pleaae addreu your mail to L.A-1. Boyd in core of Daily Pilot, Box 1875, Newport Beach, Calif. 92663. Pollution Fight Due SACRAMENTO (UPJ)-Gov. Ronald Reagan, declaring long delay& in enforcing anti· GILROY (UPI) -ll wasn't much of a fourth birthday for Lea Farris Thursday. Her kid sister, Lisa, 2, didn't like il much either. Lea ce1ebrated at the county orphanage while polic:e sooght hu father, Charles Farris. who apparently abandoned the tv.'O girls on the &tepg of St. ltfary'1 convent nine days ago. At the Ume, he told them he was gOlng after some "hot dogs and soda pop.'' The children's grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ke Meth Farris of San Bruno, 30 miles north of here, identified t h e youngsters after their picture was widely cireulated by Gilroy police. They said their son had taken the children for an out· ing. The children's mother, Cheryl, 21, a Los Angeles secret&ry, 5aid she had no idea why her estranged hus- band abandoned them. "He wanted the kids and then left them," she said. Bot.h Lea and L J s a , meanwhile, are being kept at the orphanage until custody is detemlined. How smart.-alecky. How wise. cracky-' It's ~t that I'm tired,· probablf.. · Of gtuffing egg.anlf..grapeftUit diets into envelopes to send to good customers who asked for same. No, we won 't give up. We'll fill current requests now in the shop. But tcmorrow 1 'm going to submit to my editors that dumb diet for publication in this space if they so choose. Thereby the clients will not have to wait until June to slen· derize. Please stand by. water pollution laws "no long· D 0 M er w111 be tolerated," has emocrats pen eet warned the st.ate is ready to move in against waste dis· 0 f F d p l ~~:t" .u local agend.. a ing o icy Unit CUSTO!\tER Service -Q. "Red Skelton is a cigar· m1oker, right?" A. That stogie be carries around in his mouth is a stage prop. He never smokes it ••• Q. "WHY JS IT WOMEN snore less than men?" A. •r what you say is true, sir, maybe ifs because their lungs 8J'e littler, so they breathe less deeply. I figured that out without diagnostic Consultation ... Q. ''HOW MANY OF our U.S. Presidents descended from Mayflower ·passengers?" A. Five - A principal author of the FR E s N O ( A p ) 5tate's tough new Porter-Or Democrats seeking to bury logne antipollution law says pas\ quarrels and forge a if the local regional boards · t • 1 · fail to ad eUectlvely tbe leg· .u n I e.u z on l a g a Ins l islature may abolish them. Republicans headed today for The doubJe.barT'eled warn-the annual convenUon o[ the ing was issued . Tbunday fol-California Democratic Coun- lowing a decision by the state cil. W a t er Resources Control Board to investigate whether cert.a.in of its regional boards art moving too tlowly aa:ainst polluters. Coming March 7 in All major hopefuls for Democratic statewide nomina- tions were expected to be on hand, hoping for endorsement from the CDC activists. They provide the kind of poliUcal nuts-and-boll! work during campaigns and on election day which is crucial to every cam- paigner. Family H-eekly . Party unity wu the keynote of the meeting as Democrat.a prepared to take on the Republicans, who are mapping an approach that ~·ill send a team or incumbents into the field, headed by Gov. Reagan. The CDC p resi den t, As~mblyman J ohn L. Burton .·of San ·-rrinc~ •. operled the endorsipg procedure to all state Democratic groups in a move at burying hatchets whlch had cleaved deeply into party unity the last few years. CDC used to guard its en· dorsements jealously in the days when it had 70,000 m·e m be rs and Democrats were dominant in Sacramento. But as party fortunes dipped and CDC dwindled to the 10,000 estimated now, various !actions split off from it. Benevesthas paid out morethan$7,102,700 An Expert Answers Teen-Agers' Questions About Drugs The latest find ings or tht National lnatitutt of M1ntal Healt~ a re brought out in this quts• tion-and-answer article. A six-point pion for parents on helping youngsters ovoid drugs ts 'also Included. • FOR OTHERS -Actress Inger Stevens, often hurt and once on Lbe verge c! suicide, by her own admlssion.J now s°'-Dds most other llie try .. ing to help other1. sne tills about it in cover story. "! Can·t Live Only for A1yself.'' e GRANDPA FLIES AGAIN! -Graying •ll!llts with combat mi ssions from \Vorld War JI and Korea in their logbooks are flying their an- cient, propeller-driven airplanes of the 1940s again in Vietnam . AU Corning Saturday in the ininstantRefunds. 'Ibouaanda of Callfomla taxpayers have already recetved wlr refuncla direct from Benevest-tbeir full refund., at no atta charge. Do you qualify for an lnstmt R.efundl Moot people do. Camputa 011:.U111q/'Prompc senii<.t -about a ....k [1orn srarc ro {'ltllsh/Gtt ,_, dtdwtUm the LJAu allows. WMlmDAUA WHfTTIEA 12918 e. Phllldt!Jihla/198-7134 tASTWHfTTIER 15'2.S E. wrin11er etw1JlfW&OI NORWAU( 13933 S. 611'1 A~on!G Drl"" ~19 A A 81863-5763 t.J,MtMOA 1'\IZ Imperial Hl""°"f U Mlt•da stropping Otflttr 021·3'31 er.nua. MW DOWNEY 8531 flareta Ave., SUit• 2 Q2.3.4515_ t{AWfMOll'NE 12909 H••ltt«ftl BtvdJfl71-11• ltfOLEWOOO -418 £. Manc'*W AYeJl1•t• LOSANG£t£8 1351WIWllN19MIJISM144 8223 w. Ptco bl¥d./27M220 .. .,.. f!lNr. -i. 1'170 DAILY PllOT- Opens Murphy -th-Baf2k · Troops to Laos / ~ .j ~ COSTA MESA ' ~~ . SllOPPIH& c SACRAMENTO (UPI) - U.S. Sen. George Murphy,. a member of the Senati Armed Services committee, aays he "reluctantly" 'would vote to use American ground troops in Laos If President Nixon re· quested them. The senator 1l10 belleves 18- year-olds should be allowed to YOle -a conteri.ion which puta him tn disagreement with fellow Republican R o n a I d Reagan. Murphy talked aboul LaOs, Vietnem, youth, poliUca and his health Thursday during new1 conferences in Los Angeles, Sacramento· and San · Francisco after f or m a 11 y becoming a candidate for re· election to a second term. Asked whether he ~·Ollld support sending A m e r i c a n fighting men into Laos. lhe senator ~plied : "U th e adminislration brough t proof, evidence that it was in the best interesl of the security or the United States . . . that we needed ground troo1>3, I wo11ld most certainly under those conditions vote for them. reluctantly." But he said "there is no in· tenllon to create another Viet· na.m" in Laos. Murphy said he agrees with stepped-up American bombing In Laos. Regarding Vietnam, Murphy said, "I th.ink we can see. the eod in the not·loo-diatant future • . • the progreSll of $2.95 Value! Men's & Boy's ~~~!.-~~~~-... ~. $129 Cltolu., t~ SIM ~V1 to 12. Vietnamizatlon h going on schedule and In 50me &Teas Is $1.97 Value! Women's :s~~e ~~~fE?~~~~t~~~ ~,.-,L,~~! ... ~.•.,!J.., .... !~~·•'•'~.'~~! $149 year~lds should be alloy,·ed to -.• vole and he repl ied yes. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "1 am inclined to think that most IS.year-olds should have the right lo vote," he said. "I'm no• nearly" pessimistic 1~---... SA C00 1 ER'S SUPE~.-.--""' about the present generation as some of our citizens ... 1 ~ don't think they're all destruc· r I r I live, I think we're coming ;nto / I 'I f,j I /. f,jl an era of real bright, forward, '- fresh-looking youths." Ile said giv;ng them ~ SATURDAY, MARCH 7th ONLYI r;ght lq vole in preslrienllal DISCOU11TtOISCOU11TtOISCOUNK and se natorial elections 111.,-n1.,--,_, •11nighl be good for a st1rrt." Reagan opposes giving 11- year-olds the vote, contending' this would result in political organizing of college cam· puses and open up the whole question or when a person &hould be treated legally as an adult. ,O~OAN CIOCHIT' KNITS VESTS-SKIRTS PANTS-TOPS IUllED KNIT NYLON PANTS UO. TO · s11.oa II •• TO S2J.OI 3.99 2.99 --.•1~1r.~1no...,.12n1~.,~,~u~w~co~k.,..._ Assembly GOP Trying To Revise Conflict Law PANT$-TOPS-SKIRTS-DRESSES 3.99-4.99-5.99 ''SHE'' the shop DISCOUNT DRESSIS ' SACRAMENTO (U PI ) -be the only beneficiaries or 1 ~~~2~6~1~E:;·~17~1~h~S~t~. ~~~~~!'.C~o~1~tt~Mt~1t~~~ Assembly Rep u b 1 t can s . Monagan's bill, F defealed in their first attempt A key section of the Unruh'.1,.....,___ ESA CENTER'S SUPER . to revise the state's conflicl o! act which requires all public -- interest law, are preparing ro1 officials to list the speciric ~ a sho)Ydown next week. amounts or all investments in r / 'I House Democrats balked state-regulated firm~ ex· I I , 1 f,j I , I. fJ I Thursday at supporUng the ceeding $10,000 has caused ,_ new regulations authored by several local officials to Assembly Speaker Robert T. threaten to resign. Monagan (ft... Tracy). Monagan'5 bill ,..·ould r~ SATURDAY -MARCH 7th ONLYI Monagan is pressing for quire listing · of Investments urgent passage of his measure over $1,000 but would not re- which would supersede the quire specific amounts. current law authored last year His measure also only would by A s s em b I y Democralic require that school board leader Jess Unruh, a can-members. p I a n n in g com- didate !or g~ernor. mjssioners nonsalaried While Republicans solidly ~s and other I o we r supported lttonagan's pl8n~ echelon officials I Isl in- Democrats lined up behind 11 vestments in ·enterprises their toughening amendments auth· agencies regulatt<!. orlzed by Unruh. ' Unruh tried ta ln!lert a re- The Democratic ·1 e ad e r ~uJfeineitt thar tne : el'act charged !\1onagan's bill "socks dollar amount or . Investment It to the llttfe guy but lets the be disclosed, and that all big guy alone." He said the enterprises regulated by any "economic snobs and in-mate or local agency be listed. tellectual snobs" who now con· But he was rebuffed on a lrol local government would straight partyllne vote. Resignatio~ Asked Of UCSB Chancellor SANTA BARBARA (AP) - A Santa Barbara cily coun- cilman called Thursday for the immediate resignation o f Chancellor Vernon I. Cheadle and two of his top aides at the (Jnlver11lty of California cam· pull here for their alleged failure to exercise proper authoritf during &ludent vio- lence last week. Councilman William A • Sayre, an ae r ospa<:t ill· dustry worker, referred in a news release to demonslra· tions In the student-populated community or Jsla~Vista ad· jacent to the university cam· pus. A bank building was burned to the ground and other businesses were damag· ed. Sayre, in atiklng r or Cheadle's resignaUon, also rt· quested that A. R u 1 s e 11 Buchanan, vice chancellor for academic affalrs, and Ray Varley, vice chancellor for business and finance, . step down. Sayre declared that although he had the authority, Cheadle failed to prevent an on.campus speech last Wednesday by William Kunstler. defense al· torney !or the Chicago Seven, The councllman r u rt h e r alleged that when rioting developed in Isla Vista, the chancellor failed to take the initiative to immediately sus· pend . faculty members and students who participated. Even though property had been destroyed and officers Jn· WOMEN'S SHOES e Flats &. Low Heels • Broken Sit11 e A.110rted Colors $4.88 R19ular to $14.95 SPECIAL PURCHASE .BABY'S -son•· ..... o•LY s1 44 SHOES ; .... SM• • ~he J.5oo,f erg 225 E. 17th St. . Sho11 for Women & Children Coste Mesa ESA CENTER'S SUPER---.- ~ SATURDAY-MARCH 7th ONL.,YJ SHCIAL GIOUP MIN'S •· IO'f"I SUITS & SPORT COATS 1/z PRICE WIDI WALi NO.IAON CORDS .... ,..,,.,..,, JUST $4.88 ONI GAdUI' MIN'S LON• SLllll STA,.,AUT-llG. 17,00 TO Sf.00 ' SPORT SHIR'l'S JUST $3.88 ' MENS U.S. KEDS IOYS U.S. KEDS •••• Sl l .h $5.88 LEON'S I)'>... $3 88 ..•. ''·'' . . MENS & BOYS SHOP Raquel Settles jured. Sayre said, it took 227 E. 17th St. Cost• Mesa Cheadle three days to decld'I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Out of Court on suspension of unlver~il' SA CENTER'S SUPE"""---persons Involved. \,.._...,.__ .n· Cheadle indicated he would . LOS ANGELES (AP) reply to the coundlman11 ~· Actress Raquel Welch, who &tatemmt Friday. r I --~ 1ald an auto accident here six Tht protesting 1 tu d e n t 1 f~ years ago Jell btr with a scar· themselveo have not llnked lhe ~' I '/ I I. I red left temple, has settled out violence to KunsUer's ap. ____ of court for a reported $1,500. pearance, noting the trouble Miss \Velch had demanded started a day in advance or his SATUltDAY -MARCH 7th ONLYI $3~.ooo i'n dam ages after her 1 speech. Rather. they have "' w" struck July 21, 11164 by blamed unrest on 1rustrat1on1 "WIZ·Z.;DR" an 1.uto dri ve n by Honorio over whal they have termed Sanloo, a· Pb111ppines ouaar ghetto-like living condiUons In THI SILf GIN~RATING GYRO planter. Isla Vlata. IT MAnlL -MESA CENTER'S SU~ERr-- ~ SATURDAY -MARCH 7th ONLYl- SPRING & SUMMER SPORTS & CASUAL WEAR FOR WOMEN & CHILDREN UP TO 50% onl M•f'ly, MM'!Y M.,. lacltlnt ValNI .. ChMM ,,..;.1 GILBERT'S 257 E. ·17111 St. AND "CllllY A'S" 50 PID·UP TINT MODIL A'S 1 1 lrTOlfU MAltCH 7111 119 EACI! 1.5' ONLY V,UUU AS USUAL-PUNCH IALLS WIU • olil. T ztc 223 !. 17th STREET, COSTA MISA -S41-J45.4 -· • ...---., ... '1 l • 8 OAJLY PILOi Hovdal Lawyer Rips Chief SANTA ANA -!1110 HOV· dar1 dtteoder v.·arned the &iperlor COurt jury c:oo- :ddttlh&; murdu c h a r 1 c.1 1ciinst hi.& client 'Jbunday I.hit It thould disre1ard tM "inf1ammatory atalements and complel4 d.Jsttgard for' the processes ol law Elhibit.ed by (Santa Anal ·Po~ Chier Ed.ward J. AJlcn." Dtfensc at tornt y ~fatthew Kurllich branded ·.actions by Chl~f All~ ~·hich led to trithdrawal of Hov(ia1's bail as "dcslgntd to fiod lhi1 man "'111¥ before he was tve.n FOR THE RECORD Dftdla Netkes lll:OftS !"111'1tr K. lreeir.s. Alll U. ol 1112 1"11 ,.ltct. C-11 M-. S..nrlvtd .,_ Cleutll!tr, ll'tll'klt s. w111. HunllrtflOft~.....a., '- brMtttrt. wnn.... !(''""' '"'' 1o19u, st ..... ic,...,, Jr., .st11 °""1 fNwt ,,. ,_ IFlitMffl Sdlrt1. Ohlt J Elli °""' tell, ""1w11 l.•dlel l_e119!idorf, Ctllt "'-' •lid fellr •rttldd\lldf'lfl. s .... tc .. wm fM htld M..,d,.,1 11 AM. lltt ,,....,. ... ,,, ( .... el. lnltl'l'll!ll'lt, WH!mln.,er .......... ..,,, ...... 8tl! '"""""'" Mlf"lv. .,.,. f)lr'ICfon. CA.UO•\.L Jtlllt I . C1uftll. "'1 Rfl'll "t1111t. C.lt ~. o. .. If °'ll""rMtmt .s. ~ --... t t WMltlH'f ClltiNI Mer1'wfY, -·· MdlAOI" ~IM Mc111,., *i c._ Ltnt-O.lli .... Ill.· ~-ti Miii, Mt>l:h I, S..r'l"t'IM llv Plu•ltiuW, Htr,.., II:. Mclt lll. el 1M. """"'/ -.. Fl'ICI •· Mcltlllo C,,,_ dll Mtri M'll l.tt T~IMull. lrlf. !'!. ~~r:~"~=~~.:,:~111::~ tdt/ -,,..Id., ""' ~ ,, ..... , .... d!tldrtrt. • S....lc• wNI 1111 Pleld 5•,,..rtl•~. J l'M.. "•eltlt vi.w Cit•"'· w111t 1. ..... WHlltm 0: 0.•tllll'llrf olfltlt ll"I. IMtr> "'""· "•<Ille \II-M-1•1 l'trt.. ~ Ndflld llr P'Kllte \It..., Mot"lut ,..,. SU\.ll\la" lt•tflM SylllYtfl. Afl .111 flH ld ... t ., :.e 1'1'11 l'lett. Co$11 Mna. Ot!• "' lllMlll. Mttt.l'I S. SW'WIW'lld ll'f' tw11Ml'ICI, Mtrtl S. 5'1!!1vtn1 N~ Mr. et\CI Mn. w1u11,.. '''"" M1'111•, .t H~vlu1 br'°""", Ot,. Mt rtllt. lou!lt '°15tdtnt. ,...., to.olfrl)' Mtrtl11, Lee:'"" V1IW.-. M'"""'tt l«Vk.H wut M ltrl<ll Mtori6i~. Merdl I ,· I ,.M, '°Kiiie VJ-C ....... '°Kttlc \lllW MOf'tlltt'f, Olrl'Ctt,._ WM.LAC• Mlrlei! Olllllrl Wt!IKt. '11'1 MICAvltw .. It~, LtlU!" .. di. AH Tfl dttt If ••"'· M1rt11 J. su ... 111til llr brtltltr, Cett J. G!U11n, Wt Mll"ll .. , O.C.1 IJ&.. Itri. Mri. EloNl'ltr Gll&trt MOrltl.,,.,..,• lol.lel\1 Htrrl"' HYde """"' If MlllM. -ttd'MllM!Tt. Sof"~• feiltV, P'rliltY. ! ""'' Slltfflr l•-llKlt M..tlMo,.., CNMI. l'rlvt lt ltiltrrnrf'I ti Art.,,.,t11I C.....tt....,, Vl••ll'lit. 5,...,,_r l t- l•tlt ""°""'""' Olf"Klers.. tried," And he condemned UM lnve.U11Uvt abWUet of tM s.nia Ana olli<:en uai,oed 14 the cue ., "trqlc one! beyond belld In. thtlr !allure Lo recount e~-ents as they Up- pened, and in their failure to pro\1~ the rights to which Hovdal was ent.IUed." That jury was ordered by Superior Court Judie Brue< Sumner to return Monday for complttion olJlDaJ ariuments 1n 'whit has been a 1<1-:day murder trial. ' It iii erpect.ed that they will b8 uked to consider thtlr verdict late ?.fond1y. Piiot Logi.ok Kurilich ui-aed the findin1 or a verdict of blvoluntary min. slaughter with the argumtnt at Hovdal l\'as intoxicated at the time. of the shooting of his wife, Geor1e1 Genevieve, and tl11l tile killing was not premeditated. Officer• arnsted Hovda!, 52, tut Jan. 1 81ld accused the Sl'rlla Ana man of shooting his "Mife three times during and after a quarrel that erupted in the couple'• living room . Mrs. Hovdal, 47, died on the sidewalk in front or their hom<J. Hovda! testified during the Circus in Court' Hurts Defendant By TOM 'BARLEY Of fM DlllJ ''"''"ti.fl IT fREQlJ!N11..Y ASTONJSHES jurors and onlook· era that the two lawyerl!I who taJ'lgle throughout the trial •o'ilh such apparent enmjty should turn out to be the best ol friends' who will readily link .arms in tM corridor and stroll off for 1 pre supper marUnl. It does not, of course, surprise those of us Who spend much of our time in the courtroom. lt is par for the legal course for opposing attorneys to 'become after the day's ~p .,•hat they were ~fore them -fr.llow law· yers, each of whom he 1 )ob to do and 1 duty lo h i a- cllent which m1y call for a spot of urcasm al his lurn- ed-friend"• e~. ' rr IS WITH REGRET that I have come over the years to recognize that then are except.Ions to the WlWTiUen rule. And J hive seen opposing lawyers -only rarely, mark you -Indulge in verbal abule outside ·the courtroom in a manner that put them one! their profes- .;on in a very poor li&ht. But in Orange County Superior Court ~t!Y. we have seen an exhibltJon of bad temper and bad manners which ha! me lookinl 1 king way d.own. memory lane to find any in· cident to which It can bear comparison. And the added tragedy of it all is that the lawyers involved are · on oppogi~ sides in a murder trial. You would think. knowing what Js at stake, that both attorney! w.ould resol ve '1.'h~tever is plaguing them over a drink and get on with the job of giving defendant ?iUlo Hovda! the fairest and most searching trial that the l"'o of them can ensure. 1 r DONT TRINK you can ~ absotutely 1t1rt of ii fair trial when the opposinc·eourL'l!J are Jocked in the pathetic, chlldhh NCrimln.tiOns :and pMty utterances "''hlch ha re brouetit eountltlf judicial rebtlke5 on the heads of trial lawyer MaUhew Kurilieh and Deputy District Attorney Ed Freeman ... ln fact. if, I •·ue HO\'dal , I l\"nuld object to ihe at.- m01phff't that has bee1 f<irged at the trial by both la\\'· yen. l would want the jury that might find me guUty or murder to do ao In the calm, clear. atm osphere of a COO.rt· r6om ·in Milch my laW)'er and his ad \'erslll"y "''ere only col\cetnea with the diinified presentaUon of testimony and t\"ldence. t blamf; both men for what has taken f'lact and J blame Judge Bruce Sumner for not having onct and ·lor all ' e-topped the silly bickering and endless jabbering or the two lawyers. . TREIJl ANTIPATHY ls personal and neither troubles to deny it. They have been admonished lime and time again by Judie Sumner but those warnings have not been followed up by tttrner action. Their argulne beg1µ1 long before the trial startM and erupted in an. astonishing scene beJore th e jury was se- lected. Evidence wu tossed back and fortll on the counsel table ind 'P'reeman'• stentorian tones could be heard for men than lotl yards Clllbide ~ courtroom. Mitcliell's · Resignation Accepted SANTA ANA -~lembers or !he Orange County Boa.rd of Education Thursday accepted the re&lgnation of their col- league, Clay Mitchell of South La'gilna, and said they intend to apJ>!>inl his succea1or March It. Class .Set On Rescues ORANG!: -Cardiopulmnn- ""' re.c;"~rlption fP'l'li"'"C: ' • rtscue squad persoMel v.111 begin lOOay at Ule t;a1ro )·u1- monary Training C f. n t e r , Orange: County Medical Cell- ter. according tn T>r. H~rold Peters, chainnan of the cnun· tv Heart Association CPR Committee. LEGAL NOTICE Judge Sumner heard the racket while he was in his ch1mben. His only mponse was to send his clerk In tell c4:::N::1c\J~~~~Ac~l1~~~r:1~T both .attorneys to either stop the fight or finish it outside NOTtce IHVITINO l lDS ARBU,_ ••• SON th ._,.........._ "'OTICE IS lfEREI Y GIVEN ffl•l ,.,,. '-'IU..O e ,,.......,. .. ..,..,,.,. 9'11 ••-•ti• ..,Ill be rtc1lved bl'!"'-Cl"" Weatcliff Mortaary t do fet1· IOrT)' for Hovda1. 1 don't doubt that he's hart c1itn: ..... ~h•tf e1 '"' COit• M~• .,, E -·· Sl c M r·' ....r.. S•"lt'"' Oldrl(I, 1t Mt IOtflct ln ,,,. (tty -1 • .ln• , 9"1 eaa a ;ur u-1.11) under the most thoroueh and painstaking judge Hin. n Filr 0r1v1. coa11 Mf••· Uf.W: on the Oran1E County bencl'I. c,11,...1111, ""'" "'' tiour Df 11:00 '·"'· on lht Jill dt f el Mtn:h, 1'70, ti Wlllc1' tlmt e But aD this 1'ickerint and bad temper can't havf. """" w111 eo. •-d 1ubHttt "'" ,..,., • - g1111wldt 'llt•llC.I Etrl •· ll;oudt STATI OF CAl,.IFOltNIA COUNTY OF CRANCE ' I SS. On 1·25. 1'1t, be-Ill'• mt, 1M II"· dtri .. Md, t Noltf'I Pubtk: In trMI for t1ld (OUftl'f' ..... $!tie, P~•-llV •-trM f.1rl I.. RIMft t -11 "° 1111 to 11t 1 ... ,.,_ wflose 1111,,,. It 1ub1etl~ Ill t~e •llfll11 llu!r-1, ""' 1<kflclwleft9'il "' mt 1~11 ltllW t•IKU!wd Ille Nml. !Ol'FICIAL SEALI Nottf'I Public C•lllotnlt "rtfle1NI Otfk t l1t Ottobtr 15. 1'11 TN> fll.rqoint 11 t to.,. .,f '•l.tflfkl"", th• orl1!nt1 ot whkl'I "''' 10..i lor rtt0~ e~ I"~''""' 1'. If)~, In fltt ol'!'Jet el 1111 coun1r rttorder Df O••nt• Coulltt, Celltor11lt. TI AHSAMl"RJCA. TITLI INSURAHCI COM,.AllY Ir• WllH-II. Jtll- ut Hirt~ Mt lll SlrHt ... o ..... Jllt Slftlt Aflt, Clliforlllt tmt Telt.,.._1 lTUJ H6-ffn BALTZ MORnJA.~ lielped 1 jury lo reach its \'t:rdict in what should always ~~dN•~~JN~e ,:rrc11 LA~~7t'·~ NlflD CenNt ftl Mat Oft. I-HM be a quiet, tranquJI atmosphere. MATIElttALs Fo• THE "CONSTRVcT10N LEGAL NOTICE ~~-MH1 MJ e •••• O" A S!WE• MAI"' IN FA1R OlllVl!,1----:-:::::::::::=-:::,-;:-;:;----,,-;;--::-:-:::""'.".-:-C"::--:C:::-::-:-::=::"'."-:-:::::C7.::0-7::::0;:';C::::COC:"'.:"""7":-:--c--C-CC--C-""""'.C:-C---,~ LEGAL NOTICE ~-~ 111" ..................... ,.,. ........................................ ,.,. ... ,..4 FROM FAlllVl(W ROAD EASYl!RLY OIDtMAHCI HO. ,..,, MtPI 8ooolr 251. Ptt•• '' ""' ... '"'°"'' .. AS.Sl!O ANO ADOPTl!D fflll ~ d•~ """'"" "'t T&lft dtY ,,, l"fbrv•"'· ttte. • lfll Fl!:ET. AH OROIMAHCI 0' THI CITY COON· el Ortl'lft Covrrtv. of Men:fl, lJIO. end lhtttltltr Ptu"<I tlld t dOlrM .. 1 A ttl ., llllM. Wl'ClflctllDllS tfW!f et!>f• en. 01'" THI! CITY 01" COSTA .MISA SECTION 1. Pur1u1nt to ""PnrYh!Ms A. l. P!NKLE'I' wllo!t ti •• .....,1.r "'"""' of \l;d Cl"' BELL BRO •DmAy eonlr•d documtf'ls m1v II! ollt-IM'd ti (MANGINO THI ZONING 01" \.On It, Df $ttllon 97:111.4 el !ht Munlcllotl Code 1111 Mtror ~· Ill~ Councll h"d "" t~• ?n.d dtY of Mlrd>, " " !hi oll!c1 ol 1M Cltv Clt rk, T7 F1lr O•!v,. ff, JI •M n o,. TRACT Sin, AND the Cltv of Coslt M ...... Dh trltf Miii M City-111 Co»lt Me~ 1'7!1. bv ~ 1,11owln1 l"llll c•ll VOie • MOR'l1JA.RV B • lo • G • Coita ,,....,, C1lll&rnl•"""' • dt••all cl lOTI t6 1M 11 01" T•ACT •UI ,.ROM Of flit Cl"" Ill C1111t M-lo httTbv ATT E5l; AVES• COU!lCILMEN Wllw", Tuc.ke1, ~--1 ....., n ,,....., "' ,,_ ,. " T ... Cl"' Couricll fl !ht Cf"" of C:etll RX " -~crlbld 111 Stdloft 1 IMrlJOf. Cl"" Cl•rt 111 lh• NOES: COUNCtLMl!:N H-111 Broad--, ee.a. Mn• W g• "ts fO lVe !',:'-:~"" ~'''-°!.,,'.'·"',•,,11~, ......... ,',' R• ,. .,-c:... ·-"'*' br "" 111d11rori ""~ .. c1 '"" c. I(. PR1esr s1. c1111. Plnklev U a.im S[,ARATf: CHl!Cl(S. Mt.:t lion MrHY ordl!" fl lfllklw1: SECTION J, Tiiis OrCllr11rw:1 ll\•11 tllkt Cltv f1f C1t1!1 Mtw AISCNT: COUNCILMEN J""41n • Et cll bid 11\111 bt m1dle an !ht ••-HI SECTIOJ<t 1. All lfltl ll'OfllOO! " t!11 tlle(f tnd be In f\111 fo>"tt ltllrl'"t' {30) dttt STATE OF CALIFO!ll:NIA tN WllNESS YMERfOF I IW.-1 totm 1fld '" !!It ""'""'' -lded f!'I fflf tollclwlnt ""crltllCI rttt '"""""'" II from t'ICI tft9<" lh "'-· lrld ..-lor Ill COUNTY OF ORANCE ~tr"111te M"I mv ~ • ..., 1M lfflnod tM tt•I n y R s • f L ciritrttf don•m•nh, tl'ICI 9i\•H II! 11<· ~••ttlY pltcff incl lrlC!vdM In IN ltt-C:P 11\t .-11lr1tla" Of 111\ftf\ f15} din fnlm 1111 CITY Of COST.., MESA 1 u . Ill in• Cl"" Df Coil• Mest, this 3rd d1y o1 Du.DA 8 OTRl:RS erzes 0 ectures t0m•1nled tw t ctrllf\ed tr ftsMer't lOM, te ...,11: "'Jlf.t ll>l!""eDf sN!I bt llllMhlled on« In 1, c. K. PRIEST, City-C:ier~ of.,,.. ClfV Mttclo, 1t1e. ffafuti.t-Valley cl\tct or • bid borMI for l'ICll ltst fflan lU Loh U, ,0. 71 ll!d 12 el Trtd No. ltlt ORANGE COASt OAILT .. ILOT. I 1111 Cosl1 ~ tlld t><-effltlo Clttt; el !tit C. I(. PlltEST M~•-Mrtw11I el I'll• 1mou11t ., IM llld, medt SH!, •1 shown 1111 I Mtll of Stld tr1cl ntw5"11Hr of •tf>tr11 tlrCVl•ll..,, pr!111M Cl"' COIJllCH of 1111 Cf"" el COii• M"", Cl"" Cit•-lr>d llt~ldo "',..,,1 NVtblt t. !ht C.01lt Mist St nlltf'I t!O<Ot"dtd Ill Mltn!lt-M1•1 8"'* t nd Ptlblhhl!'d I" tile (llV flf (otlt MIM, l!e:f~Y ctrtltr tto1t l!>e 1bovt tlld f<!r-. Clerk Of 11>1 Cl"" CO\JnCll ''.II - Bl'd fRVIN"' Dlltrkt 701. ,,_ 41. 4t tl'MI JG! •ll'lf '"" 1' •lld t09~thlr with t~t """"el tllt -mwrs '"" Ordl11111ct No. n-n "''' l11lroduci!'d ol !ht Cltv el Cnt1 M111 H d ____ _: ~ -Four distingui.sh-The lect.urtts include : NOTICE II FUll:TH!lt GIVEH flit!"'' ""'Tritt No.'''°·., ~fl"" I-· of,,,. CllY COi.ineii YOlll!f..,, '"" ... 11111 •-.:! ~ Helton bl' 9":1lln ., I l"l;btl\Md Or111te: CGIU D1Ur ,hot. U -~ od bi...i.....; lot"' tf Dlrtden If Ille Cftlt Mfn el ••Id lrKI rec..-Cltd Ill Mbctl""-ls IM st.,... r"11ltt mfffl"' Df 11\t uld City COUM!t Merdl 6, IJ1'1 "2-1~ aa.mi ....._,st.a will vlstt UC -Carroll r.t. WUllams, ~ s.1111 .... 0111r1c1 "'' rwr•tofor• 1111b11.,._ e lrvint io sivt a •lies of tomologlst and Bussey :~,:r~1~111'"''~'."' ~~· :,:;-:-·~: ••~c ·~ Edw·J A s t I h ProftsSOr of Biolnav a t -""t!h1"' of ,,,. '""' ..,1111w11 1..,. r '"-lr t '"'.&!"" ..,u • t n I U I Harvard Uru'"t~ty '"11o' 'II •rovtmt11tt. Th1I u ld ''" 1-.:I 1c11t ...,,1 MEMORIAL PA.JU[ Memorial Lectures. y 1~1 , W WI 1ttoeltd tw ,,,. '"',. tf Olr«.ttr1 tw Ct .. ~-• llf-·-speak on "New ~ives lttolull9" No. 10-m 9'11 tht •111 d•Y el .,_.. .1 .,.. -1 l)r Ste:-'-•n• r·-··•· de • '""Y".'".. M~. 1'10, tflCI 11 Oii fllt In tM flfltt f1f Clttipd " uu,._, ""'iulng an on th!. ~1etamorpho51S of "" A1tl1!1nt 1Kr1t1n'. 11 F'elr Ot!~, ·~ p-~ne ~ ~,, of the School of Biological lnsecta" P.londay al4 pm in cnt• Mnt, c1111gm11. T!Yt ••111 ·~·~ ~"" ....,.... .._, " ...... ..,...1. Sciences establ'·"~ th · · Ktlt Jo ...,.1" rtf,rred !1 •l't! fd:)'>!rd •" Ne.,.,ert Beedl. CaHltral1 • .......... e. Room 101 of the Physical Sien-'"'-notlc:t II "'--" "'"" ..... comPll'ltl• ,., M• Center for Palhobioloo al ccs Building 511 fl.rtfl Mrr1". •I'll "''' i1111 iuie. '' -•• UC! in Jul ' td•IM bw 11ld Rt1elullli'I. It mtff • • y, 1968, and 1erved Aron A. r.1oocona. 1 ~",.-' 111~ "°',~tt.tw '"',,,.'",-, •·. , • , u the Center's diMtor until · '""" ..... 'V' " PE-r • ~v .,_ death •--~-~-. bioloflsl 1t the Univen!ity of """""''"'e 111 ttw -11 ..... 1n1-c.n ~-/Ulll -vo.:u.oui;;.i Cl . .w_ ""-trol .,_'""· (Otlform " 11\f l•ber Cudt COT.01\1.A.L P't1NJ:RAL ucqo, SpeaJW1g on ......... "' .... ''"' el C•ll1tr11I• •<td tfllt• ·~- ROM .. S\"stenu in Deve)Opmttit" ., M~ '''"· -!!(•bit tlwt'9. wlllt ltlt Coo -• V!C"'fflln 911!1' 1111 W(lt ... rlt"°"t II "'IV ~Ill Boin AYe. J k R ~larch 13. at 4 p.m. tn Room 1w •tlllll'" Uf'Cler "" -•·i 1111111"' ll'e1b'l'll•1ttr m.sw 8C Oper 167 of the Bioklgical Sciences :",.""'i',":eiiie :JU!Jii;:-:1,':.' ':t~!~ • Bulldin1. lll~ tiv "" ... v"'°"' ~ .,,. l•bo!• M Si bt ... 1 .... 1... con. "''""!\Cf fl 11tior ,~.u be 1t·~" ~sH!f·ftR MORnJARY ~-Q 'ts p t --arcu. naerf • ....,.!.>. '"lht-m-.. ,,...,.. ""11 ... t.qua Beed IN-USI W OS at~e'ltm! R~r:vt University ,J!ij,~:,·~"'~l:r:-~1¥ ... ::,; SQ CkJMRte --• School ol MediCJne. lecturin~ v .. tte.i 11ttu ..... 11t11Y """"'"(lllr..:r ' . .._...... ··~· .... J ~ s "R ' ....:.u nd R I .... ...,i.11· fftt1"1Yf1{ll,frM lfl , ... VIII.ltd +--------~ -· • 1U• -It:• • on ege,~, • on a o e o "•'"'· tub11,,,111nv '" """ ... .,~rl"'""• RopeT-hu·rt:slJMd hl1 post·as the Ntn'OU1 Systf.m In tl'IMltKM '" ..,,,. u1111M M1i... in tht 3~0TRS' MORTUARY ell----of ~··in d Da I l" A ll 13 t J Hrtern11Mt o1 '"' t!lfl1r1ct. • .. 1..wr 11\U us I n ve opmtn , pr , a -. Nt bl4 .... u 111 t-lcittflll u111ut 11 1, m Mal• 8L peJICNWMI adminlstr1tioa of p.m. 11\ Room 101 of the .,,..,. "'I 11111111 '°""' Mni.J\ff br ·~, llu~ ~ the On.net County Depart-Physical Scltnct:!! BuUdln1. ~·:=..!•ft~~.., :,:-:,::,.i. :'~ .... meet ol Eclacaitlon '° become -Slr Vlocenl WJggJesworth, ~·.=1:=. '"., 11c._i ,,... 1111 uWatant 1apertntendtnt of the lcadin1 lnlect physklloglst, ,~•riflH " _,,..., --.. 1tw. --11n ·~~ 81 b ·~--1 1 1 ~"-k P 1 1 Tiit '"''' .. Oll'Hflr• ., the c .. ,, I -VllRlll . • '1'-"llW ~r y "CU"" ro essor 0 Mffl 1111!ttr\' Olttrl•I ,...,,.,.,, '"' 111111 Dlatrtd. BlnJology . at ~! m 1 b1 r Id 1 e '°J:l;;':;t~s.·~.~~ 1be mip1tion Is e:ffettive U vtr31ly, \\·nu "'" I be on ,., °'*' "' "'' '"'d Mondiy, campus for • l"'O-"'"ftk period r .. c:!'= ...... Roper hu betn an emptoyt istart1n1 f\lay 17 3nd v.·hose S1111111Y 0 11•flc:t of tbe C'OUrlty auparintendenl main ltcture la scheduled for ~.,.~· Only One - •• --TAI'; ~- ""' .... -... -·~·· _._ ...... _,_,_ .. _ :.-.:.."'"..::=--~ _.._ __ __ ..__ L[OENO • • ••• .. .. ......... -- CltY OF COST,\ MtSa.~A fU'!flM~ OIST~ MAP -·· - Flnal •tocU In ~n llonlr tdlt*IJ. That's t big clfal? It 11 Ill Ot.,. Coonl,J. Tflt DAILY PILOT 11 lM °"'t uflr llfWSPIPtt tll•t dtllt· m tht pecka91-of 11c:hool1 office lor tht past May 12, at ' '~: in the ,.llb11.-°''"" ~ e1nr "''°'' 11 )'Utt. scleDc. Lecture. Mt tch &. 11, ltJt •ft------------------------------------------- ' . ' - .- frld11."Malth 6, 1970 DAILY l'ILOT Jt -:=TJmy'Pe-ntv•l~Nll~~~--a;cAAumnm;---iwr.;;;;;---t;:3~clileM~orass~lr!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!~!!'!!'!'!!!!!'!!'!'!!!!!'!!'!'!!!~~~;;;:;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~_!:dJ NUMBER ONE IN THE HARBOR AREA FOR THE 24th CONSECUTIVE YEAR. St.ate Elections Gets Hoiior I See Yourself on Closed Circuit TV ot KIRKl'ATRIC!('S I Jackie hfoss, daughter or h1r. and h1rs: I. B. "Jack" "'""'"" ICA Celer ,.,_le , , . t.w, lew ,,tu. c .... ,_, ,u1111et wltti ,.,. Brl.ng Out St.ars _.., ...... ,. .. ._ .. JI ...................... ~ ... , ... ,.. ••1•w••. f.1oss, 7582 RhJne Drive, Hu'n· -.4el IM-417. ti" 111 .. ...r. 110 &41tiet. '"' pkttr•. tington Beach, ha:s b i e n $ selected secretary·lreasufer of ••1cis 25995 the Pepperdine CoJlege Garn· STAlt AT SACRAMENTO (AP) -Brown cainpa.ign televb;ion ma Eta chapter of Theta 'ElecUon year in California Is a documentary was titled "?tfan Sigma Phi, internatlonal p~ .ume when many Hollywood "· Actor." fessional women's joumal~m I RCA SALES & SERVICE I personalities believe there's no Reagan's c amp aign pro-fraternity . ~ ' business like politics. jected the Image or a "citizen The junior journalism stu· ._ ___________________ __, · Only a few -like Ronald pollUcian" who could deal dent is currently serving as KIRKPATRICK'S Reagan, now governor, or firmly with the issues, such as C·i,;~~i'8i~~~~fii: features editor of both the 673-2650 . 2760 COAST HWY. • CORONA DEL MAR O\la:J[j[] ColorTV George l\1urphy, now U.S. campusJtnrest. He won by 1 ::: campus newspaper nd · S.. rvin11 H1rbor Aru S1'nce 1946 wide margin. mag••'"' ' · • .senator -actually run for cr-1_:::::.:::::!::::... ___ ~__:=--~~~~~~~_'.'.'.~-'.:'.'.'.'.':..· ~----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ fice. But every other year the campaign trail is aglltt.er with stars working for candidates. Eugene \Vyman, a Democratic campaign otflclal, says the role of actors and ac· t.resses in a campaign can be ,_ .an important cne. "The actor with the right image has credibility \Vith the general public and his en· dorsement is of value,1 • \Vyman adds. "ln additlcn ta that, his being a celebrity can be used to bring out the crowds ·and to add glamcr to . what ordinarily is a dull political show." Headquarters for Jesse ~f. Unruh, a candidate for Democratic nomination fer governor, in the November electicn, recently announced an "Entertainment and Com- munications Ccmmittte to ·Elect Jess Unruh." .Co-chairman are comedian Bill Cosby, actress Shirley ~1acLaine, singer Trini Lopez, dancer-director Gene Kelly a'nd director Robert \Vise. Said Unruh headquarters: "The cOmmittee aims to enlist Tinanclal assistance, volunteer support a n d indu stry-wide backing for the Unruh cam· . paign." Unruh. minority leader cf .lhe state assembly, is ccn· ·, sldered the favorite, as of now, for the ncmlnation. A spokesman for f\.tiss MacLaine sai d she jcins pclltlcal campaigns because she's interested in g a o d gcvernment. She is friendly wtth some Republicans as well ·as Democrats, he added. and "the pclltical element Involved ·has to have an idealistic con· cept to it before she will su- pport It." Reagan, a Republican and rormf:r president of the Screen ~ctors Guild, is expec\ed to · ~ announce March 10 that he ·• Will seek a second fOur~year · le~. . Murphy, also a Republican, llready has said he will run again this year. Shew business personalities who helpetl Reagan's cam- pa"ign In 1966 incfuded John \Va,yne, Andy Devine, Wa1ter Brennan, Buddy Ebsen. Chuck Connors, Don De Fore, and · -Irene Dunne. Hollywood personalities also contribute to campaig n fwids , of course. with b e n e f It perfcrmancei for their can- didates. Devine said he campaigned for both Reagan and Murphy ."-not because 1 was a cele brity but because I'm a citizen. Irt the Screen Actors Guild they did such a f>Od job when the Communists were trying to take it ever. This was my way of show in& my appreclaticn." "I not only feel they were perscna\ly qualified, but they had invc\ved themselves In areas in oor union that they ·· ~'ould face in public offit!." In 1966, incumbent Gav. Ed· mund G. Brown focused on R£agan's I a ck. , of ad· ,minlstratlve exper1e.nce. A SALES & SERVICE OUI w.t.aRANTY INCLUDU: e 3·y.., l'lct•,.. Tt11M • f '"' '•"' • l ye., CeMpl.t• s..-.lc• Celflpim ..Mc• fept. o,.. 7 4op • w9" 'tH t rfftl •ltllt. f9046 Brookhurst '"' ••rfl•l4) YIL\.A•I SHOPPIN• CINTI• H1111tf.,._ '"'" tll·lltJI IN LAGUNA '00(]3LJO Color TV l'ORTABLES •lllOM s275oo -· MODIL 11.-411 Sl'iARS _ • .fRl!IMAN -Al'l'UANCES 111 •ltNNIYlllE 494.0101 494.0111 .ne • ID or or e The Hl·LITE '70 tube Is computer designed and engineered for 100% more bri(lhtness than any big screen In RCA's history. • CoDJputerRCA'sstaffof consecu Craftea highly skilled engineers . 1ve ear use computers to help solve design problems. Computer Crafted means dependable features faster because computers can work millions of times faster than men and work more accurately. computer Crafted means hl11her standards of quality. Performance RCA's unique Trans Vista• chassis Is virttJallY 100% solid state.•• Solid 'state Qevices are the most reliable and most. efficient· known to science. . ' . . . . . ' . . .. Desianed to run cooler longer and more efficiently than tubes. (Tubes are the major · cause of set breakdown end repairs.) Locked in Automatic Fine Tunina CAFTI Is completely electronic and automatic ••• pin points the precise stanal for VHF · and UHF. The Pioneers RCA enaJneers p~uced the first ' COior 1V set In 1939. Since then we have pioneered almost everj aspect of television. We make so many thinp In electronlcs we have the extrlll experience that is bound t.o be helpful. Hi-Lite '70 Tube Solid State•• THE MARSAN Spenlsh lt11ed e1blr'11try with authentic Moorilh •ctentl'; cone.led c:ashrs. D Autornttic: "Lockld in" flnt Tunlnt: ~F.T.) onbothUHFIVHF a COmpVter-tatedlOlld lntqrated dreults in IOUnd ampjlfitf • A.F.T.111tem O 28,500-\IOft IOlid·atlte•• TRnl \Ila ta• rwcetver C CoM'tnltnt Sblnd·Up TUhint 0 Solid-statt VHF 1ftdUHFOMrt-Tll'ltrl 0 Twa6•avaldUO<OM ••!wt D Remote control (optional, •ldni) Hi·Lite '70 Tube Solid State•• Model OM-6!59 ,,.....,,_.,..._._ THE MDAHL f191h, imqinativ• con1tm~r1,Y cleslp rwfltdl I Sclndlnlriln ll'lftUlnCL a -·'°""'""fJlllT"'lnl(A.~.TJOft .... uHF-AVHf a--""" fntl(iltld clri:uftl In tOund 1mpHfltr • A.F.T • .wn 0 26.SOG>wft IOlkl•mt.••Tt9ftiVlstae.ntCIMJ. 0 Conwnltnt Stlnd·UP Tunlna 0 SoHcl-tlate "·VHFtndUHFOrltlnt.TuntN 0 T•rowlduo- t0tM •Pll"" a """°"control (optlOnll, _.., Check the yellow pages for your nearest dealer, today~ ....... ,.. .... "...,.,.. ...... -wtfon ,ettf'le u.a. ,...,... . ......__,.,.,..,.,. "'""'",......... • , • •-I I ' I I • \ I l I ' I l .. -~r •'""_.,,._ JQ DAILY PILOf .. . . ~ . r11da1, March 6, 1970 ee Gi·a11t Missles Hit-Sou-t1t-4;frie--a-in Big-Ban WASHlf\GTON t UP I) _ In sur\'t!)' headquarters here. H can be inferred. according lhe biggest bangs recorded In platinum 1n lMe world. It also' S m i th.sou ian A!ilro1lhys1cal, To this fortunate r act a matter ol seconds at least The rJ$sile cluseter ap-to Hamilton, tha t these "ring the rocks o! the etintloents is an Im rlanl source o( Observi>lory at Caoibrklge, modern Johannesburg, the lhree dhferent misslles from parenll y c on s i s ted of struct ures" resulled t r om \vlthin lhe past two blllion chrome a tin ores. l\1ass .. scientls have found at Transvaal, and perhaps all or space, each a mile in dlame· fragments of a larger body, nearly simultaneous Impacts years." Tiler~ ls no suggcsllon, least 35 cra~ers on earth they So uth Africa and the living ter. smashed Into South Atrica perhaps the head ot a huge of three mass ive space objects '1 After the i m p a c t s , ' ' howev , that these metals believe resulted from the fall things therein, may owe somo 111e m Iss i 1 e cluster ap-wandering co1net which broke traveling at 201000 10 IOO,OOO Ham ilton said, '•I a r g e cam from srua cc or anywhere of giant meteorites like those thanks. I h I d b th miles an hour. ..-\.I'll i an explos ive fort.-e that up w en l got snare Y c amounts of molten rock were but the bowels or earth slir-which have pitted the moo n11------------may have generated 'the "big-earth's grav it;..tional field . A fo urth rragment from the gest bang•· our p\a n!t has Hamilton based his idea on a supposed cometary breakup form ed, and these 'magmas' r , perhaps, to action by and the planet f\1ars. HOMEOWNERS POLICY known. study or the gigantic Sushveld t.'ould have produced an ad-erupted to the surface and outside manipulaUon. "Fortunately," say' 1 h c1 This is the speculation of Dr. complex, a group of nearly jacent geological peculiarity cooled to fonn the various Hamilton frankly labeled hi s Smithsonian, "a!! of tbe fall s DON ClAWfOlD warren Hamilton , research circular masses or igneous known as the Vredefort Dome. kinds of igneous rocks we flnd proposed explanation ot the occurred before r eco rd e d scientist of the u. S. (once molten) rocks north of The e1ploslve violence of there today." South African geological ocl-history, for any of then1 could Geological survey's Denver Johannesburg in South these hits, said the geological The Bushveld comp lex is the dities as speculation. have completely destroyed a llllllml H AU .... A fi eld office. as reported by Africa's Transvaal province. survey, "might well have bee n biggest prodµ~r of precious But accord.Ing lo the modern metropolis." •1 ,._ __________ ~_....c..__:__::_._::_:..:.::.:._.c:.:__.:_~~~~-'-~~~-'----''--~~~---';:._-'--'-~-'--~~~~~-=--~~~~~--'-~~~~~~~~~~ Consu111er Gt1ard s ClJil Start WASHINGTON (AP) -The commission charged w i t h monitori ng the Truth in Len- ding Act ha s overcome the controversy and p o I i t i c a I maneuvering that rendered it usele ss for nearly two years a11d is ready to "'Ork. Despite criticism of the commlssion·s r i n a I com- position by so1ne consumer o r ga ni za li o n s , the con- gresswoman v.·ho was an architect of the law says she's satisfif1d wilh the makeup of the panel. •·J'n1 very happy with them no\v.'' Rep. Leonor Sullivan, (0-~1o.) sa id at a news con- ference. She referred to the National Commissia.i on Con s ume r Finance 's three presidential appointees: Chai rman Robert Braucher of Ha r v ard University. Robe r{ \V. Johnson of Purdue Uni versit y and Ira 1\1. l\1i\Jstcin , a Ney,· York City lawye r. The Consun1er f ederation of America protested w h en President Nixon appointed the th ree men last November <jespite.. efforts by Lyrxlon B. Johnson appointees lo stay on the commi ssion. All three Nixon appointees 'vorked 011 the N a I i on a I Cham ber o( Co1n111crce COlll· n1ission v.'hich drafted Lhe uniform stale consu mer code proposals offered as a n alternative to the Truth in Lending A.cl d u r i n g co11- gressional debate in 1967 and 1968. Braucher and !\1illstein told lhe news conference they con- sider the federal act to be good legislation. Johnson had left before the ques tioning got lo their rol es in lhc Chamber of Cotnmerce proposals. Braucher and !\lillstci'.1 sai d the uniform state code they proposed y,•as not an attempt lt blaze new ground in con- su1ner cred it but only 10 draft proposals lo wh ich all state codes could be e a s i I y modified. "In all fnirn ess. I h es e gentlemen h av c explained themselves," said f..1 r s . Sullivan. "I'm perfectly s a l l sf i e d after discussing their views th at we can sort of fight ii out among ourselves,'' she said . l\trs. Sullivan a.id Reps. Seymour Hal pern. {R-N.Y.), and Wright Patman . (0.Tex .. ) are the House members on the nine-person commission. Sens. John Tower, (R-Tex.), William Proxmire. (0-Wis) .. and John Sparkman, (0.Ala. ). are the Senate members. President Johnson signed the Truth M Lending Act in !\1ay 1968. It was eight months before he appointed former J\taryland b a n k i n g Com- missioner Herbert O'Conor .Jr., Houston bankin g and in- surance executive .Joe Albrit- ton and former labor leader Earl Rippen or !\tont gomery. Ala .• to the commission. The three fought removal by President Nill'.011. and the com- mission languis hed until last November. Now Brnucher says the commission might have to ask ror more time to do its job: Report to Congress on \\'hether the present system provides consumer credit at reasQ{lable rates and judge \.l'helher 'the fede ral governrnent should charter or regulal8 consumer finance ct1mpanies. WANTED IOYS I.ND GIRLS ACOES~l TO If -- W•llleol te .&llfll-0.. c-.. Clrc.•it f 'I *"" Ot;atNr J'itt H•llywMll l•IMI l'•L • AUDITIONS WILL IE HELD THIS WEEK IN ORANCOE COUNTY Fn ,.,... o" C•-• 1n1~1t• C111547•6251 Nowl T•l•nt $t•rc.h l•lnt Con4ucttd by TAKE I PRODUCTIONS HOLLYWOOD. CALIF. ' 3 LITE CHANDELIER Very grot •lul. Hk• •oi:nelhing Queen Ann• would ho"• though! twice about belore bo1hing ov•r lh• Xing'• head. Thr•• rnllk gl oss globes. broaA <:rrm1, turnfll wood cenl•rpott. o nd Q chain to hang it wllh. NlGRT GATE Lili• Cinderella would hO"t"• ordered for h•r coach ii sh• could ho-.e got It fo r this pri ce. You c11n. lor th• porch. th• •nlry. or •ven th1 polio ii you do a lot of 1ummer enl•rt11inin9. llu•t w11tch aul !or g uy1 with gla1' 1!ipper1.) dozens more on display • • • KIDDIE smBox "AQUA" CALIENTE Latin in1pired de1\gn mali:e1 rh!1 a chandeli•r with a Spanish accent. Amber gla11 globes ar• 1llghtly opcrque !or lntere11 ond IOI! glow. 1atin block bas• cui.d arms odd e xclling contro1t. "QUEENS CAP" SWAG Pillowed 10 Inch opal ball 11 a!tachfll lo lntrit at•ly de1ign•d tap. which goe1 to the chnln which han91 frotn lh• wall . I think you get lh• idea. but Hr1t you gotta t om• to the 1tote and buy. every style . ·• . every price 3 BIR SCHEER DOOR No. 341 Nie• for keqing lhe small fry froni sr•tting sun fri9d, Ha:1 111 Own canopy tbtrt tilt1 OT 1lld•1 down lo COY9f. Seating all around. For 1uch a· low priu. It'• cunallilJi what oll you get. lib pn•uinotic clOMr. hmgfl. ad.ju1lin9 cbo.nn•I. pu•hbm. tulip lcrkh. klc:lirplate. and, oi COUfff, lb• door, REG. 44.95 BLICK & . DECKER llDUSTRllL . smER 2999 , .. ·. . , .• Fof th• nlllD •ho·.;..ant1 th• llne1t MJnder. Blsr platen cofff• o•er fP squaN Inch•,• at on• time. Industrial ...... ~----------------------i . WllDOW-: FREE CLASSES l JYOUR CHOICE EACH Ad-.e11tsed •peeloh1 good until Mcr~h ti, 19070 !or until I gel o ri:rl••· whichever come• ~n•r , • • believe me. March 11th will come sooner.) 12x12 nssURED CEILING TllJl SQ. FT.' A mOl'e ol\roctlvw pattern with all the sound ' absorbin11 qualities you e•pa<:t In !lood tile. £a1f to do a telling. ' GLAD 1 BULBS. . · I I SBIDES -I wtDJIESDA YS I . I 7:30 -1:311 P.M. I BURO RUST P~VENTIYE PAIMT ·Strongl beCdlhy ~ tO p!GAI now tor IOJffthlag pr.tty In th• SJ>flDg. W• cony a c::omplet• a1eorlt11.•nl ol o_.,.nt1 lo·"lp. 2 c . EA. PWnc TRlSB cu 133 WITH LID A winner with lh• Hd !hat 111ap1 clo1itd. juat•llk• lhe- big one. Cleon and odor tr.. lartd w\11 aom•body pl.a•• teed that cat, it'1 been IWO y90r1.} AGGREGATE STEPPING STOllES 47~. 5 7 c:_ LA Mlf\ADA STOf\& I: March 11 -"How lo Tile o flocw:" March 11 -"How lo ln1ulole'" I WITH COUPON In •hit• 't'lnyl plastic, ltGlf -to nep, c:lecm. 'flMrtit ha:¥• Iii"• 'llD.n paMra. CUT'TO llZE FREt...UP' TO 3& INCHES. I I Morch 'lS -"ln1tallatlon of Garbage Di1po1al1.. I I : • DOOR PRIZES I •REFRESHMENTS: I ______________________ J POOL CBLOIUllE-: - KEYED E11TR'Y' LOCKS 39~AL. I keeps the wafer g•rm1 down, ln•ure1 a 1p111riling clean pool during tb9 •nt\H ffCllOa. No depotill. no r•turn. and thl1 1tull It lull polnicy. 8 6 • 50 FOOT ·aosE I 297 . ' "'9placfti9111t ·~ Joclr for th• lm>ftn ao" or for ne• 11 rou·-dedd..t you WQ8.1 to k olon• In your room. Tulip d.uip, with IWO n,.. -';...-~- BATH FAUCET 3•• fta lntlCllll palH wUhO: mlnl"ffitrrb b'I eftotf.'"m1ay.,,.~-1·­ r o11'U lil•l lo the Wi.M.rd kt 01 alter alt In black I?' Goad lltlle N placem•nt tor th•°"" that d.rippotd II• lcttt drip lo:st'nigtit~p( fO'l-.lt..,.So..y•-- rlpp.d l1 0111 cmd q,.·. your new one. n11 1landanl t l9eh .,...iag wilh M"•J turn louc.ts. belg .. ' . Glv'e1 o n•.., CO<l'I ol pai111 and pro••nl1 ru.st at 'lb.• same time. Mcui.y color•. NAnOlill." LUMBER . INT. EIT~' LATEX 3 77 . GAL. ' PaUll to~ mon•y by, iu•I 01 good a.1 lhe big hrOnd nam•• but a lot let& br•11d. HJgb plgm4nt , lal•x in m1n1y colors tor masonry, 11ucco. brick. aad plait.,. . 1' 90 LB. CONCRETE MIX . Ju•~ur water.~· and hurJY._!p ond ~ ~b ' -,;ef.,,.. lt ftcrn!•nl on fO\I got o concNte pa([ tJiihal tor many orou.nd the Ii.Ou " projects. .- !'"",··--~·--~ . .., ............ _,_ ==:====.,,=, ========:-,=:;;----:--·-:-=-=====:---====,.,,,,.,====..-0-----------N-><~~-···~~~....,..=--,...- . ,. ' I I • e ., SI.A VISTA, CALIPOJ.N1A, population 11 ,250 . The business district consists of a couple of aas stations, a few small shops, some real estate offices-and a bank. A large campus of the University of California is nearby. All in all, a normal American suburban community-perhaps very much like the one you live or work in. Normal, that is, until Wednesday, February 25, when violence shattered the peaceful calm of Isla Vista. At about 8:30 p. m. on the night of February 25, rampaging demonstrators-students and non·students- protesting the "'capitalist establishment" converged on the conununicy's small business district. Several protesters rolled a aasoline-soued trash bin through a smashed front door in i Bani:: of America branch and set it ablaze. Other st udents extinguished the tire. But just before midnight, with the angry crowd in a frenzy, the branch was set ablaze again. While police and fire officials were held at bay by a rock-throwing mob, tht bl\llk was gutted by tire and totally destroyed . A police patrol car wa. overturned and burned. Numerous other tiru were started. Windows wete smashed and life and property threatened . · These events took pl•ce in a co1111t1unity called Isla Vista. They could have h1ppened in your conununity. They can ~appen anywhere and with even more di1Utrou1 rau1ls. _ \\1!!Y did the eruption in Isla Vi~a~ place? Participants in the violence aay it was a prolest Frldu, Marth 6, 1~70 DAILY PILOT J l Position against the "capitalist establishment," "t he "91' in Vietnam," cooperation of all citizens . They will ~ oars. "the Chicago tria l," "student repression," "police brutality," Every American has a right to walk the streets in and a list of oth er grievances against [America in 1970. safety. No polemic should be allowed to obscure this right Some of these grie vanocs are rea l, some .a.re fanciful and Your wife or husband , son or daughter ought. to be safe others are false. But all deserve to be aired .. To lhc in visiting a supermarket, a filling station or a bank- degree tha\ they are not aired , are not taken seriously, Americans break faith with the ir young. But all America ns, young and old, liberal and conservative, lose by violtnce. Yiolencc,.nd destructiorr are the seeds of an archy and tyranny-whether it be the tyranny of the extreme right or the extreme left. We belie ve the time has co me for Americans to unite in one cause: a rejection, total and complete, of violence as a means of political dissent. All of us, yo un g or old, liberal or conservative, have for too long been silent on the issue of violence. We have been afraid of labels or slogans that would bf and us as either arch conservatives or traitors to a liberal ~use. Such sloganeering docs all of us a grave injustice. Let us, aa a nation, find once aaain our ability to ' distingui sh between protest and revolt; between dissent and chaos; between demonstration and destrliction; between non-v iolence and vio lence . Let us cease to condemn tho~ who diaaaree with us, but let us al10 be prQmpt and resolute in puttiita an end to violence in our land . -To this-end we-applaud the COUl'll'Olllnipo~se of many dedicated public offi cials. They deserve the • regardless of whether another may choose to reject that institution as an onerous symbol. It ia for these reasons that we plan to re-open our Isla Vista-branch on Monday, March 9. We realize that there is danger in this course of action . But we believe the greater danger to ourselves and to all of the people in this nation is to be intimidated by mob violence . We refuse to be so intimidated. ls the branch worth this much '/ ln monetary terms, the answer is no. It is not, and never has been particularly profitable . But it is there to serve the banking needs of the community and wt refuse to be ddven out of any conununity by a violent few. ls this a bad .businea decialon? P«haps in a narrow sense it ia. But wt believe that at .Orne time and in somll pl1cc Amtricans must decide whctller they lnllnd to ha .. their deciaions , indeed their lives , ruled by a violent minority, We are but one bank, but wt have decided to LIU our itand in Iala Vista. Bankof America .,,,. .. 04 ,.,.., • ...... M __._ - -----r---- T ----------- I I , • I ~E Boss_s_A_v_s_c_L_E_A_R_T~"-E_L~O-f\~W~E-RE~B-U-~~~-N~G-W-IT~·H~~R~.~ .. MAKE YOUR CHOICE and SAVE at UNIVERSITY OLDS -. ~ere's why we have so many used · c;a rs! 1970 OLDS SPORT COUPE Fully Factory Equi pped Inc luding Head Rest, Seat Belts, Back-Up Lights, Windshield Was h· ers, Outside Mirror, Carpets, etc. ORDER YOURS TODAY FULL PRICE •2499.,;. ,. .;.' .. NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY . •• • • . '69 CORVETTE SECTIONAL ,. "· lllfhl> ll""'"""'h<, $4799 oi\. .. •l•tnnt •• f..0 .... , -""'·~M. I'~, yellow w'bl•~~ '"''J OCltMlll'll "69 OLDS 4 ... 2 • ,.,,.,n b'Q •nain•. won• · ••• / $2995 '""' k>W rnll~1. tY5N01•) "69 TOYOTA COUPE • •N<'ll rtd "''I~ ""'•1• vinyl $1499 tno l•w maN9t 1"111F}ll) '66 CONTINENTAL , r uu """''" lf<!ory .,,. con. $1:599 0.1 ....... \Q. le•1h,r lhlt<'l(lf, t ll5CO!.ll "65 CHEVROLET 111 TON . . ~ ~ •Nck •11~1, VI. f!OWtr $1299 lllH•"G. IPlil rim• l,O• """"· !11211ll1 '64 FORD F·lOO ' ""' Pi(~tlP. VI, ' ,_ $950 I•~"'""""""· , . ., .. , ~~····· fll111(1 COSTA -M£S A '67 FORD COUNTRY s9u1H - 10 DISl""'lrr. Fsctorv '"• $2599 "°"'" 1!~er1.,., ,..,to, ""•l~r. 1utom11ic, wll<lt wtlll. (YOA. 1!71 '66 VA LIAN T 100 ' Door •""•"· e,o...,mtt•I ' $999 ,Yll,..,tr .,,,,,,,, l tl!OmfloC IT1n,ml»lon. illlt.TIOJI '68 OLDS CUTLASS Hf C•e. VI, •t1klm•ht. llL $2899 H, PO"' "~""' .!. br1ko\, w~w. t•cto•Y •Ir. lt...,,•u 100 (Vl(11l) '68 OLDS DELTA 88 I Dr. HT. VI. •Ulomt!o< RI. $2399 11. oo""'' 11"r1,,. " br1t•>. WSW, IKIOrY 1lr, l•Jld&tl to•, 1111 wt.HI. (VCKIJ.11 '67 OLDS DELTA Ct11!om H.T. Coo. VI. •t1IO-$2299 ,,....tit, ltl.H, l>OWer -"~""' I. b1'1ke1, lldotY 1lr, 1!1! Whl•I, 11hcllt1 !OP. (VCl.U2) '68 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill FIC!Of'I' 1lr, 111•om•t!C, l>OW•r $2199 1l!"f'rln g. rld•O. hr•lor. ••I" "'""" ,,,.,, tWCU•ll! ' ''1 CHRYSLER JOO 11.T. 