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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-03-11 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa, ·-I Charged· With Mnrder THESE THREE MEN, ARRESTED IN COSTA MESA, FACE COLORADO MURDER CHARG ES Suspect• (from left) James J1ckaon, Jack Matney and. Howard Tschirhart Lear.y~s Wife~ Son . Given Stiff Ter1ns ,• • lf u~tinl!-.t;on 1J1a1i , ~3/1ioses ·L ·re in $~ 5,0oO Fir e An 13-year old man perjsbed and i family IO!t their home in an early mom· ing blaze ioday which caused '15,000 to a Huntingttn Beach house. -'.['be victim was identified as Marcelino Sqlorzano, whose charred body was found in the hallway leading from his bedroom af 7412 Slaler Ave., where the fire ap- parently started. Four other occupants including a ooe-and a lbalf year old child who were in the bullding at the time of the 5:31 a.m. blaze managed to escape through lhe fTOnt door unhurt. investigators sald. Fire Marshal Douglis Spickard said So\orzano's daughter Rafaela, 43, was alerted to the fire in the back of the small house when she heard a noise like her father falling. Running through the house, she discovered lhe back porch on fire, awoke Josephina Solorzano, 35, Rub en Solorzano, and Eliz.a.beth Szabo, the. in· fant. Spickard said. Drjven back by the flames, lhey were unable 10 rescue the octogenarian, he said. The Solon.a.nos moved this morning to another relative's home at 7886 Speer, l(Ontington Beach. OperaUons Officer Frank Kelley said the cause ol the lire was attributed to careless smoking in bed. Twenty men battled the blaze for 30 minutes until it was controlled. Investigators estimated the damage to the house at $10,000 and at $5,000 to its contents. No insurance Was carried by the occupants, they said. Or ange Cea st ~Secret' Recall C~p.aign . . ' Again8t Allen Falls Short By TOM BARLEY Of 1tM D-'W ,,.., Iliff The semi-secret campaign to mounl a recall election 'against Fifth District Superviaor Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach has fallen at least 500 signatures short in its petiUon effort, the DAILY PILOT learned today. Petitions had been filed with County Clerk William E. St John as a re- quirement to get a recall election against Allen on lhe ballot. \Vhole ~ges of signatures have beer. dete.nnined· to be invalid, It was disclos ed. Orange County voting supervisor EL Arnold told the DAILY PILOT that the recallcrs will be. at least 500 signatures short. He cautioned that was an unofficial tally. subject to verification when the listings are fed through the county's com- puter. f\-teanv;hile, the frantic recall workers "'ere recalling their petition carriers in an 11th hour bid for signatures to replace those bogus ones that have been can- celled out. • MORE NEEDED It seemed certain at press time today that St John will order the organizers « the Allen Recall campaign to bring in "'!thin the n e x t to days sufflcleot signatures to meet I.be required total of 9,748 names. Recall organizers Paul Carpenter of Cypress and Anthony Tarant.lno of San Clemente. delivered l0.s2Z signatures to St Jolm last week. the ij.sting of peraoM who are not regla.teied to vote, duplications of signatures aod lilta compiled in Octobet . ' -to which the signatures \Yett affixed a month .later. SHEETS THROWN OUT One checker commented that "valid signatures wert running as high as 96 percent accurate when we first started working on the bundle of petillons and things looked fine. Bul we got a liUJe lower down and !ouod that we were hav- ing to throw out whole 111heets of signatures, one after the other, for variOOI reasons." Carpenter's submission of I O , 5 2 2 signatures called for a 92 percent level of validaUon and St John commented at the time of filing that the recall workers v.•ere "leaving a great deal to chance. One should have a greater cushion than th.is margjn of 774 votes when ou bear in mind the nature of the elecUon," St John said. If Carpenter's efforts to make good the invalid signatures are unsuccessful, his candidate will have to oppose Supervisor Alton E. Allen. Cosla Mesa Vice Mayor .Rollert M. "Bob" Wilson and savings and loan executive Ron Caspers of Lido Isle in the June 2 primary election. Carpenter said Tuesday that il seer.led "fairly cert.aio" that Taranllno will go again.st Allen in the June election. "He's trying to make up his mind ," the Democrat Nld, "but we. ~d hive his decision wUblD the ntxt 10 day a." • U.S., Colombian Planes Hi jacked 2 Jetliners End Flight In Havana By United Puss lnterna~al Two planes were hijacked to Cuba ~ day. one as it flew from Cleveland, Ohio, to Florida and the second as it was en route to Barranquilla from Bogota, ColGmbia. They were the fourth and fifth hijacks carried out successfully so far in 1970 In the Western Hemisphere. Both were Boei ng 727 jetliners. The Uniled Airlines plane hijacked in the United Slates carried 106 persons and \Vas fo~ by a lone cunman to land and refuel in Atlanta, Ga .• before taking of{ for Cuba. The Colombian Avlanca Airliner car- ried 78 persons. Jt W.!!S forced to touch down a1t Ca~geoa, apparently for refuel· Ing, but remained aground only flve minutes 'and then cont!nued on to Bar~ ranquilla where it took on more ga.s and then headed for cut.. - In Vienna, two young Polea -Wle..laW SzymankJewlcz, 20, Ind Romoolt Wit!slaw Zoltucho, 18-were convicted and aenten- ced to jail terms today for hijacking a Polish airliner to VfeMa several months ago. Zoltucho was sentenced to two years in jail and Szym1nkieWicl got two years and three months. The court told them they could stay in the West after com- pleting their sentences. In Berlin, the newspaper Bild Zeltung reported that the two hijackers who tried to divert an East German airliner to West Berlin Tuesday, then k 111 e d themselves when they railed, wt' r e a young married couple. They were not identified. HALLUCINOGENIC DRUG RULE ASKED WASHINGTON U(PI) -The JusUet Department has recom- mended that live relatively new hallucinogenic "drugs be listed as dangerous drugs, making t h e i r manufacture, sale or possession a violation of federal law. The five depressants and stimulant drugs are MDA (methylene dlo:w:y am phetamine}; MMDA (methoxy· methylene): MMpA (methoxy- Tf\-fA (trimethoxy amphetamine}: 318 (n-ethyl-3-piperdyl be:nzilate ): and JB·3 36 (n-methyJ.3-pipe:rdyl benzilate). DAILY PILO T * * * 10 ' * * * WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 11, 1970 VOL:. U NO. It, 4 l•CTIOJt•, M ,,,.II Conference Called Carpenter Eyes s~at in ... s~l.1tfitte~ Br O.C. HUSTINGS 0 tllt o.11)' ,llfl fllff One of California's mOll powtrf\11 Republicans -Dennis Carpenter di Newport Beac!l -is headed 1 ... public o(- flce, apparently as a challenger for 1 •at Jn the ~llrornJa State Senate. Carpenter has called a press con- ference for Thursday morning, a clear-- cut indJcaUon that he intends to 1eet 1 spot on the June ballot, and Sacramento sources Tuesday said Carpenter will bi ruMing for the seal being vacated by Senator John Schmitz. (R-Tuslin}. SchmJU: is resigning hls Senate post to seek the Congressional seal left open by the death of Rep. James B. Utt. Carpenter, 41, Is currently chainnan of the California Republican State Central Committee. He has been a key figure 1n Orange County GOP pollllcs for the pall 10 ye.an, serving as chairman of Orange County Republican Central Committee and leading campaigns in behalf of Governor Reagan and President Nixon. Jr Carpenter seeks lhe state senate post, it probably would be at the urging of Governor Reagan . He is close to the governor and state GOP leadership Is know'n to be unhap}ly with the current party program in the Legislature's upper house. Meanwhile, two other possible carr dldates for the state senate post are backing off. Assemblyman Robert Burke (R~Hunlington Beach) has declared he will seek re-election for his assembly seat and will not be a candidate for state senate. , IN THI RUNNING GOP L!tMtr Carpenter Judge Sentences ' Leary Wife, Son Pact on Drug Traffic • st~~~~1 ~1 :iJie ·!'J!iled: f:o . ~~~if T~,r m:&· '. day,t•·•• ,g~r ·~~m~!' I $ii ti.'~-. .r •• ''\: tho floil-:of J11.•.r•!'!\•-• ~"'4.~ • M .• ~am; ~ dru8''"1V" ~-.:""' ~ . . ""' . i#•qllngij ·,,,1'" •• 1 .. '. ) .. ,,J ~1 ~ort~·ocon-St John advised the shocked Carpenter of the deteriorating siluaUon and the anti-Allen Democrat bnmed(alely reac- tivated his Idle volunteers throughour the Fifth District. Carpenter noted "We have 10 days In whi ch to oblAln whatever may be the rtqulred slgntlurea and that is time enough for us.'' • \1 • 1 ttoveral1fi tSD 'cul~ wbat ll)IY tfe. Ute: T • F • M d · R I -·~ .. J:lllfe8tpefilll!IG!"~tbm. \ r10 acing u. r er " apr.' ,2!:~=~~1>~\'!t on, probttlon fOf\ tbej~t flv~ ye~. He Thursday's weather picture? In a v.·ord, groovy. The Man "calls for surmy skies and warmer tempera- tures, which means about 65 along the cout. aod pushing 70 inland. INSIDE TODA 'l' Carpenter placed llle blame for the mounting number of inva1Jdatlon1 on two Newport Beach recruit.. to his recall campaign. He klentlfied those workers as two youths (rom Newport Beach. Gang Captu red in _Mesa W anted in Colorado I ... ~"!!. Jc>!uJ,,1'!11;l=fll!OY •• ~. lo Wlde!'P a.....,~ yflt~toof caH!ornla '• Chino lao and la ttport back la hit courtroom In June . Dr. Leuy won a five-day delay of ru., Git;e o b un c Ii of college drama students e1tough rope and they'll create tlteiT own reperto111 company. 0 r a'' O e Coo.st College i& doing jwt that with its pew e~perimental tl1eo· teT. See E-n1.trtatnmet1t, Pagt 30. •lrtM U ••••In• ,. C1111er111a It Cir--c ...... r IJ Cfttdlkt9 U' • Cllulfklll J~ e.tlc• " ,_ " DPt1i1 N1tiut 11 Dlw~n II •• 1 ... 111 ""' •• '"mt••""""' Jit.Jl "hl111c• Hol1 ,.., .. "'" )II ~ l ..... 1 ,. M1llM• t "We decided to lake no ltgal adion against them a(ter the two agreed lo delete the falalficat;ou they l/<'d en· tered," lhe'angry Caf',,ente'r sakl. "ft is, of course .. a blow to our campaign but at least-we now'have tht""opportuntty to fill tht gap with genuine slgnaturee -and there are, you know, plenty of them Jn th< Fiith District." <>ir of tll05e two worken dented Carpenter's a1Jr1.ations and lok! the OA1- 1N PILOTrthat hll signatures were col- lected last week by representatives of ()pinion Research Inc. of Long Beach. _"f1ve heard ~thing since," he said, "and 1 know nolhlng about false signatures or phony names Md ftdd~" Close CliC<iklfil by Ing division supervlaor Arnold'• stiff has revealed the fllln1 of Incorrect ...,,.. and addmles, By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot tllll O.llY P'llll Iliff A lrio suspected of a croY..counlry crime .wave, ended Frlday by their an· Uclimactlc capture in Costa Mesa, today are charged with the savage robber)'· murder of a Colorado pawnbroker. First degrel murder complaints nam. ing the male partner In an alleged Bonnie and Clyde-type bandit· team and two men companiom were Issued this morning in Colorado Springs. The trio and the alleged Bonnie, charg· ed only with a local burglary, wlll be questioned about the Feb. 2.3 murder of a weallhy Newport Beach man and also a n1anlt1ca 1 Jee-pick slaying In MISsouti. "And we 've cleared up a number or armed robberies in thla area." said Costa Mesa Polle< Detective Capteln Bob Green, mentioning sevtral Orange Coast cities. Murder counts against the three fasl· traveling men were revealed in Costa Meaa by Carl Petry, chief of detectives for the Colorado Springs Police Depart- ment. The new charges against James E. Jackson, 25, of Independence, Mo., Jack C. Matney, 32, of Denver, Colo., and Howard R. 'Pachlrhan, 3t, of Cosla fl.tesa. are expected lo take precedence over local co unts. DctecUve Chief Petry, wbo new to Orange County Monday night with Depu· ty District Attorney Allen Spurgeon. saJd evidence found when they were captured connects the Colorado Springs case. ''It was a parllcularly brutal murder/' be remarked. Sh · I ho sentencing on char1es of pouessJon of owing co or p togra~hs, Ohief Petry __ in-~JJ~ told how pawnbroker Erhng Nielsen, 61, ~~ .. =-= y_George Chula sue. was mercileJsly beaten to death with a cesetully pleaded that "new lepl pro.. r\Oe the evening of Feb. 19 in bi.lay b'!?¥ maunrto Dr,. Leary's otMl-1epl downtown Colorado Springs. acUoaa" bad arisen Md be needed tJ.me "It was an obvious robbery," he, sa~, to 1cftlc:ull them with attomt)'1 wofk1ni adding that more than 20 pistols, nnee on thole cues. and shotguns, plus jewelry and olber Dr. Leart wu sentenced to 10 years In pawned Items were carried out of the prison last month by a Te:w:u Federal store. • · Court illdie• Ht Is 10heduled lo ttturn to A customer entered the .modest New York titer Urie month fot further Nielsen's Jewelry and Lotln efter Oie "S:U actkln on aUidemeanor chatga rel1tmt p.m. holdup.homlelde lo find the sllghlly to d"'<I uoe. built owner crouched plllfully on his Mrs. Leary Ind young Leary were tOn- restrOOm noor. vtcted lut month by an Oranp Cotmty lie h•d bo<n trying lo e~pe the _ -~h?r Court ucy-of ~~or savage blows1 _ -~oir marijuana -and • TM; No dollar value has-bt'en established on family wa• arrntcd tn Ll.gunl Beach on .the 'tolen goods -1.0mc recovered Lbe dnia chargu 11id tubleq~Uy m. (See CRIME, P•c• I} (let LEARY,·Plp 1} • ' ) • ' J ! l I J I I ,J • , OAIL.Y PjlOI Wtdnt$dtr, Mf.rch 11, 1910 Brew1a rlal Seene ourt Building ·~ipped by Blast CAMBRIDGE . Md. (UPI) -An <J· plOlloo tore out a corner of the Dorchester County Circuit Court building today. It was I.he second violent e1pl011ion in Maryland in 24 hours and officials said both Incidents appeared related to tilt riot trial of black militant H. Rap Brown. n.e blast, which hurled debris from the two-gtory stone building 100 feet into the street, appeared to have been centered in a women's lounge on the second floor. The expls.ion tore out a huge ch unk al the top corner of the building. There \vere no injuries. The explosion happened at 9: 10 p.m. • Jury Finds Hovdal Guilty Of Murder ~tilo Hovdal was found guilty of second 'degree murder late Tuesdty by a Superior Court jury which had appeared to be coosidering a verdict in favor of a lesser penalty. The panel filed back lntc. the courtroom cf Judge Bruce Sumner two hours before it raatjted its final verdict lo ask the jurist to again spell out jury instructions reJaUng to manslaughter, voluntary and involuntary. That requeit obvioualy raised the hopes of Hevda1 and defense attorney Matthew Kurlllch. But their ho~ wore duhed when the jury later decided thal Hovdal'1 g\aylng last Jan. 1 of his wile, Georiea Genevieve, 47, merited the second degru niurder CQll.nt. The !lame jury was ordered by Judge Sumner to return Monday for the second phase of Hovdal's murder trial - Kurilich's addiliooal plea that he was in- liane when ht shot and killed his wife. Deputy DiStrict Attorney Ed Freeman .-ta.led Tuesday that ht will not produce ·witnesses for the sanity hearing. Kurillcb Is expected to put at I ea 1 t two psychiatri!lts in the witness box during what is expected to be a OOH!ay pro· teeding. The proseaition 5uccessfully argued durin~ lhe f!rst phase cf the trial that Hovda) shot and ltilled his wife in a fracas lhat began in the living room and ended on the sidewalk in front of the couple's Santa Ana home. The jury's finding appe..-ed to acctpt Kurllich'1 argument lhat Ho v d I I ' 6 shooting of his wife WIS not premedila· ted. Hovdal, fi2, facu a poe:lble atate prilon term ot five years to life. Johnson Walking; Doctors Pleased With Progress SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPI) -Former President Lyndon B. Johnson walked around his spacious hospital suite Tues· day and suffered nooe of the palns that hospitalb:ed him 10 daya ago. "His vital signs remain nonnal, and his doctors continue to be satisfied with the President's progress," the day's single mtdical bulletin said. An aide to I.he former President said that for the fifth straight day Johnson has not su.ffered any of the severe chest and anns pains which hospitalized him. But doctors still refused to speculate. when Johnson might be released, His wlf e. Lady Bird, continues · to re· main ln his seventh floor penthouse suite at Brooke General Hospilal . DAILY PILOT H•_.,.., .._. L9'•11• lffc:lt C•lto Mn. HnfUltt.1 IHtll fM"'9il Yllllily S.11 CinMtl•• OltANGl COAST PUILllHOIO COM,Alol\' Rob1rt N. Wted Pr••IGtnl •nlll f'uOll•hl• J 1tlt R. Cvrl 1y V'CI 'rn klMI •1111 ~· M•,...,.. Tllot11t1 Ktt vil t:dJlor The!l'.•1 A. Mvrphhwo M•t1~lrlt Edll9r ltit.~••d I". Nill Soul~ Or1t19t CO!Mly ffl!Of" OHie .. (•11 MUI: »II W"I llV lfrftt Ntwpert INd'I; 2'1 1 w"t ltli.• eeu••v•rf L•t""' 8NCl'll m ,_, Alltrlve HUl'ltlf>o .... 8N"!l 1111' 11•(!1 11¥1tVtrf S..11 Clt!Mnlt: JI» Norlll El Cat11IM ••I n OolflV ,ILOI, wlfll Wllldl 11 Ull'llllntll l!fM; Ntwt>~fl.I, II pUtlo11\et dtllJ t.•ttp! Su,,_ .,., ~ ....,,," "'""°"' "' UtuN a-iii. N....... a..cn, C.OS!t ""9J.1, Huntlllt• l•dl 1nor hun11111 v11i.,, ·~ ..m. tw r"lont' fdlllOnf, O.."" eot11 'vailtf'lifit CAMN11y ,.,.!mini Pllllll .,. 11 Ull Wnt attlilOI llW,. NI..,.,. lettn, ~ .. Wbl ltY lft'fff. C:O.tt M .. t . f11t111•111 1714, M 2-4Jll Cl_. .. A"-'W"t 641·1671 .. ca ...... Al D.,.,_."' T ....... 492-4421 ~ tttt; °'"*"" CMJI """!!"'11\t -Ciili'iiiftf. • ..... '""'... tll\llfl't,.,,., •11•111 """" Ill: .......... _" ..... -:t~~ ~ •ll!'!Ovl -1111 - ....,.. ci.u .. ,... !MN 11 ,.._,, lltfffl 1111 C.I• ,...._ t.fif.tmi.. lllMC'•i.t-tY urti.ra.• -•1Y1 ltJ -11 n M -tt1•~1 ...... 1,.,., .. ., ... ,ien., ., •• """'tl!ty. ... (PST), 24 houri aner another mysterious bll1t nw &1 Alr Md., demoliShed a car and kllled its two occupant.5, including a long..ume friend of Brown's, Ralph Fe1tberatone. Cambrkt3e Is the town where Brown was charged with arson , incitement to arson and incitement to riot after racial disturbance broke out following a speech he gave there in July, 1967. Bel Air Is the lown where Brown is being trie<i. The building once servtd as the county courthouse for this eastern sl;lOre com· munity. A ne.1v building Is now the courthouse, \>Ut the older aoe cootlnued to house the circuit . c0urt. Brown was at. raigned there on the riot cha,rges and he would haVe been tried in the damaged building had not the trial been shifted to Bel Air . about 100 miles north. State's Attorney William B. Yates, who is prosecuting Brown but who was In Cambridge becau.se the trial bas been recessed, toured the blast sit e. with toun· ty officials. He said it appeared the two lncid e.nt11 were related to the Brown trial, but declined to elaborate. A demolition team from the Edgewood Arsenal 1Yas called in to detennine what caused the explosion. Yates and County Clerk Phlllip Cannon said there are only a few offices on the second Door of the bulldlng and It would have been easy for anyone to gain accesa to the lounge Tue&· da y and plant a bomb, tr that was what caused the blast. Cannon estimated damage to the struc· ture at $100,000. Maryland St.ate Police, Dorchester County sheriff'• officers and Cambridge city police were put on extra alert after the explO!loo. 'l'bere has been no unutual tension in Cambridae in rtdtnt days. although the town, wllh a 00 percent black population exper\enctd atende<l racial troubles during the 1960s, during whlch lime the national guard wa5 called in three limes. Beach Police Calm Youth, 17, After Sh()()t Up A rine.toting 17-year-old Hun tington Beach boy shol up his house Tuesday af· ternoon, claiming ht was protecting him· self from unkrmwn assailants in a fletd across the street. The youth fired sporadic shots out the kitchen window at 16661 Dale Vista SL and kept members of his family in terror until police olficers arrivtd to calm h.im down. Police Officer Jlmmv Lee Sides was tlrst on the scene, followed by Officer James Rothaermel. who finally calmed the boy down by showing his pistol and telling the youth to drop his rifle. The boy was taken to Orange County Juvenile Hall where. he was booked on char~s of displaying a rifle in public, be.· ing drunk Jn public and malicious mis· chief. "The: boy had apparently been drinking and btcome enraged at something," !11id Rothaermel this mornlnii;. An older brother !!lid the youth had run away (rom home the day before. returned Tuesd3y, began drinking then grabbed a .22 bolt action rifle. from under hls par. ents' bed and began shooting and yelling that someone was trying to shoot him. At one point In hi s rage, the youth "'alked oul front and asked a 13·year-0ld neighbor girl to come Inside, police sald. Shi': was not harmed . \\'hen Officer Rolhaermel arrived at the house the boy was still shooting. Rothaerrnel crouched behind his patrol car and drew his pistol. When the boy walked ou t or the house Rothaermel yelled at him to drop his rifle and come to the. car. The youth obeyed , then told police some· one In the ope:n field was trying to shoot him, police said. No one was observed in th~ Oeld. No other shots were fired and no one w1s Injured , police said. 'S trip' Strike Hits Las Vegas LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP} -Two powerful unions struck lhe luxury hotels that line Ille Las Vegas Strip early today and the first pickets hit Howard Hughes' Desert Inn, whe.rt the billionaire lives In seclmion. ?itost of the. 14 ,000 members of the Culinary Worken and bartenders unions showed up at three mass meetings Tues- day to vote overwhelmingly to strike the hotels. Sho\\•glrls and musicians promised not to cross picket lines and union leader Al Br1mlr:I !!aid of the strike, "Don't think this 11 going to be a short one." Viet Deaths to Ri se, As U.S. Deaths Fall SAIGON (UPI) -Caiualty figures to be releaied Thursday will show a decrease In American deaths aod a sharp rise In South Vietnamese combat. deatN lo more than triple the numbrr or Americans, Informed 90urtts sakl loday. This also was rtfltcltd In fighting rtportrd today fr0tn the South Viet· namese ctnlral coast where Viet Cong and North Victnan1esc trooia lnOlcted ht>3\'Y I011!1eJ on two cornpanlcs of South Vletnamc e m1Utiamea. · UPI T.......,. Meningitis Death Tied To Marit1es A tS.year~kl Garden Grove airl who dled TUesdty of spinal mlnlngltls. -the llrlt Oranae County vicUm ln two years -had ~ exposed to a famUy friend ataUoned .at Camp P,endlelon. The dltcloture was made by the mother of Janet Hines, of 12271 Lambert Circle, 1 stralghl·A student at Lampson lntl':rmedlate School. De.alb came at Orange County Medical Center, where the air! was transrerrtd from a private hospital to which her mother took her last Friday, in a swift· atrlklnr coma. "She looked like a wax dummy, I knelf something was wrong.': said Janet'a' mother who explained she became ill tht day before· at 1chool, showing symptoms of nu or a virus. CORNER OF DORCHESTER COUNTY COURTHOUSE TURNED INTO RUllLE BY MYSTERY BLAST No One lnjur.d in Latest Explosion to Roc)c Cam-.rltftt, Md., So.,,t of Brtwn Trltl Dr. Gerald Wagner, Oranie County Public Hui th Officer, said the disease is exlmnely contagiOU! but there i1 no im~ mediate danger of an epidemic. Schoolmates will be closely observed and the entire Hloes family -including Wtlliam Jr., 20. 1 Navy man stationed at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba -have been liven prtvenlivt lrtabnent. From Page 1 LEARY ••• dieted by the Orange County Grand Jury. ?.1rs. Leary's lawyer announced today thdl he will immediately appeal her jail sentence. Leary left the crowded courtroom with the promise that "whatever happens my fa mily and I are free, we were born free and we will slay free." Dr. Leary Is currently being held in Orange County Jail. He was committed there. last month by Judge AfcMlllan with the comment that he was "a threat to the community." The former Harvard' psychologist smil· ed and waved to what appeared to be about &Cl flower carrying sympathizers in the courtroom and urged them to "love God and stay higb." "Don't worry," he assured them , "I ha ve very good connections with the hlg~st court a[ all. Everything is perfect, we have tried to do God's work and we will still be able to do It." Massage Artist Busted For Alleged 'Extras' A massage artist who allegedly offered "extra services" to an investigator from the district attorney's office found herself under arrest at a LallJllll Beach massaae and sauna parlor Tuesday. Nancy Ann Vlahos, 221 who told police she resides at a Laguna Beach motel , is charged with conspiracy to commit pro- stitution and 1CUcltlng to engage in lewd or dissolute acl.!I, police report. After a period of police surveillance of the Academy of Physio-Therapy Massage and Salina Parlor, 255 Thalia St., the DA Investigator went in and requested a massage 'l\!esday afternoon. The suspect prepared hlm for the treatment, he claims. then asked what type of mmage he desired. \Vhe.n he inquierd about prices, he stales, ?.tiss Vlahos said a regular massage would be $10, then went on to cf· fer additional services at prices ranging up to $30. He paid far the regulW' job with a marked bill, then placed htr under arrest. Following arraignment, Mill Vlahos was freed on $M0 bail. The massage parlor, police report, was issued a Laguna Beach city buslnl':Ss license in 1969, in the name of Charlet T. Balmer, 1050 Skyline Drive. No llcense had yet been taken out for 1970, they state . Abortion Repeal Now iii Effect As llawaii Law The Red Cross atTanged for the young 11llor to fly home and be 'Yti th his parents and his surviving teenaged brother and sister. C11t1 of spinal meningitis have flared up at Camp Pendleton in the past and Mr1. Hines thearlied Tue.sday the virus could have been carried by a Marine who visited them recently. ''I want to warn other parents." she said in tones of grief. "I'm not trying to create a panic. I just don't want this to happen to any other children." Mrs Hines said the entire family recently suffered a chest virus, but Jan.t;, an honor student, went back lo clasa to work on a science projfct while sUll fff:llng Its effects. The county heallh officer said today that althou gh spinal meningitis can bring death sir. hours after entering the body, perhaps a third of the population carries the virus. He said the le.tbal bacteria. men- lngococcal meningitis, is frequently found in the throat. Only six cases ha\'e been recorded In Orange County in the past two years and all of these victims -unUI the Hine s girl -have survived. Fro•n Page I J{ONOLULU {AP) -A measu?1! elimtnatlng nearly all rutrictlons 9n abortioM became the law In Hawall ~ day· When Gov. John A. Burm, 1 Heman Catholic, allowed it to enter the statute books without his signature or comment. Keep Transplant, CRIME WAVE. •• locally -stolen by whoever tracked bloody footprints around the store while looting it. "Tiley were pawned items," explained Chief Petry, who said the actual murder weapon Itself was recovered ln the Colorado Springs area afterward. Deputy District Attorney Spurgeon said the Nielsen pawn shop Ls located on what locals know as GI Corner, where many broke Gls among the 30,000 at nearby Fort Carson go before payday. Costa Me.sa police were notified the suspected desperadoes might be in the 111:.rbor Area last month and surrounded their house at !114¥.i Bernard St. Friday morning. Patricia Jackson, 24, tried to escape out the back door but was captured and the three males surrendered without gunplay although they were heavily arm- ed. "This department has done a wonderful job of investigation.'' the Colorado Springs chlef of det.ecUves said today. He said the Jack!len woman Ls not charged in the pawnshop owner's murder. She was arraigned Monday in Harbor Judicial District Court on a burglary charge, while the men were arraigned on armed robbery complaints. The alleged Bonnie and Clyde are al~o wanted on warrants c6arglng t.he.m with armed robbery and forgery in lndepen· dence, Mo .•. while police in Buckner and Kansas City want to qutaUon them. Interrogation Is also anticipated con· ce.rning the Feb. 23 shooting death al' reUre<I movie producer William Harris, 60, of 2:012 Anchor Way, in the Baycrest district of Newport Beach. Detectives theoflze he s u r p I 1 e d burglars who had broken into hJ1 eltgant home and we! gunned down, while his own .38 ('81\ber revol ver had been fired three times. Tht"! JacksOns, Tschirhart and Matney -apparently a deal'f1Ute-a~ Kn0\f11 tu Drug, Runawa y Raps Jail Pair A young Canadian and 1 runaway Pl from San Luis Obispo Were taken into ciatody Tue!day night when Laguna Beach pollee were summoned to a r:offet shop at 1500 S. Coast Highway, lo check out their suspicious behavior. AnswcrlnB the 9:45 p.m. call police claim they found tJie pair staagering, redeyed and barel)' able to speak. Patrick Johll ~lot, 18, a Canadian c\U1en v.'ho said ht-now resides in LOng Bc11rh, was booked on suspicion of ht.Ing under the influenct of dru,l(s tn public. Pollet! stated he was incapable cf taking a sobriety lest. lUs campanlan. a 17-year-cld glrl lattr l"c"tl'lcd as 1 n1n1way, Yt'U plated In Juv~nlle Ital] for s a f e l"J-Wberpollet decided she was unable to car• for berselt. I ha\•e been in the area the following day when a ,ring crucial to 1\16 Color•do case was paWned. Costa ?.1esa's Capt. Green said they have been Jinked to a $500 Newport Beach liquor stort holdup, a similar job in Laguna Beach and a Costa Mesa market robbery. Authorities in Kansas City, Mo., also are anxious to question the alleged desperadoes about a motel robbery in which the manager was fatally stabbed nearly 200 times with an ice plc;.,k,,,. ~~ "But that doesn't much flt he ir method of operaUon," said one in· vestlgator. ' The three male murder suspects were r.?turned to Orange Coun ty Jail this momlng after being heavily interrogated at the city jail, including the alleged deaf. mute. Detectives then left seeking anothl':r ptr50n for questioning In connectian with thecas<. The meuure, repealing Hawaii'& etl)o tury-old abortion statute, permits the terminatltlll cf a pregnancy w l t 11 minimum restrictions : -That thfi abortion bt performed by a qualified physician or osteopath in a Jietnsed hospital. -That the woman bt a Hawaii resident for at least 90 day s. -That the fetus be "nonviable" -not capable of livlng outside the mother's body . Under the law, persans pe.rformina ii· lei.al. abortions would be subjed. to a $1,000 flne and a five·year prisan tenn. The Roman Catholic Church, whose members comprise 30 percent of Hawaii's population, mounted an inttnse campaign against the blU, but not all Catholics were opposed. Se.n: Vincent H. Yano, chairman of the Senate Public Health Committee, y,•ho led the move to repeal tht old Jaw, also is a Catholic. ' Barp.ard Appeals Mn-WAUKEE. Wil. (UPI) -Dr. Christian Barnard, who achieved world fame by P'rformlng the world's first heart transplant, said Tuesday such operations shou ld not be discontinued simply because the problems of tissue re· jecU<>n are not yet tot'ally solved, · "Should we go to a person we cin give a fe11o• mere mooth!!i of life or ,·year er more, should we 10 to that person and say yoo must die now because we haven't solved the. problems of rejection?" Barnard said. "We haven't help up kir;lney transplant! for lh1t rea!On, have we?, You do the bat you can at the moment and in the process you solve the problems that lie ahead," he tokt a news conference at St. Luke's Hospital. A11d the subj1ct I• love. lt 'a fer ~vryon1 bttw1en th• a13e1 ef 16-21 . Who feel. Who under1t1nd. Wh1 •new ekut lov1. Th1r1 will b1 five neti1n1I ,.co9nition pri111, be1utiful diemond p1nd1nt1 11,eclally d11i9 n•d by Or1n9t l lott•m. Tit1 co111tt1t elo1e1 Mey 15, lf70. St hurry. The tlmt is now. ~~ ii ,Muirf illfo' ~ ~tm!Nt' CONVENIENT TERMS 14 '!'EARS $AME LOCATION • IANKAMERICARD I Ill NEWPOU AVE. PHONE 10·1401 MASTER..CHAR.GE. ______ . _ _,.c.,,..s,,A!.:r· "™-- 1bo the ar.• !nd the ..n •on ica! red her tift- "'" el'J. the llnl 1nty e iii im- 'ed Ung I at ~·n ung !ntS and "'d and irus who she g to s lo nily but k to 1hUe >day ring ody, Ties nen- >und d In and lines it, ls llr. 10rld first ;SUCh nued e re- give " or ar>d rm't on?" 1ani.. best """ :ad," Jke's • ' I 1 I I I' . . 'I ' ' . ,,.....,. ·-' .. • /.r·~ " • • Beaeh Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks VOL 63,"NO. 59, 4 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH If, 1970 TEN CENTS Oil Operators Assail By ALAN DIRKIN Of 1119 o.llY Plltl IW'I Jndependent oil operators today lashed out. at the city staff's proposal to impose a tbree-eent+barrel oU 1ax lo help pay for civic improvement!. "It will be a terrific blow to us," said Mn. Doo:na Hildebrand, a 53-year-old widow who owns one well on a downtown 1°' ••Mme products $12 a day and all that 1>4ys J• the rent and tu.es." 1hi proposed oil tax was one of several ways of raising additional revenue sug- gested by the city's administrative staff to help pay for the $13.3 million ca):lital improvements prograin. Mrs. Hildebrand pumped her well at 302 M'ain SL herse1f until recently. She has operated it since 1955. "l keep it up. it's not an eyesore," she said "but it looks as If they want to get the little man out of here." Mrs. Hildebrand wondered If ute oil tax couldn't contain a minimum productlon provision that would protect the small operator!!. "If they bad a minimum on lhe number of barrels a day the well must produce before imposing the lax It would be fairer," she said. The city recommendalion does contain such a provision, the minimum being $6.25 a quarter per well . At three cents a barrel, this would make the cutoff point about 2.2 barrels a day. Any production Beach Man l(illed ' 83-year-old Dies in Fire, Four Escape 'An. 83-year old man perished and a family Jost their home in an early mom· ing blue today which caused $15,000 dam- age to a Huntington Beach house. The victim was identiOed as Marcelino Solcnano, whose charred body was found in the hallway leading from his bedroom at 7412 Slater Ave., where the fire ap- parently started. Four other occupants including a o~ a half year old child who were in 1lhe building at the time of the 5:31 a..m. blue managed to escape through, DAILY ,!LOT St•ff , ..... SUBDUES YOUTH Officer Rothatrmtl Beach Police Calm Youth, 17, After Gun Spree A rifle-toting 17-year-old Huntington Beach boy shot up his house Tuesday af- ternoon, claiming he was protecting him- ull from unknown assailants in a field , across the street. The youth fired sporadic shols out the kitchen window at 16661 Dale Vista St. and kept members or his family in terror uaUI police officers arrived to calm him down. ,Police Officer Jimmy Lee Sides was first on the scent, followed by Officer James Rothaermel, who finally calmed the boy down by showing his pistol and telling the youth to drop his rine. the front door unhurt , Investigators said. Fire Marshal Douglas Spickard sa id Solorzano's daughter Rafaela, 43, was alerted to lhe fire in the back of the small house when she heard a noise like her father falling. Running through the house , she discovered the back porch on fire, awoke Josephina Solorzano, 35, Ruben Solorzano. and Elizabeth Szabo, the In· !ant, Spickard said. Driven back by the flames, they were unable lo rescue the octdgenariar., he said. The Solorzanos moved thi!I morning to another relative's home at 7886 Speer, HUiltington Beach. Operations Officer Frank Kelley said the cause of the fire was attributed to careless smoking In bed. Twenty men battled the blaze for 30 minutes until it \\'SS controlled. Investigators estimaled the damage to the house at $10,000 and at $5,000 to its contents. No insurance was carried by the occupants, they said. 'Radical' Fund Solution Offered to Beach Board By RUDI NIEDZIWKI Of tilt Diiiy NM INlfll Two propoials lo cure the eCtJnom ic woes of the Huntington Beach Union HJgh Scliool District failed to move other board members Tue¥ay, despite lengthy rhe- toric by Trustee Joseph Riha! who sug- gest.ed them. Rlbal suggested that trustees Inform school administrators and counselors or "possible changes'' in their contracts for the following year. The changes might in- clude elimination of some positions and the addltion of duties to others. he said. "There is an unfortunate tendency in some school districts to embark on a cam- paign of retribution against the students and the parents when an election fail s," said Ribal . adding that he is opposed to cuts in educational services. Rather, he fa vors placing counselors on the same salary schedule as teachers and eliminating the positions of coordin- ator of child welfare-and attendance, di- rector of curriculum. and director of special services and recreation. u1•m afraid that in the absence of ad- min istrative and counseling personnel, I could not support that motion," repli ed Trustee Ralph Bauer. Neither did other board members. Because of the dislrict 's deep financi al trouble after a February bond i-'Sue and tax override failure, the administration says, "a drastic curtailment in lhe amount or educational service available will need to be faced .'' The pre.sent $1.39 general fund tax rate ends June :IJ, 1971. Before that time. it will be necessary to re-establish a tax rate or the di.strict will be faced with a drop in Its basic tax rate to 85 cents. Administrators explained that 1he cur- Stock lllarkeU NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market clung to a fractional le.ad lite this after· noon in tight trading. <See quotations, Pages 26--27). rent $1:39 tax rate was estailished for only three years and will revert to lhe lower figure unless a new election iJ; called this fall. While other trustees are still mulling over the impact of the election. RJbal is pushing to reduce administrative costs, includi ng the purchase by the district rif six automobiles. "[ don't think this ia the lime to buy cars for our administrators to ride around in," he said Tuesday. "If we don't put a stop to all these foolish things we're golnf to see a major erosion of the educaliona program." He promptly voted "no" on lhe pur· chases even.though Asst. Supt. Scott Flan- aga n informed him the vehicles are being bought to replace worn-out unil.; which are seven YMl"!I old. "Our admini strators don'l ride around in the cars." he explained. "We found that it is less expensive to operate our own vehicles than to pay mileage on personal cars." Trustees will tackle the touchy matter of deciding which revisions to make in district operating procedure again dur- ing a workshop session set for 1 p.m. Feb. 19 in the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria. Beach Publisl1er In Assembly Race Newspaper publisher A. A. Van Petten of Huntington Beach today ai,nounced his candidacy for the 70th District Asse mbly sell held by Robert Burke of that city. Van Petten, 45. of 9052 Pioneer Drive, filed bis papers with County Clerk William E. St John. He will run in the assembly race as a Democrat Van Petten publishes the "Liberator," a monthly publication centered in · the HunUngton Beach area. Huntington Tax Plan above that would ~t lhe operator more than $6.25 a quarter. Don Weir, whose company Is head- quartered at 428 Main St., says the oil levy would "make it rough." "The.price Of crude today Is lower than ever while everything else is up, Op, up. The price or crude hasn 't gone one up like the Increase in expenses and taxation." Weir who lives in Garden Grove pumps two wells and has 50 percent interest in a third. One produces five barrels a day, the other six to seven barrels a day. He calculates that the oil tax would CtJst him between •12 and $15 a month . Another small operatOr, F I o y d TenEyck, who o~rates eight wells with six pumping at present. was aghast at the tu. "My God, You should see our tax bills at present, mine have doubled.~' TenEyck who lives in Costa Mesa has been operating the }Junlington Beach wells since 1938. "The price of crude has dropped &O to 70 cents since 1957," he claimed. A fourth independent operator con- tacted this morning also object.ed to tbl propo!ed oil levy. "I can't see how Uley jusµfy levying any more taxes on oil," replied Joe Andeson, operator Of the three J. Oil Co., an tnaepe.ndent "It wouldn't affect me like major com· panies, but every little bit hurts,'' he ad· ded. DAILY l'ILO'f ~ W ......... KMlllW AIR 'ONTROLLER L, W. GUNTER GUID.f!S TRAFFIC INTO LOS ALAMITOS NAVAL AIR STATION Business As U111al Even While C1Yill11n Officialdom Stitt• Plcklnt Over the BOnt:a- • 'Neighbors' Hit Private Plane Use at Los Al Proposed use of Los Alamitos Naval Air Station as an airport. for private planes ran headlong into strong op- position Tuesday from all cities bordering ' on the facility. The Navy last week announced pl ans to abani!bh the""St'3't1on IS a reserve training base by mid-197 1. The CtJunly Airport Commission had urged acquisition of ~e facility by the coimty fdt general aviation use. Objecting otlhis ooncept Tuesday were William Krause , Lo! Alamitos city manager ; Larry Schmidt, Garden Grove city councilman; Jim Clark, representing the Collge Park Homeowners Association of Seal Beach ; William Young, Buena Park planning commissioner and Sharon Pritchet. representing the Concerned Citizens of Cypress. ri.tos t of the opponents lo an airporl plan urged that the property be converted to a regional park. Supervisor David Baker proposed that a study group composed of representalivs of the affected cities, assistants to the county supervisors the county aviation director, a planning CtJmmlssioner and an airport commissioner be named to "develop plans for the highest and besL use of the facility." The supenriMrs adopted Baker's pro- posal but Supervisor Alton E. Allen warn- ed that "this ls a tough decision that will have go be made by the county. Aviation needs must be considered." Bond Failure Feared ·Beach Schools Change Minds About QverrUle CauUous school oCliclals have again withdrawn their request lo place a $1.50 tax override on a June 2 ballot ln the liuntlngton Btach -Oty · relemeQ(aryJ School District. District Superintende nt S. A. Moffett told the board of trustees Tuesday night that he would like to withdraw his recom- mendation for the tax override and that he wanted oUJcial notation of bU action. "We've received too many oomments from the community indicating that if we put the override on the ballot. a pro- posed bond interest rat.e increase would rail," Moffett explained. It marked the second time the $1.50 tax increase -for pay-as-you-go school con- struction -was proposed for an election then withdrawn. District officials had -ad- ded it, then scratched it for the April 14 election. Judge to Give Legal Aspects . Of Drug Issue Superior Court Judge Hannon 'G. Trustees did decide to place the tax rate Increase on' the June 2 ballot School officials hope voters will approve a rate i~eaae from five to seven percent this llme on '4:75-nill.li<e in already approved school bon&. Last February the issue was defeated when ii fell 40 votes shy of the two-thirds majority needed. "We are encouraged to try again becau9e we came so close last tJme,'' Moffett sald. Passage of the Interest rate increase would negate any need for the pay.as-you-go proposal. "Any way, we have no pJans to bring up the St.SO pay.as-you-go proposal in the near future," Moffett added. He said CtJmment.s from the League of Wo;nen Voters, cert.a.in membe rs of the Chamber of Commerce and individual cllizens discouraged the district ln 1ts pay-as-you-go plan. "We didn't feel It would pass and It could have pulled down the other Issues." On April 14; the district will ask voters to improve a 40-cent increase Jn the ·ta1: rate. That money . is for operaUng cost& and will not eo into school cons truction if approved. ----. ~ . 8ruge Coast The boy was taken to Orange County Juvenile Hall where he was booked on charges of displaying a rine ·in public, be- ing drunk in public and malicious mis- chief. Capital Plan Study Urged Scoville will discuss the drug problem from a legal point of view at .7:30 p.m. March 23 In the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria . Judge Scoville's address is the fil'Jl of a four-pa rt adult drug forum establis~ed by trustees of the Huntington Beach' Union High School District. Other dates are March 30, April 6 and Aprll 13. 1''eatlaer Thursday 's wealher picture? Jn a word, groovy. The Man call! for suMy skies and warmer tempera- tures, which tpeans Jbout 6S aJonc • the coast and puabing '10 Inland • "The boy had apparently been drinking .00 become enraged at something." said Rothaermet this morning. An older brother uJd the youth had run •'f'•Y_from home the day before, returned 'I'Uesdly, began drinking then grabbed a .22 bolt action rlfie from under his par. ent.s' bed and began shooting and yelling that 80llleonl!i was trying to shoot him. At one point in his rage, the youth walked out' front and asked a 13-year-old neighbor girl lo come Inside, po Ure ·said. She was not harmed. When Officer Rothaermel arrl\1ed at the house tht boy was stlll shooting. Rothaennel crouched behind his patrol car and drew his pistol. When the boy walked out of the houst Rothaermel yelled 1t him lo drop his rifle and come to u~ oar. The youth obeyed, then told polic. some- ooe in the open fJeJd wu trying to .shoot him, pollce SI.id. No one was observed In the.field. No mbtt shota were fired and no'9QO "" Injured, pollct &aid. Chamber Suggests Revie w Committee Be Formed The Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce today made public a letler it sent to city councilmen before Monday night's council meeting in which it urged the council to appoint a study commUtee lo review the city's capital improvement program. The let~r , .signed by Pete llorton. chamber prea1dent. uid that· while the cha mber supports the c I v i c im- provements - a new civic center. librar)', fire stations, civic auditorium and city yard -the chamber'~ preliminary revi~w of the projects in- dicated th11I they could be paid for without Introducing new faxes. At the council meeting, Ule council did order an independent study be made of rinanclng melhods ror tf1c civic im· provement.s. The vote was 5-Z wllh Me,yor Jack Green and Councilman Jienry K<1.uf- man favoring adopUon of a program recommended by the city staff. The administration program calls for a change in the business license tax, a three-cents-a-da y oll levy. and an in· crease in the hotel bed tax from four to flvt percent Tbe city staU estimates the increased taxes1 coupled wi th a booding program. would pay for the $13.3 miUion civic im- provementJ in 15 years. The chamber's letter to the counellmen- said that lt.s pre.llminary evaluation of the capital program arrived at the followin lln<lirigso 1. ·"The recommended financing pro- gram provides for Increased tax ea on business or '' ,000,000 ove.r the next to yem. ,. 2. '.'These taxes, plus exisltng capital revenues. could create -an unallocated surplus or $10,000,000 by 1982, after the facillUeJ now propased have been patd for . 3. "Our calculations indicated that the enllre capital improvement program eould be CtJmpleted wlthout placing 1d· dltion11I tax burdens ori any class of t•x· p•yer. ''Because 0( !he potenllal Impact on the buslnes., community , the chamber htis In· strutted !tr-!pecial1ttltfY commlttee-nr complete 11.s ln-deplh evaluallon of this program w.ithln &l)..to-OO-day1.-A final report will be iuued following completion of lhls study. "We strongly recommend to the city council th11t It cartfully review the 1bovt ($et CHAM.BER, P ... I) The first hour of the March 23 meeting will be devoted to overall pJannlng of the forum, along with a film on the .subject or drug abuse. · Swim Class flelp Asked in Valley ' SUmmer help 1, needed to ~andlf Foun- tain Valley swimming and reoreation programs. Positions open Include locker attendant. cashier. lifeguard and senior lifeguard In lhe swimming progrmr;-and-a1de-and le.ader.ln the recreatlon-Prorram. Appllcal)la must be 16-yetrt-Old by June. 13. Interested Individuals must •P- PIY 11 clly hall , peuo1tnel dcportm<nl, before Mondl)o. ;-• ,, INSIDE TODAY •. ·z DAit V PILOT H WtdJ!!""1, Mud! II, 1910 ' White Boue W est 7--::::::) ' Tourists Bug· Secret Service· Unauthorized tours of the San Clemente and Key Biscayne. Fla. \Vhite House& - \Vhile President Nixon and his family wert thert -ha\le been taken by an un· disclosed number of people. The security violations were acknowledged today as lhe chief of the Secret Servict, James J. Rowley, testified before a Congressional sub- committee in Washington, O.C. Not all of Director Rowley's disclosures v;ere made public, but he said none ol the intruders were armed and will give Congress further information in a con- fidenllal memo. But he upressed worry that it is so easy to penetrate what constitutes a vital defense perimeter and could b e dangerous if security weakness is leaked 10 potentially violent groups. "We have detected these people in-- cidentally,'' Rowley told the sub- committee in hi s request for lighter security measures at lhe two coastal retreats. These would include trespassing, in- terfering with guards and prohibition of noi!y demonstrations. In San Clemente, where a few dtmonstraUons and trespassing on t.he grounds of the Western WlUte House have taken place, Chief of Police Clifford Mur- ray sa.Jd he was aware of the pending legislation. "What we weren't completely aware of, however, was the specific content of that legislation," be added. Murray said that there bad been a few problems in the past several months of persons entering the Western White House grounds uninvited. "We had three demODJtrations here last year with only one big one, and it seems that the segment of the proposed legiJiallon on that matter would apply more to the Washington White House and Jess to the one in San Clemente," be ad- ded. f.ounty Girls' Basketball Meet In Huntington The Huntington Beach Rolary Club and lhe Huntington Beach Recreation and Parks Department are sponsoring the fifth annual Orange CC)ijnty Girls' Basket- ball Tournament. The tournament is open to 5th and &~ grade girls in the junior divi sion and seventh and eighth grade girls in the senior division. Games will be played at the Huntington ~ach High School gym and the Marina High School gym on March 21 from noon to 4-p;m. EUmination games will be played on March 23 and March 24,. from 3;30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at the same loca- tions. Championshi p games will be htld in the city gym March 25. For further Information call Mrs. Sher- ry Shipley at S364573. Chimney Sparks Cause $800 ' Fire Sparks from a chimney ignited the shingles of a Huntington Beach home Tuesday afternoon, causing $800 damage to its roof. Fourteen firemen were dispatched to the blaze at 11892 Golden West St. at 2:30 p.m. since gusty winds could have escalated it into a major fire. Wbln lhey lrrtved, they found that the occ:tipUt, Ted Mlller, had already doused the names with a garden hose . Fl.rtmtn put out the remaining embers and Cov~ the hole in the roof with a plastic cover. DAllY PILOT OltANGl COAST PU19.LISHIN0 COMPANY Ro&•rt N. w.~ Pr••ldl'flt Ind Pl.lbll•""' J1c.lt II;. Curley Vkt PrtsklMt •l'lf ~•I M•fll'l'l'I' Tho'"'' K1 1•il Edllor T},0'"11 A. Murphin1 Mln .. lnt ldltor Alb•rl W, l 1tt1 Mi«lfll EtJfOI' H•11tl"1'911 ..._, Office 17l7& l1tch loul•••rd Mtlllnt AdJr1u ; l'.O. lex JfO, tl6•1 °""' Off! ... ~ hKh: m Pore.I AWfllM Cotlt M-: '3111 Wal .... i1•Mt Nl'WC*t lllld'I: n11 w•11 1111 ... '°"'"~•nf S.n ci.-11: JO! "'~"' I I CM!lll'lll 'lMI ~-('4,:_, °"ft. V "ILOl, w'lllt ~ M c.111b!Mf Mlt H'"'"·ll'ru.. I• Pllfll(~ O.lly U t _, klrlo Ott 11'1 ._.,. .. MllloN fOf' ~ IMdl, N...... IMCtl, Co.II MtM, HWll""9IOll a..o ....i '°""'""' v111ty, •*'O wit~ rwo rtt""-1 •~lltl0t•. Or...,.. CO.al PWl!stt.,. c-_., prlrttlllfl ""n'' ''" 1t nu Wnt .. ,* llYG~ lrltwpOrl IH(ll, •M aai W•l ••v s1rttt. '°'" Mft•. , •• ., ••• 171 41 64J-4lJ1 ,,_ W•alMf .. Calf H 0·1Jlt • Cl ....... ,..,,"' .. 641°1671 C!lfl't"""'' ltto. 0•t1191' Cttll fl1,11>t!U1"- C°'"""W· N9 -1toorlft, lll!Atrllitn&t M"tter4tl f!Y!ll!' ., 1M1v1rtllt"""''' llfl'll~ -r .. r~ •llM!,11 10t~lt! Mr" l'l'\IH.tflll Of ~w.·-· S9ICIMf l[)fff. ., ... ,..;, If .. ....,.,... •..at ,..,. ~If M.ftf, C.U•orni." ~!crtltrl •r at'rftr u.• -!fl~I by !NU U.JO ll'l9tl!t11'Y1 fl'il!li.ry MlilMllofr-. St.00 "*'"'rr, ' Checks with other aourct1 Indicated that the proposed Jaw is an attempt to clarify vague laws on prosecution of trespauers on land used [or Presidential residence. Under 1tate trespass reiulations, pro- secution can only take place if a peraon enters land without permission, then refuses to leave. Federal provisions for trespassing on Presidential residence .treas Is also yague. The law, it was speculated, would lill so1ne legal gaps and give the Secret Service stronger guildeUnes !or prosecut• ing 'uninvited vi~tors. "The Secret Service ha s become con- cerned about the i'islng crescendo of na- tional mllitancy and conlrontatlon, and instances of the preachment of aSsaaairia- tion and violent revolution,"' the Ster et Service director said today. " ..• In my view, the militancy of the dissident groups in our midst will in- crease in fervor •.. this activity could generate a greater propensity for attacks upon our leaders. " .•• 'There have been many incidents in recent years that have caused WI to question the adequacy or our legal pro- tective authority." Newsmen asked Rowley whether he was referring to succe!sful Intrusions at San Clemente and Key Biscayne. He said he was, and indicated there had been others, too, at vacation residences of previous presidents. Rowley urged passage of a bill to pro- hibit unauthorized entry lnto the building or grounds of a · ttmporary presidential policies." residence ; make it a federal crime to in- terfere with a secret service agent, and prohibit loud demonstrations near a presidential residence whlch might im· pede presidential business. CJIAMBER ... preliminary finding• and lhe~ overall Im· pact upon the community. Such a review might be best undertaken by a study committee appointed by the council; composed of one or more councilmen. representatives of city staff, and responsible members of the community who have expert knowledge in this highly specialized field. "Such a committee would in no way reflec t upon the work to date by the city s~ff. Jt would supplement this work, find would Provfde the council with valuable input from the apertise available in the community.· "'Ibe c\vic improvement program now under consideration is perhaps the single most important program that this city will ever undertake. The chamber believes that the benefits to be derived from a lhorough and considered ex· amlnat.ion would far exceed any in· convenience which migbt arise from deferral of action for such a study. This program should have the con· fidence. of the taxpayers and the broadest possible su pport from all segments of the community. An independent evalualion as proposed herein would appear to be lhe best metlJod of obtaining this confidence and this support." The committee that the council ordered l«t'make the study is called the Systems add Data Processing Committee. Its chairman is Councilman Al Coen and its members include, Bob Fisler, who works for Atlantic Richfield, city finance direc· tor Ben Arguello, Richard Belyea, a McDonnell Douglas executive, Mike Bokor a member of the planning com· mission , John Robbins, a data systems analyst. and Richard Waidzunas, bank manager. The committee will study methods of financing the improvements and whether the project should be entrusted to a non· profit corporation. It will report back to lhe council May 4. Beach to Watch ' f.oncessionaires The city of Huntington Beacli is going to keep closer tabs on concessionaires who operate stands on the l\tunicipal Beach. A new system has been agreed to "amicably" according to Mayor Jack Gre~, between the city's Cash Reg ister- ing Committee and the concessionaires. The concessionaires agreed to im· plemel!.t a new cash r-eglstering system to give the city a better audit and control of beach sales, Green said. It will go into operation May l. SDS, YAF Heads Oash at College \Vhat happens when an SDS pre!ldent faces his counterpart from the Youns A1nerlcans for Freedom? Golden \Yett College students "-'Ill find out at noon Thursday during a l~'O hour symposium in the college's free speech areA. Speakers win include Mike Mille r • prttldcnt of the Young Americans for Jo'reedom Ind Tom Blackbul'fl, president of the SOS. Both art from CPI Slate Long B~ach. Tht dialogue wlll ctnle.r around student problems, progress and obli&atlnns in higher cdvcat.lon. ~ ' ' • ' · 0 111 Stuli, f'Mlt Two Planes To Havana By lJnlt.ed Pre11 lnte~atlonal Twj> plan~~ were hijack.ed to Cuba to- day, one as it flew from Cleveland. Ohio, to F~ida and the S\CO~ as it wa.s en route to · Barranquilla from Bogota, Colombia . • They were the fourth i Q-.4 li.fth hijacks carritd out succesafuUy so far in 1970 in the' Western flemisphere. Both were Boeing 727 jetlin'ers. The Unlted Airlines pl811e hijacked In the United States carried 106 persons and waa forced by a lone cunman to land and refuel in Atlanta, Ga., before taking off for Cuba. WOMAN EN ROUTE TO FUNERAL DIES IN ONE CAR (i1UGHTl AFTER HITTING ANOTHER Her Auto Rama Pole at lnter1Ktlon, But He1rt Attack May Have BMn Caua• of Duth The Colombian Avianca Airliner car· ried 78 persons. It was forced to touch do~11 at Cartagena, apparently for refuel· ing, but remained aground only five minutes and then cOntinued on to Bar· ranquilla where it took on more gas and then headed for Cuba. T r affic Mishaps Prompt Warnings To Beach Drivers A rash of traffic accidents at controlled intersections which have "through" • streets ha s prompted Hunlington Beach police to issue a warning to drivers. Lt. Paul Darden, head of the traffic bureau, said accidents al intersections such as Heil Avenue and Gothard Street stem from drivers "ignorlng or not believing" the traffic controls. "In order to expedite the flow of traffic In and out of the city It is nectssary to designate some of the roads as 'through' streets," he said. "On these highway a the cross streets are controlled by either stop signs or electric signals. "Far too many colli sions are occuring at these controlled intersections where·· the through street is not required to stop. The problem is that motorists ap- proaching on the· side streets either c:lo not stop or after a stop just assume the traftic on the through streets must stop 100. '11\e driver often just pulls out In front of a fast moving car on the through street because he thinks it must stop just because he had to stop." Lt. Darden sakf drivers mustr stop and yield at these sto p signs. "'Accidents happen when a driver is not wary at fhese intersections,'' Lt. Darden added. Beach Scliool Ernplo y es Told Of Job Threat Letters notifying teachers a n d su pervisors that their jobs may be in jeopardy will be sent out this week to some staff members of the Huntington Beach City School District. "ll's a precautionary measure Yie have to take by stale law," explained Charles Palmer, assistant district superintendent for business. He cauti oned against any panic among teachers. The letters are to be mailed as a warning to some district employes that if a 40-cent tax override fails in the April election, some changes will be made. "By state law we nave to notify all certificated employes before Frida y if there is a possibility that their status might be changed," Palmer said. Changes that could be made in the event of the tax override losing would In- clude some probationary teachers not be- ing rehired for next year and some other teachers finding their status reduced. It could also affect principals and vice prln· ci pals. "We don't now how many positions would be affected, nor exactly who. It's a major decision we are studying today," Palmer added. "Of course, it all depends on the tax override. If ,we don't have the extra money we have to trim down our operation. U we get it. no problem." Anna H. Grable Dies in Beach ?oirs. Anna H. Grable, wife (lf a former lluntingtOn Beach city councilman died at her "downtown home Tuesday, fol\o\.\'ing a brief illness. Funeral arrangements are pending at Coleman r.1ortuary, La llabra. with burial slated (or fl1emory Gardens, Brea. Mrs. Grable had been a resident of Huntington Beach since 1924 when she and her husband, the late Fred T. Grable, moved to the beach from Coalinga. Born in Pomona in 1885, she married Grable in 1908. The latter worked for Tidewa ter OU Company for 35 years and held positions on Lhe Huntington Beach Citv Council anli a local school board. ~lrs. Grable, "''hn made her home at 950 10th SL. is survived by one son. a granddaughter and a grandso~. Nixon IJ1uits Import \\'A$HINGTON (AP\ -Prtsldent NIX· on issued a proclamation today tem· porarlly Umitlng crude oil imports from Cunad a Jn e,aru of Utt Uniled Slatu. • Beach Woman Killed In Vienna, two~oung Poles -Wieslaw Szymankiewicz, 20, and Romoult Wiesla\Y Zoltucho, 18-were convicted and senten· ced to jail terms today for hijacking a Polish airliner to Vienna several months ago. On Way to Funeral Zo ltucho was sentenced to two years In jail and Szymank.iewicz got two years and three months. The court told them they cou ld stay in the West after com· pleting their sentences. Death reaped its grim harvest twice Tuesday afternoon by claiming the life of a 71-year-old HunUngton Beach woman who died en route to a friend 's funeral. Mrs. Mary Ethel Miller was driving the last car in a funeral procession headed for Westminster itemorial Park when her automobile suddenly crossed two traf- fic Janes, striking another car and a Angry Mother Disn1pts Oass; Yells at Teacher An angry Huntington Beach mother stormed into a classroom at Sun View School Tuesday morning, berated and screamed at the teacher for several minutes, then stormed out again. When police went to her home to talk alxlut ii she informed them she "didn 't have to talk," and ' promptly dro14e off in her car. , Police said misdemeanor complaints of disturbing the peace might be filed against the mother," depending on the reaction of school authorities. The incident occurred in classroom B-2, where teachers said the woman yelled at one female teacher, "calling her obscene names and claiming she was unfit to teach." A spokesman for the Ocean View School District said this rooming that tbe lady's action was a violation the California Code of Education under a sec- tion on insulting and abusing teachers. "It represents a misdemeanor charge with a possible fine of $50 to $500," said the school official, indicating that action would be taken against the woman. Neither school officials nor police of· ficers could give a reason for the out· burst which disrupted classes for about 15 minutes. Students in two classes ~·ere di smissed during the uproar. and other teachers tried to calm down the mother, unsuc· cessfully, said police. signal stand~rd, police said. 'I'he cause of her death has not yet been determined, but coroner's deputies have scheduled an autopsy today to discover if it could have been a hear t attack. The elderly .woman was pronounced dead On arfiv81 at Westminster Com· munitY Hospital shortly art er the l : 37 p.m. accident, according to police reports. Officer Manuel Hinson, a traffic in· vestigator !or the Westminster police department, said both vehicles. as well as the traffic signal were totaled by the Im· pact. Shizue Nalsuhara, 4.1 , of Garden Grove, who was the driver of the other car, escaped unhurt, he said. r-.1rs. Miller was traveling north~·ard on Beach Blvd. in the number one lane in the vici nity of Bolsa Avenue when the tradegy occurred, Hinson said. Funeral arrangements are pending at Dilday Mortuary following the coroner's Investigation. The dead \.\'onlan's addrw was detennined to be 1403 Delaware St., Huntington Beach, but as of this mornin g mortuary operators had not heard from survivors. Mrs. ?¥filler was on her way lo bury ~trs. Fairy R. Orens. 77, of 811 California SI., Huntington Beach, whq died Friday after half a century's residency in the cl· ty, according to officials from Smith's mortuary who handled the funeral ar· rangements for :rwtrs. Orens. Bridge Oasses Slated in Valley Bridge. anyone? Try a new eight-week coorse starting Monday at the Fountain VaJley Community Center, 10200 Slater Ave. Class time will be 9:15 a.m. to 11 :30 a.m., each Monday. Mrs. Helen Creed. a director of the American Contract Bridge League, will teach the class. Adults may register for the class th is "'eek at city hall between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m .. through Friday. Cost is $10 for the parks and recreation department pro- gram. Book Giveaway Set for Friday At Ocean View Elementary School pupils will get a crack at their · books for a second time this Friday during a givea\.\'ay textbook fair at the Ocean View School District warehouse. 8291 Warner Ave. The books cover such subjects 1s health, science, language, s p e 11 i n g 1 music, social studies, and mathematics and will be given away absolutely free to any resident of the district who wants one. All of the volumei have been made available under recent legislation cover· ing the disposal of obsolete and unusable tex tbooks. The warehouse gates will open al 9 a.m. and close at 4:30 p.m. -or until all the books are gone. Interested parties are advised to bring their own bo:ies for transporting the books. PILOT, POLICE CLASH 1'0NIGHT A violent confro ntation for charity - between the Costa 11esa Police Depart· ment and the DAILY PILOT staff -is scheduled tonight , when the lwo mobs clash in a basketball game. All proceeds from the 7:15 p.m. tiff in the Gosta Mesa High School gymnasium will go to the J ustin Ogata Fund, for the young Mustang wres tler paralyzed in an accident during wrestling practice. ~ Tickets will be on sale at 35 cents each and, although you might find a better basketball game than co p s · versus• newsmen, you can't find a better reason lo st.age one. AIJ th e subject is love. It 's for •vryone b•tw••n th• •9e1 of 16·11. Who f•el. Who under1t1nd. Who know .bout lov•. Th•r• will b• five netion•I r•cognition prizes, b••utiful di1mond p•nd1nts •sp1ci1lly d11ign•d by Or1ng• 81011om.' The contett clot•s M1y 15 , 1970. So hurry. Thi tim1 is now. ~~·. (I M/inj!Qfot ~)My'~ CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE 1821 NEW~ORT AVE. COSTA MESA 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE 548.)40 I I ·'· I I • • .... ~ ' Co11ference Called ~!. ~ Carpenter· Eye~_ Seat: in Senate? I l ' DAILY JitLOT Sll H il'ho"" IN THE RUNNING GOP Lead•r Ca rpente r Jury Finds Hovdcil Guilty Of Murder ~·lilo Hovdal was found guijty of seco nd degree murder late Tuesdty by a SuJ)frior Court jury \vhich had appeared to be considering a verdict in ravor of a lesser penalty. The panel filed back into the courtroom of Judge Bruce Sumner two hours before it reached its final verdict to ask the jurist to. again spell out jury inslruetions relating to manslaughter. voluntary and involuntary. That request obviously raised I.he hopes of Hovda! and defense attorney Matthew Kurilich. But their hopes were dashed when the jury later dt>cided that Hovdal's 61aying last Jan. I of his wife. Georgea Genevieve. 47, merited the second degree murder count. The sa1nc jury was ordered by Judge Sumne r to return t-.1onday for the second phase of Hovdal 's murder trial - Kurilich's additional pica that he was in- sane when he shot and kllled his wife. Deputy District Allorney Ed Freeman stated Tuesday that he wil.I not produce witnesses for the sanity hearing. Kurili ch is expected to put al I ea s I. t~·o psychiatrists in the witness box during what is expected to be. a one-day prcr ceeding. The prosecution successfully arguW during the first phase of the trial that Hovda! shot and killed his wife in a fracas that began in the living room and ended on the sidewalk in fronl. of the couple 's Santa Ana honle. The jury's finding appeared to accept Kurilich's argument that Hovda 1 's shooting of his wife was not premedita· tcd. •lovdal, 52, faces a posib\e slate prison term of five years lo life. Viel Deaths lo Rise, As U.S .. Ueaths Fall SAIGON {UPI ) -Casualty figure s to be releaS€d Thursday \\'ill show a liecrease in American deaths and a sharp rise in South Vietnamese combat deaths to more lhan triple the number of Americans, inlonned sources said today. By o:c. HUSTINPS 01 '-t Otlly Pli.t 5!1ff One of California's most powerful Republicans -Dennis Carpenter •of Newport Beach -is headed for public of· rice. apparently as a challenger for 1 seat in the California State Senate. Carpenter has called a press con· ft?rence for Thursday morning. a clear~ cut indication that he intends to &eek a spot on the June ballot, and Sacramento sources Tuesday said Carpenter will be running for the seat being VC!cated by Sen ator John SchmJti (R·Tustinl. Schmitz is resig~ing his S'tnate post to seek tfte Congressioilal seal left open by the death of Rep. Janles B. Ut!. Carpenter, 41, is currently chairman or the California Republican State Ce ntral Committee. He has been a ltey figure in Orange County GOP politics for the past 10 years, serving as chairman of Orange County Republican Centra1 Committee and leading campaigns in behalf of Go\·emor Reagan and President Nixon. 1r Carpenter seeks the state senate post, it probably would be at the urging of Governor Reagan. He is close to the governor and state GOP leadership Is known lo be unhappy 'A'ilh the current party program in the Legislature's upper house. Meanwhile. two other possible can- didates for the state senate post are backing off. Assemblyman Robert Burke CR-Huntington Beach) has declared he will seek re-election for his assembly seat and will not be a candidate for stale i;enate. The office of Assemblyman Robert Badham (R-Newport Beach) has an- nounced tentatively a press conference for Thursday or F'riday, preru mably to clarify his intentions. Sources close to Badham believe he "·ill seek re.election for the assembly, definitely is not in· terested in the state senate, but possibly still could challenge Schmitz for the con· gressional post. Two elections will be held to fill the congressional seat. One will be a free-for· all. non-partisan election to fill the unex- pired part of Rep. UU's term. 'The other will be a normal primary and general election for the two-year term beginnin• January, 1971. 'Extra Services' Jail Masseuse In Laguna Beach A n1assage artist who allegedly offered "extra services" to an investigator from the district attorney's office found herself under arrest at a Laguna Beach massage and sauna parlor Tuesday. Nancy Ann Vlahos, 2!, who told police she resides at a Laguna Beach motel, is charged with conspiracy to commit pro. stitution and soliciting to engage in lewd or dissolute acts, police report. Arter a period of police surveillance: of the Academy of Physi~Therapy ft1assage and Sauna Parlor. 255 Thalia St., the DA investigator "'ent in and requested a massage: Tuesday afternoon. The suspect pn!pared him for the treatment, he claims. then asked what type of massage he desired . When he inquierd about prices. he stales, ~1iss Vlahos said a regular massage would be $10, then went on to of· fer additional services at prices ranging up to $30. He paid for the regular job with a marked bill, then placed her under arrest. following arraignment, ~1iss Vlahos \ras freed on $840 bail. The massage parlor. police report, was issued a Laguna Beach city business license in 1969. in the name of Charles T. Balmer. 1050 Skyline Ori\'e. No licen~ had yet been taken out for 1970, they stale. Meningitis Kills Girl; Vi.sit From Marine Told A 12-year.old Garden Grove girl who died Tuesday of spinal miningitis -the first Orange County victim in two years -had been exposed to a family friend lilAtioned at Camp Pendleton. The disc losure was made by the mother of Janet •lines, of 12272 Lambert Circle, a straighl·A student at Lampson Jntermediate School . Death came at Orange County ltfedical Center. where the girl was transferred Jrom a private hospital to which her molher' look her last Friday, in 1 swi.ft· striking coma. "She looked like a wa:ii: dummy, I knew sGmelhlng "'llli wrong." said Jane.rs mo{her who expla111ed sbe became ill the day before at school, showing symptoms of nu or a \•lrus Dr. Gerald \Vagner, Orange County Public Health Officer. said the disease is t :itlremely contagious but tlw.-re is llO im· mediate danger of an 'pldemic. Schoolmates v.•111 be closely obsen'ed and the enllre Hines family -Including \\11lliam Jr., 20. a Navy man stationed at Guantanemo Bay, Cuba -have been gi\lt.n preventive treatment. The Rtd Cross arranged for the young ,. sailor to Oy hon1e and be with his parents and his surviving teenaged brother and sister. Cases of spinal meningitis have, flared up at Camp Pendleton in the past and Mrs. 11ines theorized Tuesday the virus could have been carried by a Marine who visited them recently. "I want to warn other parents," she said in tone! of grief, "I'm not trying to create a panic. I just don't want Ulla to happen lo any other children." ,_1rs Hines said the entitt: family rettnUy suffered a chest virus, but Janet, an honor 1tudent, went back to class to wor-on a science project whllt still feeling ita effects. The county heaJlh officer &aid today that although 1pina.l menin1iti1 can bring death alx hours after entering the body, perhaps a. third of the PoPulation carries the virus. He said the lethal bacteria, men- ingococcal meningitis, 11 frequently found in the throat. Only slJ cases have been recorded In Orange County In the pagl two year& and all of lhese vlcUms -until the Hines &irl -have survived. ·---........ ::;;;;:::;_~,.:!I I Wrdntsda,y, March 11, iq10 H DAILY PILOf 3 UP'I Ttltll~tt. · Blast Rips Courthouse In Maryland ' ... -CAMBRIDGE. Md. (UPI) -An '" plosion lore out a corner or the Dorchester County Circuit Court building today. ll was the second violent explosi6n In ftlaryland in 24 hours and officials said both incidents appeared related to the riot trial of black militant H. Rap Brown. The blast, which hurled debris from the tw~story slone buil1Ji11g 100 feet into the street, appeared to have been centered in a women's lounge on the second noor. The explsion tore out a huge chunk al the top comer of the building. There were no injuries. The explosion happened al 9: 10 p,m. <PST ), 24 hours after another mystcriou~ blast near Bel Air ~1d .. demolished a car and killed i~ two occupants. includin(I 11; long.tt'me friend of Browi:i's, Ralph Featlierstone. CORNER OF DORCHESTER COUNTY COURTHOUSE TURNED INTO RUBBLE BY MYSTERY BLAST No One lnjur.d in Latest Explosion to Rock Cambridge, Md., Scene of Brown Trial Cambridge is the town where Brown was charged \\1ilh arson, incitement _lo <arson and incitement to riot after racial disturbance broke out following a speech he gave there in July. 1967. Bel Air is the lown where Brown is being tried. County Approves $140,000 Plan For OC Airp~rt A $140,000 contract to carry out the se- cond phase of Orange County's 1t1aster Plan or Air Transportatkln was approved Tuesday by the Board of Supervisors over the objections of Supervisor William Hirstein. He said it was too expensive. Hirstein based his opposition on the fact !hat the supervisors had budgeted only $50,000 for the second phase study. County Administrative Officer Robert E. Thomas explained that the scope of the phase two project had been increased since the budget was adopted. The second phase study is to be madt' by Ralph hf. Parsons and Associates of San Francisco. The flnn was among three finalists chosen from among seven avialion con· suiting firms 3'>Plying to make Pl!!: county 1tudy. Included in the new study will be a new master plan for Orange County Airport. site locations for a proposed metroport, a general aviation facility and an air park and recommendations on possible jolnl use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station. Abortion Repeal Now in Effect As Ha,vaii Law HONOLULU (AP) - A measure eliminating nearly all restrictions on abortions became the law in Hawaii lo-- day "'hen Gov. John A. Burns. a Roman Catholic. allowed it to enter the statute books without his signature or comment. The measure. repealing Hawaii's ti!n- tury.old abortion statute, permits the tennination of a pregnancy w i t h 1ninimum restrictions : -That the abortion be performed by a qualified . physician or osteopath in a license&:nospital. -Thal the woman be a Hawaii residenl for at least 90 days. -That the fetus be "nonviable" -not capable of living outside the mother·s body. Under the law. persons performing ii· legal abortions would be subject to a $1.000 fine and a five-year prison term. The Roman Catholic Church, whose memt>ers comprise 30 percent o r Hawaii's population. mounted an intense campaign against !hf; bill, but not all Catholics were opposed. Keep Transplant, Barnard Appeals MILWAUKEE. Wis. (UPI) -Dr. Christian Barnard. who achieved world fame: by performing the world's first heart transplant, said Tuesday such operaUons should not be discontinued simply because the problems of tl!sue re· jection are not yet totally solved. 1ishould we go to a person we ca n give a few more months o( life or a year or more, should we go to that person and say you must die naw because we haven't ~olved the problems of rejection?" 811.rnard· said. "We haven't held up kidney tran!plants: for that reason, have we? You do the best you can at the moment and In the process you solve lhe problems that lie ahead," he told a newg conferenct at St. Luke's Hospital. Billy Graliam to Hold White House Service 'VASRINGTON (UPI) -Evangellsl Biiiy Graham wUI conduct White House \\'Orshlp services SUnday In the Easi Room. the White House said today. lt wilt bt the third lime Graham ha~ ltd White House rellglous 11ervice!I. Graham is IJ1 old friend of President Nizon. • Leary Home '-Broken Up' By 3 Separate Rulings Superior Court Judge Byron K. l\.1cfi.1illan broke up the Timothy Leary home today with three separate rulings and reserved until Monday for the con· troversial LSD cultist what may be the sliffest penally of the three. He senl Rosemary Leary, 34, to Orange County Jail for .six montl1s and placed her on probation for the nexl five years. He ordered John Bush Leary, 20, to undergo a 90-day diagnositc study at tht. state of California's Chino facility and to report back lo his courtroom in June. Dr. Leary won a five-day delay of his sentencing on charges of possession of marijuana. Defense attorney George Chula sue· ccssfully pleaded that "new leg,1 pro- blems relating to Or. Leary's other legal actlor.s" had arisen and he needed time to discuss them with attorneys \lo'Orking on those cases. Dr. Leary was sentenced to 10 years in prison last month by a Texas Federal Court judge. He is scheduled to return to New York later this month for further action on misdemeanor charge& relating to drug use. J\1rs. Leary and young Leary were con· \licled last mo,nth by an Orange County Superior Court jury of charges of possession of marijuana and l.SD. The family was arrested in Laguna Beach on the drug charges and subsequently in· dieted by the Orange County Grand Jury. r-..trs. Leary's lav.·ycr announced today th~t he will immediately appeal her jail sentence. Leary left the cro"'dcd courtroom with !he promise. that "whate\ler happens my family and 1 are free, we were born free and we will stay lree." Or. Leary is currently being held in Orange County Jail. He was committed there last month by Judge ~1cr..tillan v.•ith the comment that be was ·•a threat lo the community.'' The former Harvard psychologist smil- ed and v.·aved lo what appeared to be: about 50 flower carrying sympathizers in the oourtroom and urged them to "love Cod and stay high.'' "Don"t worry.'' ht assured tllCm, "l have very good connections with the highest court of all. EveryUting ls perfect, we have tried lo do God's work and we will still be able lo do it." The building once served as the county courthouse for thi! eastern shore com· munity. A new building Is now the courthouse, but the older one continued to house the circuit court. Brov.•n was ar- raigned there on the riot charge! and he would have been tried in the damaged building had not the trial been shifted to Bel Air. about 100 miles north. State's Attorney William 8. Yates. w~ Is prosecuting Brown but . who was 1n Cambridge because the trial ha! been recessed toured the blast site with coon· ty offici~ls. He said it appeared the ~wo incidents were related to the Brown trial, but declined to elaborate. A demolition team from the Edgewood Arsenal Was called in lo detennine what caused the explosion. Yates and County Clerk Phillip Cannon sairi there are only a few offices on the second floor of the building and ll would have been easy for anyone to gain access to the lounge Tue!· day and plant a bomb, if that was what caused the blast. Cannon estimated damage to the struc-- ture at $100,000. ~1aryland Slate: Police, Dorche.ster County sheriff's officers and Cambridge city police were put on extra alert after the explosion. Pact on Drug Traffic l'IASHJNGTON CUP() -'the IJnltcd S'taleS and Me1ico gave final approval to- day to an agr~menl aimed at dr)'ing up the flow of marijuana. heroin and othel' drugs across the border Into this country. LS shoes by LIFE STRIDE. These unlined leather shoes feel better than going barefoot. Butter. •o ff uppers fit .your foot like e little glove - "MARVELOUS" $17 N•vy-Red.Vicvn• . Bon• or Whit• Kid I 052 IRVINE AVE. WESTCLI FF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH I ' • ' "SPLENDOR" $17 Bone or Whit• Kid Phone 548-8684 . " . . • I ~ I .. , ._ '"-:1'00AY'I . flEWS A .5Udil"l_g·scale titillation tax on sexy mov16fi liai been proposed in the Michigan House to cla1np do"'" on "purveyors of filth"." Under the bill. inttoduced· by Rep. Qui ncy Hoffman, theater owners v.·ould be taxed $50 lo ·show an ''M" rated film, $75.for an "R" rated piclure -' an~ $100 for an "X" rated movie. No £ax was propose4 on "G" rated !Jim•. • Schoolgi>I• at th• Don Valley. High School of Bentley, 'Eng)aad, arei. launching· a protest ag~in.st · wOoden'desks: They allege that the desks are a safety hazard. They rµ_r:i _their tights and-leave splinters in awkwa rd' place's. • Atiotller of tliose •'11ew experitn· ces" bei'llf1 sought by many has been introduced at ail International Ga s· trunomy F'air in l'lambuTg, Germo11y. Tlie device . a Japanese-nzade narghile , use! a sntaU bottle of whiskey instead of the troditional water to circulate, cool. a11d spike the smoke from a cigarette. After about 24 smokes, the bottle mvst be replaced because of tar and 11icoti11e accumulation. • A Retford. England; headmis- tress has banned the 1naxicoat and has ordered her pupils to \Year mi· nis. "Maxicoats look most ungain· ly," said Margar1t Towns~enct head of Retford High Scfiool. h1•ve told my 80 students they must wear Jninicoats -but not too short." ' 0 The British Foreign Office llas \Yarned women having a passport photo taken \\•hile \vearing a wig to wear the \\'ig when they leave the count ry or enter another. "Passport officers \vould be \•1ithin thei r Ti ghts to refuse to let then1 E'nter their country," a spokesman sa id. -----· '-~ U.S. Rep. Samuel Dei;i11e (R· Oh ioJ face$ a diplomatic prob· /em i11 relaying a request from a. local civic group. The gro11p ~ asked /iii; help in obtai11 i11g Vice· preside11t Spiro Agnew as a I speaker for an upcomi11g 1'11'!1'!t· ' iuo. F'or a1i alternate speaker, they wrote "lfow about N;:xon?'' ti ..... -_.., --.. Without N. Veit• Peace, Neutrality U.S. Laos Goals WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United States y.'ould be satisUed wiJh any agree ment between t.he Royal Laotian gove rn- ment and the Communist Pathet Lao that brings real peace and neutrality to Laos, the State Department says. A department spokesman made it clear Tutsday however, the United States could not agree to any de1l that left in Laos any of the 67 ,000 North Vietnamese troops President Nixon claims are there. "We are. very much concerned with the seUlemenl in Laos," said the spokesman, Carl Barich. "If the two sides could reach an agrttment that was satisfactory to both, w~ would not necessarily have to be concemed with that. .. He noted, however, lhe United States v.·as !ll party to the 1962 Geneva accords setting up tflt.coalltlon government under Premier SouvaMa Fhouma, rrom which the -Communist Pathet Lao withdrew in Aprn: 196.1. Bartch sal~ the United States is ''Jn touch ll1it h the Royal Laotian government" regarding a peqce plan ad· vanced by the leader of the Pathet Lao elements. Prince Soupha nouvong, half· brother of Souvanna. He declined to say v.•hat the United S{ates thinks about the rive.point peace plan. declaring it v.·ould be "beller to let the Royal I,.ao government respond or oonunen t.--before v.•e do." The official U.S. attitude was the United States is studying the Laotian Communist ptace plan. Officials private,. ly indicate they saw lillle prospect ii would lead to a solution, but hoped they \\'ere wrong. The United States has tended to view U,e intensified Communist orrensive in Laos of recent weeks as a maneuver designed to win a dominant position for the Pathet Lao and its North Vietnamese supporters from the central government. The Pathet Lao proposal, therefore, is assesi;ed by most U.S. officials as part of a squeeze play. Some U.S. officlal1 belle.ve North Viet-· nam , directing strategy ror the Pathet Lpo, believes the intensified debate in the United Sta tes over. Laos provides the same sort of pressure that forctd the United States to begin pulling out of Viel· nam . Senate Chance To Head· Off . Carswell Dim WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy said today opposition to the Supreme Court nomination of Judge 0. Harrold Ca rswell has picked up but there appears to be only "a Jong shot" ~hance of blocking Senate Confirmation. The l\fassachusetts Democrat, lhe par- ly whip in the Senate. is among lhose lighting President Nixon 's -appointment o( the ~year-old Tallahassee, Fla .. judge.. 1'tajority Leader f.fike Mansfield ID- 1\tont. ). said Carswell's nomination, strongly opposed by civil rights forces. v.·ill be brought up in the Senate im· mediately after final action on voling rights legislation . f.fansfield declined to say how he stands on Carswell. He said he expects the debate to last three or four days. Kennedy said it might take longer but "I don't know of any atterhpt now to filibuster it." About 10 days ago Kennedy said he thoughl there might be about 15 votes against Carswell's nomination. But he said today he beUeves there will be more than 30 votes against confirmation. Demo Leader Calls Vote On Lower Vote Age Bill WASHINGTON (APl -Sen ate Democratic Leader 1'.1lke r.fansfield call· ed up ~ proposal to Jower the voting age .to 18 for a vote . today althou1tt acknowledging strong OP.position both on ·t11e floor and from lhe White House. ·lo1an11field said he realized many senstor1 had already set their minds against his proposal, which was an amendment to 1 bill extending the 1965 Voting Rights Act. He said opponents feel it would jeopardize the voting rights bill, should)>e handled as a separate bill, or be.liev e a constituUona\ amendmenl i1 re· q\.lired!- Despile these handicaps, the ri.1ontana Democral said he thoug ht the Senate needed to face. the i~ue now. The Nixon administration gave its blessing to the IS·year-old vole proposal by constitutional amendment, but op- posed any change by an act of Congress. It came out against Mansfield's approach in a statement Tuesday. Only four slates permit persons under 21 ta vote. Georgia and Kentucky have lowered lhe votinb age to 18, Alaska to 19 and ~lawail lo 20. Republican Leader llugh Scolt of Pennsylvania, pushing for a five.year ex· tension of the 1965 Voling Rights Act to apply primarily to Southern states, said he opposd injecting the 18-)1ear-old vote issue. "\\'e should not risk embroiling the ex· tension of the Voling Rights Art of 1965 with the subject of an 18 or 19·year voting age," he said. Sc-Ott, differing with the administration. is supporting a separate bill to lower the voting age. He said he lhinks it is possi· ble, constitutionally,' for Congress to do thla by statu~ t Scott also bas split with the ad. ministration on extension of lhe 1965 Voting Rights Act. President Nixon asked Congress for legislation applying to all states a11ke. List December the House approved the administration bill by a fi\'e-vote margin. In the Senate, Scott has teamed up with Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich. ), in offering as a substitute for the House·passed bill a measure to extend the pres~nl lnw °"'.il~oot change but adding tv.·o pro- \'1s1ons recommended by Nixon. Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R·Ky.), \\'on 50.37 adoption of an amendment ~londay to bring parts of New York Cily and other scattered areas outside the South under the act's automatic co\'erage formula. Under his amendment. the act v.·ill automatically apply .to any state or coun· ly using a voter literary test on Nov. 1, 1968, if less than 50 percent of its voting age population was registered or voted in the presidential election that year. Police Shoo t, Kill !\'Ia n With Hatchet LOS Ai'JGELES (UP I) -Gary ~foore, 21. Los Angeles. was shol and killed Tuesday by a sheriff's deputy after he allegedly threatened employes of a coun· ly welfare office with a hatchet Snowstorm Hits Southwest Drou g ht Relieved, Ski Season Extended, Drivers Sad California Temperalt1rt!• Hl•ll lllW Pftc ~ ,. .11 0 ~· UPI Ttltl""- Ca t ·tor Sale The plea ha s a familiar ring but the merchandise is . quite different. Daniel DiP.ietro of Providence. R.I.. strolls with his pet lion cub Oedipus, who is up for sale. The four-month· old pet takes too much of his time, says OiPietro who is asking $400 for the kitty. Cambodians Sack Red Embassies; Flags, Files Bm·n PHNO~t PENH (U PI) -An estimated 20,000 Cambodian students and workers .sacked the Vieg Cong and North Viet· namese embassies in Phnom Penh today, burning their fires and nags. Diplomats in the buildings !led before the attacks, the climax of more than a year or widespread unrest over the use of Cambodia as a sa nctuary by guerrilla troops fighting in Vietnam. The demonstrators demanded that the Vitt Cong and North Vietnamese remove their troops from Cambodian 90il. Police said a group of Noi-th Viet. namese in homes near lheir tmbassy threatened the mob v.·Jth hand grenades \\'hen the youthful Cambodians ap- proched. The demonstrators pulled back. No injuries \Vere reported in the at· tacks on the two diplomatic enclaves. Bolh \\'ere sevrrcly damaged. •·Go Home, Dirty Viet Cong," read one of the banners carried by I he demonstrators. Others said, ''You \Vant to Vietnamize Cambodia" and ''Viet Cong, Dirty Hypocrites.'' Egypt Postpones Art Loan to U.S. BOSTON (AP) -The Egyptian government has derided against lending 43 major works of are to three U.S. n1usc11ms at this lime. The t1useum of Fine Arts announced Tuesday receipt of a cable from the Egyptian · minister of culture. Sarwat Okasha. that his country v.'as postponing the loan "until a happier atmosphere prevails." The other institu1ions involl'ed are the ?\1etropolltan r.·luseum of Art in New York City and Los Angeles County f\tuseum of Art. The exhibit of Egyptian art from 3,000 B.C. to H.oman limes was to open in Boston April 23. The Boston ?\1useum said in a state· ment. "\Vhile details of the backgroul)d or the Egyptian decision "'ere not il!l· mediately known, it was assumed that Egypt feared for the safely of the priceless sculptqre, jewelry and papyrus.'' .SOUTkEllN CAllFOFINr•-V1rlfDl1 (I011~•n•11 bi/I 1T>o•llr t11r Wed'IC'1d1r 1nd Tllil•r.d•v. 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Baker's talented nose began to twitch. then he burst into a sneezing spasm. Okay, he told a startled young man, where 's the marijuana . The 16-year-old boy shook his head In disbelief and productd • packet containing a "lid" of the illegal w~. Baker or the Salt Lake County Sheriff's office, had b ten In· terviewing !he youth in eonntcllon with a minor trartlc aecldent when his i1ensilive nose began acting up. He is allergic to just one thing - marijuana. The boy 11·as booked Into the Salt l.ake County Detention Centf!r for posttSllion or marijuana and was cited for the trafHc accidtnt. Eue• Retiren•e•at R6aga~ Will Run For Re-election SACRAMENTO (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan opened hls re·elecOon campaign toUay as a "citizen polltlclan" seeking another four years In office on the basis of "what we have done and what we are trying to acet>mplish." · · If re--elected, he says, he will serve the four-year te-rm, then Tetire. The Republican governor headed into Dead Woma11 Found in NY 'Bomb Plant' NEW ''ORK IUPI) -Searchers found the mutilated body of a woman and enough dynamite bombs to blow up half the. block Tuesday in the rubble of a Greenwich Vlllage townhouse destroyed by explosions Friday. \Vlth the new evidence. whlch was carefully removed and defused. police had what they considered the first con· elusive evidence explosives were being assembled in the $100.000 home. whose oy,·ners v.·ere vaca tioning in the Carib- bean at the time. They pressed thrir search today for the owner's daughter. another woman and three men "'ho fled Friday. "I would say they Were making bomb& ... tha t's definite,'' said Assistant Chief Inspector of Police Albert Seedman. "l would say they had an explosion down there by accident. The people who \\'ere manufa cturing bombs did something wrong." Theodore Gold, 23. a. teacher active in new left revol utionary groups who was a former leader of the Columbia University students riots, was found crushed to dealh in the townhouse Friday. Police and firemen at the scene said they will look for more bodies and explosives in the basement of the building, which ap- parently was the bomb y,•orksh~p Proceeding carefully, the search was ex· pected to lake another week. · Sixty sticks of dynamite and 100 blasting caps were found in the base- ment. Some of the sticks v•ere taped to~ether with ruser and severeal lead pipes v.·ere round packed with dynamite. The body of the unidentified woman \\'as severely mutilated'. It v.•as found near a workbench with tools that might have been used on the bombs, police said. or !he fi ve people \\'ho escaped the blast, the police have positively identified only Cathlyn Wilk erson, 2.5, daughter of the tO\\'nhouse's owner. They said they thought the second woman who escaped \\'3S Kathy Boudin, 26, daughter of Leonard B. Boudin, the counsel for Dr. Benjami n Spock in the care charging the pediatrician with conspiring to influence young men to avoid the draft. P.fiss Wilkerson and another woman were pulled from the rubble of the townhouse minutes after the series of. ex· plosions late Friday morning. They were cut and bleeding and one was nude. They were helped OOwn· the street to the home of a neighbor who helped them clean up and gave them clothes, then they disappeared after explainin.g_ they were going to a drugstore for medicine. Three young men were seen leaving the burning building after the explosions, but the police have provided no information on their identities. populous Soulhe,rn California today for h1s first major campaign address -a lul)Cheol) speech on his admlniatraUon's fight agaiMt smog, The 59-year-old forn1er actor formally announced for a second term 'J\lesday ,~·Ith a prerecorded television and raaio broadcast and a new1 conference. The broadcast -on 15 television and %5 radio stations -cost $28,000, a campaign of: f~iaJ said. With ~1ts. Reagan by his side, Reagan sAid, "The.years ahead can be great ones and I would like to help .as California le-ads the way to be a part o( th•l effor~ with you." "'ity every expectation is, and.. .JTlY every intention is, in running for this of· lice lo be governor four more years .and then go home a:nd sit on the fl;pnt porch in the rocking cbalr for six months, at the end or which 1:11 start rocking," he said. Reagan has no opposition In the June 2 primary. His Only major declared op- ponent is Democrat Jess ·unrub, the longtime state Assembly speaker, now minority leader. Oil Blow Out Well Lacking Safety Device NE\V ORLEAi~S (UPI) -An Interior Department official has revealed most of the 1,000 barrels of oil jetting daily from a fire blackened oHshore platform originate from a single well operating without a safety device to prevent ac· cidental oil spills. The official , flarlan \\1ood, also said the well was not author12:ed to' operate without the device, called a storm choke. Wood said Tuesday night tv.·o Chevron Oil Co. inspectors on a boat di scovered the disastrous "Charlie" platform lire early Feb. 101 boarded the plalform for a time and actually fought the blaze-on the \\'ell's production deck un til they were driven back by the heat. The production area blaze then spread and ignited eight of 12 wells controlled by "Charlie." A storm choke is an automatic valve . installed at least 1,000 feet dov.'11 in Gulf of Mexico oil and gas wells by industry agreement and government regulations, to shut down upward now if a surface ac· cident such as a fire or • hurricane wrecks surface controls. \Vood said part of Chevron's oil skim· ming operations closed d o w n Tuesday night -several hours after Tfxas wild well fire fighters touched ()ff a dynamite blast to S11uff out the flames on the plat• form. Anuhcored skimming barges re- mained on duty but roving slick~lwie boats knocked , off at dusk. The oil from the one trouble-making "·ell spurted 100 reet into the air after the flames were put ()Ut. The three-mile-long brownish-yellow slick, only partly contained by barges and the skimming crew boats, began flowing toward Breton Island in the Chandeleur Islands National \Vildlife Refuge. Thi ·island is 10 miles from the platform. Chandeleur has 8,000-to 12,000 teal and pir.tail ducks plus uncounted gulls i nd shorebirds. The ducks stop off for a rest in the islands arter flying to Louisiana from Mexico. After a few days they push on to their northern summer homes. Lama1· Scl1ool Reopen s -U11de1· Hea"J Police Guard LA~tAR . S.C. (UPI ) -More than 150 Negroes and some whites attended the Lamar School under hea\'Y protection to- day while a group of v.·hiles marched silently around the :1rea that was wrack- ed by vio lence last v.·eek. School officials said attendance was higher than on Tuesday. when Jess than 100 students shov.·cd up for the first day of classes since mobs of whiles overturn· ed buses carrying Negroes lo the school. Sul attendance was sti ll far below the normal 900.. Shortly after the students entered the school, S3 whites began a protest march a quarter of a mile away. They walked up and down a sidewalk. glaring silrntly at a line of state troopers assigned to guard the school . An ofricial read the group a Federal court order against interference with the combined elementary and high school. but lhe marcher5 remained silent and N eg1·oes Vow Mor e Protests PLAQUEMINE, La . (UPI) -Th< local school board said todey It would seek a federal court lnjunctkln to slop demonstrations by black youths who clashed <iA•ith police because two Negro princlpal1 were demoted'. Tht second nlghl or currews prompted by two days or confrontations betwttn rock-throwlng blacks and pollcio firing tear sas l'nded al dn1,1,·n today. NeQrocs, angered by the tv.·o demotions l't newly integrated achools, promi1ed inore de~oD5tratlons. then withdrew . Mrs . Jeyl Best, whos e husband is charged wlth rioting in last week's violence, led the march. She told newsmen. "We are just laking our tx- ercise. Just walking." The Negroes arrived al the ichool aboard eight buses which threaded their way through lines of NaUonal Guardsmen and Highway Patrolmen to reach the school entrance. The officials had to tum back two groups of angry whites Tuesday when UJey tried to march onlo the cam· pus. Hairy Athletes • Get 'Cut' Order SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -If four shaggy Afarin County high lthool athlete.oi \vant to get to the startioe line In school track meets, they'll ha\1e to get to the barber's shop first. That was the ruling Tuesday by U.S. Dlstrlct Judge George 8. Harris, wtto denied a motlon for a prellminary In· junction against officials of l h e Tamalpais Union High School District and dissolved a temporary restr1lning order whkh had pennltted the youths to work Olll with the Redwood High School track tean1. The Federal judge noted that the Issue was "in an area involved with the sen.~ilive. delicate and demandin1 role o,I athlete and cooch." lie added that "ttlt ;alternatives are merely to forego an alhletfc competltlo 1 or trim the hair abo\'e the collar and around the ear1 dwlng 1 particular athletic season." I I ,I ! I I --... '""''""''~·~ _ .. ,,. • • .. •• .a I' · 1 I I I I I j Lawye1· to l{~ep Atki11s O'ff Stand LOS ANGELES <VP!l - Susan Atki!ls, lfhoft oon- fesston in the bizarre Tate- LaB\anca slaylngi'I led to the indictmenl or hersetr and five others, will repudiate her story. according to the lawyer who today sought to represent her. Attorney Dave Shinn. '~ho expects to fonnally become the young v.·oman's lawyer ln court loday, said she v.•ill not repeat her grand jury revela· lions to the trial jury. h1iS! Atkins, 21. asked the court for perm ission to hire ShiM and to fire the lawyer v.·ho originally 1d\'ised her t.l tell ·her story to the grand jury. ShiM previously has ad- vised Charles Pifanson. ac- cused mastermind of the murders. ,, r will keep her off the atand," ShiM said. "She w:lll deny all her previous statements." Miss Atkins visited Manson in county jail last week and listened to his views on how the derense should be con· ducted. She indicated then she v.•as having second thoujhts about repeating h e r ac· cusalons before a jury. Shinn said hf: had talked brieny with Miss Atkins and that she wa1:1led him to represent her because he had been in touch with Manson and was "closer to the case." Deputy District Altorney Vincent T. Bugliosi said he was not surprised by the change of attorneys, and ad· ded Ulat "it was only a matter of time after she onct saw Manson ." However, Bugliosl said, "her repudiatio n will not stand up because most of what she has l'i&id has been rorroborated by other witnesses and other evidence." Richard Caballero, Mi ss Lindbergh Book Slated 01i WWII NEW YORK (UPI) Charles A. Lindbergh i 1 publishing the journals he kept during World War 11, it was announced Tuesday. . Th!'oobook, to be called "The Wartime Journals of Charles A. Lindbergh," vt'ill be re· lea!ed next September, 25 years after he made the last entry. Harcourt. Bruce & W o r 1 d Tnc. is the publisher. "twas taking part in one of the great crises of world history." Lindbergh wrote. "AViation constituted a new and possibly decisive element in preventing or fighting a war and I was in a unique posi- tion to observe European a\'ia· tion -es pecially its military aspects." Atkins' original attorney, uld fol~owing the meetlng tietween the young woman and Manson that he and Manson had !harp difftrences over the tadlC!I that should be used in Miss Atkins' defense. n1e trjal ha! been echeduled for March 30. but it is an- ticipated there will be defense requests for a postponement, partly because of the ap. pointment last week o f Charles. Hollopeter to defend Manson. After his first meeting wlth 1 '-fanson. Hollopt'ter said the best trial strategy could be a "united front" for all si1 defendants. FBI Checks Man's Alibi In Slayings NEW YORK IUPJ) Federal authorities today in- vestigated the alibi of a 29· year-old dishwasher charged by New Jersey auUiorities with the double rape-murder or a mother of four and her 14· year-old niece. Lawton Jamison tu r n e d himseU in to the FBI Tuesday and wa.s beld in $250,000 bail on federal charges of driving the murdered woman's blood· spattered. white Thunderbird across a state line. Jami.son's attorney, ,._1artin Krimke. says his client found the car abandoned on a Brooklyn street when he was on his way home after spen· ding the night of the murderl'i with friends. An Essex County v.•arrant, ~igned by prosecutor Joseph P. Lordi. accuses Jamison 0£ raping Mrs. Eleanor Quilban. 26. of Carteret. N.J .• and her niece. Debra De Los Reyes:, 14. of Newark. last Friday, shooting t~em in the head and dumping their bodies about a mile from each other in suburban Fairfield, N.J. U.S. commissioner Vincent Catoggio set Friday at 2:30 p.m. for a hearing on the stolen-car charge. Jamison is expected to be turned over to New Jersey authorities at that time. Police in Queens say a patrolman saw the Thun • derbird run a red light early Saturday and nagged do"''" the driver. Unable to produce a driver's license, they said, Jamison sh·owed t he patrolman· his Social Security card as identification and was given a summons. He abandoned the car a few minutes later after an attempt to get it going again proved unsuccessful. Police located the car later in the day in response to inquiries from New Jersey and found that the seatl'i ?:ere bloodstained. - • Ul'I Tt ..... lt Winnita9 Kiss President Nixon looks su rprised after he \vas ki ssed by Kristin Ann Vivion , of Rav.•lings, Wyo .. at a din· ne r honoring members of Congress given by the Veterans of Foreign \Vars . Kristin is a state win· ner in the Veterans' "Voice of Democracy" com- petition. DAILY PILOT IS Jet Delay Up~et~ ·Israel~ • •• By Vnl\ed Preis laterutioaal The Israeli cabinet called a special session today to discuss lhe delay in President Nixon 's reply to Tel Aviv's re· quest for · additional j e t warplanes and arms. Diplomatic sources said the cabinet, concerned by the latest appaernt change of mood In Washington, may decide to recall its am- bassador to the United Slates, Yitzhak Rabin, f or con- sultations. Israeli newspapers reflected the official rooctrn. Maariv and Yediol Arahonot said of· ficials in Jerusalem v.·ere Swedish 1nten·\ewer ~1onday that be was prepared to go to the Soviet union for more ~reaponry If the need ariSts. "The United States has knocked down ,.,.hat U really could do to create a just iand la sting peace in our area," Hu5.1ein said. "Instead of ~1orklng with the other big powtn for a P,Utlcal solUlfoC, I.he United States has been deUvtrlng new arms to Israel." . Ftom Calro, the editor of the ' ~mlofflclal newspaper A I Ahram, who Is a confidante of President Gama! A b de 1 Nasser, predicted the Israeli air force 6000 will set the re; College Youth · Held Over Poisoning Try "astonished" al the delay but l\10NTREAL (UPJ ) -Eric sum'' are "fine," according to did not regard the situation as Kranz, accused of using a pig Dr. Joh n Harrold, who treated "disquieting.'' parasite in an attempt to them. They were releasM P{esident Nixon said on Jan. poi.son his four college room-from hospital last Thursday, 30 he would have a decision on mates, will remain in jail but remain under observatlon. lhe Israeli request in 30 days. without bail until h i s They were Infested with lsr3el ls said to have asked for preliminary hearing next r-.1on· massive doses of para.site eggs .a total of 110 new Fi. Phan-d toms and A.4 Skyhawk.s. ay · that acn grow into • wonn No reason has been given Sessions Court Judge seven Inches In length. The lor the delay but informants in l\taurice Rousseau withheld parasite calfset damage to the Washington have said the bail Tuesday on the grounds liver and lungs ill pigs, though President is holding off the that a report of Kranz' mental the effect on humans is oot decision for fear of provoking condition had not yet been known. One of the four came the Soviets into sending more made and that Kranz is an very close to death, Dr. Har- .arms to the Arab world. American. rold said, and one may have quested planet and wUI have 115 Phantoms and I t O Slyhawki In Ito ab-arsenal. The.editor, Mohammed Huaanleo Helkal, aald EOPt bas two al~matlves to this buildup -matct. Israeli aJr superiority .or build up a powerful'alr defense system. . ' * * * Who's Jew? Ruling Made JERUSALEM IAPl Israel's parliament' hammered out an answer today to an aa;e- old relig ious problem which threatened to split tbe Jewls slate -"Who ls 1 Jew ?" In a linked decl1lon . legislators granted tu 11 citizenship rights to non. Jewish members of mli:ed marriages immigrating to Israel. Whithe1• Eugene Diplomatic sources in Lon· Kranz. 23 , of Hempstead , suffered permanent I u n g don said the Soviets. too. were N.Y .. Is accused of attempting damage. · holding off on sending more murder by poisoni ng his four Another 15 friends who arms to Egypt pending the roommates with a parasite vi5.iled the four during the. outcome of the ta.test Big Four never before found In man. winter car n Iv a I wtek Tbe ruling romes at a time when Israel Is fi&htlng tor the release of thousands ot Sov iet ·Jews -many in mixed families -who want to come to the national bomela.nd. After a stormy session which ran into the early hours, the 120-seat 'Knesset (parlia· ment) passed a heavily amended ·definition of ancient rabbinical law by 1 51·14 vote. There were nine abstentions. WASHINGTON IUPJ) back for the premier of a efforts to find a basis for set-Kranz had studied paraslt<r (esLivities In February ·con· Sen. Eugene J . f.fcCarthy (0-movie about his 19611 cam-Hemen! In the ~fiddle East. logy in ~lontreal since 1968. tacted Dr. Harroki, who Minn.), said today he has not paign. titled "America is Hard One Arab leader. King The four-students ln(ested believes three may be mildly closed the door to another to See ." Hussein of Jordan, told a "'ilh the parasite "ascaris infested. pre sidential bid in 1971. But , __________ _::::=::_::__:::.:::::;_...::::_::__::__:_::__:_::_ _________________________ _ neither has he opened it. Exactly two years since his ''victory" in the 1968 New flampshire primary that preceded Lyndon B. Johnson's withdrawal, and two years before lht nen first-in-nation New Hampshire test vote, McCar1hy declined to be specific about his 1972 plans. "It's l'-''O years off. I haven'I. eliminated it. J haven't done anything about it." In an Interview before heading to New Hampshire to n1ark the second anniversary of hi s 196& succeu, in v.•hich he barely lost in the Democratic p r i m a r y to Johnson, f.1cCarthy left all bis options open. The possible options include running as a third·party can- didate. fie. announced several months ago he would not seek re.election to the Senate on the Democratic ticket this year. But he was not closing out the possibility of again running as a Democrat in the 1972 president.ial primaries, pro- vided the party carries out ex- leMlve reforms. •·There could be change . enough. but I don 't know if there will be," McCarthy said. He Is particularly interest.ea In revision of the national con- vention process to make state delegations more represen- tative of their party's mem· ber.s back home. Some of ~ft'Carthy's main backers in the J\farcb 12. 1968, New Hampshire Democratic primary arranged a reception and buf[et for him Thursday at Hanover. He also was going -·- resounding reasons you should buy a new vrolet instead. of a new something else: The first pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic kept the journal in small leatherbound books. It was the only time in his life he kept a sustained diary. Toda y. t,i ndbergh is noted for his interest in con- servation. Addict, 12, Returns To Home in Slu1ns 11 R&121rre1811value. No other car in Chevrolet'• field aitt::s :rou as much back on JOI.ti initial imatmenL Year aftu year. You may never want to acll your Olcvrolct, but if you do, it'll be rewarding. 2 Deepdownvalue. 6 Slde ..... bllmL A at eel •ido-saard beam is built into 0¥el"Jbis ~1et·1 door for added protection e.nd ptace or mind. 7 A1~~kt~~meth;•••·-~ h ... Recruit Office Hit hy Blaze URBANA, 111. !UPI ) -. A fire broke out In the Air Force recruiting office early today in thi11 University of lllinois to,vn. Police .said a broken front wil)dow Indicated the fire had been .set. perh~ps with a u~bomb. Fimnen from neighboring Champaign and lhe university helped Urbana firemen fight the blaze. NEW YORK (AP) -Ralph de Jesus, the 12-year-old ad· diet who shocked a legislative hearing last month when he described his use of heroin, has returned to hit famil y'!> home in a slum filled with drug pushers. Dr. Judianne Dense n · Gerber, clinical director or the Odyssey House for narcotics rehabilitation, said Tuesday that Ralph had been senl home because he did not flt in vtith the teeD-age addicts the center wa.s designed for. "He. literally needed 'The Three Bears' told to him every night." she said. She said the special at- ' tentlon to Ralph was resented by younasters in the 13 to 17· year-<1ld group. At his family's apartment in the Hunts Point section of the Bronx, Ralph said he left because his ~pecial privileges had been taken away. He said he had stopped using drugs. On Feb. 26, Ralph sat on his doctor 's lap and told legislators how he became ad· dieted to heroin . St a te Assemblyman A1anue\ Ramos left lhe room with tears nm· ning down hll'i race. Ramos, who representl'i the district whe.re Ralph livea. said Tuesday he v.·ould seek help ror the boy. Ba11k Indian Giver But Guard's Widow to Get $913 Back CHICAGO (UPI) -The Gateway National Bank...ga.ve Mrs. Unula '-1ix $913 when her husband, a bank guard . \\'as killed in an attempted holdup -then the bank demanded and got the money back. Today fltrs. ft.fl• said the president of the Bank told her the money would be returned. "He told mt there bad been a misunderstanding and that t ~ld have the money back," l\trs. J\tix said. pay for her husband . "It's not our fault U l guy gets his head shot off. I can't help that," bank president George P. Poul as said when questioned about why the bank had demanded the return of the money. On Tuesday, fltrs. ~fh: 1aid Poula.s sumoned her to the bank· last month and ordered her to sign a check for $913 before be would release an in- surance check for S&,036. ~trs. r-.1ix said she later received another $6,000 In insurance money due to a double in- demnity clause In the In· surance policy. v.'bo preceded him in ofiice. She said Poulas told her that her husband's hospital bills amounted to more than $900 but that ghe later found out Vi' or k man's Compensation paid for t~ hospitalization. "'Nobody g"' pakl anything for services not rendered," Poulas told reporters who questklned hlm about the mat. IA!r. Mrs. Mix saJd &he used the '91S to pay for her husband 's funeral expenses. ''They told mt to come down to the bank and pi ck up the money but I told them I don 't want to go down there. The blnk ha:1 bad memories for me," Mra. Mix said today. When you buy a a.evroJet you aet exc:luai¥C thinp like ftusb-and~ rocker panels which beJp combat rust. And inDtr fenden that keep your outer fCT'lders k»okin1 aood looser. 3 Smoolh,llllOOll1 ride. Chevrolet sprinas are computer selected. Linked with Full Coil suspension and advanced body mountin1 system, it makes our bis rickr a 1mooth rider. 4 ~-~~~with Chevrolel. The impress.ion is that it's an expensive car, if you want to make an impn:se,ion. 5 --lnlllrtors. Rault1' Room to stretch out or to rit tall A lot of room for people and their lu1Pee. Cbevrolct 1ctuaUy has men front lee room than any other cu in its field . Masic-Mirror acrylic lacquer finish. WJUch is unfortunate because Chevrolet'• 15 colors sure keep their shine.. 8 ~!r~~hVlruMonnruW fuel. So does an even laraer 40lkubfo.inch VS that you can order. There ire also four other fine performin1cnsinea1v1ilabJe. 9 li'emeridoim selecliofi. or colors. or a<:cessorics. or tnlinea.. Of lnnsmiuioos.. Of fabrks. Of custom featurea you can add. And ol moddl &o pick from. There are nine dift'erent big Chevrolets alone. 10 Amerlca'smorlte. Somethins el11e: a new .. somc:thins die" can't daira:: America's mmt populu car. If actions speak loudtr than wOf'dlr. doesn't this AJ somethin1 to you? See )'OUI' Cl>evrokt ...... • Puttln1,ou tl!Jt,kHps UI first ....... !\frs. f.11•, a 39-year-old Im· migrant Crom East Germ.any. mother of three children. said r;he, received tile 1noncy from the bank ftfler her husba nd, Richard, 42. ·was 11hol by a gunman last Decembtr. The money 1mounted to 1 manU.11 She said that in demll)dlng the return of the $913. PouJa1 told her that an trror h111d btt!I made bJ lhl P'Ulden\ She said that Poulas assured her the money would be aent ~her~mwen&tf· !