'H PLYM OUTH f,URY Ill H.T. <.~. ~utom•lk. fa<:Jorv $1999 "· IUIOl!'lolllc, l1c1ory •Ir, $1.799 •I•. PO ~lffrl~a, 'POw•• ~WM 1t .. rl1>11 • llr•k•~. bra~u. ••d o, l>ul1r, whh• r..iko, lleU1r, whi11 .. 1M 1lreo. Wfll !Ira. C YWTS.61 (VtlEOI ) '67 OLDS VISTA CRU ISU 'H RIVIERA COUPE Waoa-n. VI, 1utom-!lc, fie· s2799 "· I UIOmlflc, IKtory al<. $3799 lory air, PO-l!•rir>g, POW• lun power, r 1 d 1 o; ""''" .. or1~u. r111io, ne>11er, wt11!1w1!1 liru , Y1nV1 ..... ...,l1tw1ll Tira. (fl?ASHI IVME.tl!U "6t I UICK WILDCAT CUSTOM . .'H T0l lRD H.T. i::oun ' . H I. VI, IUIO<Nllc. IK!Orv $3599 VI, •uhNnltlc,• IKIWY air, $1999 air, ~•M "'"''"'· ~~· fll!I POWtr, r 1d i o, 11'!1!tr, "''-"· r.Oio, ltMlv, ""'Ir.-wtilrew111 tir ... (5ZW2211 Wiii llrH, 11ko11 roof. CXWF- Ull "66 OLDS H LUXURY SEDA N '65 OLDS 4-4·2 COUPE VI, 1u1omulc, llCIOrY air, $1999 VI, lll!Ol'M!lc, .. , condJlion. $1299 111!1 "'""" ••CliCI, "••1••· ... llO-•lffl'ing, pawer "''"'•w•ll ilfet. (1KX01it ) IM"lk .. , r111it1, llNl9•. !MUM· .,. '67 CHEY. CAPRICE H.T. '61 PONTIAC LE MANS '" VI, IUl<>m•!o<. .... ..... , $2199 2-Dr. H,T, VI, IU!O<nlllt, I•<.· $2499 •!f••lng, "°"'ft' br1k ... ••ll•o. 1<1ry 1lr, p0w1r 1t.aring, fl· dlo, l'INltr, Vlthl!•w•ll tlr••· llo•t1r, wlll!e,.,.11! 1ire:1. {TTM· vlriyt roof, whet! coven, low ,,,. mllNge. CWl8'22) '67 CHEVROLET IMPALA '61 OLDS DELMONT Bl H.T. Jpr Ct>t, HI VI, I UIO., fir · $1699 Cpe. Au1omellc, flctory 1lr, $2399 lor1 l•r, l>IWer 1tttri11<1 I. "°w1r ire.r!119, -brU;u, D•1ttl, rldlo, l!Nllr. ..,,,lll"" rtdlo, 11111tr. "'"'""'•II t1r1s. will Tlrt1. lfZMl71) (WXE2'2l NOW IS THE TIME TO SA VE • • • NEW 1970 ANGELUS CAMPER 911,' Clb•OVef llffpl 6, 111'1'1, 71 lb, Ice )111, ll9!1t w11tl witli "1c141 trliil. lH1ri-w•rHty. "400111'4 011 ''"' true•. Serie! Ne. 19tl. CAMPER TRUCKS '70 GMC >/• TON CAMPER EQUl l!'PED llo4io •• ktite., "9\"f 411,y .,n._ 1toltlll11t", ...+' 1npn1i1111, pewit" IHft ... 750•16 I ply tlr•. 1pllt rir111, J SO YI, AT400 01tor119fit, ""' c•"t 111lr· ,.,., st., ll•Mpef, llHtitlfol 11111lltht y1ll•w w/ lllK• 4elu•1 i111leri1,, Se,iol N1. 1701 I. CAMPER COMBO New '70 kh1t·ef·tll1•ll11cf I' c•b ''" 'fl'ltlt ,1to'1'1, } 75 lb. lee ff-. 1JH,. 4, 111 O'l'IKllllO trit!li I: ,,..,.r,,I •, ~ _ _. "''11t1tl:fl 011 Hew '70 GMC '''"''"· 350¥1. :,• ...ile, ...._, 70011 ' ' 11ly 1pllt rhM. 1111 ''".dlum ,1. •-wltfl ''"" i11mlot. 1507JOI S]695 . HANDl-VAN '70 GMC 1630G ll1dl1, VI 9"9i111. 1ut1111otic tr1111mluio11, cus lo"' trh11, .. tithe side well tir", lltlitt yollow willit bl•~• ; •••1•111 htte•i••· Hord '' fi114 model. Seriel-N1:·~· ... 1aoa1. Renaember, "Wt; Ant; NEVf;n SATl.'lf'I E" l h'll'l'I L YOll .4lrE" 2850 · HARBOR· BLVD ., COSTA MESA 540~8881 • G. M. C. TRUCK·S • 540-8881 .. , ,• " ' ;1 .~;-, ~ ' ' ·~· ff '•' _{ :r ;i' ... f i J r }- I,; .... ·.,· •• & ' . • ·~ ' >. .. ~- } ~ 1-f i >:l.:-. • "" ... •. ' • ,. ; ., . • ' • San Jua R T ips :+so m ~rero to Sw_ ows • I I I • • . ' • • ~ il' J. .. '" ~ ; t .. ;.<, ' - \ Ole! It's that time of the yea again. The swallows are heading for the picturesque vlJ .. lage of San Juan Capistrano, and the residents are head~ ing up committees to welcome them. As part of the weekend celebration of La Fiesta de las Golondrlnas, members of the Woman's Club of San Juan Capistrano are deef. in preparation for the aMual Swallows' Day Breakfas . . Aided by members of the Rotary Club, under the ~direction of Don Simpkin, the women will serve the usual hearty breakfast of orange juice, eggs. sausage, pancakes, coUee afld milk to persons attending Satur· day festivities on March 21. The meal will be served from 6:30 to 11 :30 a.m. in the Womari's Clubhouse on El Homo Street, one block Crom the parade route. ' . ' The parade, sponsored by the ,Fiesta..Assocfa.tion of San Juan C8(?istrano, will take equestrians, floats, ?ands and costumed vill..igers down the main street and past the mission. Chainnen of the breaJUast are Mrs. Vinton P. Frost an~ Mrs. Leon \Vare. Persons interested in group reser· vations may write to Mrs. Floyd Arce. ticket chairman, at Box 215, San Juan Capistrano, 92675. • Checks shouldbe received no tater than Saturday, March 14, at a cost o! $1.50 !or adults, an~ $1 !or chil- dren 12 years o( age and under. Seventh and eighth grade students from Marco Forster Junior Hlgh School will set up tables and spearhead cleanup activity. The. stuc;lents also. will assist club women with serving. ... SWALLOWS'. DAY iNCLUDE S BREAKFAST - A bright'Brray of .sombreros and pa pier mache flowers signals the S'lart ·91 llie ·an- nual fjesta breakfast. ·Busy under 'vorking hats are (left to right) , . ...-....-, ~ Mrs. Vinton P. Frost, breakfast chairman, A~ -~Speer; clief (or the Rotary Club, and Airs. Melba Hanson, way!' and means .chair· man. The meal will precede the traditional fiesta. parade. BARBARA DUARTE , 494-9466 • A Wint.er's Ta le •: H.ut fif .es Bt:Jrn ing With Modern Fuel . . ). Keeping _the hoipe .. ftres burning 1nay be a noble endea\'oT, but it doesn't"'a,lways pne@te enough heat on a cold winter's night. 1'his fact being uppennost in the minds of' members of the \.Voman's Club of San Ju~~Capistrano, it is no surprise they worked long hours to secure ftn\d to purchase a new' furna ce for the Boy Scout Hut \ l · -Troop 12 of Capistrano was organized in 1928 after the club proposed such an organization. Under the presidency of Mrs. Frank Forst.er, members agreed to sponsor ·the troop with William Griswold as first scoutmaster . r~or nine years lhe club continued its sponorship, until the Rotary Club took over the responsibility in 1937 .. One of the tnajor problems of the Capistrano troop was lack of a permanent meeting place. The boys were shifted from one church or store building to another \vhicb interfered with th eir projects . In the late 30s Carl J-Iankey donated a Jot and a move was under \Vay to secure funds for construction of a scout hut. Area contractors pitched in and in November of 1939, enough 111oncy had been raised to erect a building. T. W. Billips. husband of the president of the woman's club in 1939. took ·over leadership of 'Troop 12 and was honored to have the hut named after him. AJUtough the club relinquished active le,adership to the Rolaf)' Club .. it has continued to support the scouts through a yo uth <ind s~rv ....... ice committee. : • ~ , !' Toward this end, the committee under the gtiidS.11ce of Mrs. l:iQsf Carpenter and Mrs. Paul Benson, learned the liiePljice was unabl.J'to \\'ann the hut sufficiently on cold n.ights. A driVe was ~oon under<w~Y~ and today a brand new furnace has taken over lb~ Work of one rustle fireplace. ' •' I '. -. . ' .. '· I .. , •-,l' • •rlll11Y1 ~rtll 6,, lf1t I ''" 11 .. THEY'!f&jOOOD. ScOUTS:r:-.'For 42 year._1, mem·' ·• latO.~·gesture, Mrs. T: rl{, Bitupg-s ~utn1'i:lfif hers of,.the,1Woman:s ·Club bf:San Juan Gapi~trano • ~ Dudley Brand la check'for·purctiase of 1a fWnaC:e (or ha_v.e acl(vely suppor(ed: ith~,. Boy Scpilts: , In . the the :Scout hut.• · : ' • · · . -. . 'I • • ) '\ • • • •• . ' . . I , (a,reless Placement of :A r-se m1al Loads Hbm,e·With Problem.s . ' . ' ' ' \. DEAR A!"N -~•'DER.5: fl.ty te,Yes ~re . ~ ; • . : • • '"' ---. _ 1 ~, : 1 : ~ . ler in your ~l~1~t. I can jt remembe:rt tion,."As a mo'Ufer of 16 chi)dren -yes. I pie of all religions, 1 believe il ii' unjust swollen r.rom .~h.i but.I am detenrnn-"' • ·~ ... ·" i • 1 ,your answe~ We~ your help, Ann.. 11aid·te. and I Wanted all of them-I say and unreasonable to incorporate a con- ed 'fi:~· It:= while lh .. lhoqh1:1 '· ' • -J;OllCERNE;P MQTI!Pl; vo .for l'!"'i'l am a member of the troverslal relJiioos pmcep1 u p1rt of..,. ar:_ J:r 1fu1e ~ti, only 3 years or age,. I.~ t. • ., \~. DEAll ,M.0111Ell:J Art YOI IU.,rt ,..... LD~church lrKf'il oug iTim~vtnaw. liit call tnt was shot to de~~ •yesterday .b.Y ~r 1· · f " .::;:b:: ,:z;:.n:;~m: ~:u.~ t!lal ~e have..8{1 o~~al position on abor· -MOTHE~ FROM PROVO year-0ld brothci:-., lie was playigg> rih a ... • . . .... 1 , 1. .eipedalli Wbtre tbe::aader-%5 group It la-li(>ll, t feel this dccwon should be made DEAR MOTHER: lraVe hr Pnn gu n he ilad f~nd on the closel shelf. The. • ,. · > • • • • • • 1 d ' + by the mother -not the church or the And tUak fo wriUD • little glrr "f'iJ' ,at beautiful and lovable _, .. aarry lhe b a~·1or 'the res~ orh1~ life. puts bit k.cl 111 the pfl~ toal1bt: Ctl!d '10 ve · .. . 1 s r C· child. 1Ier partnlf' are 'distraught. nie ' 'lbe guilty 'PB 1.'ln my opinion., is tl'le tbe gtn 1B yoar !tome be rtached Hy )'ftlr : If lhe roommate 11 a glrl, my advice la govtmp:1eqt. mother can't brlng herself to look at the !lither who left ls 'foaded gun wb~re lt!e chlktren, Dad? 11 It loaded? How 1bou:t to 1uge1t lb1l Pt get proresdon11'1telp l can think or nothlng more tragic than Unsure of yourse lr on dates? Whit's boy, let alone rorgivt him. This is a ter-boy could gel It. Please, Ann, pnnt Ut11 tt? -thea yoa 1boald lay·olf. Tbenin ue-a molher who does nol want her child -right? Wbat'a Wl'Olll? Should ,,OUT rfble thing, Ann. The youngster didn't lettjfr for olher..,fathers ~o own guns. ll not be fOtttd OI 1 penon. Jt may be tUt unlm, perhaps, It ls the child. 1 would Shouldn't you! Send for · AM Llndera' know what he wM doing. I-le kno1ts he courd save a whole family a llfeUme of DEAR ANN LANOER.5: Some Ume your cla1gbkr does nol wish to chonge -never consider abortion for my.self, but l booklet uoallhC DOI and Dcm'ti" encic. did a hideous thing, bul he I!: l>cwUd~red regret. ago you printed, a letter from a lesbian. la which caae, le•rve-her a.Jone. • feel strongly that any woman who does lnr, with ,your request 3$ cent.a In c:oln tnd 1tt1d unabJe lo comprehend what it lli all --=-sAD-SAD SAD Ple.1se print u again. we have a dauthter nol want a ch.lid shouJd be able to have a long, self·addressed.., slamped•envelope. about. Other membeni of lhf' famlly in college 'vho wrlles that.she has fallen DEAR ANN LANDERS: I've read your the pregnancy terminated legall.y If her Ann Landers will be 1lad to help )'au 1 already ha ve shown signs o( resentment DEAR-SAD: Uere'1 yMr letter altd I in love with her roonunate. Wf are just column for years.~ The only time l have physician decides the abortion will not wllh your p~lems. Stod them to &er ln .Y against the ctilld. It Is heartbreaking. agree compleld)'. I bope every (alhtr sick about this and don't know what lo ever fell moved lo write to Ann Landers endanger her health. care of the DAILY PILOT. mc::Joe1aa I The girl is dead and her brother wlD 'llllo owns a pa will clli<lr ll before be do. I remember readiJlll lhe leiblan's le~ ·wa ... In-regard to your posltloo on-.abor· Since die government must ..... peo-1ell·addreasod, 1tamt>ed envelope. ' I I . ...- . . . \. l • • • • . . . . . . . . ' ... , .. .. . ' • -' ' Hemlines Going Down • USC Aum • ·Meg Takes Long Look I T9 Marry Wendy Gambill and Dua~ Haley will exchaJta:e wedcdnc pledges in the COmmunJ.ly C hurch Congregatkmal, Corona de! Mar on June 20. 1fy MAJIGAllET SA VILLE omclal f\lnctlo111. Sh< lhinkl argumenl rt1ullfd. they make her look taller. Tony has done some work u .· •• .· LO!jDON (UPI) -Prlnctu Margaret 11 the flrl5t of the British royal women to buy 1 maxi coat. She chose a grey tweed one which She wears to take her two childrt'o, Lord IJnley and Lady Sarah Armstron&- Jone.s--for walla and also to go shopping and drlvl~g. lt'a a natural for Margaret For some Ume, the fashion. loving princess has been choosing long·Uirted dresses for private partie:i as v.·ell as Prin<:ess Maraaret always 1 de1l,ner oI women'• atylea. has been very conscloua of the Once he arranged 1 ruhion fact that she'• 1111ly five feet show of &kl clothes ·and wlnltt t"·o lnchea in shoes. sports outflts, but that wu Her husband, Lord Snowdon, before hls marrJage. llkes her 1n I.he longer lengths., While Prlnctss Marsarel too. He takes cloae interest Jn and Tony were in Japan laal everything :ihe wears, offering year, opening Btjllsh Week 1n frank commen~ and :iuggstlng Tokyo the princess W a J alterations If he thinks they're prese~led with a w.tll hlMer needed. of orange and aold em•t Princess 1'-faraarel usually broidery. Tony decided It accepts his verdl~t but there would make he't an everUnf have been occa•lom when dress. , they've dlsaareed and a lively "There's hardly enough for The daughter of Mt. Ind Mrs. David Gambill of Cori>na de! Mar graduated from Alhambr1 High School and tilt University of S o u l h e r n California where she was a ' · member or Alpha Gamma Delta. Associates · Preview Kauffman Exhibition n-lm auit," the prlnceu remarked. So the dressmaker wu told to use the banner for the top, adding name chiffon folds lo the noor and wide slee\'es trimmed with 10Jd embroidery. Ever since It's been Pr Jn c es s Margaret's favorite after-darK outfit. ·WENDY GAMBILL Engaged Her fiance , !IOll of ?!:fr. and r.1r11. ff.. O. Haley of SouUt Belld, lnd., r~lved bis BS from Bsll State University, Muncie, lnd. and wu prtli· dent of 'nleta Chi fratemlty. Rosarian Views Bugs Handmade for a Fashionable Occasion Lovely tableclo'lhs hav~ been made by members of the Women'r; Ser.vice Guild of the Lai!1"1a BP qrl1 Chu rf'll r f Religious Science for a spri11g bout1que fashto:-show·card party lun.;t'POD. ·0 1,. playing one of the Lableclc.l.)S ar11 . (left to right) !\.1rs. Glen Hoberts and Mrs. Delia Armitage. The event will begin at noon on \Vednesday, March 11, in the church with proceeds destined for 1he church. expan&lon fund . _ Horoscope Virgo: Be Gracious A preview reception hosted by the University G1Jlery Associates Sunday, March 8, from S to 7 p.m. will mark the openlne of the CraJg Kauf· fman exhibit in the UCI Gallery. The exhlblUon, directed by Johl1 Coplans, curator of the Pa.s1dena Arl Mu.seum, in· eludes worka ranging from Kauffman's plexlgfaas reUef paintings or 196Mf to his TTlOlll current translucent 11prayed \\'all ICUlptures. The artist's work \VIS in- cluded in the Xompas 4-West Coast USA exhibition which traveled in Europe earlier this year and currently is being seen In the 69th American Ex· She's ju.st 1cqulred the very Happenings in the insect president of the South Bay hlblUon at the Chicago Art · nP.west craze for day time world will be observed when Rose Society in addl.Uon to Institute. wear-a pair of soft leather James R. Rose addre5ses the being a consulting rosarian for One of the first Los Angeles .boots wboy style, with the American Rose Society. ar_tlsts to use 1 n du a t rt 1 I square silver heels that clat. me~ting of the Orange County Bugs 'n Stuff will be his materials and._ methods in his ter a:i she walk:i. A sombrero Rose Society at 7:30 p.m. topic and he will show close•UP work, he has conUnued to ex-goes with them but it's said Tuesday, March 10, in the slides of aphids, thrlpa, worms plore ·1he parUcular light and the princess wu somewhat \Vestmin:iter Civic Center. and plant dbeases taken in his spatial quaUUea of his plex -put out when 1 certain Rose, of Granada Hills, is own garden. !glass medium. member of the royal circle past president of the San The publk is h1vited lo at· The exhibition will be oJM!n uked: ''where's your horse?" Fernando Rose Society and tend the meetin& .. to the public March 10.Aprll 5,, ---:::;;llii~iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~;;;::-Tue!lday through Sunday, from I I t.oSp.m. J k Decontlo111 al lhe opening ft a~ ft IS ALIVI! reception were arr1ngtd by ~ Mrs. Erie-Hoeg of Laguna At "The Grandest Mell Of All · Beach and !eature the brilliant ~· . Beginning March 12. 1970 tones of the ar tis t's sculptur... $oath Coast '1ua SATURDAY MARCH 7 loyal to those who perform special services. Strive to bet- ter understand fellow workers. response to calls and messages. You are more ac- live than u:iual. There is also a tendency to be careless about details. Medical Assistants By SYDNEY O~IARR New moon a•d eclipse of 11un are re1tured. c A N c E n PERSONS MAKE TIIE BEST CHEFS. TEEN DATING JllNTS, '·· T111l11lt tllealer p1rde1 •rt fatartd. R o m 1 • t I c at· mt1pbere prev11l1, more to f1>r Scorpio than otber signs. Aq11riu1 could 1et 1tuck with tM check , while Vireo tllln11:1 H:rious t.bougbts concerning permuency o( I relationship. AriH finds th1l big for her) d16e: jg more 1tl•moroo1 than 1a_tJclp1led. ~mini makes ptOCf'!IS with one who could hW key to ruturfo b1ppl11es1. h all, a good d1Ce tdsht for mM -but be ••I')' lll tee.W· ed areas. AIRES !March 21·APr11 19), New moon po.sillon coincides with your vdl\ingneis11 lo shake off_ self-doubts. Go for the dJf. ferent, the e>;cltlng. Give full play to your innate sense of adventure . TAURUS rApril 20.May 20): Emphasis on how rectptlve you are lo friends. P'ullfllment of desires depends u p on cooperation of those attracted to you. ExciUng night In- dicated; ae«pt social in- vitations. GErtnNI •~lay 21-June 20\: Versatile approach can g1ln allies in top positions. You ha ve abilities which many ad· mire. Your sense of alertne1111, humor is a definllt aa1et. Display it lo aOOd advantage. CANCER (June 21.July 2Z): Your efforts have more of a chance to gain w~e appeal. Put finishing touches o n spkial project. Present format, idea s, overall plan. Many are surprised by your talents. LEO lJuly 23-Aug. 2Zl: Slatt. of fina ncial affalra can be cl arified. There Is chan.ae. variety. added communication with member of opposite Mx. Tnvolvement.. tonight tend to be .!Ctious. Take care. VIRGO I Aug. 21.S.pt. 22 )' Lie low; play walling game . Consu lt expert -don't at· tempt to be your O'A'n lawyrr. Family member m a k e s gesture of peace. Accept It. Be gracious. LIBRA IS.pi. 23-0ct. 22 \, Your percepll\'ltv is put to teat. You are ca)led upon ta make quality judiment. Be Fc:im ily Dinner A di~ members and friends of the Maaonlc family will be served al t p.m. on Sunday, tifarc:h 9, i n the Arthur S~ad residence. 'J'S05e interested ln at· • tendh11 the Potluck wNch 11r111 provide money for !he 6Uildlng fund may phone Mrs. Stead at 494-MU for reaerv1Uons. • .. Sweet Sole • A bakt salt will b e ·' • · ' ~ by ,!he Unli<d FGW1CjUltll WODJln of C..ta M111 tomorrOW at 10 1.m. ln • front of the .AJpha "Beta ~-maiket on 17th St. In C:Osta M,... Proottd• wlfl bene!l1 Ill• · P'oaHqUare miNlonary work. ' SCORPIO (Oct. 2J.N,,. 21)' New and creat.i\·e outlook ls indlcaled. Yo:i are stimulated. There is change. You put together correct ingrcdlenL'I. Results could add up to greater emotional fulflllrilent. AQUARIUS tJan. 26-Feb. 18): ·You add to possessions if receptive. Let others make of· fers. Your bargaining position is strengthened if impression of coolness is glven -no panic, no ru5hing. Gavel Changes Hands SAGITT Alllll S (Nov. 22- 0ec. 21): There are some restrictions. But you ate capable of completing Im- port.ant assignment. Self-doubt is the only factor standing in your way. Realiie this and rer pand aceordingly. CAPRIOORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Accent on short journey, CAROL SMITH J unt Bride News Told At Party PlSCES (Feb. 19-tilarch 20): Day features pleasurable ac· tivity among new, er<ciling persons. There is challenge and you rise to the occa:i\on. Take a chance on your own personality, abilities. You 'll succeed . California Theme Set For Confab Gillden California wtn theme tht 62nd aMual stile ~ rerenct of the Callfoml• State Society, Daughters of the A m e r I c a n Revolution, ac- cording to r.1rs. T h o m a s Vernon Coffee. st.ate regent. The gathering will lake place Tuesday, r.tarch 10. through Friday, M1rch 13, in the Los Angeles Hiiton Hotel. R e p r e sentatlves of 8S southern and 63 northern chapters ••ill attend the con· rerence, Including the Aliso Canyon Chapter, L a g u n a Hills ; Col. Wiiliam Cabell Chapter. Newport Beach ; Pa· lience Wright Chapter, Laguna Beach; RJch1rd Bay Id on Chapter, Seal Buch, and Sin Clemente Chapter, San Mrs. R. Alan Gauley of Corona del Mar will be In- stalled as president of the Orange COWlty M e d i c I I A!siatants' Association at a I " .• i I 'i PRESIDENT Mrs. Gauley Conference Reported A report on a state con- lerence this weekend in Los Angeles will be given lo members of the Cavaller Chapter, Colonial Dames XVII Clemente. Family and friends of Carol Century at the Tuesday, March 10 mtetlng. Sue Sn1ith learned of hrr k President Beatrice Crist will enaaa:ement to Donald Le Roy Group See S report on the session which Clark during a diMer party will bt attended by the Mmes. h08led by her parent., Mr. Volunteers Lowry Gallinger, E 11 n 0 r and Mrs. Robert James Smith, Kraak. Grant Rym1l and in lhelr Costa fl:feia holt'f'I!. P.1embtrs of the auxiliary cf Erwin Marka. Costll Mesa 1'-lemorial Hospital The mee.Una will be1in a Amon I g u,e s' 11 con-will a~nd Lhe month 1 y 12:15 p.m. irrthe Old Brussels gratulatJng the couple were mttl.lng at 10 a.m. en r.1ond1y, restaurant. Mr. aod ?ttrs. Donald E. Clark P.larch I, in the hospital con-AIS() included on the agenda of Coita Mesa, parents of the terence room. \\'iii ht a report on tht rtctnl benedict-elect. P.1embers ire a:iked to bring Patriots' Day p1r1de, and r.Uss Smith attends Costa persons who are willing lo presentation of a slate of of. r.tesa High School and her volunteer time. • Those In-ficen by Ttlrs. Edgar Axtell. fiance is an alumnus of the terested may phone J\frs. <'hairman of the nom inattng same school. George Thomas, &46-~I. committee. They will exchange \\'edd lng .===================== vows Jun 29 in Chri s t Lutheran Chur<'h. Mot T'-1oLhers and c · ren are In· vlted to visit the un - tJ(lglon B la c h Commu N u r s e r..y School when parliclpaUng parents host a l\'etk long open house bf:twttn 9 and 11 :30 a.m. beginning r.tonday, March 9. Classe& are conducted each 'l\'ttkday in Sl WIUred'g EPl5COpal Church. I See by Today's Want Ad s • • Good tor the ~cond 100 ytan, antiqu@ ~ 1lie hand turned !pool bed, Ex~lle-nl &ndif!Ori $150. • \V.·a of lhe soul: an- tique 1tab11ed a:tau win- dow, 2J.'CS7 tor $35, e \\'in O\'er 11\lJaUon shin: brautUu1 home, pti- v1te be.th, kitchen and col- or tv privileaes. aanae. 1'fe11 Vrrdt area. d!Mer on Tuesday, March 10, in the Ssddleback IM, Santa Ana. Others taklna: offlcr: follow- ing the 7:30 p.m. dinner will be the Mmes. 0. T. Van Houghton, president.elect : Robert Eichenberg, vice presi· dent ; Bruce l.1itchell, recording secretary: Allan Quast. c o r responding secretary; Harry K in g, treasurer. and Ft1iink Farfone and Miss Sharon Buratto. directors. Mrs. Ted Lamb, retiring president. will b e c o m e parliamentarian. Installing officer will be Mrs. Harry Longstreth , a past president, assisted by Mrs. Ray McCarthy. Egg Hunt Colored Easter eggs and Easter fashions will be discussed 'A'hen the Huntington Beach ~trs. Jaycees meet at 7:30 p.m. ti1onday. hfarch 9, in Li 's restaurant. Cocktails "'ill precede din- ner . and final arrangements far the cltyv.·ide Easter egg hunt on Thursday, March 26, ~·Ill be made during the business meeting. Plans for the aroup':i annual fa shion show April 11 in the Newporter Inn \\'\II be re view· ed, and the meeting will con- clude with an old-rashioned r1lly for the April election ot officers. Going North Directors and te1cher$ of preschoolers in Orange County boarded buses this morn!ni and are traveling to Fresno for a c:t1nference. Speakers will be from state and federal of· fices concerned with the educ1tion of young children. SPECIAL SALE JEZEBEL BRASSIERES n.11 V2 ~PRICE $4.to YA.LUI --·--St.It SS.ff YALUI ~----St.h Sl.tl 'fALUI _ _. ___ SJ.ti 17." YAlUI -·-···---·-SJ.It We lio~41ht the ''""plet• I t• Steclr ef • Seel letch tler•l "1et ell''''' & telen .,llf • t••~ 1el1ctieRI .l ONI TIME ONL T SALii MAD FASHIONS 1Hl5111Ml 11 l!OOPllllSI f!llM11MGTOll RICI Mr1. Gltn Thomsen is direc· tor of the J)lrent-patlclpelion, nonproOt and nonsecrtl&rlan nur sery whk:h i• operated for children between 2 years, nine mCH)ths and klnder11rten-1ge. Additional irJormaUon may be obtelned Crom fi.1rs. Roger Anderson, 162-3111 ''.==================·' L-~------...11 OPlll DAILY 10 To 10 IUND.lT10To7 PRIDA T AllD SA TURD AT OllL Tl March 6-7 Ladies Vinyl Suede Jackets $ Re:. j ,97 <;ome and get 'e.ml Popular vin>•le suede in perky scyle5 to make you look ri1ht. Take the cbjll out·io blue, ant.lope or-itttn . .Sittt-10.18. Charge Tl ! o,. .. . ... fi ....... ... 1111 .. '""" Wt1 tMl•1ttr ... , ...... , ..... 1"41 hec• ltftl. •.... ,,,. lHtte11 .. t V•llty View 1111 llMtl• iu. <•••• Mtui M•l'Mr ...... et Wll••• 2200 Mtrltef 11¥4. Sent• An• lil1t•tr St. el lri•t•l 1400 t•l1tt1r . .... ,.,.. lltecll lt.etbltwtli.. SJl11etcll ..... h51trtH l'l•c••ti• ti,.,._ UIHl1 ltlO N. Pl•c:e11tle '''· I t I I I . ' ·------ Fr~, Mirth 6, 1970 O~llY PllOT MWD USES HALF OF POWER GENERATED BY PARKER DAM, WORLD'S DEEPEST, TO OPERATE PUMPING PLANTS AQUEDUCT BEGINS AT WHITSETT INTAKE PUMP • Power, Recreation Gained -Huge Water Prob le JD T~~kled by .MWD CANAL STRETCHES 62 MILES By ALBERT W. BATES Of tM 0.llY Piii! St.ii Amid all the grousing aboul lhe na· lion 's shortcOrnings, it 's well for perspec- tive to p<1use and renect now and thm that Americans have done a lot of things r ighL Problems have been solved on a massive seal~ not only in space ex- ploration Uut here at home , especially in Southern California with its perennial wat.er problem. The continuing nood of new residenls into Southern California and in particular Orange County, doesn 't know, but should, about the foresight and the hereulean ef- forb which have brought enough water for their life sustenance -and also for their electric power, their flood control and their recreation . Southern California's waler and power leaders over the years have met popula- tion needs with a minimum of damage to scenic resources. On the contrary, much of what has been done along the Colorado River and across the Southern California desert has put an end to environmental damage from rampaging flash floods following cloudbursts. AJong with 29 other Orange County residents who on the whole knew no more than I about·the fabul<lUS system, I saw it a 11 on a recent four-day trip sponsored by the li1Wlicipal Water District of Orange County. the Metropolitan Water District of Southem Ct11ifomia (M \VD) and the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation. By charter bus, station wagons, boal and airplane, we made the round trip from Orange CouT\ly Airport to Glen Can. von Dam in northern Arizona and Lake Powell extending into southern Utah. Yorba Linda of Richard Nixon fame was our first stop. There M\VD's closely guarded Diemer Filtration Plant puriCies water for Orange County as it is drawn from Lake Mathews near Riverside. Lake Mathews is the destination of a billion gallons of water per day from the huge storage in Lake Powell. That volume moveS through the Colorado River system t'lf dams for power production, flood control and public recreation. Next came a view of Lake Mathew~. No public access here. Some of the water goes to nearby communities chlorinated but without riltralioo. ThaL one billion gallons a day arriving- al Lake fo..tathews has been lifted over a series of mountains by pu1rips so powerful they were undreamed or only a rew decades ago. Once al the n1ountaln 's peak, the water moves via gravity flow across the desert for temporary storage in Lake Mathews. Mile after mile of open aqucduel car- rying th.is flow nalurally raised the qu e.s- lioo of security against sabotage -by poison, or explosive, by a U.S. enemy or an insane person. Tl1e answer from f\1WD is that the open reaches of the water supply are surveyed coostantly by lheir low-flying plane and also by many fl.1WD employes who d(t double duty as patrolmen. Clooed circuit television is also used . Security of the system has, o( course. lop priority in MWD operations. Most serious would be destruction ()r a pum- ping station, for it takes a manufacturer up to two years to put together the special equipmenl required. Poison is less serious because of the enormou s volume of waler invo lved and consetiuently the enormous volume of poison a saboteur would have to dump in- INSPECTOR CHECKS GIANT BUTTER FLY VALVE IN YORBA LINDA to the aqueducts to achieve his pur~. 'I'he nation's annid f01;ces also have a role in the system's security. It 's im· possible to watch constanUy every lineal foot o( the adqueduct, but in World War II the Air Force came close to doing so. Their last alert was during the Cuban eris.is. 1 PeaceLime considerations run more to operational efficiency and such pliblic side benefits as flood control and ·recrea# tion. For flood control, among other things, the canal ac~ the-desert dips- under dry washes in flash Oood areas and for recreation there ace aquatic s~t.s. walerfoWI huritlng 'l~ filt:Ung in danr formed Lakes Havasu and Powell. After a night at Gene Village, MW0'11 field headquarters near Lake Havasu and Parker Dam, our party headed for Prescott, Arit., and the hule riilch of Orange County's representative on the !\fWD board of directors, W. Qrad Hellis. Hellis, onCf: a top official of the Irvine Company, nOw has extensive cattle holdings in Arizona and the Imperial Valley ol California. Well known on the Orange Coast, he still attends meetingS of Amig06 Viejos in Newport. Beach. The truly speetacular aspect o( this journey was still ahead. Two days into the tour. we headed for Lake Powell, the M>UrCe 0£ 90 percent or Orange County's water supply used directly in water tap.41 and indirectly through replenishment of the Santa Ana Rlver basin. It also pro- vides 15 perei!nt or the county's electrical power. En roule we passed through the ancient copper mining town ()f Jerome, sitting precariously on a hillside, and down int() an area where the cement materials for huge and magnificent Glen Canyon Dam "·ere found and recovered In abundance. "All dams have their o w n personalities," one of the MWO experts 11aid. And it's lrue. No two are alike. In this Held, Governor Ronald Reagan couldn't say, as he did of the redwood trees, "If you've seen ooe, you've seen 'em all " . ' A look at Glen Canyon Dem and Lake Powell lor the first 'time, from downstream, ls breathtaking. And it.s in- sides are..almost ·as-awe-inspiring. The trip by boat up Like Powell is an all-day affair, with Rainbow Bridge Na- tional Monument 50 miles up the lake . that will eventually reach almost 190 miles into Utah when completely filled. Many years ago, President Theodor~ Roosevelt made ttle long trek by horseback through"'wUd:cooritry to see this majestic inheritance.from. the glacial age. He was guktcd by Indians. We made it the easy way, but it still required a mile waUt uphill and worry that the cor· pulent and poorly conditioned among us might suffer heart attacks. Only two were lost by the wayside because of ex· haustlon. The canyons of Lake Powell reveal on tlleir walls and promontories of reddish brown sandstooo, among thousands of oLhers, such Images as these : -A Bavarian castle reaching to Utt sky. -A madoMa and four robed monks. -A King Tutankhamen Egyptian mununy, uprigh t. -A whopping crane. -A wild boar's head. -A railroad train, parked on top oI a mountain. -Seagulls, perched high up. Having learned that the water we drink and lhc electric power, part of it, that we enjoy in Orange County comes throogb a magniCicem. system -magnificent from bolh engineering and eslhetic viewpoints I -we \Vere ready to cetum home. Unhappily. we 'pondered Ute fact that the Co](trado system.' great as it is, will / oot meet our needs for many more years. 'J'he state waler project, bringing water liOUthward from the Feather lliver or I northern California, is next -but It's having its troubles, both financial and from conservationlsW!. .;... Already under study and already draw· ing conservationists' ire and fire .is·a pro- posal for inlerbasin water transfer, as from tl1e water·rich Pacific Northwest to the Colora<lo River. A National Water Commission was created last. year. It has been holding hearings -six regional ones acr05,, the nallon . It has recently centered it.s al· tention on California, Arizona and Nevada, the region many water experts believe should have lop priority in .the commission's studies. The hope of 1111 conc~ed Is that the · covironrnentaJ protection demands o[ the Sierra. Club and others can-be ac· commodated whil~ at the same time pro- viding adequately for the future water, power, recreational and flood ~rot needs of a still fast-growing Paclfic Southwest. Despite the historic resistance o[ water-rich areas to 11upplying ' their surplus to water-poor areas, It appears now that the day is fast approaching ~·hen a national soluUon to a nationwide problem will supplant regional action as we know it now. P.LANE PATROLS MILES OF AQUEDUCt THROUGH DESERT • • • J . " I •• ... . . . .. . .. ' • • • . __ ,. --•• .. : · . •: '••"·"'I. .... , .. , , .. , ·~·· . ... . ... • .. • . Anteaters Conve . . USC Bar s to 8-6 Victory By llOW~llD I.. HANDY or "'' D111tr l"ll•t '"" LQS ANGELES -The1 were makln& fun ol UCI'• Antuten shortly before host!Utlel boJan. "Where 's Irvine?" ''Whal'• an Anteater!" "What 1ype of country bumpkins are thtst!' "Why are we playin1 this team ? 'Ibe .score should be 50 to O." These are but 1 few of the Jibes hurl!d at Ute Irvine player• prior to the aame by the proud USC nlne that. after all, bG&sled a 7.0 record going into a game with an unknown. However, when the din ol battle had Bruins Face 2nd Place SC Tonight Pride won't be the only Utln1 at stake \Vhen UCLA and Southern California col· lide this weekend. The Brulos and Tr~ Jans wlll be thinking about No. I and No. Z res-pecUvely. UCLA, or course, has already wrapped up its fourth straight Pacifie-8 Con· ference basketball crown and Is heading for the NCAA playoffs to defend Its na· 1ional cha:mpiomhlp. But tM Uclani, 11-1, who regained the lop spot. among lhe nation's major col· leJiate teams a week ago, would like to stay ahead of second.ranked Kentucky, \\·ho they just might meet In the NCAA finals Tl-1arch 21. \\'hat's on USC's mind is the No. 2 15pol in the conference. The Trojans (8-4) now ov•n il but ~·ill be getting pressurl' from Oregon 7·5, and possibly both Washington State, 8-~. and Washington, 7.fi. fn tonight's Pac-8 play, Southern Cal invades Pauley Pavillon. Oregon State heads into Duck territory and Washington \•islts Cou1ar country in the first of a pair of "l.rad!Uonal rivalry" days. Saturday, the conference's final day of action, California'11 Golden Bears host Stanford in the afternoon's regionally televised contest. and at night Oregon visits OSU and UCLA treks crosstown to use. UCLA C<lach John Wooden called last weekend's vlctories, which clinched the crown, "very gratifying. not only because of our pl&y but also because of the fa ct that we can now approach this w~kend's games without the pressure of having lo win. subsided some three hours ltter, every member of that Trojan team knew that UC lrvine existed. The natlon's No. 1 ra11ked college baseball team found out the hard way Thursday attemoon when UC Irvine first baseman Tom Spence belted a three-run homer over the right fleld fence al Bovard Field to hand the host USC Trt> jan1 their first defeat of the season, a.&. The Trojans had taken an early .lead, faltered, then took cbmmand on a pair of home runs lo lead going into the ninth in- ning, 6-4. After fl.like Sheline grounded out, pinch hitter Mark Plassard reached first base ... on t fifth Trojan error of the lit.moon. Bob y Farl'lr drew a walk and Mike Sykora stroked hi s second blse hit of the game to rfiht field to brip• plnch runner Tom Dodd acrou. It waa now 6-S. The Ant .. ters' leading hll\ef,Jloci<)' Craig was called out on stttkes and 11ubsequently chased from the 1ame by National League umpire Mel Steiner. This brought Spence lo the plate against the TrojaOI' ace moundsman, , Jim Barr, who t®k over in relief In the eighth. Barr boomed a fast ball in for strike one. Spence dug in and on the next pitcll • belted It high and deep over the rlpl Getti1t9 Ready for BasefJall fitld fence at~ a~t a 1JSO.foot mark to score Farrar and Sykora ahead of hi:m. Irvine put a bit of 1trate:gy to work with the next batter, Mike S&aka. Ht purpostly stn.ickout and when the catchtr mll!ed th• ball. Jould lo flrol but "~' thrown out. It was now U in favor of · tr vine. The maneuver saved valuable time as darkneu wa• ~losing in. Wllh starter Dennis Nicholl50n out ol the acUon·because of a pinc:b.hitter, Dave Wollos look over on the mound for Irvine in th< bottom of th< ninth. He went to a 3-0 count on the ·first bat.. ter but came back &tron1l)' to strike bim out. He iot ~next two men on 1 around ball and a poJlllp and the delirt°"' Irvine team swarmed onto lhe field as though they hid just won tb'e World Series .. UCI coacll Gary Ada.ms went out to a~ peal a play and waa promptly expelltd from the IJJ'he In the s~ irurln1. . "Jf It means 1 victory like lb.ls one, I'll get ktcked out ol. every game," Adams said after the 1ctloq. Steve B:uaby. Trojan starter, had a no- hitter golng for five innlnp aJld his team bad given bbn 1 U lead in the second. He ran into control Jll1)blem1 in the sixth, walking fotlr bltteri''and stvJn& up the first Irvine( hit 110 Sbtlipe to account "That dOl!:sn't mean that we do not want to win." Wooden addtd. "But it doe-s mean that there ~·HI be consid· Jerably less emotional strain." Dodger rookie ol the year Ted Sizemore is held upright by mate Bill Sudakis as major league baseba.U players round into shape for the opening of the 19'70 campai&n a month from now. Trojan coach Bob Boyd admitted "it "'ill take our best ba&ketball to bea t UCLA.I' Southern Cal, and the Bruins, flf coune, remember that it was virtually one year ago -March 8, 1969, to be ex- act -that the Trojans marched into Pauley Pavilion and stunned the Uclans ~~ May Go Anotlier Decade or Two Whfie Oregon will be trying to catch the Trojans, OSU will be looking for the flne victory that ~·ill keep them out of a pos1ible b&semenl berth with Stanford. The Beavers, 3·9. still have the best defense in the conference, allowing less than 66 points a game. Wilhelm Still Going at 4 7 Unfortunately they\·e also got the "·orst offense, scoring barely 61 point& a · game, which is why they may be unable l.o catch sixth-place Cal. Oregon. on the: other hand. is in danger of falling out of the first division. But one of the Ducks will be shooting for a rir&t-place fini511. Center Stan Love can lock up the scoring title Y.'ilh a solid performance. He leads W a s h i n gt o n centtt Steve llawes, 21.5 poin ts per game to 20.1. Washington's prosptcls of a !lecond· place finish are 111im -but the Hu skies may be able to swing il \\'ilh the help of another stall game. In their first game against \VSU. they led i-6 at the half and played the Cougars to a standstill in the second half for a 3i· 36 vdn. WEST PALM BEACH, Fl•. (AP! -If old age ever rea.lly creeps up on Hoyt \Vilhelm , he'll probably just brush it back wiU1 a knuckleball and go on floating like a buttcrrly !or another decade or two. Soinetime this seAson, \Vl\heln1 vdl\ becomr the fi rst major leaguer ever to pitch in 1,0000 games. It'll probably hap· pen before his birthday . Atlanta's senior knuck leball specialis~ -23-game winner Phil Niekro is the other -couldn 't care less. For Wilhelm. birthdays come and go. On July 26, he'll be 47 years youn;:. "l reany ha\'e no idea how much longer rll go on." he saki at the Braves' spring camp, "·here he's dutifully running \Vind sprints in preparation for his 25th pro- fe:;sional seaoon - and 19th in the ma· jors. "I'll just keep going as long as I can 6-11 Girl Center I Prep Whiz Ey es Colle ge, Pro s DENVER (AP):_ There's a 6-(oot~lt center at Engle"·ood High School who averages 35 points a game but doesn 't play on lhe school's basketball team. 'f111s 17·}'ear-old senior center is a girl, and Gwen Bachrpan plays all her ltasketball in a wetkend Industrial league. ''I'd like. to go to college and then turn pro." she said, noling that some professional offers already have been turned down. pitch good. Last year I pitched as lood as I e\'er did ." Last year, the balding but ever-trim relief master came to Atlanta in Sei> tember on waivers from the C&lifomia Angels, for whom he had m&de 44 ai> pearane!s. He pitched eight times !or the Braves as they soared to the National League \\'est title. winning two games, saving four more and allowing just one earned run. "I fell ilE: gave us the spark -the ex- trA pui;h," i;aid catcher Bob Didier, who spent much of his rookie season batlllng knuckleballs to a standoff. "Cecil Upshaw, our top relief pitcher all year, was getting tired and our starters were press ing. Then Wilhelm cainc ~long." As an exa1nple of \Vilhelm's Impact 1n the title push, Didier cited the Braves' next.to-last -and biggeat game of the • regular season. Wilhelm, he recalled, was protecUng a one-run lead against Cin· cinnali wllh runners on base and t"·o out in the ninth inning: ' "He got behind Ale1 Johnson 3-0 on three knuckleballs . So I called for a fas!· ball. But he: shook me off and threw three more knucklers. The first two were called strikes and Johnson grounded the next one to Bob Aspromont.e for the Jut out and the division championship. He just wasn'I going to get beat with a fastball ." Paul Richards. the Braves' general manager, and Wiihelm's field pll-Ot ill BaJUmore in the late '50s, believe.s the ageless reliever continues to thri\'e while his .icontemporariea collect penii&ns btcau5e of condiUonJng. . "Only because his leis have lasted.'' Riclw'ds stid. "He'a alwa ys kept himself in lluch good shape. •le doet a lot of walk· ing and hunting in the winters and that helps.·• Wilhelm has another reason : "The Knuckleball !" The dancing pitch ha.s been Hoyt's bread and jam since he was a teenager. "It's not something I picked up along the v.·ay,'' he said. "I used it in high school. It jusL happens to be the natural pitch for me, and always was. "I probably wouldn't have made the big leagues wilhout iL I certainly wouldn 't still be here without lt. You see fe\v fast. ball relief pitchers staying around long these days. A guy throws a fa st bRll un. ti! he loses it, then he's got to have sonie· thing else, "I ahva,ys had the knuckleball. It's not how hard you throw. but how you throw." "I can't !ee a whole lot or difference in lhe way he pitches now and 10 years ago," Richard's said. "The only changes you might see are that he relies more on the knuckleball now -throws it just about every time - and has better control of Jt." \Vllhelm. who broke Cy Youn1'1 old record of 906 appearances two years ago. has slarted only 51 games, the. last one "before World War 11 ," according to a teammate. But it'1 a rood bet he'll finish a lot more before he '• through. "I don't picture him as an old·man ." !>aid Didier. who was three years old when \Vllhelm broke into the majors in 19~ wllh the New York GlanLI. "Especially when he geta out there on the m<>Und." South Carolina Escapes, 34-33; Tar Heels U1Jset CHARLOTIE. N.C. (AP) -The cardiac carnival, listed fonnally as lhe championshi p basketball tournament o[ the AUant.ic Coast Conference, moves in· to the semifinals tonight wiUl top-heavy ravorlte South Carolina still alive but breathing hard. The Gamecocks, No. 3 in the nation. were paired against Wake Forest in the 7 p.m. opener and third -setdect North Carolina State was matched "'ith Virginia. The closest first 1 round in the lournamenrs 17-year history produced rour games Wednesday decided by a tolal spread nf only 21 points. Virginia, a 14-game loser, turned in lhe big shocker, a 95-93 upset of North Carolina, \\'hich had been seeking 1 fourth straight title. It came after 1a.1ame loser Clemson just missed pylllng off an even more as· tounding feat before succumbing to South Carolina 34-33. \Vake Forest axenged three earlier losses to Duke witti an 81·73 conquest of the fourth-seeded Blue Devils. And Ncrth Carolina State came from behind in the last half to put down l\.iaryland 87-57. The wiMer of Saturday riJght's cha~m­ pionship game goes on to the NCAA Eastern Regionals, won the last three years by North Carolina. The ACC champion opens NCAA play ;it Columbia. S.C .• ne1t Thurllday aga inst the winner of Saturday's first rouM game at New York between Davidson and St. Bonaventure. for two runJ. Two errors and thret bll!e tuts 1•ve ucr two additional tal lies in the seventh for 1 momentary f.3 lead. UC l"M If) .. ' f'•rr•r, II ' t 'tVkDI'•. Jb • I Cr110, tf 3 I SiNtM:t. Ill I I klk_I, fl J f H•'1lllfl. 11 ' 1 SN1<lil~ 3'I 3 0 Sr.t!ln1, c ' 1 Nkl!OlaOn. fl t 1 l'lfiqnl • .ii I I Oodll. ptr f I w ...... " •• a1•1ew, cf o • T011'5 1' I UC lrvltlt UK TfOltn. u'c '" llrlll 1~rllnil I I M<!i.r, u 1 f I I 2 I Crou.11 • O I I O I 1C11111m1n,rt1 1 1 1 1 1 ae1111t11, ct 3 I I I OOP..-~11'$,C )l 10 0 0 Ar'1!'n, ID ) II a • OOA.ltlM,Jb,00 1 , .... rl,Jt> •>ll IOl!linltv.ptt ll .. ~ ....... . t O Sl'HClr'N,,i.I 1 I 1 O O lhrr. p O I I 0 • • I I To1111 ll ' 000 001 l'll•-•' OJO 000 ttO - ' I ' ' ' ' Will Remain In SoCal MIAM I (AP) -The new owner of the ABA Los Angeles Stars says the team will remain in California only if mort 'f'an.s start pushing through !be turnstiles. Bill Daniels even set down !be minimum response that would convince him to keep the Stars in Los Angeles. ,f\_.,..- "J'm not in business to lose mollf!y," said the 49-year-old Oenve1 cable television station operator ... t'd want to see 2,500 people per game within two weeks and 5,000 by the eod or the season." Without such an increa se, he said, he would consider moving the club to Salt Lake City, Kansas City or Alb uquerque. Daniels said he went to see the Western Division's last place Stars play a doubleheader two 1reeks ago and found only 795 fans attended ... It nearly broke my heart." he said. Daniels' purchase of lhe club from Los Angeles contractor Jin1 Kirst was ap- proved by the other 10 ASA O\vners at a meeting Thursday. The new ownrr said Kirst sold the club after losing an estimated $1.75 mllllon. Terms of the sale were not announced. "You can get into the ABA a hell of a lot cheaper than the NBA and you get the same product," Daniels said. "The NBA expansion teams went for SJ.7 million and I can promise you l got in for a lot cheaper than that." Jack Dolph, ABA commissioner, said he v.·as pleased by the transaction and, •·Having resolved a very tough problem in Los Angeles and now with a great new guy there, I'm not confident -rm cocky in 11 situations." • The ABA has 11 teams. After two days of meeting with the owners, Dolph said the ABA will continue merger ni:gotiations viith the National Basketball Association. "We are no less convinced than we ever were that merger is inevitable,'' he said, "and thaL the uncommon draft is impractical.'' However, he added, the ABA has never been better prepared financially to staae tt bidding war with the NBA for the na-. tioi\'s top collegiate talent than it is now. He said another meeting of the leagues' merger committees would be arranged . LUCKLE SS KINGS NEARING RECORD LOS ANGELES (AP) -While the rut of the-National Hockey-UiiUe Is battling for the Stanley Cup, the Los Angeles: Kings are looking for a cup of their own -filled with hemlock. A.!. the disastrous season rolls on, the Kings move inexorably closer toward amassin& a collection of records for futility. They took another step in that direction Thursday night, bowing 5-3 t1> The Toronto t.1aple Leafs. 