~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~--~--~~--~--~~~-~~--~~- ' 1' ,· ' • I i •• PILOT EDITORIAL P,i\GE I Usurping .. -L·oeal Power Tho environment IS a suddenly popular -polillcol Issue and a flood of poorly thought out bills have been lossed into the legislative bopper in Sacramento. Several of these, 1Lmilar in nature, would create regional commissions 'to supervise devel9pment of the ~stal areas of the state. The colnmissions \vould as· sume veto powers over cities and -where there are no cities alj>ng the coast -county governments. Authors of the bills apparently reason that broad .. er public bases are needed for such aims as developing shoreline for recreational use, preserving public beach access, saving wildlife estuaries from dredge-and-fill ~perations. and stopping pollutit?n, . The long experience of Huntington 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 help coastal coun.ties and cities with the financially back-breaking job of buying, developing and maintain· ing beaches and parks for the benefit of all Californians. The regional commissions the proposing legislators would create are to be comprised ef more appointed members than elected. This is contrary to the principle of representative government. Most of the authors of the bills are from inland communities. But one bill, introduced by a coastal resident. Assemblyman Pete \Vilson (ft..San Diego ), gives more say to localJy.elected officials. The bills -propose that the regional commissions have veto power over building and development per· mits within half a mile or one mile of the coast, thus creating a mountain of paper work. By giving fi nal say to the commission, the Jegisla· lion in effect would be stealing the local gov.ernment agency's zoning authority -t he major power of local government. And passing it on to appOintees of the government would be a serious erosion of local aathor- ity. The chance of corruption or incredible bungling through bureaucratic red tape is a good deal greater in the "in between" layer of state government -com· missions, special boards, etc. -than at the grass root3 level of municipal or county government. lnfonned sources in Sacramento say the mood ls such \Vlth both Republicans and Democrats trying to establish records for "protecting the environment" that some type of bill controlling development adjacent td th a coast is almost 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 .. 6Jiother layer or two of state government could do more to foul up the en· vironment than to protect it. ' Citizfns of the Orange Coast communities ought to he r;u re they make their feelings directly known to their legislators. · , Park Traf fie Problem Should a main highway run through a park? Or should it go over it? . ~e question· came up at a council meeting \Vhen ob1ect1on was raised to current plans in \1.ihich Talbert Avenue and Golden \Vest Street will run through Hunt· ington Beach's proposed Central Park. It was suggested that the roads be put on pilings :;~ .they would overpass the park stilt style. but no de· c1s1on was reached. ThiR obviously would be better than present plans but tfte cost may prove prohibitive. A system of pe· destr1an underpasses looks like the simplest and most economical answer. .. H Political Activisni iti Peace Corps Embarrassment Overseas WASHINGTON -1"he President, the vice president and the secretary of state have now had enough experience with the high spirits of the pol ilically turbulent Peace Corps to wonder if this experiment in spreading America's youth ful idealism over the world has not gotten badly off the track~. -:(l ichaFd ' havt. skills · useful to lhe economic and &OCial struc1ure of developing countries. Churches A re • Losing While Occzilt Gains \ The Tragic Far·ce Of 'Chicago 7~ To be quite blunt about it, Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Vice Presi· dent Spiro T. Agnew have been acutely embarTassed abroad by demonstrations of Peace Corpsmen against American policy. The resull is lhat there would be no great sense of disappointment or depriva- tion in the executive branch if Congress "'ere to lop off $20. $30 or f40 million from req uested funds of $98 million for the Peace Corps in 1970-71. and reduce its political activi&m accordingly. ACTIVITIES OF Peace Corpsmen fn a dozen countries ha\'e held up to public calumny the polities of a country they are supposed to represent. They have done go in Elhlopia, Liberia, Tunisia. Afghanistan. Chile. Peru, Kenya, Niger, Turkey. Brazil, Thailand, Togo. In some cases, such as Ethiopia , I.he corpsmen have fanned you I hf u I discontent l\'i lh existing government, pro- tested the ex.isling soc.Ja l order and, in @eneral. have placed a heavy strain on American rel a ti on .s ,1·ith host gorernments. Secretary ol State. Rogers relurncd rrom his recent African trip badly out of 11or1s over the behavior of Peace CofP$" men v.·ho had exposed b 1 a c k arm- bands, snorted their disapproval, and turned their bac\;s on hlm as he expound- ed American policy at the American em· baSS)'. AGi\"EW WAS cross.examined by Far . ; .,. .......... ---· Eastern statesmen on whether or not the Peace Corpsmen, as representatives <lf the U.S. government, were expressing hostile attitudes hidden beneath the But it is a hopeless task. The corps ha!'! a huge <lverlay -90 percent -of libe ral arts idealisls, mostly teachers of English , and cadres of protest-minded youth \.hose ideas are incompatible both with American policy and the policies or the countries where they serve. surface of Americao friendship and THE NTXON ADMlNISTRATION is not cooperation. of a mind to liquidate. the Peace Corp!. A strange theory, gupporled by a Some ~ the original i<f~lism !s regarded Federal District Court decision in Rhode as vahd. The general idea is appealing Jsland, underlies political acth1ism in th~ has been politically popular in the Peace Corps. The corpmien, by this doc~ past, allhough today's young are trine, are not government officials or disenchanted wtth this kind o( public representatives, but volunteers fin anced service, evidently preferring active duty by the U.S. government and entitled to all on the street.a and campuses lo the I~~ rights and privileges of private relath•e safely of a lropica l jungle. c1Llzens. No hann would be done to American If they wish to protelit the Vietnam policy abroad i! ~move for a sharp cul· ~ar, th~ pace of integration, the military. back In funds for operation of the Peace industrial complex, the ABM <lr Spiro Corps were lo arise in Congress. This Agnew they cann<lt be disciplined because would afford an opportunity for a new their constitutional rights would be beginning or a world-wide shakedown of denied. Jf they wish to condemn the the corps to make it a more useful in· govemm.ent ()( !flt! country in which they strument of American foreign policy. or are serving. agitate among its youth. de-at least not a disruptive influence. nounce its leaders that is no concern of the Peace Corps. EITHER OF TliESE forn1s of political activity is flagranUy in violation of the rules of the Peace Corps and has betn from the beginning. The era of permisslveness began with the original director, Sargent Shriver, and has steadi· ly grown worse. Sbriver also suppressed critical investigative repom Of the Peace Corps administrative operations. The present administrator, Joseph rt. Blatchford, is trying to weed out the young activist& and slowly convert the corps to a more atable and resptJn.Sible coridition l'iith people who are older and THERE TS SOi\1ETHING to be said. too, for going hack to 1he purposes and tnethods of the old point JV program '\'hich originated in the Tr u man "dminislration lo gi\'e technical aid end ,:upport In the development of emerging nations. The idea that the Peace Corps would be an outlet for the ideellsUc drive o{ American youth, their high spirits. dedication and sacrifice spreading light into places of darkness, s e e m s pathelical\y innocent in today's world. Not .:so much because the world has changed as becau11e youth'' concept of its mission has changed. Let Them Eat Winstons Congress, l\'hich worries constantly 11bout our health. 1s budgeting $2.6 mlllkln !his yea r for nagg ing u:; into quit1lng smoking. Of course. Congress also worries about lhe health dlthe·1obacco Industry. So it's i;t>tnding $73l°'m.illion this year to pr.>- nmt.e smoking. .... The Jinn's !hare of this. $31.3 million, goes to bUy up surplus l.obacco which \re ship to poor. starving \X'ople abroad under oor Food for Peace Program. Jncluding $31.3 million v.·orth of tobacco In our Food for Peace packages may seem heartless to somc . There. for example, i8 a ~plndly African native tottering d0\1·n the Jnngle- !rail in the lalit stages of stan·atlCln . He etumbles <ln a packagc labeled : "U.S. Food for Peace." \\'ith trembling fingers, ---iiiiiil- r l WednesdayJ March 11, 197~ The t:ditorial poge of the Daily Pilot s«ks to inform and .stim- tJlatt reoders bu presenting th is newspo.per's opinions nnd l'Om· .. ntettlary ow topics of initrtst ond. ~;gnlflcontf, by prm;id.i11g a forum f<lr 1he e~rressio1i of qur f'P.nd«rr'-optnton1.-and bu prcienting t.hct divtr st view· point~ of lnform.td obscroers ond tJ&k_e-.imtn o?Ltopics of th.4 dau. Robnr1 N. Weed. PubU.hor _.. •. - !rt. Hoppe he tears it open. Inside, Is a carton of Wlnstons. With dimming eyes. he reAd!> the legend: "Wlnslons taste good -Hkl' a cigareUe should ." So he eats lhem . NATURALLY. eating cigarettei 1S not }ioing to help oor starvtns friends abroad. Nor, if they don't get booked on clgaret· te~. is it going to help our tobacco tanners, '\'hat ls obviously needed is a vigorous technical aid program to teach the underprivileged, bac~·ard peoples of the world to smoke: "No. sir, you light the other end. Th•t's It. Now suck in the ~m<lke. There, lhere, Let me hit you on the back a couple of limes. Fine. In a couple of days, you'll learn to love it." Once we have ()Ur rioverty-strlcken frltDJ!1 oveneas hooK<d, think of the humanitarian saflsfaction we'll garner shlppina them packages of tobacco 10 case thetr cravings. Think of the pleasure they'll enjoy, lighting up thll lint, 11onous. after·brealdut ciaaret.te. It they bad any breakfast. But our program Is not mertlY huma.niLarlan, il.'.l--ecologiully aound. ConifCS." Is spending not only $Si 3 million on Tobacco for Peaict, but $27.!l million on t<lbacco export subsidiC.!i n.nd U40,000 for clgarelt!! adverllaing abroitd. TIIUS WE SEE thal Congress In Its wisdom Is approprtaUng {.s million ~ get Americans to smoke less and $59., ' milli<ln to get f<lreigners to smoke more. The goal of Congress Is clear: a thriv· ing tobacco export trade run by non- smoking, healthy Americans, all happily singing, "Oh, you can ship Salems out ()f the country. but .•. " Such a pr<lgram will not only save the economy, it will save the ,.,.orld. For ,.,.c are faced \'llth a PQpul<jtloD expl<lsion. ,\nd many .an expert warn~ t.hal "'e simp- ly must stop sending food abroad to starving pe<lple. For their own g<lod. What better substitute than tobacco? \Vhat better product to snuff out ()verpopulation? How good Jt i1 to know that our friends abroad \'li\1 dle happy. F'or there ia no confirmed cigarette smoker alive today who doesn't believe in big heart of hearts ia that ringing slogan: "I'd rather smoke than live." Dea r Gloomy Gus: \\'lly doem1 thn city of Huntington Beach correct I.he flooding prob- lem!! on strctls In vacant trat-1." beCprc \VRiling for the. dc\·clopcr!i to n1Q\C in ? -P. ,J.C. l~(I "•l\lt( ,.iJl:th "ttrr$' Yl ... lo 11 .. llMtMlnlf lhft• •I lflt "-''''• t•OIC '"" HI -~· ._ OIM..,.,. Gu,, Otil' ,Hlf. Editorial . Research The Black Ari1 From ghoulies and ghoslies and long-Jeggety beasUes And things that go bun1p ln the night Good Lord deliver us! ... Old Scottish prayer The occult. for most Americans. is an evening's diversion \vith a Ouija board or a deck of tarot cards. But for many <llhers -an indeterminate but ap- parently growing group -there really are "things lhat go bump in the night." J\1any social thinkers are worried about the occull boom. So are churchmen. For it is a fact of our time that, as church at· tendance is falling off, membership in new "cults of evil" is growing. Palmists. graphologists, phrenologisls, numerologists, Satanists, alchemists and \1'itches are all gaining follo\\·ers. Astrolojjers are having a field day. Several high schools and unh·ersities are offering courses in 1he history of wit - chcraft, sorcery and the black arts. fi1osl book store1 ha\'e several shelves jammed 'vith everything £ro1n sensational revel- ations of occult happenings to the scholarly Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology (1959) by Rossell !·lope Robins, an expert on Medieval history. Although Americ.an newspapers do atherwise, I follo\V the· practice of the British press and refrain from com- menting ()n triais "'hile they are in pro- gress. During lhe long trial of the "Chicago 7." I was shocked, dismayed. disgus ted, and silent. Now that the tragic farce ha~ ended, and we can look back upon it with a little perspecti,..e. severa l distinctive features seem to emerge. First, it was not a legal trial so much as a political aclion. There obviously was no "conspiracy" -as the jury correclly decided -an,d all lhe defendants had in common was a distaste for the system. SECOND, Wl:DLE the conduct <lf the defendants was outrageous, the conduct of the judge and prosecutor was in· excusable, both dW'ing and after the trial. Third, the whole proceedings sented no useful purpo$C: -as former Attorney General Clark predicteQ -except to make the government look bad and to create enormous publicity for the rilost extreme and exhlbitionistic elemenu among the defendants. Fourth, and most important, it helped underinine the Amerlcan system of jurisprudence far more than it clarified any issues at sta ke . TO fi'lE, THE 1\-IOST melancholy aspect of the trial was the public reaction. Although we prattle about "freedom" and "democracy" more loudly and constantly than any other people in the world. we have a sadly limited idea of wh8t these terms genuinely consist in. \\1e imagine U\at you have fl) "like" or ''approve" of defendants in order to give them their fullest judicial and C<Jn# stitutional privileges. We \\Tongly usuJM that anyone who protests that these defendants were badly and unfairly treated by the government is "in favor'' of what the defendants stood for, or con- dones the obnoXiouS' way they behaved. WE SEE!tf INCAPABLE <lf &eparating form from sub6tance; ot saying, "We don't agree with these people in any way, and that is exactly the reason we must bend over backward,.s lo see that their rights are respected." This is a state- ment of lhe democratic doctrine; anything else is rhetoric, hypocrisy, i&· norance, bigotry, or malice. I was delighted, subsequently, that all li ve active judges of the Federal Appeals Court unanimously reversed Judge Hof· fman 's denial of bail lo the defendanU:. llis spile and partiality were nowhere more revealed than in bis cJGSing gesture of illegal vindictiveness -and ezceeded only by the prosecutor's ugly attack upon the alleged "homosexual" proclivities <lf most of the defendants. These post-trial exhibits revealed, more eloquently than any ctlmment I could have made dW'ing the trial. exactly where the threat to our system of jUsUee really lies. PSYCHOTHERAPIST Rollo fi1ay in his new book "Love And Will ,'' discusses a system of "demons" l\'hich are not en· lilies but "archetypal functions of human experience." May argues that the "daemonic" comes to the fore in times of lransitlon, like our own. In the past. such eras produced "actual fear among pe<lple of \vitchcrafl, sorctrers. ;ind others who claimed to know how lo conSQrt \\'ilh the demons." Mid east Crisis: a Phase There arc account s of v.•itches in Biblical hislory, Exodus says: "Thou shalt no t suffer a witch to live." On the eve of the battle of Gilboa. King Saul visiled the witch of End or. near Nazareth. She ca1\ed for1h the spirit of Samuel, who predicted Saul's death. The Greeks and Romans believed in y.·itches -the more so as their empires began to crumble. IN THE l\flDDLE AGES. and up to the middle. of the 181h century, a \vitch was belie,·ed to be anyone who made ~ pact \\'ith the devil and worked n1agic -black or \1•hite -through animals or imps. llist oria.n Robbins b<olieve~ they v.•ere a "colossal fraud" perpetrated out of fear a1w:I religious zeal. One reference source eslimates that 300.000 to two million persons may have been executed as v.·ilchcs. By the 14th century, v.·itch hunts \\'ere being con* ducted In every nation of the \\'estcrn world. As late as 1692. in the famous wltcl1 tri als in Salen1. J\lass .. 19 innocent persons -6 men and 13 won1en -v.·erc hanged, and one 1nan "'as pressed to doath. All \\'a.rs In which a belligerent C<ll· lapses and is forced lo yield large \a~d areas, present complex and stubbom prcr blems In postwar territorial adjustment , Such a war was the Mideast. 1967, bet11•een lsrael and U!e Arab states. Israel is almost surrounded by disputed territory It occupies. Arab guerrillas at· tack daily trying to loosen the J9raeli grip, and the Israelis retaliate fn the air and Jn ground raids. A de scription of one of the disputtd areas may facilitate underlitanding of the continuing Mideast crlsls. Ir you drive north from Jerusalem on the highway to Oa1n ascus, you reach the Plain of Esdraelon. a fertile valley run· ning east-west from the Jordan River to lhc i\Tedlterranean. It inc or po rate 1 Armageddon, the Biblica l site of the "las~" battle()( notions. Proceeding north into hills you reach Nazareth. whi ch l!! 15 miles from Tibcrias on the Sea of Galilee. TilE 15 ,.,flLES is sheep country. but north of Galilee is another fertile basin aboui 25 miles long. The Damascus road then cllmbs a hill to a high plateau in the ~hadow of f.tount Hermon in the anti· THE OCCULT may only exist in the Ltbanon range. minds of those ~·ho believe in it. But that On the easL of this fenlle basin. and the does not stop it from n1aklng a rtRl 1m· Galilee aink. the plateau rises slightly in pacL Anthropologist Elizabeth E. Bacon • Dare, fOUfiQea "fange C:cal1td Golan 'A'Tites: "The belief that one is a victlm of Hel&hL,. lt rise• above the Jordan leve.1 \1-itchcraft Is psycllologically as potent as 1000·1~ feet and gpun of it run f3r aclual magic could ht>.", aoulhwa.rd toward lhe Dead Sta. The .A. cult ~f e-\1111& sakl.io ha~·o pl11ed • prewar Syr!~ border touches Is .a ust pert In the Sharon Tate murders in soufh of Gtlltlee. CAiifornia. Charle~ filnl\S()n, V.'ho is F'or some year& th .. Syrtans. and In lus charged 11'1 conncc11ori with-..the kllllngs. force the Jordanians south. ma intained a led a band of hippies. mo~ of thetn young -cha!n of artillery tmplacemmts on the \\()mtn, "·ho calltd him •·satao," or Heights. From tbe!e thty could and dJd "God." A recent. iuue ()f E~uire was lob shells into the farm and grsilng lsnd tlr,•ot<'d 10 the up1urge In the black arts lo the north aod \1:est of GaUlee, and In Qlllfomla. Thf' occult no longer &Urns lsrse pl~ces farU!Pr $<lUlh could r1n1e ln- t.o be n1crely a parlor game In suburbia. to the ea1t tnd ol the Plaln of ~draelon. ll's a lrtnd, and a troubll"& on•. One of ~e first acu of the Jsraella In the Six-Day War v.·as to silence guns by aerial b<lrnbing. these THEY TIIEN deployed groond trtiopg and tanks on Golan Heights, and ten or fifteen mile! along the plateau leading to Dama11cus. Th~ J~raelis still occupy the Heiglrtl, and it 1s a non·negotiable conditl<lll of peace U!at artillery shall never aga in command the lowlands. There are many commando raid& against Israe.I ltrong points on J1igh, ground. but even with the aid of sy1n)'1athetic Lebanese com- mandos, the .<\rabs ha ve not seriously threatened lsr<1eli lodgmenls. A similar situ ation . less menacing. In· \'Olves _the southern spurs of the Heights, and th111 accounr.s for the Israeli seliure- !nd occupation of .Jordanian territory west ()f the river. largely occupied by Ar•b refuaees. The refugees natural!). auffer from the bit*run warfare. Quite aside from Ule threats of Prtsl· dent Nasser of Egypt ti) resume the war, Israel cannot be blamed for inslrtlnr utllltry dueli north and .... 111 ol Galllee must be neutralized. Deir Ge<lrge : Do )·ou have any lnronnanon-on how to hook rugs~ E~V. Dear E.W.: Well. first you get this b'lg .shop- ptng bat. ate? NeJ:t -oh, for a:ood· ne.ss 13ke! Honesty is JN: best policy a:nd don't you f<lr&et it! I I' ··1 I I I I .. ' ' SALUTING GIRL SCOUT WEEK -/1. day-long celebration of Scouting dis- plays. crafts. dancing and sk i1 s \\'ill fill F ashion Island ~all next Satu.rday from 11 a.m . until 3:30 p.rn . P articipating in the even·I \\'ill be (left lo n ght l Senior Scout Shirley :\lurdock. ·rroop J;J.J:l. Cadette KC'llic Ne\\·cfln1b, Troop 1229; .Junior t\nn l~u:..~cll , 'J'toop 769, and BtO\Vnie J ennifer Kudryk, Troop 1!56. 1 Woman Plays Man's Game Pat Stornel is playing a mr.n's gante and doing quite well. thunk you. She possibly is the only \\'Oman in the bllsiness and the business Is 1nore th an a little dlfferent from her days as a fashion model. Bul I h e glamour of model ing for fashion designers on the West . Coast yielded to the ex- citement of the investment \VOrld . In 1965 Mrs . Ston1el, who makes her home in Newport Beach. ·began her career in large land sales. No\'r, five years later Pat is nearini:: the top. As investment counselor for Orange County and S::in Diego residents for · J)re·Buildcr L.And Corporelion in Beverly I-fill~. she is the on- ly woman on the staff of an~· of the large land-in\'estment companie'.!. SHI! trim from her play-lo· 'vin ga1nes on the tennis court , the charter member of the Newport Be<ich Tenn is Club hardly looks like the busi ne ss executive she is. lier last posi· tion was national s a I e s manager of J\1acco Corpora· lion's apartment ho u Se division in Newpnn Beach. \Vhat exactly does the dark- eved brunette do? ''\Vhat I do Is determine the precise needs of the investor by talking with him or his business advisers. Then I con- sult with the selection com· .nittec of our investment department to determine just what investment best fits the client's needs. "For instance," she con- tinued. ''some large investors are looking only for a tax shelter. One thing is certain - Southern California land is at- tracting investors from all over the world." ~frs. Stomcl rinds the land- in\•estmenl business at least as dcn1anding as rearing her four children. Guy, a junior and Bob, a senior arc honor students at COrona del ~1ar High School and · Tricia is at- tending Lincoln Intermediate SchooL Anita was graduated from CdM last June. "The children must figure I knov• something," she laugh- ed. "They look up to me at least a little bit since 1 advise investors on deals involving hundreds of thousands or dollars." How to Succeed • w....,, -11, 1970 • .. FROM MODELING TO INVESTMENTS Mr•. Pat Stomel IWLV PILOT 35 NATHALIE .. c ...... dtl M~r CUSTOM BIKINIS v-..........,, " '"'~· , • ....,,, 1llrt .. llfthll, • 2640 I. COAST HIGHWAY c ...... de! Mor 67S·2JS0 ., . ~ Fashion's i newest scoop / · .. \Veil. obviously 1 don't put on sport clothes and go oul and ta1k to farmers end ranchers on their tractors. I guess I"m still a city girl at heart." says the former University of Arizo na c:i mpus queen. Women Tell Secrets April Date Selected Be ready for fashion's new look. Underwired demi·br11:: wide open decollete neck• line , Beautilul Crepelo'l • nylon s maothness. Cups contoured with l11m!nated liberfilt. Wide-set straps; low scooped back 11i11111 you ne~er see" confidence. Style 1205. Fashion colors. A,B,C 32."36, Successful businesswomen will present their formulas for success at a dinner meeting of the Association for Women's Active Return to Education on Friday, March 13. The tTiceti'.1g in the Re1'eri! •louse, Tustin will describe how women may establish a business with a high degree of Apri l 24 rites in the United feasibility and relatively small l\.1ethodilit Church or the Good capital. Shepherd. Westminster are Spea king to the group will be being planned by Donna Kay Mrs. Beatrice Crist. operator lnglehart and Gary S. Walls. of a catering service for the past 25 years; Mrs. Burt Weir. Their belrothal was revealed co-owner of Lois • Paul dress by her parents. P.1 r. and Mrs. shop who combines modeling \V. F. lnglehart. durirtg a par. with shop management, and ty for family and friends in J\.lrs. William Evans, owner-their Westminster home. manager o r Thrift-0-Lux l\liss lngleha rt and he r Cleaners. finance both are graduates o' 2117 E. Co••' Hwy. A ' -,·at hou' ... ,.11 •·gi'n al Westminster High School and c d 1 Moo p• ''' 1950 "'" "~ oronl • -n. · 6:30 followed by dinner at 7:30 attend Golden West College. e '""\A,,..••ic.1•cl , Troops Parade Scouting Skill Silent Bidding For Star Club Star Club of the Laguna Beach Order of the Eastern Star will meet tonight at 7:30 in Laguna Federal Savings and Loan. p.m. Those. interested in in-The benedict-elect, stepson • M1 1t1r Ch1r91 formation may can 1\-lrs. Ray .i~a~n~d~so~n~o~!~M~'~-~a~n~d~M:r~s~. ;W~.~O:·~~l ~l ~'~·~"~'~;~·~·~·~·~·~'~·~"~'~;·~·~! 1'yronne. 496-5.108, Dana Point; Allen af Westminster. also M~. William Roley, 4!14-9651, served in the Navy. Laguna Beach or Mrs. Ray Stewart, 54r..3785, Costa Mesa. MARILYN STOESSEL June Bride Pair Piel< June Date Mr. and l\1rs. Robert F. Stoessel of Corona del 1'1ar have announced the engage· ment of their daughter , ~tarilyn Stoessel to \Vi !han1 Stephen \\'ilsvn. A parade of 30 international nags \\'iii open day -l ong festivities Sa.turday, J\.1arch 14, as Girl Scout troops from Costa Mesa and Newport Beach officially close Girl Scout Week with a Girl Scout Day. The parade will begin at 11 a.m. on the mall at Fashion Island and end with a flag raisin.g ceremony at 11 :30. From noon until 3 p.m .. girls will demonstrate crafts, ex- plain displays and set up a campsite. / During the a f te r noon . various troops will present skits. folk dancing and games on the stage. At 3:i5 they ""·ill gather in a friendship ci rcle and flag lowering ceremony. A comjllitlee in charge of the event includes the ?o.tmes. David Hoeft, Richard Shively a-,1d Ray Ceccerini. Girl Scout Week has been proclairned March 8 through 14 by ?o.1ayors Doreen ti1arshall of Newport Beacn and Alvin L. Pinkley of Costa l\1esa. Residents are invited lo hel p the Scouts celebrate their 58!h birthday by attending Scout Day on Saturday. Color and Design Art Basis Explored Board111alK Shopping Cen ter. TONI FRANKOVIC Betrothal Told July Date Selected For Rites Fnrmf'r ':orona del J\lar residen ts ~1arine t:ol. and J\lrs. B. J. Fr:inkovic. now of (;lcnvie"'· Ill. hav(' announced ! !he engagl'ment or the i r d a u g h I e r . Ta.;i Layne Fr<111kovicll to David Ray Birner .. J\1iss Frankovic .attendded S!<'phens College. Columbia. J\·lo. lier fiance. son of Mr. and There v!'ill be a silent auc- tion following the business meeting conducted by Mrs. Gretchen Anderson. Hostesses for the everiin~ will be the J\.1mes. \Vilfred Lawson, Grace Scott and Edith Leutwyler. Nuts 'n Nibble• Altending mf!j!tings every F'riday al JO a.in. are the \Yomen of rountain Valley Nuts to Nibbles TOPS Club. Members have selected the Hecrealion Center in Hun- tington Beach ror the meeting place. V lRGl1~lA'S SNIP 'N' STITCH SHOPPE Coast Hwy. • Corona Phone 673-8050 A Stitch ;,, Timi -For E1iltt Finery! F•1liion ;, • f<1 mily •ff•ir, 10 choo1• • p1ttern '"d f•br it from out n1w 1prin9 1•riw1l1. W1 prid1 curielves on 'a'"rihing tuit.ibl<1 fram I to 10 Bi1 !hcley1! $4.,y, we c1n 'I <1dv1t1i11 9re<1l d;,,ounl price1, in1+1•d w• prid• our ,10<1 on n•m• br1 !ld1 •nd 9u•r1n+1•d m••chendi11, plu1 9ivin9 in- dividu1 I perion•li r•d 1•rvi'• fa r ov1r 21 v••rl· S•• yau 1oon1 VI RGINIA 'The couple will exchange \OWS June IJ in Stanford ~Iemorial Church. Color and Desil::n. lhe basis of all arl. will be discussed by Darrell Ebert \\"hen the Hun· lington Harbour Ari Associa- tion mc<'lS at I p.m. Friday, ~1arch 13. in the former bank building located in t he Ebert, wh o lc:ichcs a I Golden West College. rec('ived his BA and !\IA degrees fr om San .lost' State College. He ha.s taught in 1-layward a n cl Berkeley, and in Greymouth and Ch r is t ch u r c h , Ne""' Mrs. Hay mond F. Himer of 1 -- San Jo!'e. aucnded San Jose at CERTIFIED NOW RATED #1 BUILT·IN DISHWASHER by Miss Stoessel is :i gradtJ:'J\c of Slanfnrd Unh·ersity 11 here she wa s a men1ber of Au:-.Lria Six. Her fiance. son of Mr. and Mrs. James \\r. Wilson or Sun- nyvale, also is a graduate of Stanford where he served as president of Delta Chi and wa s a member of Germany Twen- ty-one. Oriental Art Revea ls Many Cultu ra l Sides The many faceL-. of .Japanese culture will b<' revealed in a flower arrangin~ rind folk art demonstration for members of the Laguna Beach Garden Club on Frida y. March 13. • P.1rs. Elda Zeldis, an aC'· Viejo Club Hosts Meet Zealand. He has assl:mbled an im· pressive background or awards in various media in· eluding a first in watercolor at the California Arl F:ducator"s exhibit; a fi rst in stitchery at the Contra Costa Arl Assoc ia-Rancho Viejo \Voman·s Club lion and 1-layward Jo'cstlval of will host the Orange District Arts. and a first at the Vallev City College and is a graduote of the California Highway ! P:itrol Academy, lie is af· filifltrd "•ilh LBmbda Alpha Epsilon, national law cn- 1 lorrcment fr3tcrn ity. They will exchange "'edding plcdg<'S July 18 in S I . 1 Andrrw's P re s byte r i a n Church. Council meeting on Friday. F'air show and a second al thC Se rvi ce Mothers !\·larch 13, at 9 a.m. in the San· California State Fair i n ta Ana Elks' Club. S(.'U!pture. He 1,1•as awarded a Every third Thursda y U.S. Registra1ion wlll open the first in crafts at the /\n;ihein1 Air r orcc Mothers. Flight 19 /\rl Association sho""' and a sc-schedule m e et in gs in session followin g the theme d · tt It l C~lifornia .federal Snvinas J-lappiness Is Doing for Others. con 1n ie overa co egory. ., l\1rs. David R u k 5 ta 1 is . He now is pr eparing for a and Loan building. Costa Ranc ho Viejo presidt"Jlt. will two-man sho\v in Golden \Vest 1,..~.lc•'•'•' •"•'~p •. m ... o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;• v•elcome members to a 10 College. Eberl teaches cla ss cs11 . M sculpturing. l'A'O and three Mor"J f:Jle..,· :i.m. meeting. dimension, jewelry and desi gn Y A R N S H 0 P Lunch will be served 11t and color. ..\VE SPECIALIZE 12:1$ p.m. preceding a pro· During the business 1nccling IN SERVICE."' gram presented by Mrs. Mur· \\/inners or the emblem design, frllEll INSTll UCTIONl ray Granger, district second contest and newsletter name 2640 1. COAST HIGHWAY vice president. Speeches w'ill . ='~o~n~l<~''t~·~·i~ll~bc~·~n~no~l~ln~c~ed~.=~I~"=~='=' ='=''="="'===='='="="='~ be delivered by students from Ir La Habra High School and Chapman College. The meeting will adjourn at 2:20 p.m. Jor credited teacher of t h e lkeoobo School , \Vill appear at t :30 p.m. in the Woman 's Club, Lpgµna Beach. A former resident of Japan, -In picture1q11<1 CA~MEL. whr r• "pro9r1n " lt ~1rs. ZC\dis teaches ll\ing Court Stell• frowne d on, o• PfBBLE BfACH with mile1 of ,p•c· "" l1cul1r 1utf ,.,.,d world.f11,.,ou1 golf courir1-1ecu1<1 dc.-.lgn in Sa'nta Monica. wit'i:n tile g1t11 of o~t Mc11t1 fo1111. Tra cha irman will be Mrs. ~1embers of Court Stella Barbar<i Pngc assisted by the ri:laris 14·18. C at.ho 1 j c ThP1 i1 the l•nd of fo\t;inter•v pine• ind cvp1e1,, Mmes. Guy Male. Ro~rt Daughlers of America meet ,,..1t&1 al wlli11 11~d b•ft~h••· pl•ytul 1e1-ctter1, ?ifeArthur. Pa ul Ne\vrll, B. each second and fourth J\.1011· l'l>•m1nq dt41r-e"cl virV 9rftclou• people, 9,11.,1 • ., 11n1rl 1hapl •~d uniq~r r ell•~ranh. Why w1il lo the "Bett er Care" Stor• 1\1odel SVU-70 ,rlc• lnclHes Door Po•eh of Awallable Colon See this dishwasher and many other fine appliances in our n•w Kitchen and Laundry Center Let •• Hplaln our "lmER CARE WARRANTT" Certified Appliance YOU'RE THE KIND OF WOMAN WHO Gm WHAT SHE WANTS- WHY NOT FRENCH CASCADES 14 inc.hill 10119, 4 ai. ef l11xurio111 humt tt h•ir. All PLATINUM I FROSTED. Regul1r C111c1de1 ~~;5 . .. $1295 malfiej "MIRACLE WIGS" The INSTANT HAIR-DO! fo, holicl1 y o;i1d-1bauh , i•nt l•H' ii i11 ,our b19 I t<1ke it •10119! Bru1ll•, info your own 1tyle In 1 FLASH! lt'1 10 <l l'Y to w11h ""d dyle your· 1elf. 100'1. K1nek1lon fi ber. FALLS! If vcu·re "w<11t.t•·wit1" don't 111i11 ih11e lowtr·fh1n•eY•f price,! We've red uced our <1 lre<1dy law, , lcw price1. DEMI FALLS Sa ve _. to 7-HOW 22.95 18" to 20" FALLS Save 4 to 7-NOW 32.95 WIG FALLS Sev1 7 to 12.00- NOW 42.95 LONG FALLS S•ve 8 to 17 .00- NOW 52.'5 . . . YOU'LL LOOK '"d FEEL LOVELIER THAN EVER I DISPLAY WIG CLEARANCE! SA VE 20°1. to so•;. ·~ •1111,...._ IM tMCfll-'" Witt tlllt wlll !'lfell •I •• llMltfl •• tut.Mt SM!I l'IClll< ... It IH.ts. N-llf"M:lf tvtl' II ... RIM <lte •llJllt Wlp 1rem tWf" ...__ ... llM ...... -Ml • •W• MIKlllll M 19'! YH' IMlllf"I Dean Clantun, Jack Gill and <lny et 8 p.m. In St . Joachim's! teli,•1 Enjoy ••r•n• 11¥1n9 now, fo, qu•int cou.9,1 ~r---j~~.K~•~l~h~c~rln~e~~~1c~1~nt~l'.~"~·ii·~=g=•~r~i?~h;h;•;11~. ~c~ost3 Mes11. fl----·~·...;.;"~··~'c,;,"~"~'~"~'~·"-'-"_'_' _· ___ _ s 4 2 • 4 2 1 z-/e,1/i Pr11·Jof1, leea &o1· 642-0240 540-4720 WE SERVICE ALL MAKES 33 E. 17th Sl Costa· Mesa m /}/}.._ . ,. WIG & BEAUTY I allie j SALON -t--- TOUR WEDOING I~ AH IMPORfJiNf OEC.IHON (ALL Ji ~ULL·TIME P•OFESSION AL. COLOR PHOTOGRAPH Y SER VICE ---7S11 Cl•r ., • ., S11lte J, H1111th1 to11 h«• • At,oc1 <1ltd wilh O,I M o~lt r1aperlit1 Comp•"Y 'h: f4011 624 -ISl' Ca1mol, Calif. t lt21 l'.O. I•• 41 46 • 1 250 E. 17th STREET cosr·A-MEfA 548-3446 DAILY TILL 5,30 THURS. & FRI. TILL 1,00 Check Your Hol'oscope ' ···---,_...,_,_ .. :Z'.'.tl • ,_:; • e. S l ~S. :S * '.£t4U...J, cg 2 i i@ , i!USAJQAI i . I .. !i e • • r • • . j1I Dill V PILOT H Lights Up P-T Unit Program·s ~ Brushing Up on Fashion Mrs. Don McGee helps her daughler. Shannon get ready for the annual Foun- tain Valley Elementary School's PTO mother-daughte_r fa shio~ sho'~· Outfits will be modeled at 7:30 p.m. \Vednesda y. March 18, in th e Founla1n \'alley Hi_gh School cafeteria. Proceeds are e annarked for 'the elementary school's music department. With Teenage Set Fads Establish Identity By GAY PAULEY NEW YORK <UPI) -Don't look down your well-powdered nose on the teenagers' dress of toda y. There are many b a s i c reason s for ihe long hair on both the girls and the boys. the beads, the fringes. the long scarves. the unkemp! took. the other fads that mark adoles- cent dress. It was ever lhus about ap. parel. The Roman rathcrs as early as the Fourth Century A.O. v.·err di smayed when young dandies began to wear barbarian "br:icco" (trous- ers) despite public c.'tnsurc and interdict. Society really never has given up criticism of manner nf' dress, whether among teenagers or adults, ror with predictable regularil.y we hear the gospel of what is wrong - and righ! -in dress and adornment. Why have the teenagers captured the spotlight cur- renUy ? It. is not simply because their dress is "so different from that of JO years ago -or 10 minutes ago.·· says Dr. Pi1ary Ellen Roach, professor in the School of Family J~csources and C o n s u m r r Sciences. the University or \\lisconsin. In a deta iled study or "adolescent dress," Or. Roach points oul that clothing usctl by all ages are related to twa kinds of survival -·'survival of lhe species and su rvival of the Indiv idual hun1an being." It is for this ]alter reason - survival of the individu;it - 1hat Dr. Roach explores. Clo1hing helps to establish Identity, espccinlly crucial for teenagers. says Dr. Roach, "A mature older person knows himself fairly l,:ell an d has usually found a self-image compatiblt with roles to be fulfilled and \\'ith v.·hich he can be comfortable,'' she writes. "But teenagers in their 'search for self' are <1d- \'enturlng into and trying out nev.· modes or beha\'iOr v.1ithin a society which offers many allernatives. Nol surprising . therefore, is their susceplib lily lo fac,ls as 1hey cast about among the a!temativcs . clothes. cosmetics and groon1- ing aids allow each to rx - petiinent with the image he wishes to present." Dressing as others In his sel dresses is part of this survival of the individual. says Or. Roach. The leenagcr seeks ap- prov;i I of his peers. (EOl!C11''$ Hot" A Nia-lll'V'OIH IO f -\aLn. V•lllf, Ht,lllllntlan llUCll. Otr~ Vlrw, k•I llNCh..&1111 Wt$!mln.· t~ SUIOCll 01.1r1c1 P••r M·!tlC!Wr .... 11111l1~hon• will llPPNr In tM OAtl Y PILOT ..ell .,...,ll, lnlor.,,..tloll mini bt r.i:tlvecl bf Mr1. Gltbtrl" Turnbull; 5"1 Mt119rum O!'lvt. Hu"llntfOn 8t1Ch tiv 5 p.m. frkt1V lor ltUDlk:I• ljOfl W('(l"'!Klav.) Arevalo• PTO rttrs. Jack Llbldin1ky President COMING UP : Annual spring talent show will b e pre1tenled in Lamb School auditorium tomorrow night at 7:30. Featured will be a v ariety of st ud ent perfonnan~s and a Laugh· in skit presented by parents and teachers. Script for the sklt was written by Pi1rs. Ronald Covington and Mrs. Robert -·l"er.guson. faculty members. Circle Vw . PTA rt1r8. Edward Aleson President COMING UP : Unit meeting will take place Tue!day, March 17. In school. Social hour will begin at 7 follov.1ed by the business meeting at 7:30 p.m. Flag ceremony will be conducted b y Brownie Troop 1166. Fifth grade students 1,11ill present a program with a Hawaiian lhen1e. Guest speaker v.•ill be Norman Ginsburg from Ocean View School District who 11'ill l~ture On pupil personnel services. DeMille PTA , Airs. Robert Whiteside President COl\fl NG UP: Salute to Sports is program theme at unit meeting Monday. P.farch 16. at 7:30 p.m . Third grade students will present guitar selections under the direc- tion of Mrs. Thoma s Nichols. New officers will be elected. l'Hothers of fourth grade students will host. Ea •+wood PT A IUrs, Robert Fresenius President COl\tlNG UP : Education and c;uidance or Children \\lit h Learning Difficulties will be topic of l\1rs. Barbara Sterl- ing's lecture al unit meeting Monday, rtiarch 16. at 7:30 p.m. in the mul tipurpose room. l\1rs. Sterling, a child psychologist. addressed the gl'9UP previously on lhe sut>- JCCt of neurologically han- dicapped school children and !heir problems .. , Learning festWal 11•ill be sP:ruJSOred by PTA ror one week beginning fo.·londay, Pitarch 16. Variety of educational materials suitable for all ages will ht> displ:iyed in th<' school IN REHEARSAL -Prac:tic:ing "The Old Oaken Bucket" arc Glen ~lice. principJI of Schroeder School, and Mrs. Stice (left ) and 1\·lrs. Floyd Col- li ns. They wJll be perforn1ing in Century One, a var- iety shov.r being presented by the combined PTAs of \Vestminster High School District to raise schol· arship funds for deserving students. PTAs Combine Work Years 1n Pass • Review Westminster 1870 to 1970 will bt reJived when Century One ls presented by tht combined PTAI In lhf city's school dl strtct. The. variety !!how. held in con!'ut1ion wilh the city'11 crn ennlaJ, will be present.t'd •I I p.m. Frida)' and Satur· day, March 13 end 14, in Westminster lllab School. Some of the srt:nes prcar,nted by parents <1nd. 1eKher1 In lhe city's 24 scho o ls v.·111 include ~'estminsler's covered y,•agon days, the Gay 90s. the first long distance telephooe con- ver!iat1on, World \Ynr II and famous per:'l<lna1Jt1cs of the 1960s. Procf'edic fn>m the cilywldr l'fJOTI "ill prov ide .~holariih1p~ fl')r s~dcnts in lhc lluntlnglon lkAch Union lllsh !-itllool l)1str1t·1 ' L11111 )~oir'~ liho~v ra l~d $1.300 and rcsultf'd tn 13 $100 scholarships \\'h1ch w e r f a"'·arded lo students rron1 Westminster. i\larina and Founlal11 Valley high schools. AdmJssion to !he progratn will be SI for aduhs and 75 cenls for children. The rirsl shov.• 11•as lnili;1ted in 11160, t1nd in ;idd llion lo pro- vidi ng scholarships. $350 was contributed lo American field Scrvict' 10 bring the fi rst fnrt'1i;:n exchange sludcnt 10 \\'es:tn11n~ter }!lgh School. Minidryers Designed For Buyers \Vhat better to dry your drip-dry minidress in than a mini-dryer? The portable ap pl lancr l\•eighs only 11 \'i pounds And ('an handle Up to h'l'O pounds or damwtdrip-drv wash. ac· t'ord1 ~· to the inanufaclurtr. II sis three tempetBIUre settings. n fiO .minutc nulomatlc timer and can he plugged iulo normal 110-vnlt household outlets. li brary. Students may In-...,. spcct lhe exhibit during schoo l hours and parents may view the display in the artemoons. l\.frs. Sid Eichel, ,.. festival chainnan, re:J'°rti items may be ordere for '°"""'" delivery within a few weeks. Edi•on High PTSA l\1r8. Frank IJaelbardl President COPiflNG UP: Late8t develop. ments in the field of genetics will be discussed in proa:ram at unit meeting Pifonday, March 16, at 7:30 p.m. ·in the cafeteria ... Teen carnival will take place Friday, March 13, from 3 to 11 p.m.: Saturday, Pilarch 14, from noon to 11 p.m., and Swiday, March 15, from noon to 6 p.m. Games, rides and fdod wilJ be available. FY High PTSA !'ttn. \Vllliam BrockmaDll President REPORTS: At unit meeting, Mrs. Ch ar I es· Llpot presented r e p o r t or nominating committee and election or officers followed. Ne w officers are the Mmes. Rudolph LaBlaric, president : Jack Kru ll. Richard Hopper and Ge rald Hix. v i c e presidents; Edwin Blair and Kenneth Of'Jul io , secretaries; Millard Gray, trea s ur er : Robert Carpenter, auditor, and Ken- neth Martz, historian. Dr. Paul Berger again will serve as £ourth vice president. Cheryl \Vard, s tudent, performed vocal selections accompanied by Dr. Berger. Robert Martin. director or the school work experience plan and program coordinator for Huntington Beach Union High School District, discussed student opportunities .and showed slides. Also introduced was George Bell, r a cu I ty coordinator or s t u d e n t teaching program for high school students. Strike Up the Band Colleen Calvin is cheering on the efforts of Brenda Metz and Jan Schaefer (left to right), guitarists. Students are readying themselves musically for the PTO sponsored Arevalos annual spring talent show in Lamb School auditorium to- morrow at 7:30 p.1n. Mrs. Thomas Peel is coordinator. Fulton PTO 1'11rs. Robert Welch President REPORTS : C iti zenshi p awards were presented by Principal Ed La velle and Mrs. Herbert Yomogida to 44 students . . . PTO- sponsored Cub Scout Den I 111ilh leaders Pi1rs. Paul Aandeiud and Mrs. Larry Anderson attended a picnic last Thursday At ex- rcutivc board me c Ii n g resolution was adopted in support. or Citizens Aga inst Airpark group. Gift. or $25 was allocated to the new Cox School. Elected to serve on the nominating com· mlltee are the Mmes. John Sullivan. Greg Burke , Donald Williams. D a v i d VAsquez and Henry Lange. Alternates are P.frs. Jerry Carver and Pi1rs. P ete Catherman . . . i\·frs. Gary Cnnvis. representative of Fountain Valley J aycettes. presented plans for a buffet dinner an d dance scheduled Saturday. Apri l 4, in the com mu nity center. Tickets to the semiformal event will be avail able at $7.50 per couple, and all proceeds will be used to purchase a grand piano. Door prizes will be awarded. Blarney Business Painted Gi,ler PTA Painting up son1e Blarney Bu si ness are Sue Corridan. Sharon \Valczyk and Jayne Bryan (left lo right l. The J\ileado\v Vie'" PTA festival 1vill take place Saturday. March 14, fr om 11 a.in. to 4 p.m . \Vith games and foo d oUered. ~1rs. Knrl \Vojahn unit meeting i\1 o n day. President i\1arch 16, al 7:30 p.rn. in the COi\11NG UP: Teen a gr multipurpose roon1. Problems "'ill be panel topic -Program topic wilt be water at unit meeting tomorrow and air pollution. according night at 7:30. Three founders to l\1rs. Ralph Feather, pro- or Help Line. Inc. or ~Jun· gram chairman. Hosting th e tington Beach serving as meeting will be mothers of panel members are Dr. sixth graders and special Halph ~f. Sher, internist. etlucation students ... Mrs. bonrd chairman of Help Line Gideon Pate. room mother and board member of Long ehairman, rC'ports Easter Beach Psychological Clinic: parties will be pesentcd for ~lrs. Paul Alekoumbidcs. all classes Friday, Marcl1 20. chairman of special com· miUC'e on environmental Land PT A health and board member of Tu ber culosis a nd Re spi rator y Dise:ise AssoclA lion or Orange Cou n- ly, and Or. \Yalter \Vinter.s. dirrctor of gu idance and personnel services for Hun· Hngton BC'ach Union High School DI.strict. Also serving on the panel will !)(' Rober! A. Green. execulivt director of Orange County Pi1enlal Health Association a n d chairman of Orange County Council on Drug Abuse; Sgt. James Pitahan of the Hun· lington Beach P o 1 I c e Department, and Richard l~ager. depu ty probation of- ficer . Final panelist will be a former drug user. Serving <1s moderator will be Keith \Veslly, vice principal. Que.~· lion nnd answrr period v.•iTI follow . - Goldenwe•t PT A rt1n:. Paul Renfro President C0~1 1NG UP Election or or. flctrs will llf' conducted it Robert Haw President COMING UP: Newly-opened Land School wl!l be the si1e or unit meet ing at 7:30 p.111. Tue sday. ~1arch 17. Featured \\•i ll be tour of the new school building. Office rs 1\•ilj be elected durin_c the bu11iness meeting. Meadow Vw. PT A ~lrs. Ca rl llarriic President REPORTS : Children's Fair was featured at Piiarch unit meeUng. Students, parents find facully viewed ellhib1ts including paintings. dress rashlons. wOOd carvings and papler mache items made by students f r o {TI kin· dergarten lhrough elghlh grades. Also feat ured was a skit presented by the drAma clas.s under the direction nf James Lucas. fa cu I t y mc1nber. New o f ficer ~ tlected at fhr. mrclin~ nr(' the Mmes. Cnrl 11arris, president; Carl Tho n1 I c , first vice president: Kenneth Cubbison. secretary : Frank Zangger, treasurer. a n d Thomas Neilon. historian. Ned Jones will serve as S£'· cond vice preside nt and James Hillman as auditor. Niebla• PTO l\frs. Kenneth Woods President COl\'ll NG UP : Ne\v officers 11o·ill be elected at general meeting lomorro1v night al 7:30 . . Execu tive board \l'ilt meet in the home or Mrs. Allen J ones at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, !\1arch JJ '. , . !'Inns are under \1·ay fQr a school paper drive aild for a mother and daughter fashion show and tea to b e presented in Fountain Valley Ch•ic Centrr next month. (;ues! of honor 1vil1 be Joseph Perry. fo r whom the school is named. J'\1rs . John Sc hu ster, car niva l chairman. reports proceeds \\·ill be used to provide listening posts for t h e students. Robinwooq PFO l\trs. Lee l\.1ock President CO~·IINC UP : Spring paper drive will take place Thurs- day, !\larch 19. on the school parking lot. Prize wlll be a11,ardcd. fn charge or ar. rarui:emcnt s is Mrs. ~1ichae1 ~'fcClanahan. 11•ays 3 n d n11.'11ns chairman, assisted by Gary Lonza. ru;f_OJtTS : 1cc·crean1 is sold in school each Th ursday, ac- cording lo Mrs. Raymond Sn1ith: chairman . • Im- munization clinic was con. REPORTS: PTO members assisted in conducling in· 1·cntory or library bDoks. - Immunization clinic was conducted ror students rrom kinde rgarten through fifth grades. PTO Is rollt"cting coupons for ust in obt::iining ducted yesterday ) . . Mrs. i\ieClanahan repetts profit! or more than $40 from a re- cent paper dr ive . Wardlow PTO i\lrs. George l\1eeb•• President a silver teapot. Perry PTO CO~ttNG UP: Unit meeting -will take place tonight at Mrs. George King President COi\TING UP : Fifth birthday - of school will be celebraled Friday. ~larch 20 PTO 1v!ll present a blrlhday cake to lcachf'rs and starr. Students and fHettlty me1nbers wUI 1t1 lend school In v.·estem dress a~d partlcipate In a v.•cstern carnival at 4 p,m, 7:30. Newl)'-purchased con. trollt<I reader end materia rt v.·IH be demonstr1ted, and nomlnallng committee will present a slalf. of officer1. CommiUee members are t~e~ ~11nts. \\rilHam Ca sey • chotnnan; Freem&I) Coane. H a r o I d Schnai::Kenberg. Rlcherd Ecker t, and \Y'illiam McAdoo. I I 11 I 111 I . , I lj ~ I I I' I f I r ••• Fountain , Va ,.r Today~• Fl•al N'.Y •. Stoeks VOL 63, NO. 59, 4 SECTIONS, 68 P~GES ' ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH II, 1970 . I TEN CENTS ' Oil Opera~ors Assail Huntington By ALAN DIRKIN 01 Ille hi .. ,lief Sl•tl Independent oil operators today la.shed out at the city staff's proposal .tO impose a three-cent-a-bar.rel oil ta1 to help pay for civic-·improvements. "It will ·be a terrific blow to us," said Afra. Donna Hildebrand, a SS.year-old widOw who owns one well on a downtown 1o(. "Mine produces $12 a day and all that pays is the rent and taxes ." The ~ oil tai was one ol several ' ways of raising additional revenue sug- gested· by the clty'a admlnistratlve staff to help pay ror the SU.3 million capital improvements program. Mrs. Hildebrand pumped her well at 30% Main St. herself~ until recently. She has operated it slnct 1955. "I keep. it up, it's not an eye.sore," she said "but ~ looks as if they want to get the little man out·of here." Mrs. Hildebrand wondered if the oil tax couldn't contain 1 minimwn production ' ' provlalon that would protect the small operators. "Jr they bad a minimum on the number or b~rrels a day lhe well must produce before imposing the tax it woul(I be fairer," she said. The city recommendaUon does contain such a provision, the minimum 'being $6.25 a quarter per well. At three ceqts a barrel, this would make the cutoff point about 2.2 barrels a day. Any production above that would cost. the o~ator more than '6.25 a quarter. Don Weir, whose com.pa.ny is head- quartered at 4l8 Main St., says the oil levy would "'make Jt rough." "The price of crude today ls lower than ever while everything else Is up, up, up. 'l1lt price of crude hasn't gone one up like the increase in expenses and taxation." Weir who lives in Garden Grove pumps two wells and has 50 percent interest in a third. One produces five barrels a day, Ole othe r six to seven barrels a day. He calculates that the oil tax would cost him between $12 and $IS a month. Another ~mall operator, F Io y d TenEyck, who operates eight wells w'J(h six pumping at present, was aghitst at t,he tax . ~ "My God, you should see our ta> bllls at present, mine have doubled." TenEyck \Vho Jives In Costa Mesa has been operating the Huntington Be,ch wells since 1938. "The price of crude-has ' dftlPped flO to 70 cents s~ce 1957," he .;aimed. A fourth independent operator coo-. t4cted thi! morning al• objected to tbe proposed oil levy. , "l 'can~t ·see how they justtfy levying any JJrOre taxes on oil," replied Joe !Jt<ieson, operator of the thrte J . OU Co., ~ tndependenL "It wouldn\t affect me like mar,>r mm_. p&nieS, but every llltJe bit hUf't!, I he aa• ded. Beach Man l(illed '83-year-old Dies in Fire, Four Escape An 83-year old man perished and a family lost their home in an early morn- ing blaze today which caused $15,0CMJ dam- age to a Huntington Beach house. The victim was identified as Marcelino Solorzano, whose. charred body was found in the hallway leading from his bedroom at 7tl2 Slater Ave., where the fire ap- pirlntly started. Four other occupants including a one-and . a half y,ar old child who were in the building at the time or the 5:31 a.m. blaze malljlged to escape through DAILY ,.11..0T S"ft l"Mt9 SUBDUES YOUTH Officer Roth••~mel Beach Police Calm Youth, 17, After Gun Sp ree A rifl~tollng 17-year-old Huntington Beach boy shot up his house Tuesday af- ternoon, claiming he was protecting him- telf from unknown assailants in a field across the street. ;The youth fired sporadic shots .out the kitchen window at 16661 Dale Vista SL and kept memben; of his family in terror until police officers arrived to calm him down. police Officer Jimmy Lee Sides was first oo the scene. followed by Officer Jame.s RothaermeL who finally calmed U1e boy down by showing his pistol and tel.ling ~ youth to drop his ritle. TJie boy was taken to Orange County Juvenile Hall where be was booktd on charges ol displaying a nne in public, be· Int di-unk in publlc and malicious mis- chief. "'Ille boy had apparently been drinking and become enraged at something." said Rothaermel this morning. 1tJt older J>rolher said the youth had run away from home the day before, returned 'l'llfsday, began drinking then grabbed • J3 bolt action rine from under his par- ents• bed and began shooting and yelling that someone was trying to shoot him. t ooe point in his rage , the youth wllktd out rronl and asked a 13-year.old nfig.hbot gtrl to come inside. police said. She was not harmed. When Officer Rolhilermel .arrived at th'e hou!!e the boy wu slill shooting. Rothaermel crOUChed behind his patrol cir and hw rus pistol. When the boy wplked out of the house Rothaerme.I y~lled at him to drop his rifle and come to the car. . 'r1te youth obeyed. then told police some- one In the open fieJd was tryln1 to lhoot hlm police aaJd . No one \9as observed In the neJd. No othtr shots were fired and no OfM w1s iDjtaed, police llid. I the front door unhurt, investigators said. Fire Marshal Douglas Spickard said Soloruno's daughter Rafaela, 43, ~·as alerted to the fire in the back of the small house when she heard a noise like her father falling. Running through the house, she discove.red lhe back porch on fire, awoke Josephina Soloruno, 35, Ruben Solorzano. aod Elizabeth SzabO, the in- fant, Spickard said. Driven back by the flames , they were unable to rescue the octogenarian , he said. The Solorianos moved this morning to another relative·s home at 7886 Speer, Huntington Beach. Operations Offjcer Frank Kelley said the cause of the fire was atlrlbu ted to careless smoking In bed. Twenty men battled the blaze for 30 minutes until it was controlled. Investigators estimated lhe damage to the house at $10,000 and at $5,000 to its contenls. No Insurance was carried by the occupants, they said. 'Radical' Fund Solution Offered to Beach Board --·--__.., By llUDI NIEDZl!liKI Of llN D1lly l'lltl SIMt Two proposals to cure the economic woes of the Huntington Beach Union High School District failed to move other board membtts TUesday. despite lengthy rhe- toric by Trustee Ji)Sellh Rlbll who sug- gested them. Rlbal suggested that trustees inform school administrators and counselors of "possible changes" io their contracts for the 'following year. The changes might in- clude elimination of some positions and the addition of duties to others, he said . "There is an unfortunate tendency in some school districts to embark on a cam- paign of retribuUon against the students and the parents when an election fails." said Rlbal, adding that he is opposed to cut! in educational services. Rather he favors placing counselors on the ~me salary sChedule as teachers and eliminating the positions of coorcli~­ ator of child welfare and attendance, di- rector of curriculum, and director of specia l services and recreation. "I'm afra id that in the absence of ad- ministrative and counseling personnel, I could not support that motion," replied Trustee Ralph Bauer. Neither did other board members. Because of the districfs deep financial trouble ~rter a February bond Issue and lax override failure. the administration says. "a drastic curtailment in the amount or educalional service available will need to be faced." The present $1.39 gentral fund tax rate ends June 30, 1971. Before that time. it will be necessary to re-establish a tax rate or the district will be fa ced with a drop in its basic tax rate to 8S cents. Administrators e.11plained that the cur- Sto.,k. Jllarket• NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market clung to a fractional lead lat"e this after- noon in light trading. (See quotations, Pages 26-27). ' rent $1.31 tu rat was established -for only three years and will revert to the lower figure unless a new election is called thla: fall . While other trustees are slilJ mulling over the impact of the election, RibaJ Is push.ins to reduce admin.istratJve costs, including the purchue by the district of s.ix automobiles. "I doo't think. this is the time to buy cars for our administrators to ride around in," he said Tuesday. "If we don't put a stop to all these foolish th ings we're going lo see a major erosion of the educational program." He promptly voted "no" on the pur· chases even though Asst. Supt. Scott Flan- agan informed him the vehicles are being bought to replace worn-out units which are seven years old. ''Our administrators don't ridJ around in the cars," he explained. "Welftfund that It is less expensive to operate our own vehicles than to pay mlleage on personal cars." Trustees will tackle the touchy matter of deciding which revisions to make in district operating procedure again dur- ing a workshop session set for 7 p.m. Feb. 19 in the Hunticgton Beach High School cafeteria. Beach Publisher In Assembly Race Newspaper publisher A. A. Van Petten Of Huntington Beach toda y announced his candidacy for the 70lh District Assembly sea t held by Robert Burke of that city. Van Petten, 45, of 9052 Pioneer Drive. filed his papers with County Clerk William E. St John. He will run in the assembly race as a Democrat. Van PeUen publishes the "Liberator." a monthly publication centered in the Hunlington Beach area. 7 AIR CONTROLLER L. W. GUNTER GUIDES TRAFFIC ll:'TO LPS ALAMITOS NAVAL AIR $TATJQt4 • ' Butinou ·Ao Uou•I Evoo While CIVllJao Olflct•ldOm Sf~ Plckl111 Over the lono1 . ' . 'Neighbors' Hit Private Plane Use at Los Al Proposed use of Los Alamitos Naval Air Statio11 as an airport for private planes ran headlong into strong op. position Tuesday from all cities bordering on the faclHly. The Navy la.st week annoW1ccd plans lo abandon the 1tation as a reserve training base· by mid-1971. The county Airport <;ommission had urged acquisition of the facility by the county for general aviation use. Objecting otthis concept Tuesday were WUliam Krause, Los , Alamitos city manager : Larry Schmidt, Garden Grove city councilm an; Jim Clark, representing the Coll ge Park Homeowners Association of Seal Beach; William Young, Buena Park plaMJng commissioner and S!l'aron Pritchet, representing the Concerned Citll.e:ns of Cypress. ~1ost of the opponents to an airport plan urged that the property be converted to a regional park. Supervisor David Baker proposed that a study group composed of representatlvs of the affected cities, assi stanls to lhe county supervisors the cou nty aviation director, a planning commissioner and an airpo rt commissioner be named to "develop plans for the highest and best use of the facility." The supervisors adopted Baker's pro- posal but Supervisor Alton E. Allen warn- ed that "this Is a tough decision that will have go be made 'by lbe county. Aviation needs must be considered.,. Bopd Failure FearetJ Beach SchoolS Change Minds About Override Cautious school officials-have again Withdrawn their request lo \>lace a $1 .50 tax override' on a June 2 ba1lot in the Huntington Beach City (elementary ) School District. ' District Superintendent S. A. Moffett told the Doard of trustees Tuesday night thal he would like to withdraw h.ls recom- men dation for the tax override and that he wanled official notation of his action . "We've received too many oomments: from the community indicating that U we put the override on the ballot a pr<>- posed bond interest rate increase would fall," Moffett explained. lt marked the second time the $1.50 tax increase -for pay-as-you-go school con- struction -was proposed for an election then withdrawn. District officials had ad- ded It, then scratched it for the April 14 election. Judge to Give Legal Aspects Of Drug Issµe Superior Court Judge llarmon G. ...._:.__ Truslfts did decide to place Ibo tu rate increase on the June1: balloLJkllool officials hope voter1 "1P apprqve 1 rate increase from five to Hven percent this time on,ff.75 million Jn alrea(ty .approved school bonds. Lasi Februafy the iSsue waS def9ted whtn'lt fell'40 votes shy•Ctithe>twj).thirds majority needed. "We are enct1uraged to try auin because we came so close la.at ~" Moffett said. Passage of the lnlerelt rate increase would neg8.te any need for .. tbe pay-as-you-go proposal. "Any way, we have no pJiw to bring up the •1.so pay-as-you-g~ propa,&l in the near future," Marrett addtd. He said cOmment.s !tom the Uague of Women .Voters, c~ members of the Chamber of Comrrien:e and ind.lvl<Na1 citizens 1 discouraged the distttct in its pay-as-you-go plan. 4'We ·dkin't feel it would pass and it CGuld bav.e puUed down the other issues/' On Aprll H, the dlltiid Wi!111k'vot.,.. to Improve a to-cent Jncreate ln the tu rate. That money 'is fdr ' Opetattng1Costs and will not go into !cbool construcjion if approved. · 1 - Ora age Capital Plan Study Urged Scoville will dlscu·ss the drug problem from a legal point of view at 7:30 p.m. March 23 in the Huntington Beach High School cafeteria. Judge Scovllle's address Is the first of a four-part adutt drug forum established by trustees of the Huntington Beach Union lligh School District. Other dates-are h1art~30, April 6 and Aprll 13. • Thuiaday's weather pictun? In a word, groovy. The 11fan cills fot sunny sltles and ~warmer' te:mperi! lures, which meaflS a~ut 65 along 1 the coasl and pushl.,g 'It lnlalid. Chamber Suggests Revieiv Committee Be Formed The first hour of the ~farch 23 meeUng wiij be devoted to overall planning of thg forum, along with a film on the subject of Orug abuse. The Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce today made public a letter it sent to city councilmen before 11fonday night'• council meeting in which it urged the council to appoint a study committee to review the city's capital improvement program. The letter. signed by Pete Horton. chamber president, said that while the chamber suppGrts the c I v i c im· provements -a new civic center, library, fire stations, civic auditorium and city yard -the chamber's preJtmin11ry review of the projects in- dicated that they could be: paid tor without introducing new taxes. At the council meeting, the council did order an independent study tif: il\"lde of financing methods ror the civic im· proveme.at.s. Tbe vote WI$ 5-J with ~fayor Jack Green and Councilman Henry Kau f-2. "These taxes, plus exlsltng capital ma• favoring adoplion or a program revenues, could create an unallocated recommended by the city stall. surplus of $10,000,000 by um, 11fter the The administration program calls for a facilities now proposed have been paid change In the business license tax, a for. three-cents-a-day oil levy, and an in-3. ''Our calculations indicated that the crease In tht hotel bed tax from four to entire capital improvement program five. percent. could be completed without placing ad· The city stall estimates the Increased dltlonal tar burdens on any class of ta~ Swim Cla ss Help Asked in Valley taxes. coupled with a bonding program, payer. Summer belp 111 needed to handle Foun,. ~·ould pay for the 'IS.3 million civic lm· ''Because or the potentl11l Unpact on !he lain Valley ,swimmin& 1and ., recr~Uon provemen~ in 15 yean. btiSiness community, lhe chamber hu in-proarams. • The chamber's letter"to lhe cwnc11rnco structed its IJ)eCial study cominlttee. to Positions open lnc1ude locker att'enda&i,t'. said that Its prelimlni ry evaluation· or the 1..-omplete Its In-depth ev,luatlon of UUs .cashier. lifeauard and 1tnJ011 llre,uard.ln caplt~ program arrl'(ed at-lht Coll()Wlna ph)&fam within 60 to 90 daf•· /\ llnal lh~ sw:hnml~g proiram,, and aide-· and findings : ! report will be lssutd following compleUoo leader in the reereaUon program. I. "The recommended financing pro-or this study. Applicants must be 16-years-old by gratn-p-rovtdes for tnete1'!ed taxer on -0 we 1trongtnearmmtfKrtotJ\e?ll!V"-.runtrtt."'1ntercstetrm11lvtattr s p- business of $7,000,000 over the next ~O councU that It carerully review the above ply al city hall, per.sonnet departmen~. years. (Ste CHAMBER, r11e I) before Monday. • \ I . IN~· : 1'0Di\Y ·Give ·a bunch of collegtt drama students enoug1& r~ and tlu!v'U create tlirU-own rrptrtoru compan11. 0 r a n.g c Coaet"Collegr ii doing ;ust that· with Jtt uto t.tperlmentat th'~ Ur, Sit Entertoi11ment1 Page 30. .. • L • ---. ---,,, y = • • • ; ¥ q I. -... 2 DAILY PILOT H Wtd,.ld17, M1'1il I!., 1910 Wlait~otase ll'est ·~I l~urists aug ' \ - I Sec~.et · Service • Unauthorlt~ toun of the Ii.an Clemenle and Key Biscayne. Fla. \Vhllt llouses - wh.Ue President Nixon and bis family were there -have been ta.ken by an yn· disclosed number of people. ,lbe security violations w ere acknowledged today as the chief of the Secret Service, James J, Rowley, testilied .before a Congressional 1ub- committee in Washington, O.C. Not all or Director Rowley's disclosures were made public, but he said none o.f the intruders were anned and will gtve Congress fUnher information in a con· !idenUal memo. But he exprwed worry that it is so easy to penetrate what con11titutes a vital defe'nae perimeter and could b e dangerous iI security weakness iJ leaked to potentially violent groups. "We have detected these people in- cidentally ," Rowley told the sul>- commitl.ee in his request for tighter $tcurlly measures at the two e<iastal retreats. Thete would include trespasaing, in· terfering with guards and prohibiUon of no:lay .demonstrations. ln San Clemente, where a few demonstraUon.s and trerpa.ssing on . the grounds of the Western White House have taken place, Chief of Police CliUord Mur· ray said he wu aware of the pending Jeg!slaUon. "What we weren't completely aware of, however, was I.be specific content of that legislation," he added. Murray said that tbert had been a few problema: in the put several mootbJ of persons entering the Western White HOU!e grounds uninvited. "We had three demoMtraUoDJ here Jut year with only one big one, and it s~ms that tbe .segment of the proposed legislation on that matter would apply more to the Washington White House and len to the one in San Clemente," he ad· dee!. County Girls' Basketball Meet In Huntington The Huntington Beach Rotary Club and the Hlll\ttngton Beach Recreation and Parks Department are Sponsoring the fifth annual Orange County Girls' Basket- ball Tournament. 1 ' The tournament Is open to 5,th and 8th grade girls in the junior division and seventh and eighth grade girls in the senior division . Games will be played at the Huntington Beach High School gym and the Marina High School gym on March 21 from noon to 4 p.m. Ellmtnation games will be played on March 23 and March 24, from 3;30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. at lhe same loca· tions. Championship games vdll be held in the city gym March ZS. For further information call Mrs. Sher· ry Shipley at 536~573. Chimney Sparks Cause $800 Fire ~sparks from a chlmney ignited the shingles of a Huntington Beach home Tuesday afternoon, causing $800 damage to its roof. Fourteen firemen were dispatched to the blaze at 18692 Golden West St. at 2:30 p.m. since gusty ""inds could have escalated it into a major fire. When they arrived, they found that the occupant, Ted Miller, had already doused the Oamea with a garden hose. Firemen put out the remaining embers and covered the hole in the roof with a plastic cover. DAILY PILOT OllANGE COAiT PUllLllHIHG COMPANY Robt•t N. W11d Prt•od•n! t nd Pllbllt~r J1ck It Cu1!1y V1(t 1'rn1<1tn! tnd Gt !ltfol ~Nlllf lhc!f'lt\ K••yil Ed11or Thom•1 A. M111ph;,,, ~Mgl~ E411or ;.!b1rt W , l1t11 Auoc:1111 EOltor Hw11tl111t•11 ... ell Offlc• 17•7S l11 ~h l o11l1v1rd M1 ilift9Add,1u:1.0 . 1011: 7,0, t?6~& Ott..r Offlc" ltOYlll"& .. t.111 "7 FOl'9•1 Avt!I,,,_ Cl•lt M-; UO Wnt ll•~ Sir"' NtW'flO!'f ... (fl, t J!I Wto.• ll1 lbOI 80111t V"0 S.,, Cltl'lttllt: JOl North El Ctml_,. ll"l OAH.'I" l'ILOI, wlllil wtlldl It CIH'llll"*I !ht H-·l'roe.1, II lll.f(llllMd d•!IY n <tPI &1111- d•Y Ill ...-r1l1 lld!lfonl tor Lt8UM ltoa(ll. lill~rl eted\. COl)t M-. Hlll!llttlllll"I a .. dl eno F1111nltlll Vtlltr. tlorlp wflfl rwo rt111DMI ldl!Jen1, O•tntt COfltt ll'vllllll'tlllf (OfflOolllY prlnll119 pltni. •rt ti 1211 W•I .;.. kJ.bOI 11...... H.wpOrf IHdl. 1M la wen ••v "'"'· <;e~tt M ..... r.t.,hfft C7141 '4lo4l21 Ftffl W•""1n.., C.tl 14 .. 1221 CIOMifled Allftrthhtt '42•167t (OPl'•lon1, ltl'D, 011rit• Cot11 l"\ltlt11111nt ~. He ...,..,,. •!OtiM. l!fvttrlf,.,,. .a•>ork• ?Oltt!., or """'IMl'IW<'l!t hlrttn ltltY H ••O"Od\lctd wllfttvl ttl9Cllfl ..,. ,,.1 .. 1ew1 11 (Of)'rlfll1 o-•· ~ ci. .. ,,..1t91"Id11 N""""' tMotPt l rHI Coti. Me,., CllllOHlll, 51111&<rlplJO!I h' <•n1't U.00 "*""!YI l)y ,,,,.(1 U..SO fflf!lllllJ'I ll'ltUT.,r ,..,,1,,11'°'1lo •1-00 ll'IOl!llllr. Checks with other aources indicated tha t the proposed law Js an attempt to clarify vague laws on prosecution o[ trespassers on 1and used for Presidential residence. Under state trespass regulations, prrr secution can only take place U a person enters land without permission, then refuses to leave. Federal provisions for trespassing on Presidenti4J residence areas is also va~. The Jaw, it Was speculated, would flit some legal gaps and give the Secret Service. stronger gulldelines for prosecut· Ing µnlnvited visitors. • .. "The Secret Service has become con· cerned about tbe rising crescendo of na. Uonal militancy and oonlrontaUon, and i.nstan~a of the preachment of wauina· tJon.,. and violent revolution," the Secret Seri\ce director saJd today. ", •• In my view, the militancy of the dissident groups in our midst will in· crease in fervor ..• thls activity could generate a gn.ater propensity for attacks upon our leaders. " .•• There have been many incidents In recent years that have caimd us to question the adequacy of our legal pro-. tective authority.'' Newsmen ask~ Rowley whether he was referring to successful Intrusions at 'San Clemente and Key Biscayne. He said he was, and indicated there had been others, too, at vacation residencts or previous presklent!. Rowley urged passage of a bill to prrr hlbit unautboriied entry into the building or grounds of a temporary presldenUa1 policies." residence; make it a federal crime to in· terlere with a secret service agent, and prohibit loud demonstrations near a presidential residence which might im· pede presidential business. From Page 1 CHAMBER •.. preliminary findings and their overall im- pact upon the communHy. Such a review might be best undertaken by a study c:ommlttee appointed by the council; ccrnposed ·or one or more councilmen, representatives of city 1taff, and responsible members of the community who have expert knowledge in this highly 'JlOcl!fued field. "Such a commiuee would In no way reflect updn the work to date by the city staff. It would supplement this work, and would provide the -council with valuable input from the expertise avallable in the communJty. "The civic improvement program now undu con•lderaUon is perhaps the single most important program that this city will ever undertake. The chamber believes that the benefits to be derived rrom a LhOrough and -tJonsidered ex· amlnation would far exceed any in- convenience whJch might arise from deferral of action for such a study. This program should have the con· fi.dence of the taxpayers and the broadest possible support from all segmenls of the commurrlty. An independent evaluation as proposed herein would appear to be the best met.hod or obtaining this confidence and this support" The committee that the council ordered to make the study is called the Systems and Data Processing Committee. Its chairman Is Councilman Al Coen and its membert include, Bob Fisler, who works for AUanlic Richfield, city finance direc- tor Ben ArgueUo, Richard Belyea . a McDonnell Douglas executive, Mik~ Bokor a member of the planning com· mission, John Robbins, a data systems analyst, and RJchard Waldzunas, bank 1nanager. The committee will study methods of tinanclng the improvements and whether the project should be entrusted to a non· profit corporation. It "'ill report back to the council May 4-. Beach to Watch Concessionaires The city of Huntington Beach Is going to keep closer tabs on concessionaires who operate It.ands on tlle Munlclpal Beach. A new system hu been 8Jreed to "amicably" according to Mtyor Jack Green , between the city's Caah Regi!l.er· ing Committee and the conces.tor1alre$. The conces.!iionatres ag;retd to Im- plement a new cash registering aysttrn to gi"e the city a better audit and control of beach l'ialel'i, Green r;eld. lt will go lnto operation May I. SDS, YAF Heads Oasl1 at College \Vhal happtns whtn an SDS president faces his counterpart fr om the Young Arnerica ns for Freedom~ Golden West College students \'Ill find out al M'ln Thursday dur ing a two hour symJ)()Slum in the college's free speech area. S~Rktrl will include "Ulte f\1iller, prMident Of the '.'oung Amerlcaq., for freedom-.nd-1'nm-Bi11:ekbt1rn:-pre:ddent- ol the SOS. Both are from C,,1 State Long Stach. Tbt dJalope •·Ill ce.nttr around student problems, procress and obligations In higher education. • Gt.+1 $11/tn ,11411• Two Planes Hijacked To Havana By United Pre111 International Two planes were hijacke<I to CUba t~ day, one as it flew from Cleveland, Ohio, to Florida aiid the second ts it was en route: to BarranouHla from Bog~ta, Colombia, •They were the fourth and fifth hijacks carried out successfully so far in 1970 in the \Vestern Hemisphere, Both were Boeing 727 jetliners. The United Airlinti plane hijacked in the United States carried 106 persons and was forced by a lone cunman to land and refuel in Ali.anta, Ga., before taking off for Cuba. WOMAN EN ROUTE TO FUNERAL DIES IN ONE CAR (RIGHT) AFTER HITTING ANOTHER Her Auto R•m• Pol• •t lnttr1ectlon1 But H••rt Att•ck M•y H•v• IHn C•uw of Detth The Colori;ibian Avlanca Airliner car· rled 78 persons, It was forced to touch down at Cartagena, apparently for refuel· Ing, but remained aground only fi ve minutes and then ~ntinued on to Bar· ranquilla where it took on more gas and then headed for Cuba. Traffic Mishaps Prompt Warnings .To Beach Drivers A rash ot'trafflc accidents at controlled intersections which have "through'' streets bas prompted Huntington Beach police to 13sue a warning to drivers. Ll. Paul Darden, head of the tralfiC bureau, said accidents at in\ersections such as Heil Avenue and Gothard Street r;tem from drivers "Ignoring or not believing" the traffic controls. ''In order to expedite the flow of traffic in and out of ·the city it Js necessary lo designate some of the roads as 'through' streets:,'' he said. "On these highways the cross streets are controlled by either stop signs or electric signals. "Far too many colllalons are occuring at these controlled lntersectlona where the through street Ls not requind to stop. The problem is that motorists ap- proaching on the side. streets either do not slop or after a stop just as5ume the traffic on the through streets mu.lit stop too. "The driver often just pulls out In front of a fast moving car on the through st reet because he thinks it must stop just because he had to stop." Lt. Darden •aict drlvera must stop and yield at these stop signs. "Accident! happen when a driver is not wary at these intersections," Lt. Darden add~d. Beach Scliool Employes Told Of Job Threat Letters notifying teachers a n d supervisors that their jobs may be in jeopardy will be sent out this week to some staff members of the Huntington Beach City School District. "It's a precautlonary measure Wt have to take by state law ." explained Charles Palmer, assistant district superintendent for business. He cautioned against any panic among teachers. The letters ate to· be mailed as a \varning to some district employe.s that if a 4().ccnt tax override fails in the April election, some changes will be made. "By st.ate law we have to notify all certificated employes before Friday if there is a possibility that their status miJl(hl be changed," Palmer said. Changes that coUld be. made In the event of the tax override losing would in· elude some probationary teachers not be- ing rehired for next year and some other teachers finding their status reduced. lt could also affect principals and vice prin- cipals. "We don't now how many 1)081Uons would be affected, nor exactly who. It's s major decision we are studying today." Palmer added. "Of course, It all depends on the ta" O\'erride. If we don't have the e-xtra money we have .to trim down our operation. If we get lt, no problem." Anna H. Grable Dies in Beach l\lrs. Anna H. Grable, 11,..ife of a former lluntington Beach city councilman died at her downtown home Tuesday, following a brief illness. Funeral arrangements are pending at Coleman P.1ortuary, La ~labra, w'ilh burial slated for Memory Garde ns, Brea. Mrs. Grable had bffn a resident of Huntington Beach since 1924 when !he ~nd htr husband, the late F'rtd T. Grable, movtd to the beach from Coalinga. Born in Pomona in 1885, she married Crable irl 1908. The latter worked for Ti dewatet Oil Company for 35 years and held posltlons on lhe Huntlniton Beach City Council and a JocaJ achoo! board. f\1rJJ. Grable, y.•ho made her home at 950 10th St., ii survh1ed by one son, a ifanddaughter and a grandlJOfl. Beach Woman l(illed In Vienna, two young Poles -Wieslaw Szymankiewicz, 20, and .Romoult Wieslaw Zoltucho. IS-were conflcted and senten- ced to jail terms today f-0r hijacking a Pol\sh airliner to Vienna several 1nonths ago. On Way to Funeral Zoltucho was sentenced to two years In jail and Szymanklewicz got two years and three months. The court told them they could stay in the West after com· pleting their sentences. Death reaped its grim harvest tw ice Tuesd ay afternoon by claiming the life or a 71-year-old Huntington Beach woman who died en route to a friend's funeral. Mrs. Mary Ethel MiUer was driving the last car in a funeral procession headed for Westn1instet ~temorlal Park when her automobile 11uddenly crossed two traf- [ic lanes, striking another car and a Ang1·y Mother Disrupts Class; Yells at Teacl1er An angry Jfuntington Beach mother stormed inlo a classroom at Sun View School Tuesqay morning , berated and screariied at the teacher for several minutes, then stormed out a1ain. When police went to her home to talk about it she informed them !he "didn1t have to talk," and promptly drove off in her car. Police said misdemeanor complaints of disturbing the peace might be filed against the mother, depending on the reaction of 1chool authorities. The incident occurred in classroom B-2, where teachers said the woman yelled at -One female teacher, "calling her obscene names and claiming she was unfit to teach ." A spokesman for the Ocean View School District said this morning that the lady's action was a violation the California Code of Education under a sec- tio n on insulting and abusing teachers. "It represents a misdemeanor charge v.·ith a possible fine of $SO to $500," said the school official, indicating that action \\'Ould be taken against the v.·oman . Neither school officials nor police of. ficers could give a rtason for the out· burst which disrupted classes for about 15 minutes. Students in tY.'O classes ~·ere dismiMed during the uproar, and other teachers tried to c11lm down the mother, unsuc· cessfully, said police. signal standard. police said. The cause of her death has nol yet been determined. but coroner's depu ties have scheduled an autopsy today to discover if it could have been a heart attack. The elderly woman was pronounced dead on arrival at Westminster Com· munlty Hospital shortly after the 1:37 p.m. accident, according to police reports. Officer l\ianuel Hinson. a traffic in· ''estigator for the Westminster police department, said both vehicles, as well as the traffic signal were totaled by the im· pact. Shiiue Natsuhara, 41, of Garden Grove, who was the driver of the Ctther car, escaped unhurt. he said . Mrs. lttiiler was tral'eling northward on Beach Blvd. in the number one lane in the vicinity of Bolsa Avenue when the tradegy occurred , Hinson said. ' Funeral arrangements are pending at Dilda y Mortuary following the coroner's investigation. The dead woman's address was determined to he 1403 Delaware St., Huntington Beach, but as of this morning mortuary operators had not heard from survivors. Mrs. Miller was on her__y,ray to bury Mrs. Fairy R. Orens. 77, of 811 California St.. Huntington Beach, who died Fridf!Y after half a century 's residency in t~e Ci· ty, according to officials from Smith's mortuary who handled the funeral ar- rangements for 1.trs. Orens. Bridge Oasses Slated i11 Valley· Bridge. anyone? Try a new eight·?.'eek course starting lt1onday at the Fountain Valley COmmunity Center, 10200 Sla ter Ave . Class time will be 9:15 a.m. to 11 :30 a.m., each Monday. l\frs. Helen Creed, a director of the American Contract Bridge League. y.•lll teach the class . Adults may register for the class this v•eek et city hall between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., through Friday. Cost is $10 for the parks and recreation department pro· gram. Book Giveaway Set for Friday At Ocean View Elementary school pupils will get a crack at their books for a second time this Friday during a giveaway textbook fair at the Ocean View School District warehouse, 8291 \Varner Ave. The books cover such subjects as health, science, language, s p e 11 in g. music. social studies, and mathematic!! and will be given away absolutely free to· any resident of the district who wants one. All of t.he volumes ha\'e been made available under recent legislation cover· ing the dlsposal -of obsolete and unusable textbooks. The warehouse gates will open at 9 a.m. and close at 4:30 p.m. -Ctr until all the books are gone. Interested parties are advised to bring their own boxes for transporting the books. PILOT, POLICE CLASH 1'0NIGHT A violent confrontation for charity - between the Costa Mesa Police Depart · ment and the DAILY PILOT staff -is scheduled tonigh t, when the two mobs clash in a basketball game. All proceeds from the 7:15 p.m. tiff In the Costa Mesa High School gymnasium "''ill go to the Justin Ogata Fund . for the yo ung r-.tustang wrestler paralyzed in an acciden t during wrestling practice. Tickets will be on sale at 35 cents each and, although you might find a better basketball game than cops -versus· nc\vsmen, you can't find a better reason to stage one. And tht subJect i1 love. It 's for tvryont befwe•n th• •9•• of 16·2 1. Who ft•I, Who understand . Who know ebout love. Thtrt will be five netionel r•cognition priz•s. bttufiful diamond pendent1 ••p•cially d•1i9ntd by Ortngt 8lo11om. Tht contest clos •s Mey IS, 19:70. So hurry. Th• timt i1 now. ~~ ~ ~ rlJ If,}{ ,•ad/t«lff (l'fl/at CONVENIENT TERMS H YEARS SAME LOCA T/ON Ni-xon Liluits J1nporl---1,.NK·AMERICARD lill NEWPORT AVE. PHONE 548·HD I WASlilNG'l'ON (AP) -Pr<1idenl Nix· MASTER CHARGE COSTA MESA on ii1.sul?d a erocl1matlon todfly tem· pararlly llmltlng crude oil imports from 'Canada Jn part& of lhe United Statea. I. I I Newport Beaeh I . 1 \ ·EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks I ( VOL 63, NO. 59, 5 SECTI ONS, 78 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 1970 TEN CENTS J 7 Bay Development Concepts in County Hands By JACK BROBACK 01 lh• 0•111 Pllfl Jl•fl An exhaustive study posing seven possible development concepts for Upper Newport Bay was presented to the Orange Count)' Board ol Supervisors Tuesday and set for public hearing on April 8. . The study steinmed from a proposal last December by Supervisor Robert Bal- lin that the county restudy the Upper Bay in view of curreiit concepts. Battin of- fered an alternative to the famed land exchange between the county and the Jrvin~ Company. He proposed that tht •county buy three channel islands owned by the company for an estimated $8 milllon, • spend another $2 million for dredging the chan- nel tWo-thirds the way up to the so-called narrows and leave the upper .one-third of the bay as an ecological preserve. Battin's plan was considered as an alternative to the seven offered by the analysis p r e p a r e d by County AdmlnistraUve Officer Robert Thomas, Director of Harbors Ken Sampson, Coun· ty C~I Adrian Kuyper and Real Property Services Director S t a n I e y Krause. lnc1uded in each concept are economic and ~and use analyses of benefit to•cost ratio aod annual user days. The report states that conclusive com· parison between the various development plans could not be made unless certaln THESE THREE MEN, ARRESTED IN COSTA MESA, FACE COLORADO MURDER CHARGES Suspects (from left) James Jackson, J•ck Matney end Howerd Tschirhert 'Bonnie, Clyde' Gang Suspects Get. Murder Rap By ARTH UR R. VINSEL. 01 "'' O.ll'Y l'!ltl 51•!1 A trio suspected of a cross-country crime wave, ended Friday by their an· ticlimactic capture in Costa f\1esa, today are charged with the savage robbery- murder of a Colorado pawnbroker. First degree murder complainls nan1- ing the male partner in an alleged Bonnie and Clyde-type bandit team and two men companions were issued th is morning in Colorado Springs. The trio and the alleged BoMie, charg- ed only with a local burglary. will be questioned about the Feb. 23 murder of a v.:ealthy Newport Beach man and also a maniacal ice-pick slaying in Missouri. ··And we've cleared up a number of armed robberies in this area," said Costa f\tesa Police Detective Captain Bob Green, mentioning several Orange Const cl ties. f.1urder counts against the three rast- lraveling men v.·ere revealed in Costa f\tesa by Carl Petry, chief of detectives for the Colorado Springs Police Depart- ment. The new charges against James E. .J ackson, 25, of Independence, ,_10., Jack c. Matney, 32. of Denver, Colo .. and J1oward R. Tschirhart. 31. of Cost a Mesa. are expected to take preceUence over local counts. Detective Chier Petry. who flew to Orange County f.1onday night v"ith Dep~­ iy District Attorney Allen Spurgeon, said evidence fowid \Vhen they 1~·erc captured connects the Colorado Springs case. "It "'as a particularly brutal murder:' he remarked. Showing color photographs, Chief Pelry told how pawnbroker Erling Nielsen. fil , was mercilessly beaten to death "'ilh a rifle the evening of Feb, 19 in busy do"•nto wn Colorado Springs. "It was an obvious robbery." he said. adding that more than 20 pistols, rifles and shotguns, plus jewelry and other pav.'Yled items \\'ere carried out of the store. 'Secret' Recall Campaign Against Allen Falls Short By TOM BARLEY Ot HM 0.llf PUtf Steff The semi-secret campaign to mount • recall election against Fifth District Supervi90r Alton E. A.1len 0£ Laguna Beach has fallen at least 500 signatures short in its petition e[fort, the DAILY PILOT learned today. Petitions had been filed with County Clerk William E. St John as a re- quirement to get a recall election against Allen on the ballot Whole pages of signatures have been detennined to be invalid, It was disclos- ed. Orange County wting supervisor Ed Arnold told the DAILY PILOT that the recallers will be at least 500 signatures short. He cautioned that was an unoftlcial tally, subject to verification when the listings are fed through the county's com- puter. Meanwhile, the frantic recall workers were recalling their petition carriers in an tlth hour bid for signatures to replace those bogus ones that have been can- celled out. fl seemed certain at press time today that St John will order the organizers or the Allen Recall campaign to brfug in \\•ithin the next 10 days sufficient signatures to meet the required total of 9,748 names. Recall organizers Paul Carpenter .or Cypress and Anthony Tarantinl> of San Clemente delivered 10,522 signatures to St John last week. St John advised the shocked Carpenter of the deteriorating situa tion and the anti-Allen Democrat immediately reac- tivated his idle volunteers throughout the Fifth District. Carpenter noted "\Ve have 10 days in which to obtain whate ver may be the required signatures and that is time enough for us." Carpenter placed the blame for the n1ounting number of invalidations on two Newport Beach recruils to his reeal\ campaign . "We decided to take no legal action against them after the two agreed to delete the falsifications they had en- tered ," the angry Car,;enter said. "It is, of course, a blow to our campaign but at least we now have the opportunity to fill lhe gap with genuine signatures -and the re are, you know, plenty of them in the Fifth District.'' One of those ~wo workers denied Ca rpenter·s allegations and told the DAI- LY PILOT that bis signatures were col- lected Wt week by representatives of Opinion Raearch ID<. o! Long Beoch. ''I 've beard nothing sinct," he aaid, "and I know notblng about falte signatures or phony names and addttsses." Close chtcldhg by voting division supervlSQr Arn old's staff bas revealed the filing or incorrect names and addresses, the listing of persons who are not registered to vote, duplications of sig11atures and lists compiled Jn October (See RECALL, Page I) Suicide Atte1npt Victim Accnsed Of SF Murder Newport Beach police said today an un- em ployed businessman who apparently tried to bludgeon himself to death Tues- day is a suspect in a San Francisco mur- der. H. Harlan Hansen. 43. of San Francisco is listed in serious condition today in the jail "'ard of Orange County Medical Cen· ter with multiple head injuries. Poli ce said an unidentified man called officers to the men's restroom near lhe Balboa pier at noon, saying a man was beating himself with a claw hammer. llanson. who was unconscious when police arrived, v.•as given emergency treatment at Hoag before being taken to the medical center. Detective Sam Am burgey said Hansen is a susped in lhe bludgeon death of a 29-year-old male nurse's aide. The body of F.dwin L. Reed was round March 5 in Hansen's San Francisco apartmen t. Detectives from San Francisco are ex- pected to arrive in Newport today, Am- burgey said. They will take Hansen back to the bay area as soon' as he is able to travel, he added. as.sumpUons were made. These assumpUona involved policy determinations rea:ard.lnc the relaUVe public prlori~y of various recreaUonal uses, lhe importance of economic return . preservation of ecology and t b e availability or publlc funds . In addition to BatUn's plan, the other basic C'Ql)Cel>ts include the lind exchange • plan, a maximwn pubJic ownership bounded by the toe of the bluffs •nd a development along ownership lines. Flown to Cuba Variations include either an 800-loot wide channel or a 600-foot wide waterway, a water ski basin and an ecology reserve. Lahd and «onomic comparison~ for the seven development co~epts show : -PµN ONE (Battln's proposal with an ~foot channeO. Utould involve UI acres inctuding 411.8 now publicly owned, 243 acres of patent tidelands io be purchased and an additional 175.2 acres to be bought from the Irvine Company. Estimated land cost under the Battin plan Is $11.9 million; esllmated develop- ment cost is $10.48 million for a total of $22,4 million. -PLAN TWO (a variation of Battin'• plan with the narrower channel and In- creased shoreslde develop1nect). Same total 'BCJ'eage and breakdown but with an increase in developmen t cosl of $800,000 bringing total invesLment to $23 million. -PLAN THREE (Th< proposed land (Ste BACK BAY, Paae '* U.S., Colombian Planes Hi jacked By United Pres1 ln\emaLional Two planes were hijacked to Cuba to- day, one as It flew from Cleveland, Ohio, to Florida and the second as it was en. route to Barranquilla from Bogota, ·Colombia. They were the fourth and rifth hijacks carried out successfully so· far in ltro In the Western Hemisphere. Both were Boeing 'lt1 jetllDers. Tbe United Airlines plane hijacked ln the United Stain carried iOI -...i was forced by a lone cunman-to land and refuel in AUanta., Ga., before .taking off for Cuba.,... The Colombian Avianca Airliner car· ritd 71 perSonl. It WIS forced to touch down at c~ oi>-111, lor refuel· ing, but ~...,.. W'!!'!'d oalJ n .. minutes lid tblri -· mid ...... w JtliH' ranqullla •where It. IDat' ou more f11 and then headed for CUIHI. ' In Vienna, two young Poles -Wieslaw Szymankiewlcz. 201 and Ramoult Wiulaw Zoltucho, ti-were convicted apd aenten- ced to jall tmns ti>day far hijaclcing a Polish airliner to Vlen111 sevetal months ago. . Zollucho was .sentenced to two yean tn jell aad Szymankiewicz got two yean and three months. The court told them they could slay in the West after com· pleting their sentences. Jn Berlin. the newspaper Bild Zeilung reported that the two hijackers w~ tried to divert an East Gennan airlrner to \Vest Berlin Tuesday, then k I J 1 e d themselves when they failed, w •r e a young married couple. They were not identiried. Bal Isle Ready Fol' Cleanup Joh Balboa Island's annual Spring Cleanup \Veekend will be htld Saturday and Sun- day. City trash crews will pick up larger items than normal and Balboa Island lm- provement Association will organize teams of youngsters to sweep the island's alleys. . • Last yea r more than 50 tons of trash was collected, according to ,Al Kelso, Clean Up Weekend chairman. Kelso advises that city crews will take stoves. bed springs, even old water heat- ers if they are pot out where trash nor- mally Is picked up. Smaller items of junk should be put in boxes. Crews will begin making the rounds early. PASSERSBY PONDER ,PROTRUDING PROJECT Susen Lord (left), Holly H•n••n Stop to Look 'Too Big' Boat Builder Faces Newport Council Balboa resident Ed Gould Jr, ls build- ing a. 50-toot boat on h.ls 35-foot lot. lt overhangs the sidewalk and, besides that, it is located in a sideyard setback which is another viollJ,ion or the city code. Newport Beach city o(fic&ldom, how- ever, is taking the Gould boat-building cpisodt v.ith a grain o( salt. was lots of land." Gould, who is 27, said he win sail the boat to Sooth America with his wife, Nelly, who is a nalive or Peru. Orange Coast "'e11 ther A customer entered the modest Nielsen·s Je"·clry and Loan after the 5:45 p.1n. holdup-homicide to find the slightly built 01vner crouched pitifully on his restroom floor. He had been trying to escape lhe savage blo"'S. No dollar value has been established on the stolen goods -sorne recovered (Set CRl~1E. Page !J CdM Groups Eye Freeway Gould , 325-Lindo Ave., said he only netds another 90 days to poor the Uber· glass sloop in the mold he has con· structed and nlove it off lo a boat yard . "It wot.ild take U.! that long to process the papenvork so let's give him hls 911 days," said •Councilman Howard Rogers v.ilen the matter came up at City Coun- cil meeting this week. Thursday's weaiher picture? In a word, grooVy. The Man calls for sunny skies and wa rmer tempera. lures. which means about 65 aloni the coast and push.Ing 10 inland. PILOT, POLICE CLA SH 1'0NIGHT A violent confrontation for charily - between the Cosla fl1csa Police Depart- ment and the DAILY PILOT stafr -i.~ scheduled tonight, "'hen the two mobs clash in a basketball game. All pn>ceeds fro1n the 7: I~ p.m. UU in the Costa ~icsn High School gym11asium \\"ill go to the Justin Ogala Fund. for the young Mustang wrestler paralyzed in an· accidenl during wrestling practice. Tickets will be on sale at 35 cents each aod, although you might rind • better basketball game than c o p s · v e r s u $ • newsmen, you can't ftnd a better reason to stage one. Overpass Alternatives to Be Aired at Meeting By TUOMAs FORTUNE / ot t111 091Jf' l'lllt Si.ff An airing of efrorta by Pacific Coast Free"·ay designers to satisfy various Cor- ona de! fl.tar homeo"•ner associations will be he.Id March 23 at City Hall . The I :30 p.m. session will be to ac- quaint the entire Ctly Council with lilt slate discussions betwetn residents and engineering stafft or the eil$ •nd state Divisk)n of Highways. Whal Councilman LfnClsley Parsons calls a 11 rump committee" of interested parties ha~ met three times durlnJ lhe last several months wllh state hiaow11y engineers in W Angeles. DiSCU!ISlon has been about where to put u overpasa to carry Fifth Avenue lraffic Inland aCl'Ois Paclnc Cout Freeway. The overpass presently is shown on plans as being at Bucit Gully but residents of the l.usk sutxllvlsion of Harbor View Hill! have complained It would block their view. An alternative plan, which Parsons !la}'.s the state Division ol lllghv,•ays has an open mind on and feels is "praclical." is to move the overpass 1,000 yards to lhe east. -Thill would JllU it about midway be- lwttn Corona Highla nds and Cameo Highlands. But residents of tl\ose two com· munlUe1 don't much e:are ror~lhe Idea. The Highland$ people say they think the ovef'P'l ss should be beyond tile present Newport city IJmlts. Parsont said the lt11t highway enginem cwld<r ll1ls In ., the realm oft.he "lmpractlcal.'' "To move the overpa.aa that far would create a series ol new problems -reduc- tion of traffic servJce and spacln& of Jn- terch11nges downcoast," city Pobllc Work• Director Joseph Devlin says. He said the city l1 loo'kln1 for a ~luUon that woukl prov~e a rea.50l'llble level of 1rafflc $e-rvlct and be compatible to the residents. Parsons 11ald tbe purpost of the dis-- fUSSlons l\lv! beta· to "try to get u much cUy Input as posalble so the state Division of fllghwa:yt doesn't ride. routh- shod ovq; kial citizenli.1' · 'Ille cjty alreao&, bu alcned0 an -ment wKh lho'llalO for tho Pectflc Coast lllet FJUIP'AY, Pop II I r ' "l can't help but admJre the dedica- tion of someone who has billlt a »foot boat on a SS.root lot and has the public relatlo.ns ability to get everyone on his block tn approve,'' Rog~rs a aid. • Gould had cnllected the slgnatvres of !11 or his neighbors on a petition sayJng they have no objections. ur lmagJne ii r.•11s my fault ln the be- A:loning (or hnvitlll! 11uch largt Ideas." Gould said •. "But I CC1mt: from AM1.0na nncl a ranch in Paloe Verdes whtre thcrt Stock 1U11rkcll NEW YORK (AP) -The !tock markel cluna to a fractlonal lead Isle thf1 after· noon In light lradlfll· (Set quotatloM, •• , .. 16<17). AdvahcJna IS5Ut! txceedcd losers on the H• York Stotl<~l>Mlt m to $11. - INSIDE TODJ\ Y Give a b u n c IL of college drcmo .students enough rope atid they'U create their own repertory company. 0 ran fJ e Coos' College is doi11g just that witl& its new erperitnenta! thea-- ttr. Set £n!crtainn1ent, Page 30. •trlllt 11 •Nllll• H C•llffnll1 It (tftf! C.,,..r II CPllCll'"' U• I Cltttlli.t Jl·M C'-ltt " ,..._ . OMtll ... ,le" 11 otwrt.. 11 •~HIWltt ..... I ,SJ1i.rt-1111M111 Jlt.l1 ,l~*'lff ™' --M I.lit! laM•rt )4 MlltM.1; • • M1rri.ff lie:-11 Mtfl Ill ltM«i IS Mtttllln II Mll<rlt• Jt.ll ~t~•I ,..._ M "MltMI ,._ M ~·-·C"'9tf ll PTA Ji6 '"'" .... ~-, ..... " It.ell ,...., ... ,.._11 T•6twl"-lt TllMolt~ Jt.11 w-. W•IMll'l N"'l,,JHO w., ............ ' • ~ ' :t DAILY PILOT ~ Wr<IM>day, Ma"! 11, 19111 White Bouse lfest Tourists Bug Secret Service • Unauthorized tours or the San Clemente . and Key Biscayne, FJa. White Houses - while PrWdent NtxQn and bla family were there -have been take n by an un- dl1clos~ number of people. The murlty vlolaUons w e r e acknowledged today as lhe chief of the Secret Service, James J . Rowley, testiOed before a Congressional sub- committee in Washlngtoo, O.C. Not all of Director Rowley's disclosures Y.'trt made public, but he 1ald none of lhe Intruders were armed and will give Congress further information in a con- fidential memo. But be expressed wor'!{ that it ls so euy to penetr8.te what constltutea a vital defenae perimeter and could be dangerous U security weakness is leaked Cheeks with other sources Ind icated that the proposed law is an attempt to clarify vague laws on prosecution of trcspaSliers on land used for Presidential residence. Under state trespass regulations, pro- secution can only take place if a person enters land without permission, then refuses to leave. Federal provisions for trespassing on Pre1idential resldence areas is also vague. The la'A'. it was speculated, would fill some Ie1al gaps and give the Secret Service atronsv gaildelinca for prose.cut· ing uninvited vl1.itor5. ._, • ' 0111 $tul11 '"'''' I ij Bi • t From Page l I BACK BAY ... exchange with a wall'r ski basin at the upper end ). Acreage would be less in that only 116 acres would be purchased from the company. Larid con would be nil and ecology reserve). Total cost for develop- ment $5.9 million! -PLAN FOUR (Land exchange with development cost $8.3 ~Ilion. -PLAN FIVE (Maximum public ownership with 800·fOOt c h a n n e I ) . Purchase of :lal acr~s for a total.-0f 1,036. La'nd cost. $21 million. development cost $14 million for a total of $35.69 million. -PLAN SIX (Maximum p u b 11 c ownership with 600-fool channel ). l~nd cost $21.6 million, development cost $12.6 million for a total of ~t3 million. -PLAN SEVEN {Present ownership v.•ilh ecology reserve ). Land cost. $1.2 million, development cost, $5.1 million for a total of $6.34 million. Estimated annual cost of operations r ange from a loss or cost ove r potential income of fl35,507 on Batlin's plan to a $4.'J,699 ~nual profit under Plan Four. OTHER FACTORS to potentlally violent groups.. · "We ·have detected these people in- cidentally," Rowley told the !ub- committee in his request for tight.tr Micurity measures at the two coastal retreats. ''The Secret Service has become con- cerned about the rising crescendo of na• tionaJ miUtancy and confront.aUon, and instances of the preachment of assassin&• tion and violent revolution," the Secret Service director said lcxlay. WOMAN EN ROUTE TO FUNERAL DIES IN ONE CAR (RIGHT! AFTER. HITTING ANOTHER In addition to lhe economic factors, the review group noted tha t other pecision- 1naklng facktrs must also be taken inlet consideration. These include: Her Auto Rams Pole at lnter11ctlon, But Heart Attack' May Have Bffn C1u11 of Death These would include trespassing, in· terfering with guards and prohibiUon of noisy demonstrations. In San Clemente, where a few demonstrations and trespassing on the grounds of the Western White House l'iave taken place, Chief of'Police Clifford Mur- ray saJd he was aware of the pending legislation. "What we weren't completely aware af . however, was the specific conten t of that leglslalion," he added. ~furray said that there had been a few problems in the pa.st several months of persons entering the Western White Jlou~ grounds uninvited. "We had three demonstrations here last year with only one big one, and it seems that the segment of the proposed legislation on that matter would apply more to the Washington White House and less to the one in San Clemente," he ad· ded. " ..• In my view, the mi!it.ancy of the dissident groups in our midst will in· crease in fervor .•. this activity could generate a greater propensity for attacks upon our leaders. " ••• There have been many incidents in recent yea rs that ,we caused us to question the adequacy of our legal pro- tective authority." Newsmen asked Rowley whether he was referring lo successful lntru&icins at San Clemente and Key Biscayne. He said he \\'as, and indicated there had been others, too. at vacation residences of previous presidents. Rowley urged paasage of a bill to pro- hibit unauthorized entry into the building or grounds of a temporary president!al residence; make It a federal crime to in· terfere wilh a secret service agent, and prohibit loud demonstra'tions near a presidential residence which might im- pede presidential business. From PGHe J RECALL ... to ~hich the signatures ·were affixeQ a month later. One checker commented lhal "valid signatures were running as .high as 96 percent accurate when we first started \\'Orking on the bundle of petitions and things looked fine. But we got a little lower down and found that we were hav- ing to throw out whole sheets of signatures . one after the other, for various reasons." Frollt PGfle J Carpente r's submission of I D . S 2 2 signalures called for a 92 percent level of validation and St John commented at the time of filing that the recall workers were "leaving a great deal lo chance. One should have a greater cushion than this margin of 774 votes when ou bear In mind the nature of the election," St John said. CRIME WAVE ••• If Carpenter's efforts lo make good t~c invalid signatures are unsuccessful , hls candidate will have to oppose Supervisor Alton E.~ Allen. Costa Mesa Vice Mayor Robert M. "Bob" Wilson and savings and Joan executive Ron Caspers of Lido Isle in the June 2 primary election. locany -stolen by whoever trac):ld. bloody footprints around the store wblle !/)()Ung ii. "They were pawned items," explained Chief Petry, who said the actual murder weapon itself was recovered 1n the Colorado Springs area afterward. Deputy District Altomey Spurgeon uid the Nielsen pawn shop is located on what locals koow as GI Cornu, where many broke Gls among tile 30,000 at nearby Fort CarlOO go belore payday. Co5ta Mesa police were notified the ouspecid desperadoes mlgllt be in the Hu-bor Area last month and surrounded their house at Sl4"1 Bernard St. Friday morning. . Patricia JackSon, 24, tried to escape aut the back door but was captured and the three males surrendered without gunplay although they wue heavily arm- ed. "111.is department has done a wonderful job of investigetion," the Colorado 'Strip' Strike Hits Las Vegas LAS VEGAS, Nev. CAP) -Two powerful unions struck the luxury hotels that line the Las Vegas Strip early today and lhe firs~ pickets hit Howard Hughes' Desert Inn, whert lhc bl\lionairc lives in :;eclusion. f\lost of the 14,000 memberit of the Culinary Wor~ers and bartenders unions showed up at three mass meetings Tues- day to vote overwhelmingly to st rike the hotels. DAILY PILOT OllANGI!. COA' T PUllLI SHING COMP' ANY 11.oDort N. Woo4 ,.,.,115e~1 •1'd Publl"'° Joc.k ft . Cu•lo., lll«i Pr«lktt~I 11'd G~ntf•l ,,.,f"4ftf Tho"''' Ktevil IEd\lor Tho"''' A. Mu1ph;.,, ,....,.,,,r,., fdl!or Tho11111 forlu~t NtWDert Bett~ City f dllo• Nowporf ... ch Offlct 2211 W11t 81lbo1 l ou!t .. 1td M1H1119 Add101t: ,,0.101 1175. 'J66J 0"'9f Offlc .. : Costt Mtui JJll Wul lll'I' Sl,.tl ltf\1111 l t tcll: 7" F"ortl! A"11u• Hul'illMIOf'I lt•dli 11111 It•(}! .. \lllYt tt ~II CltmtM!t: -NMl'll e• C.mlflt ~ .. I 0.AIL'I' ~ILOl. wHfl wflkfl h llol .... "'- Ntwt-"•tU. It .ullli-f l l!Y t •Cffl l1lflo .,, In Nt>lrtlt felllloft& far \lfl.I ... Cf!. H--1 llKf'I, C..•1 "t"•· Hvftll,.._ lee<fl ..., ,.tou111•lrl 11111n, tlol\9 with ,...., r111ofttl 11111~ °''"'' c .. 11 P1111Utrilflf c..,_.,,., Pflntt111 ,111111 ,,, .i nn wnt l t lbo e IM., H.-rt lltKll. 11111 llO Wtil a1P 11 ... 1, C..11 MtY. r.,-.. c11•1 642·•J21 Cl•flH A4"rtW"' 642:-167. C.t0yr11Jf\1, lt10, ()rlllllt CN.r ,.ulll+11tf'lf C.-11~. Nt -•!Oriti, IUutlrtllollt, 11111111'1.. ""'"'" ff ,.,.,.,,1.,,,...,11 ..... If! ""'' ... flf..tl/c:ld \ll'ttl'lt\ll fllt (lt l Hr- l!!lMlOf'I et ~·lfll' -· S ..... t:ltfl ..., ... 11tW ff Nipw'°'J l lf (fl .,., Ctf!I Maa,. CtllfW"lt' $\lllttrt1Hlofl .... .. ,,.,i., u.• -""1'¥1 o,. '"'" tt.JCI 1T1111tr1tor1 l!'lllJI.,-., \lttill\l1ttlftt, u.• "*!Ill~. Springs chlef or detectives said t.od~y. Re aald tht Jackson woman 11 not charged in the pawnshop owner's murder. She was arraigned Monday in Harbor Judlct.al District CoW'l on a bur1l1ry charge, while the men were arralrned on atmed robbery complalnb. The alleged Bonnie and Clyde art also wanted on warrant& charging them with inned robbery. and forgery in Indepen- dence, Mo., 'Thil~ police in Buckner and Kanau City want to q1&C.1Uon them. Inteno1aUon la also antklp1ted con· .. rn1ng the Feb. 23 ahootln1 dulh ol retired movie producer William Harris, 60, ol 2012 Anchor Way, in the Bayanst district of Newport Beach. DetecUves theorize he 1 u r p I 1 e d burgl8.n who had broken into hi• eleg lll)t home and was gunned down, whlle his own .38 caliber revolver had been fired three t~. The JackBOns, Tschirhart al}d Matney -apparently a deat-mute-are Known \u have been in the area the following day when a ring crucial to lhe Colorado cue was pawned. Costa Mesa's Capl Green said they have been linked to>a $5ClO Newport Beach liquor store holdup; 1 similar job in Laguna Beach and • Co.sta MMI m11ket robbery. , Authorities in Kansas City, Mo., also are anxious to question the alleged desperadoes about a motel robbery in which the manager was fatally stabbed nearly 200 times with an ice pick. "But that doesn't much fit heir method of operation ," said one in- vestigator. The three male murder suspects were returned lo Orange County Jail this morning after being heavily interrogated at the city jail, Including the alleged deaf. mule. Detectives then left seeking another person for queaUoning in connection with th~ case. Carpenter said Tuesday fhat ll seenied "fairly certain" that Tarantino will go against Allen in the June election . "He's lrylng to make up his mind," the Democrat said, "but we should have his decision within the next IO days." From PGHe J FREEWAY ... Freeway through Corona deJ Mar. but• Devlin said the freeway designers still are wllllng to come up with acceptable changes. One point on the finality of the agree- ment is it was signed when the free"·ay was planned for eight lanes but the State Division of Highways has since re\•lsed its thinking and now sees a need for ID lanes. The freeway will be depressed through Corona del f.lar but as it nears the cast end of tov.•n it beg.ins to climb. That pushes the Fifth Avenue overpass high. er than ground level. \Vilh the several homeowners assocta. lions divided among themselves the Corona de\ P.tar Chamber of Commerce is not willing to lake sides. Said Chamber President Dee Cook. ''Our aim is to act as a sounding board for the people and line of communica- lion v.·ith the city and state. \Ve're in- lf!rested in egress and ingress al inter· vals in keeptng with proven practice or freev.•ay construction and in seeing the freev.'ay completed as soon as possi ble . We're just not taking sides." P..faking the free.v.·ay presentations on the 23rd \\'ill be Devlin, for the city, and \\'illiam Hashamoto. assistant dist rict enignttr for the State Division of High- ways' Los Angeles office. Athletes Feted Newport Recreation Awards Made Forty enthusiastic youngsters who m1y not be the best athletes but try harder received special recognlUon awards Tuesday night from the city ot New. !lOrt Beach. The youngsters v.·tre honored al city haJI at a Parks, Beaches and Recttatlon Commission meeting . Smlles were evi. dent all around as they received green •·special award" ribbons and lapel pins bee.ring the city seal. The recipients, boys and girls In the city recreation' basketball and volt~bl.ll programs. were rhosen by their C»IChel for their show or rporUmansblp, poslUve attitude. cooptratlon 1nd willlngnes1 to help othua. "They V.'l'rt selectfd for the awa.rd11 not onlv for what !hey have dont, but a.Isa for \Vha\. l~y are," aceorrltnr. to !'Tty R.-rrr.a!lon Superintendent Rl chnrd O\•~ltrhofl. Girls vollt)•ball rPCiplen1s \\'tre· ~larlnus Park -third, fourth i:radt'rs l.aul'T'I Gundrum, Ca ndy 111fonlgoml'ry nncf Sall)' Uogle; fifth, 11ixth gr1dtrs Kim Perry and Ll11 Andl!.rson. · Newport Heighta -lhird, fourth grad-er.~ Llr.a Re:n.lry and Oltn11 Farr. Eastblu(f Park -thi rd, fourth arader Kelly Btufttn; fifth, elrth graders Kathy Oavls and Robin Babbe. Comn1unily Youth Center -third. fourth graders Amy Corll'y and Kathy Bass; fifth, sixth grader Jod y Vande· KA mp. ' Boys basketball recipients were: ?.fariners Park -third. fourth graders Brian Freeman. Doug Brockmryrr, Bob- by Bre"Wn and Frank Venclik: fift h. six- th graders \Varrtn Bradley. Pat Patrick. Leroy Smith and Al Vomsteeg: se"·enth eighth grader Steve Jack!on. Community Votllh Center -third, fourth grader Da vid Koehler: fifth, sixth grader Gary Galsnes1 ; seventh, eighth grader Jeff Pue.Re. frvine Terrace -third. fourth grader l\flkr 1ttlcballk: fiflh, sixth grader Brent f1lr. Eastbluff Park -third. rounh grader! ~ft Allen and Paul Kubas : fifth . 11t1th grl\den Jerry Dolan and BGb Huiht1. Nr"•port 1-felghloe -lhtri1. fourlh ¥r8d· rr Jim Doner: !iflh. sixt h gr11ders Erle !\f11rlc1 And 1\tike l'd rllow; seventh. eighth grtidtr ll11vid Bueter. _ - 38th Street Park -thinf. fourth grad- .-r J<'frrey DAvls; fifth, sixth grader Ted ~tel.can: elghlh grader Monty Wllman • Peninsul1 Park -third, fourth cradcrs Mlk• N11b end Brad Sell, -Maintenance of an ecological balance for the area. 1 Beach Woman l(illed -Having a flexible type plan that can be modified in the future to serve the changing recreational nieds. On Way to Funeral -Providing a project within lhe coun· ty's capacity to finance. -Providing a facility for statewide benefit, as compared to local benefit -Providing a facility that will meet current recreational deficiencies, as well as providing for future needs. Death reaped its grim harvest twice Tuesday aflernoon by claiming the life of a 71-year-old Huntington Beach woman who died en route to a friend's funeral. Mrs. J.iary Ethel P.1iller was driving the last car in a funeral procession headed for Weslminster Memorial Park when her automobile !illddenly crossed two traf. fie lanes, striking another car and a si gnal standard, pollce said. The cause of her death has not yet been determined, but coroner's deputies have scheduled an aulopsy tod ay to discover if ii could have been a heart attack. The elderly woman was pronounced dead on arrival at Westminster Com· 1nunity Hospital shorUy after the I :37 p.m. accident, according to police reports. Officer Manuel Hinson. a traffic in· vestigator for the Westminster police department, said both vehicles, as well as lhe traffic signal were totaled by the im· pact. Shizue Natsuhara . 41. of GardC'n Grove, who was the driver of the other car, escaped unhurl , he said . Mrs. J.1iller was I.raveling northward on 'Beach Blvd, in the number one Jane in the vicinity of Bolsa Avenue when the Lradegy occurred, Hinson said. Funeral arrangements are pending at Trustees Okay Sale of Bonds Newport-t-.fesa school trustees Tuesday night approved the sale or $4 .5 million in bonds and set f\fay 26 as the deadline for bids. District voters approved issuing two groups of bonds 1,1·orth St5 million each in an election Feb. 10. Ernest Bodnar, representative of dis- trict fina ncial consultants Stone and Youngberg. told board members the sec· ond package should not be put up for sale ''for about seven months." He said to sell both packag'-S at the same lime would flood the market, drh•ing up the intere~t ratr. The maximum ra te for the school bonds is seven pe.rcent. Dilday ~1ortuary follttwing the coroner's investigation . The dead woman's address was determined to be 1403 Delaware St., Huntington Beach , but as of this morning mortuary operators had not. heard from survivors. Mrs. Miller was on her ~·ay to bury f\1rs. Fairy R. Orens, 77, of 811 California St., Huntington Beach, wJlo died Friday after half a century's residency in the ci- ty, aceording to officials from Smith's morluary who handled the funeral ar· rangements for ~frs. Orens. Newport Annex Of lrvi11e Land ' Before Council Proposed annexation of 1nore Irvine Company land in_. the Harbor View Hills area to the city of Newport Beach has been referred by Newport city council· men to city planning con1missioncrs. Councilmen this \.\·eek said they are in- terested but see a lot of problems to~be \\'orked out The proposed annex area i1 east of the Donald Bren homes between the city's Rig Canyon Reservoir and San Joaqui n Reservoir and takes in part of PaCific View Memoria l Park cemetery. It is split by school district, water dis- trict and sa nitation dist rict boundaries providing thornier jurisdictional problems than usual. The Irvine Company proposes the annexation be served by the Irvine Ranch \Yater District but by Newport Beach citv sewers. The hilly terrain also presents plan. r.ing con!iderations not fr equently en- countered before by the city. The Irvine Company applicatlon does not include Pacific View P.lemorial Park. Thal would create an unincorporated county island surrounded by city o! Ne\\'- port Beach territory. City Planning Directo r Laurence \V il· son said the annexation would be much n1ore likely to receive approval from the Local Agency Formation Commission if the cemetery were annexed at the same lime. &1f ;wtM!!j The report also warned that the supervisors must make p r i m a r y determinations relating to policy. ,.IATTER OF FUNDS "First is lhe matter of funds that can be allocated for land acquisition and development of this project. Should it ~ funded on a pay-as-you-go basis, or should it be taken to the voters for 3?-'. proval of a bond issue~ '.. "Another is the priority of use between · ecology areas, waterfront comme rcial use. which is oriented primarily l() boaling, or beach and park use that is oriented primarily to swimming and pie· nicking ." The study group noted that one melhod used in evaluating de v e Io pm en t alternatives is the anticipated number o( user days, but warned that these may be misleading because a change in the acreage allocated to various uses will mater.ially change the number of user days for any one of the development con· ccpls. For comparison. plans one and l\.\'O (Batlin"1) \\'ould provide an estimated 4 to 4.5 million user days, plan three, with \he water ski basin, 8.5 million user days. olan four 4.9 million, plan five , lD million. plan six, 6.3 million, and plan seven, 3.29 million. Draft Program Set for School An information program on the mili- tary draft for Corona de! Mar . High School junior and senior boys wi ll be held Friday morning, March 13, at St. Mark Presbyterian Church. across the street from lhe high school. By cooperation of the counseling de- partment. students will be dlsmi5sed from regular classes at ID a.m. to hear a panel discussion at the church. Panelists "'ill be enlistment officcn from the Army and Navy. a draft coun- selor from Cal State Fullerton. and a representative or the American Friend~ conscientious objectors. The Rev. James G, Kirk. pastor of St. P.tark Church, will be mo~frator . ~,f rt/~· &lwn ;wt tltaz11~ • CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICAR D MASTER CHARGE And +he subject is loYe, lt'1 for eyryone betwetn tht eges of 16.2 1. Who fetl. Who under,+end. Who know ebouf 1oYe, There will b1 fiY t netionel recognition pr ii•'· beeuti ful di•mond ptnd •nts •Specie!ly designtd by Or•ng• 8!011om. The contest c)o,es M•y 15, 1970. So hurry. Thi tim• it now. f!Jw~~· iJ Midi!! r7J ft!t 1/U/.iu1ld ~ IZ'!l/at 1123 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA 2~ YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE s~a .J4o 1 I i ' Wed-, M .. <h 11, 1970 DAILY PILOT f Lawye1· to l\.e:e-p ' • f • Jet Delay Upsets Israel Atkins Off Stand l '. By Ualled Pre•s lnteru&Joeal Swedish fntervlewtr h1onday powert 1 for 1 po11iica1.~uuoh, ~l1fil;d plaott__aod illl ba._ve The Is~aell cabinet called a that he was prepared to go to the UnJted States has been 1$ Phantoms and 110 LOS ANGELE$ !UPI) - Susan-Atkins. whose con· fession ... in the bizarre Tate- LaBianca slaylngs led to the indictment of henelf and five others, will . repudiate her story. according to the la"'yer who today sought to represent her. Attorney Dave Shinn. who expe<:tJ to formally be<x>me the young woman's lawyer in court today, said she will not repeal her grand jury revela- tioos to the -trial jury. Miss Atkins, 21 . asked the court for permission to hire Shinn Ind to fire the lawyer ~·ho originally advilied her to tell hf!r story to the grand ju.ry. Shinn previously has ad- vised Charles Manson, ac- cused mastennind ol the . murders. "I will keep her off tht st.and," Shinn &aid. "She will deny all her previous statements." Miss Atkins vislled Manson in county jail last week and listened to his views on how the Q:efense should be con- ducted. She indicated then she "''as having second thoughts about "repeating h e r ac· cusaions before a jury. Shinn said he had talked brieny with ~1lss Atkins and that she wanted him to represent her because lie had been in touch with M~son and was "closer to the case." Deputy District Attorney Vincent T. Bugliosi said he Was not sutprlsed by the change of attorneys, and ad- ded that "ii was only a matter of time after she once saw Manson." However, Bugliosi said, "her repudiation will not stand up because most of what she has said has been ·corroborated by other witnesses and other evidence." Richard Caballero, MI s s Lindberg Ii Book Slated On. WWII NEW YORK (UPI) Charles A. Lindbergh i s publishing the journals he kept dwing World War 11, it was announced Tuesday. · The book, to be called ''The Wartime Journals of Charles A .. Lindbergh." will be re- leased next 5eptember, 25 yeafs after be made the last entry. Harcourt. Bruce & W o r I d Inc. iS the publisher. "I was taking part in one or the great crises of world history," Lindbergh wrote. "Aviation conslituted a new and possibly decisive element in preventing or fighting a war and J was in a unique posi· tion to observe European avia- tion -~pecially its military aspects. The first pilot to fly solo <icross the Atlantic kept ·the journal in small leatherbound books. It was the only lime in his life he kept a swtained diary. Today. Lindbergh is noted ror his interest in con· servation. Recruit Offi ce Hit hy Blaze URBANA, 111. IUPll -A fire broli;e out in the Air Force recruiting offJce early today in this University of lllinoi s town. Police said a broken front window indicated the fire had been :iiet, perhaps with a iirebomb. Firemen from neighboring Champaign and the uni\··enity helped Urbana firemen right the bl aie. Atkins' original attorrieY, said foflowing the meeting belwffll the young woman and Manson that he and Manson had sharp differences over the tactics that shouJd be used in Ptjiss Atkins' defense. The trial has been scheduled ror ri.tarch 30, but It is an- tlclpsted there wilt be defense requepts for a postpone.men!, partly beep.use of the ap- pointment last week o f Charles Hollopeter to defend Manson . After his first meeting with tifanson. Hollopeter said the best \rial strategy could be a "united front" for all six defendants. FBI" Checks Man 's Alibi In Slay ings .winning Kiss Pres'idenl Nixon looks surprised after·he was kissed by Kristin Ann Vivion, of Rawlings, \Vyo., at a din- ner honoring members of Congress given by the Vetera~s of Foreign Wars. Kri stin is a state win· ner in the Veterans' "Voice of Democracy" com· petition. \V·hithe1· Eugene special session , today to the Soviet Union for more delivering new arms t o Sk)lb~ks in ill a1r IJ'senal. discuss the delay in President v;eaJ)onry lf I.he need arises. Israel:" '\ The edit.or, M o b a m med Nixon's reply to Tel Aviv's re· "The United Statu has From Cairo, lhe editor of the HassanJen HeJkal, said Egypt quest for additional jet knocked ..ti.own what it really semlolficiaJ new.paper A I haa two alternatlves to this warplanes and arms. could do to create a Just qnd Ahram, who Is a confidante or buildup -match Js:raeli ai r Diplomatic sources said the lastiftg peace In our area/' President Gama! A b de 1 . superiority or build up a cabinet, concerned by the Hu55eJn l!iaid. "Instead of Nasser, predicted the Uir¥ll, , ~errw.air defense system. latest appaemt channt or working with the other big air Jorce soon will get tf)e te· · " mood in Washingw~:" may * ' * 1f ~~·~~~r~~;~s1·E; College Youth Hehl, Who's Jew? sullalions. Israeli newspapers reflected 0 p T Rulin g Made the orlicial concern. Maariv ver 0;S0n;ng ry and Yediot Arahonot said of· " Ii ficiala in JeruSalem were . 1 "astonlshed11 at tbe delay but t.10NTREAL (UPI) -Eric sum" are "fine," ace<n'dlng to ·did not regard the situation as Kranz. accused of using a pig Or. Jolin Harrold. who treated "disquietitig." parasite in an a.ttempt to tbem .. They were released President Njxon said on Jan. poi,on his four college room-from hospital la st Thursday, 30 he wouJd have a decision on mates, will remain in jail but remain urider· observa~on . the Israeli request In 30 days. without bail until his They w~e . Infested with Israel is said to have asked for ,pre,llmlnary "earing next Piton· I •··· r It a total ol 110 new Ff Phan-\' mass ve ~s o paras e eggs nd Af gi....h k da_y · U\at stn grow into a worm toms. a n3_ aw s. · Sessions Court · J u d g e seven Inches in length. The N"o reason has been given for the delay but infonnants in Maurice Rousseau ·withheld paras.ite. causeg damage to the . Washington have said the ball Tuesd.ay on the grounds liver and lungs In pigs, though President is holding off the Lhat a report or Kranz' mental the effect on bllJl'lans ia not decision for rear o! provoking condition had not yet been known. One of the four .came _!Pe Soviets into sendirig more made and that Krani is an vm close to death, Or. H.ar· arms to the Arab world. American. rold sild, and one may have Diplomatic 50U1"Ct5 in Lon· Krani. 13, of Hempstead , suffered permanent I u n g don said the Soviets. too, were N.Y., is accused of attempting damage. JERUSALEM (AP) Israel's parliament hammered out an answer today to an 1ge- old religious problem whjch threatened to split the Jewis "state -"Who Is a Jew?'' ·In a Jinked decision , legislators granted f u 11 citizenship rights to non- J~wish members of mixed marriages immigrating t o Israel. · The ruliqg comes at a tlme when Israel is fighting for the release or thousands of Soviet Jew s -many in mixed fam ilies -who 'A'ant to come to the national homeland. NEW YORK (UPI) Federal authorities today in· vestigated the alibi of a 29- year·old dishwasher charged by New Jersey authorities with the double rape-murder of a mother or four and her 14- year-old niece. holding oU on sendlnJ niore murder by poisoning his four Another JS friends who arms to Egypt pending the roommates with a parasite visited the fotir during the oulc1)me of the latest Big Four never before found In man. winter c a r n i Vi. l week \llASHlNGTON 1UPJJ -back for the premier of a efforts tO find a bas.is ror set· Kranz tiad studied parasit~ festivilie11 in February con- Sen. Eugene J. ~1cCarthy (0-movie about his 1968 cam· tlement in the Middle East. logy In f\1ontreal since 1968. tacted Dr; Harrold, w h·o After a stormy session whlch ran Into the early hours, the 120.seat Knesaet (parlia· ment) pais.sed a ht a v l 11 amel)ded definition of ancient. rabbinical law by a 51·14 vote. There were nJne abstentions. Minn.), ,11aid today he has not paign, tilled "America is Hard One Arab leader, King The four students infested believes three may be mildly closed the door to another to See." Hua5ein of Jordan, told a wlth the parasite "ascaris infested. · · Lawton Jamison turned himsel! in to the FBI, Tuesda?' and was held in $250,000 ·bail on federal charges of driving the murdered wtiman's blood- spattered. white Thunderbird across a state line. presidential bid in 1972. But ,..::::.::::~-------...::=::::....::...:.:::.::::....:::::...:..._::.....c..:....:....c...:..._....:._:_:...c._ ___ -.,.-------------- neither has he opened it. Jamison's attorney. ~1artin Krimke , ·says his client found the car abandoned on a Brooklyn street when he \vas on his v.•ay home alter spen· ding the night of the murders with friends. An Essex County "'arrant, signed by prosecutor Joseph P. Lordi. accuses Jamison of raping ~1rs. Eleanor Quilban, 26. of Carteret. N .J ., and her niece. Debra De Los Reyes, 14, of Newark. last Friday, shooting them in the head and dumping their bodies about a mile from each other in subul'ban Fairfield, N.J. U.S. commissioner Vincent Catogf?io set Friday at 2:30 p.m. for a hearing on the stolen-car charge. Jamison is expected to be turned over to New JerSey authorities at that time. Police in Queens say a patrolman saw the Thun- derbird run a red Jighl early Saturday and nagged down !he dri ver. Unable to produce a drl\•er's license, they sa id, Jami s on showed the patrolman hJs Social Security card as Identification and was given a summons. He abandoned the car a few minutes later after an attempt to get it going again proved unsuccessful. Police located the car later In the day in response to inquiries from New Jersey and found that the seats \\'ere bloodstained. Exactly two years since his "victory" in !he 1968 New Hampshire primary th a I preceded Lyndon B. Johnson's withdrawal, and tv.·o years before the neYt first-in·natlon New HampShire test vote, ft1cCarthy declined to be specific about his 1972 plans. "H's h\'O years off. I haven 't eliminated it. I haven't done anything about ii.'' In an interview before heading to New Hampshire to mark the second anniversary of his 1966 success, in which he , barely lost in t h e Democrallc p r i m a r y to Johnson. McCarthy left all his options open. The possible options include running as a thi rd.party can- didate. He anoounced several monttis ago be would not seek re-election to the Senate on the Democratic ticket this year. But he \\'as not closing out the possibility of again running as a Democrat in the 1972 presidential primaries, pro- vided the party carries out ex· tensive reforms. .iTbere could be change enough, but I don·t know if there will be," fl.'IcCarthy said. He is particularly interested in revision of the national con· venllon process lo make state delegations more represen· tative of their party·s mem- bers back home. Some of McCarthy"s main backers In the March 12. 1968, New Hampshire Democratic primary arranged a reception and buffet for him Thursday at H3.nover. He also wa15 going Addict, 12, Returns To Home in Slums NEW YORK (AP) -Ralph tention lo Ralph v.•as resented de Jesus, the 12·year·old ad· by youngsters in the 13 to 17· diet who shocked a legislative year-old group. hearing last month when he At his famlly·s apartment in described his use of heroin, the Hunts Point section of the has returned to his family 'y-Bronx. Ralph said he left home in a slum filled with because his special privileges drug pushers. had been taken away . He 5aid Dr. Judianne Dense n. he had stopped using drugs. Gerber. clinical director of the On Feb. 26, Ralph sat on Odyssey House for narcotics his doctor's lap and told rehabilita~ion, said Tuesday legislators how he became ad- that Ralph had been sent dicled to heroin. St ate home because he did not fit in Assemblyman Manuel Ramos w'ith the tee,..age addicts the left the room y,•ith tears run· center wa.s designed for. ning down his face. "He literally needed 'The Ramos, who represents the Three Bears' toki to him every district where Ralph lives, night," 5he said. said Tuesday he would seek She i;ald the special at· help for the boy. . -·- • resounding reasons you shOl}ld buy a new Clievrolet 1nslead ,of a new something else: 1Hl1herrwleval1& No other car to Chevrolet'• field siWil YOO .. n'luch back on your initial i:nw:stment. Yett after year. You may never -:r•nt to ICll your Chevrolet, but if you do. it'U be rewa.rdin&. 2 Deepdownvalue. When you bU)' a ChevroJet JOU 1ef: exdusive thlnp like ftmb-and-dry rocker i-ne1s whk:h hclpcomblt rust. And inner fendm that keep your outer renders look.ins aood lonaer. 3 Smoolh,11nooll1 rtcle. O\evt"olet aprinp aR computer ldcdcd. Linked with Full CoiJ auspension and advanced body mou.ating system, it makes our bi1 rider a smootli rider. 4 llltpreleM styl)na;, Reason coou.ah a1one to 10 with Chevrolet. The impression is that ifs an e.xpcnsive car. ii you want to make an impression. 5 MaulWI Im.Ion. . Result?" Room to atretc:h out or to sit taJJ. A lot of toom for people and their Juaqc. <l>ewokt actually ha.s more front k1 room than an7 other c:ar in its field. 6 ~:e~ ....... '"·a...rokt·· door for added protection ud ~or mind. 7 A llnlshtlllltmts. Jn O.evrolef s field a new .. somethina etse• -on't hne ~agic-Mirror acrylic lacquer finiah. Which ii anf'ortunue because Chevrolet'• JS colon sure keep their ahinc. 8 Exupllcw1lll qnes. Chevrolot's ltlndard 350-cubic-irleh Vt rans on reguhr fuel. Sodoesa.n even l1rger4()().<ubic-inch va thatyoucali order. There are abo four other fine pcrformin1 enaines available. 9 'ftwrter".clolaselecllon. or colon. or accat0rics. or engines. or transmissions. Of fabrics. Of CU$lom features you can add. And ol modds to pick from. There arc nine dift'ucnt bi& C~ku alone. 10 Ametlt.ft falllDI 1111. Something ehe a MW .. somethln1 else .. can't claim: America'& moat popular car. If aetiO]'• speak louder than •ordl. does'ni this· aay 10mcthin1 to you? See your CbcvroJet deaJ«, Bank Indian Giver But Guard's Wido iv w Get $913 Back CllICAGO (UPI I -The Gateway Nat.ional Bank 1ave ~h's. Ursula Mix $913 when her husband, a bank guard, was ldllcd in an attempted holdup -then the bank demanded and got the money back. Today ~trs. Mi x said the president of the Bahk told'her the money would be returned. "He told me there. had been " misunderSfanding anCI thill I y.'QUld hJIVQ the mone1 back,·· Mrs. r..1Jx said . Mrs. h1ix. a 39-year-oki im· migrant from Ea!ll Germany. rriother of lhree children. said· .she received the money from the bank after her hmband. RJchard, 42, WaJ ll>ot by l IJUnntlll lut ll«ember. '!'ht money amOUDled to a month's pay for her husband. "Jfs not our fault if a guy gets his head shot off. I can't help that," bank president George P. Poulas said when questioned about why the bank had demanded the return of the money. On Tuesday , Mn. Mix said Poulas sumoned her to the. bank last month and ordered her to sign a check for $91~ before he wwld reles~ an In- surance check for $5,036. Mrs. Mixsald she later ~ived another $5,000 in insurance money due to a doUble In- demnity clause In the 1,.. surance policy' • She 1111\d lhal In demanding the return of the $113. PoullU wld her that an trror hid been mid• by ·Ille president v.·ho preceded him In office. She said Poulas told her that her husband 's hospital bllls amounted to more than $900 but that she later found out Work man's Compenution paid for the hospitalization. '"Nobody gets paid anythini! for services not rendered," Poulas \old re.p:>rters who questioned him about the mat- "'· Mn:. Mix 111id she used the '913 to pBy for tier husband's funeral e1penses. "They told me to come down to the bank and pick up the n1oney but l told them t don 't want to go down there. The bl.nk ha3 bad memorit!I for me.'' Mri . Mix sllid toda)l Puttln1you1lrst;kffps us first ...... She Fhld th.at Poula1 as'sured her the money would be aent toherbynt6~nll"~ 1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-r~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~..,..~ i • .. • ! l ' ' ·, •DAILY PILOT EDITOBIA.L P AGE Still Open for Debate Not too many days .aQo, lhore appeared \ho cloar Indication Uiat the city of 'Newport Beach was going to abondon its almost one-decade-oHI battle against the adopted route for the future Pacific Coast Freeway. Keeping up the good fight, however, appears to be creeping back into conversation. • Talk of giving up the campaign seemed strongest . just after the California Highway Commission last month, in a mute action, declined to reopen the routing question through Newport glinerally between the Santa Ana River easterly to Dover Drive. Prior t to lhat muted action, taken without a real vote, the conseqsus at Newport City Hall seemed to be that jf the commissioners turned the city down this time, the fisht was over. Nev.rport would then agr~ to launch 11tud1es aimed toward eventually signing a free. way agreement v.itb the state on the contested seg· ment. As a new City Council election campaign gets Un· dey way, however, the freeway i11sue won't stay buried, no matter how dead the body. For example, Councilman Pau1 J. Gruber, who dur- ing his terms as mayor led the freeway battle. always used to say-an4 said repeatedly-that a Pacific Coist Freeway route is needed through Newport to serve the popuJace, but it must be properly placed. And what Gruber meant was placed inland arl'd away from the existing Pacific Coast Highway alignment. Today, however, Gruber is aaying no Pacific Coa!t Freeway is needed through Ney,rport. And he wants to appeal to the U.S. Bureau of Public Roads and the Cali· fornia Legislature. ' ell after eight years of service. Yet there Is a clear in· dication that other candidates who w1U be on the ballot are preparing to pick up his "No Freeway" cry and carry it as a campaign plank. . The coastal frteway routing ha s been adopted and accepted through the Laguna area and adopted and ac· cept.ed by Newport city government through the Corona del Mar area. To the west. the route has been adopted and accepted through Huntington Beach to the Newport city line. 1 So it seems we have a freeway :dopted at both cndS' but not in the middle. Contrary to Gruber's latest stance, anothei-retir· ing councilman, former city manager Robert Shelton, 11eems to believe that sentiment in the city swings ~o· ward gelling an 'acceptable freeway agreement \Yith the state and getting on with the construction job. . So it wotild appear that the great free,vay contr~ versy is not as yet a dead issue . It will be heard from again iri at least this one more City Council campaign. Give Blood Friday Can you glv~ a pint of blood? It is a gift someone- any one of us, who knows yet whom-will vitally need. . The !led Cross bloodmobile will be at Hoag Memor· Jal Hospital aU day Friday and Friday evening. Jt i~ a chance to replenish an essential st1j>ply of this life 11ource. . ~u;,:..,,_. I \Vitb the upcoming council election, Gruber is le&v· ing the municipal wars and'wW retire from the conn• Please call the Orange County chapter of the Red Cross at 77~3782 and make an appointment to avoid delay at the bloodmobile. Your pint of blood is needed . N 'S~ INC~&U RUDENH5 ! I WAS TREAT~ LiKf >JJ AMuicM IN PARIS!• Political Activism in Peace C~rps Embarrassment Overseas WASffiNGTON -The President. the vice president and the secretary of statf'! have now had enough experience with the high ··rpirit.s of the politically turbulent Peace Corps to wonder if th is experiment in 1preading America·s youthful idealism over the world has not gotten badly off the tracks. To be quite blunt about it, Secretary of Slate William P. Rogers and Vice Presi· dent Spiro T. Agnew have been acutely embarrassed abroad by demonstration& of Peace Corpsmen a&ainst American policy. The result is that there would ~ no great sense of disappointment« depriv•· tion in the execut;ve branch if Congress were to Jop off $20, f30 or $40 million from requested fW1ds ol $98 million for the Peace~ in 1970-71, and reduce Us political activism accordingly. ACTIVITIES OF Peace Corpsmen in a dou.n countries ha\'e held up to p_ublic calumny the polities cf a country they are supposed to represent. They have done so in Ethiopia, Liberia. Tunisia, Afghanistan. Chile, Peru , Kenya, Niger, Turkey, Brazil . Thailand. Togo. In gome cases, such as Ethiopia, the corpsmen have fanned yo u l hf u I disconlent with exist ing government. pro- le!led the ·existing social ordeJ and, in genf:ral, have placed a heavy sltain on American r e l a t i o n s v•ilh host governments. Secretary of Slate Rogers returned from his recent African trip badly out of 50rts over the behavior of Peace Corps- men "·ho had exposed b I a c k arm- bands, snorted their disapproval, and turned their backs on him as he expound· ed American policy al the American em. bauy. AGNEW WAS cro~ examined by rar •ilaJ: 1 '· ~icliiird ' i ' • '\ Eastern statesmen on whether or not the Peace Corpsmen, as reprfM!lltaUvea of the U.S. government, were expreasing hostile attitudes hidden beneath the surface or· Amtrlcan friendship and cooperation. A Htrange th~, 11upported by a Federal Diltrfct.Cou.rt deti•lon in Rhode Island, underlie! p:iliUCill activism in the Peace Corps. The corpsmen, by this doc· trine. are not government officials or repnsenlalivtl!I, but volunteers financed by the U.S. government and entitlrd to all the rights and privileges of private citizens. 1£ they \llillh to protest the Vietnam war, the pace of integration, the military· indyslrial complex, the ABi\f or Spiro Agnew they cannot be disciplined because their con!Ututional rights would be denied. If they wish to condemn the government of the country in which they are lierving. agitate among ib youth. de· nounce its leaders that is no concern 01 the Peace Corps, EITHER OF TH.ESE forms of political activity ls flagrantly in violation of the rules of the Peace Corps and has been fron1 the beginning. The era of permissiveness began wil.h the original director, Sargent Shriver, and has steadi· ly grown worse. Shriver also suppressed crit.ical investigative report! of the Peace Corps administraUve operati<lns. The present administrator •. Joseph H. Blatchford, is trying to weed out lhc young act.ivists and slowly convert the corps to a more stable and rtspensible condition with people who are older and have skills u11eful to the economic and aocial structure of developing countries. But it is a hopeless task. The corps hal'i a huge O\'erlay -90 percent -of liberal arts idealists, mo.5tly teachers of English, and cadres of prot.est-mindM· yuuth whose idl!!as are incompat ible both with American policy and the policies of lhe countries where they serve. THE NIXON AD~Ur-..'ISTRATJON ii;; not nf a mind to liquidate the Peace Corps. Some Of the oriibtat idealism is rea:arded as valid. ·'Jbe general tdea is appealing and hB.l! betn politically popular in the paat, although today's young a re disenchanted with this kind of public ~ice, evidently preferring active duty on the streets and campuses to the relative safety of a tropical jungle. No harm would be done to American policy abroad If a move for a sharp cut.. back in runds for operation of the Peace Corps ~·ere to arise in Congress. This "\\'Ol.lld afford an opportunity for a new beginning or a world-wide shakedmrn of lht'!. corps to make it a more useful in· s!rument of Amt'rlcan foreign policy, or ·1l least not a disruptive innuenctt. THERE IS SOilfETIONG to be said. ro. fOT" going back t.o the purposes and nelhods cf the old point IV program ·1·hich originated in the T r u m a n \dministraUon to give technical aid and ~upport in the development of emerging iations. The idea that the Peace Corps would be in ouUet for the idealislic drive: of . \merican youth, their high spirits, dedication and sacrH"ice spreading light into places of darkness, seem" pathetically innocent in today's world. Not so much because Ult: world has changed as because youth's concept ol it.!i mil!!ion has changed. Let Them Eat Winstons Congre!>l, ~1hlch worrie5 <X>Mtant.ly about our heallh. i!i budgeting $2.6 milhon this year for nagging us into quitting smoking. Of course, Congress also ~'orries about the health of the tobacco Industry, So il'Ji spending $73.l million this year to pro- mote smoking. The lion·s share of lh1s. $31 :i million. goe! to buy up surplus tobacco whith we. ~hip to poor. sl.arving rwople abroad under our Food for Peace Program Inrluding $31 .3 million \\'Orth of tobacC(t In our food for Peace packagts may l!IE!em heartlcss to some. There, for example, Is a spindly African native tottering down the jungle trail in the lasl st~ges of ~larvahon. lie 11tumblt1~ on a package labeled : "U.S. food for Peace." \Vllh trembling fingers, ----- Wedne.<day, March II, 1970 Tht editorial page of t1tt Daily Pilot.. .st.t ks to inform of'ld. 11n11.- 11late' readers by prts11111ti»U tl11s n~cipa.per's opinions and coni- mintoru on top1c1 of 1nttre:t an.d 1f9t1ificanct, by providing 11 forum for the ezpress1011 of our rcOdt.r .. opi nio•u. a1id 'by prcaent.Uig th~ d1vtrte view· pornt1 of ttl.for~d obstrvcr.J ct~ 1pokftm4n orr. toplcs of the dcy. Robert. N. \Veed. Publi1her --..·-__ ..... ·.·~ he tearr It open. Inside. is a carton ()f Winston s. With dimming eyes, he reads lhe legend: ''Winston.s taste good -like a cigareUe Mould." So he cal! .them. NATURALLY, eating cigarettes is not. 11oing to help our sW11ing friends abroad. T\or, if they don't get hooked on cigarel· res, i~ it going to help our tobacco farmers. \Vhat ls obvioU31)' nffiitd is 1 vjiorous teehnical 1id proeram to teach the underprivileged, backward peoples of the world lo smoke: "No, sir. you light the other end. That's IL Now suck in the smoke. Tbert, there. Let me hit you on the bl.ck a couple of times. Fine. Jn a couple of days, you1J learn to love it." Once we have our poverty·stricktn friends overseas hooked, think of the humanltar11n 111t11f1ctlon we'll gifllf.r. ghipplng them pack•aes of tobacco lo ''"' their .-aving1. Thlnk of the pleasure they'll •nJoY. li1Mng up that first. gtorloul, after-breokfall dg1mto. II they bad any brtakf1st. But oor program Is nol merel y hum anitarian, it's ecoloR]c11ly .• sound. ConJftSI Is Kpcnding not only $31.3 mltlkln on Tobacta for Peace. bu t $27.SI fnlllll)rl on t.abJlcto ell port subsldl~ and $240,000 for ciaareUe 1dverti1tn, abrOfld. THUS WE SEE thal Congrtu in ii~ wtsdom 11 1pproprtatl ni ~.6 million to ' . ' get Americans lo smoke less and $59.4 million t.o get toreigners to .smoke more. The goal of Congress 1s clear: a thriv· ing tobacco export tr1de run by non- smoking, healthy Americlns, all happily singing, "Oh, you can ship Salems oot of the country, but. •• " Such a program will not only save thr economy. it will ~ave the world. For \lo"C are faced v.'ith a population explo~ion. And many an expert warns that ~·e ~imp· ly must stop sending food abroad to starving -people. For their own good. What better substitute than tobaceo? What better product lo snuff out ()verpopulation? How good it is to know that our friends abroad will die happy. Far there is no confirmed cigarette smoker alive today who doesn't believe in his heart of hearts in that ringing .slogan : • "J'd rather smoke than live." Dear Gloomy Gus: Your aport.s editor 100..dd cru sad e to get rid of "No Hunting" ~lp1 on Irvine ind othtr ranchts In- stead of exposing and exploiting the virgin hunHng of h1exico to our lJhlo:phtstlcated huntm. -T. M. V. 'T~(I "''~ rti'IHlt ""'"' 'l!ewt. "' _., .. "" """ ~ .... ft••--· , ..... ,._ NI '"'" 19 G'"°"' 011 .. CMllr '""· Churches Are Losing While Occult Gai1is Editorial Resea r ch The Blark Aris From ghouties and ghosties and long-leggely beastie& And things that go bur11p in the night Good Lord deliver us! ... Old Scottish prayer The occult. for n1ost Americans, is an evening·s diversion with a Ollija board or a deck of tarot cards. But for many others -an indeterminate but ap- parently growing group -there really are "things that go bump in the night." ltfany aocial thinkers are \lo'Orritd about the occult boom. So are churchmen. For . it is a fact of our time that, as church at- tendance is falling off, membership in new "culls of evil'' is growing. Palmists, graphologists. phrenologists, numerologists, Satanists. alchemist! and \\'itches are all gaining follo~·ers. Astrologers are ha ving a field da y. Se\"eral high schools and uni versities are offering courses in I.he history of wit- chcraft, sorcery and the black arb. ttlost book stores have several shelves jammed with everything from sensational ttvel· ations of occult happenings t:> the scholarly Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology ( 1959) by Ros.sell Hope Robinl, an expert on ttfedieval history. PSYCHOTHERAPIST Rollo 1t1ay in his new book "Love And Will ." discusses a system of "demons" which are not en· lilies but ''archetypal functions of human experience." !\·lay argues that lhe "daemonic" comes to the fore in limes or transition, like our own. Jn the past, ~uch era.!I produced "actual fear among peop le of witchcraft. sorcerers, and others "'ho claimed to know how lo consort with the demons:• There are accounls of witches in Biblical history, Exodus says : "Thou Eh alt not suffer a witch to live.·• On the e\·e of the battle of Gilboa. King Saul vi5lted I.he v.•itch or Endor, near N11areth. She called forth the spirit of Samuel, who predicted S1ul's death. The Grttks and Roman& believed in witchts -the more SC> u their empires began to crumble. IN THE f.llDDLE AGES. and up to the middle of the 18th century, a witch was believed lo be anyone who made a pact "'ilh the devil <1nd worked magic -black or "'hile -through animals or imps. ~lislorian Robbin.!! bl!liel'e~ 1hey were a ··colo,;stil fraud .. perpetrated out of fear and religious zeal. One re ference source e~timatcs th11t 300,000 to t~·o million persons may ha\'~ been executed as witches. By the 14th century. y.·itch hunts ·were ~inp, con· ducted 1n every nation of the western world. As late as 1692. in the famous witch lrials 1n Salem , 1'.1ass., 19 innocent persons -6 men and 13 "·omen -were hanged, and one man was pressed to death . THE OCCULT may only txist in the minds or those who believe In ll But that does not stop it from making 1 rt.al Im· pact. Anthropologist Elizabeth E. Bacon "Tllel: "The belief that one is a victim of \loitrhcraft is ps)·chol-Oglcally as potent 15 actual magk: coukl be." A cult of evil Is 11aid·to have played • part in the Sharon Tate murders in Call (ornia. Chsrles ?>.10nson, who Is rhargeti it1 wnnectlon \vith the killings. I® 1 ~nd..91_ hlpQies, ll'I051 of them youni wointn, "'ho <:Alred him "Satan. or ''God." A rectnt issue ol Esqui re was devoted lo the upmrge in lhe bl3ck srltl In California. The occult no longer seema to be merely a parlor game In auburbia . lt'• 1 trend, and 1 troublini one. The Tragic Farce Of 'Chicago 7~ Altl1ough American newspapers do otherwise, 1 follow the practice of the British press and refrain from com· menting on trials \\'hile they are in pro· gress. During tile long trial of the "Chicago 7." I \lo'as shocked, dismayed, disgusted, and silent. Now that the tragic farce ha~ ended, and we can look back upon it -.·ith a. little perspective, :.,,c\·era r distincti ve features seem to emerge. . First. it was not a legal trial !'IO much as a political action. There obviously was no "conspiracy" -as the jJ.J.fY correctly decided -and all fhe defendants had in common was a distaste for the system, SECOND, WIULE the conduct of the defendants was outrageous, the conduct of the judge and proseeutor was in· excusable, both during and after the trial. Third, the wh()\e proceedings served no useful purpose -as former Attorney General Clark predicted -except to n1ake the government look bad and to create enormous publicity for the most extreme and exhibitionistic elements a1nong the defendants. Fourth, and most important, it helped undermine the American syste.m of jurisprudence far more than it clarified oiny issues at stake. TO ttlE. THE r.IOST melancholy aspecl of the trial was the public reactkln . Although "'e prattle about "freedom'' and "'democracy" more loudly and constantly than any other people in the world. we have a sadly limited idea of what these terms genuinely consist in. \Ve imaglne that you have lo "like'' or •·approve" of defendants in order to give them their fullest judicial and .con· stitutional privilege.s. We wrongly assume that anyone who protests that these defendants \lo'ere badly and unfairly treated by the government is .. in favor" of "'hat !he delendants stood for. or con· dones the obnoxious way they behaved. WE SEEJ\1 INC APABLE of separatinit: form from substance; of saying, "We don·t agree with these people in any way, and thal is exactly the reason 9t'e mus\. bend over backwards to see that their rights are respected." This is a state- ment of the democratic doctrine; anything else is rhetoric, hypocri.!ly, ii· norance, bigotry. or malice. I was delighted, subsequently. that all five active judges of the Federal Appeals Court unanimous ly re\'ersed Judge ~lof· (man's denial of bail to the defendants. Hjs spite and partiality \\'ere nowhere more rtvealed than in his closing gesture of illegal \•indictiveness -and exceeded ()n)y by the prosecutor's ugly attack upon the alleged ''homosexual" procli11ities of most of the defenda,nts~ These post.trial exhibits re11eaJed, more eloquently than any comment I could ~ve made during lhe trial. exactly where the Ulreat to our system of justice really lies. Mmeast Crisis: a Phase All ~'ar~ In which a belligerent col· Japse5 and is forced to yi eld large land areas-, present complex and stubborn pr~ blems tn postv.·ar territorial adjustment. Such a wa.r "M'as the Mideast. 1967, between Israel and the Arab at.ates. Israel Is almost surrounded by disputed territory ll occupies, Arab guerrillas at- tack daily trying to loosen the tsraeli grip. and the l.!lraelis retaliate tn the air and in growid raids. A description of one of !he disputed areas may facilitate understanding of the continuing f.iideast crisis. tf you drive north fro m .Jeru!!alcm on the highway to Damascus. you re.acb the Plain or Esdraelon. a fertile valley run· ning east-west from the Jordan River to lhe r.tediterranean. It inc or po r 11 t c ~ Armageddon , the Biblical site of lht "list" baltle of nations. Proettding north into hills you reach Naiarelh, which i! 16 miles from Tiberias on the Sea of Galilee. THE II ~tlLES Is sheep country. but norl.h of G1lilte is another ftrUle bAsin about %5 miles long. The Damascus road \ then climbs a bill to a high plateau in the shadow of hfount Hennon in the anti- Lebanon range. I .. , Roy~e ~ ~· )'-• '; µ... ~; .... ·· .... ~~ ...... ;,r"''~· ' the Six-Day War was to 11ilence these guns by aerial bombing. THEY 'IllEN deployed ground troo~ 11nrl ·tanks on Golan Heights, and ten or fiflee_n miles a!Qng the plateau leading to Damascus. Th~ 1:-raelis 5till OC'cupy lhe He ight~. ~nd It IS a non·negotitible rnndilion ()f peace that artillery shall ne,·e r again command the lowlands. Thrre are manv co!llmando . raid.!! aa:ainst Israel stroni: points on high ground, bu! e\·cn \l'ith the aid of sympat.hetic 1...ebancsc com- niandos, the Arab~ h<1ve not seriously threatened Iirat li lodgments. A si milar situation. less menacins:. in· \'Oh·es _the southern spurs ()f the Height~. i1nrl lh1s accounts for the Israeli ~eirur11 and occupation of Jordanian territory west of the river. largely occupied by Arab rt'fugees. The refugees naturally aiuffer from the hil·run warfare. Quite aside from the lhrea~ of Presi· dent Nasser or Egypt to re1Ume the war. Israel cannot be blamed for in1isttni art1nery duels north and south of Galilee must be neutralized. On the east of th is fertlle: basin. and the Galilee sink. the plateau rises !lightly in a_ bare, rounded range called Golan Heighls. It rises abo11e lht Jord11n level 1000-1500 feet and 1purs of It run far soutb"·ard 1-0Ward the Dead SeA. The. prewar Syrian border touches Israel Jwl n,, Geo rge --- south of Galllee. F'or 80me yean the Syrians. arid In less Dear r.eorge, rorce the Jordanians south . maintained a Do YOU hive any Information on cha.In of 11rllllery emplace ment& on the hoiv lo hook rua~! etgtits, rrom lMSnfieyCOWaan ~"-a"-dl=a-1'-------- lob !hells Into the farm and grailng Jand Dear E.W.~ lo tM north and \\'eSt of Calllee. ind ."1ell, flr1l you cet thls big lihtlf'- large pieces farthtr sooth could rl"nie in. ping bag, set? ~ext -nh, for good. to the e1st tnd of the Plain of Elldraelon. ness !ail"e! Hone!ly 11 the but One ol the flrst 1cts of tbt l&raelll q, _policy a.nd don't you forgl!l ii! w • I I I '1 • Costa · Mesa ' VO~. 63, NO. 59, 5 SECTION S, 78 PAGES , OU Snabhed .bfl Nixota Mesa Deleg~tes Blast D.C. Meet Political sn ubs by President Nixon, vlolenct in the streets and complete lack of accomplishment were bjtlerly describ. eel today in the wake of a \V ashington conference of U.S. civic leaders. Costa Mesa's two ranking elected or- tidaJ.s flew home from the Congression~l­ City Conference of the National League of Cities, TUesday along with 600 other delegates. Mayor Alvin L. Pink ley was outspoken today in his condemnation of the annual event. ''The mayor of Tucson was dragged off the street inlO a dark alley, mugged and robbed and has about eight stitches in his head," he said. PILOT, POLICE CLASH 1'0NIGHT A violent confrontation for charity - ~tween lhe Costa M«a Police Depart- ment and the DAILY PILOT staff -is scbeduled tonight, when the two mobs clash in a basketball game. All~ [rom tbe'7:l5 p.m. liU in tbe Costa Mesa High School gymnasium will to to the Justin Ogata Fund, for the young Mustang wresUer paralyzed in an accident during wreslling practice. Tickelt will be on sale at ~ cents each and 1l(hough you might find a better basketball game than c o p s • v t r s u s • ~men, you can't find a better reason to itqe one. ' Pilot Charged In 2nd Beating Of Mesa Woman A retired military pilot freed at court Friday in almost an identical case is back in Costa Mesa City Jail today, following a savage , table.leg clubbing of bis woman friend . Theodore E. Enter. 65, of 740 W. 18th St., Costa Mesa, is held without bail on a charge o( assault with intent to commit murder. He was arrested last week on a charge of assault and battery, but released on his own recognizance, promising to ap· p,r;ar for arraignment f\1arch 13 in Harbor Judicial District Court. 7he two alleged atlacks both involl•ed Pltary S. Stork. 41, who police said shared the apartment to "''hich they ·were dispatched again Monday. Detectives said thev found it a bloody shambles, with Enter unwilling lo discuss the matt.er and Mrs. Stork hysterical and showing signs Of a beating. The vH:tim had apparently been club- bed with a leg broken from a coffee table during an obvious battle, police sald to- day. She al first seemed to have escaped se rious injury, but her condition worsen· M and she was taken to Orange County Medical Center for lreatment. Authorities there sa id today she hns been released. Investigator Gerry Thompson was assigned to the case and today was stu- dying the possibility ()f suspending crimina l action again st the retired Air Force officer pending psychiatric tests. "The city of \Vashington ls a national dis'g.race,-"'"he fiimed . "Three men together can't walk the streets unafratd," he added, saying assault in the predominantly black city can literally be expl!!Cted at every corner. Vice Mayor Robe rt M. Wilson also at- tended th e conference, but was away from his manufacturing plant and could not be reached today for additional e-0m- ment. He sha red Mayor Pinkley's di sap- pointment. ho1vever, said an employe. Both men had expected the first really frui'lful convention in three years, since deaths of nationally prominent me n mar· red the last t~o. The 1969 League or Cities event caine the "'·eek of former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's death and funeral, while the assassination or Dr. 1'1artin Luther King Jr. brought cancellation or the 1968 event. "President Nixon was off playing golf at Key Biscayne and he didn't even bother to send Vice President Agnew,·• Mayor Pinkley said today. "Thi$ was a tremendous political blun- der on the part oif the President when mayors and olher ofricials came from all • over the -country," he conlinutd. •·Then only thing we learned was the 'New Federalism' which is his plan for the 1970s." the mayor added, explaining thal states will be delegated more authority In handling certain federal funds: This concep t was expla ined under pen· ding federal legislation affecting Costa Mesa and other cities around the country. while a se ries of Congrl!!ssional briefings were also held. Three Cabinet members, Atlorney General John ~fitchell, Transportation Secretary John Volpe, and Labor Secretary George Schu1tz addressed the assembled leade rs. fl.tayor Pinkley said he and Vice ~1ayor \Vllson also conferred with Sen. George ~furphy. {ft.Calif.) and Conaressman Richard T. Hanna ()).Westmin ster). Suicide Atte nipt ' Victi1n Accused Of SF Murd er Ne wport Beach police said today an un- employed businessman who appa rently tried lo bludgeon himself to death Tues· day is a suspect in a San Francisco mu r- der. H. Harlan Jlansen, 43. of San Francisco is listed in serious condition today in the jail "''ard of Orange County Medical Cen- ter with multiple head injuries. Police said an unidentified man called ofricers to the men's restroom near the Balboa pier at noon. saying a man was beating hlmselr with a claw hammer. Hanson, who was unconscious when police arrivtd, was given emergency treatment at Hoag before being takm to the medical center. Detective San1 Amburgey said Hansen ts a suspecl in the bludgeon death of a 29-,vear.old male nurse's aide. The body of Ectlvln L. Reed was lound ~ta rch 5 in ~Iansen's San Francisco apartment. Detectives rrom San Francisco arc ex· pectl'!d to arrive in Nr111port today, Am· burgey said. They wHJ 1ake Hansen back to lhe bay area as soon as he is able to travel, he added. ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA WEDNESDAY,· MARCH 11, 1970 on ur er THESE THREE MEN, ARRESTED IN COSTA MESA, FACE COLORADO MURDER CHARGES Suspects (from left) Jamn J•ckson, Jack MlitMy and HOward Tschirhart .'Secret' Recall Campaign Against Alle11 Fall s Sl1ort By TO~I BARLEY 01 Ille OtllY ,ilPI S!ttl The semi·secret campaign lo nlount a reca ll election against Fifth District Supervisor Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach has fallen at least 500 signatures short in its petition effort, the DAILY PILOT learned today. PetiUons had been filed with County Clerk William E. St John as a re- quirement to get a recall election against Allen on the ballot. Whole pages of signatures have been determined to be invalid, it was disclos- ed. Orange CfIDIY voting supervisor Ed Arnold told the DAILY PlLOT that the recallers "''ill be •l least 500 signatures ·short. He cautioned that wa s an unofricial tally, st.ibfeCt to verlDcation when the listings are fed through the: county's com- puter. Meanwhile: the frantic recall workers were recalling their petition carriers in an l Ith hour bid for !lgnatures to replace those bogus ooes that have been can- celled out. It seemed certain at press lime today that St John will Cll'der the organlzera of ' the Allen Recall campaign to bring in wilhin the n e x t 10 days sufficient signatures to meet the required total of 9,748 names. Recall organizers Paul Carpenter of Cypress and Anthony Tarantino of San Clemente delivered 10,522 signatures lo St John last week . St John advised the shocked Carpenter of the deteriorating situation and the anti·Allen Democrat immediately reac· livaled his idle volunteers throughout the Fifth District. Carpenter noted "We have 10 days in which to obtain whatever ma y be the required signatures and that is time enough for us.·· Carpenter placed the blame for thl!! mounting number of invalid ations on two Newport Beach rccrults lo his recall campaign. "We decided to take no legal action against them after the two agreed to delete the falsifications they hac\ en· tered," the angry Car,.enter said. "It is. of course. a blow to our campaign but al least we now have the opportunity to fill the gap with genuine signa tures -and there are, you know , plenty of them in the Fifth District." One or those two workers denied Carpenter's alleg.iitlons and told the DAl· LY PILOT that his signatures were col· lecteci last week by representatives of Opinion Research Inc. of Long Beach. "I've heard nothlng since," he said. "and t know nothing about false signatures or phony names and addresses." Clooe checking by voting division supervisor Arnold's staff has revealed the filing of incorrect names and addresses. the listing of persons who are not registered to vote. dup\icellons or signatures and lists compiled in October to which the signatures \vere affixed D month later. One checKer commented 'that "valid signatures were runnir.~ as high as 96 percent accurate when we first started wor king on the bundle of petitions and things looked fine. But we got a· little lower down and found that we were hav. ing to throw out whole sheets of signatures, one after the other, for various reasons." Carpenter's submission or I~, 52 2 signatures called for a 92 percent level of validation and St John commented at the lime of filing that the reCall workers were "leaving a gttat de~I to chance. One should have a greater cushion thin this margin or 774 voles when ou bear in mlnd the nature-of the election,~· St John said. --,..-:- If Ca rpenter's efforts to'lnake §OOd. the i11valid Signltures are unsucctsslul. his · candidate will bavt to oppose pupervisor Alton E. Allen. Costa lt.esa Viee Mayor Robert M. "Bob" Wilson and savings and loan executive Ron Caspers of Lido Isle in the June 2 primary elecUon-:- Carpenter said Tuesday tb~t It seer11ed ":airly certain" that Tarantino will go against Allen in the June election . "He's trying to make up his mind," the Democrat said, "but we should have his decision within the oei:l JO days.'' La g una Doctor Abortion Case Ac tion Delayed A Superior Court hearing into a Laguna Beach physician 's charges that the Orange County Grand Jury which in- dicted him on abortion charges is unlawfully constituted was sidelined to- day "''hen both sides in the dispute agreed that they needed more lime for prepara· lion. Dr. llobert Cumming Robb, 67, of 34567 Scenlc Drive, Dana Point. 11•as ordered to return to cou rt April I for the reschedul- ed hearing . Abortion charges against him \\'ill be held pending the outcome or that investi,11.ation. Dr. Robh was Indicted by the Grand Jury on charges of inducing miscarriages in three women patients, an or them single. after Judge Paul Mast threw the sam e charges out or Santa Ana Municipal Court with the ruling that l h e Therapeutic Abortlon Act of 1967 was un- constitutional. Judge Mast agreed with defense at- lorney l\1oses Berman that any other rul· ing would be to accept lhe philosophy or the Roman Gatholic religion. Such ac- ceptance. he said, would ~in violation or the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. District Attorney Cecil Hjcks revived the charges with lhe Grand Jury in- dictinent and insi~ts that the state code is valid and Robb should be proseculed in the higher court. U.S., Colombian Planes Hijacked, Tnken to Ciibn By Unltod Prrss· tnternatlonal Two planes were hijacked to Cuba to- day, one as it flew lrom Cleveland. Ohio, to Florida and thl!! second as it was en route to Barranouilla from Bogota, Colombia. They were the fourlh and fifth hijacks carried out successfully so (ar in 1970 in the Western Hemisphere. Both were Boeing 727 jf!Ulners. The United Airlines plane hijacked ln the United States carried 106· l)ersons and was forced by a lonecunman to land and refue) in Atlanta, Ga,, bdore tWna oil for Cuba. • The Colombian Avlanca Airliner car- ried 71 persons. It waa for_ced lo touch down at Cartagena, apparenlly for refuel- ing, but remained agrowid only five mlnutl!!s end then conlinued on to Bar· ranqullla where it took on more •~· nd then headed for Cuba. . tn Vienna, two young Poles -Wieslaw Szymantlewlcz, 20, and RomouH W~I•"' Zoltucho. 18-were convicted and senten- ced to jail tenns today for hijacki ng • Polish airliner to Vienna several month.I ago. · 7,oltucho was &entenced lo two years ln jail and Szymanklewici got two years and three months. The court told thl!!m they could stay in the Wl!!st after com· pletlng their sentences. ln Berlin, the newspa per Bild Zeilung reported that lhe two hijackers who tried to divert an East Gennan. airli.ner lo \Vest Berlin Tuesday, then k 111 e d 1he mselves when they failed, were a young married couple. They were not identified. Humpl1rey Urges Campus 'Reason' TUCSON , Arli. (UPI) -Former Vice_ President Hubert Humphrey has urged students to use "reason instead of violence debale and discuss ion instead or riots" ~ bring about needed changes in universities. Speaking at the University of Arizona Tuesda y night, Humphrey said it is up ~o the young population to change politics 1n the United Sla tes as well as to bring about tmiversity changes and make them relevant lo today's needs. "Changes are netded in all walks of life, in all our institutions, but those changes must come In an orderly and reall()Jlablc fashion ir we are not lo destroy our world," he said. Police Auction Se t Saturda y_ "H It rains Saturday. bring your um- brella," says Costa Mesa Police Sgt. ~ LOVein.. , Fairvie'v G1·ad s Get Diplomas No Goat Hill Inflation He Is the pro~rly officer. in charge or unclairned valuables to be aucUoned'off beginn ing at 10 a.m. behind headquarters at 99 Fair .,Drive. . Tht rlrst 30 graduall!!s of a recently. changed program for trainini psychiatric lechniciaru will reee1ve their diplon1a!I Friday in ceremonies at Costa l\1esa's Fairview State Hospital. Trainees have co1npleted the program \\'hich has now become 111ccrediled by the Bozrd of Llc:nsed Vncatlonal Nurses· Psychiatric Technician!!. Roberl. Anthony, Ph. D.. or the f>SYChology rf at tM facility tor the mentally retarded. will speak at the event In the hospltal .audllorium. • Book's Nani e, Like Mesa's to Br~ng $?5 Prize 1-fiatory Is about lo rcpe.at Itself in Costa ~1csa. Author Edrlrk Mlller. ""ho has wrillen a \'Olume nn the evolution of the village of Harper lhrough ii! days as Goat Hill to the prcse.ni, made lhe dl~losure Tues· da.v . i\11Her. or 3157 Idaho Lant, ran lntn controversy and discord rece ntly \~hen he 11nno11nced the hJ!lory book 11,·ould be tltl- cd Goat Hill, jusl as the community w11.s In the Depression. Just 50 years lo the week Cm;ta t\1es~ 1\·as chosen as Ute city·~ name in a CGn· test lhat drtY.' entries from as far ll!li Florida and f\Ul\er will stage a similar conrest to name the history' book. Times change. he told the Costa filciut 1-listoricat Soc~l.Y Tuesday nlgtlt as It met to reviev.· t&e title question , but the contest prize money \t·on't. The late Mrs. Alice Plumer v.·on $2S ror submitting CO$la Mes• and the winn(lr of the March 16 through 30 compe~illon will " rectl\'e the same stipend. Entries moy be mailed to: History Ti· Ile Contest, P.O. B@ 1300, C0o1ta MeMI. 111e Jllstorlcal Society ""as handed the title nap nearly •Ix weeks ago after a col- orlul Cosia. ~1esrCi~y Council seuion ln which Coat 11111 was opposed. b.)' a 3 to 2 vote. A l!ubsrqtJenl proposaLby Mrs. Dorothy Cllnch, library t.mploye and hlstotlan, to produce a volume slimmer thin Miller'• wa.s shelved wiUI alter the contest. .. Umbrl!!llas won't be sold, bbt that's .about all tha( Isn't sho'wn on the llemtiea list of goods Including 40 bicycles. two boats, • television set, jtwclry and much more. Auttloncer for the day will be Sgt. Bob Goode, who notes tllat ble~cles going on the block m.ay now be viewed during daytime police business hours. S tor k ~Jarkel 1 N6W YOl\K (AP) -The •tock ll)&rktl clung to a fracllonal lead late this alter.. noon In light trading. (See quotations. Paau 2f.27T. • ,. Today's Flaal N.Y. Stoeks • TEN CENTS a T1·i0Nabhed In Mesa Hit With Raps By ARmUR R. VINSE~ Of ""' O.llY ,Ii.I St1n A trio suspected of a crOss-country crime wave, ended Friday by their •n- ticllmactic capture in Costa Mesa, today are charged with the savage robbery· mur-der of a Colorado pawnbroker. First degree murder complainll nam· ing the male partner in an alleied Bomi1 and Clyde-type bandit team and two mert companions were issued this mornh1g In Colorado Springs. The trio and the .alleged Bormie. charg- ed only with a local burglary, will be (luestioned about the Feb. 23 murder or a wealthy Newport Beach man and also 1 maniacal ice·pick slaying in Mlssoorl "And we've cleared up a number of armed robberies in this area," said Costa Mesa Police DelecUve Captain Bob Green, mentioning several Orange Coast cities. P11urder count& against the three fasl- traveUng men were revealed in Cost.a Mesa by Carl-Petry, chief of detedlvu for the Colorado Springs Pollet Depart- ment The new charges against~Jamts-E. Jackson, 15, of Independence , Mo., Jack C. Matney, n. of Denver, Colo., and Howard R. Tschirhart, 31 , of Costa Mesa, are UP.tcted to take precedence over loci! oounts. Detective Chief Petry, who llew to Orange County Monday night with Depu- ly hiitrkt Aitorney Allen Spurgeon, .said evi~ Cound when they were captured eon~ the Color•do Springs case. ''It Was a particula rly brutal murder,•• he remlrked. Showing cok>r photog1"plu, Clllel Pelry told haw pawnbroker Erling NlelRn, II, was roe:rcllessly beaten to death with 1 rifie. the evening of Feb. 11 in busy downtown Colorado Springs. "It wa~ an obvious robbery," he said, adding that more than 20 pbtols, riDea and shotguns, plus jewelry and other pawned items were carried out or the store. A customer entered the modest Nielsen's Jewelry and Loan after the 5:45 p.m:-holdup-homicide to find the slightly built owner crouched pitifully on his restroom floor. He had been lrying lo escape the aavage blows. No dollar value has been e11.tablished on the stolen goods -some recovered locally -stolen by whoever tracked bloody footprints around the store while looting it. "They wer.e pawned items," ei:pla.lned Chief Petry, who said the actual murder weapon itself was recovered in th• Colorado Springs area afterward. Deputy District Attorney Spurgeon said the Nielsen pawn shop is localed on what locals know as GI Corner. where many broke Gls among the 30,000 at nearby Fort Carson go be£ore payday. . COsta Mesa police were notified the suspected desperadoes might be in the Ho.rbor Area last month and aurrounded (S.. CRIME, Pare 21 Orange Coast Wealher Thursday's weather picture? In a \\'Ord, groovy. The Man calls for suriny skle$ and warmer tempera· t.ures, which means about 85 along the coast and pushing 70 inland. . INSIDE TODi\'t' ·Give.a bu ti.ck of colltge drama 1tudtnu enough. rope and ,tlltU'll crtate thtir ofon 1'tpertorv companv. O r a n __g e .COGat Collegt it dofng ju1t that with its 'PltW erptrimental thea.· ter. Set Enterlainmenf, Pao• 80. l lrtt>t II ~:!1. : .CM-C.,l'IH IJ Clltcttl!lt U' I (llUJI... 11 ... , .... ~, " c ... M;...,. . " 'Ot~!fl HtlkU H Ol"l'ttl 11 ..... ,1 ,... • IRiefflilR_. .,. IJl'll-· 1•1? -..... ''"' """'"" ,. Mii-. . -~~------------~~--------~----- . r •• , / ---~------,. .! Olll Y ~llDl c 7 1 Bay Dev opment Conce~ts in County Hands ...,/" By JACK BROBACK CM ... IMllY , ....... fl An tlhauaUYe study po.slng MVtn l>OS'lble deveJopmenl concepts for Upper Ne"•port Bay was presented lo the Ofange County Board of Supervisors Tuesday and set for public hearing on April 3. The study stemmed from a proposal last ~ember by S1o1pervisor Robert Bat- tin lt'111t the county re5tudy the Upper Bay in view ot current concepts. BatUn of· terf4 an allefl\IU\•e to ll\e famed land tichtn1e bttw1en U>e couAty and the Irvine Company. Ht propoltd 11111 U,. county buy lhrtc cholin<I lalonb owned by the !jftlpll\jl for an f!llfmated SI mllllon, spend another $l million for dredging the ch11n· ntl two..(hlrds the wa.y up to the s<H:alltd narrows and leave the uppu one-third of the bay as an ecological pre&erve. Battln's plan was consldered as .11n alternative to the seven offered by the White House West Tourists Bug Secret Service UnaulhoriJ:ed tours of the San Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla. White Houses - while President Nixon and his family were there -have been taken by an un· disclosed number of people. The security violatlons w e r e acknowledged today as the chief of the Secrel Servi~, James J, Rowlev, testified before a Congressional !Uh. eommittee In Washington. O.C. Not all of Director Rowley's dillclosures were made public, but he said none of the Intruders were armed and will give Congress further infonnation in a con· fidenUal memo. Checks with other sources Indicated that the proposed law ls an attempt lo clarify vague Jaws on prosecution or trespassers on land used for Presidential residence. Under stale trespass regulations, pro- secution can only lake place If a person enters land without permission, then refuses to leave. Federal provisions for trespassing on Presidential residence areas is also vague. 'The la\\'. il was speculated. would fill some legal gaps and give the Secret Service stronger guildelines ror prosecut· ing uninviled visitors. 1na}ySls °II t t p Ir t d by ~ COunty Adm'inllira\lve Olflctr 1lobeil Tllomll, Director of Harbors ~s.m-. lliun· IY COUllMI. Mrlll\ JlfA!r. l!id Repl P~y M"1• -!!It' 11_.aolty Krause. Included in each concept art ~nomlc and land use analyses of benefit Mi cost ratio and annual user days. 1'he report states that conclusive com· parison between the various development · plans ~ould not be made unlw certain wu"'pUON wttt q_aade. Thell ....... ,u<iia inYOIVed lliOll•Y dtltrmlnaUw reaardlna the ret1Uv1: pu)lllc ~lorUy , of . yarlous recreat!Qfla\ t1111, thl lmportlnce of economic return. prpe:rv1Uon ol ecology and t h e availability of publlc funds. Jn 1ddllion to BatUn'a plan, the other .basic OQntepts Include the land exchange plaA, a maximum public ownership bounded by the toe of lhe bluffs and a develoPfnent iloag owner•hip lines. Variations Include either an soo-root wide channtl or • &OQ.foot v.•ldc wa terway, a water 5kl ba sin and an ecology reserve. Land and economic <.'Omparisons for the seven developinent concepts show : -PLAN ONE (Batlin's proposal with an 800-foot channel). \Yould involve 830 ac res including 41 1.8 nO\Y publicly owned. 243 acres of patenl tidelands to be purchased and ap additional 175.2 acres to be bought from the Jrvine Company. IWl Shllll P'hefl Lstimatetl la nd cusL under the Battin plan ls $1 1.t million; etilimated develo~ ment coat is $10.48 million for a total of $22 .4 million. -PLAN T\VO (a variation of Battin's pla n with the narrower channel and ln· creased shoreside develop1nenl ). Saine total acreage and breakdov.·n but \1•ith an increase In development co~l of $600,000 brl111ing total lnves1 1nent to $13 million . -PLAN TITREE (The proposed land exchange with a water ski basin at the upper end). Acreage v.·ould be Ices In lhat ()nly 116 acres would ~ purchased from the company. Land cost v.·ould be nil and ecology reserve). Total cost for develo~ ment $5.9 million. -PLAN FOUR (Land excha nge with de\:elopment cost $8.3 mill ion. -:_PLAN FIVE {Maxlmurn public ownership v.·ilh «IO-Cooi c h an n el l . • Purchase or 381 acres !or a total of l,036. Land cost. $21 million. deve lopment cost $14 million for a total of $35.69 million. -PLAN SIX (Muiffium p u b 1 I c O\l•nership v.•ith 600-foot chaniiel). Land cost $21.6 million, development cost $12.6 million for a total of $34.3 million. -PLAN SEVEN (Pr enl ownership with ecology reserve). L cos1,_,...· '".''-~ million, development cost. $5.1 · on for a tota! or $6.34 million . Estimated annual cosl of operationll range from a loss or cosl over potential incilme of $735,507 ron Battin'! plan to a $4~.699 annual profit under Plan Four. OTHER FACTORS In addition to the economic factors. the review group noted that other decision· making factors must also be taken into consideration. 'These include : -Pl-taintenance of an ecological balance for the area . -Hal'ing a Oex.ible type plan that can But he expressed worry that It is so 4!asy to penetrate what constitutes a vital defense perimeter and could b e dangerous if security weakness is leaked to potentially violent groups. "We have detected these people in· cidentally," Rowley told the sub- committee in his request for lighter security measures al the two coastal retreats. ''The $ecrel Service bas become con· cemed about the rising crescendo or na· tional militancy and confrontation, and inslan~s of the preachment of assassina· ti on and violent revo lution." the Stcret Service director said today. WOMAN EN ROUTE TO FUNERAL DIES IN ONE CAR (RIGHT) AFTER HITTING ANOTHER Her Auto Rams Pole at lnteraection, But Heart Attack May Have BHn Cause of Death be modified in the ruture to serve the. changing recreational need~. • -Providing a project ~·!thin the coun- ty's capacity to finance. -Providing a facility for statewide. These would include trespassing, in- terfering with vuards and prohib!Uon of noisy demonstrations. In San Clemente, where a few demonstrations and trespassing on the grounds of the Western Whlte House have taken plact, Chief of Police Clifford Mur· ray said he was aware of the pending legislation. "What we wertn't completely aware or. however, was the specific content of lhal legislation," he added. Murray said that there had betn a few problems in the past several months of persons... entering the Western White Haase grodnds unlnvtttd. \ "We had three demonstrations here last year with only one big one. and il seems that the segment of the proposed legislation on that matter would apply more to the Washington White House and Jen to the one In san Clemente," be ad· ded. " ..• In my view, the militancy of the dissi dent groups in our midst wUI in· crease in fervor ..• th is activity could generate a 1reater propensity for attacks upon our leaders. ''. •• There have been many incidents in recent years that have caused WI to question the adequacy of our legal pro- tective authority." Newsmen asked Rowley whether he was referring to successful inlruslons at San Clemente and Key Biscayne. He said he was, and indicated there htd been others, too, at vacation residences of previous presidents. Rowley urced passagt of a bill to pro- hibit unauthoriied entry into the building or grounds of a temporary presidential residence: make It a federal crime to in· terfere with a secret Hrvlce a1ent. and prohibit loud demonstrat.lons near a preaidentlal residence whfch mlabt Im· pOde pruldentlol bu~ness. 'Neighbors' Hit Private Plane Use at Los Al Proposed use of Los Alamltoa Naval Air Station as an airport for private planes ran headlong into strong op. imltion 'I'uesday from all cities bordering on the facility. The Navy last week announced plins to ' abandon the slation as a reserve training base by mld·l971. The county Airport Commission had urged acquisition of the facility by the county for general aviation use. From P .. e J Objecting otthis concept Tuesday were \Vllllam Krause, !AS Alamitos city manager; Larry Schmidt, Garden Grove: city councilman; Jim Clark, representing the Collge Park Homeowners AsaociaUon of Seal Beach ; William Young, Buena Park planning commissioner and Sharon Pritchet, rtprtsenting the Concerned Citizens of Cypress. CRIME WAVE ... their house at ~14 1,; Bernard St. Friday morning. Patricia Jackson . 24, tried to escape out the back door but was captured and the three males surrendered without gunplay although they were heavily arm· .... "This department has done a wonderful Job of Investigation," the Colorado Sprines chler of detectives said today. He said the Jackson woman is not charged in lhe pawnshop owne r's murder. She was arraigned Monday In Harbor Judie.Jal District Court on a burglary charge, whUe the men were arraigned on armed robbery ,complalnts. The alk!ged Bonnie and Clyde are also wanted on warrant.a charging them with armed robbery and lorgery In lndepen. dence, Mo., while police in Buckner and DAILY PILOT Oii.ANGE COAIT l"UILllHIN~ COMP'AliY l obert N. Weed P'r.,lclt nT .,,., P'llOlllJ\lr J1clr; l . C11rl1v Vic;t P'rt11C1tftl 1..a Gl!'ltrlt M•~r lhome1 K1 1•ll ' l'l!at l~em 11 A. M11rphin1 M1n19"'9 .,1..,. C•te Mn• Office llO W11I 81v S!reet M1ilint A'dr111: P.O. loir 1560. 92616 o~, Offlc.n N1wporl i1etl'H 2111 W"I l•lbN IOUl1ve•f Llfuii. INC:ll l >Jt l'01'11t ""IM .... HunllroffoO~ ltKll: 1'171 11•~11 10\l~V•rd a.in (lt,.,..,lt; a1 ,...,,,., [I (lltl•flO II.HI ~ll'I" P'IL.Ot, wlt!I wllldl II c~ *'ot i't-·-rf!!l. " ,,...u.,,.., , .. ,, U'C90• $ ...... fir In "'"''" ecltllON fol' Llfll!M l *C!\. H""'*1 IMdl. c .. ,. Mete, Hl>Olttf!e'-1 leedl "Ill f-ttln V1l!ty, 11111'111 wlfh i.,. , .. ~1 .ini.nt.. o.-...,. CM11 -~W>lnf CO<rlNnr prtntlnt • .i.ti~ Jr• et un ""'-'' 111..0. ltw.. NtwMtt IHdl. 1Nf 0 Wtll llr &"'"I. C.0.11 Mff.t, T .. .,..... 17141 14J..CJJI CJ-.IW A4•fffW111t i4J·S671 CeorrlfM, lt1t, 0•<111\fll c .. 11 fl\ICMl1llill1 c_,,....v. No MWI 1111rlft, lll11o r1t1•••· IMllltrlll Pl'le!ll, Ir Mll'lrl!M-'1 llef1ln """' DI r~ Wltfllvl ~!It ,.,.. ll'fwl"" M C'Nl"f"lll\I e~. hcfr'll ci.11 '°''•r. ,. .. 11 HI*--" INtll eM (Mlt Mtl•1 eHiorllle ...... f tl.ilt<'\ tr te<t1"tr U.OI mat1thl1: by l'flell UJe -111111 l!llllllry ""1'"•'"""' .,,. ~Ill!.,, KMSU City want to question them. Interrogation Is al&a anl\clpat.ed con· cernlng the Feb. 23 shooting· death of reUred movie produetr William Harris, 60, of 2012 Anchor Way, ln the Baycrest district of Newport Beach. Detectives theorite he 1 u r p l 1 e d burglars who had broken into his elegant home and was guMed down , while his 01,•n .38 caliber revol ver had been fired three limes. The Jacksons, 'J'schirhart and Matney -apparently a aeaf·mui.e-are known \u have been in the area the following day v.·hen a ring crucial to the Colorado case \VIS pawned . Costa Mesa's Capt. Green said the y have been linked to a $500 Newport Beach liquor store holdup, a similar job In Laguna Beach and a Costa Mesa market robbery. Authorities In Kansas City. Mo .. also are anxious to question the aUeaed desperadoes about a motel robbery in which the mana1er was fatally stabbed ne:arly 200 tJmes with an Ice pick. "But that doesn't much fit hetr method of operation," .said one m.- vestigator. The three male murder au11pects were returned to Oran1e County Jail thia morning after being he.avlly Interrogated at the city jail, Including the alle1ed deaf· mute. Oft~tives then lelt seeking another person for question ing In connectioD with the case. Most of the opponents to an airport plan urged that the property be converted to a reRio nal park. Supervisor David Baker proposed that a study group composed of representllivs of the affected cities. assistants to the county supervisors the county avlat.lon director, a planning commissioner and an airport commi~sioner be named to "develop plans for the highest and best use of the facility." The su pervi!<>rs adopted Baktr"s pro· posal but Supervisor Alton E. Allen warn· td that "this is a tough de<!tslon that wll\ have go be made by the county. Aviation needs must be considered." HALLUCINOGENIC DRUG RULE ASKED WASIJlNGTON U(PI)' -Th• Just ice Department has recom- mended that five relatively ne1v hslluclnogen!c dru1s be ll1tfd as dangerous drugs, making the I r manufacture, sale or po~ion a violation of federal law. The live depressants and stimulant drugs are MDA (methylene diol.,)' amphetamine): M~!DA (methoxy. methylene); ?tthtOA (melhoJy. Tf\tA (trimethoxy amphetamine ); 318 (n~thyl.J·plperdyl benzilatel: and JB-3 36 ( •'m • l hy l~·Plptrdyl bentllate}. 'Too Big' Boat Builde1· Faces Newport Council Balboa resi~nl Ed Gould Jr. Is OOl!d· ing a 50-foot boat on his SS.foot )ot. It overhanir the. sidewalk and. be:sldts that, it is loc11ted In ~ slMyard s~tblck which is another v\olation or the city codt. Nc'4'PQrl Beach clly ofncaldom. how· ever. Is taking Ole Gould boat-bulldlna epiMX'le \\'Ith a grain ol 1111. Gould. 315 Lindo A1'f . said he on\ rieerlt :u1other 90 day~ to pour the fiber· gliu:s sloop In the mold he ho E con· 5tructed and move ii olf to a boat yard. ..It "'ould take us that long to proce~s the paperwork so lefs g/v41 him his to days," 11•ld Councilman Howard Rogeri llt"hCn the m.'.ltter ca1nc up at City Coun- ' cil meetin~ this wttk. "I can'I help but admire the ded ica- tion or someone who has built a SO.loot. bo.at on a 35-fool lot and has· the public relations ability to get e\•eryonc on hl! block tn approve," Rogers said. (",ould had collecttd tilt' signatures of 2!t of hli nelghborg cm • petition s•ylng th~v have no objectJoni. "I lmAglne II w11s mv h1ult in the bt· alnning for having 11uCh 11r1e ldeu." • Gould said . "But I come from Arl10n1 :ind :t rRnt'h in Palos Verdes "'htrt Ulfrt "''' lots of land.'' Gould, who Is 27. sald he will saJI the boat to "5ooih Amerlc1 'vlth hJa wUfi, Nelly, who i.s 1 native of Pen.i. benefit as eompared to local benefit. . Beach Woman l(illed -Providing a facilit y that will meet current recreational deficiencie s, as well as providing for future netds. The reporl also warned that the supervisors must make pr i mar y determinations relating to policy. On Way to Funerar· .. l\tATIER OF FUNDS "First is the matter of funds that can be allocated for land acquisition and development of this project. Should it be funded on a pay-as-you-go basis, or should il be taken to the voters for ap- proval of a bond issue~ Death reaped it.a grim harvest twice Tuesday afternoon by claiming the life or a 71-year-old Huntington Beach woman who ditd en route lo a. friend's funeral. Mrs. Mary Ethel hlillf was driving the last car In a funeral proceuion beaded for \\!estmins ter h1emorial Park when Mr automobile suddenly crossed two traf. fie lanes, striking another car and a signal standard, pollCe said. The cause or her death has not yet been determined, but coroner's deputies ~h•ve sc~eduled, an '~loP5Y t<¥1ay to disoover if Beach Publisher _, In Assembly Race Newspaper publisher A. A. Van Petten of Huntington Beach today announced his candidacy for the 70th District Assembly seat held by Robert Burke of that clty. V11n Petten, 45, of 9052 Pioneer Drive. filed his papers with County Clerk William E. St John. He wlll run In the assembly race as a Democrat. Van Pelten publishes the "Liberator." a monthly publication cenl.tred in the Huntington Beach arta. It could have been a hear! attack. The elderly woman was pronounced dead on arrival at Westminster Com· munity lfospilal shortly after the 1: 37 p.m. accident, accord ing to police reports. Officer t-.1anue1 llinson. a traffic In- vesti gator for the \Vestminsler police department. said both veh icles, as welltus the traffic signal were totaled by Lile fi'n. pact. Shizue Natsuhara, 41 , of Garden·Grovt, who was the driver of the other car, escaped unhurt. he sa id. Mrs. Miller was traveling northward on Beach Blvd, in the number one lane in the vicinity of Bolsa Avenue when the tradegy occurred, Hinson said. Funeral arrangements are pending al Dilday Mortuary following the coroner·s investigation. The dead woman 's address v.•as determined lo be 1403 Delaware St.. Huntington Beach. bul as of this morning mortuary operat ors had not heard from survivors. ~frs. Miller was on her way to bury ~1rs. Fairy R. Orens, 77, of 811 Calirornia St., }Juntington Bench. who died Friday after hair a century's residency in the ci· ty, accotding to officials from Smith's mortuary v.·ho handled the funeral ar· rangements for l\.1rs. Orens. "Another is the priority of use between ecology areas. waterfront c<1mmercia \ use. which is orienttd primarily to boating. or beach and park use that is oriented primarily to sv.•imming and pic- nicking." The study group noted that one method used in evaluating developmen t alternatives is the anticipated o~mber o{ user da ys. but warned that these may be misleading because 11 change in the ac reage allocated lo various uses will materially change the number of user clays for any one of the development coo- cepts. For comparison, plans one and twn (Battin's) would provide an estimated 4 to 4.5 million user days, pla n three , with· I.he v.'ater ski basin, 8.5 million user days, olan four 4.9 million, plan five, 10 million. plan slx , 6.3 million, and plan seven, 3.!i million. Nixon Lhnits Import Of Canada Crude Oil WASHINGTON (AP) -President Ni1 .. on issued a proclamation today tem · porarily limltlng crude oil imports from. Canada in parts of the United Slates. And the subj1ef is lovt. It's for tvryon1 b•tw•en the •ges of 16.21. Who fetl. Who und•rst•nd. Who know ebout lo ... e. There will b1 fi.,.e n•tion1I recognifion pri111, bt1ut iful di1mond p1nd1nts •1pec.i•lly design ed by Or1n91 Blo11om. Thi c.enl1st closes May IS , 1970, So hurry. Thi timt i1 now. l!Jltl~~J' '1 ~ rJJ /Mt Mftdrtq/ far/(f' ~ CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE I Ul NEW,ORT AVE . COSTA MESA H YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE S•l·HOI I • • I • Wtdt1ts41l, Mitch ll, l q10 DAILY Pll.OT f La~e1~ to ~eep. Atkin s Off Stand ' Jet Delay Upsets ,Israe~ By United Pm1 h&erutloal The laraell cabloet called a special session today to discuss lbe delay in President Nil:on '11 reply tAl Tel ·Anv·s re· quest ror tddilional j f: l warplanes and arms. SWedlih Interviewer Monday thaJ, he was prepared \o go to the Soviet Union for. more ~·eaponry It the need arises. l)OWe.rs for a political solution. quested planes and will have the United States has been as Phantoms and I I 0 d(l!ver\ng new arms to Slcybawks In Its air arsenal. LOS ANGE~E~ (UP!) - Susan Atkins, whose con- fession in the bll.arre Tate- LaBianca slaylngs led to the indictment or herself and five others, wUI repudiate her story, according to the 1811.'YCr ""ho today sought to represent her. Attorney Dave Shinn. who expe<:b to fonnally become the young woman's lawyer in court today. u.Jd sbe will not repeal her grand jury revela- tions to the trial jury. Miss Atkins. 21. asked the court for ~rmissiOf! to hire Shinn and to fire the lawyer who originally advised her to tell her story to the grand jury. ShiM previously .ha! ad- vised Charles Manson, ac· cused mastermind of the murders. "I "'ill keep her off the st.and," Shinn said. "She will deny all her previous 1tate111enls." Miss Atkins visited Manson in county jail last week and li~ned to his views on how the defense should be con- ducted. She indlcated then she was ha ving second thoughts about repeating her ac- cu!'aions before a jury. Shinn said he had talked briefly wllh 1w1iss Atkins and that sbe wanted him to represent her because he had been in touch with ~tan.son and was "closer to the case." Deputy District Attorney Vincent T. Bugliosi said he was not surprised by the change ol attorneys, and ad· ded that "it Was onl:y a malter of time after she Qnce 53w Manson." However, Bugl\osi·said. "her repudiation will not stand up because most of \\'hat she has said has been.C{lrroboraled by other witnesses and other evidence." Richard Caballero, t.f i s s Lindbergh Book Slated Ort WWII NEW YORK (UPI) Charles A. Lindbergh is publishing the journals he kept during World War 11; H was announced Tuesday. 'l'h> book, lo be called "'l'h> Wartime Journals of Charles A. Lindbergh,·• \\'ill be re- leased next September, 2~ years 11fter he made t.l'tt last entry. Harcourt. Bruce & W o r 1 d Inc. is the publisher. "I was lak ing part Jn one of lM great crises O{ \\'Orld hist.ory ,'' Lindbergh wrote. ''Aviation constituted a new and possibly decisive element in prevenling or fighting a war and l was in a unique posi· Uon to obstrve European avia· lion -especially its military aspects." The lirsl pilot to fly solo across the Atlantic kepl lhe journal in small lealhe.rbound books. lt was the only time in his life he kept a sust.alned diary. Toda y. Lindbergh is noLet1 ror his interest in con· servalion R ecruit Offi ce H it by Blaze ·URBANA , 111. fU Pll -A fire broke out in the Air Force recruiting office early today in this University of Illinois town. Police said a broken front windov.· indicated the fire had been set, perhaps with a firebomb . Firemen from neighboring Champaign and the university helped Urbana firemen fight the blaze. ' A~' original attoroey, said followinc the meeUna: between the young wom10 -and botanson that be and Manson had shary differences over the tactics that should be used in Miss Atkins< defense. , The trial has been scbedul~ for Mnrch so. but it Is an- ticipated there will be defense requests for a postponement, partly betause of the ap- pointment last week o f Charles Hollopeter to defend Manson. · Alter his first meeting with f\1anson, Hollopeter said the best trial strategy could be a "united front" for all !iJ: defendants. FBI Checks Man 's 'Alibi In Slayings NEW YORK (UPI) Federal authorities today in- \•esliga\cd the alibi of a 29· year-old dishwasher charged by New Jersey aultloritles with the double rape-murder of a mother of four and her 14· year-<1ld niece. Lawton Jamison turn e d bimseU in to the FBI Ttiesdlly and \\"BS held in $250,000 bail on federal charges of driving the murdered woman's blood· spattered, white 'f'.hunderbird across a state line. Jamison's attorney, t.fartin Ktimke. says his clieht found the car abandoned on a Brooklyn street when he was on his \.\'ay home alter spen-- dl~ the night of the murders \l'ilh friends. An Essex County warrant. signed" by prosecu"tor Joseph P. Lordi. accuses Jamison of raping ?o.1.rs. Eleanor Quilban. 26. of Carteret. N.J .. and h~r niece. Debra De Los Reyes, 14. of Newark. last Friday. shooting them in the heal! and dumping their bodies about a mile from each other in suburban Fairfield, N.J. U.S. commissioner Vin~nt Catoggio set Frida)' at 2:30 p.m. for a hearing on the slolen·car charge. Jamison is expected to be turned over to New Jersey authorities 1t that time. Police in Queens say a patrolman saw the Thun- derbird run a red light early Saturday and flagged down lhe driver. Unable to produce a driver·s license. they said, Jamii-;on showed the patrolman his Social Security card as identification and was given a summons. He abandoned the ear a few minutes later1 fter an attempt t.o get it going again proved unsuccessful. Police located the car later in the day in response to inquiries from New Jersey and found that the seats \\"ere bloodstained. Winnitag Kiss 1, l President Nixon look s surprised alter he was kissed b_y Kristin Ann Vivion , of Rawlings. Wyo.: at a din-- ner honoting members of Congress given by the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Kris tin is a state win. ner in the Veterans' "Voice of Democracy" com- petition, Whithe1· Eugene Diplomatic sourees said the cabinet, concerned by the latest appaernt change of mood In Washington, may decide to recall its a"m- ba55ador to the United States, Yitzhak Rabin. f o r con· sullations. "Tht United States has knocked down \Yhal it really could ·do to create a · just ~nd lasting peace In our area," Hussein said. "Instead of \\'orking with the other big Israel.'' The editor, Mohammed From. ~lro, the editor of I.he~. Hassanien Helkal. uid Egy~l 1emJofI1c1al newspaper A I has two alternatives to this Ahram, who Is a confidante of ·buildup -J'rlatct. Israeli air Presl$fenl Gama I A b de I !lUperlorlty or build up a Nasser, predicted the tnae.11 powerful air dtfense system. 1ir l"brte aoon will get the re •. * * * Wl1o's J ew? Rulin g Made Israeli newspapers reflected the official conce.rn. Maariv and Yediot Arahonot said of· ficia\s in Jerusalenl were JERUSALE!\1 (AP) "astonished" at the de\Ry but ?ifONTREAL IUPll -Eric sum" are "fine," according .to Israel's parliament hanunered . College Youth Helil Over Poisoning Try did not regard the situation as Kranz. accused of using 8 pig Dr. John Harrold, who treated out ao an!wer today to an age. "disquieting." parasife in an attempt to them. They were release4 old religiou! problem which President Niion 53id on Jan. !XII.son his four college room· from hospital lasl Thursday, threatened to split the Jewis 30 he would have a decision on mates. will remain in jail but remain under observation. state -"Who Is a Jew?" the Israeli request In 30 days. without bail until h is They were infested with · In 11 linked de c is Ion , Israel is 158id to bave askedPbanfor preliminary hearing next Mon· massive dMel of parasite eggs legislators b'anted f u 11 a total or UO new F4 · d citizenship rights to non - and •4 Skyh k' ay · that acn grow into a wOflll toms " aw s. Sessions Court Jud ge seven inches · in length. The Jewish members of mixed No rea!on t!as1 ·rn g~~n Jl.1aurice Rousseau withheld parasite causes damage to the marriages immlfl'atlng t 0 for lhtJ:e de ay h l n or~dan them bail Tue!day on the grounds liver and lungs in pigs, though Israel. Was ington ave sai that a report of Kranz' mental the effect on humans is not The rulinf comes at a time President la holding off the condition had not yet been kno\\'ll . One of the four came when israe Is fighting ror the decision for rear of provoking h l K · 1 d lh o H release ol thousands of Sov1'el the Soviets into sending more made and t a ranz 1s an very c ose to ea , r. ar~ arms to the Arab world. Ameorlcan . rold said, and one may have Jews -many in mixed DiplomaUc sources In Lon· Kranz, 23, of tlempstead, suffered permanent I u n g families -who want to come don said the Soviets. too, were N.V .• is accused of attempting damage. to the national homeland. holding ofI on sending more nnirder by poisoning his four Another 15 friends who After a stormy session anns to Egypt. pending the roommates wilh a parasite visited the four during the whJch ran into the early hours, outCome of the lat&t Big Four never be.fore found in man. winter c i r n iv a I week the 120-seat Knesset (parlla· \\1ASHINGTON IUPI) -back for the pre.mier of a efforts to find a basis for set· Kranz had studied parasito-festivitie s in February con· ment) passed a he av 11 y Sen. Eugene J. f\.fcCarthy (0.. movie about his 1968 cam· tlemenl in the 1--ijddle East. logy in Jl.fonJreal since 1968. tacted Dr. Harrold, who amended definJUoo of ancient. MiM.), said today he has not paign, titled "America is Hard One Arab leader, King The · four students infested believes three may be mildly rabbinical law by a 51-14 vote. c106td the door to another to See." Hussein of Jordan, told a with the parasite "ascaris infested. There were nine abstentiont. presiaential bid in 1972. But,_:::.::::: ________ _::=:::_::_:.:::::::._.=:_:_.:....:::..:.....:....::._.:.... ___ :_.:....;:::.:_.:.... _________________ _ neither has he opeoed il. Exactly two years since his "victory " in the 1968 New Hampshire primary that preceded Lyndon 8. Johnson's withdrawal. and two years before the next fint-in-nation New Ha1n1>5hire test vote, McCarthy declined to be specific about his 1972 plans. "ll's t~·o years off. I ha\"en'I eliminated it. I haven·t done anything about ii." In an interview before. heading to New Hampshire to mark the second anniversary of his 1960 success, in '>''hich he barely Jost in th e Democratic ~ r i m· a r y to Johnson, McCarthy left all his options open. The possible options include running as a third-party can- didate. He announc:ed several months ago he \\'ould not seek re -election to the Senate on the Democratic ticket this year. But he was not closing out the possibility of again running as a Democrat · in the tm preside11tial primaries, pro- vided the party carries out ex· tensive refonns. "There could be change enough. but I don 't kno\v if there will be.1• McCarthy said. He is particularly interested in revision of the national con- vention pr~ess to make state delegations more represen- tative of their party's mem- bers back home. Some of Piofc:Carthy's m a i n backers in the March 12, 1968, New Hampshitt: Democrallc primary arranged a reception and buffet for him Thursday at Hanover. H~ also was going -·- resounding reasons you should buy a new · vrolet instead of a new something else: ' Addict, 12 , Returns To Honie in S lums 11Qd1•rw1lllewlue. No ocber' cu in Chevrolcc.'a 6dd gjvea: JOO • muc:h back on your initial hnatment Year after year. You may never wl.l'.lt to KU )'Out Chnrrolet, bat if JOU do, ifD be rewardins. 2 De1pclownwlue. 6 Slde·suanlbeams. A 11cel lide-auard beam ii built in~ every big Cbcvrolet 'a door for added protection and peace of minct. • NEW YORK IAP) -Ralph de Jesus, the 12·year-old ad· diet who shocked a legislative hearing last month when he descri bed hi11 use of heroilt. has returned to his famil y's home in a slum filled wit h drug pushers. Dr. J udianne Den s en - Gerbe r. clinical director of the Odyssey House for narcotics rehabilitation, said Tuesday that Ralph had been sent home because he did nol fit in with the teeD-age addicts the center was designed for. "He literally needed 'The Three Bears' told to him every night," she said. She said the special at- te.nlion to Ralph '>''as resented by youngsl.ers in the 13 to 17· year-old group. At-his family's apartment in the Hunts Point section or the Bronx. Ralph said he left because his special privileges had been taken a~·ay. He said he had stopped using drugs. On Feb. 26, Ralph sat on his doctor's lap and told legislators how he became ad· dieted to heroin . St.a le Assemblyman Manuel Ramos left the room with tears run· nlng down his f~. Ramos. who represents the disbict where Ralph lives, uid TUesday be would seek help for the boy. When you buy a Chcvrotet JOG pt odusiW': things like ftush-and-dly rocket panda which help combd rust. And inner fenders that keep your outer fcndcn 1ookin11ood Jonaer. 3 Smoolll,•1100111 ride. Chevrolet aprinp aic computer ldcctcd. Linked with Fu.II Coil auspen1ion and advanced body mountin1 system, it makes OW' bis rider a smooth rider. 4 ln!Pl'e11"'8 styli,.. . Rcaaon enou1h alone to 10 with Chevrolet. The impnuion is that it's an expensive. ar. ii you want to make an impra.!!iOll. 5 Masshe lullerlon. . Result? Room to atfttch out or to sit ull. A lot of room ror people •nd their lunaae. Olevrolct actually has more front Jee room thu any o..her car in ita 6dd. 8 Elctepllonal erwtnes. Chcwrolet's standard 3.50-cutric·inch VI rom on rciuJu r ucL So doct an even l•raer 400-cubic-iocb VI th•t you ca.n order. There art also foUr other fine performlna enaiM$ av•ilable .. 9 'hmer".dol•sekcliofi.. Of colors. Of acccuorics. Of c.nsina. Of transmiSsions. Of fabrics. Of custom fcatura yoo cu add. And of modtla. to pick from. There arc nine dltrcrcnt bi& Chevrolets alone. 10 Amerlca'stawocllll!. . Sornethln1 die a new .. IOMC!thinaello .. can"ldaim.: America'a1D01t popular car, lfKCiomapoak loudertbu YIOl"ds. doesn't lhls llY 1<>'methin1 to you? See )'OW' Cl>evrolct deaW. Bank Indian Giver ' But Guard's Wido ,w w Get $91 3 Bac k ClllCAGO (UPI) -The Gateway National Bank ga\·e fl.frs. Ursula Mix $913 l\'hcn her husband, a bank guard, wu killed In an attempted t-Jldup -then the bank demanded and got the money back. Toda y fl.frs. Mix SI.Id the president of the Bank told her the mooey would be returned. "He told me there h&d been a misunderstanding and that t ?.1>0ld ha,·e the money 'back." t.fl'I. ~Ux said. l\1rs. Mix. a ;ro.year-<1ld Im· mlgrttnt from East Genhany. mother of three children. said lhe received the money from t.he bank aft~r her husband, Richard, 42, was shot by a guM1an las\ December. T'he money amounted to 1 month'• pay for her husband. "It's not. our fault if a guy gets his head shot off. I can·t help Iha!,., bank president who preoo:led him In office. She said Poulas told her that her husband 's hospital bills amounted to more Uuin $'900 but. lhal she later found out George P. Poulas said when W .or k man's PompensaUon questioned aboul why the bank _paid for tht bospitaliution. had demanded the return a· "'Nobody gtt.s pa.id anything lhe money. for services nol reDdered." On Tuesday, Mrs. Piflx uld Paulas tokl. reporters who Pou1as sumoned her to the questK>llftt him about the mat- bank las\ month and ordered t.er. her to sign a check for $913 Mr1. 1-fli said 11hc med the bef~e he would release an in· $913 to pay for her husband 's surance check for $S.036. Mrs. runeral eipenses. l\1i:,: 68.id she later recei\'td "They told me to come down anolher $$.000 in Insurance to· the bank and pick up the money due to a double In-money but I told them I don'\ demnlty clause In the In· want to go down there. The so.ranee policy. • bank ha:; bad memories for She ~aid \hat in demanding me," f\frs. !\fix iiald today. the return or the $913. Poulas Sht 111ald that Pou1as assured . ' . Puttln1you tlnt;kffps us tint. ...... ' told her that an error had her the money would be 1CDt been mad• by Ille preald<nt to l1<r by me5St111er. I----------------':""'"---------------'----------:-:"."-• • ,, ' •• • . ' • ' ------- . . . •DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE No Law Against lt . . • Costa Me'*'' John Kelly has the Halecrest area of town in a tailspin. Re has an airplane in his front yard. His neighbors don't like it. Trouble is, no law exists against having an air· plane in your front yard and up to this point not too many people have been concerned '8.bout this vacuftm In the municipal code books. Something had to be done and 'vhat was done wss tbe drafting of a Jaw making it illegal to have an air· plane in your front yard. The ·City Council was 50me-- What cautious about the law, howeyer, and referred the problem -not what you'd call .a community.v.'ide problem -back to the staff for further study. . Outlawing a plane in the front yard because some· body doesn't like the cluttered look it ca~ses can log1· cally be extended to the point of opening a ridiculous Pandora's Lawbook of city code violations. Costa Mesa has upwards of 75:000 citizens nov.1, sn the potential for tailoring laws to fit the personally of- fensive characteristics of each is staggering. The city has more pressing dulie~ than v.•riting rules for individual application. Jf Mr. Kelly's plane is an eyesore, some other way should be found to re· move it. Alaska Spectacular International exchanges such as world's fairs and !imilar productions on a smaller :i;;cale are increasing· Iy popular. but a new. pioneering kind opens Thursday in Costa f\-Iesa. The Alask8 Trade and Travel Exposition, Cor which the northernmost state budgeted $100,000, will continue for 10 days at South Coa st P laza and Town Center. • The show lncludos oxhlbits by every maJor Alaskan city. plus a fascinatlng array of data and information comparable lo 'a walking tour of the entire 1tate. Besides the widespread economic re!ults of helping further to open northern trade and tourism, more than 700 Orange County schools }\ave been invited to bring fiel d trips for the educatjonal advantages. Good show. Gov. Miller -and all -we're sure it 'viii be . Scrap Paper. for Ogata Nothing is as old as yesterday's newspaper, sup- posedly. but some of yesterday's newpapers contain stories of continuing in1portance. One or them is the sad story of Justin Ogata. 16. a Costa Mesa High School student who faces life para· Jyzed as the result of a practice wrestling match acci· dent . Students from throughout the Ne,vport·Mesa Uni· fled School District -whether they know Justin per· sonally or not -have organized a scrap paper drive for Saturday. It is one of many benefits which will add to the Justin Ogata Fund. All deserve generous com- munity support. ~ Nothing is as old as yesterday's newspaper when you want to know what's happening t.oday -or Satur· day -but yesterday's newspaper does have a definite value. By the ton, yesterday's newspaper is '''Orth S14 to a Los Angeles pulp plant and kids organizing the drive hope to gather 100 tons. Jiospital care costs average con siderably more than $14 per day. · • Not since Colonial times have individual stales staged such cooperative programs end Alaska Gov. Keith A1iller. the Alaska Business Coun~il, plus all others involved are to be ·congratulated. ..Justin Ogata is 16 and his hospital days stretch f~r into a future that is no longer a s bright as it \vas once. c '!IK/f INCIJOISU ~l)ENHJ! I WASTREATEP ll!IE NJ At18KAH IH PAA!Sf' Political Activis11i iti Peace Corps Embarrassment Overseas WASffiNGTON -The President. the vice president and the secretary of state have now had enough experimce ~'ith the high spirits or the politiCally turbulent Peace Corps to wonder if this experiment in spreading America's youthful idealism over the world has not gotten badly off the tracks. To be quite blunt about it, Secretary of State William P. Rogers and Vice Presi· dent Spiro T. Agnew have been acutely embarrassed abroad by demonstrations of Pea.cc Corpsmen against American policy. The rtsull is that there woold be no great sense ol disappointment or depriva· tion in the e:xecullve branch if Congress were to Jop off $20. $30 or $40 milllon from requed.ed funds of $91' million for the Peace Corps in 1970-71. and reduce its political adivism accordingly. ACTIVlTIES OF Peace Corpsmen In a do:ten countries ha ve held up lo public calumny the polities or a counlry they are suppmed 10 represent. They have done M> in Ethiopia. Llberia, Tunisia, Afahani6tan, Chile, Peru. Ken ya, Niger, Turkey. Braiil. Thailand. Togo. In some cases. such as Ethiopia , the corpsmen haYe fannrd yo u t h f u I discontent wilh existing government. pro. test~ the existi ng socia l order and, in general. ha\'e placed a heavy strain on American r elations with host governments. Secretary of Slate Rogers returned from his recent African trip badly ou t of ~rts over the behavior of Pe.ace Corps-men who had exposed b I a c k arm·· bands. snorted their disapprova l. and tumed their backs on him as he expound· ed American pohcy at the American em- bassy. AG~"EW WAS cross.e'Jamined by Far Richard WihOn I Easter" statesmen on whether or not tht Peace Corpsmen. as represenlalives of the U.S. government. 1vere expressing hostile attitudes hidden beneath the surface of American friendship and cooperation. A strange theory. supported by a Ftderal Ol1trict Court dttision in Rhode 1sland, undttlies political activism in the Peace Corps. The corpsmen, by this doc· trine. are not government officials cv representatives, but volunteers finan<..'ed by the U.S. government and entitled to all the rights and privileges of private citizens. If they wish to protest lhe Vietnam war. the pace of integration. the milltary- induslrial C001plex, the ABM or Spiro Ajnew they canndt be.disciplined because their constitutional rights \lo'OUid be dtnied. If they wish to condemn the government of the country in which they are strving. agitate among its youth. de· nounce il<; leade rs that is no concern of the Peace Co rps. EITllER. Of TUESE for1ns of political activity is flaffeantly in \"IO!ation of the rules of the Peace Corps and bas been from the beginning. The era ol permissi\•eness besan 11'ilh the original direc tor. Sargent Shriver, and has sler1di· ly grown worse. Shriver also suppressed critical investigative reports or the Peace. Corps administrative ope.rations. The present administrator .. J05eph 1~. Blatchford, Is trying lo weed out the young activists and slo111\y convert the corps to a more stable and responsible condition with people who are older and h;ive skills useful to the economic and social structure of cleveloping countries. But It is a hopele1s task . The corps ha' a huge overlay -90 percent -of liberal arts idealists, mostly leachers of English, and cadres of protest-minded youth whose ideas art incompatible both with American policy ancl the policies of !he countries where they serve. TIIE NIXON AD~UNJSTRATION is not of a mind to liquidate the Peace Corps. Some of the original idealism is regarded as valid. The general idea is appealing and has been politically popular in the p11t. al~hough today's young . are disencha nted with this kind or public sen•lce, evidenUy preferring active duty on the streets and campuses lo the relative safety of a tropical jungle. No harm would be done to Amtrican policy abroad if a move for a sharp cul- back in funds for operation of the Peace Corps were to arise in Congress. 'This would ar!ord an opportunity for a new beginning or a world·wide shakedown of the corps to make ft a more useful in· strument of American foreign policy, or at least not a disruptiYc innucnce. TllERE IS SO~f ETlflNG to be said. too. for going back to the purposes and nlethods of !he old point IV program \1•hich originated ln the Tr u man Administration IQ givt> technical aid and ~upport in the development of emerging nations. The idea that the Peace Corps would be an outlet for the idealistic drive or AmeMcan youth. their high spirit!, dedication and sacrifice spreading light into places of darkness, s e e m s patht.lically innocent in today's world. Not ro much because the world has chani:ed as because youth's concept of it& mission has changed. Let Them Eat Winstons Congrets, u·hich worries constantly about our heal1h. is budgeting S2.6 million this year for nagging us into quitting 1moking. Of course. Congrns also worries aboul the health of the lohacco Industry. So ifs spending $73..2 mil lion this year to p~ mote smoking. The lion's share or this. $31.3 m1lhon. goes to buy up surplus tobacco which we 1hip to poor, starving people abroad tuider our Food for Peace Program. Inclu ding $31.3 mllliOtl worth ol tobacro in our Food for Peace packages may aeem hearOes& to wme. 'Ibere, for example. i.~ ~ i;ptndl.\' African native tottering down I.ht' Jungle trail in the Ja~l !'ilages of ~tarvation He atumbles oo a package labeled : "US. Food for Peace ·· \Vlth trembling fingers, ·--.---. Vednes4ay, March 11 , 1970 The cditorioL pt1ge oj iht Da il 11 Pilot s«tkl to inform and stitn- trialt rl0der1 by prtsinting thts 11twspaptr'a opi11ions and com.. ·• 1Mnter11 on topics of in.lcrt s& and slgnlficonef, by providing n forum for tht ezpreuion of our rtaderr opinions. and bu prasaniutg the dit:erae vif!W- poi.tW oJ inform"-otncrum 111\d 1po1'umt11. on topics oj Ch.I doy. Robert ii· Weed, Publisher Art Hoppe he tears it open . Inside. is a carton flf Winstons. With dimming eyes. he reads the legend : "\Vinstons taste good -likt> a r..igarette shou ld." So he eats them . NATURALLY, eating cigarettes Js nol going to help our ~ [{iends abroad. Nor. if they don't get hooked on dgare!· le~. is 1t going to help our tobacco rarmers. \Vhat is obviously n~ede:d Is a vigorous technical aid program to teach the underprivileged, backward peoples of the world to smoke: "No, sir, Ytl'l'ligh t the other end. That's lt. Now su~k In the smoke. There. there. Ltt me hit you on the back a couple o( limes. Fine. Jn a cOuple of d~s. yo1111 learn to love It.'' Once we have our poverty·stricken rnends overseas hooked, think of the humanitarian satisfaction we'll 11.rne:r, !hipping them packag~ of tobacco to t!ase tbe.ir cravings. Think of the pleasure they'll enjoy. lighlinf up that Ur1t, glorious. aftl.r-brt.ak!ast· cigareUe. ll they had any brtakfast. But our program Is not mertly humanltal'\an. it's ecologic1lly IOUrxi. COlllrtSS I~ spending not only S.11.3 million on Tobatco for Peace, but $%7.0 millioo on tobacco erport .1ubsldif!J and !240,000 for cigarette advtrtlslng abroad THUS \\'E SEE that Congre~ In ii~ "'isdom 1.s Jpproprtatin.a $2.6 mlllion to ' get Americans to smoke le!s and $59.4 million to get foreigners to smoke mort. The goal of Congress 1s clear: a thriv· i11g tobacco cxJ)Ort trade run by non· !'n1oking. healthy Americans. all happily ~1ngin11:. ''Oh. you can ship Salems out of the country, but. •. " Such a program \lo'ill not only save the rconomy, it \\'ill sa\•e I.he world. For ~·e are raced with a population explosion. 1\nd many an expert warns that ~·e simp. ly mu st stop sending food abroad to 5tarv:ing people. For their own good, Whal better substitute than tobacco? \Vhat better product to snuff out overpopulation! How good it is to know that our friends abroad will die happy. For there is no confinned cigarette smoker alive·today who doesn't believe in his heart of hearls In that ringing slogan : "'I'd rather smoke thin live." Dear Gloomy Gull: I couldn't help but won<ter as t drove down Fairv iew canal during a recent raJn whr. the city doesn •t either stock U with lrout or drain 11. -C.L.A. l ~l' ~ r.llM ~tKttt' "It'#\. '"" ... ,.,,. .. ., flofl• .. .... ,.,w,,. ... ,, •• ,..,. '""' ''' •••w• ,. a'""'' .... °'"' '"''· Chu,.ches A re Losing While Occult Gains Editorial Research The Black Arts r·rom ghoulies and ghostie s and loni-leggely beasties And thinp that go bu mp in the niaht Good Lord deliver us~ . , . Old Scottish prayer The occult. for most Americans. ls an evening's di version \lo·ith a Ouija board or a deck of tarot card s. Bul for many others - an indetenninate' but ap. patently growing group -there really art "things that go bump in the night." Many social thinkers are worried about the occult boom. So art! churchmen . For it is a fa ct of our time that, as church at- tendance is falling off, member.ihip in new "cults of evil'' is growing. Palmists. graphologisls, phrenologists. numerologists, Satanisl~. ~\chemists and witches are all gaining followers. Astrologers are having a field day. S!'veral high schoo ls and universities are offering cours"s in the history of wit- chcraft, sorcery and the black arts. f.1ost boOk stores have several shelves jammed •\·ith everything from sensational revel. ations of occult hapi:;ienings to thf- scholarl.v Encyclopedia of \\'itcherafl and Demonology t 19~9) by Rossell Hope Robins, an expert on l\.1edieval history. PSYCHOTHERAPIST Rollo r.1ay in hi~ new book "Love And \V iii," discusses a system of "demons" \vhich are not en· lilies but ·•archetypal functions of human experienet." fifay argues lhal lh!" "'daemonic'' comes to !he fore in times of transition. like our O\\'n. Jn the past. such eras produced "actual fear among people of wllchcraft. sorcerers, and others who claimed to kno1v how to consort with the demons." 'JMre arc accounts of witches in Biblical history. t:xodus says : "Thou r;halt not suffer a witch lo Jive.·· On the eve of lhe battle or Gilboa , Kine: Saul t•isittd the "itch of Endor. near Nazareth. She called forth t.he spirit of Samuel, who predicted Saul's cleath. The Greeks and Romans believed in vdtches -the. more so as their emp ires began to crumble. IN THE l\IIDDLE AGES, and up to the n1iddle of I.ht 18th ce ntury, a witch w1s be lleved to be anyone ~·ho made a pact "·ith the devil and worked magic -black or "·hite -through animals or imps. Historian Robbins believei. they were a. .. rolossa l fraud" perpetr3ted out or fe ar and religious zeal. One referenct! source cslimatcs that 300,000 lo t\lo·o million persons may ha"e been e1ec11ted as \\'itches. By the 14th century. witch hunts were being con- ducted in every nalion of the western world. As lite as 1692. in 1he famoul'I \lo'ltc°l'l lrials In Selem . i\fass .. 19 innocent persons -6 men and 13 ~·01nen -"·ere hM~cd. and one man ~·as pressed to de 1th. THE OCCULT may only e'dst in the niinds of tho6e "'ho btlieve in· it. But that doet11 not gtop h from n11king a real im· pact. AnlhropolO&i&t Elizabeth E. Bacon ~Tiles: "The belief that one Is a victim of \loitchcraft is ps)·chologically as potent .u aclual magic could be." A cull or evil Is qid to have played a p3rt in the Sharon Tate murders in California. Charle!! r.tanson . t\·ho Is char;ed 11'1 connt.ctlon ~·ith the: klllinp . led 1 MM of hippl , most of them youn& ~·omen , \lo'ho called him "Satan," or "God ." A recent iM\le of Esquire ••s cltV1)1ed to the upsurge In the black arl.3 In California. The occult no lonatr stems to be mtre.ly a parlor game In auburbla. It'a a trend. and 1 troublinJ one. The Tragic Farce Of 'Chicago 7~ Although Amer ican newspapers do ctherwise. I fol)ow the practice of the British press and refrain from com- menting on trials while they are in pro- gress. During the long tria l or the "Chicago 1:· I ~·as shocked, dismayed, disgusted, and silent. Now that the tragic farce has ended, and "'e can look back upon it with It little perspective, several distinctive features seem to emerge. firi;t, it v.·as not a legal trial so much as 11 politLcal aclion. There obviously Wfl" no "conspiracy" -as the jury correctly decided -and all the defendants had in common was a distaste for the system . SECOND, \\'HILE the conduct of the defendants was outra11:eous, the conduct or the judge and prosecutor was in· excusable, both during and after the trial. Third, the whole proceedings served no use ful purpose -as former Attorney General Clark predicted -except to make the government look bad and to create enormous publicity for the mOit extreme and exhibilionistic elements among the defendants. f ourth, and most imporlant, it helped undermine the American system or JUrisprudence far more than it clarified any issues al stak e. TO t.fE, THE ft10ST melancholy aspect of the trial was the public reaction. Although ~·e prattle about "freedom '' and "democracy" roore loudly and constantly than any other people in the world. v.·e have 1 sadly limited idea of what these ,· ---~· -~ ... ~ .. l f S (Ji{" J. ll'a " .,.~ • ~ •. !:!1";"' .. ,,. ; ,; \ .~ . ,. ~ . ,,, . ~ . ·~~ ~.4 .. it~ti.bti._~· terms genuinely consist in. We imagine that you have lo "like'' "r "approve" of defendants in order to give them their fullest judicial and COn· stitutional privileges. \Ye wron gly assume that anyone \lo'ho protests: thal these defendants 1Yere badly and unfairly treated by the government is "in favor" of ~·hat lhe defenda,nts stood for. or con· dones the obnox:tous w;iy they behaved. WE SEDI INCAPABLE of separating form from subslance: of saying. "Y.'e don·t agree with these people in any way, and th at is exactly the reason we must bend over backwards to see that their rights are respected." This is a. 3lale- ment of the democratic doctrine : anythi ng else is rhetoric, hypocrisy, ig- norance, bigotry, or malice. I was delighted, subsequently, that all five active Judges of the Federal Appeals Court unanimously reversed Judge Hof· fman's denial of bail to the defendants. His spite and partiality v.·ere nowhere more revealed than in h.i$ clos ing gesture or illegal vindictiveness -and exceeded only by the prosecutor ·s ugly attack upon the alleged ''homosexual" procll~ti~ of most ol tht defendants. These pm;t:trial exhibits rt:v~aled, mOre eloquently than any comment I could have made during the trial. exactly where the threat to our riystem of justice really lies. Mideast Crisis: a Phase All wars In which a belligerent C<1!· lapses and is forced to yield large land areas, present complex and stubborn pro- ble~ in po6'twar lerritorial adjustment. Such a war was the Mideast , 1~7, between Tsrael and U1e Arab states. Israel is almost surrounded by disputed territory it oceupies. ~rab guerrlllas at- tark daily trying to loosen the Israeli grip, and the lsr11elis retaliate in the: air and in ground raids. A description of one of the di!'iputf'd areas may fscillt.ate understanding of the continuing Mideast crisis. tr you drive north from Jerusalem on the highway to Damascus. you reach the Plain of Esd raelon, a fertile valley run- ning east-west from the Jordan River to the Mediterranean. Tt Int or po r Ates Armageddon, the Biblical site of the "last'' battle of nations. Proceeding north Into hills you reach Na:r;arelh. which is 15 miles from Tibtrias on the Sea of Galllet!. THE Iii ftULES ls sheep country. but north of Galilee: is another fertile basi n about 25 mllts long. The Damascus road then climbs a hill to a high plateau In the ~h11dow Of Mount Hennon In the anti- Lebanon range. On the east of this fertile basin. and tht Galilee sint •. the plateau rii;es sli&htly In 1 bare, f'Otindtd r&11ge called Golan Heights. ft rises above the Jordan level 1000.tSOO feet and apurs of it run far southward lo\4'ard lhe Dead Sea. The prewar Syrian border touches Israel juat south of Galilee. For !IOme years the Syrians. and in le1.11 force the Jordanian! 90Uth, maintained a chain of artillery tmplacemcnts on the Hel,jht... From ll>ese they coold"lnd did lob· !hells into the rann t1 nd gral1ng land to the. north and west of Galilee:, ind l1r1t plttea farther aouth could range In· to lhe tast tnd of tht. Pl1ln of. E!draelon. One ol the llrat acts ol the larae.Ua ill Roy-ce Brier .. the Six·Day \Vll.r ~·as to silence these guns by aerial bombing. THEY THEN deployed ground troop!i and tanks on Golan Heights. and ten or fifteen miles along the plateau leading ta Damaseus. ~ r~raeli!i iilill occupy the HeighfJ. and it is a non.negotiable oindit.ion of pt!ace thal artillery shall nevtr again command the lcn1•lands. There are manv C0!71mando . raids agajnst Israel strong pomts on high gr0W1<1.'b'Ut even with the aid of sympathetic Leban~c com- mandos. the. Arabs have nol seriously Urre1tened J~aeli lodgmenls. · A similar situation . less menacing. in· vo\ves _the southern spurs of the J{eights, and this accounts for the Israeli seizurt1 and occupation of Jordanian territory west of the river. largely occupied by Arab rerugtts. The refuget:s naturally lillffer from the hit-run warfare. Quite .aside from the !h.real!i of Pre!I· dent Nasser of Egypt to resume the war Israel cannot be blamed for inristini artillef1 duel~ north and south of Galilee must be neutralized . B11 George --~ ~ar r.eor1e : Do you ha ve any 1nformatl(m on bow lo hook ruas~ --&.'\\'. Deir E.W.: \\'ell. first you itt this hia 11hoD- ping b!lg, see? Next':""" oh, for good· neu sake! Honesty i5 the be5t policy and don't you forget it! • • Saddlehaek Today's Final N.Y. St ocks . VOL. 63, NO. 59, 4 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11, 197 0 TEN CENTS Tourists Breal{ West White House Security UnauUtorized to1.i'rs o( the San Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla. While Houses - while President Nixon and his famil y \\'ere there -have been taken by all' un- diiclosed nwnber of peoplt. The security violations were acknOwledged today as the chit!f of the Secret Service, James J_ Rowley . testified before a Congressional sutr co.mmlttee in Washi ngton , D.C. Not all of Director Rowley's disclosures were made public, but he :iald none of the inlruders were armed and will give Congress further information in a con- fidential memo. But he expressed worry that it is so easy to penetrate what constitutes a vital defense perimeter and could b e dangerous if security weakness is leaked to potentially violent groups. ''We have detected these people in- cidentally," Rowley told t h e sub- comn1ittee In his request for tighter security measures at ttie two coastal retreats. • These would include trespassing. In· terrering with guards and prohibition or noisy demonstrations. In San Clemente. where a few demonstrations and trespassing on the grounds of the Western White House have taken place, Chief of Police Clifford Mur- ray said he was aware of the pending legislation. "\Vhai we weren't completely aware or, however, was the specific content of that legislation," he added. A1urray said that there had been a Cew problems in the past several months of persons entering the Western Wh.ite House grouom uninvited. "We had three demonstrations here last year with onJy one big one, and it seems that the segment of the proposed legislation on that maUer would apply more to the WashingUln White House and less to the one in San Clemente," he ad· ded. Checks with other sources indicated that the proposed law is an attempt to clarify vague laws on prosecution of lrespassers on land used for Presidential residence. Under stale trespass regulations, pro- secution can only take place if a person enters land without penniss.ion, then refuses to leave. Federal provisions for trespassing on Presidential residence areas is also vague. The Jaw. it was speculated, would fill some legal gaps and give the Secrel Service stronger gulldelines ror prosecut- ing uninvited visitors. "The Secret Service has become con- cerned about the ri sing crescendo. of na- tional militancy and confrontation, and instances or the preachment of assassina· tlon and violent revolution," the Secret Service dirl'ctor said today. " ... In my vJew, the mllll.ancy of the dissident groups in our midst wW in- crease in fervor . . . this activity could • ge.nerate a greater propensity for attacks upon our leaders. " ... There have been many incidents In recent years tha1 have caused us ·to question the adequacy of our legal pro- tective authorih• " Newsmen asked Rowley whether he was referring to successful Intrusions at San Clemente and Key Biscayne. He said he was, and indicated there had been others, too. at vacation residences of previous presidents. .J~owley urg~d passage of a biU 10 pro- hibit unauthorized entry into ihe building or .g~ounds of a ternporary-presidential pohc1es.'' residence: make it a federal crime to in-terfe.r~ with a secret service agen t, and prohibit loud demonstrations near a presidenlial residence. whirh might Im - pede presldential business. La~rence Speiser. direc tor of the \Vash1ngton office of the American Civil Li~rtie.s Union . test ified against the bJll, saying 1ls purpos1... "is not to protect the ~resident's physical safety but to protect h1.m from sounds of dissenUon. unhap- piness and disagreement · with his policies.'• • 0 oters verr1 e Masseuse Arrested For 'Offer' A massage artist who allegedly oUered .. extra services" to an investigator from the district attorney's office found herself under arrest at a Laguna Beach massage and sauna parlor Tuesday. Nancy Ann Vlahos. n, who told polU:;e ahe resides at a Laguna Beach motel, JS dlafged with conspiracy to commit Pro- . ltltution and soUCiting to engage in lewd or dissolute acts, police repwf..~ After a period of police surveillance of the Academy ol Physi~ Therapy M8ssage and Sa una Parlor, 253 Thalia St., the DA Investigator went in and requested a massage Tuesday afternoon. The suspect prepared him for the treatment. he claims, then asked whal type of massage he desired. . \I/hen he inquierd about prices, ht 1tates, Miss Vlahos said a regular massage would be $10, then "'.'enl on to ,of· fer additional services at prices rang~ng up to $31), He paid for the regular JOb with a marked bill. then placed her under arrest. Following arraignment. Miss Vlahos "''as freed on $840 bail. The massage parlor, police. report •. was Issued a Laguna Beach Clty business license in }969, in~ na~e of Char.les T. Balmer, 1050 Skyhne Drive. No license had yet betn taken out for 1970. they state. Laguna Doctor Abortion Case Action Delayed A Superior Court hearing into a Lagu na Beach physician's charges lh~t t~e orange County Grand . Jury which 1~­ dicted him on aborllon cha rges is ur\Jawrully constituted v.