11 was L<is Ange les' lith straight game \\'ilhoul a \'ictory. four short of the league record for a season set by New York in 1944 and equalled by Chicago seven ve ars later. · America's Wood Wius Gold Medal WUBWANA. Yugosla via (AP) -A brilliant free skating performance car. ried Tim Wood from behind and earned the 22-year-old Colorado Springs ace his second consecutive world figure skating championshJp Thunday. Wood finished with 2,n9.3 points and 12 ordinals. or judging points. to Ondrej Nepa la's: 2,757.8 points and 15 ordinals. In Wonien's competition. Aultrla's Beatri1 Schuba held a slight lead over defending champion Gabriele Seyfert ot East Gtrmany after completion of com· pulsory evenL,. "I thought I had stopped growing last year.'' i;he 5aid. "hut then all of f a sucjden J popped up another Inch. 1-·faybe that's it and I'll never make an evtn 7 feet,"·ahe sajd. ~he first came ·to wlcjesp;ead -attention whtn ~he _co'!lpeled In lhe t Womq1'1 National AAif ba&kethail championships aC Gal1up:w.M., where she pl~ed with several teams. "Evey team URS Gne 5trategy -get the hall lo me." she said. fl.flu Bachman uta she has had litUe trouble with coordln1tlon. Playo ls-Helo Behind toe -ed Doc,rs "Jn ttnnill. l'm 1ort of deva5tating at the net. Baskttball Is certainly e&Jler. No, t realty haven 't had any trouble \Vlth coordination so rar." She aot hf'r height honestly. Her mother is an even six feet !all ana htr ,-f•'1Mr· Robert Bachman, 11 MVt. One ol lhe probJem• Me haces is finding clothing. "They Just don't make lllY size," aald Gwen, who wears 1 sh:e 4& e:ttr• large man'a rweatu, size lf.AA aneakm an4 1 shirt with a 17~2 neek size. Her claum•~es. Me 11ld caJJ htr the "Jolly GrHn Gli!int " So she mlktl nearly 111 her clothes. As ror boy1: "I'm so dun bu!y 1 don·t have any Ume for dates," she .. Jd. " RIVER ROUG~, Mlch. (hPI -Rl••er Rouge High takes the second step today in the defense of Jta state basketball title, In sttret and behind Jocked doors. But It's nothinl -ror the llelroil area wnere thre_1 1a.mt1 have been playtd In secret -without crowds - durin1 the lut 20 days. Racial tensions at the high ""'°"!' are blamtd. "It was the flrllt lime I've ever tx· perlenced such a thing In my 30 years or c:oachln11:.'1 ~aid River Rou1e coach Lof· Lon Greene. He said ll was strange, but apparmt.IY cj.icln't affect hl1 playera. They beal Riverview Hip. -· \Vednesday in the first tournament game. l,,a&t year Rou1e won the Staie Cllss B title.. Friday's OJ)?Onenl will be Ecorae whkh exputenc:ed a locked-door C()nlUL earlier ttus year. "We4rt. schtduled to play Rouge In the di.strict final," said Ecorse coach Don PelJ"(l(f, "I'm in fa \'or of playing th, game iit Rolfl.le. and le!Una in 11pect.a- t1tors. "I lhlnk the lack of spoclalon hurt u> at Willow Run. We Iott, 85-77. lt w•s just like a 1Crimm1ge," Petroff added . R11clal teMlon was blamed for the unusual game at River Rouge-and con· tinuing fear of an incident-ha s led of· ficlall to schedule another secret game. They tried lo &ehedule Wednellday'1 game in neighboring 1ehool districts' 1>1ms, but we're rtbufred. The players were calltd rrom cla111 11t 1:30 p.m. Wedncltday for a "meellng." They were told CO ;et dresttlt for the aame while the oppoelns playen were being ~irited in aecretly throuih a rear door. Policemen stood by outside as tht game waa played. '.'Racial tensions rorced lhe clMlng ol tht school a week aco. \\"hen ollisaes resumed on t.fonday. mo.st black studtnl1 boycotted the handling of the. tension situation. In 1965 two Dttroll·area baskelb1l1 tournament g11ome1 wrre played behind lockM door.s a{ter 1lx &peetatars were stabbed foUowtna: an earlier conlcst. ANTEATER RACQUET SQUAD -Members of the UC Irvine tennis squad is competing in the Sou thern California lntercollegiate Champ- ionships in Pasadena thi s weekend . The team currently is 7·2 in dual meet competition, losing only ~o UCLA and USC . Front row (from left ) Jeff Wise , Greg Jablonski, Rich Tripp, Bob Payan and Gary Deaton . Back row, left to right: captain Craig Neslage, Jeff Williams, coach Myron l\.1cNamara, Earl O'Neill and Steve Teal. Wome11 Play Vital Bole UCI Tennis ltulllfr• C.Hltml• l•ler(tl1tti111 Cl:•rn,itnWll,1 I nfluenced Anteater Tennis ·Captain's Career By HOWARD L. llANDY Of IM O•ll, P!i.t lllff \Vomen have played an important parl in lhe young life of UC Irvine's tennis captain, Craig Neslage. first it was his mother. The Neslage family moved lo Phoenix when Craig was in junior high school. The family d~·elling \vas neRr the Arizona Country Club and his mother took tennis lessons. She Was so exuberant about the 1ame, she insisted on her two sons joining her and Craig obliged on Saturday af· ternoons. He soon became addicted lo the c:om· petition and \\'as a star for his hi1h school tea m. As a senior he began talking with club mem~rs about college:i and "enc lady told me about this place in California," he recalls. Sports In Brief I I Ncslage applied al Irvine and made a trip to the campus durin1 his senior year. AthleUc director Dr. Rlymond Thornton. himself a tennis buf(, showed Neslage around the campus and told hlm of the new coach. In his first year. Neslai:c wasn't con- vinced he had made the right move and debated a transfer to the University of Miwna. I "Dr. Crawford chana:ed my mind. Now that I look back on .it, 1 am happy I did slay here. In fact, I wouldn't heSitate to recommend Irvine to others." The tennis team capllin tuts played in the shadow of Earl O'Neill since he started at UCL N. a freshman )le alternated between the third and fourth spots and as a sophomore ~·as the third man on the squad. La.st year it was 1 battle with O'Neill T revino to Skip Maste rs; B ig l OO kaysll thGame ATLANTA -The Atlanta Constitution. rti:x>rtcd that former U.S. Open champion Lee Trevino, who stirred up a con- trover1y "'\l.h remarks concerning the Augusta ·NaUOnal golf course, has turned down an invitation to play in lhe Masters lournement th is year. "I got a nice letter from them and I wrote them a nice letter back," Trevino was quoted. The golfer said he was mis- quoted about· his rrmark:s conctmina the coun:c but acknowledged the controver. sy maY have had something to do with his decision. "I r.ever said it 'A'&li a bad course," he -..aid. "I just said I didn't think it Was 11.uited to my type of game and I didn't feel J could ever win t~re." • CHICAGO -In a mild surprise, the Big Ten has approved an 11·1amc foct· ball steason effective In 1171 and may pull Another at Its meetings today by takin& ;iclion on the controversial no.repeat Ror.e Bowl rule . • I.OS ANGELES -Bi£ Wilt Cham- herlaln "·orkcd out for.one hour with his l.01 Angeles Lakrrs teammate:• Thur&- day, then commented : I felt pretty good -but after I was out there only two minutes I was tired." It was the first Umc the 7-1 star ccnttr had pracliced with the club since sul- rtring a M?rlous kntt injury Nov. 7. . Chamberlain hopes to see .somt action .starting f\1arch IS in the linal thret rc1Ular·stason games lo prepare for the ~·ntlonal Basketball Association pla)'offs. Thursday's "·orkoul "'as llmlted to halfcourt drill s to enablt Chamberlain lo pl~y "'lthout running. He did some ~hoQtlng and rebounding ind said the knee didn't botMr him. • e1cept that ti1ark Spl\J: was back in lht. pack. Spitz, one of the world'! top !wimmers, finished fi ft h in the 500-yard freestyle event won by Hooaiier teammate Gary Hall (ot Gardea Grove) lo a meet record. time of 4:t0.0ll. Thret other Hoeslcrs ll'tre ahead of Spitz. Indiana atarted after its Jot.h straiaht conference title by wiMln& four of the ni&}1t's nve event.a and tot1Un1 14' points to runnerup Mi<:hi1an Sllte;'s tOZ. The on- ly non-Indiana winner was Michifan State's Dick Ctitttnden, who took the 50- yard free.style in 21 .S. • TACOMA, Wash. -UC RJver1ide overcame an early cold°"'streak Thursday Naht and wen t on to overpower Boise State, 83-fl, in tht opening 11me of the NCAA Colleat Olvialon Far West reaKinal buketball kAifnamtnt. • SAN FllANCISCO -Wilh II -nd• left In the 1JmC. reaerve PaL Galea hit 1 20-fOot jump shot, his only basket or the game, to 1ive the uruverslty or 8111 Fran- cisco an upset St-58 West Coast Athlttlc Conftrence basketball v I c to r y over University of the Pacific Thursday night. The loss knocked 1.JOP, 10-3, out of lht firs t·plact tie with Sant.a Clara , 11·2, and sets up a do-Or-die game Saturdl)' nl&hl for the Tiftl'I on lhtlr home eouJ\ lft a ~e1son fQlal• 11ajnat the lrwoe:. Officials Named OffiCiaL<i for WedMAday'• OAJLY PILOT VI The COpa baakttball &amt have been choltn. Veteran coach and loftstlme whlaUe1 tooter Ernil Netme will thtre dutlea with llowal'.ll Handy, DAILY P!WI' 1porta wrt1tfw11o n111 1n w1ten ,.gu1.,1y ...,,~ f'd officials fall lo shOw al various prep event&. for lhe No. I and 2 positions and thl! season he is currently playing in the No. 2 spot. "I like doubles betltr than singles," ht' relates. "They arc ty,·o different games. I don't really know why but ma)'be· it's easier for me to play doubles. "Earl aod I started playin& together this year. He has always been more of 1 sinJles }>layer before. We tried lo team up but never could make it work. "He worked hard on his game. tltis past summer and he is tremendously im· proved. Doubles is largely 1 game of serve and volley." Neslaac want! to ,gel his master's degree in business admini8tration. At the moment he is an electrical enFneering major. He worked for f\fotorol1 in Ar liona last summer, putting together digital 1oiic circuits. As a. youth his hobbies were stamp and com collecting but he now prefers pluing lhe gui tar. Simon and Garfunkle and Jose Feliciano play the sweetest mU!ic lo his cars. He also double.~ as a ltMis co:.ch.when time permitll. "I've taught tannis for the past four yurs both in Arilona and out here." He worktd at 11 tennis camp in Arizona last summer along with his job al f\fotorola. "His tenni! hi!.s iUlftred because he can't spend as much time on it a.s he would like to ." coach ,_tyron McNamara says. "I'll le.II you one thing. though. No mat· lcr who he pla ys, he'll play hi.a be:st. You know ht'll produce. I wish we had a whole team just like him." Craig doean'l Plan to follow the tennis trail after gradua tion but will co1npett in local tournaments wherever he a!!tt les down. As captain, he knows O'Neill is in 11:c· compUahed player but is equally im· pressed with a freshman on this y!!ar's te:am, Greg JablonskL · "Orea is No. 3 man rifhl now and he rould give both of us trouble be.fort the year ends," NNlaae says. \Vith that ht was off to the tennl! courU to get in a bit more practice befort an upcomin& cbaUen1e match with !he upatart freshman. Lombardi, Wells Bag Top Honol'8 At San Oemente Sal Lombardi and Mike Wells received the top lndivktual honors Thurlday niahl "'· San Clemente High Schoel'• winter aport.. awards banquet honorin1 the b11sketbtll and wrtstling teams. Lcmbardi was· named mott, v1h1ablt playtr Cindie varsify bufilbaU !tam while Wells was receivint 1 like award in lht wrutlln& program. Ba•k•lhlll V1t1lty -MVP: Sol t.omblrdl; Most Improved : Rick Muon ; Captains: Lorn· bardi ind Grea Domenichini. Junior varsity -MVP: Howard Valor<; Captain: Stove COpt. --MVP: Don Sleffen,.n. Cees -MVP: Charle• 01r11n. Wre1dta1 Varsity -"'1V; Mikt Wells ; Ca_ptain : Jesse Hernandez: ~fast tnsplrailontl: RJck Andcr1011; ~1ost Take doV:'J\I : JUck Andtr!W)n~ MO!ll pins : Dan Cllemottl. "''"' .... "" S11"i.. 1:,;1p !UCll dtf. Shll1Mr IUCll J, .. J. 6->. Jll>l..,1~1 IUCll dll. At.m•n •J 1c111 ... ,, •• O'Htllt tUCll ott, Mru1rooll ClVl, 6-0, 6·1 1 .. 1 1ucn d.,, 1t1111y 1ucsa1, , .. , •I."'· h'131410t 11111 P•J•n dr1w lln• rlutld by~. CMubl" 1t1H tllll P1y•n !UCO dtl. l rllr.11 1nd ltl imunen (ltetl.). l·•· 6--1. 111-1. J1allMl<I •Ml t u l (UCll dd . ltldlwtli •nt Ho.,,.e1 liO!I, J.1, 1.,, 6-1. O'Htlll '"" NnltiGt dr•w lint -by1. ' . .. ' • ' • • • "' ~ > • g , :i • • j " • • • ~ " • , • • ~ • • ·; Frld11, MN t., 1970 -=' Trojans Third • UC LA Takes Lead In Pac-8 Sw imf est P1.JJ...Ll\.1AN , Wash. (AP) ~ Southern California, a team that has n~er lost the Pacific.a swimming and dlvln1 cham- pionships, held a weak lhlrd place aoin& Into Friday's &e(..'Olld day competitlon. Stanford won three of five event&. but the UCLA Bruins walked off with the lead after the first day of compeUtlon Thur!· day. The Bruins amassed 126 points to edge lhe Indians by two poin~. Southe rn California Trojans were third with 93 point! fol lolYed by Oregon 5e, Callfornia so. Washington 46, Oreaon State 34, and tht host \Vashington State Cougars JO. Freshman Steve Genter trigacred the UCLA chac;e, scltlng a Pacific-! record in the SOO.yard freestyle with a top time of 4:39.9. Teammate l\.1lkc Burton, \\'ho woo two gold medals al the 1968 Olyn1· pies, was second In 4:42.4. John Ferris successfully defended his title In the 200-yard Individual medley, CIF Playoffs Again. Tonight Playoff action in CIF bL'!kelball circles continues tonighl with 1 pair of AAAA quarterfi nal s games slated for Loog Beach Sports Arena highlighting the bill. 'l'wt>tlmc champion Compton meets Palos Verdes in tht 7:30 aflair followed by a con.Jrontation between Sunny Hills and Long Beach Millikan in the AAAA doubleheader at Long Beach. \Vestminstcr awaits its quarterfinal ~ho\vdown "'ilh Monrovia Saturday nlghl, 9:30, at the same site. In AAA play It'll be Santiago and Lasucn at Long Beach City College al B p.m. white the other scmifii1alists . Verbum Dei and Rancho Al amitos, will collide Saturday at Oomlnguez High in a televised game on Channel 4 at 3 p.1n. The AA and A clashes arc all ton ight 11ot A with AA 11cmls involving La Puente \Vilson and Palm Springs at Cal Poly r~omona and \Valnut and Arroyo Grande at Rio Hoodo JC. The A semifinals ha "e Trona and Aquinas meeting al San Gorgonio High in San Bernardino and llar\'ard and Notre Dame <Riverside) at UC Riverside. brcakina lhe Pacific-! record he scl lut year in I :S7.6. BUI P..1ain, of Stanford, walked off wlth !he one-met.er d I v I n g champiooahip, grabbing 492.3 painl!. He defeated: UCLA 's Gor<fon Creed, who finished •· cond, by more lhan 45 point.s. Stanford's @ yard medley team. made up of Ferris, Steve Carey, Olympic veteran Brian Job, and Frtd Haywood. ~et the Pac.a record in winning the cvetit In 3:29.9. Defending NCAA champion O a n Frawley captured the SG-yard freestyle b' 21.4, edging out Fray Heath ot UCLA wbo was clocked at 21.6. Six events will be held today with time trials in tbe afternoon and finals at nifht . The events are; 200-yard butterfly, 200· yard freestyle, too.yard breaststroke, 100- yard backstroke, 400-yard freestyle relay. The finals of the 800-yard freestyle rel ay will also be held. In Thursday 's preliminaries, Frawley posted the top time in the 50-yarrl freestyle with a lime trials time %1 .1. JU.'I record time last yca'r in winning thn NCAA was 20.7. OCC Tennis Whats We hereby declare 1970 Th• Y~ar of the Puaaycat. Our na• lional prize·winnina drink ha .. become a ereat 1ucce11. No wonder. This aunny, oran•e· sweet sour maket you want to purr. And mixes up quick as a cat. Ju1t combine a packet of "Instant Puaaycat Mix " water- and Early Timea. Aak for Instant Puaaycat Mix al your favorite food or liquor atore. · To act• 1et of 4-10.U oz. Puuyca.t rl.uaes and 4 packets of lnatant Puuycat Mix: aend S2.95 to: £AA.LY TIMES PUSSYCAT CLASS£$ l'.O. BOX 377.MAPLE PLAIN.MINNESOTA 5535t • Bt,OOM INGTON. Ind. -The fini sh In lhe llrst event of lhe Big Ten swimming n1eet Thursday nlaht looked • liltle Uk• an Indiana Unlvertity intramural r1C1; The 7:16 aame il Cost.a fl.leaa Hlah I!" htrief!t t.o atd pua.Jyitd wr~stl1r Ju8lll O&ata with mowstlll( mlillW u~ Junk>r var1Uy 4 Capt.aln: Tori Nlchi>ls; MV : Bill Madden. '!------------------·----• __ .., • ,- • • I .. .. .. -"\ .' I ~ • I •• Weekend Ski C:ompedtlo11 Pamela Hatch, daughter oC Li do Isle resident Mrs. Richard Lern- er, takes part in weekend s)ci competi tion at Glen Ellen, Vt. Southland winter sports prospects climbed considerably with the n1id'week slor1n which deposited !now on Southern CaHfornia mountains. City Cage Standings Lt•I l ' ' ' w.,. Ltll . ' , ... ' • • ' • Cult 1'\8& M•11iclt•! L.111111 OHll LHtlll , , • Le•I • , l • . ' , .. _ • "" • W11JOn FO<'CI' ' Wa• Fn.til ' HO'#ln Automct1v• ' !•errt \'tn & $t11r11• ' o. (, "~· • I Ltt -w ' SICUrflv l"tcillc • • IUthtn!s Udo Mlrkfl • ' 51. """'tw1 , ' Nvltnd "" ' ' ••• CCMl"'!unlc•!~• ' • "'"' l •ll• • • 'c1ri11t 0Hft LNt lll Miki Fl•l'>t1'1v (J°""""" & So"! U .1 Tom ll11d tWPSt FN lll It.I Tom Witt (Wll-Forcl) 19.J Frint leba! !Jctinwn & Sonl 11.J Jtck 11:1111 ISitrn! 11.1 U.rrY MIN;9DC (Wnt ,rvl!) II.I c.1111 Ltftdot IHowlKl 16.1 llri.n Amll<Clld'I IWHIOl'I Fordl U..1 Jim Bullet' IJoll""°" & Son) 15..1 Crtlt Ftlc-• IJO!ln-& Soni !4 I I L111w1 F.rlc C1rt\Ctl !Securl!•I i. 1 Mtrtl'lt ll Styll ($!, A,ndr•wll 1),0 ll'WCI llrt...,lnt !HYltnd) 17.I lo\JrOll S-loff IHYlindl l J.J O..n 0.VtnC•tU! !MOM! 11,1 Jl111 NH!eOll !Aich1,..,tl 111 Atndy Otoon llllcMrCl'>l 11,0 Sr1d War,,.. C$e(Ur1!Y l If.I J im C1non CRidt4in:l1I J 7 $•-Solim (0111.11 1 1 Prep Net Summaries V1,..;t, F111nt1i11 V•llff n11 kftll-Hl ''" .. ' ltrtwcnk (FV) Olf Mc<lror lS\ I Une 1 .. 1, liMllHI 6-1, Tricmp~ t-1 ~lli.1 T-tn fFVl Olf MIN'"r tSl I ~ une •1. zi.,.,bt .. ,. Tt1Cm11~0" 1-0 S/>1w !FVI Cl'~ Mo.1rer ($1 t-0. Uflo .. ft . llembl 1-1, Tllom•lOn 6-0. lr""'91 /FV1 d•I Mo.1ror (Sl --1 U•oe •.O, Zl!MM I-~. Tllcm1>1on 1-0 Otlllltt M1ll•f ind V11tn1~•lt tFV! "'' ~·~'""~ •na 1'11.,i.11 (ii 1-1, 1-0. de• l•lllwln •rid C1.-6tn t-t. 1·1. w r11t TOPP"" •rid Ml,•l!IOll IFV I ~·f """'""' -na ""'"'" 111 w. 1-I: oe< 111111""" 1nd C:1rc:t1n '"'· 1.1. '""'*' "''"llv lf...,1tttl11 'olt lll' CUl 111111 ... Ill ~ .. .. kl!lll!fl-1 tl'VI dtil Gltl1nt !~l .... • _ .. ''°· CclHN" !FV ) Cl'~ Gillin• !SJ 1·'1 I!»! lo ko<Mtn 5•7. c-{FV ) Cl'f:f W11!1• Ill 1-0. Sele I· •• lltld fFV/ oe• Wiiie< ($, •·O. io•o ,, '· ...... Allttl 11'111 McrTll IFYJ 09! ~l""'I •M N111flfl Cl ! M . t-1 Clttr-.... T1m«!1<1 ll'VI ·~ VlllleJtmt 11111 ICll....,,.n ISi t·•· t-1. ·--l"-11111 Vi lle' 111) " ... '" 111 ...... 'ti• IFV) -...... .. a-r!'I' (FV) wen ... , M O'tllT fl"V) !Mf J ... ~·rl CIVJ won •·t .,..,, ... • SchOol in El Toro Hills Boasts Student Body of 44. By PHIL ROS."i Ot I'll DtllY ~lllt Ili ff Of the ~~I member schooll!i listed in the current directory of the Cal iforn ia Interscholastic Federation's Southern Section,' perhaps the most unique is a t i n y , b o a r d i n g school-seminary located in the hill! east of El Toro. St. ~lichael's Prep. although ii can <Jt1ly accommodate 44 boys in its hillside setting, is a full-fledged, dues p a y i n g member of the Southern See· tion. The school , ncslled in a small glen midway between the civilized climes o{ urban Orange County and the lush wilderness of Saddlebad: Peak. only competes in bas- ketball and baseball on a lim· ited level. But, aceording to alhletic director, Father M. D. Cutcliff, the teams are now lac king in enthusiasm. rather Cutcliff, a native ~r Alabama and a (Jesuit) Society or Jesus priest who has been at St. Michael's al- most ty,·o years. feels the school's leVi•key athletic pro- gram affords the boys an op· port.unity to get an occasional bn:!ak in their studies. He says. "It's true that we have so rt or a relaxed regimentation up here, being partly a boarding school and partly a minor sem inary. But J:C11erally the afternoons are free (classes are usually held ~1ichaers tagers and baseball players. The Denver, Colo. native, \Vho has future aspiraUons or going into larger -scale coaching, tutored the Pioneer ba sketball team in its only two contests this past season, both losses. Next year. ·111e Pionec~s hope to play IO .or 15 cage Uffs against area Cee teams. 'J'he (\\'O games this time around were against the Warren High Cees of Downey and a junior team from a Baplist church in ' the San Fernando VaUey. St. Michael's boarders. and Orange Coast area residents. on the Pioneer basketball squad "·ho Lindenmuth ex- pects to also join the diamond corps are John Ha viken, 14, of Newport Beach , ~fission Viejo's Chris Klotz. 14, and IS.year old ~fatt Ganooa of San Juan Capistrano. In addition to lhe aforemen- tioned, the IS-year-old Thomas hvins, Steve and Don, of El Toro participate in bot h ·sports. Another localite, Robe r l O'Mara, 18, of Mission Viejo, devotes full-time in pursUit uf his priestly studies. 0·~1ara and lour other seminarians in a similar age group tthey come fro m Nicaragua, Guatemala, New- foin1dland and Connecticut I comprise the novices or the Norbertine Order. which runs the school. lfungary as a rc.suh or the 1956 revolution in that country, oversee all activities al St. Michael"s with the help of Father Cutclifl and Father Fred Schell. both American Jesuits sent lo help !he Norbertines from the New Orleans Province or the Socie- ty of Jesos (Jesuits) . Founder and principal of the school is Father l..adislas Parker. a Hunga ri an Norbertme. The school lirst became a reality nearly eight year:i ago and has since exhibited only the limited sports set-up described in this story. But everyone a1 S t . J\1ichael's, from 'F a l h e r Parker right on down to Lindenmuth, hope to see the school's athletic reputation bloSsom gradually with the growth of the enrollment itself. Father Cutc!Hf liays, "By the end of the decade we ex· peel to ha ve 150 or 200 boys enrolled he re and we should be able to field regular varsity teams by then." He adds. ''However, even when we do reach that level of competitio.1. I really doubt if we'll ever join any particular league, what with our location and the advantages ol being a free-lance schoo l." The Norbetine.o:. 1i11h-O fled Until that time arrives, tbe kids on the hill at St. hlichael 's will be content slug- ging it out with p r e p lightweight outfits on lhe athletic battlefield. in the morning and early even· -----------------------ing hours)." "So, competing a g a In s 1 other schools offers tht boys a break in their reg u I a r, routine ... ~1ark Lindemnulh, 21, 11 ~tarine enlisted man at El Toro. is "the one person most directly involved "'ilh the St. 1 -- llcucfi L J<'ccd F or-;11 111 Cook SOFT SELL SAM By Marvin Myer5 ;;//I Wetness Puts Off Contests Wet ground:! put a damper on Orange Coasl area prep athletics Thursday with eight dual track meets and four of seven scheduled b a s e b a 11 games knocked out of action. In track, the Htmtington Beach.Corona del Mar, San Clemente-Bolsa Grande' and Marina-Foulll.ain Valley meets have been postponed untiJ Tuesday. ~1onday will be used by Costa t.1esa-Garden Grove and Estancia-Saddleback while Los Alamitos and Edison and Laguna Beach and ~later Dei are trying to get the meets in today. The Mission Vie}o-Katella dual \viii be held ~esday at Katella. Base.ball action ls ~cheduled April 1 for Santa Ana and Costa ~1esa, but the San Clemente-Mater Dei revised date has not been decided. Fountain VaUey will play host to Servile at a later date -probably Wednesday -in its rained ou t Hm1Ungt.011 Beach Tournament game. The Westmin ster-Foolhill game wil l be played Saturday at I p.rn. on the fonner's dia- mond. Ai·ea Slvim Honor Roll Or•nt• Cotil 1re1 lWlm ~ roll bt•e-d .,,, wlnnlnt time. 1"' -•r11" «11'1'1-P~tl!lon cnl¥. XO Ml!dl~J lleltJ -I. CerD111 ~t M•• lll•rvelOll, Jtck5<>n, 8 trn.tn:I. 1111<)1.I 1;4.111 CC$tt Mn• 1:.W.S J. M:;on•f~~·· -L Krvm""°ll tCdM} l:n .2 1 StenMltm (CtlMI l:Sl.1 1. lll!d< ICdMl l :'j·' 50 Fret -I. 1rn1rd ICtlMI H .I 1. Gr"r !NH) 21.0 J, H1Hm1n !C""'-'\l n .1 100 tndl-ldu1l .IMCl'ln' -1. E~t11' tH81 2:06.t 2. IC'k"'Pllol• ICllM) t:IJ.O J, 8trt~ (CdM 2:!0.t 100 FIY_ -1. ""'' IHI\ 5'.• 1. lltr~rd 1f.dM) Sl.O l . MeC'OfllllU9"'¥ 1 ~&;' ,...~ ~ '· a 11(k ICdMl ~t.1 1. o.....,,, c&M1 50.1 ,J. c. Wirt tL1~u111J S\\i, •IKk -1. Mlllolek CCMl $6.• 7, ~E:f:'ncl~~el:oo~·· 3. L. 11 11111r1'1n «IC Fr11 -L Kr11mllflol1 (COM) 3:1'.6 t. ltfll'IOll (CMI t:IW.O I. 80Ulll!t'<' (CdMI ~:IM,I 100 lr1~I -I, J, 5flC!Mlll ICM) I :06 l 1, • S....,,..,. tCMI I :01,J :S. wn1l1m1 l •rlN I :ol .., GI FrTt R111¥ -1. Cl'CN ~·I t 111er111r11, sr_,_ IC' u"' •no I l, i-111:1<1 ):11.t 2. COiii Nte11 J:Jl.~ J. _laJQdt 1· UC I, Prep Goll Scores UC ,,.,,.,. Ill) IHI P'tllltfff tll1mllertl11 IUCIJ•H 111.t. T-CF). "· t-1. 51e.iot t1 (Fl·tl lllllf, il.ti.n fU(.114 t-o. Ok'.-Cfi l·1l def. "°'1¥1!'1 (UCll·lf. • " A rund-ra lsinc dl:oncr-d1nce 1vlll be. held llOOIJ. Sunday at the Li o n ' s clubhouse In tla"'ailan Gardens to he:lp defray the medkal expenses nl Norwalk 's' Jim Cook. who ~till remains in A semi- romalOf;e state al Riverlliide Community Hospital . rollo11·· Ing an accldrnt nt Ul<l Rl ver- 11idt 500. Jan. 18. ''T~E' GENTLEMAN AT THf: fND or: /Hf BAR WN'ITS TO KNOW IF YCXJ'lJ.. MffT Hllj HA!.F·klA/? II Sotn CUCll·15 Off. 9,_,. (1"1·1't, M. , ~ tUC.11'11 tlf!ll c1trt\lll!l.tcn CO· "· ,~ M~tll !F)·ll 1111. l'cvllft !UClJ·"· 1• V1"I" l1l1111ti. Ill' 171 c .. 11 M•M Geor" 11!1 11 Ciel All!Mll !CM\ 13. »118111t !CMl IJ Oflf, llOblrlMll fl!! ,. 1i I WI k1"' fCMl 11 Cl'tl, Ill.Vt"' (l l 75. t· Crus·h Jlolsa • I ournament, 9-3 .The Huntington Beach High School basebaU tournament got under WB!Y Thursday in an abbreviated form with only one game getting in the books while the other three scheduJ. ed tilts were knocked out because ol wet grounds. Huntington Beach chalked up it.s second straight victory of the campWgn wilh a 1-3 win over Bolsa Gtande.-b u t Marina, Westminster a·n d Fountain Valley sat it out. The Oilers' victory came via a six-run outburst iri the sixth Inning that snapped a 3..3 tie with the invading Matadors. Coach Don Walker's crew took advantage of s,hoddy play by the losers in the decisive frame as Bolsa pitching allow- ed two walks and hit two Oiler batsmen along with an infield error. l'he only base hits !Or Hu ri- llngton in the burst. were r:un- produclng singles by 1'1ark Cheek and Pat Murphy. Mike Symons got lhe Oilers orr and ruMing in the initial inning when be belted a two· run homer over the left field rence. Brad. Churchwell earned the victory for Huntington after a nice relier job Jn the sixth and seventh innin'gs. He came in with th e bases loaded and slrtJCk <1ut the first batter, but an error at the Argos Slain CdM, 9-1 , Behind Two-hit 1-lurling CorD11a del Mar High ,drop- ped its second straight non· league baseball game Thurs- day afternooo ~ after w e t grounds moved ~, original site of Garden ·Grove to Corona del Mar's diamond. The invading Garden Grove Unit s~ Corona on two hits and took advantage of numerous W!llks and four er- rors to deal the Sea King$ a 9- 1 Joss The Argonauts jumped on &tarting pitcher Dave Vilas, a junior southpaw, for single la!Ues in the first and fourth frames around a pair of scores in the third inning to put it away early. The winners' :;ixth inning Was a display Of Corona deJ Mar frustration as Garden Grove collected three runs on Garden Grove hooked a triple to right llekl. His safety scored one run but he was out at the plate on a tag by catcher Snyder from first baseman Keith Samuel 's re lay. Vilas gave up rive hits and four runs in his fiv&-inning stint, striking out two. Coroba de! Mar hosls Mater Del jthi~ afternoon in another non-eague test. ttr.111 "' Mi r 01 ICtrt, lb P1J.._, cl-1 1>-• Sn~der, ( Cl1Plll!ll, II $1mwt1, 111-t ErlU.tcn, rf $1!1, cl·rf M1ver. ~ Jofl"'°"' ll VU11, • Gtrcf1. •f i1.t11m1. • Tote ls G1n1t11 Or1~1 .. • ' , , l ' ' ' ' ' ' • n "' .. r II rlll • • ' . • • . ' . ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' . . Iour walks and a Jone base hit___A.r>e1•-· 11 • S.11, lb r II rbl ' ' ' ' . . Coach Tom Trager's Sea G•""-11> Kings' only tally came in the ::;-'· ~ i;ixth stanza when Stan Crip-,,,.';.u,, '1 . •• pen unloaded with a run-scor· ::~,~ ct ing single after two-out walk s .. ,,,,.,,, Jb to John Palmer and Don wi~. Jb .,.,,tack, t :,nyder. Adllhi~1", " '!'he only extra base hit of 1011'* sc.,., by • • • ' , ' ' l ' • • • ' .. . , , ••• ' .. ' , ' ••• • 10 1 . ' . the day came in the third in· ninF, when Steve Jones of Glrt1•" Grev• It>? !OJ 1-1 1G 0 Cor011t d•l'Mtr 1'IOll fOI 0-1 ) • plate allowed a run io score to lie the game up. " Ile followed that by retiriilg the final batter or the 1ixlh frame and mowed Bolsa Gran- de down in 1·2·3 fashion iii the seventh liming. :. Hwttlhttl• i_. lfl .. . .... Murllllr, 111 ' . , ' Etrllr. 31:1 • ' • ' $f"10nl. If-lb • • ' • MMb, c • • ,. ' C111!rtll, .. ,1 • ' ••• Mo~. cl l ' ' • 8•nn11. rf·ll ' ' ' • ChH•, » .. ' ' ' itlvb!n, lb l •• • Churchwell. • ' • • ' Tolt l1 " • , .• ••Ill Ort ... <'' .. r II rbl Or-. rt • '" • ~cGlll. ( ' • , ·' C11Hll1m, ll • • • McL111tlllll\, lb • ' • l •t!llOll. " ' • • ic., ... cl • • ' • 8rook1, 1ti J ' ' ' Folt'I', lll , ' • • 5nlllh, • J • • • 9rliJly, .ii • • • ' o u"ctn. ~ • • • ' l<.lludt. p • • • • Tl7!1l1 " • • ' SCOf't llf ln~ll!fl . ' . lcl•• Grande .. '" ,,.., • , ll~•clo M• ... .... , • Gymnastics Summaries : c •M 011.n (111.11 s.. ,.,.,,_ TumblJ119 -I. Gr1,.r CC) ?. lletdl (Tl 3, Cltn!lffl \Tl, Polllli: 6.JS. LOftll horse -, Idler IC l J. Gr1Hf IC) 1. 8tKll !Tl. Polflll: 7.tJ. Mcr l1onf'I' 111r -1. lle•tll ft} t. WUtl1m1 . C) L WOf'tflen (T), Pel'1111; 1,,, sroe l\ot'$• -1. wnn1m1 IC I I. MclnlcYi (() ). lhldl !ti. Po "11: •• 115 • P1r1ti.1 .ti.rs --1. C-Pl'l 111 1 . W"""" \1l J. Sdlollt ld Ind Wlltltn'll IC IJ Poln 1; 6.S. _ A 1191 -I. Wiit:fl CTI 2. C1111111I IT) J, W!llltryq { • PG!nll: 6.d . W111mm1tlr' (l .n1 11•.tSI LI MIWlll11 Tum~ll'lll -I. Ht•lll CM) '· ~.11 C"'(o~~;!,' ..!.~~·~J:rt.i= c~~i 1. Hertel (Ml J Johnson !W l. Point~: t.3.5. Hlvn !'' -l. Oalfron (Ml). McFtll !Wl l . ~•vu' (M). Pel"'~ 7.t. Hf,:1las1 i•;~~· i:-T~ :~:!'n 1~in!1 IM) Ind ur.il \Ml. Pein!!' t.lS. Sld~horll -. P"!' M! 1. ll!Hlt (Ml 3. EVtfltl !W). Point$: ).J . Ptrallol 81,. -1. O'Nflll (Wl 1. Hotmn IW\ 3. L1Cct !WJ. P,,lnls: 1.0. lllr191 -. Mcu111 ... tWI 1. JohMdn (WI l. Ever1U IWJ. POln.ts: I.I! . """-' HlrilOf'.\l ... lt) • LI l"tl\I 1112."21 Tumblll!f -1. E11rm111 CNl 1. T11r""' IN! 3. Ht111~Vt llj, Points: J.IS LongltOrse -1. H1r11r11Ye (l l 't. Tur!lfr (N) 3. McsltJ \Ll. Point•: 1.0J Hlgll 111• -1. EMtm1n (1<0 t. Wtlker (Nt 3. E•rl !LI. Pcln1,, •.S! Floor Exercise• -\. Okull (L) 1. H11rgro•e CL!. ), Turl'll!r (NJ. Pcln1•: ••• Sfdehon• -l. M1ulf¥ ~LI l. f~:lltlltl (ff ) J, Hlllb'11nd !LL ~01Mt1 P1r1nel lllrs -1. E1.llm•n (N\. Introducing COOL .~~~ ... "iE~·,, ~·'' The greatest advance in brakes in years! coo11. 8RAKo• 1Nnoou:~;~:· ': $ COOL -' 1 BRAKES Valid wilh lhi1 coupo n only. AT BIG BRAKE YOU GET BOTH! ;\'1'1\ Bendix Premium linings AND ne1v f ~r.tory·fresh brake shoes (not rebuills!J \Ve do nnl just "reli ne" "!our brak115, l.OOf. BRAKE means d,,1v lining ANO nP.1\f metal brake shoes a tour reasonab le pricPs. COOL BRAKE is cuatom gro und Ir> fi t your drums. These nP.w Bendix Pretntum linings are specially dcsigne<l to "i:lo p you cold." COOL BRAKES f'\rf!fld r11ctory •landards ror new l:llrl 11nd arf! guaran!red fo r 36 n1onlh! nr :!6.000 milell, \vh ic:heve t comet firs l. !Thill is not a pro·tatnd guaranlee!) Al BIG BRAKE w" ad ju~t yn11 t' bra\;cs FREE1tir the lifr. o( your <:ar. Don 't bf! half-safe, be11ll-saf t "·ith COOL BRAKE · • , . II stops you cold. "\Vhy pla,y cr-lsh~ rnu leue .•• loslii.11 COOL BRAKES, they .a lop you cold !'' A1k u1 1M11t Hie 100.000 t1tlle Slt•c• •fttorlhr. Abt••• l lG IKAKI ftr ••patt fre111'- e11ll •flt•...-., wlteel H IMCJ .. •II GetM tfm. ' .!!!!Big Bra~e ~STA M'HA 3111 H.,Mr llH . 17141 141·40IZ I Just Sou tit ol s.a..Di1go frw'l'.1 0,111 Ev11, l Su11d1., HUNTIN•TON 11.ACH 1 •0•1 .. K ii 11.C. 17141 147·001 1 ~011• 11oc.k Soullt &' S111 Di190 Nwy. I GAKDIN Gitovr IJJll lrn•ll•rtf St, 1714 ) &31·0111 10111 l lcc• Nc•-tlri cf '°•rd111 ..... , ft.wy, I ~ANTA ANA 61• WHt 17tlt St, 17141 I JS•IJJ7 ""' -~ ··- . . ·' .' . " .- • p,w 1!td ,..,ti l liVl -'·'•lo 1 Vauolll t f!CI W~/1 !FYI -._,, 1- TickeU for thr bener11. 1~hlch "'ill feature aclor Stcv~ ~fcQure11 sind racing great Parnelli Jonel'I. arr $5 pc.•r Pf'''"'°" and may bt purchase d •t the door . IC~~M 11'1\ 11 tit'!, e::::" 1CMt r,t, 2-1 e kfluttt II: 11 Clll, OWM {CMI U. •··--------------------------------------.· I ' ' ' • ' • • • ' • • I ' • • ' " • • ' • • ' ' ' ' ' " .. '· • ., • " " " :1 • >. • '· i:: " ; " " " " • • : .' , .. ' ., . ., i ) I' 1! I ~ ' I . - Congressional Cup ; u se '*'*-_ ....__ Top Competitors · Entered i1!1 aace The largest gathering of Jtoat.1 ln Loog Beach Harbor since the arrival of the Queen 11ary ln 1917 is pred1cled for ;file w e e k e n d competlUon J,1arch 19-22 In the 61.h annual ~nl Beach Congresstbnal Cup match race· sailing series. Ten leading skippers from :all over North America will ·race ln Columbla·OO sloops ii\ 1nine tels or lndivk!ual matches Jn competlUon sponsored by •Long Beach Yacht Club. ; 'l'1le Congressional Cup has '.become one of the world's 'most. important match race 1erles -second only lo the ·America's CUp. Trophy for the :1:vent ws deeded to the LBYC thy aO" ad of Congress Jn 1965. '. The vast spectator flttl for lhis year's races is expected to Include sailboats, power :Cnmtrs and even dinghies )'rom all of So~thern 'California's aquatic ~porLs et_nters. Aboard them will be not only members of area yacht clubs, bul also the general public interested in seeing what yacht racing is like. "There'll· be space aboard boaU on a first c<1me.{irst served basis leaving LBYC each racing day at 10 a.m.," a~cording to Bob Leslie, ·general chalnnan of this year's Congressional C up . "People who join us will see that this klnd of yacht racing is an eiciUng, e;olotful spec- tacle." .) · Boat assliivnentJ for spec-_ tators will be made In the yacht club foyer each mom· ing. Specators are asked to wear rubber-soled shoes and to bring their own lunches for about five hours of raclna: each day. "lt's also suggested that vi!ltors bring swtaters or light jackets -tt can get chilly out there," Leslie said . A five-mile wlndward- leewar~ twice around c<1urse will ht set 'just oJf the Alamitos Bay entrance to Long Beach Harbor, The first ract each day -is planned for 11:30 a.ril. -depending on wind and weather conditions. Sunday, t.1arcb 22, has been set aside in the event that weather prqblims prohibit racing any of the first three days. The entry list includes fam· ed deslgner-sailmaker-racer Ted Tllrner. Atlanta, Ga. -YC:1 Barney Flam, Long Beach YC: Cy Gillette. Waikiki YC: Ted Turner, Atlanta, Ga YC: Buzz Boettcher, California '(C; Argyle Campbell, Balboa YC; Ches Rickard. Royal Van- couver YC ; William J. Tbs Jr., New Orleans YC: Patrick O'Neal, Larchmont (N.Y.) YC, and Tom Fisher. Grosse Point Mich. First alternate is Tom Hazlehurst, East Green- wich, R.l. NEW BOARO B,OAT -AMF Alcort's new Flying· fish sa)lboat -a sister to the famed Sunfish .and Sailfish -moves out smartly with three persons aboard. The boat was designed for a crew or two. Flyingfish will be among hundreds of boats display- ed at the \Vestern National Boat and Merine Show at Anaheim Convention Center March '13-22. Ne1rfJ -fJoat Displayed In Anaheim Showing l I frldf:f, M#di 6, 1•70 DAILY Jl'ILOT 19 APBA M~ Winds Their Kind Off~~i1a~1 s A merican Eag~e Capt~res Miami-Nassa u · A ilf NAMAU, Bahamu (AP) -Other 11ppirtnt thus win· honors on the Great Lakes In Pr ' ace Ted Tutner'l 17·fOOl Amertcon nen Included' B-Coselte, 1961. R ... : lllll ,·, ol Sea.I Bt, ach, tagle, second ~the flnllh tk1ppered by Halsey Hem:-' l--,-11-1"T-T"1'"M"1"""0"••"'· 1=1"'1"0- -line, wu the apP&rent wlnn<r sho!f 01 Rhode bland; C-LIASI A Am_ttl~an P o w e r Boat Wednesday on u~frlcial cor· Ciyenoe, c11.ptalned by Don- AsooclallQO Re & I on 12 reeled Umes In the IM·mlle aid Tate of Annapolis, Mid.: 1970. chalnnan and member ol one Ml•ml·l~auau Ocean race. and D-ltustler, by O.B. Flit· TOYOTA CORON.( or bQaUng's firit rainlllea. will 'lbe American Eagle'r Ume man of t.iJami . '"°' 69" -·'~ree "•April It ,..;.. . .,, a-1 The southern ocean racing ,l lt MO. ~ ..... . :-::.r·-,... was 15.4171 hours, near y an • 4 ooo Del s dll nu11 . Lond Be.a. ch-Ense.nada championship will be seUled r uxe C! n • hour better Ulan second·place • Automatic Trani. International, It was an-Bay Bea, a ft.foot craft skJp-Friday with the 3 0 -m I I e • Radio & Heater nouliced by the sponsoring H f Nassau Cup race the Jut • Fully Tinted Glass PaclliC Q(fshoi'e Power Boat pered by Pat aggerty 0 event or the seaso'n.' • W /Walla & Wheel Cover1 RaQing AMOClatlon., Dallas. Bay Bea'r time wd Hlll1 a data processing ex; 26.46l4. Turner said he won the 32nd ecuUve, ts the aon of a famed They w'ere. followed In fleet annual race because he en· race'r-admlnlstrator, Russ Hill and class A standings by the countered "our kind of wind''. I G den G ~-..i • first boat to finish Tuesday, Sr. o · ar rove, DJN lS h • wi-• d American Egale's correcled a,lso the older b.rothet of ·Mark Jo nson s iiuwar lGarden Grove's Ron Hill, Passage out of Hwa i I. decimal time of 25.4177 for the pettnijl•lly among the na· Wlp.dward Passage's corrected 184-mUe voyage was mon! tfon's outlxiard racing let.de:rs time was 2&.5939. than an hour better than the and a second place finisher win •• Brisk 25 m.lle an hQur runner·l!P. boet in the histori· LEA.SE omECTLY FflOM A 'l'OYOTA DEALER • CALL LIAll MANA.Gi it 147-1515 BILL MAXIY LUSING .. ·the · 1967 Outboard World easterly winds continued to cal sail O'lamplonship at Lake· Havasu !;l~acr the f:el andw~veral Second was Bay Bea, Pal 11111 a..a .. 11¥4. City. , s 1 ow er ats s were Haggerty's 49-foot sloop which Hut•---...... As regional chalnnan, Jijll is 1 ..:a;t~s;ea~a~te~W~edn~e..l~a~y~. ==~w~o~n="~Bo~a~t~of~lht~=Y~e~ar~·~· ====--='""===~= responsible for sµpervlsing one of APBA's most active and varied areas or boating - Southern Califomia, Southern Nevada, Arizona and Hawaii. In all, there are 20 APBA regions in the U.S. and Tickets on Sale Now! Canada. All regiona l chainnen PA'C I FI c' I ND 0 0 R are aulomaUca]ly members ol · The Flylngflsh. ne\v sister of vantage of superior airfoil or&anizatlon's highest policy· the APBA Council, the . Cl • · 1 the popular o n e • de s i g n c h a r a ct e r isUcs usually setting body· sailboats Sunfish and Salllish a s s o c i a l e d with high The Long Bcach-Ensenada by AMF's Alcort Division, wm perronnanc< mulli-hills. International, ' t!O-mlle race AMERICA'S BEST FAMILY ENTEITAINiENT be among many new boats The Flylngfish has a com· between Long Beach and the realu•ed in H. Werner Buck's fortable family-size cockpit, UaJa Calilomla '"'ort, b Ult LONG BEACH ARENA MARCH JJ.JJ15 Western National Boat and simple sheeting, convenient second race on the 1970 APBA ,. Marine Show at Anaheim kick-up rudder and cen· naUonal thampionship points Fri. I , .•• : ht. 2 & I ,.; Su. 2 & ' '"'' Convention Center, March 13· terboard and buill·in flotation calendar -the foorth for SS.GO tllni 12.00. 16 yrs & _.., 1/1 ,tin _,, 22. among other features. -=m::;e::;m::;be::;"='::;1 ::;PO::;P::;B::;RA=.==:;I fitr'rJ:' L~ :..::'A,!.; ~11:;:· MMa~~ Measuring 14 ft. overall, and Buck's show wiU feature ,; City S._..; All M•• Tick et AfHC'-t, CM· with a S fl 8 in. beam, the Fly· everything in the way of M•ke e Sharp p11Tld.1t _, TIU.,,_ 09'tetl. MAIL OIDll: ingfish caJTies a single 120 sq. sailboals, from dinghies to T d U WI•••••••· ~ .. .,...,. ... clleck tt1 L IS ilh C ~~fl~·£'a~l~l~on~the~ta~l~es~t~in~m:•~su~jlu~x~ury~~y~ach~b~,~·~ll~d~~p~la:y:ed~====,:::':"::'~;~s:a::,,=~~~·~o~D~ro~,~L~O~N~•~l~IA~C~H~A~ll~N~A~,~LO~N~•~11A~C=H~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·. OCa a Oat 01Dpany -flexible fiberglass. under run sail in the high-ceil· Dimo-A·Lines ,,,,,_ • A full-batlen sail takes ad· inged Arena. .... t as••,....._. IWln Announces New Dealers . , . Appointment or authorized dealerships in Canada. Texas, and MIMesota for the c<1m· plete line or Er:h;son sailboats has been announced by Del Walton, vice president of Ericson yachts, Santa Ana. The new dealers further strengthen a sales network that is now represented in virtually every yachting area in the U.S., Walton sald. The naming of a dealership In Canada Is · Ericson's first such venture outside the U.S. Ericson YachLs is now represented in North Vall- couver, B.C. by Geoff Coleman Yacht Sales, Ltd. Funeral Set For Famed Yacl1tsman Funeral services for Eugene (Fritz) Overton,.wldely inoWn Sou th ern· Ca Ii fo.rn i a yachtsman, will be held Satur- day al 2 p.m. at '9e Ann:strong Family MortuyY. l~l S. Hope St., Los Angeles. Mr. OvertQn died Thursday after an illness of about 10 days. He would have been 90 years old ln May . Mr. Overton was a foonder snd past commodore o r California Yacht Club, Los An,eles Yacht Club, Catalina Island Yacht Club and the Southern Califomla Yachting AssocieUon. Fritz, as he wa s af· fectlonately known to South- land yachtsmen, s ailed in the first Honolulu race In 1906 and sailed his own yacht in the first Tahiti race in J9'l7. Call!omla Yacht C I u b ' s season'-long blue-water ocean racing series is named after the veteran yachtsman. Tn the fast growing yachting re-gion near Houston, Tei. the net.> dealer is Ankers & Moore, Inc., located at Watergate Yach ting Center, League Clly , Tei. In the Great Lakes cowl try I Superior Yachts, Inc. in the Minneapolis-St. Paul region, has ~n named exclusive Ericson dealer for the state of 11-tinnesota. Ericson Yachts manufac· tures a C1:1mplete line of seven fiberglass sailing yachts from 23 to"il feiet oVeral1 1ength. Designed by Bruce King. Newpo rt Beach naval architect, the-line is now unveiling a new Erlcson-29 sloop to add to the new Ericson-35 and preeXlsting 23, 26, 30, 32 and 41s. Ericson is a subsidiary of Pacific American Industries, Los Angeles. ( Buddy Ebsen Places 2nd Buddy Ebsen. :skippering h i 1 catamaran ·Polynesian Concept, was sec<1nd boat to finish in the Lipton Cup Race in'Miami. The 3~foot Polycon came in 45 seconds after Windward Passage, the first to finish, and five minutes before American Eagle, winner on corrected time over I 2 7 starters, five or which were dismasted and all of which, except Ebsen 's, were 63. or 73- foot , boats. Winds gusted at 22-30 knots, not favorablt condlUohs for the Polycon, an unoUicial en· try. Order or arrival w e r e \Vindward Passage, Polycon (unofficial entry ), Kialoa 11. American Eagle, Ondine and Baccara. MAST ER SERVICE DEALER SANTA ANA L. W. Bemis Tractor & lmplemen1 Co. 1629 I HI hi SlrHl-543·2639 SANTA ANA HUNTINGTON BEACH Clark Dye Hardware 210 S. Maln-547·1'33 Ron's Mini-Cycle City 1721 6 B11ch Bl.--142·211 1 - ' NEW w1DE. fl.AT TREAD DESIGN TWIN·PLY FIBERGLASS BELT GUARANTEED ADJUSTMENT ,, .... -...... 1 tJ ....... "' ........... . -...... -........ --•""l'"' ._ .... -~-·----~ .. -.... ·--...... -.. , ..... ""' .......... , ... '"'"' .. -1·• • Apll'llt llewOUlll • Ag.!Mt Cvts -.. -.. --... --.......... 1 -l'ff'"'' .. ·~· .......... of ·--------c~--• ... -11'*' •• .. ••-"'' _.,, ... _ .. _ .............. • A11ln1t IMM 1,..0 • ApiMt ltwrlehltt& • AISIMI WortlrMMtilp • Atalnst MMr1st ----· Mo09 MITWtlllll • ,,. 11."4 Dekcl• o.Mc• . • He Umll on Jllli.s • H9 Llffttt Ml MonttM _,.., ..................... -.. _,.._ TIRES • ,1, ......... ·1-· 670X1• I f" 2.15 MAG WHEELS I SS/8000 Super Sport • Mlnor-pollllh chrome JUST • Cnt aluminum center • Thell.proof hub C1P s299s • Other 11)1ee 11Yalleble COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE s2 ,4ss FORD-CHIYY -'L YMOUTH l .. IM all 4 WllMh A41a t ...... ,.,..., DN-. CrlllMhn. AM Ft114 W N""4 PREMIUM 4 PLY NTL ON OTHER BRANDS blemished -whfte~slde-wall T I RES 6SOX11 $13.95 77SX14 $15.95 77SX1S 12sx14 $16.95 125X1S ISSX14 $17.95 WX14 fHX1 S $19.95 . 11SXIS LARGER SIZES ret 1.86 Fet 2.20 Fet 2.37 Fel 2.57 Fct 2.98 U S x 14 855x15 BLACK TUBELESS JUST $15 9 ~'et2M 1like Your Pick! USED TIRES 1o11 of tlOft..fl(id trt•d $595 ~~~~~ COMPLETE • CAR CARE ---if yOUr Cer Shi••s & Shimmy• , SEE US FOR EXPERT TIRE TRUEINGI Add miles to your Tires with our profssslonel WHEE L B"LANCINGI Since 1959 h-+1,1---.nouts· Z:30 w11n1. AUNIMIN1' & MU.NONO t•aYICS I 646-5033 to 6:00 Dally ·540.5110 • .. l L .. IO DAILY PILOT LEGAL NOTt s frldu, Marth ~ 1970 ·an LEGAL NOTICE .... CllltTIJl!ICATE 01" IUSIHISS ,ICTITIOUS NAMI The u...:1e,..11 .. ec1 dO ct!ilf'I' ff>•' ••-cor.dudl.,. , butlnn• •I 76' W WU.on .Ur C Coslf M~• C1l/fflml1 ut1""r 11'1- ficfltlout II"" ""''C Of I CYCLE 0YHAMIC5 (With dl'lllloni cf! ! CYCll! M ... Gs '""' 1 .-.vTON•M•CS '"" '""' 111d form II CO"'POi.ed of thT '9!1owl"" MtlDll&. .......,., lllrnet In tun •lld PllCU °' ruld•nt<" ''' '' follow! Tom So1t'llller 766 W w "°"' A!!ll c Coo!t MeH C1llforlQ 8ri111 Lltt"1" 166 W11t Wolto" <I.pt C c~11 Mffl Ctllfor11!1 Dtlecl F1b 76, tf10 Tom 511•,,.I>• l rlt11 Llllll'I" STATE np: CALll'OltHIA OltANG~ COUNT'!' On Ftb 7 1f10 belort ""' • NOl•"Y P\lbl!c "' •NI for Mid S!ftt •e•IOl'l•llv ~P~••rel Tom SP;o~ll':r 11\d art.11 l ltlll':r ~ kl me If lie 11>1 Pl'fMllll -M ,..mes ••• Mlblulbell fo tr.. wltl'llll lfl-W-t Ind ackllOW!tdffcl ftltV UIKUlrel LEGAL-NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE .,.,,, Cl llTl"ICA.TI! O" COll,.Olll'TION ooo-1i: IUSINl!SI UHOl!ll "l(TITIOUJ NA.Ml 'THE' UNOEll:S!GNEO COl>l>Oll:ATlOH il'lflft l!t!,r~Y ct rtll¥ fhlf !1 ,, «!NlllCll1'19 I C-'« te...,.lct1 t nCI uoll,.1rf "'1'111e!t at ''°° Mlcl'lel-Orly' 1,..,IM C1Hlornl1 .,..... ullde'r "-' lkll!lo111 llrm ntr>\t ot ORANGE COU,TY COM P UTElt. ceH'TIER tnd '""' ""' n.mt ol H id COi' _,,.,.. Ind 111 O~l1>1t l llCf ef bu1IAQ~ k 11 lo1-• MAltSHAll !HOUST1tl1E5 ~ Hun llllt"Orl 0th•• Sin Mtr!llO C1 lfornl1 1110• 1)1ttd J~•lll"' I ltTO Ml.llSHALL INOUSTlllES 11 .. Jotrn J l eo-t Jr Vier Ptt1!d•nl "r Rlclll•d D 0 Htrln T •e1 e ~TATE Of' (llll~O!INI• COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES I !'I On tllll '"' clOY ol J1nu1r• n7n b>fo.r~ ""' 1 Noltl'l' ll'ulltlc In 1fld lor 11 d Cou,._ "' tNI l!•tt "'"'o""llv ~•-•"II Jo!lft J kf'I' Jr ""°""' to m• 10 ~ l"4 V ce ~r.,.l(tgnl 11111 R th•rtt 0 0 H•rln Jr.no.,.n '" "" It be the T '"'"',,.,. ol t~t cor -•'I"" 111•1 • ..:uled ~ ... n~ln 1,.. ~ 11111 brll•" "' ~ ......... 11on """ti" nt~ !"" t C_l'IO,,,l"Cllt'CI IQ "" tllll 11/C!O cor...,.,1io.. r•t<u•"CI ,.,, \-"nit WITNESS mv ll~n(I 1"'1 O!!lcltl tell f()f'l'ICl•l $EAL) C:-tlt l PAt•ll•• Nolt..,. Pi.rtlll< C1lllo n I "' ndHI Offk t '" lo' Antei.• CO!lf' Y MY Commln <"" E•ol" IA1rcll If 1t1tl llllReENllRO & C~Ullll l ,.,,..,._, ., Ll'w "" ,.,_ tf '"' "'" t.. -. ... 1i.1 c.~-· • "0.1 T J1HI '°vbl '"" n .. <tt• Co•~ "•btl.i•rv 11 '"" Mlrclo ' ""' """' 10tt1c111 Se1tl Mery K Htt1r, Nol•,.., Pub!lc. Cl.lile.rnl1 Prl11dD9I °""' In Or11111• Countv ,,...,. (0111mk1~n E10 rt'I NtY ?I 10? Plib!rthfcl Orll'lltf Co151 Fetirv.,.., 11 1nd M1rcl> I 01 iv "n..i ll. 70, 1t10 ·--~ LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE NOTIC.-Of' tAL~ In 1ctotC11nce w ti! lllr orovlslons ol '~" C1!ffornl1 Onllorm Commtrc!11 COde "'"" ~!119 d<a end unP• Cl 1•or.vt ror wllkl! "" Don Merlin McY!nt 1nCI S!or"e lllO L091n llYttlUf (O!ll MIU Ctl torn 1 I• enlll!!!d !o 1 ll•n •~ Wirt'-'~" on IM 900Cll 11errln~ter Cine• Orel '"" Cl<a !IO!lct "-Yltlo lite" 1lven Ill 01rtl11 k1111wn to claim In 1,.. tern! tll!reln eno ''" llme 11111KlllN In well 11111 c• for p1ytMnl ot well ll1vlnt e•11ttCI l'IC!ltl h l>!rtbv 1lven ttr11 lllH<> to«I• will ~ WICI ti public 111<tio.. ti Wl!>Cl'lo 't-Awclltif! eirn 7flU'llf--H"""°" lou,.v1..i (Irv of Co.It Metil Ceuntv ol 0 '"'" S•fle ol Ctll!orn I on 1111 1.7111 dov ol MlrCll 1910 t i 1 30 o tlo<.lr. P.M l l'le lolklWh"O Us! 11 I brl•I OeK•ll>liGll ol tri.t orOot"rf'lo to bf Mild Loi !<lumber J10 Jul • And•""'"- A.mo;rnt OIH! 1n H 011-0 01 Ccpt" M~• C111toml1 Fel>rut•r ;1 1'70 I Yl!ndv • AucliOtl !ltrn 9v LOI'"" E Wll\dham Pub1h""41 Or<t"'• CNll 01!1T P k!t Feb'1!11'V 11 t ncl MlrcJ'I I 1'10 l1t l'O LEGAL NOTICE • \Vallace Kling of llunl ington Beach 1s rcllr1ng from General Tele phone C.:o after a ca re(!r of 1nore than 23 •years J-fe work M as a lestboardman A \Vorld \Var Jl veteran Kling 1s a me1nbcr of the American Legion Post 1n Huntington Beach Guzak Joins Dean \Vitter t I OVER THE C Subcontract Totals Told ' . • ' , • " M"'h 1970 DAILY PILOT N.Y. Wintaers and Losers J_ . . -., ~ . . : . ''S-PECIALIZING IN UABITY:'- •, . ' . ·HERE l 'S1. WHERE '.YOU • SHOULD B·uy Y10UR NEW BUICK '• .-OUR :STOCK IS GREAT! . SKYLARKS e G. S.455 PER_FORMANCE Sf.ECIAL e ~E SABRES , WILDCAT.S e ELECTRAS e RIViERAS • AtL NEW ' ESTA~_E W-AGONS ·• • . . --------~~----Im'!"~~--""'!'""--~...-. 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' . 66 ·~~.1~~ ••• ~.~ ,.,;,, 1" 1"· f ... $1 795 tory •ir c0Milio11in1. lltltW7751 AUTHORIZED BUICK-OPEL-JAGUAR DEALER ' 234 E. 1-7th .STREET 548-776·5 ' • . . --·· •.• , .... -...... ~. _,,..,.._ ••• "!!; -7·.l;"'.o,;-:_·. ~· • . -.. I Frid.ti', Math f, IJ70 • • E.E KE DE • 1 . A ( o 111·P le ~t e 'Git ide I Where • •• to go •••• W/Jat to do • • •• • • THE·wOLF DANCE IS THE FIRST TD BE PERFORMED BY TH.E ESKIMO DANCERS DRUM BEATS PROV IDE THE ONLY MUS IC FOR THE PERFORMANCE OF DANCE S '. Alaskan Culture Comes , I I .To CostaMesa's Plaza .. , . r"' There will be lots of Aghel and Soya~ story of lwo spirits of thie thunder c1ouds. fn Costa r.1esa, March 12 through · The good spirit is lhe dall(er wearing the 21 when the Alaska Trade and Travel Ex-qi~k with lhe big upper lip and the evil .poslti<:ln comes to South Coa.8t Plaza. one has the big lower lip'.~They~ are agru-' Trani~aled the Eskimo words mean ing and eventually fight. The evil spirit 1inging and dancing; ahd drums. There ' k'•lls the good spirit. This makes the evil is no written Eskimo language but from spirit sad and he perform! a dance which time to time some missionaries, teac)t. eventually brings the good spirit back to ers and travelers have attemped to re-lite and they finish the dance together as • cord wOrds out of Eskimo converiation,, Iriends. and Aghei (singing and dancing) and 'I1le only music or the Eskimos comes Soyaks (drums) are two of them. from drums. They are made by stret- Thank you Is either quianna . or ching the skin of 1ti:e stomach of a walrus alianamUk·; dogsled is ooneit; song is when wet 'ove.r driflW'OOd· fr~s. They atooo, and dance is seiuk. Not really always keep."'.a~r nearby to moisten the enough to carry on a conversation bUt an drum skins to give them more resonance indication of friendship U one could learn and keep them from spUtting. to pronounce a word or two. The ~ are seated in a row and The dances which will be done meral begin to tap the drums very slowly with a times each day during the nm of tbe moOinit (bk:tory .stick)'and soon~ soft event wUI start with the Wolf Dance chant accomparues the, t a pp 1 n g always the first dance the people do. 1t Gradually the~ and volume incre~ tells ofl.a hunter who kills an eagle, then and the drums give forth a booming preserves and dries the skin carefully. h>!klw sound. ~ weird ~mony of the Some days later be is hunting and sees voices and the .irregular tempo of the another eagle1and starts to draw his bow drum beats begm· to ·mount and as the but the eagle draws back his hood and rhythm reaches a peak it is broken off says "Bo not shoot." He talks to the abruptly. . . . hunter awhile then takes him into the sky The Expo::ition will run in the Carousel to a land the hunter has never seen. Here Court.area of 'the. Plaza Irom 11 :45 a.m. the· hunter hears a strange sound. The to 8:15 p.m. n1g:hUy except . Sunday. eagle tells him it is "lbe heartbeat of my Dances by the King I.sland Esktmos and molher1 since you killed my brother." the Chllkat Indians wtU be performed at They return to the hunter's home and the the 11 :45 a.m. show as . well as those eagle tells him he must find some object scheduled for 2 p.m., 4:45 p.m. and 7:30 that will sound like the beat or the p.m, mot.be.r's heart to make amends _ and Other events during the show include thua1lhe Eskimo drum came into being. totem pole carving, bl~et tossing, dou- Other danc.ts which will be performed ble barre.led yo-yo twirling, more than 24 by the Eskimos include The \Valrus ~hibils showing the excltemebt of Dance, In which the men go ou\ in their V1SiUng Alaska. ooiniftki (skin boats) to hunt walrus. Ofld: they find big herds floating on iet. noes and the dance is an lmitaiJon of the walri.is• movements. The dancers wear the irWk of a walrus which is carved of wood with ivory tusks. The ·Witch 'Doctor's Dance tells the WEEK.ENDER KMPC Fights Nudity in Music Album Covers Beginning a campai111 agaJnst "nudity INSmE ·FE,\TURES in muaic," radio atalion KMPC hai .,POI- .....,_ Mord! 1 .~1 out the word to all record companies and •· ..... ,,.,' ' "'' record distributors· that it will not play ' There 'ii a della,hU'ul art exhibit any material from albums with "nude or scheduled for this Salurday and objeCt.ioaable" Cftfn. Sunday from .noon to ~.p:m. 11 Ille The orlllnil declllon was proposed by KI NG ISLAND ES KI MOS, CHILKAT INDIANS IN ACTION Holly w04l!! Backstage • Sutherland On Way Up •" By ·VERNON SCO'M' Untll "M·A-S..H" Sut~rlaod was large· HOLLYwCio'i; ~'C'h~~~~'!'re you have ly uilinown in Hollywood. To the public not heard ot.Don'ald Sutherland. he 111 still a stranger. You wlU.-~ , •• "I can walk a.round totall)I" unrecignii~ He is an astorilshingly good actor. cd exce'pl Ir. New York," the actor said, 4 native .Pf Canada, Sutherland ts t.l)e stating a fact. "Even in New York I'm ganglil}g 6-foot, f.inch ,, 185-pound star of mt well koown. , , • "M·A-S-H," w h;J ch should Qo for him "l went bl$=k there lor the 'premiere of what "The Graduate" "M·A.S.H" artd a UmOl,!Bine met me at did for Dustin Hoff-the airport lo attend the -New 'lork critics • • awards. When 1 gotr~ out of the car a mITke HoUnian, Su th~ ct owd dubcd up aSkJng, please, Mr. Intermission llow to Fin.d Neiv Play s? Clrec k the T V Arcliives By TOM TITUS 01 tll• Dlllr ~JI•! tt1!f 1l has been a long time coming,· but Orange Coast community theaters finally are beginning to exert a conscious effort toward the . prOO:uction of plays which haven't been done to death by othu little theater group~. The question "Has it been done before?" is creeping mort and more into cast party conversation when _prospective productions for the next season are being discuased. Directors or the various local groups are coming to realize that it's a small county and that the fact a play hasn't been performed at their Joe.al playhouse doesn 't mean their potential audience hasn't seen it presented. It's commendable that our theater groups are shaking off t h e i r parochialism, but in doing so they come up against a new problem -where to find the good, new pla ys. And if the show isn't well known, will the aUdieoce come to see it In large numbf!rs? · I think thCy will, and I base that assumption partially on one or my OY.'n projects currently on the boards -the Rane.ho Commu'nity Players' production ol '"l'he Death and Llfc of Larry Benson," which pulled good crowds in it.s first two weekends, although it's doubtful that many playgoers really knew what to expect from the Reginald Rose drama. Tms ISN'T intended a! a plug for lhc play, but as a possible direcUon which other communily theate rs might follow in their search for material both unfamiliar and atageworthy -lhe early days of television. TV, as I pointed out in (he "Larry Benson" program , has not always been a "boob tube" or a "vast wasteland." Be.lore the horse operas and the site.oms took a strangle hold on lhe home screen audience's viewing appetite, there wits some powerful and meaningful drama available regularly -not just four times a year if you happen lo be bo1ne to catch CBS Playhouse. Among 'the products of TV's •;golden age" were Playhouse 90, U. S. steel .Hour, Hallmark Hall of Fame and Studio One, where "Larry Benson" -first ap- peared. Television also gave us some other fine Reginald Rose W1lrks later adapated for the stage. such as ''Twelve Angry Men," "Dino," "Thunder on Sycamore SU'eel" and most recently "Dear Friends." Comedy scripts which had lheir genesl1 fn video also abound in adapUon, notably ''The Many Laves of Doble GUlis," "Our MiSs Brooks," "Get Smart" and, for the younger set, "Meet Corliss Arc.her" and "Gidget." l\tA YBE. YOU'RE a movie bllff and you'd like to stage a play based on one of your favorite films. It's easier than ,)'Oil may rcailze to recreate "Seven Days1 In fttay," "The Ugly American," '\Pilklw Talk:' or -for the extra. ambitious - "The Robe." What this all boils down ·to Is that there's a wealth of material kicking around in the .most unlikely. palces for any theater group tired ol putling' on the same play a neighboring playt»ouse,Slag· ed last season -or last week. • • All the group has to do is dig a litile:' * .. ADD ONE more name to Orange Coun- ty's already formidable II~ or IJUlt theater groups -the Irvine Community Theater. , This brand-new organization held 113 second meeting last week and came op with a pair or one-act plays for i~ maiden production. The Irvine players \\'ill do "Aria da Capo" and "How Tall is Toscanini?" -the latter lor presi!ntaUon at the Riverside one-act tournament1in ti.fay. tr you live in the Irvine area and want to get theatrically involved, give Carll Dow a ring at 833-0793. Weekend ~lgl1lig~~s Pomono SChoo1 In Co&t1 M1<1. See .KMPC Mmic Llbrlrlln Alene McKinnty. picturu llld 119'1 on Page 14. and· bas been IUpJIDrted by slltloo '"-·,..;,,..J TIMI l'llp 11-1-ecutives ---~ erland is a member Nicholson, give us your autograph. the new genre. of .. "T~ey w_i&_too~ for Jack Nicholso!!