•as . sidelined to- day when both sides in the dispute agreed that they needed more time for prepara· lion. Dr. Robert CUmming Robb, 67 , of 34567 Scenic Drive Dana Point, was ordered to return to c~rt April I for the r~hed~l­ ed hearing. Abortion charges against him will be held pending the outc0me o£ that invutigation. ·or. Robb was indicted by lhe ~rand .Jury on charges of inducing miscarriages In three women patients. a\1 of them single. after Judge Paul Mast thr~. the aame charges out of Santa Ana Muruc1pal COurt with ihe ruling that I h e Therapeutic Abortion Act of 1961 was un· constitutional. ' Judge Mast agreed with defense al· torney Moses Berman that any other rul· ing would be to accept lhe philosophy or the Roman Catholic religion . Sue~ ac- ceptance, he saKI. would be in violation of the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Distr\ct. Attorney Cecil lilck1 revlv~d the charaes with Lhe Grand Jury 1~­ dlctmenl and insists that the state code .1s \'llld and Robb -Id be pr.,.culed .. the higher courl NEW YORK (41') -The stock mukel tlun1 to a fracUonal lead late this •.fter- .noon in tight trading. {See quotaUOn1, Pagu 26-17). Advlnclog is.sues exceeded losers on the N'tw York Stock Exchan&:e 673 to &18. DAILY PILOT Sti ff P~ei. IN THE RUNNING GOP Lt•dtr Car~nter Carpenter Heads For Senate Seat Le ft by Sc hmitz By O.C. HUSTINGS Ot t1M1 Del"' Plitt fllff One of California's most powerful Republicans -Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach -is h!!:aded fo r public of- fice. apparently as a challenger for a seat in the California State Senate. Carpenter has called a press L'On· ference for Thursciay morning, a clear- cut indication that he intends to seek a spot on the June ballot, and Sacramento sources Tuesday said Carpenter will be running for the seat being vacated by Senator John Schmitz (R-Tustin). Schmitz is resigning his Senate post to see k the CongTessional seat left open by the death or Rep. James B. Utt. Carpenter, 41. is currently chairman of the California Republican State Central Committee. He has been a key figure in Orange County GOP politics for the past JO yean, serving as chairman of Orange County Republican Central Committee and leading camp8.igns in behalf of Governor Reagan and President Nixon. tSee CARPENTER, Page %) Blast Rips Courthouse Ex plosion Linked to Trial of I/. Rap Brown CMtBRIDGE, A1d . (UPI) -An ex- plosion tore out a corner of the Dorchester County Circuit Court building today. It was the second violent explosion in Maryland in 24 hours and officials said both incidents appeared related to the riot lrial of black militant H. Rap Brown. The blast, which hurled debris from the two-.atory stone building 100 feet into the slreet, appeared to ~ve betn centered In a \Yomen's lounge on the second Ooor. The explsion tore out a huge chunk at the top corner of the building. There were no injuries. The exploaioo happened at 9:10 p.m. (PST), 14 hOur~ after another mysterious blast near Bel Air Md., demolished a car and killed its two occupants, including a long-time friend of ' Broy,·n's, Ralph Featherstone. Cambridge is the town where Brown was charged with arson, incitement to arson and incitement to riot after racial disturbance broke out following a speech he gave there in July, 1967. Bel Air is the toy,·n wh ere Brown Is being tried. The building once served as the county courthouse for this eastern shore com- 1nunity. A new building is now the courtbnuse, but the older one continued to house the circuit court. Brown was ar· raigned there on the riot charges and he "''ould have been tried in the damaged buil<llng bad not the trial been shJfted Ul Bel Air, a~t 100 miles north. Slate's Attorney William B. Yates, who Is proseculiag BtoWD but who wu in cambridge because the trial has been recessed, ioured the bla.st site with coun- ty officials. He saJd it appeared the two incidents were related to the Brown trial, but declined to elaborate. U.S. and Colombian Jets Hijacked; Land iI1 Cuba By United Press International Two planes were hijacked to CUba to- da y, one as it flew from Cleveland, Ohio, lo Florida and the second as it was en route to Barran~uilla from Bogota, Colombia. They were the fourth and fifth hijacks carried out successrully so far in 1970 in the \Vestern Hemisphere. Both were Boeing 727 jetliners. The United Airlines plane hijacked in lhe United States carried 106 persons and was forced by a lone cunman to land and refuel in Atlanta, Ga., before taking off for Cuba. The Colombian Avlanca Airliner car· ried 78 persons. It wa s. forced to touch down at cartagena, apparently for refuel- ing, but remained aground only five minutes and then continued on to Bar- ranquilla where it took on more gns and then headed for Cuba. In Vienna , two young Poles -Wieslaw Szymankiewicz, 20, and Romoult Wlesla\Y Zoltucho, 18-were convicted and senten- ced to jail lenns today for hijacking a Polish airliner to Vienna several months ago. 1.oltucho was sentenced to two years in jail and Szymankiewicz got two years and three months. The court told them they cou ld stay In the West after com- pleting their sentences. Lag una Pageant Tests for Noise Pageant producer Don Williamson and Fe stiyal dirertor Stuart Durkee have agreed to parti cipate In a "sound test" Ul make sure a sc.heduJed swnmer pro- duction of the musical "Oliver" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse will not in- terfere with the Pageant next door. The production by the Playhouse, In associ ation with the Lyric Opera of Orange County, Is scheduled for presen- tation July 3 through Aug. 30. Festival Director Mrs. Helen Keeley said Playhouse representatives told her they had checkt:-d out the sound and assured themselves that strains of the musical will not float up into Irvine Bowl, but would like to invite Williamson and Durkee to lend an ear to another test run . A demolition team from the Edgewood Arsenal was called in to determine what caused \he explosion. Vales and County Clerk Phill ip Cannon said there are only a few offices oo the second floor of the building and it would have been easy for anyone to gain access to the lounge Tues- day and plant a bomb, if that was what caused the blast. Cannon e1Umated damage to the atruc.. lure at $100,000. Maryland State · Polkt:. Dorchester County sheriff's officers and cambridge city police were put on extra alert after the explosion. There has been DO unuaual tens.ion in Cambridge in recent dlys, althouih the lawn, with t 30 percent black population experienced extended racial troubles during !he 1960s, during which time the nallonal guard was called In three times. Recall Campaign Against Allen • 500 Names Short By TOM BARLEY Ot tl>I Del" ,!lfl Ir.II The semi-secret campaign to mount a recall election against Fifth Distrtct Supervisor Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach has fallen at least 500 signatures short in its petition effort, the DAILY PILOT learned today. Petitions had been filed with County Clerk William E. St John as a re· quirement to get a recall election against Allen on tne ballot. Whole pages of signatures have been determined to be invalid, ii was disclos- ed. Orange County voting supervisor Ed Arnold told Ure DAILY PILOT that the recallers will be at least 500 signatures short. He cautioned that was an unofficial tally, subject to verification when the listings are fed through the county's com- puter. Meanwhile, the franf.ic recall workers .,.,,ere recalling their petition carriers in an !Ith hour bid for signatures to replace tbose bogus ones that have been can· celled out. it seemed certajn at press time today that St John will order the organlter1 of the Allen Recall campaign ' lo bring In (Set RECALL, Page %) Mayor Tells Beach Purchase Plan By BARBARA KRETBICH Of IM DlllY Plitt Si.ff Conlinuing his survey or prospects for development of Laguna's Main Beach, Mayor Glenn Vedder this week expressed lhe opinion that city Income in the next ft>w years could cover payments on the beach purcbase without seeking ad- ditional taxes. He also proposed a lhree-pba.se development program to extend over the nest 10 to 12 yean. Step one, Vedder suggested, woukl be the development ol lbe beaeblron1 !tOm Laguna Avenue to Ocean Avenue with • revenue producing r11cllity adjacent to L.aguna Awnue. This Is where the clly Is »eeking proposals for a hotel-conference laclllty. The portion of the beachrront from Ocean Avenue to Broadway , says Vedder, • could be retained essentially as It now is Analyzing beach cosLs and revenue, for approzimately 10 years in order to Vedder notes that annual principal and continue rent income to the city. in le rest payments range lrom $220,000 to The area from Broadway Ul the Boys' $225,000. Insurance, taxes and other Club should be. developed in lhe near charges amount to about $i0,000 an- fulure, the Mayor believes. nually, but taxes will be reduced as This area, he states in a report, "could leases are terminated. The total cort Is provide a clear and expanded vista and a $270,000 kl $275,000 annually. larger pedestrian use, as well as some To defray these expenses he clte1 commercial aervices oriented to the esUmaltd Income for 1969-70, in round beach and beach Ulf".n. figures. Felttval or Art.I revenue will ''A series ol terraces: for people to use, amount lo f]tl,000, bed tax to $120,000, al 01' near Coast Highway 11dewallt rent. from leasts. '80,000, .beach pa.rkln& level," says the repc>rt, "could be con-lot fees. '8,000. for a toial of $%71,ooo', str\lded, servipg .u a roof over 1mill _P.lu1_a r,!!StTVe of $$11000 from ll6341 ... shops or stalls cat.trinC LO the beach&oer. Of thf1 liicome, t105,000 his been No cost projection la offered. but the budgeted for cultural a:upport, city pro- overall rtturn In view, pedestrian use and motron aDd traMrtr to the general fund rent wool rt be great compared to the ror "housekeeping." small construction co11t. Terraces could "Appare.ntly the Income In the next rew be bunt :11 needed and as mooe1 Is ytt1r1, I! prope.rLY alloeated, could meet 1vailable." the charges without golna; to the tu· payer, '1 the Mayor slates. Additional facls to be considered, he adds, are the Governor's proposed six· cent sales tax, whJch would lncrtase the bed tax to the same rate and add ~.000 a year to Laguna 's bed ta1 revenue: and the fact that, when lhe Main Beach Is fully developed, ttrere will ht additional cost for care and maintenance, as wcl111 loq ot rent. Purchase or the RlctiOeld llatlon and run development of Main Beach Park could ~1:1ire l.IL...ad\lltkmal MO,OOO___u. .... nually, he notea. Urging an 1adopted P.l'flcl8c plan for • phat<d dcvefopmen ol lhe bo•CblfuOI, the ~layor conclude11. "whim, fad or fan-• cy should not direct a . pjece:mle1tl unrelated de~elopment of the total beach park. •t Bo11d Ra te h1c1·ease T1·y Fails By RJCllAltD P. NALL Of I~• D111r 'llol S1111 School ~uses londed with youngsters from Capistrano Unified School Dist rict s~med perkier this morning as they pbed lhe freeways and residential streets or the sprawling district. It may have been only the morning su n ~n the rellow paint !rut lransportation hke music and the enlire educational pro- gram l'SS given a new Jesse on life Tues- day by the district's voters. Half of the 15,069 registered voters - 7,521 -turned out and passed a 50-cent tax override that will be in effect for two years. ~ An ac<iompanying proposition to raii;e the interest rate from live to seven per· cent on $4,2 million in previously ap. proved bonds for school cnstrucilon and si le acquisi tion faJled to pile up the two to one ratkl of yes votes needed for passage. The override won with 3,845 yes votes and 3,628 no votes. The bond issue had 4,631 yes votes (61.7 percent) and 2,868 no votes. It would have needed 66 2/3 per· cent yes votes to succeed . 1TURNOUT UP The turout of vo!ers was 2,015 more than the 5,506 turnout April 15, 1969 which saw that 50-cent override substantially defeated. Registration in the district had increased from 13,844 to 15,069. . II became apparent early in the even· 1ng at election central, the district office, that the bonds would prob ably lose. Election o If i c I a Is apprehensively \Yatched for returns from precincts or:ie and two. Concordia School I Pres.ident Nixon's precinct, allhough he was not yet eligible to vote there) and the Green residence, 204 Barcelona. Both are tradi· tionally tough on school f j n a n c e measures. The negative votes fron1 these polling places, in the case or lhc override, began lo be offset by a heavy majority of yes votes from other distri cts. The override started gaining 1 slim lead that became a cliffhanger un!il the last precint was In, Las Palmas School. Truman Benedict, tllstricL superla - fSee ELEC110N, Page ZJ Orange Coast \\ 1ea11her Thursday's wea ther picture? Tn A word, groovy. The l\1an calls f-0r sunny skies and warmer tempera· lures, which means iibout 6.S along the coa!'lt and pu&hing 70 inland. INSIDE TODA V Give a b '' n c I~ of colle!Jn dro11ta atudenl.t tttough ropn and they'll crtatc t11eir OWtl repertory con1pany. 0 r a 1) {} tt Coast College is doing jrist that wit1l It! new e:rperin1et11.al thco.· ter. See Entertainn1ent, Pape 30. 11'"'' 11 ,,..,,r ... IMI'" n 1.ltt"M'I II C1Ul9tlri. 11 Mfn Ill knk• '' C.,.., Ctr• I~ Mfft!ql II C"-<111"" u, I Wvln •n ~~'*' n-; ::!t':~,r:_ :l c,...,..~ • °"""" c:.wio n " Oiiflr> M'"1llft' .,r PTA1 -,V,., DI~ II '-" n.u ••lr.r(fl , .. , f Or, 1ttlt>c:l"Of\ll 11 ____..ltdalam~1tiK&...Muiw......u.zL -..111lf!t1 1t.tr T111vltllft " HlrlK"" Joi • TIM1f~ Jil.ll ~Ill\ l .... " )ti ~··"''' • Mllllltl t Wlllltll'\ M ..... ~ Wll'llll It.wt W I ' . .I DAILY PILOT SC Delay for Ti••• Leary W1f e, Son Draw Stiff Terms -- Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan broke up the Timothy Leary home today with three separate rulings and reserved until 1'1onday for the con- troversial LSD culUst what may be the stiffest penalty of the three. He sent Rosemary Leary, 34, to Orange County Jail for six months and plaefll her on probation for the next ri\'e years. He ordered John Bush Leary, 20, to undergo a 90-day diagnositc study at the state of Clllifornia's Chino facility and t.o report back to his courtroom in June. Or. Leary won a five.day delay of his sentencing on charges of possession of marijllana. ~ Defense attorney George Chula suc- cessfully pleaded that "new legal pr<r blems relating to Dr. Leary's other legal actions" had arisen and he needed time to discuss them with attorneys working on those cases. Or. Leary was sentenced to 10 years in prison last month by a Texas Federal Court judge. He is scheduled to return to New York later this month for further action on misdemeanor charges relating to drug use. r.trs. Leary and young Leary were C{)n· vicled last month by an Orange County Superior C.ourt jury ot charges of possession of marijuana and LSD. The family was arrested in Laguna Beach on the drug charges and .subsequenUy in· dieted by the Orange Cotmty Grand Jury. Mrs. Leary's lawyer announced today lhdt he will immedi ately appeal her jail sentence. Leary left· the crowded courtroom ":ith the promise that "whatever happens my family and I are free, we were bom [ree and we will stay free." Dr. Leary b currently being held in Orange C.ounty Jail. He wa1 committed there last month by Judge McMillan wilh the comment that he was "a threat to the community." The former Harvard psychologist smil- ed and waved to what appeattd to be about 50 flower carrying sym pathizers in the courtroom and urged them to "love God and stay high." Rockwell 'Proud' Of Pageant Part tn a letter to Festival or Arts publicist Sally Reeve, famed artist Norman Rockwell said this week that he ls "proud to be a part" of Laguna's Festival. Mrs. Reeve told Festival directors she had written the attist to ask if he knew where a print of his "Winter Duet" could be obtained for reproducUon as a Jiving pie~ in thb year's Pageanl The painting had been reproduced before, she explained, and, like all Rockwell works, was an audien~ favorite, but the original 1965 calendar \lsed for reference was in poor condiUon. In a gracious letter, the artist referred lier to the calendar publisher, adding his expression of pleasure that the painting \YOUld be part of the Pageant's 1970 ''command performan~" of all-time favorites. Rockwell is an honorary life member of the Festival of Arts. Viet Deaths lo Rise, As U.S. Deaths Fall SAIGON IU Pl) -Casualty figures to be released Thursday will show a decrease in American deaths and a sharp rise in South Vietnamese combat deaths to mote than triple the number of Americans, informed sources said today. This also was reflected in fighting reported today from the South Vitt· nameae central coast where Viet Cong and North Vietnamese troops inflicted heavy losses on two companies of South Vietnamese militiamen. DAILY PILOT Hu11tl111to11 leech F•ltlltfl\11 V•IJtoy S•• Clt"'"'9 OltANGE (GAST PU•LtSHIHG COMPA,.Y ltob•rf N. Weed Prt1111tn1 end Pllbl ttlltr Jei:k R. C11rley Vial Pr.Ide.>! end Otlltr11 M1111,er lhom11 K1•vil EdHor Thome• A, M11rphl111 Mlf11911\f Edll'Or Richetd '· N•tl tout~ Ortno• cou~ty lt11or o .... C•lt M .... : U0 W..I ••v $!!'Hf "'""°" •M(l'I: nn wnt ••n:ioa aoul•~••• LQllM llMcn: ttl P•ttsl A\'fft!.19 HllflllrlftlM e .. ctlr 17115 '"'" aoui. .... " $111 Cll/Mlllt1 1U Nortll El Ctmlnt llt"I DAILY ,ILOt, With Mild! It ett11111r>ti1J th• H-Pr1J1, II put1!11"" M llY t •Ct'Pl &1111< fty Ill "PIA,_ td!tlttlt fOt llleWI& htdl, HfWOlll't IHC!'I, COii• Mt$t, Hllflll1't!Ol'I ltttm d Follllttfft V•llt'(, •IO!IO Wf!ll twl '"JoM' 111t1io.... Orllltt ,_, l"Wllillff\t GomPlllY "'"'"• pl•l'll• .,. ., ttll W..t ltlbN •IYll~ """°"' •••d't· ..... »O W•I hY llrltf, C.0.T• MtM. T•l1plr••1 17141 '42 ... JJI a.Ht .. ~ ,., .• ,,. • s--ctua1111tw .--e.,...1wa111-T...,•••• 492-4420 (~I.-tt'9t-Of.. (M.1 ,lllllll ftlnt '"""'llY· No -•""*-111\btrll....._ •l1trl•t ;ft11"9f ., M'wrtlJ-11 "''''" -y .. '"""'""° wllt!Oyf ..... , ...... '''''••loll "' eerrrltfl• -· •IClllll (1 .. t _...,. .. If •I filt'ffll(IM hidl ...,. c.t• ,.,..., (tllfff'nt1, Su11Krl91i.t\ ..., U"ltr U.ot lft0flltrl~1 /rf -II U,.16 "°'"'ll'llYI mllh•,,. lllft!llltllont, ct.• "*'"'"'' ' "Don't worry," he assured them, "I have very good connections with the highest court of all. Everything is perfeet, we have tried to do God's work and \\'e \viii Blill be able to do it." From Page 1 RECALL. •• ' within the next 10 days su·ffi cient signatures to meet the required total of ~,748 names. Recall organizers Paul Carpenter of Cypress and Anthony Tarantino of San Clemente delivered 10,522 si8;nalures to St John last week, St John advised the shocked Carpenter of the deterioraUng situalion and the anti-Allen Democrat immediately reac· livated his idle volunteers throughout the Fifth District. Carpenter noted "We have 10 days in which to obtain whatever may be the required signatures and that is time enough for us." Ca rpenter placed the blame for the mounting number of invalidations on lwo Newport Beach recruits to his recall campaign. "We decided to take no legal action agai nst them after the two agreed to delete the falsifications they had en· tered," the angry Car~nter said. "It is, of course, a blow to our campaign but at least we now have the opportunity to f\11 the gap with genuine signatures -and there are, you know, plenty of them in the Fifth District." One of those two 1vorkers denied Carpenter's allegations and told the DAI~ LY PILOT that his signatures were col· lecteri last \Veek by representatives of Opinion Research Inc. of Long Beach. •·rve heard nothing since," he said, "and 1 know nothing about false signatures or phony names and addresses." Close checking by voling division supervisor Arnold's stall has revealed the filing of incorrect names and addresses, the listing of persons who are not registered to vote, duplications of signatures and lists compiled in October to which the signatures y,•ere affixed a 1nonth later, One checker commented that "valid signatures were running as high as 96 percent accurate _when we first started working on the bundle of petitions and things looked fine. But we got a little lower .down and found that we were hav. ing to throw out whole sheets of signatures, one after the other, for various reasons ... Carpenter's submission of 1 o, 5 2 2 signatures called for a 92 percent level of vaUdaUon and St John commented at the lime of filing that the recall workers were "leaving a great deal to chance. One should have a greater cushion than this margin of 774 votes when ou bear in mind the nature of the election," St John said. If Carpenter's efforts to make good lhe in valid signatures are unsuccessful , his candidate will have to oppose Supervisor Alton E. Allen. Cos ta Mesa Vice Mayor Robert M. "Bob" Wilson and sa vings and loan executive Ron Caspers of Lido J9le in the June 2 primary election. Carpenter said Tuesday that it seen1ed ''fairly certain" that Tarantino will go against Allen In the June election . "He's trying to make up his mind ," the Democrat said. "but we should have his decision within the next io days." Drug, Runa\vay Raps Jail Pair A young Canadian and a runaway girl from San Lu is Obispo were taken into custody Tuesday night when Laguna Beach police were summoned to a coffee shop al 1600 S. Coast High,vay, to check out their suspicious behavior. Answering the 9:45 p.m. call police rlaim they found the pair staggering, redeyed and barely able to speak. Patrick John Moe, 18, a Canadian citizen who said he now resides In Lonit Reach. was booked on suspicion of b!lng under the Influence of drugs In public·. Police stated he was incapable of taking a sobriety test. His companion . a 17·year-old girl later icie:ntifled as a runaway, was placed in Juvenile Hall for s a Ce t y when police tlecided sbe was unable to care for herself. Office Seekers To Give Talks Two Lagun an s who have clashed trorn nme to lime on school Issues will move into the field of l'Olitics when they appear as guest speakers at a Monday afternoon meeting of the. \\'omen's Republican Club of Laguna Be och. Attorney WilHam Wilcoxen, Laguna Beach school board member, wlll be presen ted in his ro le as can~date for the Coogrtaslona l seat or the late. James B. Utt. Edward Lorr, president of the Laguna Beach Taxpayers .Associat1-0n and le3der of opposition to the. recently defeated school tax override and bond ls11ue, wlll be ht'ard a~ a c~ndida!e fo r the Laguna Beach Ciiy Council. lntere!led 1nembers of !he public are lnvltl'.d tO 111\end the 2 p,m. 1nreUng In lhe Laguna Bf!ach \\1oman's Club St. Ann 's Orh·e and Gle.nneyre Street. ' • ' !42 4 4 a Ell a - • I 15 •> :;z Me11ingitis Death Tied To Marines A 12-year~ld Garden Grove girl who died Tuesday of spina l min!ngltis -the first Orange County victim in two years -had been exposed to 11 fa mily frie11d stationed at Camp Pendleton. The disclosure was made by the mother of Janet Hines, of 12272 Lamber~ Ci rcle, a stralght·A student at Lampson Jnterinediate School. ' Death came at Orange County Med ical Center, where the girl was transferft:d from a private hospital to which her mother took her last Friday. in .~ swift· striking coma. "She looked like a wa~ dummy, I knew something was wrong." said ·Janet's mother who explained she became ill the day before at school, showing symptoms of flu or a virus. YOUNGSTERS CROWD TOGETHER IN 'HOLD' IN RE-ENACTMENT OF MAYFLOWER VOYAGE History Comes Alive at L1gun1'1 Top of the World Element1ry School Dr. Gerald Wagner. Orange County Publlc Health Officer, said the disease Is extremely contagious but there is no im· mediate danger of an epidemic. "'Mayflower!' Sets Sail Schoolmates will be closely observed and the entire Hines family -including \Villiam Jr., 20, a Navy man s!alioned at Guantanamo Bay. Cuba -have been gi ven preventi ve treatment. Students Recreate Hardsliips of Historic Voyage The Red Cross arranged for the young sailor to fly home and be with his parents and his surviving teenaged brother and sister. Two-hundred Top of the World Elemen· tary School students in Laguna Beach participated in a uniqu·e bistory lesson last week as they learned a little of what the passengers on the MayfJO\ol.'er had en· dured on their historic five-week ocean crossing. Teacher Judith Anderson read actual passages from writings of the original Mayflower passengers during the lesson, but their descriptions of the trip were just part of the experience. Instead of fi ve \Veeks, the students spent five hours aboard their ''ship,'' crammed fnto a darkened room to represent the "hold" in \\·hich the passengers traveled. J'roHa Page 1 ELECTION ... tendent, today prlsed the citizens group called ARVY (Area Residents -Vote Yes) tor a dynamic hard sell that turned the tide. \Vall hanging depi cted the sea around and tape-recorded sounds of the surf, with occasional "storms" filled the room . Once lhey had .,cast off," the students could not leave. At intervals. Mrs. Anderson read from the diaries of the Mayflower passengers. Some or the students brought musical instruments which they played from time to Ume, and the girls brought sewing and knitting to pass the time, as the original passengers had done. The only food offered to the ••passengers" wa s bread and water, but they had to watch the "captain " and •·first mate" eat a hearty meal of ham- burgers. \ Helping to simulate conditions on i.he ship were realistic splders and rats (plastic). Growing reslless at times, the students expressed amazement that their an· cestors had been able to endure the original voyage and were genuinely relieved when land at last was "sighted" and they were met by "friendly Indians." The Indians, a surprise feature ar· ranged hy Mrs. Richardson and a group of parents, treated the new "arrivals" to apple cider and cookies. The students now are writing essays about thelr trip, the real Mayflower voyage and the sufferings endured in search or freedom. Dana Homeowners Meet With Water Officials Cases of sQinal meningitis h.ave flared up at-Camp Pendleton in the past and Mrs. Hines theorized Tuesday the virus could have been carried by a Marine who visited them recently. "I want to warn other parents." she said ln tones of grief. ''I'm not trying lo create a panic. I just don't want this to happen to any other children." ~1rs Hines said the entire famil y recently suffered a chest viru s, bu t J anet. an honor student. went back tc> class to work on a sclenee project while still feeling its effects: The county health officer said today that although spinal meningitis can brfng death six hours after entering the body, perhaps a third of the population· carries the virus. Fie said the lethal bacte ria, men· !ngococcal meningitis, is frequently found in the throat. Only six cases have been recorded In Orange County in' the past two years and all of these victims -unti.1 the Hines girl -have survived, "I think we really had a fine etfort at By JOHN VALTERZA . 'l'om Brooks and Bob Malone, district Capo Approves Membership getting the information out • , • it was so 01 '"' D•Ur '11" 51'11 lawyer George Lopn and members of widespread," said Benedict. "Certainly A small del~gation of Dana Point the district_ltaf!. .. Chuck Dargan (ARVY chalnnan) and the homeowners me{ with a committee from A compromise in lhe lssue appears far ARVY committee did a fantastic job." U1e South Coast County Water District a\vay, h6wever all parties in the Tuesday In SERRA Group Tuesday night in an "informational gathering agreed that something could The ov erride wJll bring the district meeting " to examine whether the possibly be worked out. about $700,000 annually. Without it, school district's recent SO-percent rise in water District Manager John "Tex'' Smith San Juan Capistrano city councilmen offi cials had estimated there would be a rates could be reduced. this morning said one basic problen: in have approved the city's membership in 10 percent cutback. But, despite a Jess emotional level than lhe controversy ls miswulerstanding of SERRA . Benedict said override passage \.\'ill last v;eek 's slormy meeting on the issue, the standard fiscal practices of govern· The city will be the second to sign the no one really reached accord. nlent agencies in which a "cushion" of agreement forming the Southeas t permit the district essentially to continue The group set March 3I for another reserve funds must lie in a budget each Regional Reclamation Au thority which is the existing program, meeting. year to meet expenses between the a joint approach to sewage and ecology "The most dramatic thing will be The delegations examined reasons for start of a fiscal year in July to the first problems in the San Juan basin . .single session kindergarten ,''. he said. The the water rale increase -the district arrival of tax revenue fund s from the The Santa Margarita \Valer District be ·i· · I' · .n 1· county in December. 1 as lhe r·rs1 1 ·• kindergartens are now on double session. mem rs cl 1ng Spira 1ng u1.11a ion. \" 1 o s11&n. The homeowners, who have examintd "I think that many of the homeo\\•ners Still studying the joint powers agree-Benedict said the funds Wollld also allow audils and financial reports ()f the believe that cushion of n1oney should be ment are the San Clemente \Valer a catchup on some necessary ma in· distrk:I, n1aintain that the district's used for lowering rates, but if we did. we District, the Capistrano Beach and Dana tenance of school properties. sleai:ly income and solid investments wouldn't have any money for a six-month Point Sanitary District and the Moulton· Although failure of the bond interest show it to ge running in the black, thus period," he said. Niguel and Santa Ana Mountain CoW1ty proposition left the district unable to no increase should be macle. The district delegation. he added. would \Vater Distri cts. The six-man layman committee -meet on its own before the next session The purpose of SERRA ls to eliminate market its bonds for building, Benedict reprtsenting primarily the homeowner's '"ith the homeowners "to see if we can the necessity for small agencies to saw hope for a second high school in associatio n in the Thunderbird Hoines come up with a satisfactory com· duplicate facilities for purifying and car· Proposition Seven on the June primary tract, met \\'lth water board members promise." rying sewage. ballot. It would raise interest maximum Ir=======:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=====-. on state bonds from five to seven perce nt to make them marketable. The slate, said Benedict, has already approved a second district high school to be built in Dana Point, "Dana Hills High School ," off Golden Lantern on a site the district owns, lf the state bond interest goes up, said Benedict, it would loan the district the funds for the work. The high school \\'ou ld house about 1800 studenb and cost about $5 million. The existing high school is overcrowded by 20 percent, t h e superintendent said. An addition to Richard Henry Dana School is also stale approved but Benedict said it Would have a lower priority for state money. The district. was able lo build Pi.fission Viejo School because the Mission Viejo Colnpany bailed it out and purchased the bo11ds at five percent. However, Benedict saw no liklihood o[ another such transac· tion. He said the district will have to go back tG the voters again sometime this year in another effort to get the-bond ceiling hiked. He said this probably would not occur until September or so metime in the fall, f'toom Page J CARPENTER • • If Carpenter seeks the state senate post, it probably would be at the urging of Governor Reagan . He is c lose to the Rovernor and state GOP leadership is known to be unhappy wlUt the curtent p.'H1.y program In Lhe LtglsJature's upper h-0use. • ll1canwhlle, two other possible ran· didates for the stnte senate poat are backing off. All5emb1yman Rober t Burke CR-Huntington Beach) has declared he will srtk r~·cle:ctton fo r his assembly seat and vdll not be a candidate for $late sena te. CONVENIENT TERMS MNKAME RICARO • MASTER CHARGE Anc:I th• subi•cf t1 lov•. It's fer t vryont betweel'I the 1911 of 16·2 I. Who f••I. Who undtrst.11nd . Who know about love. Th1r• will b• f iv1 nationa l r•cogni tion prii11, b.autiful di1mond ptl'ld1 nt 1 ••p•ci1lly de ,igntd by Or•n91 Blossom. The contest clot11 M111 y IS, 1970. So hurry. The timt i1 now. G'aw~~ ii ld/d1f rZJ f'Mt 1.wa>M/ .!«1f tdll/41( l ill NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MES A I 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION PH ONE I • San Clemente ·· Today's Finni C-api~trano . EDITION N.l:'. Stocks VOL. 63 , NO. 59, 4 SECTIONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11 , 1970 TEN CENTS Tourists .Breali West White ,~ous~ Security Unauthorized tours of the 'san Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla. While llou.ses - whi1e President Nixon and his famil y were lhe!'e -have been faken by an un· disclosed number of people. The security violations w e r e • acknowltdge3 today as the chief of the Secret Service, James J. Rowley. testified before a Congressional sub- committee in Washington, D.C. Not all of Director Rowley's disclosures were made public, but he said none of the intruders were armed and will give Congress further information in a con- fidtnUal memo. 1 But he u:pressed worry that it is so easy to penetrate wbat constitutes a vital de£ense perimr:ter and could b e dangerous if security v.·eakness b leaked to potentially violent groups. "\Ve have detected these people in· cidentally," Rowley told l he su~ committee in his request for tighter security measures at the two coastal retreats. These would include trespassing, In terfering with guards and prohibition of noisy demonstrations. In San Clemente, where a rev.· demonstrations and trespassing on the grounds of lhe Western White House ha ve taken place, Chief cf Police Cliflord Mur- ray said he was aware of the pending legislation. "Wbat we weren't completely aware of, however. was the specific content of thar legislation," be added. Murray said that there. had been a few problems in the past several months of persons entering the Western White · House grounds uninvited, "\Ve had lhree demonstrations here last year with only one big one, and it seems that the segment of the proposed legisla tion on that matter would apply more to the Washington White House and less to the one in San Clemente," he ad- ded. Checks with olher sources indicated that the proposed Jaw ls an attempt lO clarify vague laws on prose<:ution ol trespassers on land used for Presidential residence. Under state trespass regulations, prt> secuUon can only take place if a person enters land wiihout permission, then refuses to leave. . Federal provisions for trespassing on Presidential residence areas is also , vague. The law, ll was speculated, 'i\'Ould fill some legal gaps and give the Secret Service stronger guHdelines for prosecut- ing unlnvitet.1 visitors. "The Secret Service has become con- cerned about the rising crescendo of na- tiona l militancy and confrontati1Jn, and instances of the preachment of assassins· lion and violent revolution," the Secret Service director said today. " .. , In my view, the militancy of the dissident groups in our midst will In· crease in fer vor ... this activity could generate a gre1'ter propensity for allacks upon our leaders. " ... There have been many Incidents in recent years that have caused us to question the adequa cy of our legal pr~ tectiv e authority." Newsmen asked Rowley whether l)e was referring to successhll intrusions At San Clemente and Key Biscayne. He said he was, and Indicated there had bf:en olhers, too. at vacation residences of previous presidenLs. Rowley urged passage of a bill to pr~ hlbit unauthorized entry, into the build ing or grounds of a temporary presidential policies." resldence ; make it a federal crime to in- terfere with a secret service agent, and prohibit loud demonstrations nea r a presidential residen ce which might i1n· pede presidential business. Lawrence Speiser. director or Lh~ \\'ashington office of lhc Ainerlca n Civil Liberties Union, testified against the bill, saying Its pur(>Ose ''is not lo protect the President1s physical safety but lo protect him from sounds of dissenlion. unhap- piness and disagreement with hhi policies." • a 0 o ers verr1 e Masseuse Arrested 1 For 'Offer' A massage artist who allegedly offered "crtra xrvices" to an investigator from the district attorney's office found herself un,der arrest at a Laguna Beach massage ind sauna parlor Tuesday. ·Nancy Ann Vlahos, 22, who told police she resides at a Laguna Beach motel, is cl\arged with conspiracy to commit pro- sthuUon and soliciting to engage in lewd or dissolute acts, police report. After a period of police surveillance of the Academy of Physlt>'Iberapy Massage and S.iuna Parlor, 255 Thalia St., the DA inves:Ugator went in and requested a massage Tuesday afternoon. The suspect prepared him for the treatment, he claims, then asked what type of massage be desired. \Vben he inquierd about prices, he .tales, Y..1iss Vlahos said a regular musage would be $10, then went oo to of- rer additional services al prices ranging up to $30. He paid for the regular job with a marked bill, then placed her under arrest. Following arraignment , Miss Vlahos was freed on $840 bail. The massage parlor, police report, was 1sSued a Laguna Beach city business license in 1969, in the na~e of Char.les T. Balmer, 1050 Skyline Drive. No license had yet been taken out for 1970, they state. Laguna Doctor Abortion Case Action Delayed A Superior Court hearing into a Laguna 'Beach physician's charges that the Orange County Grand Jury which in- dlded him on abortion ~ha~ges is unl a\\1ully constituted was sidelined to- day when both sides in the dispute agreed that they needed more time for prepara- tion. Or. Robert Cumming Robb, 67, of 34567 Scenic Drive, Dana Point, was ordered to r!tum to court April t for the reschedul- ed bearing. Abortion charges against him wirf be held pending the outcome of that investigation. . Dr. Robb was indicted by the Grand JUry on charges of inducing miscarriages in three women patients, all of them single after Judge Paul Mast threw the 8ame ~barges out of Santa Ana Municipal Cpurt with the ruling that t h e Therapeutic Abortion Act of 1967 was un· constitutional. Judge Y..1ast agreed wlth defense at· torney Moses Berman that any other nil· Ing would be to accept the philosophy of the Roman Catholic religion. Such ac- ceJitance, he sakl. would be In violation of the First Ame:ndment of the U.S. Constitution. District Attorney Cecil Hicks revived the charges with the Grand Jury i~­ CUc:tment and Insists that the stale code 1s .... 1111 and Robb should be prosecuted in lh• hi&fl<r court. Stock /tlarkel• . NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market clun& to a fractional lead late this after· noon In light 1radlng. (See quotaUons, p,, .. 26-27). Advanclne; ls&uts exceeded ttRl'J on lhe Now York Stock .Exciwl&e m to IJI, . ,,, ;; DAIL'( PILOT ti.ff P ... 11 IN THE RUNNING GOP Leader Carpenter Carpenter Heads For Senate Seat Left by Sclimitz By 0.C. HUSTINGS O! '"' Dto!IY Pllfl Stiff One of California 's most powerful Republicans -Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach -is headed for public of. lice, apparently as a challenger for a seat in the California State Senate. Carpenter has called a press con · ference for Thursday morning, a clear- cut indication that he intends to seek a spot on the June ballot , and Sacran1ento sources Tuesday said Carpenter will be running for the seat being vacated by Senator John Schmitz {R-Tustin). Schmitz is resigning his Senate post to seek the Congressional seat left open by the death of Rep. James B. Utt. Carpenter. 41. is currently chairman of the California Rt:publican St.ate Central Committee. He has been a key figure in Orange County GOP polltics for the past 10 years, serving as chairman o( Orange County Republican Central Commitlee and leading campaigns in behalf of Governor Reagan and President Nixon. !See CARPENTER, Pa1e Z) ......... t Vote Tally Then~ Now ' I ~ (Eloctlon of April 16, 1969) Present Bond lnt•r•tt Tax Rate Total Registered No. Vote Registered Rate Iner•••• Iner•••• Vot•s Voters Voting (y•s·nol Vot•rs Yoa No y., No Cast ~ 1-Concordia School 1,583 663 246 417 l ,716 493 443 396 531 937 #2-Green Re sidence 1,730 613 217 396 1,174 289 293 211 369 584 (204 Barcelona) #3-0le Hanson School 1,275 573 280 21l3 1,83E 571 337 457 452 913 .#4-Las Palmas School 1,067 380 146. 232 1.260 303 243 263 285 551 ;#:5--Lemberg Residence 645 JIB 167 153 1,269 422 215 346 288 657 (219 Via Montego) • jt&-Palisades School 1,197 486 223 263 1,121l 420 2M 344 307 655 #7-District Office 1,097 419 188 231 975 272 158 213 217 431 ,;f8-Richard Hen:J' Dana 1,21>4 397 162 235 11653 394 264 337 316 659 •oiscontinu Pree. 826 310 108 202 #9-Marco F'; Forster 1.023 460 232 228 1,262 457 192 386 259 651 # 10-San Juan Elementary 1,043 398 152 246 1,2611 406 236 349 m ~I • #II-Crown Valley School 'Split with R.H.D. 948 420 241 179 1,525 549 233 445 285 761 Totals 13,844 5,506 2,389 3,117 15,069 4,631 2,868 3,845 3,628 7,521 U.S. and Colombian Jets R ecall Campaign Against Allen 500 Names Short ·Hijacked; La11d in Cuba By United Press International Two planes were hijacked to Cuba t~ day, one as it flew from Cleveland, Ohio, to Flo rida and the second as it was en roule to Barranquilla from Bogota, Colombia. They were the fourth and fifth hijacks carried out successfully so far in 1970 in the Western Hemisphere. Both were Boeing 727 jetllners. The United Airlines plane hljacked in the United States carried 106 persons and was forced by a lone cunman to land and refuel in Atlanta, Ga., before taking off for Cuba. The Colombian Avianca Airliner car· ried 78 persons. It was forced to tou ch down al Cartagena, apparently for refuel· ing, but remained aground only five minutes aod then continued on to Bar- ranquilla where it took on more gas and then headed ror Cuba. In Vienna, two young Poles -Wleslaw Szymankiewla, 20, and Romoult Wieslaw 7.oltucho, J8-were convicted and senten- ced to jail terms today for hijacking a Polish airliner to Vienna several months ago. Zoltucbo was sentenced to two years in jail and Seymank.iewici got two years and three months. The court told them they coold stay in !he West after com- pleting thelr sentences. Laguna Pageant Tests for Noise Pageant produ«r Don Williamson and Festival director Stuart Durkee have agreed to participate in a "sound tesl" to make sure a scheduled summer pr~ duction or the musical ''Oliver'' at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse will no! in- terfere with the Pageant next door. The production by the Playhouse, in association with the Lyric Opera of Orange County, is scheduled !or presen- tation July 3 through Aug. 30. Festival Oireetor Mrs. Helen Keeley said Playhouse representatives told her they had checked out the .sound and assured themselves that strains of the musical will not float up Into lrvtne Bowl, bul would like to invite Williamson and Durkee to lend an ear to another test run. By TO~f BARLEY ot IM D1llY Pll•I llllf The semi-secret campaign lo mount a recall election agaln."!t Fifth District Super9lsor Alton E. Allen o( Laguna Beach has fallen at least 500 signatures sho rt In !Ls petition effort, the DAILY PILOT learned today. Petitions had been filed v.·ilh County Clerk William E. St John as a re- quirement to get a recall election against Allen on the ballot. \Vhole pages of signatures have been detennined to be invalid, it was disclos· ed. Orange County voting supervisor Ed Arnold told the DAILY PILOT that the recallers will be at least 500 signatures short. He cautioned that was an unofficial tally, subject to verification when the !!slings are fed through the county's com- puter. Meanw hile, the frantic recall workers v.·ere recalling: their petition carriers in an I Ith hour bid for signatures to replace those bogus ones that have been can· celled out. It see.med certain at press time today that St John wlll order the organiz~rs of t.he Allen Recall campalgn to bring in (See RECALL, Page Z) Mayor Tells Beach Purchase Plan By BARBARA KREIBICll Of tti. O•llY Pli.t lltff Continuing his survey of prospects !or de\''iopment or Laguna's tl1aln Beach, "fayor Glenn Vedder Ulla week expressed the opinion that city Income in the next few year1 could cover payments on the beach purchase without seeking li.d- ditional taxes. Hi? also proposed a three-phast: development program to extend ove:r the nert io to 1% ye11rs. Step one, Vedder suggested, woul~ be the development of the beachfront from Laguna.Avenl!e to <>ctan Avenue with " revenue producing fs.clllty adjacent to Laguna Avenut. Thia is where the city Is seeking pr6posala for a hotcl~nference !aclllty. The WUon or lhe beachfronl from Ocean Avenue to Broadway, 11)'1 Vedder, could be relained essentially as It now Is for approximately 10 ye11r1 in order to continue rent income to tile city . The area from Broadway to U1e Boyll' Club should be developed In the near future, tht Maiyor belleves. This area, he states in a report. "could provide a clear and expanded vista aod a larger pedestrian use, as well as som commercial services orlepted to the b!!ach and beach ustrs. "A series of teJTaces for people to use, at or near Coast Highway sidewalk level:" says the reµo.[1 , ''Could .be con- strocted, scr'¥ing It.$ a roof over smnll shops or stalls catering to the beachgoer. No cost projection Is orfei'ed, but the ove rall re.tum in vtew, pede.slrlAn use and rent would be great compared to I.he sm&ll construction cost Terr aces could be built 11 needed -and as money 1B available." Analyilng beach costs and revenue, Vedder notes that annual principal and intere:st payments range from $220,000 to $225,000. Insurance, taxes and other charg~s amount to about 4'50,000 an- nually, but laxes. wUI be reduced as leases are terminated. The total cost is $270,000 lo $275,000 annually. To de.tray these expenses he citea estlmaltd Income for 196~70,. hi round r1gures. Festival or Arts revtnue will amount to $70,000, bed tax to $120,000. rent from leases. $80,000, beach parking lot tees, $8_.000, for a total of '278,CMXI~ plus a reJuve or $50,000 from 1~9. Ot this income. $1!»,000 has been budgeted for cultural support, city pro- motion and transfer to the general fund for "housekeeping." ·~pparently the income ln U1e next few years, if properly allocated, could meet lht: charges without going to the LU.· payer," the Mayor slates. Addlllonal facts lo be considered, he ' adds, are the Governor's proposed six· cent sales tax, which woukl increase the bed tax to the same rate and add US,000 a year to Laguna's bed taJ re venue; and the fact that, when UW! Main Beach is fully dev'eloptd, there will be additional cost for cart and maintenance, as Wt.II as loss of rent. Pun:hase af the Richfield station and full development of Main licach Park could require an addlllonal '61),000 an· nuall)l, he notes. - Urglng an adopted, precise plan fo'r phased development of the beachfroot, lhe Mayor concludes, "whhn, fad or fan- cy should 'not direct a plecemleal unrelated devtl0p1ncnt of the total beach part." I ' I Bond Rate Increase Try Fails By RICHARD P. NALL 01 fll• DlllY Piii! 11111 Scbool buse:s loaded with youngsters rrom Capistrano Unified School District seemed perkier this morning es U1ey pUed the freeways and resldenUal streets of the sprawling district. It may have betn only the morning sun on the yellow paint but transportation like music and the entire educational prt> gram was given a new lease on Ille Tues· day by the dislrlct's voters. Half of the Ui,069 reg1.stered voters - 7,521 -turned out and passed a 50-ccnt tax override that will be Jn effect for tw o year.s . An acoompanying proposition to raise the interest rate from five to seven per- cent on $4.2 mlllion in previously ap- proved bonds tor school cnsfructlon and site acquisition failed to pile up the two to one ratio of yes votes'11eeded for passage • The override won with 3,845 yes votes and 3,628 no votes. The bond issue had 4,631 yes votes (61.7 percent) and 2,868 no votes, It would have needed 66 2/3 per· cent yes votes to succeed. TURNOUT UP The turout of voters was 2.015 more than the 5,506 turnout April JS. 1969 which saw that SO·cent override substantially defeated. Registration in the district had increased from 13,844 to 15,069. It became apparent early in the even· ing at election central, the district office, that the bonds would probably lose. Election off I c i a I s apprehensively watched for returns from precincts one and two, Concordia School (President Nixon's precinct, although he was not yet eligible to vote there) and the Green residence, 204 Barcelona . Both are tr;idi- tionally tough on school f I n a n c • measures. The negative votes from these pol/Ing places, in the case of the override, began to be offset by a heavy majority of yes votes from other districts. The override started gaining a slim lead that became a cliffhanger until the last preclnt was in, Las Palmas School. Truman Benedict, distri ct superin- (Sff ELF£TION, Page ZI Orange Coast Wealher Thursday's weather picture ? Jn 11 word, groovy. The Man calls tor sunny skies and warmer tempera. tures, which means about 65 along t.he coast ·and pushJng 70 inland. INSIDE 1'001\ Y Clve 11 b 1' n c ll of colleac dran1a studeul1 e110t10ll rope and l11t~1ll crtatfl their owu reptrtory compa1111. 0 r a u u e COO.SI College is doing jcui that with its fltto t:rptrlmental tl•f'a· Ur, See Enterl<lif1mcnt. Page ~O. •ln!tt 11 ...... . CtHl•n.la II Cll'MI' (.,"" 1J c~.n•"' u, • Cll!Hl"-11 j) ... Cffi)ln n c .... ,_, ,. 0.Nll Htlkn II Oi .. rc,, 11 tflW ll l P... 6 Iftlw!llNMM ~1 "h••not• , .. ,, -.~ "'"• llrtfert M MlllM,I • M1rrlt1t Llctt1M1 'I """" i. l«'li(I 1 MHlfftt'I 11 Mtvln Jt.l! ~tlUl>I J1111ts M """"-' ruwt .... Otllltt C•velY 11 PTA )f '"'" t).tf Ot. llt\ll(!'lflft 14 llotcll Mwl1h r .. n Tt!Wl\IM n TMtl-JWI Wttll\tf' , w.111.,,•t Nm u.tt w.,. ,.,.,, •• ;.? DAIL 'f PILOT SC \Vr6nttd1r •• ~1arth 11, 1970 Del.ay for T ·i111. • Leary Wife, ·son . . Draw Stiff Terms Superior Court Judge Byron K. tdcMlllan broke up the Timothy Leary home today with 1.hree separate rulings and reserved until l\londay for the con- troversial LSD cultist what may be the stiffest penalty of the three. He sent Rosemary Leary , U, to Orange County Jall ror six months and placed her on probation for the next fh•e years. He on:lered John Bush Leary, 20, to undergo a 9Cklay diagnosHc study at the state of Ca1Uornla's Citino facility and to report back to his courtroom Jn June. Df', Le:ary WQn a five-day delay o( his sentencing_ on charges of possession of marijuana. De!ense attorney George Chula &UC· c-essfully pleaded that "new legal pro- blems relating to Dr. Leary's other legal actior.s" had arisen and he needed time lo discuss them with attorneys working on those CaSCl!i. Dr. Leary was sentenced to 10 years in prison last month by a Texas Federal Court judge. He is scheduled to return to New York later this month for further action on misdemeanor charges relating to drug use. Mrs. Leary and young Leary were con- victed last month by an Orange Counly Superior Court jury of charges of possession cf marijuana and LSD. The family was .arrested in Laguna Beacll on the drug charges and subsequently in· dieted by the Orange County Grand Jury. ?i.1rs. Leary's lawyer announced today thc1t he will immedlately appea1 her .jail sentence. Leary left the crowded courtroom with the promise that "what.ever happens my family and I are free, we were born free and we will stay free." Dr. Leary is currently being held Ln Orange County Jail. He was committed there last month by Judge McMillan with the comment that he was "a threat to the community." The former Harvard psychologist smil· ed and waved to what appeared to be about 50 Dower carrying sympathizers in the courtroom and urged lb.em to "love God and stay high." Rockwell 'Proud' Of Pageant Part In a letter to Festival of Arts publicist Sally, Reeve, famed artist Noonan Rockwell said this week that he Is "proud to be a part" of Laguna's Festival. Mrs. Reeve told FesUval directors she had written the .artl!t. to ask If he knew where a print of his "Winter Duet" could be obtained for reproduction as a UvJna picture In thia year's Pageant The palnUng had been reproduced before, she explained, and, li ke all Roclc....·ell works, was an audience favorite, but the orlglnal I~ calendar used for reference was In poor CQndltion. In a gracious letter, the artist referred her to the calendar publisher, adding his expression of pleasure that the painting '~"Ould be part of the Pageant's 1970 ··command performance" o( all·time favorites. Rockwell is an honorary lUe member or the Festival of Arts. Vi el Deaths to Rise, As U.S. Deaths Fall SAIGON (UPI) -Casualty figures to be released Thursday will show a decrease in American deaths and a sharp ,rise in South Vietnamese combat death& lo more than ~!pie the number of Americans. IDfonned sources 3aid today . This also , w.U reflected In fighllng reporied today from the South Viet- namese central CQasl where Viet Cong and NorUl Vietnamese troops inflicted heavy ~s on two C1:1mpanies of South \'ietnameae militiamen. ~ DAILY PILOT "",.,. IHcll Lot•M hnh c .... MllM """""" .... " P•111 .. h1 Vell.y s .. c1-.,. OltAHG£ COAST PUBLISHING COMPANY Robtrt N. w,,4 flrt110t11I ~ PubU1Mr Jeeli R. Ct;rlty Vic:• flrald1n1 and Gentrtl M111~er lhom•• x,,.,;1 Editor lhol'l'ltl A. Mw1phl11t MtMt!Flt E.iW>r Rieltenl P. Nell s1111111 011~1 co11nty E.dl1t1 Offlcff c .. 11 MM: :uo Wnl ''' '''"' H•WPOrt e..-eri: ttll w .. 1 l•lllM htil4v1..- U9UN IMO\; ll1 II""' AllMlll Nt;1111"91tn IMCll; l,.li lttctl llOllllVJt~ S•n Cl-'-: JIU Nllfth l!I CtmlM lllMI DAil Y Pll.OT, •flll wfllcrl It COf'llintlll lht New..PrtM, b 1111bll111td •H ltv ••e._,1 •wn• dolly Ill MMFltl tllllloM tor l.,_ 1.-dl. Newport IMdl. C:..tt Mttt, N1111lllltlltn IMfll ttld l"-l•lfl Vttlty. ,,.,,. •llfl tw. '9fllMI .-115-. Ot.,.._ CN•t ,.llllllullnt ~ftt ..,.lrlllflt oi.nli ttt II 1t11 Welt a.llOol llYlll., HtwP91'1 1¥dl, .... Ml W•I llY ltrllt, C.tt M .... , ......... f7141 642-4)21 ca-Htt:4 ......... "' 642·1671 a. c1,.,,,. An o.,..,...,.: ,., •••• 4tJ-4420 c.,Yl"'9"i. 1•10. or.,.. CMH ,,,_...,."" ~.,. "' "'"' ''°""" llkollflltlfll. •ITWlll ,Mfltf tt _. ... ,UMfl'lfM• '*'"" ,,..., .. ~ WltllOwf tOttllll ..,. 1'1.lltlclft Of tooi'tllflf --· l«W cltU .. ,,... ~Id •f H_..,I ~ " CM.hi -... 011~"-llJbkrlJl'tl•ll ,, Uf"l1t1 UM l!Wrtlily1 .,,. ll'lfll U,JI "'°"'IM,1 ..,tlt .. •Y Onllrtttitiw. U.111 ~"· "Don't y,•orry," he assured !hem, "I have very good connections with the highest court of all. Everything is perfect, we ha\•e tried to do God 's work and we will still be able to do it." From 1•a9e J RECALL. • • u•ithin the n e x t 10 days sufficient signatures to meet the required total of 9,748 names. Recall organizers Paul Carpenter of Cypress and Anthony Tarantino of San Clemente delivered 10,522 signatures to St John lut week. St John advised the shocked Carpenter of the deteriorating situation and the ant.i-Allen Democrat immediately reac· tivated his idle volunteers throughout the Fifth District. Carpenter noted "We have 10 days 1n which to obtain whatever may be the required slgnatures and that is time enough for us." Carpenter placed the blame for the mounting number of invalidations on two Newport Beach recruits to his recall campaign. "\Ve decided to take no legal action against them after the two agreed to delete the lal1ification11 they had ell· tered," !he angry Car,;enter said. "Jt is, of course, a blow to our campaign but at least we now have the opportunity to fill !he gap with genuine signatures -and there are, you know , plenty of them in the Fifth Districl" One of those two workers denied Carpenter's allegations and told the DAI· LY PILOT that his signatures were col- le<:teci lasl week by representatives of Opinion Research Jnc. of Long Beach. ''I've heard nothing since," he said, "and T know nothing about false signatures or phony names and addresses." Close checking by voting division supervisor Arnold's staff has revea1ed the tiling cf Incorrect names an<! addresses, the listing or persons who are not registered to vote, duplications of signatures and lists compiled in October to which the signatures \\'ere affixed a month later. One checker commented that "valid signatures were running as high as 96 percent accurate when we first started working on the bundle of petitions and things looked fine. But we got a Hille lower down and found that we were hav- ing to throw out whole sheets of signatures. one after the other, for · various rea$(lns." Carpenter's submission of I O , 5 2 2 signatures called for a 91 percent level of validation and St John commented at the lime of Ill.Ing that the recall workers were "leaving a great deal to chance. One should have a greater cushion than this margin of 774 votes when ou bear in mind the nature of the election." St John said. Jf Carpenter's eflorts to make good the lnvaJid signatures are unsuccessful, his candidate will have to oppose Supervisor Alton E. Allen. Costa Mesa Vice hlayo r Robert M. "Bob" Wilson and savings and loan execullve Ron Caspers of Lido Isle in the June 2 primary eleclion. Carpenter said Tuesday that It seenied "rairly certain" ·that Tarantino \viii go against Allen in the June election. "He's trying lo make up his mind," the Democrat said, "but we 11hou\d have his decision within the next 10 dayi;. '' Drug, Runaway Raps Jail Pair A young Canadian and a runaway girl rrom San Luis Obispo were tal!:en lnto C\JStody Tuesday night "'hen Laguna Beach police were summoned to a coffee shop at 1600 S. Coast Highway, to check out their suspicious behavior. Answering the 9:45 p.m. call police clalm they round the p11ir staggering . redeyed and barely able to speak. Patrick John Moe, 18. a Canadian citizen \\'ho said he now rcsiries in Long Beach, was booked on suspicion of being under the Influence of drugs in public. Police slated he v.·as incapable o( laking a sobriety test. His companion. a 17-year-old girl later !rlc.ntlfled as a runaway, was placed in Juvenile Hal) !or s a f e t y when police decided &he was unabla to care for herself. Of £ice Seekers To Give Talks Two Lagunans who have clashed rrom time to time on ~hool i&sues WU! move Into the fleld of politics when they appear a~ guest speakers at a Monday artemoon mteUng or the \Vomtn's Republican Club of Laguna Beach. Attorney Wiiiiam \Vllcoxt:n, Laguna Beach school board member, y,•111 be prtstnted In his role 1s candidate for the Congreulon1l se1t of the late James B. Utt. Edv.,ard Lorr, president of the L.aguna Beach Taxpayers A.ssoclaflon And leader of opposltlon to the reccnlly dt:(C•led school tax override ind bond issue, will be heard as a candidate ror the Laguna Beach City Council. lt'lterested member~ or the public are invited to lllend the 1 p.m. mt?cting In the Laeuna Beach \Voman'a Club, St. Anll's Drive and Glenneyre Street. ~ , Meningitis Death Tied To Marines A 12·yeer-old Garden Grove girl who died Tuesday of spinal mlningitls -the first Orange County vicUm in lwo years -had been exposed to a family !riend stationed at Camp Pendle!on. The dlsclosure was made by the mother. of Janet Hines. of 12171 Lambert Circle, a straight-A student at Lampson Intermediate School. Death came at Oraogc County ~1edical Center, where the gir l was trans(errcd from a private hospital to which her mother took her last Friday, in a swift· sttiking coma. "She looked IJ~e a wax dummy, I knew something was wrong." sald J anet's mother who explained she became ill the day-before at school, showing symptoms of flu or a virus. YOUNGSTERS CROWD TOGETHER IN 'HOLD' IN RE.ENACTMENT OF MAYFLOWER VOYAGE History ccWr,., Allv• at L•gun•'• Top of th• World Elementary School Dr. Gerald \Vagner. Orange County Public Health Officer, said the disease is extremely contagious but lh('.!ra is no Im· 1nedlate danger of an epidemic. •Mayflower!! Sets Sail Schoolmates will be closely observed and the entire Hines family -including William Jr., :M, a Navy man stationed &t Guantanamo Bay, Cuba -have been given preventive treatment. The Red Croi'IS arranged for the younc sailor to fly home and be with his pareats and his surviving teenaged brother and sifter. Students Recreate Hardships of Historic Voyage T\\•o-hundrcd Top of the World Elemen- tary School students in Laguna Beach participated in a unique history lesson last 'veek as they learned a little of what the passengers on the Mayflower had en- dured on their historic fi11e-week ocean crossing. Teacher Judith Anderson read actual passages from writings of the original Ma yflCJWer passengers during the lesson. but their descriptions of the trip we re just part or the experience. rnstead of five weeks, the students spent five hours aboard !heir "ship," crammed into a darkened roo,m to represent the "hold" in which the passengers traveled. From Page 1 ELECTION ••. tendent , today prised the citizens group called ARVY (Area Residents -Vote Yes) for a dynamic hard sell that turned the Ude. \Vall hanging depicted the sea around and tape-recorded sounds of the surf, with occasional "storms" filled the room. Once they had "cast off." the students could not leave. At intervals, Mrs. Anderson read from the diaries of the /11ayflower passengers. Same of the student.s brought musical instruments which they played from ti me to time, and the girls brought sa,·ing and knitting to pass lhe time, as the original passengers had done. The only food offered l.o t h e "passengers" was bread and water, but they had to watch the "captain" and "fiNt mate" eat a hearty meal of ham· burgers. Helping t.o simulate conditions on the ship were realistic spiders and rats {plaslic). Growing restless at time s, the students expressed amazement that their an· cestors had been able to endure the original voyage and 1,1•ere genuinely relieved when land at last was "sighted" and they were met by "friendly Indians." The Indians, a surprise feature ar- ranged by Mrs. Richardson and a group of pclrents, treated the new "arrivals" to apple cider and cookies. The stude nts now are wriUng essays about their trip, the real Mayflower voyage and the sutrerings endured in search of freedom . Dru1a Homeowners Meet With Water Officials Cases of spinal meningiUs have flared up al Gimp Pendleton In the past and Mrs. Hines theorized Tuesday the virus could have bee n carried by a Marine who visited them recently. ''I want to warn other parents," she said in tones or grief. "I'm not trying to create a panic. I just don't want this to happen to any other children." l\1rs Hines said the entire family recently suffered a chest virus, but Janel. an honor student, went back to class to work on a science project while slill feeling its effects. The county health officer said today that although spinaJ menin&ltis can bring death six hours after entering the body, perhaps a third of the population ca rries the virus. He said the lethal bacteria, men- \ngococcal meningitis, is frequently found in IM throa\. Only six cases have been recorded In Orange County in the past two years and all of these victims -until the Hines girl -have survived. ' •·r think we really had a fine effort at By JOHN VALTERZA Tom Brooks and Bob Malone, district .. Capo Approves Membership getting the infonnalion out .•. it was so 01 1"' 0•1tr Plitt 11111 lawyer George Lopn and members or v.·idespread," said Benedict. "Certainly A 1m1ll deltgation of Dan a Point the district ataff. (. Chuck Dargan (ARVY chainnan) and the homeowners met with a committee from A compromlse In the issue appears far ARVY rommittee did a fantastic job." the South Coast County Ylater District aw ay, however all partles in the Tueaday Tuesday night in an "informational gathering agreed that something could In SERRA Group The override will bring the district meeting " to exi:imine whether the possibly be worked out. about $700,000 annually. Without It, school district's recent 50-percent rise in water District Manager John "Tex" Smith San Juan Capistrano city rouncllmen officials had estimated there would be a rales could be reduced. this morning said one basic problerr. in have approved the city 's membership in 10 percent cutback. But, despite a less emolional level than the controversy is misunderstanding of SERRA. Benedict said override passage will last week 's stormy meeting on the issue, the standard fiscal practie£s of govern· The city will be the second to sign the no one really reached accord. ment agencies ln which a "cushion'' of agreement fonning the South ea s t permit the district essentially to continue The group set March 31 for another reserve funds must lie in a budget each Regiona l Reclamation Authority which i!'i the e:l. i ·lg program. meeting. year to meet expenses between the a joint approach to sewage and ecology "The ' ost dramatic thing will be The delegations examined reasons for start of a fiscal year in July to the first problems in the San Juan basin. si ngl s 'on kindergarten," he said, The the water rate increase -t~ distritt arrival or tax revenue funds from the The Santa h1argarita Water District •· ·11 · li · .n Ii county in Deceinber. the r· 11 · kindergartens are now on double session. memu.::rs c1 ng spire na nuia on. y,·as 1rs o sign. The homeowners. who have examined "I think that many of the homeowners Still studying the joint powers agree--Benedict said the funds would also allow audits and financial reports of the believe that cushion of n1oney should be ment are the San Clemente \\later a catchup on some necessary ma in· district, maintain that the district's used for lowering rates, but if we did. we District, the Capistrano Beach and Dana tenance of school properties. steady income and solid investments V.'ouldn't hB\'e any money for a six-month Point Sanitary District and the ?i.foulton· Alth ough failure of the bond interest show it to ge running in the black, thus period," he said. Niguel and Sant.a Ana Mountain County proposition left the district unable lo no increase should be mac'e; The district delegation. he added. would \Valer Districts. The six-man layman committee -meet on its own before the next session The purpo~ or SERRA is to eliminate inarket its bonds for building, Benedict representing primaril y the home.owner's with the homeowners ''to see if we can the necessity for small agencies to saw hope for a s~ond high school in association In the Thunderbird Homes come up with a satisfactory com-duplicate facllitieS for purifying and car· Proposition Seven en the June primary tract, met with waler board members pro1nise." rylng sewage. ., ballot. It would raise interest maximum 1-;:::::::::::::::::::=.::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::==================-. on stale bOllds from five to seven percent to make them marketable. The stale, &aid Benedict, has alrl!'ady approved a second district high school to be built in Dana Point, "Dana Hiiis High !ichool." off Golden Lantern on a. site the district owns. If the stale bond interest goes up. said Benedict, H would loan the district U1e funds for the work. The high school would house about 1800 students and cost about S5 mlllion. The existing high school is overcrowded by 20 percent, the superintendent said. An addition to Richard Henry Dana School is also state appro\'ed but Benedict said il ""·ou\d have 1 lower priority ror rtate money. The district was able to build Pttisslon Viejo School because the Mlaslon Viejo Company baJled It out and purchesed the bonds at five percent. lloweve r. Benedict saw no liklihood of another such transac- lion. He §aid lhe riistrict will hav e to go back lo the voters again someUme this year ln another effort to get the bond ceiling hiked . He said this probably v.·ould not occur unUI September or sometime in the fa ll From Pag11 1 CARPENTER • • I! CArpenter seeks !he state senAte post. it probably would ht l l the uratng of C.QVemor Reagan. He Is close to the governor ~nd state GOP leadership Is knOV.'1l to be unhappy with the currtnt party program In the l..egl1lature's uppe.r houst. ~teanwhlle . two other possible can· did C'ltes for the st:tte senate PoSt are hacking olf. Asstmblyn18n Robert Burke tR·Huntlngton Reach \ hns deel11rtd he v.•ill st"ck re-tlectlon for his IS$embly !!(tit and "·ill not be a candidate for atJte senate. CONVENIENT TERMS I ANKAMERICARD MASTU CHA ~G;E And the subject i1 lov•. It's for evryone betw ee n th • •9e1 of I ~-21 . Who fe1 I. Who und•r1t•nd, Who know 1bout lov1. There will bt fiY• nation•I recognitlon pri1e1, bteuti ful di•mond ptndsnt , e1pteially d11i9n•d by Or•nge Blossom. Thi cont 11t closes M1 y 15, 1970. So hurry. Th e tim1 i1 now. B~~n if Mtfiw tZJ /at ?tP.QMa/ /«1f f4ll/at • 18ll NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA 14 YEARS SAME LOCATION PHONE !~8 .)"401 ' ' • \ Estanci~,.. 1~~~~a:" lJ()()(t . s~. 1k~ "* Hlgb'• Lee ~·and•'dW !'torpel niil-' ell top lndlvWiJll honors ~t \be ~ .... ~::'1'-"'!' ..... Ski p ' I Ind 1om ~ ol Es~ were -IV-!!... sjmilar 1wa'rd1, !J'uesday i;:"' at the sc~l'i l:ale~- J:laven waa named most VJ}u'ble oo the Tars' bas.II.et-· l\fll team ·whllt llorpel, W , wrestler ol tht 'ear IJ)d. t9J(lefeated cha~ la the t•poand weW-·class! w-. nlool valuable on~~ Ttiuanu, the 1 VP ln, t~l:DJ League baskettil'll e i r c)e'1: received like honors while F068 was.. named most valuable on • the Estancia wrestling forOes. 1 Newpo(i Harbor WresUlog . , vafsily -'Captain: Doug ~Iller; MV: Chris Horpel; Most Improved : Brad Hovey. Juniilr varslly -MV: Bruce Mellor; Most Improved; Lar- ry Jones. .Frosh-soph -i\JV: Richard Brown. Basketball Varsity -Captain: Nels Tahti; MVP : Lee Haven ; Mom Improved : Bill ~llet. .Junior varsity -Captain: Larry Gentosi: lifVP: John Kauner : ll.tost Improved : Bill ~ones and Bob Helvie. • Bees Captain: Fred R ey nold s: ~tVP : John i;towniari ; Most Improved : Ra~y Larson. ' Cees · -Captain : ' Brian Cokas: "-fVP : Charlie Thompson ; ~lost Improved~ 10M'Clarl<. , l:s....,J • . . • • a..li:ttbau Vmity · -·c.-oaptain.<: ti.1ike • Hays a'nd , ,Mi k e ~hiuaime.r: . MVP : s· t I p Wllliamk: -Mosl -ll"f'roved: Gary ,o,illt ' .. . ; • Juolor Varsity -'captain: llob Kaiser: MVP: .Jeff Zelsdorf ; ·. ~1 o s·t Improved: Ctaig Hay1. • JJeeg -Capt.ain: Tim Olson ; MVP': Hanle . Moor!'; lt1oil ~proved: Kevin Brown .. : C..s -Captalo: Scott lGayner: MVP: $Cott G91uer:· iMoat 1n1p<ovid: Scott' 0e "Vries.' . ~ _w~l . , V~ily ,---~iolalns: Tom ; t}°Oll">t ~ .~<?l"lll(~~lani\:I.: if.iV: Tom. \Fosl; Mo•, t )miirtivea' 'Bob il-Je. :. -, Junior varsity · -.1Cciptain: .Ed ·Marsh i MV: D'i!n1li1s , 'Snydl\r> Most In\provfd' Tora I 'Schea.fer· l . , ' : FroS~h -Captai~: Ran-•i 'dy F..rftt.Y: MV: D.e .n n i;s i ~Snyder; MMl JmproTtd·: ·i.n·' :stroup. l • UCI Swim <t UC fl"o'I• 1121 011 Uottt Alll • «lO llWIS!n> rtlt'f -UCI (Deli;•, ~ c~. Ctm.1!\9n, Dlckl'Yl9rin). J:J6:t. 1000 freeotio lt -1. ~Id (U(I), 2. Or.ice CSA), J. l<l;U1kt! ISAI. 11:24.f, , 200 frMSl'l'll -I. Ftr..-r IUCIJ, l. oi-ltlCO, 3 Drlnom 15A), l:Sl.J. ~ ll'HSf'llt ~ 1. P•liold IUCll. 2. Gtelh (SA). 3. Dld!mlM ruc11. 2jJJ, :roo Jnd. r?l«llft' -1. l\'.1$<1n iUCo. J. Ntt..,,.~CI), 1. Mllloir ISA!. ('°'·'· 1·0:: cuc~'i Dr1it~1i~~'1,J'.i.11• 1 HIO frnsl'l'le -I. l'l•!Mf' (UC!l, J. I l!'.•tcn IUCll. l. Gron ISA). JO.I. 200 be(kstMt -1. NtlMlll (UC11. 2. ) Girdner fU(IJ, J. KKk ISAI 2:11.J. 500 frtuh'ft -I. Mlllrr ISAJ, ·l· OlilOll IUC.I), J. McO-ld (U(I • l 5:70.1. { l'OG bt?1!11trDlt1 -1. C-r !UCO, · t A...m IU(I), l. F111lk"'r lS.t.>. :g;~· rneier 1111¥W>il -I. l"rlnce (UCIJ, t 5lnl1 An1. \ .i frt.,fl'll ••l•Y -UCI DkkrMnn, 01.ert. F1•m1r, E•i«1>. l :ll,O. I . , . l>NA~~ ~~or~ $~I'. Au1ll1> 100. South C1~!n1 ''· lit K~\ldlf SI. 6', ll!lnoll W•1ley1n S. ' C1~tr.I W•"'· n, St. lltflHlctt. K1n. " ~ /,\ll!:l'fs H ... W!¥ "' Wftl. ' Nr« ~ 1 ... i.n11 76 I GVllford tll, W1Ynt. N!'b, n l5 Eat Tern Midi. IOI. ,E••I Centr11 Oltlt. ~ W1rtbll,. '1. filorfflt"' S.O. 11 -E1v Clllr1, Wtt.. n, E11tern Moll!. ti .... n.. ..... If .. Melt• ... 'c:ONStDi:Jt.YoUlt.FELLOW QotfERS -, How often ·hav•. yo'u se•n 1 golfer with whom you ar• playi,n1 usa_his putt~r·&s a "crutch'' when retrieving his ball from the hi>i;1 . This practk:t"9\ quit~ common •. yet seems to bt a lrttl•·diScussed point of ·etiquette. • When. a golfer pUts most ·Qf1his weight on the nose of his putter, .he oot only dti;tts the putting surflct,· bu.t also run• the. ris~ of snapping his puttershaft. If you vlolat1 th• •tiquette o~ tht aamt. in this manner, I urge you to think of tile players that foUOw' who must ~putt over your indentation. And r11Mi;nbe r: the next such· m•rk you must putt over may ba~ouc:. own. .. . ' ...-. . ' Scor• In a,pit• of traP1, i:tunkers, rou1h arid downhiff•li•5-'fl'ith tli• hilp Alnilld 'Palmer cff•rs )'OLI in his bocklet, "Tr01.Jbl• Shelli." 'A eoPt;ls ;our•' for 20• •lone with •11t.fnped, self· .CUres.sed enwlop-11nt to Arnold P1ltMr: ~air• of this n•ws- . ptper, , Area Briefs Pirates Win, 4 .. 1; CIF Mate hes Set ' ' Orange Coast.College's soc- cer team will 1 be idle until ~prll following 1a~ 4-r vic,tory oVer Cal State lFullerton) rri· day on·the JoserS' field . · • The' Victory ~a~ ~ Pirates' 9tUOll ftCOrd ,to ·S-1-'Z. OCC is e~e,:f' to compete' in a ii.ague with Chaffey, Mt. San Anf9fiic' arld1 · Golden West. w~ld) will bqin· In AprJI and end iii May· · --- ' ' ·' ·'ln !l);day'I Win .civer ·cat state; Jtay . Crump' was ace-~ 'Pla.v,ef·; 'of the. game h<iow>.lqr his outslanllillJ! play at 'CWIUe·. • · • ' 1 :. 'Scoring for oec werelffenry ~t~&kal, Cefin3n C~t~~~o, Alfttil<> Maran, ~n4 ?bip Mor-n~.· Steve JOiitfsOh·tnmed in . I ' ' ' a noe defe~lve, game" . •• Frid~ ~nigbt~l . .CIF _AAAA basketball semifinals at Los Ani~es -SPorts Arena will pit Long·atach Millikan and No. I seeded Santa Barbara in the 7:30. opener. . .... Wrapping up the night at 9 o'clock will be P•los Verdes and Monrovia With the win- ners of the twa battles to meet the fo\lo1'1ing night in Uie wrapUp a four-game set at the Sports Arena, to Oecide tbe champions of the A, AA, AAA and AAAA. • Laguna BeaCh High 's Wlnter sports ~thleies will be honored Thursday night · at th~ school cafeteri a, along 'w,illl Costa Men High'i basketbaU team at that school'• cafeteria. Wguna's aw;irds. banquet fot"" 'the,' basketball and !Wim- mihg teams wUI begin at 7 o'clock' while Costa Me'sa will begin its activiti~ at 6;30. • Laguna Beach High track coach Le:n 1-1lller <µld Orange Coast College instructor Ed Burke, Gl~ic h 1 in m e r ·-' - I ;I •4 throwers, Ytere two of the featured speake~ at the 11th annua• Arir.ona Track Coadies Association Clinic held 'Satur· day at Phoenix College. • The l-larbor ,Area Boys' Club has announced n!gisfration dates" !Or ila ' 1970 )'OUth baseball ·program, which ·is open ta ill ~e"'J>Ort Beach and Costa Mesa youths between the 7th gr,ade and high sctpol. R~gistration will open Mon- day .at Kaiser School' at 6 p.m. and at Er\Slgn School at 8 p.m. an<t Will conU~ue jhrough 1t1ar. 19. Registration ha! opened for the Costa Mesa Recreation Departmeqt's t.h re e ~man ballktlhall ltague, W h i c b bekins .league Jllay at Orange Coa:it College, April 7., All male& 14 or 'ol$fer are eligibl~ and registration forms and., rosters are available at the recreation oUices from 8 a.rh: te 5 p.'m . f\fonday thfough Friday.and from 7·10 ,p.m.: on tuesdays and Thursdays at OCC begiMing Tu<,sday. Entry fee i.5'$8 per team and the.. 'TI>iten. are limited to a rnaxifll.u!,ll or five players. • .iaJl.01~mente •ligh qualified nirl'e lndlvidua ls for this week'•s ' ClF Swim Prellminarlcs. which will be tield ,Saturday al Belmont Ph1za !n Long Beach. nit 'nine Triton qualifiers al"( Corby Lloyd, J i m Hati11'1.8n and Gary Smither tn the"" 9arsi1y claSs. Tim Spr. itlger and Randy Smither in tbe Bets and Mark ~1cCartin, Dana King, Gary Burris and Chris Broughton in the Cees. i I SOFT SEU SAM IY:~li ~yen· ~ --·- Prep Net Summaries ! • I ; j • • • . • L I : • • , ·~L "'f/fj!-· I _ ( . < .. 1 •• ,J •• -:::::---:::::_ ::::::> -=--' --~ ~ "DO YCV ACCEPT CARTE BLJ..NG1E ~ '1 - Staie JC Playoffs To Open Four games are '.shetluled Thursday as )he state jUaior college basketball toum11ment gets under way at Long Beach City College. 1 Jn fil'61 round games, City College or San 'Francf.sco and LACC meet in a 2 p.m. gan1e with San Joaquin Delta and Fullerton clashing at 4. Tv.•o night games find Con· tra Co,,ta matched aglli!'~• Compton at 7 and Hartnell facing LBCC at 9. All the teams won reglbnal games last weekend, with the e1ception, · 0£ San Joaquin Delta, the Valley Conference champioll;. which dre\\'. a bye. City College of San F'ran· cisco advariced to the Long Beaeh tourney with a 69-58 ''ictory over College of the Sisldyous while I.Ace turned back f\'fira Costa. 122·104. Fullerton defeated S a n Bernardino, 85·73, Cont r'a Costa got by Butte. I 13-87, Complon trimmed LA flarbor, 84-77, Hartnell whipped h-1er. ced. 118·94 and Long Beach had an easy time with Imper· ial Vall'ey, 98-75. LACC and LA Harbor tied for the Southern California Conference title while Mira Costa and Imperial Valley were eo<hampions of the Desert ·Conference. Fullerton captured the South Coast Co_nfererice crown. Semirinal games are sci~· uled Friday with champioMhlp round contest s slated fot 4 p.m. and 9. Consolation games will be held at 2 and 7. The slate title game Is plannetl f()!' 9 Satu rday night. Wfdnesday, 1.1arth 11, l'J70 Redman, Caneday " . -New School Names· ' ' ' . Foothall .·Coach, AD The. Orange Coast area has a 14th high school, complete with athletic director and varsity football coach. Jerry Redman is the foot~tl mrntor who'll be in charge of the &rid fortunes lor high school No. 4 .or the Tustin District,' the DAIL¥ PILOT learned exclusively 'today. There Isn't an official name for the scboo.t ---· ROGER CARLSON '"'----.... yel which has a location of just ·east of UC Irvine in the Turtle Rock·UNversity Park area. flowever, according to athletic director Dick CanOOay, the institution will field a varsity football team this fall aod ·will com·. pete on a free lance schedule against schools of comparatile si:re and ag~inst junior varsity teams from other contingents . 'M1ere will be no seniors in the first year or operation bul Redman expects to field ''arsity, Bet and Cee football squads. TcntaUve agreements have been reached ~·ith Banning and \\'ebb <Claremon t) high S('hools for varsity football games Ibis fall. Redman ~omes to the area after serving at P'oothlll High School tot sl1 years -the last three ca1npalgn1 under coach Ed Bain, It was Redman who was iil charge Qf the Knights' offensive blckILeld -1perhaps ·lhe backbone of Foothill's 11189 CrestView Lt.ague champions. . Prior to 1''orklng at Foothill, Redman put in one year under Wayne Hughell at New· port Harbor-High. HugheJ is now athletic director at Estancia. J\edm3n, 29, prepped at .Temple City and was graduated from Redlan<ts UniversilY. af· ... ter earning letters twice in football and "'as an all.coriference catcher and f\fVP on the . . team. He's married and lives·in Orange. Redman says he expects to play home games at either Tustin or !\11ssion Viejo (preferably li1ission Viejo) and Is hope!ul of conducting spring football practice at a site not yet .selected {possibly UC .Irvine). Caneday lakes over as athlellc director after three year11 at Mission Viejo. He is currently coaching swimming alter two years in weighi football. Prior to that he was at La Canada High School for four years Involved in football and swimming.· lie's 31 and lives with wife f\1ary in ,_lis- sion Viejo. At the moment, tht entire situation at high school No. 4 is up in the air. But Caneday says, "The school may not be completed by the lime school starts, but whether it means double stsslons at one of the existing schools or what. \l{e'll be fielding athletic teams in Seplember.'' DAILY PILOT 25 Bucs Trip Two Swim Opponents John Blauer won two event1 to lead Orange Coast College '• swim team to, victories over Rio 1-Jondo and Chaffey col· leges at Chaffey Tuesday. Coach Jack Fullerton's teum · turned'back Jlio Hondo, 68·31, and edged Chaffey. 56·43. Blauer captured the 500 iree style . in 5:30.5 and won the 1,000 free in 11 :24.5. Steve Schwer, Chris Gammon and Bruce Johnston also were individual winners for the Piratea. Schwer won the 200.y11rd free in 1 :56.1. GammDn cap- tured the 200 butterfly in 2: 13.8 and Johnston won the 200 bl't!:aststroke with a fine time of 2:28.8. Orante Coast returns to ac· lion Friday, hosting Ml. San Antonio College in a South Coast. Conference meet. ' Of'l!I DAIL~ 10 A.M, TO 10 P.M, SUN. I 0 TO 7 Offl1t IXl'tUS SAT, l /14/70 , . _ , , ' ' •*·.' mm:~ ............ C!".-·· .,,,,.. ....... .(llll'...,_ ::.=O:--.. ":.C::.t~-~ -.. --... ;:;:;r:;:. _ ~ ';9 .:"C.:':: :.::::::: -.. --.. -·---_ .... _ .. __ _ ______ .. _ --·---.. _, ...,. ..... uno 011il..U'Tlt = ~ _:. 7'.::---...=-.:: ==.:...:.:--.::;:~~ ---·-... ·-~···-::r .... _ .. _ ' ' --WUT.MINSlU llMI.._....._ ·~ m.- 240 • ""LT ln"LOfll C.OltD TU•ILelS • IT.ulD.t.•o T•••O DeltOM • Oll'IMO.t.ILI l:COMOMT Tllll ·-·1 ... 1 ..... , ... T...... l"ricl Ill. Tri Sin llldl . •- 6.10.1 J I 11.n t 1.11 : 7.71·14 I llM I· ·2.11· •.s•u •i9tlwt>ft. 7.75-11 I IJM ,, J.t t :::'in l .Zl-14 I 17 . ., I · 2.JJ ,, .. ,. l•d• All ""!qt """t f( l•clM ' 'T• llll. Wlllhl .. 1111 t;t.11 I"'!· ~ 10,000 Mlll IUAl~ITIE .BRAKE 'R~LINE 1388 ..... , ....... ..,.,. ....... ~ S-OIK .,_. wta1'SnATWr.1o. ................. --•0-.................. .......... .,,.... .... .............. .,_ -- E7S. f4 (7.35) F'.18-15 17.751 'F7&-14 (7.75) ' G7,9-14 f8:251 GJS.1$ (8.251 H7S.14 (8.55) H78·l5 (8,551 Vlti'TL .t.VA!Ultl IN1 M.1 NOtlf ... '"' 111~1 . 'fWlft ,....,. -fWM ., ... THESE Sl'ECIALS GOOD AT THESE LOCATIONS ONLY IUINA""?AU l lU u...a. AMo ... ...., .... 126-- 11-... , ..... .,., ..... lh4. .. .....- SJJ.J040 COSTA MtsA ---·-141-J012 ' ' PLUS FED. Q". TU: EACH TIRE 1.65 2.35 .61 . 29Jl8 2.55 31.88 _2,6'1 ' '2.17 2:61 33,18 2.98 • 'TUOJ'(C tlCJrr • ~TOil -.Oi"fnOll 1 COIWPRE!SIO.'f T£!f!W SAN1A ANA 1409 ..... ......... - 546.71j2 . ' \ ... OllLY PILOT SC WtdMtd1y, M1rdl 11, 1910 Drug Changes 'Ruts' l=~-:::z:r.:u.· OVER THE COUN TER Economist Predicts Boo11i Will Continue Economist Ray J a J 1 ow believes California's booming economy w\11 col'IUnue to da exactly that in the decade ahead and he predicts thal the average California family will have an aMual income of 123,!WO in 1980. And that, 3ay~ lhe United California Bank's vice presi· dent and chief economic ad· v1eer, will be 24 percent bigher than family income in the rest o( the United Stat.es and mott than double today'1 averaae California income of $11,SOO. His prediction i.s in line ,..ith that of economists who put Californians of JNO in a select bracket; the J:t perctnt of American families who will eam $15,000 to $25,000 a year. About 31 l>tfcent will be in- t.he •10,000 to $15,000 bracket ~nd 24 pe.rct:nt will be found in the $7,500 to $10,000 salary range. Economists predict l b 1 l "'hile today the salary ran1e nf $5.000 to $7 .500 a.ceoonts for 20 percent of the American working force. by IMO it v.ill be only 12 percent. And in· comes of Jess than that will have been reduced tn about 3 percenL In le.rrns a{ gro~~ pre· ducticn. J a I 1 o w forecasts. Califomi8's economy in the tleeade ju:i;l started v.·111 con· tinue to top thal or tht United Slat~ as A whole with the .state's gro11s produtlion reaching as high as $240 billion by 1980 -up 140 percent from tlle •too billion regi11lered in 1999. Dr. Ray Jallow has !he reputation of b e I n g con· ~istently right. And tha t's o~ reuon why he was asked to deJiver the keynote addreu al .a recent conferenee. of the Na· lional Association of Businesii Economi.lts. Jallow refuSts to tag California as one of the nA· tlon'1 50 atates -at Jeut in lenn11 of economy. Ila: massive oul9Ut. ht says, justifies it." compJriton wtth n11tions and he looks at California that way in his report. Cal\fomla'a tot.JI oulput to- day, states Jallow, makes it Put the 'AX' the teVenth lara:est nation tn the world. In 1980 it will bt surpassed only by the rl'! ol the Unli.d Slales, Ruuio, West Germany and Japan. While California'• population is rising by five million persons to a tot.al of 15.5 million reskienta: in t9*l, forecuts Jallow, the state's businesses will add more than two million new jobs to their payrons and boost the total employment number to more than ta million persons. By 1980, business rttl1l sale.~ will need $72 billion, an in- crease of $31 billion or 75 per· cent over an e11tim1ted '41 billion for thi8 year. Spending on services and leisure •e- tivities will rise by 200 percent durbig the same lo.year period. But it won't be all wjne and roses for the buJineuman by the time 191> rolls around, Jallow warns. SubstanUal growth In all sect.ors wil1 be the 1tcry of tht: decade but that :wne growth will bring with it intenslfted competition for the n t w milhoru of dollars generated by the bUTgeoning economy. Many businesses, predich Jallow, "will wither away and disappear." They will find they cannot cope with the new demands placed on thflr resources by a m o r e ~phist1taled population. a more varied economy and a more complex business world . Some may sta.ve off that predicted fate by resorting: now lo careful planning, tht economist adds. "When businesses rn a k e long range plans.'' he 1aid. '"they adopt the philo,,.phy or determining where they want to go in the future instead of helpleS!ly following courses dictated by market forces. ''Ra-pid cbana:ea 1n technology, eonsumer ta stea. the business cycle. govem- ment retulaUons, population move.rnenta and s o e-1 a I r e 1-p o n a I b illtles require thoughtful -plannln1 to ad•pl to the envlronment or be left behind the competiUon'i dual. :cuirering severt /lnanci1l con· sequences," ht said. . U1 TA XES tvith Sylvia Porter's New Bo ok I I • • • I • • • • • • I • I MAIL THIS HANDY OllDIR PORM TODAY · Only $1.25·e"d~!:~potl•~ ............ •••••••••• .......... -fll-.... ,,, r ·'"'""" , __ ....... -.. .... "° Ol:9M -••q ...., ____ _ .. __ "'_ &.-k suo Jnl! 111125'"',.,. ......... - .., """" -· mv 1-T•--• 11 .. ·----------------------------- "~--------------$1•l•---------lip"'----- DAILY PILOT I I I I I I • I • • I I I I • I I •••••••••••••••••••••• Computer Talk Slated Makes Bid Air Wfll!l, a regional airline serving ei;ht western stales, Canida and Mexico, has challenged every o th e r certificated airline. in lhe con- tinental United State s tn match ita record for on.time performan<:r , Larry De c ker . \11cc president-marketing for the alrlint, ilaued the challenge on the basis or either the year 191!9 or the la st full 12 mQJlths. ~ker said Air West actlieved "" on·hme performance rttord of 71.fi percent for all of 1969 and 80.2 percent for the 11 months 'nd- ed March 28. That mean5. he ~aid, that UI0.248 Air West fiiJhta departed on time last ytar, and 17'.492 Air West fil&ht! departed oo lime dur· tng !ht 12 months ended March 21. 2nd Change . At Vineyard llead~ Soles • Alex Grah~m has been named 1'ales 1nanage r ior Orange County op, erations of Kouf1nan and Broad. Inc. ti c previously \\'0 1 k(!c1 in a similar po~ition \\'iU1 Lusk. He and his fanii - ly live in Tustin . Kauf- man and Broad "con1· munities'' include Sea· ~yard Advertlslna. lnc.. \\'ind and Sandpiper in TuaUn -whk:h untll l111l ~eek l-funtington Beach . had betn Pereira· Vineyard ---="-''------ will chanac Its name again, tf· fectlve Mart.h t. to Vineyard & Auld, Advenl1lng, accord ing to prtsident Howard Vineyard . Steve .4.uld, who Is • prtn- dpal tn lbfl re-n11med a1enc)', wilt hold the title exe-culh't vtce: president. He had b~n ~e:ner•J mal)ager and cresUvt director of Pertlra-Vlntyard Al 1M: wame time. Vln~yart1 announced I.ht ,promotion of Phi! Bauer !I} crullve dire<:· tor. Jack G1t1on mover; up 10 e::rtt:utl\'t art director, . !ht f!Osltion pre\•1ously he:ld by Jt.a,uer. Complete-New York Stock List ..... fl" tltflll,J 11111 Ll'W CllH C)l1. I fill Mtf OlfJ.) "tt)I \.tw t '-t Ctlt• /tlurket Syuibols • , Wldnt1dq, Mardi ll, 1'10 SC Wednesday's Closing Prices-Compiete New York Stock Exchange List .... __ .. , ..................................................... ! ....,, """ uw c• 0$. l' ..... lilt! ,.... "'" ~---~ ----~ ' .. I.ft I~ H" ~ fi>.i -'· DOW JONIS A VEftAGES Yt,rlell ~ " fl' ""; ~ -• ~j}i i?:t~ Stocks Pull Back ~I ~~1=1~ ·~ n~ ,: ri;l !U .Y~.>M'n"{'"';n1'-::.,.-~$ .. M-f: ~E[:f~= 'li ~ f ~§~ ill uU~ ll. ll~ ! tt ' 1! • ~ ~l ·~ii t 1• ~ V\j II Ill «t.r.1 !1 = ~iW, , " :Ji ,.. ~a f'" : ... ,.~ ,.,,_\) L \" u ~ +r• r~ lJ, ill. JUJl ;1 :;:, ~;,,:.,:'111 d Tl ,.?!,,!~+,· • il" lll\ -Vol c~ .. inoi: I • ·:a + • ~n1•c1lCir1• itoc I VMICI lti ·~·· VJl~Cort .. • l;i. JI" l \' +.U lf ""-~~I 11 i 1 mi '-\l ~ , , m \'" 111M1t I It r.\ l'l a.t-\o 1f: 2f1' -!f In L T 1• t•11W'li'' 1:15' 4 t11 '<'I ~ t ·~ t~n • ... • • ... J VW Ullll 11 1 l•'t I 14W • •,', n• r!il ,~t:i; at.e rac 1ng 1:rW" :Ii ' I ; Io!~ "l'ill. . .. " .. : .. :. •. -W·X·Y·Z- lJ i: .. jf~ J~.. t:~I hoil'.~: I .. i 1l tz:=~ I : ~'I r. ~! -,, • ~U u'h ftllo -J tlfj ll r J 1: ~~ II ..... ffff W11l~fH I 1Qil 10 d~l -~· 4t~ t '/o ••I ,"'~ ,., .. l...,.,•. ·,· ~ r1lo '' • ~ 1. 1.4-ti' l''•IH"''-C"""" w11 M~•rv I f n1 1~•11 D '• " -· ' •~ ' •"1•1 '-'--'• "" ...,. W•lwor11'1 Co It '' I" t " ~tl\JJ .0 I I t •• ' Wt ttFd l ht 11 11\~ l , -.._ In ~ ~ •n -,,., NEW YORK (UPI) -Stocks pulled back late 'N'-NJ,' ., 14 m I? Vt -•• 1'1""'" '°' .,, 21\) ~ 1'4' ·~(' W•r,,.(6 .. II ,,,, If\' l " +·· ,ti 1fl: 1:~.::1 ~~ I k t di t I tJt :vi! 1 11ao• 'i11o • • U =it {;:~~rr' 1: ~ JI,, ,,,, lho ::~~\i: 1·!: 21f t" ~ ;; -1' Mf « 1, 1,1, + \':. today, eavmg m&Jor mar el n ca ors n e m1-~,.,.~:-~ f 4i ,~ ~-+-''J T'':ij''°" " •'• •1"' '"_\'II w • .o •• 1,, , ,1,,. " ,., ... 5 ~ 11'' ,•,,~ = •,,' nUS COJU?nn ln light tUrnOVeT :':r'f::wo'i,. j' ru··'· ~ t 1~ -}: 1r'1 "' tO 1•' l!\'o s.t\'I U\\ + ._ W11 Wi t I ff 2fl 'XI llh 1t " I i -· 1 -rtv ft "'t 11 6j °"' #U + ~. Wtfkln Johll1 If \~ 'J 11 •, ~ 1ri: lli", 1· + •A The UPI market Indicator. measunnf all stocks "'"' 1111o.1~ , ~ l •,' '1: = t: 1r1c°"' 1 iJ! ,, 1•1• ij"" """ -~ W•l'fl Go. 11 , nll '"' 1m .,, ' > • .. llburbC.o 'j '° 1.-1 -I.It T•IC.on Pl1 t Jill.< lt »l.li wean 1,11111 ti 10lt l t tt. 1r,-"' 'I , ~l 111 0 \ traded, sho\ved a loss of 0 14 r,ercent on ,561 issues ~)'•oP 1 _ 2 • ,~ ~"' l rr1~1" 1 uu "' uu w"" P'"' u , '!'• 1n1 1 + .... 1 ~• l ·~=\: la Of th 627 d I ed d 624 d ed "fill': -~ i , o '• -"'• llllW il'IC: I 10.lt ,~, 3' J4 -~• Wetfllr<I l)o i• l '\ 11 1 '• -'t ._, "\\ ,, ,, on the pe. e1e, ec n an a vane u .. o 111 dV. '• • •• t ,, 1111w "'' t11 1• " u ~ 11u + '" w,~ ot1 E ., 111t 1oi. 1111A -'" 16 .U\ 4'k 't n01 Dn~ 1 Jl\'t '• W IO lllW pfl 40 J t.I t.I 14 -""Wt ~I t4 l JOlo Jflo ~ , .u1~ "' 'j\• _ ~. The Dow Jones 1ndustr1al average of 30 select· ur.tie•"' 20o1 14•,. !!i, P~ , Y11e111 c;E n o 11 1•lli •"-• -"' w. " 111 11 v. P • f'i u UI\ I\ I I\ -~ II 78 12 tJt b U ur1cbtfM 41 n 1. l' 11; -,, '"''" c'"' tJ H\\ ,.,, '' ~· Wtll1F1r ''° 4lJ •i~. •li't "'' -U~ ~ 1-. ._ ..., _ \, ed blue chips was o J 58 at 7 near e e . ds1 'i•~ l •1 •" •1 1 •, '• ~ •• y.1 ... cor. •s 100.~ 101. 100 .,. \Ill wHc;oF 1 ,., 11 ni. ,, m-. ' I~ • 1' ill ~ I • ll'l1 Olo uu. -10 u v W11IY•1 SOii I ti JO!~ " t .. . n· Ii\' ,.._ '~ A turnover of around nine m ion shares com-::.",' • ~ ol 1~-11~·-I~~ -+l1' -• -WPP 9f 4.54 170 w.; ...... .o\'I '\ 11 I'll Ot!o 10'11 ,_ ed th 9 450 OOQ b Tu Sd&y 41 \\ 1 -i., UAL tl'IC: t 11 '"'' tJt• n:it -O.. Wrtl"tP Tu ll 21\il 71•1 11\l \1 tt ••· "" par wi , . s ares e . m-'" 1 1~ '• •{ -,~ o"Jt1f, 1 10 J 11 , IT\~ 11111 + tti w,1,. .c.ir t." • 1•~• 1ffil ''" 1• ff\'IP ~•" -}! CI b B d Un S t d s S K '""v"ct 41 • 'l 'I uo1 1:0 n 21'4 ,,, :12 + 1""'"'•M l "":111! n~-" 'll i1t. u~ t!.~ =" o um ta roa cas g ys em an . . res· w•'*~'°" r l , , i _ '! uMc ""' n 1o u 1~. t.-to _ ~ w''" tM '"' ' m 'l f~ + 1• s 22 r/,. 1f~ .!.. ~~ ge were among the day'& most heavily traded 1.5· :;li:_ir:,. ~ ''/, ~~,fit, 'l:l\-.; t ~~1~t~ :~'° 'i ~ ~'• Uti +. ~l ~~~·f * 131 !n • 44 1 .i?1 --. ~~ ,~~,,, ~n: ,;;~ = r. sues CBS moved nan:owly, while Kresge tended =':_,,.: 191 ..... ~~· =t~l u" ,"• .. • •, •'• •,~ ,"1• ""~ + .... ~:'8~ !1tff ~ 1:f ,ff ,:r !r• l°' '1Vt ll t t r••rori DO<I" • f.~' u Tl"! -11 u" ''" J ' 14• I .. wnr11r1 '" «1• ,, 'I :rt .. 10 11l; 1 1, 1rn hig'er The latter .. ad dropped sharply last week u..ion corp 11 .... • -~ ~·· ..,, ,1 •• ,, .. .. 1 1~ 1 !Ml II II --\J." ~ltc I :0 llt it'• !l'O 1 \_;, -'.l utvco 1 OJ fl jS ti~1 j•!\ -l~ 1 nv. ml: ttl'r when 1t reported a smaller than expected n3e tn 1:1~.ri~d,1 ';'0 111 ill: 'g" 1~1 7 ~ ;j~ ~: :H:i ;\a •1'Yt ~1 .. 'b -1 wg~:, 1'.P, ,,l ~ ~:i. it;"' f''' 1~ ft: ?f" n: ;:1" earnings for 1969 :~~ ~;:'0 4 f.421,,~ :~· ii 1't, ~8~~f•J,,•JO !! tti? Htt ~~ t (': '"~"f"~ll''Sft \} 1~ 1i'1 1 ~; • ,iw. 11 .. j "" + R Other active stocks lncluded TRW Inc , Gulf t""•JICo :t9 1• [' "~:~,,Sf l 1~i ;J,: fl,? 3~~ -+ ,, w~;IPJI o1 1 110 n•,.. 1v. 1Vt ' J lij" Im ~ f Oil , Jersey Standard, ·-11 Paper, Great Western '1~~:r.' 1co ·' ! ~ ~t:· Sil -lo " •t cl .0 I till ,., 't + \Ii wt> rlC• l,..'_0 !l SI~ ,.t ST'A -:· 1 1 ~. J " "1•~ ~~ ..x.v ti 0 3' ·~ 1. ,, -m I .oct 10 qt~ w111•-<•.i-w ll ?Olli "• ,~ -~ • " n F1nanc1 al Lubnzol Corp d Continental Mortg ge :1J...~ "1 Oft ,.. l \~ -·I "lrOl'tl 711 l 4 ! i t 11\~ 1 \i .j. '1 Wh r<:n ,., ] , l4 S4 :u -t, 11 •• ~\ J! -'• ' an 3 Te "" Coro •t·~ 1 \"t 1 4 1 =.. Unlravtl •I I dlO 1 4 101\~ lot +I~ Whl'Cft 11tll l ' ?t.:'1 ~'\o tt·~ ~o .,"'-' n:•tt .l~ ~ ~~ Investors lemot••n u l 11t 1 t ~n11h1101 'I u 'lit• 401~ .oi. -... WMt~ cte' , if" nu. ~r ·· '• 101 111/t 1 11V. -\; .·~~.,"11'•'•'• " '\"I 21f• \, + -t "I'"!'' I 0 !! 3'•1 J.lli 14V, -·~ :::~1'i1 m,"': ~ ~JI\ ;. ... ill"!,· •1 .,.~ 1 ' ''h + ~. One analyst said he believed the market still .... 0 •~• 9 • • + 1• "1 )• '!: ra \l •u ,., -\'II \'lh I •ku 4l 12 .. 1t1i 1 " -• ' 'IN '01~• 102.u +it. had a little low er to go before mak111• a s11sta1ned :;l'fr" 60\•o ':l 2 it ~J~~ t -" ~ L,11lr 1 ~ 11 s •• jiH. ~ -,,., wirt,•Cor• 1 ~" 41'1 •1" 4 u + •11 r u:: 111. ll~ = ~ to ·~ ''T •• lG.'l l .U\.:. + '~ "Ir ''M ~ H ~ 'lo " + \Ii Wlrib'l'r 'Jb 100 ••1 t -" a• ,.,,,. t•1·· 211, mo ve or. the upside JJe noted that \Vall Street's !" I on.so ' H !j + '• 8" • M 1 11 i 1\ ' .,.. l • ~111 °'1 " 1• tm r.:• "' ·~ , 351, J 1 l!"i +U • ·i ex 111 60 "! '•I I.\ '' n~uc r 21 • ~·~ +t\w H•rm '~ '' J;r la" ''it.,.•• " l1 1 '• j'\~ -·· main interest centered around the pnme rate Issue. \•x•t 11111 11t 1 ' • ''• ''• "1 P Mn • ,,, 1i 4•• ~w""•'• , 1 ,,. ~ " 36? n1\ l'" 11, +., •~OllGs OS 21 SS 54\.t 54W Ul orS ?.tk 11 30'i , .. ~' -i. WJ11"Dlx 1 '' 70 Hi1 -·~ " -R t ( gth h db ll b l d l d 7~wPLd 45e ' U 1••• 11 +'~ •' ••-v 'IN4L TOk '' ! " Wlnn Dhdt • l JI '' 1 -'• ,f 13), 1~1• 1£\" -.., ecen s ren a een a r1 u e o a re uc~ t•~ v11 , 10 ., se~• '"' s1\• _ " ul Frte• 11• "l " ft \'J ,,.,,. _ '• w/'Jl1~ 11.a '' ,,,,, tllAf "' '-"' ' .»o, :Ill '! °'On In the prime Interest rate -'hat Charged b1g Tt)lfOll tO IOO JJ 7211• tltt t ~ ' ~y._ ' 2 ~I> " n· -il W 1 'If': l " :t 1""1 1•1.'r ,,_., •• •ti l 1''• 1611 I -t. 1.,1 'l jtXlrft Pl?Ot 17 31~ 311.'r Jtl~ ~I tJ •• Pfl I~ I -, Wlh:e Cf\ f2 1 7>!. 2r,\ 2'\\ + 1'o '1a '"• ,,,, ''" co~ration s _by some or the nation's small banks, 1w1rr1 1111"' n 2n. tJl~ nl'I -" u '"'~" so 101 ~\ 1i. + • w11coe •11 •t ' J' ! v. 111 .. +11" 13'0 I\ 7 lZ l J2-1 U • t'"' T~lollol 10 J6 11 .'J ll\1 Ill• -11 U PitC~ M 10) 11 ? '' + •\ Wll'I WW !6 11 121~ J 17'.\ + 111 > ~:' '' f4 + 1. and traders appeared 10 be W8Jt,jna for large 1ns';· ll'lomS.I I Ol 11 '2'4 •f 42\li + a1 tJ p l>f11t 4 l l' 30 .'J lOI• + *' Wtlt'ldtO .n 10 Ill• 1 ., 1~ ·+ '' I • ' U'.l \ " lo.I Tllom 1'14 10 J 111-< n~, 11\• '\ U "" U J ~· '°'" 201\ -l'o 'A'oodl Cl ii ! 2'11 lf'o 'O '• • ~: 14 + ' t U l ak I H k Tl!•-•w .ioe • ,,. m JOU.-+ '' ~ m11t 1 4 11~ in• 3N -+ !·1 Woorwtll •.., Jl .l"~ ~. ll')-'• '!1 !"" , jl'' u ons om ea simtar move. owever. spo es· n.;'lii;or H 1 ,,~ 11,• 11.,. I '"11• o 01 :111-P'I ,. -+ ~w11111w II'''° '"'~ sl "'+1~ 1 : 1r.~ :! rr. = :~ men ror the large banks recently 1nd1cattc1 that anv r11,.,.~~·11.: M r.1' m! 1!~ + ~ .. ~"m, ~~ ~ ;r.: ,fol ~!~:: ~ ~~:l,,., .. i:" : 10:li 11~t 1111"' +1~ Ill tt~ l•'• n,, = ~ pnrne rate CUl by them St!Jl U'aS several ffiOnthS Off Tlmo~lr I SO 1? 11l; lll\ 37 \ u~eu: 0~h'"\o l JlO~I~ •ij,,, _ ~.Uj'~ C~ ~ ,,; ~~~ ~ ~ !,. l l 1l ... ~ ~·· .ftl!o-•. k Ttrnl!RI 10 14 "'' '°'' )Olo-+l.l;o~L•'' lW "f:J:l4 ,,.., ioo;+•,ll It,. IM ,. ~ /"!-\ flt.\~t '!!Jt, fl" H'' -'• Stoc s also moved narrowly on the Amencan r 1s11 1t1N .., • "'' u•. "" u ..a "' '° 111 :JJI'\ .no.~ ,, • _ i , ..,..,.,,so ir. 1 '°"' im '°"' + "* > S k E h Totlln l'k~ l I 1110 11l'o t1l\ +'\ UnYttv CIT'• 11 ,.,, 4••• Sl\'4 '•It(""' l 0 *! ..rk «M+-. n' M~. , .. ,,.~ -11 toe xc ange m hght turnover TOl.idSI\' ',. 1 n·~ '''• "1• -'"' o.rorwo 1 • 145 s,.. s1\lo Jll\ +11, f•le o1 "to 1 »' an• 111111. -I'• .u ., ...,. .. T.i«tEd 111 U n 1i ttl't nu -'• Urft 91.,_ 40 t lfV, 1'11 ''"'" •N'• Nor~ s.i• ''"' '" • • l l41'o li 't Ult :::.:.l:~.,,-~·"'!!!"'::""';!!""'!!•• ...................... ~ ....... 11DOIROI! "°" 1. tl'~ ?Ole II -~o u11.tFE ~ l S JI\~ Jfl• 11'' Z•llN« 11'1 I •7 1• 4' -I IOI• 1001 ~-',' r1nt Co fO .. ., • llol •• u M Ct , '° l ll '3Vt »Ii -\\ "•Y•• Cor• ,, :\Olli :'II'• r. + •• " li''• JHo 5 ;, t » l"ftue 40 lt1 " ... " :!ii> U +-llll",I"•' 'r.l " Ai_., •J'\ u _ t 1 Tr1n10 r1 I U ~ l• U '• » -+ '• tJSM lll'l 1G :t.ll "" M~ .i.1 7t~ll'llt 1 Ml ~ 3~ :M•• _''I 1 '' ·~ t1r!nnMfu l I IW. j bb '1 4 ill U \ "'' -lj Tr1nt W "'' 11J Ul'i 11>4 II'• -I& 0"11C~~• 6ft Jt Siil 56 + '~ 1,,,,11 IM ff l'lt ,1 .. =-»• -• It? "' JJ~ li '• ....... o '°" 11• JOU i l'OO t "' • IYMI 40 • \~ lilt :Nit -I TrtnWI' '" jJ n 11•. 11.1.0 -.~ Viti\ Pl. l '1 • i2~i .n-. 12 b -~-Ctrff'l1httd b~ Tiit Au«ltftd .... "'° • • IS DAILY PILOT Wtdnesd.,, M1rcb U, 1970 U:GAL N01,CE LEGAL Noo'ICE LEGAL NOTICE •• LEGAL NOTICE LEQAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ' -. , • QUERIDA 11 PREPARES FOR CONGRESSIONAL CUP RACES MARCH 19-12 Twist, Tittis Aboard Har~or Men Crew Intrepid By AUION LOCKABEY •01111"• EdJi.t 1\\'o young Newport Harbor Yacht Club saiJors have been se lected on the crew of the 12- meler Intrepid for the America's Cup trials which start at Stamford, Conn,, in June. Bill Ficker, NHYC skipper of the Intrepid, announced to- day that he has selected George 'l'\\'ist. 24 , and J im Titus. 20, as \\'est Coast r e p r e s e ntatives on the lntrepid's 12.man crew. The remainder of lntrepid's crew 'for the 1970 campaign are rrom the East Goast. "111e crew consists of in- dividuals who have had ex- tensive experience in one- design sailing and large ocean, racing yachts." Ficker said. "A number of them have ex- perienced substantial suceess and recognition as top skip- pers and cre\\'S. .. Several have s a i I e d together and againsf each other. although they have not sai led as a 12·meter team," Ficker pointed out. Only three of Ficker's cre\V have had 12·meter experience. They are Steve Van Oyk. who sailed on Columbia in 1962 and Constellation in 1964; Norris Stra"•bridge, Nottingham, Pa .. a crewman abo ar d Constell al!o n in 1967. and Richie Sal'er. Nev .. porl. R.t. aboard Easterner in l!!M. · YOUNG CREW Ficker pointed out that the crew is young, averaging about 23. and all a re athletic and have participated or are participating in other com· petitive sports. "Their backgrounds I n yachting, their confidence, ap- pearance and poise should gain them re spect in the coin· petition as well as ashore," Ficker said. 28 Classes In Regatta On Harbor Some 28 classes of sailboats are expected to ,J;warm over Newpo rt Harbor bay and ocean waters Saturday and Sunday in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's a.nnual Spring Gold Cup Regatta. Twelve classes of small boats have been Invited to participate on inside race courses starting from a .rRce committee boat off the NHYC mooring basin. . Sixteen Jarge boats classes -or sma)l boats capable of rac.ing in the ocean -are ln- \'ited to C<lmpett: on outside courses with a starting line to be established off the Balboa Pi1r. inside classes 'A'ill have three rnce:s Saturday, the first starting at 11 :30 a.m .. and two on Sunday starting at 12:30 p.m. Outside classes will have l\\'O races Saturday ~tarting at noon and one o n Sunday :starting 111 noon. Five yachli starting '"'Ill form a class. Classes schtdulcd for Inside starts arc Thistle. tnterna· lional·14, Snipe, Lehman·12. Lido-14.A. Lldo-14B. LJdo-14 t,lr. Kite. Fllpf)fr, Sabot A, B and C. "Selection of a crew is dif· ficull," Ficker said, "because of the many highly qualified individuals requesting con· sideration. A great deal of judgment 1nust be used to select those who can con· tribute most to each job and possess the best temperament for such a team effort." "We will ha\'e a crew of 12 associated with the boat. Soon the remaining three selectiorus will be announced. "It is not Intended lhat those yet to be named will be all.ernates. All 12 members will rotate during the days of practice so that back-up crew are a part of the team and will be able to fill any position should anyone become ill or an emergency arises,'' Ficker s~id. Ficker did not indicate \Vt>tlher any of the three .~ malnlng crew members '\\'OU.Id be from the West Coiist. CRE\I' RUNDOWN Here is a rundown of the eight crewmen a l r e a d y selected : Roger . A. Lo\o\·light , 19, Manhasset, N.Y .. 6 feet 2 in· ches, 170 pounds. He 'is a· sophomore at Lehigh Universi- ty, has bff:n sailing since he was 8 years old. As a skipper he has placed second in the Rhode,s.19 nation a 1 cham· pionships, .,,,0n_ the : Sttauket Invitational for the Lightning Class in 1968, and placed se· cond in the Lightning district championship in 1968. He has crewed on miscellaneous ocean races. including the An- napolis -Newpo rt . Edlu. Vineyard Sound and New York Yacht Club cruise. Richard N. Sayer, 2 2 , Ne"·port, R.l. Graduate of the University or PeMsylvania, and graduate school at the tJniversily of Rhode Island. He has been sailing sin~ an early age in various small boats in Narragansett Bay. He won the Vanderbilt Trophy Series in 1963, sailed in the Annapolls- Newport race in 1966 and '\\'On the Shields championship at Rye, N.Y. in 1969. He bas crewed aboard the 12-me.ter ,Easterner and several ocean racing yachts. Norri~ S~ra.~bridge, .. Not- Battle Cruiser Patrol Boat Converted One of three Uninlte power cruisers on-display Is bound to create a great deal of interest an1ong visitors to H. Werner Buck's Westem National Boat fi nd Marjne Show at Anaheim Conventio n Center, starting Friday. It's a 31 foot hardtop six· sleeper cruiser typical of its line of all fibergl ass pleflsure cruisers from 20 to 36 feet. But, especially for the technically minded visitors concerned with hull con· s!ruction, this is the sister ship of a fleet of 386 PBRs (river patrol boats), the Bell· ingham. \\lashington boat builders recently constructed for ttie U.S. Navy for action in Vietnam. Oellvered in full fighting lrim . down to machetes for the four·man crews operating Lh~. the..se compact , hard.hit- ting Jillie fighting machines are now in Vietnam helping to stop the Viet Cong from mov· ing supplies along the network of waterways making up the 11ekong Delta area. The 31 foot Uniflile in the Anaheim Boat Show, o f course, is complete with cabin and nying bridge for pleasure cruising. For the sister "ugly duckling" in Vietnam, these have been replaced with such items as grenade launchers, machine guns fore and aft: high·po11t·ered infrared delet· lion devices, radar and other navigational aids to permit night and bad weather opera- tions. The Uniflites are the first v.•ater-jet propulsion boat s ever used in Navy operations. allo\Ying them to skim over shallow water and away from mud ban~ and Other hot spots in a hurry. tlnsham, Pa. Ensign, U.S. Navy. In addiUon to his crew work aboard ConstellaUon in 1967 he has crewed on tbe Bennuda Raee, Cowes Week in England. Sears Cu p , !\fcMfllan Cup and the in- tercollegiate races in 19'1-64. He is the son of the l~lfepid Syndicate manager, William Strawbridge. • NE WPORT YO!JTll Jim Titus, %ti. Ne'A'part Beach, 6-2, 185 pounds. Is now attending Lewis & Clark College. Portland, Ore. He has been sailing, since he waS'nine and has won many interclub events in small boats at NHYC. He has crewed QP the regional winner or. the Sears Cup, pa'rticipated in numerous ocean races off Southern California, the Governor's Cup matches and has crewed in a Rhode!-33. Geoi'ge Twist, 24, Newport Beach. 5 ft.JO in., 175 pounds. He is • graduate of' Stanford University where ·he ~as • m~mber of the · wrestli.ng team. He has .been sailing since he was g and has won the \l'estern Sweden Cham- pionship in Finns; placed se· cond in ttie Scandii:i~vian championships and has.sailed in numerous F1nn regattas. As a crewman he has participated· in the Pacinc Coast Junior Championships four times, the winning Sears Cu p team in 1962, the winning Congressional Cup in 1969 and the Olympic 5.5 trials. Stephen Van Dyk. 27, New York,' 6-2, 213 pourids. He has &kippered in miscellaneous ocean races, and crewed aboard the first p I a c e Maredea ln the Trans-Atlantic race, Constellation in 1964 and Columbia in 1962. He is in charge of th' ocean racing program at the U.S. Naval Academy. Christopher \Vick, 2 4. , Darien, Conn. He is a ·graduate of Yale in l!lfi8, has done considerable sailing at the Norwalk Yacht ClUb and has participated in · various oce.an races. including the Bennuda and Trans·AtJantlc races. At Yale he was on the wrestling' ·te'am . . Peter L. Wilson, Darien, Conn.. student at Prin«ton University. }fe '\\'on the Long Jsland Sound junior cham· plonship in 1960. the Long Islind Sowid Lightning cham· pionship in 1964, was a top varsity •skipper at Princeton for three years and sailed on the winning 1.lcMillan Cup team in 1965. He has crewed on a Sears Cup winning team and participated in numerous ocean races. F or the Cr11isl1tg . l' achtsttaa11 • 1! V11l!lf Cup Race Yachts Announced Twelve ColW'Qbi a..SO owners from California ya c ht l n C centers will make their yachts available fifarch 19-22 for \ht 8th annu al CongrtsaionaJ Cup match race serie s outside Long Beac~ Harbor. ~ral .Chalnnan B ob Lesfie of Ille !pOll!IOl'i>i Lons Beaclt yacht club announce'.d that the yachts to be used in 1he series are: W~ Cb11lcs M11, ·] Dieao ·Yac C1ub. \ Vector, M«tr J o·h n ro• ~ Oceanside YC. Serapis lf, Bill BarT)', Bahia Corlhth~ YC. ' 'i.; E~derO, Die V a I d e·z·, Long Beach YC. , Charis.m;;i 11, Ed F'eo, Seal: Beac.h YC. Cygnus, Ernest Long Beach YC. ' Chipman, • Astral II. Cornelius Van- de rstar, Los Angeles YC. Querida JI. James Feuer· stein, Del Rey YC. Gem. Charle1 Hathaway, California YC. Vasito, Frank Burke , Santa Barbara YC. Ranger, Warren C. T. Woni, St. Francis YC. Yellow Bird, Frank DrudinC. St. Francis YC. Only JO of the doien boats "'iii be used as there are only JO competitors in t he Congressional Cup. The other two will be on 1landby in the event ol breakdown or gear failures. Leslie said the draw tor boats will ia.ke place at LBYC the day before the series begins as .soon as a represen· tati\'e from every crew is present. Sails will also be pooled and drawn for. The time table calls for boats and sails to be assigned by early WedJlesday morning before the start of the first race: on Thursday, March 19. Skipers aod crews will have the rest of the day to familiariie themselves with the characteristics of the boals. Pairings for all 45 matche.!1 wll\ be-determined as boats are drav.n , based on a master chart designating races u "A versus B", and "C versus D", etc. Concept of the: Congre~ional Cup empha!ilzes the skipper and crew rather than the boat. Consequently, the boats will be made Ylrtually identical in equioment and rigging. All boats and sails Will be in- spected by L B Y C com- mitteemen. OCC Leads Collegiate Regattas Orange Coast College ullor1 look over the lead in the Southern Series Regattas by s\\·eeping the regatta last \•:eekend al Vall Lake. The next regatta is April 11 1t Mission Bay. OCC in four regattas this year has two firsts, a third and a fifth to lead all schools. OCC is the only junior colleg1 in the compelltlon, and sails against UCLA, UC Santa Barbara, San Diego State, USC and UCI. Nine teams competed last \\·eekend in the regatta hosted by USC. Second was San Diego State. follo...,•ed by UCLA and IJCSB. Remaining te ams dkl not score. 4 Pete Parker of OCC wu nnmed hlgb point skipper in the regatta. Other skipptra were Pete Wilson and Harry PaUison. with Tim Berscn and Gary Hasson crewing. Outside classes are Ocean Racing A. B. C and D. Star, Hhod<'s-33. PC. Soling. P.Cat. Shield>, PllRt' A, B, C & D. ~tORF. Luder1-l6. Excalibur, f'ion, and Endeavor. British ho.al bu il ders are making enthusiastic noises and will accommodalo eight people. about lhe 42 foot 6 inch Lancer. a twin·screw power belni displayed at U.S. boat shows. The boat u yacht which is reputed to be utremelY seawol1b,y ' ' ' • f I • Today's Finni .N.Y. St oc k s ' VOL 63, NO. 59, 4 SEC TI ONS, 68 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, MARCH 11 . 1970 TEN CENTS Tourists Breal{ West White House Security Unauthorized tours of the San Clemente and Key Biscayne, Fla. White Houses - while President Nixon and his family were there -have been taken by an un~ disclosed number of people. , The security violations w e r ~' acknowledged today-as the chief of the Seeret Service, James J. Rowley, testified before a Congressional sub- committee in Washington, D.C. Not all of Director Rowley's disclosures were made public, but he saW;I none oE the intruders were armed and will give Congress further information in a con- fidential memo. But he expressed worry that it is so easy to penetrate what constitutes a vital defense perimeter and could b e dangerous if security weakness is leaked to potentially violent groups. \'We have detected these people in- cidentally," Rowley told t be suJ>. committee i.n his request for tighter security measures at the two coastal retreats. • These would inc lude trespassing, ill terfering with guards and prohibition or noisy demonstrations. In San Clemente, where a fe\\' demonstrations and trespassing on the grounds of the Western White House have taken place, Chief of Police Clifford Mur· ray said he was aware of the pending legislation. uWhal we weren't completely aware or, however, was the specific content of that legislation," he added. Murray said that there had been a lew problems in the past several months of persons entering the Western \Vhlte House grollfl4.s: unlnvit,¢. "\Ve had three demonsLrations here last yeafl with only one big one, and it seems that the segment of the proposed legislation on that matter would apply mo~ to the Washington White House and less to the one in San Clemente." he ad- ded. Checks with olher sources indicat,,:d that the proposed Jaw Is an attempt to clariry vague laws on prosecution of trespassers on land used for Presidential residence. Under state trespau regu]alions, pro- secution can only take place U a person enters land without permission, then refuses to leave. Federal provisions for trespassing on Presidential residence areas is also va gue. The law. it was speculated, would fill so me legal gaps and give the Secret Service stronger guildelines for prostcUt· ing uninvited visitor.11. "The Secret Service has become con· cerned about the rising crescendo of na- tional militancy and Confrontation, and instances of the preachment of assassina-, tion and violent revolution." the s,cret Service director said today. ", .• In my view, the militancy of the dissident groups in our midst will in- crease in fervor .. , this activity could generate a greater propensity for attacks upon our leaders. ". , . There have been many lncident11 ln recent years that have caused us to ·question the adequacy of our legal pro- tective authority." Newsmen asked Rowley whether he was referring to successful intrusions at Sa n Clemt:nte and Key Biscayne. He said he was, and indicated there had been others, loo, al vacation residences of previous presidents. , ~owley urged passage of a bill to pro- h1b1t unauthorized entry into the building or grounds of a temporary presidential policies." residence; make it a federal crime to tn- terfe_re wllh a secret service agent, and prohibit loud de1n&nstrations near a presidential residence wh ich might int~ pede presktentlal business. Lawrence Speiser, director or the Washington ofrice of the American Civil Liberties Union. testified aga inst the bill, saying its purpos ... "is not to protect the ~esident's physical safety but to protect him from sound s of dissention, unha1>· piness and disagreement with his policies." • 0 verr1 e Masseuse Arrested ·For 'Offer'~ A massage. artisl who allegedly o(fered ··extra services" to an investigator from the dlstrict attorney's office found her self under arrest at a Laguna Beach massage and 11un1 parlor TUesday. Nancy Ann Vlahos, 22. who told poli~e she resides at a Laguna Beach m?tel. ts charged with conspiracy to commit pro- stitution and soliciting to engage in lewd or dissolute acts, police report . After a period or police surveillance. or the Academy o[ Physic-Therapy Massage and Sauna Parlor, 255 Thalia St., the DA investigator went in and requested a massage Tuesday afternoon. The suspect prepared him for the treatment. he t'iaims. then asked what type of massage he desired. When he inquierd about prices. he states, Miss Vlahos said a regular massage would be $10. then ~ent on to .of· fer additional services at prices rang!ng up to $30. He. paid for the regular Job with a marked bill, then placed her unde r arrest. Following arraignment. t-.1iss Vlahos was freed on $340 bail. The massage parlor, police report. was issued a Laguna Beach city business license in 1969 , in the name of Char.les T. Balmer lOOO Skyline. Drive. No license had yei been taken out for 1970, they state. La ouna Doctor !:') I Abortion Case Action Delayed A Superior court hearing into a Laguna Beach physician's charges lh~l the Orange county Grand Jury which i~· dieted him on aborlion ~ha~ge.ct IS unlawfully constituted v.·as. sidelined to- day when both sides in t~e. dispute agreed that they needed more. time for prepara- tion. Dr Robert Cumming Robb, 67, of 34567 Scenic Drive, Dana Point, was ordered to return to court April \ for the re.sched~l· ed hearing. Abortion charges against him will be held pending tilt outcome of that investigation. Dr. Robb was indicted by _the ~rand Jury on charges of inducing miscarriages In three women patients, au of them single, after Judge Paul Mast lhre~ .!he same charges out of Santa Ana Mun1c1pal Court with the ruling that th e Thtrapeutic Abortion Act of 1967 was un · ronslitutlonal. Judge Mast agreed with defense at · tomey ~loses Berman that any other rul · ing would be to accept !he philosophy of the Roman Catholic religion. Such ac- ce.ptancc, he. sa\d,.would be in violation of the First Amendmc.ol of the U.S. COnstitutlon. . Dis trict Attorney Cecil lticks rev1v.ed tbe charges with the Grand Jury 1"° dictment and insists that the state code ~s valid and Robb should be J'lrOsKUled in the higher court. NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market clung to 1 fract10nal lead l:ite this afltir· noon In light tradjng. 'See quotations. Pages 26-27). Ado/anclng Issues exctoded loser!I on the New York Sl.oek Exchange 873 to 518. ' 1'. .... DAILY Pit.OT S19H Pl!tll IN THE RUNNING GOP Lttdtr Ctrptnttr Carpenter Heads For Senate Seat Left by Schrnitz By O.C. HUSTINGS 01 l'hl Diii~ Pllof Ili ff One of California's rnosl powerful Republicans -Dennis Carpenter o( Newport Beach -is headed for public of· fice. apparently as a challenger for a seat in the California State Senate. Carpenter has called a press con· ference for Thursday morning. a clear· cut indication that he intends to seek a spot on the June ballot, and Sacramento sources Tu esday said Carpenter will be running ror the. seat being vacated by Senator John Schmitz: (R·TUStin). Schmit? is resigning his Senate post to $eek the Congressional seat left open by !he dcalh of Rep. James B. Utt. Carpenter, 41. is cuTTently chairman ol the California Republican State Central Committee. He has been 11 key figure in Orange County GOP politics for the past 10 years, serving as chairman of Orange County Republican Ceniral Committee and leading campaigns in behalf of r.10vernor Reagan and Pr~klent Nixon. (See CA RPENTER, P11e Zl Blast Hips Courthouse Explosion Linked to Trial of H. RapBrotvn CM.1BRIDGE, t-.1d. (UPI) -An ex· ploslon tore out a corner of th e Dorchester County Clrcuit Court, building today. It was the second violent explosion in Maryland in 24 hours and officials said both incidents appeared related to the riot trial of black militant H. Rap Brown. The blast, which hurled debris from the. two-story stone building 100 feet into the street, appeared to have been ce nt.erfd In a women's JOUJ1ge on the second floor. The explslon tore out a huge chunk at the top comer of the bu ilding. There were no injuries. The explosion happened at 9:10 p.m. 1PST), U .bour• atter another mys terious blast our Bel Air Md., demolished a car and killed its two occupants, including a long-time. friend of Brown's, Ralph Featherstone. Cambridge is the town where Brown was charged with arson , incitement to arson and incitement to riot after racial disturbance broke out following a speech he gave there in July , 1967. Bel Air is the lown where Brown is being tried. The building once served a1 the eouftty courthouse for this eastern shore CO!ll· munity. A new bblkfing Is now the courthouse, but lhe older one continued lo nouse the cir~t court. Brown was ar- raigned there on the riot char'gts aod he would have bteq tried in the da maged building had not the trial been shifted to Be.I Alr, abaut-1001 miles north. Slate'1 Attorney William B. Yates, who is prosecuting Brown but who was In CambrJdfe becaUlt the trial has bttn recessed, toured the blast site wJth coun- ty officials. He aakt tt appeared the. two incidentl were related to the Brown trial, but declined to elaborate. u~s. and Colombian Jets Hijacked; Land in Cuba By United Press lntematJonal Two planes were hijacked lo Cuba to- day, one as it flew from Cleveland, Ohio, to Florida and the second as it was en route to Barranquilla from Bogota, Colombia. They were the fourth and riflh hijacks carried out successfully so far in 1970 in the \Vestern Hem isphere . Both were Boeing 727 jetline rs. The Unite<! Airlines plane hijacked ln the United States carried 106 persons and "'as fo rced by a lone cunman to land and refue l in Atlanta, Ga .. before taking off for Cuba. The Colombian Avlanca Airliner car· ricd 78 persons. It was forced to touch down al Cartagena, apparently for refuel· Ing, but remained aground only five. Minutes and then continued on to Bar· ranquilla w~re il took on more gas and then headed for CUba. ln Vienna, two young Poles -Wieslaw Szymankiewicz, 20, and Romoult \Y ieslaw Zoltucho. 18-were convicted and senten· ced to jail terms today for hijacking a Polish airliner to Vienna several monlhs ago. Zoltucho was sentenced lo two years in ja il and Szymankiewlcz got two years and three months. The. court told them they could stay in the West after com- pleting their sentences. · Laguna Pageant Tes ts for Noise Pageant producer Don Williamson and Festival director Stuart Durkee have. agreed to participate in a "sound test" lo make sure a scheduled summer pro- duction of the musica l "Oliver'' at the. Laguna Moulton Playhouse will not in- terfere with the Page.ant next door. The production by the Playhouse, In 11ssociation with the Lyric Opera or Orange County, is scheduled for presen- tation July 3 through Aug. 30. Fe.!lival Director Mr.1. Helen Keeley said Playhouse. representatives told her they had checked out the sound and assured lhe.mselves that strains of the musical will not float up into Irvine Bowl , but would like to invite \Villiamson and Durkee to lend an ear to another test run . A demolition team from the. Edgewood Arsenal was called in to determine what caused the explosion. Yates and County Clerk Phillip Cannon said the.re are only a few offices on the second floor of the building and il would have betn easy for anyone to gliin access to the lounge Tues- day and plant a bomb. If that was what caused the blast. Cannon estimated dama1e to the struc- ture at $100,000. Maryland State Police, Dorchester County sheriff's officers and Cambridge city police were put on extra alert-after the explosion. There has been no unusual tension in Cambridge in recent days, although the town, with a 39 ~l black population erperleoced extepded racial trou ble.a during the 1980s, during wblch time the natlonal guard was caJJed in three times. Recall Campaign Against Allen 500 Names Short By TO:\I BARLEY OI IJ!.e 0.llY Piiot l lfll The semi·secret campaign to mount a recall electlon against Fifth District Supervisor Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach has fallen at least 500 signatures short in its petition effort, the DAILY PILOT learned today. Petitions had bun filed with County Clerk William E. St John as a re· quirement to get a reca ll election against Allen on the ballot. Whole pages of signatures have bee.n determined to be invalid, it was disclos- ed. Orange County voting supervisor Ed Arnold told the DAILY PILOT that the recallers v.•i\I be at least 500 signatures short. He cautioned that was an unofficia l tally, subject to verification when the listings are fed th rough the county·s com- puter. l\.1eanwhile, the frantic recall workers "--Cre recall ing their petition carriers in an 11th hour bid for signature• to replace those bogus ones that have been can· celled out. ft seemed certain at press lime today that St John will order the organizers of Lhe Allen Recall campaign to brlng in (See RECALL, Page %) Mayor Tells Beach Purchase Plan By BARBARA KRElBICll 01 111• OlllY ""'' S,.tl Conlinuing his survey of prospects for development of Laguna 's Main Beach, Mayor Glenn Vedder this week expres.<ted lhe opinion that city income in the next f Pw years coukf cover payments oo the beach purchase without seektng ad · ditional taxes. Hd also proposed 1 three-phase development program to extend over the next 10 to 12 years. Step one, Vedder suggested. would be ~gu~=e~:~~!:t ~r~8nbe~~::"~{~~ revenue producmg facility adjacent to Laguna Avenue. This Is where the city is setking proposals for a hotel-conference facility. -ne portion of the be1tchfront from Octao Avenue to Broadway, 1ays Vedder, could be retained essentially as It now is ror approximately 10 years in order ~o continue rent income to the. city. The area from Broadway to the Boys' Club should be developed in the n ar future, lhe t-.1ayor believes. This area, he slates in a report, '"could provide a clear aDd expanded vista and a larger pedestrlan use, a1 well a.'i som commercial 9CrVlces orJented to the beach and beach Ulf:rs. "A scrtes or terrace.s fur !)€!Opie to use. at or near Coast lllghway sidewalk level," says the report. "could be co~ structed, ser\l lng as a roof o~er small shopa or stalls catcrin& to the bcachgoer. No ~t projection ls otfr:red, but the over1JI reUtm in view, pti:destrlan use and rent would be great compared lo the small constructkm cost. Terraces could be built as needed and 1s mont)' is 1vaUable." • Analyzing beach coi;ts and revenue, Vedder notes that annual principal and intere11t paymenl3 range from $220,000 to $125,000. lnsurancC(-laxes and other char ges amount to about $50,000 an- nually, but taxes v.•ill be reduced as leases are terminated. The total COlit is $270,000 to $27S,OOO annu11ty. To defray these expenses he cites estimated income. for 19&70, in round (lgures. Festival or Arts revenue will iamoun1 to $70,000, bed Lal; to $120,000. rent from leases. $80,000, beach parki ng lot fet ll, $8.000. for 8 total or $271,000. plus a reserve of f50,000 from 1968-&9. or this inrome, •tos,ooo 'hu been budgeted for cultural gupport. city pro- motion and transfer to the 1ene.r1I fund for "housekeeping," "App11 rently the Income ln the nelt Jew years, It properly 1llocal.td, could meet Ill< charaes wllboul a•in& Lo lht tu· j payer:' the M;iyor states. Additional facts to be considered, he adds, are. the Covemor's proposed six- cent sales lax, whlch would increase the bed tax to the. same rate and tldd $25.000 a year to Laguna '• bed tax revenue : and lhe tact lhal, whe.-n the Ata in Stach Is fully developied1 lhcre will be additional cost Jor care and maintenance. as well as loss of rent Purchase oI ll'le Richfield station and fall development Of t-.fain Beach Part coukf reqtiire 8fl tddltJonaJ $60,000 , an · nualb't be notes. Urging an adopted, precise plan for phased ..de•elopment of the bearhfront, the Mayor concludes, "whtm , fad or fa n- cy should not dJr~t a pleeemleal unrelated dtvelOJ)me.nt of Ule toLal ~ae:ll park." I } Bond Rate Increase T1·y Fails By RlCllARD P. NALL 01 lht D1llv PUOI Stiff School buses loaded with youngsters from Capistrano Unified School District seemed perkier !hi! morning as they piled the freeways and residential streets of tbe 1pra\vUng district. lt may ha ve been only the morning sun ~n the ~ellow paiot bu t· transportalion like music and the entire educallonal pro- gram was given e new lease on life Tues· day by the district's voters. Half of the 15,069 regis1ered voters - 7.521 -turned out and passed a 50·cent tax override that will be in effect for two years. An accompanylng .proposilio n tu raise the Interest rate from live to seven per· cent on $4.2 million in previously ap- proved bonds tor school cnstruction and si te acqu.isltlon tailed to pile up the two to one ratio of yes votes needed for passage. The override won with 3,1145 yes votes and 3.628 no voles. The bond issue had 4,631 yes votes (6L7 percent) and 2.868 no voles. ft would have needed 66 2/3 per- cent yes votes to succeed . 'TURNOl.11' UP The turout of voters y.·as 2,015 more than the 5,506 turnout April 15, 1969 which saw that SO·cent override substantially defeated. Registration in the di strict had Jncreased from 13,844 to JS,069. rt became apparent early in the even· lng at election cen1ral, the district office, that the bonds would probably lose. Election o f t i c i a I s apprehensively watched for returns from precincts one and two, Contordia School (President Nixon's pr ecinct, although he was not ye t e.liglble to vole there) and the Green residence, 204 Barcelona . Both are tradi- tionally tough on school f i n a n c • measures. The negative votes irom these polling places. in the case or the override, began to be offset by a heavy majorit y of yes votes from other districts. The override started gaining a sUm lead that became a cliffhanger unti l the last preclnt was in, Las Palmas Sthool. Truman Benedict. district superin- fSee ELECTION. Page !J Ornn!(e Const Weal h e r Thursday's Y.eather picLurc? ln 1 v.·ord. groovy. The Man calls for sunny skies and y.·armcr tempera- tures, which rneans about 65 along the roast and pushing 70 inland . INS IDE l 'OOt\ l' Cl!;f! a b u 1l ch of colleor dra1no st11de11ts enouylt rope and they'll create their oWllt repertor11 conipa,111. 0 r a n a~ Coa.sl Coflegt i.1 dohl!J jUJt tho! with ir.c new erperirneruat thl'a· ter. See Enler1ait1me11t, PCJge 80. l lr!M " .-uitri..~ .. ... ft, • l lCfftt.ft " C1lllt•nl1 " Min ill 1.,.,1,, " C••ffl' Cir..., , .. Mtttlttf\ " C~klnt "' ' M•~ltl ,.,, ci.oltloll ..... M\ll~•t •ll'tllh " Clll'li<\ • " ........ .... •• c~-• 0.ll'lt'I COWl>tl' ,, Olll~ '"1k1H' " f!:tA .. ··-" -· D•U t:•·••.i .... • Or. SttillCnlllt " 1f1t'9rtt•111'1'111t1 "" llltdl llillflleh H-11 FlftMC4 .. " Tl~~ ·-"'""'''~ " ™'"" ,.,, .Alt~ ,lH .. •1 • WNtl!tt • M•IM:;.1 ' WOftltll ~ N"'" JI"-•w• -· .. \ • -1 O"tl 'I PllOl ~·!tdntidiY, Muth 11, 1970 Delay fo1· Ti111. Leary Wife, Son Draw Stiff Terms Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMUlen broke up the Timothy Leary home today with three separate rulings and reserved until J\tonday for the con· troversial LSD cultis l what may be the surrest penalty or the three. lie sent Rosemary Leary, :W, to Orange County Jail for six monlhl and placed her on probation for the next five years. He ordered John Bush Leary, 20, to undergo a 90-day diagnositc study at the state of G.1.li(ornla's Chlno fa cility aod to report back to bis courtroom in June. Dr. Leary won a five-day delay of his sentencing on charges of p6sses.slon of marljliana. Defense attorney George Chula sue. cessfUlly pleaded that "new ltgal pro. blems relating to Dr. Leary's other legal · actions" had arisen and he needed time to di.!CUSs them with attorneys working on those cases. Dr. Leary wu sentenced to 10 years in prison last month by a Tex&.! Federal Court judge. He is scheduled to return to New Yark later this month for further action on mlademeanor charges relating to drug use. l\1rs. Leary and young Leary were con- victed last month by an Orange County Superior Court jury ct charges of possession of marijuana and LSD. The family was arrested in Laguna Beach on the drug charges and su~uenUy in- dicted by the Orange County Grand JW"y. t.1rs. Leary'1 lawyer announced today lhdt he will immediately appeal her jail sentence. Leary left the crowded courtroom with the promise that "whatever happens my family and I are free , we were born free and we will stay free." Dr. Leary la currently being held in Orange County Jail. He was committed there last month by Judge McMillan v.·ith the comment that he was "a threat to the community." The former Harvard psychologist smil- ed and waved to what appeared to be about 50 flower carrying sympathizers in lhe courtroom and urged them to "love God and stay high." Rockwell 'Proud' Of Pageant Part In a letter to Festival of Arts publicist Sally Reeve, famed artist Norman Rockwell said this week lhal he ls "proud to be a part" of Laguna's Festival. Mrs. Reeve told Festival directors she had written the artist to ask ii he knew where a print of bls "Wlnter Duet" could be obtained for reproduction as a livin1 picture In this year's Pageant. 'Ille palnling had been reproduced before, she explained, and, like all Rockwell works, v.•as an audi ence favorite, but the original 1965 calendar used for reference was in poor condition. In a gracious letter, the arUst referrtd her to the calendar publisher, adding his expression of pleasure that the. painting lYOuld be part of the Pageant's 1970 · •·com mand perfonnance" of all-time favorites. Rockwell is an honorary life member of the Festival of Arts. Viel Deaths lo Rise, As U.S. Dea ths Fall SAIGON IUPI) -Casually figurea to be released Thursday will show a decrease in American deaths and a sharp rise In South Vietnamese combat deatM lo more than triple the number of Americans, lnfonned sources said today. This also was rerlected in fighting reported today from t.he Souf.h Viel· namese centcal coa1t where Viet Cong and North Vietnamese lroop.1,Jnfllcted hea\'y losses on two companies'1:if South Vietnamese militiamen. DAILY PILOT Newp.rt IHcli L .. ,.. lffch c .. t. M- H111fiatte1 lfftlt fe111tel• Y.z1.., S.. CltiM•f'* OU.NGE CO.t.ST PUILISHING COM l"ANV Jtob•rl N. W11d Pr11111ent •nct1 P11bll&lltr J1c~ R. C11rl1y V>(I Prnkltnl lnO C:.1ner•I M•Mffl' Tho"''' K11•il f l !tor Tho"''' A. M11rphjn1 Mtnatlrlf •1l1or Rid11rd P. Nill 5011111 0•1"91 Co11nlv faltor Offk• ('oilll M-..: J>O Wit! lty 5trHI H•"""°'' e.-c~= Hll .,. .. , 6tlbH 'Olll1¥t rl llfl#ll llKYI! :in "' .. '" ........... Munt1n9!Clfl 8M(!'I; Hlli lltKfl llWll•or-S..n Ci-11: Jlt5 Norltl El C..mlN Rul "Dorft worry," he assured them, "I have very good connectlons with lhe highest court of all . Everything is perfect, we have tried to do God's v.'ork and we will still be able lo do it." Frona Page J RECALL. • • \Vithin the n e x t 10 days sufricient signatures to meet the required lolal of 9,748 names. Recall organizers Paul Carpenter of Cypress and Anthony Tarantino of San Clemente delivered 10,522 signatures lo St .John last wetk . St John advised the shocked Carpenter of the deteriorating situation and the anti-Allen Democrat immediately reac· tivated his Idle volunteers throughout the Fifth District. Carpenter noted "We have 10 days in which to obtain whatever may be the required signatures and t.hat is time enough for us." Carpenter placed the blame for the mounting number of invalidations on t.,.,·o Newport Beach recrui ts to his recall campaign. "\Ve decided lo take no legal action against them after Lhe two agreed to delete the falJifications they had en- tere<t," the angry Car.;enter said. "It is, of course, a blow to our campaign but at least we now have the opportunity to fill the gap with genuine signatures -and there are, you know, plenty of them in the Fifth District" One of those two workers denied Carpenter's allegations and told the DAI- LY PILOT that his signatures were col- lecteci last week by representatives of Opinion Research Inc. of Long Beach. "J've heard nothing since," he said, "and T know nothing about false signatures or phony names and .addresses." Close checking by voUng division supervisor Arnold's staff has revealed lhe filing of incorrect names and addresses. the listing of persons who are not registered to vote, duplications of signatures and lists compiled in October to wbieh the signatures were aff11ed a month later. One checker commented that "valid signatures Wert! r unning as high as 96 pera!Dt accurate when we first started working on the bundle of petitions and things looked fine. But we got a llttle lower down and found that we were hav- ing to throw out whole sheets or signatures, one after the other, for various reasons." Carpenter's submission of 1 0 , 5 2 2 signatures called for a 92 percent level of Validation and St John commented at the time of fJling that the reeall workers were "leaving a great deaJ to chance. One should have a greater cushion than this margin of 774 votes when ou bear in mind the nature of the election," St John said. . ff Carpenter's efforts to make good the invalid signatures are unsuccessful , his candidate will have to oppose Supervisor Alton E. Allen. Costa ti.~esa Vice r.tayor Robert ri.f. "Bob" Wilson and savings and loan executive Ron Caspers or Lido Isle in the June 2 primary election. Carpenter said Tuesday that it !ittr11ed "fairly certain" that Tarantino will go against Allen in the June election. "He's trying to make up his mind ," the Democrat said, "bill we should have his decision within the next 10 days." Drug, Rm1a,vay Raps Jail.Pair A young Canadia n and a runaway girl from San Lu is Ob ispo were taken inlo custody Tuesday night whe n Laguna Beach police were summoned to a coffee shop al 1600 S. Coast High"'·ay, to check ou t their suspicious behavior. Answering the 9:45 p.m. call police claim they found the pair staggering. redeyed and barely able to speak. Patrick John Moe. 18, a Canadian citizen who said he now resides In Long Beach, was booked on su3picion of being under the influence of drugs in public. Police staled he was incapable of taking a sobriety test. His companion, a 17-year-old girl later irlentified as a runaway, "''as placed In Juvenile Hall for safety when pollce decided she was unable to care for herself. Office Seekers To Give Talks 1\..-o Laeunans -·ho have clashed rrom time to time on school issue.s will mo'\l'e into tl'le field of politics y.•hen U>ey e,ppear as guest speaker3 al a tttonday arternoon l"eeting of the Women's Republican Club of Laguna Beach. Attorney \\'illlam \Vllco xen, Laguna Beach school board member, y.•ill be presented in his role as candidate for the C-Ongre.ssional seat of tl'le !ale James B. Utt. £dy.•ard I.Arr. presldenl of the Laguna Stach Taxpayers A3socll1tlon and Jeoder of opposiUon to the recently defeated ~boo I ta1 cverrtde and bond iS5ue, will be heard as a c:lndldalc ror the. Laguna Beach City Councn. Interested members of the public are tnvited to auend the 2 p.m. meeling In the. Laguna Bosch \Voman's Cl ub, St. Ann'a Drive and Glenneyre Street. • ·~·. _·r.," YOUNGSTERS CROWD TOGETHER IN 'HOLD' ·IN RE-ENACTMENT OF MAYFLOWER VOYAGE Hiatory Com11 Alive •t Lagun•'• Top of the World Elementary School "'Mayflower' Sets Sail Students Recreate Hards hips of Historic Voyage Two-hundred Top of the World El emen· lary School students in Laguna Beach participated in a unique hlslory lesson last week as they learned a little of v.·hal the passengers on the 11.fayno .... ·er had en- dured on their historic five-week ocean crossing. Teacher Jud ith Anderson read actual passages fron1 lvritings of lhe original i\1ayflower passengers during the lesson, but their descriptions of the trip were just part of lhe experience. Instead of five weeks, t.he students spent five hours aboard their "ship," crammed into a darkened room to represent the "hold" in which the passengers traveled. Fro111 Page J ELECTION ... tendent, today prised t.he citizens group called ARVY (Area Resident3 -Vote Yes ) for a dynainic hard sell that turned the tide. \\'all hanging depicted the se a aro und and tape-recorded sounds of the surf, with occasional "storms" filled the room. Once they had ''cast off." the students could not lea\'e. At intervals. ri1rs. Anderson read from the diaries of the l\.faynower passengers. Some of the students brought musical instruments which they played from tin1e to time, and the girls brought sevt'ing and knitll ng to pass the time, as the original pa ssengers had done. The only food offered to t he "passengers" was bread and water, but they had to watch the "captain" and "first mate" eat a hearty meal of ham· burgers. Hel ping lo sim ulate conditions on the ship were realisUc spiders and rats (plastic). Growing restless at times, the student s expressed amazement thal their an- cestors had been able to endu re the original voyage and v.·ere genuinely rel ieved \vhen land at last was "sighted" and they were met by "friendly Indians." The Indians, a surprise feature ar· ranged by Mrs. Richardson and a group of parents, treated lhe new "arrivals" to apple cider and cookies. The students now are writing essays about their trip, the real Maynower voyage and the sufferings endured in search of freedom . Dana Homeow11e1·s Meet With W ate1· Officials MeniI1gitis Deatl1 Tied To Marines A· 12-yfar-old Gard en Grove gi rl who died Tuesday of spinal minlo.gitl,<i -lhe firs,t Orange County victim in tv.·o years -had been eJpo~ to a family friend stationed at Camp Pendleton. 'The disclosure was made by the mother of Janet Hines. of 12f2 Lambert Circle, a stralght-A student at LamPson Intermediate School. Death came al Orange County J\tedicat Center, where the. girl was transferred from a private hospital to which her mother took her last Friday, in. a swUt· striking coma. ''She looked like a war dummy, I knew :romeUtlng was wrong ." said Janet's mother who explained she became Ill the day before at school, !bowing symptoms cf flu or a virus. Dr. Gerald Wagner, Orange County PuQlic Health Officer, s~id the disease ls extremely contagious but there ls no im· mediate danger of an epidemic. Schoolmates will be closely observed and the entire Hines famil y -including William Jr., 2Q, a Navy man staUoned al Guantanamo Bay, Cuba -have bee n given preventive treatment. The Red Cross arranged for the youni! sailor lo fly home and be v.•ith his parents and his surviving teenaged brother and sister. Cases of spinal me ningitis have flared up at Camp Pendleton in the past and l\1rs. Hines theorized Tuesday the virus could have been carried by a Marine who visited them recently. "I want to warn other parents," she said in tones of grief. "I'm nol trying to create a panic. I just don't want this to ·happen to any other children." r..trs Hines said the entire f;;imily recently suffered a chest virus, but Janet. an honor student. went back to class to work on a science project while still feeling its effects. The county health officer said today that although spinal meningitis can brine: death six hours after entering the body, perhaps a th ird of the population carries the virus. He said the lethal bacteria, men· ingococcal meningitis, is frequently found in the throat. Only six cases have been recorded In Orange County in the past t..-.·o years and all of these victims -until the Hines girl -have survived. "I think we really had a fine effort at By JOHN VALTERZA 'fom Brooks and Bob 1t1alone, district Capo Approves Membership gelling the tnformittion out • , • it v.·as so ot th• 0.111 "1191 s1111 lawyer George Logan and members o( widespread," said Benedict. "Certainly A small delegation of Dana Poin t lhe district staff. Chuck Darg•n {ARVY chairman) and the homeowners met with a cotnmlttee from A compromise in the issue appears far ARVY committee did 8 fantastic job." the South Coast County Water District away, however all parties in the. Tuesday Tuesday night in an "informational gathering agreed that something could The override will bring the district meeting ,. to examine whether the possibly be worked out. cibout $700,000 annually. Without it, school district's recent SO-percent rise in water District Manager John "Tex'' Smith San Juan Capist rano city councilmen In SERRA Group officials had estimated there would be a rates could be reduced. this morning said one basic problerr. in have approved the city's mem bership in JO percent cutback. Bul, despite a less emotional level than the controversy is misunderstanding of SERRA. Benedict said override passage will last wee k's stormy 1neeting on the issue, the standard fi5Cal practices of govern-The city will be the second to sign the- no one really reached accord. ment agencies in which a "cushion" of agreement fonn1·ng the S 0 u 1 he as t pern1it the district essentially to continue The group set March JI fqr another reserve funds 1nust lie in a budget each Regional Reclamation Authority which is the existing progran1. meeling. yea r to meet expenses between the a joint approach to sewage and ecology ''The mos t dramatic thing will be The delegations examined reasons for start of a fiscal year in July to the firsl problems in the San Juan basin. single session kindergarten," he said. The the water rate increase -the district arrival of tax revenue funds from the The Santa Margarita Water District be ·i· · Ji · a ,. county in December. th fi 1 t · kindergartens are now on double session. znem rs Cl 1ng sp1ra ng 111 a ion. v.·as e 1rs o sign. Benedict sai d the fu nds \.\'ould also allow The homeowners. who have examined "I think t.hat many or the homeowners Still studying the joint powers agre e-- audits and fin ancial reports of the believe that cushion of n1oney should be ment are the San Clemente Wale r a catchup on some necessary ma in· di strict, maintain that the district's used fo r lov.·ering rates. but if ,,.e did, .,.,,e District. the Capistrano Beach and Dana tenance of school properties. steady income and solid investments \rouldn"l ha \•e any money for a six-month Point Sanitary District and the "1oulton· Although failure of the bood interest show it to ge running in the black, thus period." he said. Niguel and Santa Ana Mounta.in County proposition left the district unable to no increase should be ma~e. The district delegation. he added . v.·ould \Valer Districts. The six-man layman committee -mCE't on its own before the next session The purpose of SERRA is ta eliminate market its bonds for building, Bened ict representing primarily the homeowner·s \Yith the homeowners "lo see if \.\'e can -the necessity for sma ll agencies to saw hope for a second high school in associati on in the Thunderbird flomes come up with a satisfactory com· duplicate facilities for purifying and car· Proposition Seven on the June prlmary tract. met with wa ter board members promise." rying sewage. ballot. It woulQ raise interest mailmum Tr=========================================-. an state bonds-from five to seven perce nt to make them marketable. The state, said Bened ict, has al ready approved a second district high school to be built in Dana Point, '1Dana Hills High School," of( Golden Lantern on a site the district owns. If the state bond interest goes up , said Benedict, it would loan the district the (unds for the work. The hig:h school would house a.bout 1800 students and cost about $5 million. The exisUng high school is overcrowded by 20 percent, t h e superintendent said. An addition to Richard Henry Dana School is also state approved but Benedict said it would have a lo"•er priority for state money. The district v.•as able to build Mission Viejo School because the l\1isslon Viejo Company balled it out and purchased the bonds al five percent. Howeve r. Benedict saw no llklihood of another such tran3ac· tion. He said the district will have to go back lo the voters again sometime this year in another effort to get the bond celling hiktd . He ::;aid th is probably would not occur unUI September or sometimt in the fall. From Pnge J CARPENTER • • If Carpenter seeks U'le sate ft.Male post, it probably would be at U'le ur1tng of Governor Rea1an. lie is close to the governor Rnd state GOP leadership ls known to be unhappy with the currenl party program in the Legislature's upper hou!ie. Ptfl"anwhll~. two other possible c•n· didates for th e suite genate post are backing off. Assemblyman Robert Burke (fl-Huntington Stach) has declared h' will strk re.-cltctlon for his assembly seat ~nd will not be a candidate for sta1e senate. CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARD MA5-TER CHARGE fihff r t Miff Qfiuj' pttfaaf6~ ~?uJm rt ditYlllt. Arid the iubjecf i1 love. It's for evryon e between the •9•1 of 16-21 . Who feel. Who understand. Who kn ow ebout' lo••· There will be fi•• national recognition priz1s, be1utiful diamo nd ptndants •1p1ci1lly d1si9n1d by Or•nga Blo ssom . Thi cont1st clos11 May 15, 1970. So hurry. Thi timt ts no'fl'· i%~~.W-J1 iJ &&1f rZI fi.Jt nufK.114/ ptr/j' aw/ad J. C. .J/.um1~hrie ~ JeweferJ 1 24 YEARS SAME LOCATION 1123 NEWPORT AVE. COSTA MESA PHONE ~4:.1401 ' • j • ' OAILY 1'11.0l l'h~l111 D1 Ltt P1y ... J',tdntsday, M11th 11, iq10 L DAILY Pl T :t SA Fia;'11a Fails S. Coast Tra sit Line • Ill The s~udy was approved by a 4 to 1 vole \vith Hirstein dissenting. Santa Ana Transit Corporation, the t•ity's only public transportation fir1n, has asked the city to take over operations because or financial troubles. The offer does not Include the South Coast Transi t Company which J>er\'eS the Orangc Coast area with a ra-ite from Sant.a Ana lo Costa Mesa. Ne1vpo rt Beach Count y Appl'oves $140,000 Plan For OC Airport A $140,000 contract to carry out the sc-- e<>nd phase of Orange County's Master Plan or Air Transportation was approved Tuesday by the Board of Supervisors over the objections of Supervisor \Villiam Hirstein. He said it was too expe nsive. Trouble and Laguna Beach. Bul George A. Cordler. manager of both companies said the latter line is also in financial trouble. ''I "'ish someone would take over Soutl\ Coast also as we are losing money,•• Cordier said . He added, however , that the proposal to the city of Santa Ana only in· eluded lines within the community. Company officials blame their trouble.~ on increased competition of the private automobiles together with generally bu· proved economic conditions in the area. South Coast Transit took over the financially stricken Santa Ana Bus Co. in ?\1arch of 1966. A year later an official said the company was losing about $2,00Q a month . Even Lag una Puppets Hit By Inf latio1i WEA RINESS AND FRUSTRAT ION OVER A HUNG-UP KITE -SIGNS OF THE SEASON ALONG THE ORANGE COAST lfirs tein based his opposition on the fact that the supervisors had bud geted only $50,000 for ti~ second phase study. Counly Ad1nlnistralivr Officer Robert E. Tho1nas elCplaincd that the scope of the phase two project had been increased since the budget "'as adopted. Puppetr.er Renee appeared before the l.aguna Beach FesUval of Art.s Board o{ Directors Tuesday to suggest an increase in Festival puppet show prices Crom IO cen~ to 75 cents. April Hearing Set Capo's Festival For Rettu·ning S\vallo,vs Slated Upper Bay Development Plans for this year's Fiesta Las Go\on- drinas in San Juan Capistrano are pro- ceeding as steadily as !he flocks of swallows heading up from the south, festiva l officials sa id today. Study Given to County The plans are nearly complete ror the celebration n1arklng the historic arrival or the dllrting birds which fly in by the thousands for their spring and summer stay at San Juan Capistrano's Mission every St. Joseph's Day. And children of the city will be aL the mission to gree t them on !hat day with a religious procession honoring Sl. Joseph and the swallo\l•s. The procession \.\'ill mark the official fitart ()f the fiesta. which will include rodeos, parades, dinners, breakfasts and even more merrymaking in between. The parade, which will begin al l p.m. Saturday, March 21, will be the high point fir the fiesta with all entries either on fool. horseback, or in horse-drawn car- riages. ChaJTos, Indians. bands, buggies, wagons and comic entries v.1ill join with equestrians in the parade through the center of San Juan Capistrano. Immediately after Sat urday's parade, rodeo will become the focal point with contestants vying for $10,000 in prize money in a rodeo sponsored by Far Western Rodeos. The rodeo will be repeated at·2 p.m. the next day. Sunday. Other parade day activities v.1ill include " breakfast jointly sponsored by the Woman's Club and San J uan Rotary Club, startinc at 6:30 a.m. in the \Voman·s Clubhouse. Other breakfasts will include one on Sunday morning at 6 a.m. at the fiesta campgrounds. The breakfast v.1ill precede a public trail ride on horseback . A barbecue dinner will be held al the horsemen's can11lground l\tarch 21 at 5:30 p.m. Bill v Gr a hatn lo Hold J \Vhite l-Jouse Service WASIIINGTON /UPI) -Evangelist Billy Graha1n v.·ill conduct \Vhile HOlJst V.'orship services Sundny ln the East Jioom . the \Vhite HoL1sc said toda y. It wlll be the third time Graham has led Wh ite House religious se rvices. Graham is an old friend of President Nixon. Cona11aittee Meets 8'.l' JACK BRODA.CK 01 ftlt 01111 ,lie! $1111 An exhaustive study posing seven possible development concepts for Upper Ne"·port Bay was presented to the Orange County Board ol Supervisors Tuesday and set for publfc 'hearing on April 8. The study stemmed from a proposal last December by Supervisor Robert Bat- tin that the county restudy the Upper Bay in view of current concepts. Battin of- fered an alternative to ~ famed land exchange between the county and the Irvine Company. He proposed that the county buy three channel islands owned by the company for an estimated Sii million, spend another $2 million for dredging the chan· nel two-thirds the wey up to the so-called narrows and leave the upper one-third of the bay as an ecolOgical preserve. Battin's plan Wa!l considered as an alternalive to the seven offered by the analysis prep a red by County Administrative Officer Robert Thomas. Director of Harbors Ken Sampson, Coun.- ty Counsel Adrian Kuyper and Real Property Services Director S t a n 1 e Y Krause. Included in each concept are economic and land use ana lyses of benefit lo cost ralio and annual user days. ASSU~lPTIONS The report states that conclusive com· parison between the various development plans cou kt not be made unless certain assumptions were made.· These assumptions involved policy determinations regarding the relative public priority of various recreatiooal uses. the importance of economic return, preservation of ecology and the availability of public funds. Jn addition to Battin's plan. the other basic concepls inc lude the land exchange plan. a maximum public ownership bounded by the toe. of the bluffs and a development along ownership lines .. Variations include either an 800-foot \\•ide channel or a 600-fool wide waterway, a water ski basin and an ecology rese rve. Land and economic comparisons for the seven development concepts shov.•: -PLAN ONE (Battin's proposal v.·ith Thi i; lli the newly formed Executive Committee of the Laguna Com· n1unity Players. lnc. Fronl Je!t are Ruth O~good Salyer. Bet~y Rose, \Villiatn l larcu111 an d Joan Short. Group "'Ill take the lead 1n form- ulating plans for fulure of Laguna Moulton Playhouse. an 800-foot channel). Would involve 830 acres includi ng 411.8 now publicly owned. 243 acres of patent tidelands to be purchased and an additional 17~.2 acres to be bought from the Irvine Company. Estimated land cost under the .Ballin plan is $11.9 mill ion; estimated develop. ment cost is $10.48 million for a tolal or $22.4 million. -PLAN TWO (a variation of Baltin's plan v.·ith the narrower channel and in- creased shoreside 5fe:velopment). Same total acreage and breakdown bul with an increase in development cost of $600.000 bringing total investment to $23 million . -PLAN THREE (The proposed land exchange with a water ski basin al the upper end). Acreage would be less in that only 116 acres would be purchased fro1n the company. Land cost would be nil and development cost $8.3 million. -PLAN FOUR (Land exchange wllh ecology reserve ). Total cost for develop- ment $5.9 million. -PLAN FIVE (fl.1ax imum public ownership lldth 800-foot c h a n n e I ) . Purchase of 381 acres for a total of l,lm. Land cost, $21 million, development co.st $14 million for a total of $35.69 million. -PLAN SIX (11-1aximum p u b 11 c ownership with 600-foot channel). Land cost $21.6 million, development cost Sl2.6 million for a total of $34.3 million. -PLAN SEVEN (Present ownership with ecology reserve). Land cost, Sl.2 million, deveJopment cost, SS. I million for a total or $6.34 million. Estimated aMual cost of operations range from a loss of cost over polen\lal inrome of $735,507 on Battln's plan to a $43,699 annual profit under Plan Four. OTllER FACTORS Jn addition to the economic factors, the re\1iew group noted th at other decision- making factors must also be taken into consideration. These include: -Maintenance of an ecological balance for the area. -Having a flexible type plan that can be modified in the future to serve the changing recreational needs. -Providing a project within the coun· ly's ca pacity. lo finance. -Providing a facility for st.atewide benefit, as compared to k>cal benefit. -Providing a facllJty that will mttl current recreational deficienc ies, as y,•eU as providir.g for future needs. The report also warned that thf! superYisors must make p r i m a r y determinations relating to policy. AIA'ITER OF FUNDS ''First Is the matter of fuocls that can be allocated for land acquisition and development of this project. Should it be funded on a pay-a11-you-go basis. or should It be taken to the votl!rs for ap.. proval or a bond issue? "Another is lh:e pr1orlly of use between ecology areas. waterfront commercial use, which is oriented primarily to boating, or beach and park use that Is oriented primarily to 1wimmlng and pic- nicktng." The study group noted that one method u!ed in evaluating de v elopmen t alternative.s is the anticipated number of user days, but warned I.hat these may be misle:adlng because a change in the acreage allocated to varklu1 uses wlll materially change the number of user day1 for any one of the development con· cepts. For comparison, plans one and two (Battin's) would provide an estimated 4 to 4.5 mll!Jon u&er days, plan three , with \he water ski basin, 8.5 million user dayli, olan four .J.9 mllllon,.plan Hve. lO_mlllimt. plan alx, 6.3 million, and plan seven, 3.2~ million. l<'und s Requested By Saddleback Saddleback College trustees · agreed J\fonday night to makt an official request f ... r state malehing fund s for a new science-mathematics building under pro- vision of the Junior College Construction Act of 1967 -but the request wa s strictly academic. The state, a col/egr spokesman noted, ha:i some S65 million in unsold junior col- lege const ruction bonds. which arr parenl!y are not likely to sell at their ap· proved five percent interest rate, so in fact funds for con!itruction are not now available. However. board approval of a matching fund reque st must be sub1nilted in t:on· Junction with a college's project planning guide, so the trustees dutifully gave the request their blessing in order to ·•gel in line" when funds eventually are released. Shoplifter Show s Taste in A ri Theft A shoplifter with artistic tastes remov· ed two art objects worth $365 from War· ren Imports, 1910 S. Coast Highway within the pasl week , Laguna Beach police reported. The second phase study is to be made by Ralph ~1. Parsons and Associates of San Francisco. The firm was an10ng thr ee finalists chosen rrom among se\'en aviation con- sulting firms applying lo make lhe county study. Included in the new study will be a new master plan for Orange County Airport, !ilte locations for a proposed metroport, a genera l a\•iation facility and an air park and recommendations on possible joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, l<'red 0. Shol't La st Rites l-lelcl Services were held 1\londay In Rose J.lills Memorial P<irk Chapel, \Vhittier, for Fred O. Short. formerly of Laguna Beath. y,·ho was killed in an auto crash in Baldwin Park las t Thursday. He was 28. A nat ive of Texas. ~1r. Short li ved in Laguna Beach for ieveral )'ears befof' moving to Whittler, where he recently made his home. He is survived by his wife. Sharon: A daughter, Uza Ann ;his father, George Short of Monarch Bay: mother, Mary C. Short of Virginia Beach; and a sister, Susan. After ixindering the mall er briefly, the board agreed that the incrtase should be granted. Puppet show licket prices have not gone up for JO years, Renee noted. The same could not be sald for his operaUng ex-penses. including the cost of llYing in Laguna during the six-week Festival run. "li-iany people have told me they think the show is worth more." Renee told the board. "and I think il is, especially now they have a nice. comfortable the.a ter ~o i;il in {the Foru1n). Mosl children s Uieaters charge $1.50 for ticke ts." Boa rd president William Martin noted that cost of grounds admission -50 cen~s for adults and 10 cents for children - also must be taken into account. The ballet. D1rect0r Stuart Durkee co1nmented, charges $1 for chiklren a~d S2 for adults. Director Paul Griem said the increase seemed in order to him, since pageant ticket pri~es had gone. up as much as JOO percent 1n some sections in the 10-year period . Nixon Lllnits Import Of Canada Crude Oil WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on Issued a proclamation today tem· porarily limiting crude oil Imports from Canada in parts of the United States. LS shoes by LIFE STRIDE. These unlined leolher sho es fe el better then 9oin9 barefoot. Butter. soft uppers fit your foo l like a little glove - "MARVELOUS" $17 N1Yy-Red-Vicune Bone or Whit• Kid I 052 IRVINE AVE. WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPOftT BEACH "SPLENDOR" $17 Bon• or Whit• Kid ~ Phon e 548-8684 r 4 DAIL v P1ro1 • • IN TODA rs NEWS -IC--'*I n "'-0•1tr ~"" S11IO A sliding-scale titillation tax on sexy· movies bas been proposed in the Michigan I-louse 10 cla1np do"'" on 1'purveyors of filth." Under the bill. introduced by Rep. Quincy Hoffma n, theater o\vners "'ould be raxed $50 to show an ''l\1'' rated film, $75 for an "R11 rated picture and $100 tor a n "X" rated movie. ~o ~x. \Vas proposed on "G" rated films .• • Schoolgirls at the Don Valley . High School of Bentley. England, are laqnching a protest against \vooden desks. They allege th at the desks are a safety hazard. They run their tights and leave splinters in awkward places. • Another of those "new experien· cts" betng sou.gilt by mo11u hos been introduced at a·1L International Gas· trcr11om11 Fair in flo111b urg. Germany. The de vice. a Japa11e1e-made 11arghilt. uses a stnalL bottle of wl1iskey i111tead of tlie rradnional water to circulate, cool. and spike tlie snioke from a cigarette. After ab-Out 24 1mokes, the bottle 111ust be replaced because of tor and 11icor111e accu11Lulorio11. • A Retford, Englan~. h.ead.mis- tress has banne<! the maxicoet and has ordered her pupils ~o wear mi- nis. "l\.1axicoats look most un gain- ly," said Margaret Town1h.nd, head of Relford High School. "l'ye- told my 80 students they mils! wear minicoats -but not toP &hort.'' 0 The British Foreign Office has v.•arned \1·omen having a passport photo taken \l'hilc \Vearing a wig to \\'ear the \\'ig when they leave 1hc country or enter another. "Passport officC'rs \voutd be \l'i thin their rjghts to refuse to let them enter their counlry.'' a spokes111an said. ll.S. Rep. Sarnael Decln.e f R· Ol1 io ) fa(t.S a diplo111otic prub· /ern iu relayi11g a request fran1 r: a local civic group. Tlie !Jroup asked liis liclp in obtoi11ing Vice· president Spiro Agnew as a speaker for a11 11pcomi11g 11ieet· I ing. For an alternate speairer. they torote "How about Nizo11~" • • M••hack Jutoshewa of Parys. South Africa, \1•ar; recently iined $42 for two traffic violati-Ons and r;entenced to 6() dayr; in jail for a·t- tempting to bribe the arresting of- fi cer. The bribe offer -one fat sheep ready for slauihter. Wi.thout N. Vei.t1 • Peace, Neu ality U.S. -Laos Goals 1 \\'ASHlt\GTON (UPI) -The United States v.·ould be Jalisfied wlth any agree menl bet,,.,·een the Royal Laotian goveril· ment and the Communist Pathet Lao that brings real peace and neutrality to Laos, the Slate Department says. A department spokesman made it clear Tuesday however. the Uni ted States could not agr~ to any ~al that left in Laos any of the 67,000 North ·Vietnamese lrOQps President Nixon claims are there. ' ·'\Ve arc very 1nuch concerned with the settlement in Laos," said the spokesman. Carl Bartch. "If the '"'O sides could reach an agreement that was satisfactory to bolh, \Ve would not nectssarlly have to be conce rned wllh that." He. noted, however, the United States 11•as a party lo the 1962 Geneva accords selling up the coalition government wider Premier Souvanna F houma, from v.•hich the Coinmunlst .Pathet Lao withdrew in April, 1963. Bartch said the United States is "in touch v.·lth the Royal L a o t i a n government" regarding a peace plan ad· vanctd by the leader of the Pathet l..aD elements, Prince Souphanouvong, half· brother of Souvanna. He declined to say what the Unlted Stales thinks about the five-point peace plan, declaring ll ,,.,·ould be "better to Jet the Royal Lao government respond or comment be fare· we do." The offlcial U.S. atUtude v.•as the United States is studyin1 the Laotian Communist peace plan. Officials private- ly indicate they saw little prospect it ,,.,·ould lead to a solution, but hoped they were wrong. The United States has tended lo view the intensified Commwiist offen1ive in Laos or recent weeks as a maneuver designed to win a dominant position for the Pathet Lao and Its North Vietnamese supporters from Lhe central govl!:mment. The Pathet Lao proJ!O!al, therefore, is assessed by 1nost U.S. officials as part of a squeeze play. Some V .S. ofOclal& believe No rth Viet- nam, directing 1trategy for the Palhet Lao, believes the intensified debate In lhe United States over LaOs provides the same sort of pressure that forced lhe United States to begin pulling out of Viet .. nam. Se11ate Chance To Head Off Car swell Dim WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen: Edwscd 1\.t. Kennedy said today opposition to the Supreme Court nomination ol Judge G. Harrold Carswell has picked up but there appears to be only "a long shot" chance or blocklng Senate Confirmation. The Massachuaelts Dl!:mocrat, the par· ty whip in the Senate, Is among those fighting Presidenl Nixon 's appointment of the 50-year-old Tallahassee, Fla .. judge. Majority Leader f.1lke ~tansfield <D· f\.1ont. ). l'iaid Carswel1'9 no1ninatlon , strongly opposed by ci\'il rights forces. will be brought 'up in !he Senate im· mediately after nnal action on voline- rights legislation. Mansfield declined to say how he stands on Carswell. He said he e:tpects the debate to last three or four days. Kennedy said il might take longer but "I don't know of any attempt now to fill busier it." About 10 days ago Kennedy said he thought there might be about 2S voles again.5t Cars,,.,·ell's nomination . But he said today he believes there will be more th an 30 votes against confirmati on. Demo Leader Calls Vote On Lowe.r Vote Age Bill WAS HJNGTON (AP) -Sen ate Democratic Leader Mike. 1'.1arufleld call· eel up his proposal lo lawer the voling age to 18 for a vote today .allhough ac knowledWng str-Otlc opposition both on I.he floor and fr om (ht \Vhite. House, !\1a.o.slield said he realized many ~enal!Ors ha d already set their minds agalti!L his proposal. which ~·~ an amen"dment to a bill extending the 1965 Voling Rights Act. He said opponents feel it wquld jeopardize lhe voting rights bill. should be hand led as a separate bi ll, or bflie.ve a constitutional amendment is re· quired. Despite these handicaps, the ~1ontana Democrat said he thought the Senate needed lo race the iss ue no1v. The Nixon administration gave its blessing to the 18-year-old vote propos~l by <:onstilutionsl amend1nent. but op· posed any change by an act or Congress. It came out againsl Mansfield's approach in a stateinent Tuesday. Only four states pem1it pl!:rsons under 21 to vote. Georgia and Kentucky ha\'e lov.·ered the voling age to 18, Alaska to 19 and Hay.·aii to 20. n.epublican Leader tfugh Scott or Pennsyl\'anla. pushing for a five-year tx- tenston of the l96S Voling Rights Act to Apply primarily lo Southern stales. said he opposd injecting lhe 18-year-old vote issue. ''\\'e should not risk embroiling the ex· Lcnsim1 of the Voting Rights Act of 1965 wlth the subject of an 13 or 19-year voting age." he said. Scol t. differing "'ilh the administration, ls supporting a separate bill to lo,,.,·er the vot_ing age .. He said he thinks Jt is possi· ble, C0111ttitutionally, for Congress lo do this by statute. Scott also has spil t with the ad· ministration on exten&ion of the 1965 Voting Ri1h1J Acl . President Nixon asked Congress for legislation applying to all states alike. Last Oe~tmber the HoUBe approved the administ ration bill by a fi~·e-vote margin. In the. ~enate. Scott has teamed up "'ilh Sen. Pluhp A. Hart {0-Mich.), in orfering as a substitute £or !he House-passed blll a measure. to extend !he presenl la1v w.H~ool change but adding h\'O pro· 1·1s1ons recommehded by Nixon. Sen. John Sherman Coope r (R-Ky.). \\'Oil 50-37 adoption of an amendment ri.1onday lo bring parts of New York City 1lnd other scattered areas outside the South under the acrs automatic coverage forn1ula. Under his amendment. the act \\'ill a\:to~alically apply to any stale or coun; ly using a \'Oler literacy lest on NO\'. 1. 1968, lf less than 50 percent of its voling age population .,.,·as registered or voled in the presidential election that year. Police Sh oo t, ](ill 1'Ia u With Ha tchet LOS ANGELES (U PI) -Gary J\loore. 21 . Los Angeles. was shot and kllled Tuesday by a sheriff's deputy after he allegedly threatened employes of a coun· ty welfare office wllh a hatchet. Snowstorm Hits Southwest Droug lit R elieved, Ski Season Extended, Drive rs Scul CnllforH ln A!~~Uf"'U• A1>thet'lft ""'"'• M~L ... ,.rte " 1' ·" '' '' I~ •s Cat for Sale The plea has a familiar ring but the merchandise is quite different. Daniel DiPietro of Providence, RJ., strolls "'ilh hi s pet lion cub Oedipus, \\'ho ls up for sale. The four-n1onth- old pet takes too n1uch of his time. savs DiPietro \vho is asking $400 for the kitty. Cambodians Sack Red Emba ssies; Flags, Files Burn PHNOM PENH (UPl ) -An eslimated 20,000 Cambodian students and workers sacked the Vieg Cong and North Viet· namese embassies in Phnom Penh today, burning Lheir fire s and flags. Diplomats in the buildings fled before the attackli, the climax of more than a year of "'ldespread unrest O\'er the use of Cambodia as a sanctuary by guerrilla troops fighting in Vietnam. The demonstrators demanded thal the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese remove their troops from Cambodian soil. Police said a group or North Viet· namese in homes near their embassy threatened the mob with hand e:rena<les when the youthful Cambodians ap- proched. The demonstrators pulled back. No injuries were reported in the al· tacks on the two diplomatic encla\'es. Both were severely damaged. "Go Home, Dirty Viet Cong," read one of the banners carried by t h e demonstrators. Others said. 1oyou \Vant to Vielnamize Cambodia'' and "Viet Cong, Dirt)> Hypocrites." Egypt Postpones Art Loan to U.S. BOSTON (AP) -The Egyptian government has decided against lendin1 '43 major 11·orks of are to t h r e e U.S. n1uscums al this time. The Museum ol Fine Arts annou~d Tuesd ay receipt of a cable from the Egyptian minister of culture, Sarv.·at Ok11sha, th11t his country ,,.,.as postponing the loan "until a happier atmosphere prevails." The other institutions in volved are the J\.letropolitan !\1useum of Art in New York City and Los Angeles County 1-tuseum of Art. 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" . " ~ .. . " --,, " 11 -.- SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Depu· ty James 1'.1. Baker's taltnled nose btgan to twitch , then he burst Jnto a snee:ling spasm. Okay, he told a startled y<1ung man, where's the marijuana. The 16-yearo()ld boy sbook his head In dlsbellef 11nd produced a packet containlna a "lid" of tht Illegal weed. Bakl!:r of the Seit Lakti County Sheriff's o!flce, had b e e n in< ter\•iewing the youth in cooneetfon with a mlnor tr11ffic 1ccldent when h!:i1 sensttlve nose began actilll up... He Is allergic to just one thing - marijuana. The hay "'AS booked Into the Salt Lake County ~!nllOD Cenler for poaa;ts&lon of mal'ijuan11 and ~·as cited for the traffic accidint. I I e /,tetir~•~•!_ ,- eagan Will Run For Re-election SACRAJ\1ENTO (AP) -Go•. Ronald Reagan opened his re-election campaign today· as a "citiun polltici1n" seeking another four years In office on the basis of "what we have done and what we ire trying to accomplish." rr re-elected, he says, he will serve the four-year term, then retire. The Republican governor headed into Dead Woman Found in NY 'Bomb Plant' NEW \'ORK (UPI) -Searchers found the mutilated body oC a woman ,and enough dynam ite bombs to blow up half lhe block Tuesday in Lhe nibble or a Greenwich Village toy.•nhouse destroyed by explosions Friday. With the new evidence, which was carefully removed and dl!:fusfd, police hnd what they considered the first con- clusive evidence explosives· were being assembled in the $100.000 home. \\'hose nwners were vacationing in the Carib- bean at the time. They pressed their search today for !he owner 's daughter, another woman and three men who fled Friday. ··1 "·ould say they were making bombs •.. that's definite,'' said Assistant Chief Inspector of Police Albert Seedman. ··1 ~·ou!d say they had an explosion do1vn there by accident. The people who were inanufacturing bombs did something wrong." Theodore Gold, 2J, a teacher active in new left revolutionary groups \\'ho was a former leader of the Columbia Uni\"ersity students riots, was found crushed to death in the to1vnhouse Friday. Police and firemen at the scene said they ·will look for more bodies and explosives in the basement of the building, Y:hich ap- parently "'as the bomb 'vorkshop Proceeding carefully, the search was ex· peeled to take another week. Sixty sticks of dyna1nile and 100 blasting caps "'ere found in the base· ment. Some or the sticks "'e re ta ped !~ether ,,.,·ith fuses and se\"erea\ lead pipes "·e re found pncked \\'ith dynamite. The body or the unidentified v.'oman was severely mutilated. It was found near a ll'Orkbench with tools that mif!,hl ha,·e been used on the bombs, police said. Of the fiv.e people who escaped the blast the police have positively identified only Cathlyn Wilkerson, 25. daughter of the to~·nhouse's o-....·ner. They said they thought lhe second wOman who escaped u·as Kathy Boudin, 26, daughter of Leonard 8. Boudin, the counsel for Dr. Benjamin Spock in the case charging the pediat rician with conspiring to influence young men to avoid Ule draft Miss Wilkerson and anolher wonlan "·ere pulled from the n.Jbble of the lo\\'nhouse minutes after the series of ex· plosions late Friday morning. They \\'ere ·cut and bleeding and one was nude.· They were hl!:lped down the street to the ho1ne of a neighbor who helped them clean up and ga re them clothes, then they disappeared alter explainin_g, they were going to. a drugstore for med1c1ne . Three young men were seen leaving !he burning bulldlng after the explosions, but the police have provided no information on their identities. pqpulous Southern California today for hls first major campl;ign address -a luncheon apteeh on his administratioo'1 flght againllt smog. The 59-year-old former actor formally anno1tOCed for a second tenn 1\lesday w1th a prerecorded television and raaio broadcast and a news conference. The broadcast -'on 15 televis ion and 25 ra<lio stations -cost $28,000, a campaign or- flcial said. With Mrs. Reagan by his side, Reagan said, "The years ahead can be great ones and 1 would like to help as Califomi9 leads the way to be a part of that effort with you." ~ ''My every expectation is, and ms evei'y intention is, in running for this of· flee to be governor four more years and then 10 hOme and !it on thi front porch in the rocking chair ror six months, at the end of which I'll start rockin1," he said, Rea1an has no opposition In the June 2 primary. His only major declared op- ponent iJ Democrat Jess Unruh, the longtime state Assem bly speaker,' now minority leader. Oil Blow Out Well Lackin g Safety Device NE\V ORLEANS (UPI) -An Interior Department official has revealed most of the 1,000 barrels o( oil jelling daily from a fire blackened · of!shore platfurm originate from a single well operating without a sarety device to prevent 1c· cidental oil spills. The official, llarlan \\'ood, also said the "·ell \Vas not authorized to operate y,·it.hout the device, caUed a storm choke. \Vood said Tuesday night l\\'O Chevron Oil Co. inspectors on a boat discovered the disastrous "Charlie" platform fire ea rly Feb. IO, boarded-the platform for a tin1e and actually fought the blaze on the welJ's production deck until Lhey u·ere dril"en back by the heat. The production area blaze "then spread and Ignited eighl of 12 wells controlled by "Charlie." A storm choke is an automatic val\'r, installed at least 1,000 feet do'1.'n in Gui( of ~texioo oil and gas wells by Industry agreement and government regulations. to shut do\vn up\vard now if a surface ac· cident such as a fire or a hurricane wrecks surface controls. Wood said part of Chevron's oil skim- ming operations closed d ow n Tuesday night -several hours after Texas wild well fire fighters touched on a dynamite blast to snuff out the names on the plat-- forn1. Anubcored skimming barges re· mained on duty but roving slick-chase boats knocked off at dusk. The oil from the one trouble-making "'ell spurted JOO feet into the air aCter the flames v:ere put out. The three-mile-long brownish-yellow slick. only partly contained by barges and the 'skimming crew boats , began flowing toward Breton Island in ihe Chandeleur Islands National \Vfldlife Refuge. -The island is 10 miles from the plalform. Chandeleur has 8,00G-to 12,000 teal and pintail ducks plus uncounted gulls 1nd shorebirds. The ducks stop off for a rest in the islands 1lfter flying to Louisiana from ~1exico. After a few days they push on to their northern summer homes. Lan1a1· School Reopen s U11de1· Heavy Police Guard LA~iAR. S.C. !UPI) - More than 150 Negroes .an<! some "'hites attended the Lanlar School under heavy protection to· day while a group of whites marched silently around the ~rea that "'as 'vrack· ed by violenct last \\'eek . School officials said attendance was higher tban on Tuesday. when less than JOO students showed up for the first day of classes since mobs of '1.'hites overturn- ed buses carrying Negroes to the school. But attendance was still far below the normal 900. Shortly after the students entered the school,~ wMtes began a protest march a quarter of a mile S'A'a)'. They walked up and down a sidewalk , glaring sllenUy al a line of state troopers ass.lined to guard th< 9<Hool. An official read the group a Federal court qrder against interferenet with the combb\td elementary and hlgh school. bul tht marthers remained silent and Ne groes Vo\v More Protests PL.\QVEMlNE, La. (UPI) -The local school board said today It would seek a fede.ral court Injunction to s t o p der11onstr1tlon s by black youths who cla1hed with police btcause lwo Ntaro prlncipt.ls wert1 demoled:-· The second night of C\1rrew1 prompted b\' two d11ys or confrontation~ betwttn r~k·lhro11 Ing blacks An1l polic!! firing tear ges ~ndcd at da\\·n loday. t\trroe•, angered by the two demotions al nt111•ly lntegraltd schools, promised more dtmomlrationl. then \vlthdrew. ?>.'!rs. Jeyl Best, whose husband is charged with rioting in last week's violence , led the march. She told n£'\.l's men, "\Ve are just taking our ex· ercise. Just 1\·alktng." The r-irgroes arrh·ed ai the school aboard eight buses which threaded their way through lines or National Guardsmtn and Highway Patrolmen to reach the school entrance. The official s had to turn back tv.·o groups of angry ~·hiles Tuesday \.l'hl!:n they tried to march onto the cam· pus. Hah·y Athletes Get 'C ut' Order SAN FRANCISCO (UPI! -Ir four ~haggy 1'.f1rin Co\lnly high school athlete~ want to get to the starting line in school track meets, ~y'll have lo 1et to the barber's sbop first. _ That was the ruling Tuesday by U.S. District Judge George B. Harris, who denied a motion for 11 preliminary in· junction against officials of t h e Tamalpalt Union Hi&h School District and dissolved a temporary rei:tralning order which had permuted the youths tn work out with the Re<lwood Hlgh SChool track team. The Federal judse noted that the issue WM "UL. _an arl!:a Involved with tht' ~en~ltlve. drlicate and d ;ndin& ole t>( itthlete and coach." Ht 11dded tb8t ''the altern11.livci1 art merely to fortgo an ;ilhlrtic C'Olnpellll•· 1 or lrlm the htiir flbo\·e lht collat anti around the tart during a particular aUlietlc seasoa. '' • Festiv al Readied Capistrano Waits Swallows'· ·Return Plans for th.is year'& Fiesta Las Colon· drinas In Sa n Juan Capistrano are pro- ceedltlg as steadily as the nocks of riwallows heading up from the south, festival officials said today. · The plans are nearly complete for the c.elebratlon marking the historic arrival of the darting birds "'hich fly in by the thousands for their spring and summer Stay at San Ju an Capistrano's ri.fission nery St. Joseph's Day. equestrians In I.he parade through lbe center ol San Juan Caplstraoo. lmmedlately after Saturday's parade, rodeo will become the focal point \vlth contestants vying for ~10,000 in prize lllOl\fY in a rodeo sponsored by 1',ar Western Rodeos. The rodeo will be repeat~ at ·2 p.m. lhe next day, Sunday. And children of the city will be at the mission to greet them on that day with a religious processiou honoring St. Joseph and the swallows. Other )Wade day activities wiU Include a breakfast joinUy sponsored by the \Voman's Club and San Juan Rotary Club. starting at 6:30 a.m. in tbt ?i1oman's "tlubhouse. The processjon \\'iii mark the official start of the fiesta , which will include rodeos, parades. dinners, break(asts and even more merrymaking in between. The parade, which will begio at 1 p.m. 1 Saturday, March 21, will be the high point or the fiesta with all entries either on foot, horseback, .or in horse-drawn car· riages. Charros, Indians, bands. buggies, wagons and comic entries will join with Other breakfasts will include one on Sundaf morning at 6 a.m. at the fiesta campgrounds. The breakfast will pr~ede a public trail ride on horseback. A barbecue dinner will be held at U!e horsemen's campground ~1arch 21 at 5:30 p.m. • Also on Sunday. the community's children will stage a repeat performance of the religious procession with a few dif· ferenl aspeets, including the crowning of a boy and gir l from the Mission School's eighth grade as king and queen. FRUSTRATION -ANOTHER SIGN OF THE KITE SEASON '. IGncaid, Mrs. l\.oster Win PTA Honorary Awards · A San Clemente High School teache1 with a travel record spanning 18 coun tries and a Capistrano Beach woman with years or community service are this year's Honorary Life A1vard v.·lnners for the San Clemente High P'fA. Ed Kincaid, hunu1nities teacher al UlC high school, and Mrs. Margaret Koster of 34972 Calle Fortuna. Capistrano Beach, received !his school year's annual awards. Kincaid . of Laguna Niguel. once se rved with the U.S. State Department on educa- lion as signments in the Caribbean and Africa. He is a graduate of San Jo~ State College with a bachelor's degree in art and of Stanford University with a maiiter's in humanities. Kincaid, married and the father of three teenage sons. also is head of Ule household hosting AFS student Ricardo Pereira of Braiil. f.trs. Koster served with various PTA groups stnce joining at Downey 's Alameda School in 1~. Oemen:te Kids ·To Hunt Eggs Sa n Clemente High School's American Field Service club will hide Easter eggs on the Triton campu.s next Tuesday and the finders of special ones will be eligible for pr\7.CS. The club also will sponsor Easler egg hunts in four of the area's elementary schools Saturday. \ At the high school the eggs will be hid4 den tn front of the school's administration building. During lhe four Tuesday lunch periods ~Ludents -·ho come up with a quarter hitve Ule chance ~ find lhe "golden eggs" which will yield free car tune ups. mot.or oil, lube 1erviee, fi!hlng trips and ot.htt prizes. The egg hunts on Saturday wlll be: held al 1..as Palmt1s, Crown Valley, Ole l~anson afid San Juan elemenbry• schools. .\/ter her ea:i:-ly PTA work she began "·ork with Girl Scoot and Brov,.nie troop~ and served for five years as 1 scout leader. A camping trip to Doheny Stair Park in 1961 pointed out the attractions of the South Coast to ?l-1rs. Koster, and in 1962 lhe family left Downey and moved to Capistrano Beach. . Thus started ~1rs. Koster's work in area PTA groups with service primarily as a membership chairman in several groups. ,,... In recent years she has served as treasurer for San Clemente High School's PTA and the Capistrano Unified Council ol PT As. \, il.. " • ' • • THIS SIGHT BECOMING COMMON AS KITE SEASON BEGINS Chamber's Goal Railroad Track Removal Eyed for July, 1975 The target date for ren1oving the Santa Fe Railroad tracks from San Clemente and San Juan Capistrano is July 1, 197a. Th.is is the long-range goal of the San Clemente Chamber of C o m m e r c e railroad relocation committee. Ed"·in W. Chaffee, committee head . Tuesday detailed for fellow chamber directors the labrinth of public entities and legwork necessary to move a railroad right-of-way. He said it takes about three years to get through agencies such as the State Public Utilities Com- mission and l-"ederal Interstate Com4 1nerce Commission. A beginning, he said, is a topographic and aerial survey of the proposed new rnute near the Thompson-Ramo \\loolridbe test site and Ch.rislianita Can- yon. Ov.•ncrs or pro1>erly along the existing ncc an right-of-way are interested in purchasing that properly. he said. should the route move inland. Chaffee said the federal government would do an intricate sludy and engineer- ing survey. In the East, he said. reloca4 lion of rights-of-way for railroads has helpe<\ turning a money losing route into a profitable one. Chaffee said Santa Fe Railroad of- ficials are interested in the relocation. He estimated that it probably cost three limes what it returned to maintain the ex- isting railroad route. Wtd11tM:Ja1, Mvch 11, 1~70 s DAILY PILOT !t ArcMt.ect Spe.al's • Clemente of C Hears City Goals Long-range goals lo upgrade the qu ality of life in San Clt:mente were detailed Tuesday at a chanlber board meeting as one of a series of com1nlttet reports. Architect Loon Hyzen told directors San Clemente Kiwani s Bowl Fi11al s Victor San Clemente High School's six scholar team won fir st pl;:icc by a one-point margin in di vision rinals ot the Kl"'an is Bo\\'I academic tournament at Huntington Beach High School. f.tonday . The students, competing against three schools, \\'On by a 40-39 score against Savannah High School to win the Division Three category in the academic com- pelitlon styled af'°'r the television College Bowl series. The \'ictory entitles the si x students to compete in the finals April 8 at Fremont Junior High School in Anaheim. \V inning academic teams from as tar a\\'ay as Clark County, Nevada, y,•ill com· pete. San Clemente's winning team is com- posed of Monica Hutchens. Peter Chicas. Vicki Vedder, Dave Evans. Dick Tosdal and Jon Limebrook. Student Activities Adviser Dale Drager said the Triton team built up a herty halftime lead picking up \Yins on four- po[nl loss-up questions and also on bonus queslions, but the rival team began edg- ing up in the second hair. "It was a squeaker, but the students did very well. We're awfully happy and proud," he said. The competitions are sponso red by the Kiwanis Club. .Two Sl1akespeare Films at College . -. Tu·o classic Shakespearean films ~iaxmillian Schell's "Hamlet" a n d bfaurice Evans in "Macbeth" -will end Saddleback College's Herilage Film Series for this school year 1'.1arcb 16 and April 16. Tbe Hamlet showing will be on the March date. Macbeth will be shown In April. Both programs wllJ begin at 7:30 p.m. in tbe M building on Ute Saddleback campus. that bis environmental development com- mittee has set as continuing goals: -Playgrounds for Llnda Lane and Trafalgar Canyon. -A new sign ordinance. -Shrub and treeplanting lo beautify the cjty. Cleanup campaigns by nejghborhoods or areas. -l\1odificaHon o( the municipal pier entrance. Underground overhead utilitr "'JJ'eli. Hyzen sajd the on-going goals would need extensive community participation. He mentioned both the senior and junior women's clubs, Jaycees. tl)e garden club, service clubs and city department:s. Goals for 19i0, Hyzen said, include beginning work on a new sign ordinance, the playgrounds and nei ghborhood clean4 up drives. He said Jack Bt'rges of the city park.s and recreation commission would be ask· ed to serve as an ex-officio committee member, Advice on the shrub and tree planting empha.sis \viii be sought lrom landscape architects, Hyzen said. The chamber executive committee la to review lhe environmental goalii program. Regional Fund Eyed to Serve Southern Coast Planning is under way for • regk>nal United Fund organization to solicit in and serve the communities of San Clemente. Capistrano Beach, Dana Point and San Juan Capistrano. "We 've gotten the ball rolling," Roy Garbarine told the San Clemente Chamber of Conlmerce board Tuesday at a monthly luncheon meeting. "t Garbarine said the organization would help curb the separate solicitatlons now carried on by charitable organizations. "\Ve will altempt to have cne single drive vdth local control and disbursement of funds lo local organizations." he said. Garbarine, temporary president of tht new group, said a ta.member directorate \\'OulO be formed wlth membership representing the communities served. He said the direct.ors would elect permanent officers. Letters are being written to both polen- tial donors and recipient& of funds the South Coast United Fund Drive would generate. Garbarine said it may be possi· ble later to add Mission Viejo, El Toro. Leisure World and Laguna Niguel to the group. Triton Capers Opening Tonight 111 Auditorium LS shoes by LIFE STRIDE. Students from many of San Clemente l{igh School's departments, including music and drama will perform in a varie- ty program, the PTA's annual Triton Capers 1oo.ight and Thursday in Triton Center auditorium. Under the genera l theme ol "Our \Vay,'' dozens of students will perform at 8 p.m. each of the two nights. Randall Hannon will serve as narrator for the "path Ui.rough memory land" and will introduce the following students and their performances : -Specia l selections by Virginia Crow, Vicki Sch\\·artz, Bruce Buttyan and Mar io ~lainero Jr. -A duet by Karen Jacobson and Ronald Cushing. -ihe male quartet, comprised or Ronald Cushing. Craig Dastrup, Curlis Rcnsha\Y and Thomas Sheets. -Portrayals by the drama c:lub under the direction of drama instructor 1'.1rs. Curt Sykes. -1'.1adriga\ singers and the 60-voice student choir under direction of teacher llichard Dastrup. -Several selections by the school band under the baton or Harold Roseburg. Tickets to the two performances are available at the auditorium door before the 8 p.m. curtain. , These unlined leather shoes feel better than going barefoot. Butter· soft uppers fit your foot li~e • little glo ve - "MARVELOUS" $17 Nevy.R•cl-Vicun• Bon• or Whit• Kid ' I 052 IRVINE AVE. WESTCLIFF PLAZA NEWPORT BEACH "SPLENDOR" $17 Bone or Wh it• kicl Phone 548-8684 Funds raised through Ule activity on the Triton campus will help P3Y for nexl year'• exchange rtudffl t program. TWO. WHO SERVE BECOME j~N CLEMENTE PTA 'LIFERS' Tt1ch1r Kincaid ind C1pl1trano Be1ch'1 Mr1. Koster - . ~···· 4 DAILY PILOT (~ ... "" ~-,., .... ttffJ A sl!dmg·scale tillllatlon tax on sexy movies has.been proposed in the Michigan Hduse to clamp dO\Yn ori .. purv,eyofS of filth.'' ·Under the bill.' Introduced· by Rep , Quincy Hoffm~, theater O\V{lers would be taxed $50 t.o show an "M" rated film S75 for an "R'' rated picture . .. '--. and. $100 (or an "X"~tated>movie . No tax .Was propos·ed on "G" rated films. •. • S~hoolglrls at th• Don Valley Hiih SchQol or Bentley, England, are 'Lill,riching· ~ . p"iolest. against wooden dtskl. 'Jlhey allege thal'the d.esks '.are a safety hazard. They run their lights 'and leave splinters in aw~ward places.' ·• Another of tllose "ntw etperiln· · ets" bet11g sougllt by many ht11 been introduced at 011 I nternational Ga1· truno1ny J'air in Hamburg, Germany. Tht dttiice. a Jcpanest·madt ttarQhil•, uses a small bottle of whiskey initeod of tht traaitionaL waUr to circula!t~ cool. and sptke tile smoke from a cigorette. After about 24 mokes, tht bottlt must be replaced becawe of tar and nlcottne accMmulation . · •• A Retlord, Eqgland. h•admi•· t ress has banned the maxicoat and ha s ordered her pupils 'lo wear mi· nis. "Maxicoats look most uq1~in­ Jy," 1aJd ' Mar9aret TowntlM!'MI. head of Relford High School. "I've told m~ ~ student• lh•.\j must wear 11!\nlco~ti -bu! not -~ short." ' 0 ·. I The British Foreign Office has '''amed \vomen havi ng a passport photo taken while \vearinf a wig to wear th e \Vig \Vhen they leave the country or errler another. "Passport officers v,ioul d be \vithin their rights to refuse to let them enter their country," a spokesn1an said. • !!"''"""'' ' """ U.S. Rrp. Samutl De vine f R· ~ Oh io! faces a dip1cm1a!ic prob- lem i11 relaying a req'U.esl from a locol civic group. Tlit gro up asked his help in obt.ainh1g Vioe· pre1ide11t Spiro Agnew as a ~ speaker for an upcomiug mttt-.~ ing. For an altr:1'1lOU speaktt," f: they wrote: "I/ow '1JoUt Hi:ron?"J !UllllllM17'~'1r'.,.., Mtahack Jutaabtw• o( P~rys Soutll Africa. w~s r acantly. line~ $42 for two traffic vlol1 tions and sentenced to 60 days in jail for at.. tempting to bribe the arresllng of· ficer. The bribe ,.offer -one f•t sheep ready for slaughtl!f. · WIU...t N. VelU Peace, Neutrality U.S. Laos Goals WASHINGTON !UPI) -The United SI.at.ea would bt utWled with any airee ment M:tween the Rbyal Laotian aove:rtl- ment and the C6mmunlst PatMt Lao that btings rtal ptlct and neutrality to La~. the State Department 111ys. A department spokesman made it clear 1'uesda.y Mwever. the United State could not aar6e to any deal that left tn 1..a&s any of the 67,000 North Vietnamese troops President Nilon clalms are lhert. "We are very much concerned with the scUlement tn Laos," said the 5J10ktsm111, Carl Bi.rtch. ';Ir tht two aides could reach an aJret!m•nt !hat y,•as satisfactory to· both, \\'e v.·ould.nol nectasarlly havt to some U.S. offlclall lllllevt North Vlat- n1m, dlrecttnc 1trattty ·ror lhe Patbet Lao, believes the lnttnslntd debate In the tJftlt.ed St.ates over Laos provtdt1 the same aort of prtNute that forced t.ht United Slales lo belin pullln& oot o1 Viet- nam. Senate Chance To Head Off be concerned with th at.'' • c II Di lie noted, however, lhe United State• arswe fil v.·as a party lo lht 1181 Geneva accords qtttna up the coalition 1overnme11t uttder Pl"emltr Souv1M1 Fhouma, from Which WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. E4ward the Communist Pathet Lie wUbdrtw In M. Kennedy said today opposition to \ht A")1rll, 1903. Supreme Court nomination of JI.Klee G. Bartch said the Unlttd Stilts Is "In Harrold Car.well has plcktd up but there touch with tllt' Royal L a o t I a n government" re11rd l111' a peace plan ad· appear• to be only "a Jone shot'' chance vanctd by the leader of the Pathe' Lio ot blocklna Senate Confirmation. elements, Prince SOuphanouvong, half-The J\t111achUHtts Democrat, the par· brother of Souv&Ma. ty whi p ln the Senate, Is arilon1 thole He deellned to say what the Unlttd fighting President Nt1on'1 appolfttment Stale• thinks abollt. the rive-point peace of the a&. year-old TallahaQee, • Flt., plan, declaring U would be "better to let jud1e. the Ro)•al Lao aavemment re1pond or Majority Leader Mlkt Mansfield (0- oomment before we dt." Mont.). said Carswell's nomination, The offlclal U.S. attitude was the strongly oppoted by civil rights forcts, Unil!d States is studyin1 the Laotian will be brought up in the Senate im- Communlst peace plan. Of6c:la\1 private-mediately after final action on \•oling ly indicate they saw little prospect it rl&hts legislation. would lead to a soluUon , but hoped they Mansfltld declined \o say how he \\'ere wrong. stands on Carn·ell. He said he expects The United Statt1 has tended to vitw the debate. to last thrtt or leur day.11. the inlentiOtd Cornmunllt oflen1lve In Kennedy i;aid it might take loncer but "I Laos of r.cent weekt a1 a m1neuver don't know ef any attempt now to dtslgned to wtn a dlmlnant pc11Uon. for fillbusltr it." the f>athet Lao Ind Its Nerth VlttnamtN . About 10 days aeo Kennedy said he. supporters from tht ctntral aovemment. ~ueht there ml«ht be about 25 votes The Pathtt Lio propo11J, there(ort, is 11ainst Cars"·ell's nomination. But he asseped by mott U.S. of rt cl alt as Plt't of iald today ht bell eves there will be mere a squeeie play. than JO votet 11llnst conflnnatlon. Demo Leader Calls Vote On .Lower Vote Ag~ Bill WASlllNGTON (AP) -St•ata Dt:~r•tlc Lead1r Mlke MansfltW. calJ.. .e<f.up h1a propouJ to lower tba votlni a1e to II for a vote today alt~ufh acJmowledcina: 1tron1 Cpj)OllUon both on "¥ floor and fJom the White House. .!Mfnslleld iold be roallied m .. , senators had altaady set thelr minds a'laintt his proposal, which w11 an amendment to 1 bill exlendlng the 1965 Voting R11hts Act. He sald opponents !et! U would Jtcpardite lht \'otln.1 rl1hts.blll. ~oukl bf: J:ltndled as a separate blll, 6r l>elieve a cepstltutJonal amendment b re- quired. Despite these handicaps, the ~fontana Democrat said he lhought the Senate needed to fac: the iasue no1v. The Nixon adn,lnl1tratlon ga"e it.5 bless.in& to tht IS.year-old \'ote proposal by consUtutional amendment, but ep- poffd .,oy change by an act of Congress. It came out ag1ln1l 1'-tan1flek1's approach in a statement Tuesday. Only lour stale$ pennlt persens under 21 to \'Ole .. Georgia and Kentucky have lov.·ered tilt voUng age to II, Alaska to 19 and Hawaii to 20. Republican Leadtr Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania, pushl!\1 fer a five.year ex- tension et the 19&& Voling Ri1ht1 Act to apply primarily to Southern stattf, sald he opposd injtttlng the 11-year-ol4 \""Ott issue. "We should not risk embrolling the ix- tension of tht Voting FUahta_ Act or 1965 v;•llh UJt t\lbjecl of an 18 or ti-year votin1 ace." he laid. Scott, i!IUferinc: with the administration, 1' 1upportini a separate biU to lower tho ,·0Un1 a1e. He JI.id he thinks it is poui· ~le, OW11tituliOl'laliy, ftr Ccmiresa le do th!.! by statute. Scott also has :i:plit 11.rith the ld· ministration on extensian of the 1115 Votlnt R!1ht1 Act. Ptelldtet 'N11on 11ked Conrresa for leg.ia!atien applylni te all states alik1. Laat December th• Hou1e a~proved the admlniatratlon bill by a five.vote mar1in. In the Senate. Scott has teamed up with Sen. Philip A. Hart (D-Mich.), in offering as • 1ubsUtute for the House-passed bill a n1e1sure to extend t~ prese nt la111 without change but adding two pro- l"isions recommended by Nixon. Sen. John Sherman Cooper (R·Ky. l, \\'On 50-37 adoption of an amendment ~fonday to bring parts of New York City and other scattered areas oul5ide the South untler the act's automatic covera ge formul1. Under his amendment. the act \\·ill automatically apply to any state or coun- ty uslhg a voter literacy test on No~·. I, 19&8, if Jess than SO per~nt of its votlng ace popul.&.tion was reg.l1tued or \'oted in the presidential election that year. Police Shoot, Kill l\fau With llatchet !,OS ANGELES (UPI) -Cary Moore. !I, Le~ Anselts, w11 shot and killed Tuesday by a sheriff's deputy afltr he allegedly threatened tmployu of a coun- ty wtlf1re ornce wjQI • 1'atch.t. 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" JI 11 Al S1 51 ~ r, " " II •t .la " " ., "' ... n • u 41 •• , J1 '' J7 •S ~ . Jf 1• .n u " ~ .. ~ " n " • • (" .... ' -· E11~r ·ftetirenlent C J ~ ,,, ReaganWill Run Eor Re-election . . . ' SACRAMENTO (AP) -Go,, .Ronald Rti.gan opened bis re-cleeUon campaign today 11 a "clUzen. polltlclao'' aeel(Jng another rour yeari~ln oUlce on the bpis of "what. wl!i ~vi·done and what we are lryJna lo accoll!Plilh. '1 ff re.--elected; he 1Jy1, he wiU serve the four-year term,. thti1 reUre. The Republican aovernor he•ded into Dead Woman Found in NY 'Bo1nb Plant' NEW )'ORK (UPI) -Searchers folllld the mutilated body oC a woman and populous Soulhern Callfornli today fer hll firtt. major eami>aian address -i lubcheon 11pcec.h on his admlnlstratlcn'1 l1kht aga!Mt all)og. Tht 59-ytar~ld former actor fQ11'nally announced for a second ttnn 1\Jeldty wilb a prtrecorded televtJ\on and rule broadciut and a news cbl'lterence. ~· bra.dcast -on 1.5 t1levtsl6n •nd 21 tadlo stations -cott $28,000, 1 campali'n •f· fjclal said. Wllh J\1!1. Reigan by his side, R1:111n aakt. "Tbf: yeats abtad can l>t treat ones and I would like to http i ! CtUfomla Inda lbc "'I}'· to bt a part of that effort llt'ltb you." "ltfy ev,ery expectaUori is, and my t\'try lnt~Uon is. 1n run'ii.l.n1 for this Of • nee t.o be eovernor fo.ur mere ye1n and· then ac he~ and sit en the front '°"" in tht rocking chair.for 1!1 months, at the end ·of which I'll start. rocklna," ht'sald. Cat tor Safe -11 enou1h dynamite bombt to bk>w up·half the block Tijtlday in the ru!lble of a Gretnwlch Vllla11e townhouse destroyed by explt>5lona Friday. · · Reagan baa no oppo1IUon ln the June % primary. 'Rl:I only major declared o~ ponent is Democrat Jeu Unruh, the longtime state Assembly speaker, now minority le2d"er. ' The plea has a familiar ring but the merchandise is quite different. Daniel DiPietro or Providence. R.I., strolls with his pel lion cub Oedipus, who is up for sale. The four-mon th- old pet takes too much of his time, says DiPietro who is asking $400 for the kitty. Cambodians Sack Red Embassies; Flags, Files Burn PHNOM PENH (UPI) -An estimated 20,000 Cambodian students and workers sacked the Vleg Cong and North Viet- namese embassies in Phnom Penh today, hurrying their fires and flags. Diplomats in the buildings fle<i before the attacks, the climax of more than a year of wlde.iiprtad unrest o\·er the use of Cambodia as a sanctuary by gutrrilla ttoops tighllng in Vietnam. The demonstrators demanded that the Viet Cong and North Vietnamese remove their troops from Cambodian soil. Police said a group of i~orth Viel· namese in homu near their embassy threatened the mob with hand grenades when the youthful Cambodians ap- proched. The demonstrators pulled back. No injuries were re ported in ti)e at- tacks on the two diplomatic enclaves. Both were severely damaged. "Go Home, Dirty Viet Cong," read one of the banners carried by t h e demonatrators. Others said. "You Want to Vietnamiu CambOdia" and "Viet Cong, Dirty Hypocrites." Egypt Postpones A11 Loan to U.S. BOSTON (AP} -The Egyptian government has decided against lending 43 major vo·orks of are to t h r e e U.S. museums at thla time. The Museum of Fine Arts announced Tuesday receipt of a cable from the Egyptian minister of culture. Sarwat Okasha, that his country was po1tponlng the loan "until a happier atmosphere prevails." The ether institutions involved are the J..fetropolltan ~1useum of Art in New York City and Los Angeles County J..iuseum of Art. Tilt exhibit of Etyptlan art fr.om 3,000 "B.C. to Roman timta was to open in Boston April 23. The Boston Jl,fuseum said in a state- ment, "Y.'hlle details of the background of the Egyptian decision v;ere not i!JI· mediately known, it \\'IS auumed lb1t l!:IY]>t fe arid for the safety of the prlceleu sculpture, jewelry a n d papyrus." Sneezing Spcuin Brings Pot Bust SALT LAKE CITY (UPI) -Depu· ty James M. Baker's t.altnttd noee bt1an to twitoh, then he borat !nto a sntt11111 spaam. Ollay, he told a startled youna man, where's the marijuana. ?be lf.year .. ld boy ohoolt bla hold In d~btllef and produced a pocket contalninl a ''lid" of the Ulegal weed. Baker of th• Salt We County Sherlfrs olOce, had b e e n in- terview1n1 the • youth in c:cnnecU• with • minor trafnc accidtnt. when his stn1ltlve nose bt(tn •ctlnc u,. He Is allerflc to Juat one thinJ - marijuana. The boy \\'II booked into tht Salt l..alce County DetenUon Centtr for poss~ulon of rn1rUu1na and ~was cited.for lha lraWc accldenl. \\'IJ.h the new evidence, which w&s carefully removed and defused. pblicc had what they considered the first con- clu.!live evidence exPli>1lVes were being asstmbled In the $100,000 home, whose cwnera were vacationing. in ~ the Carib- bean al the time. ThtY. pre'S,ed th·tir search today for the owntr~s d1ughter. another woman and three men who fled Friday. · · "I vo•ould say they were m1kin1 ~bs . , . that'1 dtfinlte,'' said Assistant Chief Inspector of PoUce Albert Se~man. "I would say they had an exp)oslon down there by accident. The. ~le who were manufaet11rlna bombs did something ~TOil&." . Theodore Gold, 13, a teacher active tn new left revolutlo~ry groups who was a fonner \eader ef tfie COiumbia Unlveralty stude(lls rlotl, was found • crushed to death In the townhouse Friday. Police and firemen at the acene said they, will look for more bodies and e1ploslves. in the basement of the building, which ap- parently was tha bomb workshop Proceeding carefully, the search v.•as ex- pected to 1ake another week. Sb:ty .stlcP .or dynamite and 100 blasting. c1p1 were found in the base- ment. Sonle of fhe ~Ucks were taped together with fuses and severeal lead pipu v.·ere found packed with dynamite. Ttte body of the .,unidentified v.·oman · ~·as severely lJlUtllattd. It was found near a workbench with tools that might have been us'-'!! on the bombs, police sald. Of UJe 11Ve. people who •tscaped the blaat, the police have po1iUvely idtntlfied only C,llilyn Wllkenon, ZS, daughlal\, ol the i<iwnhoqse'i owner.· They said 'they thought tl\f:. ~nd woman who escaped was Kathy !JOud.in, 16, ·daughter ··of Leonard B. 0Boudln, the cOunstl for Dr. Benjamin Spock in the cilst charlinl the pedla.trl~an with conspiring to influence young men ·10 avoid 11le draft. · . ~fiss Wilkerson and an~her woman \\'ere pUlled from "the nibble of the townhouse minutes after ·the ~er I es of e'.'f- plosions late Friday morning. They were cut and bleeding and Orie was nude. They 'Vere helped dowti tile street to the home Of a neighbor whb helpeH them clean up and gave them cl«>:Ut_es, then they disappeared after expla1run_g they "·ere golng .to a drugstore for medicine. Three young men were seen leaving the burning bulldlna after the erplosiona, but. the police have provided no inform.tlon on their identities. ' Oil Blow ()ut Well Lacking Safety Device NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -1'JI. !nlerlor Dt:partmenl official ha• revealed.tnost t [ the 1,000 bamb of oil jellilll dally from a fire blackened offshore pl1tferm originate from a single ·wen operating without a safety device lo prevent 1c- cldental oil spills. The offlclal, Harlan Wood, also said the \\·ell was not authorized t.o · Opel'lte wtUiout the device, called a storm choke. Wood said Tuesday niaht two Chevron Oil Co. inspectors on a boat dllcovtnid the dlsastroui, "Charlie" platfonn fire early Feb. 10, boarded the platfc:nn for a time and ac;tua1ly fouaht the blaze on the \veil's producUon deck untU they were drtven back by the heat. The prodllcilon area blaze then spread an~ iplted elaht of 12 wells controlled by "Charlie ." A storm choke is an automatic valve, installed at least 1,000 feet down ln Gulf of Mexico oil. and au Wells by indUJtty ag:riement and •ovemmeftt resul1Uons, lo shut do~'11 upward now If • Mlrflct IC· cldent such as a flr'e or a hurrtclne \\·reeks surf11ce oontrots. Wood said ~ of Chevron'• oil 1klm· mini operatkms ·.clo9H d o w n Tllllday night -'ievUal' houn after. Tnu wild weU ... fire''llgbten toucmf:d off a dynamite blast to sftuft Out" the names Oii Ute plat-- form. Anuhcored sklmmlnc bar,. •re- mained on du'ty but rovtnc 1Uek<he e boats knocked off at dOsk. ·The oil from the one trou~l•·rnaldn' vo•ell spurted· JOO feet Into the air aft.tr the flames v;•ere put out.-· The three-mlle-long brownisb·yellow slick, only partly contained by barges ind the skimmln1 crew boats, began flowing toward Breton Island in the Chandeltur Islands NaUonal Wildlife Retu1e. Thl island Is 10 mile& from the platfonn. Chandeltur has I,~ to 12,000 tol atld pintail ducks plus uncounted gul!J and shorebiids. The duckt stop10ff for ·• rtst in the islands after flyinc to Louiliana from Mexico. After a few d1y1 thty JW!h on to their northern summer homes. La1na1· School . Reopens U11de1· Heavy Police Guard LAMAR, S.C. (UPI) -Mora th .. 150 Negrot:s and some whlte·s attended tht Lamar School under hea~y protection to- day while a aroup oi whites marched silently arouod the :lfel thet was wrack· ed by violence last \\'tek. School officials 'said attendance was higher than on Tuesday, when less than 100 students at)owed up for the first day of classes 1ince mobi ol. whites overturn- e4 bule• carTYlnl Nerroes to the acbool. Bqt attendance was still far btlow the normal IOO. , Shorlly after th< ttudents enter1jl Jhe schoOI, 33 whites bl!111n a protest mi.rch a qu1rter tf 1 mile away. Thty walked up and down a ildeVlalk;. j:larin& tllen_Uy at a line of wit troopera · ualpad lo ruard the school. An official read the aroup a Federal court order ••alnst lnterferenc. with the combined elementary and hltb achoo!, · Wt the marcher! rtmalned lileot. and Neg1·oes Vow . More Protest!! PLAQUEMIN!:, La. (UPI) :,. ~ local school board .. 1<1 ¥aY lt ,,..14 Htk a federal COllrt 1njuoc:Uon lo i I o p d.nONtraUona by black youths wbo clltbcd with police btcaute .two, Nearo prlnc:lpa~ wara damotod. . The second n11ht of curf•ws prompted by ty,·o daya of confrontations bltwttn rock-throwing blacks and police Urlng tear au eMtd at dlWn todQ. Nt(l'OtS. anceredrby the two demotlon1 at newly lnt.,vatod .lclJoolt, promlllt\I more de:momtraUCI\$.. thtn withdrew. •· Mrs. Jtyl Best, W h o 1 e. hutbl111d ls charted with rioting in la.st wttk's violence, Jed the march. She told newsmen, "We are just ta.kine our el· erclse. Just walking." The Ne.groes arrived at the IChool aboard eight bu11t& which threadM their w1y throu&h" lines of National Guardiinen and Highway Patrolmen to rtaCh~ the school entran~. Tht offlclal.t llld to tum back two croups of angry whites Tuesday when the:y tried to march onto the cam· pu1. . , Hair.y Athletes Get 'Cut' Order · SAN Fl!ANCISCO !UPI) -JI four shaglY Matin County h!f11 achool alllletos want to aet to the l1:artin1 line tn achtol track meet.II. they'll have to 1tt te the barber 's shop flnt. That waa the rulinc Tuuday bf IJ.s. District Judp G<or1• B. lllrril .. who denied a mot.kin far a prtllrnthlry in- junction a11lnlt oruclals ol . th • Tamalpals Uoloo !Up $chooJ Dlltrlcl and dlllOlvtd 1 temj)ol'ary ratr1lrrln1 order which Pad permitted the )'OUlN to wort out wlih the Redwood Hip ·5eho0I track ttam. •The Ftd•rtl Judi• noted !hat Ille !Jlua was "ln an area invelvtd with tha tensltlve, delicate and dtmmiln& rtle of athlete and coach.'' He added Uiat "the 11tern1t1v•1 are mtrely to fortgo an athletic compallUo 1 M trim the blir .abovt the. eoUar and around the • ""' durlni 1 plr!ltulal lth1d.k seaaoo." La'r)7er t~ l{eep ,, ... . Atkibs ;Off.:Stand LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Atlllm' original attorneJ, Mid Susan Atkl!'f, Whose con-loJlw.ina the mee~-f.W"(' Ii Iii< • blaarrt Ta!<, ' the )'Olllll woman - LIBlonca 1laymg1 lt<I to the that he and -olutrp indictment of berstU and five dlffen!nces ovtr t.1CtJes other1, will repudiate her that lhould be med ln Mia .. tory, """"''""' to the liwyer Atkins' def..,... Who today, apuaflt tO "ll"'""t Tlie mal llll -ocheduled lier. . for March 30, but It i.· an- AUomey Dave Shlnn. who tlclpa'ted then will be dtfen11 erpecli. to formaUy become nqUHls for 1 postpOnement. 1ht young woman'i )awyer in partly becauae ol the •Po .court today, uld she will DOI poilllment WI 1ftek of ,,.peal her srand jury revela-Ow:!~ Hollopeter to defend ,lions to tbe trtal Jury. Manaon, ; Mi.a Atldna, 21, med the Aller his flrll meetinl with court rpr permission to hire M&NOn. Hollopeter pld the Shinn and to lire the lawyer best trtal stratet)' could be a ·who orf&loa1Jy advl!ed her to ''united front" !or all Iii tell her story to the Jl'and defendant.. jury. Shinn previously has ad- vised Otarles Man.son, ae- .cUitd , mastermln4 of the murders .. • •. '.'J wilt kitp her , off tlte st.and," Shinn said. i'Sh«i Will •,deny~ all htr previous 1tatemenl& ... FBI t;;heckl Man's Alibi -In, Sla.-yings . .. -lf.ln11ing K!•• Pr•ti.d<nt Nixon looks surprised alter he wa s k.is1ed . by Kri&ti~ 'A,nn Vlvlon, of Rawlings, Wyo., at a din- . ner honoring members ' of Congress given by the Veterans of ·,Foreign Wars. Kristin is a state win- ner iii the Veterans' "Voice of Democracy" com- petition. DAILY rn.or I Jet Delay·.iUpsets Israel -. '111 Uol ......... i.-a11ooa1 The 1...U ca~ called a special session today t o dl:!:cuas the delay In President Nl1on'1 reply to Tel Aviv's re- quest for ~ additional j·e t warp!~ and arml· -; Dlp!O!natlc -uld the. cablnel, concerned Df the lltest app8emt chanile of mood In Washington, may Swectlall !Qltrvlewer. Moodt~ Uiai'ho w., prepared 'to jO ,,; tfle SOvlet Union 'lor more weaponry If the need arb1es. "The United States has knocked down 'vhat it really could do to create a i•&t 11od 1aslfua ~ ln our ·area " Husseln siki, "lnstiad ~r working with the other big _powera r<il a ""'1ttcal 1101U1ion, • ~~ planer and wtll have the United Slates has -· '16 PbaDtoml and 111 delivering n'ew arms ro Skybawlta ln Ks tk ltltll&l. Israel." n. editor. Mob am m • d From Cairo, the editor of the. -Haosanleo -~ Pld EIYPI semiofficial newspaper , A I hl:r ,two alttrnatives to ~thls J\1.,lrem. who ls a confidante of, ~up -matd1 Jsrae.U air President G1m1I A b de 1 ~Wk>tttY or build up a Nasser, predicted the JaroeU pbWerful .ir defensuystem. air force soon will cet the ""' •1 • '-..... ..;.. . .>.. J... • • lo{ • .i w w Who's Jew? $x.1~n.t[~~~~;st·E~ College Youih Held sukltiom. Israeli newsPJpers reneeted O p T R11 ling Made ~ ~~~~ i:;!i ::1'.iar~~ ver oisoning ry ficlals in Jerusalem were JERUSALEM {AP) "astonished" at lhe delay but l'r10NTREAL (UPI) -Eric sum" are "fine," acconlina to larae.l'a parliament hammvtd did not regard the situation as Kranz, accused of Using a pig Dr. John Harrokl, who treated out an IJllWtr today to an •P- "disquletlng." ' . pata.slle In an attempt to them. Tbey were released old rtl1siOUJ problem which President Nixon said on Jan. poison his four college room· .from bosnital last ThUJ'J(fay, threatened to spilt the Jewia 5il be would have a decision on mates, will remain in jail but remal;; under oblervaUon. atate -'1Wbo is I Jew?" the lsradi request in ~ days. without ball until h I s They wert infested wilt& In a linked• d t c I 1101'1 , Israel is said to·have asked for preliminary hearing next Mon-massive doses of parasite egp leglslaton ll'anted fa l J a total of tio new F4 Phan· d citizenship ri....,• to ftOf'I· and A• Sltvh k ay. that acn grow Into a worm ... -toms n~ 8~ 1' Sts~lons Court Judge seven Inches in length. The Jewllh membera of mJJ:tod No reason has l]een given Mauri ce Rousseau withheld para.site catlStl d•m•-to the man1a1es .lmrnigratlns t 0 for the delay bu( informants In .... ._-Israel h Id .i.n bail Tuesday on the grounds llv1r ·andJuo11 In pl11, though Washington ave sa .,.,. that a report or Kranz' mental the effect on. hwnans Is not The Nllng comes at • time President is holding off the condition had not yet been known.. One of the four came when Israel ls fiahtlni for the decision for fear of provoking K •· clos •• 1, Dr H rel•-of thousands of ~vlet ••· Sovl t · to nd ' made and that rani ~ an very e to U'!:'.I • ., • 1r-,.,., um e s m &e 1ng more Id id nd h Jews -many In -•-~ to ' •· Ar b Id American. ro sa , a one may ave mu~ ' Miss AttiRs visited Ptfanson Jn cowty-jall last week and ·listened to bls views on how .the defenst should be con- ducted. She indicated then sb' was having .econd thougfits about repeating ht r ac- cusalons be!Oft a jury. • arms 11'1' a wor · l families -who want to -• DI l U · • -Kranz, 23, of Hempstead, suffered permanent U.Jlg. ..,,.u NEW YORK f.UPI) -Wh • h E Poma c sources tn LA.In· to "· national homeland. t g don said the Sovieb, too, were N.V., Is accused or attempting damage. 1.1flll Federal author:ltie• today In-. I er u en e holding off on sending more murder by poisoning his four Another 15 friends wbo Af1er • stormy teaaion. vesU1ated the alibi of a 2t-arms to Egypt pending the roommates wilh a parasite visited 'the four during the which ran into the early houn, shinn fsojd he had Aal!<+t briefly with Miss Atkins and that she wanted him to represent her bt'cause he had been in touch with Manson and was "closer to the case." .Deputy District Attorney Vmcent T. Bugliosi said he . was not surprised by the change ol altorneys. and •d- ' · cled tblt "It was only a matter r 1 or ; time after she once saw j•Manson.". " However, BUgliosi said, "her ~,'repudiation will not stand up because molt of what she has Hid has been corroborated by ~ other witnesses and other ! • evidence." Ridlard Caballero, M i s 1 ,. " Lindbergh ; · BoQk Slated On WWII NEW YORK (UPI) · •• Charles .A. Lindbergh i 1 . publishlna the journals he kept -' during World War 11, it was announced Tuesday. .. The book, to be called "The ! • Wartime Journals of Qtarles .... A. Lindber1h." wil1 be re-- ":Jeised next ~ember, 25 ·:.years after ht made lbe last • ·entry. ) • Harcourt, Bruce & W o r 1 d Inc. is the publisher. ";" "I was taking part in one of :;l tht great crises o{ world history," Lindbergh wrote. r, ''ATiailon constituted a new • al'ld 1poaslbl1 decisive element : .. in ~I or fighting 1 war 1 ·• and J was in a unique posl- ';-. Uon1to observe European avia- tion -especially Its military t..r jaipects." ' . . :." The nm pilot to fly solo • .. • across t~ Atlantic kept the t " journal tn 1mall leatberbound ·.to ~ks. It was th• only time in hJS 1ife be kept 'I ;sustained diary. Today, Lindbergh is noted for hJs interest in con- aervaUon. . ' Recruit Office j-,Hit .by, Bl~ze URBANA. lit. (UPI) -A fire broke out Jn the Air Force rec:tulilng offict early today in this University of Illinois i; ·town. oi. Police 1ald a broken front ·1·· window lndlcat.ed the fire had been set, perhllps with a .... firebomb. !••• Firemen from neighboring ·, OW.Pill" and the university • '. helped Urbana firemen Opt .,.tbablue. year-old dishwasher charged WASHINGTON (UPI) _ back for the premier of a outcomeofthelateatBigFour Kner~~~ bchafdor~t~~f:!td palnr~~! r:J~rtlescTnr~~~~!ryw;: ~\:0-_!!!!_.~.~~lr; by New Jersey aulborities Sen. Eu-J. P.tcCartby (D-effort.I to f1ncl a basis for set-... ~ 11'1)tnded"'°dtftnltkm ~ andmt. with the double rape-murder ... MIM.), ~ today he has not movie about his 1961 cam-tlement in the Middle East. Jogy in f.fonlttal since 1963. tacted Or. Harrold, "b o. of a motht.r ot four and her 14-cloMd the door to another ,.Jp~al~gn~,~t~ltled:=._"A~mertc==a~is~llar=d~~One~~Ar~aCb~. ~lead~e~r,~K~i~ng~~Th~e~!~our..!s~tu~d~e':nts_:i~n!~e~•t~ed~~be~li~ev~e~•-thr_ee_m_•Y_be_m_n_dly~~ra~bb~lnlcal~~law~l>y~a~ll~·l~f~'*-~ year-old ruece. id b . B to See." Husaeln of Jordan, told a with the parasite "ascaris Infested. Thtn,,...nlDe ... if. iUoal. , Lawton Jamison t u r n e d pres enUaJ kl in 19J2. ut himself in to the FBI Tuesday nelther has he opened it. and WIS held in $%50 OOtl bail Exactly two years since hl1 on federal charges oi driving ''victory" ln ~ 1961 New the murdered woman'• blood-Hampabire pnmary th a l spattered, white Thwlderbird preceded Lyndon B. Johnson's across a state line. withdrawal, and two yean Jamison's attorney, Martin before the next first-ln-natlon Krlmke, 11y1 his client found New Hampshkt! test vote, the car abandoned on a McCarthy declined to be Brooklyn street wbeD ht WIS apeeific about his 1972 planJ. on his way borne after spen· "It's two years off. l haven't ding the night of the ~urdert ellminlted it. l haven't done wt th friends. anything about IL" An Essu: County warrant, In an interview before !igned by prosecutor Joseph heading to New Hampshire to P. Lordi. aCC1.J1ts Jamison ot mark the second anniversary raping Mn. Eleanor Qullban, of his 1965 auccesa, In which 2~, of Carteret, N.J., and her he barely -Jost in the niece. Debra De: Los Reyes, Democratic p r I m a r y to 14. of Newar~. last Friday, Johnson, McCarthy left an tiis shooting them In the held and opt.Iona open. dumping their bodies about . a The possible options include mile from . t~ch other in nmninl IS a third-party can- suburban Fairfield, N.J. didate. He announced everal U.S. commissioner Vincent 5 Catoggio aet Friday at 2:30 months ago he would not seek p.m. for a hearing on the re.eied.lon to ~ Senate on t!te stolen-car chqe. Jamison is Democratic ticket .this year. expected to be turned over to But ~ wu: not cl,OSJ.n& out the New Jersey authorities at that poss1biltty of ag~n running as time a Democrat m the 1'12 Poilce In Queens 11y a presidential prim~les, pro- patrolman uw the Thun· vlded the party carries out ex- derbird run a red light early tensive reforms. Saturday and flaged down ''Ther,e coold ~ change . the driver Unable to produce enough., but l don t know if a driver's:~ they said. then! will be," McCarthy said. J am i s on 1 how e d th e He Is particularly interested In patrolman his Social Security rt.vision or the national con- card as identification and wu venUon proctss to make state gJven a summons. dete11Uon1 more repruen· He abandoned the car a tew taUve at ,their party's mem- mlnutes later:-after an 1ttempt hen back home. to get It going again proved Some of McCarthy's m a I n un!luccessful. Ponce located ti.cbn in the March 12, 1918, the car later In the day in New Hampehin Democratic response to lnqulrles from primary UTanged a reception New Jersey and found that the and buf(et for him Thursday seats wert bloodstained. at Hanover. He also wu going Addict, 12, Returns To Home in Slums NEW YORK CAP) -Ralph de Jesus, the 12-year-old ad- dict who shocked a legislative hearing last month when be described his uae of heroin, has returntd to hla family's home in • alum ruled with drug pushers. Or. Judianne Den11n - Gerber' clinical director ol the Odyssey House for nlf'COtiai rehab!Ut>'tion, said Tuesday thal Ralph had been aent home because he did not fit In with the tffn·a1e addicts the center wu deal,ned for. . "He lil<rallJ needed 'The Three Bean' told to blm fVtl'J' night." abe said. She ,.kl the apeclal at· tention to Ralph wu resented by younpters in lhe 13 to 17· )'tal'Okl group, At h.11 family's apartment in the Himt5 Point section of the Bronx, Ralph said he left beeause his special prtvllq:es had been taken away. He said he had stopped using drugs. On Feb. J.t, Ralph sat on hit doctor's lap and told ltgialators how be became ad- dicted to heroin. State Assemblyman Manuel Ramos left the room with tean run- ning do"'1 hlo lace. Ra.mol, Who represents the disti'iCt where Ralph lives, aald ~ay he would seek help !or the boy, --- 1llafs1rre1ll1\rlll1& No otbcr car In Chevrolet'• 6dd ai* JOU; • much t.ck oe ,,_. illitial ilnatmenL Year. &flct year. You may nevu wut to .U :roar Chevrolet, but if you do, il'U be rewardina- 2 De IP down value. When JOU buy a €bmolet fall lllt adusive lbibp like --..ir,. rocker paocb whJch bolp combU rust. Aod inn« Cmdcn thal bop,........, !codcn lootdna aood lonau. 3 Smoolls,.noott1 ride. Chevrolet 1prin11 arc computer 1elec:ted. Unked with Fall CoU tutpension and advanced bodJ mountina mtcm, il mU:a our bis rider a smooth rider. 4 •1sps 1111\ie atyll*Wo . .. kM&Oa llDOUlh aJonc to 10 with ChevroJc(. The iropt:eedoll is lhat it's an cxpcnsi¥e car, lf' you want to make lft impiMion. 5 M111h8 lnterton. kctult? Jtoom to .udcb out or' to Sit tall. A lot ot room f« people ·•nd' their Juaale. 1 Clicvrofef adui.Uy has mon, front Jca room than any other. ou in iU 6tJd. • 6 Slde 0 pmdb11mL . A-11-atdbanllabonltlnto....,.loif°""""'" door for added proeccrioi and pr:m:c o{ mifid. 7 Atlnlshthat¥~. , . Jn Chevrolet'• field a mw .. aometbina eta• woe't 1lillllt Mqic-Mirror KrYlic lacquer tsm.h. Wbitb ii ~ bccaUIC Oevrolet'• 1S c:ok>n IQft teep ..,. ...... 8 Elacadlonal ....... -ctieV;;e..., standard J»cubic-inch vs,.. .......... · fuel.SodoaanevcnSlr1tt'4roabic--incbVllhllyo11-«W. There a" abo fqur other fiM performlnl ..... ulftable. · 9. 'ftwneridol• slleclluti. or colon.. or acccaoria. or malna. ot ~ Of .fabrics. Of custom featDrW yoa cu add. And of .... • pick from. There are nine dilkrent bis Chem:ileU lloM.. 10 Amettats fawill&. lomahi111 dtc a nsw .. IOr'MlJ\ins .... ca"I dl6s Amerka't mosipopalarcar. Jf.acikml~IOadert:bn wordl.' doesn't this NY tomtlbiq'to1)'0i? a.;.. Jt:M ai1osala1 ....._ ·' 'Bank Indian Giver But Guard's Widow to Get $913 Back I . cmCAGO (UPI) -The -;o.·~01teway National Bank 11ve Mn. Ura1l1 Mil tlIS when ·, ' lier huaband, I bank auard, .... wu kllltd tn an attempted • . holdup -tt\en the bank .. demanded and cot the money •• • back. ·' . -Today Mn. Mix said the ~ ' pruldent C1f the: Bank told her · the money ,,_ould be returned. : 1 "He told ,ne the.rt had been '' 1 mlwndentandlnc and tb1t I 'o.: ,wauld have the money back," Mrs. Mix 11ld. .. Mn. Ml1, a st-year-old Im- " migrant from East Germany, 1' tnother of t-children, uld Pll!Y for her husband. ·Vt'ho preceded him in office. "ll'• not our fauH. il a fUY She nid PoUl11 tokl her that ..... his bead ihol off. l can't her husband's horpltal bll11 .......... amounted to more than f900 help Iha~" bank president but that ohe later found oUt George P. Poul&! uJd when Work man'• Compensation questioned aboot why the bank p.kl for tbe~hoepitaUzaUon. had demanded the rtlum of '"Nobody 1ets paid anything the. money. for. aervlcu ncJt r.enclefed," On TutMlay, Mn. Ml1 aaid Poul• ,toid , ttportera who Protas iW'l"IOMd her to the questioned htm about the mat- bank last month and ordered t.r. her to alp a check for •I! . Mn. Nill uld she uaed the before. he would ttleale • ~ •1J to pay for her hulblnd.'1 sur~ check for '5,036. Mr1. funeral· upenees. Ml1 1aJd 1ht l•ttr rteeived "Tbey tokt me to come down another 15,000 In \natlranco to the bank and pick up the money due to a double In-~1 bot 1 lold them I don't demnlty · ci-In U.. In-want to p down there. The eurance poltcy. bank hat bad' memoriel for She nkt that In demanding me," Mra. Ml1 aaid today . ' ' Puttln1 you tint, leleps Iii tint. • I ahe received the money from ... ' &ie bank after her husband, "" Rlcbard, U, was shot by • "· ....,,..l JUI Decomber. Tho tr{ 1 ~ amaunted to I month't the "'turn ol the 1111, Poulal Sil< Pld that Poul., a11ured told 11er -.. unr had 11er tho ..-y .... id .... n1L===:....--------==-----='-===---=====--------=-....,,,..,=--======~--ll -...... ., a. )IAaldoot lo lllr by ... _. • . • DAILY PllAQ' EDITORIAL PAGE • City Aid to Culture Ewryo111 In Lacuna'• c11y hall was talldn1 econ .. my. DtPartment hew wera ·rac1lvln1 "hold the line" admOll!llons from Iha city mana1ar. Councllnlen brood· ad tllrou&h p,...budilet 1tu4lt!. So It waa somtl!llng Of a shOc:k for Iha councilmen to teem that r~utit& from cultural 1roup1 for city •financial eupport totaled a whoppln& '38,000 this yeer. Since liol year'• city all<lc:allOno to local culture amounted to ,11,000, It's small wonder the co\IJICll's cul· turai committee asked for a little more lime to dlaut the Jt70 requ1111. · · Laauna Blach Is rather lllte the "all who catn't aay no" wl\en It cornea to 1u!ll)ort Of culture. Of cOUNt, part of tho city'• shire of" Jl'elllval Of Arts revenue lrad!Uonally aoes for this purpooo, but ll'o also ear- marked for park and recnation expendltur11. And the clly does have a few payments to milt• on the main beach, which was purchalad for the btneflt of tho en· tlrt communily. · The orlffnal Idea of cultural ~rt 'WIS to Iida over soma of the very worlhwhllo . pa unlU ·they could stand o• their own f"l Whl\e t ... ms unlikely m111y of them wW blcomt col'nplttaly 1•ll·support1n1. It rill1ht be almost timt to conaider an across-~board reducUoo In city aid. Corlalnly any m!l)or increase Is queaUonabla In view of Iha many other needs of the community. The Regional Approach SERRA is htr name and economy and efficiency I• her aim. She's a joint po'iien·apProach to the future Hwage that will be 1•nerated In Ille moulve San Juan Basin that drain• much of South Oran1t County. was formed by .counly aupervisora In 1911 on tho bast ' ways to handle future waate water and reclamaUon In the basin. The joint powers creation would be formed by seveh member agencies: Moulton·Niguel Water Dlltrlcl, San Juan Capistrano, Capistrano Beach Sanitary Dillrlct, Dana Point Sanitary District, San Clemente, Santa Ana Mountain County Water District and Santa Mar1arlta Water District The aim of the r,roject ls to achieve economy and clean ouUall by el mlnatlng duplication of physical ~rorks 1uch u main 11wer trunks and their rlahts-of .. way and sewage jlant.s. Dupticatton of services aucb as en&tneerlng an legal fees !or such work would also be eliminated. SERRA looks at this point lil<e a sound and enter- prlsinc recional approach to future pollullon In an eco- nomical and efficient way. Are Dress Codes Needed? A 1ure •itn of 1prin1 ls the rene\val of rwnbllna;s about hl1h school dreH codes. ThJs year, the rumbling be a: an at La1una Beach Hieb, with a colorfulfy clad student appearing before the school boa•d to plead hl• caae. Mission Viejo and San Clemente hi&h schools, like Laguna, operate with drea1 cOdea drawn up by student- faculty·parent groups and covering pretty much the 1ame ground: no 1lackl for the girls. skirts not too, too short and ·hair that covers neither ears nor shirt. ..... . . ~ StRRA (Southeast Retlonal Reclamation Author· lly} lw been In the works since a study commltttt In the light Of what'•• happened at the Harbor Aroa schools that d~ their dress codes, it would seem they may be r11ht. Mo4t of the students went right on dressing the way they always had, very r~ spectably. And everyone saved a lot of time. s 'SIKJ! JNCm!SU IWr:>fNHf ! I W~ WAT~ LI KE >JI NJBKNI IH PAAIS/' Off •e t t o. Jli ppie Notoriety Laguna's Young Ballerinas To lbl i:dltor: The Laguna Buch Civic Ballot Com· pany la to be contf'1lultted on the ei· ctllent iroctam lt.s members presented at the hi&h school 1udit.or1wn on &ilurd1y, FebnJuy 28. t doubt if any community 6th!r thin Lquna Buch could 1slher IO(elher sud\ a talented and wtll-tra!Md fl"OUP of tttnage balltri.nil and others whO com-- posed lhe cast. The Choreof'lphy of '"J'ho J..ute IOn&" by Lila Zill ,.,. ...U nllh J>ll'ftcl, and "The Balild of the Sh<rllf . and lhe Schoolmarm" waa a veritable tre&llll'e ti the folk lore of the old ll'eot. ONE COULD almost il'o1poe -u In Vlra\llla City er In the Mother !Mt CNlo tty .freq.-by Maril Twaln. Airy - 111e11l I 1rpocl4d lo• l!lo ~ ,.,., of Cal1ver&1 CoQoty hopplaw dillll' lht it.age! Lila Zall and •verybody connected With the event deserve to be hi11\ly com- pLlmented on a really flrst·rate tn- lerlllnmint. 'IVllA T A WEI.COME chins• to ... o6molhln& b01utllul lft.r htlf\Jli nd •••dlni about all the di-and rtot1n1 thtt ,..,... to be llll'eepllli the country. Laguna netds more publicity about or1an1u.tion1 l.ike tht billet compafty, the community concerU and the Pl&,yhO\l.li to olfoet the bM nOtorlcty 1pre1d """"'1 by the hlpples aot! Ille~ ~ EDGAI\ O'G. PlllU'S Portto•le BllU..ar• To Iha Editor ' A large pl>rtlblc bUl-.i lllOllllM eo • llllCk is btlna parkOd -..... advertltlnJ !'tier OotrMdtr'• -. IUdl llOlboordl, adv<tllllni .,...iucu "' cltlfb' <ealrllT to lhe lnleftt ol tlit 11111 toe11on (IOI) el our zonln( orcllnanct. Ytl Oolrl!lder, wllo llu been 1pe1kln1 out aboot the -·for enlorclna LaSUftl'• llpl llM, Is hlmlelf I cenb1bufor r the qly 11111 problem. I SIW the truck parked 11 lhe cO!'!ltr of Broadw1y and Coul Hl1hway during the parade. Othm have reported aeetnr it .-. Since Clltrllftder hu been '° articWate en the lip ls.rue, itnoranet or tht law cannot be comtdered an excuse ; What la? TRJS II ITIUU: two. Strlke ene was c1tetly l1'e c.dobl C.lutroph" a pion to llack and pock people In sud\ a way u tO lllllht and _.i !lie Momln1~d•/ Bluebfrd ari:a. Cordoba : a dtvtlopment whidl 1t1.pe;p1rn eplMd nuJd l'f'Ve ... .-1 , .. l1'e lulllro .... iopmtl>t of .... hll1o. T!lil ,.-ate prepoo!tien wu, of c«rrll, nj«ttd .,, _.,. perefptlve plan· n1nC commission and Lasuna was !!aVed, at least for a short time, from the crea· tJon. Gf what mlgbt have become a malig- nant form of devek>pment mutalin1 to ·other artas of Laguna. 8tnoe it is early in the game and Ostrander already has two mikes aplnat him. it will be interesting to waleh f0< strike U.... BERNARD J . LUSKIN Tht sign on the truck of onr of Cit11 Council ecmdid4tr 0.strander's campaign worktrs U not in triolatio~ undlr tht present language of the lip ordfnGncr, tohith prohibiU rigM tm oehkl•• omv if the vthiclr• "'principal m1" i3 c.i a. JUJ)port for the sign. ( aa on. old eor or wa.gon po.rktd on a lot to npport o dgn) which ii not the ctJH. h1rt. How~cr the ordinance doer prohibit political .rign., po.tttd on fern:~s. utilitu polis, buildinos, etc., 10 it'1 a ncrr01D lint. -Editor SC...t<!lt T hat lllf!a To the Editor: Dam, I lhought we ml&ht get a Taco Bell or Tasttt Freeze htre in Miasion Viejo one of thest days. !ut no, it would he dlsgrac<ful and allJIO)'ing f« people to hang around there. Scratch that idta and don't con.sider any other shops or &llYlhl"i that Jllitht provide lnterlll In our happy havm. Believe me, the Minion Viejo Company hu dene a fantastic job of lceepln1 our town "cltan" on the outaide, but what are they -· •bOut all lhe pt0pl1 that turn to clrup for lack ol 10mothln1 bttllr to do. JOYCE THOMPSON Let Them Eat Winstons ~"· wNc~ .,..rle! -Qy about our heslth, iJ IJudsttlnJ .i.1 tnilllOft this ytar !or n111ini us iftto qutttiftl llftbkln1. or """"'· C.Ogrw Qo worti• abolat the health of the -llldUstry. lo II'• speMln& JIU miill«I lhls year to ..... 11\0lo ll!IOklnl. The lion's share of this, '31.3 mllllen. cots to bliy up su~ius tobacco which "" thtp u. poor, wmni J>tOplt abn>ld undir our Food for P••ct PrDiram. Includinl Ill.I millli>o worth of lobl«o 111 oor f'oOd ror Ptoce P>Wlts may tftm htartleu to t0mt. 'tbert, for example, is a spindly Alrlcal\ n1t1ve toltulnt down the Juftll• traJl in the last ataces of stArvaUon. Ht ttu;,,bJes on • paekaat 11.,.lt4: "U.S. toed for l'eati." With tnrnl>llfll f!nfm, Wednesday, Mirth U, lf!O Th oditorlol l'Of• •f Iii< DtUv pnot 1ttk• te ht/om 01\d atiM- vtcte +iodm b~ prtstntino thi.t nt111tpoper'1 ~nioru and com-mcmcrv on topiu of in tt,11t ""4 slgnlflconc•, bv prool<llng • f-fM the t!prllsit• ef 0., '"4111' opi~lom. olld bl! pt•...,.. the tlioctfl 111•• ptl~li ef illformcd o&ill'IMrs on4 lf>Ok•tmfn Oi tapiu oj the ci.v. ~ N. Weed, PllWei '\~ q.,, . ~ :·~, : .. . . l ~· ... ' ' .. ,t, ~ ' .. t ht lean tt open. Inside, Is 1 Cllfton of Wlnilena. Witb dirmalftC eyes, he reads tbt lt1tnf: "Wlnoletlt tat. Jood -Iii<• • e11areu. aboulc1.'