_ actor better sulled to ·In 'tasy Rider. SCHOoL MUS ICALS -Marina Hi!lh SchOQI In Hunting-• 1• ton Beac6-is prooucing"Guys an<l'D(j))s tar<h 6 .-.7 In the~ CWldttio~ Art P ... II JtMPC Pnlll'llD l'>lr.dor Russ Barnett la tile GIOuta Pap 14 gplaloed, "There m l.tlict 11"5 eovem- Ltve TlttMtt Pq:e If. ing the publicaUons and types of material Oat 'N' About Pqn !5 • .U wlllch can be purchased by youths under Golde to Fun Pq:e ff 11~ But youn1 people o( any age cao k>ok Sprio1 FUn1 Pip n al or buy II-• which hive total nudtty OC . rt.UUrmonJe Concert Pap 1'1 i suggaUve poees and out.and-out por: "Mardereas Angeli" Pap t'l ograpby on the covtrr. New M_. Adams Pap t7 "We are by no means fdtlnc ouraelvea Cross"erd Puute P•I.'" D op aa aome kind of cenlOl'S as to wl'llt is Galft to Movies Pap a art and what b obscenily o r ''Al•!JkH SM•ri" Pap !I pornography," Barnett continued. "But Qaetnle Pep n We can control the mualc played on our Comics _ Pip !t station,, and we're making Jt very cltar TV VleM Pip !t that we won't play music, regardleu or l'elevlsloo Los P.,. It th• •tipe. ·;r "" led tllO music or the album co vu 11 in poor taste. n Cbai'acter roles ·than '' is unlikely similar incidents will leading min. recur. . Db u 1:. U.Mo Twenty years ago S:.itherland appeared Jn 16 movies, he might have been a prospect to flll the mainly In bit parta. His most impOrtant void left by the passing of Sllm Summer-role was as a 1dylng EngJilib • lord in vtUe Whie he Is more llandsiime than the "JOMa." 11e also impressed producers - late 'Summerville Sutherland will not with a small role in ''Tbe Dirty Dozen." make the W-Orld f~rgeL Tyrone Power. Sut.berland ls affably tndlffcrent to hi! Sutherland bas watery blue eyc:s, a pro-1ur1'0undlag11 -1" lives in Bevuly Hills mlncnt nose, variegated blood 1houlder· ,, with his wUe and three children -and i! length hair and a somewhat preoccupied given-to atarln&' into the middle distance attitude. while lapsing into a Canadian accent. But Sutherland also is an accompllsheil. He Is dtvoted ti> American poetry and convincing actor who -along )"ith •toff. dotes :in acting . man , Jon Voight and Elliot Could -wlll "I'm conrtdenl of n1y abilities," ho be starting in moUo'n plctures for years Aald . "If the chara~ter I$ a man, I can to come. play him." \ school's gymnasium,, at 8 p.m. And in Laguna Beach tbe Thurston Inteimed.iate School is offering "On With the Show" at 8 p.m:, March 6 • 7 in the aurutorium. . OC PHILHARMONIC -The Orange CounlY. Philhar· monlc Society is presenting the' Los Angelex J'h1lhar1nonlc Orchestra, wllb Zubln Mehta conducting _ Sal. .. March 7 at 8: 30 p.m., in Crawford Hall on the UCI campus. OCC SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA -The Orange Coast College Co mmunity Symphony Ocche•lra will be beard In con- cert in lhe auditorium on campu s. Sun., March 8. at 4 p.n1. Joseph Perliitan will conduct and gultansl Ernest Blteltl wlU be soloi st. j ' St• Gulde to Fun, P19"I 27 1 I I • I • ·. ' .. . ' ... ' ~ ••• 0 ... ARTIST CAMERON KOVACH, AGE 6 Th• Title of His Painting is ''The Ck>wn" • Travel Pilgrims' Road I Outlines Spain By STAN DELAPLANE RIBl\IJEO, Spain -The pilgrims' ro•d follows the coast line. The gray cordiuera stacks up agwnst • • the Bay ol Biscay -Lhe Mare Cantabricus ol Lhe Roman maps. 'l'his is the ancient kingdom of As- turias. The slice of Spain denied .to the conquering .-Moors who never St."\lled north of the line of the olive tree. •• Jt's plea:;ant country of big rough-coated cattle and rushing 1ivers, tished by n1en with \Vh1ppy, 1 ~ ; Joot trout rods. The inns serve sturdy peasant soups :·t and coarse ground sausage. ; * Th• hotel is nol elegant, but its f<'rench doors ~ .• npen on . the river _Eo. 'iou look across the quiet , · estuary .1n the evening and see the reflected Lights .:.·cf the sister town Castropol on th e opposite shore. ;·· Thi s is lhe road the 1-~fench pilgrims took to lhe :_ holy tomb of SL James at Co n1postella. 1'housand s of them made the journey. Prayed for the destruc- tion of lhe infidel Moor. And returned, e.ntiUed to \Vear forever the .scallop shell of the Apostle saint. The toad itself \Vas known as "the French r~ad." European pilgrims \Valked it. singing hymns 11i.nc:e the year 811 when. by angelie direction the shrine 0£ St. J ames was found again. ' It gave the surge to Christianity ~hat sent it 11oulh tor the next four centuries. Until the last l\1oorish king handed over the keys of the Alhambra to Ferdinand and Isabella . :-~·-* > "What car would you recommend w• rent for • clriving trip in Europe?" You \Vant something a s .s1nall as you can man- age for Yl?urself and luggage. Town streets are nar- row. Medieval streets of these Spanish towns were made for donkey traffic and they haven't changed. Al&o small ,ca~s don't use much of the liquid gold • I.h ey call gasohne -80 cents a gallon is a fair price. : Of course you sacrifice power. Most of these cars ~ could, sC'arcely turn over an ice cream freezer. But ! v.•hat s your hurry? ~ ... -. ~ c .•. * ~ "It i1 possible to rent campers in Europe? How .-:~:-·about in the U.S.?" " You can rent them in Europe. Buy then1 \Vilh a 1: · tuaranteed buy back plan. Buy and shjp then1 l home. But people \Vho've done this have had repair trouble in back country \\'here you take campers. Lack of parts. An exception is the Volkswagen camper. They seem lo have parts everywhere. * , I see !ots of ads for rent campers in the U.S. ~l ~ ~com.Jng s~ big several huge companies are ~<>­ mg into ~e business. The problem is finding places to camp 1n our overcrowded parks. * t ... ~ ;, ~ouple of solutions for this: A paperback book. .;,-• P nvate Camp G.rounds . U.S.A ." from Box 2652 ~Palos Verdes Peninsula. C.~. 902i4 . (I cannot find ~---a price mark on my copy.) Mystery Cruises to Nowhere. Just for the fun of it. A"'trlr.•11 l"rwtltMt Llrltt llft > •11 M1t1..-, Ctwltff ff Nt""'"rt ... w .... ,.,... • • Dtc. JI, llfltt llM ,_,.II.ii t•t tflft ti 11!1 1.""11t 1111'111, fllt'U -t flt ,,.._, ,,..,,., 1-HJ.lt'Y• T~nt ,..,.,lllJ, Kt1"'1tlttll Hrt!n trt "'' ••• f'I lflft1 '"'· f~t t111Y 1111. IH l'I "'1' ttltl" 1M hH llfirlnlrt. Crlllu rtt. ti IU.tt JflCWt&-....,..,._ ,..... ....... -- r1rtt111"""''· . '~ ARTIST ELIZABETH HANSON IS 6 Y.EARS OLD The Title of This Painting Is ''Flth Under the Sta" ' KATHY TORELL, i "My Shadow end I" World of Children's Art Youngsters' Imagination Slwwn at Pomona School ARTIST KELLY BRANNER, AGE I Works on Creation S'1t Hopes to Ellhibit \Vant to gel out or this world? You can do it very 5imply by going to see t h e "Imaginative W or Id of Children's Art" this Saturday and Sunday rrom noon to 5 p.m. at the Pomona School, 2051 Pomona St. in Costa ~tesa. Seeing the world through the ryes of youngsters is a remarkable experience for adult.3 and t.he ninth a-11nual Jr. Ebt.11 Club ol Newport Beach show, of over 1,000 pieces or art from the students of Newport· Mesa Unified School District, promises another op· portunity to enjo~ the hn· aginatl.on or a r t 1 s t s , kin· dergarten through e i g h I h grade age. The artistic products of the children have been chosen ror charm rather than talent and each wlll be suitably matted and displayed with the artist's name on it. None will be judg- ed but all will receive a certificate of recognition for participating. As in prev\ous shows there will be continuous o~the-spot demonst.raUOOJ by the young artists. They will be showing their skills with various media such a.s crayon resist, collage, y,•ater color, po!ler paint and chalk. The whole event has been made poB!ible by a lot of bard work by the members of the Ebell Club of Newport Beach with fine. arts chairman, Mrs. Keith Keppler in charge, and the Superviso r of art for the schools, Miss Jenean Rom· berg. All lovers of children's art shou ld make this a must y,•eekend and be awakened to the shifting shapes and forms about them through the eye.o; of the youngsters. There is no charge for admission to the two-day show. Live Theater 2 Dramas Close "The Death and Life of Larry Benson" at the Actors' Playbox, Gold- en West College, 15744 Golden West St., Huntington Beaeh,1 March 12. 14 at 8 p.m. Reser- vations -892·7711. In Coast Galleries Drama of a soldier's return from war, on stage at Rancho Commu nity Theater, La Paz School, 25151 Pradera Drive, f\.1is.s!D11 Viejo, Fri. and Sal. through March 7 at 8:30 p.m. Reservations -837·1753. "A OeUcatt Balance" A drama by Edward Albee nn stasc at the Costa ~1esa Civic Playhouse, west gale of Orange County Fairgrounds. "Spoon Ri ver Anthology" An evening of monologues with music on stage at South C-Oast Repertory, 1827 New· port Blvd., Costa Jl.1esa Thurs.· Sun. at 8:30 p.m. through ~-larch 21. Reservations -6~1).. 136.'l. UCI GALLERY -The Fine Art Callery on Campus at UC L will be showing the works o( Craig Kauffman, lecturer in art at UCI, Tues. lhrough Sun. I to ~ p.m. March 10 through April 5. Corona de! Mar. Hours: 10:30 a.m. • 3:30 p.m. !\Ion. through Costa Mesa. Fri.. Sat. at 8:30 "Ladies or lbe Jurv" Sal On exhibit through ti1ar., paintings and graphics by Jaan p.m. through March 7. Reser· A courltoom comedy on Ames. presented by the Newport Harbor Service League.' vati ons _ 834•5303. stage at the Lido Isle Club- LAGUNA ART GALLERY -307 Cliff Drive, Laguna BeacJt;. house. 701 Via Lido Soud, C.UlERA WORK. GALLER'l -2400 \V. <; o as t Highway. Newport ~ch. Hours : Thurs. and Fri. 5 lo 9 p.m.; Sal. and Sun. noon to 9 p.m. Gallery limited to photoiraphy, with work of Carole Thomas, through March. Adrnlasion $1. Members and one guest free . Hours: I to 5 ''Little l\lary Sunshine" Ney,•port Beach, Tues .• Sat. p.m. daily: docent tours Sundays at 3 p.m. Currently ori A musical satire on old time -al 8:30 p.m. March 17 • 21. exhibit, a com~ined show of craftsmen/designers and graph-operettas on stage, 8:30 p.m. Reservations -673-6324. ic artists through March. ~t the Laguna Moulton Play· "Night i\1ust fall." GOLDEN WEST EXKIBIT -Golden West Colleae 18744 Golden West St., lluntington Beach, is presenting a Faculty Arl exhibit in the Library on campus lrom 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. NEWPORT IIARBOR ART l\1USEUM -400 J\1ain SL, Bal· house. 606 Laguna Canyon A British mystery drama boa. Hours: l lO 5 p.m. Wed. through Sun.; fi to 9 p.m. Mon. Road, Laguna Be a ch, now on stage al San Clemente Closed Tues. On exhibit, March 11 • April 12 an exhibit af !hrough h1arch 28. Reserve· community Theater, 202 Av&- Calil. artisb tiled, ''Directly Seen: New Realism in Calif." lions -494.2550, nida Cabril\o. San Clemente, through titarch. , t.1F.SA VERDE LIBRARY -2968 Mesa Verde Drive East, C06ta Mesa. On exhibit during regular lib rary hours through March. Metal sculpture by Peggy Jones and oil paintings by COSTA l\IESA LlBRARY -566 Center Sl .. Costa Jl.1e,a . ..Spoon River Anthology'• Thur:; .• Sun. at 8:30 p.m., On exhibit during regular J)brary hours through !\tar. 15, oil Edgar Lee Masters' collec· March 19 . April 4. Rescr\'I · paintings by Marjorie Ludll lion of monologues on stage lions -492-0465. \-~~~~~~~--''----''----'"""'--'=---':..:..CC--'~~ Gertrude Mattocks. 1 CROCKER • CITIZENS BANK -2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular business hours through t.·lar. 15. oil paintings by Nadene Guptill. Ballplayer With Lewis UNITED CALIF. BANK -3029 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa. On exhibit, during regular business hours, through titarch, oil paintings and pencil drawings by Ernest C. Towler . J\IAtUNER'S LIBRARY -2005 Dover Drive, Newport Beach . During regular library hours, the Jr. Ebell Artist or the Month exhibit featuring paintings of children, kinder· garten through 8th grade in various media, through March. SECURITY PACIFIC BANK -196 E. 17th St., Cost.a M~a . On exhibit during regular bu siness hours through Mar. 15. oil paintings by Blanche B. Downs. OCC REPRODUCTIONS EXHIBIT -2701 fairview Road, Costa t.1esa. Hours: 7:30 a.m. -10 p.m. f..1on. -Thurs. 7:30 a.in. • 5 p.m. Fri.; I • 5 p.m. Sun. in the Library on OCC campus. Currently on exhibit are reproductions of great paintings including works by artists. Degas, J\1anet. Monet, Van Gogh, Cezannr, Renoir, Gaugin and Cassa\ through April. Ted Sitcmorc, the American Lcagur 's Rookie of the Year, has joined Jerry Lewis motion • piclu re productioo of "\Vhich \Vay lo the Front ?·' for \Varner Bros. AVCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -3310 Bristol St., Costa Me$8. On exhibit during regular business hours through Mar. 15, oi l paintings b.v Pat lngran1. CALIF. FEDERAL SAVINGS -2700 Harbor Blvd., Costa ~1esa . On exhibit during regular business hours. oil paint· ings of Pat ·lngram through March. COFFEE GARDEN GALLERY -2625 E. Coast Highwa y. Sizc1norc. a 1ncmber of the Los Angeles Dodgers team, was voled the I ea g u e 's nutsl;indlng fi rsl·ycar player tor 1969. Centerfielder \Villie Davi~ and pitrher Don Sutton arr also in the Technicolor ton1edy, or "·hich Lewis is st ar . producer and director. -· ... ·"" .... ,. . ' .... ' Selling Produce for 32 Years! It isn't •ny fun to get up al 2:30 in the m'or nin9 to buy the freshest produce, but I've been doing it for 32 yeati. My fethcr c.:i me from Italy in 1908 (unfor+u · nately ·he didn'f tr1in me to do he•rt tr11nsp lants ) so I ~ust continue to 9et up at this hour, just lik e he did for y1•rs! I'm 39 now !like J1ck Benny isl and I still gol in ev,ry day to bring you theie fantastic. 1peci ah! So come in encl buy these Jlnta1tic 1pecia ls! Sincerely Ernest Camp ( Ana ro ) Sf< VE MONET WITH THESE COUPONS • • • • • • • ... , ........ • •••••••••• • DELICIOUS TASTING • MARSHIURHS a IN OUR FLOWllll: SHO,. • MANDARIN • 'AMOUS QUALITY • flORISTS QUALITY • • ' CELLO I CARNATIONS • ORANGES CARROTS I I • I FltlSH CUT I sell. • sc·llG • I • I • O~I. 99C • lf<Go I Limit-I lbt. • llmlt-J a.11 • • l imlt-1 Oe1. • With Thi• Coupon • With Thi• Coupon • WUh Thlt Ceupon • • • a • • • I I I I I • I • a I • • I .-. • I I I I • I • .- COUPONS EXPIRE MARCH 11, 1T70 The•• rest•ur•nts demand the fin est for their cultom•r1. That', why they fe•ture Newport Produce. Petro ~ze Them! THE AICHI$, Newport; THI FISHllMAM, Huntin9ton B••ch; ALLEY WIST, Newport;. llN llOWHS, lt9un• Bt1ch: LA POSADA, Colla Mes• aAd over 200 others. How •bout you c•lling u11 "ORA NGE C9UNTY'S FASTEST GROWING PRODUCE ORGANIZATION" ~-NE!,~~~~~~Cf 2616 Newport loule•qrd on The fltnln1Mto 1'h0ne 611·4291 673-1715 673-1711 ",15 )'ear:ii of Producr l\11ow How" "\Vita.re Quality la Tlie Order of th~ Ho1.1se" • f Fly to the Hotel SS Lurline May 19 or June 9 and cruise the islands of 11'• th• part1cl ··1wo·w1ek'' vecstlonf Che ck into M11tson's sea-going Holef SS Lur line in Honolulu . Then . over the next 10 leisurely days. cru1&e to Hilo. to Kona. to the old whaling port or La ha1na . to Nawitiwili, and back lo Honolulu. bef6te flylng home. Five fa sc1naling ports ol call. Four exqulsi1e islands-Oahu. Hawaii , Maui and Kaua i. Mais on's Ho!et SS Lurline rriekes ii all so delightfully easy. too. No worries about packing and unpf cking. or transportation from place to pla ce, or more than one hotel reservation. All you do is enjoy the islands in •very way. And, no matter what you do. everything is arranged for yell. From caddfes, to deep sea fish ing excu r- s ions, to every imaginable kind ol to ur'. So give yourself the perfect "two-week " vacation. Fly lo lhe Holel SS Lurline in Honolulu M11y 19 or J une 9. Matson Or check into one of Maison's other Hawaii cruise-vacations, offered every three weeks throughout the yesr. starting May 1. Fares begin at $460, (If you have the time, stay aboard !or !he delightful rive-day retur n to California I) CONTACT YOUR TRAVEL AGENT: Or send this coupon directly to us for additional informat ion. r p:;r;;;,;P;;,-c;;.; c;r:vtt.-;------, I M1t1on Linet, S23 W11\ 6lll S!rett 0"/110/MAJ I I Los Angt!e1. CAi0011 I l T1leohon1 213-62&.-0501 I I P1e1~1 send me rnor• i"lor1••1tio" ehovl Ill• I I Ho1e1 S S Lv_r line ~ 10.oay Svp1r r 011r-!ilind I C•11•1e·V1~10on~. !111c!vcl1 1ntorm11io11 about llie I longer t1urus, loo ) I l .!!'At.I( I I I J AODRESS I I I l CITY STAT(' ?JP I I TRAYt.L AGE.Nr I l_-::-::::::::..:::::.~ __________ J Tht SS Lurline Is registered In the U.S . • _ rIW, f tbnilry" 27, 1~70 DAILY PILOT ~ A'B I.{ u T By NOR~I STANLEY • • ·.o LYT WEEKENDER ' 'ORANGE COUNTY'S R. E s T A u RA N TI NIGHT Ct US AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE Ho1·~ d 'Oe1\vres Festival They 've come up wi th a stellar att raction al Orange: County 's four Gordon-o perated :estauranls. A s ur~fire hit with the late al.ernoo n and early evening cocktail cro\rd. Bille<\ as an internationai hors d'oeuvres fe s- tival . lhe ~agenda calls tor customer acce.ss to a steadily changing choice of uo1;1sual appet~zcrs. . The quartet of restaurants fea turing th is draw - ing ca rd· are Re1nbrandt's B'eautiful Food in Costa J'l;Jesa. "Gordo,n's Laguna Niguel restaurant, the Re- vere House in Tustin an d Rembrandt's in Placentia. "Festival" hours are being observed fro1n 4 to 7 p.m .. Monday throug h Friday in the cocktail lounges at all lo cations. INTERNATIONAL TOUCH 1'h.e international tou ch stems from the origin and variety of hors d'oeuvres being ~erved . Since many foreign countries. as \veil as the . U.S., are represented in the offerings. On the trays are suc h delicacies as Oriental ru - 111aki (chicken livers \\•ith \Vater chestnuts wrapped in bacon and broiled): l\1cx ican tacos; crab puffs : Ha\\1aii.Bn ham ; an assort1nent of hot open-faced ~and\viches: mini cheeseburgers: chilled shrimp : F rench quiche loraine (c heese pie ): and other items from around the world . There's no question that these things add up to a deli ghful array of snacks. But a word of caution is in order for 1.hose \vho "·ould plung e too heavily "·ith such bounty. DON'T SPOIL YOUR OINN ER . Ove rindulgence can cu t down on th e enjoyn1enl of dlnncr that follo \1.'s. \Vhich is a primary rea~on for heading for any of Gordon 's restaurants in the fi rst pla ce. Ten1pting as the appetizers are, take ii easy so you can 111ove on to one of the delecta ble dinner 0.1 w.bb'_• 10 '21'/121d;. OPENING SOON THE CELLAR A Re :.taurant of Enchantme11t Unique dinin g highl ighted by delicioui!y marinated Shrimp en Brochette , , . Cote de boeuf -carved to your de- iire -with other gourme t tou<:hes to deli ght the pa l•fe. I MAGNIFICENT COLLECTI ON OF WINES I I RESERVATIONS ONLY 1107 Jamboree Road Reservat ion5 Only Newport Buch Tel. 6'14·1700 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY ARLENE SKILES and th• DICK POWELL TRIO 37 FASHION ISlANO NEWPORT CENTER l•ton111 luff11rn• & •l'Mfwe ""'" ~.,id119 f't ....... tl-...... 20H• Ope1i to tlie Public ~ Newly Enlarged . PL~0rit<. I ROOM· -1 ,r•ttdl'f 91111e111en "'9 ... ,,,. '"' .. e"""' ef the Mt1Htltf19' l .f -,. MIKE JORDAN DUO • BANQUET ~ACILITI ES FOR 450 SERVING LUNCH ANO DINNER DAILY MEADOWLARI\: country club GO~Elt SIMS, CECIL HOLllNGS WO RTM, Co·O•n•n 1'712 GllAHAM STREET HUNTINGTON HACH · For Rt1trv1tlons Call l46.tt'6 or 146.1416 enttees. Like jumbo shrimp in bourbop sauce, chic· ken' in champagne o.r lamb stij\nk' in Burgundy sauce. And then save room fl')r some of the sensation- al homemade bread that accomp.an1es every meal . It i~ the best we've ever encountered in any res· laurant anywhere. Those who haven't visited any of these rela- livelY l)ew spats in the area should mount an out· ing at lhe earliest opportunity. Eacl\is a very wel- come addition to the local dining scene. •' ' THERE ARE FOUR The four restaurants are operated by the Gor· don Brothers, Bernie, Gene and Albert, all well- kno\vn California restaurateurs. They ' also own several top-light places in and around Los Angeles. Jn Cos ta Mesa, Rembrandt's is located at 2831 Bristol St. The Placentia edition will be found at 905 E. Yorba Lind a. Gordon's Laguna Niguel is loca ted on the corner of Pacific Coast Highway and Cro\vn Valley Parkway; the Revere House at 900 \V. First St., Tusti n. Ne w Sizzler E ntrees Perhaps th e key to any continuing success stQ.ry is a refu sal to rest solely on the laurels of existin g success. A \Villingness to expand and · experiment even as you hold the line on a proven formula. Such. at any rate, seem s to be the case 'vi th the Sizzler Family Steak Houses in Costa Mes~ and ~luntington Beach. Because they've taken ·another graduaJ step to increase the size of tbe menu. \\'hen you ha ve a bill of fare that's a model o( brevity and popularity, there's a tendency to stand pal. But ov.•ner Bill Stewart is n't the kind of fello\v to so station. himself. llAUTIFUL llESTAUAANT MOUNTAIN/SIA ATMOSl"Hlllf D111cint Niqhllv Tut1dty thr11 Su"''" THE NATURALS-10th Month S11ec1.i S1111H'f lr1t1C•-ll:lO • 2:ll lpOt COAST HIGHWAY USIRYATIONS Sovth LGt ... _ 4H·2Ul- MR. MIKES HOUSE OF PRIME RIB PRIME RIB ..... . $2 95 ti Y•v W•nt • Mer• $1 Mer• Nightly Tunday Tllno S.ndoy Dinner 'r•m S te I 1 11.m.-Cl•ed Men41y l'.1-Yev won't ltell1Ve ttt. "''" •f •ur •ttltv4• •lll-Ju1tmeflt hour -4 t• I ,.m. HJthtly. 209 . Palm, Balboa !tt 11!1 11~ '•rll LtlMllfltl •~1erw1tlont 675-577'4 DON JOSE' Proudly Presents LEE FERRELL Direct from Las Vegas Opening March 10th IN TH E FIESTA ROOM FROM 8:30 P.M. to 1:30 A.M. e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Adlim1 (at Magnolia) Hunt. 8t1t:h 962:7911 o .1w~bb', . ~/ti! / -,,, .. OPENS 'TH.E CHELSEA B~R A Bit of Victorion• • Comes To Oronge Coun ty UNIQUE. CHA RM ING. INTIMATE 1107 J1mborM Roed Newport lttch Tel. 644-1700 His' ch~nge$ ~ay be inlre~ue11(but t11ey;re glv: en a lot or forethou~ht .• They 'a"ie designed to, bOost tbe Variety of OUer1ngs while stay:lng lvi thin 'the framework. of moderately·pticed items that have '·d I l \v1eappe~··· .. ·· ~- .. THREE NEW ONES Just up on the Sinl.er menu boards are three new entrees that fit ver) neatly into this category. • \Ve have sampled each and found aU worthy of the same consideration as qther house dishes. First is'· Ute steak-a-bob that nets ~ long ske w- er interlaCed \Vith chQice and tender sirloin tips, mu shroorris, green j>epper, oniori.s and pi,neapple. 'fhe tab at din11ertime is $1.49 while a·sUih'Uy small- er lu ncheon..ver&ion is priced. at $1 .19. LUNCH ' SPECIAL A ne\v midday special , served daily from JJ a.m. to 3 p.m., offers a Cull half-pound of ground sirloin smothered with mushroQm gravy. Incl uding a choice of baked potato or · French fries and Sizz. ler egg roll bi:ead toast. the modest cost· is 99 cents. Available at both lunch and1dinner is then e \V T-bone steak entree. It 's se rved \l!ith a choice or baked potato or French fries and· the special Sizzler toast for $1.911. OLD FAVORITES, TOO Lel it be repeated that customers won 't fi nd any of their ol d favorites displaced by the ne\v of· ferin gs. l\1anager John Lawler in Huntington Beach and Bo b MacKenzie. in Costa Mesa preside over kitchens th at still turn out the regular items too. Such as top sirloin steak, $1.49: Ne\v York, $1.69; Sizzler speci aJ, -$1.99: Kan sas City, $2.39; f'rench fried gulf shrimp, \1•ith French fries, $1.29. .A.II steak orders include the choice of potatoes and Sizzler toast. Along with the extensive remodeling late la st year that spruced up the appearance of both re s- taurants, the ne\v menu entrees create an added boon for .the family trade. Seeing as how variety, ARCADIA 4lz!allY -AIRPo'R.'i~ P:tetwlitt St"k • Chickn. ltelJ•" C•lslfl t , Se"lng Late Dinnen Mlll.·fllat'. 11 A.M.•l:)t A.14. 1H2 'ALIU.DE~ ltD, COSTA MESA l'ro, 4 ltl, 11: ... 1:11 A.M. 133 E. HUNTINGTON Oil. ""'"' All: CA DIA ..., .. 111 THE OCEAN AT YOVR TABLE! SEAFOOD, STEAKS AND GOURMET ENTREES Now Appearint JO· ANNE AND TONY Nightly . Tuesday thn.1 Sund•y DANCING· J17 'alfk Ce•t Hwy. IANfUn PACILITllS HIHttiltlM a..c• Rt..,v•tlen1: SH-2SSS LI'S II llCOMMINDID l 't•tHI MUIMAND COLUMNllTS: + DIAlt -.-...0, C. IE-1119 N1°" * ,., ... Mt"llMl-TM 1.lilsi.t' • ,..,... 1,...,..,-DlllV 'llet ., .. , .... '"""'-untl .... ,.~,.. '"TIRTAINMINf111iUY ,.;;--SiTUIDAY..--.• ' IHI AIA-MS Aft. t .. M-Nel 91.e5050 HUNTl ... (Or. llACH V99 • FOR ADY,ERTISING IN "rHE . . t WEEKENDER PHONE 642-4321 ,. ·quality, pleasan t surroundin gs and low prices make . them Idea) for treating a household large or smaij. Costa l\.1esa's Sizzler is located in fliJlgren Square. corner of E. 17th Sl. and Santa Ana. The Huntington Beach address is 18852 Beach Blvd., Town an d Country Center. Newporler Inn-Ovations .'\ coupJe of stellar attractions have or a re about to debut at the Newporter Inn in Newport B~~ch, "''ith France and Victorian England pnr v1d1ng the sources of inspiration. w . Bot~ of the now enterprises, in our judgment, lVil] be around a long time to the delight and en .. joyment of out 'n' abouters. BYGONE , ERA J The touch of Queen Victoria's reign comes in . the form of a ·charming little spot for libations -the Chelsea Bar. Located just off the registration lobby this authentic slice of a bygo ne era is the ideai locale for a quiet tete-a-tete. Perhafls the first thought th at comes to mind nowadays about the Victorian era regards moral standards or conduct -Si nce those somewhat stuffy and ~ypocri1icaJ attitudes are always good for a few laughs. ~ But \\'e tend to for ge t it was also an age ~har_acterized by . considerable grace and elegance 1n life style. A .trifle gaudy. maybe, in some ways , but stamped \Vlth an overall refinement that holds good today. The Ne\\1porter's Chelsea Bar is an admirable reminder of the durable qualities the fashion and modes that bespeak a time of less'busUe and busUe in carrying out daily activities. AUTHENTIC Every particular of Victorian decor has been executed with minute attention to detail. And there can be no doubting the authenticitv because nearJy a!I of the room 's furni shings are ~bona fide nt>riod pieces. £- \LQ · Continu.d on Pagf! 26 tlie FLING ENTIRTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WUIC DAlfllCING MON .• tua,w11.~ * HAP HALL DUO * Lll'Tf Like wltfl ~.,,ft 11.,.,, .,. ''" Slnrer lhr. ttini S••· Guitarist li\ESA~ Rtar-Mes1 Thteter sou.111E CMt• Mes. 145 I. lftli St. Jrnt d Newport lh4. -l"er .. ,/\I riwn •• latt ,.,,.,.. o,... 't.rn. t. I t,M. CNll)t Real Cantonese food ett her9 or ••k• homt. ST AG CHINESE WINO 111 21st pl., Newport Beech ORiole 3·95'0 OjllH y._ lr11Jl4 hlly IJ0 IJ -M. u4 Set. "tM J •·•• NOW OPEN _'J'cmple Gardens• Beautiful Ne\v RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE PIANO BAR ENTERTAINMENT FRIDAY And SATURDAY Tenaple Gardet1s Chlt1ese Restaura11i 1500 Adem1 (At Herll•r) Ce•t• Mt1e S40-ltS7 S40·1,2J ~, O"IN DAILY 11 :JO A.'M. TO J A.M. Oiftl~wersR ... , .. ::~:::7• • • OtNNElt • llSTAUIANT AND • 5UNO•Y 811UNCM • COCKTAIL LOUNll e LAT E SU,PElt • DJNI~ OCEANFFl'ONT DINING, ATOP TOWERS WING 01 SURF And SAND HOTEL U•UNA l lACN, CAl.IP'OltNIA LORENZO'S SPAGHITTI BENDER The Fintst In lt1ll1n Food Family Dinners e A l1 Carte Food To Go o,.. hily • , .... -s...,. J , ... .-c ....... ..., 620~ W. Cout lilghw1y --- Newport Buch 64S.o6S1 •. • COSTA MESA GOLF AND COUNTRY CLUB Now Appetrlng VIC GARCIA LTD. Vocals By GERMAINE THURS e FRI e SAT. -9 p.m. to 1:30 1.nl; DANCING :. 1711 G•tf Cl11t Dr!.,. Ctt .. M-541°72H \ • ) ..: • • ' . " lY PILOT LAGUNA MOULTON PLAYHOUSE Tickets 494-0743 406 LAGUNA C:ANY.ON RO. • LAGUNA BEACH M4RY SULLIY4N DON MILLER ;, the hil•rious music•I comedy hit DJ.octed by KENT JOHNSON Muslc•I DlrKtlon: DORIS SHIELDS Musical Staging : J04N WULJISOHN Tuewlays thru Saturdays at 8:30 March 3 thru March 28 MAIL & 'HONE ORDfRS FlllfD rROMPTlY Ope1tl119 Nl9'1t Morell .Jul. All Sfftl S4.50 T ... ~ular, Wed~o.,. Th~rsflay: AH $eoh SJ .50 Frido't• olld Sot11rd.-p: All Snts $4.50 THE HUNTINGTON SEACLIFF Continu.t from P•1• 25 Especially noteworthy items are the bar itself with en ornate back bar and ta.rge Victorian over· manUe, the intricate fireplace glowing cozily in one corner, and the colorful stained-glass window on the rear wall. There also are some fine antiques among t.he tables, chairs1 velvet sofas and sideboards. CAREFUL CHOICES Even where new materials had to be used thoy were chosen for ~enuine identification with the setting. Like the fringed tablecloths and bright carpet with its Victorian cabbage rose pattern. One can take further pleasure in studying the framed pictures and-prints on the walls. There is a particularly interesting signed pastel of an English pastoral i;Gene and some fascinating · Scottish lithographs. . Much of the room 's bric-a-brac also com· 1naifcfs close scrutiny. Such as the Staffordshire figurines and antique porcelain barrels labeled with their one-time contents of rum, port brandy and sherry. SMALL AND INTIMATE The Chelsea Bar is quite small - a factor that adds to the room's charrrung inllmacy. On our first visit we found the atmosphere conductive to com- plete relaxation. For that reason we'll make it a stopping-off spot whenever time permits. 0 The CcUar Second of the Newporter's ne\Y attractions tto be opened soon) is an even more spectacular production insofar as creating a dramatic setting. Known as the Cellar, it's a self-contained little res- . taurant quite apart from any of the Inn's other eat- ing facilities. From the moment of entry an.d subsequent de· cent down the staircase, it's like stepping into the enchanting old-world aura of a French castle's underground vault. Only the trappings are much more elegant than you might reasonably expect to fin d in any chateau today. LUXUfUOUS The brick \Va lls, together . y.•ith plaster ceiling and pillars, give the reeling of a subterranean en~losure in some ancient building. But the lux- urious overall appearance is something that stems from contemporary knowledge of artful decor. Planned for exclusive nighttime use, the strik- ~g red tablecloths ~nd candles on each table pro- y1de E,erfect aest~et1cs Crom .romantic evening din- ing. ~·wo very dim chandeliers shed just enough Ught to fill out for the candles. HEIRLOOM PIECES Arti!acts judiciously incorporated into Ute Cellar's decor include three-centuries old wood carvings, dated prints and maps, a suit of armor, RESTAURANT & COCKTAIL LOUNGE v -CuupltJ -I "(/<)/J (/fi ( /7 -~/ll· z ,.. CJ1ta11tjt~7V' ::.L 1/111el' nb t./eDUW" H B ~ 'l'REf.\IERE ENTREE AT REGU LAR PRICE A O "~· 4f ACCO~PANYI NG ENTREE %PRICE ().!~ L E -. ~lJ NOAY THRU THURSllAY 'EVENll'lGS R l 3000 P11ln1 A\·e .. Huntington Beach -536-8866 ~~ 1 i tni/c 11(( Pcic1fic Coast 1-ftvy off GoldenwesL Sl. ~ ti 1111/i>~ south off Golde1nvest St. from San Diego Frwy. ENTFi<'f AlNM ENT TUESbA Y tHRQ SA TU ROA Y 'Whet! Exciting ~inp~t! Happening! . ' ' . ..-'"' ..,.. . ,..... . ......... 'N ABO T Kate Porter Sings Song stylist Kate Porter is delighting the patrons or lhe Sherat~n Beac~ Inn's Caribe Room Monday through Fnday dunng the cocktail and early dinner hour 5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Phil de Santo and his trio play for dancing later in the evening. The Inn is located at 21112 Pacific Coast Highway Huntington Beach. For reservations phone 536-1421. ~eirloom plate.s and dish.es, pewter and copper cook- ing ~nd serving utensils. A11 of the cha irs are SP,an1sh or Italian in origin and are more than 100 years old. • . Handsome \vine bins lining the walls contain great vintages of Europe and California. Total value of the stock. we were told, is in excess of $10,000. MAGNIFICENT WINE B~lled as one of the most magnificent '"ine col- lect1ons on the west ~oast, it is probably just that. One can sel ect from imported and American cham- pagnes, French red and white Burgundy or Bordeaux: Olhe~s are . Rhone, Moselle, Rhine, _<\Jsace, fine ltahan, .sw!ss and German vi ntages, sherrys, cognacs, CaJifor1a red, white or rose. In addition to the novel nature of the restaurant, the bill of fare is presented in a unique ~anner. The.re is a ,fixed menu, served at a fixed time,. at ~ fixed pnce -$10 per person. not in- cluding wine~. LEISURELY DINING OUT The idea is for patrons to take their seats at 8 p.m. and spen~ several ~u,rs luxuriously indulging 1n ~gourmet.dinner. Ordering one or more ,vin es is optional but 1t should be made part of the feasting ceremony. Flll! TH9111 HOUIS OF CONTINUOUS MOVIES Pizza Palace PRlllCE oi \Ve don't recommend having cocktails in this kind of a situation but we inquired on bebalf of those who wouJd Uke to know. Yes, they are able 1£ you must -bourbon, Scotch, gin or vodka. • ONE MENU The meal gets under way '''ith a l!ipecial soup that's served exclusively in this N e w po r t e r restaurant. The special salad thal Collo\\o·s is likewise solely featured in the Cellar. Next up is a shrimp brochette marinated in a light sauce. The entree, uaing only the finest aged' meat1 consists of a center cut of tenderloin of beef with oearnaise sauce, served from a cart and carv .. ed to individual df:sire. It is accompanied by a Stu!· led baked potato. Then comes an appetizing cheese board laden Vi1ilh domestic and imported cheeses.· Plus a bowl of fresh fruits with pears, apples and grapes. Rounding out the offerings are petits !ours, a demitasse and cigarettes for each person. FRIDAY ANO SATURDAY FOR PUBLIC The Cellar will be open to the public Friday and Saturday nights on a reservation only basis. Any other evening of the week it can be reserved for private parties up to 30 people. The Cellar and Chelsea Bar are the first new additions to the Inn since the recent management change brought it under Del Webb operation: Under the direction of genial Doug Ross who has returned as general manager. both~are commendable efforts. The Newporter is located at 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach. French Lament We came across an interesting item in a recent press report. One-of those stories all too current t~ day in which a great French restaurateur laments the present status of the bu)iiness. Jn this case the spokesman was Raymond ThuiJ .. ier, owner of La Baurnaniere, long regarded as one of France's finest eating places and located in Les. Baux-De-Provence. According to Thuilier, the best restaurants art threatened because it's harder and harder to find the right ingredients, the right people to cook them, and then the right people to serve them. HELP PROBLEM tie complains that suppliers are making it jn. creasingly difficult to obtain the exact products he 'vants, and that as far as help is concerned, it's getting "more and more dillicuJt to find a youni · man who agrees to having no fixed hours." We have no idea whether local restaurateurs are confronted with the same supplier problems. but doubt very much that they're troubled with ThuiJ .. ier's personnel dilemma. And therein at the same time, is probably the root cause of the 1 Frenchman'1 quandry in this regard. It seems to us that there has been a mass exo- dus ~f ~e best qualified French restaurant people to this s1d~ of the Atlantic. And perhaps more than anywhere tn the U.S., 'lo Southern California. WHERE ACTION IS . Even many Orange County spots are barely httle more than staked out French claims on the new .world. And why not? If we're finally corning of ag.e 1n the matter of food and its proper enjoyment, rhight as well be where the action is. : a Iii • ""' .--.--. • • 8 • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • a • a • • • •. TAel•Mff _,,, '°' .. rltrff• c.,.,., .. : rs-,~.l' ... .-..1~~ ~_.--~ ~-Caribe Room : ~::::::nw:';;r.. .. ,. 161 ~1H::r::'z:'~:: ...... • \. M•'''IZ/MlQ,UJ'R-WXU,U6 {,!/Im PRESENTS • .. •• "'""·1 --·•- 839 " 7290 ~ .... ,.._.r:"" Bdt.l £uc/MM w1. HONOlt ALL l'ttlA COUl'ONS Seafood Re1t1ur1nt whAf es ~al diners ar~ also apparently \veil aware of the lncreased benefits these immigrants bring. No-. ~here .have we seen any graffiti or signs suggest- ing "Pierre go home". : EASTER BUFFET -SUN., MARCH 29 : G ~~.';!~.~EL l~~~~~~.. F~~~Y ""'"'.,. "" ii $3:15 Per Pt:non-Ch11dr•n $2 12 Noon To 8 p.m. • ANAflllM,CALIY'.772·'1'117 SALAD Felk M11tlc 1$975 HAlllOll ILYD. • • • • • • • Thr•• Entrffs -laro11 of Beef, Vltgl11I• laked Ho111, Fr~ CMcke11 Au ortff S«tlod-, J~lo Maids, Yarior., of ¥...-toblH -Free Easter laslceh For The Kiddies - ENTERTAINMENT -DANCING -Monday thru S•turd•y Now App11rin9 PHIL DE SANTO & HIS TRIO • $:10·1:30 ,.M .. Mo1. "'" ftl. Featuring Songstre11 Martha Hill : 21112 PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY-HUNTINGTON BE4CH-536-1421 • .. . . . . . . •.• ........................ , 'I PIZZA HOME DELIVE RIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS Now Me •n Ed~s mobile ovens speed dll'licious J)1p1ng·hot pizzas to your door In minutes. YOU'LL ENJOY OUR 11~~~~~~~~~~~l~IS~T~P~IZZA~====~~~~,1~iiii:iiii:~8;3~9-6770 Fri. & Sot . • • • Wt 1hi11k yo" s.hould. But then, having offered Laguna's best view of the Pacific- be.i.utiful French Gardens-a wide choice of good food and drink-con- sider•te service- and, enjoying lhis unique atmosphere ounelves for over 25 years, we may be a little prejudiced. V1aOR Huoo IM CllffDriw:~ Coa~ Hlghwiy laRUn11 lle1ch- 494.9477 Optn 011ly Luncheon-Oinner- Codulls Sundly Oiim!)'1gne llrunch B.lfHttM't f1cilitieJ 1V1IL1ble .. A 'ubJid/,uy ol AhfFAC, INC. • • MIDDAY FAER SUNDAY 12 P.M. TO 4 P.M. I RMEttA IFlfW ~ 1t£5TAUllANT f ine Di11i11!f Since 1%5 Continental Cul1ln• 3801 E.uT UM.sf J-lx;;HWAY Cockt1il1 CoRONA 01;L ~iAR, CAur-ORNTA Strvi11g PHONE: (714) 675-1374 Lunclleon and Di1uurr + Mone.tau 11trough Saturctau. llr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o~~-----------;;;;;;;; Closed Sundays We 11re loc•ttcl ne xt to th• Mey Co. in South Coast Pl•t.•, JJJJ s. lflttel Celtll w... 140.J'40 .. For Advertising In WEEKENDER • • Phone 642·4321 NEW M l! EXCJDNG I N OftANGE tJOVN'l'l' DELANEY'S SEA SHANTY OYSTER BAR n. •• ""' .. , LUNCH • DINNER • SUNDAY IRUNCH Wllettt« llelaM .., ._... Fwt•rilllt .... '"•' o.,, .. ,. · Cl9'M • Ml~mp • Lfflm · kn11"I • Clri••llltt 630 LIDO P4RK DRIVE NEWPORT 814CH 675-0100 . . • • • • • -. . . . . .. . . FrldiJ, Muth 6, 1970 . ~ Ol1L¥ PILOT 2 ' ,. Guide to MARCH I· 7 MARINA IUGll MllSICAL -Marina High School, 15171 Springdale, llunllnglon Beach, 111 presenting the musical .. Guys and Dolls" March 6 • 7 ln the Gymnasium on cam- pus. Tickets are $% each for the a p.m. production. Phone 893-6571 . • MARCii 6-11 JUSTIN OGA1'A BENEFIT -COiia Mesa High School 1lu- dents are conducting a paper drive through March 14. All proceeds ot $14 per Lon will go to Ute Justin Oga~ Fund to help defray upenses for the Costa Mesa High. School Stu- dent who Is paralyzed as a result ot lnjury dlU'ing wrestling pracUce. More than fO schools wJth 27 ,000 children will join in tbe.C1JllecUon of papers from'res.idents of the Costa Mesa - Newpcrt Beach area. Papers may be brought to the parking lot of the Costa P.fesa High School, 260$ Fairview Road , on /\1arch 14. For those without a car, unabJe to deliver the pa· pers, a phone call anytime during school hours to ~9431 :..... Ext. 27 will get the papers picked up on the day of the collec- tion. l'ltARCH 7-8 SCHOOL 1'1USJCAL -The Thurston School, 2100 Park Ave., Laguna Beach is presenting a musical, "On With the Show," 1i1arch 6-7 al 8 p.m. In the auditorium al the school. Ticket1 11re $1.25 [pr adults and 73 cents !or children. ltioney raised \Yi ll go £or new .sta;ge facilities for the schdol. MARCH I · 13 AFTERNOON CONCERTS -Fine Arts Bldg., Room i71, Univ. of Calif. Irvine. 1'"ree concerts each Fri. at 1 p.m. March 6, Conservatolre de la Voix, performed by students of music dept.; March 13, Dorfmusikant.en Spielen Mozart. P.IARCH 7 • 8 f!USSION ART DA.1'S' -Old Mission San Luis Rey , three SOUTH SEAS TROPICAL FISH mllMttY LARGE STOCI • £1'1N!&t1if !I ~g,g!<~!".! , • • • Coast Ill Concerts nland from Oceanside on Highway 76, ls hoJdln& Mls- Art Days on March 7-1. Exhibits of paintings, wood ings, metal work and fabr ics from earl1 ttllsaion days be abown . .P\!bllc invited free of charge . MARCH 7 OC PJIU,JJA NIC CONCERT -The Orange County Philhiftnon19' lety wlU present the Loa Angeles Philhar- monlc orcbestr , Zubin Mehta conducting, Jn Crawford Hall, Univ. of Calif Irvine campus, Sal., March 7, at 8:30 p.m. Tickell '4, al e Society offic~, 20l W. Coast Highway, New- port Beach, or at the door. Phone 6ff.6fll. MARCH 1 TEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster RecreaUon and -Parks Departine.nt will hold a Teen Club Dance in the com· munlty Cent.-, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for Weslm.ln.ster teen l) each Sat. from I p.m. to mldnighl. Adml!sion, II . . !or members, $1.50 for non-members. The 11lUu1loos" group wi 1 play for danCing March 7. J MARCH I OCC SYMPHONY CONCERT -The Orange Coasl College Community Symphony Orchestra, under the baton of Jo-- &eph Perlman, will be heard In concert in the campus audl· torlum, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, March I 'at f p.ni. Soloist wilJ be guilarl11t Ernes t Bitetti. ·Tickets $ at the door. • MARCH 15 BALLET FOR CIULDREN -The Laguna Beacii Clvlo'Bal· let Company will present a ballet program for children, in-- eluding lhe delightful "Enchanted Toy Shop," in the Forum Theater on .the Festival ol Arts Grounds, 650 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, on March 15 at 2:30 p.m. Tickets, S2 ror adults and $1 for children, may be purcll.ased at the door. Di sney's 'Fl~g' Coming Mehta Conducting New Maud LA Philharmonic Set In Film . Sprin&lime will bunit Into musical blossom at Disneyland Saturday, March 21. with qie exciting "Spring Fling," traditionally one of the Park's most popular date·nlte spectaculars. For Irvine Concert The Orange County Philharmonic Society w 11 I present the sixth concert of the season Saturday, March 7 with the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra CQll· ducted by Zubin Mehta. Spotlight , llOLL YWOOD !UPI) Maud Adams is back In I.he entertainment swim. Those of occull persuasion need not cry out in triumph. The original Maude Adams (with an "E") departed this vale in 195.1. It was she who starred as MARCB U ·II UNIVERSITY ORCHl'liTRA '-The Unlvenlty ol Calil. lrvioe Orthestra and chorus directed by Peter Odegard will perfonn in the Crawford HaU, on UCI campus at 8:30 p.m.~ Sat. March 14 a.nd Sun., March 16, Brahm's "Requim." and Pendereck'.• "Dies Irac." No cbarle for admission. w,,.,~f -~ 47J-6260 2'05 last Coos! H'!J. Coron• dtl , Mir' EXCLUSIVE AREA PERFORMANCE FOR ADULTS 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS IUT ACTOU -hdll HofflHI • ,,_ Yeltttt IUT PICTUll! lftT tUPPOITIN• ACTIES$ -S'thi• ""' .. llST DlllCTOI -.teM Sdikalllf" IUT 5CIUNPl:A Y HST PILM IDITI,._ ~ • 7100 m t :JO -MMI .... S..., Largest Selection of Tropical Fish & Supplies in the area. PICKWICK~ 11U MollywM II"" ~~-Nm Headlining lhe event will be Bobby Shennan, top-rated but still climbing vocalist whose "Easy Come. Easy Go" is a airren\ chart leader. The 8:30 p.m. concert, lo be held in Crawford Hall, U.C. Irvine, will include Haydn's Symphony No. 92 in G (Ox· ford ); Bartok's Suite !tom the l\Jiraculous Mandarin ; Suite, Ma Mere L'Oye (Mother Goose), and La Valse, a chottographic poem, both by Ravel. Broadway's fir.st ''Peter Pan'I-======== (1906-07) and other such plays as "Little Minister," "Chan. licleer'' and "What Every Woman Knows." Now 1 Locisftont BEST 111 "·ML SON, con A MIU. (off F1/rVie" ltd., ;S.41.J'HI 1n.G, Jt lY1nlde Dr. -HrwPOrt Medi lbll'llnd"" ~t cmul "6-IS» Th• DAILY PILOT off•n •oin• •f t+ie hit feefur ... \tv •cotu•I 111rvev of r•..deNI, ev•il1ble in eny ne••p•p•r In tll• netio11. ~ J'outh Coast Repertory Am•rlc• ln Poetry •IMI Song •OGAll LI!£ MASTlllS "SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY" O'•HI SAtUllDAY-J Wlit:KI CNLY SCR CHILDREN'S THEATRE "Wind In th• Wiiiows" -Sundays at 1:00 & 2:30 1127 Newport, Cott• M ... -646·1HJ V!:bt ,1our JHusrs PRESENTS IN CONCERT - JOHN STEWART of the Klng•ton Tri• March 11-14 -8:00 to 10:00 p.m. Coming: THE DILLARDS, Morch ~21 IHTIMAT£ TA8LE 51EATING • • • 1HI SEATS··· NO Dfl:IHIC MINIMUM ··••NO AG.£ LIMIT :n2 Avenidll do La Estrtllo SM Clemrnt9, C.llf (7141 492-4909 The Hotels SS Mariposa _ and SS Monterey are going~ The South Also on hand will be the top- in-pop Kenny Rogers and the First. Edition, frequent show· stoppers on the personal·ap-- pearance clrcult and con- sistant favorites in record circles. Th e po pularity-spirating Spiri.l Staircase will fling ad- ditional springtime '70 selec- . Uons in their special out-of- sight style. Brought back literally by popular demand are Clara Ward and her i!Umllable Gospel Singers, who wlII take lbeir old-music-made.new to the Golden Horseshoe Saloon. Roundi"ng out the evening is the Sound Castle, Disneyland's own choice find !or rock· hunters. Adding further interest to "Spring Fling," more than 500 prizes, ranging from a spank- ing new automobile through six mini-trail tiikes to scores of gift Ci!rtificates, movie tickets and records, will go to lucky guests during the evening. Tickets for the spritely spring rite, 5et from 8:30 p.m. to 2 a.m. March 21 onl>: will be on sale March t at $6 each, special reservations w I th BankAmerlcards at branches •of the Bank of America. eas Sai1April26 or July 7 for Bora Bora, Tahiti, Rarolonga, New Zealand, Australia, Fiji, Tonga, Samoa, Hawai. 1rs the ultimate crulse--vacatlon : 42 days, nine exotic ports of call! In addition to the SS Marlposa's Aprll 28 sailing, and the salllng cuisine. You'll enjoy numerouti shipboard parties and other gala events. And you unpack Just once! of the SS Monterey on July 7, Matson offers South Seas departures on Auguat 20, September 15, October 4, Oclobtlr 21, November 11• and December 12 from San Francisco; departures from Los Angeles the folloWlng day. Throughout your cruise.vacation, you'll be treated to the ultimate In personal service, gracious acoommod•tlons. and Continental Check Into one o1 these crulae- vacallons soon. lfll be an adventure you'll never forget. Matson The SS Mlttposa and lht SS Montanr .... reglstered. Q the u. s. ""°"'""''---...;..----~ Cl1Y~~~~~~~~ STA'1'------ZIP ___ _ •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Zubin Mehta, at 33, is in his eighth season as music direc- tor of The Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra and the eighth season of con· ducting the orchestra i n Orange County. The meteoric ascent to fame of the Bombay. born young genius ls now of international signifance as is the name of the Los Angeles Philharmonic. Among musician s throughout the world Mehta is regarded as a phenomenon. In only ten years h is achievements have"been little short of remarkable. Since win ning, at the age of 21 , an in- ternational conducting com- petition involving 100 aspirants, be has .spiraled to his present position of renown. l\1ehta has bem guest con· duct.or of 30 orchestras in Europe, bas conducted opera at the Metropolitan, a t Salzburg, and in Florence and Rome. He took the Los Angeles Philharmonic on it s first triumphant world tour in 1967. Tickels,$4 for adults, Sl .75 for st udents are on sale at the Society office, 201 W. Coast flighway, Newport Beach and ir available at the door on the night of the concert. Phone 646-&411. Mehta will return for the fin- al concert in the Orange Coun- ty Philharmonic Society's cur: rent season on Sunday, April 12 when he will conduct the Los Angeles Philharmonic in Orange Coast Auditorium. What every woman doesn't know is that there ls a second Maud Adams -an e.xquisite Swedish beauty with long, dark blonde hair, perfect featur.:es, and, more's the pity, size 911.11 feel Why is IL the Swedes in· variably send us gorgeous ac· tresses with shoes the size of an armada? Ingrid Bergman and Greta Garbo, for example, are not on record for having men drink from their slippers, only W.C. Fields could quaff such quantities. The 1970 model was bom Maua Wikstrom in t94S in Llulea, a snowball's throw from the ArcUc Clrcle. She married an American named Adams and came to the United States innocent of the facl another actress named Acfams had made her mark on the world a half century earlier. "I modeled for three years in New York," Maud said in a combination Swedish· English accent which she calls Swinglish. "Whenever J told people my name they mistook me for the daughter or granddaughter of the original Maude Adams." Voskovec and Gossett Starring in 'Angels' Somewhat to h e r con- sternation, a few insensitive a n d I or outrageously unin- Lumumba as the h e i-o I c formed persons accepted her martyr in the fight for as the original Maude, which freedom and independence, would have made her roughly 98 years old. Eve. Show Starts 1 p.m. Contirtuou• Show Sunday From 2 p.m. FREE PARKING TWO GREAT SHOWS 2 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS BEST SUPPORT.ING ACTOR , , • ••• JACK NICHOLSON BEST ORIGINAL SCREENPLAY Amari went looking for America. And couldn't find it anywhere ... "'"" =>ETER FONDA·DENNIS HOPPER · l!!::'.o;:z!S!-';G!Slt I JACK NICHOLSON·~ .. • Rtlmeif bJ' COLUMBIA f'ICTURU, -Also On The Same Progr•m - BURT LANCASTER -DEBO_RAH KERR "THE GYPSY MOTHS" George Voskovec and Lou Gossett are cast in the pivotal roles of Dag Ham- marskjold and P a t r i c e Lwnumba for the World Premiere ot Conor Cruise O'Brien's important new drama "Murderous Angels," currently on stage through March 22 at the Mark Taper Forum in Music Center, Los Angeles. the author deals on ~e , "It took a month to put the surface with the conflict bits and pieces of information1....:=:::=:::=::; between these two legendary on the original Maude men, but probes for beneath together," Miss Adams said. that surface to IUwninale the "She was a very distinguished concootemporary issue o t actress. I would like to be The controversial p 1 a y which deals with the intrigue and internal power struggle and the diplomatic chess game staged during the turbulent period of the Belgian Congo Revolution of 1961Mil pits Hammarskjold against Lumwnba as political ad- versaries. With Hammarskjold as the champion of peace and •••••• OFF e • • wmr .• •••••• SENSATIONAL! ~~ THE BLUE MAGIC Tuesday thru turday rom 8:30 GRAl)IC . HOTEL 7nhDMANWAY ANAHllM "'°"''rn.rrn white and black relationships. also." In their first appearances at J.1aud makes her movie the ~12:-k Taper Forum, actor.! debut for Cinema Center Voskovec and Gossett wiJI Films in the "The Christian undertaken two of the most Licorice Store" with. Beau challenging and provocative Bridges. Her previous acting roles of their c a r e e r B • experience Is limited to Voskovec, a dislinguished television · commerciab, 29 in veteran of the A m er i c a n all. theatre and mollon picture "We have finished the worlds, was one of the stars of movie," she continued, "and It the recent Broadway musical will be difficult returning to pit, "Cabaret." modeling. Y o u get a better Gossett has been cast in grasp of people when you work many Broadway and motion with them In lfilms. Model.irig picture roles. is more personal MAUD ADAMS WITH BEAU BRIDGES Mokol Debut In "Tho Christian Ll<orlco Slort" tl1e-rnesa : 1'r ,· F,"·:-i1J.2vv ,\r:L-,: ·it..-., '1'· f~E\VP )Pl ,\ND HARBOR IN" CO)l..0: f.',[~~ lWPHONE 541-1552 FOR INFORMATION 9 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS 7 For .. BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID .. BEST PICTURE -BEST DIRECTOR BEST ORIGINAL SCREEN PLAY BEST SON<; -BEST SOUND BEST ORIGINAL MUSIC SCORE BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY 2 For .. THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE" BEST ACTRESS ••• MAGGIE SMITH BEST SONG ••• "JEAN" OLOR-G.P. Rating ·-------ALSO THIS FINE FEATURE • • . • . • • . . • • . . ' • . • . • . • .· • . . • : 1 I I I I l • , .... "• 1".">IO .. • .