• So he His lhtm. ms WE SU thai Co•gr•ll In 111 wltdom ii •ppropritllnJ fU mUllon lo 1tt Americans to amoke leJS and '59.4 million te pt fortlpers to smolre mo~. The 1oal of Conireu ts clear: a thriv· Ing tobacco eiport trade run by non-llO>Oldni, healthy Anlerlclns, &ii happUy linCinl:. "Oh, yea CID lhlp Saltma out ol the couctry, bul. : ." Such a prOgram will not only save the economy, it will save the world. For we are faced with a population explosion. And many an eiput warns that we siJnp- ly mu1t stop seodini food •broad to ttarvin& -1•· Fw lheir ...,, pd. What helttr subtUtute than lobl«o? Wllat better product to 111tfl out everpepulollon! How Jood II ls to know llllt our lrt-abroad w1n die hippy. PW , tbtrt \s no cooflnMd eiaeltlt. -· allvt'todly who doHn'I btilnt 111 Ills 11ur1 o1 """'In llllt ri111inJ '1olaa: "I'd ntht:r smoke thaa ltvt." · ~ Dear Gloomy Gui: Even our dirty 111»1 .. lie btltu to have around thln lht vldous mot0rt)'Cle ClnfS UTWttd Sund1y In lloly Jim Cenyon. -D.S.C. Tltlt '-ttw,. rwlfftlt "'tfft" "'"°" Mt ....... "... .... ., ... ~ ...... -...... .,_ ,.. "'" " .'"""' ... ht" '''"· Churches A re Losing While Occult Gains The Tragic Farce Of 'Chicago 7'· Althouih American newspapers do olherwlst, I follow the practice of the British press and refrain from com. mentlng on trials while they are in pnr ' . I gress. Tbe Black Arlt From· &houliet and ghosties Md lon(·leggety beasties And thinp that 10 bump in the night Good Lord deliver us! ... Old Scottish prayer The occult, for most Americ1n1, is an evtnlna'1 diversion 1'1lh a Ouija board or a deck of tarot cards. But for many others -an indttenninate but ap- parenUy &rowing lf'OUP -there reaJly art 11thlnp thJt so bump in the night." Many 10Cial thinkers are worried about the occult boom. So are churchmen. For it is• fad of our time that, as church at· tendance is falJlng off, membership in new "culls of evil" Is growing. Palmists:, graphologists, phrenologists, nume.rologiists, Satanists, alchemists and witches are all gaining follov;ers. Astrologers are having a field day. Se\'eral high schools and universIJ.ies are offering courses in the history of wit- chcraft, sorcery and the black arts. Most book store& have several shelves jammed \\1th everything from semational revtl· aUona of OCOJ!t happenings to the scholarly Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonolop (1959) by Rossell Hope .Roblnr, an eipert on 1'1edieval history. PSYCHOTHERAPIST Rollo ~1ay in hl:s new book "Love And Will," discusses a system of .. demona" which are not en· tlties but "archetypal functions of human experteru." lifay argue s that the "datmonlc" coims to the fore in times or transition, like our own. In the past, such eras produced "actual fear among P.eOPle of witchcraft, sorcerers, and others who claimed to know how to consort with the demons." There are accounts of witches in Blbllcal hlstory, Exodus says: "Thou shalt not guff er a witch to live." On the eve of the battle of Gilboa, King Saul visited lhe "itch of Endor, near Nuartth. She called forth the spirit of Samuel, who predicted Saurs death. The Grttks and Romans believed in witches -the. moR so as their empires began to cnunble. IN THE ~llDDLE AG~. and up to the . mJddle Of the 11th etnlu.ry, a witch Wa&. belitved to be anyone who made a pact with the devil and 111·orked magic -black or \\'hlte -through anlma1s or imps. Historian Robbins believes they were a ''oolossal fraud" perpetrated out of fear and religious zeal. One reference :source estimates that 3001000 to two million persons ma y have been eiecuttd as witches. By the 14th ceriitury, witch hunts were. belni con· ducted In every nrUon of the we11tern "-erld. As late as Int, in the f1mou& witch lrla1s In S.11.lem. h1m., 19 bmoctnt .,er.sons -5 men and 13 v.-omtn. -\lr'tf'e h1n1ed, and one man "'as pr03M!d to death. TRE OCCULT may only exist ln the minds ol !hoM who believe In il But that does not stop It from making a rut im· Pttt. Anthropologist EUzabeth E. Bacon 9.Titts : "The btlitf that one Is a vlctlm of witchcraft is psychologically aa potent u actual mag1c could bt ." A cult of evtl ts sakl to ha\'t played • part in the Sharon Tate murders In California. Charlei fltanson, \\'ho is char~ed iri connectien with tht kllllngs, ltd a band o( hippies, most of them Yount \\'OOltn, who caU'11 him "S1tan," or "God." A recent isaue ol Elqulrt WJI dtvottd to the upsurae in tht black aria l11 CalUornla. The occult. no tonier S!tml to be mttely • parlor game In gubu?bla. Jt'1a1rtod, Uld • troubliq one. .J During the Jong trial of lhe "Chicqo 7," I wa.s &hocke<i, dismayed, disgusted, and sllenl Now that the tragic farce has ended, and we can11ook back upon it with a little perspective, several distinctive features aeem to emerge. First. it was not a legal trial so much .as a poUUtal actlon. Tbtre obviously was no "oonsplracy" -as the jury corrtttly decided -and all the defendants had in common waa a dJtWte for the 1ystem. SECOND, WHILE lhe conduct of the defendant& waa: outraaeoue. the 1'onduct of the jud1e and prosecutor wu in4 excusable, both during and after the trial. Third, the \\'hole proceedings served no useful J>Ur'PO'e -as fonner Attorney Gt.neral Clark predicted -except to make the a:ovemment look bad and to create enormous publicity for the most extreme and exhibltloobtic elements among the defendants. Fourth, and most important, il helped unde.rmlne the Amtrican S}'stem Of jurisprudence far more. than it clarified any issues at stake. TO ME, TIIE MOST melancholy ISj)OCI or the trial was the public reaction. AIUtough we prattle about "~om" and "democracy" more loudly and constantly than any other ptoPle In the world . we have I Sadly limited idea or what the.SC terms genuinely copsist 1n. We imagine that)ou haYe to "llkt" er "'approve" of defendant.s in order to If\·• them their fu11est judicial and eoiP sUtuUonal privileges. We wrongly usume that anyone who protest.s that thtM defend ants were badly and unfairly treated by the government ls "in favor" of what tll!: defendants atood for, or con- dones the 0~111 way they behaved. • WE SElilll INCAPABLE ol .. psratin( fonn from subetance; of aayina, "We don't •gr .. with these people bt any way, and that Is exaclly the reason we must bend over backwards to eee thtt their right& are respected." This is a ttate- mel'lt of the democraUc doetrine: anything else is rhttorlc, hypocriay, la· norance, blfJtry, or mallet. . I was delighted, subsequently, that all five active judges of the Federal Appuls Court unanimously R versed Judft Hof· fman's denial of bail to tbre defendants. His spite and partiality were nowbtr• mort revealed lhan in hil closlfll telture of illegal vindlctlveneaa -and ocetdtd only by the prosecutor'• ugly attack upon the &ileged "holllO!UllOI" procllvtllts of most of the defendants. 1'he9e post.trial exhibits rt:vealed, more eloquently than any oomment I could have mtde durlrlJ the trial, txactly wbert the threat te cur system of jusUce really lies. Mideast Crisis: a Phase All wars In which a belligerent col- lap.ses ind Is forced to yield large land areas, present con1ple1 and stubborn pro- blems in postwar territorial adjustment Such a \\-'ar was the Mideast, 1917, between Tsratl and the Arab atatts. Israel is almost surrounded by disputtd territory It occupit.s. Arab cuerriUas at- tack daily trying to loo11n the I1rMli grip, and the Israelis retaliate in the air and-In ground raids. A dtkription of one of the disputed area.s may facUltate understandln1 of the contlnulng Mideast crlsl.s. tr you drive north from Jerusalem on the hi&bway to Damascus, ytu reach the Plain of Etdratlon, a fertile valley run· nlng eat-west from the Jordan River to the ~1edlttrranean. It Inc or po rate s Annageddon, the Biblical site of the "IHI" battle ol nationl. l'rocetdlnt north Into hills you reach Nazareth, whldl Is 15 miles from Tiberlas on the sea of Gaij),ee. THE II MILIS Is •ht<p country. but north ot Galilee Is allOthtr ft11.lle buln •bout 2$ mlle1 long. The Dam•rcu1 iat4 then c)imb$ a hl11 to a hl&h plateau in tlle shadow of Atount Hernton in the anU4 Lebanon range. On the esst of this fertllo bt&itl, and the'· Galilee link, the plateau rl..., &llif>tly In the Sil·Day War was to silence theJt """ by aerial bomblnl. THEY THEN deplo)'<d ground troo(lo and Jana on Golsn HtlsJni, and tell tr flf!ffn mllto alo111 the plateau leadlN to Damaac:u.s: • The Israelis still occupy the Hlllhtl, and it is a non-negttlable conditkla Of peace that artillery shall ntvtr •Cain command the lowlands. ThtTe are; many commando raids •&alnlt lsr•el -· polnlS Oii hip ll'OWld, bot em with the aid or symplthetk Lebantst com- mandos., I.he Ara~1.h•vt oot -ly thrutened lsr1tll _, .. A similar situation, Im mtn1e.lnl, In· volves the ~them spurs of tht Htfitlts, and th.ls 1ocount.'I for tht ltr•.U llLM• and occup111lon ol Jonllnlan ton1""7 weat of the river, 1at1tly occupied l!y Arab rtfugees. The ref\qffs nal\lraliy sutttr J~ the hlt;..tun warfare. Qttlte ulde 1..,,, Ult thrull ol P!OsJ. dent lluier of Eopt to nswne tho wor. ltntl cannot be bllmtd I« iMlainr arUllery duels "°'th and ICIUJll ol Golllti mus! bt tltlltrlllstd. • bare, rounded ranee caUed Golan Hel&hll. It rbeo •hove the Jonlln level 1000.JllOO f,.t and _. of tt run lsr')\ soqthward toward the Dead Sta. The B prowar Syrton border Jouchu Israel jun .---W Georp --.., iouth of G1lllee. Dear Gtorst' For IOme )'tan Utt Syrtan.s, and In less no you ha vt. any izi'W1ftiU. en forte tht J«danl1n1 !IOUth, matntalMd a ~-to ~ , chain ol artillery tmpl1<1monls Ol1 the ·~ ·-• nip· llttlht>. P'n>in tht,. Ibey could ml did lob lhetls into the rarm and gra1lni land to the. norlh and w1at of Calittt, and hll'Jfl pltctl farlhu w.ith coUld r•nt• in- to the east end or the Plain ol Eldnelon. One ol the first octs of th• lsracliJ in L'ti'. ll11r E.W.: Well, lint ""' l'I t!!il 1q """ pin; bii, ffl! !'Int -oi!1 f• ~ llOSI •ii•! 'l!lllelfy 11 U. Wit po11ey ...i don't .,.., foraot m •. • ' • • ; . • ' ' . • .• Wtdl'ltM!aY, Marc~ ll, 1'170 DAIL V PILOT 7 ' .QlalNll ly Phll lnterlendl Gravy Train Slow~ for Young G1·aduates ·- •• ''Th~ efficiency expert put them up all aver the o!· fice-Jt'g supposed to bring us closer to managemeJit , •. " Features, pictures and progr~ms of the full week's tele,·ision far~ is yours [rec "·ilh Saturday's D.\ILY PILOT TV WEEK ll!dttor'• Nollt; Ce!Tll'W tt b r..:;r\l!tfft trem ""'°' eMN"i.. 11.-d Jo -Inf In -· tlJtt •1!11 clo -lllr coll._t 11vdtnl1 te ri.t. "'"'° •«r11florrs II•"" -n•td "''"~ 1tudlnl1 wllll • '"''" CtUH for CO<>Ctrn D~tUll ot Ill.Ir t bltl'ICt from lllt U""'llltt. A 11owc1ow" 111 the -~ 1111 rewltM In t tflt\« •'-111 lllt rftn1lhnenl ot 10P collf'tt 11\ldtnll IOI' Ith In WtlMlt 11111 lndlnlrY. U111tH ''ru lnlerri.- t'-'411 "'"''"' ""-'*" tM cOYnlrv CIMCllM .., 1'ht «ill~t +e1t lftffkd, Tiit fol!lowl,.. 11 IMlr "Pfrl,) By DA VJD SMOTHERS particularly In the liberal arts '\\'OUkJ have been inclined to particularly those spedallilng Council, a nonpn:fll organlia· some or them prime hunting fields. pass up a year ago. While they In aerospace: graduates look· lion which deals with 1 ~ col· ground., for lhe 1 recruiters In The.1 res1ult s ajre )hdal 1 ~ob are lowerin1g t1he11tr . sigh1ths, ingreaefaorc"'h•.rd9tnodcaree11benralln P,",',', lege phicenlent offjces and years past , had facts and recnu ers or ma or m us nes many are a so o owing e have canceled appearances at advice of placement directors graduates emerging from c..'QJ• 21100 employers, re fl or l e,d rigures lo attest. to their hiring many campuses; that recruit-lo get a shave, a haircut and a Jege without any -particula r recruiting ~·as down 26 per-stun1p. ment has plummeted-In such clean whi le altlrt before they. skltla. cent trOm 196~ for r,aodidatei Stanford Uni versity reported industries as aerospace and go job hunUng. Nor can holders of advanced ror master's degreea. down ti M major firms and seven pthers inlimatt'ly related to ~ "can do" types who dqreea expect their.doctoral· i. b bet • cttrense; that el(panslon and will have liU\e trouble finding and master's ctrtlflclltes lo perctn~ at 1\•e ac or 5 governnu:ntal agencies cancel · research funding have been the jobs they 'A'ant include ac-pay off big in lhe job market degree level, and down 1~ per· ed recruiting dates for !he cut baclt, that recruiters are counLants. cht'mical engineers. Raymond $1.ocker, place n1enl Ct'nt for Phl>s. flrsl lhree months of 1970 - The gravy train has stoiiped looking for "can do" men who salts management graduates, director at lhe University of "II is pretty apparenl," a the prime roundup season for running for graduating college can step in and do a job now pharmaceutical technlcians. Rhode Island . observ.ed !hat , (pelke!om8.n for Uie couocH college job prospects. Prin· student! and many of them without years of additional and holders or masters com paniesarenolongcreaser .said. ··~hat this is the &lowest celon said the numbers of may be scratching for good training and seasonJng. degrees In business ad-to pay $100 lo $150 a month eK· r1ecntitlng yea r 1n 10 years. companies in t er v i e wing jobs when thty sraduate this Consequently, students ministration. tra for degrees they don't Ho\!{ king It wUI remain this students was down 20 percent , prl ewakenln1 to the situation ll'f: Those not 'so fortunate ln-· tru~k they need. wa;o,-is anyone's guess." Rutgers, 25 percent, and 8 Thn:· cl••• of lt79 is belq ..;;gra_bb_l..:ng:;_a_t ..:Jc_ob_ofl_er_•_th_;ey'----•l_ude_•_the_r_ronk_•_•_f_e..:ng:._in_•_•n_. __ Th_e_c_ol_l•.:c.g•_P_I_a_c_e_m_e_n_t __ ·_u_n1_v_er_si_u._s_•_n_d _co_ll..:•8:.'_'·..,..-R_hod_• _Js_lan_d_20_to_25..:f>ec__rce_nl forced to fact a hard fact"of .1 life -m1ny businesses and industries are f11 less in- terested In hiring bright young men than they y,·ete just a ye.ar ago . These were the conchuilon1 • of a UPI survey of how graduaUng students stand in the job market. College and uni versity placement dire:Ctora reported campus job recruitment may be at its slowest pace since the end of the Korean War in 1953. The causes, they said, start with a $4 billion cut in defenu: spendiftl, exacerbated by high inttttal rates, a 5<1ueamish stock market, t.he p r or i t squeeze. the return of Vietnam veterans. and a surfeit of col· lege and high school te.achen, PENNCREST ® WASHER AND .DRYER VALUES SPRING SALE ON PENNCREST ZIG-ZAG Prices effective thru Saturday SAVI 41.95 ON PINNCRUT IMPERIAL ZIG ZAG. It ,.w, oltlf 1r1end1 and decoram just obovt IS"Y faltrk , , • even the new tffetch fabrics. 2.( inMrtable cams for nery kirtcf or stitch, &u i1t·in bllttortholet aMI bobbin winder. Non-tlore light C'l'llr t!.e r.eedl•. Pl1.11 mony ll'ION lobvlow!eotino. Rog . 199.95 NOW Penncrest® two sfleed· 16 lb. ·porcelain washer features two wash/spin spe9d setti:.O., live wash/rinse temperoiure settings, lOClk c:yde setting, three water lewl selections, automatic rOSet swilch .1°' unbalanced loads, rotary switch controls, plus many m<Xe! Ava~able in while only. Can't .miss this terrific buy! ·'I 78 •. ··. . Tbr~ temperature ·Pennc.rest® gas dryer. Features include porcekiin enamel finish tap and drum in white, three temP.roture sellinQ., 130. minute timer, ten 'minute cool down, rotary cc;>ntrofs, safety start switch, easy access rin1 filler, Thermo Flo dryiniJ, electric spark ignilion, morel $138 .· ' Penncrest® three temperature elec:tric dryer. Features include thiee lemperature ieltings, 130 minute timer, porcelain finish top.and drum, 10 mimte coal dawn. In while only. fl08 · ..... " • .. SAVI 21.tS ON PINNCIBT 24 CAM ZIG ZAG wilfl the _...,...,,..._..., __ _,..for_ fabrics end JMor. A -c -tlwt ~ loocW wllh loo!Uta. .... 119.tlNOW $98 U10 Penney's Time PaynMnt Piao I NOW! THESE-VALUES AT ANY ONE OF THf:SE PENNEY STORES! I I CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD DOWNEY MONTClAIR FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEAQf NEWPORT 9£ACH VENTUltA SHOP SUNDAY TOO 12 to 5 P.M. ! I BURBANK CANOGA PARK CHULA VISTA COL.LEGE GROVE DOWNEY RJLLERTON GRANAllA HILLS HUNTINGTON BEA<:ti ' HUNTINGTON PARK LAKEWOOD LONG BEACH LOS.IJ.l'OS .. Penricrest~ four speed 16 lb, automatic wosher.fea!ures all ~·porcelain {i~ish, four wash/ ~in speed setti•, fi¥e wash/ril'IM temperotwe settings, white. $188 . ; ... '>~~ '.' I~ ;,t ··•··• ~J # .... :, .. <'"'y, fl '·.· ~,/· Penneys 4 ·tempera- ture.gas drye~lh a 130 rninvte timer, porc.e1erin• f'fnisFt fOf> and drum qnd a ten minute cool down . Available Iii white ·Only. A great buy f MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLYY.1000 SAN FERNANDO ....... $148 SANTAANA TORRANCE VAN NUYS VENTURA WESTCHESTER ' " 8 DAIL V PILOT Wednesday, March 11, 1970 CHECKING •UP• Bpy Scouts Turn . / Girl Scouts at 15 By L. M. BOYD lT lS KNOWN a single girl has one chance in 1,700 of marrying her doctor . . . WERE YOU AWARE a third of the people in the .,., orld ~·ould rather die than eat bacon for brC!akfasl? ... ON THAT LIST of attributes which husbands crave most in wives, 1hc pollsters clailn •·a terrific torso" ranks No. 5 .. , . ACTOR GENE HA ltRY is the fellow who c,ontended that age 15 is the year ""'hen Boy Scouts turn into girl scouts .. , TEE'l'OTALERS might wish to point out lhnt home-brewed beer ""'as the universal drink of the Dark Ages. LANGUAGE ~1AN -In that effort to s1tlect the n1ost felicitous phrase in English. still nominated most often is, "I love you." Runners up in- clude, "Dinner's ready," "I'll take the cheek" and ·'Keep Lhc change." Also under con- sideration Ly our Language man for inclusion on this hap- py lisl is ... Sleep till noo.1." Saddest phrase. of course. re- mains, ''Non-sufficient funds." CUSTOAfER SERVJCE-,Q. 11Ask your Love and \Var man this one, v.•111 you? It concerns me personally. \Vhat are the chances of happiness for a fairly handso1ne guy and a girl that's not much to look at?" A. \\'hy didn 't you si~n your name? I cian't tell your gender. At any rate, if you·re the girl. ch ances are pretty good. lf you're the guy, they're terrible ... A. "DO GEMINI ~tEN hold grudges ?" A. Our Planet man says Ulis widespread rumor .is er- roneous, they don 't. But Gemini men. he says, aren't forgetful, and they rarely get fooled more than once by the same trick, no matter how lit- tle and cute. DOWN SOUTll, A LAKE with a lot of turtles isn't much good for fishing, I'm told. But a lake with an alligator is. The why of this is that turtles eat fish eggs, but alligalors eat turtles ... AS TO THE QUES- TION Or why mei1 never fasten the bottom button on their vests, a Carlisle, Penna., subsc riber says l\.ing Henry VII I sta rted th::it custom. At !he dinner table. As a matter of con1fo rt. SLEEP -"\\'hen outdoors in sub-ze ro weather, don't faU asleep, or you may never wake up again ." Was it in one of Jack London's books I read that? At any rate, such was the belief years ago. But it's \\'rong. The more you sleep, I.he more heat you conserve . Scientists now know the bes! way to stay alive outdoors in sub.zero weather is to sleep. Out of the wind, surely. And in the best possible shelter. But sleep. sleep, sleep. RAPID REPLY -Yes. l'l''ice as many '!''omen as men ha\·e an extra rib. Further, to be exact, one oul of every 166 citizcl'IS is so over-supplied. Your questions mid com· n1cnts are welco med and u·ilt be userl 11;he.11ever pas· sible i11 .. C/leckinri Up." Please address your mail to L. A).. Boyd, care of Dai ly Pilot. Rn:r 1875. Ntwport Beach, Ca lif. 92660. Support Voiced For N.Y. l\'la yo1· BERKELEY (UPI) -The UC Berkelt:'y Academic Senate Monday urged that New York ~fayor John Lindsay be given some sort of honorary degree when he speaks at Charter Day activities htre April 2. And in Sacramento, the California Slate Senate passed a resolutioo by a 27.{) vote commending Lindsay as "one o( the brighle.!.1 and most artieUlate young men'' in American politics. THE MAGNIFICENCE OF THE DIAMOND SOLITAI RE Penney's diamonds come from famous dia mond centers all ever 1he wo.rld, Ou~ diamond buyers select only those which meet Penney s exacting standards o! cut. color, and ciarity. We invite you. to examine .a Penney's diamond and compare the QU.!lity and styhng. Our !rained personnel will be happy to assist you. V,. CARAT ... 13750 Y3 CARAT ••. 22500 ·1/2 CARAT ..• 45000 OTHER PENNEY FINE DIAMONDS TO $2000 PENNEY APPROVED DIAMONDS ARE CHOSEN FDR THEIR EXCELLNCE! CHARGE IT AT YOUR PENNEY'S FINE JEWELRY. DEPARTMENT l NOWI IHUE VllUES Al. I~~ r~~Hlo.E PENNEY SlOilES! I (.A!\IQ",A ,.; <>• "1..-NIUll.;.l(lti B!ACl-i t>l~t~ ,. 1-~>' \l[NTUAA ---------- 0 I • SALE~! ·CO ·LORFUL SCAT-TER -·R·UGS! Prices effective through Saturday • LIKE IT • , • CHARGE m 'Sparta' lOOo/o virgin nylon cut and loop pile, latex backed •.•. oliv.e, gold, orange, red solid colors. 24x36". R·eg. 3.99 NOW 2.88 27x48" Reg. 5.99 ................ 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Nylon loee .tmch strap \re, nylo11/Lycr•• 1pot1dox olo1tlc, wtiite, ltlock, 32-S6A.,. )2-311.C. .... ,3NOW2 .... 5 Up-Tight lo1tt lat gartetlea powty glrcUo, t1yl0ft/lycra9 1pot1das/ rultbot, 14, 17" INgfhl, whfto, and nvcle $-M-l. a.1.S4NOW21.,S7 a. ~oclol• polyester filtorfill porldacl bra, strokh strops, Lycra• tpoftdex Nck, wllhe, Rude, 32- 31A. 32·361. .... '3 NOW 2 1.,•5 Nylon/Lycra• spo11dox pewerMt po11ty 9irdlo with reinforced frttt1t portel, IOftg leg, whlN, S-M-l.XL. .... $1NOW'6 C. Co"on/Ootron• poly .... r/ 11ylot1 lore l:wo, ...t.I .. , hlod;, 32-UA, 32-421-C. lllCIChl--•hoble. •·•· "'·" .NOW21oo $~ 32..UD •••· 3.50 NOW 2 '-'6 l.otl1 1 .. ponty girdle, 1,. ,...... pottioMd, 11yto11/Lyc:ra• spoitdex, wftlte, yell-, pink, hl11~, S-M· l.Xl. • ... $7NOW'6 D. f•llr ~dcfH ~· pol,.. •tter cettoR br-9, ~lno weth· able, white, 32.JIA. 32-361.- ... U NOW 21 ... 3 Loni 1.. 11ytoft/lycni• apoRlllea ponty 9in:U•. 11" proponiOMCI, whit•. ,..How, pink, bl"9, $-Mo. l-XL .... J<N0W'5 Sandal closeout ••• save on scores of styles! 1.88 2.88 3.88 YOll'll find all )"Ill' fa.otll. oandaJ 11yfft al I-dOMOUI pricn nowl City oondals, ~ ...sat.. clm&y oandoh, ~ oandalo, w;1h lmOOlh 10let, u.,,. &0iet, r.tt1e t..h, ltodt hook, flat hMhl Choose leathen or -.inyh in i«itMr '°""' --.. -.-. an -... but choose thom"-wliile tt.i· .. 1oc1 .... ii al lb bntl HANDSOMELY ST¥LED SPORT DUO WITH COORDINATED COAT AND SLACKSI He'll be the smartest, handsomest boy on the block, when he steps out In these sporty new suits by Town- crofl! They're a tough and sturdy blend of rayon/acetate that con toke plenty of hard wear, yet stay neat and wrinkle free. "Grown-up styling feotures 6 but- ton double breasted tailoring and nifty coordinating sloc~s. Choos11 his from a wide selection of pot• terns and solids, with fancy or solid slacks. loy'11iH1 8-12 Reg. and slim R•g• sizes 14-20 Slim si11114.18 11.88 14.88 PRE-SCHOOL boyi' ten-in-one.suit is the most versatile outfit ever! features matching 1uit and snappy coordinoling fancy slacks, plus smart reversible veJt. Royon/ocetate blend oi- turet long wear and o!woys looks neat. Reg. 1iHs 3.7 Slim 4.7 9.88 AVAILABLE AT YOUJ~_LOCAL PENNEY STORE • . ' ' • ' J DA1 LY PILOT \Vednfsday, Mirth ll, 1970 SF State Te11se 14 Arrests 2 Women Selected • • GRAFFITI byi..,,ry Police Confront Protest MadeAfter In Unders ea Test SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -..,.,..,..,.......,,._,,'"'""',,_, A force o( 100 policemen, 16 or Fl:.:;;...;...=1' them on horseback. held a ·tight rein .Tuesday on a mass demonstration al San F'ran- ciKo Slate College -scene of some or the nation's most viole nt student disorders lat year. AulboriUes y,·ere aided by students and professors who argued against violence as they moved through the crowd of 1,200 persons protesting the appearance of m I Ii ta ry recruiters on campus for the first time this year. The demonstrators dispers- ed peacefully, but riot police later arresttd 13 persons in a club-swinging · melee at a 1 nearby shopping center \\•hich has a branch of Bank of Ameri£!..__ Police Lt. Charles A.. Schuler said his men y,·ere ordered in after t h e y overheard several p e rs o n s shouting. "let's go do what .,.,, did at Sant.a Barbara." The Isla Vista branch of Bank of America was burned to the ground last 1nonth du r· ing an outbreak of violence ;.it the Santa Barbara campus of the University ol California. The da y gol oH to a bad start at San Francisco State. \'/hen a molotov cocktail which failed lo ignite was found in the office of Colleqe President S . .J. Hayaka~.a. The firebomb apparently y,·as hurled through a v.·indow during the night. P o l I c c gathered on the 18.500 student campus during !he morning as recruiters set up inroramllon tables 1n tbe college aymnasiurll. Following a noisy rally at noon. th e demonstrators 1na rched towa rd the gym· nasiu m shouting, ' 'war recruiters n1ust go!" and "pigs off campus!" They Wfre slopped by lines of riot po[lce and peacefully dispersed by mounted qfricers. Authorities alloy,·ed 3 O 0 persons .to set up a peaceful picket line. but kept 20 officers bet 11 een the pickets and the g}'ln nasium. The oth e r demonstrators left. and only ctboul 40 of !hem took part in Uie shopping center con· frontation. La'ck of 1•iolencc vr a s credhed in a large part to 50 faculty and student leaders, headed by Prof. Frederick W. Terrain and student body president Harry Lehmann. • I • '; lndl~dHal IBl~r dllkl Pl'Dlldl SIT·OOWN DAIKIN& Pri'lacy and ease are yours ••• whe n you do your banking at Newport National Bank. You can·1t!U' 11'1 a comfortable arm chair •hile a ffiendty, cheerful teller transacts your busil'leSS quickly and efficiently. It's a moment of rest and personal attention that you can look forward to in your busy day. Coffee and delicious cookies are aV1il1ble to help )'OU relax while we pl'O'lide you with outstandina: smice. Enjoy our extraordinary unique services. 9 CONVENIENT OFFICES SIRVING ORANGE COUNTY Airptrt Olllct Michtbon 1t MacArthur SJJ.Jl 11 • ltflld• Olfiu Baysidt 1t J1mbore16t2·1141 Collt&• l'Jl\ Olfiu Nuhrood at Commonwe1Uh 871·2900 • Sunn1 Hiiis Ollitt Harbor 1t Brta 871-7290 Suptriot Orlin Supe1ior 11 P!actntia 642·9511 • Uni•t1sily Olntt East Chapman 1t Stilt Collea a 879·4840 Weslclill Olfict Westelill 11 Oo¥1r 642.Jl I: Sttl htdl Offiu ltisure World. Se11 Beach 59&·2711 • Lt run• Hlllt otfltt Leisurt World, Upnt Hii!s830·3200 • • \1•ho argued against violence. Terrain called attempts lo for.ce the recruiters orr the ca1npus "id iot censo rship)• y,•hich could properly be met ,1·ith "legal force '' if necessary. Lehmann said a free campus, ¥.'here radical and conservalive groups are allov•ed to present their views, could hardly restrict the r{?(:ruiters. * * * Fired Profs A'sk SFSC For Rehire Oxnard Vote Nixes Bond LA Protest LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) -to participate in Tektite, 2, a Two women breaklng the i.cven-month undersea living aquana1:1t 1e1 ban'ler in the rim •-th c 'bbe United Statea are confident expe ent u• e an an. LOS ANGELES (AP) they11 iet along as well as Tbe women "'ill 11 v e Fourteen persons were ar· men on the octan bottom. In together for 14 days in July at rested and about 25 fact, they may fare better in a SO.foot depth in the Tektite demonstrators were dispersed one respect : they believe habitat. two l&-fool-bigh steel thev'll find more to talk about. cylinders, each 121: feet in after causing minor damage "it's equally as bad for diameter and connected by a ,l;o Roosevelt High School's anyone -male or fema!e," tunnel. main classroom building in says Ann Hartli ne, 23. "f'm just glad to see l'l'omen East l.oll5 Angeles. P.frs. Hartline and Alina considered Cor science pro· The disturbance al the 3,000.. Szmant, also 23, graduate grams," ~1rs. llanline sa id 11udents al Scrip pi, Ins ti lute of Tuesday at a news conference. student. predominantly Mex· Oceanography, were among "It shows girls are capable o! ican American .school wu one five women selected last week doing scientific resec:rch." of a series of demon1tr1Uons1.-'-=-==-===-'----"-------- :~:~.~~";~:.:~= ~ .. (!tn''\~(i rood and other conditions. t\li 1 \ '1LI\1 - OXNARD (AP) -A bond Police said only two of the --~[.l\([\1 l\t\\. F" issue lotaling nearly $4 million 14 arrested were Roosevelt IL\\t.{\ ,.... .,,-..1 i~~ dollars for new facilities in the students. Eight were from \} e,\fEn l ;O Oxnard Elcmeotary Sdtool othor high ~hools and four -~~~G;E~ii'{~O~~:;"~"~::li~l.~E:O~;· SAN FRANCISCO !UPI) -·District drew .11 turnout of cnly weren't students. Bookings v.J\\.. \} f4,E. ~'" Forryier teachers in the blaclc-24.6 percent of the 14,729 ellgi-y,·ei-e for investigation of I.I.,. R "{0 studies department at San ble voters and failed . charges includtng disturbing OO "' Francisco State asked Tu:s· School offici als had been .ap-the peace, failblg to disperse day that the college rehire prehenslve that integration and possessing marijuana, of·. them. · Id k -'·" r· 'd The professors made the de-1uues wou v.:or agtu11:1~ a ice.rs sai . mand in ll news conference succe.ssful election Tuesday. ,;;~~~===-=-=;:;:;! which took place an hour A !•nal tabulation from all II ON THE TUBE before police and precincts showed that of the de.monstiators clashed over 3,622 persons who cast ballots, fo, th• b1tt 911ld1 to wh it'• lhe presence or mi Ii tar y 1,91 5 votes favored th. e h1pp•11l11t 111 TY, r••d TY d t 701 ed t WEEK -~i,hl\1ut•il with th1 recruiters on campUs. measure. an ' . ~ppos 1 · S1turd1y .ditio11 of th1 DAILY COSTA MUA t7f I . Ht-if.-IU.fHl .MS w. """ 11.-Mt-tm ON N_,.,. Sl'f'il.~·lHI I .tNAHEIM l'td Marl, Utl W, LIMl"'-J11·'1H 11't W. Lf ,..,,,.._.ll-46N tUt W. Llolc1Jft Aw• • .-.,._llN Ofllce Muri: t '·""· i. t '·""· Men .lflr\I ~rl. t •.m. i. S ""'· Sit. & !un. Wilmette', Brown and Pa-A· .two-thirds ma1ortly was re-PILOT. tricia Thornton a cc u s e d,_.:q~w'.':r:'.'.cd~fo'.'.'_IP~'"~ag~•::_· ___ .!::::=========='.! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=" S.F. State Pr~ident S. I. liayakawa of trying to dismantle the black studies department. . ·Miss ~Brown and M I s s Thornton said they spoke on behalf of four .of six teachers who were told two weeks ago th ey would . not be rehi~ed after their contracts expire June I. · The instructors .said .they wanted the Jobs back in -ad- dition to greater control of recNiting of students and hir· ing o( faculty 1n the depart- ment , more office space and equipment, I •n c re as e d ad· mission of minority stua~nts -and the w&!Ylng of nonnal ad-mi~ion requirements for non- whites. Angela Davis Speaks at JC After Edict WALNUT (AP) -Com· munist party member Angela Davis apPeartd on schedule for a spe1Jclng engagement at Mt. San Antonio Colleg e despite an edid f{Om· ~ col- lege t.(ustees t!W she 'ita)i: away. • - Miss Davis, an assistant professor or philosophy at f; UCLA, told several hundred students gathered outside the adinlnistratJon building Tues- day that their college cannot function without them, "We tend to foi"get that." the young Negro educator ad· ded. "They (the college officials) depend on r,ou. But you can create a situation in which they can no longer depend on you ." Her 3(}-mlnute talk was greeted w\th occasional ap- plause arid cries of "Right cn." When she had finished, the listemen walked quietly away . •• WE'RE HAVING AN INDOOR-OUTDOOR CARPET SALE ••• AND YOU'RE INVITED TO THE MOST EXCITING SAVINGS YET ' 50 sq. yds. will carpet 12 x 13'6" patio, 12 x JS' den, 12 x 9' kitchen MR. FREEZER OWNER: It's time to fill your freezer now and beat the high cost of everyday shopping. llEG. 3.50 Stj). YD. NOW 2.99 sq. yd . I I REG. 7.99 59. YD. NOW 6.99sq. yd. if you do not have a Freezer or Freezer space we will store FREE! CUSTOM CUT FOOD PURCHASE ORDER You SAVE! othing • B~tter Hurry 482 ~J!S. 542 .~s. Down +oR+ 6to9Mo. 300 LB. ~IDE-ALL 360 LIS. PLUS FOREQUARTERS 112 LIS. PLUS Cut, Sharp to Pay FOR Frozen IEEF. PORK, BEEF, PORK. -~ VEGETABLES $11 93 VEGETABLES. 45 Days and & JUICES & JUICES Before Delivered Per Wetk 1st Payment $383.00 lutl pri<• SHOP IY PHONE ..• ASK FOR MISS KAY ~ Visit our Retail Dept. Thursday, Friday, Saturday and see our many low discount prices. Buy 1 lb. or 1,000 lbs. EXAMPLES -- Swift Premium s 9~ BACON . . . .1b. Bono1.,, S9P I FHot Mignon $169 HALIBUT FILET . . . lb. STEAKS . ____ . . 1i. . . .. ··~· " . All AIOUT Fiii IONUI OFflR "'"' """ ~lff --... , Jtl.it <••l 9f J .... lllt -Si.1 9f t .. t -HI/NI -rtln -,_,.....,,,., ... , -(MllOll'I (l#t C&MMEATS !:j~., . ·l::::o ··~~ , "~IA.UR 5 1325 Warehouse Rd. fS~ .. !>'<. ~ Costa Mesa 540-6176 11 '~1 o.t .c. •=iQ .... •ll!(ll;f"' .... HERCULON8 POLYPROPYLENE OUl'IN •.• Easy to install ••• just snip to Rt! Easy and carefree to live with ••• indoor-outdoor car· pet priced 50 low, you can carpet areas that you thought you couldn't afford ••• in your choice of 5 decorator colors. REG. 7.99 s9. YD. 6. 99 sq. yd . . -NOW ACRILAN8 ACRYLIC 'FORECAST'.,. level loop·style, aptly named, b•ciause it's o s new o' tomorrow .•• pric•d for savings so you can buy it today! Choose from 8 d~<· orator colors in this carefree carpeting! 1N 'N OUT' ACRILAN'° ACRYLIC, , • level loop or tip sheared ••• your choice of either in this miracle fibre easy·care car· peting, Choose from o rainbow of smashing decorator colors ••• 14 of then1! REG. 10.50 s9. YD. NOW 8.SOsq. yd. ACRILAN~ ACRYLIC 'HEARTHSTONE' •• , This carpeting is brick patterned in your choice of 8 tweedy decorator colors. Eosy care, ond it can handle all the traffic prob- lems o busy family can give it! FOR PROFESSIONALIZED CARPET SERVICE-SHOP IN STORE OR SHOP AT HOME ... CALL YOUR NEAREST PENNEYS TODAY CANOGA PA RK (883.3660) • OOWNEY - (869·"5'1) FULLERTON (871"343) HUNTINGTON BEACH (892·7771) LAKEWOOD (63,·7000) NEWPORT BEACH (833.0783) MONTCLAIR (621 ·3811 o•98.5·T21 7) • free estimate. '• No obli9otion. • We brin g t0mples. • frH coruultatio,,,_ ' . For the Ma1•1•iage Lice11ses Deoll• Nf>t lces ARBUCKLE & SON We5tc1Hf !'tlf1rtuary 4%7 E. 17th St., Costa l\tesa &46-<m • BALTZ MORTUARIES Cortina del !'tlar OR 3-9~50 Costa !'t1esa !\U 6-2414 • BELL BROADWAY J\.10RTlJARY JJO Broadway, Costa P.1esa LI 8-3433 • DILDAY BR0'111ERS fluntingt.on Valley !\1orh1ary 17911 Beach Blvd. Jluntlnglon i!f:ach 84%-7771 • PACIFIC VI EW !\tE!\10RlAL PARK Ctmetr:ry e !\lortuary Chapel ~ PAclfic View nri\'t NewpOrl Beach, California ,&tf..:00 PEEK FAMR.Y COl.ONIAL FUNERAL RO~tE 7801 Bolsa A\'t, \\'ntmlo1ter 1'3-lS15 • SHEFFER MORTUA RV l.aguna Beach 49.J.1535 San Clemenle 49%.0100 • Sl\tlTHS' !\IORTUAflV 627 !\1Aln Sl. Tiu.ntington Reatb 536-1131 --....,. .. ------·.,.,.~---~...,.,. Record Ne,v Judges Plan Held By County ===---..·· -----~.,,-. W~. Marth 11, 1970 Only Sb: o~ Coast , . ¥ outJJN otBuying Non-driver ·c_ard$ • By STEVE MITCBELL · "Most ol these l:lds 1\1•• Allhough !he cards don't IJ> culling cl><cko or &"tllng had acUon taken qalnst. tbelr pear to be popular wllh the ·credit., &ince:, ln C&llfomia, the Of 1111 Dlilff Pu.I lft.ft driver'• license 11 lhe most SANTA ANA -1be new driver'1 liceoses and have ap-younger set in Orange County, geDeratly accepted form of n 0 n -driver'a ldenUflcatlon piled for the non-driver'• card the OMV claims more than idenUficiUon. cards wblcb have been for idt!nUflcaUoo purposea,v ~S,000 Calllomiana have ap-The no!Wiriver's iden- available through the state he noted. plied for the cards. Four out uncatkm card costs the same Department ol Motor Vehlcles Most teen.rs and young of live 10 card request.a co11'1!1 as 1 Callfomla dttver'a Ucense since January, apparently are adults have little use for Uie from women, and ·fiO Percent DAILY PILOT JJ\ -!~~J!~ /~Q.E$ J TO It ...... ,. ... """ Ofl C~ Cltc•lt TY ... OHll!v ,_ MlllywMIT11Mf ...... AUDmONS WILL • HILD THIS WOK JN ORANH COUNTY lltt ,,.. °"' C1_,1 hlllr¥1N C:•ll 547-625 lNowl proving unpopular with young ID card Issued by the depart-of these are In the JS to 25 age -~ card · ioou much the people in Orange Cotmty. ment. Few have checking ac· bracket, OMV officials in same u a driver't Ucente and The Costa Mesa branch of counts. For the most part, Sacramento cont.end. Only If la good for ai.x years. T•l•nt ... ,ch '" .. the OMV has recorded only their age probiblts them from pette'lt of all ID card holders F..;;-"'-======;IJ CoMYCtell ~ six applications !or non-driver drinking in hara, so lbe ID are over 60 yean old , olflciala 8,.., Tho DAILY PILOT TAKE I PRODUCTIONS ID cards in the 11·21 age cards are, ln this Tespect, claim. -, HOUYWOOD, CALIF. brackeL more of a hindrance lhan The ID cards at! useful ror Just for 'Peani;··=~~~~~~~~~~~ '1be reason that only a ball r;;;;a;;;n;;;y=lb~in~g==e1: .. :·~=:'.~:0:~:llOIHlri:""::O:v~en:"::w•h•o•ha;;;;;v;;;e;;;tr;;;oo;;;;;b;;;le.iiiii:iiiii:ii~= dozen kids have applied for ll the ID cards is probably al-ANNIVERSARY SALE tribut.abJe to the fact that ~t young!f.ers in thi! age SALIJTAm ... THUHDAT,~AICH 12'11 AT tt·M AM . . SANTA ANA _ Endorse-group have valid driver's ment of proposed legislation lo licenses," said Edward T. add three Orange County O'Brien, Costa Mesa OMV superior court judges and two manager. PUlnAN •oLf SLA.CQ Wiii 111 ,, NOW $8.99 flNI DIBS SU.ClS Sit.ti TO SS0.10 300/o To400/o o .. IAVI SUITS 30% 409/e MORI IOTANY JOO, lUPf'INHllMll, H. ·flllMAN, Births municipal judges for the West "Those who don't have Orange County J u d i c i a I licenses are usually disabled District was held up for 3Q or have bad their driver's days Tuesday by the county license revoked or SU3J>e'D- Boa rd of Supervisors at the ded," he added. urging of Superviso rs David Santa Ana. has had a little Baker and Robert Ballin. better luck In pushing the non- Baker warned that each new drive r's JD cards. D M V judge added to the bench license Supervisor William H. NICITIU SJ.It TO S7 .St NOW 1/2 OFF BELL BOTTOMS Wiii NOW '7'' "' ' SWIATlll UP TO 1/2 OFF STACY ADAMS & DOUGLAS SHOIS NOW ur TO 1/2 OFF. . means the hiring of about It Finken said about 50 IP' AU. SAL.IS l'INAL.1 NO lll!TUllNI. •XCMANGlfl NO ALTl!lll\TtoNS other support personnel. plicanis in th• 18-21 age group HOWARD'S MEN'S SHOP SPORTCOATS llAMOUS NAMI IU.NDS 30°/o to 40°/o OFF TRENCH COATS SINGLI AND DOUILI IRIASTID Wiii SJJ. TO $Jt,tl NOW 19.99 to 22.99 Ballin urged that a cost have applied for the non-42 hllll• hl-4 .,, • ., .... .,, N...-. .._. M4 .. 111 MANY, MANY MORE ITEMS comparison be made on the driver's license.s at the Santa o,. ...,._.,, TIMI,.,...,, ,......, "" ••• ON SALE! SAVE FOR EASTERI possible s ub s tit u ti on of,.~A~na~~of~fi~·"~·:_ ______ ~~~~·-~·~-~·~·~....,.~~·~"~ff~C~,.~--~~0~·-~·~<~·~·~·-~~·~~·~-~.....c~~·~"'~'~"~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-...,~~~ referees or commissioners for ___ - Dissolaitions of Marriage l'l1>rr~e. RuMf'li Oavld I nd C1rol Ja•n Peace. Je1nne Merle 1"'9 John Roborl Cl!•roll, C1rol A., 1nd Oot1111!1' L. C,dm1h1w, H•len R. !Ind Gereld S. W1r1~. ae11v Lovl,,e 11\d R1vmnn<1 George MtCov, Beverly ,i.nn •nd Robert 0. Brv•n. P"911 LoulMO •nd Oolitlll ~lt•idte, Ph11!!1' l'VOl'lne and G«irve ,, Kuhlmevtr, Mi>"I e. •r>d 8111 e. Pe1not'I. 8•11er!y J. and Robert l . P lnks10!', Mellnda S. and Jetlrey D. 8•~•r,·c1a1re Loi.1114 and Harvey Deln Murtl'I''. N•ni:v Eln\e 1nd Gt!••lcl Jolln &a~e<. Paull~ H, and Rotef Doutlft ,69u111r, Con'Wtla and Luis A1uU1r Sn11(1er, Mell.,... J, ollnd Rick S. Coloma, B1r1:>1r1 J. and Pl\lllla Lamllert, c;.te11 E. and Glori. II:. Dohu1v, Leella F, •nd Jarnn M. trvlng, Lo11<.ml• N. arw:I e""'"°' Hanna. Elillbtth Marie and Llayd EdWl'll Ref<!, Nano e . •!Id Lar" w. D1rllnt, Sus.an Caro! aod D1111d All'""' Klrke'1Cl.!oll, D111lcl P1ul 11!d KIM llP.11111 Po!"''· C!lnllllnat LOrtlle IM Robli•I Kel1h Parcrll>. Diune ,I, uld P1lrlct. A, 811!, Jolln A. Ind IC1rm LH t(tHJdY, Emiline J. Ind c~n L ltr•IHl<l'f, Ctv'!stlno, Leonor ....,, C1rloil All>!'rto £11ran. Curtlt: L. IM .£1fabttll JavUI McCOii, Sabt>ie Dean arid SMrln Ann McCormick, Mkhll!I W. 1...:I Ptlrlci1 '· Dean, MY•I• •!Id JI•$ YnegP~, Tonv and TrrMll Rancotah, Waneta Mo11•I.,. and Cati Stan!fy, Jame=; Charles ar>d P1!rlcl1 , .. RNL Richard Rusttll, Ill '"" ,.., ....... , """ Kime, Audrv Kiri< •r>d Duane Louis McNa!r. An..abel and David S. Ortll, 11.ullen N. •ml MM~rv II. Nash, S""'rm1n II:. and Doroll\11 0. Duke. Che51er 8, and BenY J. Murphy, l!O!I and Naomi l. Ooal•~. Robffl L. 1"<1 P1lrlcl1 i\nn POWf TS, Elt!r~ G. lrnl 0..M& 0. Mc.od. E•llel M•Y '"" Georoe H-•rd ,, Jones. J~I Dffln!$ """ P1trl(i1 J. Klein, q1rw:11 II., """ Jolln M 8ur ... 11e. MlrrY Mlf"!ll•el Ind D-.. AIAn Pell.~. Yv°""' Cl1uOl1 1r>d Alc.h1rd Ken<1et~ •n<1fll, Chl<lf• C, 1nd Miki"'" F! ... 1>1w, Falllo L<>UI~ encl J&<;tt P"ul l'ud<u. ll.1mct1o1 SU..""" NIUl1rn LM H11'>n1, JUdltll LYn Incl Gary J.,,.,, Fre...,an, JMeoh H. 1nd 81rb1r1 G. !>cllmkll, Mlc.hael Wavne Ind Lynd• Dia .... qe1nnarO. Pe!~y l <>Ut•• 1...:I Clllfo•O EdWarO WIT!M)n, Jallnne H. Ind DoN\d C. Wood, Mary Calti...i~ Incl Jerry Joe E1r1. '"'' 1no Jmeoh L, PY'~~11rlt;11 Ann Ind Jee Cullll)erhon, Huon G. Ind Wll/11lm1n1 ' G<>nt,.10!5. I••~ and J"" 8 . Ncs~lrDCI~ Jtrrokl P. J<. and M1r11re1 Elsm~n. i.uelyn 1nd Saul Pettv, Do•o11W E. eMI Ch••s Chari~ Ccrr!I~ Norma J. """ lu1hrr O. Elon, ~v!ula E. a!>d Ar<hle CllOflf, l lna and 11.oi.>tM Cheri•~ ll••rn!, P11rlc11 Land Stcl>han II. 11.b~mann, HQr\t ~udwlo and Vera Ltt L~mon, Jctn E. and II.Of' lie• McNau91\1on, Wllll1rn Huth and Joan H!;';~r'.~'t:;,1. Je1nra .. nd Jet~ w 11111m J1mes1<>n. Le51ie Loulw and M!~ll1el S. &raaKti, Jll<ll1rO 0.:•n Ind J11noe M, Killian, ll~rt 0 . 1'1d (t(.1118 F. Gentry, w,1111rn A, •nd Nancy l. Gu!le•rn . .511rlene Gey ind A:elwlo Jr, N1tt1C1'l1n. Aiko Bml M1<ttl judges. The county uUlizes five such referees now and has 22 superior court judges. Proponents of the additional judges point out that the caseload in the su perior courts ha s increased 9.6 percent in the past three years. Facelift At Chapman ORANGE -Four hundred college students, faculty and staff members of Chapman College will assemble Thurs- day morning for the beginning phase of Operation Facelift, a three-day proje<:t of c:ampus improvements. Developed through the con- cen1 of studena for their cam- p.is. environment, Operation Facelift will include projects which are beyond the coUege'1 regular program af renovatioc and maintenance. Classes will be cancded Thursday and Friday t o enable lhe work force to do the landscaping, remodeling, and painting. Volunteers will assemble at project sites at 8 a.m. Thursday morning to begin work. N e\V aistory Com·se Set IRVINE -Oral history, which creates new source materials for research by means of tape-recorded in· terviews, will be the subject of a conference S a tu rda y sponsored by Cal St ate Fullerton and UC lrvine at the Irvine cempus. Registration and a coffee hour are sched uled for 9 a.m. to JO a.m. Saturday In the f\lesa Commons Gold Room where the morning session and luncheon will be held. The afternoon group discussions will be conducted in UCl's Fine Arts Building. Conferen<:i! fee is $10 ($3 £or students) and includes lunch. Registration is limiLed to 150 persons. One Marshal~ County Warm to Proposal SANTA ANA -'Ibe coi.mty ffom the ranks of the currtnl 5Upervlsors could h a r d 1 y marshals but the inspectors believe thcir ears Tuesday jobs dropped when present when the five e 1 e ct e d elective terms expire. marshals proposed that their \Vllk:irson said San Diego collective jobs be consoliated County had adopted the one 1nto one appointive position. marshal ayste.m In 1963 and As outlined by North Orange although the workload in the County J\.1arshal Dillard 0. following six years was up 300 \'Jl\kfrson. lhe one county ap-percent, t h e n u m h e r of poinlive marshal wou ld • be employes was increased only nnn1ed by a majorily or the 50 percent ~lunicipal Court justices, one 'County supervisors hurriedly endor!ed proposed legislaUon deputy marshal would be which would Implement the named and three inspectors plan. added. •-----.-,.--------• The deputy marshal and tn-1 -----~----I speclOr• would be seleded Do This If I FALSE TEETH Selection Told Feel Loose, lasecare O..'\ tie-. atrakl $ba' ~r tt.i.. SANTA ANA -Vernon A. ::.ui.::~O:~~~:; f\fetzgcr of Fountain Valley. ~~~o:;..~~.!aa: professor or managtmcnl at d•r on "'" pl•'-' }llA.8TllTR S I "· h h holdl dentun. flrn1ct 1onpr, M•lt• Cal. tale .ong m.:ac • as •tint •o.i•r PA&T.:J:TH 1a a111:1· hccn appotnted by the Orangr lln•-•on't 110111 under den11.1,.., d ol S . Ntt summ1 '°°"'' p11i1'' tuw,. """'· County Boar uperv1sor.!i hi..r. tht.\01 •••-n11.t.1 t.o b•l'tl\. to serve on the Ort\nge County I !ee 1our d•nt1•1 rq"Ut•r11. a" Co .lie rABTU'TH t.\ ..U 4nl1 eowl...,... 1·ransil mmt e. Penncraft®tool sale Save$5each ••• Prices effective thru Saturday! YOUR CHOICE, 19 e 99 REG. 24.99 VARIAILI SPEID SABRE SAW, % HP,' omp. MOtor cfewlop1 0.2800 1p01. Ful 1• lln>b, tllb ol.5" right oo loft, Rip and -gofdo. NOW! THESE VALUCS AT ANY ONE OF THESE PENNEY STORES! NOW 19.99 Cowtp crx• l:l"tool bn 5 p&. ICI !ff ... Ml -- CANOGA PARK LAKEWOOD SANDll/POWHU. 2 _... J.. .....Jina aod buflioo. 11 ... u ... p. -dnolopo 2000 -,~ bonMt. 2 IOOCl1og clisc.. NOW 19.99 PENNCRAFr HAND TOOLS 1.99 1ACH DOWNEY FULLERTON ll"VAltlAIU!Sl'EEllREVnSIN~ DRILL II HP, 2.6 amp. motor"-!. .,.. 0.1000 .pi.. ,..., .. -aod oplndlo beorlogs. 2 •Iago ........ 10" ... glolocl- 2..-efu,.Jn.,.. I~ Wottt .,.,..,, pli.,_ C:O.loatloo- HUNTINGTON BEACH NOW 19.99 MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA SHOP SUNDAY. TOO 12 to 5 P.M.I ~ .. , ' . - Camping Col umn oming to W eel ~nder 0 .. •L'I' "'LOT \trn Pn~•· • WHEELS, CAMPI NG EXPERT 'PARKS' IN WEE K R1cr•alional Vehicles Author"ity Jack Kneai1 Dick Tra cy, A bri er ~ Join Pilot Co11iics Chester Gould v.·as ;:id. vocaling "Suppor t Your Local Police·• ~lmost '40 \'f'rtrs befnrt> th e bum per sticker or the i.amc name was ln,·ented. And Al Capp d1'imvered lht' f.outh about lh<.11 i; am r tune-long beforr the natinn rlC'clnred \Var on Po\erty 111 D tXIC'. The fa cl lhat mo~t rc.•dr-r~ nt'lt only recognize the namt's 11f these two carloonists, b11! r;in tell immcdialely 1vh1Lh ~!rips they created. and ~ti ll produce on a d111ly q;ist!>. pro· bably sums it up They are undoubLrrlly l\vn ol the l-0p "comic slnp·• art1~ts in lhc world. Anrl thrv h:ivc been near th<' top of 1lic hcoip since they started their strips in the 1930s. All this is ln1por1il11t to DAI· i~v PILOT reader,'\ h1>cause both Gould's "Dick Tracy" ilnd Capp's ''Li'\ Ahner" \,\:Ill be regular features of lhc !),\ILY PILOT comics pas1.· .starting J\farch 30. lnaugurat1on of the t\.\o flt\\' st rips is the first of scvcr;1I <'hanges planned for lhf' p;u~r. :iccurding to f)AILY PILOT Editor Thomas K c <' v 1 I , :;;tarting wit h !hr rcn101 ;ii flf the daily televi.~inn ~l11:•du!c from the page to n1cikr roozn for "Trarv and "Ab11c1 " Other r)l::inned changes ,11ll be announced lale r. l)ICK 1·nACY-£ven as a hny in Okl;ihoma. Chest.er r;ould v.·antr-d to be a car· loonist. lie managed two ~cars al Oklahoma A & r.1 as ::i head st<irl in the direction of hi s ari c;ireer. Then, wilh $50 in his pockcl, he struck out for Ch ic<1go. Jn lht• c d.:iys the Chicago 11n!ir-1' 1\·rrc having their p11b\ic1ted trou bles combating 1hl' prohih1t1on-era c r i me \l;t\P. Gnu ld decided tha t if lhc •·coppers'' couldn'l catch lheir quota of crook.<;, h" '1ot1l1I do 1hc jnh fnr tbrm On paprr, th;u j<;, So hP inked 1n :;ix cat· loon strips about a hook-no'.'E!d rictccti' r hf' r all rd Pl:~u1clt'llhf''> TrJl•··. 1\ lt"lr~ram [rl'l1n P<itlrrson hrnut;ht li:rn hril-(unltnt: <H'rt'I'>~ 101'-fl. ran1.·~v111 l1l,r'tl lh" lr1p attri ~11:•e.'-"lrd lh" n;inv Iv· .... nnr!r11 ·d t' Jl1tk. Tr:!l\'. Gnut,r 11;;_<; j?l\tn a rontr~e1 - I! \\a~n·11oni;: t, .. forr tonircs r·1no; \\f'rC' r~!\'Jfl~ nbfiu1 lhr rh1 ,el·t·l'l u1tl(•d dr>lect1vr in lhP l\1'o·bur-k i::.ku11mf'r ::inrl black :ourk su!l. LI 'L AR!\'l!'.H-Thl' slnrv l•f J.i'l Ahne r begil n 1n Auiiust. 1934. He was then si11: . feet th ree and 19 years old, and ~till i~. Reing a tvpicnl, rt'rl- bloorlcd One-llun1lrrd-Perccnt i\111cr:can ~ov. h1:0 1n11in u1- tPrests 1\'{'rl' CJt.in::. sleeping. nol working inuch an d avoiding m.1rriage ~1a tnl~. whal he af\1ays l\<1nted frtom hfe was no lr1111ble. ~. mainlv. thRl's \\h:Jt lire h.1" ;1\w,i\..: i;:•\rn h11n lh· i<. lnrl'vl'r !wing bilk· rd hy 01 1;1i1 l)f ~nl'.';iking con mr·n. ~lr1b~ hie: \\ hrels-and •·lose rela llv<'~ Through 11 all. AbnC'r keeps hi.-; primiti ve in· nocl'noe. llJs popularlt_,. i~ riue rr1r!ly lo a painful tasc t'lf j\irl· :-h\nl'~~. \11h11·h w;i~ h;1 rdlv 1t·~~cnc1l by h•..; n1.ii·rin~·· 1;1 Jfl:i2 to Uat."Y l\l ;ir. As one well-knov.•n pundit put it, Al Capp's ·•gift for in· venting biza rre characters and outrageous situations ... has made him the best and most durable creator of a cC1mic stnp .... he shov.·s the kind nr invcnli1·ene.-;s !hat ( !Ii a r k J T\\'nin sh.o\lt·ed in ·Tom SaW\er Abroad' and ... in m3ny of lhl' shorter piett!s. I am sure lhill if ~1ark 1'\lt'JJ!l 11cre ;11111· lodav, hr \vnulrl tikr pll·a ... url' in ·1.1 I Abnror'.' Hlr;in.,.111•· H1('k:;, 1n th1· S.1turd;i\ llr\1('"' Feb. 2~. J!l'.:11. TALL AND BIG SIZ!S ONl y tt now has gotten to the point 11•here lhere ls a recreational vehicle for eve ryone. The surge In recreational vehic le ~ales started v:1\h trailers and dtn<eloped un til some models are so coin· pleteJy self-contained tha t they ca n be 1>arked for a week or so in a oom plcle wil derness without the passengers missing a television program. Then came the resurgence loi lruc k-campcrs. those trail· f'rS without v. heels placed on th ree-quarter or o n e • t o n trucks. A year or so ago Uio:i.'e lllOnslers of the hlghw 21.JS, lhl' 1nol.or homes, began to sell in q11an lity -despite retail prices ranglni;: fro tn $8 fJOO to S?.0.000. The mos t luxurious of . th<!se hove everythlng tha t has ever been put into a trailer. including generators that take a city l\ghUng system into thC' \Vildernnss. Al about the sa1ne lime mot.o r homes bega n to se ll lo riuantlly, the so . call r-d •·van convprsion'' hr-i:tnn ~ainini: in pop11laril .v. The VW Ca m. permobile i:i. an exa1nplc of this, or lhe t.1inlhome, but many small converters make cus lom \•an conversions of ex- cellent qualit y. ln essence the van con- ver(':ion is a delivery v;in con· \'Cr!ed to a home ;nvay lrorn .hoine, r'lmplctc \v1 th refrigeralion. stovr. bed s and stor;iRe spaCt'. ll m<iy be r!abor;1tc or slmlJle: may h;ive ;i 11ropane-clectric refr igerator 1ir an ice hox. and may be i.:otnparative/y inexpensive - or IJuitc expcnsi~'e. Each of 1hcst' units ..• t 1 a1lcrs, !ruc k-cam pers, 1notor 11on1cs ;in dvan tnnvprsinns ... h:11C' \irt11r-.'i ;ind fa11l1s, for nn1h111g i~ prrlrcl in this y,·orld l'Xt'r-pl 1ne and lhec. Sorne people loriked at the giant n1olor hurne and faulted it for pr!rr. g;i:::oli ne mileage, dir- fil'u lly of handling and lt1ck of p:1rk1ni.: f.1c1 lil ies aroun d lhe home baS<'. Others lik rd Ulc l'<in con· Vt'r~lnn.-;, but 1vanlrd n1nre sclf·~:01ntain1ncnt fJc1tilics and more sleepin g area. The resu lt of these diflering rcq 111rc1ncn1.-; 11·as a com- prQm]se that has been selling with incren~ing rapidlly dur· in~ the pa~I yea r: the van con- ,·er.1;ion thal Is really a motor ho1nc.·. To cf<~te most of these units havf' Oren buil t on Ford 's E• :ion .F;conolinr hcc:iu~e the l\herlha~·· ;1nd ~pecifica1 ions l<'n~ lhc1n~.('Jvei: !o lh1s cnn- \'Cr~1on. but Chevrolet and Dodge h•11 c rerl•ntly come out \\'ilh 1nodcls lh:•t should be highly cn1npclHi11e and the battle for \•olume is on. Thcsr :::rn<ill motor hurnc~ :ore nt•l as spacious as the big 11tlf''\, although ~onte are fully ~1·H-ronta1ned. Nor, because of the 11cight f<1clor. are they as .... 1ablc on thP road '.\hen tle:.crt 111n1ls 11 hip the pa~~e~ anrl thr ( ';1h lornia Highway P a I r o I 1 loses rriarl s 1!1 tra1lt'rs ;uid ' :u111x·r:-.. Ii\ lirl'yhuund bu -; may p:1ss \\' h e r I' .u1 It'• our first irthdoy ond we're stil growi ng. We're inviting yo u to Ip us ct• rate. Hu ndreds of famou1 b rands of l'Tlt-n'i cloth ing ond sportswear have been reduc.ed for this 1pe,ia1 occasion -Michaeli Strrn, Vnn Heu\rn, \\'indb11>11kc r, M'Gregor, Bernhard Altmonn, Wings, Pu ritan, Don loper, Ch ·i~lian Dior, Middi1hadt', V-line and many ath•r notionally advertised bror:ds MEN 'S SU IT SPORT COATS FO R BIG and TALL MEN 14 5. SUlTS ..•............ , 125. SUITS ................ . tl O.SUlTS ......•.••. 9s. sum ............... . 7S. SUITS Ol<i' 10"! NOW 5112. Nl'.IVI SQb. fUJ\'/ ~~'1. N:".\'I ~76. N~W SH S?Oql FO?. BIG a nd TALL MEN SSS. SPORTCOATS S7 S. SPO RTCOA7S $65. SPORTCOATS SSS. SPO ~TCOATS \!$. ~POR TCOATS -~rllf I~ COIJG SANOl~S ... NOW $63. NOW $54. NOW S47. NO\V $42. NOW $33. OON lOPtt ,.LAYIOY Dl,SS ~1,11 ht..,3Vl e•1><>d• MOCKlUrTttS HOSlt•Y JAC Still!S 'l'9·' I 2 '""'" ss "' " S6 ~;,c;.t,o• ss s1 (1<1f• 10 o, Val I• le9, IOOS l>•oup 1 G•o1<p 1 }0 ~· V•111ft II' It "l'I WINDBRlAKO JACK(JS ... ,, .... s19 ". 1416 4th St. (NEXT TO CA.MP'lfll'S) SANTA MONICA OAllY 'Ttl 6 • flll Tll 9 • J CORDUROY SPORT COATS by Coli!. ~~·tiwr_ s32 !Jr lh• b·9 l loll r , 45 CO VAN H!USEN BANLONI cuiroM rNn IAC SIVt A1CRS S6 ROBES .. , s17 J S 00 ::; ' $10 Teti """ 1912 HARBOR BLVD. "'t-A• 191h ~t. .. TALL AND BIC SllES OliLY • DAt lYTll 9 . !A1' Tll 6 I COSTA MESA au tomobile \\·ould be b\01\'n off the road.) But they ha ve virtues. Even 1\•iU1ouL power steerlnc they handle easlly. One manufa c· turcr adverti ses : ''En joy the lu:-.ury o! a fully self-contained rnotor home. yet dri ve \Yith pas~cnger ca r com f ort .'' Because of their siu, usually about 18 feel length over alt. "·idth of 71rz feet. anrl y,•eii;hl of bct...,·een 6000 and 7000 pounds, a skilled handler of sta ndard passenger cars has little tn learn about driving this type of n\otor home. He ' n1ust, of cour~ slow do'l'l'n v.•hen the winds get high and hold a firm grasp on the wheel ll big trucks flash by, lest suc- Uon move hirr: over. Aclu11lly, such a motor home handles almo&l like a pa ssenger car or pick-up truck. These units can be parked \\'lthoul being consplcious, eas- ed in lo a shopping center. used as H second or third car If necessary and dri ven on com· paratively narr<>w road s without diHitully. Because of the ·•cab-over" feature they can sleep four persons comfo rtably. or 2 adults and 3 small children. Some may be n1odified so they sleep 6 persons. Being smaller they cost less than a large motor home with comparative equipment and get more miles to the gallon of gasoline. The n1orc expensive units !!ell for approxi1nately $8.000, and have such self-contain- 1nenl features as interior 12· vol! lights. 31)..gatlon \l•ater tank. 30 -gallon h olding tank. complete bathroom y,•il h • 8 track stereo tape cartridges your choice .................. 4.44 all loiiel tac11itlcs, elcclnc·g· s refr igerallon . stove and ov n, hi-rise 1vater healers .and duul butane tanks \vith aulo1natlc hPr nn the ri:ar \\heel:, the bet. tcr \\1llh 10 00-16.5 1 h e u11rumun1. \Ve have found lhal Lhe ftolat1on I) pe tire gives n1uch greater stability tp the ~rn<ill motorhomc change-overs. In tl 1e pa!i1 some n1anufac· turers have neglected l o engineer whnl they built <itn.1 !io1ne nf the~c motor home~ lac k lhc fol!ov.•ing features· \\'hen larger tire:t arc used. ,J~ th<'V ~hould be. rear axle i;crcnng ~hoold bl' wn lc!ied. :tddrd slnbililer~ fol' . re<1r ' P~•<I P01t11c~1 """'.,n1ef'•r~1 springs. heavy duly battery ,......;-..--.------.. and :11\c!'nator, heavy duty fan Robert Shelton Says: "VOTE FOR rind coolini; i;.ysten1. C h cc k these out before buying TOM C.ASEY, In lhe opinion of this "'Titer . N.S. CITY COUNCIL" and as a result of many test s. "''C beUe\'e that the rnore rub· 1 om C• •v (~m :>e~1 Kt~~lflft Or C"M • urne w las s tir e WITH 2 FIBE R GLASS BEUS OVER A 2 Pl Y POLYES TE R CORD BODY I 30.95 ·700-13 p1u;, l .?O f~d.1ax encl c;'d Inc Vlhitewall t ubeless SIZE REPLACES PRICE FED. TAX c·31i ....•. l.?5·!" •....• :Jl95 .....• 2.1.5 f18.\" ...... 135-1 4 ...... :'.'-~95 •••.. , 2JS f'31~ ....•• 7-•1' ..••.. _.~?!> ...••• '}SS C.ib·I ~ .....• 8,.$.t• ,. .. w~?~ ...... '167 H78.JJ •..... C551• •.•..• JC39~ .....• 2.93 JIBI • .••.•• sas.1" ...... •0 9~ .....• 2aa ~60·15 •....• 560-15 •••••• 29t;S ...••• 1..53 f7B-15 •. , ... 775·15 •. ,,., J •95 , .•••• 2.61 G78·i5 •..••• 915.15 •..•.• :!6.95 .•. ,,. 2.77 "'178-15 •.•.•• 8"5·15 •.•.•• :'.'~95 ....•• 2 ,9S 900.\'J .••... 900-1 5 ••..•• •0_9S ...... :2'90 1761~ ..•.•• 915-1 5 ........ 2.75 •••·•• .322 DRIVE IN ••• CHARGE 1T! 36 MONTHS GU ARANTEE WITH 14 MONTHS 1000/o ALLOWANCE Yo•ul INem·,,t llf! protr~ltno ~o••~ntc• r 1~1 rs ~11 f~ir~n·t p~··~rref l••tS (no. r.t (11.r ".0H al /\• ... ,,,1_,,,."""" l!T~~I ·lf•'n:.! •'I,,~~ ~d1A•1 "' d••~rl 1'1• 11r•~. Y~J i1t riot•~l~i I ' I'" rr.T·,~ ~1,1r1 moM~l ul FO~!Jntc~. lf ;, r 1 ·~ l.\t S 11011",: 1'•~ ru •.onlr' P""' J. rP1"r" 1! 1 O\ ~~~ w ,. .. i, d: o~r i <'• 1, <1 r .··• '""r !•'". N 1 ·~1,.~ ~~ "•·• .,n1~ bJ~Of\ , ~ th~ ,., g•na n"''' • " D' ,. •" 'u .,,.,. or11!1t.1M~ 1 ~ .. ,,1 r1-1•,. 1,., t·-~~·n • r•:· ~J ~ ot ~ "~"' '" w, .. 11 ,o.r ~ \"'1 o •' ln ~,..,-.di po!ChJ~e fl ICl(.l1Hl•lll,.4fr1t~~(' r I JI !tr• e ;., dUflTI1:; l ,,. v1r,•. 1!:r,,.ant. p~1tnrl 1 •. ,., .. !, ..... ,11 ~ '~"' 'J"•;. or 2'J•. ol lh~ Dll~•~·'' ru··~a1· P•tC. •nt!u~­ inr ap:ihcJble rr1~<~I E1tiit T.•• '"'"" 1~~ r~·­ r"d·~ ~' .i. n•., t•·r IS~• {hMI 1!~10•) 11tr• 1 ~ow your (UU~~l't 1~11n1t b1lurc wcr k1: rnl••t 1u.H~1>\et ll"'•od ....•. ~ •. ·-JG moro1~ ... 100"1, .irlow~n~t pO<•Od _ --··-·· 1·1 I mon111•. :-.o•. ;t llo,.·~nco pc"o~ ·--·-· 15·2·1 ma11111 ... 2~·. ~110.,,•11>cr pt11od --........ -... 2S-J6 monll•.\ lrt~~ life Protect1a" \',• t11,d •":o t··~rv rl}lrlT\IJ·I I''~ ·JI• 1•"t:l"'~ •n· f'•tJl'I!~. T11r1 • i~~i .,11~n ~r.~r 111~ ~lloul~ he rr· r l:\, •'ti, 11 ~r,11r \tit W~iH; £<"! {~xrept for ln'~lt~rt a1.;nmen1) "'c will ma•~ an ~lln,.Jr,te b~•td OP Ill~ n•<v nil purrhJ~r. 011te, inc l"rl'n~ ~ppl+cJble rrd~r.i! l•~·~" Tar. towMd t~e pu•tl\~," n1 ~ nr" t.r·• w~ w1 I ~·'~" ' ~li'•"r. l~t ht5I h•I! nr :. ··'"t·n~ t 1• s~ron<t !'J ! ol 1110 S1Jt~d m~nth~ cl 1:•1,,~nlr~ T~·~ r~~,a~l•~ ll not !•a~i!rr •. blr It,. nn11 t~r """ vate r .. 1Jrn~cr t~r~ or D'~sen~e• ~1at1on '"''on~ • 'led l eppal1n 11' include1: 'Whole Lotto Uiv-e ,' "'o nymorcl • 'APdy W1llionis' Grcn1e1t Hi11' •• , i1 Indeed , jusl 1hotl •'Diano 11011 Presents Th• JotltlOn .5,''The Motown Sound''! • 'Roindrop1 Keep Foll ln' On My Head,' BJ, Thomo1 each (Prite effective thru Soturdoy) .5 . .5 wot11 pow1r 011tpul p1r t ho,"n•I pl us 2 lof'I quality speoli:en de lull iu1tice to yot.1 r ta pes. Bea utiful ly de1i9 ned detlr fr.oturw1 modent thumb.wh_eel tuning contr ol1. Hong·on or j.,-doo, type-speokr\ . THESE STORES OPEN SUNDAY TOOi 12 to 5 P.M. CANOGA PARK CHULA VISTA DOWNEY FULLER TON HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEAC H VENTURA BUENA PARK ., (CLC?SEO SUNDAYS) ( 011"Qtl1'0•fof11 11) V1hty I'••., ~ .. ~ . • ' "'"' 1 I'll OT ·AMl!TISU · we\.-, Ma~h II, 1970 Wtdnt$day, Mmh 11, 1~70 DAllY PllOT J:S. . ·Program Course of Actio~ in Checkipg Computers By JOYCE LAIN someoae other thu the puten.'" Make sure stlldentl desks -ltave immediately. business firmll which bl.re tJ'l.lnlna ln teadtlrW. wrlte 10 Umes u many p~ he comp I et e 1. Tht3lt More than 250 four-year col. salesman. It should be of the can actually fuse the equtp. 7. REFERENCES-Ask for EDP persoMtl (auch u 11. Pl:U'ORMANCE ll'lmS; In reality, t b • • e performance polntf art di£. le1u. and an lncreaalnC sell-grading type, that ii., menL Although a computer on a JlsL of 20 former 1tudents bank:!, insurance companies, Graduates &hould actually be "program111 are sub-rouUne1 flcult for the pr"05pectlvt ~ number of fwllor and com-designed to show you your campus may not be required, and spotcheck at Jeaat five. etc.). In person (not on Ult able to program a compu~er: of JO to 15 instructions. U the dent to check out; one ft)' ii munUy colleges and vocatJonal IC'Ol'e without the pcmlbWty of the student programmer must Aak their opinion of the phone), ask about ~ tchool know at lealt thrte pro-student writes four complete to atk former students if theM tchoolt are offering EDP fraudulent scoring a:s a lurt lo be assured that his programs school's courses, faculty and and what training la requlttd gramminr Ianiua.1es. a o d programs, It will llbly take standards WtN met tturtnc (electronic data procesatna) enrollment. \\'ill be e-0mpHed, It.sled and .services -and detennine If of beginners. hJvt written· a minimum of him the entire coune &o tuo-the.ir tralnlna. programs. I. EQUIP~fENT -some debugged on a computer. If their jobs are related io the -t. FACULTY -lostructors four prorrams. eacb lnvolvtna ceutully debuc them. Tbe 1tu. For• me, 1r.,1e1 "°ldat• However, if you are plan-JCbool1 use obsolete equip-the school will not guarantee training they took. Call for an should have pracUca! buslneu a 'mlnlmum ol toO proctsslng dent should alto hav. a pro-cempattt t ... n, Mad .. a ttlng to become a computer mentor try to pass off punch-this, or says that their in-appoi nbnent with managttt ol ezperience 1n data proctssinl; Instructions. Some schools say perly documented "nm book" pedcanl martM .. AFIPI" at progl'IJDJ'Qer by attending 1 _ec1_ca_rd_eq-'-u-'ip_m_•n_1_1_• _"_co_m_· _stru_ct_or_s_can_d_o_lhl_•_•l_lh_e_Ir_l_nf_onn_au_·,_n _Proc_,_....,_· g;___a _t _a_,_.,_,_u_u_p_r_o_f_•_•_• _1 '-"-aa_ l __ lhelr __ •tu_dt_nra_are_req_ul_red_to_l_or ee_a_ch_a-'-ppll'-c-atlon_.:..P"'_ff:;_•m __ w._ .. _.,__.:.,..c.Pff_· ---- private EDP school, here ate tips to help you .-., a good one. Many thanb lo the Data Aiax Anosol " "Lux'' WINDOW C1EANER 1 ProcessingManagement AllOCiation's oommUtee on private data processing school . will lhrt lllllOlllA . ll&Sbl . 12:$1 ~. standardJ ~ to t b e American Federation o f Information Proces si ng Societies. GUIDEIJNES I. FIRST THING -chock the xbo01'1 reputatlOn with your local Better Butl.neu Bureau, or t'lltmber of Com. merce in attas when: no BBB office erist.s. Determine bow Jong the school's been In ex~ lstence as one factor In eva1uating financial an d operational stabWly. Watch oot for bllnd ldvertlsementa -the school'• name and ad- dress should be in the ad. Investigate more than one school, prices vary. Compare costs and hOurs involved, being certain there are no ••extras." %. BEWARE -al high P""'1U< saletmen, particular- ly those claiming to be ••career c:oun 1e tors'' or ''guidance coumekrs,'' o..r 30methlng otbe:r than sales ttprtsentallves. Bypass any 9Chool that tries to pressure you to lllgn a _,.act Jm. mediately or whlc:h olfen you ••special" Inducements such •• ' • s cbollnhlpe." Abtohrtely •""d ICboola which guarantee jobs, or 11y that you will be: anything other than a trainee upoo ffaduatlon. 3. CONl'RACl'S -3\gn notllloa anl1l you have In· velllplel the achoo! and stDdied its etr0Ument acree- m«!L Makt "'"' the school'• IChedule al payments, tulilon refuod policy, ed cla111e1 covering canctllation a r e clearly spelled out -and that the rrllmd policy Is part of the actual enrollment contract. Gtt a recelpt for :your down paymellt and a copy al the ._,,.. 4. ADVERT!lilNG -don't fall for uaggerated clabn1, such as: ''ANYON E, re1ardless of ability, prior education or experience, can 111-.I In the field of data processing" (dropouts are ~-l•tolhls pitch) ••• 'You can earn top income to ttart" (you wifl start 11 a tralnee or at a lower-level job, not as a quellfied iroerammerl. • . ''This school is aMOCiat.ed with a computer manufac- turer" (demand proof). I. APTITUDE TESTS -should be of a standardized admi!sions type, such as JBM prosrammen' test, not a test ••speclalJJ designed" for that ocllool. The test shoold NOT bt t.ake:n in your home, but ad- ministered at the school by 500atGWC Listed on Dean's Roll Five lnm<lnd Golden Welt College atudentl, 1 a r I e 1 t number In the collep'1 four yura, tMdt lhe academic honor roll ar Dean'• un for the ran aemester, lnclodlng :a:; who made ltral&bt • 1 A ' ' ·~ ...... Jiil ncogn1 ... ttudentl who earned "B" • ,..._ (S.0) or better In 12 •nlilal wwtr. The total number w ho qualified ia the fall repre.ent 13 percent al the student body. Thooe who made straight "A" aver11es (4.0) are: CoMa M"' -Mary M. Milk!'; Fountain Valley - Diane L. Baty, Gr•ce M. Mod&fm, and Rulh A. Schell; HunUnatoo Beacb -Beverly B. Dam, Paul J. U..., Berty L. Bri9coe, Jeri L. Chenelle, Mark J. ChrlstJa.n. Gary R. OtBotse. Peter R. Lynch Olrllllne A. Pickford, Martin G. Stpl~ Dtanne L. Shelley, John C. Spero. and Beverly A. Totman: Mkfway City -Bruce D. Saundtts; Westminster - R.,,noad W. Buckland , Thoma• G. Finch, Jamn R.. Jocob, Nancy M. Monlcomery, and Thoe! A. Nehrllnt. w .. ry. O.orit? Rt1d Bill t..1ry 8:$1 3i$) !:.57c ' ida'•'lllckorBny .. -..... dwly ---· ~'Z':.';3.29 'Tweak 'n S•' 'Musical' Bagged Candies lell~!lf NI'S·· 1111Uaw abJ "SllVf,.Rnt"WASlllMI :~= ~Foam Slippers 11 .... ._ 33c ~ Clot)!e f,....., styles.. -=.c;ja~!a~=l=1 99 '' ~ tneraales for •n111y SPICIUI & Sllal -~·~ PL w HA 11- ,._ Jtlr -ll ..... ... t111r 1pk1· -. Vacumn Bottle lrO loi _ .,._, lll43C !=~=-': 1 66 PEI Supplies -~~----1111!'!'"'"._"I At~!~*-"Cassette" 'r ___ ,.._ ""' 11111111 .... •ill -3gc~ sgc __ ...... c- ·-·""' 22 88 l••ll Lql '""''~JI • Dog Comb Portable Table Radio ~ J;_ ·: 5nc IUllllllE -lllJIM l1dio ..U • .-.. -···• \J- tlitteries rx N, Clrfeflt tor 11arnt m. ~ B h. Slider~• tlliq, telcs<opln1 """"'-DOG & CAT IVS !'°~ na 13.95 ;r;;:_: Aftc "Cassette" TAPI ~ 't\1-"' ...... ., --. . . f :'~~~rusb -....... d,.... ··-·-snc _,. 11!11 II ld.1 95 :: .: = Ital \J- Iii(. 111 "* "' • · 'Tie-Out' Stake gac ............ clllL • 1* 11.·lltdlt ltiltr • J It. Claml1 w/Cmr • 4 It. Cm111l1 W/Cttw • 2 It. T1t lltll1 . • 211. s.ce .. l'/lllltr • I C., l'llalallr =c~2.98 I 'Tie-Dlt' Chain 7nc !lilt -11 IO ll lq~. \J-DeCOrated Collars ' 1.69 Tw-Jnel CockUil-. =~ 2.9a Lat*t111111t •••• Jta • SClllCl PllSPlati• DOllUIMI Razor Blades I.a 1'i'r' sac '1 HltO -Mar· able Bunnin ill• sart&d pnltiD•a. s.;-- ""' fl -----· .. 2.98 -EuCrlle •1t r•1u ... --will ... '""'"'· _,,1237c BUNNIES TIMELY -Asst sins and pGlitiOllS • lltdll Pl i....r .... .. 3.39 Easter Egg Colors lltllln -ll'•"' ·-..i: PWT1c 1GGs ....... "'1•~6T3•':1.C11~ Ctlltfll ••llo• gp tt frtt Wil' 4SC biilr-"' al 11 '-.;;;;;;;;;.. _____ , • Cltllcelltl lrWp Mil • Cillcoi.tl Ill,_ sgc • Cheulatl hUlt cmtlf'I .... .,.. ...... WI 'Dapper Da'l'Ra!D Salid'· I "Grass" lHU'S -.n-,e:! Slr*f .._. :::::;93c :.,-:,: • ..,.&Jc ::::;, 31c • .,..... -.... • .. •11-. ORGAJIZE TOUR fllHZIR WITH "f reezettes" =.is:.~ Fmn l S..1 ••• Fmt 111111 •/UU "Par'' - :,"f PRESCRIPTIONS (!~ .• '-· age M PllCU rll'llrt. """"'· -l!!I ... _, ~ ... lltll 1'1111111 ti tlPI I NTSA Will I l ~ -I PYREX·WARE · •casserole' wflll Clm--;============ z 11-1111 ii,.._ of-1rplne-tr~ T It --wltll llllto I In 51111111 11111 II Call ••• _1 88 "Th C11111Uc DIKllllJ 11 lh Tiii" • • CREtvE 2CID "Salt & Pepper" srr .,~m ,. .. -.i., s1 .. 1•ni 1i1~1r1 •itll attrlCtiYI cw- 1rs IR IYOCldO '*· Sat If z llotl Bacl llt °"""' ..... ,_ C.. 2000 Ill lliller·• ..,.. Ill I Cfftf ...... Yw ail "''"' • -""' lrltlla , ............ -"' ... 1.98 hllled, ----~~ 2.75 --Juicers == ~= tr1111 c1la rf1 I • ftaral " Dafl deoip. 111.1111 ma1111 98~ 1.19 "Hamelawn" :::... 2.98 · IADtll' Sandals IADUCllKI Hair Clrler '"""d""' -.ii. .. Ill =-~:.. "':: ."':: 21 88 tial #II a ICll1Cll "Consolette" 1111 11'111 -fist, --~ .. :::·:... ""G.,,i 19.98 'Shat of -Steam' lroa SMUii -TOlcl a lot· ::.:-:: === 19 88 .--,, #1111 I ec. Opuer lftlt ....... IHllWlr -"""' ori •!Dr· ... --""" 9 98 ... 111111 ""' llC-11 • 7.50 • • ' • • ,14 , DAii. Y PllOT Children Are Not . I • Just Toys 'Bf J'.llor ,. lie-. MD Dur Dr. ~hn: I have Just reaa"'llie .Jetter In your CDlumn 'ffom the 'grandfather m.;. 'Ul*t about the treat- ment hia &randlon Wll rece.iV• in,. "lie made many good points, but u a young mother with two little sons I would like to add a view of the other lide. When a . falrly sane pair of people ·-grandparent! thq .,addenJy lose eve:ry oudce of faith they evu bad in lholr own offsprloi. Somehow thty managed to raise ·l!s, but now 'we. ., not the least bit ~ to raise our own y_..... . Man)' JWI have gone by, and the pressures of young married life plus little bab- bling chlldttn have •lipped beyond memory. THREE YEA.RS old is not quite a child, but ts not a ' baby. Anyone who Uva with a three-year-old knows t b a t DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE IOfDttimes the only way lo get a cbUd to listen is 19 yell. Uke the old jote -hit them first to act their attention. And aometbing else I don't think grandparents· realize : a parent wants desperately lo be proodothiayo u n gate r's behavior, e1pecially In front of hi1 (or her) own parents. Hence parents are ' 'o n guard." Unknowingl y the grandparents teeter-totter by doting on the erandchild. ''Look 1t BiUy burn the house -isn't he clever!" This sounds exaggerated but take a look at the gfve-a-ways in grandfather's very I e t t e r : .. wonderful grandson, lovable young character, i n n o c e n t mi s deed, beloved grandparenls ... Grandparents tend to forget that their grandchildren are not little toys to be pam pered and idolized. They are people aod as people they must learn the ways of the world and aometimes that means a partnl must punish, or yell, or IOD&d. Not to embarrass the child but lo guldo him. _ MAYBE the parents of my 1eoeralion are too hm:I. l con· ~ I am at times. But 1 am Jiving in what the generation before IM (who went gung-ho on the psychology books) grew up to be. I don't want my youngster to be a hippie or • college stu- dent showing no respect. If it were left to the wonderful grand~nta, my ltidt would never learn the meaning of the word "respect." 1bere is a generation gap. 'J1Us is a subject that no partnts and grandpaunts can slt down and talk about without burling someone. But tt would help if after reading my letter and "Grandpa's" letter each couple tried to give 1n a little. I could be more lenient and maybe grandma and &rand.pa could make a few rules stick. And who would benefit? The child. Sincerely -CA young mother who cares) OOMM:Elli'T: Readers of au generations are wtk:ome to e:rprea their views. I'll look forward to their reactions lo this mother's hone st ex· pression which hopea lo nar· row "the gap." MEDICAUTTES (Replies to Readers) Dear Dr. Ste.inc:rohn : ts It true that smoking wrinkles the 1kln? l am 27 and smoke 2 peen of cigarettes a day. I have a problem of cracked skin. I look 40. -1itiss B. COMMENT: 1 doubt that IJ'JlOking wrinklea the skin. BeUer look deeper. Beauty ·is not stln.cfoep. The question Is: What does 1mOking do to your heart . arterkl and lungs? I hope you'll excuse the moralizing, but most of uS are more con· cerned about how we look than how we feel. Otherwise, why do so many ln\•ite coronary diaeue, emphysema, bron· cbltll, etc.? Hijacking Ends In Suicides BERLIN (AP) -Two arm· ed hlj~s, apparently aeek- inl lo ruc:h tht w .. ~ failed in an atte:mpt to divtrt an East Gorman ,.tome.Uc airlil1er t day and committed suldde as the pine ianded, the olfkiol Eut German news 1gtney ADN reported . AON did not 1-----ldenllly the two. referring I!! tMm onl)r 11 •·armed ban· dlta.• ~·· WtdnHd1y, Mirth 11, 1~70 Citg-eountry foshio1ts discount priced ot,Zodys: POL YISTIR KNIT SHIRT 7.99 value )... S••• 26,_I Clitnic point.d collar, Ion; 1\;...,. 87 shirt •Ith flny golde111 button1, sin;I• pakh pocket 5 aftd 1id• 1lit, Ea1y-care pOlye1ter knit in 'White. P.,oCh, 1nOize, black; ovailable in th:e1 32 to 38_.. · STRIPED VEIT 'N PANT 14.99volue L s .... e 2~'4111 Toilor•d ve1t and pont Mt of cfi1p, 9'7 mi,.cl royOfl and ac•tol•, bond.d to triocetole to atay ilk•n.w fre1h. Pant• ho•• fly :a:ipper detoil· ir.g. HQY')', btoWti; 1iJ:ft I to 16. Hew for 1pr-i119. TUNIC DRllS·PANTS C. I••• Jt,.I Dreuy two-piec•.wt bOo.n a 'Irina collarM, 1le ..... ln1 tun le tap tftat. aoe• it alon• 01 a dr ... or pair• with th• l'ltCltching flare J.9 P"Uon panfl. Tiixtured oc.tol• bond.d , to ac.tote tti,ot . je colon of iet blaU GI' RO'fY bl~I ill tlut.7 to 1$. 12.99 value 7~•7 . ' ~·- Wtdntsday, Marth 1 t, iq10 S SHOP .. & SAVE · AT ZODYS . THE FASHION STORE! • 1 i --. VESIEE-LOOK SKIRT sn 9'7 13.99 v11lue D. lhe "Yett•• look'' is a sur• winner in foshion cin:ln. Coordinated toyon-<otton set includ•s ll'!ulti.button front 11e•ve1eu . "Yest and A-line skirt with choin belt. Novy, brown. lilac or wheat In .siz•• I to ~6. MEN'S MOCK TURTLE ACUAIE KNIT SHIRTS 2'7 4.99 value L ·S.•• ... r 40~1 Styl•; Hlaction ond . acnin91, too! Popular rnock turtl• ned, short sleeve knit 1him ond foncy patterns. Hand. '¥i'Oshoble, te:11turized atetote in . brown, l:ilue, green, white, black or orong• with. sii:es S, M, l, XL included in the group. MEN'S T FLARE LEG SLACKS 3'7 7.99 value F. Sne •••r 50%1 Trim ond tailored 1locb with popular bell bottom leg. Group inclu~•• 1tripe1 and solids with r•gulor ond _ Hollywood waistband styling. Royon and otetal• (9onle with nylon) in <dmel, grey, 1ta'Y blve, black or brown; wai1t 2? to _38. • • • • I • BRIGHT WHITE ROOMY HANDBAGS 3.49 -..11lue 237 Sa'I• 32"-f Big 'n fOOfl'ly ccuual bags for town <1nd travel. Rich, leottler-loolc wt.it• plo1tic detailed with "'"'!ti zippers, pockets ond iturdy doubl9 handle1 plus 1hining bixkle trim. . .... --:""> h BOYS' FASHIONS WllH ·PE_,_ANENI PRESS BOJIUS LITTLE BOYS' ITON ·SUIT G. Sn• 40,_I "Dreu•up .. two- pi.C. suits i!' two styles: owning striped focket "'ith aolid. 1hor1 ··~••I" I. panb °'solid color doubl• br•ast-2· 97 r ed iack•twith motthing long pants. I ·fortre13 polyester and cotton in light ·blue, brown, noTr, 2 to A. BOYS' NO-IR~N SHIRTS · H. S••• 41'91 Buflon-dowrt .2." ftl9e ·collar ond short 1l•evet. Permo· , • nent . preu polye1t•r-<ollon in 1s 7 · min~. red, surf blue, aq_uo, yel· . "IOW, brown; in si1e• I to JI. , BOYS' BILL BOnOMS 14 S••• 25"'1 fancy and lunC· 3,99 v.tff tional twill 'Wea .... pant• with two 9 7 pock•ts. b.11 botto"' legs. Poly-2 uter ond cetton i111 oli.,e, blue, whiskey; 1i1e1 8 to 16. At Zodyll • • ~;>----------.-_,. 'LITTLE GIRLS' BILL SLACKS Net •h•wn. Sev• 4S'6ol Perky floral print and •olid f,a.tel cotton pants with popular box•r boclt tfll'Cli~t. llu•, rnint/pink;1111ai1e, lilac or ora11ge in 1i1e1 4 to 6X. 1.79 fflMI \ • • e -& SAYI Ar z•YS-,,_. SAT.10A& Tt 9 P.& e -AY 10,.. 7. -l•l••IA i:-tMM ........ , ., ----AUi. -Tll L-HACll UAllllM·I-l'An ...... _"faUMN ""'""" ........ ,cat...... ..., ...... f!Wf, ., ., ......... . I. MVtll lfllm At C'"llllT ttAC• ll'l't. A UMOOI ............. ,..., l .... r~ .... YALLIY _. .. , ...... Cll _ ........ tfAH01"11tn.~•t·1..,...•-to1-coton1,1rl1•• t.woo••IH' •M•t•Mll&l ...... I "'· ...... ,.,. ., 17'11 ...... -··YlllA .. ........ , ...... ····-···· ............ , .......... ·---YI ---CA•llA .,... ... ..,..,.. 6 11_....Vllf ...... !ttMA .... M.ft. Af ....... ,........ CMMW .... At IMC .. ' • . l • . • \ ' • ' .. ----=-,-.:---;;-;;==·-.. ,-.. --...-----------,.~~--.. _. ~--:::::z::v . 8 PILOT-ADVERTISER "' r, S \\'tdntsday, Ma rth ll, 1'170 , .·EYERYTHING ~·F.ROM -·''A'' T.O ···z•i . . - 'AT ZtrDYS LOW DISC.OUN:T PRICE.SI.; QUALI TY DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES TAKE.¥0lJR CHOICE!. . POPULAR HEAVY DUTY PLASTICS : ,. llOOYIR l!LOOR :'0~·-\;;~ ~ --·l'IOOll WAX • .;. \ ~, S.lf.Pel•int, llOlt- yelftirtt1 floor WllJllC' • for latting waJC llH- tre, Dri• ill lli!'vh'- 67c voluea YOUR CHOICE Choose from: • 12-qt. pouring pail • 14-ql. waste basket •Giant s1ze bushel. laundry basket . SPRINKLI• I ITIAM·DRY IRON I ·e ByWESTINGHOUSE ..... NMll '-... 11.97 899· I value I I UMS plain tap I •ter. Sprink• lei on all Ml· I t i11gsl I • NIW CRINKLE .&: ltATINT PUMPS MODACRYLIC STRETCH WIGll ' Compare at 7.99 551 SQUARE tOI boldly butlled with heavy hi0ri1e heel. Solt. •qui.hy crinlle patent in blatk·.or white. Mi1Je1' and teeM' 1i1H 5-10. STaAP HAPPY p11mp styled with' oll th• swin; and swag9er of the rie.,,,..loolc. ·Whi,. smooth or bloc\ patent. Miises•, teeri1• si~es.. 5-10 •• 1970 INCOME TAX GUIDE OR PERSONAL FILE YOUR CHOICE I~! INCOME TAX GUIDI. New 1970.di·. lion of J.K. La11er's widely u1ed tax guide. Compact, eary-to-read infor- mation on 1a•e1 and related subjet'h. CRUSHowtROOF WIGS 1111 3 STTUS ZODYS·REGULAR lOW· PRICE 1·4,97 , •• SAVE 4.91 . . . MIA STYLI Pr•<ut in a charming ;Gamin style, forms o 1leek, casval cap wllh hint of wave, flatter• irtg tO ..,.ry facial shape. PIXlf ITYll Long eno11;h to tfyl• "n you like it,H shart ·~" iO 1wil'ig withovt 1eHin9. CUILY TOP STYLI With c11rly .top 01td ban;i, co""'1ibl• gvich•1, orl· f11tly cet lo' fro111e 1h• foe• in ICtillptuNcl c:11ryes. • • Pll$0NAL flLI St11rdy. compact file •ith easy-carry handle~ indeic folder$, lock and ••Y· Our ••1.-2.~3 11.i.1q1.111.q.1:1 -.. ------------.. ------------""' AUTOMATIC I 4-ILICI TOASTER 14.17 value 999 I WIJM COUPON I ~:::;~-· Jfainily 1iz• 4-I slice autOMC1tic I foaiter •ith chrome fini1h, I '_, .... , ...... """ C-OUIOll I LlnLE LIAOUI LEATHIR SHOii t Xooly• low prl<• 3 59 GenviM leoth•r bcueball shoes with apprOYtd rnolded sol• •and c:'leots. Po~ ulor .+iite c•I· lar rnod•I. Lln .... LIAOUE fllLDER'S GLOVE 6.47 ., .... 4a7 Pref•11io•ally cnftH top grai11 1""1er wlth gen- .._ rawhide lac. Int, nylan stilth· Ing, 1970 model, leolhe; linr:d. l _.. ...... -...... -- 1 .... ___ , .. ,_ .. ____ ..... i-o .. -..... -... -.... -........ ...-w ...... AWRNllUJ' .. .,. _________ ............. '1Erl!!!J3C!;Jl~il:ll'" - - -~ ~ ''·'·i&JJ.1114·':' .. l ' PLAYTEX RU.BER GLOYIS %0DYS RIGUU.R lOW PllCI 17c 59:.· SAVI 21c Durable, fl•lllibl• rubber glo.,., protect• your hands from hanh detergenh and water. Aqua, yel· low. RIGHT GUARD . DEODORANT . XODYI llGULA.a. LOW PltCI lie 59c SAVE 29c Fomou. "lght Guard anli•pirant cf•odor- o~t tproy kHps yoll dry all cloy. S-ar. °%•GAL SHAMPOO OR CREME RINSE: '~ ZODYI REGULA.I LOW PllCI 17( SAVE 21c ·C~• •5151'• ca"'. . tilt, l11xury thompoo ar crem• rinse In a handy plaitic bottlir. LISTERINE ORAL . ANTISEPTIC ZODYS llGULAll LOW PllCI 9ac SAVE 14c fre1hens breath". lceeps mouth heol- thy. Kiili 9111M o" cOntad. Big family 20-oz: bottle 1i1ir. , WILD, WHIRLING WHIZZ)IR TOP 1.37 ... , ... 97c Jr! The world'• wild~ •1t whirler· with three trick topJ.o Different colora. needs no batter~ i1' or strin;\. GIRLS' PATENT DRESS PUMP C•mpor. ....... 331 OLD STYLEf 10·YR. WHISKIYI COMPAR~ AT 4.99. 2 99 fifth EJ1>9cially selected from choic1, rar• 1locks of fine, mel- lowed 1traight whifo lci1s, oged for 10 yeol'1. Stoc'lc·vp riowl I I I • LONG LASTING I SPONOI MOP, I ZODTI HDUUR 79c LOW PllCI 1.47 I • BABY WORLD NIGHT LIGHT 2.47 ...... 199 a, day 0 decoro· live tey to amu1• baby, by night a nurll/Y tablir lamp with soft, ·friendly glow. Safety switch Ul apprO'l'ed. ---• --· MO&IR L-&IAClt AMA•M·~IZllA llARll AllA•m.-..a&TH --YlllA M .. l.IMI ntnMT ...... At•• SIMI' _..,_. .,_., •f ........ n L ..VIM lfllff Al C........ eMCtl l"I .. A , ... ( ... flt ................ "' U1MM AnfAA'fL Al nnnt' liilM llff. ., ...... ; ..... ~-YAUn' -auat' &lut1t•Te11 &U.Ctl IAllTA. ••• •A-..... ---•A••• PAlllC ,.......uun.Cllfllt-: ............ ,...... i9fl6>f6"J;ff'llt*.......... .. ................... ~ ................ ,.,..stun_ ~· llCMNl#Ullf ............ _M.Ye. .. , ......... f#AIMA CA""'" M'tt. "' HHoCOf .. _ _....,I .f DAILY PILOT JS , Men in Service 'llETURNS TO U.S. Sgt. Wllll•m· D"Amo,. Sgt. \\·1wam D'Amott, son c:i~ Mrs. .and ttfrs. William D' Amore of !223 Laurel Place, Newport Beach, has returned to lhe United States and is at Letterman Hospital, S a n Franci!co, Jfter beln, Wound- ed in actian In Vittnam. . The y o LI n g lnfantrymanJ member of Company·C, First Battalion, 503rd 1 n rant r y Airborne Brigade, wu wound- ed and suffered the loss of his right foot when a booby trap exploded· while· he was lf:nrin1 in Vietnam. A graduate of Newport Harbor High School, he at- tended Orange Coast Colleae before entering the service. He was awardtd the Purple JJeart Medal. U. Mlcboel W. c.adle, USN, son ol Mrt. Wilfred A. Condie of 201 ·Esplanade. Newport Beach, was awarded th• Navy Achievement Medal in ceremonies at I.be Naval Hospital, San Diego. The lieutenant wa5 presented the medal for his superior performan~ of du- ties in the f~ld ol profwi-O:nal achievement. Airman WlWam R. Willis Jr., whose puents live at 8322 Carnegie Ave., Westminster, has been assigned to a unit of the Strategic Air Command, Westover AFB, ?.lass. for training In the data 1yatema field. The airman is a gradua~ ol SL Antbooy 1118~ School, Loa( Beach and attended L<>nt Beach City College befor• entering the serlice. Airman Wllllam P. Verosko Jr., son of Mrs. Zelma E. Nielsen ol 2871 Club Mesa Place, Costa Mesa, hi! bee.o asilgned to a unit of the Strategic Comm and, Van- da"tberg AFB, for tr&inini: u a security policeman. The airman is a graduate of Costa Mesa IDgh School and attended Orange C·o a 1 & Colleie. HIS father, William P . Verosko Sr., Jives oo Hickory Place, C061a Me1a. Airman l .C. Mlebael C. Paton, son of Mr. and Mr1. Bruce L. Paton Sr., of 1711 ~ndrew1 SL, TustJn, has ar .. rived I"' duly at LIUle Rock AFB. Ark. The ainnan, a com- rnunication1 s~la11st with " unit of the Air Force Com- municatiOl\I Service, is a 1161 graduate of Tusti'tl High School and atrendtd San Antonlo College before enterlng the service. Pfc. Jamer Funk, %4, whose sister, Mrs. James Johnson lives at IM Cove St.. Costa ~en, has been usigned to the Old Guard Fife and Drum Corps aa a special bandsn1an, at Ft. 'Myer, Va. The private whooe home Is at 4156 Briab,ane, Irvine, is a former Orange County Pl"l; ning Department employe and urban planner 1nd pro}ect coordinator of the Oran1t County Prorre&s Report. He i.11 a 1raduate of Costa fl1e1a f:Dgh School, 1963 and recei\fed his AA dtll'ff froni Orange Cout Colleae and hia BA decree from Ca1U'ornia State College, Fullerton. The Old Guard of selected peraomel t1 the oldut active Infantry unit In the United States and serviu as Honor Guard ol, First Battalion, 3rd Infantry . The colorful group whoee uniforms dupllcale thoR worn by the fifers and drummers of Gen. Walblncton's4 Anny use Authentic! wooden'filts 1nd hand made drums • BOAT BUFFS ~IP11011 lM••lliey 1, tft. •lllY' f11/l-th111 M•""t Miter .,_,., .. 111 eny n•..,.11•""' 111 Ot•1tt1• C.1111f'V, Hie e••l111I~• ,,..,.,~, ef ~••H11t ,,.; yeclctl"f NWt )• 1 Jelfy f1th,...•f the DAILY ..llLOJ. _ ' l • • • ' .. .. . " JI l>All y. PILOT Wfdnesday, Marth 11, 1~70 I • '""""""'""' Her•~~ !lt'iVt.~m.~!e. 10 LEVITZ '1,000,000 Cl1 1 tok.t odvontoge of close-out prices on Famous fum iture brands. H u r r y to Le vitz:! -liUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA, MARCH 1970 Bar1ai1 buoters , , , This Is ii! The sale you'1e waited for! $1, 000,000 worth of the aatlOl's flan! name brand fUrllture! Ottered to you at snlngs you must see lo bellete! Thousands of Hems, some H·IS, some brand new factory tr~h but cer· tallly alt at UNHEARD OF SAYINGS TO YOU! This Is truly a .b ar1a1n hunter's paradise! No matter ·where you l11e la Soutben CalHornla *e belle1e your tfme will be well spent when you come to Letltz. Come-In, compare , •• that's all we ask. We know you won't go home disappointed! This Is the most exclt lats.ale we~e ever ollered to pro1e to you, the homemakers of southern California, just what Levitz means In qualify and snln1s. Le11fz Warehouse and showroom is the talk of the furniture Industry! (250,000 square teer, 13 acres and 5 mllHon dollars In ln1entory probably makes us the largest sln11e turnHure outlet In the world!) You be the Judie , • , but don'.! delay, This sale must be strict~ nrst come nrst sened. TODAY 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M ; " ' 1,, .. WQt. ill~hn .... G ihl .;@ th~-·~·~ ~· I tt [IQtlltllll( shOuld bl funl Thi• Its-WtlllUI loollUSt wl -.yslable 1~!lvts Medlternnelft ity nc vi 1"'• nse mt bosttsa ewt aivts the llosttss ror ..,... 1lor111. Tht lust n&ht lUm dMst of dr1wt11f It ha ' Mlcartl ta11 "*' tinlt to tnjoy her suests , , , Mil at Ma s.wlnp tod'fl Ula? r1slsts 1t1i111 ~ 1Cr1ttMtl Tht htlpt litr tttvt foods Ind drinks In REO.· 19.95 ................... SJI 1Mrftd ai:cent tor JOUI' Mcor at \t u. _. 1ttr1etlwi llll!lfttt mrl R's I r--------...., f off now! ... a IOPflittlelttd lllOdm 0.SIJn IJI ricll II.ACK WIOUGHT IRON lt:G. 139.!S .. · · • • • •· · · · · • · · .. ·-..._ .w "" be yours It *' 111-· IOOK sHtl. " F Slmpficl.7 of desl1n livt• tllh MMlful time law Jte&1 ~~'11'1\ tPK=·*~ns...~ RR. l3' · ·' · · · .. ···'' ··" ,$11 lfO, $If ................. s9 1 rich welftut fln!Jh. Dlo't lllu ttlh Tbla Lm: *!"I clblM:t wit store ,... 'flll Ptrltct ltt11 for sholli111 off bu ! tntitt coll.ction In dust free saf•tr • • Jlllf pr~ 1t1rM ••• w1H brint ''' !!95 e.u rllhl tt )'OW fincer tlps. This Chim-lddtddfMlltit stytln(lo)'Olll'span. REG. ' .• ' ..... '' .. '" ' ..... -Int Cololllll drot>-lrorrt dtslp hi ll'A kll decort ltautiful 'Im p·o r It d This llncerit dwl , I• perfKtl It'• f11ip1t 111Ua 1 Ptrftd lift Sm Mr wrourtil lroit •1th tllre1 da1k oal small /11 wldtl\ ytt HI ,ientJ of ... ~ now wooden shelVIL HunJ fer nu ont! 11 ,,act W 1tof1 JOlll' .. dc""'•,thlntil REG. tz9.95 ............ : ..... 63 It's jiust r1aM fir tlllt fOOll ~!;.,' 111'~.~ro:_rw1 ly Joltnao... CED~~ESTS 1-Daks REG.·179.9S .................. $95 VAW!S • I I·---... --;.\ ___ . Bmett dtsl1ned tllls lllncbam1 ~ l'O l••.•s .............. s7 5 This cbtrrnln1 Coloflltl d~~ fe11ui11 J Im Bad!elor clltst with • JOCllllY hutch. Y11t1'U hlYt lo bt hert etrly to 11rp Mictrtl ttl, to ~•!.ist stains. It pUtt t!ld en4 lo 10111' SPIC• pro. takt tdnnt111 of this t111tatle sentcllu 1od bwrrs! It 'ka1 4 riJllrnY' bltm.s be1111!fully. Deep ttk tct1nttd olferl l,lfll foll~. Uned • ln ·cedar drtwtn , •• Dnt Is Jiit size~. You 131, b1 rich etMnas. Hup anlnp now! chests! brl1 Ameriun btnch top ,..._ thl •1.i. ....... . REC. 209.95 · .. · ....•.. , · · .. · 135 ,tylt 111 rich m1pl1! This 11 m1l1 !tele~u'f 1 •"qui~., ... $.I: today 5·01t4WElt ::U~t:. ~:i~:1if5fil(h: REG.189.95 .................. ~SS LINGERIE CHESTS locks Ind full 1torq1 wair1nty! This k1ullf11I Fnneh PrO'l illCial m - OVElt ~ ·OFFI Doll't mlu t1,1tl 11,y desk Is Unlsbed in 1nti(!ue while S with aotd trim! It his 1 lift Ill~ l'l1ib •EG. ,,,ts...... . . . . . . . 48 Ill •• n 11sa u w a llfndr m1••up ~lrroi! Sa-it we1 \., Start yOilr dt llc1t1 clothi111 betcr • , • Tfltst Bautt Spanlsll will 1111itt ttie warehou11 w1y. tilully llld Slfely ill JOUr cha kl ot i11 dttp pee.an 1taftd 7f' llilh and l(G. 111.95 .... , ...•. , ...•.. ~97 a wNll Clf Colonlal m1111t llnatrl• f&ltlll'I 5 1htlw1 plus 1 roomy drawert chest. ktll havt 5 'OOll!Y dr1wers hp them tot;ether Of lolY tht111 ai!W-ENTIRE STOCK thlt n dl.lst·PfGOftd Sid fllll1hed ty, Sm lh llOW! Of BEAUTIFUL· DESKS ta a 911:11 smoothM11 11 tllty'H RE'-129.!S · •• · ·" ·• · • · ·" • · .. $66 ltEOUCEO 11e\'er Intl JOlll' clotlllna:! You "" Tiii perfect •IJ to dlsplly JOtlf 1111'1 Sm • 111uc~ 11 ~ Oft 1 tirlf over ~ today It lnitil ailllc:tl011! lbis handsome Sj)lnish &JM ulectiOll ol y 0 d 1 r1, Colcr.ial !=========:r==~=======ir::~~:;=~======r::;:=;~:;:======i::::;=;:;:;::::;:::=== I ,II:!:", "l,%"=::,.::"":l,~,:n::"l::::,.:in~ I tltllMt Is llrthe11tically 1tyltd 111 w1n11 ffltdt Ind &ptnish Mst;s. Mtnr finished 11 dttp walnut! All trlwtt1 peelft. It Mids 10 (llRS bthll'ld sfhlinc popu11r woodl t!ld flilisht:s. luge 1r1 clovet.al1ecl and ckJstproafff t. 1tor1 lln• daon thlt loc~ llld ferlLlfa 11 llld 11111n 4tsb included_ Ill e1rly Tnr leys Tt Value 1-ltdroom Sets Z-Odd Dnssers 3-ll1ttresses .t-lllghl Slam ,.,, ''"''"" '" "'""''' ,.,,., • ~'!' ~-~·'~ '"", """" "' 2 ... ,., ,.., ,.. .... ....,. .:,.:..:, _ _;:._ _____ l ----------·l ·----------11 ;:=========:1 ;::;::-:;;::;:::::;;;::~jM!carte tap relills sttiM, ser1tcties uuul1 lili..,""""' lft "''base. • 11tr· 1111 disk whits. 1-lldroom Sets !~~~jtetheca~~1sa~n 0! t~~r~r~~i~ ~:tv~~ril~ :Js ~ssa"tt~~:r~:e~! ~~r~~1:;n er~~ 1:;~ei,'io!.111 = :C~. ~J~ .. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ·. · .$63 ~W.~'JJ~i1!,~.'!:~·:~:. '~"':.:·.~~=·~· ·=11 :· 1 ·.:l' i!.In!tl!:======::;:=~ Z--Odd Drt11trS Si>1nish bedroom sullt bY" BasseU! You dresser. It is finished in MtiQUt white 3.PC. 1rlined pet1n and added a 1111tcllln1 Fr111th 'rovinci1I Chest.(ln-Ch1st Hind-WE'VE BEEN UP ALL DAY AND All NIGHT uve over $100 on tht Micart1 tt>pped, 1nd acc1nt1d in sky ,blue 111ith raJud QUILTED KING SIZE Concerto NP lo resist ll\llfS ind 111in1! c111!ed In the Old World trtdilion by Gffil"G READY fO• OUR A•'•'UAL /"l_'r .1.-n _.. 3-llaffrlllH double 6ress11, tht frtmed pl1te a:l1ss panels. All drawen are fully. dust· Two drawers! Slv1 lh. todl} at ln'ltl! Thom11vlllt 111 warm distressed fruit· ,., " rll"'I ... i.,-c,.,"" • "~I Sl1nds mirror ind i lull or queen slzt held-proofed, dovtt1lt11 and finished to ' IEODING SET REC. 119.95 ................... $60 wood finish, fivt m1s1lv1 stonia:• ;..••CE SALE. WE'RE CLOSl•'G OUT,,· All .,_... b di t ! n 1 t SJ 35 drawers with in1Tic1te c1rv1d front. '"" '"" R','c' .299 95 1188 ·~,•,·snag,,·,'"o.'" 11 "1 mes ~omp e e •EG. 179.tS ........ .• This layely Bassett nilht sllnd hu ' Solid bn1s tlll'dw••· Simply m11n!li· ITEMS THAT HAVE •Ee•• 1•• OUR ST.OCK 5-0 d Chtsll · · · · ...... · · · .. · · .. · wi a me P a t g au mirror. mw ind ht1l resistant Westin1hous• D '"" 1., ; • Ddifht !ht air1 in your Uft • , , whet!ter REG. 209.95 .................. $115 Hothin1 tan match comfort and Mlclrta top thtt wipes sparklina clttn cent! FOR OVER 60 DAYSI 1--0dd lldS •he's 10 or 100 .• , with lhis ele11nt Coloni•I cllarrn from Bassett to you when ycu combine lt with King size with a damp cloth! ti his sophistic· REC. $299 · · · · · · · · · ·· · ·•· · · · · .$172 II white and 1otd French Provincial eel-• , , 11 a Levitz list dar salt p1ice. 1tretch{lllt room. you have' sleep-ated Unes In 1ichly ar1ined w1lmrtr 7·D rewer lln1trlt Chest bl "Krebs L..-..----,--_,,..,...,..,.,,..,.,...,,,.,...,.,.,..,...,...,....,. 1-llllCI lftlOYS 1oom suite by Bissett! Included in the This roomy dresser in honey.toned Ina comb!nillon that just can't bi Hurry IM this. Sleng1I". The perlee1 Item ar 11tr1 Bnstt Sp1111sh consolt Js crafted ta Tiit" desk 'lii1h bath beau\J and priltli- l-ll"•I low cle1ranc1 price is the roomy, 1111ple has dust.praoled, dovetalltjj btal! This kin1 sizt set Includes REG. 69.95 ................... $« slOr•ll•· 54" hi11h, 11" wldt. Priced at rich pecan wl!JI wrouaht Iron trim, calily In 111Jnd. It's 1 rich Col0Ai1I Ot· a Mic1rta topped dieutr, the f1¥11tjj drawers llllt art finished so they won't 111 .inn~is17in1 mattrtss •lld 2 bo~ This lovtlY white nirht stand ls a h111e snin11! U11 It lo brfahtetn wP 1n odd Wiil w slsn in 1ntiq111 white \l'iith roomy I t-Uvlng ROlm pl1tt 111ss mirror and 10ur choice ol eve1 sn11 your deficat1 clothlna. Tiii· ~f~rll!; !ht ;:!~t•1 you 1 ire• charmint Colonill style by Bassett. It REG. &9 · · · • • • • •. • • • • • • • • • •. ·• 4! to wrrn runts tt your entryway! ir1w111 11\d a laminated tJa5hc to~ to 'I 11-C"afn 1 twin, foll or queen sirt headboard! in&, frtmed pl1te 111ss mirror included! · feituns a mar·resist~nt IAiCirU top 33 ASSORTED CHESTS KEG. 119.95 . , ..•.....•....... $56 resist s«1ttl\ls and 1t1!1s! n • • REG. 289.95 .................. $177 R[G. 129.95 ................... $8ii ind is ptrlect for ~our liltft Cid's 4!" bookcase •• , th• perfect W't'f to IEG. 99.95 , .......... -... ", ~~S :11-RtCklrS Intricate cmin1s in a f1amed, scrolt room! As·ls S 4 7 stor1 111 your bOok5 ind knick tntcks! lusett plusn th• Yount tli.>ftnt lr1 wa~ desi1n accent this rich PKln LEVITZ SAVINGS OFFER YOU FAMOUS REG. 69.95 ................... 45 '-==========I You choOsa from the Cololtltl maple or 1'M' home lrflb ttiis mOiler• wefnvt ,t Z-RtcllftlfS Sparrish bedroom set by Jahnsoll-C1rper. • Modem walnut stylu ••• batll htvt desk and ltutclL Tiie des~ has a mM· •• ~1..,a-'" "" homt "''"''" ~'"'·' • FURNITURE BRANDS AT THE YEAR'S LOW-NIGHT STANDS 8--0dd IHI •••'I''"' doon to'"''"' ort! """'"' top '"' 2 °''I""•'~ • 11.--. 1 • drawer trlplt dresser, t lrrmed pl1!1 Zl Assorted Nifht Stands s.v1 O'Jtr in. 1t Lt\'ltt Cltarlnet Stiel shelf • Ind ti tllpped by tM 2·shdf It .I Dlnln• Room ll•ss mirror, I full Of queen size head-EST SALE PRICES! HURRY TO LEVITZ! •.• , '15 Takt your p1Ci of a twin Of lull 1lu tlE&. 19.95 ..... ' ..•.....•... '.$44 hulcll witll bllilt-11 li&hU .--. llt &oard plus a h1ndsom1 nlatrt stand! DON'T MISS OUT! GET YOUR SHARE! l l L.---~-"_..;,.;;... __ _,I hetdboard ind laotboattl in in e1epnt Stc1r1 )'Otlf tlltirt re.:tird eolltction in IEG. 239.~ .................. ~125 't5-Dl11ftlS IEC. 469·95 ..•............... $297 whit• f1tneh Provincltl styli. Don't dust·free, scratcll.lm sifet)' •.• riaht Haney-ltrttd maple hishlia1111 Ill! att· The beauty and d!.rnbi1itr ol solid o•k L..-------------------~I ~:!"~cths~\~! ~iM~~l·:~edeo'k,'~~ miss this chanct to SIVd rt Yout fi1111r tips ft this dramatic th11rtit. styli111 of tlli1 Colorii dtsk! 'I S-Occaslonal Chairs headline~, \h~_re1~akblt SDa1nis,h bf:ij. Farnall! Bassel! quility rs bllat in ta rull, firm s~pport th it only 1enuine niiht stand by Ba!!ett. l.licarti top REG. 79.9S .... , ..........•.... $33 S(i111ish rtttlfd cabin•~.!" deep oak It •n a Micartl 10111 to resist stains 11-LampS room sui 1· ,,,.. ...... 1rwer tripe resstr this lovely rnode111 double dresser in Uniroyal Uhi foam 111bber can 1ive to ralist mais and scntch'es. lhis lovtly Bassett 11K1dt1n he1dbolrd with .1 car'fed slldin1 Ul/\lrS. It 1111 a and ICtltches. YOll &aY• lln!osl: * tames complete with a !rimed plate tic.Illy 1n1ned walnut. lt features a fall is you1s 11 1 krn, low 11le prlca t i1t rich wain~ 1111 been drntlc•llJ Formic• top lo resist scrllefles alld ROW! 1 l-ICCHSOr"5 11us mirror plus .• kin1 .Vre he1clloard W11tinatiause Micartt top thtt's, st1in tl>d•Y only! This twin silt set includes llE · 64·95 · · · · · • · · · · · · · · • · · · .$42 nduced tor our Int drt stlt! Your sta1M! 36" wide! Hurry for this • , • REG. &t.95 ..........••...•.... 34! REG. 'u~that 111st can'l. be btaixio and burn relistarrt and comes complete a foam mll\1esi and 1 ba-1pr!nr! CLOSE.OUT-All cholet el 11ueen °' lull 11111 Don't 50% 0111 ISO This irac:eful. e1epnt field fr• · · .................. with a framed pl1t11lw rnirrw. Tremendous slee11in1 comfort! miss this bllJI . REC. 99.9$ .................... vtncltl O.sk 11 perfte1 lfor \be bul) j leclrMlll Slfl l r---------,1:''!:[G~·,'.!~39';'.9~5::'." .. i: .. '::.i. .. i: .. ';.:0"·:i:··c.·;:··:;·1=97 REC. 149.95 ................... $95 ltEMAININ~ BOX IEC. 69.95 ................... $« far tht talented hostess! Thit be1utilul W01111n ltt your life! 11 b l~isi.d tr ----------This htlldlome Spanish triP.le dresser The ul!Jma te in 1 1t1eat night's sleep! SPfttNGS ANO Thi beauty ind durabihly or solid oak Sprnislt ctlllretle blf makes p1rty. wh11' with 1ald trim llld hu • Jlllj ~.PC, is 1ecenl'ed by h1ndsam1 ar1l!ed drawer Famous Simmons comfort ind st11tcll-MA.TTl:ESSES A.T ONE 11 1ours 111 this kln1 sl11 h1adbo1rd f1vin1 1 breeze! tt has a lilt top with 1 1nd scr1tth r11lst1nt MIClrtl tOll ICl.llptur&d Anes liV• th!• B1nett mod-COLONIAL fronts and cr&fted in rich cak, It has a 0111 Kini size room! Wt'v• reduced this GIVE AWAY PRJCE , •• it'• perfect lar 1n1 S;11nl1h decor orm!c1 ,ervina 11ea plus a nquar Bassett quality! Roomy Wiwer 'lface tr~ bedroom a tlean1 fresh look to rive mar and burn resistant plastic top and top qua ity qullted kin1 iize innenptin1 s2 4 ind Is accented by rich c1ivln1ll Hurry 1tlelf, 1tiss nck 1nd ice lr•Y bthind 2 IEQ. 179.95 .......... ·~ •....•. $91 JOUr bed!fllfl 1 s~ac ou1 air! Take home MAPtE BEDROOM comes comp!ele with 2 tl'l'in framed, mattress ind 2 box springs tor the Y•w• C~oic•/••-pc ...... , for this! S1v1 over Y,! carved 4oors that lock! C&ther you r Detp pin• ments the 1111hentic styt. fht roomy doub I dnner '1itb mai· SJOO pl1t1 glas1 mirrors! lirst limr ••• don't miss lllfs chlnce' Come in 1n ma~e t decision, Do REG. 139.95 ....... , .•••..•.... $&! 1u11ts round tlld tl~I in the compli· Inc of ltlls Biuttt Colanlal ftik wit• 1esl1tant top, the framed. plate ~a: •EG. 11t,fS ........... REC. 279.95 ................. $181 to sa~e! you w1nt In innersprin1, mattress Charmine Colonial styling in w1rm m• mentsl 1 Jiticlrtt ti>p! A perflCt dt;), lor det ·~!~r i!~d 0~' 1~~ ~.~ue~ic:\z• 1 :ek ~~fli~~e '"l1:n;-;:" r~r~i{~~! ::s·,~a~'f~{1:1~~~:1•d~~~ffs ~I~ ~~:~e2:t::Y ;;;e·1 ·b~d ~;~~~ ·,:,jj~!:~: :zeb1°'\v!P~:~: 1':e:~i1 1•11·1 • ~~\ ~1! i~~o!~ol:!u1°1th~1~~~~d ·~~ :~;, 2~~ts. ·~; ·;;;r·. ;~t~~~.$~i~: t.1~~d!~1 lDts 01 -~nf·apacs llEG. 199·95 .....•..........•. $126 an •celess styli 111 )'OUB in lhis ishe in 1nliqu1 w~itt with 1o!d trim twin or lull sbe and 111 m01Jnled on These lllill sell out quickly. bed lr1m1 at 1 low, low 1111 P'rlce! this dr1m1lic Spanish 71" cr1den~I Jt IEC. 11!.95 •..•......•...•.... ~7~ Colonial ehlfll't • • • 11 a Wt dar. sale Bnselt rn.tftle bedroom set with 1 and has 1 Weslin1hcuse Mic1rt1 ~P le smooth-rallin1 usters to make cleanina !::::=========I Hurry for this/ Is cr1fled in rieh peca1t tfld Ms 4 J.1ce! This honey-toned nu~I• suite i11-roomy dresser. framed PlllsburKh resist sc11ttties and mars! Complete 1 snap! Hwry lor these! 5-0dd ChlSfS REC. 59.95 ................. , , .$32 door1 with handsome 1ritltd fronts! eludes 1 doubl• dres,se4 wi/ 1 ~'ct;nr Plate Class mirror. 1 lull slze head-with • framed Pittsburgh p!att glass REG. 9.95 ..............•. , . , ... $6 B11111t tun 1izt heldl>aud In 1 chl1111-lots of stonlf sp1t1! Way ovtr YI off! tiouu Mlc«I• top. 1 ~rdp 1 : board pl11s 1 11u1dy, s!eel btd lnm1! mlr1or 11 hu11 clearance s1vin1s! Outtn silt comfort by flmous Sprina ,,.,...,.-..,.._,.,.....,....,..,...,.....,..11n1 Colonl1l 1tyl1 comes corn pit le with REC. 219.95 , , ..•.....• · · .. · · .$!7 ::::~:1~~~1 te~~r~:. ~.1 mist :his Don't miss out •• , be he rt eai ly REG. 199.95 ....• · · · ...... · · · · $127 Air. Thts 60"xSO" innerspfinc mal· This 1le11nt French Pm incltl chest by 1 sle1I btd frtm• , . , evef)'lhinJ yo11 Sturdy she I bed framu idjtJst 10 twin buy.~!. llurry to Lniti lactlioa todiy! la llk.1 ldvintaae of this low, low "tlnk·Tiylor" £.Drawer Ttiple Dresser, tress and bot sprini aives you Jhe Bissett is s~led In stunnini 1ntique needl Th• htldbalfd is rinisl\ed 1n a~ or lull ~Jie. Etell is llKIWlttd on cist1r1 IEli. m .95 .................. $147 clear1nc:a price! 21-<1aors pJu,s T11iin ~) Mirrc,r:_.Flni0·stted ed:r1 IOorn }'Oil need for 1 tiuly 11eit ,"",,','.,' 00Mlh1.,1 ~~!101,1 l~~~e.~ roomy, ~!,•,1~~'•'-~, blend with 1ny Elrly for clean na: and m~t~a •,!SI Md,"'.,' n w•m ecan w1U1 1111 en11c r1ss ni1ht's sleep! Scientifically desianed . . • """'l-fl ...... ·~ · 1 • • "'" ....,., ......... is reldy ta be 1tt ....... d "' your t · hardw11e. Ou1lity Eastirn constructi on, with quilted co~er! l1nisbtjj to a norHnl( smoothness. IEG. 79.95 ·. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · .$43 hoard. Support your 1ntttress so it 16 IED~OOM SUITES Thom1svllla btd<aom suite ••• the complele!y cluslpfOOf, Ont Only! REG. 149.95 .................. S9& REC. 139.95 ·••••••···· $&1 O.li1ht thl littlt &111 in rour lilt can aiv• yoo tile sllflilOff )'OD nttd for AT TltEMENOOUS lligttest qu1li t1 11 the lownt clear. REC. 67!.95 ................. $288 1.----------.1 Splnlsh Annoire by Johnson.Carpar ..• with this h11utll11I r.hlll CtllOPJ bed 1 !rt•t ni1ht's sleep! SAVINGS ance Jll'~• ever! This be111tilul .sui11 is ''Thomasville" Tiiple Diess'r Rast. Fi,.. COMPLETE 4.pc thr top in Sptnilh s1J1in1 bos! Thi• from Bauett. Th• hi1h poster bed RE . !.95 ...................... $6 crilted 1n h.anij.rubbed pee1n with hand ished in rich. WiMlll Pecan. Nine icornJ HOlt YWOOO BED SET Iara• chest has 5 drawers and 2 doon! comes campltl• with 1 canopy fr1me! United Spinish console ill !ht perfect MEOITERRANEAN KNEEHOlE DESK uo. ,,..,, ......... ,, 1) 00 i Famous B1ss1tt qullit)' Is !DIM i~ this bewtlful Mtdil1mn1an dt1~ in rlcll ch1ny ••• you 1aw: 1:1 1t ! Ltviti tochy! 11 tlas 5 ~ drt'll· 1rs 1nd ii 1tyled in 1 poillll1r kneehale lleslcnl B1 hen ..tien t~e doors aptn •.. don't miss wt! VAlUES $ 142 ~Ned actent,s! Our cle11~nct price dr.wtrs !or imp le stora!e ind com-,68 It's !ht perfect or1tnizer fur all )'OUr This is !ht perftel till! Buy it now accent lor yt'IUf livini room or •ntrJ 10 ltt.tS .... • .. · · .. · 1n.tlude1 the tnp.le diesser with 2 doois. plel•ly •·•lprool, ''' '' y•. l !G 11 , '' husbtnd's clathin• 11 tremendous sil t 11vln2s! 1 0 h d d•-s w·th ''''" of -16 I I d f I OU • • ........ ".. REG 179 95 ~ $125 ,,, 179 95 197 WI)'. IS Cl/Vt ""' I IJ Hurry tcM !hue! w,1 on.,, "o"•·d "'f.1 "f!'l1 ·,1~~~att0 1lassh m,rrors. REC. 499.% , ................. $1&8 r..,~,,·., 1,, "''' for , I''" 'I 1-.·-..-· -.· ·;,;·-· ·,;,· ;,;· ·-· ·,;,· ;,;· ·-· ·,;,·•· ........... -.·-...-· -. ....... _. ·-· ·-·-· ·-· ·-·-··-·,I stor111 sptte, This m1pll knet hole ~sk re1 • •1• ol thet• r1mous 1:111 1an °" · a 1n1 size e ... war. • an some ~~ •1• ... 11 REG. m 95 11~ A+ ~-b 11 tnd '"tl'f!Cl l"' lDOl'll s11ltes •.. 111 1r1 otte1td n11ht 1ab1e plllS the spteious door ches1. 11t1ht's rest! This 1abu1ous set i11-BRING YOUR TRUCK TRAILER OR STATION · · · .... · · · · · · · ·· · · "' '"' ••u ... '\" .,. "as is". Ml lnclude dre~er, minor cious doo1 che1!.(ll-drrwen1 3-MaftrtSSIS ch.ides a ~in sire it1ners11rin1 m•t· ' Modem rtcard cablr.et •t huce s1vln1sl "',•• ~ s~c,iousH 1 dr1 1,wtrs ~~ ~~ 1,,ar~ d 3 · I d ,. REG 150000 $897 lrees, a bo~ foundrticn, an 1d1·ust-WAGON!. HAUL YOUR PURCHASES AWAY flat cut W1tnut lfnlsh 30" wide. Two ormrct •11P·. •: es ...... · 1nd heldboar • • • inc u t 1n1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . • ,.,,, ''''"''' 11 s•·••• •"' ,. b d d . ,,,, ,,,,, ,,, lr•m• '" r"' s!!dl n1 doors for 11sr acce••· Storu . Lii size ,••0•d .D1 at tn ,!0 1m0• "•'•" Sott while enhances the 1uthentic lines A wide assartment at twin sizt head-, •• ,.,, 01 , ,,.,.,,,, Co!onla or FOR THE GREATEST SAVINGS! ENJOY THE over JOO tecocds. disk! Cl111anc1 Jivtl'lfll , mate e su1 es e'ten iuc u e e or thi• Early Ame1ics' bodr~~m suite. bo1rds ••• your choice of Sp1nhh, '" l[G 99 95 SS· ehest of dmtr!. II you dan't mind For ~nder $200, you 1akt home the Coloni1I or F1enclt Pri:vincltl , •. all French twin tire headbo•rd. Hurry BEST FURNITURE BUYS YOU'LL EVER FIND REG. 34.9s ................... $II · · ............. , .... .. 1 slilht scratch 01 dent, you'll find double dresse1 the framed plate glen 1t lf2 affl Come e&rly to find tlle style 1 ,_,_.,_~_''-'-"-'-"-"-''m_'_''-"-'-' --' Ct•st Sl!dirt1 Door Boo~ces• in rich 1 ~· d~~s b~~~m buy5 b~"~r~h~~ ll'lirr0t. 1 twin' 01 fu!I slie headboud you want ~hese w!ll stll o!'l qulckly 1 Your choice 01 1 lamous Simmons twin '----------.,.,,,,..,,.,,,,,., "•"'"""'"''""''::i:r.,:::m,:-. -•• "'111!1~t Pecan finish fi'tln1 1mpJ1 stor•1• for H~~~p~~~ C.~0,,1 ,... • • • with loo1lb01rd 1M the roomy c1heSl·of. and Wt don t want you to miss out! or lull size qullttd lnMuipiina mat· Auth1nt11 Coklnl1I stylin1 (Ives this this 30" Aon-A.Way bed you'ri reictf tll your hooks. low, low priced todl)'! "" · drawers. Clear1nc1 Pflced now. REG 29 95 . . . . . ........... $15 tress or box sprini:! The 1151 word in ,Bassett maple Bachelor chest 1 look fur the unerpected overnlfht JU•stl ft R[G. 49.95 , .................. $27 CENTER REC •. 349.95 · · · · · · · · · · •• · · · · · .$197 We'vt drastically reduced prices on sleepin comfort •• , now 11 1 low YoU'H IO'le! It his • mar-reshtant Ml· stores easlly in a closet re It rolls out. Bia~ WroLl(ht l1Dt1 Baker'• Rtcl A f25 If ~ ~!w1ys w~led In tle~1nt bed-luxuriGus modern stylini lrom limous these famous Simmons studio couches. sale pifce! earta lop! This chest Is perfttt lor any !olds down to 1 firm ~lorllbl1 bed retl eollettars Ihm ~et useflll !or any 1rG. $4t.t.S ............ , 'OOl'f! s~ilt, thl~ 11 lo1 you. Th is Fren.ch Batsett ..• now at a levitz c!eannce Your choice ol floral or twud hbrit! REG. 64.95 ...........•........ $44 room !hat need's tx!ra stor111 1p1c1 with a lotm mtllrtss. Sile 11 one room thlt need• 1 place fo1 book1 or lncluclts student lletk. lati• ~k-P~o\'1ncill se.t 1n rich cherry ar ~lh!I! price! This lovtly suit• includts !ht Cach converts in 1n ins!Jnl to s!•tP , . . · · • see lt tod1y! location only. Oon't miss out! unutu•I items you wish to display, A cise plus ptdeiUl bn( c~r. Tllb. "-1\h 10\d 11 1r1celully styled. with 9-drawer triple dresser with center 2 lduttS" on famous Simmons inner Tht lowest p1rce ever on • 1cient1fli> REC, 114.95 · ·· •· · · •· ·••· •· · • .$10 •EC: 59:95 ........... , , ,, .... $37 C011V1mlion item !hit win h1in( warmth l!&r metal trllll\fs In ltfd tent !in. famous 9wett q~1li1J. lncl~dtd is th• door, 2 iwin liamed plate 1lass miirars sprinz mattn1se1. Don't miu this buy •!Ir cle1i1ned 1s·•x&o" kine .size 1e11-If you'vt been looklna for 1 king slzt to your hal!lf ish. Salt llf1ct toby! tr\pl1 dresser with dovetailed, dust· plus 1 full ar queeR site headl>attd! ..• come to LtvitJ tod1y. u1ne fo•m rubber mattress with 2 box heldboud to mitdl JOUI' Spanish de· l '~IG~ .. ~ '';'·!95~:.;j;. ·~·~· .~ .. ~·~· ·;'-· ·';i·~· ·~· ~· .~SJ;l 1 ~======~== fraalld, l\OMlllg li~ished draw1er~1• • REG. 469.95 .................. $2~4 REG. 139.95 ................... $87 1vr!ng1! Sletp in 1oom~ comfort la. ASK A'OUT OUR tt'lr, this is mr you! Savt over;\ on W11terr1 Stickle'f cr1ftfll this SP1n· rimed plate altss mirror ind 1 u or ~irht .. l'lurlJ to Levitz flOWJ u this Krothltr PIC .. htldbo1rd wlttl In. lsll bookcrse ill .. ~quo 1ellow, It a I •I a. 11!f! 11ueen site he1dbo1rd! Hurry !Of this! R(C. 279.95 ................ $200 tritalt eaMnp! Tiiis I• tht Int Ny leatvrts 4 ,he1¥1s, I dmlf tnd Is W--Wf••C ~ •EC: 339·95 .............. ·: ... s222 LEVITZ GIGANTlr MILLION DOLLAR SALE twin size m1t1rus 1m1 box 1ptin1 sell REVOLVING · · bt h•rt •lflJI trimmed •it11 wroulflt iron and k--I----...;;.---+--- 1ntr1ute c1Nlnz1 decorate lti1s Spar1-... perfect fer yoor children. Thay assure REG. 129.95 ... , .•. , ......... , .$&6 Ctnted by lt1ndSom1 cartin1s. Ya11 This bttvtllul frtndl Pfivilci•I sol ",·,',,,••,·,", bJ r~·~;:1~1i,n11d~~~s:~·.~~~ OFFERS EVERYTHING FOR YOUR HOME AT the hta!thy. r1st1u1 n!1hrs sleep need· CHARGE PLAN Y11t1r cMdrl• wia be ttir111eo wtlh :'~,",•,~is! 1133 hn a cS1t11 111amonc1 tu1~1 ~~ t.'.ic1rl1 to~ tile lramed Pl•le 111s1 PRICES YOU NEVER DREAMED POSSl'lE ed! Clear•nc• priced tod1y it tevilrl llMH ifvtdr tttndsomt burlk beds 111 IOU. -•••••••••••••••• , dtt, lwn rtvtrslhle stlt "" ..... n rniiror rlld 1 foll 01 queen sin head· D , • • ~RE"G.j8'!9.~9SC .. ~ .. ~.~ .. ~. ~·~··C.:· ·c:.·"··.0:··2·1~5~51 ~'."::::'.:":'.;'7.:;:::;::;:;:::-;~I honay.tontd mte1!1. Included 1r1 2 for ttlt min of tht halls• .•. e!tbor. lor ta, comfort! ltl trpoftd ln11twoa •lard tor on• low price ••• today EARLY '!ROS GET THE CREAM OF THE CROPI foam bun~sleri set ..• 10 ma~e ycur Thi luster tnd bftuly ot sol~ off ls lle1dboa1ds, 2 loottio11ds plut Jldder alt GtJ11 Clbinet •Ith alns l!ldinz doors tr11111 .llld rldl, lurlfflon, .Jaecorm "'!! Murrr to ltv!tz MW! P • children's hunk btds Info the firm, cam· yam in this strikint Sp.nbh chest 1M ' ligrd r1UI You u v1 * now! lhat lock. Holds sir (6) auns with fabric ~lett.s tilt P\.'llJI picnl"t •• 31995 !195 1 blo 0 d h d 1 h Ith YOll'll 111y11rs 1nd years of"" from REG. 6 .SS .................... $35 ll'l'tnitUnfllon drl'A'!r btlow •hlch locks Don't mb1 Ull• buy. e .i tury l t · • · · ......... · · .. ·.. BE HERE FIRST! °'11,'1. ·," I ,•.,1 ne~. or 1', ·~1 Y this bandsom1 chest! Hur11 to ttritz A dram•tr·c .~.,., • -·r chl"r••'s tor safety. finished Ill 'Klfl. ll'litt hid~! • •11~tlful Medite11anein lines in 1ntique n l s seep, e 1111mt • u1 ck '"' "' 1 _, 1•• "' REG 11415 I" l[G 519 9 !31 • · • t foam 111atlnss and ftWndation tl>dar rt a save. rOom! lJle1e dtrk otll Sp.t11lsh bunk · · · .. · · · · .. · · · ..... " ..., · · ·" ·• • ... · .... , ··· ~'hill •.. this bedroom suit• 1s pe,.ec at a srle pr"c.el REG. 119.95 , .•........••.••... $97 btds iom• with ladder and i uird nil , 1 "" "' ""'' 11 ' 1 1 ' ''" Iii" 1 " "" 1 ' ··--~ ' I ,. "' •• "' '"' """ to twl• "'' " r~ ••' LEVITZ W •REHOUSE IS J • " PACKED w g H . pi•ir v. 011 ht roomy drtsstr With S mmons •in1·si:e ~l with an 'ltlet REG. «.'5 .................... $21 """'f-111 fl'ltll • 11 I h ·~ .. "' """ Mlclrtt m•r·reslstant top. 1 !tamed FAMOUS PULASICI border 1llow1 a!r la circulate to ttP thentfc stylln1 of tf1!s Bauett c est o dttn trow olcler. Cnlted wit llmous 111111 1111, mi rror ind 1 full or qu1cn SPANISH 8ED!t00M !ht m1Urt1s lrtsh. Our salt price in· '-11..t..f Stands drawe11I It'• a perfect lddlt!o~ to Bnsett q111llty. , TRULY OUTSTADING BRANO NAMES y U •lie hiidbolrd, See !his ttldayt SUITE eludes an inn~rSptin1 m1tlrts1 that's &11 your llOme ••• 11 hu11 s1l1 t1vtn1s! REC. 189.95 ....•....•.•.••... $97 KNOW ANO TRl:JST •. • •LL 'T UNPRE'¢E·'· aE'-. 329.95 .................. $150 76"x80" and 2 !>ax 1p1inp. firm sl1ep-Mlc1rta m1r.reslstant tcp! "' ,., tEG. 7t9.f5 .......... s497 ',',·,·~9''9''s' R1lsed carvin11 1ccent th• 11th oak REC. 119.95 .................. $74 ASSORTED SAVING BASSETT 5.pc MODERN BEDROOM M 111 ·..,, · ••·· ··• .•.•.•..•. $23! or this Sprnlsh n11h! lihle by Bissett. Srvt Vt on !his Johnton-C1rper Sprnish HEADIOAltOS DENTED S! • I •1n cent ••• d1e11. hand tarv-It has • West1n1house Mieart1 tap ta S-drtwer cllest in Olrk ~k. It hn I I in11 acttnt !Ills larnous Pul15W usist •Pills, scratcllts and ci11rette handsomt nilled dr1Wer lronh 11!d 1 10 'to 35 bedroom suit• In detp pec111, hind 1 YOUR CHOICE burns! Don't miss this k!w tl t11111ct mllf 1111s1a"t;i plastic top! Oon't miu Ho 111a1t1r wtltt JOU'l'I looklnt I« rubbed to I lutin1 pat~! ltvllt SIMMONS MArTREf>S price •.. be hert eulyl this 'I'l.· .. COIM to UYltJ: llflyt ••• yau'q lllrl ti l!MI lt II clearance ruict Includes 4 stllflllln1 1£G 74 95 $-CS I 00 • htri wf1e tht docHI I ..ieces . . '"" •ft"'"loos trl..it OR BOX SPRINGS • · · .. · .. ·" .. · ·"" " REC. 1 .95 ................ · · I 10d rt rt 11 open ~· ~"' ..,..... I" .. ,.. W• lltYt I larp ttlK!loCI of lltN drts11r, l11111td plate lllSl mirrors s3 6 Each el•11nt, &tlCtlUI Freiw:h r1ovlncl.tl Tlrtd of hl'rlnc )'Ollf' hllSblnd'• 1ocb ill bl:ltrdi Sptnl h Modtrl'I plus 1 ~1n1 site ltetdbo1rd 111d · h!Pt stllld by 81ssell •.• now at reur drtU1rl The jMlltct Wlflt to cOri • s • • •Colon! two nltt st•ndl. You 111Ust u t this Simmons f1mous comfort In your lwce wit n vlnp! This roomy niaht reur stor11t problems Is the s!rl~inl ' • • frer!t~ i.Ood. f lsht ti wit• to 1ppreci1U Its eltpnt ctlolu t,tt t twin M ttill silt t111141r. stand ii lif'lllhH ltt wtill1 wllh 101c1 ~111sh chest bf hsutt ill deep a• fi1e, • 111~ ;,.:rry, _,11111~ 111'J belU!y' sr.il'lll rtl1ttrt ts Of bol sprinJS, '°" ICteft\s and Ills I /lllfoflSllbnt Mi. W1tll I Mieartt lap! Oofl't 11hs tht •• , "I ,., f I .................. 1297 A fllll room of btt11tiful Bassett tumlt11ra at •n• f1n11stic1lly '°" sale prlc1! Thlt lovely, rith walnut st! k ttetnted ~, raind diamond Cll'vinas tnd l11eh1des tt11 spaciou! 72" 60ubl1 dnsse1. tht room1 chfst af drtr.'!rs, 1 nl(ttt stalld 1nd 1 h1tdbo11d f« only $297' You'll ., ~ ""' '°' ,,,,,_ . .r· I map" "' J tt1 . , • " •• , u 5 et Plfll tonlf0/111 \he IOWtSt ..,,c1 " · •·-I ••• Ovttrt Do!i't mlu this cllancl tvttl IEG. 89.95 ................... $50 REQ. 129. • .................. 177 to save 11 11tucll n $11$ Oii thl nt:nr mltch me •alut ot 11111 ofle1 lruatt a&lted this .Sp1nl1h bedllilllll titlft end todry Is yOllf i»y to 1~1tt in daf k pecan lltlth Clf.tld teetnt1I , ht»dbolrd ti '°"" dlOltel llchly Cntd Mcdll1trtn11t1 Crtdtnta, £11bor•tt CINtd tffKIS Ofl 6oar lronlt. ~ldeu1 Cl" widt for «np!1 11Draae, linWled in war111 dttp hctn. REG. I 79.SS .................. U7 70% OFF 41 ASSORTED Ml"OlS lEFT ,ROM l!DROOM SUITES tal• lllttlfllli• ol le0111 ukl Don't 0111' iow t l!111nct pnu •ndude1 th• Simmons quun '!'e innt rspr1n1 mat· PARTIAL LISTING ••. HUNDREDS AND HUN· miss out\ !.dr1-.;er. lnp!e drtut r. 1 t1a111td Dlllt hts' rnd bo-sonn1 set me1ns more Thit ' "":fl• lt\lndl1 bed tlkes up the S~Jtt Wtoutht Iron St1lrcw. llldl QUetn un 81nnl~t•1·1fyle heidbatrd. room 10 strttth out ~nd top Simmons j DRE OS MORE! THE BIGGEST FURNITURE IPfCt Ol'tll IMO r.t to!Mrts It 2 Spllllsh Wl'DlllM Iron i.:11., stlltt.11t. . Snt t~ llO'lil ii Lavitt! sletpln1 comfort! >lurlJ tor 11!11 last bids l111lant1yl All iclttl. ~ for )'OVI' Gi1tt for shew\'fll oft sptd1I lltms or """"/"'" •i""1dty • · · ' 1 '""' I "~ '"·" . . · · ... · mo dar "'' oncet CLEARANCE IN CALIFORNIA'S HISTORY! "'"' """' "'"''"'" Coloolat •Ill-I'"" •I< ''"" • "''' ,..,,,.. lnv11ll'ltnl In load 11!tt! lhi; ~cit Tiii-faonoui "ltJlf" t.Pc. ConltmPGrary ~ RfQ. 149.95 ...•........•...• S97 Int • , • Cle1ranc1 M'llntsl £G, $1!1 .•• , , , ....•..•. , , , , .. $1 •111 btdroom s11!11 Dy 811Mtt 111tlud1s Irr B~rotm S111te. Cuitom tnlted O!I· Oullled f~ll size m1nreu •Jld bol NO ONE CAN MATCH LEVITZ SELECTION R.£ii, 19.95 • ·• · ·• · ·• ••· • ·• · • • .$51 "B1t1ett' AntiC!Ut Yi'blt1 54" wldl C11. tt11 l-dr1.-er, triple drtne1 wllh M:n111 td flalnu l llnii~ed hMld·rubbed to a 1prlfll aivt lull, firm support 10 every ••• NO ONE EVEN COMES CLOSE TO THE Thon'tuv!nt Kini sin M14bo1rd. A d1tV•. The perfKl Item tor hall flont ~' ltll fr1med pl1t1 111ss mir101 pl\1$ mellow 11ew. You fit UM 111111 78" Tri· Inch of 10ur body ••• no 1111tter wh1l m1pllic1n1 rnodtnt des!1" In 1Jch room er dtn plus ample stor•t• sptca, t toll or 411t111 slu l\tfdbo1rd. Cleil· pie Or1ss1r. '•ir 21 rr1mtd Twfft Mlr· ~our llYllr!lt sletPin( posllioa II. A!sq·\ FA'UlOUS S •VINGSI 111c1n by this. world rtmous ltctary. licl'l\y cfNtd cantlMI door fronts. h-fttd fl!_C_t priced lodt)' 11 ltvlttl 1ors, plus \ht tl!Vtd '•nd Httdli~rd. avt!ltblt _Jn lwl• 11111 u ,.., Must bt sold. ti 11t11e 1arinp lod•JI ti 25L9S ................. $166 REC. $~79 ........... ,,,,, ... ,331 l[(i, 99.~ ... ,,,,,,,,, .. , ..... $6'1'--------------------o· lf.C. $lit .............. , ...... po REQ, 204.9$ ···:••••••• .. ····$121 33 MSOlTED , DEC~Tott 50fAli\ vAtues ro lt•.•s ..... 'li.5 3' Ho matter what sty/1 ro~ ~!er • • • S(lanlil! • • . [ailJ Anll l;ltll ••• Modem ••• Coa11111pttt ar Trtdiliwl .• , y11t1'r1 ~11 '' 1r.d lent ~t fOU Wini It JOU.II II 1ilhtr Lt'lltl loctllDn 1rht1' lllr doors open, All l1bflc1 frolll ru~ lo rtl~•I . • • IVtft -· ~ om "1i11141 Tht11 111 o6d IOI, f OI •tmplt and dlscontlntied '°tut flnt U1M ••• Rrst served • ~ . t trm I y Amt1lctn !O I t 11 comrwubl• It 1111111 to irwlk JO, to to tit down 111d 11t1KI II •• 1 11ml41trcllld pin~ b1e-and dt!i fNm reir1rMM1 u1t a111tioni •~d 11 t~•rtd In 1 C111tmn qulJ1ed !&bric " lltS ' bo:r plt41ed "ll'L Stlt 11vlqsl l£Q. 2iii.95 .... , , ..........•• $l1S ' I f, Mlr"dl 11, 1970 l!All Y "tOT - 'AliVIJl"MllllENT • lti rftANCE BULLETIN FLASH EDITION HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORN.IA, MARCH 1970 .. IS . •9-Li •lllr Ro _9-_u_vl-'ng'--Ro_i;..!'l ...... _,1_1_".,.Lh_ln.:.g..;.~_•0111 ___ 1,1,..1_-R_oc_k_•rs ___ 11S-Sleep1rs 14-llhllllC R1tn1 11-Dllltltes ...... ~31 IRON Fi151llon· proves. its tltlr r C6!oni.ir. A 1111iqoe lllny bmtt wt1v1 hfetd This ~erui eletant sort 1nd dl1lr can Thrt c1Mt1~. Colollill 1wiwl routr h• Hanchome vlnyt '°"" tllb moder-Thia M06tt11 walllut buff rt wilJ edd Sturdy tubulw lltel CGMt:rucllOfl &IYH Tht bl!•ty 1nd dl.lflblllty "•ollcl Hd cle,lgo ~111 tlli~ ch~ln sofa. 11 15 cnven this modern Ture(lo JOl1, It /Iii bi "1JR 111 tremendous low cle1r1nc1 I pr 111tch-qultt badl tncl IUll It ft• 11tep;er 117 Ktotnltr. 11'1 .ior. ind ~ ~ti of tx\11 slof.,. IOOlll to JDl!I' Ulb cllnet1t 1111 cl11tlllill1Y lo Wt Roct tuple ktdllne1 tfit11 llrthtnttc- tadortd •n 1 qwlt!cl pnnt nl fti'lufes DM:rort-wrapPe~, loam ftYenlblt 111t ericel Boltl 1rt cowrtd in 1 wstom tUl'es 1 sem~llilChed plllow back Jfld "ttrh lo 1 full silt bed wiftl 1 se(la(ltt dinin& lftl • . • B11U1.ilut Bmtlt throuch pars and )'elB tf llird wtll'. alt»' 1tyled Calonlal tlbltL Yout dlOkt a stml-attiched Piiiow bic••.nd Dacion cushions for the utmq\I ln seltlrt1 ·quilted flbrlc ind both b,.,.e t•l'Oled 1 deep fotm revtnlbli self cushion. tom mattress!, You1 choice ol colon qutllty ls bl.lilt Into this IO'lely piece. It h11 1 hetl and m1r mtstanl pllltle tt cocldJll, ,iii~ °' ind sl)'lts. S.v. :';Pf::U::;: fr;' :~i. hlons ~llaf tonllort Ind is ~ti decked. ijlddtn lruitwood lramt1I Revtrslblt T-cusNon Plt1t1d slirt ••• cholct of colon. Reversible ieat cuihlons. REG. 1611.95 .... , •.......•••.. t98 topped lablt pl11$ .\ WKhtblt vinyl ovtr ~ on lhts1 btlilliful' t1bl11 to- plettcd skirt. -u rear. 0~ f~lers aJSUrt1 movin~ •au. Hlll'I} rw seats assure you IOll CGfllfort. Both REG. 169.95 .........•.....••.. $17 R£G. 299.95 .•........••. , , •• $196 Blwtt's contrlbut!Dn to modern dlnlnJ Win , .• don't 111Jss tf!ls buy! day. Don't miss out.•. bt 1M11 whel Rlllt • '3 1 9·95 "·,· · ·,· · ,·, 1 ·• .s250 RE 1J. '4i9.9~ ~-1~ _s_e~1-· ~!~~· · · ·· -'250 ~~~~~r95C:. ~'. ~-~ -~~!. ·· .s3221 '"-c-.. -,o-o_s_E_f_R_O_M __ ""T""H"'o'""'MA---sv-· ""1L_L_E_, _LA_N_E-,,-BA-s""-...,I i~t !z~~::n"f .~ttr•!: !~1'3 ~16' ::,G~1r6!95.·.·s~~ · ;1~··~~~;·~~=· :CG.~0~~--· · · · · · · · · · ·•· · ·"4 0J1 ow, ~n s ft ·. 1 Kioehler Tht charm of the 111st .•• tilt edn-In nh I (;IJ d'ltlri -1th comfort1blt, upllol$1Hed Your cholte of 1 1tttln1ul1r Ubl• wlth Bas11tt bad Ear!Y AtntrlClfl lowtt II m trn so. II tGYfrtd IA icokh~ard vuue_nce of lodiy! Till~ l'llnclsome [arJy v--v I rs SETT, KROEHLER, DAYSTROM, SIMMONS, Still. The 1ntlr1 suilt is 111\isllad in lei! or an ov1I Ublt ••• botll ll'ith mind When tht~•lrned ltltH Wt~ prtl,Kled tw•td lo stay freJh llld Anientiln Miia Is cover·~ I• ..,,,,.,1 ""~ •··' ~ f 1 "" '"'''' i.1 """'•I ,., ~ r•·• pl-••• tor Y•••' It • o ~ LINK TAYLOR BERKLINE JOHNSON CARPER r...., •nu~ "'••Y• or hi"" 1111ssvre ltmin.attd plastic tops ..,.. -·"' ~ , ... •0-· 1 • n . ac -wrapped, Hercul~ that wears like Iron .•• sl•Yl This. handsome modeni dlalr by Kroell-• ' , • soph 1t~l!d 1t1d lo¥ely , •• hucr;! 1o''~sii1 suitchls Ind stains. '!us a. Pick frOfll cocuat~ 11tp « tnd 1tyll1o ey °"" se1t c~sh1ons Ind Shel'-fresh for yean! It has,.,,,,.,, loom I " ed I h I "f b I AND DOZENS OF AMERICA'S LEADING FUR· REO -,, l l97 oof ''"' -\If . ~tf'd c.1slera. Hup sal er ·~;:o.er · n l e new m rac: ... 1 r c, • .x;r, ••••.• · • • •• • · · • • • · w1shabl1 \llnyl d'l1in. Savi l ay al ' lt e ~ n~ lodiy cu!lh!ons and Is lrimmtd io ma,lt/·Box Vtctra, that resists st1ins, wear and H·-~-, sollO bltdl headllntt lhis leVI U! · REG. 59.SS ". ............. , .... $27 0 ple1ted ski1U f di • tt I " NITURE BRANDS ""'"" Rl" 1 !IS II" • ,289.95 1 $165 REG 369 9S I nc. ISSUleS you op Ulunl tom-• Bmttt Calonill dinJnc room $11111. It 11. l . . •.... , ....... · · ·. 11uagtd slate top , •• hlWJ CIMd t<> ===1;~· :;:'.:· ·~·~· ·:·:··~· ·~·~· :· ·~·:· ·;::.:·:.::·:.~· ·~· ~· ·:··~·:· ·~·:· ·~·:· ·~· ~·12:"~ I !:ns ~~. ~~~si~lo~:otb~! ~~ I ~==========;-;;Th:,:.~1,: .. ~lt~f~obri;::"c~V=tt~ll:,-.-. -. :lh:,,~ ... ~ I ~ :\~nsion"~:, ~~u: ,1:•ci:\~ This J.pc. dinettt 111 is par1ett lw ~~ Criri~=~~:OJ ~~:;1~: You,..1 BE ED AT HOW LEV ITZ CA.N c1sters for movlna east! I Z-R-llners to uot ':':' w>o• t•mlly. All 1 "i. •P•.rfm1nts, mnbi11 homes or 11'11 sn1111 nl" scnis~ c·ocktail t""'· ~,, ,,c • REG 169 95 195 .,.. 5ists 1t1ins •fad ln1 tnd wt11 . • • sp.1ce thal nieds 1n 1ttracllvt dining " ""111 '"' '" • · · .... · • .... · -.. • ·" · , .,..,...,....,..-.,---,.,...-.,,,. cow rs tflls halldsom• modem sl1eper. incli.1ded n tfl1 low salt price. -.~9•7 tab It. The diop-lul ttblt "'' 1 hut ~.!j.ed 99s1. * ·PfiC• du1ln& tur sale. ---It -SELL FINE FUR l!URE AT SUCH LOW PRIC'ES! ColonialdlarmcombinetwlUldttpsttl·r 9 11y Amerif.11'1 ehwm t<1mbifH!s with It hH rwerslblt sett cushlo!i and REG. ,99.95 .................. ..,, and mar "~htant plntlc top ind "'~-1 .95 .................. SlOIJ ~~rtu,11,•1:.~ ONLY OURI N S UCH AN EY E...,T ARE THESE IRf COm'ort ln tllil hanckomt cllllr. It famous recll nlnc comfort In this htneJ. ope111 lo •full .sin btd Wit~ an Ul!ft. £Je1111t formal dinln1 room wit• ••• tOO'ltt to111plett 1111itll 2 w1$hlble vinyl This lone low Soenhh petan C«ltifl ·~ l ' h•s • detp ln1111 rtverslbta seat eusll-SCllllt recliner. It Is cowrtd In 1 comfortabl1 m11t1ess. · f~m Bissett 11om our most dlsc1lmil1· thalrs. HufTJ' 101this1nd s.v1 onr in. lllllt has bl/ill ln Bnutf qu1U1:y, 2 ~J 4 r~my VALUES POS BLE. BE EARLY • SAVE o· N Ion 1nif ls 1Ccent11f by tlpostd 1napl1 ·--101 _,,, flboo·c .,, -·· ,~..i,.. REG . .\.\9.95 .................. $270 OllM ... , ... ,,This handsome cherry 5'l RI" 5995 128 doors In lht but tor llDrt&• room. =--Yo1 sa1• trim. bprtMin be. pltaltd skirt! Set ••v•• ,.. "'" "'""" Jnc.1"·"·• ,•,· ,,,,,,,., toble with 1t1f ~ · "· .. • · .. • .. • • ... .. REG. 149.95 •... : .......•....•. $75 I ...... , EV,ERYTHING•. . ... tod or CCllbn 11\d his I ple1tld skirt! TOii u..:....rnc th• whole ftmity-lor. visit? 1111< N r D I ... "' I" h ... u011 If. f rt 1 , tie~... '"'us • side ch1lts with upbolslued lf!IOllS 11$ rom s11 111s Bo•··tt ....... ..,;.1~tw1,. •"g·•t I• .. $SS . ~~~, · t169.~ ,· ... , .... ._.,h .... h._:.;. .. ,"', ~fG. ol69.~ ·~~r.''.': .... SAVE VI $35 nifrt'1P~~1:'~te1ThJ:we;~~fr:: ~; ~1· •h. E'ff11 pie~ his 1iM, lflCtlul ::.• c5horce ~;·~~· osvea~ ~~ :;~~ 1a1diops. ~" ;rl: ac:n1..,1;'your 'i~~· This SpmJsJl SCl,I I~ t/~tse1t are I Xroehler pro~es its flair lot ·Sp1nlsh ~Ye SWtVI FCIC er WI t 11" IC Sleeper opens UP to I lull Silt bed lhft inaS. table wllh 1 care-fftt pl1st\c top 1nd il home, Choose from end Q( CCltkll~ iliciu:1 ;,a;'; .w1nni11& tornbinatio11 , , • at a p1ice with this dr11Ntic soli. It Is tccent!d ind deep lnam, revtn lble stat cushion 26 NAME BRAND sleep1 2 tdulh on 1 tlllc~ INm mil· REG. 329·95 · · • · · • · · · · · · · · • · .St97 CClmplelt with • wlShible vin11 chairs! tatiles · •• all Ont low prlct. ·n "'1• lh1t's so lo'll! it's bifd io betie¥e. (ach by exposed oall posts. ind features t!Hdr. 10 issure f JtlU unsi.1i~ssed com!ort! RECLINERS ••• }'i OFF tre11. H1ndsome Ch1nnel blck 1ttd Lant chin1 cabinel f1om the lamous See this today! REG. 99.95 .................... $'8 1 Ill~ ••. ft ~Kt is llllortd in I lllStom ru•lJted foam, reveniblt se1t cosh'···• '·If Perfect for l !mo1l aU dee«s! s,.,.. at rtvtrsiblt sut CUJ;/llOns. CllDkt ol Spenls h Grandeur collection! This drt-Sn Deep dart --trbl wt• h l'lt M l ~r lltcorator l1b1Jc and has deep":foam. declling! ""'1~ ~ levititoda~. VAlUES TO 11•.•J .... $58 colo11. m1tlc brt•M~nt citsign hn 2 l11u REG. ll9.9S ................... plink tops .';1j'"~asstv!1 c~d ~':. tgJ reverslbfe seat and bac~ cushions tllllt REC. 499.95 ...•••••••••••• ,, .$294 REG. 159·9 '. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • .$95 Sl¥I o¥er \; Oii your eholce of REG. 369.95 .•••.........••... $22$ doors ln the lnp and 2 c1mtd doors In ~\~.,~·n:ly .~~~f1T~s'1!~1~1,~ • 7.':, Btslett quility, Their hefty llll Wlll · · · • ·• • ue wrap;ed Ja Dacron l~r maiim um , r------.--' =''= .. I Early Allieriean slylin1 11 lh bell! This llll'Hlsomt recHners by Berkllne, 1 the bast. Sm ~ durinJ our Y1ar-End bl pltase the man in your home and ew:ry sei\lng CJ'.C!1!'0lU H~rry 10 Ltvitz today! 11 clllrmini chair br 'Krothler is covered "'"'''' ,-,~, f.-..-namt Double your ll!i)flt'( w Ill this sleeper Clelftnee ~le! Don't miss out! dinette Mil Includes 1 rtctan1ul• tr • woman will 1_ ... ,·, hl•••I• Rfo 529 "" · 'CUSTOM QUllTE' · Scot·• d • d "'.a~ ,., u• .. ,~ .•. It's 1 bt1ulil1.1l sofa th1! convem RE" 619 95 13""' Willi 1 mar-r11lit111t pl.slit 109 11\d v-• u.., &1~ ., '41 111~ • ColmilJ st;1, Many hts. ltr&e I. 8t 1111rly '.., .... ;. All :r.oa · ·"" •.•...........•... $333 " lfl • •.u11r Pl: ecte lwt .... manul1tturers. This auortmtnl -,,,1,,11y lo 1 •. 11 •••••• , ,,.1, 1 Q. • •••••••••••••••••• ~" ~ .~ '" ·,,i ~.· Clloost cocktail or end k>I""' KROEHLER SOF 11 mtd · I ft h d I •u -_, 1dr1 ~11 plus • w1 ... 1 vr Cr .. in. famous !ashletri quallty ~l almost ¥z 'A rm .. 1n mip t. 11.! t~P ploim, includes ~.s.Js" tlose-outs ind dis-separate loam m•llrtss. It's. covtttd An oct1con1I. pedestal ltblt hl1htilhl1 REG 99 95 $55 REG. 99.95 .................... $« all! Tiiis br1ut1ful Sp,anil~ sof1 fs cc.-$] 75 revers seat cushion 1"" 1 uux •11• continued sl)'ltSI 81 her• early... in 1 Scolchi•~ lrolecttd tweed flld this dr1m1tic Spaolih suite from 1s-· · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • • · · Handcrifted lllndsome llltles In ri•h veied in 1 rich deC(lra!or fabric and Is ~~G. 1'9.95. · ··•• ·•• • ed skirt! iu ;i: Dll. 1et lht cream of the crop. Don't has !kip revttsib 1 seit wshions. sett. The table comes compltl1 with Theu t11nd!.om1 b1r stools ltalure rlowlnl peun. The ir S,.1'bh •Ir!• "'1; '"'h'!",'•" ""oed ·n1l ~rmsl II 11i1 Ho matter whit your dator". this REG. 199• ·················· s95 mlu tlltst hut• uviiv. REG. 349.95 .....•............ $197 two I!.: li~•s ,Plu1s J..1•1nn_,llld ~ ,w!L,l!Ut"''~'K'I>'' ~".,1 Tnic!.,!0~~·~ set of by lnllid tops ind htlldsomt a t it 1 1m. acro~w11pped loose handsome sol1 by Kroehler is tile VINYL side c .... n with ¥1ny u ...... s ''""st••~ I""' ,_, c11ved leis. Clloitt of atylta. Over Mt p1llcw b1ck ind seil that 111 revjjui-perlect Miff for yo~! II I& ccw:red f•mollS Burri$ tomfcrt Is youl'I in this This ch1rmint E1r1y A!Mriean sor1 hu 1nd backs. Com1 to lJ~lll tnd SM! COIOfll Each 1111 • lull 360' swlvelt of!. , · ble for de~&ilt wear! Ari tht 1uJ1111 in a custom 11t1illed fabric ,th.It's MODERN CHAIR e man-sized vinrt r1t,.llner ·.,"",",''i 1•1 • !.~ecr~!~·. , it COfl1 muf lo • 11111 size REG. 529.gs .................. $333 OoR·='t1m4195ss lhi1 low c!earfntt pri'i~ REG. 199.95 .................. $97 featu1es JOU •PPl'Ktate • , , self~eck· Scotdtg1rd protetttd to slay ff'!sb •5 8 Scotchprd proltcl m • r c. op -. w1u1 • aenu n1 Oa'l'I 1n1Uress. This dirk oik Spadl)t ltn'illl urt ii ui. • • • · • · • • • • • • • • • • • • • · · inJ .•• Iii 11 casters , .• 1iceUent 1nd new! And, it teaturts lllose ·UG. '19·9'· • ••• · ••• · comfort whethe:r you're 1ittlnL w1tcb-It's klnt welrin1 eas)'-clft Ht1tulq11 perfect ror the lloSltss, Wflo tnttrt•IM This beautiful doublt pedtslal lable has Splllll!ft stylinc •I Its belt • • • tltest i11loring. 't miss tllis bUy/ : pillow back and seat cushions. nl This handsome 1nodfrn chair is COY· ing TV or strllthed out. fabric D11:ron -wrappe1I, clttp •IOtnl, 111 1 mar and heat nsbt111t pl1sllt toit for 1nasslve. hefty htlles, ill dtep Ml"' . 529.&a , .•... ,, ..... ' .• : •. $275 cloud-soft foam lnr comp It le com. tied in carelre1 Yinyl ind is ton-REG. 179.95 ............••..... $98 r1e,v~rsl3081t9 95seat cushion. "'4' b1:h1:nt~. ~ :nd~la'r~~~~\:~ Clfeliei upketit tnd comts compt1t1 ~!~~'~: ::h~ ='~~1 1(1oehler goei Spani1h • , • with a era-fort ••• revenlblt for· doubt• Wt tr! tourtd lor your COl!IPlele seatin1 A fan11stie new vlnYI "RllClifl'' co'ICrs Q. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ...... irea. Accented b¥ tlth cm1nes! Savi with • swivel chtlrsl Vinyl upholstery. coc-1.all er end hbles. Kurr; for thue millic stnst for styli~ th.at can't ~ Ste th is today H11se Cltarilllfl ='~ S~= a:f !pl~~m:~of~I 1tli$ handsomt Berinne redinu . • . Thls CGl'llemrior•ry sletper Is covtrtd \; now 11 Lt'l'lll:! Set this lodQ' and ll'ltl 37 ... d!ln't rnlss ouL boa5t! Thhis bel~utilul so• is cover1d0 in , '"'-"-'"'-'-· ---.----'I Diamond lulled Dae-1nd seat! th11's n~w vinyl 1oots11. •""11eels 'wi",•,t~,!h in a heavy Herculon tweed lo proteet 1 R~l-G._1_•_9._9S_ •. _ .. _._ .. _._ •. _._ •. _._ .. _ •. _s_f"...;~"-'--'-"-·"--· ·-··-·-· ·-·-··-·-··-·-· ·-·'-f, I RCG. 139.95 ......... ,: ........ $M a cote gu prate~ted decora!nr lab-1 · • 1 lo · ve Mpes spa1 1ng c eJfl uit it fron1 st1in1 tnd splrr1. It con-terts to 11 ik: ind has e piltcw back am! seat Save in on !his t11ndsornt SPlflisll sol1 Don t m ss this w, IOw pt1ce •'. tnuch of • damp cloth. Reversible deep •queen i!ta bed with • lo11n m1llreu ONE AND This rtt•1niflC1nl oet•eonll tod!lll wshions , •. all wrapped m Oac:rnn Ind chair in a heiYJ decor1tor fabric. uva \ii todry! loam se1t cushion ind •~Ira hi·bicll. to steep untxJllt\td cuistJ In unsur· INCLUDED ARE "FLOOR SAMPLES" llble by BHsett his rn etched 11111 tor ettr1 cornr~n and ill reversible lnr Both He accented by uposed oak anns ~1co"'1"'c>-11-10,.-or-0"1~"'""..,...,,",,."""""'"'-"'"''~C I Don't miss !his •.• )'(Mir cllolct ol ~'sed comfort! FEW-OF-A -KIND.SUITES ANO ODD PIECES •.• top. leautllul Spaniih atyllnJ, double wear! It Is accented bt e~posed and both hnt 101m seat cushions tf1a1 Colonial cllalr 111 it Wl!Uld ~ liesh colon. 1 68 REG . .\49.!S ................. $291 REG. '249•95 • • .. " .. • ..... • .$!21 __ _.1oak trim and NI Shepherd casters lor art rew:rslbl1 for double wt1iJ ODii'! •nd new lor years! It his a print fibric, REG. 299.95 .. · .. · ..... · · · .... I Turn any room In }'Olrr ham• Into 1 DISCONTINUED ITEMS ANO ODO LOTS! FIRST Clpturt in tnch1ntln1 lthdllt11ane11 1 n '3'ieU. m1lving east! ftrry lot this value.· miss lhese 11rin1s! · ' 1 semi·allaclled pillow badr. ind 1 deep Please Did with this u!lrKOl'lllorhble ~est room with thls 3-cuJhlon 5o111-COME FIRST SERVED! ••• SOME 11 AS IS", mood with 11\tH Bassett 9ptnlili hbln. ColoQial ff-~EG. 439.95 .. · ·• • · • • • • • •• • • · · .$225 REG. 399.95· · .....•.••.•••.••. $2~ fciarn, revetsibl1 seat C1.1$/lion. Roi reclifltt. 11 1djusb 1ulom11ic.11ty to his 1slt sletper. ti's slrikJncty s!}lld 111 1 Th1 er ll•vt carnd aproni ind flll'lf '~·,•,,, .•,om110 1,-------------------..:.,... __ , I •',•,•.•,•,,•.•915nt ................... $ .... r"'orite 1eclininc positlnn 1r.d is tO'f-ridl dec.or1tor fabric wltll D1tron •rs · · · In detit l*M. Cbolct of • WE H •v E · R 1J ered in carefree vinyl th1t IOC1k1 li-e wr111ped, dttp lo1m, reverslblt seat stri inc Pllllsn stynnt combln1s with cocktail, 11111' « and s~lts. s! , ,... E UN ARTHEO HUN DREDS OF ITEMS eeablilul high bal:ll Spanish chair' CCIV· leather ..• wtar1 llke lion. Ynur cushions\ It ccnvert1 lo 1 quee11 11te BASSETT SPANISH easy t Ht In thb l!Nely dinet11 sef. It REG. S9.95 · · · • · · · · · · · ·•• · · · · • .$41 ....... 148 W E DIDN'T KNO W WE HAD FOR OUR er!d in 1 lush. plush velwl labric llith cho ice of eolClll. HurTJ fnr this ••• bed with • thick, flnn, comfort1blt leiturts 1 rtctanaular tab\1 wHh 1n Se1~~ vu11t1 se~i;.tlon.~of l1mous Bts,wftj M · I f do"I ms·,, oot fD1111 mallrtss. DINING ROOM I • t 100 1 m11 -•1>11•1 plo•fo"c '"""1sv e Inv ou1er flmClus Fin I sl!Jlhint in MILLIO N an exposed ed1terrane1n CIJ rame. " .,,1 R'" "' 95 tx 11 ' ··~ 1111,.. .,1 ty'· ed 11 •·' 4ei• wtll'lllt DOLLAR CLEARA NCE SALE! PRICE$ Here's 1 chlir yoo'll be PfOUd to own REG. 69.95 · ........ · · · .... · ... ..,, w . · .. · .. · .... · ..... · .$297 SUITE. Wp pM 4 11\p.tlxked vinyl chlirs e>. "' 1 •1 1 1 "IM- J hu, llllf· HAVE BEEN SLASHED TO ROCK BOITOM TO 111 savings lhll will 11111te you. Roell or 11cllne In this 1atra-comlor· A handsome cll1Met blck enhances the ,244 trimmed with wrou&ht Iron. tlurry lot ~f: 'I:,' ~o ti~~ J:tn ~ Jll'/rt lfffl pl!!i l' REG. 1S9.!r.J ....•.............. $98 tab1t Roc~tr-Recllner. 1rs Ct1vt1td in sleet mocM!m llnts of tllls steep sota. UG. 341.fJ ,. •• • • ••.• thb. S1ve 'hi 175 1,.-. ......... ..,..-.... ._,..._ 'the 2-shdf MOVE THEM OUT FAST! Hiih-blc•td -Spanish it)'Hni .• , the lealhe1-likt vinyl in your cl!Gice ol col-It is· covered In 1 Scotchgt1d protected The be1t1\iful o!k set leitures 1 R[G. l•IJ.95 ................... Bit.A.ND NAME t led d · tod 1 Th' bt ors. Hurry f« this last di)' silt price. twefll to stay lrelh for )'tits tnd OCCASIONAL ....... s125 1 '1~hl~d:::;:.;-;,:~::;:.;";.~;:======:;==:!I tiru51 ::..:r hu t~R"expos1ld oa~ lra~u~ REG. 129.95 ................... $88 comn in 1 dl0ic1 nl colors. Opens :;:u1~~111':~~1t • 1',~~~ ~::!'irs'x!~~ ASSORTED Jbt1 !re ·1u-I 1 s ramat1c p1m1h S!CliC1n<11 by ind is cove11d In • carefree vinyl that M1dt lo please • man witfl its comlo1t to sleep 2 on I lwm maltrtu in Clf'led backs ind ~pholsle11d loam 5.pc, DINETIE SETS TA&LfS olonill dtsk! Kroe hler Includes 2 pitces tor one.low, ASSORTED will look Uke new !or ye~rs and years. •• 1 Wootln with ill styllni! this queen slie comfort! Hurr; fer this: •••ls. A beautiful way to dine! $45 YOUll $33 E h low price. Both sob Jeclions, aft lOVESEATS Altrxtiw: spindle l tml' Utr1-l1r1a recliner hn J.paltiOll, dtat1nce price! L------;..,---JIJI VAlUIS TO"'' CHOICf ....... ac runt itil~i detJlly biscuit tufted 101 tnr, comfor11 ~% OFF "OWi REG 95 · REG. ~9.95 ................. $295 · ·" ·' "''' -~-·n1 J odd lot ..,. 1 ilmost l/i .._ , "0 11 • 1 ,,.· "' ,1 • 14. . ................... $17 bre1k-•w1Y action f« deeit se1ti~, r-----------------------•I Silvi up to~% on -·r choice et •-w•"' ... ineie 1 an a!la e s ·' •· 00 a pleawr1 a!ld fe111.1res t sem~1tt1ched 11 s•• of-Hind bble1 •t one low llfkt. s .. ,ind 1,',"'"fi:.~ak rcpt n,'"r' tirYi~lss! VAl1JES TO 29'.93 ..... $125 SPANISH pillow bac• and I lttldr. loam rtvenlble DU'E TO THE NATURE OF THIS EVENT All ,501r;.,sc11~.!!·~ ~~ ~IK~~1n = Spanish, [.tr1y AmtrlClll •rid eon.. ... ..... ee ts OJ1MY Cfl~tft A care ree DECOltA.TOR CHAIR uat cushiO!I. Your cllOict of tolofs in "'' 100 reclinwulif tables • • • lamporll} lncludtd. Milty umpltlt f1eQ Pr• vi11. 1 1 Be here tarly ··.!He first etlOfCI urelret •lnyl, . ITEMS MUST BE SUBJECT TO PR IOR SALE. 111 lll'ith ctrelrte.Plntlc fl)p$. Each sels. even'some popul.-llllrtllt lop for Lbe IHlsy ·RE .·749.95 ............. \ .•.. $444 hom ~is ~hgeJ:p ~lovasuts tEG. ff.ts ............ $55 REG.149.95 ................... $97 NO PHONE OR MAIL ORDERS! NO HOLD set lnclude1 ~ wnllable, Yinyl tlbln. wiM•-W SICriftCli tt 11r1 ; ~~~n:i:' If )'OU're the: kind ~f ', tiioman IVho ' ·' pins' · ~~·, A~rtem~~ ThiS t1111ctsorne Sptnish ch1lr ii 10-, famous reclintr h.as a deeit tufted cbllrs. e. t1e11 when 1111 doors vnbUrd ol price. 81 •tl'IJ JM JOll MlcMll IDIL ~s min~s ind peails. VQU'll lovs !hi> ·~ ir; ?:O,Teis~u ~ :· • .,;0: are tent!cl br .. rich oa• frne tnd • back ind 1 revm!b!e seat cushion lot ORDERS. EVERYTHING IS PRICED TO SELL open ••• be the lint to choost •rt 1ur1 lo lind ••KU, Whit JOU riwer ll)ace! high-fashion luxedo ~i br Kroehlef. lloar stmples! You'i! wre 10 find sh19td cine back! Jt hai 1 tttld: toit tomfort plus II features ).way lrom lhii assorlmenl! w1nl Includes tables with up to It's coveied in a tan'tte vin1·I and iusl What you're klciking l11rf Sa'lt loam seat coshlon upholsle1td ln xtion! It is tailoud In 1 Scofchitrd FAST. S119.~ u l111s.. • '· · · · · • · "1 ~~s • deep biscuit lu '1d Seil aitd \'i and Mere! cardrtt vinyl and is mounted on protected pi in I in your choice of colors! I!,-.,....,....,.,..,..,-,...--.,,..,.,---------=' This Speriish dinette set wiU Cfltl J'Olll' I ~-...,-,_,,...,.,.,...,,.,...__, llheJltlc stylo back! II seems to lloat 8bO'le hidden smooth rollln& enters. The perf1ct REG. 219.gs .................. $125 Tiit miracl1 f1bric Veet11 cove11 this Dine In eleg111ce on this ftlttlll~ tlcfl dining room proudlYI It ft1ture1 an Bassett franch Provinci•I llblll lfl • ill desk witk :c:asle rs !or cleaning ~aSt' rail in 10\'e IC'Cllll lof yOlll' decor •.. 1 perftcl handsome sleep sol1 It wtll 1•• t,ou w1lnlll modun dinini room. lnc"·~·o "'""'I ptdestal bblt..l/" 4 h~h rrat 1ddith111 lo 1700r hom1. Cl'lllH r1 .. ·' "' ''' Wilh th" "f• IM-01 l.-o•·•. Tho"• Kioohlei ,,,.,0,., .,. ,·, ""'"' ~ H te"• lod 1 "'od"1111Uble headrtrt ind 1 1evt1slble · •vw ....... ch< Ith ~., co~ "' ·~ """' "'" ''" 5''" \lrfJ lo " IJ T hioll stll Itani.up to rive you yews and years of c1r1free usa! Ills is th• octqonll pedestal w!lfl two JZ" btcktd W itt trimmed It wrou 1u ... 1u rry w '"'~' """ '!ll'OllS. rtinr lf.dC1; REC. 329.95 $197 w1111 the h11be~1 qualily. It 113' deep 1 i,.-..,..-,.-,..,...,..-...,-~1 1 :, recanioe comfort than iver In-sleep sofa opens 10 sle~it 2 on 1 lwm leMs pk!s 1 11111 Ind 3 side ch.a.In Iron ind upbolsttrt4 In w1shable Yinyl. Your thole• of t.np flf tlld &IJlt• tt This chaiming Colonial !Cl'~ is coveied IG1m loos1 piUow bKk and n it. This laft YinJI chair hu •~ Imported tfl" 11 Berldine rrcUner 11 is c°"" mattress ind h11 rtYltSlblt dttp fotm with handsome cine bxks 11Hf Cllln-111 1awln1s todty at lh• Year.£.nd accent your decor • • •.• . -. .. S75 111 1 cu5tnm quilted [&ii'f Ameiiun cushions •.• v1rap~ed in Dacron for look to Its lutl Rnes. II assures you lop 15 _ r,, . . 1 nd 1 seat cushlon5! lortibt• form 5e1ts Eich piect crtfttd Ctetnnce S.111 · REG. 119.95 · .. · · . ·. ·. , ••••••. $61 ...,,--•rtrlnt an~ ictenlrd by ex~'ed maple cloud-SQit comfCll't ••• r1wrslblt for se1tin1 cnmfort in Its plump, cloud-soft :r~k. e:,ih: ~~ V,. ~o~~~~ REG. 399.95 ....•............. $275 with !1mOll$ Bassiti quatlty. REG. 1 ~9.95 .................•. $95 lbt beaut! t!ld durability of iol!d H•rf ~ ••-. It ha• ••••·•••PP•I ,,,,,,,.,,,, d<lllble wear! cushions and tht vinyl cover breathes d .1 1 1 R£0 499 95 "97 Ch 1 "' · 1 ·~ •-1 1 '-·h 'oct "" • hoodlo·,., 1•-, -••I-""' REG 319 9l 1198 · I " f 1•••· 1 to ,.,1 You1 c••co to lJvitl today • • • on mu ou · "Simmnns" Quee,..size Hide-a-Bed, Up.. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · • · · · · · ~ lmt n1 on11 ..., ..., I oo s. ~ 11 ''" .... Es lletp foam seat cushionst ~Jlflentitally · · ..... ...... ..... IM e o 1... •M IEG 29995 1150 1 ob I 01 pl fl ,. ... •"'f I~ I •-1 •aod·-• ·""'" b··• ··' •. •111 sl)'led Colonitl lables. Your ~ct • 1 d of ••• 0 .. r . . ................. · hOlsttred in costly God I re. J If Yl)l)f nt c 1n1 ""'"" u n ,.., " '""' ....., ...,. .,,.. 1 ·'I ,_ I sty e !rem !h shaped batl to its box This modern .Tuxedo ~nl1 by Kroehler ""'8••9·95 195 REG 539 95 $297 thl I 1 f nch Pro 'ncl I J crafted in honey-toned maple with • o coctt .. • 11ep or rwnd ....,p styltL . l QQ pleated sflirtl Hurl)' Im thb1 • accented by ricll walnut 1crnss tile REG. I · ················•·· Comfort styled thll recUntr in' slun-' · ··•···········•··· cih1n:1e:;"e1ssre'11.1t hasv'z ~: 1:: br11111 lootrtaL 360' on 11t. Clearance Sll't over~ on ltttst be"lflul l1ble1 ,_ • REG. ,299.95 ............. ,_ ... $185 ~s·cf. ,., ,1,1,,1 1,,.., ,.,,.,, ••"lh .• ··•. luxur.ioos ve.lvel tan rs tftis dr• ~Inf Spanish design tlld tllen bUilt In This wit has 1 secret • , . insltnlly 3 d 1 h b •. 1 d ••• , "d .,.. 0, 1 '·'I tod1y. Don't m!u out ••• bt lier• n ~'Jrl iir r ""' """ .,.>!~ ,,... k tltli with d knudlt fln\OUs S1l1nced Comfort lol deep sell· eonverh Into 1 quetn size btd fnr the r1wt1s n I 1 ~ p,..s 1 C ISS oar p,,....,. •u •Y • • • e n. REG 99 gs $44 ine1n dtsk Graceful and ete1ant • , . thh beautiful Dacron wraoped, 1evtnible loam tush-rn1tic "Y"'nu.. r carw . In& pleasure. Thb Mndsomt recliner ultim1\e in slieplnJ comfort.. Medi-Iott. Ste tflls 11 lt'rilzl IEG. 59.95 ........... · · · · ·• · .$21 · · · · · · · · · · · • • · · · • · · · · ,SJ\tl n 11 Frtnth Provincial sofa has, beautiful ions and 1 deep tufted b1ck! Don't arms and exposed, carvtd oa~ lnml It hu a slllped bJct: ind exposed nik lerranein stylin~ uphDblend in micic REG. 249.95 ................. $166 r1111M Doufln 7-pc. d'melle. Tht llaHlft Prowinclll tfliTabte by 11mOU1 diamond tu1ted b:ttk a~d ''tP foa/ll miss out ••. be at t1vill when the his loose _se1t lfld bK• Clllhlons th.at l s·i ••"h TV slrttch "H 1 " 1 f b 1 0 o.11 hl•~nt,.'juilfl>' 11 1 IOI!' cle:illnce '\w". Otep.loneij· f1ultwood llnisl\, --'· •••• ,, •• ,,010 ,,,1 co•ho·o .... ll c· -·e•l•d .. ,,, '"" Choo· co of '"loo•'· , ''' revtfS1ble I.or double wear ind Is 1tten s. 1 · · · "' • • • ere~ on 10 1 r c. ne .,,, y, Ma1nlficent MedlttrtaMan DlninR Room. .-· •1 'n d 1 d " f " 1 -.. VCllTJ!' ·~ Ill ..... '"' ., "" out I• '"mpl•l• comfort. REG 369 95 1187 H ·' price. I uded Is the double podeslal ""4ua11 1p1rt P el ,. 'c11 •urn- ' b I R[G 'I' 's $150 se lf-dttketl This 11 on. ol !he best ... · · ............... · Brinf Sp1ln lo your 1..,en41 now, s1v-'l, d •·11 1 popv w D',,"""399~9•5 truitwo&d !rim! 1 98 · · · .................. ..._in the w1rehOl.rsel $11 it todar REG. 179.95 .... ...... .$95 El"" Amerk:.ln· Quu r..Slze Sofa Bed. incs. Y~ tel the Oval Tab!• plus !ht t•blt with 2 ltMl llld •high pres-" ,,. · ' .. -ti• " I , --~ I l f •· -•• "' f f 1• b I ~. 0 h I '''' 1-m· olod lop "'' i >wlyol c'·o• R G, $69 ...•........... , ...••. $31 "" · · · · · • · · • • · · · · · • :t..:..:.:.:.: K1oenl!r 'C1t1 .,,., ovesea ()!'OM "'" 11 a low salt prite! Hen's 1 luxurious sofa in faultless ut Cl our &1• IC u,.~tere ' 1 n, ..... ,,. ~ miu: &111! kir 1 lruly d1amat1c. truly ekiant H.-clearance price! Both ire t1ilottd in a REG. 329.95 ...•..•....•...... $175 IS-SlllplrS egad taste, uphalstered In costlr llor1t REG. $319 ..............•..... $1 95 Don't ~~r9u9 th b! 1 1 Thomlsrillt Cod.llil Tlblt, Oclqclll ---"I ing room! This ICr<N:lller sot a ; dyled cu11om quilted labric 11'11 bath have print with sweetheJrl back •nd warm REG. ~ · 5 · · · · · • • • • · · • · · · · · 19 Medita1r1ne1n COC.kt1U tlblt front ltlt '-ik f'IS i :i Jn 1 luxeclo design and cover~ in lu5/I looS! pillow back l!ld seat cushi()Qs of EtEGANT SPANISH This htl\dsf)nlt sleep-cr-lounae sol• by mipte trim, 1110 seotchgarded 1011001 Brtlkhonl Chlni with misslvr lour D1ystrorn dlMtle ct11lrs! We hJVe t ''Cimino Reil" CGltecllon. SllHr 11 .. 111 wlvrt in ynur c1¥11ce of colors. I's ert11 t:~ep. t~1tk foam that •"' revenl~a VELVET CHAIR lioeh!er not only c<1nverts 10 1 tu!~ weir and lail ttslitance! door hist, (lass •he!ws in cllln• with lar1e rroup of h111dsom1 ch1l1s wlll: 1•nc• rt • l1nlutic sl¥1nli. ·~c~1~8rg~ ~i ... with 4 foam cusftions Iha! are ror doublt wtu! Scotclliud prottc d .,145 W:e foam bed, but It has 1n 1dj111table REG. 319.95 .... _ ....•.•....•. $117 ~~~l Dn~lss':dH,!!, ~~l~~s ~~~od. ~t tone frrmes Ind vinyl uphoJs. EG. 279.95 · · · · · • · · · · · · · · · · · .$161 · '''enibl1 and has caslrrs l:r your deco1a1or la bric, Hurry lor 111is clear· IEG 249 95 .., headre11 for rtadinc °'TV viewing too. 29 ~·• tery In your chcdce ol color! Perk cp ''llfle" Ml!'dihrrtne1n Gmdtur Coe•· ~11111~~ ':;i! c!tanin' ease! Save li~e n1ver btlore! 1nce-priced stt! · · ·········· It's covtred in Vtclr1 that will wear 14--DI I R REG. 8 •95 ..•••..........•.. $266 your old dlneltl now ti huge uvinKs! tall Table Dtep pec1n l111lsh, ll!l'IY 1111 •7 ..... SSB ' ' lY .. ~25 brt• ~k­t ~hilr. TIJb.. ~ ttrlt Ii,.,_ R£G. ~99.95 . .. .. .. .. .. . . .. l325 REG. 529.9S .................. $344 This hlcfl-badtd Spanish thiir is ijkt Iron, and 1ool! new lnr yeus 1nd ft ftg: OOfn "Blssetr' 6-Pc. 01nfsh &lyled Din!nz l(G. 17.95 ................... $10 Ille Sp1nlsh dtcOf tJtdillon. A teal v1!u1 ,Thi amuin1 n~w fabric, Hercult'\ cov· This charmin g Coloniil salt setm! 1o ·~~:;~~~1\u~u ~ld!~~~,'d~dr!:;:~ ·y,,","t to come. Reversible, dttp loam -----------I Room. fini shed In custom aired Walnut. four t1ne backtd tllllrs lllditf&hl this lor some price conscious .,111111 .11i; this ICroeMer mCldern sofa You'll invite ycu to sit back ind relu. 11'1 so tufted hick ind a rew:nlb!e, thick RlG 319 95 1197 famous Thom1svlltr qu1lit1 11 • low, lntludes Rttt•naular ellenslon !Ible Dmtrpm Spanish dinette -It hn 1 hunter. 39 ne.,..r have to 'Norry about weer, fadifl& comfortable . It has thick 101ril Si!al foam seit cushiOll. A rich oak lume · · · ·· · · · · · · · · ·· • · · ·· low list dty p1ice. This btairtJlul Span. with 3 -12'' ltnes, spaclC1Us Bre1k-double pedesl1I trbla with 1 m1r ind REG. 2 .95 · ·• · · · · · · · · · · · · · .Sl31 or sliins! For deep sea tin& pleaur,. lhis , cushions and is 11:cented by eqiosed ""ents !his belUty, •• see it todiJ ish dinin1 room s~il• l11tluoe1 • lr11tlt front China wil~ two do<n1 ind three t1111 resistJ11t top lnr easy care. Ste it '!ofi leaturts 1 deep lo1m, re~'lfSlble maJ1le. All the hnury feitures you IP.. it l•~ll. KROEHLER table with two 18" le1ves 1nd l inn dr1Wer1 plus .\ f.llYtd hitti.backed up.. 11 1 clrar•l'ltt prlci todty! Save mr 11-Llmps T-eushloo ~al ind has casttrs tcf your preciite ••• custom quilted lrbric, box I ~,,_ ____ ...,, _ _,_...J 11 DE CORA TOR. and 3 1ide 'h.alrs. Uch piece is IC-holstered thllr1. i,;1 1 ~=========::; 1tonvenienctl J~n 111e carefree wcrld tc.-pleated s-!rt. carelul t1ilorin11 Low, low th lht chair 1 ottoma n for one SlEEP SOFA cen11d ~ deep, hind c1rvin'' In rich REG. 529.95 . · •...... · .•...... $347 RCG. 2S9.9S •..... , . , •...... , .Sl2S 11 kll)' •.. see lhk It ln'ltz Ind SJ¥r! cle:u~nca price! . low, low r lce! This 1ttucllve Colnni1I '18 0 ptcan. ou'H 111ver m~lctoo 111 valut Th• parfecl Wly lo disp!1y J(lllr chin• I-----------· 11 T AILE LAMPS ••• :Rm. CA9.95 .............. ·-'.$275 :E~~ ~:1~ -~-r~·~;~ -~~~~~ -~:. ~~ ~e:u:J:~" i!e P~~::d s~f:u~ ~:l~~ ~';·::·~·e~e h11t1slic :~~-hll49.~' .". ::. :~~ .'~ ... !.1! .. $575 :~1~ j~~~t'~~131d~~~~! ;~nz 16-0CCllloftll Tables som~1!~~~-T.1:;oor:~e~lld. ElEGANT This stri~ing Sp.1ni$h salt ii wvered The chair l!1tur1s • biscuit tufted bid sletptrs by Kroehler. Each con-This 5-Pc. Cooltmporary hrty Sat will dOOll in !ht bis• 11\d 3 roomy 1he1Yr1 1-----------· 11 25 % OFF FRENCH SOFA In 1 heavy Spanish fabric illd acctnted and a revetsiblC, dttp loam ~It Cush-~ertt 1o 1 lull size bed with 1 be the center of Ktlvilits In yM bellind gl1s1 doors In !ht top. Its so-l t•utllul frte fnrm coclttail table by 0 $2 25 by exposed Gall trim. Loos• pillow bick ion for un1urpustd comfort! sep1r1t1 inltUtsa. lhtse ,.., floor hom1. T1ble ll1s earelr1e plastic top ph!sl!c1ted stmplicitr mak.es II 1 list-B111tll Richly 1r1lned wa!nul 11ts: nff MJny sl)'!ts , •• miny ctlor1. eorM IEG. «9.9S .• ,., , .•• . , tlld dte~ fOlffl, iewrsiblt seat DI~ RtG. 149.95 ..... · · · · ·••· · · ·· · .$91 sampll• pried I 0 r fmmtdiltt with lour sturdy ch1lrs, bution tufltd tnc /nvtitment in toed 11111 ••• fl • lb lllndsom1 lhll>'d Unes. Hutr; for in e1rlyl only 40 lo chooH ffoml JnJ formal Mrilll I~ sol•! It leat.irei ~onsl-Alm0$t Vz olll 1f you'rt ~in1 lot 1 tnrly 1ni~. ctui.-.... 8t U. lint to cllOOst. sefl and bd ln blad: vlllyl! low, low 11!1 price! lhla. V1lu11 rem $23 to S5Z. ~-;hi~te~~~~~\~. If~~~. :eavc:r.~~: o!~:·~~~h· ~~;~ -~· ~e~:~ ~~~s:~ii:~· "mnt~3 ~;1!~ iaild I '-----------'"REG. ZU.95 ............. -.... $171 REG. 269.95 ................ , .$116' «flt 79.95 .................... $41 ' · · 1 1 " ,. fl ,..,,,, •• ,, '''' ·~" .. ~ !time ind tenures a 1evtrs!bl1 pv:i••" so' sen t us ions 'u CH • z pieces lor ont sale pric1! Sotll.ar1 ,_d bad 11111 Ing Cf)nlforl! It 'Vs 1 shaped Wtk taUored in luxurious cut •tlvet and to-seat tnd blc.lc t111hl011 Q.f CCll'lllortlblt pt wslVGns; ind 1 scalloped skirt plus lilt Jui· cenl!d by expased oak trim. Both hm IOillt\! tt is eow:r!d In lelffltr·R~• •inyl led lnrl!lfl'Ood unou1 !ouch n11 stlf-deck. fills deep foam seal cushioos wr~pped rn lM )'llfl lllCI )'lltl of lllt. 15, decoralor beautiful sol• 1 tO'lered in a rich tuett1n tor extr• comfort,., rewrsiblt· REG. 119.95 · · · · •· · · · · · · · · · · · · .$80 ~ttY picftl't' mate lass• l1br1c Don't miss out ··· for double we.tt1 Best ot .,11, botti c1n I I-Rockers i , •fllr/ IO buny to levilll ' bl youl'i 11 1 rtm11Ubl1 klw prict I now 21 levl!z! 1,.,...,.,,.,,.-,...-.,..--...,., 11 J •. r ... S3i5 lfJou're looklnt ~: • charmint toflo-rt R!G. 599.95 ...............•.. S'?5 Jhb Ca10!tl1I 1wiv1I rocker cnme' in fli sofa 111•1 to•:'liMs top arm a your dloltt ol urefre1 vi"yl or • •' • ["'itlt • low prict t':1s 1s 101 JOll! TlllS fall llt iov.e • .• lllis romantic IMldtm Scotthprd prottclid tweed, ti Is ..,. wgH . lllndsome '101• has • .., tipesed pine SDll is C(IYtfed ill I Scntthglrd prottcl-thtntlcally styled trom lb win1 *- !'tint ba1:k 1nd is et lffed in 1 cus1"'J e4 r111tclled p1int lh.at Is car1lally Cll~ to lts boJ p1e:tted skiftl Deep folm Y l1 lciuilted decon tnr hll'td. It hi' a semi• him Qullfedl It has deep loam, l1\'lf11. reveriiblt st•t cushions , ... hurry tor 1Rete.: ' , ~~!~~:1e Pf~u~1u~~~.:~~ 1::k ~~G.T~~'.: -$-~a-~.'-~:~~ ~~'~im ~~~ 169.95 ................... s~ ,Int pleH1.1r1! Box Pk~ted skirt! 5 This 1r1celu~ "tltgant f1encll Provlritltl Jl!EG 299.95 · · · · · · · · .Sl6 smlSH . swivtl chait assures Yoll top comfort In :::j::::~:t tltit Tuxeclo loYese~t lr K1oehhtr Is co'i· CUT VELVET t custom qullled decorator hb11t wllh Vld In c1rtlru vinyl lo withsta"d tl!t TIJ"""" SOFA an t xpoiM fnr(_i.ood fmctl It 1111 • :o '• ,,A~ '11'53 '" gl• • Ami CM! lllj!Or at UIS II 1"4 )'Oil'ft II wtte11 ii. ,,., t ine cim lot. f or ied soi.ii !t'ltd • j. • In 10 15 .t lnvi!ll ro~ xi rt •• • ' aH •t 1ionl J~d t d fabric SIG' llt 11v1-:isl ..... IVl li:br of 1 crowiftl 1¥1» IJ. It ~ I dttt "'"·'"' stm~ttllchlcl pillow blCi ml t iMP 1 :ti~clllt tulltd ~ lflll s11l to cus~lol ' fl 97 Mtlt totm. ft'lt'Sltlll stat Mhion. ryou in comfort! HiddtJ c•~ters! Don't •re. l'J9.t5 ..... ~ •• :. · £G. 159.95 ................... $• miss thls. 1 ,~ U~e the Mill l\ft? Thil Ml cut luxllflM. plush "htt ctMIS this lllEG. 229.95 . . . . • . • 1 ~ nll·et sell Is IS eleglfll • II h iwlwtl rockff. It fin 1 ten1MlbCllM A u•im• Ill" design I llll ICtoehltr In tomlorlablt! It II# 1 dl1p blscirft pillow lilcl llld 1 ,.., to.ft. Dlcrat lfhe mj;'ic1e fabric Vecti tllll lat11h1 •I , !uhe• ~ •nd wit to. wsaion '°' wrapotd. ... mtrSIMt Hit cvahlon to fl•dlni. $tlil'I' and we&rl Tlll1 low:ly ,011 ~d~~~,rr:'~,t~~1~11~: 1ssurt )'OU !OP comfort Handsom• has leost pillow bac• It 11tat &1ishfon' 'ftnlenet IN b·rtdtictd 10 M tti. •k.k flltahd skirt. • fM~OUf' OJ111oltle corr,,, •.. and 1. .. lee! J:rG. )9!.95 ............. , , Sl21 \ the rt rtY11$lill1 for do Mt •'t~I! Ar111 lfM Pl ' !1 'h 1ntlud1d. Comp. e •.• then COLONIAl VINYl thOp t1V1tt C1e1ran" ~.It ind ~•! Wtnt your l\~na room to ~ dnhlnL SWIVfl ltOCKElt 1£1:, 449.9$ .... c•., , .• · .$281 dllleren\ '.-1 ' mJYbt; I U!Ut bit dllint1 $97 !Add 1 nt• dimell$ifn .1, p1f Hv1fll This ~rotnter JOf1 Is hll',)'OUI It I!• llO. 11•.t.t ........ .. l'fllll l Thli ll"iothl.r 10!1 ~~1 imc:ellt blfU IU. own bill.It In ind tables With 8e c1111forlltlle •• , l!lls Nlh licnt lO tiVt 10llf tumlt~11 f!OUplng t woocl&rllncd pl11ltc tops !tit! wlU re!l11 bacled 1'114\111 nder his 1 dtep tllftlt, !nllmitt -..ii It 11 ccn1td ill tven lllt helt b! 1 bvlntnc Cl(trlt1t tulltd btct lfltl cle•P lotll'I. mtr· \a .!c.Whtlrd prmtttd ~~ttOt !lb-Wld h• dtep blSCL.it lul\t~ seil and 11ble seal wshion lol cltejl se11in1 flt in J'O'lf choitt: of co !WI tM 1111 Net for compi.11 s111ir11 comfort 111tmr1I It b ICttllltd by t(· l'tii1cl foa111 rtvcnlble 1e 1 cllllliorftl C¥tfrff -ttyt to\ltl1 JM ntwtU a. pond 111ap1t wine• Md ~It • lSe-!1.0rtkln& •l'ld sm~t11111~HnJ e111111I tll~ 1t a Cle11tnct fl!'icel , lrMI, Hurry! o il~ 559.95 , ................ $191 1 REG. ll!.91 .................. 1111 '-------- WAREHOUSE AND SHOWROOM SELLING DIRECT TO THE PUBLIC SINCE 1910 TERMS OF SALE An Morchandl .. ;, Thi> Solo Wiii Be Sold HJv 11" Du. To Tht b:ctpfiort0I Sovl~&. All Sol11 Will It finol .•• No Excbonge• , , , No -tfi.1nd1 •• , Pltk Up Yoi.1r Pure~ .. Ar--n.... IM:redlbly low Pricn Or ArronQ•m•nh May h Mod• Fot Dillvery. Ilg Sovin91 Ell~r Wayt Partial Usllnv Only. Tho111Gnd1 of fabi.1low Homt Fi.1r• r1hhh9 6uyt Art Al ltvltzJ TODAY 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. SAN DIEGO FRWY., AT BEACH BLVD., on •osy drive lrom onywher• - -,, •• • t II D41lV ~ll~T ... --• ft ll I Nutty President Idea ' Pursued by Writer • By MERRIMAN SMITH WASH INGTON (UPI) - The frightening idiea Of • nutty president and how he mi1ht affect the world has been klck~ In& around for years, but George E. Reedy is bringing the theoretical problem into public focu s -and quite seriously, too. Few people around Washlniton will diJcuss tht possibility or an unbalanced president, and what to do about him, for fear of beina accused of referring to IOfnt.- one still 011 the pallllcal scene. Because of Reedy 's backJTOUnd, he makes it cle•r that all present company is excepted; that in his ntw book, "The Twilight qi the Pre:.sidency," he Is dealina: on- ly with an abstraction and his no specl!ic individual in mind. GOODCREDE~ Rttdy has more \ban &ood credentials for discuatn& the presidency. He hu been around \\'ashiniton sinc e World War ll and for about 20 years of that tlme, . he wa5 aasociattd with Lyndon B. Johnson while he wa111nator, vice pruident and. tben Presi- de>L During the LBJ Whll• House era, Reedy wu prtS5 secretary for a time, then became a special wiltant to the President. The main thrust of Reedy'& book is that wJth dome.sue problems and world attain becoming incrtulnfly com- ple1, the presidency as now COMtituted is too burdensome -dangerously so. Reedy thinks 600le of the n:sponsibili.ty should be spread around instead of remalnlna concentrated in one maa. Along the way, Reedy devotes a chapter to l he possibility of an unstable man in the presidency. EVENT UNKNOWN "A highly i r ra lion 1 I per&0nality. "'ho under other circumstances might be medically ttrtifiabJe for treat. ment. could Lake over the White House and the 1vent never be known with any degree of assurance." Reedy says in a chapter titled "It Can Happen." As one ••ho has lived with politics much of his life, Rttdy says a man ha3 to be neurotic in the first place if he is compelled and driven to ex- ert leadership and dominance over others. Political reportlrs have w o n d tr e d about this for yeaN : How does a man bring himself to the point of saying, "I believe I am better quallCied than any ot.'ier person to be the aole leader of 200 million people." Reedy says, "What keeps most political leaders from rushing headlong into • catastrophe is the fact that t.hf.ir own neurotic drives must. clash with the neurotic drives of others and In the conflict certain forms of social aanity are bound to emera:e." NO SOLtJTION That happy check.ancl-balan- ee might not always work and this la what worries Reedy. What would happen whem ec- centricity becomes neurotic behavior and turned toward psycholis? Reedy says that under Ult present system, OM!rt is no utisfactory aolu. Uon "lo lbe potential problem ol the mentally unstable presJ- denL" So, what d~ a country do! Retdy 1u1gesl5, "Some.how, there must be a conversion or the operatin1 authority of the pruldency to a managerial 1tatua -one in which a presi- dent can be challt'<lged without impugning his sanity o r balance." How Is this challengeable "manaaerial status" arrived at! Reedy does not aay, but he feels some thought thould be dtvo&ed to a workable solu- ticn. Scary? YOU bet. Outstanding Math Youths Hold Meet ()Jtatandlng math scholar.! from 40 Oran1e County high achools will compete for prize.! on March 13 at the 14th aMual OCC Invitational hiath Meet. Registration will begin at 3: 43 p.m. In the OCC Science Hall, wiUt presentation of ln- dlvldua.1 and team awards 1lated for 9 p.m. followin& compelltlon. Eaeh achool will send four math scholars to the meet . Preliminary competition wlll begin at 4:30 p.m. and run through 5:30 p.m. Student! will attend a dinner in the OCC Student Center, and report back. to the Science Hall for finals from 7:15 p.m. to I: 15 p.m. Dr. Robert C. James, pro- fessor of mathematics at Claremont Graduate School, will be the keynote speaker at 8:13. The 1tath Day w a s originated by the Orange Coast CoUege Enginffr's Club in 1957 to encourage and recognise high school malh i.1udenl.s. It is j o I n t I y sponsored by the club and the OCC Division of Physical Sciences and t.falhematics. I See by Today's Want Ads e LIKE FAnttJ\ Lt KE SON Painlt.rs, q u a 11 t y \l'Ork:mansh.ip Ii. materl&I ru1n11tffd, rtllable, reJ- '"ncta, experienced. e Brother. can ,you 1pare-a alT'lktf 80\\·lln1 bill $10. e 80N VOYAGE .•• 1ol"1 to aea, So IO att ~'hi.I )'Oll may nttd from ~t.at thry can't takt. \\'HALE of • Alo. .. ' ' Ships Mediterranean • Ill Russian Mo1·e LONDON (UPI) -The Soviet Union has sent Sl1 more amphibious landing ships into the Mediterranean as an ap- parent show ol strength in the growing ttflddle East crisis, defense source! said. The landing ships a r e Russia's latest type and the new ones double the strength of th.is type of vessel in tbe Afediterranean. the sources said. The defen.'!e sources said they were baffled by the Soviet move. But they sald they consider it part of Moscow's tactics to show Sov\~t strength in the Mideast area In supPorl of Arab nations. Rusaia has 1nade similar m~ve1 in the past when the f\.fiddle Eas\ crisis has taken a turn for the "-'orse. The Alligator landing ships -a ~·estern alliance code NEWS ANALYSIS name -are !he latest type of Soviet landing ships. 1'he first one of this type was built only hi 1965-66. Alligalors can carry 2,400 tons of cargo. Show of Sea Strength Some of these ships are ex- pected to move back to !he Black Sea soon. Just what they are wpposed to do in the Mediterranean was not ascertainable, the. sources said. They form part of the Soviet fleet assembled in the area and reported to number about 35 warships, In- cluding 11 submarines, some of which may have nuclear capabUIUes. Somewhat surprisingly, in the view of the defense sources. the Russians recently have ~·ithdrawn their cruisers from the area. They sUll have several destroyers equipped ~·ith missiles, and t h e i r cruisers may return any time, the sources said. The Russian hellcopter-car· rylng cruiser ~toskva is in the area but defense sources con- sider her more i.n the nature of a small aircraft carrier lhan a battle cruiser. The Russiam have no real aircraft carriers. EASTER INFANTS SIDS 4111 TO •• IOYS' WINGT" OXFORDS A h•ndlom1 wing tip lace oxford for E•1t1r dr111 • up. Sturdily made ior long Wttr. Bleck or brown. Si111 8V1 to 3 2'6 IN OUR STORE THERE 'S AL- WAYS A WHOLE NEW CROP OF SHOE IDEAS FOR MISSES, CHILDREN AND INFANTS. l Oiplomita, concerned abOut Egypt In a hurry nl. t() curb the explosive Middle E 1 1 t Israeli air atllckll on Egyptian situation a11d Russle's recent ports where they may be (al\· outbursts against Israel, are ing for short periods. following . Soviet n av a I De£eruie sourcts did not rule movements in the area 1o1•ilh out that the ships may be special interest. followed by 11 l>tW ~·a\'e of Despite the -at times -Soviet war1hlp$ in yet another alarming movements, they of the Kremlin's periodic have so far considered them buildups in the area, intended as intended as a shmv of to underscore Ru s 1 i a ' I strength and of demonstrative determlnaUon to play her new support for the Arabi rather role aa a major aea pov.·er. than a massing for any possi· ;;====='==='====; hie 9.irect action. Some suggestions implied Russia also may be using the new ships to ferry arms to Tho .DAILY PILOT- The Ono Thal Coros ,,. INFANTS AND MISSES DRESSY STRAP ALSO INF. SIZE~ TO I She'll at•p liv•ly with I "zi"t" in th i1 pr•tty one 1tr1p flit. l ittle new 1tNp1 heel. SIUS 111, TO J 2'6 IOYS' "CHAlLIE" llG IOTS' IUCKLE STRA~ INFANTS AND MISSIS WIDI IUCKU STIAI' BOOTS A iingy step into •nd step out for E•1t•r wt•r. Ptdd•d in1id• upp•r1. Anltl• 1tr•p. Wid• buc.k- 1•. Choo•• brown or bl•c.k. SLIP-ONS 'r:ni.in Nnl.tt •ll D-e>n 01:T•rd. Sul• loo...t t on11:ue Ank1s •t,..11. C<1mb+· nstlon 11-•t. Thi• t. " r~•I ·~in•y'° on• tnr l h• "bls: brn•" •ii•• 11,9 11 t DRESS FLATS Or111 up the little one for the E11t1r p1 r1d1 with th111 widt ankle st r 1 p flits, AHr•ctiv• 1 .. ,. b•cll2 ~:S 4 TO~ s~s 396 396 3 ALSO MISSES SIDS I'/• TO J ~·~~~i•J~~~Q~~~ WOMEN'S -WOMEN'S ~ATINT FLATS A lovely dr•••Y fl•t h • e I pump. Blunt foe. Sauc.y 2 rivet wide in1fe p strap. 2'' WOMEN'S FLATS A fin• E•1ter 1lin9 flat. Pilqrim typt buckle tongue. Choose black or white. 2'6 NEW ZINGY HIGHLIGHT AC-PUMPS CENTS WILL ADD NEW CHARM, FOR E A ST E R, TO WOMEN'S STYLES! WOMIN'S lOYE KNOT SANDALS ·rhe ide&I dan .. tn1: hal1;hr he~I •nd •i.11: d&Jnly er o•• 1ir111a 1 lrd lo the mtddla •Lil\ love knota. M•t"ll any outfit w !th hl1d oai,nt. '\'h lla or 111.,r.r. s713 llKll .,. ..... _ ,,...., ... _ S,_,. '>rlnrf' _.,A'"" "'°""'" .,_ w ""' ''Jn' .-. 513 WOMEN'S filNUINI LIATHll EASTER SHOES Out1t•ndin9 new w or Id h1el. Blun t toe. Extt• widt buckl1 strap. A mu1t for E•s ter. Blick or wkit• l••+her. 6'1 fH r···~~--{;~~<:),-..'f;.·l:!t ..-.~,,_.f).._, ~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~~ MEN'S AND IOVS' DRESS MIN'S "CHARLIE" 0 x F 0 RD s NEW ZING-ZANG STYLES WILL B 0 0 Ts Choose brown or black in I h is bluch•r style wing tip oxf ord . Or•11 up your Ea1l•r w•rdrob• with th•se. 713 llG IOTS' SIUS 3'1• TO .... 6.38 ADD NEW ZIP TO ANY MEN'S SHOE WARDROBE! MEN'S AND llG IOTS ANKLE BOOTS ,., bro"n or bl1-c1' 11ad<'ltd .. Ur>-on with ,.,.Ida buckl• lnrlda l:ID?Mr•. Wida ton•ll• 1os1 MIN'S IUCKLE STRAP ' ' OXFORD • MEN'S LO-BOOT lllnL • h!•h l•c• •llD -""· Alocca.e ln 100 -Kt~ndlffl oYer 1nlM. ~·rench h•lirhr herl. Bl5ek 1 .. a 1her and 1.v•1l1bl• 1.ho Jn bl•ck or .-rein •UNe. 913 A hand1om1 sliP·on in br1wn e11ly. lerg• tongue. Ankle bucltl• 1 t rt'' "Th• Contin1nf1I". Si1•1 0 to EEE. For E11t•r end •II yea r. EASTER FASHION PANTYHOSE 99c PAii Sha•r be•ufy for your Etsttr w•rdtobe end into Spring •ncl Sum- mer. Zin g y n • w th•des . HUNTINGTON BEACH 5898 EDINGER at SPRINGDALE 847-9125 llG IOTS' SIDS l l/1 TO 6 J38 HUNTINGTON BEACH 10051 ADAMS at BROOKHURST 962-9178 INEXT TO SAY.ON DRUGI STORE HOURS--WEEK DA VS 9 TO 9--SUNDA VS 10 TO 7 1011 EASTER H'ANDBAGS l'oittd t• l'tur , .......... ro" t1*ol tllet ~ .., t.tni.rw.i. !Mid .... l!Mny. -~ .... aoll IMIOFl9! ... Wedn!sday, MJrch ll, 1q10 SadcQeqacli Honor Roll Re veal ed SaddJeback -College h a s · named 210 studenLs lo its deans lisl for <1chleving a 3.0 (8 average) standing or belier during the fall, 1!169 quarter. Of these honor s1udents, 23 , received a 4.0 !straight·Al standing. Studenls on t~ Dean's Llst \VIII receive letters or commendation :>aid college president Dr. F'red H. Bremer. and continued high scholarship can result in gradua\100 with honors. Students 1n~t carry 12 units or more to be eli gible for the Dean's List. The A studcn1s 11 e re Douglas R. Sweet of Dana Point; Bryan Bailey of El Toro; Bernadine K. Cun1ptY.>ll. ~1arion Casagrande and Huth' \Vakioof Lagyna Beach; ?!lark Paulson of Laguna Niguel: Daryle Pliska, D oro t hy Roseberry a~d Lloyd J , \Vengeler of Mission Vic}o: .\I. l. Rudman of Orange ; Pamela A. \Ve aver or San Clemente: Kathleen Collins, S ha r on Nelson, Carol N.vslul. Terry Pimental and Robert Ryan of Santa Ana: and Barbara Breedveld, Carol Du p r c e . Doris Earley, Ca I h c r inc Groeschel. Daniel C. Herbst. John Pilastroiannt and Richard .Ne uland of Tustin. Other students nanlcd to the honor list Included : Laguna Beach -i\larjoric .J. Austin, Betty J . Caddes, Glenn Daniels, Bob 0 e Almeida, Odiie DcWitte. J. D. Doocy, Pauline Favour. Ray· mood Fontana, Gail Good1vin, Jerrold Hagstrom. ~1 ichael .J. Hallahan. David 11irdler, Cin- dy Holter, Jean Holtz, Anna Jcsser, Hila ry R. Huston, And ree Lagerstedt, Patricia Lincke. Basil E. Lobaugh II. Rebecca B. f\1uUer, Timothy R. Port, Patrick J . Reilly. Carolyn A. Robertson. Renata A. Russell , MareareJ.ha Sena. Bonnie Shipley. C a m e r o n Smith, Patricia J. Straight. Peggy A. Stullrl. Deborah \\'eber, and Nick \Voodbuury. Laguna Niguel -Dean R. Honnette, Standlty A. Jacob~. Patricia J. fl!umb and Oru.~illa \Vhelstin~. South Lagun:i -N c i l Barbour, Patricia Beaumont. Eric Bem1an. Gordon Bro\vn. Richard England, Joseph S. Guerriero, Nancy McDonald. Gabriella J\.1ercercau. Lee 1'resse lt1 Karen ~Vilson and John Zold. • Lagu na " Hills -Shciron Kipp, Faith fl.fasucrl, Susan E. Pacek and Joan L. J{ex. Mission Viejo -Anita Bec ker, Gary Ber~en, Mike Derbyshire. John S. Est.ey, Craig Fleck, A vif F'rench, \Yilliam 1'-1. Gross,. J. Gary flultman, Anita J ohnson , Sleven Johnson. Lana L. Kiussis, Sandra H. Marshall, Daryle Pliska. Do ro t h y Roseberry and L1oyd J . \Vengeler. El Toro -Bryan 13ai!ey. Stephen Bell , Poit Case lla, Nan G. Dahle, (h1istel R. Fiorenza , Fred C. Floyd. Diane Lysiak and Patricia .J. Thomas. San Clemente -fl1ci rcia M. Abbott, Audrey A. \mara!. Thea A p p leby. Roger Baldridge, John Cla1 k, Leo Collin, Pa t r i c i a Cr1 i&hton, fl.like Deffley, Kathy Duugher- ty, Nancy Duesler. Eric Eissman. Dana Fales. \1clody D. Falk. Mich;iel L. ~ itzsim· mons, \Vayne Gyger, \.1rginia Halli f\tary Ann H 1rmon. Susan M. Hester, Rich ;rd A. Jones, Arlyn .I. LaBeir J ohn ~fcNamara. Philli p ~lathis, Patti Oddi, Ho~·a,rd Ri<l~nour, George Sausman Pam :la A. \Yeaver and Ronild F. \' yatL Sa n Juan Capi!!trat.o - 1-loward N. Greenlee, J nel ld· dings, Perry A. Patrick. Diane Stephenson, Bobbi Ston~ and John Thompsnn. Capistrano Beach -Joyce En:zweile r, Bill Langlo:' and Linda Sanchez. Dana Point -Chris Hector. Shirley A. Kent. Nt1n,·y E. Kruse, David Kunz a n d Douglas R. S"·eel. OCC PapQr Wins Honor Orange Coast College & cam-rus newspaper, The B.ll'nacle rece ived an honorable f'1ention as best junior co l lege newspaper el the 45th annual High School and J u n i o r College Ne~spaper Oa) &l lhe University of S o u t h e r n Californiam Din Daleboul, sporttMrllcr fo r The· Barnacle, recel,ed an honorable mention In the best sports stories category l'otore than 300 student editor~. reporters ;ind lheir !acuity adViSOl'I from S(lU!hern Californta echOQJs attended !lit day-long coofcreoce sponsored by USC's Scho o l of Journalism. • ' DAil V PILOT J 9 WPdn~sd.1y, March 11, 1970 PILOT.AOVERTISC R J 1 HAVE YOU VI SITEO OUR NEW STORE AT: 9861 Adams at Brookhurs~ in Huntington Beach Chipper's Nut Hut Cashews Coconut Toasted 59f Chicken Bones 1!.?: ~ 39c Women's Casu al Sand als Discount . POUNTA1H \'All[Y-1'10 141 .... , •1¥t1, & E••11tt• .. UNT O~GTON laACM...JIUI 1-.<ll 81Vt1. 11 Al'4flle El. TOlllO-f:I l M• 11 lltck.llflll 8Ntl ' HUNTINGTON 8 &AC--t.wll ' t:•i111•r ,OUlrtfAIN VALL•Y-lftM M.,...i11 51, el Ttlt>"t IANTA ANA-ION W, l:•11•t1t .... •1n111 ~I • Wl!STMINSl t:llt--.n! Wt,1111••.,ltt •t Gelllte WOI (OST• MEIA-.t• M~r ... t I M . 11 WllMot SI. (0$T,\ Mail.A-tll i , 111~ SI, Free! Giiiette Techmatlc Razar Reg. 42' ~ Black & White 126 Film 3~$100 l . $tttlr111p 911 ttil1 11 ._,.. .... c•rtri•I!' tJI", ,.,, • ..... ''" "' Famous Name Nail Enamel or Lipstick . Priced 5 & 6 for $1 00 Ubbey Blue Tempo tF.=-,1 ~Glassware $3'' Plastic Trash Cans Reg. 69 1 to 981 Plasticwares Reg. $2so & $300 Ch:, 68c Coo l. comfy for sr11n.:; or suni· m~r " .,,,,-r ca~ual •·ear. Stice! your 5,n- dali from Jt 11"1de choice o{ colo rs ;nd ~hades. $219 Faultless "TINY KIT" Syringe '.'"' 99c St11 l\"~nondlr kno••n fir r qudity •.. now le...i rlun .$1 or1. 60' Dr. Scholls Iino Pads 2 ~sac Buy 2, So.,c 3!2c 22 Oz. Bonus Size ~i!frL?>TD Mout hwash ~·· '",,. 59 drt1onal 6 l•.!. C ,, 0 Ii ~"" ~ Bh1e 69c Norelco Flip To p Speed Shaver J.licro_e-rOO•e Jloltin_R s 12B7 . hnds follll"' cor.rll!Jr of I.ice for rin s e, f.i~I, MOO'"L '//ii l/O.) .~22' Quart Aladdin Vac uum Bottl e ll u~t pro(lf! Dent proof' In-$178 ~.i!.urd k1lc proof scopper. lnde-sttU{uble pl"1ic. Reg. 11u Gro sset Road Atlas l p to d~:e m1;ii of all 'O 'c11~. Un•d• & l>lcxiro. f.uy to read rO\lte m~rkers. Key of Kentucky Blended Whiskey fiftft 0.11.~ ~.f. $299 99' " ' Metal Snop·Lock Handles l ou r Cho ice 39c .. 6 Ounce Juice or 12 Ounce Tumblers ·~, l2i$JOO ~~~22 .Gal. $193 -SIU j • L11unchy llodcet1 • 1 s Qt. Wo1t•~o1lt1tt ) •• , 12 .... 1.00 ,, 1.40. . • Bea1.1tiful cool blue ~bu • ith htiry ~ and stltty 1im of quality by L1bbe1-. A nevrr be· fore prier! 3995 7 Drawer Mediterranean Style., Chests $2999 C tc •te Decou ror Styling. Jdcal fo r bedroom or den. Affords txtrt sior- agc space. Dirk oak finish. As- sembles c 1$i ly. '48x21xl~"· 14995 Value! 5 Foot Spanish Style Library Units $29?~ AHrach\'e decorat- or unit offcn 6" of h~nd1ome desi_..n for you r home. Scr!td .,,, i 1 h de · l~rltd cttvio~ ind Jcritch proof fin- ish. Expensive looking bur low price. Spanish Record & Utility Cabinet $1411 Cil'·cd look ••. •r,in finilh. Grc't for re cord • or SIOtJge. Vinyl Shower ond Window Curta ins B~t qu d uy buy. H1g 1.1· 1011ment of eolon and $249 rr1n1,. 39c Shell Soap Dish with Nail Brush So pretty in your barh- ri)l'.lm .. , in pink, orange, 291 rellow nr .11;rttn. $5.95 Yafue! Cornwall Warmlnr Trays Jdril g1fr anytimt. Llt£e $399 111~9"' s1:e. 98c Pronto 20 01. Floor Cart Cle.ins fau, Je,1cs 110 781 film. ::! $3'' ''" R • y. ft KCtate blend in the most popu!.ir folors. Rt.i.:!1 10 b ani WashJb!e. $14" Value! 4 Shell Metal Book Cases $999 All me t il •••!not sq•I. in,~. Ar111.nge books. tJ1or- i1e obittt11 ol 1rt or rtcord~. C.eate 1 func· 1ion-di1id c 1 room. 124" Value 5 Shelf Decorator Hutch Style Bookcase s1999 Rug&ed met•! ron11ruc don with the hltld· )(}me meditcr- r,ne.in Jock of 1od17. AttrtC- tive di-roniror pi«e ti 1 '!'hri- ity sa,·ing' of 20%. Reg. $pt 'Pop Art' ~~Tray Tables ' • 99' Colodul & con· 1cmoorary. Non umi~h c n•mt l finish. 13° Val! Enameled Wood Toilet Seats s22• Smoorh ch ip si111nt 11•ood in ~·hite, rrllow, pinl:. $1.99 Value! 2 Piece Drain Mat and Rac k S1nt1al)', dt1n! Hind· 991 some colon. $1.69 Paok at 3 9 Foat Extension Cords Tor 'lu•l•ty extension $131 cords •I 1 Thrifl>' 1•1lue! It/" Value! Metal ·~;;:T~a~ble l Stool I!' .... $6'' '" -=::;;;:::,~~· l lier t~bl~ with 1 · ' eiJy roll casten & stool oi 11urdp me11I (On~uuc-J ~ 11011. A 1•oc1do A color, Polre1hi!ent t(J~h can i1 lite ~·e1.e;ht. 1c1is1t rus1. clc~ns e.i~ily. ~nug iit .~nJp-On lid climi• ruies 1pillas;e. fJntastic 11lue: s5,95 Value! 3 Shelf Avocado Metal Units Ad1usub!c shel\·~ for den !'If office Use ~cv~rJl for 1 ,;reJt hbr.iry lool:. $444 Fr uit of the Loom Non·slip Foam Back Furniture Throws Th•ittr $298 Di1count Pric1 Dr,;or;11ive p!O· 1~,11on fo r fumi· 1u1c Non slip l1~ckin1<t clinAS to furnilul'f: with "·rinkle frtt fit. PetmJnCnt lJ • IS Qt, Utility T11lt1 • Mixint Bowl S1'11 • C11tl1ry Tray1 • 12 Qt. Poi11 • Dith Po111 • Vc91tobl1 Bi111 Quality pll.ltic •• , unbrt 1lcablt lon.s b.sttng polrethylenc l1opul1r colors. /~,,,...--.... \, l.()~ ,J . Mel mac® Dinnerware SOUP ' CERE AL Your Choice BOILS CUPS SAUCERS SA LAD PLATES Avocado Turq. • 69c Dinner Plot• S:Sc • 1.09 Senoing Pl1tt•r 93c , Reg. 39' to 59' ea. Disposable Bakeware ~h:~c• 4 ~,,~ bonded. to back· 11~~~!l!~ 1~i~ 01" Sofo Sl1.1 $5.95 $391 Detecto Bathroom Scales ., .. .,.. $293 Ptice4 ~ Famous quality . Ac.:ur.ate! Ntw popul•r colon. $3ts Value! 16 Pc. Dinnerware Set $277 Chirming 1• • breal:f~st set. Dlih· w11htr safe. 124,s Value! Cory $3,59 Cory 4 ta 8 Cup Glau Coffl1makor Percolator Vacu11m method for per· $277 '~ "' $1611 '"'·'"-'"·'".··------S111 ruUv 11Uomatic cl«• tric w11~1 handy cup m1rk1ngJ. E1 sy to r!cJn st.lnless s1.1:el. $14.88 Value! Deluu Sunbeam Hand Ml11r p ur;ble motor fer mi~· s9n 1n;:: poT.-et. MOO! L H $2.98 Value! Iron Board Pad & Cover Sets i "ef lnn-outl•stJ n1hc1s. $191 With frtt iron re~I. Fruit of the Loom 1p9 Bed Pillows ·" Di1e11111t $159 . Price ~~' Da isy print ~ bl ue or p1nlc. l AIHtllc.,. i:oam f11!rd. 100% rotfon t1cbng. t.11- tbine ..,,sh· :hie. &'u11ful berib. boned b15ltcti, metal ptlls, n0l'- cltlf$ dlot:lr: f11/I of wonderful ltt"• and pr11cs. $4.99 Value! Teflon Hi-Dome Skillet In· decormtor color~ of $399 Poppy. Gold, Avotado. $2.19 Valut! 2 Qu ar t Pyru Covered Cuserols Ch oice of i'·oc1do or pi~pple color. U'c for $111 :1trv1n.i: or storing. R1gular 98c Dow Bathroom Cluner CleaN ind J1nitiics - Lu,·es h1thtoom ~prini; 781 frd h! $2511 Nobility Radio Phono $2177 ' F.1ithful tt· ,,,. , ,,..J producuon of ~ ,'~;J 3~1;1 or ~) ' :-.:'~ RPr.I rrcords: Great 1onc. ,. I!! Power ful ' ~ fullp pOtl· --·ah!. Slender Wheel Exerciser Creme or fros!ed nJol e1umel 1nd full ~1ze lip11ick9, Excel- lent shade auon- rr.en1 inc lu~c t 1'1nlcs, Cor1 l1 , OrJnges, i rauvcJ ,nd Beiges. Hi·fuhion ha ndeaus, sbm· OUl bows. ICllNred .hud bJnds. 1ie-on binds. Otheni 4'9c: •"' 6fc Striped Knit Boy's Shirts r.Iany d1fferc11t strire 2 '$3 ~ color tombin~tions, 0 3 necl: styles. 8 10 16. ll ladies Nylon Bikini Briefs ~011·stock up onimuch 2 ~$I 'll'lnied l1ngcr.ie item! It Men's Perma Press • Sports Shirts S11l1ds. Stript5, Ch t r k 1 $191 Pl1rd~ ~·•ul A" A,.o eu rr~N r • Shon sltt\·n and tapt'rtd. Sl'• Ladies' Vinyl Clutch Purses ~' $149 - e:!!7 Small size purse f!'Jr Easter. Ju . sl'd. co l o n ft ll\'le,. Sl.l7 Worne11'1 Billfol&t f7c A '""'' 1p•cltl •llYI ~-­s4t1 Women's OPTO SPEC Sunglasses $297 ' ·\ • - ' .11 DAILY '1LOT Wtdnesd11, Matth •ll. 1970 .I Lawyers Don Robes Court Crusli Eased by Judge Pro Tems 111 TOM FORTUNE ot .. o."' .., ... lltff Corona del Mar attorney Carl Xe11ey ls 73 -too old, he 11)'1, \o be 1ppolnted a judge. But recenUy he cloaked ~ in a judge's robe arld hUrd himself called for the f1nt time, "Your honor.'' Ke&Jey was sltllng as a jodle pro tern (temi)orary judle), a fill-In taken from a list of more than 100 J!arbor Area attorneys approved by the judges of Harbor Judicial District Municipal Court in Colt.a Mesa. Judie pro terns are used Lo lr1 traffic and small claims cues and even a few• civil cues. explains Judge Donald Duncan, presiding judge of the Harbor Court. They are used year around on a regular basis but even more so at the mo- ment because the judgeship Andy's Fun Ask any Ir.Id. "Ask Andy" Is fun. Set It Saturdays lrt the DAILY ftlLOT. held by J.E.T. "Ned" Rutlet, elevated to Supericir Court. is now vacant. Kegley said he got along just fine his first time on the bench and found it an "en- joyable, worthwQile ex- perience.'' Then he thought, and reJaltd how, well, there was just one little hitch. He sentenced an offender to lraffic school and a $5 fine, then saw him a lUUe later in the court corridor. ''Hey man," he said the defendant chided him, "you told me it was five bucks. How come it was 10 bucks?" Blair Barnett. 3 5 • y e a r • old Newport attorney, ha s served as a judge pro tem a number o! times.,He says he 1.\. no longer in awe of the job. but "when you sit no matter how small the matter you're hearing you take it quite seriou.sly. People are trusting you not only to be impartial but to listen and understand each side o[ the case." Parties to the case are ad· vised beforehand that an at- torney rather than a regula r judge is presiding and asked if they consent. A few aslr. for 1 regular judge but most are willing to have the pro tem hear lhelr case. "It Is good experience tor attomeys and gives them in- sight to how it (eels to sit on the other side," said Judge Dungan. nut the pro tern procedure ls used for the more practical reason on of keeping the court backlog in bounds. The pro tern judge list is prep.a.red by the t h r e e municipal court judges from names of attorneys who have argued cases before them. Judge Rutter wu elevated to the Superior Court in January and court JOUrces say nonnally it lakes about 00 days for the governor to make an appolntrrient. In the meantime, J1,.1dges ·Dungan and Calvin Schmidt have gotten by with the help of tile \>ro terns and on only a couple of oceas'ions judges assigned to their court on an emergency basis by the state Judicial Council In Los Angeles. These often are relired judges. The Orange Coast DAILY PILOT offers you this great 120-page boo~ to help you save time and money on your Income Tax- Sylvia Porter says: ~f you never needed tax help before-you need it now! Them fohlll which yon mm tax to the absola!e legal ' mu out. thia year are edireJ11 tninimum; ~, unfamiliar -more com-(S) Save time as wen u money plicated _than ever be[ore. on your 1969 income tax But with our 1970 Income Tax -quite likely much biK!l"r Gwde, you will be able to: amount. of both than you (1) !I:, in your F~nn 1040 and would now guess. ' . accompanying schedules Everything you need to !mow with far leu trouble and far about filing your Federal Income more confidence. than yoa Tax is in this d ependable, e.'\sy- n~ ~eve po111ble; to-understand book. You need no (2) Find doz~s upon dozens o[ one to help you. Vita1 tax aaving1 money~saVlDg hints 'Which -all of the current tax "bl:'eakl'I" w~ll h elp you to a,void costly many of which may be bra~d nustak~ In your income tax new to you-are explained aa: you retam and ·to •lash your ~llout7ourtaxfonnlinebyline. USE THIS HANDY ORDER FORM Only $1.25 :·:;:;:.;,:.::-,:::.·-----------: I f...wtt PWllatilll. llpt. "" JilO C.UH "'AA•• I -•-· """ ~ I ·--lbb ""'•"""'~"' I · ..,._ -.... ... or I to "Sytwil l'Drt., 111 '1ildl" P*are and handling · ''••nic.k, c-.. ""° • I I .D ·FOR YOUR I !ncioMd is 11.50 lit.a .... 25( 1 .. pasia., Ind i.1d!;lll! ... _ I I •"1 •f $)hia "'1o'1 1910 ""°"" Tn c,ldt. ".;,. ""11 lo"'. I COPY TODAY : .. ,,_ : I ""nt --·--I What. you spend for this book will mum many dollars • in tax savings I Addrtu --···--I : C1b : I St•I• ~ 1.tp "°·-----: I HH·IJ I ~---···-----------------~ Claampioti Losers St. Louis area \Veight \Vatchers Club . members can count themselves \Vinners for losing. Thomas Berger (left) Jost 125 lbs. -and no\v he and his \vifc can both fit into the pants he used to \\•ear. For the Stocker fan1ily the \Veight re- 0ducing plan was definitely a family affair. Mr. and Mrs. fl'ferle Stocker and son Howard, 12, (right) can no1v all fit into Merle's old overcoat. Stocker lost 153 lbs .. his wife, 45 lbs., and lioward. 8 lbs, for a total of 206 lbs. THURS., FIL, AND SAT. ONLY "' Rafferty Opponent Due at GWC Fest Or. Julian Nava, candidate for · state superintendent of public instruction, a post now held by Or. r.1ax Rafferty, will headline a Mexlcan-Amerjcan Festival al Golden W e s t College March l&-20. The two-day event, 'planned by the college's MECHA organizaUon (Chicano Student Movement ol the Southwest), will focus on problems of the Chicano in education with emphasis on Orange County. Richard Biaz. ~1 E C H A president, said five top speakers, all close to h1exican- American students and their needs, will participate. Leading off h1arch 19, will be Sal Castro, high school teacher Involved in t h e walkout at Los Angeles' Lin- coln High In 1968; Ralph Echave, head of the Orange County Neighborhood Youth Corps; and Carlos Ramos, director of the Community Ac-- Lion Council of Orange County. They will addre!s students and public in the college's free speech area adjacent to the Forum. beginning at 11 a.m. Luncheon in the student center will follow, with a Mex- ican menu available and entertainment by Mariachi musicians. Nava, a member of the Los Angeles City Board of Educa· tion and professor of hlstort at San Fernando, Valley State College, will &peak at 11 1.m. March 20, followed by Ray Villa, businessman and cit)' councilman in Santa Ana. A dance from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. in the :student cenler will cap activities. Bircher lo Run ., For House Seat ARCADIA (AP) -Fonntr Congressman John H. Rousselot , once public rela· 1..ions director for the John Birch Society, has announced his candidacy ror t h e Republican nomination from the 24th C ongressional District. Rousse~ot. who said he now Is an inactive member of the Birch Society, told newsmen Thursday that his membership might be used against him by opponents but that the White House had aSSllred him hit candidacy would not be "a" embarrassment" to President Nixon. Seamless Nylon ' PAITY ROSE :> AQUA NET HAIR SPRAY CREST TOOTHPASTE I• Rftistont GRANTS TRAINING PANTS SALE 22 ~r. Sold in l pr. pltg. Dwble ~lck cono. witti Inside Frosted UBHT BULBS SAU 33' ~ 1 l -oz. .efj ..... fllt Hanl to Hold limit 2 GRANT CREST RUG YARN SALE 28' 20 GALLON PLASTIC GARBAGE BAGS SAU 46' 28" I 35'" I-a. 69c ' SAU 38' I l09"lar "' lilot -iJ s .... ,.,lly Silo !'1: Limit 2 ~ JELLEY BIRD EGGS SAU 4 ~100 Eat • t'nll Ont at • tUne .. by the -1.1. l imit 4 lb1. 3 QUART FOAi ICE CHEST SALE 64' Llg .. Weig .. ""' Slr""'J •• ,. 1.00 limit 2 ~ GRANT PLAZA • Brookhurst at Adams • HUNTINGTON BEACH \ Wedntsd11. Marth 11, 1970 DAILY PILDT ,t?j Madame Tussaud Has Many Guests at 200th Birthday LONDON (AP) - Madame Lou.la XV'& mlatrus, respltn-(on hl1 deathbed across the li1aug~am ). it became ln-\Ya lter H. Ann en b e r I , executioner's 'block while 1 nourished hls famous fly benijn figure or Swiss-bora "T'uyaud's wu m u se um dent in !>Jack lact decolltt.aa:e hall), I am b chops VicLorla creasingly d If f I c u 1 t to obllvious or l'A'O chaps staled real-life venlon identically fl icker, wtUJe art hb torlan Madame Tuu aud, In black r·elebr1ted Its 200lh birthday with mech1Nltd bosom, the (Earl MOW1tb1tten's queenly dlsUnguish the rt al from the on a bench behind a arrayed, Lady Antonia Frwr, Kenneth Clark, in real life , llUl'I bonnet and stetl rtmmed 'J'hurlday night at 1 aa la din-onJy fiiure ln the grand hall · great · srandmother standing realisUcally rendered world. newspaper, who happened to author of a b es t -s e 11 1 n g contended with 1 buulng glassei, who moved th 1 :t~ In the grand hall allended dalln1 baclt tc the: orlglJW nut to the real IUe Baroness Britllh Home Se c ret ary be mall train robbers Bl&&• biography of the tr•1ic quetn, microphone to deli ver the m\15ewn tc London in 1802. l'ty 360 world famous gues\8. PvJi tlhiblUon in 1770· Gall.lkell), potatoes Lord Callaghan, charged with law and \Yilson. bent over lhe Consomme main addrt ss ol the evening after 1 career'ol molded htadi llaU of them were alive. A~~..1~ :irenlng wore on, Byron (In a hlppy cape beside and otder, found himself chat-Elsewhere, titary Quetn or Bourbon. "truth ln protralture." or f\IUlotlne vkttms from tht Speaking for the inmates -_rr_••_~..;.Y_• tt_d•_00_1_• _N_•1;..'°;.." .....:•_:bor::.•::d:_:loo::kl::•:!l:_:So::me::::":•t:..__:t::'.:in&!....:w::'.lth~:::_U·:S·:__'.'.A::'.:m::ba~ss~ado:::::_r ....:'.:Scot~1_::bvl~t _:::h''.'.'..'."'~•~d_'.av'.:''.'.'_::lhe:.___:J~omo::_:_K~en'.::y~at~to::_, :.ln~el~li~IY'.:_· _'.'.:Pr~es~ld~ln~g~ov~e:_r ~It ~·1~1 w~u~the~~Fre~n<~h~R>~vol~utJ~on:_. --- tl\OSe enshrined in w~x - .\dm. of the Fleel Earl ,\!ountbatten of Burma looked :lt his effigy across the room, 1c(entlcal down to the ten rows <1f ribbons, an d deplored how 1nuch hai r he had lost since ht \vas portrayed by the wax w9rks a quarter of a century ;igo. Behind him on the dais. robust in freshly rouged wax, '•tPod President Nixon in a flaming red tie, astronaut .John Glenn In ghosUy Cbn- 1·er,11alion wlth d e c e a s e d Rllssian cosmonaut Yu r t (;~&arin, Egypt's President Gamal Abdel Nasser peeking .1ver the shoulder of Jordan's King Hussein , Fidel Castro in lreshly laundered fatigues; \Vlnston Churchill, cigar at the re.ady, leaning over his easel. JJVING VERS IONS Al the banquet tables wert 1h~ living versions of Home !'i~retary · James Callaghan, 1ockey Lester Pigott, recently !\nighted actor Kenneth More, Liberal party leader Jeremy ·r11orpe, Earl and Counle55 Longford. model Pen e Io p e Tree and a number of others l';ith a" artlricial alter~&o xomewhere about the halt The famous ll'axworks had l1il upon the idea of having as ~uests of honor at its birthday party anyone present in effigy in its halls. "Pope Paul didn't respond to our Invitation," said a ~ pokcsman for Af a d a m e Tnssaud's, "Lent, you kn<Jw." llubc rt H. Humphrey wasn't invited. The former vice presi- rl<'nl had just been rolled into lhc store room. along with the fllher JOO historical personages \\ho each year fade from the :-;1·rne al the London landmark . '·If they don't make a come- h;1rk in 12 months. the head 1·. broken up, but we keep the 1r1olcL" said · the spokesman. !lum phrey's head sat on a <.he!f with Canada's John lliC'ft'nba ker. Harry S. Truman ;ind Cassius Clay. Among the honored guests, Baroness Spencer· Churchlll admired the rendi lkm of) lier late husband at his easel, the C hi n e s e amba~ador com- plained about how wan Mao T,.;~-t ung looked .on h i s redeslal behind Ho Chi Minh's r·hair and police constable \ndrew Hanna. v:ho has smil- rid a \\'a:ty ,.;mile from beneath 11is bobby hal for years ln the 1nai n lobby , showed up in white lie and tails. No one recognized him. SNUBBED FETE :-.'l lss \Vo rld , Eva 1\uberslnrir of Austri a, snub- hcd the festivities, so the low 1·leavage honors of the evening went to fl1adame Du Barry, Six Adult Oasses Set For YMCA Enrollment is open for six ;idu!t classes sponsored by the (lrn11gc Coast YAICA, 2300 L'niversily Drive, Newport 13e<ich, according lo YA1CA t.pokes man. fl.1rs. Alice Fox. Rug making will be offered 'Vednesday from IO: IS a.m. to 12.15 p.m. beginning Wed- nesday, The e igh t -week "'c.ssion will be instructed by lll'lcn Pro thers. Beginning. intermediate and advanced oll painting classel l\·i!J also be taught by ,_1n. Prolhcr.s. A class for begin- ners and intermediates .,.,.tll be orcn li1onda ys from 1 lo 9 11.m. and Fridays from 1 to 3 ll.nl. The class fo r in- lt'rmediates and ad v a n c e d painters will be held \\'ed- 11csdays from I to 3 p,m, Classes ru n ~l arch 2 throu1h April 24, illenta l Oyna1nics. ::t class in n1entaJ exercises fo r co.1- • rntralion and i ncr e a sed reltntion. will be g i v e. n Tuesdays from 7:30 to 8:30 pn1. by f(en \Voo dw1rd . Regislration ls still open for the classes whlch run to ~lar1~h JI. Classes in y,·eaving are scheduled Tuesday from I to 3 p.m. lhrough April 23. HaU1a Yoga classu will meet \Vednesdoys and Friday• from 9 to JO a.m. Mrs. Fox .~aid a new four-week str16S \~JI! be scheduled at the cotn· pletion of this series l\,farch '17. T\\o lnveslmo1t session& ''ill be held J\larch 11 and II from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. J\lrs. Fox said additional io- tnrmalion ma.y be obtained by <>lllns 642·99!0. Califomia Fecl~ral guara11lees $1,236 a year on a $20,000 inveslanent with absolute · · ty.- 6% guaranteed interest is what we 're talking about. A guaranteed annual yield of 6.18%. That mean s $1;236 a yea r on a $20,000 investment. And not only is interest guaranteed , but your principal is full y in- sured by an agency of t he fed - eral government. It's on e of t he world's safest investmen ts. Naturally, there are ~r-some conditions. First of all, t o quali fy fo r California Federal's guaranteed 6°Ai plan , the minimum deposit is $5,000. Second, you leave your mone y with us fo r a period of two years or more. Withdrawals are permitted at any t ime, howeve r, with some loss of interest if with - drawn pri or to maturity date. Is it possible for a family to invest more than $20,000 and still have the principal amount fully insured? By opening three separate accounts, a man and wife may ha ve up to $60,000 full y insured. What if you don't have $5,000? California Federal has a wi de variety of plans for invest- ment s und er $5 ,000. Interest ranges from 5% to 5.75 %. One of them .undoubtedly is ideally suited t o your particular cir- cumstances. Can you earn more than 6.18 % yield? Yes, you can earn 7. 79% an- nual yi el d on $100,000 or more if left on deposit for 1 year or more.Thatamountsto$7,779.00 guaranteed interest on $100,000. And the 7.5°Ai yearly interest rate is adjustable for terms shorter than one year. Does any Savings and.Loan Association in California, under any circumstances, pay a higher interest rate than California Federal? No. Do you ~ve any other questions? Call any of our offices in Los Angeles, Ventura or Orange Qounties. Or stop in. We'll have the answers. Helping savers earn more money on their savings made us the nation's largest federal. Califomia Federal·. Nation~ Largest Federal. For the money you can't afford to risk. Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave.· 776-222 2 Costa Mesa Office: 2100 Ha rbor Blvd .· 546-2300 Orange Office: 381 0 w. Chapman Ave~· 639-3 033 Olh•r COl'\vtnienl offic:os throughout Loa An;•l•s.. Orong• and Ventura CouotlaL ' .. • . .. ., , . ' . .. .. t ~-. \ DAILY PILOT Pilot Battles Cops ·Tonight It's the undefeated (0-0) DAILY PILOT against the winleSJ (0-0) cops tonight in a benefit basketball game at Ccxsta l\1 esa Hlg!l's gym. Doon open at 6:30 with Upoff at 7: 15. Admission ts 35 cents pe.r person \\'ith all money going lo the fund for paralyzed Costa Mesa High wrestler Justin Ogata. The DAILY PILOT rates a solid favorite on the basis of the inside menace H Newport Beach editor Tom Fortune represent:i plus the outside shooting threat of sports editor Glenn \\'hite. That, blended with the all·round court iiibilities of spor\-s staffers Craig Sheff, Phil Ross and Roger Carlson plus mates Griffith Fig hts 'Mark Tonight In Eli1niI1ation NEW YORK -Emile Griffith. one of . the most sucressfu'I gardeners in boxing history. n11'cl~ young Carlos i\lark tonight as he continues his efforts to cultiva!e anolher title bout with middle11Jeighl champion Nino Ben\'enuti. The scheduled 12-rounder . billed as ~ middleweight elimination. will be t:ril· fith's 21 st main event in i\·Jadiso n SquarL' Garden . The 32·year-old Nev.• Yorker, three times the v.'orld 11·elterweight champion and tY.'ice mlddle1ve ight king. won 17 of his previous appearances. Only two fighters top Griffith in Garden main events. Tony Canzoneri had 25 anll flalph "Tiger" Jones 23. • • NE\V YORK -Only formal approval of the National Football League is needed for complclion of the sale or the ~ew· York J!'\S, a team official says. "Details have been v.·orked out and now it's up to the league directors at the meeting in Honolulu next. w e e k . ' ' Townsend l\1artin . Jets board chairman, Ii aid Tuesday. The annual meeting of pro football 's owner~ starts Monday in 1-lawaii. A syndicate headed by Sleven J. Ross, Kinney National Services president, aod jncluding Allie Sher1nan, ex·head coach of Lhe New York Giants, is the reported purchaser of the JelS. The pri ce tag is about S21 million. said a pro football source.· who confirmed that the sale was on the agenda for the J-lonolulu sessions. Approval ror the sate must com@ from 2Q ol the 26 American and National Conference owners. The Jets are in lht American Conference. · • POJ\1PANO BEACl-I. Fla. -Slugging Frank Howard of the \Vashington Senators, at &.7 and 275 pounds the big- gest pl ayer in the American League, ,;igned a contract to match his physical fitature Tuesday with a one-year pacL in the $125,000 neighborhood . Appearing at the Senators' Pompano Beach train ing base with club ov.•ner Bob Short and manag!'r Ted Williams, Howa rd said he compromised on his de- mand ror the security of a tw~year pact \\•hen the money in the one-year contract \1·as swee tened. • i\like Washington of the University of Califomia al Riverside was the only Californian selected to the Little All- American basketball teams. Washington \\'as accorded honorable mention hooors. • SAN FRANCISCO - San Francisco \\'arriors sta r Nate Thu1111ond, acquitted In a pat erni ty suit trial two months ago, must face a new trial. a Superior Court J udge has ruled. Jud~e Carl /\. Allen granted a retrial morion J\1ondav on behalf or plaintiffs 'I'hercsa JacksOn. 21. and her 2.year-0ld i;on. Alex is. In the firs t lrial. a jury of six men and sb: women voted 9-3 that Thurmond wa5 nol the father of the ch ild. A pathologist had tcstififd that the 6- ftXll·l I basketball star is sterile \)c('ause of a glandular imbalance which caused hts hcighl and his 7·foot-10 arm span. In granting the retrial, Allen said Thurmond's defense did not prove anyone rise could have been the father, and also liaid he himself might have made legal errors in his instructions lo the jury. • BERKELEY -Jim 11anifan, Qffensive coach for !he Utah football team the past ttU"ee seasons. will join the California football staff, head coach Ray Willsey •r>- nounct'd Tuesday. Hanifan, 36, has coarhcd at the high 8CIDol and college IC1'el since he w1u1 graduated in 1955 from Cal, \\'here he was a slar pass receiv er. Willsey sakl he e~led to fill a rt- majning vacaocy on his staff soon. • VJRGJNIA BEACH, Va.-Polict said a 1&-yr1r-old boy collapsed Tut5day ar. ~ •tule prep;1rlng lo start ba!leball ~ ii Princess Anne. Jtigh S~hool and lfif:d ,,...a;rly two hours later. ()and A11n McDaniel died of un-~11'«-d caiases al 5.20 p.m. 1n lhe ~~ rOl'lfTl al Virginia Btach C..ta1>..:r-.1 He•p1i.l. a hQspital lipokc!1nan WI f''Jr,.t-" Ji)J ti.lc:l>anlcl, a 9th graoc pup.1. coh1~ •hile at.andlna wllh • fl1WP " """ Tom Keevil, Carl Carsk:osen, Jeff Stevenson, Steve Andnws and Jim \\'ood, makes the DAIL V PILOT an awesome force. The newspaper types ran lhrough a gruelling 2\7-hoor full court game type scrimmage Monday night, putting the finishing touches on a polished offense and stingy defense and hacking down se\leral kilos of stomach fat. The DAILY PILOT also has the ad· vantage of having Howard Handy, a member of the $ports staff , working with Emil Necme as an official. And, the DAILY PILOT will also pr<>- vide the scorekeeper. So how can it lose '! The Fuu has superiority in numbers and overall height-advantage~ However. JOO sheep wouldn't be picked to whip a doun wolves and what good is height ad· vantage if the cop is too over-weight to jump~ While the DAILY PlLCYI' has been working out for two months in prepara· 1 li on for tonight's struggle, lhe cops ha ve been dtllling by ticketing helpless motorists. And despite a police threat to ticket all DAILY PILOT cars for the next six months if the newspaper wins tonigh t, oddsmakers continue to make the cops 15·polnt underdogs. ' 1Jne11PI Dally PUol Tllo C.JK f>.2 Carl Caratenstn F Owen Kreza 6-2 6-2 Craig Sheff F Ron Palmer &-10 s.a Tom Fortune c ·Phi! Q:>Mbue 1-1 S-9 Phil Ross G Max f n S-ll ~10 Glenn White G Tom r 5--11 DAILY PlLOT sul>s -Roge Carlson, ·Steve Andrews, Jeff Stevenson, om Kee· vii, Jim Wood. 1 Cops' subs -Gary Barwig, Bill Bech- tel, Chan CamariUo, Matt Collett. Sam Cordeiro, Dick Frederiksen, Carl Jack· son, AJ Muir, Roger Neal, Pat Rodgers, Austin Smith, Ed SUtton. Best Year • Ill Says LA Su er any Ways, Star .West LOS AN<i~:Li'.:S 1AP) -"I've probably gain1~d a reputation as mostly a shooter,'' .Jerry \Vest mused. "\Veil. that's the tur1hcst thing fron1 the tiuth." The lanky Los Angeles Lakers guard \1·as juggling statistics as he considered the possibility of wiMing the National Uasketball Association's scoring race. "I guess that this year, though, \\'hii: "'ith the club being hit wiUi so many in· Juries, maybe some or the guys hav1' looked to me more than usual," \Vest ad· milted. He has, indeed. gained fame as a shooter. His 31.1 point.s·per·game average is best in the league, about three points be:I· tcr tha n his neares t challengers. centers Lew Alcindor of Milwaukee and Elvi n Hayes of San Diego . By appearing in Friday night's game agai nst Philadelphia, \\'est will meet the 1 'iO.game minimum needed to qualify for the crown. \Vinning the scoring title would be quite an accomplishment for the 6·foot·3 veteran v.·ho, five times in his nine previous seasons, has been in the top five, twice as the runner-up. Only twice in the 2f.season history of the NBA has a backcourl man won the crown -Max Zaslofs ky of !he Chicago Stags at 21.0 in 1947-48 and Dave Bing of the Detroit Pistons with %7.1in1967-68. "Winning the scoring race is not as significant as knowing that the team won." West insisled, sh i ft in g un. comfortably as Uie discussion focused on bis shooting. "I mean, if I did even more scoring but v.·e didn 't wtn, some people might think my shooting so much was detrimental. "People Jose sight oC the fact that this is a five-man game." He .acknowledged Safe at Second • •'"" ;:!"' J ERRY WEST Lhat the early·season iniury to center \Vilt Chamberlain had hurt the club a great deal bul that, in one reSpeCt. ii made the game a bit easier for him. "\Ve '"e had to become a running team agai n," \\'est sa id, "and when there's a lot or running and passing there's a lot more room. "It's \\'ide open and you don't get belled around nearly as much as in 1 slow. deliberate game." He 's been quite fortunate this season. missing only eight games due to a pulled hamstring muscle and some other minQr injuries. Since playing every game as a rookie, \Vest has been farced to sit out 119 games with a variety of sprains, strains, pulls, Sandy AJomar of the Angels is safe at second base as he slides into the bag during action in the first inning of Tuesday's game with tile Giants. San Francisco shortstop Bob Heise comes in for the tag, but Is too late. The Angels won, !().(). I lean and at least hall a dozen brOken noses. "Personally, this is my best year in many ways," he said, "perhaps because I've contributed more." He has well over 500 assists and sets a Laker record every time he makes another one. And hi.!I average, about 7.5 a game, is fourth best in the NBA. 1 "But 1'11 say this -I'm a lot more tired than J might have been on a healthier team" West observed. ! "When you're an 'old man' at 31. playing as many games as we do (82 in the regular season plus 11 exhiblUons and as many as 21 in the playoffs) it really starts catching up with you ." Then, k>oking ahead to the post·season grind, he said: "For some reason a lot of people seem to be conctdlng 'lhe Western title to us. That's just ridiculous! "We haven't got any better chance to win it this year than others. In fact, we've got a worse char>ei!. After all, we didn't dominate the division like we did last year or some other limes -although rm .sure we would have with Wilt. But we 're right in v.·ith the rest of them. It's very balanced." And, considering a playoff without defending champion Boston -which has defeated the Laken ror the UUe seven times in 11 years -We st said : "l can't really say I'm sorry lhe Cel~ tics aren't in the playoffs again this time -but I am kind of sorry to see them ao the way they did, not being able to de- fend their championship. "I know I've said maybe I just wasn't meant to play on a championship team and sometimes I've wondered to myself what do we have to do to win it," he said. "So it would bave been nice to finally beat Boston for it. "But as Jong as we 1et there, that's all that counts." Lakers Can't ' Rest West LOS ANGELES -Coach Joe Mullaney of the Los Angeles Lakers was sOrry he had to use. Jerry West so much in the Warriors game, but not that sorry. West scored 42 points Tuesday night, using the last two seconds of the game to sink a 25--foot jumper and squeak his team to a 1()6.104 victory over San Fran- cisco. "I would have liked to have been able 10 give Jerry more rest tonight," Mui· Janey said later, "but the way the game went it just wasn't po5Sible." Tuesday's victory, witnessed by 10,732 tense fans , "keeps the Lakers one short game away from Atlanta for the lead in tht National Basketball Association's Western Division . The six-foot-three guard said after his performance, "U we had lost this game, it would have killed our chances to catch Atlanta . Emotlonally," West added, "you just can 't measure how much UUs win might mean to this team." The Lake rs rest tonight and Thursday, going against lhe Philadelphia 76ers on the home court Friday the 13th. DODGERS H AND CA RDS .S.1 WIN VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP) -If a b>d dress rehearsal means a good opening. the tos Anaeles Dodgtrs ought to be opening the season with a bang. They're l-3 in exhibition play. Unable to knock out more than seven hits Tuesday, the Dodgers handed the St. Louis Cardinals their first Victory In Grapefruit com petition, ~I . Slugging Willie Davis was still able lo mainlain his hot start by belling out a fourth.toning 1inalt. He la now eeven for 14 thia 1pring. SHADES OF JERRY WEST -Tom Keevil (right), editor of the DAILY PILOT, attempts jump shot over reach of sports staffer Phil Ross during final workout for benefit basketball game with the COJ>I tonight at Cost.a Mesa High.·Game time is 7:15. ' Boston Cage E1·a Ends; Celtics Not in Playoffs DETROIT (AP) -The era really end· ed when Bill Russell announced his retiremmt last summer, but now it's of· ficial: the Bollton Celtics won't be in the National Basketball Association playoffs for lhe first time in 20 years. The end for the defending champions has been only a matter of time through the final stages of the regular season. It came mathematically Tuesday night in a rt!>-112 loss, and ironically the coup de arace was applied by the Detroit Pistons -the only team in the NBA's Eastern Division with a worse record than Boston's. The Celtics are now 31-43, and even if they shbuld win all eight of their re- maining games while fourth place Philadelphia lost its final six contests, the 76ers would stiU finish ahead of the1n. "We had a lot of things happen to us," first year coach Tom Heinsohn said .... ·hen aske.d what caused lhe demise of !he Celtics this year. "We lost two great ballplayers and had to go with a whole bunch of new players with no experience. \Ve had a nucleus of veterans, but a couple of fellows were on the old side and we had to use the new guys in case one of the veterans got hurl" The Celtics knew last season that they were going to have to replace high-scor· ing backcourt ace Sam Jones, who had announced his impending retirem.ent to go into coaching. But right up lo training camp they nurtured hopes that Russell. the great center who had turned an also ran team into perhaps the greatest dynasty in pro sporl-'l history, would change his mind and play another season. When he didn't everyone knew Boston was in for a rough year. The team never could come up with a winning combina- tion as ii languished below the .500 mark virtually aU season. And for the last few weeks it was ap· parent to all that the hopes of making the playoffs were going down the drain. Boston missed the playoffs in three of the NBA's first four seasons starting in I!M6-47. Then Red Auerbach came oo the ~nt as coach in ltJS0.51 , and the Celtics made the playoffs that year anrl every one since until the current campaign. The first ftw playo(ts experiences end· td In defeat, but ~ Russell arrived in 1~7 and the CeKk:I cllanied the formula : not only did they always make the playoffs, they almost always wori them -11 limes in 13 years, to be exact, including the last two seasons. Now it's "wait 'W next year," but th• Celtics are not dismayed. Asked about the prospects for 1970-71, Heinsohn said they were "very good ii we have a good draft." Pilots to Be Called Brewers After Move TAJ\1PA, Fla. (UPI ) -The Milwaukee Brewers are about to become the American League's newest entry. League President Joe Cronin already has the nine voles necessary to switctl the fin ancially.distressed Seattle fran· chise lo i\1ilwaukee and official an-- nouncement of the transfer will come in a few days, il was learned today. Onl y a few relatively minor wrinkles remain to be ironed out and that largely- "''as the re ason a scheduled mee ting o[ American League officials was canceled here Tuesday. Cronin said there wilJ. be another meeling very shortly, probably in Cleveland. That could be the occasion fo11 the fo1111al announcement of what already has been decided privalely. A i\1ilwaukee group, known a 1 ~1ilwaukee Brewers, Inc., and headed by Bud Selig and Judge Robert Cannon, already has agreed to pay $9.5 million for the one·ye11r-0Jd Seattle fr anchise and put up an additional $1.5 millton for working capital. Coinciding with that agree men 11 workmen Jn County Stadium, Milwaukee, are getting the ball park ready for the America n League season wh ich opens: April 6. Snow was cleared off the seal~ and the field Monday and to shov,. how news sometimes travels qu icker in the lower echelons, one of the workmen , when asked by a visitor why he and the othent were bothering to remove all the sno"• replied : "Didn 't you hear? The Seattle Club 6 moving in here In a few weeks." Aussies on Threshold of Victory Actun lly. the decision to welcome 1>.tilwauk« back into the major league orbit after a four year absence was: reached last week following a financla1 report on the Seattle Pilots by Roy CAt.18RIDGE. J\lass . j A P ) Australian Iron men John Newcombe And f'red Stolle stand on U1e threshold of \"iC· tory as they carry il :J.J lead over the U.S. team soing into tonight's fina l matches of the $20,000 "World Title" ten· nls competition. Stolle, a 31·year-old vcleran who hA!!: ne1·er pll)'ed on a losing team in ln- lernaUonal competition, gels lhe flrsl chanee to clitl('h rir!il prize money of $11.000 ff)r his !iidc .... ·hen llC! leads orf t'gainst Tuan Cliff J{lcbcy In a 1inQ:les match. Newcombe meets U.S. Davi! Cup aee Stan Smilh, whom he defeated 7·5, W Tuesday. in anolher singles match, and 01en the t\\'O AU.S!J\('s will play Smith and Arthur Ashe in a concluding doubles match. , Newcombe was upset by Rkhey while Stolle defeated Ashe in the opening matches or the three-day compclltlon ~fonday nl11ht for a l·I standoff. The Au ssies then g11lncd their com- manding lead Tue5day n I g ht t.1·lth Newcombe'11 victory ove r Smith rollO\A'ed by an U, U, llh! dOllblu ltlumph by tho Aussie piir ovtr Ashe and Clark Graebner. Smith, who won the U.S. indoor title •l Hampton, V1., last wedtf!nd on a ra._ synthetic IUJ'face:, arrived here late 'i\fori- day nlaht •nd had only one day of prac- litt on the slippery clay surface of Harvard University's indoor courts. "It was a very diffk:ult transition to make," he said. "I don't feel comfoNble on the 111.1rrace." Newcombe also lndlcated, both by hls plAy and by his ¥trords 1fterwards, that thl -I& tab -l•lllD& uaod lo. 1 ••t was conctntratin& much better aM was more used to the surface tonight." he said in comparing hls victory over Smith \\'llh. his openln1 night Joss to Richey. Smith and Newcombe also agreed that the crucial point Tuesday night came when Smith was serving ror the set at $-4 after hiving broken Newcombe in the ninth game. The Amtrlcan comm illed l\vo errors and was br'Qjl:en bac.k on a Jll'ISSi ng shot, alter which Newcomhe won .. lhe next two 1ames and neve.r \railed agaio, Hamey. -_ The Ameri1:an League loantd the Pilot. 5650.000 in February in order to get them thr.oogh spring training. The loan \\'A ~ made wi th the intention ol helping the club to at least start the aeason in Seat>- tle. That idea v.•as abandoned how('ver, after Hamey , the on·lf!ave Nn' York Yankees t'xecutlvC'. who was designa ted to ovcr~ce !he Joan, came b8ck to the American League with his report.· He reporled the ~dvance licket 5ale In Sf>attle for the coming season was only 20 percent cl wba1 it bad beeo a year ago; • l ' • ' j l y h l• l • a ,. ly ,, '1 ,. in ,.. at I >y n, "' ul ig n• ue .. ml "' .. m •• h• ·~ ~. r~ •• he In 20 o; . . . FAMILIAR SCENE -Huntington B~ach Jligh's rvtark Cheek (22) co1nes across horne pla'l.e against Servile Tuesday afternoon in the Oilers' 9-1 r'?ut o! DAILY •ILOT ....... 11r Lte ,,,,.. invading Servite. Friars' catcher is Rich Stef. Hunt· ington bas scored 39 runa en route to a 5-(l baseball mark . Oilers Triwnf!11, 9·1 flunting tort, M.arina Share T ourriey Crown Dy ROGER Ci\RLSO:"I' Of lhe Da1l1 PllCll 51111 Huntington Beach's high-flying Oiler<; -.wept to lheir fifth consecutive baseball \ ictory Tuesday afternoon. f>pnnking visiting Servile, 9-1, to cliflCh a lie for the Oilers' four-game tourney championship with Marina. In other tournament action. host J•"oun- lain Valley came back from a five-run defi cit to tie Foolhill , 8-8. <1 n d \Yestininster dropped a 3-2 11it1c-lnning Ut-cision to invading Bolsa Grandr,. Coach Don \Valker's Huntington ercw 1naclc il five in a ro\v in as n1anv de<:isions v.·ith style, s!appini: !lie \ isi!nr"s \Vi!h a fi ve.run first i11nin~ and eo;_islt'd 1n fro1n there behind the steady pitching of Jtandy Cantrell. Cantrell gave up a solo honit• run In Etl Harto,v in the third inning :ind scaltcrcd live other safeties in notchin~ thr victory The undefeated Oilers ::.ent I l player . .; !o bat in the initial frame -and allhnugh Servile pitching n1anagcd 1o slrikt' oul I he side -the damage ""as done 111 l"tCtween \Yilh four sing!l?i>, a dnuh!c and lhrce walks. Run·scoring bingos by Dan f\lnal s, Lil lJ.anagas and Bill Shubin along '1·i\h ;1 1J,vo-run producing dn11b\e OVC'r tl1c 1'en terfielder·s head by CantrC'll 11·rrC' the key hits. Huntington added :inolhcr 1allv in •he ~C'rond inning on C:1nlrt'll's ~acrlf1rc tly vilh the bases loaded. By t he li1ne the sceflnd stanz;1 \\'a~ n\Ct' in !hr wi nd·S\vcpl 11ffa1r, the Ollf'r~ had left five men str:indcd on b;isc 1vhi lr en· Jl'.lying a six-run lead. Cnntrcll finished the day "'1!h lour rtBis. In all. lhC' Oilers f1n1shcrl with 12 Juts 100 by 1\1.ike Symons' lhrcc ::.afell C's. Nine Oilers hil s:ifcly \1 i!h only Pa11l \foro failing to collect a hit . He \\'<1lkCfl lbrec limes 1n four i.!ppcarancc:< r ou ntain Vallry's con1c·frorn-bct1111u er· forl \\'as highlighter! in the s1x\h innu1:.;. when the Barons scurcd the tying: run un a wild pilch. Mike Roberts cainc 1n af\C'r gt•t1 1ng :1 ROod Jump to beat the play The Barons had trailed, 7·2. when !hl'V 1'i1me up ~·ith four talliC's 1n lhc lourth lramc. Hobcrls started il off in the fourth w1!h <1 Ooublc lo score onC' run, I hen Steve Mil· ~~1cll accounled for llobcrl!l 1,1•ith a s1ngll'. i'olike Shimaji ca1nc U\l later tn lrip!P lt01ne lwo scores and subsequently scoreU on \Vaync Ouel!ette's three-bagger. .Jay Stanley \\'Cnl all the way for Foun· lain Valley . allowing only twq earned runs. He was virtimized by six Baron er- rors behind him. \Vestn1i nsler failed lo come up with the key hi t in.its l~ss J.O Bolsa Grande. The Llons had the sacks full in the seventh and eighlh frames, but coo.ld not t'tl me up with the righ l combination. \'r'estminstcr again used four pitchers in getti ng ready for Sunset League hostilities. Two wild pitches accounled for Bolsa·s pni r of runs in the fi rst inning Lo keep the l'\·latadors alive until they came up with the winning tally in the nin th frame. HUl!!ln!lo" 111 5•r-.ll• 11 l .. ' ' .. .. , ",. M·. '<•n¥, " , ' • • 81.iow, .. , ' ' c~urcn,..~11. ltl ' • °"""· " ' • • MOnl, " • • W1lbutn, ti • • , ~Vm<l!'I\, " , • ~·~f. ' • • • ,, • .,..1 .. ' ' ' Not)(~. " ' • ' flM>agM, •I • , ' BetOllnH!. lb ' • ' f",1rl<'v. •! ' • Zlm~mtn. ct ~ • ' f~nu~n, • • • • P•llfr, ,. ' • • s~utun. " ' • • Trtlla, • • • (_n~~li: " , ' ' • 8t!;~1. °" • • • Tola!; ,. . " • l'!vnn, • • • • Wfl ... I, p • • • S11q~<1<1 . .. ' • • Tn!1% ~ ' • Seen by 0~1r11,-. ' H • ~e"•'t (IOI 000 0 -I ' J l•u•-·l•"!;'G~ Be•c~ '10 012 • -t U l Founl••n Vt H•• fll ~~·~•'bl 1 O l J~tk 1on, u I<•, ll·t• G 1 O f.'l•~ten, er R~b~•t 111 J 1 t ~ocn1. cf •..\1tc~e11, II 1 1 O Car11t1nttr. rt 1b r ~rbr l I G O ' ' . ••• , ' s~,,.,.A., 1h 1 1 ' lllat~llllue. 10 ' . ' . , . Ourlltl•r. r • 0 1 1 HoMn". )b :. fl;el\nn, '~ 1 o O O V•n()oQ•. Jb Oohrrrv. II ! O G 0 $plU.1r. rl ' . Wt~ne~"mp. rt J I O Cli~l· Jbo1b ' , . Sl•n"y' ~ • 0 0 0 Tuvell, c • o. 0 0 1 o e o I G 1 0 l,1 112 fol•I• ll I t • ~<h•c!, p l-"0011· .. 11 ,. l=,;,m1 ai" V~llt~ "' Hnv!, p TottlJ "' • "' • -- ' H ' ' H • • " , I • • l •lsa GrinOt "' Wnlmlntltr 111 ... ~ rOI •• , " ..-1 l(o,1no, " ' • ' • 5~ ....... ~ ' • • l<'cG•I~ ' • , • S. Mtrl•tltl. c! I • • (~:JAn~n " • ' • • ""'· " , • • "'tL4U9i'>l'"-·~ • ' • • P ioli, ,, , • • M(OrlMICI " ' • ' ' c1~n0enl\ln1. lll ·• • • 0°ond. " ' ' ' • M S11'1(h•1. II ~ • • G•ool<•. '" • • ' G•vlor, " , ' • TfM>ea.,O. ' • ' • Buckland, ti ' , • Fo•~• , ' • • • SitVI Mlrtfnrl,. r~···••· P • • • • Cl·)D ' • • g,,,1 •. '" ' • • • Prltl', .. ' • • l ,,,., " • • • " J. $11'1(hf l , !flop • ' • ;_ ·-~ ..... " • • • • Gt111<1m. ' ' ' ' !<;""""• " • • • • 1u ,1. " ' • • Ota"<~. • ' • • n-.,.. p • • • V&n E~trY. , .. • • 'tft••I• " l ' • TGTlli • • ' ' H • S<ltt ~¥ Ou1rltn l\~IP Gi'~""e 100 000 OOt l t ' v1m•m1n1•1• ~10 000 000 -J • I Vikings Rally For 6-2 Win Over Pacifica By PIUL ROSS Of .. Del"' P'li.t ll•ff Trailing 2-1 going into th~ sixth iMlnf. ~farlna'a Vikings picked up five run.s m that~ frame to overcome Pacific•. 6-2, 'I'u~ay in Huntington Beach Tourney baseball lflion. The win enables the Vik.es to tie with crosstown rival Huntington Beach for the toornamtDt champiwb.ip each with 4-0 marks. Marina is now 4·1 overall alter loainJ: its 1970 opener to Costa Ptfe.sa. It looked Uke Marina wu •tarlin& oU on I.he "TOng foot again in the sixth u all.Su nset League third baseman Tony Cresci led off the frame with• a strikeout. But. rollO\Ving a Walk to Len Beller I the Vikings' cauldron started brewing. Coach Ray Allen sent Wally Kuzma In to pinch run for Beller and Jeft!lekler Jim Frank slngled him to lhird to 1et up Urie main attraction of the Vii e fire \.\!orks -Ken Murillo's three -run homer. Ptfurillo tipped i 2--2 pitch right throu(h the wind and over the rightfiekl er's head and sped arotlnd the basepaths un- touched , with Kuzma and Frank SC«inc ahead of him. Bob Witt, pinch·hitting for catcher Ed Anderson, waa iSl!lued .a free pau and eventually ecortd on Dave Campbell's double. Campbell legged it inlo third on the relay throw from his double and tallied on a solid single to left by centerfleldtr Pat Curr111n. lronlcally enough, Cttlcl, generaJly Marina's best hltt.er, ended lhe inning lht way he began it, with a strikeout. Rlck Saeman picked up the victory in his flrst-ev tr start as a pitcher. The nllty righlhandtr allo\\'e:d only four hits and struck out six batters. l'ICllka (ti IMrlH CO ••r ~"" ••r ~ttil G11!!Mlln1, lib ! e 0 0 C•m!HMl1, 111-U J I I I :~~.·.i;; .• ~ ~ ~ ~ : :~·1~ : : : : Mii•••· lb 3 I 1 t Cwrr111, cf l I 1 t Newt.n. c l 0 I 2 CttKL, Jto l 1 I t L1Poln11, d J t I o a.ow, rt I I t t ... llhetlneron, 11 2 t t 0 IWUI-., 114b t I t I ChNtt .lf l t O eFr•,.,lf !IJt w 111tln1. " 1 e I o Mlll1r , u f t 1 1 W1rrt<1.P 1o e•MurllJe.rl 111J J1cobH11. rt e O o o t\"""1otl. c J t 1 t T,1111 '~'~Jwin,c 1 111 l'tcllk:• M1rln1 s,...,,~. • l t • • Towi., rl t G I I Tet111 n •s • ' ' I Scert W .. .,,._. OOD 100t 1 1 1 0\1 otJ ·-· s . LA Harbor Rips GWC, 14-0 ~ Colden \Vest CollcGc·!i l.IJ!tt'ball train has Oil(' day to rCCUJll'r .i lc, f\lllui•-in~ 1 14-0 setbac k to LA II.arbor 1'ucs1la\ 11° Southern California Confcrt>ncr <1c11un (Ill the winners' diamond. ·The Rustlers return to confctt"ntt rlay Thursday facing LACt' In :i l\\lce· postponed game at Qui gley Field in l...A 1A>iK'h Fred Hoover's ~lub 11lso hJ::. ~ ho1ne gRmc planned Friday aga1n~1 Rio Hondo. Both are 2:JO conlt!'I~ l •. A llarbor rein 11..s conferenc' record 1n "--0 \vith ;i 16-hi1 Hltack JtJialnst lhrrc Unldc.n \Vrst pitchC'r 9 The Sea lla"k~ !ICor<'d four n1n<t. 1n lhr 1.1ilia l fra1n<', added 1.wo more In each ol lhr tlurcl and flhh innings and capped 1!1r ~t·onns: wil.h th ree.run outbursts in lill' i)J xlh and c1ghlh innings. Greg \Vnocls sl:irtcd on lhc mound fo r Golden \\'est and \\~t lire first four in· n1ngs 111/011.•lng six ~ on seven hits. ~lark Johnson pitched the next 1wo, giving u'p fl\'<' nuui 11wo earned J and four hits . Uct?g llcnry tossed thr fina l two framea, :tlltJ\\ 1114 1J1r~ run1s on (!\le hits. LA llnrbor"s 16-hil :ittack Y1·as led by ritihtf1rJder Bob Thornton who had four hit~ 111 rl\C' trips tu the: pla lt anti rour Hill Bill \V:ilkcr h1l :i two-run homer for lh(' \1·1n11{'rS In lil(l firti l Inning. For Golden \Vest, third baseman John Hogan htd two hits in two trips to the plat~. both singles. • 011,._ w .. 1 111 u MtrW 1141 .,,,.,... ·••rartll Jim H0tatl, ti J O I Clttr. tf J 1 I I 5nl'Otr. ti 1 I t WMli.1111, ff ' 1 I '°"'"'·I' 4 1 1 W•llttr.:zt t t l l P•"'t""° :rt ~ t I DtG..,!n, a.tt 4 J J tllll•r. rt ~ 0 I ~n, u 4 J I I (orMJ~ If 4 0 I T'lllnllM. rt 5 J 4 4 NllMfl, c 4 I I Mc1Ewt11,I• 4 I 2 I llU'HI!~ JI 1 I t Urilc~, C 4 t f ' nlwl Hfftll. all J t J llWl'ltl, I• I I t t M...,.,,,, 41 1 P'tl'M.t S iii Woocls, • I t t TMI!• )t U U I War,....,p~ 100 JoM'°"' • I I I P""btrton, Ill! T t t H9fl••· • ·-• I . tol•I• tf 0 I 0 _,,_ GolO~" Wt\! 000 000 000 I • 't lA "''°" .t0i IU O)li -14 I• t • ,.,...,,,....,.. Wf'dncsd.if, March 11 , l 'nO DAILY PILOT 23 Baron Spikers Nip Marina; San Clemente Upsets Loara A daal meet and two non-leap trianplar mtttt hl&hll&hted Tue9day's Oranae Cout area prep track and field activity. In ihe lone duaJ contest, Irvine Lea5ue hopeful Fountain Valley edged past Marin• of the Sunaet League, fiO.a, in a windblown attai'.r •t Fountain Valley. San Clemente pulled an upset ln one of thf: trl-meeta, acorlng 57'1S points to 55IA for Loara :and ff for ho$t Bolsa Gralide. Loara wu a 1lron1 pre-meel favorite and i3 the deltndlng Irvine loop titlist. Tbt other tri-meet was held at Katella, with the Knfrhts ltndlng off the double in•aslon of WQttrn a~ &.lission Viejo. KateDa posttd 71 pointa, while Western had 4' and Milsion only collected 31. Oave Ll.cy and Sieve Christiano were double 'Winners in the Pttarin1-Fowitain Valley confnintaUon. Marina's Llcy won both sprinlll with wind·aided t .7 and %2.S clockings, while Chrlstiano perfonntd another dUficult 4*'8IO double, capturing both races in SU and 2:0.'U. Lacy ·.w•• put bed in both sprint everilll· by tht Barons1 Ph,ll Maas, who turned t .a in the century and 22.1 in the furlOrlg. Brady 'Moore of Founlain Valley was third In the 100 In 9.9. The BaroM' mile ttlay combo of Mau, Dan Shaw, Carl Hardin and Christiano turned in a lf:lllOnal best of 3:30.1 with the latter bluin1 to a 41.I on the anchor 10(. Rk:h Martin ltd 1 1·2-l Baron sweep o( tht Jon1 jump wilh a 11·91h leap, fol· lowtd by teammates Dennis 1.erva.s and Ray Harris. At Bolla Graodf:, Loara was knocked off.Its ptrth by a fifed.up San Clemente cn!W. A double winner for Ra y Reeves' Tritqn:\., was ace hurdler Bob Blacker, who c'9red the 120 highs in 15.l and the lowt In 20.&. Triton sprinter Rick Geddes had to take a blck seat in both the 100 and 220 to Loara'11 Steve ElkJna , who already has the top furlong mark \22.0) in the Cir thus far. V•"ltv Lttrt CHl'il U1'.'tl ltn (ltflltfttt 141) tellf 100 -I. !lklN tLI 2. G9ftl• CIC! :J. Wtlll!lbllrll ··~!"": ,. -1, li!M ClJ t. o.t:lllll !SCI I. W1Ht 1>ll1.lrt (I ! : J ~{ lck-1• iSl 2, 0 ¥tlln (I I ). Colll~s lLl .,lt'rll: SJ -MCI -W1"N" tSC) J, flrtllt IL) l. Seo!! l~CI Tl""=: 2:ot.t • Mli. -ii· 'Tlltt1• Il l 2, M!Ult•n ll(J l . E1e1I CSCI Tl'l::1i!..1:'sm11t11M ,., 2, Av•r IS() l . 0t1"11 ..... 1 '" 'Wl: f;J.l,f --Y• -1. i •1cktr !SCI 2. Wt rd Il l l. l t .tff' ILl 'f mt : I\·" lto LH -, l lt dl•r (SCI J. Werd Il l l. 5~neoll ILl T~: JI.I. • -1. rt T :U.t. t:l'1, :1'1¥ -t:-'!:111 ~ht (flltCkff'. Winl~n. ~ 0 I•~ MCtlfN ltl llrt'll: J.110, M 7 ~i.W•rtf t•l 1. S..m"'I• (ti). 1•~1tr 4L\ - \, 8•"\" !I I 2. S4111utl1 II ) L M<.G1rr¥ cs 0!•1;11C•: ......... -MO!fmln (SCI J. lllcl!en Il l l, ll!blt • !LI H~•M: l ... P -I, T•~lor •LI J. HumllhftV t•ci l. McOulrt IL Ol11tnt4: M.J. T•¥:"''cli. 1D1fti~'t";-1~>s.1' H.i"mt"1411" tti t ... lNrt UH 1.,1 Ith., 11'1 14111 Cl•lnlfttt lot -I. COii!! CLI J. M1nn!tw1 (Cl J, KDl!n t•J 11w = 10.•. :1.v -1. Ct~ll IL! l WllcoK ll ) J. Kolln Il l Time: l~ -'\&'."°"'I .. ILi J, lrt"flr (I \ J, WU.on ILi '1r~ !_:J '. '1rown (I J t Ht ll Il l l . ~1Un Ill Tlmt: l1•.t. \20 f.!H -I. l'lucn ILi J, FotlK tll l , St<Kkwtll l l1JtOTlf::_l,.JMorrll !$CJ 2. Fot,., !IU l , Flncn (LI Tl"'I: t.l. .. 111.-1. 8111 .. G•-•· 1;_, !ot l,J, HJ -1. Sfiu.tNlt (LI Mt --or lfllrd H1IQlll S. • u -I ....... 1 11Cl J. Alclw!ln !LI J. ICOPU ILi or111n.c1: 0 .1, H pillli?i~Ha1 Cl.1 1. 0.¥11 CSCI J. Hullb.lrd !LI H\IP' -I ·~,-CLI 1 """" ll l L !kt'""" !SCI °''•nt•: ~i '" h lu 1111 1n1 lh•• tu s111 c11- ~-I ~ullfl'l !I I J. l(oblwt11!l Cl l l . 1101~ ....... 1111e1~11 M!r.i11 tLI J. KODl¥11hl Il l J. Rolfln>or t lBI, T1mt: 11.1. WO -1. Mtltllt CL) J. k rgtn! ll l l. SNvt r ($Cl. 'tifNI: 1:1l.1, lDO -1 ~··1 t•) I. Edwtrdl lLI l . El!.ffll>o•t• 15£ l lrrie· ·21 . .. ~;rm.~:.:.u.:. \:),;1i.•1 Jt) I. Yoi.nl1•• !LI J. C•OH • \I -1. Solu G•\""' Tlmt• <11.1. -•ltOOU4:mD" !a! , Moltttl IL) l. L1mll Ill -1. e(l\NlnOrl (I ) I. MGl11tl (\:) ), LlmD SP -I. I Kkntr (l l 1. W1!!on (I ) l, Wh111ktr 11 ) Dllltl'Ct: JM. c II • •JI 'ri·· ) 01111 Otlv• f Tlmt: 11.0 i -'l Pf:m'f'nt1 (Mi) . ~PICKlrl,GGJ l. C1ok1 - \, 5a11.ku1 (GGI I. Fltmlna lGGl l. Gt1m1n f Tl1t1f : .i.1 -I. Hon ! IGGI '· Rlc!11rd1 fGGil l. Tody C Tlmt · 1:3',1 -'l. Cr_twloro WGI 1. H1kl~t l(MI 1. Gem1c:he tGGJ. TJ..,.: >~ J 10 HH -J., W1rd lv ) 1. M<T•1191rl !GGil l. Ct.irll1 {CM) 'hnt: 1,1 I llll -I) .. ,,d 1GGI I. HUl'l!lr!ord ((Mj J. V vt r {OO .T me:h ,1 I 1l•v -I. G"·"'" Grovt. Timi: "'<' -I, l •k•r CCMI 1. H~rtord CMl l. Tio! M !wttn H•ll ((Ml Ind MCIOfl ( Gl. Htlohl J.I L' -4) P"'cum1 (GG) I . 1n°'1Vff !GGl J, C10kt IG • Ol111nu It-I PV -Mllnll! (Q.\) 2. Fk Klt1 !GGI l, WgHe (CM). Ht lqhi: IM 011cV1 -I. Sol<kt_rt \CfGl 1 JollnW1f1 ((M) l Vfa· Pt' GGJ. Oi1i."'e: 11 .. , l P -I Joh"'~ !CM! ! PtHum. IGGI l. so .. tlllroer (CM). 011i.~~ 4':6'1 (•II Miit l:l\\l (1'\.ll 0 • .. 111 Or.wt '~ -I H•-(C:Ca 2. lotlt• CGGl 1. W••d IG . Tlrnt: Ul.1 I l -I, Hl~Wlfl IGG l J. l'lllcl\er !GG l GrlllW• IG • n1' 1 .• ~ -!~omn cG31 I Grlnolt !GG1 l c:ir.:.· .0i~1~1• 'Wol'\~· Holldl• CCMI l. HllCl~'S '~: Yl"':!..: l~~r.lff IGGI 1. Wird !GGl J, tuew CG.J.Rt l';'::_ 1 1 G1rllt1J.Grov~ fl,.,...., 4 -• HJ -I Gtll•iil>tr !GGI J Bt u"' ((;Gf 1. Ouonhvln ICM). Mtlaht: 1-41 ~J -I. Ht'i?ion (GGJ ). S. Splelbernor !CMI 3 G•"r _1G;01 s21~':"'i~G\1·v P~IY•n IGGI J Tie \'f'.';'..., wh11rno ,cM ~ 1ni1 Flttc111r cG.Gl. Heloh!' $P ~I, Pocc1:m !GGI J, Slm1 1(MI l. WllU1ni' IGG). Dl11~n<~: · I Ol1(111 -1 l"'s !(Ml J. Herndon IGGI l Wll1t1m1 !GGI. 01i.n1:r: 16·1'> V•rmllY l(lttllt 011 IU\ Wni.•n !111 MIUlt" Vll lt 100 -1. <:1•1ro (10 J. R1f!1r iwi J. Cu"'""' ll(I .,1...,., IO I UC -I, TllOmpllN\ (I() 1, Ltnh110I !WI l. R11ter IWI. T!mt' 1•.G ~ -I. Tl'IClmPIOU l l(I J. llm"••ll !Wl l. Howell 110 . Time: n.• NII -1. Voll~r lKI 1. R1llrtY !Ml J, Gwllve~r 1".) l ltnt: J;ot.J M hi -J, l llf/lnoitmt IKI 2. Ptl0rnar1 (Wl J (OCk"fl mt CWI. T ,,,., 4:•1 l 1-Mllf -). Ptr•i !Ml t M1r•t 1! CW) l l(rf u11 lWI. l l.,..; IQ ;ll.t 1'6 HH -I Turntr !WI J, PendfrQfl11 IMI l . V~•elt HCl. Tlmt: S.6 !!ill~ -I, (;11lfO (I(\ J, T\H'M< tW) l lt9[Bll" 1'°':4 R::~ _!l·t_· Kl!t !l1. lli:: 4'.0 Milt 11:111¥ -1 l(.rt ll• ont: l:41 HJ -\, P'tndt"lf•ll ( 2. ThDmoi.on lWl l Whats new , cat. We hereby declare 1970 Th< Year of the Pussycat. Our na · tional prize-winning drink ha.a become a g reat s ucces s . No wonder. Th is s unny, orang e · •' sweet sour makes you want lo purr. And mixes up quick as a cat. Just combine a packet or "Instant Pu1sycat Mix," water and Early Times. Ask for Iris tant Pussycat Mix at your favorite food or liquor store. =l'o get a set of 4 ·10~$ oz. Pussyca t glau ts and 4 packets of Instant Pusaycat Mix,• send $2.95 to : EARLY TIM ES PUSSYCAT CL.ASSES P. 0. BOX 377, MAPU: PLAIN, MI NNESOTA 55359 _ .... ' -:;.. .... ~·-· • • 24 DAILY PILOl Newpo1~t 111 7-2 Victo1·y By 11 0 \\'AIUl I .. 11Ai"\11V 01 !hi 01•1¥ ''IOI ~Ill! Ncwporl Harbor Sl'Ort·d four unearned runs in tht• lourlh in· ning and 11·cn1 on tu post a i-2 non·leaaur b01-;r1Jal1 1 a·torv over F.di90n'!' Ch11r11t·r~ Tu!'s· day afternoon in arlinn on 1ht> 1v1nners' dian1nnd ~·like Mc~hnn 11orkcd fl\l' lnninss nn rh1· t1l"llncl 1111 lhC' TarS. givin~ up 1110 run~ and -. four hilS "·h1lr striking oul lour batters. Bolh run~ 11 r rt unearned 1-fis coun1rrp;1rt tor Ed1~01l J);in ti1aurrl, 1 .. abo suing for non-support 1"he T11r~ ~L11rt•d the firs! run 111 1hr third on singles b.1· Alviu 1111i1c and Ron f\111rlln t·ouplrd 111lh a ' ~ncrificf' anrl w i t h nu I 1hc mi.~1·ue.~. this 11nuld h;ivc- becn surfic1l•nt The n1p,ht111ari ~h rounh Hor l':dison) found rilaurrl hilling lr<idoff batter .Jeff Bl:.U1l'hard <ind lhen wnllii11g Bnh Ernv. Afte r BlanrharO "a~ put out at the pl:itt', fi1 ~' ~U("l":t'SSl\'e error~ put lour 1:1llic~ 11n the scoreho<ird 1n n'akt 11 f,.o Playi ng !hr part nl !hr 1)4.'rfccl ho:.!~. Nr"port l'UITI· niitted ;:i pair of 111f1cld errors in the lop ol the f1f1h and Ter· ry ~1cNay capital1:ied 011 the break with ;1 lv.o-n1n sini:!I<' lo nsht. It v.as-:\lc~ay's st'eond hit nf tht' da) Tv.·o 1n.~ur;1ntc run:. 11crr added lo the Newport \01<11 111 1ht' botro1n or the lillh on a w:ilk to Erny. a double by \\lhitc and n s1ni:.lt by Martin. \\lhitc <ind ~1artin Pcich had a pair nf hits !or !hr Tari; Ncwporl is n"ow 2·1 Jar tt1f ~casnn and l'.'lll face Cosl<1 f\·lesa /ligh in a night ganu· Fri1tay al Costa f\·lesa Park <it 7:JO. Edi~n ·will be sccki n~ 11s first victory t1Jlr:r tv.o deh:a !~ Friday aflrrnoon 1vhen ii hosts Los Alan1ilos at :l:l:l. • Mc ll~y. '' 1(11>f'('r, •f WI""• lt:I 111tr~. lb l\Altn, II l>utl. 7b lVl•r. < t·~~:~tlp ti l..-,"" P"•"~"· '" £DISON 01 •b•I>•~· . ' ' . ' . . ' . • • • • • • . ' . > I II D l 1 Q D 1 D 0 I I D 0 0 o o n o 1• , s 2 TOlitll "IEW"O•l 1<1A-.10• l'I M41rl>n. < E1~1.,1o ..... " Foste-. !lb Moli..ell, 11> '·""'""''" ,, 111•"<1>••0. •' £•11~. 7b Wllit•.11 Mrll"•ll ... 0 Wlll(IOllO, 1)11 1(11<!•. 0 0-11\, ,, Pe<~lns. lb Toltl• Sc.,, b1 '""'"'' •b ' ~ •b1 ' ' ' ' ' ' • n o o ' 0 0 0 ' 0 0 0 l 0 ~ 0 , ' a o l 1 7 ' D II 0 0 I 0 0 0 n 0 II 0 I 0 0 M 0 c " 0 l •7 ~ J ... [•h'°" (II'(\ 1110 0 l ' ~ tl~wp0tl H..-t>o• ro;1 •10 > -I ~ :i lfonor Roll Area P 1·c p (;olf <1,11 Me1• 1111 un f91111111n Vall<' ~ ..... , llot1 .. n l~I <I" lt•nal•I f( 1 •I llt••"-•Cl Ori ll•o"n l~I .;! °""~ 1r1 o•• M••' r ~· 1• •n•m1 If ) Ott W1'•inl If! <fl ""''"~ !(I d~t W<lh•"'' I'• l-1 MIV !(I Of'l lltllo"" (F\ l l. ...... u. M1tf< O•• Ill! CUI ~1nt1 Inf M"l!>•\I IMI ~·t Doo! IS! • l~<ln•_,, ;5} O~! I t ld !M! •O. !•""•" Mt <l•I C•llo (SI • l w~r!<O !Sl oer !\~IOI tMj '• lo:r~!~ C1•'' IM) ML ""ood'"o'I~ I~• •~ l'l•I~~ t•~•I-!Ml <I•• lo;~<J" l'I •" ~·~ Clo"""'' ri.1 t~) o'c"~"'" J•1t~ O•·•n ~I'll kon JOl••rnr> • ..-~111~1'. II • • l'htlt .. , ltkll ....... . MV Nl11e Loses '. ' .... .. --~· -Nigh~Ra I • r " ' I • • • "To'Resu1ne· ... -~· ·-. . -CdM, ~ater _Dei,. At ·OCIR Post Victories ' , Ora'R£c·Cowity lnt('rnnllonal • nl\C,f!\VaY'• A-nrl"Ji, (fOrll i\5 Corona· del Mar and Mater· si11l;les and lhree RBI.~. . ~ .__,_ Dei posted 1vins \vhlle Mis!.lon ~ John ·palmer'. Keith SnmLUlls r<j:,luo.r ·5~n.d.a~ 8 t·-t e r n Q O.fl 1 Viejo was bralen in non-leagUI" · and ~1ark Johnson alw col· \\'inttr sche<(U,le ~ ri,tun1s to btlseball action Tui;sday, lected two hlts in · the '16-l1it ·• 1uglLL' racifi:g :S:i.11ifduy y.i th a Corona del Mar 'tan Co·ronij attack . supL•rc:h argC<d (M.lfY ~r e1•en1 roughshodcivcrTustin,18~7.on Dau ~eyer bunge~ hut ll in the ~Po!lis~\.·! I the losers' dio1nond While double •.n the last of the Gale:;;~n'fil ~tlO p nl. 111t111 J\1Etter Oei rallied for a 5-4 vie· seventh uin!.ng lo score Ray qliulit,)·jng ;il 7, ti rn. ;ind lory over Sadd\eback a I S:.ila?.ar with ·!he ivinning run (•l i111Jnaifons srh®ulC!CI <in huur 1 i\lc1norial Park In Santa Ana . In Maler Uci's fH win. . tater. - :\1ission VieJO fell lo Valencia . Sala?.:.ir. Meyer and llitL11cr Top Or<ingc CJJi!~l arr;1 ('11•, :1.2 on the \\'inners' field. llon ~lunil had (\VO hits L~t:h 1ry in Satu~y's. r1c:lrt l.> Don Snyder and ft\ i k e i~ the game. rii~Jniz. '>l'r'll lf'le l)On l:ook or llunlinSlh!l Beach.) Adams paced the Corona vie· dista~ice, scalll"nng :;even hl11>. who is r•q>et ll'd tn ~ at U1e1 tory. Snyder banged out a i\·alk1ng lll'O and stnldng out .. \\•heel o{ •• jl runny car u'iualh ~ ' hQ1ne run. triple and two tii·o. ch'il'aJ bY \\'ioternatinnals 111\1 • • • • • • • • • •.• • • • • • • • • • • • suigles, collecting four RBis. .A \Valk. a l~iple. by Solaiar. '-IU;1l1firr"Dirk Bourgcoua. ;:it:,,o! l.O"i~ Cl! !t.C. H:.. r Ills lwo-run homer came in Stan Jarksons ~1nglc~;1nd a: 11 l\Oftli ngt.Qn11!!\idcnl l"V tJ&f.\ "'" the sixth. Adains had three tltrec-bagger bv ri1cyenc.arnf!d llop1ng to-i:ivr. l:.'.utJI, kr AR. "'. 1_ • ··~t I~~ M?na.rchs lhrce runs 1111!1!! roug-ht!st i;Q1npet1Jion ~ r r c.; ' '\ ·f:? -¢t -{;r tliir~mnmg. -<:mleHGr°'•'Ha~Allcy.thrf M"!"l. ·1" jtf l" ,., Chuck Adarn!'i cnllec~cd. il Beebe brot.bct·s .or Ana.hciQ1 ' -P*i. \• ~· ~"' ';I.• Cor•N e.1 Mir Oil _ h ,, •I I De' · ""r~rbl ome .. ru~wr aer _1.in.the. ;,ind All.Pro ScyiP.~ ·point<t F•· BP~i·S .. 1 2~·1PM·~u~. Kdrl, ltl r'~lrl'••. d ~ttyde•. t f '•Pfl"<t, I! I dtloun, '' C.1rcl1. ,. ~~''"""' lb M~~e•. lb Jottiuo,., u vn~·· p Ad~ms, o Tnte11 ~ l f ~ sixth 1N11ng Jc;1~l'I' . CeuL' · Cnn,1;1v Qr 2 & ~ PM i~.oo m a $2.00. 1 tt ~ 1"' ,In lbc ~11[)."S"ion ViC'JO ~a1nL·. Jn"lciifHltl ·.• v'~ .. ~ Ufl<l•r ',.,,,_.11 ric 1f1; •o i 1 I ' lhc Diablbs scored 111•0 run <; 111' f.r;:1nd jlri~ rilotor('Yt'll'~ ·irid V" " 0 ''' •,., P•;r• s~t ·"4ut~ o 11 o O the pc · f , 11. . • · T I C: KET S. At LOMG 8b),~ ' l t 1 ,0 fllJl!; ran1r . ucn ~CI C • <">ldq_:;J (.S rJJ;e, Ill Sund.iy's AR<NA d· All 111Ui1.JAL TtCKri ~ ~ i } blankded ti!~ res~ o! the. wv,.y. . . lh:Qit!·~ ur1f91f nvc1r OCJJCs 2 l· AGfNc1~$ 1•4:( Q,d r';· S!ll-!3> 1 ' ~ ~ · R~. Y.Hohncs StQgle. a \l'<r~k . 1nth.'. pq_vt·~f ro<!d coursi< 11·1th ih~·ued. 11.,..,r~·J .. ~·;~lop•·-~"' J9 11 i' 11 to Rick \V.!!dsley, two Valencia ~lrve Bo~an anti r.flrdon c~~•.• 10 rODtO. LO!IC~ · Bf"Jl.C:.l"f. TUlll~ 01 · d ( · , '· ab,~ tbl e1•ror11 a~ a :i<JCri Jc~ fl_y· ~"'·. ;\1inti'u,'~;Nitlf flf l_lun1ington jA R~NA, lv1J$._ t.£;,oi.CH '>0801, _ ~ ~ : \ the two 1 uns hon1e for tl11ss1on B1··1ch. Jictrchrff: ltto hsl 11f ;ire a --- 1 ~ ~ ? ViejQ. . t!rivrrli 1nvohed. ON THE 1UBE ~ 0 0 0 H11lme:t hHrlged out two nf n II 11 ..i'lu n,I,) i:_ • tJ JI:. c L . t ~ 1 l the ·five f\1i~.~ion \'.iejo h1t'i. (:ary BurE:io \.ai-;~ Suuduy 111 a fo r tkt b'~\t" 9,, da la "-~~!'> ! f V g Va/~cia_.. 'which .scored llvo sopcrchari{)(f · fratyre .wbcrl' h~pr"n;n(J·· on TV. '""" lV • 1 1 o runs ia the second tnning. 1'nd 1hr latter "as ~n111jj, for an tin· "'"E.EK --I •t·<hM1.ed wdll. 1b1 I I ' 1 th ' ' · h h' d / • I ~ .. 'u1dn~ ,t!111t1n of 1h• DAILY -' o o o c wtnn1ng run 111-I e t 1r . pr~cedcntttJ. fou lh, :.traig_ht l'l LC. r. HI-LO WINNERS-J1n11ny Jones (le[t) of Los Alamitos and partner Dr. Ken lla1ncl ol Nc11'port l:>cach captured th e 161h annllal 1-li·Lo tournament at Irvine ('oast Coun try Club 11•ilh a sensational 19-under-par 125 net. Jones. a si x handi· capper. and Dr. 1.i.a1ncl, 18, posted rou nds of 62-63 to "'in by one stroke. Seventy· seven learns participated in th e t11'0-day tourney under tbe direction or tourn<i· 1nent su pervisor Duncan l\1cA!pinc. !,~ll&Q),r,. It ~Cbl"J.oft, 1b llor:co. ,. f'••lliloorl· u Heine. lll SI""'"""' lb W1!lli1<ru.. c H?lrld~t. c l~~. tt llurkt. '' -~"'"'· :Jb.'4> 5 .... M.1111 llll<Ml·I~, • :."'~'"'· p Tol•I~ r.<1M 111~1·" ~ l ~ A also had five hils. victory. : lJ 110 1 ---~----. _..,. -·· -~· Sc.,1 lly 1111111191 100 MIO 0-I 10 I 020 167 ,_~ ~. ~ I Mlnttfl Y1111 01 •ll t ~rbi1 ""'"'''· (' ( ll•O, Jb W~<ll~V, ltl !,t .. Y, t 1 1 , 0 ! ~ { :\ ""'""· lb M~n,.afnr<I, 11 1 0 1 0 1 ~ 0 0 • 0 0 1: I-lollywood Hacke rs to Play • Wllll1m~. '' 01.1llth. rf M•ti:-dl!t<. I! ll••11na"· 11 f\n•t.,, " M•<l"•oon. ~ HI•"·''' M lglal~ " .. ! o II 0 1 " 0 0 l 0 0 0 1 n o n 1 II 0 0 1 o n o 21 l ~ l V1\tt1tl1 IJl At Mission Vie jo Course ~. p...,.~ ;~ E•1101t. lb ~~c•!/. '' fl~•·· .. WAlll11g, II 'II Cl\~"'"""'" "''''9"-'b·D ~11~11•r, , 1lrbrbll l l;I l ~ I 11 I 0 1 I 0 11 '1 1 0 D 0 1 D l D l D tr 0 l ' ' . I. 0 DI Hollywood Hafker~. a grour or sholV business pcrsonalilie~ 11:ho play goH for numerou!i charily evenl!i throughout the year in Southern California and Nevada, "'ill make tv.·o aOl:!arances in -the Or<1n::!r Coa~I area 11·1thin the nrxt month . Firsl of the l'>l'O tour namf'rlt'I is a two-day affair al t-.1is'i1on ·\1iejo this weekend. This onr i'I the group·s annual birthday party and concludes the year \1•ith a club rhampionsh111 pl11yufL II is also one of the fe1v events on the year-round c;ilendar that isn 't rlaycd fnr c·harity. "This is our rrivate birlhd<1y party. 0( course. it is open In the public to walch ;i<; ~pcetators, .. originator or the group. Bill f\.lims. says. Defending chainpian is pro· duccr Robert Chenault. Challenging him fnr tnr honon "'ill he f\1i ckev Sholdar. "·ho appears 1n · thc 1elr1·ision :-:enPs. ''The Vnrmer's Daughter " Charle~ Lane nf ' Re· 11·1Lchcd"' and Shur Fishrr 11 hn play« Shorty on the Beverly Hillbillies shov.·. arc the o!hcr n1('mbers of lhe chiimpionsh1p f111rson1e mcclins hear!-on at ~1 \' Th•s lnurson1r. 1vil\ Ire off 111 the final b1111ch with the fir st group getting oH thC' Ice at 9 30. Othrr llol\vwood ~ta hvilrts appral"ing :-il f\'iss1on Vir10 Saturd<tl' ;ind Sunrl11y includr f1t.•nny :\filler, Frank Allrlcr. B11b Stcelf.'. Ja" ' ' Pa l ' ' O'i\la!lfy and '.J r s s Op- pcnhrimcr. Oppcnhe1n1cr i« lhr crfator n! th<' ·I Lo1c Lury'' srrir~ ;ind prndlirrr of lhr [)('bbie Hcvnolds shnw On April 12 thr \lr1rk1·1" will re turn to lhc area 10 play ;i nne-da~· tou111a1ncnt al Costa "'1rsa Golr and Country Club. This one 1s a ch:1ritv rvPnl "'"ilh admission chari;cd for spct'ta!ors and proceeds \vill go to lhe Child Guidance ~enter . This onr "'ill !he H:>llywood tioll1esl4!. bf' kno1vn al Hacker s SttllCft AHif 13111 B:ikcr defeated Or. {;enc \Vallace. 3 and 2, to win the 60-69 age group cham· pionship at Santa Ana Country Club. \V ith all three winners now determined a playoff ror lhc over-all seniors champion will be held on a point system in the immedia te future. Baker is a 14-handicapper 11•hile f,0..59 champion . Al Fickes is an 18 and the: Old Crow 170 and over) title holder Dr. Bill Sheeha n, is also a I~. /ti e11tf 01vlnt•f,. Jeanne Czach 178) srcflnd . An· no:i Lee Shetlrr llH ) was !ollowcd by Betty Blakemorr (87 I in D flight. ~l i••i1111 Terry Tilus. No 2 man on thr Pcppcrdine College gnlf ream. s c: ore d a hole-in.one ~1onday in a malch ·with U(' Irvine al ~llss1on Viejo Goll Course. Tilu~ used an eight 1rQn 011 !he 177 yard. par lhrec fourth hole to score his acc. The Mle is known as El Conquistador ;ind has a Jake imn1cdialely in front or most of lhe green. He is a two--handicap golfer for the Alondra Park ~n ·s club in add ition to playing [or the Pepperdinc varsity. Although Titus 1von hi~ match, l!vine deJ'eatcd Pep· perdinc. ~•e•" Ve1·de "''~· ,, 0 o~v .... l;l~rnrl, D lol•b Seo" br l1111iR,1 . ' . 