•. ". . ' • ) ~----------I G11lde to Moviei . . :·Return . of . I 'The .Bostqn Strangle~' •. Ed1Lor'll Note: TI~ f.; movie gµide. is prcpored by llie flhns committee of llarbor Co1n1cil PTA. Mrs. Joliri Clark is presjde11' (Hid l'llrs .. \Viltian~ \V ar e is committe~ cllairrnan. It 1s i11te11ded as a reference 1ri detern1i11i11g suitable Jil111s f.or certain age groups and will appear weekly. Your vie1os are solicited . flfoil thern to r.10- vi.e Guicie, care of the DAILY PILOT. • • • ADULTS The Arrangen1tnt II\): Kirk Douglall, Deborah Kerr and faye Duriaway star in triangle drama. Easy Rider !RJ : Peter Fon· da and Dennis Hopper portray l'All dropouts who travel the United States on motorcycle. Sl.udent coorageooaly facts the problems or an unwed TJlolher. Sanely Dennis. MATURK TEENS AND ADULTS -The Boston Strangler: This film traces the events leading to the arrest of a psychotic, who has never been lrled, for the mutilation and murder of thirteen women. The probe of Pis personality follows. Tony Qurtis and llenry Fonda. · Butch CassidY and the: Sun· danc:e Kid (GP): A deft COOl• r.dy aboui two charming legcn· dary bandits who take lhe \\'ays of the old \Ves1 to Bolivia. Paul Newman. Rob- ert Redford and Katharine RO$s. Cactus F l owe r (GP): Sophisticated comedy in which a prosperous dentist drafts his proper nurse to masquerade of the-slums who became a great comic star. Barbra Streilland, Omar S h a r i f , Walter Pdg~n. Scream and Screit1n Again (GP); Vincent Price and Christopher Lee star in this science-flclion horror t I I 1n about a race ot superhumans. !001: A Spa« Odyssey tG): Fascinating film about t h c earth's formation through the development of man to travel in space. Spectacular visual effects. Ke i r Dullea, Cary Lockwood . Viva f\.1ax (G): Comedy about e h1exica'll general who schen1es lo recapture the Alamo. Petor Ustinov and Jonathan \Vinters star. '-. t,Af\.11LY rating oJuen the picture b11 the r.·1atio1& Picture Code. Tiie fllo!io 11 Picture Code 1\ucl Rati119 Program n1oy be /ourid on &he motion picture -page. 'ALASKAN SAFARI' FILM· ON HUNTING AT FOX THEATER Walt Bestrom, left, end Ron H•Y•• SMw Brown Bea ~ Thty 1Shot on Hunt Easy Rider tR): Peter Fon· rla afld Dennis Hopper portray two dropout.s who travel the United States on motorcycles. .. as his estranged wife and rescue him rrom a com· plicated situalion with a zany Qlonde. Walter M a t th au , Ingrid Bergman, Goldie Hawn. The Brain CG): Da vid Niven cnginft!rs. a Gla.5gow-London train robbery in a slapstick comedy u•ilh Jean-Pa u I Belmondo and Eli \Vallach. Goodbye l\1r. Chips (G): 11-1usical remake or Hilton's classic starring Peter O'Toole and Pelula Clark. POSITIVELY ENOS TUES . 'Safari' at Plaza Goodbye Columbus (RI: A summer roma·,1ce between a poor librarian and a nouveau riche college girl lapses due to lhelr different views. A satire on sex with Richard Ben· jamin, Ali htacGraw. Five Card Stud G: '\1estern mystery in which two lynchers of a cheater al cards are * • * murdered. Dea'.11 Martin. Tile Letter immediately ST~RTS WED . MARCH 11 llOllllT lll!DfOJID GlNl HACKMAN C::.AMl\.LA SPAlY WJIH/lLRA~ '< . :- !· Moviegoers See Alas kn. in Wilds Gypsy rt1oths iR): Drama In \Vfiich the leader of a skydlV· ing trio falls 1n love with the faithless wife or a dull. smalltov.'n businessman. Burt Lancasler, Deborrah Kerr. \\'hatrvrr lf1ppened to Aunt ofter the. title indicatt.s the Alice (GP)· Film starring ! · Ruth Gordon, Gcraldioe Pagej • BALBOA ' ~~ , "Alaskan Safari," a·ruu col- :: ~:' or, adventure film acclaimed -. as one 'of' the most exciting ~: ~ motton pictu'°'11 ever made on • Aluka, is now showing at the '.; . • ,South Coast Plaia .. ~ox :: Theater. Audiences travel by I.. horSt!', tra<'ked vehicles. and planes through the magnin- cent far oorth · rountry in pursuit of all the Arctic animals. --- l'.1ovie-goers nol only see lheSe anilnals in beautiful col· ?r, but also hear the hair-rais- ing growls· or the griuly bear . MOW: RA11No8 FOR IWtEN'T8 AND "t>lJNCJ PEDPl£ ® 110 Olll U#Dl• 11 AIMllTflD fAtt ""'', "''1 ~,,,., "'""'"' .... .,1 ·······•····················· ••!la:-(l!l .......... ---.. ,... --~--......... Ml ... ACRO SS 511 Sailor 1 Dfoops _';l Kry : 2 word!. S Dropped off 53 Destruction 55 Sorrow 1D Roc K .~Ii St!al Cilttle 14 Leavt out bl Mild oatM 15 Century til Rubbet l)lant roducts l!i lllr. Porter words 17 lilakr s 114 Hiii: So. desoh1t" 'l'I Habitat !i5 s7stem o soc ial ZO Sinus ~trat1· cavity Hcalion 21 lndl1 --· b6 Scold 22 Spoke11 I, 7 Tl11ter 21 Stor age 68 Work a !)IJ:Ct •nass with (5 Ares or tilt hands .i1rs Z6 leveling &'l Gael ic strip )0 0~1ted DOW~ jl Illinois city l Popul (tf J4 01 a certa\l'I oniltt geometrit 2 W<Hd al sMapr ;ts sent J& Epee's J Pith ~la\lve 4 'loun :>ulfnt l& Nrgativt 5 "Fa1~.and . '!ply 39 Commt.111cat1on Ii ·-· Kh~,, 1111diu"': 1 Srcreta1y 2 word s Laird's 42: Qr nbl concern 43 Pairs 2 word~ 44 Pierce 8 Somrthln9 45 Kind or that happens bull1l 9 Item of 47 ·-CIOW office ., • §9 For"fi~lt equ1p111enl • cone usiOt1 : 10 Body ol t Sl11J9 tr1cntrs . s ' . " and all lhe ' other sounds peculiar to tbiS primitive land. In southeritr Alaska "Mother Nature has produced lhe world's most perfect home ror bears. 1n this region they grow to their greatest size. And here the ca1nera rollows the hunter' as he stalks lhc · Alaskan Hrown Bc<J r -the largest carnivore 011 carlh. This anim81 11·ill outv•cigh the: largest lndian Tiger o r African Lion by 1000 pounds. flli dttlghl Cowboy I X I : Duslin lloffman and Jon Voight star f11 a studv of loneliness a n d surviva'I in and Rosemary Forsyth about . • . - a penniless widow who hires · · 673-4048 1 housekeepers with mo n c y , • ' o'EN - murders thei;n and plants •;41 them in her yard. Aunt Alice '" E. lalhN becomes her housekeeper to .. 11 ... P•nln•Mla 1ry to discover how the disap- pearances oct:urred. l1ul '°'UL.Al: WfEK "THE NIGHT THEY RAIDED MINSKY'S" S1•r1i11'J Elliot Gould Reverse Weight Woe New York. 1'he Prime or flllss Jeane 13rodie (GP): English-made fihn u•ith fl1aggie Smith in the ~l arring role as an eccentric hut captivating teacher al an Edinburgh girls' school in the TEENS AND ADULTS ,.\.laskan Safari: \Vild animal hunting in Alaska with Ro.1 llayes and \Vall Baslrom. AC3D0ffiY AWclrD \Olllinmlon BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS The Battle of Britain (G): • For 'Brcicke1i' Stcirs Story of heroic pilots of the H.A.F. who held off the Luftwaffe. in.\Vorld \V~r JI and I saved Britain from invasion. 'filichael Caine:. Laurence • Olivi<"r. Christopher Plummer ! and ~1icharl Redgrave. 1 -~-00~1~ ~awn . Denrlis Cole and Peter Haskell have a problem that is diametrically opposed lo !hat of rilany of their fans -they arc ha ving trouble ketping their weight up. The stars of 20th Ce.1tury· Fox Television'!! "Bracken's \\1orld.'' which airs every f'ri· day night at 10:00 over Chan· nel 4,' have been sleadlly IDS· ing pounds ·since the series started shooting last June. This has necessitated frequent wardrobe adjustments lo ac- commodate their narrowing \\'aistlines.- Dennis, who plays Da vid Evil'.1s. has trimmed do1vn seven pounds and Peter, who portrays producer K e v i n Grant, has Jost 10. Aller most recent call for new "'ardrobei. for the actors, producer Stanley R u b i n became roncerned about the Yest!rday's Pu11 lt Solv!d: ' " :, -I C ' '' " c 11 A~l laqethe1 41 R,.la li 1• l Z •••• 1111\er 1nlormat 13 14'1nd e1 '" Fr an(ness l.8 Portial'I of 43 -····· w!lh the Chtwil'lg saMe brush lob<lCtO 5 l ,t,rlhur ..... 2 ~ lll'\:i~M VIP Dayl e ZS Stuff ta 52 [qy11t 1an capacity •uler 26 Perceive by Informal olfactory )3 lnlerwel or~an s 54 Unoleasanl 17 Ou wa1d 55 Par! of 111:lmlratial'I ~ lamr l& :.4"ake 57 Alflrma\1·" ~grrtablr reply ta so111eo11t 58 Plete cl zq Th Jckne5s Slll!Clllla l unit ~!eel 31 Cr!• l wo•rls .lZ Rivl!r of Sil Eyr p1•1 Aftka &O Italian ) 3 Put fortM 1oyal 35 B@ver19e family 111mc 37 Fund amtnlal b) Grte\: 40 Tit le letl~r " ,, \\·ell-beins of his ~tars. In an edlrl.· unusual for Hollywood in that it takes ti1ne out from production. lhc p rod u re r ordered the filming be halted once t.1 the 1norning. in <td· rlition to the nonnal one-hour lunch break. lo allo\'1• Denni s and Peter to cal calorie-lllled foods. n1id-30's. Tht Reivers "fOf'I~ titeve ~lcQuecn slars in the filmed versii n of Faulkner 's no\·el. The hired man ·s odyssey leads llim from a small town in ~lississippi lo the sinful big ci· 1y of Me1nphls during the car· ly 1m·s. Thr. Sterile Cuckoo ~GP\: Li la "'Unnelli gives a sensitive performance in this story or two lonely college kids \\•ho find love for the first lin1c. The extra food hcJ1)5 sustain \\'cndell Burton also stars. Dun,vi eb Horror IGPl: llor-' ror fihn starring Vincenr Price. I F'unny Girl IG l: Lal·ish n1usirat prcsenlalion about the life of Fanny Brice. the child Caslino R ecord " the two actors through long. Thank You All Very i\1urh tedious hoo_rs-of shooting on ;i IGPl: By keeping her ii· llOLLY\VOOD (UPI) back·brC11klfl& schedule. Their legitimate child, a graduate Columbia topped its single-day normal work day slarls with .:1 1----~--7:00 a.m. make-up call and I--"., Ht:lftC toAS'I' ._,...,. ~m n. casting rceord "·hen producer LIZA MINNELLI WEN DELL BURTON n.Jlen'le -CuclWO ,,,,.~, """ '· ' : -"".····~·.,.. ~ Abo • .-~ ~~"~ ~1" ' -~ ~ A FR.ANl(0V1CH PRODUCTION 7 ) · r \\ClLTor· inorio , p[,~ M8TTHBU BOl101TI30 ·::-..;, e.aerus FLOWOI' I • ~r ..,,..., ,g, OOWiG Piil\~ll -~g,,'$~;;;~~ ~ " JACK WESTON "'"'""·"''""111 . ..,.,...,,., riuitting time usually t.-on1es 12 n:G~/)// C?~ Stanley Kramer signed 25 ac· hours later ;if~er nu1ncrous ~ j~ tors for speaking roles in long scenes 1 ·.1 v 0 Iv in g • ' · ••1;·1111~ "R.P.M." v>'hich star; Anthony ~ physically and 1ncnlally ex-TO NITf AT •:oo 1 ,.11 -iQu~in~n~a~nd~A~n~n~-M~a~r~g~rc~t~. ;;~~~~~~;~~~~~II hau sting acth•ities. ' I ~;~~~~h"\rr~~1d;;i~~'°~;':~:1 ..,,,_,,,_,_., 1 g;t31 i tll 111f:1!:e1,11i:14,\ i ;! ifl j[[OiAMONO ·ABE°BURROWS . BARllITT:; GREOY · =lf.;».DAVID MERRICK ·QWNCv JONES -.. M.J. FRNlKOVICH ·--.. GENE SAKS "~'°'""" ENDS SOON! Harr!son, Karen J e n s e n , .,. .., 4LL sttoc1< tto111t.011 s14ow Laraine Stephens. Stephen 1 11~ico1t toio--1 ,u111ouwr ri:u1.K ._......., "SCllEAM AND sc111EAM .r.GAtN'' 01 . 'I di R , • .., IGP'J Colo• 1ver, 11· a yn hue, Jeanne 1 ,.,,. -J AND AT 1:00 ONL T M2"'73'7 "NIG14T OF THI: LIVING OEAD" ACAOEMY AW.t.llll lolOMIHEli G.tlol!1 Ml-' ll'IV' Wiii•• M•ttt••~•"t•!f l t••m•n "CA,TUS flOWlll" --"THANK YQU. ALL VEllY MUCH .. WU~ SllMIT lltnlllt * HEY KIOSI , llG PAL SH,,OW SAT. 1:30 TONIGHT AT 8:30 * ~~(E[):iJ(EIJiIJ[I~(];:~··J'~'~'·L•;·l.i.1.1"-lL.; Shows Start at Dusk• Ct-iildren under 12 fr•el lfl,,. DOu9110-o,1 .. ,.•h I<••• ilMO..C..r...,. "THE AltllAlolOEMENT" II!) C91or ._.,.:_is..) AnG ff2·i!4fl "1'1VE CAl!O STUil" IGl Ct .. r Uno1r 11 MVll ae With Ptraot 1 At•Gtm¥ .&w1'11 NeminJIJ9n1 .:,~~ "MION IGHT COWIOY" Of) Ctil• . .. 111:1•-=":'·~":"'..J "IA.TTL! Ill' ll!ITAIN•• f0 ) COior Ullfl ... II Not loGm1t1M 1 Ac•dtm¥ Aw••G Ntmln1l11n1 ••• "YIVA MAX" 10) ColOr .....,=~~ All Slit<~ t<o•ror Sl>o'lf """"' ".SCJllE AM 4NO SClllEAM .&GAIN" ,..,~.,. IG"l Color tt ..... , VlftClftl l'•l<r. S45·lJll "THI: OUNWICH HOJlROll," 101'\ Ct11r "'"' Cun~ •• ''TH! aOSTON STJlANOLflt" !Ill ... "Wtl"TEYElt HAl'P'EH!'O TO AUNT ALICIE" 101'1 ColO• Ul!llrt II Mwll •1 Wit~ ..... .,, ACADEMY AWAllD NOMIHll l t:U Supportint Alto1 -R~p•rt CrOJM IE$T MUSICAL SCORI William Fc!iulk ner's Pr ize.Winn ing Novel "The Reivers" is now a film ! THE REIVER . is 1 5coundrel 1n operator and 1 brawler! Steve McQuee n "The Rei vers" ALSO-floMrl Cr1tt.1• 51!eroR f errC"ll -~ ~~•i..-..ir.-,c.w.:-c. .... , • ....., .... ....., ........ ~ .... _,,,.\........,.,,,.~~ s- 2nd TOP COMEDY ~!'I.~ tllll\D~ • ~u.;wl!Jtl rl;D .l•.a"I PETER I ffiMElA I ..QllAJ'HAN ..JJ!-N l.JSTl\CW1 TFFN I WNTERS I ASTN EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING 1~~~~~~~~~~~~rn ""'.t~: SHOWTIME SAT .. 1:30 i 8:30 ~n . .-1:30-4:30-8 :30 "OTOOLE BEST ACTOR OF THE YEAR! .. .'Chips' On e Of Th' Year's Ten Best!" -1.•rO'•"'l eo .. ~o Ol'R('YIE\'I • ~if>LrO-W<::•>I' -'11.>rr Fll:WILI A11 Arth1Jr P. Jac:otoi. ProdlolCUOll aLarrinr Peter O'Toole · Petula Clark "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" ,,......,...,, Slr Michttl IH1r1Y• NEW POLICY - NEW LOW PRICES ~O RESERVED SEATS CHILDREN SI.OD ANYTIME •• ,,,.·~.,,. AS, .. HUNTS ST ALICS Titf MOST FttOCIOUS A"llMA~S ON EAITH SEE IT AT YOUR FAVORITE THEATRE Wu t C.11,1 l't1 Soollfl C.e•lt "*tu ,., loM~tll!O lt11lt A111 IO·IJll C.lllf Mtw J.W.t1ll JJS-1ffi .,, ..... ,..,, ~,, ... ,,u '""' t 1t).l:•ri•-t :11 s.i. 111•2:l).4l"Jt.7:•t:11 Adult• $2.SO Under 12 75< 9 ACADEMY AWA RO NOMINATIONS 2NO WEEK NOMINA 1'.EI! FOR '1 1 INCLUDING BEST PICTURE .EST SON& I ""'"'°'"" "" 1 • 'AUIN'ON M'YttlAO~ -CClftlll-fll l'llUU'll FNI. NE"'1AN RDllEllTRmRlllD . llM'ltr .. lltt'lllOI&. BUTCtlCASSllV AND THE SUNDANCE KID -Clllll" llfUll( :.....:'-'\}-~~~~-:'."'~~~~~~~;; -PLUS - NOMINATED FDR 2 ACADEMY AWARDS ,, __ BEST ACT11£SS! •If.::!.'"~"' llf MAGGIE SMnH _fa~·" B£STSOHG!·""' ~· .. ~mdit• "°'" .ll~ic ,...,,itlr ........ [gfJ ' " .. ' ' • f S:lf .... ·- ........ PLAIN JANE PERKINS I· ·I I· ·I JUDGE PARKER I PROMISEP ME'S &.t.li'l.V PE-MVPRA.TEO, CAlL I'P KiEP' "'r'S· WIN'Tff'S ~ I THINK' IT MIM .6.T MOMf, WOULP IE W15E TO T.6.t:E t>OC.TOR:~ CAN 'T 'IOllll: HbSIAMP TO TME WE C.6.ll:E FOi HOSPITAL! N'-~\..... IHIM. MERE?' MUTI AND JEFF HELLO, BRUCE". THIS IS JEFF--DID YoU SEND ME A GET-WELL CARD? CIOC.TOl'. wi.IY IS HE SO CQt.l~SEP?' IT MUST &E TMAT 'SOMETMIWG'S MAP· ••• -=<6- By Frank loginikl D By John Miles • • (. •) • - By H11rold-Le Doux WE\.L JUST MOPE FOi! p.jE &EST ~ OttCE WE MAVE HIM IN TI-IE MOSPITAL, PEIZMAPS MEll RESPONO t W.t.NT l'US 10 ST.\V IJ THE HOS· PITAL WITH MtM! Will. ~AT IE TO TREATMENT! ALL RIGHT7 COM\}'J<; 1>1-- I ASSUliE THIS l5 JM EXECUTIVE ORDER! VfRYVl"ElL!-J SHALL IE FltEE AT 7/-UNLfSS sowe. EMERGENCY .AlilSE,;;S~!~,_ By Al Smith ' BUT, BRUCE, I'M NOT SICK! YES,! KNOW <l'Ef'r; BUT · SAVE IT- JUST IN CASE I CATCH YOU FLIRTING WITH MY GIR!. AGAIN I MAY NOT FEEL LIKE SENDING oNE.' .. PEANUTS . "' ~"' . '. ; ' ' ' , . -(- By Charles M. Selim 111E HEAD 6EAGLf AAS DISAPPEARE?i! I . TELEVISION VIEWS TV Season Soon History By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -The 19611-70 televisioo sea- son will be history in about three weeks. Then it will be, as usual, reruns and replacement shows for the next five months . . <\s far as the commercial networks are con· cerned, 1969-70 probably will be, at best, a footnota in TV hi story. lts entertainment bas been bland and. most of it easly forgotten. The brightest new pro- gram was a daily series aimed at children between ages 3 and 5, "Sesame Street." THIS SERIES, on the educational network. was not only well done and appealed to its an~ience but nudged the commercial networks into doing mote than talking about upgrading the quality of chil- dren's programming. . Popular series from other seasons, often a little sbop"".'o~ aod weary, continued to~ the most popp. lar · v1ewmg fare. Good old mo VI es attracted btg audiences and bad old movies were treated by the audience the way they treated bad television shows. Variety shows, slick and colurful. had a tendency to look alike as the same guest stars traveled from one to another. · The so-called "variety specials" often were ljl:O more special tban· the weekly shows -Aime Ban· croft's recent hour was a happy exception. NO IRIOHT new stars arrived, no engaging ne\Y concept became a series, and TV exposure dulle<I the shine on some established stars. Neither Debbie Reynolds nor Lana Turner did much for her career by taklog a TV fling. Original dramas, few in number, were rarely memorable. Occasionally, however. a performance lit up the tubes -Uta Hagen in a "CBS Playhouse," Patty Duke and Al Frejman Jr., in a "World PT• miere" feature , Peter Ustinov in a "Hall of Fame" drama. Criticism of TV violence muziled the guns and reduced the mayhem, but nobody came up wJth a stimulating substitute for the fist fight or the shoot- out. New comedy shows seemed to draw inspiration, format and sometimes the jokes from old comedies. Behind the cameras, there is considerable worry about attacks on the medium, about the impendifJg loss of cigarette advertising and about a new .re- port that viewing is down . NIELSEN STUDIES still ind icate lhat the aver- age TV set is in use well over six hours a day arid the number of people watching i& increasing. But a riv al firm. the American Research Bureau. said Its study found that viewing had dropped, in aome places as much as 10 percent. The cause Is a mystery and the validity of the report is controvefsial. . , -· Dennis the Menace ~ • I- .-- I I • • • F'rldiy, Marth 6, 1l17Q .J' ··"" NEW 1970 BARRACUDA • • • Stiiel No. BH23C0Et . ' '.~65 · CHEVROLET '67 PONTIAC r · COl!VAIR. COUPE · ·VENTURA 2·DR. HARDTOP I I . i ' .~ i\'t, t uto,,.•1ic, r1dio, h11t1r, pow1r R1d!o, h11ler, tic. A r111 bl#Y. -CrNA •t11ri119,•f1ctory tir, vinyl roof. IUUF 7.51) 2071. '66 ·DODCE DAR·T · '68 CHRYSLER ... I • ,' ' . 270 CONVERTIBL_E A11fo1nttic; t1clio, h••l•1. pow•• •t11r· i11g, •~c1llt11I conditio11., 1 fXIR141l ·,, TOWN & COUNTRY WAG. VI , 111!0"'1lic, r1dio, li1hir, pow1r •1tt11i11t·br1li::11·windows, J1clofy 1ir ccinditionin9. 'i°SW. IUZJJ2S) ' . ~ '64 DATSUN 4 WHEEL DRIVE PATROL Equipp1d with 2 1pe1d 1 1111 fcir 6 1pe1d1 forw1rd. E•e1!11nl m1ch1nii:1I c.ond, IZAD212 ) $1195 '&6 Pl YMOUTH SATELLITE 2·DR. H.T. \II, r1dio, h'11t1r, P.S., P.I ., etc. Good cond!tion thru 'out, (5!X95J) '68 PLYMOU TH BELVEDERE 2·DR. VI, 1uli::im1fie fr1nu11i11ion, rtdio, h1tl1r, power 1!11rin9. (\15 ~271) s1495 '68 BUICK SKYLARK SEDAN VI, t 11to1n1tic tr1n1mi11io11, rtclio, littltr, pow1r st11rin9, fe clory eir condit:o11in9, low mil11. IWWH363) I '69 VOL KSWGN. ''BUG" R1d io 1111cl h1.f1r, "4 1p11d trtnJm it· 1ion .Nici c1r$_i. !YWR7101 • s1595 '&6 Pl YMOUTH SATELLITE ' VI, 111lom1lic h1111mitsion, r1dio ind h1el1 r, powtr 1lteri119. fTFl>S281 ATLAS SERVICE • DEPARTMENT Welcomes and hono,..1 all Chry'sfer COrPora-, tion _vehicles requiring1 1 service and warranty· , Work, regardless of where car was pur .. chased. A u th 0 r ired Chrysler factory train· ed personnel at you,. disposal. Chrysl., PlyMouth, Imperial, Dodge and Dodg~ trucks. We honor most credit cards , , • All "'UI -pl• ffl 9'IHl1 liu-. Prkn Mll4 ..0 10:00 P.M., S111Mky, M9reil I, 1t70 ·CHRYSLER . PLVMOIJTH .IMPERIAL ....... -,... . . MUSTANG GRABBER • · '70Y2 FALCON MODELS • us•D CAR SUPER . SPECIALS '60 STUDEBAKER . lark. ITL 587. J. .. PAI~~ Pl<OT Ill -- • . 1/2 ' I . ' . . . . .. . I , , N DISPLAY· :e.·· MAVERICK GRABBER NOW • · '70Y2 FORD CORTINA ·· . . • fULL PRl(I • , If you area 15 Lindi l1le Orlv• New & beautl!ul 4 Bedroom, 5 bath home 1' \Vith Iarae sunken livlnR: room & tam. rm., -IJ. wet bar~ Radiant electrlc heat. Carpeted & landscaped. Priced . . . . . . . . . . . . $155,000. 45 Linda Isle Drive Nearing con1pletion. 5 BR. 4 ba home. 80 Ft. I' J on water. 3 frplcs., atrium \V/fountain. .I'°> • Bit-in TV system. With dock .... $225,000 80 Linda l1le Drive 5 Bedroon1 & maid's, 5 baths with family room & large rumpus room. 3 Fireplaces. 4,246 Sq. Ft. Dock & boat slip ..... $159,300 HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE FINER HOMES WE ANNOUNCE WITH PRIOE THE MERG· ~'!_':,y~Fs~~017.G~i':,A,.~11,'\1~L Ii ~iMR SINCE 1954 -WIJH LINDA ISLE DEVIL- OPMENT COMPANY, DEVELOPERS OF LINDA ISLE, UNDER THE LEADERSHIP OF JOHN MACNAI, RIAL TOR. Our Experi•nced Residentlel Staff Offer You: LINDA ISLE Come to R1ncho La Cue1ta 1t Brookhurst and Atlanta in Huntington B••ch 1ny day 1>.twffn 10 a.m. and 1 p.m. and 11f1ct your home In our newly opened Unit VII. 90 Linda l1le Drive Beautiful 4 Bedroom, 4 Bath home with ex· tra large living room & master Bedroom. Carpets & drapes. Landscaped. Boat slip. Near tennis court & club . . ... no\v $120,000 This ne\v Bayfront home has everything. 5 Bedroon1s, 4 baths plus polvder room. Huge family room "''Ith sunken wet bar, formal dining room, breakfast area & kitchen with Vie\v of \\'ater, your choice pf decor. From this 55 Ft. Bayfront home you can sail to anyplace in the \vorld. Sec our representa- live at #l Linda Isle. DOVER SHORES A king size home with a spectacular vie\v plus a heated & filt ered swimming pool. 4 Bedrooms, family room, fortnal dining room, exquisitely decorated. Only 21h years old. Asking $104,000. Open Sun. 1624 Antigua Way. ~riced ,,.,,, $JO,J90 to $U,100 Occupattcy in June &-July Waterfront Lats 968-2929 968-1338 Lot number 4: Excellent 51 ft. Linda Isle leasehold Jot. Consider trade. $35,000. Lot number 41: Lon2 water view with 76.2 ft. of fronta~e facin,:? tlarbor Island. DOVER SHORES BAYFRONT BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 673-7176 ~~ J=:=:=:=:::::=::=:::::=-;-:::=:=:=:::::::::::::=::;-:::=:=:=:=:::::::::::::::=1G,;•;n;•;'';';;;;;;;;;;;;;l:OOO;;;G;•;n:•';';';;;;;;;;;;;1000;;;;,J Gerttral 1000 General 1000 Gentral 1000 11 · J.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ;:.::=;.;:,; __ ---'-"-' ---- Bankruptcy Rel'eiver has instructed us to a~· cept offers for this \Vonder!ul Norman Grant built 2-story home on 60 ft . lot \vith pier & float. 4 Bedrooms, Jarge formal living room & formal dining room. Open Sat. &: Sun. 333 Morning Star Lane. DOVER SHORES FINEST VIEW OPEN 3 Bedrooms LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS 320 LIDO NORD Beautifully landscaped view home 'vith 4 bedrooms. $89,500. Open Sal. &. Sun. 1130 Santiago Drive. Ovttlookln1: China Cove 11nd harbol' entrance. E:'lettllenl expot;ure. 11·atk lo bay or ocean Cu1101n buUdln& pl ans for an all-t!n1e home SAT/SUN. 1-5 , 435 AL1so $111.00 Per Mo. [ l N'pt. H!'iG'h l5. Pro- l • '"'· doooc. 3 BR • $22,900 r rnm . rm. 5 yr11. old. 6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility roon1. with 85 ft . frontin g on eJCcellent S\vim- n1ing beach. Units arc ne\vly furnished . No\v $240,000. Excellent tern1s available. UPPER IAY Exceptionally lovely home with 1naster bed- room, large Jiving roon1, beautiful family room & dining room, all opening to 40 ft. pool & lanai. This customized, im1naculate 4 bed· room home may be seen Sat. & Sun. Priced al 867.500. 1300 Estelle (Corner of Highland & E stelle ). Included in price $51,500 I fANTASTIC kitch· I r n • \\'Ol'lh buyin .. Lllled e.xclusi\1cly lVi lh 1~thc honie fol'! ' .. RIAL TORS 673-4400 General CcottHM·MAimMp ===lll·llll==:J~ 8 UNITS • FJX UP All 111:. 2 BR. Inc. S9:i0 ino. SUbmit on temu;. Good loc. Price • $87 ,500 PYRAJitlD EXCH ANGORS JWaltOl'S 646-7629 IOOOGener1I 1000 Coldwell, Banker OFFiRS: WATERFRONTS WITH SLIPS ~ BR. 3 Ba. beauty-3 car gar .. $ 85,000 3 BR. 2 Ba. -3 car garage - Owner will finance ....... . 3 UniU -excellent rent - will finance ................ $ 63,500 4 BR. 4 Ba. 3 Yr. old lovel y ... Sl40,000 \V1lter 1-laase R·2 W /TWO SEPARATE HOMES Open House Sunday 1-5. Larkspur & 4th St .. Corona Del !\far. Large home. 4 Bed- rooms, office. !am. r1n. Pool. 2nd I-lome 3 Bd 's .. dining. new cpt. & paint. On lot &. ..... $79,500. Mary Lou ~1arlon BALBOA ISLAND flere is that hard lo find . fairly ne'v du- plex in exc. condition. 3 Bdrms. -2 baths front house & 2 Bdrms., 1 bath over extra lge. garage. Al\\•ays rented both ,~·inter & ;un1rner. S73.500. Kathryn Raul ston OPEN HOUSE- HARBOR VIEW HILLS 3814 TOPSIDE LANE \vill be previewer· Sunday afternoon -custon1 decor - Sty .. 4 bdrm .. sep. ram. rm. \V /frplc .. r' rm .. 3 car garetge. $112.500. EASTBLUFF -SUNSET VU Lu sk home w/character: 3 Br. 21r.i ba .. ram . rm. + la rge addition that can be used !or play area or pool rm. ·oramatic courtyard ent. $53,950 Mrs. Davies PRICE REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE Owners must leave thi.s immaculate 3 Bd- rm., Cam . rn1. hon1e . Gated garden entry & e>;pensive vie\\' of Bay & Ocean -thi s v.1on't last at $53,500 Mrs. Harvey CALIFORNIA CLASSIC Sharp 3 bedroon1. dining room hon1e ; 2 rlrepleces. courtyard entry. A-1 condit1nn . Adult Jived In. Prof. landscaped 'v t min . care. Short escro\v. S46,500 t-.1afy Lou rrtarion UNIVERSITY PARK 10':0 I>o..-•n wlil handle this sep. home. \\'ilh loan as:sumeble Ill 6.5%. o"'ner "'ill carry bal. "Se .... Good loc. $34.900 "1 Fink COLDWl!LL, IANKER & CO. 550 NlWl'Q_RT ClNTIR OR., NEWPORT; BEACH 133.0700 6'14·2430 ................... Anyone t·an 11ssumc e:osling t'MA loa.n, annual pe1-cent· aa~ rate of 5'-'~i> -No qual· Hying -NC\'J c arprts throughout -Thi!! ls you!' doll hOUlit' -Sec ii. BILL GRUNOY, REALTOR 133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.B. 673-7176 By App't. Gener1I 1000 General 1.:;.;;=0::...---~:.: 1000 VACANT LOT Corner of Highland &. Somerset, set among be~utiful homes, at the exceptionally low price of·$23,500. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2129 HARBOR BLVO. 546-"40 OPEN EVES TILL 9,30 OPEN \-oTHEREAL \"."\.. ESTATLRS NO DOWN VETERANS LO\V 00\VN FHA. SHARP FOUR BEDROOlll , fan1ily room, Jl f. bath hon1e '''ith fireplacc. t·o~ au· h(.'n!, Built-in kitchen, carpets and drapes.. La.rg~ ovrr _ ~izcd double ii.fa&' "''ilh 1va.shin;: · fscilltiei;. 15'x20' patio. renc- ed yard • sprinklers. Only minutr:f trom major 11hop- ping and schools. O n 1 y $26,9:-io • Current V.i\. ap. praisal. GIANT ~ BEDROOM TWO STORY 5 Bedrooms, han1ll. room, Tb\g M11ut1rul bf'urh homr drn, Island kitchen, Ivan h15 low lntrre11t financing \Veils buUt. Pool. Tratlc ror that c11n br 118umtd. \Vl!h im1alltr homr ...... ~5.000. n.ooo do"~·"'"" wm h•tr. EXCHANGES 5 UNITS EARNS $8,400 Short wA.lk to lhe beach, \) block lO the Ct"ntcr of town. Large 2-brdroon1 unit! al- 1\'a.)'6 rented. ExCt'\Jrnt hn- ancing available and good MACNAB-IRVINE REAL TY COMPANY 901 Oov1r Or., Suite 120 642-1235 l'l!tum on initial investmrnt.1~!!!!~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~~ Prk-ed lo SELL -at $69,500. j~ Colesworthy & Co. REALTOR l'\C'wport Btach OU1Ct' 1028 Bayside Drh't' General 1000 Gener1I - GOLFER'S PARADISE Beautiful executive 3 Bdrm. 3 Bath home. Tastefully carpeted, draped &. furn. by dee· orator. Loe. on the green at 10th hole of Ber- n1uda Dunes 27 hofe golf course, site of the Bob flope Classics. Has 2 golf car ts & swim pool. Bermuda Dunes Country Club member· ship avail. Ask $95,000. Xlnt terms available. BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR 833 Dover Or., Suite 3, N.B. 673-7 176 By App't Gi:-.-19:;o &l:!-7777 ~~~~~~~~~'!!"!!!"'!~~~~~~ No quttllfying necessary lak~ 01·rr p1nls. on this ex· ii;tlng VA loan '"i!h annua l percentage rate or 4 1 ~<:0, It hRS hardwood rloor5, built· ins, Pa!oi> Verde Nfonc rire. place. biit rear yard, com· ple1ely repainted inside. In lwst Cottta 1\lcsa area, owner askini; $25,500. '\'on'! last. ORANGE COUNTY 'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546-8640 OPEN EVES Till a,30 $19,950 R·2 la!, 2 BR, I BA. p&1n!cd In & au!, new c1·pls, <.'Ov ra· !lo, new dr!ve1.,.sy. EMtsi dc , Lachenmyer R1altor 646·3928' Eves: 644·1 6~ $23.500 Total paymt'nl $232.00. Home 1''1't't t'XChatlgt! llgt. Wt havr hl\1 bffn rrtshly peinled. \\'hat )IOU \\'trnl. NtlU' or tar. \\"hy Rtnl! \YA 1.1\ TO \Vhlll do YoU have! ~~Cl;E~L~ HOME 646-4837 2790 HIU'bor Bl•d. " Adam• EVERY 31 MINUTES MATCH EM REAL T"f ~~l~!60~N~•~wpo~rt~D~l=•d~.;· C~':'~l:~"-""63!·::~°"'~"~·~1i1;9~P~~:'~ Lochenmyer R • It r Almo1t No Down Natural bttck flrtplacc In av- tnlzed family nn, 3 Bd1•m, 2 baths, t'ntry hall, d!nina rm, 1prlnkler syslcm. !'t4().t?a'.I TARllLL 2955 Hl'bor W J k & L WESTCLIFf CALL 64G.392S E\'es. 646-2290 a er ee 2 Home• on One Let ' Ex"{'· trHnsfr forces salt! of 3 BR. 2 Baths. fam & Jiv. ,_.,00 11,,.bo, Bl•d. ,1 Ad•m• outstanding ~ br. 2 b1t, Ire Foreclo1ur1 Pending ......... m !"/A ... , 1.,,1, d"'• • I ho Bl R bll Tri '"" ., , .... ' ' IJI ,,.il-!Ual Open .111 9 P:\I am rm me. Lu.~ury a; rpu c .level. 5 Bd· a•rage • 2 BR. 1 BA. Pric- crp!s, drps. w&ll paper. lm· nns, 3 btlt111, exttll&nt car-cd to aell! Eulslde. BALBOA ISLAND mac! As!IUmf' 6 ~"~' loan. Pt'!l n~ .k many txtn.ll. but 2 BR, "''''ery IAJ'Ef, btamcd S•l8,300. 1921 ~f&ril'K':rs Dr.. nN!d' 110n1c 11'0l'k. Besl 1>U· t'tU. liv. rm , nlc'f' famlly N.S. Cttll &4~1 1 ... FHA or VA J Gr., lli b& .. North Col!t• 1\lt'A, ClOllC lo &11 &ehooll, C:ul·dt'-llllC', DAVIDSON Realty ~~00 E\'fl~. 5'44-1833 rn1, A dru. "'11111-ri l'lll tio. L.AKEF'RONT. Ll:&kr roni11. Ntat & clean. $56.000. Sub-New 2 br. 2 Ba. pluah crpts Lochenmyer $46·~110 OUT Or Slate Ow11er: r.tust Rl"1lt or f~"dnflnflhf'thtl Sell or 1''8lle t br, 2 ba mil your 1r1·111~! & drjM'. Undtr rtplacement Riddle & Ro11 Rltrs. prlc~. Lta.se option . Owner M.1S E. Co•BI Hwy. &TS.Tm ma,y trade. Owntr 494-MG LLEGE REALTY lt60 Newport Blvd .. cr.1 home. ri8 Sht':r\\'OOd St. fotf 1'0JACIM.1tHMw,Ci& CALL~ '£Vt's. 64~·16M SAnlo At\l Ave, C.l\l.l Ph. !!!!!!...,...,.,....,...,.,..1,!'!!!!'!!!,..l!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!•'M -~~~~~~--\ . . . • •• HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi Gener•I , 1000 G1ner1I 1000 REDUCED Red tile roof, large inner atrium with re- tractable roof to let the sun shine in. 4 Bdrm, 3'h BA, Dover Shores view. Just reduced to $99,500. OPEN HOUSE SUN. 1 • 5 '\'our very own wine cellar goes with this 2 sly 4 BR, 3 BA. POOL & VIEW o! Upper Bay. Owner says sell now -only '99i000· Come see at 1930 Santiago. · THE lllG ONE FIVE Bedrooms, 3'h: Baths, family rm, &ep din rm. Island kitchen, 2 frplc's, 3 car gar· age. Panoramic vie\V fro1n the rim of Upper Bay. $95,000 STEPS TO BEACH Custo1n blt home in secluded China Cove. 4 Bdrms, + loft for pool table or '! Sandy beach fc\v feet a\vay. $72.000. ROY J. WARD CO., Realtors BA YCREST OFFICE 1430 Galaxy Odvo, NB 646-1550 ----------------- General 1000 General ~~~ 1000 Irvine Terrace e •st Spollrss 4 BR. 2!~ bath plus enclosed lanai. Eltc. kitch- en, brkl'l;;t. al't'a. Low lease- hold fee. Sale pric.1! $56,650 t"or Appolntn1ent Call CURT DOSH, Realtor 1730 W. Coast Highway 642-6472 Eves. 673-3468 Expensive Cke1n View Charming 3 btdroom, dlnlng roonf; 30' Llving room, ar- tistic lirplc. E.,.er:ything to please the critical bu~r. Choice Corona dcl Mar area. Unmalehable at $69,500. <Ews. ~) "Bi l " Rulty us.~ DON 'T &ivr It away, J:t, quick ca.sh lor il w!.th:--.. Daily Pilot want Ad. Ope11 Hot1ses THIS WEEKEND tcnp thi• i..1\41 41rtcltff with yo11 thl1 .,.. ...... , • fOll 90 ho11seoh11at/1t9. All tt.. locotl1111 ll1to4 1to1- or1 dttc1l•M lfl 9r•tor dotlll •r edftrtl•l"t •i... who,._ ht todoy'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS, Petro• Mtowi'") opn ltol!MI fot 1ok or to ro11t ore '"°" 19 li1r 111111 iaforTHtiH 11 tlrlb col111111 .... fflllty. HOUSES FOR SALE (2 Bedroom) *No. 6 \Vestclill Villa, Dover Drive, NB 642-5200 (Sat 1·5) . {3 B•droom) 223 Via llhaca (Lido lslel NB 6i5-1662 (Sun 12-5) (3 Bedroom & F1mily or Oen) **433 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach 642·8235 (Sat & Sun) 135 Aliso (Newport Heights) NB . 675-1662 (Sal & ~un l·5Y 231 Santa Ana Ave., Newport Beach 675-3982 (Sal & Sun all day) B84 Presidio Drive (l\lesa del ri.1ar) cr,.1 546-9769 (Sal fl.5 Sun 1·5) ' 2512 J<~ordham Drive, Costa Mesa 549-3738 (Open Daily) 438 Aliso (Newport Heights) NB 675-4600 (Sun 1-4) 2298 \Vaterman \Vay, East Costa Mesa 645-2000:5411-6966 eves. (Sat & Sun 1-5) 892 Cortez (l\1esa del Mar) Costa Mesa . 540-1720 (Sat 1·5) . *2048 Commodore Rd. (Baycresl) NB 646-3255 (Sun 2·5) (4 Btdroom) 2i0 East 23rd SL . Costa ri1esa 642-1771 rsuo 1·5) (4 Bedroom It Income) *Larkspur & 4th, Corona de! !11ar 644-2430:833-0700 · (Sun 1·5) (4 Bedroom & Family or~ Den) 1430 Galaxy Ol'ive (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 !Open Daily) * 1300 Estelle (U pp" Bay) NB 642·8235 (Sal &. Sun) 505 Morning Star Lane (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 !Sat & Sun ) *1624 Antigua \Vay (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 r Sun) . 2710 Drake (J\'J esa de! l\'1ar) Costa Mesa 499-1990 :494-5488 (Sat&. Sun 1·5) 19101 Bik ini Lone. Iiuntington Beach 842-669 1 (S•t 12·5) *1930 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Sun 1·51 3814 'foosidc Lane fHarbnr Vie'v Hills) CdM 644-2430 ,8.13-0700 (Sun afternoon) 1632 Dnrolhy Lane (Westcli!f) NB 644-4910 (Sun l·S) (5 81droom) **'4 Linda Isle Drive (Linda Isle) NB . 642-8235 (Sal &. Sun) (5 Bedroom & Family or Den) *1536 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) **l Linda hie Drive (Linda Isla) NB 642·6235 (Sat & Sun) ' CONDOMINIUM (2 Bedroom & Den ar P1mlly) No. 50 Blue Lagoon Villas, Laguna Beach 641-4910 (Sal &. Sun 1·5) INCOME UNITS (I) 3 lodroom 13) 2 BodrMm IOI 13th Street, Huntington Beach 536-2579 !Sun 1-5) * , •• , * * W"'9rfto11t • * * ,,.. •1ul W•t9rfretit --. . ~ ..... -----·-- ' frldaJ, MattPI 6, 1970 DAILY PILOT 33 MOUSES FDR SALE HOUSES FOR SA~E HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSIS FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FDR SALE H F R SALE S 1-t1~~·~1~~~~-~-~G~•~-~~~~~~-~\;-~~.t~~~~~-~-¥~.t~~~~~-~ ~•wP!!!._~HchlHt Co""'O.~C:d_E_at-A-_Mo_N.,_Sl_D_1_Euo_ .;;,;;;tt ... _...-a~-4 liiffi~9 ;;;-uan'loo·f=~~!:;!f.~ur~~~f---__::;;i I WESTCLIFF LITTLE LADY ALONE Wan! a Fun Houu ? Ronla lo 19 Shara 2005 WESLEY N, TAYLOR CO, CUSTQM OF HIGHWAY ""'t .. u thla '"°""" doll Wllh • Pool? EM PLOYED Indy JO.SO to (IO - " " D 2 r .. p ·-r 4 b 0 -000 IW nlng ,,.. ' 10 yer. :rea. ,500. ~ ~I I - Pete· ,/Jarrell /eaft'J ... p1·e~en/:4 BEST BUYS. ON LIDO PANORAMIC VIEW Beautiful Irvine Terrace 4 bedroom home with 3 full baths & famUy TOOm. Lge H&F pool surrounded by huge patio. Excellent floor plan. By Appl. 177,500. PICTURESQUE LAGUNA house Jn lovely ltfesa Vel'<:le. Plu" 20 toot pl1tyt"OU111 \Vllh •hjl.l'e, 2 br ant w/prlv bft, 4 + POOL. Just llirtea In chOltc at't'a Plush deep pile carpel'< built.In bar and Iott of deck· wl11aifle tn C.\\I. Rec. room, D\Jplex "'Ith 2 Bedroon1 borne lht"OYghout. Lovely ~us1on1 11~1 Plus 3 1nltl.lltCt'.Jize ~ pool l. s .lLU n 11. bL PIUJ M!wln; roon. or ?olalds v.•ltb patio and 1ncorM ~part. drapn. 3 hu.ce bed,room.i,;. roool& ~ Plus custon1 carpet· Relettnce11. ~T·7716 after 6. quarlt.rt. Df!li;thtfully liPllC-al J·' '" ~ Co 11 ba I ment "'lY• rtn t;<,I • .,_,.......,, l"ge()Uj pu ITlAn t Ill. lfll' and drapes! Plus intcr-YOUNG R•~. "e m •I c ioua living room opening lo -'"""" I al •·--c "• • I "''.>'OOUU de -.;f<lion. real school con1 with F'.:il. t'rl us I c .... ,t~ "' ·•·n: •·~-encloaed 1:;a.rden area v.· th ,.._ .. _ •· .. ,. .. ,... ,..,,,"" fountain and 35 ti. healed S}'5tcm. Near u.iuull')' Club. throughout! \VE'VE GOT v.•/nlOtlll'r & son. Br. ba &: f'.Jl.A. do1m !)l)'n1cnt is IT! And holtl your hat! 0 CC le • NEWL y REMDDLED HOME. Charming 2 BR, convertible den & 2 BA. Ide a I for a coupl e or bachelor. Only $56,500. OUTSTANDING FAMILY HOME. 4 Bedr m, 3 bath wi th sep. dining rm. Lots o( pane)jng, beamed ceil ings th ru·out. Really priced to sell -$63.500. Split level 2 & den condo with \\'bite wa ter coastal view. Custom drapes & cpts, 3 baths. Glass encl. \vide balcony, 2 pools, private beach. sec. guards. #50 Blue Lagoon Vill as. $64.900. 30781 Coast Hwy. Open Sat·Sun 1·5 LIDO ISLE -$140,000 POOL ~ la\1ish balhi, hullt· ... 000 NO DO\VN C _, 1>hooe. ~ mo. . .. V . . d d _ _, ... _._ ..-, . to .?.'s. .,.,,!IC)) Jt~Ul.L PRICE. No 54S-8002 aft G:30 tn 1-esstl'$. et1ks. a,~ ..... ..a. C&.11 ()()v.•n for G.I. or take over Beaullru l ll;ht kitchen \\ilh WE SELL A HOME low loan of $l85 per monlh. L.D.S. nialc, 2:], employed. aJJ built·Tna. A true CUSTO~t CORONA Hlif\lands view EVERY 31 MINUTES WE SELL A HOME Shnrc your or bis Rpl \V1th qUall ly ho1ne \Vilh 1he· best hon1e. Ideal for couple 11a1nf'. SA or CM i l'ea. or cverylltlng! $62,000 \Vlth \\'/possible guest qh·s. or Walker & Lee EVERY 31 MINUTES 540-44&4 lOS'-do\\•n! fl\Ol'e bdnns.: overlobklng Wa Iker & Lee the I0\\71, SEE THIS! LADY want. sanie to 1hart WE SELL A HOME 2790 Harbor Blvd. ai Adams tier home. Qy,-n Bdrm & EVERY 31 MINUTES 412°:C~::~::a~ 545-9491 Open 'til 9 P~I 7682 Edinger bath, _Kar. Reaionable . NORD BAYFRONT -.REDUCED $25,000. Beautiful 49lf.t' lot . improved with older home + pi i r & slip. Great remodeling or new building possibiliti es at ne\v price of $200.000. OPEN HOUSIS No. 6 WESTCLIFF VILLA '(Dover Drive & WesLcliff). Luxurious, spacious, 2 BR, 2 BA. Dining rooni. Single sto ry. Gracious living for ad.ults only. Excellent condition \Vilh im· mediate occupancy. Open Sat 1·5. 1331 WEST BAY AVE. See this charming 3 Bdl"m home \\'itb dining rm and large sunny pati'o. Vi e \V Of Bay -excell ent location ! Only $56.QOO. GREAT HOME- TERRIFIC LOAN! Enjoy gracious living in this splendid 2 story home. 4 bdrms, den, dining rm & S bas. Elec gates open into priv court yd. By appt. QUIET WESTCtlFF Bright airy 4 bedroo m home on desirable cor- ner. Lge kitchen & pool size yard. $50,000. 1632 Dorothy Open Sun. 1-5 LINDA ISLE Rich~ col orful .decor in NEW 4 bdrm 2 sty ~lediterranean by finest bu ilder. Huge fam- ily rm with sunken \vet bar, 4 baths + ele- gant p<nvder room. Spacious entry. $155,000. NEWPORT DUPLEX l·T,vo bdrm & (am. rm; 1.one bdrm & lanai + good income. Corner lot, 1 bl k to beaCh. $43.500. 2100 Walker & Lee s1ao Smith. m tr. rn.2010 FOREST E. ;w1<0 M2-<1;;:; Ol&-001! cml 22 '""" '" '"""' < "' 20U \\1estcliU Dr. Of the oce~~E;'!:,rn lge. !iv. o L s o N HHn:;:~°:' 1405 house C.1\I. "''ith wne. r.,..,. ...... 646' ... m.,.1,.. ....... 1 rm. in lhls qua1 3 BR. 2 (·hlld"'n uk. 042-5106 or t• ba. al'lg. H.V.H. home. LIQUIDATION-New 3 BR 1 76-1._.~IO!J:I====~-~ PANORAMIC VIEW 1014 SEA LANE Inc. Realtors hoincli. 419l Branfol'd St. l or 2 RESPONSlBLE people ~l Ba.yslde Dl'. Beaut. Open Set. & Sun. P .M. Just $35,500!!! Bldgs/Agt. !o ~hare luxury 5 BR. 2 shake roo( I-sty, 3 Br. 4 ha. 642-0177 OWNER OLD FA'RM HOUSE 84b"-0609, eves ()57~1.Jl slory L.eguna lkh vlew waterlront bOme, xlnt &\vim. 1 -========= --,,========I ho1ne. $60 mo. Call 49.J.S'i'iJ 1 • 2 or J Bdm1'1. J•o1nuU din· - min: beach. Neivly redcor. B•lbo• Peninsula 1300 ing rtn., giant country kHch-Fountain Valley 1410 SJ-TARE beach (i."Ont apt up lo $180.IXXI SHO\\/N BY APPT. - -------J",,,. ,,-,h. $100 "''· ~ ~102 '11 G d R I f'n, se1vi<.'t! porch. Fa.ntMlic ,,......., Bl run y, ea tor k>I. 100• lron!agt', 240• deep. WANT ask for Ron. 333 Dover Dr., NB G7l-n 75 PE~~~~~AI O\-er 11 acre. Zoned l\11. Stor-• \VORKINC Lady To-share V.nlc. W.1.rw.y age hea,•en. Trucks, equip-Home iv/same. Orange & House & Apt. l<~iniih the re· n1ent. ?ilini1nun1 On. (}y,•ner 161h SI CM Call •~1822 Duplex, Canal \Vaterlront, nlodeli""' on thi:!I 3 br. 1 ha A BIG HJ.ME? " .. ' .....,.. · • .., \\<\II hc!lp finance. Don'! be g \Vllh .pier for boat. 2 ~ .. 3 ':K>~ on PlazalroDel Su1r. En-late_ Call 962·5585. ·' n-"•-o•. la-, ma.•l'r "~'. Costa Mes• BR 1nvestinent, or m .... e JOY 1ncon1r m ap O\-er • D<.'U "" • ., ,, """' !his your 5 BR family home, garage, "Fixer Upper." 962 _5585 ruoin. large <.'Ompletely pan. illESA VERDE HOil'lf:: $1>1,500. $44,000. Louls \V, Briggs clef! Fa111ily Room. l\:ilchcn Beautiful 4 br, pool, formal LINDA ISLE LOT Graham Rlty. 646.-2414 Realtor · 673-8110, 673-4037. \Vil h spacious caring area. rli ri. 1111. $400. fHG--0631 Call us fo r appointment to see this most attractive 4 BR, 3 Ba. executive home on -charming Antigua Way. Priced right "'ilh ~~large Joa n assumable. at present low, low interest! Choice waterfront s ite among Newport 's fin-Near Newport Posl Of1ice 19131 Brookhurst Separii.IP f 0 r m a I dining 1 -===-c-======~l est homes. Prime location facing lagoon. Lido Isle 1351 Huntington Beach rooin. 2600 sq. ft. Priced at Coron• del Mar Lea~ehold $50,000 incl plans for 5 bdrm borne. ~~~7'i~ ~o3r~~·r 2 g'::·e~ Franclscian Fountains $44•950· belt/view. Cov. w a 11 ed· Pool With Prestige 546-2313 "Our 25th Year" · tl d '-h " pa o, cu11. rps .,. s u .. en 223 VIA ITHACA Elegant dee p pile carpets WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors -+ """" Walk 10 '"""· •"" '""'m drapon" ,.., 1-oTHEREAL \~ESTATERS 225ll 1 Bf\ hou se. Furn or Unlum. Crpt!, drps, frost !rce refrig. ga r. So. of H1vy. Nr. heh & SIOl't':!I. Adults, no pets. Least' S165. 67:>-li>!O Offi.::e Open Saturdays & Sundays Cdlll "' o •M 500 I OPEN SUN. PETE BARRETI REAL TY 2111 S J · Mill R d ru, \Vnr .,...., • [ the n1ood of lnte luxury. an oaquin · 1 s oa 644-4265 a 12·5 Huge n1astcr sui1, ,\•ith par. NEWPORT CENTER ~910 1 11!:!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 BAYSIDE VILLAGE T Lldn fslt' 3 BR. + ental retreat. 4 king si:.:e 1605 WHlcllff or .. N.B. 642-5200 . I• Unusual !ype l\tobile Ho1nc 1 ~tudio. Assunte f'X-bedroon1:r;. in all 11•lth lhl'er 1000 Mesa Del Mar 1----....,...---General 1105 wl perrn. cabana. 2 Bi-'s, 2 A h1 ting ·loan. Full balhs. Carefree )'ard anr.I Ba'11. drcss'g rn1, 32' Jiv r111, I price $81,000. decking around hC'alcd and EXECUTIVE 111GO HOME flTE&\ DEL·~fAR clbhse & beh. Pool. Boal to )'U\!rself to move Ufl. ' "'. '• '., .. • ?i1EADO\V llome by 01vner. Li;:e planned 3 Br, den, :!1 ~ Ba, royal bh1e cal'peting, COl'ller lol. A.ssun1e loan. 962-0964 Balboa 2300 PENINSULA Poinl. ~i blk to ocean or bay. 3 Br. 211 Ba, yrly 1-ent $250 mo. Avail April I. Owner 871-1205 ]~;:;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1---------ICUstomized 4 Bedroom Home L EAsEs 3 Bedrooms-Sharp! f,",,!'!~ !':;.,;~~~"' ~~~ ---------1 trple, carpo11, patio. p1i v b flUr1"Cd POOL. You u"'e it XTRA CLEAN!· slip av1tU. Adults. 67Z>-1692 Coft111N-MA"T1Nj1 WE SELL A HOME 4 BR. 2 BA &: lam rin. Shake 17ii·lllf ~ EVERY 31 MINUTES 't < ..... <pt, d•hw.,ho1· 4 BDRM·DEN LIVE I "' ";.., • bi•• to "'""'' uppor B•r435.5oo oN Lico Walker & Lee 3 BR. 2 BA, beamed Ct'ilin~. frplc, xlras. l't'C fac . S29. 7aD. .,IA/VA 5•; 1-0an. l!)g'n La Terran, 962-4888. OCEANFRONT 2 Br, yrly lease $140 mo. See Sal. at 1125 E. Balboa Bl\'d. SOi\lE \VITH OPTIONS Cate '!. Bed.rm "•ith p001. 00. $22.500 full price w· bn1it. 3 + din ru1 ...!.. fu111 1- 1 • 'tl1ei;a \rercle Cain· id;e $300 mo.. possibly cl gardener. O"·ne1· !flY5 to take o\·er 6',~ loan. ·~ted $38.900, bu! what's r bid? $111 ,00 Total MD. •trttt. Spad ou• li,·;ng room, f ormal dining room and la~ family room \\•i th built· P t in bar. Close :to Boys· Club m . and pa1·k. only $64.%0. '{ou have to !!Ce this to be- lieve It. AJI ne'v carpeting, double garage, forced alt heating, large built-in kitch- For det1il1 673-1550 O THE REAL "\... ESTATERS en. Beautifully appoinled -!-====::::=::::== CO\l.Ms, psu·ks. ~chools & col-2306 Redlands. 646-4393 legt'. All this for onlyl ~-------­ $29,97lll. By (}.\•ner 833--0192 BLUFFS · 3 BR, 2 BA , split- or ;;15-0772 le\'el rondo. $29.750 01· lease/option. 644-2039 Newport Beach 1200 Newport-Heights B/B f lRSI' TI~IE LISTED~ BALBOA PENil"SULA POINT! 1210 J BR. &: dt'n. Lovely Pa1io r.1ove-in cond. $65,000 lan1J -1\·e have otht'rsl Walker Rlty. 675--5200 J.'l66 Via Lido, NB Open Sut1. SPACIOUS custom built familr home 4 B<lnna., den, 3~: baths. $76,500 7682 f'..dingrr 842-44j;i :i-11).;)1<10 OPEN SUN 1·5 NEW 4 UNITS 401 13th ST .• HB Sa nta Ana 1620 Balboa Island 2355 ----Terrific Buy! 4 BR/$23,900 In1111a..:ulale home, l'K"ar Pa· rochial & public school~. Lathe & plasrcr. hrch\'d firs. Gt or f'llA fine. HAFFDAL REAL TY 142"405 f'URN. i\Tod. l Br. 2 Ba. Dock. Nu pets. Avail to June :l!l. $300 1no. 67>-7880 BAL Is. furn. cot. hse. 3 Br. :.! Ba. Nu paint, frplc. Cov. patio, fncd . Now. 673-6267 Duplexes Furn, 2975 ------' · Beautiful Del Ce1'1'0. Near . Coast Pl aza. 40' s\\•lm J, 4 ~pacious bclnni:;. $37;; cl pool & gardenel'. f'urn- hcd if desired. Full price $..'2 • ...,. """r $30,950 hmTy. Assum• 5%•/e loan Prime area. Entry hall, hui::e family rm, natural \\'OOd pan- e.ling, xtra baths, lines! built. In appl iances. 540-1720 TARBELL 2955 Harbor Q U I E T Neig hborhood-Ll1: yard, fruit trees. t'OSI' bushes. 3 Br, den. !29.950. Fl'ank t-.larshall R I t y . LIDO REAL TY INC. 67::,...1600 Beauriful custom . buiU five 33i7 Vla Lklo 673-1300 bedroom foqr bath home on\========= "'!~~~~~~~~·I two lols facing small park. Baycrest 1223 - P.lany e:-;h•as. As k i n g-------- SlJj,OOQ. Prope11y c It' a r. r~INE Bayt'?'l!sl Four BR !\light eonsidcr exchangr tor hontl' lor sale or t r a d e. thrtt bf'droom home Back .Secluded 11treet, large yard. Huntingt~_B••ch 1400 SMALL DOWN PAYMENT J BR n\\'rle!il apt \1'/ frplc, rlish\1•hr, '1'ptg, drps P LUS (31 2 BR apts. \VRlk to beach! 1111 0\\.111'1' ta.x ad· vanl.Kgi:o. $66,JOO. ~ Ali;o 2-6-9 & t:l New Units Tiil:: LINDBORG CO. Q !'136-2:179 l•gun• Beech 1705 BEACH CONDOMINIUM SPACIOUS 2 BR - \~ BLK from beach. Duplex 2 Bclrm, f1,1r11i&hed. fil'eplacr, blllns, very nice. Rent 'Iii July l . $WO n1onth. \Viii rtrgo11atc. 119 46lh, Newport Bcuch. 675--0389 ' 5•6·5880 (nNf cinemi tllat!t) OLLEGE REALTY 1500 Adams 11 Harb«,CM ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546-8640 OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 DOLL HOUSE ~~~=:I WATCH REST E. YOUR 3 BR. beach hon1e. Steps lo ocean. Can retai !Hi::% in- len!'!f. ;:tii.900. CAYWOOD REAL TY 6306 \\1. Coas1 Hwy .• NB • 541-1290 • LS 0 N WIFE Her ryes will light up when she ~g this sparkling clean BUILD UNITS 0 5) Builders Attention! Inc. Real to1·'5 645-0303 fa.mily hon1e .. -4: 4 Bedroom Lot 100 x 297 \1-'ifh good 3 With (ormal dining and fam-Bedroom home. Top loca· ily room in exclusive area tion! S.19,500. of J\.te.sa. Ver~ e. $41,500 • Wells--McC•rdle Rltrs. Tem1s are llex1blc. 111 d c ~2313 646 7171 l O Nl'\\'POl"t Blv ., .fl.I. • 548-7729 644-0684 E\•es. 'O THEREAL \"\... ESTATERS ESTATE SALE 2 Bedroon1. Costa lilesa., Easl8idc. R·2 zone . Invest· men! prope.rty. large lot. BALBOA ISLAND $21.,500. Principals on I y. 548-7218 or 5'11-2578. Bay area. 5'm-0173. &1~2000 J.::\'eS ~8-S9661-========= · Dover Shores 1217 AITENTION-BUILD~RS!. REGAL_ SPACIOUS \\'e have 1\1·0 level lots 1n Nf'l\'J>Ort Heights priced at COMPLETE VIEW $19,500 11.nd $20.000. One has ~Y & ~1tns. ~ Br, 41~ Ba 11 smfl ll "tearer . do\\·ner'' -r n1a1d.s. · High , cethngs. lhat roold be rented until .j()()O sq ft bu ilt arou~ court. you al't' ready to build. Oil-'n· 4 car gal'. E-Z main!. ~m· e1-s ,viii nnance on both. n1ed occr. $11~.ooo. (urn1Sh· 645.2000 Eves. 548-4810 f!d. As11ume 61t% loan. 0\\'0- er :>18·12~9. EASTSID&COSTA l\1ESA! I"'""'======= Open House Sat. .i Sun. 1.s University Park 1137 P.\\f, ?198 \Vatennan \Vay, A MUST SEE Corner o{ 23rd. jUll1 ~ of 1 3 Bdrm & 1 il Santa Ana Avenut', C°'ta Love Y • am Y "'" Th-•-•-d rm. 21,i Baths. Beaut. land· . . .... .,.,., • ....,ms, en, . • t' 1,1 b. · d' · · i;cap1ng ..: pa 10 attas. , -com tnallon 1n1ng • lamdy CULATE . • 1 N . k't he rtd AIA Jn OU • ear roo~, nice 1 ~ n. cove pools, tennis oourts & shop- pallo. 011·ner \\111 accept low I R all f al'"' ·~ t do1"n paymen1 fron1 quali· P ng._ e s ic ., p11 a CREDIT A PROBLEM? BUY LIKE RENT Cute rancher \Vilh iicparalc den and 2 bathroonis. nice- ly carpeted and draped. ?.tonlhly payn1ents include ta~l?ll and lmurancc, $17;) on this 6'iii Government loan. $23.900 FULL PRICE. WE SELL A HOME a~nre~'i. A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES EVERY 31 MINUTes Walker & Lee Herl''s a beauty \vilh 3 huge bedrooms and 2 baths. Gorgrou~ brick fireplace. DiahmRl!ter kitchen w i t h dish\\·asher. Beautiful car- pels & drapes. Older couple retiring, M1ys sell \\1th Sl,400 total dm\·n on FHA term11 or NO 00\\/N VA. Call for an Walker & Lee "'" "";""" 540-5140 84z.+1J5 4 f.IO'S YOUNG 3 BR. 2 BA. frplc. Plush erpU;. Take O\.-et GI loan. ls this sharp, d ean, J Bedim Submit down . $30,2·10. Seek l\feadow Homt. Former mo-Leadership -&42-4466 2790 t larbor Blvd. at Ada.ms ~:i-MG.'i Ope n 'Iii 9 Pi\1 NEAR NEW del hon1e that still sho\vs I --------- FOREST E. 2 BATH t'aelng beauliful laii;r pool, just 100 yds from pl'ivate bench . Laguna area, per· feet lor year round living, inveslmenl or rentals. \Viii sell complelt'ly furnished or unfurnished. 1\1'0 story plu!I lo\\'l'I' ca,rpo11, 11torage. laun- dry room . \\'HShc1· / dryl'r. \Vet bar. f·uuy maintained gorgeous grounds including 2 pools, 1cnnis co11rrs, l'IC. Close lo super n1arkcl s/MJp. ping, Coast lli,vay. Excel· lent buy, musr see io app"'c- iatc. Sho\vn by app·t C:tll 011'flt'r at 499-2152 or 835-a791. L1gun1 Niguel 1707 RcNTAL~ House1 Unfurnished General JDOO ------Why Rent? No Down To Vets C<1n l 'OU Mve $700.00 for clot1.. ing costs In 3 mos? If you C11n, you can ow11 th is OOinc TODAY! 11·11 a sharp 3 bed- roorn in a g1-e111 area. rrs in mov<>-in oondltlc11. NO\V. rn. eluded in price are \\'asher &: dryer, refrigerator. dish· n'i11sher, flre&!ann and ollJl oversized lot for only ;23,800 -See lhi1 one. at Harbor Center ::i299 Harbor Blvd .. C.~f. 3 BR. 2 BA., FURN. $49,500.i ===~~~=-~- 0 \YNER W/CARRY 1st TD CUST Bit 4 Br. 2~! Ba. Beaut AT GOOD INT, \Vint LO\V J\.tod Rn. Hse ne5tled in 3 A. 00\\'N. Otg Gr. 67,000 2:>':"~ dwn Bal fil'd Buyer. ?!light (.'(Jnslder J~~~jT REAL TY CO lease option. 01\'nE"l' ''e.ry ,; anxious, submit on prite and "The House of Homes lerm1. Available immediate llJ.:0101 like a model. Good localion ln fountain Valley, Exce:l- lent lant.lst•aping '1-'/sprink- lt'.rs fronr & rear. Priced to sell at $3.1.900. 0 L.S 0 N J\fONARCTI Bay. Pvl guard- ed area. pvl bc1ach. Charin. ing 3 yr old ~ledlt. w/lile roof. Pano1•an1ic o cean vie1v. !us. decorated lhruou1. 3 bi'. fam rrn. :\ ba, l111ln Spn11. frp!'s, n1a.ssive beam hi-<.-ellings. Cour•tyd ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546-8640 1~~<;:. O\\·ner R-2 Box 18 2 f UR."'I. DUPLEXES ON Corona 737-2976 LIITLE ISLAND. >..'LNT MESA DEL MAR TNC .• STE PS TO BAY. 4 BR. 2 Ba .• Family Rm. ON FrfA/VA TER\\1S $67,950 EAOI. Large yard. Nr. shopping i: I buy !hi& cute 2 bdnn &: _L Fr'wy. $28.000 Lo\\' dn. o"·n/ n home nt"ar eity park & t SO. BAYFRONT CORNER bkr <199-1990; 494-5488. v;nto,1n. Features hard· HOMES, EACH \Vl'rn BAY-. noon.' heatilator fire.' VIE\V AP'T'. XLNT· TER!\15. Ho.me & Duple~ $27,500 ace. fruit freeg. etc. It'• S11i1bury Realty E-31de 3 Br. pr1v 6 ,.fJ. loan, trd cant. Immediate posses-315 AfA Rlt-IE AVE. 673-6900 for clear hse. Lea\·1ng area. BALBOA .ISLAND Ov•ner/hkr, 646-3T'a0. $22,950 Estate Sale Co1ta Me11 1100 Lease I Option Immediate Great location, 1\·alk to \Vt's!-Possession cliff shopping. Clean 2 BR home, hrd\l'd floon, dining, FHA.IV A NO. 00\VN. 1crms f'llCI palio, nice yard. As-available. Nice 4 BR, 2 BA "l:l=:=:=::I suinable 6'/c Joan ava.U. on quiet cul-tie-sac, 2 blcks ii Lease $175 mo. Call 545-8424, to park, schools & shopp'i;. 16 UNITS South Coast Rt"al Estate. Beaut landscaped, all bll- STA MESA'S BEST i111, firepla~ &. dining. Out $275,IOO $251950 or I0\\'11 owner. priced 10 may assumt' a $225,000. Assum. 5Y4% Loan sell m.950. Ca ll 545-8424 TD at 6.6~ int. with 4 Bdrm + Famlty rf11 •. South Coast ReaJ Estatr. .ooo. do1\·n. Present in-Beautifu.1 ho~e. Huge tamily famous ''T4Plan'' occupam.-y. Price • $34.500. ["""""""""."""""""'"iii 64fr2000 El'es. 5--tS-6966 Come For • Visit - \\'ESTCLlff! 51,~s<i LOAN! Spotleiu~ three bedroom, hro bath home. Extra large Jiv. ing roorn. Beautiful n e 1v kitchen. S1nall dining room. Covered paHo. Large cornet• lot. Existing loan can be as- stay a lifetime. Thia little J BR. tO\\·nOOuse 1vill ll'in your heart at first 1:;la.nt:e ! Enjoy !ht' parks & pools & it's nt. schOol & shopping too. $31,000 e Red Hill Realty Univ. P11rk Center, Irvine Call AnylillU! 833-08M sum ed at 51,~3 . Price only[.,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!O. $48,500. Exclusi\'<' listing. 3 BR'. Bonus rm. Cathf'draJ &15-20JO Eves. 548-6966 ceillngs. Priced tor quick Bay .& Baach Rlty, Inc. sale by o"•ne1" 833-2234 001 Dove1· Drivt', Suite 126 NB - 645-~ Corona del Mar SPECTACULAR VIEW of HARBOR STAR BRIGHT 1250 WIWll TRI-LEVEL 4 RR. fam nn. form DIR, 2'l00 sq fl of graciow; Jiving. Takt' ove r IO\v int. FHA loan. O\\'ller will ht'.lp finance. The Re•I Estate Mart 147-1.531 $3500 DOWN I nc:, Reallol':!l entr. Spac. covered patio J UNITS ON I LOT area. 3 car gar. Assumable 1 House + 2 apl3. fan1a11r:ic 6.5•1: reducing ra•e loan. By money m~kcrs. SU1nmer owner al S74,900. -199--3931 by rents ca.n bf> raised. 5 Blk.~. appt. crnly. fron1 beach. 01v1ll'r will Un-1 :P;;-A;-;N:;;O'°R'°'A"'°"ll°'C"CX.'"".,,--y~;~,w ance \1•ilh niinimun1 do1vn. col'. lot. Pvt bch. f.Tonareh This can't last ovl.'l' nighl. B11.y. $25,950. 499·1 3 44 , $21,900. Bf!ttt'r bC' rirst arlCf 49.i-451 9 call now. Dial 9G2-558J. 962·5585 Mission Viejo 1708 OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 ** RENTALS** furn. Bachelor apt. Adults r lO!lr lo shop'G' . .' .... $100 Unfum. 3 8 1· h.sc. Gar. Bi,e: yrd. l\lds & Pt'l'> ...... $150 Unh1rn. 2 Br du plex. stove re fill:. Clean. Baby OK $140 * ROO!\l~IATE SERVICE • l\IANY OTHERS Free to Landlord' BY 011-'ner · l\1ission Ridi;:r J Blue Beacon Rental !<'indcn 2 Stoi'Y Spanish stucco, 4 BR. BR, 31: h1t, ;; l'llr garage, ·135 '.V. 19th St. CM 645--0111 2~1: BA, beaut crpts, drp11. 19131 Brookhursl compl land&;aped. B~ 11 t J5 f11onlh! new. llunling1on Beach \·le'v lot in I0\\'11. Lo"· ir._ 4 BR. 2 BA home -new BRASHEAR REAL TY teresl loan assun1able. Ph. errits, drp11, all bltins. quieJ 847-8507 Eves. 431•3769 BUSIEST mar11etplace In &3l-7643 c:ul-<le-sac, cl05e to schools & LIDO ISLE I town. The DAILY Pll..OT & 500pp'i· $245 n10. Call DAtLY P ILOT DJ ME·A · Claxsif)ed section, S a ve DON'T JUSf \VISH for llt'rltnge Real Es tatn is the word for this BAST-ES. y h 1h· 1 J · h ' U N ou can use t em money lime & eUorL Look some uig o urn1s yaur M0-1J5t lopen eves.i 3 lk>dt'OOri't + extra 1-o:'.:m. SIDE, 3 bedroom, 2 bath for ju11t pennie:11 a day. Dial I now!!I. home ... find great buys In ;,.,-==-;,~,c--'--~ Hardwood Doors. E.xisting doll hous.-. Schooll1. ehurch-&12-5678 today's CIRllslfied Ads. VACANT &. t1can, 3 Bi;: loan 7~~. ht TD. Vacant. es and ghOpping are a rew "=========.!.=========,._;..-...:======= bcdrooml', bllins, f r p I c., 231 Santa Afll. Avf!. CS. of Cliff Dlivel 546,000. BY OWNER. 675-3982 of the eMlra amenities that ·Gener ii 2000 General 2000 General 2000 large fenced yard . Only $210 go \Yilh this home. Priced ----------------------------~m.,'~·-'-o""C=-"'--~°'~!Hl.c..,41,c...~- al only $29,900. 3 Bdt·. 2 Ba., hse. Rec.. Priv. 54&2313 $@1t4U1A-c!&£~S9 ~~:i;,n;~"' °' ""13' me $.13.120. per yr. Call rm. \\'1th btt'place, entr)' stt this "lop-notch" she.I-hall. I~ li vin;: & dinina O THE REAL "\.. ESTATERS The Puzzle with the Built-In Chuclle Costa MH• 3100 nn park likl! yard with Large dble ya.rd model '\'ilh BY 01vner: Blurts Condo. 2 bu lit-ln BBQ fireplace pt\· boat door and 2 patios. Spac br, den, 21,~ ba. Liv. rm I--:::::-:;-...-,.-;""'=--o• i. f th 5 Bd l B •• Newport tlo. &!CJ.1720 . 3 BR&: 2 BA & I~. brlghl w/trlpc, wl!l bar, 2 patios. 2 ORAMA & FLAIR i!'rrro:t'llbl~~ords tJ! _,.-..... ..., · rms, athS TARBELL 2955 H1rbor family nn. Sep ~fasler SUilf'. t ar a:ar, entry patio, crpts, One-fo-a·klnd contemporary low to form'four llmple words. fi1't'pl<1cc. palio, cptg, dt'J'IS . ~====~~=~! Full carpel<! & drpa, all drp1. pool pri vll. All main. on ocean 5icie. Exciting 2. Close to all achoob. $290. SEASHORE DRIVE bltins._ Now at lu t year'• Incl. Luxury + atS42.000. 511 story living room. 2 BR ., 2 I NEE VA l I Lease or lease w/oplion to OCEAN VIEW price .or 129.950. Vacant, 11ee Avmida Campana. !Comer ba. &. den. All this &.. income, I I 11 I I bUY. fw·n. DupleM. Dbl p rqe loda.y. Heritage Real Estate. of Vista Del Om.) 644-2867. too! s;)9,500 I· Wells.McCardle, Rltrs. Anytime lmmaculat~! $44.000 call 5-16-USJ, (ope11 e:ve11.l Open Sat &: Sun Noon 'fil Hil Pinchin & Assoc. 1810 Ne,.<port Blvd., C.M. ~~~~~'!':~!I Georg~rolli~mson MESA DEL MAR 5 Pr.I. REALTORS rl _V_E_Y_O_.~N---.1 !" 5'1S.'t129 644-0684 tves. , OUNTRY CLUI 3 b• 2 "" lam rm Shak• DOVER SHORES AREA '"" E . Coul !fwy. 67""392 . • Across The Road 67)..4350 673-1564 Eves. rt. , bU.1na', a-Prs it_ drp1, YOu Own The Land ' ORJGTNAL 0 \VNER t j I J j l.ARGE, 2 Bl' at 1673 nd new. built by builder $28 000 hrd11·d fln. wnken Uv. rm. . Selltn, hl11 2 Br Ranch atyle lrvh~. Very rough on imlde. his own home. 3 bi& bed· 1, A' CRE C I o • e lb Te Winkle Pk. Beautiful pool 11ie )'rd, 3 BR home 2 bl ks. from ocean. I I t. \VIII rcnl for 6 mo at Sl~ I J $28.500. 546-9169. home wl elep.nl features, II•• hel m -llln"'*, l<e brick ·T A S U E r 1no. mom or leq. On Pt'O-ms, sparkling eleetric b kf •• ., •. i-i-T-i-..--t ~ ...... r .. • Sat mo , ,_. 70 tclien and yoU can choose Elegant enlr)' hall opens to DELUXE TO\VNHOUSE _ a lrg tam nn, l'f& ast trta, fb-epla~. to~ air heat. rj I I I I X Overheard· "Ske's 10 old .. ~ '3 • r · 1-• or t own carpt't&. all plus rear IJVlng rm, dining nn, Br, 2~ bath. Ha!! bullt·ins A. formal dln'g rm. 3 car Real iharp! CJ.II Ull for ske knew Heinz w hen ht had call 537"'8M for more in. bl 1 la~familyrm..witb fire-man,y e Mt r a l! +pool :••'fl.IC. S8 3:~0 0 . BY detail!!. only vor"et' .. formation. • _!,1t'~~ ~ml .ta..,;~ z~ pla~;"Be:!l....!, built·in applianc-clubhOuae t rec faeUltie's. 0 \YNER. &42"65l1 MORGAN REAL I R U JN I E I -1 111 ' .. ~• 2 BR.di dtn. lgt fro l'l,l ~" ""'' """' -·""" es. ~ •.w N. CM. Ca!!h to 51~ % loan. 421 COL TON ST. 6'7U641 m+!W ~· ~ni,-,.-,--,-.,,r-1 0 Comol•i• th• cttut:lil: quol e:d roo1n/ n m1 comb. Kft- talk t~Tt TARBELL 2955 Har~r By Owner. 633-9646. Open House Sa.I. 11 sun. 3 For Sal• By OwMr ¥ I j j I I' by till.in; in 1~• miulno "°'d <'htn w/eating moa . i 4 BR, l,_ bl, ram nn. COLLEG E Park. Au ume br., 2 bl. \\ratk to ot't'an. •lo1.uie ' P ra:t apt on 1 ~. . . . . . . VOi.i d1Yeio9 from .rep No. 3 b.Jow. Children ok. Allllll April 1. Wcstcllft Ftata area, 81\aa: 5%~ loan. a Bt, family rm. Community pll)'gr'Ollnd " Etch 2 br, 2 !>-. Rear unit • PRrNr NUM8E R£0 l lTilRS IN II r I' 1· Is I $l7l mo.~, cpt1, 5hede trets. $28.500. xlnt cond. Q ,500, Owner awlm pool. SZ7.50D. Owrtf:r/ CUlTf'nt lnoonw $2U mo. l HES E SQUARES • E"f,T&IDS-J Bft-.Mr-..- Klnpard l\.E. Ml S-2222 549--11• _ __ Agtnt. 812-.3137. ~In~ tront unit. rrplc, Adult• oni1, no p<!tl. llt RT Heights rambJ· 1 VIE\Y I.he 1un!Mlll fro m fhls DIAL di red ltl-5G'i8. Chaip BAY FRONT PDi'1HOUSE bay window, Pine p&nellna:. 6 UNSCRAMBlE A80VE LETTERS J j I I I I tlst St. or. ~ rt.net\ flyle I bdt1'11, lo\·ely, ~hided, 2 BR. dt'n, )'OW' ad. then •lt back and! Pa noramic view. t BR. J Ba. Vacant It rtad,Y It\ move tn. TO GET ANSWfR J BR.. crpts, drps......., ,. root, frpk. 128,000. 2 bo th ho'"' $31),500. T•ma. 1111•• lo t!te phono ''""' """k" soo.!00 JO~ do '"' Pr!"' 14~.!00 wllh fl!.eoo ICRAM•LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 dry.,. fters "'I'd.• . N'd Jtt. titl 2--2222 Owntr SCMOOT Now! tnt. Md<entlt, Rltr 646-0132 down. Call ~18. '-----------------------------'-°''-·..:;l_i4!1;;.;._;61.;;~....::.·:::.. __ • \ • • I I ' ' " ,. ' .. I: I :· ' '· ' I DAILY PILOT tf·B ~ASH! c L A 5 5 I F I E D 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 WANT TO CLEAN UP ON YOUR CLEAN OUT? FOR FAST! FAST! ACTION! CALL DAILY PILOT CLASS· IFIED DEPT. D I A L D I R E c T -- 6 4 2 -s 6 7 8 ---·~ .L P•w.tH ClllTl,ICA,Tt 0, •UllNlll ,ICTITIOUI lllAMll TM ulldtttltMll *'-' <trtlll' M *' c~ n c11111 1 111.rtlnn• 11 1'11 w, c .. tt H1t11w1r, Ntllo'POrt lfUl'I. C1lll1•11l1, lll\llef 11w fl<tl!IOll'I lltm "'f"" of MHU TOUll.S 1!'11 !Ml ... lei llrm It UO'llllOMd fll IN! to!IOWI"" hr'°"' Whlltt Mint Ill tull arlll 1111<1 ot rttlillrni:t I• •• ~1: HtM' G. ICtfbt. 11• Am\ttl Wtr, NtwNr'I l•ICI\, 011tc1 M1rCll ,, l t N Htll" G. ICrtbs Sl•ll ti C1Ulor11C., Ort l\M Ct\lftlY: Oii Mardi " lf10, bttw• ..,., 1 Nett,,. ,.Ubl!<; I" 1llCI for 11k1 Sltlt, Hflll\lllY .. >PflrM Htn!'l' O. l(rtbl know11 lo ''" lo ti. !lit IH'ttori' ,.tio.t IMllll II 1ubottrl~ to l!lt Wllhlft IM""'"""I lllCI IC~ntwlecil• tf hi eit(lfltd lhe Nll'l\t . (OFl'ICIAL SEAL) ilttbl H, CIMlll N1111r' "ltltolk.C1nttr11le 1tt111ci111t Ofll<• 111 Or1nt• C111111h MY C0111ml11!9l'I Ea1lr11 $e11tmH r If,, 1t1J l'vtillW.MI Ortl'tOI CoM11t D1Ur Piiot. Mt•dl '· ll, 70, 11, ,.,. "'''"' LEGAL NOTICE l'·lll-· Clll.l'l'1C•TI Cit I UilNlll PICl'ITIOUI lllAll\I 'The llll4tr11t11M do <trTll', '""' ire tOl\lllKl!nt 1 111111~u 111 o,,,,., c°""''· Ctllfornl1, llfl(ltr Ille f!clltl-f!l'fl'I 111m1 ti £U!ll MAIO •!Id !Ml 1alt l!t"' 11 i:"""' "... af !Mo l•lklwlt>t "'"°""' -.,,,,.., '" 11111 tllll 1111'4! Ill rukltl'l(t '" •• lollowl: 11.lcl'llf'd M. C110111l•o 111C1 Coli..n s. CtMUt lrt. nt3 Amerk 111 A .... , .I.II. A, C .. 11 MtH, ~6'7. Dt!ICI Mardi 4, 1'111. Col!Hn S. Ct ... uolto Rldltrt M, c1"1"t"' S!tlto ot C11flornl1, Dr.,,.. County: On MarCft 4. 1110, btf0r1 IN, • No!1,.,. ~bile 111 111d lo• 111d s1111, •••Ml'llll' IP,9'rtd ll lcl'll•d M. C111ut!ra 1nd Colletti S, C11111tlr11 tnown to m• to bf fll.t ''"1111' wllo1t "'int• ••• 1\l~ltrlbtd It Ill• wlrftln 1,,.1rumt11f t nd 1cknowlt'CI~ tel llll Y 11tt11llHI me Mmf. IOFl"ICl"'L •EALI Miry It. Htnry No"r¥ Public •. Call'°"11l1 Pr!nc.1011 Dtflct In °''"'• ((l\jllfy Mr Comml11lon l•1lr11 N•v. ,4, un Pubtrthfll O'll'tOt Co.rt Cally Mt rcll '· n, 20.. 21, lt70 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l"·Utt7 Ct:llTll'tCATI! 0(11 COllPOllAT10N ,011 l'll.1.NlACl'ION Cl' 9UllHISS UNDSll FICTll'IOUS ti.I.Ml __ _,,_ l'lle Under•lenecf Co•PO•lllOn "°'" NOTICI' ·:: ::~OITOllS 11.r•t, <trTffy 11111 11 11 '°llCluctlnv. Riil l'rtiffrty lle¥tlopmfftl business •I -001 t tJP1 1110fl COUflT 0, TNli l lrcll Sr.Ht. He"'"'1 lltt<h. Ctll!ornl1. ITATI 0, CALl,0.NIA "011 I nd t hl..,.llf'l'I In !Ill Cou11tlt1 o4 L• l'HI COUNTY 0, CllAN•I .1.,,.1111, 5111 fltrnttdino, Vt n I u t I . Nt. A-UIH fllvtraldt. 51nt1 &1r0tr1, S.11 DI-t nal Ellltl of FRl!O WILLIAM a110WN. Ortfltt; Gnci.r t11t llc!ltloul 111-ot •Ito k-.i I I l'flEO w. lllOWH. 0. OEANE tnd fftll N ld firm It c.omll01ft! of C.M~d. .,.. totlowl,,. car.ort llc11, llll'ltll Prlnc:IPll NOTICE IS HEllEaV GIVl!N Ill lllt ,11ee of bu1l11eu Is as lollawa: Crfllllllll of tl'lt 1bowt 111mffl dtc:Kffll OCCIDENT .. l PETROLEUM LANO 11111 t ll PfflOlll htvlnt t l1Fm1 Hll>KI.... ANO OEVELOPMl!'NT COllPOlt.l.TION, N lcl dea<trnl t•t re<tulrlHI to tilt tM.,,, 1 Callf0tfll• ClnlO<llion !111r1T1e•IV wll!o 1111 ntttSM•• Wllllelllr1. 111 lhe elfl~t known 11 Otlne flrothtts. Inc,) 11'01 of 11\e cltrt of Ille tbowe "''"'" ot"'1, or a 1rc11 51reel. NtllltflOrl Stltll. C1llternl1 !fi l>~Hnl tti.m, W!lll IM t'!Kft .. f'l' t16'0. _,...., kl lltt 11Menl1111CJ ti tit WITNESS 111 ll1nd tllh 1(11'1 Otl' of ,.1unlttll t l'lll Plunkttl, Altotntl'I 11 L....,, J1nu1ry 1910. 112 0 11¥9 ""'" f . O. lo.>: 'Hf, Munll11tlon OCCIDENTAL l'ETllOl.l!'UM llMd'I. C•llfoo'nlt '2'41, lllll!th 11 111t t ll <W LANO ANO OEVELOPMENT of Ol.lllMl• 111 Tlll urwltrtlt llO'CI In all m•I· CORl'Oll.ATlON Hori ••rt•lnlne ta the 111111 of ...,~ C• Ct!lfarnlt totpar1Uenl lftcffll,,I. within four man11t1 11ter lllt RtYmot>d Giii flr1I PUtlTl<•l1t" of !M\ nollct. Vkr l'•t1lM nl Dtltd Ftllrul,..,. 77. lt1t, \V, LH Cltt,!er I • ' A••l111n1 ~t!1rr s Vlr1ln!1 •-n nPt• Sll!t at Cal!lorn!• I AOmlnlJtr•trl• wl!h Tiit counlY cl Los An1tles ) 11 w!ll 1n11e••d ol !I'll 011 1111, Ulh dtY of Jt llUlrY 1t10, boFMI 11t1tt 111' lltt •llo~t mt, Htttrtt E. L!lorcf'>l•dl I Noll•Y l'ubllc lllmtd dtctdlnt In I nd IOI' Jt ld County 11\Cf Sltll. rt1!illllf PLUNl(ITT AND PLUNklTl' tl'l ... f lll. duly cDmmlHlontO t nt ""or~, 411 ONwo A•t .. '· 0 .... '" Plf'sontt1r 1ppe1rtd R11fl'IONf Giit t nd W. M1111tl111!111 lttc~. c 11H. n'4t Lff Cllritor, known to m1 to bl #It Viet ,....._I (7141 "6441» 11' IM••71 PrnlMnt 1nd A11ls l1nt St c rt I• • ¥ , AlltrM'n tw Affftl•lt1r1trlll rt~Cflvely, of Int Clf'llOflllOll tl'ltl r•· Wllll lllt Wiii MllllJllll o t<Ul«I •h• wltnln Jnslrumtnl on behtll af Published Ori n•• Co.st Ot llr to1111t, m. ear-•!lan lhtrt l11 ntmed, 1nd Mtrch S. 12, It, ll. ltto ol04·1t et;11;11<1wltdifll 111 JM 11\al 11/dl ctr!Klrttton -------~~~---eu•cu!IOn lllt •t me. LEGAL N011CE IN Wtl'Nf$$ WHEllEOF. I 111¥1 Cl!llTlillCATI OP I UllNISS illCTITIOUS NAMI Tiie Unot~lt"HI llof_1 <1rtlh N II co... !llllrtll'tO 1 bull,...,. If 201A Mew Orlw , C•t• Men. c.n1or1111, uno.r "" tklltloul llrm NIM of SUPlll!Mf I UILDlNCI MAINTEN .. NCf lllCI ttitl n it firm Is cotnflOilld fll !ht follt wlnt "''""· "'11G6f "'"" i.r, N~ and 1ll(t of rn lt....ct 11 -. follows : 11.olltrt W, Fryf. ,01.1. MUI OtlVt,, Cot!• Mes•. D1llCI Mtrtll 5, lt7'0 llo0er1 W. F,..,.e Sltll Ill' C1 lllornl1, Or1~t C11111tr, On Mt•ch S. lt70, ~ PM. • No+.rT P11bll< 111 tlld If>• Nld Statt, "•rllOlll!lt •-••IHI Robert w. F••• b •own 11 mt lo bl tto. peraon wl'lcrlt n1m• 11 1ubl.crllltd 19 lf'e wllll!ll 1Mlrurntnt tM •dc-ledMd fie ••«"'9d '"' ume. (01"1"1CIAL SEAL) Rutti J. Yanct Niii,..,. Public. C1llfl:lrt1i1 P•!n<IPll Ofll(I In Orlntt Counlv M• Commlulon E~olrn Ottt1nbor •· ltltl PullllllWil Or1119e Cota! DtWr Piiot, M1rdl 6, lJ, XI, 21, lt111 401·11 LEGAL NOTICE IUPl!RIOR COURT Cl' TME ST.I.Tl 01' CALU'ORNIA l'OR l'MI COUNTY CP ORANOli NI. 11-UIU HOTICI! Cl' NE.1.111Hll CF Pt!l'll'IDN l"OR Pll.01.1.Tli 01' WILL AN O POii LliTTlll.S TISTAMINTAllY E1t1!1 of WILLIAM M, H.1.1111,IS. Oe<111td. NOTICE 1$ HEllEIY GIVEN Tllll 0o:wt Cct1rcrr l'llS nlH Mrtl11 1 1otc:and ,.ettflcln for "'Obi!• o4 Wiii I nd lo• l•IUl 1'« ol lei- , ... THl1m.,.11.,. kl P11n1ontr, rtl ... t"'t 111:1 Wl'lkll 11 m..S. for lurther 1tnlf;ul1n, end ltl•I ltll !\me an6 0!1c1 o1 M1rln1 "'~ Hme lltl ~" Ml lor Ml•Clt 11, 1170. If t~IO 1,m., In tltt cour1r"""' el l>tHrl-m~nl No. l ol ,110 courl. 11 70& c;wlc (~llllr 0 r1Yt Weil, In tllt' Cltf ti &11111 Ant . C1!llo•nt1. Otltd Mtrt lt 4, 1t10 W. E, ST JOHN, cou~l'l' c1 .. 1t, IOW ... flD L. CONROY, IUI Nlrlll VIM Slf'MI, 4'11t1 '-"' A""le1. C1!111rnl1 ttHI Tth 011) 4U41H A!MrM~ lor Polllll"lf Pub1111ttd Ortll~t C111I Dtl!V P!To!. Mtfth .. 7. IJ, lt7CI 31 .. 10 Read The DAILY PILOT ORANGE COAST'S htrtu11t1 1~ mr ll1M 1n11 1ffi•td "'' tf. fldtl IHI 1111 d., -Ytar I~ thll c1r1111eak flrll tlloYe wrt!lftl. tOFFtCtAL 5EALl HPlf~ E. eordltrOt Natt ,..,. Fubll(·C.11111r1111 Prlncl.,.I Oflk t In Lc.s """I" COIHll'I' Mr Comml11lon l!•~l•t• Mttc:ll ,,, 1t11 HI. G UI llt AYMON D 011.L.., ""'""'' I t LIW tUI l lrcll SIAlll H~ IHc~, Ctllfrtr~ll '2611 Publl1111d Ot1111e COllf Dt llY Plkll, Fttinll f'l' 20, 11 t nd Nlt rtl'I 6, 11. ltTCI. ,,, .. LEGAL NOTICE ... ,,.,,. Clll.TlillCATI C, CORPOll.ATtOH ,011 Tll ... NIACl'JON 01" IUllNlll UHOl!ll PICTITIOUI NAME l1'1t Undersltntd COtP«t llen does ~r•ll'l' '""Ill' that II Is cOl'Mlll("ll,.. 1 RHI Protitl"IV dtwlollm'"t tl\lll'lfU t i ~101 S lrd'I $1ret!, Ntwi>Orf llta<;h, C1Ut1r11lt lllCI l h twlllre In '"' CO!i!lllK "' lts ilnftltl, $1n lltt111rtlno, V t n I u r I , lltvtflldt, 51~1 a1r1Hr1, 5111 0 1'" 111d Or1ntt; unorr tto. flctlllous ,.,,..,. of OC- CIDENTAL HOMES tn6 tti1l 111t firm 11 urn'°'"' of· tllt' loHowlnt co..ar1tlon. "'"°'' 11rl11cl1a1 1l1ct ol bll1ln1u Is 11 follows : OCCIOENTAL l'ETll,OLEUM LAND AtlD OEVfLOPMENT COll.l'<ttl .. TION, 1 Ct lllor11t1 cor-111ot1 !fer,...rtr knowft •• 0.•n. l •olllru. Inc.I 4701 alrcl'I SI,._.,, NtwP11r1 S11cti, C1t1ter"l1 --WITNESS 111 ltllncl lllil Ulll ti' Ill J111111,.,., 1'70. OCCIOENTAL •ETflOLEUM LANO 4ND DEVELOPMENT COJll'OJIATION C1 C1!1ttr111t (O!'Hrt llc"I R1YmOllll Gtll. Vl<e l'mlOtnt 'W. Lti Cllf11tor An l1!111I $ttftt1,,. S!1te ol Call!ernl• I ((l\jn!'I d Lei .l.!lftlff I n 011 Ill!• 1011 d111 Ill' J1nu1,.., lt1(1, ~I.re ""' w 1m1m J. E1ton, 1 Nell•• Pu!Jtlc 111 and fer ••Id c~nty t nd $1111. fftldll'l<f ll'ltrtln, dulr c.ommr11lontd '"° 11110M, p1r11;r<i11!r IPPllted R••rnoncf Giit lllCI w. Lft Cllr•ltr. known kl mt to be fht Viet PrnlOtnl 1/!CI Aulst1nf S • < r f t I r'. ~1•1dlvttr, of Iii. cor•ontlo~ llltf t K• o.eutffl Ill!' wltllin ln•lrumt nl en .,..h1lf of 1111 con10r1tl0n 1111,.ln ntmtd. tnd l(kMWP<IOtd lo mi! 11111 IU(lt tOrPlfl llln tl!ICU!lorl !l'lt $11'\e. IN WITNE$S WHEREOF, I l'ltw. lltreunto 1t t IT!Y !land 1'!111 1ff\lfll IT!V of, Ilda! 1111 lllt idtY 1..0 Ytlr tn 11111 ei-•l!fl<•fl 11'11 ·~• wrl!ltn. !Of'flCIAL SE.I.LI Wllllim J, E1tot. N1t1rY Pubnc·Ctllfor"I' "•l11dP1I Oft/ct In LO$ ..,,,,.ties CIHlnf\' M• Commln !011 E~flfO• Fifi. ll. itn N•. mu 11••-nd Gin, Al"'"'' 11 U w ••II l lrtll. Slrttl N•Wfff'f lttc:ll, Ctliflr~ll t?H• Plllllld•fCI Or1na• Cc•" 01itr Piiat, Ftlr111 r' 70. 11 •nd M1rcl1 '· 1l, 1t1t JOJ.7'0 LEGAL NOTICE C111.Tlf'ICAl'I Of' IUSINESI l'l(Tll'IOUI NAMI! l'l>t ulldtr11fllld Oot1 cerlll• 11w! I• ca.,. duC1ln1 1 bll1lntu 11 lJO E. 11111 St., Sune IC. Coll• ~·•· C11ltor~ra, u..oer 1~ 110-11110U1 l!ffl'I "'..,,.at I. OVV'S 'N DOLLS. 1. CINDl!Rl!LLA t rod 11111 st lt 1lr1T1 Is toml'Mfd of lf'lt fOllOWI°' Ptft(lll, Wfll»t ~llM Ill full Ind Pfl'f of rtllOen(t II tt fl!lollll: fvtl1n L, Auld, 1'11 S.~!1190 01., N.a . DtttO Mt •dl i, 1'10 1!'¥tl1n l . .1.11111 s11t1 ot c 1111ornt1. Ot1"9t ccu~ty · On Merell S, lt10, bff111e me, 1 Noll.., "ubllc I" Ind fer ltlll Sllt1, ~·•-11\1 tPtNrN l!'v,1v11 L. Auld k-n fl mt ta bt lllt ""°" wl\~ Mme 11 1ubsc•lbtd kl ffll Wit!>!~ l"1triJ11'1f M I ,,_ ICk-ltdt· fl! 11\t •••<~ltd ""' ....... !OFFICIAL 51iALI Joullfl E, D1 .. 11 Hellf'l' Pu1t1lc.CJlllOl'11l1 Pt""l11I Ot1k t '" 01111tt CllUlll'I MY C-l•llOll l .. !tto J-"· ,,,. ~llOlltl'lfll O•t~tt C111! Otll• l'\lat, Merell " ll.,.. n. 1'1' 3"·1'1 • / RIJtTA~S RINTALS ' RINTALS RENTALS RI NTALS llw nl thod-Apt~ol~ur!'.!ft~I !!!"!t::i:::_Af':!~·-U~ut~!_th!L_-' -t-• #1tt-Unlurftl ,1 .. ...Jw nlohM Coile MHI 3100 Cost• Mou 4100Coste MIN 4100 Coste ~ .. tBR nome;.~1.a:;;,..;;;,,,~""';;:;.dli:1n;~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l!!;!;;;;;;;!;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;1 Cute Me11 5100 5100 ::,.ro·~."&~ 1~ COSTA MESA'S SU AWARD w1N N IN~ SPACJOUS Oil Cc:rro bomf1, 6/) "'"' s.. eo..: "'"'" "" Finest Garden .Apt Complexes _.tegance mo. 547~. 54~ d , IJllMAC. 3 BR ""· bll-lm, FEATURING ALL MOOERN AMENITllS merrnn" ac woo s crpts. drps, nr &Chit. $1jQ PALM MESA A rt t mo. 5""'35l °' 6'IHM3' pa men S Oroll{le Cou11ti1'1 Mo1t Bteullful CH.,EEARFd'lJl"L ',,!?R, ear,,., Nwo Next to the San ta Ana Country Club. Just Apartment Commu·mty pe • u · ,,., mo. · Ftalurlnr a elub atmosj)here for your \Vil.son. M&-2802 East of Santa Ana Ave. on Mesa Drive. comfort and pleuu~ ui t completed e 2. J •<BR" w/pool. Xlot Call 546·9860 1 or 2 S.droom, 2 Bath, Furnlsh<d or Joe. Near rtwy. Unfurnl1hed. Alr·cond., soundproofed, ,,....,.,, VILLA POMONA A rt t self clt anlng ovens, beam celllnp, dlth· Aaenl pa men S ~·asher, lush landscaplnc, wtth 'treama LOVELY 2 br, l!I ba, Coodo. '-watertaUs, •l.,aton, BBQ'•, club- l\tontlcfllo Townhouaes, furn South on Pomona Ave., at 18th Street house le 1oclal actlvltles, saunas, Ja. or unf. 673146f Call 642 .. 7786 ~/~zt'o~~wim Pools. private guace $115 3 BR. HOUSE FROM $1eG-S2lO e Adull• p1,.,. * Yard. 962'43.\l * BACHELOR, I & 2 llDROOMS J111t •••t ef 2600 HarMr 11•4 .. n•xt te Neltwl CHlllec Furol•hod A Unfurnl•hod 425 MERRIMAC WAY, COSlA MESA e 545 6IGI IVIRYTHINO 0NIW-MOVI IN NOWI Mt 1a Ve rde 3110 2 BR Trt·plex & den, frlll, bltm, 11 patk>, new w/w crpt, drpa. tile. Adults, no pell. Sl75. Avail 4/1/70. Adults Only -No I'm ----------------------RllNTALS RINTALS ---------------Apt1. Fumlshod Aptl. Furftlthod RENTALS Houses Unfurnished M&-1;;54 co=u7.N7.·m=y~o=-,~b"'"v"'n,_1a-eo=-oo"'"o-.1 Corona del Mar 3250 3 Br. 21,S ba, hid pool. Adj. lo rolf course. S4>MSS. Newport Beach 3200 DE LU Xii 3 Bdlms. • 2 Baths Carpets -drapes. Frplc. 1290 JlllCALTC" Adu~~ BOnly co,..~~:~.vtnND 3 BR 2 balh~, split level $265 2 BR'. 2 baths • , •••.•••• $225 LI:ASE OR LEASE OPTJON AVAILABLE NO\V Gorpous & charming 3 Bay &: Beach R@alty Inc Bedroom home -beamed 901 Dover nr SuHe i16 r..:a Ct>Uings thruout • sparkling &45-2000 ' Evei. 548-8$6 tie.at.ed & lillered pool • m1ntmum upkeep yard. 5 BEDROOM'S Lease U';(I mo. Call 3 ba. Spacious Living in N.B. ~;;..s.t2.t, South Coa3t Real Esta te BeauUhtl hillside view. Ser· ,_,=...,,-..,._..----~ enlly. $450 on Lie. Water 2 BR. nice livin& room, dlr.- pd by owner. Call alt 6 Pi\1 Ing area, l\'/w cpl.I, drps, 642-3446. fittpla~. refrig &. SIO\'e. BLUFF'S 3 BR. 2 BA split level condo. Cu 1 tom de cerated. Leue/oplion. 644-20.19 Patio. Elec. door aarai;e. 4:J' lot. Adults only. no pets. Lease $22j,. Avail now. 644-1342 FREHSLY painted 3 Br, 2 Lido Isle 3351 Ba Duplex nr heh. Nu cpt1. ~tALL 2 Bd •-· Bltns. $230 mo lease . . rm nvuse. 5'10.-75~3 Fireplace, dbl garage. ref. 4 req. S225 mo, 673-88ll COUNTRY Club Living. 3 Br 2 Ba. 2 pooli, &:ardens. Sl2j Huntington Beech :MOO mo. Baek Bay nr. S.A. ·-----· counlry club. Bkr. 675.60« $160 YEARLY 3 BR. Fenced DELUXE TO\vnhouse 2 Br. 2 yard. Dbl garage. lst & la.st Ba, lrplc, pool. s 2 so . + dep. \Vtr pd, New crpt. & Bay(ront apt $33). Agt. rcdee. 17660 Van Buren. &ift.-0732 8 IZ-8263 ===~~~~ TOWNHOUSE. Pool. Sauna. SPACIOUS clean 4 bdrm, Jg 1055 Dover. 2 BR, 21,z BA. (am room. i\1 ere d 1 t h S240 mo. \Va1her/dryer. Gardens $350 month. Vacant. Bkr. 67;;...&'.M.4 968--2188. 1~~~~~--­TIIE BLUl'FS 3 Br .• Jl,I ha., 4 BR. 2 Baths; family rm. Pools. Nr schls & shop'g:. Children . & pe~ OK. $275 SZ75. 6#-2>137. J\to. Avail. 00\V. 962.-0460 University Park 3237 Fountain Valley 3410 2 BR. l ba. Lie. liv. rm. Avail. f.larch 15th @ $225 mo., incl. refrlg. 4 BR, 2 BA. bit-ins, dln nn. covered flagstone pa t lo "'/bit-in bbq . Near seh11. E-Fountain Valley. $250 ri.to. 642-2264 3 BR. + formal din. ~m. + 4 BR. 2 BA. Frplc. hlt-irt!. lif .. stp. rec. rm. 2 ,~ Ba. Cul-de-sac. $230. Avail Avail. March 20 @ $360 mo. 3/1/70. Call 540-6&37 4 BR. fam. rm. 2:';i ba. tm-La,.una Nl,.ual 3707 mac. cond. Move-in TODAY1-~·---~·----­ at $350 mo. ATTRACTIVE. t.lodern 4 Brand new J Br. &o llep. din. rm. 2 Ba. Avail. March 20th @ $325 mo. All ha\'e frplcs &: bit-ins PETTIT REAL TY CO. "The House of Hom••'' IJJ.0101 BR, 3 BA. decks, bu ilt In v~um , drapts, carpets, sprinklers, view. $325 mo. 31741 Jsle Royal Dr. Call for appt. 496-2763 EXECUTIVE home on the 3rd fain~,.ay, 4 BR, 3 BA, over 3(KX) ft of luxurious liY. ing. $.>50 mo/lse. 495-4889. General 4000 N.Wpert leech 4200 Laguna Beach 4781 The GORGEOUS Ntw VAL D'ISERE Sinife-1 br-2 br. Fum.-unt. Sauna, Act'y R1n. Billiards Thcro1py & U' pool, BBQs 2tlOO Pat!Ona: Rd. 642.srtn $80 Utll pd. Bachelor. Conv. location. BKR. 534--6980 $135 2 BR Triplex, children &: pets ck. Newport Beech GRAND OPENING IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY BKR. 5.34-6980 =========: 1t.uxury zarden apartm•nl.t 4100 offerlnt complete privacy, ----------1 beautiful landscapin::: ' SUNNY * unpenllel•d rtcttational facUJtles tn a C1)Untry THE NEW \ltlJ.AGE JN!1 Formerly Saddleback lnn, Laguna, from $35. a "<ttlt Lovely apl1. All utll·t, Uriens, maid, pool, laundr)o rn1. ~eps to beach. 696 S. Coast Hwy, 494-9436 sruo10: 2 blkt to heh for quiet adult. Ulil paid. SlOS mo. C&ll 644-4137 Capi1trano Beach 4730 S26 \VK.-S92 J\tO .• UtD. ind. f'um, Patio, linert1, TV. N,o pets or children. 4~•~ 492-5Ml * * ACRES * * Motel·Apts * club atmOliphere. Now Hotels 4971 leasing in Ne"1>0rt Beach. -----------1 J signal So. of O.C. FairJrou,nda StY.ille & 1 lttlre9"'1 $12 WK. A UP Day, Weff, Mo11r• • Kitchens .'. TV's incl. e Phone aetv., hid pool • l\Jald serviee. avail. 2376 NIWPOU ILVO. 541-'7.15 CA5A d• ORO Modtls open 10 am to 8 pm Furnished or unfurnished Rtnti from SU>s.310 Oakwood Garden Apartments 1100 16th s1 ... 1 714: M2·8170 Casual Callr. Llvlni; in warm 1---------- MESA MOTEL 1.leci, a.tmosphe~. Spaciou1 color co • ordinated a.pt1 De1te:ned & furn. fo i-*~0\V \VEEKLY RATES* stYle &: comfort. * Pvt pa.-Kitchen, TV's, maid aervtct. tlo * B-B·Q * Shq cpll He11ted Pool. * Gar w/ stora1e * Heated ~9681 pool * Kitchen v.•/ indirect Jightinf, deluxe o v e n ~ BEACON BAY -?ilodern 2 range. 1 BDRt.f. Sltl incl. BR. frplc, l~ 11undeck, util. 2 BDR1.I. $193 Incl. utll. S200 'Iii July lit, 673-5094 or Adults, no pe11. 365 \V. \VU· (213) TH 5-3477 son St. &12-197L 1 BR, large. Block tG pier. *'VINTER RATES Gara~. Students ck. $"'1 if tenant remalrt! thru llUJTI· yearly. 673-8088 mer-no raise in rent1. 1 BR 2 BR furn apt. View of Bay furn iuo. studios $115. 2135 & Bch. it85. Aflf'r 6PM, Elden, C!\1, ~ l\fgr Apt 6. 968-1793. SUS CASITAS 2 BR turn &: un t urn F'Um. 1 BR Apts. Adults $150-$17:;, Cpts, drps, bltns, only, no pets. 2110 Newport pool, patio. 1525 Pl&centla. Blvd, CJ\I. 642-9286 FURN. "'' util. Bachelor 1.10DERN furn 2 BR in apl. Avail April 1st. $137.50. nel'.'er triplex. Qu iet, wry 1525 Placentia. NB clean. Adults. 768 Scott Pl. W/FRNT 3601 Flnley, ~r. 646-2323 2 br, 1 bl, )Tly. srn. MERRIMAC WOOOS w/util. 83>-1134. FUm units avail, See ad W\. $135 mo. util pd, Winter ren- dr.r clus 5100. 425 ?.If~ tal to July. no children. mac Way. ~ 675-4533 303 Palm, Balboa Lido Shores Hotel Bayfront kilehent~ ault1111 from $'.!55 mo. SuJtes ' rooms by day or wtt'i;. Phones, maid, cofttt, ic., 617 Lido Park Dr. 673-8800 RENTALS Apt1. Unfurnithed 500I !~~!~.] ADULT 4 FAMILY SECTIONS AVAILABLE CloM to 1hoppl111, P•rlr * Spadoul 3 Br'a, 2 Ba * 2 Bedrooms * Swim Pool, PuVarttn * F'rpl. Jndivllndry fac'ls 1145 Aneholm Avo. CX>SI'A MESA iU-ml • RENT • l Rooms Furniture $19.95 & UI' l:Onth-To.l\ltmth R.entall WIDE SELECTION "O DEPOSIT O.A.C. l rl'R.C Furniture Rentals 517 W. 19th. CM 548-MSl ~155 Util pd. 2 BR. R/O, v.•J\\', pool. children It pet OK. Bier. 534-6980 $125 2 BR Trlplex., Patio A i::arli'.e. RIO, W/ti, d~ Bkr. ~980 Costa Mtsa '5100 1 BR new beaut tum 6 units:. l BDR.i'f apt, 1 blk to bay & Adult1 only. r.,1gr c p I beach. Sill mo-yearly. 2 BR. 2 baths $250 NE\Y 3 Br It. f&m ily t'OOm. wanted. 2220 Elden 646-5302 675-2539 NE\Y Single story Ga.rdel) Unill!. 2 Br, l Ba, ahag crpts, drp&, dsb\\·hr, t patios, beam ~illnis, frplc, gar. Adull1, no pets. Sl6S 2650 Elden 537--00&2 aft 1 pni Ir: Sun. ' 2 BR. 2 baths •••••••• $275 Carpet.a. drapes, bit-ins. eves. AT OCEAN: 3 Br 2 Ba Yrly 3 BR. 2 baths ........ S295 Days 541-5441: eves. 495-0797 1 L,-R=c~e-eo-,,..-,,-,-. -Crp~,-,-, -.~,,,.-. lse $300 mo or $250 10 July • J BR + bonus rm •••• $340 CHAR~11NG 2 br home, llln. bltns. nicely furn. Nr OCC. 15. Also 2 &Ir 67;5-0922 4 BR. 2 baths •••••••• $315 nn. Stcluded pa.tkrgarden. $110 incl ulU. 288:> lifendoza . CLEAN, modern 2 Bii duple:< apt. w/altach ed garage. nr Pll..lisades ... Newport . 1 child OK. Nq pets. 548-4969/642--0791 4 BR. 2\i baths .•..•• $350 Vw priv. bch. 673-0097. 545-5421, 5'fil.63l8. 1--------- 3 BR. 2•~ baths •••••• $.125l:=='========o SHARP Bachelor unit. ao1e Corona del Mar 4150 • RED HILL REALTY Condominium 3950 Univ. Park Center. Irvine 1----------lo OC'C &: UCI. $13:; payi \VANTS To sub-lease Furn. l Ca.JI Anytime 833-0820 J BR, 2 ba. crpt, 2 car, gu, all. Jkferences_ requlrtd. Br. apt immediately. Leav· 3 BR, 2 BA. new 1haf: c rpt s /drp 1. Fre1hlf pain ted. Nr OCC. Upslaln: 557~151 EXECU TIVE-Type 3 BR 2 pool &: clbhse avail. $225 Avail l/l/70. 54i)-4879 ing state. Cont'I Breaklut. BA home ,,,.1 atrium. Bit-mo. 540-6339. 1 BR apt. Gas & water pd. Tennia. Pool. ~21!1 in1, crptl, drps. lmmed. OC· $120 m? .• No children, no 2 BR. Crpts, pool, carport cup. Nr. UCI &: shopping. Duplexes Unfurn. 3975 p!!ls. f>·J>-fl991 wkdys aft 4 Adults. So. of hwy. Sl55 mo. 2 B1·. Houl!e $140 attach. rar., crpls & clrps, eardener, laundry. Jmmac. cond. No childrt"n or pets. 64&-2ll8 $150 + sec. cleJ)Ollt. Clnn ; Bdrm Duplex. Crpts/drp,\ 1tv/ref, •Pncl patio. Intanl OK. 22.W-A State. 642-7472. ' e DEUJXE 11: 2 BR Garde!) Apt& Blt·lna. prlv patio, heated pool, "1>lc· Adultl S145 mo. 546-5163 64.1--04.49 or 675-4497 -$00 INCL ulil. Small a.pl, Lea5'. Call 873-Sru Z BR, 1 BA, sm den. Gar. sm 1 1 d It N 15th &i __________ 1 yn:1. Drps &: crpts, sna:e au · r. 2 BR. M&f'll.lerlte, So. ol -45 \\'&hr/dI')"l'r avail. Adults, Newport. Call 642-55113 H"'Y· $XIO mo. No children. _lrv_i_no_T_•_r_r_••-•---"-no pet•. $175. G4)-IJM N.B. e NASSAU PALMS e * ~)-7898 * RENTALS I & 2 BR. POOL 2 BR &. den, 21,i ba. Lease $775. Open Sal It Sun. 142:) Santa Nel la TerT .. Cdi\1 Apts. l'urnished 177 E. 22nd St. '42.-300 B1lbN 4300 1 Or 2 BR. IY, BA. Crpt1.1--------- Gtner1I 4000 Coron1 del Mar :1210 1-------- t.fODERN l Bdrm. House. Stove Dlspos. Re tri g . Flrepl•~-2 blks market, ~hop~. China Co\'e. $135 n10. 408 Fernleaf. Shewn Sun 3/8. CORONA DEL J\.1AR J Bedrooms, 2 baths plua ~ncloaed lanai 2 blocks from ocean. SZ50. per 1nonlh on year le11:tt. "MfE Real Est11.ter.11 673-85j() SHARP 3 Br. home: unusual (1-pl.: din. area: built-In kitchen: niet' pitio. Sc-enle Properties 6t;.:;726 NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH Single Adults Lu.'<Ul')' sln:lt, 1 • 2 )>ed- room apartments, furnl1h- ed and unfurnished, with complete privacy and land· a-:aped country club al1Nl• phere incluclin.r $750.000 worth of recreational f•cll· lt'es desl.rntl! and operated ju.;t for \inale ~ple. RENTS FRO'-f Sl4~ lo $300 NEWPORT BEACH 8SO IRVINE AVE. IRVINE AND 16th (TIC) 645--0550 GARDEN GROVE drps, gllTage. $152.50 ulll pd. t.!AGNIFICENT VIE\V adultJ l8M t.tonrovla. M!-0336 Bayfronc l br, patio, pr. SOO & Up. 1 &; 2 BR. Trlr. 133 Util pald, Couplt!. 'Iii June, E. 16th Sl. Sp 41, CJ\f. 27th. Sl75 mo. Or avail yrly, 642-1265 613-6190. 928 E, Balboa 81\'d. LARGE t Bdrm new turn.1--------- crpts. drps bll·lns. No pell. ---------- ~ J\1endoza 545-5421 Lido l1le 43.11 SPACIOUS 2 br, bll-i"lt W/IV crpt, drpg. Prlv, patio. S140. Eve• &; wknd1, 646-6112. LEASE. l Bedroom duplex. 1 BR. Furn. Nr. shopping A°TTRACTJVELY tu 1 B $115 mo. Larae yard , center. 820 Center St. apt 8, . rn. . r, &8-7381 e\.·en\np . C~f SIM pallO, bt.yttOnl, view, 1m· 1 • mo. med. occup., 'lil June or $130. 2 Br. upper. 8ltn1, TR.All.ER· 2 Bft. $120 adu1!1 leAM' thru summer & crpt1 &: drpg. No pets. 5'l only. Bllchelor Ira.lier $60. loncer. 61~3000 \V. \VUIOn SI. 34f>.-0760 ,,c,.aU~&l6-,_...,IBO!l_ • .,·,,,64=--"":-:"::·,.-,-l·---------12 BR. 1~ BA. No chl1~n of $1.M Beau!. fW'?I 2 BR ex-a. P<l• G••li• Hid -• pando ~toh. Hm. 133 E. 16th Huntl....... tch 4tOO · · · ,,_,,_ ~ Cl-pts, drps. &t2-aM2 SL Sp 16, Cf\t 64Z.U65 NEW 1 BR.-blk to beach. JUSl' completed 2 Bit, crpta, Z Br apt., turn/un.f\1rn .. J)OOI. $150. Prl patio -QUIET! drps, blt·lne:. Sl55 mo. 2'5,l $13.l &: up, 226Z> Canyon Gar, single adlts, couple. Elden Aw. &U-3092 Drive, 646-7914 202 A 14th. 536-1319, 673-1714 QUIET AREA · Bf•ul JI'): ' l BR rum I untum, drps, t.RG Ba~klr. Ulll pd. Nr. 5 BR apl. 998 El Camino Dr., \\'/w crpts, pool , pvt b&1. polntii:. Mature, slnale !"dull 01. ~51. 631"'9585 8~79t afltr 3 pm only, $91.50. g.u...2219, Re(. It LRG z a; l BR. Cf'pts, drpl. J clean'r dtp req'd. or 2 ktds ok. m.f Coileat FREE UllJ turn. 1 A 2 Bdrrn Aw., Apt. 2. ~ leading r==~='OR=A=l)V=ER=Tl=SIN=G=il THROUGH A 13100 Olapman Ave. (4 blka \V. &ant& AM Fwy.) <n4> ~ , .... , NOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH •Pta. Ntar bt-1ch. SUS up. "°""L'""°"°''""""""'""'"'.,-~-1 5315-JTTTor ~m2 DE UXE. !lu llt -la 1. Carpiled. P1tlc, extrat. LftG 2 BR. Adults. Pool . $155 1: list. &M-47fi0, ripea.( I>lahwhr. $200. Util pd , 17676 SH 'RP , ·- Marketplace I w:::N:ER DAILY PILOT PHONE WANT AD 542-4:!21 642-5678 ANAHEIM NOW I.EASING FOR f'.fARCH OCCUPANCY m So. Brookhur1! (1 blk. So. of Lincolnl ( 714) 77Z-4600 Sout h Boy Club A p1rtm1nt. Cameron 84~121 " ! ._..e l bf, ctpfti dm. hit-Ins. Quiet llkla. Adu.Ila. $130. $17-2612 J f.ARGE l BR. tltc bu Ut·ll\lt crpll, drpo, Nr OCC. $ll15i THROUGH A LARGE l BR. petlo, So La· ~19una hech 4705 DAILY PILOT ,_""=na.,...11.'l-,--,l m_o.-,-lnd~-.,._..uw. 1 .. ~1o$1.1n. 499-2191 WANT AD 2BR2barana:"ch01,,.loc. $183 year 'round. S3i-a5 mol"fls or a.n 5. No pets. M0-9680 • 3 BR., 2 S-. Adlt1, Newlf der. r.lsc \\'eatclltt Shpt 1', 18th SI. 1115. M64171) llM431 s - 170I _.. "'I Inn. .. k. t.U't , :i "'' $10,; -1730 -~ci. No ml. ::1 >71 ..... •t .. ' ' ff]f. ice. 00 -; ' - ' " . :1 • . mt "" • 11 !411 -:10, ptl >A ... ~ ' ..... 100 ... har ! i~ pnl ...... BR "d :~ NV ins, 1tlo: "· I or ool. , Frldly, M""1 i, 1970 DAllV •ILOT 35 ~ ' ·::::::::::--:::-~;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;~;;;::;;:;~~~~~;::~~~:""':~-~~I RENTALS 'RENTALS RENTALS . ....,..-~R~INTALS REAL-ESl'.AJ=E __ _,JllAL ESTfil __ I· -,..~ .... -... -... •• ,_. ·-J...:;:i::'.::'·:..Unlurnllhod Apts. . ur ~AP.. ur i h1 Apli:'FUriillliM-G ... ral GtMral • • · '" • ' • ri;c;oa;t•:;;M;;;•;•;;;;;;;;;s;;1oo;c~0~1~;;~M~e~•~·;;~;;;;;s1;;00;/~N;•~w~po~r~t~Be~o~ch~~~~5~2oo~~N~•~w~po~~·'~11e~~·~•H~~~~5~200~~;l-8..;u;.;•l::;n1:;1;.;1:.:.R_e_n_t•-,--_-c-om=m=or.;;c;..le-1---.. -,-I P'honos Aro' OpOll 8:00 a.m. • 5:30 p.m. -------BALBOA ISLAND Improvod Comm 1<>11 Br11101 9 to Noon Saturday-Clos~d S~n&ey * GRAND OPENING * THE NEWPORT i..ue "o"' or omce. 307 Ma· BA1w '"''· 12 "' "' tt. • New and Dramatic as •,i0n"•' b'ro"•·-ffl. 1>'-04ill or ,.. "'anla ~~al .. • D IAL DIRECT ••• 642-5678 S · h c u Luxuriou1 Spacious Garden Apartments ~· • •"" .. tt EL CORDOVA APTS Offering: Olflco Rentol 6070 '42-6560 WESTMINSTER & NORTH COUNTY DIAL FREE 540·1220 Th ink yoli've seen 'gre41t apartments? • Private PatiosFO ""'R=-sa1-,_e-, -.~1,-,.....,bu,...,,Udl"'-na-.1 We have al.I the.nice featu_res as follows: • J-leated Lanai Pool Q6.8 \V. 19th St. Bethel Hunli09ton B11ch: 540.1220 Legun1 BHch: 494-9466 *HEATED POOL * REC HALL • 360 Feet Private Beach CORONA To""" ..... 548-17!& AJI. * DISHWASHERS * BAR·B·OUES I Bedr'm $175 . $275 DEL MAR lnduslrlel Ront1I San Cl1mant1: 492-4420 * SHAG CARPET'G * GARAGES 2 8.dr'm 325. 500 rmmaculate 2 room suite. - ' ~iANY OTHERS! 2 Bedr'm & Oen 695 Ground Door. Private bath. INDUSTRIAL SLOGS. lllltOll: Mw.,.IMn ahtul• check their •If• "II' aM ,.,_,.. 1,.,.ni•ll•t•lp errlf't Hours-Reguletions-Deadlines - 1 & 2 BR'a--FROM $145 For Adults Only $135 mo. Util pd. Parkinl". T\VO 1500 sq ft. bldp with er mltclauHlutt•ns. THI DAILY PILOT auvm• lll~lltty fw .,,.,, ulp h 2077 Chari• St. * 54>q376 919 Bay1ide Dr., N.8 . Phone 67~14 673-6757 Owner. air cond. offices $223 mo. tfte ••'l"'t et pdillahln1 thrt •tlYWtlHlfttftt cttnctly •• tlm•. (Just 4-00 I!. W. of Harbor Blvd. off liamllton) HUNTl~TON BEACH each. I 1., au-oond. otEC<! REAL ESTATE Air Conditioned $lOO mo. t lge. fenced DIADLINI POI COPY AND KILLS: S:Jt P.M. th9 t11y w.,.. 1tUllilk1tlM, 1a:citllt Costa Mesa 5100 Costa Mesa 1.=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;; 5100 Huntington Be•ch ~ ON llACH ILVD. •toraa;e yard $150 mo. f., W..Untl ltllfltn anti MIM11 MCliMM wh•n cl .. ln9 time It l :M p.M. ' 1--G:..:Cen~•~·~·~'------De::k IPl\t..., available in 847-1820 or 536-i655. Frl4iy. DUL T Livtng in a !m1aU coinmun11y -BeautUully 'landscaped "' i th Medit~r­ ranean atmosphtre. \Valklng ~ distanee to niajor 11hopping • -8: transpor\ation, Bluns-Shag crptg-D1·apes Garage \'-'/storgr. POOL 1 & 2 BR'o. $150.$170 utU included. NO PETS 241 Avoca~p • 642·2925 LUXURIOUS-NEW $150 & $170 All Utilitiet Paid · 1 & 2 ER. 2 -:w:.m pools ~ Adults on.ly, no pels. 301 Avocado SI .. C.l\f. '. See ~fgr on p1't'mi~s '(Behtnd K·t.lart oU Harbor at comer Rutgers & Avocado) Da.y 642·353.5, e\·e 645·0'283 MARTINIQUE Spacious gl'ounds w/ park· like surroundings w/ pri· vacy. Patios & pools. Nr. shoppin;. Ad··l!s only. 9UIET DELUXE APTS ' BACH ., 1·2 & J BR's Im Santa Ana Ave, C.l\f. 1'Jgr, Apt ll.3 646-JS.;2 ORLEANS APTS. ' & 3 BR avatl. Adults only. 1741 'l'ustin, Costa J\.lesa l\tgr. l\Lrs. Carson, &t24641 Fairway Villa Apts Nea!' Orange Co. r\1rpor1 & UC!. Arfulls on!y 201;!2 Santa Ana A\·e. 5~:).389·1 1 LARGE l BR, J 11 BA fhJdio apt. Crp!l•, d1·ps. stove, "pat!o. Children 011. no pels. $145. 126 Joann St. Se" SUn. 1-5 or caJ! 84~1584 eves for appt. , VIL LA MESA APTS. ON BEACH R t I W ted 5990 ne"-est office building at RENT ~t-t, 1125 aq. ft. $12> en a' •n prime l<>eatlon in Huntint· mo, 13.>5 J..oa:an, CM . YOU MUST HAVI KILL. HUMllll WIM11 kllll11t 111 ·1t1 Mc.•uM _, 111ulclr Nlultt. , 'HARBOR TOWNHOUSE 2217 Harbor near \Vilson • 2 Br 1 Ba. ground level Townhouse $125. • Heated pool • Adults on1y e Nn pets • Adj tn shopping HARBOR GREENS APARTMENTS • SINGLES FROM Sl40 e 2 BR li,J BA FROM $225 e : BR 2 BA FROM $260 • 3 BR 2 BA FROM $360 Carpela-01'Bpes.dlshwasl•e1• heated pool..gauna·tennis rec room-ocean views. patios.ample pPrkin;. Security guard11 HUNTINGTON PACIRC 7U OCLAN AVE., H.B. Bachelor, 1·2 & 3 BR. Furn/ (714) 536-148, unf. Fro_m $110 & up. ~ar· * LARGE new 1 Br with den patios • Beam cetlgs • . F'rples e Rec Rms • 2 Pools loads of storage, dressing Saunas e Nurser:( School ~m, Pullman b a th , Fani &. Adult i!iectlons. Im· D1shw~sher. Bit-Ins. St\ag ed 2700 Pet carpehng, Pvt Patio. l blk m • OCC\lP. erson lo shopping & walking ~~~ Nr Hrbr & Adams. distance to beach. Adults BRAND New 3 BR. 2 OOJh only. 8262 Atlanta. H. ·B. 5..16-2800 DeLuxe Studiq apt. Large --==o-===-- sun deck & p11,tio. All elec· FOR RENT l.ric kilt'hen-f.ireplace-cplll 2 BR apt, t;.i BA, newly dee· & drps. Also 3 Br, 2 hath orated. Built-Ins, dishwasher. upper deluxe apt. Fireplace. \Valk lo College & Shopping. large eleclric kitchen w/din. BRASHEAR REAL TY J;-g space-garage. See al 758 847-8507 96.1-ll78 W. 18th, Cl\>! or call 645-2626. NE\V J BR-blk to beech. 2 BEDROOi'.f, 2 bath. condo. $130. Pri patio . QUIET! compl etely furn_ished. Pool Gar, single 11.dlts, couple. & clubhouse S2l :i pr. n1onth. 202 A !·1th 5.16-1319, 613-178i Bkr. 675-4930 ask ror Dic k SPACIOUS I BR. Quiet. Dorsett Frplc, encl gar, crpts. drps, Mesa Verde 5110 x!ra ~tor. Adulls $1J(]. 8117 Garfield. 962-890t ROO:O.f'\" 1 & 3 hr's. Crp!d !: 2 Bedroom, crpts~ drps. elec drpd. Neii·ly decor. 3 br .. ?Hin.s: Adults. 543-32JJ9 or Ubl attach gar & frplc. 3 .):10-;x,99 Rltr. blks Lt'Qm bc:h. 536-1711 ton Beach. Air conditioned. 675-51J6 N aure .. Make a reclftl 9f th•, klll """'"' 1lven ,.u lliy yeur H taktr • 2 'VORKJNG gil'ls lookina: for beautiful entrance. Front· •lf'fflcett.n .r yevr cell. 2 br. aparbnent in Newport, aa:e on Beach Blvd., rear M-1 Ottice, atoraa:e ahed. Up YEARLY, pre fer furnished. leads ~n priva te pa.rklnr to 2 acres. R:_asonable. l••rr effwt II matle te klll er cetNCt •MW 14111 thtt hn ·haft.,.,.,.., ht w. o• !\Vil! take u n furn ished lol $50 per month for Baker St., C.~I. ~ n .. 1varante1 te tie.• U•tll th• 1t1' haa a-rM·•· tht-. ,...,.. . . spacr. De.-tk ana Cl'lalra ""t r~..1. \\'/reb·1g) to $160. Responsi· available tor $5. Business R-C -Costa Mesa. Build ble, have refe.rences Please hours answering aervh:e 40 Units, Phil Sullivan, call a.rte.r 6 . &l0-8308. a\•ailable for $10. All uUli· 01vner/Realtor. 548-6761. \VANTED: Roorn ·or apt. or tles paid except telephone. r . v· L 'd DAILY PILOT 1\'e·1n near 1a I o · 1717$ llACH •LVD. Shower &: room ttq'd. or HUNTINGTON llACH will share ·a.pt. Needed im· '42..u21 med. 613-6890 or (JIJ) U.1~fEDIATE Oceupancy. 3 '131-8178 fully carp e tr d , ail'-COn- 3 RESPONSIBLE girls over ditio~ office a r r a s 21 desire 2 BR furn apt ren-available now at 2865 E. till Jix-Easler \\'eek. Approx Pac. Coast ll"'Y· in Corona vie of 30th St lo 49th St. del ~lar. 4,410 sq. ft-rang. Newport Beach. Call ing from 1000 to 1120 sq. ft. 892-5966 From $150 to $774 ~r mo. • RDS • Area can be sub-divided to LANDLO 1uit tenant. 675-0500 for in· FREE RENTAL SERVICE formation. . . Lots •100 Th• DA!LY 'l.L'OT ,...,., .. i M rl9Jrlt t• claulty, ... It, c1Mw·.., r.tuM •nr, """ NE\VroRT OCEAN VIE\V. tlatmfft. IM t• chllnf9 lb rat• anti l'ltul1tl1M wltheut prier net, .. Zoned 30 Units. Owner. Call ' • 54~106 Mali Atltlr111: lu 1175, Newpert l•h. C.llt.nlla J32'x::.OO' E·side, take :?6 CLAISl,llD. COUNTllll aN lec1tetl •• fell1w1: un;os. SUb. A•kin< 144,!50. COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH A•'"I. 646'1750 330 W. BAY 2211 W. BALBOA R-l !I acre lot E!condido. Lo"• do~'TI. Owner 642-577ti or ~240 Acr••1• 6200 HUNTINGTON BEACH LAGUNA BEACH 17175 BEACH BLVD. 222 f0RE5T AVE. Broker SM-6982 ----------• DEl.'<. EXEC. OFrlCE DYNAMLC Rooms for Rent 5995 suitE's for lease; Xlnt location· O~ANGE SAN CLEMENTE -305 N. EL CAMINO REAL Daily Pilot Classified ---'--"-------I on Campus Dr. across from CLASSIFIED INDEX SHARE BEAU TJ!o~UL Orange Co. Airport. Suites COUNTYI HOl\IE! Pvt bath, kitchen & avail. trom 540 sq tt. to 1050 600 1 • d HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS o::l!MIHT, c--. "" ('(!!or TV prlv, laundt)' sq ft. A/C. c arpeted , This acre parce lS f'S· aaNtRAl '"' Apt1. Furriith1d ~:~L'~ttf~'.i,uetlnlf :,: garage space. l\1esa Verde draped. Call S..16-8801 tined 10 appreciate consid· coJT Ml! n• ••N•1tAl "" '.:~Jtl'lt CLlANtN• uu \" k' 0 an (w;th 1 erably frnnt Its price of~:?~ MllAA Dl!L ~1 .. ,. 11• con.A Ml'A o .. t~,.,.~T , •Y1Ne • 11,AI• ""'* ar~a .• or i ·w m 811t Loc•tion in CdM Cl 1y MIU v111:01 u 1t 011A,1111es .,. child, ok.J 519-3226. 800 to 1'00 -. II. n-1···· Otl-ptr arre. ose proxin,11 MISA ve•o• Inf NIWPOll:l •l"C'" ~ DI MOLlflON ... " "'I ..,., "" to b'ee~·ay1 & crnt~n 0 ac-COLLIGI ,AllUf lllJ NIWl"Olt1 NllGNft "211 ..... ~,., .. G SlllVtCI "" ROO~f In priv hon1e Kitch i s I A ai' lmmed r 'k> Full . ~1 500 000 NIW,O•f llH:" ,,.. Nl'WPORT SKftRl!5 tl:fl Oll Y'11'it.Lt. .... ' .. il • Lad ce pace . v • . ]~I._,, prJ~ ' . . NIWPOllf NllON1S 111• WISTCLI,.. tl:)I l<Lt:Llll:IC.AL ... &. laundry pr1v . y Phone Owner. 642-9950 With terms available. Pr1n. ll:ALIOA COVEi '"' UNIVIJISITT ,,,.. .,,, IOUIPM'!NT alMTALI "" only, $50 mo. tttesa Verde LAGUNA BEACH--~!pals only please. For more ::,~::::, INOll:IS ~= :!~~ :tJ,.,. :~ ;~::• = area. 549-1827 Air Conditioned 1nfonnatlon, plrase call IAYSNOll:lt 1tu cc110NA OIL MA• aH ~UllNAc• .,,..,.,, 11c. ...,, $15 Per \VK UP w/kitchen ON ro-~-A',..,...n..... Eckhoff & As1oc., Inc. OOYEll SHORll ltl1 IALJOA .. ,Ull:NITU•••rSTOllNI ru:..:)' wc.nv"" WISTCLll'I' 1tll J,t,1' !SU.NOS &»t &•tPUlllHtll• ..,_ $30 \\.'K UP Apts. _2376 New· Desk space available ln 1818 \V. Chapman A••e. NAll:IOlt NIOHL&NOS lt:S LIDG ISLI Ull •Af!Ot'NINO .... port Blvd. &1S.975:i. ne?.•est offiee bi;:lldtni: at Oran~ Calif. UNIYlllSITT·.f'Alllt ltt1 IALJO.l ISLAND USS OENlllAL llllVIClt "" ROOi\l & bath, pvt. entrance, prime location in downtown 541·26'11, Eves.~knds 5.18-59TI ~",,~•:•,,., ::: =~~~'l~~o:,,~~::" :: :~~;No. DISCINI := no ca.rage. Balboa Isl. $fiO Laguna Beach. Air condl· I ~~~"""""""l"""~"'."• l•••TILUF~ IHt SIAL ••A.CH .,. Oll:t'IN fNUM& • .,. mo. 67;)..3803 tioned, cazpeted, beauutuJ 10 Acre1 near large lake. ~~vT~~ Tlllll:Ace :::: ~::: ... ~·~~RTT :: ~~:L~~o~Lu.• :',: entrances: Front.age on l\tmt sell! SlOO dn. lake CCHl:ONA. Oil Ml.If 1ttt ••ltDIN GllOVI .,. MAULIN• ,,.. 5200 2 BR, I ch.ild under 2 yrs OK. Ri'°~!u~~~· 7r~ .... ~~~~~t Forest Ave., rear Juda to oYer $25 per mo. !!M-47.U ::~:: ::;•Niu~ ::; :rC:T~"~~: ::: ~:Tu::~~·~~~o••ATltr• :;: No pets. 2G12 England St. MuncipaJ parking Joli. 150 LINDA !Ill 13N "'"'" AMA .. ,. IMCOMI TAI( ,,. ' Newport Beach 11~=. ...,., '089 P1·ef. $60 mo. 64~5.l32 aft 5 -r month foi '"""'~. Dffk Resort Pro-rty 6205 ''" tSl.ANOS n~ SANTA •NA w11•HTI .. M •t:oN. ~..,...., 1t1. •:;s' ~. JnO. :.>OQ-.> rw -.--"'~.:.;_.:_c.:i:r::;_-;.:..._..::;:°"IL.IDO ISL.I IHI TUSTttt _.. IRONING 2 & 3 BR. 2 BA, p\'t. patio, FURNISHED Room. Util pd. and chairs available for $5.. r N v ,_ b S,1,lffA ISL.ANO nu COAST,11. UM INt.1.>l.AflNI SJj mo. Student pref. Costa Business houn: answering ANYO LAh."E: w .... t y MUMTHl•ToN ••ACM 1• t.AOUNA llACM ..,. INSUllANCe '"' heated poof. \\'a.Sher & dryer l\Iesa. 642-8520 service available for $10. ownr. S600 dn, bal $102 mo. NUMTINOTON H'ol:IOUI: 1.., 1.AOUNA NIGU I" . •1•1 INVISTl•AflM .. h!Kll... ,,. LUXURY LIVING hook up 962-899~ =,:,:,:,,.,:,,.,,,c.~-~~-,1 incl int 6<"' 962-3803 eves l'OUNTAIN V.llLIY ,,,. MISSION VllJO .,.. JAMITOt:IAL ,,,. . !o~URNJSHED Roon1-Student All utilities pald eXCflp! er If. '••.N. 1111.CN lut SAN (Ll!ME1>1T• •f lt IEWE LllY llUl!l'Allt.. lie. .... :? BR. 1 Ba, carpets, drapes, H tclephone. IUNSl1 IUCN '"' SAK JUAN CAl'nTll:ANO •llS LANOSCAl'IN• Ull NE\V. Spacious 2 & 3 Bed-blt·ins. near beach $135 n1o. prcr. Sj{J n1o. 1 hlk to .B. DAILY PILOT R.E. Exch•ni• 6230 GAt:DIN ot:ova un CAl'ISTllANO at:ACM 4110 LotKSMITN tnf ? B h Adult piPr. S.12-8520 LON• llACN l!M OANA ,OINT 47'9 MASONll:Y, lll:ICIC ... J'OO!ll, -et&. s. 84:!-408j ---m FOREST AVENUE L.AKIWOOD "W TlllPLI•, .ic. ttM MOYIN• & STOltAll ... Steps to 'VestcJiff Plaza · U.GUNA BEACH OWNERS ONLY OllANGI c.ouMrr IMI c.cNoOMIMIUM ""' l'AINTINct, ,._....,IN ··· _ ... 252 5620 Motels, Trlr. Crts. 5997 1G6 OUT Giii' tO\IMTY Utt NOTELI ....................... 4'11 PAIHTIM .. ,.... .. 645·0 Santa Ana -,-~-•..;9.c·'·c.'"=-= TO TRADE :~J:.. n1.Ta :!~ RIENTALS l'ATIOI MARINER 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. J 'VEEKL'l.' rares Sea Lark Modern OffiCH Tr11de lovely Cape Cod in w1sTMtNSTl1t u1t Apts. Unfurnished ~ :~::::~:;:v .. ,ia.. ....,.., = I• !\1oleJ, 2301 Newpo11 Elvd., best North Santa Ana Atta MIDWAY Ctn' ui• OIMl•AL ... p.'.",·.·.··-· ... ~ SQUARE APTS VILLA MARSEILLES Costa J\1e.sa. $75 single. $17;) 2 rm sulte. IAMTA ANA t•N COSTA M•IA 11.. • .... • NEW :=:=:=o=.======o= Air cond, Sect'y service, for home on Lido Isle, Bal· IAMTA AMA NeTI. ,.,. MllA v111:01 111• '00L 111:v1c.t ''" 1244 Irvine Ave., N.B. B~:~~IOUS Guest Homes S9'I parking, centrally located, boa Ish1'.'d, Ba Y Shores, :~:.;i,:• · :: ::::::~ :::::rs =: ::=:•.=::,~~'*'• :: Owned • m•n•ged by So. Calif lst Nat. Bk. Bldg. Shore Chu, Dover Shore!!. 1'1011TM TUSTI.. -... Nf:Wl'Oll:T SMOll:ll ''" llOOjlllM• .. NEWPORT BEACH 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apt1. ·"'"""°'""-:::-;:::-:T.1d=I Co M ,..1 • .., Our home Is 2900 squ~ ANAHl!IM .r 1 w11TCL1,., '"" 111.010 •• .,..,. 11tc. ,,. The Irvine Company Adult Lo'vo'ng PRIVATE Room for e er y sta esa vu-"°" • ~ILV l!""*DO c.1.NvoH 16$11 UNIVlllSITT l'Altlt .,,, ll:IMOM'LINI • .,, .. ,. .,.. I d · f sed t ho feel, On lot l2:i by 175. Old· HAVASU LAKI 1411 IACK IAT 1241 ltlMOOILIN•, l'.rTCMIQ .,.. DELU.,E 2 b•·. 2 ba. condo. Furn. & Unfurn.. a Yin icen gues me. CORONA DEL MAR er home but clasisically re-LI.GUN• 1H1.l1 1'• EAST IL Ul'I' 12ti s--. ....,_ .,. ; 2 BR unfurn, pri patios. htd ~~~~~""~""""~. pool. 2 eat' encl'I :;;er. ChU. ; dren 11Jelcou1e, no pets please? $Hi0 also ft1J'11 ~185, 9 \V. \Vil.son 646-1251 2 BR Unfurn. Newly dee. New crpts, & drps. Spac. grounds. Adlts. no J)l'ts. $1·10 mo. 2283 Jo'ountain \Vay £. (Jlarbor, !urn \'/, of \Vilsonl. \Vilson Gardens Apts . * TOWNHOUSE * 2 ER. t 1 ~. BA, crpts, drp~ . ~ patio. Adults. $160. l:J.f E. l l\1!.'locly La n e. 6~2-6872, : • 5'18-1'168. ~ I 646-3391 Deluxe suitP.s avalJable, ra.ng. d 'th dd'ti u l AGl)NA ..... cN ,, .. COll:ONA Oil 11'\Alt J1Jt SIWIN• ,,. F"rplc, 11.,1,. crpl, drps. hll· Dishwasher. color C001u1na · one WI a 1 ans recen y, LA~'N I. Hir1i~L ''" IAltOA 5,. llWINI MACHIN• ••l'Alll ..,. ins. 51,•immiri'"'• pool. putting ed appliances ~ plush ~hag 5999 ing from 550 sq rt lo 1720 Excellent achools -high in. MllSION VIEJO tr• aAY 15u.,.0s llSI saPTIC TMU. Sewn, If• ...., I . I ' I Misc. Rentals en .. •Sc .. , •• -ED I . --·· ..... '"I "MINT~ 1111 ,, •• ,,,, ... , ,,,,,,,.. ... green, luxurious lanrlscap-carpet • c 101ce o -co or :.;.;.c.;:;._:.;.:..;;.c _____ I "" "· · '" come -pro essto • ....., as '"'" JUAN cal'•STllAMO 1n1 f" ing, pool main!. Adn!ts pref. schemes • 2 baU1s • stall 15,000 sq fl. Fenced R 1 DD LE, REALTORS. neighbors. ?tty daughters CA1'15Tl:ANO llACN 1rn :g:;:~~~:o:A~f:~" .:: ~~:1~11~~C:,NTll:OL ;; No pets. Near Newporl Bay, sho\\·ers • mitTOred ward· Storage yard. Call • 646-8811. \vant a 1veltE'r climate -DANA l'OINf 11; ''"soA ISi.ANO '"' r11.1:,--1.1n9!Wm • Mtrflll ,;;; S!iO illonthly Le as e . robe doors • indirect light. 548-7027 or 642-1121. OFFICE space for rent. so if you nttd a drier one-:r:1~:: :;,, llAL alACN •di r:~:vt:1~~~:tNI,.., IM. "'9 0.-18-61?9. ing in kitchen . breakfast Laguna Ni.,.,•el area sso lei's trade! Call (TI4> 541-2903 1:1vaas1oe C.O\INT1' 1111 ~::o~.,~~~TT :!:: Ul'HOLlff llY " Garage for Rent; Fully .. ~ . HOUllS TO •• Movao ,,.. OAJIDIN 0110¥1 Ull Wl!lOIMG ... BAYFRONT 2 BR. 2 BA luxury apts. Pri. terral:e, elevators. suhler. taneen pk'g. All elec. Pool, soft ll'a1<'r. boat docks. $350. up. 3121 \V, Coast Ji1vy. Ncw- J)Orl. 642-2202 bar • hUge private fenced Enclosed, single. Call mo. 49:>-0411 alt 6 &: Wk· after J p.m. Princ1pa.ls only, CONDOMINIUM ~= WEITMINSTl!ll: ... , WINDOW~CLIANINI .,.. _ __,. "'' patio • plush )!lf>OSCaping • OR '1613 'd""S. ends. pleue. OUl'Ll!Xll PO• ,,..,. .. MIDWAV 'CITT "" • j brick Bar-8-Q's . large heat. "' -====.---.---l"'"ll:TMIN'TI •0• SALi SAHTA •H• ~· JOBS & EMPLOYMENT lofARINER's CENTER BUSINESS and ~NTA AIU NlllN1S s.• ,0, wA•T•n. -.. ,_ ed3fOJ15s!.1&';i~tol St. Income Prop9rty 6000 Office or Store Bld1. Rent or FINANCIAL RENTALS • c0.t.'I~L :;: :: :=:: ._ ~ -'-'---'--'---'---lse. 149 Riven;Kle Ave. NB. h-..1 U.•UN,t, llACN n• MIN a WOMIN ,.. (~; 1ti. N. ot So. Coa.·t Ph,ta) 4 _ PLEX 646-2414 Buslne11 HouHt Furni1 -LAGUNA Nrout t. 1111 SCMOOLS 1 IHn11:uc.noN 1'11 S t An. 0 ~. • I .i:•-MISSION VlfJO f10f P•IP •&flON -an• ~·-9.9"" COSTA l\fesa offices. A/C, ppoiiuntt •• ..._ Ol'Nlll:Al 1111 s.IM ct.1MINTt JUI Joa " P HONE : 557-8200 -"" ll:IHTAlJ 10 ...... ,.., SAN JUAN CAl'ISTllANa J'1f THUT•ltAl ,.. $12,000 DN. ('rpts, d1·ps. Parking. 1555 ---------1 • 3 BR, 2 ba. Near Orcan.J~~~~~~~~~~-~-. Pride or ownership -Corner Baker. 646-4833 or 548-4757 FOR Lease • Re.tail Tire ~~',',."~~s~All: ::: ~~i;::T::~ llACN ::: MERCHANDISE l'Olt ' 108~1: Grant (Corner of · p ti Store heart ot Costa Mesa MISA v111:01 tn• REAL ESTATE, SALE AND TR.ADI I NEW TOWNHOUSE Grant & Seashorr). $300 Mo. Laguna Beach 5705 local.Ion. Fenced a 0~ -NEAR C.M. City Hall. 3 Rm. • . · coLL101 l'Allk uu !'UllNITUll:I - Ycly. ti 1 716-1013 days. Out-0f.to11'l1 o\\·ner. Live in Offi ces. Pane.led, carpel..'I, Could be used for ahgfl-NIWPOllT lt!ot.CM 11• G9ntr1L 0,,.rc• l'URH"Ull •M 2 BR, 1 1 ~ BA & 1 & 2 BR. one • let renWs pa" ox d $150 Call ...... """" men!, brake, tune.up or ll11Y NIW,OltT MOTS. Ult Tll:IPLIX, .,L ,, .. O'!'ICI ••UIPMINT ..... Crpt<J, drps, .~elf cl11g gas &1~27-18 r.vrs. l·BR. Apt. u n ru r n.' ' 3 . rapes. . "'""""""' ttlated IU!O repair ahop. =~:..~".T.:HO••• = CONDOMINIUM fKI ITOltl IOUll'MINT . oven. &15-21~. J77 \V, Wilson HONEY~IOON view a Pt. doY.'nto.,.,'n, Lease ••..•• $115 penses. CaU today 646-nn. 600 SQ FT OFC. ldeal set up for retail tire DOVl!lt s"o••s nu :::~L:o":A1tN1T:f r,:: ~::1io~~:~U,.~"' = BR. $1'.re mo. -2 BR S\35 elegant carpeting, 2 Bdrms, 2-BR .. Apt, unfurn., good $90 ~lo. C.1\1. 646-2130 __ I o~rat~. 6 bays, 2 &llgn. ~=~~~~~~ 'Allllt :; ~:,.~Lt ~~'t.~111: cou11:1s ~~ :!~!~:Ot;!L:OODI :: mo. Crpls. rlrp.s. fl"'IOl. No fireplace, garage s 250. location ... ' ...•..•..... $200 SJ\fALL Office: on busy cor-pits, Ready lo go! Contact lt:VIM I ml GUIST KOMIS '"' PUllNITUt:I! AUCTIOM - pets or childrrn. 325 E 17lh !HS.2394 1-BR furnished duplex, frpl., ner Costa MeM $55/montb lit. Kenney, (213) 469-5354. •ACX 11.v ti• MISC'. al.,,.AU ''" A'PLIAMCll 11• r'I. Cali 6'" ""''··· ocean vie\V ........ ' .... $1501 -======::;::::::=== "lilt'!•'•• ... cl"d-'. "~?."=" 111,· Ne••! Blvd C>I IMT •LU'' !!.~.' INCOMI! l'llOPl!ltTT .... .ulflOUll .,,, ~'"""" 'BR upper. :i, Bath. l\OSSJON REAL TY ~94--0731 5 I """ ,,.._"""" .. • II Tt,. .. •USINESS PllO,IRTY f t!f Sl!WINO MACttlHll lltl 2CJ4j Tvs1in IBI. Large 2 Ne11•po1·t ls.land. Carpeted. DRIVE units 26:?7 NE\VPORT BL v D '' COIN laundrles-FJig1daire ~~==· T::~A~. ~:: ~~~·:~::, ·:::~,.~ ::: ~,~,~~i.. ~:~:~:'IHT :: BR'l!, Palla, ;;Br, cpts, drps, t ease $135 Yearly. 1:!131 100 CLIFF acroBS from El Rancho From $6,500 lo S.f 2,5DO , SALffA !~: oF~tC E a!NTAL •fl• llAOIO '"' bl!-ins & laundry area. 796-::WO $170-1 B'R, JI ; BA, $18f..2 ~r. f · 2 bedroo1n. & 1 three bed ,.farket. Realtor 673w6:?10 Anaheim, Co.!ita ~f e 11a, ~i'i:o 1:~t;os l ?SI ~~~~:~~Ll'ROl'll!ll:T• :::: re1.1v1srOM -. I 3811 JI Bi\ Cr:its drps bllins room. •i>:l w cal'""''· dra""S, a ....... p-~·, F"llerton, ••••••is·••• '"' '41·1'1 & ST11t10 "" Avail itnn1f'd. 6• &-I BACllELt>R Ap1.. no cook· ? -. . ' '. r '. ' ' • .... .. w D\l'C•-<LCA .... lNOUITll:IAL lll!NT•L ·~'' rot.Pl RICOll Dllll 1221 . . I d cl V1e1\· of otcrin \\ alk1 n ... dlS· all with patio!;, 5 closed gar· Ga rd en Gro v e. NU"1'1NGTON SIACH '* LOTS '"' CAMEltAI • l!OlJll'MINT .. NE\V dlx. l & 2 BR. Shag ing, SIOO util\tll!S inc u c . ' ·-o P:OUMTAIN VAL'-IY t4ll II I S 61'f 613.~"t ta.nee Lo 101vrt. Al!IO f11rn. ages, all located on 2 large Industrial We1tminater, Huntln ..... n 11,,.,,,,. tut AN:N · HOllV IUP,l.111 .,. ll d h11ins I 1med ~ k 6 "' CITll:US GllOVIS ,.7' il'OltTINI eooos -1 crp !I, L'J):<, • n ==~~""-~--~~ E:li:i<·hrl(lf, \'t'i'Y ltirgr. Sl70. lot,, completrly fenced, 11111.l Property 60IO Beach, Santa Ana, Tustin, LONI llACN u• AClll!AGE &:ct ltNOCUl.All:S. 1cop•1 .. _ , occupy. $16().$180. 3·10-1973. CUTI!~ 1 Bi;t. Nr ocean. bay 491-2W~ or 1:).1 ;,:;o::. to m11.jor shopping center. La J\fil'ada OllANGI t ouNTT ~:: I.Alf'-' Et s•NOl!I '~e"J >,ttSCELlJJrllOUI f l;-15-23'.?I. & perk. No Jl('ls, $1'.'l"i n10 OJ'I UXE 2 BR 1· t ..... " liv noo 20"t do11·n & o11>1"1er \viii [in.1-,-B·U-IL-D-E_R_O_F_FE_RS_ NEW C&JJ Charlie. 5..'15-78M ::~~~.~~~e11: t,11 ::!~~~ ~~?~~~:.1"'' :~:~ :!~fiu~:::.•:,., :',: I • 2 BR • 3 BR • v. cl)'. Avail Apr l 1. 6i::-'.!2:.G . ·' . . . fl ..,, ' ,,,,.-. Bk•·. "'9'''. ·21.500 "l· lt. deluxe bldg. • ' lilllDWAY (lfl' ,.,, OUT ti!' 51'AJI 1'1101'. nn '·'""''' ... ' · f1·11I. 2 pati·-•. fal>o1l-oo'.-1•ir11·. " ""v,,,,., '"'000 AFFORDS I'-o-Io T• UM I C v.> v •' ,,_,, '"' >' IANTA AHA M I H MOUNTAIN I OlllltT ltlt STOlt.lOl tnlr .. j BACHELOR apts. rpls, CONDO. 2 Br. zi" h11 .. fpl. f-,,· •l•p•. 10, l"'"'"h. r··"''''· JNV''ST'IENT TAX ' 0 rtu I"' t be · b · COASTAL trlt SUIDl'llllON U.ND •tit , <><>o ,-~ .~ ......... "'' " • Leased, choice range po n 'J o tn us1ness , •0""' ''"'" nw •'w",",o1iN5 ~Tlll:tALI "" 1 drps, bltns. No ""IS. ~;, Obi. g'". Adnlls. $240 l\lo. 00• "nfoto·. ,,.,,·1. ., lat·. ''· SllELTER p 1 11 , -di d 1 wo ""' 1tEAL ISTAT• s1av1C• 611S t ~,4 .., " " " County area. roperty or youru ...... esrea Y OuoUNA N1oueL t7'7 11:.a. IXCNAHOI ,,,. \ l\lendoza. 5.1~:;.121 ronl•<. Realtor 6\'J..~illf.() ·I". I·"'~. 'd -~ ~ tu th I 110• v ''° --d IVESTOCK .• "'"'•' T1 •;ir!f's co11&1 ea~ clear. Owner w/~'t"f lst wear 11tott:, ... r r er n· Mts ' .., .. It. L WAflTIO •ut PETS an t. -==--""'c-...--:=-ooc M =75 SAN Ct.I MIMT• ,n. • LID..1JRJOUS 2 Br. 1 ',~ Ba. DELUXE 2 Br, 'Ve.slcllfl loc z BR .. 2 BA .. 1\. l~nd. Ell-Croul ilul IJ unit 100% aparl· TD 8~''70. Pnpd int ok. for, Call days 8~ , eves 1,,. '""" CAl'llTltAMI m1 IUSINES~ 1nd ~e ts, 111Nl•A" - ' C1·pts. drps. GE kitch .. Jlfl· Pool & bit-ins. Adults. S200 ins. Patio, Coasllirie Vie,... 1nrn! t'0!11 plex. l\fanager 530-3645 am, 82&-5430 pm. 53&-2979. :,~T::,~~ 111.cN ~= 'INANCIAL ~~~11 :; ' lio. encl gar. 11r bull. $150 no lse. 642-6274 Adults. $19:1. •19·1-30~1 11·111 t ... 1;11111ue. 6~~~)) i~terest NE\V Bldg., ll.000 llq ft for E~IPLOYMENT AGENCY •IVlllJIO. COUNTY t• IUllNf_SI WAMTID ''" MOll&EJ ... adults. 120 E. 20th SL 2•<s;;R>;d~ot~p;;l,~x-. <s.~a;s~l~~,.;:;-'io>.,c.1 'L~G~E~.~,~•ie~•~'.~l~B~Ri:-, ~s.~1•~~ • .,,--.,-,111. r.t1r: $.i0.000 cash mln11num. sale or lease For details Newport area Eatablishtd 3 VACATION ltl NTAt.t :;: ~':,~~~~s':~'"°~::;','ia = Ll\ll!lfotX - 1 <SBR. 2 ba. crpl &drps. Bit-f'urn/unr. New r.rpt. ilrps. Sl:t'i. Cpl, d..,..s, slovr, ref 1\1:\, 111"· O\\'llf>r P.O. Box ll • ·• I yn,, irowina: business. Full ;:~=~~nJ,.':,ltM. •11 tN'(•ITMINT wot.NTIO '"' CALIFOJlNIA LIVING, • ' N I d N o 922 "8"81 ''' _J.".(;1, N.U. li11i (i.l:.!-J:ilii, 8U18 f8 ftt n· "000 te-m• The MON•Y TO LOl>lf '"9 NU1ts1 1t11!I .... ins. ellJ y ecor. 0 pe s. 'l.'r lsc . 6·16-6 ' ..... ,,., avail. Sal·Sun. 499-2J91 ~ p Cf: .... • • • Plll:IOfilAL LC>ANI '"' IWIMMINI ,ODU ... $15.'i. Avail J/15 . !JG:?-3894 -"'"="'="==='==== 1 ;:;;,;;:~~.:;:;:;::.:.._ i\lr. l.iJP 642-6560 R~al Estate"rs 646-71n 1.11k RENTALS J1wauv LOI.M t '"' l'ATiot ""' , 1021 f\.·tis&ion Drive, apt c . Back Bay 5240 GARDEN Apl. 1 bdrm. nr \\111\' buy apt~. 11-hen .~1000 for Van Cot.1.ATlt:Al LOAMI C3S llWNINOt .. heach, utl. paid, $1 3 O dn, S70 nio. on land gets you Commercial 60IJ CHINCHIU.AS, Rea.s. Are HoUIH Unfurnished ~~~=:l•,.:;::,_ ~: v•C.ATKINS Mt t DELUX E 2 Bl', 2 Ba, crpts, VlE\V. 2 BR. Carpets, Adul!s, no pele. 49J-826:?. be 1 & tun ,.. MOMIYWAMTIH> 41M TRANSPORTATION drps. r/o, dw, huge patio, d B ·11 J Pool $165 goodtter,h;l•l;r".'"1,'·.' ; .... ~"bier .• ; ~ you interested? S25. 541.-6661 ~,',.ttot.,!-,,, ,.. ANNOVNCEM&NTS •OATS ' YACHTS "" I .ar. Fol·-d a1·r. •d"lts. -. rapes. ui ' ns. ' · · " " ·' • ., "' I !919 -.. , _,, ~. I •" " ... D p · 5740 <>A .. ?"~' CO!\fl\f ot at · .,. ""--... MIJA'ML •• .. sA1L101.tt "' ' .. •· 11-,0 1,,0, 'I" ,,06 ft-673-3690 an• 01nt rli;.k? Company stayi with ..... ~ . · · · . ..,,. v110·1 "" ..,d NOTICES ••••• -••"••• ::: "' ., v-""" :''""";:';"';;'====;:;:;,I----------you. G44-426:>. Anaheun Ave .. Cosla l\fesa. OUTSTANDING opportunity C°GLLIOI PAIK ltlt NUNO c,._ AN 14• Sl'lllD-,kt 'ioan i LOVELY 2 BR. \11/w crpts, East Bluff 52·42 NEW 2 Bdrm, Unf duplex, J ::==-:.:=:======"( (Nr. 19th & Harbor>. fl1any for recorded inrormallon • NIWHll:T sucH :: ....., '4t' •OAT T11A1L111s .., .drps, \1·ood U1"J, iii r . Business Rental 6060 great uses! Good rental on DhO ~::::::;::is • ::::"~~is .. Ts ~4: :::: ~JWc=~.::c• : \l'a!:her/dryer. Adults. no LOVELY Bay View. 2-hr Blt·ins, Cpls, Drps . .$l90 l'."0· :;;:;.:.;o:.:.:::...:..:::..;...____ property. Free & clear. SA.VSHOllll mt 1111:1"1 MU MMIMI IOUIP. ..,, ; f'E'IS, f'or appt. Call &IS.3160 t:.ludlo, lrg patio, 2 ba. crpl, 3394 38 1Alcazar, Dana Point. LEASE. 15x60 store, n e 1. r owner will cart)' l!i.I TO. Investment oov111: SMO••• ttu PUMIMLS t41J IOAT st:11'. MnollNI nu d'.i><. d<lo•••<i<r. loeQ!Od ·-!. 9';.Z\ 9 y,l"'V ,..,,,;,.0,, Rick Alderol· O . • •llO WllTtlll'P •ti lll'AIO OllTUA•V 141, I0,1? llll:VK:al ... I 2&3 BR Apts , 2 n1i ·~. nedec ... vvv l~h & Harbor. O>sta Mese. •.; ......... ., ppc>rtun1t11s UNIYJ:ltl lTT l'A•• S1t'1 !'UNlll:AL Olll:I CTOll:.S f414 ll.IAT •INTALS: ..... •1 I ,. Nral' 1-·a~hion 1~1 &. ~lkl. REAL ESTATE ..., le 5471469 111:v11re 1111 l'Lo•1STS ••11 •OAT CNAllt t • ,.. k Ready to .. o,•e-n. ron1 """' Active: tihopping area. ve.J1..:::..::::.c:..::::.... _____ I·----------uck •A1' t1• c.AllDOI' tMA.N•I ,.... l'•SKINOIO•TS .... Sll!i. AdUltl'I only. 18th & sm. ~10. 644-5~ • ..,. General ~ location. $225. n10. • $15,000 s~al~~ven-l ::'l.r!LUF, ~: ::.·::~·"L':,,, ::: ::: ::~:. =-'\ Poniona, &1&79S8. 548·75.14 Corona dtl Mar 5250 Re ntals Wanted 5990 KERMIT RIGGS NOW'S THE tory. ReereatiOl'I rW1JUC 111:v1N• tt!R••c• *"' c•M•T••v '"""'' u 1t so.1T1 WANTIO \\ E·SIDE Ir~ 1 Br, cpls. <lrpi;, I iiiiiiiii~~---·•il:::::::-;:------.;--:-: R.E. Broker l.il=5=%==R="="~'"=·='l1=::4':838-$83===-I.:~::: OIL ~ = ~~~~~~:1::1tw.a :::: :~~~"~1s,oN t = bltn!i, pa.Uo, iilr. Adulli; on-It <Assoc. \V/David50n Rffltyl • "-o ..... Ill.AMOS ~ AUCT!Otrl .. ,. MOSll.1-MOll>!lt .. ; . ly, no pct~. $13.i &16-1762 ~ -1\tTDDLE age executive 'v/ 8 "'""·'GO ~ E·-•. ,,. "1"" TIME fQR Mon•r te Lean .,, .. LIN tSlt a.1 AVtATtOM 1111:vte1 MP MOTOll NOMIS "11 · l BR. bllrui, crph1. closed ft -n< -ly. '"'· 2 B" ••llh 20c SQUARE FT. -----·-"·----1"1wP011:T w•sT m a1• T11:A.Hs,01tT.tTMM ,..... •le:c111ir c.•tu .,.. ' ~ \\'ORKING couple dee. lo '1'tOV'I ~~" .,,.,.~,VJ IA.1.&0A ISUJtO ... T••V•L ... alCTCLll .... d 1 ~ ...,. 0 ·~ .:t• ~-n. L ~llNTINOTON •••<" ... AUTO T•AM•~•TATIOll ..... MINt llKIS ·---.. gara~e. f\fa\Ul't! Au ts 0!,;; "• garage In N.6. vle. no 60().J20<).2<100 aq. ft. Ottice D1 1st TD oan HUfrolTIJtOlON MA11ao111 -LIOAl NOTICl.I ..,. MOIOll:CTfOLll -- 51£0 ino. J IS.•l:.173 or aJS..~ chltdren or pets. Up to S140 Reta.ll gtorrs. 211·213 ~nd QUICK CASH .~~1;l~c~ALLlT :: TUT0111No ..,. 'ru~°o':~~~!::: & •Alfi ,.. • 1.0VELY nc\~ 2 hr, 2 ba. 1111 ON TEN ACRES mo. 892-1377 St., Newport Beach. J\ey • -.. aL lnte -AV&Uabla eu9IN eJt0\19 sot.,. SERVICE OIJtlCTORY AUTO TOOLS & IOUtP, ,.. ""'r, lo" ~·d, hltns. ,,le\v, Nr. l &: 2 BR. Furn .1i Unturn ---.1d,_,,_ _ _,.--..,--Lod ~f ...., ,,... l.ONt ••Ac" 1 A,C:COctNT1H• "" lltAll.llt. ·r1t.t.v1-. ._ • S"cs1Pl~UJ.5'1&-G97G. =~:n1~.~~in~~ ~~1e ~~~s~Ri:,:~n~! :;~~111!1;.av~t3> ~i~ A 2nd TD Loan,5~;;;;',. =., i=::l:::::1·~t ,..mi fL~1u.viH1ty ! l an $130. 2 Br w/rrrl<..'f'd 900 Sea Lane, Ql~I &14-2611 dutiesconsldered.6f6..3n6 ~o~r~·~,.~·~<~21~·~1~~-:':'.i'=:: THROUGH ~~· 1· MIDWAY CITY ... ,.., ... L~ tlllt m• CllMl'lt:S • . ... "" r ....... drp< • •'1 SM "ALL •hop• nr .... K........ Term1 -on ·""" ty. ..-........ -.,,.. ..... A•CWITICTUltAI. llllVIC• MIS Cl.MN• 1t1NTAU pal.10 .......... .......... « OI. (MacArthur nr Cmitt Hwyl OLDER. quiet Ttllln. no l~ "l't"''' ..... •171 ... ~11 tWt I" n•• . AUIO •• ,. ... ,.. .... OUM• S\190111 I inti &J2 .. :n19 l'1·es & \\'knds. ''!l!!i!l'!!!iii!!!!!!j!!!!~!!l!~J drinker. de!>lre~ room & ba. Pier. Var!OulJ sites. Tnquirt DAILY PILOT ..u,.. ~ 1,.,.; Al '* AUTO. "" ,...., , .. ., ak. "* ,•Ml"ORtllD ""'°' I' I So I C B I ~. rtl Sel'ving Harbor &fta 21 ynr, ~·ovv"'•• .·~.•"<IN! fllf IAIYSlrTING ____.... S'-011:.T,.,C.lal OL.X lrg 2 BR hnn1ac. Crn-2 BR l\.larguerte. · <l in prlv. ho1ne. d'M. syve\\' r•ufM! es .... m. 10 1 MAINtlMAMC• ...,. Altt10u11 cL.AUtel lrl heat. dshwhr, bltns. dbl l·ht'y, $!SO mn, No children 67J..TI1l ~..00 \V, Balboa. NS 673-7120 Sattler~ Morfl .. • Ce. 0.\:"~J'?,~ 1u t ••~k, MAJONllT, 11., Utt ll:ACI u ri1. •oos a raw .... .., -898 * '"'===-~~..,--,,,,.-STORE ron LEASE In D 3.16 E. J1lb Strttt ••• , .... N CA,l\fll::A"• tru SUllNISI lllt'lt<ll ~ AUTO IVINTS a:ar, •dul1s $145. 5:1~ • .,.~, M;\1UR£ Couple \Van I WANT A PM au+LDlll ..,, autos w•NTtD DELUXE 1 BR itudlo, crpts. NE\V 2 Br. l BA Garait House w/small clean work Pam~ic Rid:;., ne~t to WE MAA"E OR BUY ~~:1:= ...... -" ., .. U.Tlltl•O *" NIW u.u I C I •--"'R I I I TRUST DEEDS c ... OOMIMIUM ... CAaOflfMAICtMe -AUTO LU.SI• •-. pool. lmm111-. l child al)!. ivuher / dr:rflr, Cd.bl. s.hop &: db pr. all Berkt.: 1110:& es aunn . n-,.... -c•·--••*• .,. usn ...... --~ I ~--· rn "'I •mrUm• ma. •UP'LSXh "" .. -v .......... -ok. Ce.II £t6-!H96 675-2492 or 61.5·2677 , ..;.~_111-_1_m________ quire 67$-.9403 ~ ra ... r..rll\e '----------~ ' , .... = ·-= -.... "» = i • ' - .~ -; ----~ --·-. ---=-----· __ _.;._ ~----J .. - - - ---. • •• • . . . • . t.• I . • • •• • . . . . t • • . . •. ' . : ' . . • . :' • . ' . . . . ' ' . . . ' . ' . ' -' .. ,._ . ·- ' _., ' -· .... _ ----~--~--------.... , --· -:: ~-r--·---~ -,_...::.:=:::__--==--~--=----:-~~ • \ ' . ' . SO YOUR LITTLE RED WAGON _ l.S R.EALL Y DRAGGIN' • Bill 81!.L . ,. ' ADD HORSEPOWER TO THE FAMILY BUDGET . . ~ ' • 1 ' • ' . . • ' • • i • I ' • . . • ' . . . ' . . . . ' . ' ' . . . . . . • • • • • You can handle those bills. 1'11 you need are the dol· lars you'll get for all .the still-good, but· nobody· uses • them items you'll find all over the house. Make a list of them today and decide to turn those unwanted ar· ticles into extra cash. It won't cost you • • • it'll pay you. And you'll be surprised at how fast you can sell iust about anything with a DAILY PILOT classified ad • 1ry it today. Every day is a good day to use • DAILY PILOT WANT ADS (And You _ Can Charge Them) ·567 ··"-----.-.----------------------------------------------~ 1 I I ' l .. I • • ' ' ' !' ' l i' • • l • • • • • • • . l • • • 1 • • • • • • • ' • ' . l . • / * * * CTOR ' MILY nLOT Ni JOll I 'IMK6fll DON~T PINCH When You Want it clone right ••• Call one of · the experts listed below/I YOURSELF (You're Not Dreaming) But You Can Whocldya Want? Whaclclya Got? SPECIAL CWSIFltATION FOR ' NA·TURAL IORN SWAPPERS Special Rate S LlnM ,....; 5 11.,.. -5 ·budn ltUl•I -AO MUST INClUDE ._..... .... ""'' 1111 .,..... ~ '" ...,., "' '""" a-TOUI lllMl'lt 11111/.., ...._.. .. -.t II-.. ~-It&. t-HCITHINO l"Olt IAll -Tl!.AOas OPill YI To Place Your Tr1der's P•radlte M PHONE 642-5671 SERVICli DlltlCTORY Baby1l!!!,n1 '550 FORMER Nunte WW rive i'>Od lavina care to )'Our child 1''hlle )'OU work. ahop or? No. side C.l\I. uu. ca.JI ·54~7. .l"9llah Tudot BABYS11TING • abund.1nt View. 6 mu:. 10 mlfl. L.A. tlvl"e I t Beautiltil, $29,500 Clear. ac ~ s, P ayma ••· nutritlota foods, Gr e e n Trade. N.J3./C.M. f>4&.85l2. Valley Hm1, FV. 968-606.i lSTRETDfl.IORTGAGES: BAPYSITTlNG ; Clean insured subs'! signer. Pay home. C.J\1. area. Fenced $2200La each. Totals $42,000. yd. Wkday"I. \\lknds, eves. falloring 697DT1llorl119 TH• ........ SHAN8HAI TAILORS BACK TO NEWPORT BEACH AGAIN! 2 DAYS ONLY -MARCii 8 & 9 AT NEWPORTER INN 6170 THE REMODruRS Quality Home· lmprov1m.nt Contr•ctor1 ADDA • Family room * Rumpus room *Bedroom Kitchen Remodeling Complete Remodeling Garage!! • Carports BABYSfM'ER Wanted Im U mo. boy, Mt>"-""'·-· Mu1t have oaii ~ Vic MN&' del Mar, 'CM. ~*1 llABYSl'M'ZR, maturw, cart for tnt.ant, my hame c.M. ana. Phone aftt.r T, -BABYSrliER I 1HOUMkeeP. er, -2 children 5 a: 4, own crar.:p. 001 -..1a. atter e. BABYS!TrER. LIY&-ln, II houlekeopfnr. --UK. W-3041 alt ' CM. =CW. INSTITtmON ' IS LOOKING FOii Pl·NCH -YOUR Hedie q:&lnsl inflation • Trd tor Inc .. or boat. 5 R-1 Ww lots. Heart of Orng Cnty: Eq. $251\I. Be quick on this. m.roio 772.9920, ~eed duplex or triplex; have 3 Br. l~ Ba bou6c. 63x300' lot. Surveyed & "approved for Three R·l Lota. SJ Slav- in, Rltr. 642-6222 • t.8' magh. dbl plank util bo&t, 140 hp frBY. Ful restrd mint oond., val $1795. For lot or ? At marina, Lido , Shore• Hotel, 617 Lido Pk Dr, t-.'B. st pmt Apr '7L Trd: cat \\'ellatt rate1. CaD MS--6215. botlt °"" ? 675-1047 Box 1433 N.B. MY home. Hot lunches, Fenced yard, Playroom. Sea Trade c..iean "63 Chtvy Sta. \Vind, vie: A!hu1ta &: \Vagon, R/J(. tinted gtu1, Brookhurst ~U92 elec. '"indo\v, regularly Hr· ll 07 Jamboroo Rd., Newport leach Call 1714) 644-1700 For Appointment WE OffER DIRECT HONG KONG PRICE SA YE SU!ts-$55-U• 5Hllt~5-UP t!ftc>I sPOl!COAts-140-Ur ...v-;o LAOIH' KNIT SUIT$-$20-UI' FREE ESTIMATES 100-/, FINANCING TELLERS WI HONOI ltnkAmericercl -Mt1f•r C:h1r9• Jr ~ have the ~r Cht•p Th11ed11 Not u1, If w1 clo, w1'll CALL NOW!!! amount of tntelUpncie, the PENNIES with a PILOT 31' Boat. OU 6hon! Ba1boa. Wand moortn: Incl. No rental fee . Valu Sl0,000. Trade for ? • '"'ill usume, Hnance. 673-2431. Trade 3000 sq U San Fer- nanda Valley home. 5 br, 3 ba + cabana, pool. (North· ridge area). For Beach pmperty. 846-4614 New '69 Fittbip:I, only 25IJO ml. pis. p/b, air, stereo tape de.ck. low eqty. For car, tumiture, ? 64&3369 (8J 2 Bedroom units. small shopp'g center, house. du- Ple-ic, vacant. \Vant vacant for trlr park any ares or ? Fannie Price Rltr, 548-3209 ()y,'?ler moving-Trade $20,000 eq. in 7 centrally Joe older units. U'hittier. Val 6 lim· e1 income. \Vant: property Ne'W))Of't ll't'a. 1·213-693-5188 Sofa 76", brand new. for truck, car, color TV or ? :w.- 6:00.7:30 night.. All day Sunday. .. * * BUSINESS and FINANCIAL Mortgages, Trust Dffd1 6345 S54XXl ht T.D. on Huntlnitan Besch R-l lot. $50 s month fncludln1 9%. 3 yr due. 15% discount. .( 9 4 -8 1 O O or 493-1706 Monty Wanted 6350 ESTABLISHED B u.11 de rs need $1kl,000 ~ w/ ht TD, on new industrial bid&. Val. $120,000. Prime loca· lion in Orange C n t y , 826-0.WJ, evtl 528-4088 vice for 2nd T.O. or ' MOTHER Of 1 \Van t s 64&-8226 baby1itting my home, vie of Harbor Sbop'a Center . '68 Jeep CJS-Top, hubs, R&: 646-7838 H. rollbar. 8" rims, poe:i· 1 'VE=R~Y~Re~u.~.,,-oM7o~lhu--.~, .,, trac. S2-400 value. 'l'Yade wants babyJlttlng. My home. Sl400 equltY for VW Bui ar Prefer infant to 3 yrs. Ca.11 ? ? 642-4826 545---027J. Have $12,000 lnvested in V\V RESPONSIBLE Party will aarage, small parts house bab ·1 "' ho ys1 , ys, my me, & machine shop on New. H.B. area. Have ret1 . port Blvd, OJ. Trade far 817~9936 mountain acres or 9ll Porsche. 548-1814 Ask for BABYSITTING. Nlct clean Bill Acker. home C.i\1. area. Fenced yd. Hr. d~ or wk. 55'1-9826 What do you have. ta trade 1 List It here _ in Orqe. BEST Care for your infant - County'• tarRest read trad· D&y or Night. 566 Hamilton Ina post -Ill"'! make a deal St., No. 8, C.tlf. ~2-2764 6-2BR. units &. pool $6Tht BABYSITI'ING, li1y home. \\' I $4Thl loan assumable \Vatm food, Infants ok. Dur-· 6.6 Int. Trade S26i\f equity ing day till 6 p.m. 646--01!15 fo 1• 4 BR. \V .1lde CM home. BABYSITI'ING Agt. 549-0218 anytime. AdulL Evenings&: \Ve.ekench. Have Grundig stereo con-_Ca=ll=>~tll-06=""~·===="' sole "ith automatic etereo --· tape $500 ·value. Want V\V or motor bike 250cc or b\g. ger. 541).9779 $20,000 + $12,000 equity in Condo, 105S Dover. Need 6- 11 units. prefer Co 1t11 J\1esa. Skr. 6i;>o61»4 * * * Boat M•int•n•nc• 6555 Enjoy your Boat Complete J\tarine Service P.1echanlcal-Electrlcal Bottom .. in or-out water Varnish· Painting Fiberglau Butfinz. Flberglau Relinilhln1. Ca.II Jim, 548-7Cl21 "~ never mike ii. l 1hop1 now, how eboul th•t1 We c•11v only lrlt!ih 111cl tt11i111 * 642~3660 * right ~Uty and a de- r•bric1 . Thty "••P good 1li1p1, don't I ~!!!!~!!!!!!!!~~~~~1 ,'""'~=='°~-~~·~-~will~;traln_ wrinkle. . I ~ )'OU, CALL 96W551. With our 1111t 1 r.d cl1t1 JIM wo1k1111111hlp, _Roof_lna '950 BANK TELLER cut & fit lnd i .. iclu1lly, our cu1tom1n k11p :.:%•--~-----·l\V/Exper, P/Tbne. Good coming b1ct i nd r1co1111T1111cl tf!1lr NE\~ Roofl, ftep&ln & c .. 1 .. -•• Xlo'h""ld-~. fri•lld1 too. · ._....J' ·• oClSIU Noboclv'• p•1f•cl, off.r•clt clotlt1, •r• Coating at all T,ypes. Doi!.! Apply In penon lat Wntftll '"'cl• for 1t111d•rcl 1h•1, vo11 clo11't "••cl l\'Orks on the job. F'refl Bank, 16932 G<Wdtrilftlt St th.,.,. w. b••I th•fr pr ic••• 111• b•ll•r estimates. 6'5--1691, ~2550 HA , fobric• •rtcl 9iv1 bott1r fih. R1m1mbtr , 24 br. BAR MAID, Slkini, full time clotht• rri••• th• rri on. AU.. types rock, Wl)Od & or part time. Top pa,y. Ap- OUR LA STORES-u:phalt ahin&les. LEAKS ply Fri I: Sat bl!tw 10 _ U • 1'4 S. V•rll'lont Avo., lo1 A1111l•1 REPAIRED Work M 11500 V111t11r1 llvcl., Sh1rmt11 O.k, ' ruar. A · Saaay r....y. 2901 •DUTY NOT INCLUDED Sfl'-1136 Harbor, C.M. 'i~~rim~~:i';r-~~~~~~~~!'l s I .,, BARMAID* SERVICE DIRECTORY ew ng 69~ tor ntce bar. can~ or Contractor• 6620 Houaecle•nlnp 6735 • Dreasma.king • Alterations 527""697 BAY &: Bea~h Janitorial Oea.lgned to &Wt )'OU. BAR='-e"ER="'c"M"'u"te"•">-... :--.... -1 Additions * · .emodelina Fred H. Gerwick, Llc. 673-6041 * 549-2170 Carl'!! CIHnlng 6625 CARPET SJ'EAJ\f CLEAN· ED No aaap, no brushes • For est. 646-&ln A~K Shampoo Special ST.SO rm/leu for halls, etc. Also comp. house.cln'a 827--3182 Drywall 6631 e DUDDY Drywall Co . lJc'd Contractor. Large or Small Jobs. Ph. 847-9581 C1rpe:t1, windows, floors. Call Jo * 646-M46 barber 1hop. Contact Loo etc. Res le CQmmc'l . --Evans 5.36--14%1 nl12Paclflc: 646-1401. Tiit, Cer•mfc 6974 Cout Hwy., H.B. COM PLF;TE quality housecleaning. E'xperlenced. Reasonable. 638-2354 • * Verne, The Tile Man "* B~RMAID, pa.rt.time & full cu.at. wor-k. Inst.all &: ttpa.lra. time, triquira at E1CBpade, No job too •mall. Pluter 166t Newtx>rt,Blvd.., C.Y..f. 6740 patlo, Leakinc allower BEAUTIFUL a:lrl w/flgure repair. to match to model blldnla A: M7-1957/M&-O)J6 lingerie a few hn a wk. =========J Great pay, •trlct privacy. Smiley Tax Service TrH Service 6980 • 12th YEAR LOCALLY • TREES. Hedges, trim, cut, Quallfl~ • Reasonable •tumpa, removed, hauled. 30 \V. A. CBW) SMILEY . yn exp Fully im: 642-tOJO Cd'tilied Public Account't · · Easiest way to earn xtn. money. No exp. Send description or photo I:. phone no. to P.O. Box ru Santa Ana BEAIJll'll OPERATORS &12-'Z221. anytime M&.9666 Upholstery 6990 ·wanted, with clientele only. Floon Central Busl~ Service11 Huntington Beach to Lquna 6665 eTHE TAX ADVISORS CZYKOSl<l'S Cuatm. Uphol. aru. Eltabllahed buai>I<" ANNOUNCEMENTS and NOTICES Los·t Brick, Masonry, ate 1----------Penn. ottice·Reu Rates European Cra1t!mamb1p rxp&nding. 60, 6S and '10% 6560 CARPET vnlYL TILE 328 No, Newport Blvd. 100~ tin! 642-1454 comm and oth!r bendita. Free estimate Uc. c.ontr. Oppo111te Hoag Hospital 1831 Newport Blv. CM Call ti.tanager 673--1159 for 6401 ALFIE Is m1sa1ng and hls family is offering a reward for his: return. He is small, black. mixed breed with 4 wht. paws. N.8 . 642--3692 REWARD • \Vht Standard Poodle.. female, vie Baker&: Fairview, crit Flea &: tralnlng collar. 545-8989, 613-1772 TAN & \Vhite Z..fale Shelty; looks like collie. Flea collar. No tap, no ident. Vlc. BRICK & CARPENTERY work, planters, fireplaces, block walls, cement patios, patio roof.I &: &IJ type.I of repaln. 49'-7928 BUILD. Remodel. repair Brick, block, concrete , carpentry, no job too 'lmall. Lie. Contr 962.6MS FREE Est. Brick, block, 1tone, planters .t: entr)' Wll)'I, 531-4973. St.ate Lic'd. Cabinetmaking 65IO River & 52nd, N.6. Reward! 1---------- Call 6'2-2625 RESIDENTIAL &: Comm. Custom Cabinet &: Furn. Furn Re-Finisblnr. 6(5..0991 ~ll-1'62 5464418 F'or ApPL can 645-0400 JOBS & EMP LOYMENT lntmnew appoln"""'L G_ardenlng 6680 H.K. Clark TAX SE1\VJCE . BEAUTY OPERATOR. with 23 yrs. lo ana Job Wanted, Men 7000 faUowillr. Coda Meaa an&. ANTHONY'S 548-62&5 eppt. CLEAN up for Bakery Shop. Call 5*-952'7 • yaur home or office • 3-4 hn. daily. 1's"'t°"KINJ="s.'"· °'Eam=--.... --rr=.oo=1 644-1160 TAX SERVICE In """' 641-530.1 per hr., ..utna s&ndp!per Dependable l\fainten11ince home. Tut a: e.tfictenll Cu1tom Btkilll.s at bOtnt Experienced-Pntnina-* 531...(15(12 * Job Wanted, partil:1, part Ume. No in- Planting Women 7020 vestment. Gltl1 11 yn. A Budget LBndlCaping I ronlng '755 up,•call fl.1111 Paal. wk. daya e Horticulturist e AIDES • far cmwalt"ICt'nce, 545-4088 NE\V lawns. re.seed i n I , IRONlNG· In my home, Sl elderly care or family care.1'BOO==KKEEP=='-'ER=--. "°'\1,-or.,...,lull"" Complete lawn care. Clean Hr. Dreumakinf 6' alttra-Homemalwrs. 5C7~ time. For construction 4 up by job or month. Free t1on1. 545-7641 devW.,iment Co. Exp tbru e1timatea, Fer Info caU I-=========:: Jobs Meft, Worn.: 7100 trial bal. Ph. 64M21D Btwn. 897-2417 or S46-C932 P•lnth'fl, ------~--1 12-3 GARDENING Paporh1119ln1 -Full Charge --,.ao=y'="s""11=--""-1""'4--l Trtt1, &hrubl, ivy removed. -· Bookk .. per Clrrltr Rout91.Clpea PENNY PINCHER ANNOUNCEMENTS and NOTICES LOST: Black long haired cat. small -white spot on stomach. Vic. Poppy, Cdi\f Please. call MS-0864 ar 5<>-1.162 RED lrtsh Setter, male, 6 mos. old. Vic. W. Nwpt area. Reward. 642--4765 New la"m . Rototil.Ung. Free AVERAGE 1 story exterior' Know led.cu&: payroll. IJibt tor f!fit. 548-8918 $259. 2 story exterior $359 typina. Bea.ch area. Lqum Beach. So. lqlm JAPANESE Gardenina Bonus 5000 Blue Q:ilpa: Man•9ement TralnH DAILY PILOT CARPENTRY Service.. Neat \\"Ork. Interior pricea a vail. Good work background, mar. ===,,-,...,,--..,...,....,1 6590 Classified Ad 3 LINES 2 TIMES DIAL DIRECT 642-5618 YOUR CREDIT 15 GOOD Found (FrM Ads) 6400 SHAGGY black female dog. Injured by car About 6 wks a.go. Newport Blvd. & Monte Vista. C.M. 64&.7327 or 673-2TJ4 FEMALE yng puppy lrg tloppy ears. Tan & Blk. Vic Back Bay, Call aft 5 p.m. &l&-5126 CHIHUAHUA, tan, male, 1$'.pOt shaved on left side. Found Yor-ktown A\'e., H.B. 968-1755 after 6 p.m. Si) SMJOYEDE dog, female, am.it 2 )Tl, eentJe &; obedl· ent, no caiJ.U', at Monarch Bay Plaza. 499-1fi67 LOST On my front doorstep, pair of pre1cription alvs'!s tn black leather ca&e. (J..2- 70). 548-TICM FOUND German Shephenl puppy. Approx 3 mm. old. t.tale, No collar or JD. (lrvtne TPlT.) 67S..'1!18 LARGE German Shepherd. Cs.II &: Identify . 642-9493 t 10 -12wkloldGerm11n Shepherd. Vic Balboa tal. Csll to Identify 675-4998 DUCK. Slit nite. Vic nit St., l Orange, C.M. Ca JI &.jl).33j9 C~lER.A Found at Newport Beach pier on Feb. 23rd . Call &. klentify 64>-1523 \VATCH Vic 00 & Plactn- tf1. Call to tdentlfy. ~1530 6401 Ptr1onal1 6405 --------* F1JLLY LICENSED * Renowned H Ind u Spirit· ualist. Advice on all mattera; Love, Marriage, Bualne.ss, Courtlhlp, Health, llappinc11 &. SucceY. No problems too lll!V or too small. I CAN HELP YOU. Readings given 7 day1 a \\'eek. 9AM·9PZ..1' 312 N. El Camino Re a l, San C lem ente. 492-9136, 492--0076. *Women START YOUR NEW YEAR WITH THE RlGHT MAN. 547·6667 24 hour recording fl.ttNOR REPAIRS. No Job Clan-up " yard ma.int. 631~ tied, aome. colle.p. BOYS 13-16. canvau 3 to 5 Too Sma1L Cabbwt Ln pr-963--2303 * Paintins·Paperhanafn& L .. af Sec. P~t 6: Sat. to $3 hr. Need ares & 0 th er cabinetl. I ·AL"''"S-,G".,.,_--,-•-.., .. ~La~wn Interlor--Exterior Good typJn& A: SIH.1could be tnllsp. to ottl.ce. SCl-.99111 545-81~. U no answer leave Atabrtenance. Cmtmerdal, Special Prices on Paptt trainee, beach area. * BUSBOY * Gra~ me at 646-2372. ll O. llklustrial & residential Call Leny 642--4558 WESTCLIFT ahitt. Approx. 35 hrs a wit. Anderson * fi4&..3629 * YOU supply the paint. Apia PERSONNi;L AGENCY Apply in peno11, $2 W.19tb GEN · ... b JIM'S G-~0.o... ,_ la"-& I ~ WESI'CLIFF DRIVE. St. C.ltl. • repatr, ........ ca . ..,"' .... '6 • ..... mote a painted • $10 NEWPORT BEACH CALIF 1,.--.,.-,--,....-..-..,...-s·,_ Formica, pa.ne!Jng, marllte. mafnt.enance. Rea. I: oom-averg. nn. Call anytime Pal TELEPHONE: • C•feterla Counter' Cflrl Anything! Dick. 673-4-459 merclal * 5404837 the Painter, s:l7~838 6(5.2'170 M5-5685 10 AM·2 PM daily. Mon thru REPAIRS* ALTERATIONS J APANESE Gard ene r , INT&. Ext Palntina. Free 0 nt. Call 13.1-0tl.O, ext~ * CABINETS. Any siu job exp'd. Compt. yard service. eats. Loe refa. 30 .Yf1: exp. O~~~~~Ea betwn 3 PM &: 6 PM only. 15ynexper. 548-6713 Free estimate. 548-825.5. Ltc. &: in!l"d, Call Chuck rAvl:" DECORATOR Accrual Accounttnr Sntem. ~ ' QUA.LJTY Woodcraft. Gen-EXP. Japane&e maintenance. 645-0809 or Jim ~8-0405 Z..finlmum 2 )Tl collep, 5 female/pt time munta. Gd eral ~ntry, Small Gen. H.B. & F.V. Area AVERAGE exterior $177.50 yrs. practk:al experience. salary, itndy. Apply b)' 9 Coil&tr. Call Ken 540-9009 * 842-8442 * labor only. lnterlot pn·-, Pe-•-nt e Io ·1 to AM. CUpcake Bakl!Q', 273 ..... .. ....... "' mp ymen E. 17th St C.A! MS-mt REPAIR, Partitkms, Small GEN'L yd. Clean-up, tree avail alao. 53-1546 Ii: qualified petwn. Evelyn ' · remodel, etc. Nll.e at day serv. f'Otc>.tllt. SprlJdr re-6'6--31!5. 14ger 49i.1Dil. * ~G women Dllld- Reu! Call KEN ~. pairs, Haul • Rea.son. 646-M48 SlTRBURBAN Pa I n t e r 1 / ACCX)UNTJNG e.d, fl:lll or part ti.me. Call CARPENTRY &: Lite Haul· EXPER. Japanese. Gardener. Decor. We take the pain Re1p6nalble pottlon &Yailal>te1,,.m.>-;;;?8S""'l ______ ,1 tng. 24 hr service. Free Eat. c:omplete Yd Suvice. Fret out ol painting. Expert work. in Accountln1 Dept. MUlt be "* a.ERKl'l"YP1ST * 897--0196, aak for Vince. estimates. Call 54()..1332 FJ'Cf! est. 494.JlOO neat; alert: work sood with Gbod , try position for ,... CARP.ENTRY, Re pa Ira, CLEAN-UP SPF.CIALlST I PA I NTING--INT/Ext. ~tbera~r,e~~ cent: lf'lld w/S(X>d tnf:rW Remodellnj-, cabinets. No !.·lowing. edglna:, odd jobs, J ack can do I.hat painting cedun!I. APPLY: 1642 .&: apelllJ'IC. No exp. nee. job too 1mall. ca.JI 646-4224. Reuonable. 54S-695S .lob-fa1il, clean I: very re:u! Kaiser St lrvl~ Start $350. C&ll Joan ~ JOHNSON'S GARDENING Est. 894-3895, MT·l358 • ... lin 540-6055 SAUNA· l\Iassage by Starla, ALASKA TRAVEL "'-' Deni&e, Pat, 1\-larlene, Carol Cement, Concrete '600 Yard care, Clean-ups, Prun· • lnterfor • Exterior e COASTAL AGE"" T Le Sa.Ion de Traitments Ing, planttna. 962-2035 AcousUc ceWna:1 ptd, 12 yn AND Tf!ADE FAIR 2790 Harbor 81\ld., C.M. 79M w. c.t. Hwy. Npt Bch. CONCRETE work alt type1. *LANDSCAPER.* exper, State lie. Plttsburah W Da.ily noon to 1 am. 642-3154 Sawing. brealdnc, hauJtnr. 12 )TW local exp. $1225 -•.,"';:';;· _,:w,,~..,1.,m==--:°""-.-anted: To hlft, at $3.00 per CLERlCAL 'l1lA1lQ:E \Ve accept all credit card1. Sldploading; Llc. Service & CUSTOM Palntir11• Iriterior-hol.lt net. ' •ttraqive and women ....... -40 with So0d1I.Q .• Th. "Now" Blue Room Quality, 84l-1010 Haull-67"" Exterior. Lie, Bonded. Jne. ~ble pla .. to work In 45 .WJll!l typ. i: 1o:iliBf adder "• -\V ~'"' 'n.c:tchlkan",,Aluka EX· accuracy needed. tt?S to P-sen" nightly CEMENT WORK. no '"'b too on't be underbJdl &4S-36'19 hlbl '" ,.. CAIU..'S • t. March J.2.21.. 6 houn start, with advance A com· Rick •nd the ''H•wk'' Small, reuonable. Fret · Movi.na, Haullni &: PAINTING, Pape,rina' 17 yn. per Cl&y. Cont.ct: Glen W. pater train. oppbr. Oil Chadbourne Gey LarnArd Eitim, H. StuOJck MM61!i g:n~·I. ~J·0• Reu. In Harbor atta. Uc I; bond· Mood at lbe "Nri'porter Birch St.. Suite 4 (nr •• 17th&Placentia.CM 1' CONCRETE Joan:, ed.Rell.fum.6f2..2356 lnn"Afarch9thaftu7P.M. airport}N.B. Did )'OU know that ladlff patios. ms&0nry. Any It Job. JIAULING Cleanup, Iota etc. PAINTING, e.:xper, inl. &: or ~w meuap on lb!1o.t '~~-.-a-.-,--~-.-_,-.,-~,'' aet more out of massage7 Reas. Don, 642-8Sl4 an 4. HAn4yman anytime you ext. lnsured. l"ree Htimat. 10th er Uth. e1X*I ALLEY WEST JtES. Le SA.Ion de Tnltments .... C 0 NCR ET E ,Work. 1-•atl_... _64_2-mB-'.,.~·=,.---I h'"<'·;;;n.J;;iph;,·--;;,:,~;._,,,_-Newport B.m. l1DT Jam-TAURAHT fB.tn.C 2930 W. Cal. Hwy. N.B. J..k:en9e(f, Pattcs / drvwya. JACK'S RETIRED Palntu: 2S )Tl boree Road. (714) &U-1700. CHILD ~ A i.iM mlq:ls, Daily noon to 1 am. 642--3154 etc. Phllllpa:Ce~nL 54s.GIO Re:!,O~G~~L HAU~'lon ~per. Neat 1: honqt. Non ARTS A Craft• Diredor, 20 Jive in JIB an.. PIW rm. ALCOHOLICS Anonymout P.10RE concrete patio for drinker. Call ~L hrs ~ wte:k. $1.65 per hr. H~ llD-0415 ' Phone 542.-7217 at write to leu money, Artistic setting YARD/ Gar. Cle•nap. * PAJNTING, lnt.-Elrt. LocaJ Over n, must haw driwn ='°"=""'=,_....,...,...-. P.O. Sox 1223 C.C.ta Mesa. " flnlahlrw. &U--0887 Remove llfts. tvy, trash. re:terencea. lmmecl MrVlct. lie. Cell ~'1111 ... tor CLEANING i..tr W/rdwr. ' Grade, bockboe, '6U74S • 6l6-Ml2 Miao Ramnbacl> bn 'Wld:f.,..'1 bft,-- c d of Th k .. I' cusro" <DNCREl'E -;~~_,,,=,....=-I·-'---="'---12.ZI hr. -•uL Ir In I Pa~. -• '-~ elc. FrM • P"'Al"'""'G '1'<11 Male p/Slamese cat. .=..;_"------\-,....... ~ HOUMCl•inine '7U • .,..4 •• • Ext·rnt. U )TS. Vk. N.B. Antliu& A \\.'e thfl Don L. Crawt'ord est. 675-:i616 aper. lm:. Uc. F'ree eat. l'dariners. FritDdJ)' ''P'Ud· '·-Uy t Balboa p ninsula MAlI>S OR ~ANCE ACC'Clllt. CtW.np. sct.S325 ....... .i:..u.."'"" w.in ° e Chlld Care, ~ ~·~ Point exlend our mot Maid '""'"' by tlle day ID * PAPERHANOING LOST . vie ot Baker 4 Man-httrUtll cratltude to au our LfcenHCI UIO )'OW' door •• AllO. lull ma.int. .1: PAINTlNG. * 968-2"25 doza, a1. Sm1 f, m . ..-ondcrtul friend 1 J: far hOmt, commercial. etc. P/Siameae cat w/ rtd flea neighbor• for thtir NURSDtY Scbool, C.M . 'T Wa al1G strvict parlit1. Pl••ter"lng, P.tch, ·t'OlJar~521 • 'helptulnc'! "klndneu -d8;Yt.....wk:.-t130-AIU1aoPM, Jl':.nd~~~---R.,.lr -..-'8IO LOSI'==ooo="': "M°"a""l•"""'t~.,.ob~St-1•• I tna P.trs. Crawford's tllnc11. Full, p/tlme, aft acbl. tt.r 6 m05, Weit Newport R&tt1 fDt 2 or more. Beach aroa. &4).4'165 Cemetery Lots Tn.nao. tum. So Or.nae Co. 1.0sr: Siamese Mlle Seti· HAAnOR ~-2-,-pacu--, 534-ll92 polnt. 10 mos. Vic. Galaxie bt1t aecdon. Forced to tell. .lo llallday. MM32S -Cfler. ~ Mt1& Oa1n1na Stnfce Carpet.a, windows, Doon, etc. Ru. It Ccmmc:'I. S4&-4W .. PATCH PL4ST&IUNG All b'Pe•· Fttt eattmatea can- TIME FOR QUICK CASH JHROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD --1 l . COCO'S ~aahlon lsi.nd ll'IWlYliwbc BUSBOYS OISHWASHIRS (OM' ll) APPLY IN PElllOll' No. 18 J"AflHIOll lit.. NJI. * IXlOta * WITEOltllROILl:a - -. ,, ~ DAILY PILOT -tJOIS·•-!M,.-EOYMENT-JOBS " EMPLOYMENT· )68$" IMPLOYMENT JOIS & IMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISI -FOii MIRCHA:NDISI FOR SALE AND TRADE l . --• -SALE AND TRADE , .lobs-Mon, w ..... 7100 Jol>t-Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobs /Mn, Wom. 7100 Jobi-Mon, Worn. 7100 -l ' -HOUSE.KEEPER: i,d:p w a Nu11hia: savings I: Loan ~rnftur• 8000 Furnl~· l Congtruct10n wce.k. S2 hour. Ne Pa rt · tlrne, LVN BRANCH ~ 1 Bl.lYER-ESTIMATER Rder. Call -cherge nurso MANAGER 6 I · 9000 : Major bllilder offu• idn't INDEPENDENT Cli<l<t of Savina• & Loon ""°"talion, _•' I J •' l_. 1 1 ~ .. · ',I J I ' ~ : opportunl!y f 0 r q:UBlllied foreslm ii looldhi· for 3 Exptrlenc.d •idt1 loca.ted in Newport Beach _ ,1 , • m11.n w/he~vy e..'\"Pf'.'r in tract Wes lra.lntta. c&reer opp, area, hu poaitlol: avail. for i tsCalin~fle.!a1mtfy"'bo~~r ~So. pnerour. advance. 645--0591 7 to 3:30 p,r.J. Shift a well quallfil"d Savin&s I , 1 • """ "' =" •••vy • •m-uo pm Loe.n~noh !Janaaer. Ex· DECORATOR Gm CANCELLATION 1 bud~t control e.-<per. Field INTELLIGENT Youn& f\fan HUNTINGTON VALLEY eel. potential &. trin&e bm. Of 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS ' : expei· i: acrounting back· Stronger tblll\ Y. locomotive, OONVALESCENT efil!. Only ,applicants with : ground des\rJl,ble, r.tu&I be faster than a speeding HOSPITAL a min of 2 Yl'$. Savinis ex· Sptnish & Mediterr1nt• Funiturt ; capablf' 01 iOCT'eased mpon· bullel. Red·E·Rentals, 2167 842-5551 perienee need apply. For AU BRAND NEW , sibility in future. 1 d C llf . particulars call ?i1r. Hensley : Pie~ send re.sume 1nclud-Harbor B v " · · NURSES Registered ~ even· (21J) 869--051.2 A decorator dream house on display -3 • ing salary requil~menls LVN 7 to 3 PM shift. ing & night i;hifts. Ex. · . rooms oC gorgeous Spanish furniture (was 1 IPERsoNNEL MGR. J . (;.s~~:!y co. ~~!~;, ~~lyCOA~~c::. ~1!~:G~~c:g ~~r~ s'4"gc. $R12915F. ICE. 'S425 ; P1rdH Con1truction FASHION ISLAND munity Ho.11p., 31872 Cnast Orange Co. Exper pref. not • • • • • • ' P .O. Box 54089 H"''Y·· So. Laguna. 499-1311 ne~sa. •i ll train. Protected ! t>:<I. 356 Territory. Ph. 63!h1144 Complete Mediterre neen Bedroom Suite in ! Loi Angt lts, 90054 hai> tllll or ,iart time open.' 0 k ( R NOW $181 00 • ll 1 t•as fo • ,...-.,0-• 0111·-SALES: $25 Investment \VUl a • e9. $3oi9.00J .......... . 1 iNo phone ca s peasel " • .,.,._.., ''''" '"" G S h C B I S f I I · the foll R e•ept'ionlst/Typt'st put YoU in a wig business of or9eo~l penii ustom ui t o I with ' COASTAL AGENCY sa espeop" in OW• .. h L S -Ch I b : il'Q; positions: Front office appearance. your own. Fnr Intervw. Call mite ing ov• eat oice o eeutlful , A member ot Opportunity for advance-547-162.9. f1brics. I Re9. $419.951 ____ .,NOW fllS.00 ; ~h.u~~:id~~~;:t MEN~Rc~~~~ING menlH~:~~n ';~~· Salc'RA' NT'S SURPLUS ~="dj'~.~i~~l ~=~j.-;·;·;;d··c-;;;f;·;·r;b;;;::i~;::: 1 Profe11ional GARDEN SHOP Convalescent Hospital Till Decor1tor T•ble Lemps , Employment Service SHOES . 18792 Delaware, H.B. Now lntervi'owi'ng I Reg. $49.961 ··-······-··---· .. ··--NOW $11.00 2790 Harbor Bl, c .. i 510-6055 COSMETICS Office Spenish Hangin9 Swag ~•mps Hartm B1'°· at Adorn• CARPETS CREDIT CLERK !Reg, $0 .951 ···-·······----···-·NOW $22.50 COUNTER HE\.P, 2 bn. With ability lo wri" roll"· SALESMEN CREDIT.AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN per hr. App: Chow Bell 2576 No. 24 Fashion Island, NB key adder, fillng. Must be Experienced prefeITed I noontime, r.ton-Jo'r1, St.65 APPLY IN PERSON tion'letters, type 50 wpm, 10 Full T im• m D RJRNITURE Newport, c .r.I. Equal npportunity emploYtr willing to train on switch-but not necessary, Many ' COUNTER Girl, exper for JANITOR Wanted for C.1'.l. board. _ company benefits. Apply 1B44 N I ~c;"ai;.;:~li~~~~~.Ap~lio~ area. ~s & pklbone re-INVENTORY· ;na;~;t.~.nl.'.k17o~·;;~~ ewport B vd.Harbo~atBlvd.) quired. 6 n1tes wee Y. Musi PRODUCTION ·r "" Harbor, Unit A-2.C.~I . be exper, dependable: & Lipkin. c t M o I COUNTER g;,1, "'"'· only haro-working. w .... open. CONTROL CLERK OS a esa n y The Boardwalk Cleaners, (213) 923-5820 Lite typing, outstanding add-PLEASE APPLY , , , , • 16851 Algonquin, H .B . JANITORS, WAXERS. ex-ing mach. ability, gd. hand-1750 Newport Blvd., Chi Eve7 Night Til 9 -Wed., Set. & Sun. Td ' 8'16-0015 per. Gd. pay and working wr_iting. Sa1a.cy comm. w/ SALES Pe-ople, Full-p/time.. DENTAL ar;sistant conditions. ~9393 abil. & e:tpe.APtP. LY "SLil\f GYM". Leads avail. Furniture 8000 Furniture 8000 · Chairs\de, f'Xpt>r on I y. - -Call 897-1986. P/time. Send resume to KEYPUNCH L.fl.t. Cox Mfg. Co .. Inc. P.O. Box 5Si\I. Daily Pilot, OPERATOR 1505 E. \\'arne r SARA.H COVENTRY has OJLOR TV RCA remote con- Ne''"J.lOrt Beach. Full time. Two ye.a~ exper. Santa Ana ~penings for fu!-1 or pllrl trol w/dlb speaker, cnnsole, "th al ha &: • M t Equal oppol'tutnity employer time sales. No 1nve1tme.nt, $193. B1'and new r-.Jedlt. DENTAL Office Rettp. wi P numenc. us no deliveries. For interview, style desk dark oak $.J:i 6' tlonist. Please Write l-lnx ~ accurate. Sat. &. Sun. C(PERATORS • Sports\\'f:ar * 540.0614 * painted de&k & chr SZi 3 2 t.tATCHING green occas. chairs $50. Fr. Prov. dining rn1 set, table, 6 chairs, hutch & buffet $375. Kg:-sz mattress & 2 box sprngs SHlO. Gold flo\\·ered quilted 9' sofa SIOO. Matchlng clbc Coppe1·to11e \\"asher & dryer $200. Patio furn., umbrella & table, chairs, redwood table & benches. misc. chaise lounges $50. 847-8176 57M Dail Pilot NB 8:30 am to 5:30 pm., fl.ton. l\.lfgr. Ex.p'd. only. Gd. pay,!-~~~===~~ d h I I,_ l Y ' · · *** SECRETARY raY,.er c e.11 o =ciw"rs, n-"·g:•di·og Yo"t "'o•k thru Wed .. 4:30 to lam. Ap. gteady, 642-3472 N..B. 1 ., d 1. 25 . n.c ..... '" • ' 1 Iii a1 , 11e.e s re 1n. S , t\\1n HI •· & ""'·alil ply bet. 3-5 pm. • S or genera o ce , · g..,ry ..,u · MEDICAL Part Time ecy. ,~'Ork, sonie shorthand. sz hdbrd, antiq green, $7.50. OISITTVASHER, Ex!)t!r, full DATA SYSTE?.>fS Hrs. 1 to 5, t.lon. thru Fri. Please provide resume. 833-0392 time. Refs. Apply in person, 17822 8"ach BlVd., Suite 321 for a young ex«:. in lovely S days. salary open. BEDROOM SPECIAL Benton's Coffee Shop. 133 S. Huntington Beach. ofcs. (Mission Viejo Area.) 557-.9540 tor appt. 9 Piece Complete. Bedroom Coast, Laguna Beach 842-66-11 f'Xt. 29 Must be attractlvf' & ~rson-SECRETAl'tY-Steno. Exper with box spring & mattres:s. 1-Massive. 7 piece Spanish DRAFTSMEN (Electro-Mech Detailer) •KITCHEN HELP• able w/: & goo: typing. necess. Send resume w/pic· Regular Pri~ $199.95, This living room set consists nf: Gino's Italian Delicatessen. p ewpol Ar ture. Pontlerosa. P. 0 , ~ week on1y $119.95. Sofa & love seat, 2 end Colle 962-651.2 enonn• gency 11383, S.ota Ana. Approved Furniture tablos, 1 rooktail table & 2 LANDSCAPE Man. exp!!r. to 833 Do'48.{.3~;o• N.B. SEAMSTRESS • Exper in lamps, all for $1 39.95 . lead crew. For appt call garment Industry on in· 2159 1-larbor Blvd. 1-Massive king si:re 5 piece 6#-1784 deys 549-1688 evts * PBX OPERATOR, \Veek-dusttiaJ 5e:l\'ing machine. Costa ?-.Iesa 548-9660 Spanish Pecan Bedroom WOULD PREFER ONE TO Salary open. ends, Sal & Sun. Se" Diane Phone 493-4586 or apply in OPEN 9.9 Set, $179.95, The Factory, :rwo YEARS EXPERIENCE i -~=~~=~==~ bet 7: 30-3: 30 PM. Mon.-Fri. pel"S01l at Coast Catamaran. I~~~-------i=™~5="="=bo='=·=~===== &!nd resume or apply in penon COLLINS RADIO CO. ; ,. 19700 Jamboree Rd. ~ Newport leach • ~ opportunity emplo)~r " • * DRIVERS * : No Experience • Necessary! .,uat have clean Callfornil ::drtvini r@COt'd. Apply • YELLOW CAB CO. : 186 E. 16th St. • Costa Mesa LEG_AL TRAINEE Sheraton Beach Inn. 21112 33012 Calle Pufeclo, San ALL Dinette set!! 5 piece & 7 • - \Vork at Newport Center, Pacilic coast H\\y., H.B. Juan Capistrano p!e~ to be sold for in. start $425 per mo Requires Vf:nlory c I ea r an c e at secretarial ex · Type liO PBX Operator. exp'd prefer-SERVICE Station Attendant $22-$33-'44-$~ while they I----------Office Furniture 8010 rt SJ;·• Attorney red. "l\i U train. U qualified Full lin1e, penn. Salary + liist. 3 good u~d 30 .. gas =~m~ e& Ka~ S44-002J. s 540-"2052 Comm. l\lust be able to sell! ranges $59.95 each. 1 new AEROSPACE RELEASES . Over 21. Brown!! Shell &\'OCado 30" g;u; range $99. f!lECHANICS -(2) marine POLICE OFFICER Service, 990 E. Coast Hwy., The Factory. 1885 Harbor. FOR PUBLIC SALE e 500 steel transfer cases e 7n Steel & . il"ood desks e 85, S.Dra\ver legal file cabinets gas engines. Electrie&l & N.B. 540-6842 general boat •xP· Good ,., $711 lo $872 PER, MO. ===~~=~- &co. benefits. Permanent i1 SERVICE Station Attendant, CITY OF days, l\\•ing & graveyard. qualified. Apply in pl!'fSOn, Apply in f>'J"SOn, c 0 r • •·-"-M--w Coast NEWPORT BEACH =• "''-" 00' ... ,...... • J\facArthur & Canlpus Dr., Hwy, N.B. Several nell·Jy crealed N.B. l\.fachlnists ACME GRIDLEY positions avallahle with S\VJTCH ASSEMBLERS prog1.-es.<1i\'e Police De-Apply 2220 So. Anne St. r.tODERN 9 draw"r dnsser. ,,. Misc chairs, tables & cab- 2 nlte slancl11 S4ii 6 drawer i.nets. dre!.Ser $35. Blond huffe! & lllcf\.fahan B~ Oi?sk Inc. gl~s top china cab. $-10. 1800 Newport Blvd Couch & chair $65. Lrg 6 l==Co.=ta=M='="=*="='"'="="=-drawer chest $50. Truetone ·- stereo cnmbo $40. 548-8611 Garage Sale 8022 Screw mach. setup ·ope.rs. partment, expanding in Santa Ana !\-lust have at lea.st five years 51 .•• a-•·--01 .,,,.,,ty, FOR Your cnnvenience THE •· & · ..... "" ..._..,,.... • \VAITRESSES \\'an1ed : All CT0 GIRL'S green Schwinn setup operallng exper. n~·•-m•n•· 1n•I"d 0 . • FA RY will be open on 1. li S · h.fl XI l ben' ---' •'"'°'4'4<1"" "' ... Shifts. Apply Od te 's S d f 10 ~ s ingray, ke new $40, wings t • n s • ..,.... .. _;,,.ht 5.9 ... , , •. ,1.ghl ·~ R 1,00 un ay11 rom am to., pm. • -d· b.k 25 kin _ _,. , ,..,,,.,,, ~ wv eslaurant, .. \V. Coagt '"'ti Jes 1 e. $ , Hoo\'er at-\\"Or g couu r;. pounds minimum: 21 lo H N 6 StarUng r.tarch Slh, new tachments $3. Ham i J ton Apply personnt'I ofc. llyea-of a-·. 20130 un-"'Y·· · · slore hours 8 am -5:30 pm. 8 h ,1, T bl L 11\f Cox Mfg Co 1nc • ., .. ~ \\'AITRESS \\'anted: Coffee The facto'"", 18" H•tbot, eac vacuum "'"• a e · ·1505· E. Warn~~ · coincted "ision: high Shop, 1797 Newport Blvd. 540-6842 '" ~ lan1ps S20, Black oriental Santa Ana school diploma. Apply bern·m GA..\l & lPt.l. I 7===..-,.,-.,.-7"-,~ table $25, Red\\'OOri double -548-9284 1 Used gnld ~fa bed & chair, seal w/cushions & a!teched , ~EARN $50.$400 WK. EqUa.l opportunity employer Those qualifi~ shouJd report1~~==·~~~~--~ $19. 2 used 7' sofa beds & table. like ne\11 $3:;, Clothing , ~ Selling 1 br-8 hr day lilAID \Vanted, Ken Niles for the next wntlen test at WA IT RE SSE S • exp'd, chairs $39 each. J used 7' ~i2e 12. }'"'ur stole $15, Baby l.ten-Wome:n 18 up. S48-327'7 Villa tfarina ll1ntel. 1021 6:30 P.M., t.lar. u, 1970 at \\'an.l~d Surl & Sirloin, 5930 avocado sofa & chair $49. items & misc. 1501 Antigua Bayside Dr .. NiB. City Hall Council chambers, Paci fic Coast Hwy, N.B. each. all in good condition. \Vay, N.B, &12-3553 ': ELECTRONIC MAINTENANCE m an, also 3.300 Newport Blvd., New-* WANTED * The Factory, 1885 Harbor, PATIO Sale_ 320 Iris, Cdr.1. , TECHNICIAN me.id tor motel, OR COU-port Beach, Calli. No appli-Ambitious, young men, lo ~2 ?<olarch 7-8. Sat-Sun . fitrong 60lid state theory PLE. 2376 Newport Blvd, cation necessary prior to wnrk in quality bakery, to ESTATE SALE -E'nlil""'P. Furniture, dishes'. cutlery, •knowledge. heavy prototype c.r.t. test. For furt~er infonnation learn bakery trade. houseful of fu111: & acce· jewelry, books, clothing, 4hn1 production ..,,......rience. nt I th P n I OU co ~ ~r-~t AINTENANCE 'fan, "'" co ac e er so ne · NTACT ssories, all like new-incl liv children & adults. Elec. :SOme QA ............ r. Good nav. " " • !7141 67'6633 ~,,~ ~....,. Maid for f\JoteJ. Perm. 1~· .,. • 1\tr. Robert Anderson rm. 2 Br's, \\'asher/dryer, type1vriter. osterizer, elec. :Apply in person. 642-2670, 2100 Newport, C.f\.1. al Ms-83.39 betv.'f:en dshwhr, etc. 18325 l\tan· heate1-. other appliances & ~ ~SI~~MSt~~~·-r.IAJOR Appliance Service PRODUCTI ON Artist 8 At.f and 2 Pr-.f dra.ke (University Park) records. 9-7PJ\.1. ftfan w I kn 0 w I edge of \\•/kno\\'\e~ge of V 1 s u a I WO~tAN 2~40, N 0 e..i:-833-2076. 833--0121. IG=A=RA~G=E~Sal-'-.,=,,.~,,~;g-.• ~li-ke ·MERIZHANDISH OR SALE AND TRADE MERCHANDISE l'OR SALE AND TRADE MERCHANOlsr J!~ SALE AND TRADE I A_pp""'-1_1._n_ .. _."-, ___ 11_00 ~bby sue pllH 8400 M lscellaneoua / NOO REA!,. Esta.le Oe.voloper dl11PQ$lna 01 an ovel' lu\'ell- l(>ry &upp}y of new 12 cu It. rch-ig, $13.$-$150. 1 yr \Var- ranty on .pa:rtg & service. For info. call Miu Hen- den;on <1141 557-37'"..0 WH!RLPOOL. Auto. \\'U.her & gas dryer, both ln xlnt cnnd. $100. 847-8115 or _,,, KENMORE \Vashe r &: Whirlpool --elec. dryer in gocxt <:end. $180. 549--0663 or >13-8768 \VASHER & Elec. D~r. pair. X l nt . cond . Guarant"ed· Both only $125 terms. &1~2306 FRIGIDAIRE 6.8 cubic feet. Good. Has b-eezer. ~ or best offer. 673-4343 APr SIZE 1-·RIGIDAIRE REFRIGERATOR :575. &16-6176 WASHING hlach\ne, good condition, just oYerhauled. :525. Call 5'16--5712 0 .S. f\l.a.x 3-ChlUUlei DliJlKJ k 33·· boat, !Ike new. $12j. 1007 E. Balboa, Balboa. No. 3. Sporting Goods 1500 DR.AND hew tent, used anee:, 12 x 14 with pole Sl50. lee box cooler, used onet>, La.ntenia, ~ STU Ca1np lleater, 2 Colen1an stovea, Sf)a.l'e Gas lank & Can\•ag Top for Jeep wtlh JlO]es, good oond. 2 New black reupholstered Jeep :;eal.6. 642-4843 or 642-326.l CAL .22 WOODS~tAN. llrst of the r.ratC"h Target :;erlefi, a t.'Oi!ectors ite1n., $90. 61:l-7529 SURFBOARD 7'5" Russe.II, :590. • 548-9446 * SURFBOARD 7'4" GOOD CONDITION'. $30. ~S.1'!15 GUN Hi-Stanclard 12gau;:-e. 32" ban-el, ribbed sighL $95. 675-5429 SIGNATURE cc Rllnge, 30·· :(Int co , $70. Anti11ue stained gl s "' I n do"'', 23.'1:57"", • Theodore H1:1. ... n11 21 pc. Denti·Tasse l une on set $2 5. Harle Onvldson motorcy- cle rlmlet. like oew, $10. \\'ebCo1· tape recorder corn· plete w/ tape $35. 54~ •TO:-.IATO PLANTS+ LARGEST TOtilATOES EVERGRO\VN ABRAHAM LlNOOJ,.N GlANT OX REART 8 -PL.ANTS ·7Sc One Pal:lo tomato Freel JOHN H. ENDY nl3 Thurln A~. 5-tH89f *AUCTION* U )'OU will sell (If buy I Antiques 1110 1======== -'-'--'-----"- rive \Vlndy a ~ Auctions Ftklay 7: 30 p.m . Windy's Auction B1rn 2075~1 Newport, CM 64&-8686 Behind To.ny's Bldg. ?i-fat'l. 2 SHOVELS, ~a.s la w n mo\.\·er, el"c hedge clippen;, hammock lawn chn, chai~ loung", ll l so Color tilagnavox TV, COlil over $600 11·/ nrly new SD> plc- 1ure tube -S300 cash. ~376 INTERIOR DECOR. Mi1celleneou1 1600 Antiq. Sale: P.ctu!'f's, lace, I ;:;;:;;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;;:;;:;;;;;~ I glass\va1'f:. Duncan Phyte ATTENTION dropleal tbl, 3 leaves, fi ROCK HOUNDS! chrs w/needlepoint seats. EVERETI'S Jennings \•;heel chair, Xlnt condition $50. T\\'O step end tables, 1 cof· fee table, good cone!. all for $25. Clothes hamJlf!l' $2. N"w cotton ya.rdq:e, 4 yds length $1D t>ach. 340 E. 16th Pl. .. ~ game. tbl. Sat & Sun, tll-6. NE\V Shop Opening 21592 Kaneohe Ln, H.B. lO Sat., March 14th. 962-6269. am·8 pm. Open 7 days ===~------1COME in&. register for draw· ANTIQUE * We hand turn-ing for FREE Star Diamond ed spool bed. over 100 yri; polishing unit complete & 6 old. Xlnl cond. $1 S 0 . lb. Covington gem tumbler • 830-3623 STONECRAFT 1.0 AQUARJUr.1s • martM or fi'f!sh \\'Bier. 5 to 15 g-als. \vltll 8' stand & nuorescenl light. with equipment. Complete $135 or w i 11 1>eparate. ~2-62:)3 ENGLISlt walnut secretary 8101 Bolsa Avi>. 1314' high, Original glas~. fllidway City. 897-1970 Burled drav•er'll, & Brass I,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!• I hd\vare. S250. &15-14,16 ORIENTAL Black Coral Carvlnp. Collector's item. Avail for limited time. Appt. only, 548-8219 RUSTY (lt'ange oriental rug 9x12 $300, 2 others. Meerschaum Pipes. 64.Z..2615 Sewing MethlnH 1120 SINGER au!o zig-zag, 6 ?1105. old. No attach needed for zig-zag, button ho 1 e ~ . designs etc. Guar . .$37 cash or sma.11 payment5. 526-6616 WHITE t:ig-zag port. sewing machine. xlnt corut .. $65 or offer. 1965 model. 646-9753 Musical lnatrument1 1115 CONTELLO ACCORDION 2-4 key, 120 ba~s. with case, $600 value + .. easy to learn" books & sht!et music case. PERFECT CONDmON! :5200 or Best Offer 5-10-8308 After 3 PM 1 PIECE Yamaha drum set. new in 1969. Xlnt condition. Sacrifice.! $325. TI4: 538-1435 after 5 Pll-I. DRUr-.tS. set of Four + e.'1:- tras. Llke new $100. Even- ing~. call 673--0372 FENDER f.fuslang with I-lard Shell case. $00. 5'18-3155 alter 5. Pieno1 & Organs 8130 If you are ~hopping for a piano or organ. new or used, and are interested in a truly greAt deal, please !hop WARD'S BALD\VIN STUDIO 1819 Newport. C.~t 642-8484 Open Every Nile &. Sunday Afternoon POOL TABLES --· BRUNS\VICK-A.r-.fF Custom Slate Table From 12'19 100% Finandni * SECARD POOLS * S32-1"'J 323 S. !\fain Sl Orange SKIERS. FISHERt<JEN, HJKERS Mobile home & ca bin for sale. or trade in r-.1ammoth Lake. Fully furn, Slpg 7. f'irepl. Sacrifice $4500. Days 531-3.:.""'74, Eves >ro--0617 ZENITH slereorecard pla}:er Ir. Ar.1-Fi\-1 contbinalion $50. RCA TV, black & "''hite $30. Blond" king si:t~ headboard $35. Hereford saddle, $175. Blonde coffee table $50. 6U..OO~ LADIES n"e.d a new lift in life? Cu~tom Iii bras & GAS rang", near ne\\', owner deceased $93. Refrig, family siit S50. Antique pedestal oval-shaped hath lavatory $30. 2114 ContinentaJ. CM SPECIAL Hunt, -&-F..i!h camper for 6 men. Near new. Bought With truck. have. no need for. Priced Righi! 2114 Continental, CM f\.lOVING: fllust Sell! Single r.1embershl p in Newport Sch Tennis Club. $450 or best ntfer. 8AM -5 P?.t , 642-8590. CARPET left from Comm'l. contracts. Sl.98. $2.88, shag $3.99 sq yd. Drakes Ca~t 17206 Beach Blvd, H.B. 8'12-5114. ORIENTAL RUG, Kerman, 9'9" x 14'6", iood cood. ;79;1. swim'>l·ear. 549-2100 for appt. :>ts.gjl2 TIRES: 4 Goodyear Polyglas CARPET Layer bas carpet. G7S-l4, nevt'r used. $125. Nylon, Kodel. Shag k Call 847M8li6. Hi-lo\vs. Will sell at cost for "P;;;OTI=;;E;;R°"'s'""'1Vl=tE°"EL'°'""'1"'3ll'""l labor. 52:).1188 Electric. A Steal: 2 i\fATCHING 8' Bay l\1urrey 6-15-2246 aft 6 P~t w fas, beige S9:J ea. GE port. HAND Painted oil portrait of dlsh1\•asher $30. Dbl box you or your children from a sprin.;:: & mall. $15. 548-2416 pbotograph. 64&-3629 LOCAL Eggs \Vholesale from \\IHY Pay more? Must move Ranch to Restaurant! & used carpet, xlnt cond. Call C on v a I e s c e n t Honres 3J!H110 ~738 aft 6 P~t NEW wip $9, lonR falls \\1th GE Electric deluxe dryer bangs, gtay curly. a.II colors, $8.i. Antique rocker W). synthetic $5. 515-1387. Brass table lamp $1 S. $1.6-0071 Sl-IOPSl\lITH, ccunp. w/all attach. Jig-saw, spray gun, -Carpet layer has Hi Lo planer, sander. Kt 6-9633. nylons Sl.99 yd. Shags Irom $3.50 up + my labor, TABLE $15, Hanging lamps 00:: per yard. 847-1519 $35 each, barstools $3 E'ach, bar $35. 235 Broad\vay, C.ill. QUALITY king bed • quilted n1attreu. Complete unused 50 YARDS "·ool carpet, $50. 1 $120. worth $260. 842-6536 braid 8x20' rug $25. 1001 N. e\>·e11. Coast Hwy, Apt ll, L.B. ENCYCLOPEDIA BRIT AN· 2 EARLY An1erican Z\\"i\'(>[ NICA. 1959 .•. $65. 644-2128 bar stools $30 coffee table $4 rug pad 7x 8, S4. 548-1453. Mile. Wanted 8610 f'EMALE. Good organizer. Frig!dsire & Hotpoint Ap-Al~s. p/bme. days .Call perience necessary, Live-in, 1 Giant 5' Credenza $35. 2-2 new, bulane 3 burner ;Must be able to handle I ~p~li~a~n"'~'~· ~C.:l~l ~&t~&-:;:24~'6~ ...... 1 ... -:::..-033:::~3~. =-~::-:::::::--·j \Vork for man in \\"heel door Credenza~. 1 avocado camper stove &; tank. ~ ervi.Cf': ttqUests on the 1 i chair, & I antique \\·hile $25 each. \\"asher & dryer, mlsc furn I ~::;~~;;"'~:;;~;;;;~ :phone, put them In cnrrect ** ?tlGR. T'R.AINEE ** POWER MACHINE * 5~8-3634 * AS5Clrted walnut t>nd tables .. accumulated junk. Also, I· PIANOS & ORGANS =~rder &: keep nur custnmers Ambitious responsible guys, OPERATOR &. c«-ktail tables $2.50 each •62 Chevy 327 S.S. Fri., Sat NE\V & USED DELI Case, 4 shelves w/con1pressor. CaJI * 646-5383 * \VANTED: Used dbl Tandem boat trailer for 22'6'' Chry§. !er twin in/outbnt. 536-3248 : ~~00 Balance Flo, N.B. work your way to the top w/ Sails By Shock. 675-1823 School1-ln1truction 7600 lo $7 each. Thf' F'ac!ory, & Sun t8Afi.f-5Pt.f\, 2738 e Yamaha Pianos Orangs a co. that is top notch! $5400. REAL Estate s a 1 es men 1885 Harbor. 5-16-6842 Freemont Ln. C.r.t 546-®10 e Titomas Organs DIAi\tOND 2K Weddlng ring, never ·worn. Appr:iise.d $1,032. Sell $435. 49-H463 r t<MALE cook wanted, Pt· Call Helen· Hayes 54IHi055 shouldn't you be selling the AIRLINE GROUPING Early Am turn., itOVING. B!g Garage sale. e Kimball Pianos time in your 0"''" home. COASTAL AGENCY holiest area Hu nt Ing Ion SCHOOL 4) couch, chair, f:nd talJ!es & Nick nacks, \\' R ~be r. e Kohler & Campbell FREE TO YOU ·Good earnings. C&ll 67~2135 mo Harbor Blvd., C.lt-1. Beach? \Ve will train. Call PACIFIC cnffee table, $125. Richmond freezer, TV's, f\!aple dining COAST MUSIC r KY COOK. exper, full time. I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'I Phil l\.fc:Namee Village filaJ Day & Night Clai;scs upright piano $300. Also :;et, 6 chairs, r-.Japle f\vin NE\VPORT & HARBOR ~·· TRir.tM.ER La''"' n r.101\-er, Sl20. Good Con- dition. Call -2 FEi\tALE toek-a-poos. 880 Captol St., C.M. 311 Rels. Apfiy in pt>rson, Estate 962-44TI 5-i3-G596 other turn. 494-6738 beds, ron1p. Misc furn. All Costa Mesa * 642-Z83J Benton's Coffee Shop Management Treinee 1 .... good 11hape. 1591 \Villa Ln, 0Pt'n 10-6 Fri 10.9 Sun 12-5 592-2J.)(I, !J3 S. Coast, La..,•na Beach $600 RECEPTIONIST, Gener a 610 E. l71h St., Santa Ana \\'H!Tr..· "TOUghl lron ~af1;1., CM 9-S Sat-Sun. .. ~ OUice. fl/lime for eves &1""'""'""""""""""""= chair &: ottoman. cocktail i RY Cook. Short order. 5 r.rust be married. 3-5 yrs wkends. $2 hr. Fun Job for MERCHANDISE FOR table ~-l.<!unger $Xi COl\E niachine • lube gun. days. Sat-Wed. Apply 101 work exp., call Ann. \Vest-responsible girl who likes SALE AND TRADE M>-5271 some oil & air filters, etc. J\.1cFadden NB (Near r!iff Personnel Agency. 2043 t & ·r •---"-an<>e fron1 c.-~ ... n .. , s1.1 1·00 lo ' • • \Vestcliff Dr .. N.B. 615-2770 peop e ' a.i p .... ..,s. v• 0 ULTRA modern Dan ish °"'' ··~ · Ne-wport Pier) Cn. AirfXlr!. Call Kay,I F--.-1------8-0-00-recliner $50. matching ot· closeout. Also s-e wing GARDENER TRAINEE i\IANAGEl\f ENT Op-·wkdays 54(}-2720 ur n1 Ure tonian SlO. Like ne•v, 8~7. machine & othe.r goodies. . Experience nee. Xlnt opp. portunity. Full or Part lime. 7509 Sar, J\111rch 7, l!J.-6. 631 Vi~ta fn4J 546--9085 Car ne e. 20 hn. wk. 8364302 Restauran! QUEEN Anne down filled Bonita, NB. • Generel Ofc. Trainee $350 Lovely ofcs. Frie.ndly atmos· ·pbett. Wonderful opty, for •beginner who can type. Call Min Betty 557-61l2. Abigail • Abbott Personnel Agency. 230 \V. Warner, Suite. 11, 'Santa Ana. , *•GIRL FRIDAY :Sharp. Appl)·; llfllc Gregw : Yllcht Corp. 1631 Placentia. 'Costa ll1esa. . lfOSPJT ALITY H 0 S T ES S • SER.VICE. has openings tor mature Y.'Omen k>okir!g for interesting, part time "'Ork, "''tlcomillg M\.\'CGmet'S to ~J'QUI' area. Sales e" p, ~dealnible. Must have. car. 'CALL, 5.'l.- MANUFACTURING chaise lounge. Antique tilt SALEM House 5 dra1ver TYPE\VRITE che5t, nile stand. dlb bed, · R. furn. pain. ENGINEER COOK !bl., Wllsh stand. desk. ting~. lrames, fape deck. --chair, misc. 206 Emerald s75. x.lnt rond. £ v e & 'Pkrs. tapes. t.-lisc. 3248 Days or Ni9hts Bay, LagunA. 49-1-2166 /\\•knds. ~14 Dakota. CJ\!. 545-«!60 f\ey r.tana~ment role ln a last growing company. 1\lllc Gregor Yacht Corp. 1631 Placentia, C.t.f. APPLY IN PERSON lfAVE n!decoratetl home k T\VIN Beds Comp!e1e. Retin. SAT. & Sun JOAM-5PM, 2315 "'ill sell beaut 8' curved. frame-anliq green. Paid Arbutus. N.B. fEastb1utO quilled, gold ~tin sofa in ~3lO. Sacrifice $lOO. Like. All kinds fu r niture . R b E L xlnt cnnd, Decorator's item. New. Call 642-6297 Re·-nabl•I MEN·WOMEN. foll tim• or eU en , ee - part time. Fish &: Chips 151 E. Coast Hwy. Sbephers casters. 6•14-1252 QUALITY king bed • quilted TRANSF-priced lo &e 11 ! restaurant. across--tro m -Newport Beach l\fOVING -must sell! Quali· mattrtss. Compl~te-unused Fum., porlable: 11 t er'! o, Newport pier. 21(!0 W. :c-.,---,'------1 ty Maple lurn. Din rm set $120, worth $260. 842-6536 \\'ndw air conditioner, niisc. Ckeanlront. Restaurant '"/hutch. BDRi\1 ~ @c t. eves. 2988 Cenle.lla. NB. CNr r.f ARK ET Re I ear ch . Ancient Mariner \\'indsor rlesk. 81S' floral 8' SOFA, ne\.-"er used, quilted Irvine&: 11!'.I) lntervie"·er. No f!" :'C pe r no\v takint: llpp\lcations for Mi ia, niod. Bdrni ae I• floral. &;otchguarded $11.0. INTERIOR Dec. Bk yd ar! ne.ceSl!. P/lime, no ~Uing, 'Full & p.:1r! time, rlay ~hiU. .o'~''°~rt_•_d_t_b_t._. _67_:;._·~·'~"--·I ~~-loveM!at $75. (l) 11how. 4 Artists. Sal & Sun Own car. (2131 541-3103 e KITCHEN HELP 8" Blue &-green CJUil!!d gJip ==~~~~~--10-6, 21592 Kaneohe Lt'.l, r.tEN \Vented for l\tornlng e DISHWASHER COv1'red divan, match . BEAUT.\\•hlfedoub!ecal"IOpy H.B. 962~ N""'spaper dellvery to Apply ln perRin ~~~~ 6i~U~ue. plaid chr. bed & 3 drawer che11t :5100. HUGE SchQol Garage Sale, homt>s, H.8,, f .V. atta. 2607 \\'. Coa!!t Ii\\')'. 9' & 5' gnld floral wfas $395, furn, appllancts, clolhes. ?iotust live \\'"fit of Newport Bt11.ch i\IESA Verde ryoalilY hand value $!0). 54S-4llO l\tlsc. 62S Center St., C.M, Brookhurst. Call 847-t.m RESrAURANT. r-.11r. IJ :3D-tiM maple living room KITCHEN SET. ?>larch 6th & 7th. b10D'ELS for I Un che on 2 Pi\I, days. r-.IALE, over lS. group. xlnt cond. Ste~ l\IUST SELL! G1\RAGE SALE. fl larch 7 ti SKP R-CO OK Exll & fashion show1>. 21 or over. eves. ~\pply at Ta~tee Freez ret'Clrds $1. S46--0379 540-232t &ft GP?>! & 8. 3092 Country Club Dr. }matutt. Take en m PI e. t e c.aJI for appt. 540-3460 2966 Bristol, C.~f. after 2 CASH! Furnlture V.'aJlted. DINING set. walnut oval C.t-.1. From 10 to 5 pn1 :dwge.. Of house & other P'I N··' sppt·1on-• sntlq's drople•f t•blo, '''''"" ~help. Hn.) am.thni dJnner. NEEDED Ll.dle.s to do Ille ' · e= . , .... ~ • • .. :s~ d~ Uve out Own Maid work at r;mall motel, ROY ALVARADO '1tc. No Junk. 968-6.m. 24 lhelf. $85. Ce.11846--5215 !t1'ani . Ple.aae a tvf' HB.Onlyafewhoursntt<t-H1ir Styllaf ~b="~·==~---~-USED Black & \\'hi!e hffierencu, fXl'ft' & aaiuy ed in the morn.Ina. CaU Now lntet'\lle\\<lng: H8.lr styl-l~TER?OR Designer's (N.11 portable rv·s .in excellent ~. Write Dally Pl.lot 536-4170 lsts. htir dre881'!1'5. beautic-7 red & blui,: p~ald aofa, condition $39 each. 2 used :Bo. )f.)(. r-.1EED mature woman to ~11 111n.' AS's l!tants, $hllmpoo N!cently uphoJ $12;,. 64.&--2005 sterro1 $25 tat h. U~ head· ' •' 30 J t t rt t • hnl aJt 5 boards, double & twin ~lze AOUSEKEtPER Nttded for w/mother. 1-..: , b!'t!:ataal Ir, man cu 1 5 r Jrn>. ,...=·====,,__,..,.. . :;._ldf'rl.7 M!mJ lnv&Jid lad)' · 1 It lunch. to.'o hou~Wl.lrk. drls. Ne\\' port Beach. 2 UPlfOt.STEREO chidrR Sl each. The factory. 1885 :Ille coaltinc. Own tnnsp g $1.ri hr. ~S-1185 aft &:Y.l 642-6323 -AnyUrmi. :515. !)8tio furniture 530. 1601 Hal'OOr. ::H0·~42 ;l>t.,\'I. &30-&:JJPM. S60 ~ NfZ.,"OEO Companion for + + SALES.\tAN. Full time. N. CotJI H1\')', 11pt I(. LB. 8' GOLD couch, brand new. * mNk. H.u mini J)OOdle. elde r ly lad)', llaht Experienced. Neat !n ap-RA'fTAN dining se.I. table CoUtt !bl &· ove.rstulfed Vie . .Ho.a Hosp. Aae 40-65. ~tor 2 Adults. ltvt pear1tK:t. Set Jim, 2500 flX"tends to 1·, 6 chain JM, chalr, xl:JI (.'(Ind. 5'18-8908 Call dQS 64J..U8l tn. Rm. nee. 4.!M-7'186 N~ Blvd., C.M. 968-1171. Whlte Elephant.a? ,_ ______ _ I ' Appliances 1100 LADY Kenmore g&!i clothes dr yer . Coppertone-rolor. Brant1 tlE'.\\'! 646-2975 J96T 30·· Gas range, excellent si;.; 96S4172 USED Arpfia.noe &: TV'&. all &llllr&ntttd, Dunlap's. l8lS N•wport, C.M. !W3'TISS '60 l.Ai\lBRE'ITA ?-.1otor CALICO cat, 7 mos. old Scooter $170. Din4!tte set $25 ff'ma.IE', hsbrkn. 534-0094 317 HAmfOND Steinway, Yam· la\\'IUnowe.r $30. 546-8854. }.,,UR KITI'ENS 534-1588. aha. New & used pianos of Pnwer i\fov,:er $15. hand To good home. 3/7 most makes. Best "3UYs in mower $5. 188\~ i\lerrlll CACTIJS Planlc; -you dig. So. Calif. at Schmidt Music Place, C.r.:1. 64~206. 642-1522 ::ift 5 pm 3/7 Co. 1907 N. 11<11'"ln, Santa Ana ,-=========-=========I PIANO RENTALS tram :510 monthly . Mi1celleneou1 8600 I Mi1cellaneou1 All rentals apply to purchase GOULD MUSIC :lfl45 N. Main, SA 547-00.31. TH0?>1AS ··sand Box" & "Playmate" both ror S.100. Artii;a.n Orchel!tnt be 11 s $20D. Add exciting 1 percUMlon to any organ. Ne\.\'J)Orl Organs 64>1530 UPRIGHT anfirrued avocado Piano, xln! tone, brand new keyboard, a.zk'g $350 . ;J().11663 HAi·1t~'IOND Organ Mod"! J\.1· ill, \\'a.lnul, t.larlc Pre-set. back grill. $1200. 673-SW. PIANO Good Cond. 962-8"731 Tele v ision 1205 SlLVERTONE Color TV, Conmle. 1 'i yn: old. MS-8918 PACKARD Bell 1V, remote control with be11utiful cabtnet S-15. 536-8411 •tB Tape Recorder• 1220 LIKE Ne~'. Ro~rts i'70-X !Ape reeorder w IC r o 5 s field Mild. &OU:iti w/aouod, C trk • .C spd, w/tape& $1~ Ctll 675'-6513. Auto Body & Fender PAINT SHOP FOR RENT Tn Partnersh ip of American J..totors Franchised Dealer. * 2 New Ptlnl Bootha * 2 Hydraulic Lift Racks * 31/J Acret Complettly Fenctcf * Approxlm•tely 1600 sq. ft. Inside * Front Office Spact Av1ll1ble This Property Faces Beach Blvd . and Mai n St. a1t1 five Points ShQpping Center DORSA MOTORS Or•119• Co11n1"v'1 N1wt1I A"'t1ic:•11 Moton 011111 11621 llACH IL'ID., HUNTIN•10N llACH 842•8340 MAIN Al llACH 842•~ • - TRANSl!O)ITATION TRANf l!ORTATION TRANSPORTATION J•.!t!_ 9510 fmport~~utoa •600 _,,_ •• _,_ • ._. .. ;;...;A.;.u.;.•.;.o•:....._.•6:.:.:00 lmpottH Autos FREE 10 veu~ r1tANIPOR·TAT10N -------,D:::!:':....---~112::!:!5 Sallboab ,MIO TJtREE pert<y penonal.ity - Moblle Homes 9200 Tr1l1•r, TraVel ~ -·-----9425 plus pups need CoOd home. OROOMINC Spec $6 for Pla1Trend Poodle father & motlier any toy or mini. poodle in $0LING * JOMICRA INC. * "46 DODGE Pwr Wgo, wloch. AUSTIN AMERICA DATSUN hubs, utility bue. Great lof _____ ;.;_....;.....;.....;. ·--------- ml.led """kel' &. Be.qt .. , 2 average cond. by appt. TEMPEST "'"'" ~ 646429$ Ftoturin 9 America's ftn . ten1ale, 1 ma.Je. 6 \Vlts old. --.7..,,.,.,b,=o--14' PT420 OD Clus 15000! est mobile .,tote homtl camper 1700. '56 J"p W • '08 AMERICA, Auto. Ri>dio. NEW '70 1VI. . hubs. wide w h 1 • Ex«-llent Cond. $1350 01• 616-1&13 "'" or1er. <>J--2Ma DATSUN PICKUP Call ~ aft 5 P.r.1'.. & YOR HIRE 1'.tain, jib, spin. et" S1314 Y.'k-e.nds 3/6 TE RIER Padflc Yacht Salff 6'la.1570 displayed in Or•nge SHARP "16 Jeep, COCKER Spaniel, Butf ool-pUpS. -4 AKC. 613-1756 3•l46 Via Oporto, Newpt Bch. County's newe1t ad i.lt rollba.r. llOOxlS ti orW. male, 2 mo's old. Cute E o ac h sh u nd 31 ' MALIBAR. Junior Aldtn par•s. TRAILER SALES M6-39l3; aft 6 pm as a. button. Looking for Pups bred, no papers. s Sloop, dacron uil1, ~In-S'ACES -Your ellolc• of St LI e Id I '43 r-.tilllary Jeep, $850 or of. ---------- good home. &12-2461. or v:eek3. $25. 546-1026 Costa naktr. 2Sh.p Craymarlne. •p•c• '" •nv of our ntw ream ne e a fer. Heavy duty chmme 1960 Austin Healey 3000. 64i-&OO 319 Mrs11. Slt'tlps 4. Good cond. $8500. p•rk,, TerryeNomadeOasis rfms & Gates tires. 673-7192 Xln'1 t!Og & good body. E en.) ~· •~ SA LES Ch h E I M t H S475. Call 548--0226 evr~. TJt,EE-pupples mixed oreed. GREAT DANE PUPS ves. ;,uo-......,., -001• ,your om• xp orer o or omes ./ '42 JEEP. New transmJ.&. AUSTIN HEALEY Wlcamper, 96 hp overhead cam, 4 1pd, dlr, 6 ply tins. b4ck up llghts. You n.a.me lt! Serial No. 244009. P'ulJ price SW99. Take small dn or trade. Call Phil, 494.gm or ::.45"0.:.34 after 10 am. All females. Small or Fawn black muk! Will be LAP\VORTH 36-sloop. Xlnt from 0"'' IOO niw modili Campers and Shells fllon. $725. Ask for Olen, mtdlwn 11ize dog11. 2 black & BIG•. •J20 m -.· 121 •g.:;<r cond. Loaded. 10 sails. r••dv to mo"• in or h•"• 13172 Harbor Blvd. G G 548-6523. $ ,. __,,., -i "' your1 tu1tom bulh, , ' ' white &. 1 brown & 1vhi1c. AKC ~llver Poodles. r.67.~d~cedo~ $L28 per I b. SERVICE_ Full ti,,,, ,.,...It• 1~1 Blocks No, of MUI DATSUN mna. Xlnt w/chlldren. Ca 11 ,,.-,o " dtp•rtrn•llf 11,.,1n, ••cl. lo-Garden G1'0\'e Free1va;,' Dune · Buggie• 9525 # 1 536-4174 3/7 Bellu!Uul Pups, healthy. -=--~----'I <•llon. 537-4011 . After 4 PAI, !41~2119. 25' Sloop 'vllh mooring l\tEYERS '! BMW TINY maie chihuahua, mb(. S2SOO -"ANAHllM"-FANTASTIC B · 4 st · "anx, go.Id metal SELECTION OF "Leader in The t.eanh Clllet" ~ 3 Id 1 ta 1 2 LB. Toy Poodle1, Yorkles t>MJ833 ll..Yll in ar. Ilake. 1500 CC Eng. FuU in· • 8 ZIMMERM -· fllOli, o , cur y 1, •. 1_, •.• •·-PONOEROS MOBILE \Vestways & Funt i me . MW's • AN floppy eat's, nds lvg home. or " ... tese at su.11.1. ~~-""":,.::::=____ A Ca Scotts 914 N strumentallon. ·Mag whl11 .. '46-UllB 317 Pocket·slie tiups. !>10-3500 LIDO 14 Sailboat. No. 2389, ESTATES H mpers. A • · new tires, hdtop, side c\11'-C. BOB AUTREY ?110TORS 2845 HARBOR BLVD. \vlth trailer. Call 837-7039 2100 So. l•wi1 71l·,l3·l'Ol 1 __ ar_bo_r._s_._._____ tatns. cust. dacron cover. • LONG BEACH • 540..6410 SEVERAL saC'ks or alumtn. Horses 8830 aft 6 PM -"COSTA MESA"-KENSKJLL· & Kit. Special litany goodies. ~l uch \\'c have gold mQ.re Bl\1W's ___ .:..:::.:::.:.::._ __ un1 cans to girl scout or boy -------"'"' NEAR new Sabot, xJnt cond., G~EENLEAF PARIC prices on lot modeUi, Scotts, chrome. All profess, detail· lhan any dealer ln L.A. or DOT DATSUN scout or similar croup. BEAUTIFUL S he tland rl ~ge d for racing IJSOWhittier A.... 914N.Harbor,S.A. !ng.5'13-2751 OrnngeCounties? OPEN DAILY &12-9846 3/7 Geld~. Great w/children, Reasonable. 675--!'>162 ' 714.64 2.1350 '69 i\IEYERS A1aux 2 + 2 \vith SALES -SERVICE AND rE'IALE cal ready 10 ha" ~ceptional saddle., CAii for'"======== LEASING SUNDAYS " • .e 1· T k 9500 top & side curtains, Ne\\'IY klttena desperately needs a S-IJ5). Call c7t4l 842-1358 Power Cruisers 9020 -"H8~.NCTHl~.GTON ru' 1 rebll, big bore V\V eng. Lotl! Overseas Delivery Specia11Sts 18835 Bea...h Blvd. home. Vtey pretty, very af-TRANSPORTATION ,.... ol chrome, Gates tires. 1970 r.100ELS lN STOCK· Huntington Beach teetlonale. 968-4397 3/7 --~------1 FOR Sale twin screw 250 hp, DR IFTWOOD IEACH CLU9 Ntw International Transfei· forces sale for C. Bob Autrey Motors 842·1'1tt or 5-~0-0442 2 Year old male Shelty, Boats & Yachts 9000 34' Fairliner. Ve53el has 21-462 :i~~~J~~;~;t Hwv. Pick Up Truck Sl!>95. or trade for late 1860 Long Beach Blvd., TllF. ENCUSll GOING THING! AT ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLUME ENGLISH FORD DEALER 0\T!:h. 60 NOW AT CLEARANCE ' PRICES! Theodore ROBINS FORD I DO Harbor BJ.vd.__ : Costa ..... :__-, FERRARI . ! fERRARI Newport lmporu Ltd. 81 ange Count)<'a Cln1)r •u it:ed dealer . SALES-SER'(ICE·PART$1 3100 W. Coast Hwy. · Ne\\-port Beach • 642·9405 540-17 Authorlted Ferrari Dealri Needs iood hcnne. Call new hull job. t.1ay be seen • model Pickup. ~344 11.Htr Long Beach DATSUN LATE '67 M!-2324 ""· 319 SCR·AM-LETS !',,~";:;'i'.f.; H.,bo,,,. by "YUCAIPA-CALIMISA" LIQUfOAJION '-Ph<l"' 213 . 591-8121 JGOO Rood•ter. 4 •pd, dlr, FIAT • ''"IAMESE k. bl k SOUTHWEST MOllLE VIV Met lfl·•e D -b OPEN SUNDAYS Sharp, hdlp, sun red, plush ia-o ittens, ac s BOSTON \VHAI,.ER EAST-~-HOME SA LES i a ..... u,,.., uggy. -=~==~-~-black int. xlnt wnd. l\fust ----·-----~-:ti • -y 6 ... ., .. -·l" AN WERS 3 to choose fro1n al factorv &~! oHer takes:! See at :?34 BMW'S #1 : · ... ~ ' " ""' u "· PORT, 65 hp Mere & trlr. 1065 C•limt1• 81¥d. " sacrifice! $1499. Take older '63 Fiat 6000 . Strotig 850 &15-5978 317 All 1!!69. Phone 646-2007 714: 795-4512 invoice p1·ice. Albe1·t P .. C.l\f, An1erican carors1nall do\\'J\. Lowered auspen1ion. ~ F'Er.1AI..E Dachshund 4 yrs. Leflven -l;invoy -saute -w • • BAY HAR BO Kus tom Motors VOLKS 1350 Engine, Neal' DEALER IN URE643. Call Ker. 49'1-9773 tras, ta.st, e co no mt cal to --" hon1e, loves Injure -SEVEN WA~ED: .2>30 Cabin R "'"0 -•·cr C'f <10•01· Ne\\'. $600. or 545-0634. 642-14" AM .1' 6 """ Cruiser Fa• .. to --" --·' Mobile Homo Sales '"" ,...." ' ·" · '> .,,,., ;) C FO ~ children. 5ffi..5005 319 Overheard: "'She's so old · .. 6 ""'" ....... 11.1. * 67;>-3132 ~JI 5 * All RNIA AND she knew Heim: when he had Call 642-96&3 days. YEAR ENO '4!l O!EVY PU, 292 eng, ~.l =:======== '70 DATSUN SEDAN FEMALE beagle, 1 Yl". old., 1 CLEARANCE SALE Race Cam. Solid Llftcl'!:, I d C 9600 ORANGE COUNTY'S Big 4 door 96 hp overhead iood \\'/children. To home ony SEVEN varieties:· Speed-Ski Bo1t1 9030 NO\V ON DISPLAY Holley 600 Carb, Runs good. mporte ars LARGEST cam, disc bra.Ires, 4 spd. dlr. JAGUAR w/fenced yard, 963-5825 3/7 GLASShullonly . .26'X'8Built,i-''---.;._;;._:...;_..c;..c Body in good cond. ~ ---------\\'SV.'. bac~ up lights. Sa.er!. ---------ii b Cry f OSTO 12• 16• 20• 24 & 30 Wides l>.c•. T-'"• trade, '''ill ""•-'70 JAGUARS.',· BLACK male cockapoo, 3 Y sta Liner for net B N \Vhaltr with 50 Up To Go Feet Long cash 968-2883 aft 6. AUSTIN AMERICA 1970's Immed. Delivery ..,.. """ years old. Good watch dog. boat. S500 or trade tor car Mere, All new in '68. 2 gas 1425 Be.ker St., Costa Mesa .64 OIEV' ;~ ton 8. bed, VS 25 Nr1v &. Used in Stock private party, Call Phill, ln stock. Immediate df<lli'Ul~I 494-3955 319 or pickup, Scott, 19 7 3 tanks, elec starltr, good ;, bJock East of Harbor Blvd. stick, raQio, htr., SHMS. AUSTIN AMERICA T&M MOTORS 494-9773 aft 10 am. Authorhed Dealer , OVERSTUFFED wing. back Federal Ave., C.t.-1. 548-7865 =·~~it ofter over Costa J\ftsa (714) 5.t0-!M70 54:HXl32: 2766 Bristol, C.!11. Sales, Service, Parts 8081 Garden Grove Bl, G.G. '67 ROADSTER ~ I chair framt. Dtcellent con· BIDS Accepted. Repossessed · · LOVELY , •. 1 hr "''" trlr. No. lll 1 edl n -ll 534--2284 Open Sunday 892-55$1 New top & tire&. 23.000 nliles. ..,. 11"\fl• dltlo .... 1308 36' House boat, Bank of ;)Q ,:,..:~~~=----mm ate ""' very ut "'II n. or1 3/6 America. r.tr. Mot·gan or Boat Slip Mooring 9036 All set up. lo rent, adlts, no '63 ECONOLINE Van. Ne\v All Aiodels ~~840~nd! $1350. Ca 11 lll""'•-': 3 PARAKEETS, 1 "'ht, 1 JI.tr. Goodi•:in STJ...2500 pets. $2695 cash. 6;1:!-2841 pttint, interior. 8 lrk tape, '' •• yello\v, 1 green, 2 "'°===~~~~-chron1e v.•hls & more. $1200. DATSUN '68, 1300 11; toa • regU;ttred. 549-1418 3111 RUNABOUT .65 hp Johnson. 40H' 801 AgtoT DooHak fobor rent in Bicycles 9225 &1~2861. pickup. Good cond. SllOO. 900 So. Cat. Highway ; 01\/11er leaving town. Take uni n n r ur. Ph 673-4023 Laguna Beach • 9 MO. old male Scottie to ovt'r pymnls. Contact Bill 646-9303, uk for Jl!M"y ---------'6.1 Ecooollne Pick u P •94-7503 * 54Q..:Sl .. iood home only. 847-4528 3/9 \Villiamson, days &t2-9470 Erwin. BOY'S Schwinn sting r ay \\'/po\\'er lift gate. See at _ PETS bicycle. Blue and \\'hite. 20341 S. \V. Cypress, S. A. TIME FOR '65 3.8S Sedan. Belie I bll •nd LIVESTOCK 8' racing runabout, reglstra· Bo R hardly ustd, in excellent Hgts. 3100 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. lrthr, pwr/aJr, chrm. ~ lion papen &: hardware. at entals 9038 d'll S30 537 3993 -"':;;:.c~-----642-9~05 540-1764 QUICK CASH whls, neW radials. 6#-4265.1 Dogs 8825 l: II S50 962-396-con i on , -'j7 rORD 1,~ ton pick up. Authoriied MG Dealer THROUGH xce ent · :> WANTED to rent: Exptr. $250. MIT \\'heel~. =~=~-'-.;..;.==...-&16-Z055 A '61 XK 150. DH Conv., minf. 12 FT. Boat. ne\\•ly paintt!d. pl)\\1er boat handler deslrts Mini Bikes '9275 *Call 646-3646* PLANNING to move! You'll BAYSIDE MOTORS DAILY PILOT condition. True C(>11ectorf \VEI~lARANRR Pups, AKC, Bargain $80. lo occasionally rent 33-10' ;.:.;;.;;;...;:;.:.:;.:::..... __ _.:=:; l,19~5=7-1-N,cT:::E:.:RN,,,:.A:.;T,:!O:.:N:.:A_L_P~ick find an amazing number of lllO w. Coast Hwy., N.B. Item. 830-5976, 495-4332 , fitld & show, \Vhtlpt>d * 675-l31B * llport crulzer from In· MINI-BIKE Up. Very clean, Runs good. homes in today's Clautl.led THE QUICKER YOU CALL. WANT AD '62 JAGUAR MARK 10'1 l-7-70. 6 male, 6 female. dtvldual. Principals only. NEW CONDJ'JltON $75. S29i 642--6817. 67~5413 Ads. Check them now. (213) 373-0n3 Sailbo1ts 9010 plea~e call C. Lewis days ~--•-54_>-_1.187 __ • ___ i·=~=======-"'=========-~™=E=Q"U=I=CKE==R=Y=O=U=SE=L=L'-=========-'$1::;:700=:. =-==='=lt=6=pm=. ::ill =BA"°SEN=.;.J,,:I...:.,"Bar::__kl_"_'_"_p_u_p_•. ---------1 C714) 5 47-6001, Eves GO-KART.goodrunningcon-New Cars A.KC, 7 weeks, shots. 1 Of A Rind? 16' 9" Deep ~3499· dition. $50 or best ofier . .::::::::::::0:------'-'-;.;.;..;.;;.;;_;c;...:... ___ ..:..:.:.:.:.:.:..::...:.:c..:... ___ ..:.:.:.:;.;.;.;c;c.....:::..:. ___ ...c;.::::._.:.:;:.:;...:;:.:.:. ___ _:..:.;:.~I * 968.7532 * Keel Salling Canoe. $250 673-8593 C"l o 1 ' Aircraft 9100 ~------AUSTRALIAN Siiky Terrier ~~~_R_>-_39_5_. ----i·--------- AKC. l\1ale puppy, 3Hi LIDO 14 l'fo-. -2303. Xln't GYRO COPTER months. Shots. $1j5_ 635--8127 Cond, W /full racing ge•r & Near!y complete, $800 '"· BOXER pups , AKC trlr. Cal1673-0941 •642-74X>• registered, fa wn colored, * FLIPPER * TACO 22. 5 months ne\v, xlnt cond. l\1ake offer. 609 Marguerite, Cdil-1. 673--1243 show qual.ity. 536-2449 VERY GOOD CONDITION Mobile Hom•f $275 548-7626 9200 ENGLISH Cockers, 12 '\'ks, ARC. Line-brtd, Tri-color, Show-pet qual. 833-2883 28' F-Gl 6 berth sloop O/B, 5 sails. Ask S649S Pacific YaC'ht Sales 673-1570 MOVE IN MONDAY Motoroycles $1500 00\VN 0\VNER ANXIOUS 2j() YA~'lAHA Bi;: Bear 20 \VIDE Scramble.-. Every th t n g IRISH Setter pups-A.K.C., Killagay I i ll e -6 wks. 968-1390 SCHOCK Racing sabot, xlnl 2 BEDROOM works. Great rubbct'. $395. condition. CORNER LOT. SANTA ANA _?48-4757 or &IG-4833 BLA CK min. poodles $25 & $35. Call 549--0229 ~nNSTER AREA 1969 T;)() NORTON CO!ifMAN. Wint.cl: Sabot Dolly 545.824l American 842-3939 DO, Excellent cc::iiUon. Call • 548-0442 • e 673-8811 e MOBILE home, new 1969 546-1548 after li p.m. GERttAN Shtpherd Pups, AKC, 2 Iemales. ahots $3:). 837~18 18' SLOOP, aleeps avail. Built 1n Eng. some work $9w dock ''Paramount.''24x50', MUST Sell! '6.) Bultaco eeds relrig-treeur, dshwhr, aw& (Sherba) Runs good! $2'15 7 ing & skirting complete. 2 * 642--0820 * Sik:=I Bdrm, 2 bath. Charniing ~~~-'.:..:=-'-~ 96001mported Autos 9600 ~~do view-site. Adull!i, Imported Autos HARBOUR VOLKSWAGEN s66 DATSUN WAGON~.-:~·.:,-;•~. $696 '62 YW BUG '63 YW BUG '64 YW BUG s64 YW BUG ""''°' "'"''· '""'" ntJ 1t1•10, H•1lff, IVl"M 4111 llKIO, Htillr, (NMI" 1J1) llHll. H11rtr. fNE't' S.Hl $795 $896 $996 $996 '67 DATSUN ' '"' ...... '"·~·· $1096 W/W 11 .... 1, tVVl'.1 107) '66 YW BUG '66YWBUG '68 YW BUG '67YW BUG '68YWBl!G JIKIO, lttlltf, nt• h1'11. ITIX 112) llMl9, Ht•ltr, ISYI.. IHI AM•,M, H•11tr, Allfem•lic. (WIO otn "'~'·· "'''''· IVTW ~11 F1c1try Air, ltHIO & HNl1r. CYCL Ull $1196 $1396 $1496 $1496 $1696 '63 YW OAMPER ~.:~ ,~r·~· $1696 $1896 '&& YW OAMPER ~.::";:..:""" $1996 (,CA Jl41 '67 YW OAMPER ."::::·, :r.:;;. $2696 HARBOUR V.W. AUTHORIZED SALES & SERVICE 11711 Buch lllvd., Huntlnglen S.uh 142-4435 1966 DBL wide CUslom bit ""'-=CC,,"'"~---= J\:IUST SELL! '68 Honda 350. mobile home. Awnings both sides, fully skirted. 9x12 Street Runs good: $550 outside screentd ITl'I, 2 --~*='""'--'"="'=-*--stora.a:e sheds. Set in adult pk 68 360cc Bullaco in heh area. $10.000. Call El Bandido. Like ne1v ! before 9AM, aft 6PM -==N='=v="='•o,ool=.="='=3309=== 54S--88n ~ -cl-.t~ .. -.. ~l~I -y.-,-,-m~ob~i~l.-1 Auto Service hom•. & Parts Absolutely no cost to you ALL kinds of Corvair parts S & K MOBILE fur sale. HOME BROKERS * 64~<171 * 12362 Beach Blvd .. G.G, ·6() vw Eng. Recently • 636-0921 • overhauled $175 exchange. VACANT • MOVE JN Call 642-0896 after 6. 8x40 MOBrLE HOM.E WI1ll 10x36 CABANA 2 BEDROOM SANTA ANA AREA $2.}95. SPACE RENT $40 f>olj..8241 American 842-3939 PARK LANE t tobUe home 2 0 'x 5 7' -awnings, deck, slorage shed, in family Park, C.oast Hwy. across from new Dana Po int Marina. 493-3978 MUS't sell! '67 Dbl wide Cuatombed, w/many xtras. Reduced price, New 11.tobile Club, C.M. 642-0495. 1969 BA·RRINGTON 2t'l60 with all delx. features, across street from ocean. 5JS.«18 • VIKCNG Scandia, 20xfi0'. 2 hr. 2 ba. Awnings. Xln't Adult Pk. 548-4142 aft '6, ALPINE VACATION TRAVEL CENTER Excel •• Goldin Falcon Olympia -Alpine Apach• ·Wheel C•mper \Vorlds large~t most com· pll!tc RV vehicle shopping centt'r 8352 Garder. Grove Blvd, GG 534·6686 Closed Sat. Open Sunday 66 Kenskill 28'. Self-con- lained. Air conditioned. Ex. cond. $3500. See at Adams & Beach Blvd. Owner 833-0242 aft 4 C1m!!rs 9520 I Campers Do You Hive the W1nderlusl? Rough it in style with • :J6 CALIFORNIAN ~ ~~~!~~ R1nchoro OPIN SUNOAn:-c~.L 538-3997 538-0091 Siles e Rent1l1 e Rtp1trs . ._ ____ ~ Ca~/ornia Campe1• Safe:S '•1-1. M91.-0,...._ ... , ... Cil9pJIMlll I JOHN _CONNELL "NO GIVEAWAYS NO GIMMICKS" ••• Ji.nf 21 Y•ars of Hone1t D••lin9, StllPn9 Ch•.,•ol•h. OVER FACTORY INVOICE ON ALL NEW 1970 CHEVROLETS EXCEPT CORVETTES BRAND NEW 1970 CHEVROLET Chevelle . $ 24 S 9°RD;:D:~URS BRAND NEW 1970 CHEVROLET NOVA $218 9°R0;:D;~uRs Brand New 1970 CHEVY I/2 TON Fleehlde Pl,~up. S•rlol Number 127506 ALL NEW 1970 ,CAMARO ~299 525 Brand New 1969 CHEVY >/4 TON Flffflidt r1c.•11p. Yt, 2 to .. llH & whftt, $2699 chrolll• 1ldo mldt .• H. D. 1prl1191, S-10011•.l·I PR, tlrn, 9eu9 .. , fvll cirat. tab. Sit'. No. "41flf, Lotit •lie -Clo1•-out price. LARGE SELECTION OF USED CARS 'U FALCON Deluxe. VS, automatic, radio, heater. (11G4521 '6~ IMPALA Cf;j. Aulomatic, radio, heater. t IPL332) '60 CHEYROLIT Bel Afr , 3 ~peed, radio, heater. IGKH091 J, $495 I '66 RAMILER Convertible. (\VIK508) $895 '66 CHIYROLH Van. Sul'fers special. (1'809571 $195 '62 RAMILER American wagon. 3 speed. radio, heater. <TXB969) '66 DODGE $1895 '65 CHEVROLET Carrlpcr. Fully camper ~-·· equipped. (U49277 ) f 2) $695 I '64 RAMILH l\1echnnlcs special. (TVS465) $595 J '67 JAGUAR XKE ' Like new. l.olv mileage. • (VCL712) '61 CADILLAC $3195 $295 Convertible. R.&:H. au tomaUc. '195 power steering, (ZW7601 $1395 '67 IMPALA $1695 Cpe. R&.H, facto?r;lr, auto .. P.S .. vinyl root. J817) • -.. - 40 DAILY ~llOT :rilNSPOiTAftOH TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOR rATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TliANSPORTATION TRANSPCRT~TI TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOFITATION --l!"rmd Aul• 9600 ... .,,.,•ttef Autos 9600 9600 lroporlld Auto• _..f60Q., .lmportad~UtOI "°° 9600 lmpo~ •utoo 9600 Imported Autot • LOTUS '-------967 Lo1u1 Elan, Brltl1h rae- ·lnc 1rttn. radio, htr .. 1upr-r rhen')'. UPR9311 $2995. Dlt. - DOOR. Sell or trade for r;harp V \V. • ~2-5Tni or 548--5240 ~ MG .. MG "· Sale&, Serv1c.J, PartJ •" • lmmed!ate Delivery, ~ All Mod.t. •• •' ,. ·= > ' J2rtuport 11inports MG PORSC.HE • '65 ti.1G ri.1\dge1. r-.1K ll. r.tich tire5, v.1re wkls, disc b .. xln't, $99.;[ol r. '63 Sliver ===-:/.='===== '66 PORSCHE 912, 1'eef'nl overhaul, new tires. <:hrQml' rims, \vht w/ fa"'" inL Xlnl contl. $3450 01• best oUcr. Sprite, gd cond. 61~2ti60. l\tGA 1600. $575. Good condition. 642-9647 aft J: 30 MGB * '66 MGB HDTOP Beaut. orig. British racing ~en w/ full visibility lac· tory matched hdtop, plush black lea ther Inter .. tonneau cover, R/H. \\ire whl5. ru:. ~Tot;l desirabJe ladyfi' lo.,.: mileage rie:w car trade:in Orig. sold !lew & se1"1·1ced by us. Ol\'LY $1795! !\IAR- QUIS MTRS: 90C SO. Csl H··')'., Laguna Beach. 494.7503. !H0-3100. 1960 ORRIS mini-Minor 850 673--0-195 Ha ·all-bound, excel conc1. l ~ ... ~~PO=R~sc=H~E-,~,~,~T~,-,.,.-,, $ , 130-4!1th St. NB." Bt>l~e/blk~ ZS;\1 n1i. :Xlnt OPEL 196'!1 OPEL K&dett Sport Coupe. J'l1u$f sell. SJ9.3679 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD cond. Sacrllice . Pvt ply. 673-218.'i. 1963 Super, red 1v/bh1ck 1111. Perfect car s255o. &12-9153 alte1· 5 p111 \V ANTED 51'g" 01· 6" mag 01· chron1e \\'heels for Pot'Sche !Jll. Call 644--0586 PORSCHE 1957. 356 A Cou(X'. 20,000 mi. 1 fan1ity 01v1K.'r. P.1ake oUcr. 8:;8-38J1 '66 PORSCHE' 912. Exira:-., ne11· rarhal.s. NcPQ~ minor \\-ork. $3200 67:>--6 \77 jf~TAR GAZEK111<~ Br CLAY '-J!QLLAN Alll1 LllU .JflJ i.iAA. l l ~ Y11Ur Ooirr Adivily Gvidto i:. un. 2J ri-i ~ -. t At<ordin9 lo lh• .Stori. oci-11'1,;t@ 9.V~ii~ To develop m«:$5oge ~or Soturdoy1 "-6,1~2 ~. 54.63-73 reod words ~orre~ing to ni.mbers 1.n.71 ~ of y<lllr Zodiac birth sign. 1 Yw 31 Comft 's..-12w;o. AUSTIN AMERICA YEAR END CLEARANCE SALE 3100 W. Coast Highwtly, N.B. 642-9405 540-1764 Authorized MG Oe•ler TOYOTA NEW e USED RECREATIONAL VEHICLES • 100% Factory Wa rranty Available on U1td Toyotas 1000 Milt's or 30 Daya • ELMORE 'MOTORS TOYOTA Factory Direct De ale r New Cari U1ed Cari 894-3322 894-3321 153()1) Bearh Bh·d. \\'est minster * '68-TOYOTA SPORT SEO. POJlUl11r "Co!'Olla" nlOtlP I ¥,•/ :;!d. rohunn shill, R II. v.;/ \\'ftll'\ CIC. C.1Yl!C"C' 1<>11-mile. ar;1 1~· Tu~o1u •·trndt'-ln". Sp;u·klin::: on;;. 1•rn111K' \\•hlte 11· 'at1rnctivr ~II\ er snbJe / =====~~~;:::;~~~~======~·! tilac·k intct·. ''Drn·c ii -.:; You'll rievrr.let go!" ONLY RENAULT SUNBEAM S\1'1"•! i\1AllQlllS ~ITRS: 900 S.1. Cst l/11'Y. L11.guna Beach, '70 S1•baru Star 1-'"-'·-""-'-· -'''-'·-"-"'-· --- CHICK IVERSON YOUR AUTHORIZED PORSCH)1 AUDI DEALER FOR ORANGE COUNTY 1965 PORSCHE •• '" . . ............ $3395 1966 PORSCHE ..... "" $4195 1967 PORSCHE "' ..... ~. ...... $4095 1968 PORSCHE '" ..... .. .... .... $819& CHICK IYERSON PORSCHE AUDI Authorized Sales • Service -Parts 900 WEST COAST HWY . NEWPORT BEACH ~9391--549-332S VOLKSWAGEN YW BUGS FRC~r $399 GOOD SELECTION VOLKSWAGEN ~ 100 W. Coast Hwy . N.B. ~94C?t ~G-1764 Authorized lt1G De11.ler ~ MGB red, good cond., ~ whla, r&.h. $1050 or st offtir. 548-5479 aJ1er 6 GB '64 . \V ire "·his, Fi\!, M!W polyglas lire1. Priv. f!95 Orm. 546--0066 eves. J (,uor<I 33 I"'° 4 f•O'lf 34 M"'f 5 A J~ 0'"""'"''11 ~ e",r.c...1 5~ ~,Id, I It JIY°""' 9 v.,.,•,, 39 er JO~ 40 '-"" 11 .,......, .. 1 Ma~'"'1 12Your •2 Awol<r U..GITTAllUS Hor. ii~· . ' otc. n _ , '!ill HE'.'lAUl.T n 10. Alt' rond , Lo 1n1lco1;1-. $ll~.OO * ti)!i.1')1] t * '6S VW STA. WAG. \Vanled 1500-S series w/BIG l\:ITR., brand new 6.S5x15" 111/walls, amps I pressure gauges, Ri ii etc. "Choice" b·ade·ln. Spnl'kl lng orig. 101v n1ileagc local new cat ------ i;Jl~:~~·ill~i~O/ll~~~~ .• ::,~ ~;.1i:~I [!l()r'fP"fTIAI ~ ~~~~. bb8~t'!11·~:~~ac~1~ or nil.\' c·un1na1·alllC' au10. . ~~~-~L~~~""-~-'""~·· 9, ft ~ QUIS f\:IOTORS, 900 So. Cs! fi~K~:~~~~:, M'~t~\~,~ M a rk 11 Wagons .. ::;:~, LS:0-g3~C:. a Beach. '60 C.\RAVEL Lt:, removahlP 815 BRkcr. r,1 :riG-5915 Hi Lux Pi~kups L,' ,,so 1---------- lnirdtup, i,:ood 1:ond11\on Land Cruisers ~ ._ '69 S Ba REN AULT . JDa.1 P.tG-TD. iood ctin- ~il.ion. new top. r e b u 11 t i:ena-ine. 6:1..2-3826 ' 7 i\fGA, :dnl mech~nical !l'onditlon. Rebll. eng & :_:trans. M~2421. 'S7 i\1Gs.GT, wire \Vhh~. ·:1'11dio & htr.. l 011·ner. " FX409 $1895. Dir. s.:H-2284 IJFr.-.dl -'lAboul \4 Pr~ A4 P~I 15Go'" 45YOUt 16fo< £6You 11 °""" 41 May 11~·, .111n.. 19 ~POI'"' .ll'J Well lO Go<id ~Mal ... 21 f...,.. 51""""'" 22 Mo.a 52 A-oid 230.. 5JAnd 2•U-· 54Thon 25~·-55Mok.e 26 Mot.... !16 Or 27,_.. 51 ""°"*" 21 T ruU !II """'-• 29 itfp.>101-)9 w.,.i. JOC<>opr101-'° lf'le•ftb ¢: Good @Adttr..c 1'(1lllnlllU,:al lran~p s I !Jj. HAVF: just r('ll'n! s:;.oo in ~I' Wagons Vk.,~ quare ck ;-,.;;>-i~i3 JlUrl~ fnr n1,11 1961 Alr11nc PLUS OTl-IE:R "\. Exccullve car. ndio, heat~r. ~:~======;I Sunbcnn1 and .no"• hnd ii HARD TO GET ?.10DELS .:.auton1alic transmission. Fae· n<'('ds a rod . \\Ill sell ror a NOIV TN STOCK tory \\'arranty. No. 71009 ~;7,.;oo ",;" " ~-DEAN LEw1s ~~' ~~R 'ii~~ Harbour V .W • SUNBEAM TOYOTA '67 Alp111P. Xlnl cond. \\"Ul' 11·hecls. Riii. Slill on 1\ar· r11nty. Sl:iOO or besl ollcr . Sl.Hiti6 . I . . '67 SpoM!i iwrf11 n, lo n11lc$ 1966 TOYOTA, auto, radio & Xlnl cond. Pvt Ply. i\hk<' I heater S!f.l5 or best offer. t2l:l l ·1Z7-0322 Fine. avail. 54S-2698 1961' Barbor, C.l'lf. &16-93(13 COSTA MESA BILL l\fAXEY I Tl~V!OI TIA! 18881 BEACH BLVD.· Hunt. Beach 147-8555 I ml N. of O>ast Hwy. on Bc.h "67 V\V Bus, split front seats, air t'Ond., radio & hlr. - 'You 'll like thi$ one. KSH5:91 $1995. Dir. 534--22&1 '6'1 V\V Can1per 1 5 0 0 . Headers. New sand tires, rebuilt engine. S 1350 . 61;l-lSO'l AUTiiORlZED SALES & SERVlCE 1871 t BEACH BL .. 842-4435 HUNTl!'OGTON BEAGO{ '67 VW BUS 'i=:::=======~~;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~=======:l1 ·69 To;rota Corolla Sprintl:'r. II DeJuxc. A:'\1/F\I r adio. '69 V\V Sedan Demo. Auto stick. Aill/Fill radio, lots of xtras. 9.000 mi. 646-9391 or 67~732·1 ask for Joe ~ Sharp. 100% \1·a1Tantee. This 11·eek-only $1495 IUQJ400) 2 olhr1·s to choose lrom · Bank financin; at Kustom Motors 845 Baker. Cl'll 54G-~1 5 FIBERFAB AVENGER V\V, '68 Beaut. pN?pared. lrophy 1-.iinne1·. s2;;oo. 673--J6.19 Announcing Pontiacs lowest priced two door hart/top! The great new T-37 SEE IT TODAY AT CARVER'S. '67 DATSUN RDSTR. Rtdio, h•tl••• .i tpeed, Red, IVrt.51781 Demo 1969 GTO H. T. Cpe. Air corid., power di1c h1•k•1. pow1r 1t1erin9, con1ol1, turbo hvcir1m1 t;c, •le. l42l79ZI0906'7 Demo 1969 LE MANS 2 Dr. H. l . Co .. fOYI lop, V8 , 1ulo .. ,;, co11d., pow1r sle1rin9 l brek11, cori1ole. Cl to choo11 from ) 2l7J79ZI 1018 1 New 1969 GTO Air corid .. power di1c hr1k•1, pow1r 1!11•· lri9, turbo hvdre"'1tic. 2421792 126301 '68 FORD TORINO Redio, he1I••. 1ulo1111tic, pow1r 1te1rin9. f1clory eir. IXOE202 l '67 BONNEVILLE 4 Dr. H.T, Hvdre1111tic, pow1r t!e1rin9, pow· er hr1k•1, r1dio, lleeler, WSW, f1ctory •ir, /TX594SJ '65 CHEVROLET C1,621 MILD M•lih11 l Ot. H.l. V8 , 1uto111 11tc, po••• 1leerin,, redlo, he1l1•, 1fr cortditio11i119, rid line ti111. INPflJ51 $17771 $3877 $3727 $3977 $2577 $1277 $1577 '68 LE MANS 22,22S MILES 2 Or. H.1. Ve, aulo,,,atlc. •1dio. heeler. pow· •r 1l•ering, wh!!e wa lh, factory a;r, cordov• lop. !WXHIOS! '68 FIREBIRD 400 24,47S MlllS VS, turbo hvd •1,,.,,+:c, po,..•• 1le•""'J & br41it1, radio, lleeltr. WSW, fe c.fo ty er1, c.on1ol t . OCS P489 1 '68 CAMARO 13.156 MILES Con¥•rtible. va 1utom11ic, po ... 1r 1•••••""' r1dio, h11t1•, WSW, f1 clo•v 1ir. IVSYI 7SI '67 FALCON 26,426 MILES Econo,,.ic.11 6 cylinder, !ldnd1rd lren1m11· 1io11, reciio end h11ter. 11I29Al '68 LIMOUSINE ll,961 MILES C1dill1c Formel. ,Air conciilio11iri9. l1elhtf inter;or, e!c, 1lc.. !XWYIS~l '67 CATALINA 21.520 MILES Coup1. Va, ·~•0,,,,.1;,, riewe• 1•eeti 119 , ·~· di-o, he,,ter, wh!lt ,;a. well !Ora1. fZDX427 l '69 GTO l l,1)1~ Mill$ l Or. H.T. Vt, I 1p11d, 11d10, h1el11 , •1d l1n• ti•••· con1ol1. t•l7ASLI $2777 1 I $2777 s26171 $1377 $8777 1 · $1977 $2977 ROY CARVER PONTIAC 2925 HARBOR BLVD I COSTA MESA iY I ~I -·"" ..... [I] • Kl-64444 ' ]i,000 n11le~. $1300. ru7-060-1 <1fter 6 P:\l 'if'T-co_y_o_ta-Corolia-- ?>Jusl Sell:! l'llovhljl: East!! I Excellent condition. i '""'· TRIUMPH "~3826 T1'1umph TR250, 11·1re 11hls. rurhal !U'f'li. ratho, htr .. ()(0) 111 1, l 01vner. lnl· ni:.il'. i\lust he sold !his 111•rk. \\'AL 76i.i S:23!)j. Dir. . '>::.1-228·1 looJ-11·1ump1-;-TR-I. \\71~e II hi!!, I}('\\' lilt. RUil$ good. $j.j()/br!11 oHer. ( 7 1 3 l 131-16.i.I VOLKSWAGEN 1966 Volkswagen S<1u11reback. Good rondl!lon. S\7!},l * ;,.18-84~1 * 'til V\V Van. Xlnl, cond. reblt. t'ng.. new paint, clutch. Clean. 67S.1632 '66 V\V Bu.~:· hcrl, chair. carpctlni;:-. t11pr i!crk. Runs 11·e11 . Sllhll. 67:r320-1 '66 V\\' Sunroof. Red. 11•/1\•/s. Xtra ~h;i rp car. \\leU cared for. ;)18-2981 af! 6. 'j9 V\V -5350. Runs Good. New B1·ks, •6i3-43!H• '62 V\V, new paint, good con· di1lon. $:JOO * * .. •194-3950 '68 V\V. Light blur. alr cond, Tlld io. Xln't. $1500. Call 536--1\jj, j '63 V\" BUG 5650. Xlnt s<>ntl. inside1out. i\-lech. perfect. .,,,, ..... 67 & 66 V\\'. Xlnt rond. Sunroof. l'llust ro1.1se ta.'l'.es! 6:12-035016'~ i670 '66 VW. TOP COND. * Sl200. 546-3398 * '62 Volkswagen $300 54S-2780 'GS V\\' Sq Back, lire blue, Radio & beater .$1800. Aller 6 pn1 54S-3074. 'j9 V\V Bus, '63 trans. Eng rblt in Nov, Oversized tires. S6,)Q 832--082:) '67 V\V X:h1l Cond. Uiw mi. SIJJO. P1·iv. pty. Ca 11 ~\jll '66 V\V Ca.mJ)E'r. Good tires, Enginc rebuilt. Lo miles, $1800. 536-7376. 546-131:) '61 VW. RE-BLT ENG. * S39ri. 67f>5438 .. 1962 BUS Can1pt'r, New rbll eni;. Tr11n~. Ne1v paint. Xlnt cond. SS75/offer. ::..18-9823 VOLVO * 131 1968 VOLVOSI Just turned in on new 1970 VolVO!S'. Kno1vledgeable buy- ers chance to choo5e from these 1vitnted current look 14·1-S scl'ics 4 whl . disc brake models. -2 witR std 4 !!peeds, l 1\-'ilh automatic Inns., 1 11•ith faetory "air mndilioning"! i\-1 A R QUI S i\-1TRS: 900 So. Csl llway, Laguna Beach, 494-7503 or 510..3100. 145 -WAGONS 164 -SEDANS All other model1 now In stock. 4 specdfi &. .aulomalie!. Your ~st Deals Are SUU At DEAN LEWIS 1966 Ha rbor, C.?i-1 646-9103 9900 I Used Cars -9900 I Used Cars 9900 If winter has left your present car too puny to perform, then now is the time to trade it off on one of these spring· ready, la te-model 90-9etlers! '67 IMPALA Spt. Cpe. Radio, heal-er. automatic, air cond. Ne'v tlrei;. One 011·ncr. <VET1 73J, $1795 '65 T·BIRD 2 Door Hardto11. f ull power, air, blue \I'/ blue interior. 1 011•n· C"r. tPCR606l $139S '67 T·l lRD 2 Door Hardtop. Full PoU'er. air. Derk blue w/matching inlerior, 1 owner. fTZU6801 $1995 '65 GALAJC IE SOO 2 Door H11.rdtop. Ra· dit>, hpaler, p0\1't'r steering, V8. (PCR· 444 l. I 011ncr. $1195 '61 IMl'A\.A Rac11o, heater. air cond.. """'' tires. J ov,rner. l\\ITE355l. $2395 '61 TOYOTA Corona H 11r dt or Coupe , \\'h.ite ,,.; bh1.ck bucket ~11.t.s. ;\utomatic, radio, heater. 1 m,·ner. fVGJ047\ $129S '69 GA\.AJCIE 500 2 Door Hardtop. Po\\'• er steering & br11k!tl, air conditioning. NP\\/ cav \\•11.rranly. {No. 9J58Yl 14911 l. $2995 ''I GALAJCIE 500 4 Door Hardtop. R11 · dio. heater, cruison1a- t.lc. air conditioning, factory 1varr11 nty. One 011---ner. (\\'BJ· 191 l. $1995 '69 COLONY !'ARK fully cquip[l('d. A:'\l· f ill, lraller lo1v pack· age. One owner, lac· lory \l'arrnnty. (XXf386L $lt9S ''5 LTD HARDTOP Radio, heater, po~·er slcerlni!;. 1 owner IPG'N982). $119~ ''4 'T.llRD HARDT!'. run po1,·cr &: air. tOLViOll. $129S ''5 MUSTANG Hardi.op Coupe. Po11-" er slttrinR. radio, heater. rrui~om11tic. (.1'1ne O\i·ner. tOUC- 757). $1395 SOUTH COAST FORD-MERCURY 303 Bro1dw1y, L19un1 Beech 494-8515~549·3151 •.. • ' tor used can I. truckl juat ca.II ua for fret esllma.lt. GROTH CHEVROLET Ask lor Sales litanacer l82ll Bea.ch Blvd. Hun tlntton Beach • Kt S-3111 '67 Caprice cpe. vinyl top Air --;;u...-.. ..---..-...--1 Cond. power Str. It brks. 398 WE PAY CASH · V-<lenr.Torbo-hydra . FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROLET 2328 •11.rbor Blvd. Costa ritesa 5'16-1200 llifPORTS \VANTED Orange Counties TOP $ BUYER SILL r.IAXEY TOYOTA trans. 492-0076 er 492-9136 '66 CHEV. Caprice, Fully equip, Compl tune.up. Ex. cond. See to apprec! 842-2646 '56 CHEVY V-8 3 speed, macs, chrome rims, S.W. Gauaes. m4l OR BEST OF· F'ER. ~9016 after 5 PM "65 El Camino. Air, 4 speed. New engine. * 675-5516 * 18881 Beach Blvd. '65 Impala SS. Immaculate! H. Beach. Ph. 84.7-8555 J\fust sell! lilake offer, Auto Leas ing :>57-6151 9110 1=======1 CHRYSLER FORD AUTHORIZED LEASING SYSTElil wr----- --------- Amerlca 's larae•t le~sinJ ~~ 1Y1tem for finu~ or net '6S Chrysler Newport le ulna: Ol ill t)'pt' can and BY O\\'NEF{. 4 Dr: sedan; trucks. blue, wilh matchlna' nylon • Immediate delivery from &: vinyl inter. in xlnt cond. over 300 cara and trucks Radio (fronVrear 1pabn), • Competitive rates heater, a\t-eond.: l'eal' v~w • New car dealer.ship service mirror adjusts from inside· • Full "trade:n" value for p'.l't. steer., brakes. auto'. your prt11ent ca1' trans. All appt's. in xtnt • All popular makes avail-cond. r.ooc:1 tires. '70 Uc· able ense. Car in top running Fot· Complete Details Otll cond., burns no oil! Service l'lfalcom Reid history available. Handles Leu!n& Manaatr &. rides like a dream, as Theodore - ' only Chryslen de! Test it ROBINS FORD foe "'""""' We .. ,., 3 -H can, only 2 drivers: car "'"""' arbor Blvd. U 1 -Costa 1.tesa 642.00lD ava • n approx, ene \I.Wk. 1.,...,'!""'!"!!l!'"!"~•-•I $695 -f1R1'1. Call: 847-6640 t• .,, LEASE .~ Alttr 6 P.M. (or weekenda "" anytlmt). '67 Cadillac El Dorado, full * * * * PV.T, air. black w/~ leath-~~ er int. Sll!. per mo. '" T·•1nt Landao. '"" pwr., CONTINENTAL air, stereo tape. $79 per mo. -------- '69 Cou1ar XR1, pwr, air, '64 Continental. All poMT. vinyl top. Sl05 per mo. $990. C&ll anytime, SO. COAST LEASING * """"2 * 300 \V, Cst Hwy., NB MS.21!2 '66 CONTINENTAL. xlnt U _, C cond, loaded. Tax: We. leu •r1 9900 Private party. 673-0655 BUICK CORVmE 1966 Buick Electra Convt. '66 CORVETI'E FatBk, 427 Black. Full pwr, air. Orig. cu. 425hp. Bia.ck I: blk inter. ewntr. Good rond. Sl593. Pert cond. Prtv. pty, Me.kc Over $400 undtr bk. 675-1060 etfer. Call 642--6342 i964 BUICK Skylark, Xlnt cond. 1i1ust sell! * 5.16-);;n * CORVAIR , * '66 CORV A1R 1.!0NZA 18 ~lF. ~pecial fac. air, SPT CPE, w I auto, rth, po"e.r stttnng, Rulo, vinyl etc. Low m.ileqe, local 1 top. $2095. 494-5909. o"-ner. Sparkling oria tea] 1968 RIVIERA, .all extra'!. blue w/ beaut ,pJu1b . blue $2/::iD private e"Tler, vinyl lnt. ·Provtn eoconomy 592-5136 plus that late · model Cor.. '64 BUICK Riviera. full pwr, tinental styling lhe en1y makt! oUer. 371 ,V, \Vil.son, S995. 1'1AR.QUIS l'llTRS: 900 Space. 34, C.lif. So. Cst 1-lwe,y, Laguna Beach, 4~TJD3, 54()..3100. '67 RIVIERA • Sharp looking, '"'°" cond., '""' ,,.,..... '66 MONZA $2.850 or bt1t offer. 492-8632 Sport CoUPe with automatic, CADILLAC One ewner, locally owned. Goddess gold exterior, plush cream interior. $799 full price ..... ~ or small do1vn. Call J.P. ~ EL DORADO Convt . l •94-9r.3 or 54~. Owner. Absolule\y Pf'rlect =~=~~~~~~ original cond. Lighl brown 1960 C 0 RV A IR. 4 Dr. w I cresm lealhl.'r 1·n t er. Aute. Low mileage. Owned S1850. WUI trade ,1;1 terms. by elderly W'Oman. New Prlv. owntr. Ph. 833-1356 tires, brake&. $395. 646-1914 eves. 1964 CAO Coupe de Ville. ========= Power/air. Clean $1500. 645-2182. aft 6 &. wknds DODGE 490-5695 1--------- I=,--:=,,--=---=-· ?itusr sell! '67 Dodie '64 CONV. All extru. Good Corontt 440 \Vagon, Pwr cond. \Vhlte/red. $12 2 5 . steer, PY.T brakes, Fae. air, ($100 down). 496--2500 Luggage rack Clean. Full '37 CAD., iood transp. $100. price $1200. 540--0144 1'tuat tell. 53&-&IM betere 12 1968 OODGE GTS, yellow noon or after 4 pm w/blk. vinyl top & raclnr ·g.t 2 door. runs well 1h'lpe1. 4 spd, many $950 xtru. xlnt cond. T.O.P. 545-8424 646-0033 -CAMAllO ··"'ro,....oo=oo"'E~.-,-,u,..,k,-,V8"'.-, ... -, rubber SU5. 1---------1 548-8562 '68 CAlilARO Ra.lly Sprl. 327 ======== '"· tna. • •pd. All "'"'"· .FALCON S20S7. 548-tM-t, betwn 4:30 •i---'--'"------1,,a,,''°,.·-,,==,,--:--. '64 FALCON. Z--dr. stk. nu 1968 CA1.fARO, 6 cy I, traMm.. battery, brakes, automallc trans. lo ml; S47;,..t618 Irvine, 642--1189. $1700. MT-8569 a.Uer 5 pm CHEVllOLET FORD . 1966 FAtRLANE GT.A, .390 J~ CH£VELLE, 3 4 , 0 0 0 eni.. auto tran1< p/s, xlnt mi's. llkt new. $1000. ccnd. iuoo. ~7936 after •54$-6392• pm, '86 Chevtlle Malibu, vinyl 1964 Fotd Falcon V-8 &talion top. air, aulomatlc. Sl.293. Wagon . I Own@r, R/H, Auto 96&-8187 trans, $61 Ml-4il0 ?itusr SeU! '68 Chevtlle Sta. '62 [ord GaJ. 4 dr. Rea.I Wq. UJ mi's. it530. C&ll cit.an. ft.Ill P"T &: A/C. Ask- 01-!)!jl. 4'4-19l8 ina $SOO. 548-4667 art 4 PM ~v. II Nova Sta \Vai. 4 '6'1 FORD Galaxie, V-3, p/s, dr. New 6 cyl ena, gd tires. xlnl cond., lo ml1. S700. $300. •TBOS (2131 59".-1032 l9~ CHEV. Sia. w-.. Radk>. heattr, automatic Irani . Power brake1. 54~. '60 CHEV. Sta. \V&$Qn. Xlnt mtclwllcal cond. Klten' in and out SilO. 54~1810. ·~ Ferd \V1aon Rung Good. Si5 Cash. ·-· '60 J"ORO RANCHEJIO $400 '* lf6.09T5 • ---.......... . . -.. .. . • I ' Frldar, Mar<h 6, 1~10 DAILY ~ILDT 4 J TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOllTATIOH TRANSPORTATIOfi Used C1r11 '900 U1td Cars .... ------' 9'0I Utod C•MI • MUSTANG MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE PONTIAC RAMBUR ---* "Choice" Mu1t1n1 I Rt•tlrl(l IMcher1 nlneltetMl;>t. tJ.ll\'e. VS 1.1•Hh std. ·1hllt, Rill. etc. "J ust 411.100 mll· c~". Spat•kllng flay,·Jcss mlk· ado yello\\'. \V/plw;h black \i l't)'l ln tl'r. f:x_!.-e\. y,/wall1. Srnart buy for 3l29.:i! J\l/\R· QUIS J\l01'0RS 000 So. Cit. llwy, Laa:una Beach. ~!W-7603 540.3l00. '6' Mu1tan9 H.T. Brltilh racing areen. Riii, dlt. Xlnt. condition. Take fott\ln car In trade or $986. \\!Ill finance prlvlllc party. Call Ski 54i>-Oi:W, 494-9773. ·~ OLDS ~. full pwr, vinyl top, lttn!o la pc. l\1ake olftlr. L?/' W. \Vil.son. Space :W, C.M. 61 Pon1lac CTO Conv. Must Stll! ., P.S., P.6., Alr. 17,000 mi. •52 Sia Wog. ""'"'"· air, pl runnlnt cond. Sltt 499-3588 bel 10, art 6. Take over pym'lt ·19 1..5739 aft 5 T·BIRD ; OLDS 'fl6 CUll•.ss .. 2 dr. Epnrt Cpe. Buckel lilats, 11trreo. --;T;;;,.;;;;;,.,=:,;-;;E;;nte;:r;;;l:;alft;:m=on;;;:::: I Und<'r low book. ~2~6 '&T l\fUSfANG conv, loaded '63 STARFIRE.• lmn1ac. Full 'V/t>xtru. Call 615-3021 alt 6. pwr/11.lr. Orii owner. t.Iust '66 \.l Mustana: V8 3 spd., dllc Rll. &18-3106 '61 Tl'mpest \Va&. 4 cyl, auto tra ns. $250. Call •l48-2861 * 1968 Ponliac Catalina, 2-dr llnrdtop. Fae air, Pwr steer & brake8. $2100 847-3929 F'OR Sale: '5T T·Bln:I. 200 owner. Very clean. Orti.' w/2 tops. Call eves ~ t.IUSfANG , '68 F'a.slback, Many ext.1-as, ln1n1aculate-. Draft!d. Sacrifice! ~ aft 6 pn1 • '67 l\1ustang FaslbaC'k, VB, ..-tick shifl, xlnt condition. $14Th or best ofr. !N>8-60l8 brks. ndial t\reg, xlnt cond, orig owner Sl29S. 673-4807 'fi6 OLDS Starfire, bucket seats. All power. Fact. air. 1 OY.'Ol'f, 646--5383 PONTIAC RAMBLER 1961 LE l\1ANS CONVT. vs.1--------- auto, oont.ele, p/1, t &h, h1r- quolse w/blk top, xlnt c:ond. Cdl\I. 544.1497 '64 STATION \Varon . Americana 300. Xlnt Cond . }lt i. 494-3034 VAUANT TRANSPORTATION cv "ule 1960 Vallant, ~«!i . SJOO. 1628 Newport BIVd~~, C.l\t. -· Jo-linson & on ~~ LINCOLN-MERCURY ~~ NOW-IS THE BEST TIME IN 10 YEARS TO BUY . A LINCOLN-MERCURY PRODUCT AND WHERE ELSE BUT AT YOUR LOCAL LINCOLN MERCURY DEALER, JOliN$0N & SON, WHO GIVES YOU THE . BACKING OF 1 B YEARS OF Cj)UALITY AFTER t:HE PURCHASE Sl!llVICI!! 1970 COUGAR "The Summit of Sports Car· luxury" ' Equ ipped with power iteerin9, power disc brake1, white side well t ires + many other de· sirable feeture1. $ #OF91HS17134 +TX & LIC . HIGH PERFORMANCE CORNER 1970 MERCURY CYCLONE 2 DOOR HARDTOP COMPETITION ORANlil Cem•s equipped with ell thtse e xtra1: Big "429" 4'1 •ngine, emisuon control, <4 speed tr1n1mis1ion, high· er ratio rear •xle, white sldewall1 b78x 14 , power fro nt disc brakes, power steering, radio, remote left hind mirror. Instrumentation group. No. OH 151 VS28272 GOOD SELECllON s OF MERCURY l,IARQUIS & MONTEGO STATlbN WAGONS Summer Is lust 1round the corner! (Don't wait too long) JUST ARRIVED r:ROM FORD MOTOR CO. (S,.cl1I 'vrch•••> Wide SelectlOft Of 19H MOfcury Models Ceu11r1 & Mercury•, convert!• lrllt•, tt•tlen w•1•n1, 4 dr. "-rdteps, 2 doer ha~tops. YOUR CHOICl $2995 'ff COUGAR CONVIRTllLIS With air (011dliienl119. po w1r sl••r· 1119, power bra~••· ale. 6 to •ooo mrle1. 'If MIRCURY CONVIATllLll With alt (011dltieni119, powar t l•at· 1111, iltOWat br1~1., tic, 'If MONTIOO SID.A.NI With 1lt condltlt1n in'll, po w1r 1l11r· 1119, pow1r br1~e1, 1t,, A NICI SILECTION OF WAGONI, M.A.ll:QUISES ITC., ~T ONLY $3695 ALL LIKI NIWI VERY LOW MILES! '69 PONTIAC CATALINA $2895 2 Dr. Hardtop. Automatic tran!mlulon. radio, heater, po~er steering, f>O'ver brakes. Lie. XXA-668 '68 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE $3495 Beautiful Ocean Turquolsa y,·ith matching int•rlor, landau tep. Exceptionally clta.n. FUlly luxury equipped Incl. factory air. One owner. Uc. UGC-1 70 ~I~~ T1'1~!~t~ht Blue mct11.Jl!c finish $1395 with matching interior. Full power Incl. factory a.Ir , U c. OSE-645 "64 T llRD $1 095 Btau tlful turquoise with matching Interior, aho\\'S exceptional care. Lie. IEW-178 '69 FORD TORINO liT ConverL Attracllve C&rdlnal Red with color match~ lntcrier, white top, auto. trans., P.S., radio, he.ate.r. Lie. XXR-231 '67 IUICK LE SAIRE Conv. Full power including factory air. Lie. TMlf-472 '6' CONTINENTAL $3895 4 Of. Sed. Acaean 1old finish, brewn landau root, le.n.thcr Interior. All the luxury ftalures Incl. factory air. Lie. VTP·736 '6' CONTINENTAL $5195 Coupe. Ro!le\Yood nietalllc finish \Yl\h black ltather 'white landau roof. Luxury equipped, factory air, etc. Lie. XSR·'80 '67 LINCOLN CONTININTAL Coupe. Pull poy,•er Including factery •Ir. Bea utiful Bronie with while Landau top. 41.000 aclual mlles. LIC 841 '64 CONTINENTAL $1395 4 door sedan. Velvet black flnl1h with blac)( leather interior, Fully luxury equipped Including full po\ver &: factory air. U c. OYS-52~ '67 CONTINENTAL $2995 4 Dr. Srd. Beautiful arctic 'vhlto finish with matchin1 lta ther Interior. Landau roof. fully luxury eq11lpped and factory air conditioning, Al\1-rl\I radio. One-ownei-car. BeauU!ully maintained. Uc. TRK 296 '65 CONTINENTAL $1695 4 door. Mldnl&ht blue Clnl1h with blond leather Interior. landau roof. Fully luxury foqutppt'd. lncludlnr run po"'·er & flctery air. Unusually clean. U c. TFC 969 '67 CONTINENTAL $2595 cOnvtrlible. Polar whtte with y,•hlte Jeathe1· & \\1hlte top. Full power equipped \l.'\th fact. air. Lie. VGV·252 'H CHIVROLIT IMPALA . $1995 Super S1>ot'I. Full power lncludtn1 powtr \\'\ndOY.'fL & factory air. A one owrier La1una gtm. 28,000 actual mUes, Uc. TRT 313 BARGAIN CORNER 111 Our l•rttin Corner, we "'"'' 11umerou• u1ed 1111. Semi c:l1111, 1om1 not 10 cl1111, Som1 011t •r• duplictfion•, 1om• w•'"'• h1tf too 10111 -111 Ill'/ f'tflll, !htt• tttl ar• rttl b1r91llu . LOOIC 'EM OVEltl '137& '149& • 171 -'1871 '88 ._., ......... '1471 ltllltt! ....... . '88 Tl't"!t Ce""' ·1 ·-l Or, tll....., .. le. 8f9U WJlO fU .Johnson-son 2626 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA NEW, CARI 540·5630 642-0911 140·1635 UGID CARI • I .... :z: Ii'!'"" z - • ' WE'VE CORNERED THE MARKET ON FORDS! AT HARBOR BLVD~ AND BAY ST. THREE ALL-NEW ONES FRC>M FORD! 19701/2 FALCON FORD'S NEWEST PRICE FIGHTER! OVER 600 NEW AND USED CARS AND TRUCKS READY . TO 'DELIVER ••• COME IN ••• LET'S DEAL ! OPEN SUNDAYS BIGGE R, MORE LUXURIOUS THAN EVER - YET STILL PRICED AT PERENNIAL FALCON SAVINGS. READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY THE "GRAJ81R5~~ A BRANO NEW · MUSTANG .• ANO A BRAND 'llEW MAVERICK IN THE EXCITING .STYLING OF THE A "MUSCLE CROWD." READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY New 101/i Ft •. Eldorado Camper Fully Equ;ppod ind ·~:10, '2014 OUR FIRST CHANGE OVER OF 1970 '"DEMOS''' Reidy for Your SALE s Pkkup ••. 1 Now '70. ,.,01 1395 OVER 40 #11524' $619 CAMPERS IN STOCK! DISCOUNT OVER 30 1970 MODEL STAFF CARS .NOW AT TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS 6,000 MILES OR LESS ON EVERY',' 51L ,15J1 CAR! ~l'OR FAST CLEAlfANC~! T-BIRDS-TORINOS LTD's-STATION WAGONS MUSTANGS ENGLISH FORDS TO BE SOLD ON FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED BASIS, HURRY! '65 CADILLAC CPE. DE VILLE 'l Or. H.T., VI. ~uho., R&H, P.S IYWSO<tq) !67-BUICKSKYLARK·~---. 2 Dr. H.T., 1ir, 1uto .. R.&rl., S .. Vi,.yl '""" IVCL2!1J1 '66FORD XL "$1090 2 Dr. H.T., 11110., R&H. ,.S., ~:r tonl'. I SV'Y~t1l ~6FORl>LT.D~.~~~~~~S1~4=90 2 Dr. H.T. F1clorv 111, 111to .. P.S., ,.;,.vi ,,,,..r, ••tl'" l.1 11•• flll\D/IOOl '65 MUSTANGA~T. $890 VI, r1dio, h11ter. !CZl5l I I St~ No. l bd '6TTORINO G.T. ConYf, f'1clory 1ir, •ulo., P.S., P.I ., RAH. !W ICS •Ol '67-FOR-D-GALAXIE-500~--$1290 4 Or. 5,,f. V8, 1ulo .. f1ctorv .1ir, P.S., P.8., RA-H. !ZVE1J2l '68 THONDERBIRD $2690 1 Or. H.T. VI, 1ulo..,1lic, P .S .. r1dio, heeler. I SUY I 11 l '6-:fMERCURrMONTEREY·--i, $790 C ult. 2 dr. H.T., ,;, cr1nd .. 1ulo .. P.S., RA H. IJWF016l '6'9-FAIRLANE COBRA .$2390 F11lb.1ck. Auto., pow•r 1•eor•n9 A c!i,~ brok•• (ZLH88Jl' '68M0STANG W19011. V8, 11ulo., P.S., f1c:torv 1ir. ll&H. IYPG'll 1 I l(' ..,;1 • ., '6-6-FORD-COUNfRYSEDAN VS, 1uto..,1t:c, R&H. pow1r ,+.1rin9. !SQL927l '67-FORD~COUNTRY-SEDAN-$1690 AIR, 1u!o., R&H, P.S. ITRl7S9 l '64-FORD COUNTRY-SEDAN '$190 AIR. A11to .. 11.l H, P.S. (Nll 629l A THEODORE RO.BINS EXCLUSIVE LOOK FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHIELD! 100°/o PARTS AND LABOR . WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS C1•.n SI mechanic:ol pom l1Kh1di119 ~9ine, tro111111iuio11 drl•• li11e, rear ond, PLUS ltrok•, .. attory ond o•ho~Jf ·~atom . A.II tt· OVER 150 USED CARS AND TRUCKS IN STOCK TRUCK ANO CAMPER SPECIALS -'.65 r.?..~~ .. ~·100 5990 ISS2S19 l --------'65 ~:~~.~~!~~;, 51490 h 111,., he1!1tt. INHY087l -,6-Q-~-.~~Y.-·,.::,2·T~O_,,N_$6_..,.9,~· Q- 11 ulom•tic h 1111, l FJ0204 f · ------- '68 . , • ' DIRECT FROM E.NGLAND ! 54 NEW FORD CORTINAS; 2·Dr's, 4·Dr's, GT's, . Station . Wagons NEW CORTINA 2 DR. SED. ~~~ANL sggoo PLUS TAX PAYMENT ANO LICENSE MONTHLY s5 g· 00 FOR 36 • PAYMENT MONTHS 18A92J B718bl l P.ym1nt inc!.,de1 •II ''"•ti 11nd finenct ck1•9t1 ef $170.61 for 16 1"onth., fin<1nct clian;i11 b~~ed_ on •nn .. 11 p1rc1t11te91 rt lt of tl.80 '1 •. D1f1rr1d p1vme nt p1i<:1 of $2135.46 lolel c;1~1t price ;,,cl ud11 f t i: 1nd 1970 lic1n•1 of $1995 . Subie.;l lo b111k 1pprov1!. '65 CHEVROLET IMPALA <I Or. H .T, Aulom.tl!c, rtdic>, h1 •+1r, t ir cond. I PDA?701 '68-DODGE CORONET $-891> "'Dr. VB. •ulo., healer. Nawpod Bch. D1t1ctiv1 •~•. ( l lS87 1l '66-MERCORY CYCLONE Sf390 H.T., AIR, t ulo., R&H, P.S., J>.B. f R~VJ='""-' ----. '6-9-FORD CUSTOM $1490 <I Dr. Sed. 429 VB . 1ulo., he1ter, P.S .• P.ditr; br~. CM .,,.lie• car. ! 1140111 '67-DODGE-DART $1290 2 Dr. H.T .. AIR. 1ulo .• R&H. IVTS<l 2t.f '63-CAEVROlET NOVA-II $690 Fu!! power, f •clory 1ir, (MPP12 11 '66-CHEVR-OfET-CAPRfCE 4 Dr. 1-1.T. Air cond., P.S., radio. he eler, Yinv! ,,.o f, IWQ0511>l 1Dr.1-1 .T. VB. P.S .. P.8 .• .oult>., rad•e, h•o!"t t. !$Yl68!l $1390 $f390 $1190 . '68-CORVETtE $3291> <12 ::__~_.'pee~. A M :£~ radia, lr1w~"';'!,.q~•·_IZ_'D_< .. _I ___ _ '64 THUNDERBIRD $1090 '65-P00HN,Tiic:~?E~i1'A'Ns.;,;, .. '"""" $990 VI, f1ctorv 11ir, 1ulo., P.1l•tri n9 & br1ke•. l PCll4l l l '63-FAL-C-ON $491> , VI enq•ne, "ut'o..,.1 +ic *••n•l'1 i11io11, !J EA69!1 '67-t=.iAT~CONVERflBLE.---$1490 <I 1p.1•d, lltW p1i11t, new lap. (8E65S9) '69-TOYOTA-COROLLA $1090 1 daor. ~ 1p1ed, rad;o, he1+-,r. !XIN4<!bl '69-VOLKSWAGEN~=-----$1-690 Bug. Aulom11ic, R&H, t0,800 ..,;le•. (XTF7 J !l '67-DATSUNST A TION-WAGON-$990 R&H , ,+;:ck thift. (TWN07'l '67-SUNBEAM •~~llT !IOl'O• 11no•to Iii" ~·' tu.1..,. 1¥ '°"""'fat to.• Costa Mesa <'.@ 642-0010 . . I