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 D ~) .. ; ? ••• 1~1···"~ Vie lo '"° °"' o _, · ~ / V1lrntll 01\ 000' --l j 1 ~AIM~' II J4tJio.on •I flA\I!""•! <' Mtv~•. lb ~""'' n Cn!IAGI < Sn•l<kon. < ... t!Am), lb 118\lrt. ,. 9inb<H. II! Slm~l>l"I· lb l\.ffDl•fn". <! loillJ l•ll!tr Del Cl) S1<I01tbac~ (I) 1t rhr11i' (O<'itn•Jlv.'i ~ 1 1 I ••1rno..U •.()OOI 1!•1 Irr, •t • {I 1 ! I Kv~.?b ?100 Munl""' lb V"11 ~ 0 ~.,v~t;~i:. t t ~ 11 ~ g l'r!l'Q'rl~. ct 1 o o ~11~•.)b l ODO 6~'"""A~e. lb l 0 ' ' O•vld..,.,, lb · l 11 O J~<:nUCI, < 1 '0 1 0 Tol~IJ J!1 ~1 J SlO<I b• '""'"'' t; I ~-~~lrbrd' <ii ~~ l-' 1 1 M~TU 0.1 (ll)J 1)1)1 1-J t 4 JC Baseball Larry Brown. Meadowlark n1en's club champion. Is cur- rently in second place in the John Farrell and 8111 Ticrr Long Beach city championshir combined lo lire a 65 to win a Ployorrs that include lhc Hun· parntcrs bl-.5t ball tournamcn1 Standincrs t:l t M V d C Cl b ~OUTH COAST CONl'E,Ep.l(E linston Beach course. a esa er c OlUltry u w 1,. r Pei. oa Ml'ke F•dderly, furni'ture uver the weekend. t~n1101 1 o a 1000 i' o. Mt 5•n ,,ntr)r"o l ~ ~ 1 .~ I :-tore o"'ncr from ComptQn, Ernie \Vagncr and Keell'r ~:.'!1~~~.,..Co••' · , 0 .Jn ,. represents Lakewood Countrv Lil"nlz tied "·ith Pet c ~::1~1~ ~ l ~ ·~ ;1 Clu b and is the leader arte'r Matranga and Charles \Vir \l1 S•n Oiego ....,_,. o 3 o .OQO J f Mond1v'• S<ort nnnG 69-71 al Virginia and or second place 1vilh 66. r:1111er111n 6+o~:~.~1~q.°m':.u' 1 Hccreation Park last \1•cekcnd. In a mixed bcsl bait nf ti'"""" <o••, ., ce,,110• "rn"'O h·,•d 74 ·73. roursomc tournament. Perr\ • •·l~•!on "' Mt Son An!~nln >Y . • ~ ... D••(!a •t s.~ Oltgo ...... The club title holdcri; wi'll and Betty Stephens combinr1I ~~"t" ,.,,, •. b•t h -t. Stllir<l•V'l G1mt1 ploy at Sk_ylink.~ S<ilurday and \Vil ~1r . and Mrs. r.1icstkc I, s~n D·•~o 111 O••ni<~ co~,, ;1 58 p heJ d \ · .Y.I S~n •n1oo>lo ti Ct"!IO'I !:! al Los Alamitos N11vy course ~core a · erry JlC 11 ~ t~~·~~~~~.,~~:.~.,i:~n9 1t l c•n SundRy 1o conlplclc the learn with a holc-in·onc on th1· souTHE•N CAI. coNFt:1tEr.ia: rour-round compclition. 12th hole. ri 144-yardC'r. usins :1 1 A He•llO• ~ ~ 1 ~-oa Cl11b chanipions rron1 scVC'n five \vood. 1 AC< 1 o 11X1n 1 < d I I t R I I tyr-r1' 7 t Ml 1 1·nl1rscs compete for the title ... econ ll ace wen o a Pi E"'' l-' 1 ? .Jai i d Dolt, M · d Ch I ("lf)ldr" W•l l a ) l'otl{t )' including ~I r a d·o w t a r k . an 1r orris an ar c... .11111 ••""do ~ 1 000 1,, ltl'crcolion Pork, Skylinks, and Carol Friedcrsdorf al S!l '-" H~•IXtt ~~;'t:~·:,, ~~i'o I 1.;ikcv.•ood. Los Alamilos. the A tie resulted for I hi r rl k~,c1.'.-. ~7Prt/;,n4.oo 0 Nav\' course and El Dorado. place with Joe <ind Ri ll1P rh""''y·, "'"'' St I . . h Lo II Co<J!d~" "'"·" ~• 1..-.cc The ~iradO\¥lark n1en's club arago earning wit wr Frl111V'1 c;,,.,._. \l•i11 journey to ti1assacre Can· 1--'"-d_J_ean_n_e_._s1_a_r_k_o_n_o_n_e_1_e_a_n_• --~-~'!_,'_\'_:'"_.c•'"~c•"<o''c"_'"_w_, _' ----11 .1·fln in Gilman Hot Sprinl,?s lor a t1\·o-d:iy tournament th is 1veekcnd. ~1cn and \vomen \\'ill comprtc against Quail Lake S;ilurday and lhe hos l i\1a~sacre Canyon squad Sun· da1·. MAR ~d.wL0"~"" ' EVERYTHING FROM OINGHIES TO 13-22 LUXURY SAILBOATS & OCEAN CRUISERS ! I ••••••••••••••••••••••• : 2tfd A#flUAL "lHEOU£EN"- • WESTEI# #AT/DIAL • • GUARANTEED IN WRITl,NG " .. -......... · /-n•t~u" -............ ~ .... . ..... ~ ...... ,.,_ •· .... ·~··~·-, ........ . ,., ..... , <1-.1...,.. .. ................. ........ ,...,_,...,_..,. . .., lot ..... _,,,.lot• .Cll •""~•n•I """' .... ~" .......,,. ,.,_, __ . -" TO-n>•" .. """"•'"~·--·'" .. ' ... , ......... ~ . . ............... ,., .. , ... "" ........ " ..... _ "',,. .. ~"' .......... ' .. '~· . ....... ....,. ' .......... -.... __ .. ··-.............. . ··~~ "" '''"". ···~· '"·" .... '"' ............... . .,.,. ., .,,,,...,., , ,., .... , .,_, ,.,.r~1,., , .•••• ;::.::: :-.:.r ~~· ::,:~:~·;,; .'.:!.'.;: :·~ .. ·:.:;,·.:. .. ··"" •• ,, .... ' -. ~I • f\111 1•""1 7f·.il ing 111:·' ,~ ·ir•• 11 ,n+ ,. 11r~ ·11! 1 1· · '"'l"n ,·,,1d 1 ..... h. . • H.11 J ,,n11· 1dp1u1;»j) ,,J1 .. ;1i1 41 11~ 'l'lrlflf1)1 r.Y11 tr1, ,.,,, l'li1,.fi11n • Lnfli:"\• '.": r;:-.;i1 ,..., · 'l' r:.-1 L. F tulolJl•r , ..... ~ ... ·---'··-"': _US~D 11 IE Tires10'1¢. anti other; brand!: ' . . < f:._<, ... .-,t,,.,,f, -~ "'~·· • ~~·· ~-·"" 11,.1 .... ____ - • ' '"II '• I ! ! I• " •• ~ I 1 !• •• "''" Ru stler s' Tho111pson Na111cd All-Co11fere11ce l>u ffy Lt'P. a member or the :irti1e jtu1ior goHing group at J\lcado"'·\ark. had a hol e-i n-one nn the t!th hole rrcen\1y. It is 151\ yard!i in lenJ:l.h. llrink V;1n Rl.'C nr 1-"'ountain \'1i!lcy acrd the 175-yard 16lh holr. • • • • • • • • • • • • • Economy Buy! Tirt•rone ' OLC-100' Retreads .._ . =..$10 2 s4210· 'l · .. ::.:.· or ·-·- Lawn G Pl,irit fOGd ' 20·10· G . ' .• ' r.nldcn \\"f!'il C"ollci;c'!i Chn~ Thon1pson h11:. bc('n n111nrtl lo lhf' coaches i\ll·Southcrn r..aliforn1a Conrcrf'nc:e baskt>t· ball rirsl te<!1n. announred lo- day. Tho1npson sc·orC'd 707 poin1~ this p11i.l sca!ion 10 S"l a \Ingle l'f'ason S<"1r1ni;: r('('f)rd al Goldtn \VP~ !IC. 11!5n lrd lht ~inly 1n scoring l4nd hall a &fi. ~nl 011tpul 111 Golden \\'r~t :. final game. S""'" 1.aru;tbcr~ or Cypre~c: V. IJ"-""'lCClcd llS the. player nf lfll' )Par Akn namf>l't ti• Ille :ill-con· fer!Wr '"am wPrP l)l)n Strong :ind· Wilham c::t>x of l~ACC, Lamar Anrit'rliOn o/ LA Stluthwfl:"'t and John 1Jeam11n1 or LA 11 .. rbor. Second team srlrc1ions in· "lude Dave \\'a l1cr:. nnd Bill t"aN•yke of Ibo II on d n, llichartl Hart and Bob Jen· n1ngs of LA llarbor and Jim Browning of Cypress. LACC aod llarbor endcrl lhr ronfcrencr season 1n a lie for f1r:.I "11b 1().2 n1:irks. Cyprrii;"I frtric:hf'rl third with an 11-4 rrrurd and Golden \\'rsl p\ac· <'d 1::i .. 1 "'tlh 2.1n. ~ :o '.·• , \ ~-\ •O ~"-•·I r •. \ II m1rlw SJ n nvu1 Lee 11nd fr an k Recknlan romhineri talents and hnnc!lcaps lo vdn a p11rtner·~ \ow net lournament al Httr1C'ho San .loll(Jnin over the 1veekcnd \\'1th a score of 70 Orrin \\'right and Pat \Vade pl:u.'!'d sreond'\1"llh 62 fol\Q1'1°e(f by Dill Bradsh:n~· and \Valter Crammond al 6t A ladies ace day tournament round a lhree-way tie for lop honors in A flil,rhl between ~l1di;:e I\ c Ir h n c r. Priscill:i Anderson and Dorothy Varian .11 n • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • :..-~ Whit~. told •1.25 Ot-,,,.:< _.,,,,,,., law P<IC"'1 --...... -~ ------·-· COSTA MESA Firestone Store 475 E. 17th St. 64~·2444 ·1 ... " ... ~.. ,, , 2 for •46.00" ... --· .. ,_ 2 for 155.50 · ... -·-.... -.. --. .._.. .. _ .. _ HUNTINGTON BEAC Firestone Siorc 161 71 Be.acb Blvd. 841-6081' Lr1ln Brande 1iRl \\l'IS tht B Mol'l .·Fft. 8 •.m,-0-'.JO p rn.· I II ' 8 Men .• F-r1 .. 9 d m .Q p.,.. \\Inner o 11\\f'd by Bonnie' J"'· •.m .• S P·'"· Alk!nson (79). I>orothy \Vright Open Su "de y 11 lo 5 Sat. S e.m .• S. p.,., (77) won C compe:Litlon wltb1--------------------llL..-----------------------------' Estancia, Tars Laud Hoop Stars Newport Harbor Rl&h'• Lee Haven and Chrtl Borpet nall- ed top individual honors at the Sailors spcxU awlfd5 banquet while Skip Williams and Tom Fou of Estaocla were rtctiv- lnl. 1iID!tar awards Tuesday night at the achool's cafeter· las. Hawn was named most valuable on the Tan' bubt- bill team white Horpel, CIF wrestJer of the year and undetuted champion in the 148-pound welaht class. w11 nl05t valuable on the wrestling team. Williams, the MVP in l.r\'ine League basketball c I r c I e 1 , received Uke honon while Foss was named mos t valuable on the Estancia wrestling forte!. Newport Harbor "''radiag Varsity -Captain: Doug Miller; MV: Chris .Horpel; Most Improved : Brad Hovey. Junior varsity -MV: Bruce Mellor; Most Improved; Lar. ry Jones. Frooh·soph -MV : Richard Brown. Baske\ball Varsity -Captain: Nels TahU: MVP : Lee Haven; Most Improved: BDI Bffket. Junior varsity -captain: Larty Gentosl ; MVP: John Kazmer; Most Improved: Bill Jones and Bob Helvie. Bees Captain: Fred Reynold s; MVP: John Bowman; Most Improved: Randy Larson. Cets -Captain : Brian Cokas ; J\.fVP: C harlie Thomll'Oll ; Most Improved : John Clark. Estlncla Buke&Ull Vanity Co-captains: Mike Hays ~nd ht i k e Shlughnegy ; MVP: S k i'p Williams:. Most Jmprov.ed : Gary OrgiD. 1 J~ varsity -Captain : Bob Kaiser; MVP: Jell klsdorf; Most lmproved : Craig 11ay,, Bets -Captain : Tim Olson.: MVP: Hank M~re; tlOst Improved: Kevin Brown. · Cees -Captain: Sc1>tt Gayner ; 1.fVP: Scott Gayner ; 1.f06i llnpro,·td: Scott De Vries. Wre1tlbtg Vanity -Co-ca.plains: Tom P'oe:s and Grant Frteland; P.fV : Tom FC>Ss; Moat Jmprovtd: Bob Fate. Junior varsity -Captain : Ed Manh; MV : Dennis Snyder; Most Improved : Tom Scheafer. Frosh-soph -Captain: Ran- dy Frttty: MV: Dennis Snyder ; Most Improved: Ian Stroup. UCISwim UC: lrwl .. (Dl Ill) h11I• AM olOO medl,y rtl•Y -UCI (0.kt, CllOP9r. Ct m1fl1n, DklU'ltllfll. l :lt-1. 1000 lreesrtlt - l, Mc0on•ld IUCll, t. Drtkt (SA,), l. k11!hlcll !SA ). 11:2t.O. 100 fl"WS!Ylt -I. Ft rmtr IUCI), 2. OI_, CUCJJ, J Dr'""U (5.A), l:Sl.1. .$0 frNIN1• -I. P'tli:okt 1uc 11, 1. Gron 15.AJ, l. Dldr.~1111 tUC I. D.t. 20D ll!d. "'9dltY -1. Et_, (UCll, 1 N~'°"' IVC:t/• J. Mllltr (SAi, 2:09 .... 100 bvttarf y -I. CtrneMI! (UCll, 2 Dotkt IUCIJ, J. Drtkt ISA.1. t :ot.I. 100 lrentvlt -I. l'1rm., IUCll. 2. £11011 fUCll, l. 0"°'1 ISAI. JCl.I . 100 btdtJfroltt -!. NtlJOfl IUCI!, 1. Glrdrltr IUCJ), J. IC'<k ISAI 2:11.1. 50t fr-Nit -I. MIUtr (SA,. 2.. o\...., (UCll, l. MeD-lcl CUCI). $:10.1. aoo bf"Ultslrflk• -I. CO!Hllltf" 1uc•1· l. A•f~ (VCI), l. F1ult.nef" (SA . :tJ.1. One '"'''• o11v11111 -1. ,.,111c;, cucn, ' Stftll Ant. «ID lrft'llYlt "'"'"' -UC! DldllM""· ~Ml!, Ftrmer. E.UOll). l~M.O. NAIA Scores "'"' """" SIMOllM ,, Au1!Jn 100. $OUtt1 C1l'Ollnt lf. " kl'llll!dlY St. 6"1, 1111.,.ll Wt sltYlll M Ce11tr.i Wt lh. 17, SI. l'ntdkt., K111. u Motrl1 "4tf¥W "· Wtd. Htw lntllrw:I 1f Gulllom:I to, Wl~M. Ntb. n Et lltNI Midi. lot. f 11t C.,trtl Oltlll. u W1rflNr1 t i, Ntrltltf11 S.D. 11 ft\I Ct1tr1. Wt1. •· f11lf"m Mont. 11 How often hlWI you Htn I aolfer· with whom you art pltyi"I us..his putttr·111 "crutc;h" when "trievinr his ball from the hole! Thts practice Is ·quit• common, yet' seems to bt • littlt·discus$td point of etiquette. · · · Whtn 1 1otf•r puts most of his weight on the noH of hfs putter, ht 1ot only dents the puttinc surface, but also runs th• risk of snappinc his puttershaft:. · If you violate tht ittiquette.of tht pmt. in this .mannfr, I ur1• .y(iu ·to think ol tho· ployers that fo.ll<fN Who , m01t 1putt tover your indentation •. And rernt(l'lber: th"• n'txt such mark you must.putt over may be your own. · •· ·~ .. ' ScoN iii ·•IHt• of trwps, b"1nkera, RK.lsh and dGwnhill llH-wlth th a htlp Arnold P'almar cfftts you It! hla booklat, "Troubl• Shot1." A r.ofri Is yotir1 for 204 •lon1 with • at1mped. ••If· addresstd .nv,tcpe Mrit to Arnold P1lmM, ln°Urtof this l'lefto INIPV• ' ' Ai-ea Briefs Pirates Win, 4-1; . CIE Matches .Set Orange Coast College's ICIC'- cer team will be idle until Apri l following a 4-1 " victory over Cal State (Fullerton) Fri· day on the lolie111' field . The. victory r1n the Plrates' season record to $.l-2. OCC ls expected to compete in a league with Chaffey, Mt. Sall Antonio and Golden West. which will Main ln April and. end in May .. In Friday's win ·over Cal state, Ray Crump 'fas act· orded player of the g1me honoi:s for bis outstaDding play at goalie". Scoring for OCC were He nry 1.fopakal, German C r e 1 p o , Alfredo Maran and Tom Mor· rl.son. Steve John90ft turned in a fine defensive game. • Friday night's CIF AAAA basketba11 9em..ifin1ls at Los Angeles Sports Arena will pit Long Beach Miilikan md No. t seeded Santa Barbara in the 7:30 optner. · Wrapping up the night at I o'clock wlll be Palos Verdes and ltfonrovia with the win- ners of the two battles lo me.et the following night In the wrapup a four·1ame set at the Sports Arena lo decide the champions of the A, AA, AAA and AAAA. • Lasuna Beach Hi1b's winter sports athletes v,;11 be honored Thursday night at the school cafeteria, along with Costa Mesa Hlgh's basketball team at that school's cifettrl1. Leglina's 8wards banqutt for the basketball and awim· ming teams win begin at 7 o'clock. while Costa Mesa will begin its' activtUes at 1:30. :e Lagtn)a Be.aoO High trick coaeh len1 'Millfr and 'Oran1e Coast , Oolle1e insthlctor Ed Bvrke, :olYmpic-.b a m· m rt<r throwers, wer~ two ol the featured speakers at the Ilth arviu;al Arizona .Track Coaches Association Cfuiic held Satur- day at Phoenix College. • The Harbor Area Boys' Club has an~d registration dates for its 197tl Jouth bcueball program, which is open to all N ev..oport Beach ind Costa Meu youths between the 7th grade and high school. Registration "''ill open Mon-- day at Kaiser School at 6 p.m. and at Ensign School at 8 p.m. and will conthrue through Mar. 19. • Registration has opened for the Cost.a Mesa Recreatlon Department's thr ee.man basketball feague, w h I c h begins league play at Orange Coast College, April 7. AU males 14 or older are eligible and registration forms and rosters are available at the recreaUon offices from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday and from 7-10 p.m. on Tuesdays a n d Thursdays at OCC beg!Mlng Tuesday. Entry fee ts $8 per team and the rosters are limited to a maximum of five players . • San Clemente High qualified nine Individuals for th ts week's CIF Swim Preliminaries, which will be held Saturday at Belmont Plaza in Long Beach. The nine ·Triton qua1ifiers are. Corby Lloyd, J i m Hartman and Gary Smither ln the varSity class, Tim Spr· inger and Randy Smither In the Bees ind Mark McCartin, Dana King , Giry Burris and Chris Brou&!Jtori in the Cee:s. Prep Net SU.inmaries State JC P~yoffs To Open . Four 1ames are sheduled ~ as the slate jWlior collqe basketball tournament gets u1*'r way at Long Beach Ciif College. Jn' first round games, City CoUege of San Frlinclsco and LACC meet in a t p.m. game with San Joaquin Delta and Fullertoo clashing at I. Two night game11 find Con· tra Costa matched against Compton at 7 and Hartnell facing LBCC at 9. . All the teams \\'On regional game,: last weekend , with the exception of San Joaquin Delta, the V11ley Conference champion, which drew a bye. City College of San fran. cisco. advanced to the U>ng Beach tourrv with a 69-58 victory over ~ollege of the Sisldyous while LACC turned baCk: l\fira Costa. 122·104. Fullerton defeated S a n Bernardino, a&-73, Con Ir a Costa got by Butte, 113-37. Compton trimmed LA llarbor, 84-77, Hartnell whipped l\ter· ced. I lS..94 and Long Beacll had an euy time with Imper· ial Valley, 98--75. LACC and LA Harbor tied for the Southern California Conference Utle while P.tira Costa and Imperial Valley \\'ere co-champions of the Desert Conference. Fullerton captured the South Coast Conference crown. Semifinal games are sched· uled Friday with championship round contests slated for 4 p.m. and 9. Consolation games \\'iii be held at 2 and 7. ThE" state .title game is planned for 9 Saturday night. WtdntWy, M1rcil 11, 1q;10 Redman, Caneday New School Names Football Coach, AD The Orange Coast area has a 14th high school, complete with athletic director and \•arsity footba11 coach. Jerry Redman is the !001.ball mentor \\'ho'll be in charge ·ot the grid fortunes for high school No. 4 of the Tus\in District, the DAILY PLLOT learned exclusively today. There isn't an official name fot the school ------- ROGER CARI.SON ·------- yet 11•hich has a location of just east of UC Irvine in the Turtle Rock-Uni versity Park area. •lowever, according to athletic director Dick Caneday, the institution will field a varsity footbaU team this fall and will com· pete on a free lance sched ule against schools of comparable size and against junior varsit y tca1ns fron1 0U1er conlingenL•t There "'ill be no seniors in the first year of operation but Redman expects to field varsity, Bee and Cee football squads. Tentelive agreements have been reached with Banning and \Vebb (Claremont) high school!! for varsity football games this fall . Red1nan romes to the area arter serving et Foothill lllgh School for six years -!he last three ca1npaigns under coach Ed Bain. It was Red1nan who was lo charge of tht Knights' offensive backfield -perhaps the backbone of Foothill's 1969 Crestview League champions. Prior to \\'Orking at ~~oothill, Red1nan put in one year under \\'ayne •Iughes at New· port Harbor High, Hughes is now athletic director at Esta!1cia. . Redman. 29, prepped al Tc1nple City and. , "''as gradua ted from Redlands University al· ter earning letters h1•ice•in football and wa~ an aJl-ccmfcrcnce catcher and !\1VP on the team. He's married and lives in Orange. Redman says he expects to play home i:aines al either Tustin or Mission Viejo (preferably f\1ission Viejo) and is hopeful of conducting spring football practice at a site not yet selected (possibly UC Irvine). Caneday takes over as athlelic director after three years at !\1tssion Viejo. He is currently coaching S\vimming after l\1•0 years in weight football. Prior to that he 11·as at La Canada lligh School for four years invoJ\•ed in football and s11·in1mlng. He's 31 and Jives 11•ith 11•ife !\1ary in i\li.s· sion Viejo. At the mo1ncnt, U1e entire situation at high school No. 4 is up in the air. But Cancday says, "The school may not be completed by the time sch01>l starts. bul whether it means double sessions at one or the existing schools or what. we'll be fielding athletic tean1s in Scplen1ber." OA.ILV PILOT t11.-"''' But·s Trip Two Swi111 Opponents John Blauer 11i•on two evc111s to lead Orange Coa.,t College 's Kwir11 learn to victories O\'Cr Rio llondo and Chaffey col· leges at Chaffey Tuesday. Cooch ,Jack ~·uuerton's lf'11m turned back fUo Hondo. SS.31, and edged Ctt.afrey. &&-48. Blaucr captured the 500 IF'C'C stvle h1 5:30.5 and l\'On lhc 1,0oo [rec. In 11 :2~.5. Steve Sch11l•r, Chris G11n1mon and Bruce Johnston :11.~n ~·ere indi vidua l winners ror lilc Pirates. Scl1wC'r \1 vn lhc 2UtJ.yarrt free in 1;56.I, G:1n1mon CIJP- turcd !he 200 butterfly 1n 2: 13.8 and Johnston \Von the 200 breaststroke \1 ilh a fine time or 2:26.3. Orange Coast rClturns lo :ic- tion F'riday. hostin~ J\lt. S..1.11 Antonio Collrgc 111 ;i South Co.isl Conff'rcnce rncci. (lrlnott CN•I !U I tUI •19 "a"dt Orll\ff (O•<I IUl 14fl c"'"'¥ fOO "'fldllly •~ltY ~ 1 O""'V• Co.•t !DtH11f!. 8dll'>ll. Fd" tnd J1111n•t01o1, 1 C~l!lf• Timr' ~-~ l 100 I••· -I, sen .. ,, (OCCI. 1. PoblnM>n ICI }. N•!:IOll llt l, ,, l!Gdewora IC /· Tim~; I.SO.I. .111 lrt t -M•llf• !Pl, 1. Tl!e>mf'\nn IOCCl. l. Ht•ll'li~•t lC!. I For r t!X:C.\ Tim•. ll6 100 Incl mtG I ll•ml>•<>ll !Cl. 1, At•W• !OC(l, l (;~mmon !OCCJ. t Ho,.t 1111 r1 .... l•l6.1 D••ln11 I. lint~• tCl 1. Soulfl•rfl "/· J, ''"' tOCC l. l M1V.lm•r ft). Pn nt~· lJl.I!. lQQ butltrll • ! C.•mn•~n H)(:C!. 7. 5cf\W~r !o<.C 1 l f<••!rlltvt IGJ. I. fol(l!ro~ !!Ii i. Tim~ l 13~ !~ tr~e -I. l!(l!Jln,~n IC!. ) Edt~• •en !OCCI. ?. Mi!l~r Hl1• • f/IQmP· ...... (O((l, Tl"" ~1.J, 70l'I 11..r~·t•Oll~ -r Rom11av~ rci. 1 ltM'Vt (O(CJ. ). 11~.,.v !C f,•. Poucn· P• 411 ), T!fl'\f 11 !I t ~ ''~ 1. Bl.tun COCC:l . ? Dvnn (~I.). lllKlt••ld !Cl •• Nelson !Ill !. l imt l :IC.I. ?l'IC t><t.nh!•okJ - ' J""'"'"" fOCC!. 1. Murpl!Y !P l. l E•ldloon Ct.!, I P1lt!>l"I !Il l Time 1111 foil lr•t rrl~Y -! C~afltv. ). Orange c.,.,t r1,.,,: l:lt t , 1,000 !"" -I 1118l!N IOC(I. 1 Ol!"" l(l, J. Pgud1er 1111 1. '· Ohl!n IC. l •~ot, 11 ~· $ Ol'IN DAILY 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. SUN. 10 TO 7 a~Ul\f:t Zt MONTK OUMANTU 16?.! PIUllEI PLUS umn 12eolf, achtal"" 42 MONTH GUARANTEE 95 ..... 8-TRACK $TEREO TAPE Pl.AYER 52~ ---..... '""''" 'l'Of 111lnlertsrt Ml~11 pft'Yl1hl11mpl• ·~!tolkiit ....... •tl't>cl• (VfQ "'""' pi;oce;,~ •PfC1•i11m.•'llll) aw IOI"" lit •nit tleNoalc ~....al di»~. All 1r--.aor .iw ttal~ oatt "• 6 .-;alt.i lmlSk ...... ,., dwl1111~t. 240 • W'l Y "Yl<NI 001110 T'1al!l.lll • STA .. 0111110 Tlll:AO Ol!llGN • 01!,.llfDAaLI IC.CNOMY TH•I 1011 ,.S0.1J I 10.77 I 1.71 1.1s.14 I 1s.01 I 2.11 •.H-11 •i.cl-11. r.1s.1s I 11.H t :t.1t ,..,_ l'lul 1.11 l .1S·l4 I 17.00 I Ul .,..,Ill ••<IW AM wJa.I .. W1 ,.fftr.t lf:JdJt T• '""· -n·-ri. "·" """' MC• 10,000 Mill GU.ll.lJITll BRAKE RELINE 99C Orlf'.11 ... •fllf .. ~ -b ... ktN IOt tod1y'1 lllfll. -..-... "-. • 71-:tnl• - PLUS fEO. EX. TAX EACH TIRE 1.65 E71J..14 f7.35) 24.88 2.35 f78·15 (7.751 2.6 1 29.88 F78·14 l7.751 2.5S (i71J..14 (8.251 2£;1 31.88 Ci78· 15 (8.251-f---t--:;2:.,.'-;-'--11 H7S.14 f8.551 2.6 1 33.88 H78-15 f8.551 2.98 FISK AUTO YOUR CHOICE FLOOR MATS AUTO CiAUCiES 3!7 2~~ Vlt'l't'L AVA~LAILl ltol1 "'u. "'°"'' • •111.l .,,,.., tWIM niOlff -IW~ llA' ,._~,,._,,,,_,..r•oi•I~, -knJ-r .... UI ~ li4.• _, 'lfl.'JOOD thrn 2(;..~;~'I .. , .. ('!i1mpiol!I, f ~1< •"4 ~ '•-' .......... ~""' ~ '""'"" """ l-.IP...!.U10l•~IKI It )O\.ot li:•t, 'L~ 1(1 ., 3fWI .!'11()(1.150!'! t 1'1.'ltl'\G IJClrT • MOTOll MO,, IT•llt: • 1.0M.l'JU~IO.~ TL."1"!.ft • ..-Aa XUM rtr1-:L 1T.!l'TEk •1·1-~U·IM?. •I, .. , LUG WRENCH 99,( ,~ .,.1nt11ftC t("tl"~ , "!II'"' ~-'\tll , •• U:ll'I i.. "1-0 "'!I 1'!1 , THESE SPECIALS GOOD AT THqE LOCATIONS ONLY IUllNA PAIK IUlllA PAIK lll1 ...... IM. ........... W.JMO COSTA MESA 2111 ...,.._. l h·4. •Wlta1 541-20l2 SANTA ANA 26 OAILV PILOT s Perso nality Trait R eversal Possible By THOMAS t'ORTIJll'E Of !llt 0•11~ 1'1191 Sl•H A NPwport Beach ohar1naceutk·.il flrn1 nl a y have found a drui; tha t rPvcri;(',s thr persona\H.v 1rait of old-folks gr.tung SlUl'k In 1 hr1r 1vays. The drug. rlC\l'IOJICd by Nr1\por1 fJharn1accutltal lnc .• h11c, been gl\·cn lo oldtr rals ~11i1 ~ho1rn lo revhc their will· 1n;inc~) '" cxperin1cnt in the s:1n1t \1ay younger r;its do. 11 ii: now bcin,e: tr~ted on n1n11krvs for ;iny uns.1 ft side rllM'ti-.: If nnnr :ire found it "111 he f'V'!lluatrd 1n clin ical ~iud i€.s for rffer!Ji on humans l'it>lrirr ~ dtcl~lan 1~ 1nade 11 hrther lo ptH 1t on tht n1.•rkcl. The l11o·ye;ir·old dr u g l'f'~earch firn1 1110\•td a ~lep clo!.er !his 11eck to making the r!111c: a\'allablr w 1 I h an· l\f\1111r·e.1nc11t lhal It has ac· 1111ircd rontrol O! a company for marketing drug product~. The l"e11'1lort firm has other ctn.1 ss under develo pment. \n !he field of contact viral difteases t lhe common cold. flu, poho) and in t~ field .or lrarning and memory. Bul its ~eriatric drug to prevent ros:illization into habits of rigid behavior i1:. the hottest hope for success at the mo- roent. The beha\·1oral d!'ug as yet ha~ nt1 name other thii n NP- 113 <NP standing for Newporl Pharmaceutical). Compan y President Dr. Alvin Glasky J.11id he ~lieves the company's drug is unique sin tt he hasn't read of anything similar in scientific publications. The co1npany's own find ings on rt>sults or U1e re&earch with laboratory anlmals hasn't yet been published, he said. The fi rm lo be used for marketing is Western States Properties 1nc. of Salt Lake City, to be renamed Newport Pharmaceut icals International. Ne wport Pharmaceutic1l will acquire 300,000 shares of the cOmm on stock and take over n1ana gemen t, "''ilh Newport Ph armaceutical vice presldent and genl'ral administrative off- icer Dale Holker becoming Ecori o,nist Predicts B oo1 1i W ill Co1i tinue Uonon1isl Ra)' J a 11 ow N!J1eves California's booming P<:On'lITI)' "'ill continue to do l!:ractly thal in the decade ;ihead and hf: predicts that the average California family .,.,ill have an annual lnct>me of $23,500 in 1900. And that . says lh" Unlted Ca\Hornia P.~nk's vice presi· d'nl and chll'f economic ad· ,;sl'r, will bt 24 riercent higher tha n fa1nily incQn1e in the rest of the United States and more than double lo<h1y's average California income of $11,500. • nis prediction is in line wilh that of economists who put Californians of 1930 in a select bracket: the 12 pereent of Am erica n fAm ilics who will earn S15.0QO to $25,000 a year. About 31 percrnt will be in !he SI0.000 to $\:i.000 bracket and 2'1 percent. \\'ii! be found in the $7.500 to SJ0.000 salary ran.11;e. Ecoii111nl!~ predict t h a t ~·hile today the ~alary range nf $5.000 10 s1.;,oo accoun~ for 20 percent of the American v•orking force, by 1900 lt '''ill be only 12 JM!rrent. And in- romefi of ]l'~s than lhat will have been reduced to about 3 percent In terms nf gross riro· dt1ction. J a 11 ow forecasts, California·!'! f"conomy in the dec<idr JUS1 started wiH con· tlnue to lop !hat of the United SI.ates as a \\hole with the state's gro.r;s rrod1.1ct i on reaching as high a!'! S240 billion by 1980 -up 140 percen t from lhr $100 billlon registered in 1009. Dr. R;iy .!allow has the reputation Qi be in g con· $islent ly rig ht. And that's one rea son v.·hy he was asked to deliver the keynote address at a recent conference of the Na· tiona l Association of Business Eeonomigl!. Jallow refu:'f!s lo t a g ralifornia a~ one ol rhe na- lion's 50 states -at lea.5l in trrm~ of economy. Its massive output. he i;ays. justifies its ron1riarison \vith nations and he lo(Jks at Caltfornia lhat way 1n his rf'.port. California 's total output l<>-- d;iy. states Jal\ov.•. rnakes it the seventh largest nation in the world. In 1980 it will he surpaned only by the rest of tht United States. Russia, West Germany and Japan. \Vhi le California 's population ls r1 51ng by five mlll\on persons to a total of 2S.5 million reiiden~ in 1980. forecasts Jallow. lhe state's businesses will add more than two million new jobs lo their payrolls and boost the total employment number to more than 1n million persons. By 1980. business relail sales v.·ill exceed $72 billion, an in- crtase of $31 billion or 76 per· cent over an estimated S41 billion for trus year. Sptnding on services and leisure •c- tlvities wlll rise by 200 percent during the same IO.year period. But it won 't be all 1\'ine. and roses for the businessman by the timt IMO rolls around, Ja llow warns. Substantial growth in all sectors will be the story of the decade but that sarne growth will bring "''ilh it intensl!ied c:ompeUtlon for the new n1lllioru of dollars generated by the burgeonlng economy. Many businesses. predicts .Jallow. "'vill wither 1w1y and disappear." They will find they cannot cope with the new dema nds placed on tt\tlr" resources by a m ore sophisUcate d population, a more vari~ economy and a more compltx business world. Some may stave off thal rredicted fate by resorting no"' to careful planni ng, tl1e economist adds. "\Vhen busincssc:?> m a k e long range plans:• he said, "they adopt the philosophy of determining where they want to go in the future instead of helplessly fol\o\vlng courses dictated by ma rket forces. ''Ra p id changes In teehnology, con~umer tasteis. the bu!lness cycle, govem- n1t nl refUlations, population movtimenu and s o c i a I r e s p on 11 i b Hi lles require thoughtful planning to adapt to the environment or be ltfl behind the compeUUon'a dusl, suffering se vere financial con- sequences," he said. Put t he 'AX' in TAXES u;ith S vlvi11 Porter'., New Bonk MAIL THIS HANDY ORDER FORM TODAY Only $1.25 ~~":d~:':dpost•ve ........ -........... . I I I I I I I I I Stldt ,1r11r'1 lnUllll T•t S11'1 fll't'ltt P1•U11t11~1. D1,t HM (tftl tt P1at1 lnt••l$i. C111. DUll NON ... ~Ua& Mt did Ill' "'°"" Ord# .... Pwt1f , .. Wt." lJlclo"4 b fl.SO "1.25 ~"' 25' "' -......... "' ... c.an of S)fvr1 l"orlll''s 117'0 IM:mM Tc ...._ ,._ 11111 fl 111 IS ftllowt- I ~llllt -----·~--------~ I M*m ~~~~~===:==::;;;:~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-I I t $UM --------~ Zl•"•·---- I I • • DAILY PILOT •••••••••••••••••• I I I I I I I I I I I I I ' I I Computer 'f alk Slated Air W est Makes Bid 2nd Change At Vin eyard , S11111.bols • : • ! • ' l • " ' . . . " ~; l " .. , . • '• •• " •• ' ,, " ~ ~· ,, " •• .. 't\ '·• . ,, •• .. .. .. " ,, '. '• '• ~·~ '• "' " ' . • . ,, ., .. . '• ... :·e-; ; '·• ., -'~ ••• . .. . ' . ... . '• -1' • . . , -1• • • •• ., "' . '. " -'i . " . " ... -~­." -~ •• :,. '• . ,, j. ,, .: ··~ ... -'\ t-:i .. ,, -'"' ·~ -'• + .. :_ i: + '• +1•1 ..... _,., ' " <" 7flf -.. + '• -... -" _, i,-"' -· ... , ... + " + .• .., _,., 1 .. ". '• -,, -'• _., + ., ... -·· +" _., + " _., t :, l '•· -., tr • ~ •{ ... _ .. + '• •••• .:,:·., .... + " + ''• -.. -., .... . .. • •• -" -·· -'• -··· •' t r••• """ ..... '· ~ _,.. lfl'lbvo ••• -..... -...... ~ ... -.... --t tun. ,_ ·-••• ----·~ .... ~-:: ------------·----------·---,-.. . ' ' •• • ·, -10, 1'70. OAl~Y '!LOT -Tuesday's Closing Prices Complete New York Stock Excllagge List • I 2f DAILY PILOT ~~fdnttdilf, tAit(i 11, 1970 LEGAL NO'l1CE LEGAL NahCE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE \ • • ' 12 v,,, ... . . \ Cup Race Yachts .. Ann~wiced Twel\•e Cob~~ia.50 ownert from Callfomia y •ch t In I centers wtll make their yachts available March t&.32 for the Ith annual Congres,s.Jonal CUg_ match race serle1 outside Long Beach Harbor. General -Chi.inn•" • B 01> Leslil ol'.tlit •J>OlltOl'illl Lonf Be~ch :,Y.c111 club innoanced that the yachtJ to be used lft -1 the seriea are: Wisdom, Charles May, San ll'go r !'ht _\:lub. . " ~ 4 VeciDr, H~.,J ob·~ ~.9. oc .. nstdt 'v~.\. . · · Se(api.< 11. BUI Barry, Bahia Corinthian YC. ~.iii ·...._. ·V-a'U •• , t UICI ,,..,,.,, Loni Beich' YC~ ' Charisma II, Ed Feo, Se~ Be11d'I YC. J Cygnu1, !ll'l!'$l ChiJ>'l'lll. -Twist, Titus Ahoarlf Long Beach YC. , Astral JI, Cornelius \'an· derstar. Los Angeles YC •. Harbor Men Crew Int~epid Querida II, James Feuer- stein, Del Rey YC. Gem, Charles Hathaway, California YC, ~ Vaslto, Frank Burk~. ~n" Barbara YC. By ALlllON LOCKABEY 1w11nt afii.r Two young Newport HarbOr Yacht Club sailors have been Selected on the crew of the 12· meter Intrepid for t h e Amerjca's Cup trials which start at Stamford, Conn., in June . Bill Ficker, NHYC skipper of the Intrepid,-announced lo-- day thp.t he · has selected Georgt ,Wist, 24, and Jim Titus, 20, as West Coast r e p r e ' e ntatives on the lntrepid'a 12-man crew. 1be .rtmaihder of In~repld's crew for the 1970 campatgn are from the East Coast. "The crew consists or in- di viduals v.·ho have had ex· tensive experience In one- design sailing and large ocean racing yachts," Ficker said. "A number of them have ex· perlenced substantial success and recognition as top skip- pers and crews. "Several have s a i I e d together and against each other. although they have not sailed as a 1!-meter team," Ficker pointed out. Only three of Ficker1s crew have had 12·meler experience. They are Steve Van Dyk. who sailed on Columbia In 1962 and Constellation in 1964 ; Norris Strawbridge, Nottingham, Pa .• a crewman aboard Constellation in 1967. and Richie Sayer, Newport. R.I. aboard Easterner in 1964. YOUNG CREW Ficker pointed out that the crew Is young, averaging about 23. and all are alhletic and have -participated or are participating in other com· petitive sports. "Their backgrounds i n yachting, thei r confidence, ap· pearance and poise should gain them respect in the com· petition as well as ashort," Ficker said. 28 Oasses In Regatta On Harbor Some 28 classes of sailboats are expecttd to swann over Newport. Harbor bay and ocean water s .Saturday and Sunday in Newport Harbor Yacht Club's cinnual Spring Gold Cup Regatta. Twelve classes of small boats have been Invited to participate on inside race courses starling from a race committee boat off the NHYC mooring basin. Sixteen large boats classes -or small tioats capable or racing in the Ocean -are In· vlted td compete on outside coursCll with a starting line to be established off the Balboa Pier. Inside cl asses will have three races Saturday, the Urst starting at II :30 a.m., and two on · Sunday starting nt 1!:30 p.m. Outside classes 'viii have two races Saturday starting at noon and one o n Sunday starting at noon. Five yachts staTtlng will form a class. Classes scheduled for inside starts are ThisUe, lntema· tlonal-14. Snlpe. Le:hman .. 12, Lld .. llA. Lid .. 148. Lldo-14 Jr. Kite, Flipper. Sabol A. B and C. outside classes are Cktan Racing A, B. C aod D. Star. Rhode>-13, ~. Soling. P.C.t. Shields, PHRF A, 8, c " D. . MORF, LUders·IS, Extallbur. Flmt, and Endtavor. "Selection of a crew is dif· ri cull," Ficker said. "because of the many highly qualified individuals req uesting con- sideration. A great deal of judgment must be used to select those who can con· tribute most to each job and possess Lhe best temperament for such a team effort." "\Ve will have a crew of I! associated with the boat. Soon the remaining three selections will be announced. "It is oot intended that those ye t to be na med will be alternates. All 12 members will rolate during the days of practice so that back·up crew are a part of the team and will be able to fill any position shou ld anyone become ill or an emergency arises," Ficker said. F'lcker did not Indicate whether ariy of the three re· mahjng crew members .would be fl'Vm the West cliasl CREW RUNDOWN Here is a rundown of Lhe eight crewmen a I r e a d y selected: Roger A. Lowlight, 19, Manhasset, N.Y., 6 feet 2 in· ches, 170 pounds. He is a sophomore at Lehigh Universi· ty, has been sailing since he v.·as 8 years old. As a skipper he has pl.aced second in Qle Rbodes-19 n a ti· o n a I ch am· pionships. 'won the Setauket Tnvitalional for the l;igb'1line Class in 1968, and placed se· cond in the Lightning district chan1pionship in 1968. lfi has crev.•ed on miscellaneous ocean ra~s. including the An· napolis ·Newport . Edlu, Vineyard Sound and New York Yacht Club cruise. Richard N. Sayer, 2 ! . Newport, R.I. Graduate of the. University of PeMsylvania, and graduate school at the Unlversity of Rhode. Island. He has been sailing since an early age In various small boats in Narragansett Bay. He won the Vanderbilt Trophy Series in 1963, sailed In the Annapolis- Newport race in 1966 and won the Shields championship at Rye, N.Y. in 1969. He has crewed aboard the 12-meter Easterner and several ocean racing ya chts. Norris Strawbridge, Not· Battle C1·uiser Patrol Boat Converted One oC three Unifli le power crui sers on display Is bound to create a great deal of interest among visitors .lo H. Werner Buck's Western National Boa! nnd Marine Show at Anaheim Convention Center, starting Friday. It's a 31 fool hardtop six- sleeper cruiser typical or its line of all fiberglass pleasure cruisers from 20 to 36 fee t. But, especially for the technically minded visitors concerned with hull con· stru d ion, this Is the sister ship of a fleet of 386 PBRs (river p8trql boats). the· Bell· ingham , Washington boat builders recentl y constructed for the U.S. Navy for action in Vietnam. Delivered in full fighting trim. down to machetes for the four-man crews operating them, these compact, hard-hit- ling littl e fighting ma chines are now in Vietnam helping to stop the Viet Cong from mov· ing·supplies 'along the netv."Otk of waterways making up tl1e f\1ekong Delta area. The 31 foot Uninite in the Anaheim Boat Show. o t course, is ·complete with cabin and fl ying bridge for pleasure cruising. For the sister "ugly duckling" in Vietnam, these have been replaced with such items as grenade launchers, machine gun., fore and aft ; high-powered Infrared detec· lion devices, radar and other navigational aids to pennit night and bad weather opera· lions. The Unifliles are the first l\'ater-jet propulsion boat s ever used in Navy operations. allowing lhem to skim over shallow wat er and away from mud banks and other hot spots in ll hurry. tingham, Pa. Ensign, U.S . Navy. ~ addition to his crew work aboard ConstelJaUon ln 1967 he has crewed on the Bermuda Race, Cowes Week in England, Sears Cu p ', McMillan ·eup and the ill- tercollegtate races in 1963-64. He is the son of the Intrepid Syndicate manager, William Strawbridge. NEWPORT YOl11'11 Jim Titus. 20, Ne..,,·port Beach, 6-!1 185 pounds. ls now attending Lewis & Clark Colleg,e, Portland, Ore. He has been sailing aince he was nine and has Won many interclub events in small boati at NHYC. He has crewed on the regional 1vinner of the Sears Cup, participated in numerous ocean ra~s off Southern California, the Govemor"s Cup matches and has crewed In 1 Rhodes-33. George Twist, 24, Newport Beach, 5 ft-10 in., 175 pounds. He is a graduate of Stanford University where ht was a member of the wresUing team. He has been sailing since he was 8 and bas won the western Sweden Cham- pionship ln Flnns. placed se- cond in the Scandinavian championships and has sailed .\n numerous Finn regat!as. As a crewman he has participated in the Pacific Coast Junior Championships four times, the winning Sears Cup team in 1982, the winning Congressional cup in 1969 apd the Olympic 5.5 trials. Stephen Van Dyk. 27, New York , 6-2, 218 pounds. He lias skippered in miscellaneous ocean races, and crewed aboard the first p I ace Maredea in the Trans-Atlantic race, Constellation in 1964 and Columbia in 1962. He is in charge of the ocean racing program at the U.S. Naval Academy. Christopher Wick, 2 4 • Darien, Conn. He Is a graduate of Yale Jn 1968, ha! done considerable 'sailing at the Norwalk Yacht Club and has participated In various ocean races, including the Bennuda and Trans-Atlantic races. At Yale he was on the wrestling team. Peter L. Wilson1 Darien, Conn., student at Princeton University. He \Von the Long Island Sound junior cham- pionship in 1960, the Long tslSJld Sound Llghtninc cham· pionship in 1964, was a top varsity :skipper at Princ&>n for three years and sa.Jled on lhe winning McMiJlan Cup team in 1965. He has crewed on a Sears Cup winning team and participated in numerow ocean races. Ranger, Wafren C. T. Wonc. St. Francis YC. Yellow Bird, Frank.Di'ud1nC. St. Francis YC. ()jjiy JO of tile doun boats will ·be used as there are only IO eompetttors in th• CongreS!ional Cup. The other ho.-o v.•ill be on standby in the event of breakdown " Or ae•r failures. Leslie said the draw for boats will take place at LBYC the day before tbe teries begins as soon as a reprtlen.· talJve from every crt)' is present. · Salls will also be pooled and drawn for. The ttme table calls for boat! and sa119' to be assigned by early 'Wednesday morning before the s4-rt of the first raC9 on 'nnd'sday, March 19. SkJpus and crews v.'111 have the' rest ol the day to familiarize them~lves with lhe characteristics of the boats. Pairings for all 45 matches will be determined as boat.a are drawn, based on a mNter chart designating races n '1 A versus B", •Ind "C 'Vers'l!I D" • etc. , Coocept of tile Congresslcmal CUp emphasius the lttpptt and crew ratHer than the'boa.t. ConsequenUy, the boats wtD be made virtually ident;Cai in equipment Arid rig~. All boats and sails will bf in- spec\ed by L B Y C c:un- mltteemen. OCC Leads Collegiate Regattas Orange Coast College. Wallort look over the lead In the Southern Series Regattas by sweeping the regalia Jut weekend at Vail Lake. TM next regatla ls April 11 at r.t.ission Bay. OCC in four regattas thb year has two firsll, a third and a fifth to lead all schools. CXX: is the only junior collec• in ttie compeUlion, and 1ai\s against UCLA, UC Sant.a Barbara, San Die(o State, USC and UC!. Nine teams competed last \\'eekend ln the nlaUa ~led by use. Second was San Dteco State. followed by UCLA and UCSB. Remaining teams did not score. Pete Parker of OCC ·~ named high point skipper in the regatta. other &kippers were Pete Wilson and Karry PaUison, with Tim Btrlen and Gary Hasson crewing. For the Craiisittg Yachts111a1i Brl li sh boat builders a.re me-king enthusiastic noises and will accom1nodete eight people. about lhe 42 loot 6 Inch Lancer. a tw in-screw power being displayed at U.S. boa\ 1how1 • Th• boat Is yacht wbicb la reputed lo be ulremeJy seawonl>,y l ~ ' ~ " I!.. It la ' 111• er· 111. ,.ts nlY h• her the ear for 1YC res .... is 1nd mlo 'be day ' of lay, .,,. y lo with the '11<• oats mr 1 "A D", ..,.\ pPer ... ~ ll be I In ,\ll ' In- '°"'" dlon the I by lut The ,I II this third iools. 1Uege 11ils Santa State, last Osted Diea:o ' llld • did ·~ er 111 ppers llarry nm! -----.,-,------_,,_......----~--------~-----.......------~-----r·--------------------~~·------' -~-----:--:"-- _,. TUMILEWEEDS S.:R169i.& iKRlll&l.J: 5'RJ811.e PLAIN JANE By Tom K. Ryan SALLY •ANANAS WHV 0 \0 WE CoME. to A. Wi.?ESILING. MATCH ~ANG.;:. J====ll '\olCU KNON f'TS A ·-. MA llCM If I " I r -I I ~, (' ..... • l'uln1m-K1lly-Miller I * llA-~ETT.AT 5 FM KTTvj I:~ 8 l ht 1h'."t (Cl (61)) J!rn Dur.,!ly. ft m HtlnlltW·l rbt.lar (C) {301 A fin Yt ll Top This? (C) (30) Host w.fnk l.lirtindsl• wetct;nes p1n1listl [rntst lcrrnln1. J~:le Whitt t nd Morey Ams:erjj1'll. 8 "THE OE5ERT RATS" * RICHARb BURTON i. JAMES Ml.SON! fJ Iii O'tl•cl u.vi.: "n• lkserl 'f l1)l"•" ('rlrnJ) '53-Rlcl\trd But· t•n. J1m1s Maun, l!6b!rt rle"Nlon I Rt~"1 Cou1111:T<l1i" Thatcher. Tia !I.tit of tht d!ftr.st cl Tc~ruk fn ltl1 •rly if1y' of ·1h1 l','Clrfd 'i1'11 .: · II t10l~•l:ns in Ncrth Africt. I liU V111 tyl;"f (30) Stat lrt' (C) (60) (I} Ate N~1 (C) (30) st.a M1rltt SUMiury (R) Whit'• flltw? (20) "Americana 11: Sh1ke1 Vlll11e." I t2' (1) CIS lltJS !CJ (30) 81 ibUT AJutd1 {30) Or1m1t:c urhl st1rrinf An1elfc1 M1ri1, A!iei1 MOntoy1;· C1rtei R~que!~. I. Mnl 11 Ult l11111d (C) (60) m CAROL CHANNING WITH * LIBERACE I. EVA MA~IE SAINT .8:30 ON KrTv! m Dn :4 fr.11 Shtw (C) (!OJ Caro! Ch•n~!nf, Utuact. [1·1 Mir.• Z1lnt. T11a Cl1~1CJ Bros .. and Sen. Ro~!rt P•tk'll60d (rt-Ori.) C1J Tbt l lf V1lltr (C) (60) cm Somi1•s (30) 1:45 m l:il1r,;11nnDn (30) 1 S:O!l 11 a (, tl~d:~r C~n\1r (t) (SO) Dac~or Gan;.,)~ t:_:i~.s la tr~al hit h<l;rhoo~ l<lot:all idel 1.id is st1rtltd to c!\SO>ver that 11111'\1 Olllt l'ltyn• !l11St1't 1•111 ear• if !ht llOCI' t:rc~latle~ in his let is c~r•d. Forrt!I Tucl«r ind Je Ann t:arris 1111!1. 0 KRAFT MUSIC HALL * Steve Lawrence, Eydie Gorme, Pew Lte 8 iD@CI Ktalt Music Hiii (C) (£!l) Shv6 l1wrer,:1 tnd Eyd:t C.<lr:ne S"t•r. Pf&ty L11 i nd S~etky r.reen~ 1ua~t. FJ (i]; 00 U) hhnny C11h Stuw tC) (iiO) 0. C. Smith, Hink WI!· '"a::is Jr .. Ui:da J!onst1dt aut:lt. :I!) lnl1tr11tl•n•I Mt111in• {&ll) Tht ' ,neb!eir.s i nd sufl11ln1s •I th6 ~15 a lll¥Utlrt 11!1WC1M (30) (R) '"o~n1, from the b1tt!t fir survlv1I in Au str1ti1 to sex iduc.Htn in .... II UIC N .. 11r1ict (C) (60) l ritlln, ire S:udle4. • 9tM -All111 !hGw (C) (!10) ,.,, ....... Mnict (60) H.nry, I'll lihCor~lck, O~lrd1e "Mil; 9.15-Kt• y Mt •, ll'l!ifn lft (") S»uttert>u.1" 01n1els cuast · _. • ' 1 1 ~ e n . '~"" .••r11• tet t3o> ~1.~1 9:3o a "''' 1c1 (30) Slits. lit~ ::t1·1tns 1nd Qeor1e ti I m hhr,1 fft·r• (C) (30) : CD MJ r1rtrltt Mlrtlln (CJ (30) i:iS. PSA Filna lin~11y 1ul&!. I ,. litJ t'.11 Pl,.Y Jiltt1n (60) 11:11R3 ri1 M1w1il rN~t (C) (60) tD CIJ ftUllMJ·l rlnkl., (Cl (3()) I Alii1h Y4ft111 it'lle! thltf dtci~es -to ste1I i trtai:.ir•d 11m •1lani 1n1 !'&'. l vtln l•t (~O) Sumi h•s •••n to H1wtll1n roy1lty. Jetnne l invll11, m~11t' I~ st1y 111111~ ltlto~!I, andl Christ111h1r Cary ind GMrJI G1ynu Aki 1pph1s tor·• dnvlr'1 li~n.'.;f. i uest, tifi (I) fht Mu~rters (30) 0 QJ \~a;, Tlltn C1111t l r1nson II Wkltr• 34 (Cl (iO) (~ (IO) 1 ht Ninet)'·~ln•Milt 811 kllll ..... (C) (SD) Cirdt." llronS4n j<lin• lorw with tn 11,erlr wi~t'lltr wilt hts lltt his •ual11t1s In Hl·w Yerk i1 'rlvt Iii· surely 1cross !ht tountry In si 11ch of ~tw e~,ultitcts. Dtvi' u1n1 l U&S!S. J.:45 fZ1\il ii l1r .. r1 (R~ '7:• D Ch [VtJiDt .... (C) (30) 11 WMt'• Mr Li111t taoi e 1 lm LUCJ' (30) FAl(E/ LI NG JUDGE PARKER MOON MULLINS ~~iffe. ~-a ~~~~~ • ••t tllt ~ (Cl (30) •. &C..11Nlty/Mut11tl Fun4 (30) i1J 00 A111a;U! (C) (30) I Nowt IC) ('°) (iJ.) (I) m lnt;t l•erl H~:n,t:· , ck (C) (60) C1hrln1 V1l1nlt, IC:.....L..-"L------'--.i Orn Kn1tts. Tht Eftl" Mtwklns Sln1u1 1nd Mt lec1m Rti.,rta ,uut G I ,,, (C) (60) m Akrll (30> lft (I) Trutb tr C.n-'-uinces (C} tD W111f1rhllt (C) (30) GI ,ut nam News &i "•ports llTioat 1;• !Ci !301 * 10 WEEKENDS KTTV! 71• • 9 (j) H• M1w (t) (60) l uck I Ntws (C) (&0) Dwtf'ls Ind •ttoJ C\1r~ wt!eome ''"' M ... n (iO) 1utsts Geor11 .Ion"-ll<lltl1 Wtst Htf1Mt11141 '(J) (30) "RFll: Dot •nd CtilH Wl!ls. ;·,11.son snd Son!' Tht ,r1m1ry 11· 8 Ml (t) m TN Viriinitn (CJ ·~n1nt tf th1 f!tt·plekinl ruit1r (la) ...,..'Rith Man, Poor Mi n." A :nd his &on. M1rl1. pl'lltnl • vie.ti· poor sed~uster colltcts 1 $10 000' 1na;trum1nt1l hour of c.eun\fY music. rtwanl ind lmmidl1le:y 1oe1 <ln 1 @m ll ,, ... l 1mla (SO) .s;tndln1 tlll'lt. Jack Elim. P1trici1 10:30 I ,._i ('C) l •xter wu•. M•rrt• 1n' M!c"'ll l1rr1h1 ru1st Mn till Wt 1... lh? (C) 8 !II) CU C11 •1n111 •n• tl!t PT~ { 0) film 1n u1b1• r1nw11 pr. r..r (tJ (30) "Strlttly !tr !ht g11rns. l ltls." Ni nny IOlS to tourt Whtn l di CJnlhil (30) r1!lr1d •rcfmor lites complaint •et1u1t '~'' ind h11 c.M1dr!n took 11:1111 «ID ID flltn (C) thrtt 'ucktin1s !rem Ii:• city park. Hip .. ~ "11b1I Edwerd Everett Herton llJ!sls. M1vit: 'l t11tt11r•'• Ttn H111tf· la MMll111 $. M1vil; (C) "rli,,r1 m11u" (m~hrY} '60 -Geor1• ""' Uvlft1urt" (dttl'll•) '64-Brlin sand1rs, Cer1nn1 Ctlv1t. ~etly, Luka Htloin, 1'1111e!1 rr111klin. I ~m::w Pl:• lti4 (C) When • bo~ le1rJ1S th•t his pel r;.., r:.. li1ll -~ ~. ffi ' (I) trltlphi" i; to. •• saA t. an 1qu1· IW 1.AJ ~ ~ 4ll "' rlum, ht runs 1w1y ~it~ the m•.m· 11:19 (tfl m Ci1111111 S~IRI"•: "Ghost mll to 1n ls!1nd 1n I~• Fl<lri~• Dive~ Ktys. • Truth tt "t111S111Mtl'lllft (C) (30) 11:311 ~ ~ Mtn lrilfln (C) • Mt!•r Adi .. (le) 5' Im ltlln11J C,rMn (C) . Tiit tif•n 9 TkhA\c&I C«n• (30) (II;) m l ilt CP1tt SIMw (C) Dus· g amittJ WllJ Tiu $Jiit••: A tin Hoff'm1n. Sen, Htrold E. HuPu. .Sllf·l'tii'lti) (30) Viewers jci~ ,IJtrld Gllb1rt1 1ulllt. t~m rt1ll111"1 in ttkln' 1 test t111t ttY11ls whv lh1y a! ln•lvldu1!3 ... TH E RICHARD WIDMA"K smtkt. 1'1111• in • flve·,11t strl!&. - S Cruz ll t a1111r (30J * MOVIE 11:30 ,M KTlVI MUn AND JEFF W>IATS T"E c..iARGE? ly Joh11 Miles ly Harold Le Doux ly Ferd Johnson By Al Smith ! ii• Iii Mtvi1 111111 (C) (30) Sonny • Mtwlt: "hwR ft illt Sill ~ l:l:~-_j~~!.....::~.J..3.j ~ Toi lll!ts. Ji mtt Slewlrt, Anlla ~,. .. (Jtt1ntur1) '49 -Rich•ii L--=='-'""""'-""""" II.I.:£"' ·Louise, .lot! C11y i nf U.t11 Cham· . l1idm11~. l~ntl. '1r11111•!•· plen i uesl • Cit NM1•i. lnv131Mt .,.,,_., (Id· ! ~-CO .,.. • " .. '"' ~•nturt) .>9 -Humphrtr l o11rt, ' ... u ,, Ifie . If ' Wil!11m H1J,1n. (IO) "M1n11 l•. • fivt·ll~r .Wf,..." E4"• 11 ••ri4•' '1 h1111:118 te111111ft!tp lullttl1 ltir4 (C) ichoolm1ltt for r1!urnln1 • !1r11 sum of mo~ey that h1 lilu~4. t:• a Mtvlt: "ll1•t S,.t" (dr1rr.1) • f6 T.tl tht Trul~ (C) {30) •SS . -Gln11r Rc1u1, [d~ud c, 1tob1nJO~. e W.111n 1n• tM M•fht (R) Ma...,. t~ • TM ftnflt S.11 (60) (R) . iibt1 l hNtre: ''Thunder CNtr e llitt11iltt (30) •••l•r." 1:151J1 lffict tf tM Prlti4111t (30) (RJ 1:319 All·flliJlll Sbtw: . ~The Stertl I ,. .. ,?t," •'Nl.~t w.1~1uf s1111. .. l llt. a (j) Tiit ltw91J Hi11bi!ll••1 "IJenil ti DtrtM•." (CJ (30) Slllfty Sl\aft1 {Pll!I Sil~1rs) ttrMI Ill t~orlJ Hiii• dettrmlnM 1:31 .. NIWl/l lvt U1 T~il MJ <C) THUR\1J A• Oj!i1MI. M621t:1 • lltl e "nt lie IMtl" (1...,1ntur1) 14-Gltftll lt11J•n. "'91• "'1tftl. "11ttt·t• .... (••!)') '5j-Jtll l1t!1.-1, Mtntr lltckf!\111.-- 8 "lt l\ftffllt Cmtllll" (myllltry) ·~1wt1 Re~~I•. J11nn1 Crtl11, t:U II .. ,,., tt tlit "'""' td11m11 'i2-Reear T1lltn. JIRt Pt.free. • (C) "lllfU""4 ltl•nl" (dr•fll') 'il-Olftl An•rew•, hiit Powell. J!:H 8 "'Liff ti h 1•1M" (my&ttlY) "'43 -llf'tll' Sl•n"fj)~. Ml~Ml O'Sh11. , 1131 . '1 Mtrritl • Wt11t111" (comtdy) '5'4•r1• c1•t1, J1:rl• ft•tM ta11•1L ZM 8 "'"* Ari tt11 ""1'' (ctm1dy) -1l~t!.li DIYIS. h~J Ott. m "ik.t4tnt "' Mom" te4mld1) •,t7..=.srU111 itw1n, Cl•M• f1rr11l, 4:10 It '1•ltll t'.lrt'" (11.11,.nu) '$1 -ot!\1 M•1Wt. C111•t ftllM. GORDO MISS P'EACH ·---- By Gus Arriola YIS . &VE'fl'fn.l""''S r:t!"lf, U"'TIC I GO MOME. T~E.JiK:'S S'OMITl'ilT"G A&OJT Ml ,.AR INTr WMl'M U PSeTr M~. ly MeH -.. NP IT'S NOT EAS'Y, SllM4 A PAH-t1M£ NIUA:O'!"IC ... . w ....... Mlttlt 11, 1970 DAIL V PILOT 21) • ly Charles Barsotti ly Charles M. Schull ~--~~ m!AIL~ HOPiS IT Will !IE A l.'lf' lj r< ' I lypC. .I''•( c.,. . ~----""'-·~ ' ' I I .. 1; " 6E5T· 5Ell.!R ... TllE~ All !10 ... 1' I lL1A5 SEC~ETA.~I/ FOR Tf.IE 1-lE:AD 0EA61..E " TELEVISION VlE\VS Pool1 Makes Debut on TV NE\V \'ORK (.i\P) -"The Submersibles" were the stars of Jacques CousteaU's ABC hour Tuesday night. The assorted undei'sea craft \Vere as fascina- tin g as the oce.:-.n flo ra and fauna that usually get Cousteau 's !Op billing. The first portion of· tile program \vas devoted to \vhat is no\V Prin1itive diving equipment iocluding the First aq ua Jung th at Cous teau developed almost 30 years a110 . MOST l'ASCINATING \Vas filJn of the twin mini- Subn1arine s on Cousteau 's laboratory ship. Each has roon1 !or one n1an, and they move together to-- \Vatd lhe ocean floo r. going through slO\V maneu- vers that look like huge marine beetles in some sort Of COUl'l :SlJlp ritual. At the end were shots of \\'hat Cousteau called a 0 diving jamboree" ofr Southern Calift:lrnia's Cata- lina Island , \vhen seven types of sub.marines sub- merged en mei1se. . . ' 'rhe hour, a dep arture fro1n the usual mood of the nature series. \Vas sli!nulating and educational. In an unfortunate coincidence of scheduling, the fj rsl half of the progratn conflicted \Vi th the first . tel evision use of a five-year-old Disney cartoon bllsed on A. A: l\'lilne's greedy. lovable littl e bear, Winnie the Poo h. It \Vas aimed at the yoµnge st members of th.e audience but had considerable a~ peal to older vie\vers for the gentle way it pointed out the horrendou s consequences aft~r the little bear m'1de a ·pig of himself. WINNIE STUFFED on honey and .S\Velled up so U1a·l he ,,·as stuck in the door of a friendly rabbit's hou se. .-'\BC's '1Movie or the \Veek " caine up \Vith another of its SU{lerior made-for-TV film s. a science-fiction U1ril1er that \Vould have been even better trilnmed one hour from 90 minutes. "The Love \·Va r" \\Pas the story of a creature from the planet Argon sent ·to ea11h as part of a team to fight invaders from an enemy planet. Both \Vere tryi ng to take over the earth. LLOYD BRIDGES played the team leader from the white-hat pla11tt. flis assignment was complica~ led by his meeting a cpretty girl, Angie Dickinson and developing a hum an attachment for her. • 111e cliinax \Vas a shoot-out on the 1nain street of a \Vestern ghost town. Ac~ual_ly too much of the pro- i ram was given to the sk1rm1shes and shooting. but · the real surprise came when the girl turned out to be .one of the enemy -and \\'On the eartll for the bad guys. AJong the \Vay, the characters tossed in som e trenchant comment on \varfare as a \Vay of resolv· ing differences. Detitait tire Jtlenuee ----------------------------- OAJLY PILOT Wtdntsd~. M&Kb ll, 1970 UlGAL NOTICE $Ul'• .. IOll COUllT0 1' T~ STllH 01' CALll'OllNIA 1'01 TH• C:OUMT'I' °" OllANOI N .. ._..,..I ' Studio s OCC Gives Dra1na Students Plenty of 'Rope' NOTIC• 0" HIAIUNt) 0" f'tTlllON P'Oll l'llO•ATll 01' Will ANO 1'01 LaTTllllS TISTAMllMTAllY f.tll lt ol MAllAN W. l'ETER~lt. DftelUll. MOTICI! 15 Hl!ltEllY GIVEN Tiit! WWlfl WOCldViud l"ln' ht• lllfol "9-.111 • Httllon '-'r .,..._"' of will tnd lo< hw111ee of L1n1rt r.-1 • ......,1 • .-.. to Pt11· llol\e,, "''....ic:' lo lll!lkll b ,,,_ fQI' tu•"'-'" ptrflculari.. 111d !Nol IM II~ tfld p!Ktl ol IWPttlne IM ~-M a bffn ,., tor ~rch 21. 19111, #f t:XI '·"'" I" "" <'Ollflroom Of Deii1r11ne11t No. J of "ld <6Url, ti 100 C!vlc C,nt•r Drive Wttt, I" t1W Cttv of S."11 AM, C1llt0<11l1. D1ted M1rcll '· "'° W. E. ST JOHN Countv CMrk WAll.ACI , lllOWN .t.NO CllAtN tu 0.'lff Drlw, Sull• NumM' 1t H-..H Biid!, C1Utw11.. nUll Ttl 11141 u..11n AffWM'l for f'tlttl- P11tll1W\td <Kin" Co-.1 0.11' l"llol, M"~" 10, \l, 11, 1'10 '3'·70 LEGAL NOTICE Cf_ltTll'ICATI! OP' BUSINESS flCTtTIOUS NAME n., 11ndforai.~ -cor1!t1 llr ii COii• dlKllnt I Mlnt•n ,, 11'2!M l!tacfl Blvd .. HunfllMlk.n Be1cfl, C1lltornl1, unM• lh• fl tlllkiu1 llrm n1..,. of BOULEV AflO AUTO PAflTS 11111 11111 I.lid ll•m II '""'" ll'Olf<f of !tw lollowll111 P•"""· .,.,,,.,,t ....... In lull Incl PllCI d rt•llMnCI ra 11 fOlloWI' Gordo'I O. Botd>. !UM Wllllns SI., S.nt• Ft SprJ1191, C1Hf0fnl1 Dtled Mtrcn •. 1910 Gord<!<! D ie..,n $'TITE OF CA LIFORNIA, ORANGE COUNT'I': On M.l•cl'I I, Jt10, l>elot'I nw. 1 Nolarv l'ub1k In 1nd lat uld 51111. ,..,.,,,.,.11~ l !>Pn•ed GordOft 0 . 11..,n kt'IOW!! lo mt lo k In~ ~rson wno11 ntmt 11 1ubtcrlb..a to I"'° wl!l>ln ln11rum1nl er•O 1cknow1-d0- ed n~ t •tt1/I"" tnt 11m.. (OFFIC IAL $E ... ll J•ln L. Joti31 Nor.•Y Public · C1111ornt1 Prlncll'll Oilltt In O••n~• Co1mlv Mv COMmlsi!on E•,l•n Mitch ?, lt1J PubllthiM Or1noe Coasl 011IY Pllol. fo1rtl'I II.II. 25 tnd April 1, 1t10 '46-70 LEGAL NOTICE NOTTC• TO Cltl!DITOll5 SUPl!lt!Olt COUllT OF THE STATE OF CALtFOllHIA ,_Oii THI! COUNT'I' OF 011 ... HGI!'. He. A-444*9 Cause of Downfall By BOB THOMAS llOLLYWOOD (AP ) -So much nonsense has been writ- ten and said about the film in- dustry's predicament that ft might be wise to establish some truths that should ap- pear self-evident Item : The management of Paramount explains In a Life magazine spread v.'hy the studio and its equipment are up ror sale. One reason given \\'as the greed of stars who demanded huge sums for their services . Nonsense. \\'hy blame the stars:' They know their earn- ing yea rs are limited and they aim la get all the money they can. v.'hile they can. The fault, dear Bludhorn, lies not in the stars, but in the film con1panies who submitted to those ridiculous salaries. Paramount was the leader. A year or so ago, the studio proudly gathered for a group photograph those stars it was paying a million dollars per picture: Julie Andrews, John \Vayne, B a r b r a Streisand, Clint Eastwood . "The only thing I can do for them b unlock the door. I supervise-with as much ln- visibillty as I can." Bill Purkiss, Orange Coast College d ram a Instructor, thinks experimental thealer should be just tliit, and he gives lhe student plenty or rope. Sometimes il trips U1e stud- ent up. But most of the Ume, it helps turn out a drama graduate who is not only an actor, in the grand sense, but who is famili ar with every phase of Uie theater, from lighting 1o selling tickets. "When we decided to set up an experimental theater at OCC," Purkiss said, "I wanted the oldest, raunchiest building I could find . f...fy first choice was an old warehouse with holes in t he wall, but I couldn't get that. We eve n- tually settled on a corner of the old mess ball that used to be Cosmetology." Purkiss, the closest thing to a bottled tornado this side of that famed cleanser, turned his students loose on it. They ripped out old plumbing fix- tures, painted the enllre in· terior flat black, btlilt ticket booths, scenery, and formed a board of directors. These six students run the theater. They decide a.1 th e plays, who is in them, how they are staged -whether it is in the round, side sealing, or any other variation. The board is composed of Clark Bannert, Mike Brown, Dan l\IcWest, \\ra\t Douglas, Steve Scott and Ed Little. The group has come up with a slate or plays for the spring semester that runs t h e gamut-" An tigone," March 17·20; "The Bald Soprano," March 31-April 7; "The Tiger" and "The Typists," April 14- 21 ; "The Four Poster," with music, April 23-May 5: an original mime show, 1'.1ay 12- 19 ; and something called "undecided" May 26-June 2. The most the theater "'ill hold is about 40 or 50, and that is exactly the way Purkiss wants it. The theater needs that Intimate atmosphere, and It geU it. The audience Is close enough to reach out and touch the performers. In addition to the scheduled performances, Instructors on campus who feel that a play has relevance for his class n1ay call and make an ap- poi ntme.1t for a perfortnance. Th is wa s done lest semester with "Spoon Ri ver Anthology" and "The Zoo Stllry ." "We are aiming al being a theater for 7,000 students," PurJdss,11aid. "We want to put on plays that have relevance for that n1uny people. Not all at once, but in small groups as we are doing now. We will do things that are In demand · bl the academic field in gener• • al., We want to involve drama '. in other disciplines." Purkiss said that in most cases, this is Uic first lhne that the drama student has a chance to make independent decisions about the theater. Th is is why he is staying Jn the background as much as possible. "J let one fellow 'vho is a fi ne actor direct a play," Purklss recalled. "He concetntrated so much on the acting that a day before !he performance he suddenly realized he had no sets and no tickets. He came to me and Et!ltt fll JUAHIT" OENN1. DectlHd. NOTI CE IS HE:llEll'I' GIVEN !ti l!'>e cr!'C!Uor1 ot t~ 1tiove ... ....., df'c-nl t1111 1n ~''°"' htYlno clalm1 1galn~t tht 11ld oeced•nl '" rll'Clulred lo lilt lnem, t'llll 11'1• ....,.;a11no """""'"' in '"• olfitt "' !ne tlerk of I~ 1J:loYt entlllld caurT. or ~ Pte>ent '""'" wlffl ~ n~{fl~,..,, c!>f'1. lo '"• u~r1latlt!d ~I '"" office tne!r A""'"""· lll>MrT L. H11mph•n$. 51111 "dam1, So.1119 Nllmbe• l'Oll. C<>1ot1 NiMI, C•lllo•"'~ t'l~'·· Whlcfl Is "'p plat• ot bv•lnM' ftl II>• """er1!ant<1 In t i! mt !· '"" ... t!~ln!"" !-. ti.t ••!Mt ..I St1d de<:t · '""'· w!ll>ln lour ITl<>nlh• 1fltr !ht !!rat 11u~llc1lion ot 11'1\ nnl\tf, Not only did Paramount burden its films w I t h enormous talent costs. It also allowed the film companies lo go off on dislant locations and run up ruinous costs through lack of discipline and direc- tion. To put $50 million in four movies, as Paramount did. i~ the weirdest kind or ecQno1nics. The ind ustry rule is th:1t a film must bring in 21.l.! times its cost before it can Harbor Hi gh Presents Spring Concert Friday said '\Vhat do I do:'' I told him that that wa s part of the theater too and that he had bE>tter get going un it. He was a mighty shaky guy for a cou- ple of days. but the sho\v v.·ent on and he learned a very big lesson." D11ed M•r~n '· 1•10 EXPERIMENTING -Members of Orange Coast College's experimental thea- ter group rehearse for an upcoming s how. From left are (top) Nancy Patter- son, \Vall Douglas and Shirley Barrus; (bottom) Jan Gaydon, Don White and Steve Scott. ' Mlf9~"1 T, fllJh ;Jf1d >t'JfPhlnt E. lt1~V ro·EYf'CUlrlta cf lh• Wiii ct the ft~~• ••..,ecf dtCflifi>I sho\v a profi t. 'That means ----------------------------------- those fou r films v.·ould need lo l\fembers from N e w port Harbor High School Pi1usic Department, under the direc· tion of Richard A. England, ready themselves for the An· nual Instrumental Sp r Ing Concert to be held Friday, March 13, at the Newport Harbor High School l'Ol t:llT l . HUMPHll l!'l'I, ISOll Ad1m1, Sul•t J<lum~·• ~•6, C1•!1 Mn•, C1ll•on1LI tJUf Ttl: !114) 14.ot'9 ,ll!O<'lltl' lot Ca·E•tculrlcta • Pv~ll1hed or1n.1 c~~JI o ' iv Pllol, Merell 11. 11, '5 1nc:I April 1. lflO 444·70 amass $125 million in rental!! before seeing black ink. Lois of luck. 7 Shows Readied at CSF LEGAL NOTICE SU,.1!111011 COUllT OF THI! 5TATIE 01' C"l.IFOlthllA Fl'lll THI: COUNTY OF OllANGE Nt. A·fS4JI NOTICE OP' H~AllNG 01< "l!TITH'J"I FOlt ,.11011.llTE 0~ HOLOf"lllll"'I" WILL .ll MD 1'011 t.ETTEl5 TE5TAMENT ... l'I' • E•ll lf ct ADFl!NI: "· KIMIALL, t •!c ~nown 11 AOIEllNE P ... flAZ ... OIE KIM· 11.t.LL. tho k_.., .. AOOIE KtMll.t..Ll, 111.o k..own ti AOOllE "· Kl,Y.llALL, D..,.""""· NOTICE IS Hf_ll!.SY GIVEN T111! J. 0 . >rrwild Ml!Chel! fl11 fllM lwrt ln I pel]. 1o<1 tor proN;t~ ol Holoo•a•fllc Wiii Ind llO' 1-~ "' LP!lt rs T~t1mwn11,y lo ~rtitlorle<, rf'!>.,fnce to w!ltc.l'I Is mllde for lf,,,,M, PM°llCU11'1. '"" "''' tl'le l!mf ind 11l1ct ol ht~rln<i !lot Um!' h•• bfrn tel for M•rcll n . tf111. 11 '''° 1.m .. I" t!'le counroom et DtPtrllN'nl No l of !tld (cvurt, 11 'llO Clvk Center Drlv• Wies!, In th• Cll'f at Slnt& """'· C11lllornl1. Dttt!d M11rch 10, 1'70 W. I!. ST JOHN. CO\ln~v Cl•l'lC, llOIEllT L. MUlllPHlll!'l'I. tSIO Allllml, Sullt hlumW ftl6 1C••t1 Mtu. t:11Jfornll n1H 1Tel: 1714 ) .'WO·OfSO """.,.y for Ptll!lontr ' Publl1h!'d O•&tiG• Coa'I D•llv P·!..I. /M1rc11 11 , n . 11, too ..iJ.Jc • LEGAL N011CE • 1-.-.,-,-,-,-0-,-,-,c,.c.-,c,c0•c-,c0,--,,c,c0c,c0o, I I IH THE S"LI! 01' ALCOHOLIC , •E'VEll•GES To W"°"' It M1'i C""c•rn: ~utll•(I !ti ln u•11te ct t.,. llcpn~• 10- "'liM fw, O'IO!ICt hi !\f,rthv f i'10 11111 !tie .,_,,lGtled P'""°''' IO ''" 11lc.,.,ollc .,. • .,., ... , lhr Ptemlsn, dtlC•lbfd I I 101~· Uttl w. IJroolohursL ~'ll.ln•aln VIile• "unu•nt lo 1uci. lntet1tl011. The un- -t•"!~""" It 1PolY!no to 11'1• Deoa•hm!t1I nl ,lll«il>oollc ll•Yt••~• Control !or luu~nc~ r~ o•lol""t 1oollc1!1on o< •" ~!col>ollc t>-urr•ll'! !l{l "te I~ 1i{t Mt l ) !-.• th~• prpfTll"'' •• l~llOW!.· ON ~ILIE BEER & Vll "IE !Bon• Fide l'ubllc: Elling Pl1C~l Anvon• onlf!IMI !o Prt1tt1t th• \\lu~...:t o' •ucl'I llct noth l "'"Y lilt t uPtlll•d oro. I••• 11 1ny cHk t ot l~P O•o••lm•nt o• ' Alco/'ollc ll•Yttt~t Conl•ol or b• mtll lo •~e D091rtmtnt of Al(ollOl!c ll'Yf•~ot (lt"l•ol. 1'1S 0 !!•ttl. Stc•1m,n!o, C•!l!O•"I~ •SIU •o II to bt •f(,IYt d wl!flln lo di~\ ot T!I• dolt '"' "'OPottd ~"•mh•s -'~ 11,,t oott•d, •!&!In~ o•ovn<1• fo• d~nret &1 prcwldf'll bv l•W. T!>• prernl1•1 "" nat now 11c~"1"d lo• th• ,~"° ot 11cohollc llrYt rtQI!'\ Th' lo•m of v~rlllc1!IM mtY llr ob!tlntd frD<I' 1nv cl· ! 1,,, ol lht DePl•lml'l!I. ' OROZCO. Abdon i. J•imr F. Putl!l•fled 0•1ng1 Coast Dally Piiot. Mart!\ 11 , lt711 oUl·10 LEGAL NOTICE T·SJl43 But of course Paran1ounl i" not the only victim of bad judgment. All cumpanies have Orange Coonty theaLergoors Dance on the Killing Ground." PQUred immense amounts of will have a busy schedule this At once Qoth comic and moAey -possibly $50 million spring attending seven vaslly serious. thi s three.character into v.·ar or <i.nti'A'ar pit1ure~. difrerent sho\\'S thal the Cal dra1na. featured a Placentia This is a time in history Stale Fullerton theater depart· resident. Carolan Daniels, in "'hen most Americans are sic k ment currently has in its premiere Broadway prG- of \\'ar. preparation. duclion. Sometimes if tile fihns are The department's I hr e e After its first four-night run well enough done -"Patton" mainstage prOOuctions will (l\1arch 12-15), "Slow Dance" and ';M-A..S.H" are examples open a 27-performm1ce run in will move into temporary -"'ar movies might pay off. repertory Thu rsday in the storage to permi1 a t'Omplete But \\'hat will be the fate of campus Llttle Theater. reorie-.1talion of the Little 20th Century-Fox's 52Q million Tickets for all perforrnances Thealer stage for the !\larch "Tora ! Tora! Tor'a" with a are now on sale in the Theater 19 opening of Peter \Veiss· filmgoing generation th a t Box Office. located in the 1nacabre pageupt, ' • Tb e doesn't remember Pearl flar. foyer or the 1'.1usic-Specch-Persecution and Assassination bor? Orama Building. It is open of Jean-Paul J\·larat a s "Zabriskie Poi nt " offers daily except Sunday frorn noon Performed by the Inmates of another exllmple of mi s-until 4 p.m. and rese rvations the Asy lum Of Charenton judgment. ,\fler prospering also may be made b y Under the Direction of the with "Blow-up." MGJ\1 gave !elephoning 870·3371. lt1arquis De Sade." its di r ector Michaelangelo The initial produ ction of lhe "~1arat/Sade," "'ilh a com· Antonioni a blank check v•ith 1970 spring season \viii be pany of 50 aclors will be under v.'hich to film his impression of "'illian1 Hanlcy 's study of the direction of R. Kirk i\1ee, America. human rel,1 tionships, "Slo\'t assistant professor of theater, Anlonioni ran up a biu;------,----'----------'------- eslimated at 16 million. then CrosS'\Vord Puzzle returned to Rome to assemble his picture. \Vhen the MGJ\-1 officials finally saw it, they v.'e re sO !hQc"ktd they insisted he cut it dOwn lo almost an hour in length. Tnuupc ter Set For Recita l Trun1peler Kurt Lauten· schlager of Brea "'ill presenl his seniur recital Tuesday, l\iarch 17, at Cal Stale Fuller· ton. Sel for 8:30 p.m. in Recita l Hall. the perlormance is frtt and open lo the public. LEGAL NO'l1CE CErt;TIF!CATI!'. 01' I UllNEll l'ICTITIOUI NAME Th~ und~r~!gnf'll doe• tet1ll' ht 11 co.,. ACROSS 1 Bridgr players' word S Kind ol nut 10 Lrgtnd 14 Big nJmt in baseball lS San A11tonio buildinq 16 Frteze1 17 Hollywood adjtt:tivt 19 Word r xpressin9 annoyancr ZO Hot 21 F1ult prtStrYt containers 23 Certain Swrdl sh kings 2b Prrsldtnlial nit:k11ame 4) Russi ~" hrro 44 Norwrgian man's namr '5 --surgron 4 7 Storr lixt~rs SO Goddrss ol inlatuation 51 Mistake 52 Considtri119 that 56 T irnt ror recovery 60 Talk wildly 61 Columbus' lla;shlp: 2 words 64 F amrd oprratlc sopfano bS llli11ois communlly 60 Denver or Ottawa t Slilb· lishm rni &7 Of low / 3/11110 8 Australian )) Bird:"> birds l b Rts idtntr 9 Make a bad J9 He n "' ~1age1 : lab I t'ft'ilft 3 words 40 Prtss 10 Ad~anc ts .,, nts' oblia11ely "' at ions lll•l:i40ol 44 Wat ,,_ a sauarP "~ '" milt 41:. Kin d ol 12 Machine "" " par! I ) Skills 48 Sua " SUl'l!RIOl COUIT 01' T1'4! STATI' 01' CALll'OllNl.t, 1'011; THE COUNTY 01' OltANGl Nt. A·lStOll dU'Cllnt1 I tluol"tH I! XM0 J l •I llNd, hlOT!CI! 01' HEAlllHG Of "IETITIO"I Coslt M"'' Calllorn1t , llndtr I/If fk · P'Ort PltO&l.TE 01' WILL ANO titlous llrm rwmt of DUANES CON· COOl(IL AND 1'011 LETT IE RS 1'11 ... CT ING Ind !~ti H id l!rm 11 corn- Tl!STAMll!:NTlllY "°'l!d ot lht lc!towln9 0•'1""· who~ E1l1le d OOflOTMY 0 , 5CUODEll, nt mt In lull and Ol.lct ct <t11a~nct II 1$ 27 Diving boa1d height: quality b8 Grm CIJ Sta ndard 18 Whe1t 52 Clo •• I ooe~•,ed. IOllCWJ! NOTICE ts MEREi" GtVEN T~tl "" o~ .... Pttrowskt. lOolO J ••• 11 ... 11. nyon J kveld~, ht • II~ h•r•ln t ~titian !or ,,,.,., ol wlll t nd codlcll t nd for h tu1nt• ol tette•• TPJl!m,nll,..,, !ti ll'o• J pel!tlonr<, •~ltt•n{p IQ wh!ch It m1oe !or furll'\lr 111rrlc11l1••· 1...i 11'\ll !ht llm• t nd pletf' cl ""'•rlne tht 11mt ht• be•n ••I 1 for March '7, 1'111. 11 t •,)(I 1.m , In !hp cat1rTror.rt'I ot Oepe•lmtnl Ne l cl 11ld CQUtl. ,, 1llO en.le C1n1,. Oflyp Wt1t. In 'I ~ ('fly ct S.nle Ant . C1lllcrn!1, • 0111'11 Ml•'h f, 1'10 W. E. ST JOHN Coun,., Cltrk l'AlllCl!rt. l l!rtO, LORO & SOlOWEDIL 134 lttt C1lor11M l l'Y •. , Suitt n1 P1ia-.n1. t:tlll1111l1 '1Ul Ttl: UIU "J·SIH 411·7211 ,1n.,.,.n ttr ,.,u111ner Putlll•hed Otl"Vt Cotsl Otil• Mir<!\ IG, 11. II. 1'10 LEGAL NOTICE CMlt Mno1, CllllOl'nl•· Otted ~re~ 10. lt7D, Outllf! PHrt1"'1lcP Stllp cl Ct lllo•nl1. O•ttKJ• C..un!Y ' o~ M•rc~ 10. 1110. bflor~ mt , 1 Nol•rw Public l~ 1no for i•lO Stilt, oer1ontllY •-•rM O~ant Pftt!IW$k• •nown lo "'' to bf lht oe•.on WhOH , .. ..,.. 1$ IUbK<l~ td to th~ wltl'll" ln•l•11mtnl l !'H:I tdcllOWll!dted ht t •KUlta Int Umt. (OFFICIAL SEAL\ M•tY K. HffltY Not••Y P ut111c.c11uo ml1 Pdnc lo•I Ollie' I~ Or•<1C1• COtJn lY Mw Ccmml!!Olon E11lrt> liov. 1•. 191) Pub•hl>ed O•a~o• CH1t 0111~ l'llol, Mt rch 11. ti. 75 1"'1 April 1, 19111 ..iJ•IG LEGAL NOTICE Z words JO lmmediale suptriors 34 European c!ty JS Kind of robbery 37 Legal stalult 38 Concl ude 39 Military ran k -41 Turkish off ictr .42Alrhtro " " lO s " 60 .. ,. • &9 Htrb ( DOWN Ttrn.t 2 Hill : Sp. ) Nol 5Wttl '1 -·-Cou1l 5 Kind of robbtr ti Old Umts: Archaic 7 Right conduct: Ch int st 1 Cork is 5) Nim ""' 22 Dwrlling· S4 Wit hi11: P,!act ... Iii 24 Actress SS Whitt Jeanne «y stall int ZS Rob~t <om pound 57 Am elody 'Ii . --··-·· 58 Sou "' 27 lilou11ta in SIJ An tmotioi, nymph 62 ·-Dinh 28 Timt bting 01• m: 5. 29 German ci ty VI• tnam 31 Work hard '" ttsman JZ Anxious to bl liltta111c ge l goirig elt111ent • • " " Auditorium. who staged last seasons' highly successful •·nvellth Groups performing are the Night." Newport Harbor High School \Vith rehe<1rsals conthiuing Sailor Band. J\.1idshipmen, and through the Easter vacation the Sailor Orchestra. Special br eak, the department's third soloists are Randy \\'·oltz, niainstagc presentation of lhe or-ganist; Marlin \Val k er , spring, Zizet's "Carmen." will trombonist; and Sue Peterson, open a four.night run April 2. vocalist. To be sung completely i rt A special awards ceremony English, the score fo r this will take place with five classic story of a passionate seniors receiving s pec i a I gypsy and her soldler lover recognition. T"·o n a t i o n a I contains so1ne of the most awards, tv.·o local a11.·ards. and ramiliar and popular melodies the auxiliary girl of the year ever \\·ritte11. The massive \Vill be presented. Fullerton production will be a,-,;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, combined effo rt uf lhe theater and music rlepa rtments and will feRlurc a full chorus and ort'hcstra. l mmed ia!Pl y afte r "Carmen" com pletes its in itial run. the three mainstage sho\1•s \YilJ join together and play in rotation for three weeks. Each production will gi ve five additional performances spread over a se,•en-night·a-\\'eek schedule . Thursday through Sunday evenings will begin al the usual 8:30 while Monday, Tuesday, and Wed ne s da y performances v.•ill begin at 7:30 and be followed by in- formal discussion s e s s i o n s be tv.•een the audience and performers. Y vonnc Back HOLLYWOOO (UPI) Yvonne De Carlo will return to the screen for a cameo role in ''The Delta Factor," based on it Mi ckey Spillane oovel. ACAOl.MY AWAllD NOMINl'E G91tl1 Hiwn ... Will•• Mtltl11-ln9ritl l•"lmlfl "CACTUS FlOWIA" ~·­"NUMIER ONE" wllh Chtrlol""' Hnl"' CNllln•ua Sllll. l :M ,.,M, Where can you take your kids to see a good movie? , Right here! The Childrt n's Movlt of the Month presents ''THE BLUE BIRD'' l\taetrrlinck's fant asy of the drPam sear1·h of l\1·0 chil- dren for the Blue Bird of f.Iappincss. -P'a rentt Ma911ln• PLUS Daffy Dutk •nd florky P'lt lrt t wo Super Color Cartoon1 (Academy A'A·an;I \Vlnnt'r) S4TURDA'I' ONLY e 2 SHOWINGS e 9:30 •.m. •nd 11::JO 1.m. T l c k•T• l'IOW A¥ail1bl• YOU ARf THHlf Al Tiii HUNlll STAllt Tiii MOST RtoOOVI ANIMAU OM IAllH HELD OYER 2nd WK! AT THESE THEATRES Wt!I (Nil ,,. 1"""' CMtt ,.11.U l'tll' AR"'-lm lnli .IJW ~4l·U11 CMll Mfll )4'-1111 .,.._. Wttk••T•c l :•,:•t <U kit, tJIM1»J11iM11S "'" 111•t>l..-1•1i•t1ll Ad•lh $2.SO The performance begins at 8 p.m. Tickets at $1 will be available at the door. ''\Vhen the s e kid /\ graduate." Purkiss said, "they \1·on't always walk out and find a job in a modem, well equipped theater with plenty OCC Given or staff to do what you "·ant. In addition to knowing how lo MOVI•C Film act. they "'ill need to knuw ~v· ery facet of the theater. More than 1$2,500 worth of .. And they will wind Up, to still and movie film has been one degree or another, doing every job in the theater. donated to Orange Coast They'll get th at chance lD our College by the Foto-Mat Com-experimental theate r." pany, according to a college ,------------ spokesman. Lee LajeLmesse, director of the 1'.ledia Resources Center in the school library. said the fi lm \\'ill be used for in- structional purposes. It will be used as reference 'material and for the production or visual aides for the classroo'm, he stated. Konrad H. Wilt. manager of FutG-i\1at said the donation "'as the first ever made by the company which was formed three years ago in San Diego. NEW POLICY NO RESERVEO SEATS NEW LOW PRI CES Childr•n $1 .00 Anytime ~\f;j'ol j>,·, ..... ,.i .. ·'" t\rthtu I' .. l.1<•-""' 1'1nlvrt11•0 Peter O'Toole Petula Clark '"Goodbye, Mr. Chips" '"'''"""'" CIN EDOME #'t~~" ....... " ''" ' .. '"" ~,!r.f ~. ,,,.,2,0 2905 Emt Coast Hwy. Coron• dt l Mir ALL HIW! FltOM SWI DIN "FANNY HILL" MGM l>'P'AI A Carlo flrti Produt!ial '°""'"' David Hemmin1s Joanna Pettet THE BEST HOUSE IN LONDON ·(i)-Eastmancolor• - NO ONE UNDl lt 11 ADMlnED 2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS A man vJent looking for America. And couldn't find it anywhere... . -Pflt'!llO ........ .., .. __ lt.ftlll•IPWOOllCUQllS•- • ACADEM Y NOMINEI SHOltT "PEOPLE'S SOUP" EXCLUSIVE AREA PERFORMANCE FOR ADULTS 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS l lST ACTOltS -Dnri11 H•ff-• JeR 'f•ltht l lST PICTU ltl WT SUPPORTIN6 ACTAISS -s,1.,1. Mlln l lST DlltlCTOlt -J•M kWetl""" I U T 5ClllNPLAY 'l lST PILM I DITING Sh•wl.,.,.t J:Ol-4 t:Jt-M.,._ ~ ' I I· , , l • 11 ' I ' j 1 ' j ' ' ! s y d II y ' D n ! r .. t J " ~. .. • •" 't" ·.-.· ., ' ··-~ -----------· ------' ------·------------------------~--~~ ------- • • VJtdn•sdfY, March 11, lt;'iO DAil Y PILDT :J l ' Ernefto Bltetti I I KCET Given $356,000 Ford Grant GUitarist Concert ' Applauded at OCC By roM BARLEY Of 11!1 D•llJ ,llet 5teff Guitarist Ernesto Bltetti brought his gifted iilstrumenl and a rarely played concerto Sunday to the Orange Coast College auditorium and he left with the plaudits of a delighted audience and an ova· tion whlch brought him back to the stage for two equally well received encores. A near capacity audience - there we~e more than t ,000 persons present to establish a 11ew rtcord for Orange Coast College Community Symphony Orche$tra concerts -ob- viously reveled in the glorious- ly chorded "Concierto de Aranjuez" and equally ob- viously shared thls writer's regret that Rodrigo's glowing lo~e song for his naUve Spain is such a stranger to our American concert halls. glorious string 1")tk tnd, at we have ln<ficattd, this is nothing new with th i s orchestra. For au i b a t , however, it wu 4 Pleasing performance .and we have parUcular ~~"" lor the orchestra's dttivery ol that lovely final movement - adagio, allegro non troppo - with its stately, a I m o s t spiritual theme and a dauling climax whlcti did not escape that dedicated string 1ectlon. It was, on the whole, a good performance and v;e are perrecuy weH aware: Of the challen,e that this major work: presented to a struggling-eom- munlty orcl;le:stra. Our point is that it could have betn so . much better and we believe that we have indicated the major flaws. There eads the critic's duty. Rouini'• ''Ba rbe r or SeVUle" overture was our eotertaining pipe opener at this fine concert and the orchestra tackled tbe happy Ilalian's bubblina work with th e gusto it demands and deserves. There is no better opening work in the orchestral fi'lrst of Two . Buddy Ebsen with gues,t star Pbil Silvers appears in the first of a two-part episode on "Beverly Hitl- billiea'1 tonight at 8:30 on ChaMel 2. Silvers as a shifty con man tries to ·bilk Buddy ink> "investing" in a scheme to rid the city of smog. Coffee , Cake Boost Funds for Syniphony We cannot blame Bitetti ror that since we understand that the sultry, "'torrid Rodrigo \vork is one of the pieces des resistance of his challenging repertoire. It should be; his· sympathy for the work is ob- vious and shows and his delivery of its t h r e e movement& -we particularly praise his flawless adagio - was fully in keeping with the composer's wishes. repertoire and if you aren't \Vhile maestro J 0 s e p h ready for your symphony or remain anonymous -has now pulled in more than $300 for the orchestra in just its second season of "performances." He enjoyed a s plendid liaison wilh maestro Joseph Pearlman and the result was a superb blend.mg of guitar and orchestra. The only flaw in the performance, to our ears, was insufficient amplification of the guitar and we had to strain at times, from the back of the hall, to catch some of the finer phrasing of thls love- ly work. Senor Bitetti won many friends on Sunday afternoon and Pearlman is to be con- gratulated once more for his praiseworthy policy of placing a rarely performed work before a public that is not always as appreciative as this enthusiastic OCC audience . • We can not summon quite the sar e~usium for the Brahm SYni.phony No. 1 which concluded the program nor can we bring ourself to criticize what was, overall, 1 praiseworthf performance. The •. tragedy was that the ·work had ib bad momenta and many of them came -as they .have come before -from • ·somewhat sorry brass section. :it is time Pearlman tciok this ·section to task and . licked them Into symphonic shape because they were far from that level on Sunday af- ternoon. : We had several wobbly horn :pass4gea that 'ruined aome $do """'°" lft.Clll -..... -.. , ""····Of .... ,.. concerto after this lip-roaring Pe3;flman and his musical Rossini then you never will be. volunteers were pulling in the Another word; if we may. music lovers Sunda y another about that near capacity au-band of volunteers was putting dlence -there were very few on an intermission offering empty seatl that we could see which has become a popular -and this welcome public feature of the OCCCSO co.1- support for an orchestra that certs -coffte 'n ca ke . has progressed by leaps and Takings for the interval botmds in the few yean that refreshments were $64 Sunday we have attended it& concerts. and the group -it prefers to Coffee 'n cake proceeds are used solely to e n a b I e Pearlman to engage featured artists for his concerts. Like the members of his orchest ra the _.refrt!shment crew is un- paicl: Pearlman and his happy,--:== band or volunteeNI R I c h 1 y deserve their success. It has come their way because they have worked for it and because they have refuaed to accept circumstances a n d situations which have Jed to the demise of other community ep.sembles. We do tlOt exceed the'bounds of objecUvity vital to all journalists in offering this comment. A3 a musk: critic, we are also dedicated to the cause of music l'l'ld we think we know when we can see service to U)a.t cause above and beyond what many people have a rJght to expect. A poor performance brings a biting review. A good performance brings the tJnd of comments you see otfered in this analysis. And the determination to fight and win an uphill baUle that· has produced this h'ellthy and splendid concert orpniia- tlon deserves and t.e\' our hlartleat consratulatlons. "'It ahouJd also get your1. • Eve. Show Storts 7 p.!11. Continuous Show Sunday Frem 2 p.m. FREE PARKING t1,(1-rnesa . • I M, ' "JI_ :"\if'.'.! ~. 1\'JI;' ,•I C•R 1•. '-..::::~1:. ,',',['jf,.. lEl.EPHONI 541·1512 FOR INFORMATION 9 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS 7 Por "BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID" BEST PICTURE -BEST DIRECTOR BEST ORIGINAL SCREEN PLAY BEST SONG -BEST SOUND BEST ORIGINAL MUSIC SCORE BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY 2 For "THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE" BEST ACTRESS ... MAGGIE SMITH BUT SONG ••• "JEAN " NOW e FIRST RUN "A Droam Of Kings" rinks 1mol'1CJ th• mo1t truthful and ro11i1t ic of films. -Joyce Hober The Love Scenes Are Better Than Ever ANTHONY Cj)UINN II A DREAM OF KINGS" .!RENE PAPAS INGER STEVENS !Rl -Also-- "HAIL HERO" MICHA~L DOU&~AS T•R!SA WRIGHT And ARTHUR KENNIDY In Color R-G.~. RATING ALSO THIS FINE FEATURE CONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 2 P.M. SATURDAY And SUNDAY SOON • NE)V YORK -Th< Ford Foundation today announced a one-year gr,.,l of ISSf,lilO 1o Station KCET, Loa Angeles, lot the aupPotj of '1Hollywood Telev11ton 11leater.'' a series ol full-lengUI dram,. 1o bt shown J)ationwlde over the Public BroadcasUng Service network. Gran ts providing_ additional support for the widely ac-- c.lalmed children's ~levislon show, "Sesame street," and for "Soul!" produced by Sta· tion \VNDT, New York. were also annountd. Lewis Freedman, one of the country's leading specialists in PACIFIC WALK-IN THEATRES Shows Start 1t OUlk •Children under 12 frHI ' a ) l•chlttv• °'""'' c., Dri.,.lfl SlloWlnt "THl HONEYMOON KILL.l•S" 11111 Color "10 !COMMIT A MUAOlll" CAl Ctlor UllMtr 17 MYll bo wltll P1t1RI All !Ct!or Sflow "DOWNHILL 11.A(llt" IG1'1 ..... Offn MlrllR "AMIU1HEaS" 0' 1 Ac1dtmy aw1'11 NomlllllliNI• "MIONIGH1 (QW&OY" UO "0000&'1'1: ICQLUM&US" (IU UMltr 11 Htl A...,.lntd AR!llotft)' QuJM .. "O•lAM 01" l(IHQ.5" t•,1 ICOlfr ''MALL. Ml•O" l•PI Co .... UMI., 11 Miii! ff wltll '''""t All (tier SMW "PANNY MILL" ()() "DI SAOI" OU UM!~ II M.i MmLll .. Acod•MY A••'' N.1111 ... luJ Swppotti11t Act•r • • •&ACM L . A ILLll • • -~wp•rt CrMM :;;.~:;~• .~N~":;T::0::zt;. l"t Mvticol Sc•,. William Faulkne r's Prize.Winning Novel "The Reivers" is now a fil m! THE REIVER .•• is 1 scoundrel 1n oper1tor ind 1 brawler! Steve McQueen "The Reivers· ............~·,c-c-.. r-~ ............ .,..c-o1""'''""111o1r .... a- Plus this d r1m11ic1I 1st aro1 run ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS I ENDS TUESDAY ra~~-=~":-"..::-~ NOMINATED FOR INCLUDING BEST PICTURE IESTSDN&!;::=,=- -PLUS - NDMINATED FDR 2 ACADEMY AWARDS »-- BEST AC1R£SS! '1k 3'"'!" 'If !Esi' so"61--_f.ia'Jin ~k -91~.'imith •c. .. -~ STARTS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18 Woll !!1aney 0 /'11. lfG1"t'!_ of tA1 .1u1,5aY'ittNrs U'8UJ.. ' ·--- Somebody Fights Back Who fighls city hall? Tht DAILY Pl LOT does. That's wtto. And whtrt tlst can you find togtnt commt11tary on your community? Check tht tdltof\al pagt of YOUR comm11nlty's dally newspaptr, t11t O"-ll Y PILOT, of course. televi11ion drama, will be ex- ecutive producer of the Los Angeles series. Experienced in both conunerclal and non- commercial ·television, he was one of Lhe original producers of the experimental "Camera Three," and the producer of the memorable "The Iceman Cometh" as well as a major share of other "Play of the \Veek" produeuons. More: recently, Freedman was assoc lated 'with StJ.UoD \VNDT, New York, and th.e Public Broadcast Laboratory, fie ls currentl y on the first·' Distlngulshd FellowahJp of .. fered by the Corparalioo for Public Broadcastil'lg a n d underwritten by tlie foun· daUon. ·0/' Jbut h Cuast ReperturJ ' Amtrlc.a lft P•tf'y alMf so,.. EDGAa L•I MAITl!aS "SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY" LAST t . Wl!EKt sc• CtllLDllN'I THIATRE "Wind In tM Wiiiows" -Sundll.)'• at l :00 Ir. 2:30 1127 Nowport, C:•t• MtM -'46·1161 ' "ROBERT REDFORD GIVES TO US IN AU HIS SURPRISING DEPTH, •. THE DEFINITIVE JOCK, ONE OF THE CENTRAL SYMBOLIC FIGURES IN THE INNER LIFE OF MODERN MEii." -Ric"-'d Schie~/. L/1-M1g•1i,.. "ROBERT REDFORD 'S PERFORMANCE IS A BEAUTY!" -Arch•r Wirtsren, Now Yori! Posl -ENDS TUESDAY - AC3D8fllY AMlrD M)lllinmlon BEST SUPPORTING ACTRESS OOLDiO H8\\fl C stereo103FM y the soundsoftheharbor _1d.~~7 youve never heard it so good ' ' ' t ' ' ,, . -DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, Marth ll, lq7o j HERE'S YOUR INVITATION I TO WIN A BE AUTIFUL PRIZE WANTED! -FIFTY WOMEN TO JOIN GRAND PRIZE CAMPAIGN CREATED BY OUR ADVERTISING AGENCY -JUST TO HELP ADVERTISE THIS SALE. HERE IS FUN - FASCINATION -EVERY CONTESTANT RECEIVES FULL, FAIR OPPORTUNITY TO WIN 1st Pri1e-Portable Colo r TV 2nd " -Ladies 17 Jewel, Wrist Watch 3rd " -SO pc. Stainles' Flatware & Chest 4th " -21 pc. Stainle1is Carving Set 5th " ----8 Speed Blender 6th -1 pc. Gourmet Cool<ware Set 7th " -8 Transi,tor Clock Radio 8th '1 -12 pc. Entertainment S~rver 9th " -Waltha!YI Decorator Wall Clock 10th " -4 Slice Manning Toaster 11th " -4 Bulb Make-up Mirror 12fh " -Elect. Can Opener & knife Sharpner Priz:es Will Be Awarded 2 p.m, Sat., Ap ril Addr~SS------------ SPECIAL D E E P C U T -S A L E. P R I C E ·s 0 N FA M 0 U S MAKE B RA N D .S OPENING DAY A Sate UJid a ;('ea.1u ••• ad 1tot p"4t a. &u.ue . , .. Jn 1937 -33 years ago -S11m Crawford came to Costa l\iesa fron1 Alhambra and open~ Cr1wford's Pharmacy at 1810 Newport Blvd. With one employee, Evereti Brace, "·ho is still' with him as General Manager. In 1952 he moved to the present lo~ation, 1804 Newport Bl vd ... ,'~ Sam, with the ~elp and cooperation of his capabl e and loyal employees, directed the gro,vt h RUBBING ALCOHOL PINT SIZE -REG. 65< CLOSE OUT 29' Hair Rollers, Brush and Magnetic, All Sltn Yalwe ta 69c SPECIAL 47~ET '-- Miss Clairol Hair Color Shampoo and Ti11u 20°/o 10 TRANSISTOR ~t~:~~ I Reti11lor $1 '·'' ci ••• 1188 Out of his store to its present success -These many years with day and rtight service to the citizens of Costa ~1esa and surrounding areas left little time for Sam to re I a x and enjoy some o( the things of life that we al l like. With this in mind, Sam Crawford has decided to close Crawford's Pharmacy and catch up o·n some· long past due golf and fishing. \Ve all wish him th" best with his semi-retirement in the Pacific Northwest with his daughter and son-in~ law, Mr. and Mr1i. Ernest Rombough. MYSTERY PACKAGES lS WATCHES Will !E SOLD FOR ONLY $1.11 IN' OUR MYSTERY BOXES DURING THIS SALE Oth1t P1clt•911 Coni1i11 , ... , ... '"'"' ··"··· '"' s117 Oth1• V1lu1bl1 Gift lt1m1. f,,1ry Mvst1rv Box Cont1in1 Gu111ni11d V1lu11 We ll Worth $!.11 lo $20.00 or EA. Mori . 10.000 EXTRA VOTES ON EACH PACKAGE • Meoi & Wt-TIMEX SEWING NEEDS RICK RACK BIAS TAPE Watch Bands ELASTIC BRAID 1/2 PRICE COSMETICS Narrow · Med.· Widi Reg. $1 .50 Sacrifice 97~ 20% """·~• ... ,.. RE.VLON INCLUDING OFF Feminine Napkins J111ior·ll1"911lor & S11pe1' -3 3 Mote• -Modeu -Fe-& P'lovt•• -( 12 Co1111t VITAMIN SPECIALS Most Popular 200/ Nam• a.ands /U OFF PLAYTAX Dress Eez Baby Panty Med.-Large-El!'.tra La rge Reg. 69c Ea. NOW- 2~44~ WATCHES Calendar-Waterproof- 2·03•lf :::. HAIR SPRAY SUAYI & MAX FACTOI L~;:~ •snd 7Supe~ S11e ,, Christmas Decorations Lights-Light Sets and Ornaments SACRIFICE 1/2 PRICE Tooth .. Brushes P'OP'ULAR NAME BRAN DS Values to 89c 44~ Radio Tubes Tn t a nd Sefect Yo11t Ow11 Reg. $1.49 All T11bn Now WI llOJIOJI master charge FOR SALE COMPLETE FOUNTAIN 16 Stool_CAp.acity STE AM TABLE 'REFRIGERATOR For Appo intment Call : CRAWfORD'S PHARMACY STORE FOR SALE Including Fi;ttures and Lease ... For Appointment Call: 548·0950 -·~--- 1804 NEWPORT BLVD. PHONE 548-0950 • COSTA MESA I ' 1 SU-0950 , . • • ( . . , .. ' • \' . ' • • l . ., Or-C-D•llY Pilot w..i ... oc1.1• Mordt n, 1m . ' . . • · Jtaska ls Jli1e Jnd f ifint ••• An -are -• nl9hlty 'Ill t.30 P .M. S.rn.e Stem Opan Sundoy 12-5 P.M. ••• at South Coast Plaza and now through March 21st you will.enjoy fun and festivities ••• Alaska style. The Alaska Trade & Travel ~~ition has trans- formed our huge, colarful, mag- nificent, imaginative two-level city of balconied stores and shops into a little bit of the real Alaska. While.you're here, stop by any one of our stores and register for the free trips to Alaska ... Then deposit at the Totem. Pole in t he · Carousel Court. There are many all-ex- pepse tours to take you to all of Alaska's super sights. So come now that Alaska has moved to South Coast Plaza ... and the fun has started. t ,' 5outb Coast· ?lua , '.'THE ~DEST MAU OF AUH llRISTOL AT SAN Cimo l'MIOWAY, COllTA - - ' l ova 10 ... SlOtlS AllD SllVICD •• , A 11 en•-· llMltry • Alnt'• •Avco So•lnt• & loin• C. ff. llbr • llftk If Amork1 • llfrlclnl CIMIH o llron'1 Toll I-o "'''~""''Iffy Nowt• -..... • 1 ~I Oltl Ni'I $Me1.e C.... SMrtt e Cwlt'1 e Chlll•'I t Chit V • C:Wc AccmoriH • Otrls' f11hlon1 • Cllrtt' s Stationery • Crock tr Citl1tns Natltn1I lank • CrtwwMt Glery hwtr S.t... • Dtcor1tw UM • flt Jlck'1 Cett.> SIMlp • W1 Sbln • ffM'1 , ...... ..,.. • f1rst Wlltlnt ... • Fo1 South Coast '1111 Th11tr1 • Tiit Galleon • Gene's • Gtntry Ltd. • Gtort• Mlf'f'IY • U... Nee .. _•....._.,• hdt....,..tt Shots• MtthMrt Stlll1ri •f&' ... • 111tr11 I ,,.,. • 11.1.C. • llortftt -Cohllrll •Hickory ''""' • 1M1111 of Folrrlcs • Hou11 of Nino • Hou11 of Tolio<lnt • HouM of Ttn'y • H•bbvb • 1-S-• -i., Jote,i. • JollPh Mlfllin • Joya $illo Troo . • Ju4y'1 • J. P. c..ol• Opta•atrht • llp&M'a DtllcatttMR & lnt••nl • Knlt·Wlt • Kovens Jewelers • Line lry1nt • LI Petite • U Soupcon lt1t1ur1nt • ltt4's Shots • ""'-'• • LlnA•rt Nwtrttlon •kt. F~ • May, Co. • Min Howoll • Oo T1oo !lo T""' • r .... Stllw • Pulflc s..lnp I loon • Pickwick look1hop • Tht Prep Shop • Qvtrtorbtck Spot11 & ltlsurt • Rtj of lndlt • Roj lnt...,iflllli • Rlvlort RHlovrlnl • • .,... ~ WtrW •: •oalu'1 ~I -e ,_I~ o lootfi Coot ...... •·SonHI HouH • lholll McAn,• Tio •Kk • Tlndor lo•• Toy World o Udoff"s Homt IU<11i1hl091 •U.S. Notloool' link I Wlillcll's Mutlc Oly I WtbfltW's Jowoltn • no Wet. s.I ,. WT•nh Cls.a..•·~·· .... w.,w .o 1.w .. w.-orth • lov.,.Mot•lllrv •.Ztllt'.• Ylll•rr.J.o4Jb ... ' ' ' '' -. '""" ·-· . 2 ~South Cot1t Plaza Suppl•ment to The Dally Piiot, WM., Mo rch 11, 1t70 Alaska 's Bard to Introduce Poem at Plaza Show Larry Beck, the Bard of A1aska, will Introduce one ol h.is newest poems to Orange County audiences during the 10-<lay Alaska Trade and Travel Exposition which opens at South Coast P I a z a Thursday. Beck, who earned the title •·bard" because he recited Robert "Dangerous D a n 111cGrew") Service poetry and creates Alas ka rhymes in the Robert Servict tradition, has earned another title. Just before he left Alaska to begin prepar ations for th, Alaska.land Show at SouQt- Coast Plaza. Gov. Kel~ H. M i I I e r officially con{ei'red upon this r esl dept of Fairbanks the desi~tion of "Ambassador or Goof!~WW for lhe State of Alaska." Visitors Ger Alaska Plus In Bargains Surprlsifll pleaslire a n d bonus bafthlns await spring visitors ~ Alaska. Then, l8'1, there are the •tth St.ale's J'l\)'riad attractions, in- cluding¥\. McKinley, coastal glaciers, the Arctic, and many others, l,,cludlng hundred! of out..of·tht-fiay attractions and resorts not apparent to the casual tiaveler. Write the Aluka Travel Divlsloni.!ouch E, Juneau, Alaska ...,1, for detalled in- form1tl~. Beck t r a v. e I s throughout Alaska and other states en· tertaining and e d u c a I i n g crowds with Alaska stories, poetry and music!:' Since he ar- rived in the Southland l.bNMI weeks ago he has plfy~ before several t h o 111 a n d students, visiting ,pore thin 50 Orange COUnty aohools. He has also 'appeared before numerous· )QCal service clubs, includlqg the c o m h I n e d memJ:lpr'ahip of the Orange Coqptf Chamber or Com- "1f'Tce. His latest appearance was a 1'fires.ide performance" for Costa M e s a Mayor Alvin Pinkley, the Costa Mesa City Council, o£ficials of the city police and fire department and Costa Mesa Chamber of Com- merce. Also in attendance were Robert Weed, publlsber of the DAILY PILOT J and Haro~ Segerstrom, develope r of the North Costa Mesa shop- ping center where the ex· position will take place. Beck, \Yho ls accompanied by Carol Betcher, M I s I Northern Lights, w i I I also emcee the four shows which art to be J!resented daily In the Carousel Court of the plaza and which re a t u re Eskima and Indian dancers and other performus. The govarnor'a press release advising of Beck's bonor said : "It is a tiUe we proudly con- fer upon you because or your truly outstanding work in pro- moting all of Alaska and ail of Alaska's people in you r narvelous show," The governor also paid tribute to "the great talent, exceedingly fine taste, and authenticity" of Beck's own poetry and his inlrepretation of Robert Service's ·works. ' l~ ... ·• Spring Doublekn its Perfect for your Easter Ensemble • I 00 1. Polyester • Machine wesh e nd dry • E•sy c•r•, no iron • "•m )f..60 inches wide • • • • Over 40 shades aYe ileble W • hive prints, solids, the crothel lool , and many weighh freril which to choose. ~ 'Casual' Is What to Wear in Alaska FABRICS SOUTH COAST PLAZA MALL • CAROUSEL LEVEL One or Ul@ quesUons most frequently as~ed by the wOtJld· be Alaskan visitor is, "What clothes shouki I bring~ Js it warm enoug~ ror shorts? In the Arctic, ls it always top- coat weather?" 1 u i t for her escort, f o r hunt moose in tile bush coun- nightclubbing in the Jarler try, or skin dive should bring cities ). Comfortable walking ~''.!""~'~''l'_P'~la~l~e ~8'~'~"----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!~~~!:!!!!!!!'~~~~~ shoes are a must. Slacks, - Alaskans iwe quick to point out that surnmer visitors are indeed frequ!'ntly comlortable in shorts. At the beach, in fact, bikinis ror the ladies are very much in evidence (ar pleasantly not much in eviden- ce. as the case may be). Particularly in the interio r re g l o n s , temperatures fre- quently climb to the eighties in June, July, and August. Actua lly, the key lo comfort In Alaska is an informal wardrobe (plus perhaps one dressy dress for m'lady and a shorts, and sports shirts and blouses are e q u a 11 y ap- propriate. A sweater or two - for coolish evening:. after the midnight sun goe.s down -will come in handy as wil~ a light raincoat for the occasional summer shower. The Arctic? It is a bit cooler there, even in the summer, than in the rest of the state. The airlines which serve the area, however, ouUlt the ir tour guests with summer weight parkas at no extra charge, so the visitor hlmself needn't worry about it. Of course the visitor who in· tends to climb Mt. McKlnley, WELCOME TO THE KNIT WIT WE'RE LOADED FOR BEAR When you wlsit the Al11ka Exposition, b. sure to com• to th• Knit Wit in th• Pl•z1. We h•v• everything for your kn itting needs including instruction •ssist1nc•, knitting m1chint1 •nd the most complet• selection of fine y1rns. YOU 'LL LOVE US I The KNIT WIT SOUTH COAST PLAZA Harris & F~ank srt«:t le$ IPR In Si11B117 OUR REG. $110 TWO TROUSER FASHION SUITS $88 Beoutiful Two Pont Suits featured in er wide selection of handsome Ploids, Stripes crnd tolid colors galore ! Every suit o QUALITY suit lailored to perfection. ••member the EXTRA PAIR OF TROUSERS doubles the weqrl HARRIS & FRANK ONE TROUSER QUALITY SUITS $78 R~ulorly 89.95 & $95 in crll the currenl, new fo shion ttyles, fobtits and colors. Every suit 1,ken from OYr regular sJocb crnd speciolly priced for OY! S,.Ong Scrlel .:.~ t'f ,, • , .. I ~ . i. : j! . . I .. \ '·it·•· . '"' ;:• BAllD AND 'BIRD' SING ALASKA'S PRAISES Larry hck Tunes Up With Mias Northern Lights LOWll MALL -ACROSS COSTA MESA FROM WOOLWORTH'S PHONE 54S·2812 OUR REG. 89. 95 SPORT COAT TRIOS $78 FAMOUS BRAND SPORT COATS Reg. 59.95 to $65 $48 Ataska Hom e To ·Millions Of Birds Alaska. that hair-million· square·mlle chunk of rugged real estate in the far North, is the nesting ground for several millloo ducks. geese and swans. Each autumn the crisp, clear air is filled with the wild orchestration of thei r cries and the sound of beathig "'ings as the birds rise up frotn the myriad of shimmering, black ponds and start winging their way southward. For the y,·sterfowl hunter, there is action here beyond compare. During the 111onth· Jong period in early fall when most of the ducks and geese start heading south, excellent hunting can be found over almost all Gf the state. One of the best hunting areas is only a few minutes flying lime out of An chorage, Ala ska's largest <'ily. This Is the Susitna River Flats across Cook Inlet. These birds lea\'e t h e Yukon-Kuskokwim area with the first free?.e-up. usually late . In September, and ny dlrtctly over Anchorage heading far Soulheast AlaskJ, B r I t 1 s h Columbia ind \Vashlngton. For the water!owl bunter whO , 126 kinds cf cheese • •• are on display for your selection at Hickory Farms of Ohio. Freehly cutcheoee is appreciat.ed by all for it reWns the moisture and full ~ty flavor people like. Sampk first before you buy! ' ~~&~~{?, ~~{f~~e SOUTH COAST PLAZA LOWIR UVEL l'llofte 5-40·Hfl Handsomely coordinated Trio1 !Sport Coot with two Pairs of Slocks}. New fobrial Pollernsl Colors I REG. 49. 95 TO SSS SPORT COATS $38 Choose !rom o comprehensiYe collecl ion of most wanted fob1ics, patterns and colors-including solids. Coals whose good looks belie their low price tog I Oeluxe quality Sport Cools fecrlured in o wide range of fabrics, patterns and colors -including "Shaped" stylci. IMPORTED DRESS SLACKS Roa. $4019. 90 2 for $3 8 Hond-Toi!ored S!ocks from holy crnd Portugal. Choice An Wools and Wool Blends. Top Pock et We,lern models including FLAIRS! You soYe over $20 !he po ir. SPRING SALE FEATURE SHOE BUCKLES ARE BIG BUSINESS 109.$25 17.90 Choose f~ the Tailored Wing Tip in Block or Bro'Nn OR ... the George Boot in Brown only. BOTH in .soft, $l'll001h leather. 2 Prs. for $34 ALSO SAVINGS ON 'FURNISHINGS, SPORTSWEAR ANit-tff--olii WOMEN'S SHOPS! • OPEN A HARRIS & FRANK OPEN·ENO ACCOUNT OR USE YOUR BANKAMERICARO OR MASTER CHARGE . arris & Fran SINCE 1856 p1..,, hi• ttlp to coincide with BUENA PARK COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON BEACH SANTA ANA this lime, life hunllng Is ex-ceptional anywhere on the Shoppin9 Center South Co1at Pleaa Huntington Cenl•t Honer Plate Am"ricl!I'~ 1..rAdln~ Chrl'J:e Stnr<-11 hwidred·mUe.Jona Cook Inlet. . ______________________________ 1_s_1_._,,_._,_._1_L_._P_,1_m_• ___ s_,;_,,_.1_._,_s_,_,_o_;,-'9-•_F_w-'y-· ___ Ed_;_,•'-•-•_•_,_s._._,_h_l_l•_d_. _____ 11_1::h_•::•_B::•:.:;,:.:'•::.'_ ••&"'!' .. ,..,..,..~,,.,.-·•·~~,,.-~~~=··~~~·--;•...,..-:-~,..=·~•~".".':"'"'"""'·'N'~·~"~·••••--:•••• .. •••~··•••••••••-•••••••••"N...,.~~·•"•••r•w,...w~11-'"~""™"""'*"""'$fuli..,.r•-•P~., ... ~&~•t~·-•~"~'~~-.oro.,.~·•~-•~·~~·..,.,,_.,.,..,.~~-·-.,,.-.~~·"1~r· '••• •o•o•'••"<'""'''•I '•• ~·••• o o. "'•~•r••• .~. ;. \ Campers Go Whe~e Action ls SACRAMENTO (AP ) -Ah wilderness. The bllsa o I heading for the campground and getting away from the ci- ty and its people, people, pei> pie. Nol for all Ca l lforni a campers, says Wiiiiam Penn Mott J r., stale parks and rec reation director. A lol of them want people around where they're camping. Mott's depa rtment has been developing pr,imitlve camping regions for the g r o w l n g number of people who want" to enjoy the "wildemess ex- perience." But Mott noted in an in- terview: "My observa tion is tha t most of the people com- ing out of the metropolitan centers really don't want th e lsolalion of those primitive areas." "They're gregariou s and want to be together In a campground," he sakL And some of them ad· mittedly are afraid of bears and the unknown of the wilderness, headed. Mott said the slate ha~ a policy of building only four campsites to each acre of campground, so thef ·won 't have the shoulder.to-shou lde r feeling of camping such as has been the experience in some overcrowded areas. 3 DAY SPEC IA L ! 640· Re g. 7.99 wet-glow strap alicka up the shine in your shape for gleam wit.b curvy fhirM>ut heel. Save now on this channer in new cun-ctruck colon! ~aliCraft Shoes SOUTH COAST PLAZA San Diego Fwy. at Bristol -Costa Me11 "But we ha ve quite a few complaints that they are too spread out," Mott said. 1-------------------- "We have to do a better job R d of interpretat ion and educa· ea lion," he added. the Stars With Omarr BEAUTY SAVING S! lock l1"t 1t i" • fl•llt ri"q fe1h!o"tbl• •prin; •tvl•! Go •~etd -P•mp1• y11un ,1f, but 1!ill Jl•1leh your budq•!. , MON., TU ES., WED. LATllt WllK SHAMPOO-SET ................ 52.45 '2.95 •2.00 HAIRCUT --51.50 HI STYLE SHAMPO O-SET ...... , . . . $2.95 $3.95 HAIRCUT . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . $2.00 111 waalc Faam;dgei Pe rms5 . 95 -STYLE $5 95 COMPLETE sn . .• WIG SPECIAL Not for tlntH or bleached hair. 515°' WONDER CURL PERM &H~~~ •• 59.95 CrownTng Glory BEAUTY SALONS A. ppointmenb welcome but not always necessary lll'PE N EVENINGS & SUNDAY CROWNI NG GL ORY 267 E. 171h ST .. COSTA MESA PHONE 548-9919 OPEN EVENINGS CROWNING GLOR ,,.,.....,., C.jtric•,C.lff-1 SOUTH COAST PLAZA i..-~nt t.S..... PHONE 546-7186 ·································~ • • • WI N A FREE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ALASKA TRIP Fill In and depolit In box at th• Carousel Court, South Coa1t ''-" Grand Pri1•• Include: 'I\vo f!1-st. c\as~ tickets via W1atern Alrllnu from L.A. to Ancha. rage, ,vi th a bonus stop In ~Ja"·all. One stateroom for two penions, aJ I fi rst clw meaJ1 1tnd ,.ntertainment via Prine••• Lin• Cruise• for two "'l?i!k& \vi.th departure from San Francisco to Al allka. Tv.·o-,~N>k trip in conjunction "''Ith Al11k1 Alrll nff and Wein Con1olldated, \\'Ith acrnin<'lfl11t jrin~ 1n lht' i;talP's finest hotels: all maJor AJaak& cltln \'islted. Allio ll 13-da;.o Matson luxury <"rul~ for t"·o aboard tile S.S. lotarlposa or S.S . "fl.fonterey. "ltll vi.sits lo Victoria, Vancou~r. Skagway, StUta. San 1'rlndlc0· and return to L.A. Eigh t other SeatUe-Skagw&y round trips on liners of the AJa.ska ?.tartne Highway Sys tem . r i.u Ste"' •m1111ytt "'"' tllttr 11m1!iet ""' n.t t11tie11 • NAME ............................................................................................................. __ _ ADD RESS ...................... _ ........ _ ................ -.................................... _ .. ____ _ • • • • • • • • • I • • •1 • • • • • CITY ................ -......................... STATE ............ -....... -...... ZIP -·-·-·---• .. . PHONE ................................................................ . •••••••••••••m •••••••••••••••~••~• • ... • .. --' ' ' Sovth CNtl Pin• Suppl1m111t to Tho Dally Piiot, Wod., Morch 11, 1'111-4 SUDDENLY IT 'S SPRING SUMY dresses for an .early early Easter airy, lightspun and easy-care, too Springtime. Days filled with daydreams and pretty thlnp to wear. Like twirling, swirling dresses ••• gathered or pleated. With rufDings and lace and sashes and bows. Even a nautical sailing dress. How pretty. In unburst colora of yellow, pink or blue. And, they're washable, too. Tbo prettiest dresses in the Easter Parade. Now at May Co. •· Claire Brooke , cotton, white lace top, pink skirt, 4-8x ,,00 b. Bow Age, polyester, cotton , light blue, 3-6x 11.00, 7·H 1100 c. Tiny Town, polyester, cotton, white and yellow, 7·12 14.00 may co girls' dresses 56 m1y co 1011th co11t pl111, 11n diego f¥1y et bristol, eo1t11 mesa: 5'46 -93 21 shop mondey through 11turd11y I 0 1.m. to 9:30 p.m., sunday noo n 'til 5 p.m . • MAVCO ) -· ,... CJ& & 1 I tl P. ( $ Jj JQESJ ¢ 2 2 a: 2 5 3 a ·--. . ... 4 -South CNtl Ploo Suppi-t to,,,_ Dolly Pilot, Wod., Morch 11, 1'10 To Arrive ..._ When C. L. 0 1\ed" Clarke of Norco yells "M'ush" at 10 :30 Thursday morning at SOutb Coast Plaza, he'll alJp into gear one of the fastest sled dog teams in Southern CalilomlL And the speedy canlnes will be very much in the spotHgllt a.s they scamper across the South Coast Plau parking lot Lo carry onto Carousel Court the governor of tbt slate of Alaska, the Hon. Keith Miller, to open the AJuk1tn Trade & Travel ExposlUon to be beld at the Plaza for IZ days. Gov. Miller win be riding in a spttial dry-land sled Clarke has devised with whlch to keep his sled do8;s in condition fo r the JO· to 2$-mlle racea they win wtlh ,.gu1ar11y throughout Southern Callfornil. He uset the frime from 'i. small car wllb JG-inch whee.ls. (The sled and the dogs will be on diJl)lay at South Cout Plaza all day TbundBy.) "We try ta make the load . litUe heavier than under ac· tu al racing conditions," said Mn. Clarll:e, "3o the lighter racing load will allow for more speed." Conditioning workoub for ' St yle 1n lhe clop begin with runs or about two miles. Then, said Mrs. Clarke, that distance is gradually lncreased to near the actual racing dl1tance. Clark runs a trn-dog team, n. cept in the races whtre the number of dogs Is UmUed. Clarke, who ii the president of the California Sled Dog Club, ha1 been the high point winner for Southern California for the past two years. In 1967, he negotiated the JI). mile course at Fawnskin (located on the north shore of · Big Bear Ll\ke) in 37 minute1. The time was a cour1t record and, said Clarke, "the club ls trying to get it recognized as a national record." The Clarkes became in- terested in sled dog racing about II years ago when they acquired tbelr first Siberian Husky as a pet. ''Through other owners of Siberians," said Mn . Clarke, "we became lnterutecl in show dogs and then In racing. 11 Thef staded lhelr Katsu Kennels, named after a legen- dary Alaskan tribal chief, six years ago and now raise and sell Siberian Husky puppies in add!Uon to racing the dogs. KA.PLAN'S Restaurant, Delicatessen & Bakery "A Sandwich or a Full Meal " e BREAKFAST e LUNCH e DINNER BAN9UET FACILITIES ANY OCCASION-SERVING UP TO 150 PARTY PLAmRS IU'"' STYU MEAT PLATTERS -$1 .75 por person FISH PLATTERS -$2.2S por porson OPIN t •·•· t• lt p.111. Phone 540-9022 llJJ IRllTOl Al SAN Dll.0 PWT. -COSTA MISA Uwr ....... -0,,..... M., Ce. ATIDUR SINGER CENTER~ ~products at yesterday's prices. Singer' zig-zag sewing machine in "\\!ntura'' . cabinet. This versati le zig.zag machine sews lorward and reverse. Dams, mends, monograms. Sews buttons and buttonholes. YoLlrs now in a handsome cabinet Or in a carrying case. ONLY 58330 And the SINGER I to 36° Credit Plan is designed to f:t Y!!!!r blldget. ::....-~h-=-SI NG E R &.rar'~CCJtlP':G" ~-,,....,_~••IMG IR ... I• .,,_~dTHE SINGmr:t:MPIHf COSTA Ml l A ,,..... Mii .... _ ....... ..... (Ntt '""'' SANTA AMA -........ ···-"· ,COITA Ml$A ,,.. "'""' ,,.... Kl .. llH "'""' .... HUN1'1,.•TOH llACH ••llllw ., hKll "1·1MI Mlll'lttrlf*I ~ C""" •.t.lllDIN •1tOYI n11a..-.,...,. 0rfHllt (-.ty' .... I I Re sttlts of Tida l Wtive Old Vald ez No w New City . ' Valdez ls one or Alaska's oldtst towns. ·Valdei ls Alaskl'a newest city. The clly WU mortally WOUI\• ded by the lilt Good Fridlly Earthquake. Valdei butldlngs and homes oot destroyed outright lhen are now being removed or dem9lished. . Valdez is 1 thriving com- mwrlty of new, modem struc- tures. All of these .staten1ents, t~gb seemingly con... traclictory, are true. VaJdez' ls Indeed one of the state's oldest towns. ,.11ners ..ftnd supply packers founded lhe community at the ium of the century. For ~ades a happy combination of friendly people and Alps-like scenery has made the area -dubbed the "Switzerland of Alaska" - a favorite with tourists. In one survey of visitors homebound from A I a s k a , Valdez raled a n1 on g the stale's top attractions, right along with Mt. 11.fcKinley. tot em poles, and the Eskimo Arctic. KING WOPSIM OF POPCORN Star of 'Hats' Musical Production LADY LOUISE, VIVACIOUS VAMP She Speci•lizes in Eyelash.batting That \vas prior to l\farch 27. 1964. On that day, Mother Nature dealt the old city a death blow in the form of an Popcorn Theater Pup pets Plan :Ela.,,..,z '--"" erf ormanc.e The Popcorn Theater Pup. beautiful flamingos are the peteers (Mr . and Mrs. Carl largest marionettes ever made! BruMer and their 12-year-<>ld by the talented puppeteers.) son, Paris) are scheduled to They will perfom a difficult return to South Coast plaza tango. for a three-day appearance in DOES CARVING the week before Easter. Carl Brunner does. all the The popular puppet theater carving, d e s I g n 1 n g the has been set up before on magnificent marionettes so Carousel Court In South Coast that they are completely Plaza. But it has been almost a rt I c u l a t e d wilh eyes, eyebrows, mustaches. mouths, a )'ear since the Brunner and even ears that move on family has brought its magic the animals. to lhe Northern Costa ~1esa Children love to set a pro- shopping center. lesslonal of their age and thls The marioneltes w 111 is just what they will see in the Brunners' son, Paris. perform twice daily -at 11 He's ~ acting voices for a.m. and3 p.m. -Wednesday, the life-like marionettes since Thursday and Friday (r.farch he was S and manipulating1 2S, 26 and 27 ). alongside his parents throughl thousands of performauces NEW PRODUCTION since he was 7, m'5tering the They will present a new pro-intricate maneuvers that re- Syroco Coronado WALL MIRRORS '' REGULARLY $35 33V2 In. Long, 141/2 In. Wide OAK ;,fRON $1995 OAK &-CiOLD . Ucl ~f~~ SOUTH COAST PLAZ A duction, "Hats A-eourtin'," quire dozens of strings on each Phone 546-681 2 featuring an entirely new cast, ~be::••:t::_iru'.'.l~m:•:'.:'°::.":'t::t•::.· --~===================~!! of puppets. 1- The setting for lhe new musical is in a roya l court where a huge king-marionette reigns suprem e, wearing an unbelievably fabulous crown. encrusted with O\'er 1 O O jev.·els. ''Audiences will havi their eyes opened by his costume, too," says ?tfrs. Brunner, who does all the designing for the highly original marloneUes. "The King is one of our 1arge$l marionettes," she con- tinues, "and the intricate mass of embroidery, furs, lace. and jewels make him wonh well over $2,000." Villains are In sto,·e pipe hats and lady mariontltes are Jn fantastic feather hats, as the pomp, splendor, and glilter of a colorful marionette court appears on stage to entertain the King (and the audience, too l. One act even includes a cart filled with birds that pop out v.'lth surprises. A pair of Employ es Unit Tries Cupid Role OLYMPIA, \Vash. (AP) - The \Vashington St ate Employes Association. which represent.! stale employes in matters ol wages and working condlUons, has branched out Into affairs of lhe heart. It gan when Don White , editor of the association's monthly newspaper, The Sen· linel, noted a surplus of single per s on s among state tmployes. The result \Vas Dateline, a lonely hearts column for the stat~mployed. \Vhlte edits enlries carefully to eliminate any off-color In· nuendoes and emphasizes that the strvlce Is free and the ln- formaUon conlldenlia!. The Sentinel assumes no re11ponslblllty for rtsiJlts1 or the laek of them . • He quotes no itatlsllcs on how many Dateline contacts have led to wedding bells, but the column's bes l ad· vertisement Is right In The Se.nthlel's front office. She's Mn. Wiiiiam 5. (J0scelyn) Gilson, who met her st.ate 'mploye husband l h r o u i h D.tt•tlnt. 4X • • • TIURSDA Y -FllDA Y & s·ATURDAY ONLY! ; POWER ZOOM SUPER 8 MOVIE CAMERA • Through·the·L•n• Automatic El•clric Eye Expo1ure1 • Battery operot•d Zoom ing and Fil m Wind • Complete with pi1tol grip 3 DAYS ONLY! IAIY CRID!T TIRMll, SYLVANIA SUN GUN MOVIE LIGHT -. • l rill>.nt lftv.,.,;. "'~ion ,.;tt, lhotll "''' • ltat. "''..,. '"'' ••• • fi11 .,.,1 s,,., I M"'" (tMtr11 Rtgular S 12.88 s9aa KODAK SUP. 8 MOVIE FILM ~1111NliilllCIUflt.rl>llMfM,..-'"4 $388 ...... .. -Mo... °"""' ......... ., ..._.,'-"' 14 ... "'" BURGLAR ALARM CAMERA GADGO BAG • •~1~.;., .i .... """ '" *"•• "'"' '""" ...... • left• ..... , lilt 1., M1rit tr Stift (1111trM FLASH CUBES Gt " SYl'IAMll.. Sletw• ti l J 99c fl-1ht1 • "'"'~'··· ~,.111, • 1..,.s1Jt SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA LOWER LIVtL f'HONt 146·005"1 r ' J -1 J . ' earthquake and tidal wave. available to the visi tor BS are Hotels, stores, restaurants, campsites a n ti une11celled homes -every structure In fishing and hu nting grounds. town was damaged, many Access is easy to Valdez, by beyond repair. Worse yet, road , sea, or air. The geologists suspected t h a t , Richardson Highway orgin~tes beCause of the unstable nature there. leading 360 paved miles of the ground, the whole thing later to Fairbanks. Anchorage could possibly happen again. is 30$ miles away, also by pav· Jifany assumed that Valdez ed high"''a)I, As they ap proach resldenls' wo,uld have . to give or leave town, inotorisls tr~vel up and pull out. through Keystone Ca nyon, re·1 VaJdei residents, though, qucnlly described as one o are a tough breed of Alaskans. IStt VALDEZ. Page SI Rather than abandon their'•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~ town they elected Instead tol~ simply move it -literally ~ four mHes away. They chose a rock.rinn area w h i c h , ironically, had originally been suggested as the location of the city six decades ago. No1v the 11\.0Ve is complete. 'The Pla'e,To Go For * Fine Jewelry Some residents moved their older homes to the, new site but most have built modem, c o n t e mporary structures. Brand new hotel facilities. a marina, restaurant.s, and ~tores are once a ~ a 1 n So11th Co11I P1111 a,;,1 0 1 11 th1 Sin Oi19a Fwy. Cail• Mt11 5'40·9066 B!G BUYS FOR MEN AND BOYS! ~~~ (I .J.,, " ,I Ll11tt11JeJgllt and ragged! MEN1 NYlON JACKETS · l ! -I 1 ~ ! Season spanner. z~,pered $ nylon jacket sheds rain ... spots, .stains. Navy, gold, green. ~fen's S, M, L. XL. Boys· S, ~I, L, XL ..... 34 .99 99 Zipper front 11t11le11 MEN1 JACKETS Light,veight C'O\'Cr·upsl Jn .\\'ash·and·\Vea r Dacron"' polyester and colton pop- lin. }.·Jen's S, '-f, L, X.L. Bor~·s. ~J, I,. ....... -: ... $3 ,99 91 ..,+, SATIS~o\CTI~ GUAR.\NTEED• REPlACEMENT QR MONEY RE~UNDEC SHOP IVIRY IYININ<i MPd•y thf-Friday UntU •:JO P·'"· 19'. t• ' l'·'"·-i•ll., N .. N te 5 I'·'"· ~ •.•. ~~:~:~~~ ~aza COSTA MISA Q WICKERSHAM'S. BIG SISTER -Largest and fa stest of \he Alaska Marine Highway fleet of rcrryliners is the Malaspina, sho,~n tiere in narrow stretch or the Inside Passage. One trip for t\Yo-complete w1t.h all meals and lodging aboard the ferryliners-will be given a \Vay dally during 10-day Alaskan "ex- po" al South Coast Plaza. Liner Wicker shani Winter Cruise to Alaska Offers Luxury , Econ omy The voice of the vessel's pi- lot seem3 to fill the dark inter- ior of the pllothous!'. "Three-five-zero," he con1- mands tne helmsn1an. The helmsman repeals the change in ship"s co u r s e . "Three-fi\:e.zero. Yes, sir." Aller a pause. and after the barely-illuminated C<>mpass in- dicates the vessel h a s responded lo the change, the crc"¥roan cfil_ls out ~@in. "Three-five-zero, sir.'' '·Very good." says the pilot , and the ship sails unerringly through the night on a course north by northwest. One deck belov.· is the vessel's posh cocktail salon. Large. yet in timate. the lounge features a decor of dark hardwood paneling, rich, salmon-hued carpets, and am- ple, uphol stered chairs you can virtually sink into. There. a directive of a different sort is given to ship's crew. "A brandy Alexander for the lady," says a Sealt.le businessman, one ot t\\'O passengers at a small table near one of the windows that :surround the loWlge. ''and for n1c a n1artini. Very dry." 'f\vo decks lower still, a 1nother offers some very dif- ferent instructions to two tocl- dlcrs as she tucks t~e1n for the night into \Y3r{Jl. firm berths. Sleep well, she soys. but the admonition is hardly necessary. The gentle motion of the vessel has the same slumber-inducing effect tha1 • rocking and lullabying her children had "'hen they 1vere 1ilfanls. -- The time is winter. The ship is the elegant. glistenins 1vhite ferryliner 'Vickershan1, a vessel bui\\ in Nor.vay and ov.•ned and operated by the State of Alaska. The place is off the coast or British Colum- bia, en roule along the Inside Passage (rom Seattle and Vancouver to the top of the southeast Alaska panhandle. More and more, 1vintertime vacationers are finding that an off-season pleasure tr i p aboard tile Wlc.kersham blend surprising economy with total relaxation. unmatched senery. and the opportunity to meet Alaskans at their friendliest, most unhurried time of year. Just Arrived! FABULOUS COLLECTION OF IMPORTED & DOMESTIC SANDALS "· ITALY SPAIN DENMARK PLATFORMS SMALL HEELS CLOGS MAKE YOUR SELECTION NOW WHILE STYLES AND SIZES ARE COMPLE TE! Innes SHOES SOUTH COAST PLAZA COSTA MESA F'or n1 o s I Alaska-bound passengers a ho a rd the \Vi ckersham, the trip begins at Vancouver, British Colum- bia . Because of the fe(leral n1arilime restrictions -often called the "Jones Act" -the U.S. government will not permit passengers to travel on a rareign-buill ship from one U.S. port to another . ll':i an Ullhurried. relaxed. but raseinating way to tra\1l'I north and although I h e weather outside may be cold and choppy, the \Vickersham is fully enclosed, 1\.'ell heated, and \·entilated. And -becauM" or its slahilizcrs -the ship can opt!rDtc s1noothly i n 11·;;1trrs that coul d give son1c anguish ta lesser vesse ls. A typical day begins when a passenger arises. showers in private bathroom facilities which adjoin his stateroom Of he has rented one of the deluxe rooms available) and eats a leisurely breakfast. A11thentic Thi s fearsome King Is· lander is among. Eski- n1os 1vho \\'ill pcr[orin authentic d a n c e s of their native land during Alaska Trade & Travel Exposition at So u l h Coast Plaza. Here, the dancer is doing steps \vhich recreate the per· ils of the hunt. OUR NEW LOOK for 1970 We've completely re-decorat- ed our store, and you're Invited to see our ne.,, look for 197Q!! Fresh New Ideas- On Wall Systems On Kinetic Lights L.---~dlil:;::s~::c;e;;::. J "'Ora"fl'C ... tN!f• '"•ff L"i4ue 8•.-e ,..,.,,.,,..,..,, .. Lower Mall level 540..7777 Ma•t•r Ch•rte Bri.stol ot the San Di190 'frwy., ''"UM•ric•r4 Cost• Mes• ------· • • South CN1t Pl111 Supprtmtnt to Th• Delly Pilot, WM., March 11, 1'71-S VALDI:Z. Whittler to the lnla~d com· munlty ol l?Nj.11&• n e a r AncbOraao, Fro1n Pai:.e • 1"'0r Mkllt10hll \bfornuiUon A1nerica's most s c e n I t' oo Al&IU'I 0 newu\ 'old city" roadway locations. A number (or "o&dest new city") •rite of d""p-plwiglng waterfalts1,_lhe;;;;;;;;;Valdez;;;;;;;;;;;;Qiambo;;;;;;;;;;;;';:;· ;;;;;;;i;• i:;;J BOOKS BOOKS cascade from mountain wallall which rise straight up from the road. Thirty miles oot of VaJdei, h I g h way travelel't ... pass \Vorthington G I a c i e r ;\'hich nows fron1 its moun· talntop origin <1ln1ost lO the side of the highway . The deluxe Tu stumena con· uccts the tuwn with Cordova to !he south~ast and \Yhlttier to the i.ycst. A unique, ''rail ferry " carries vehicles . and passe ngers piggy-back Crom Th• Plac• To Go For * Fin• Oi1mond1 So11tl. Cot1l 't111 l rlttol 11 tht s,~ Oi190 II~.,. Cotta M11• 5-(0-•0~ll • . BOOKS ' BOOKS Fqnnltfly Mullen A lllu.it Let's you save a BIGS45.95 by· shopping NOW for all your Spring and summer clothing. Select from newest styles, fabrics and colors. Each wardrobe gives you 6 good looking outfits.* ALL-OCCASION WARDROBE Your choice of: ANY SUIT in stock .•.... reg, 115.00 ANY SPORT COAT .•..•. reg. 59.95 ANY PAIR SLACKS . . • . • reg. 25.00 2ND PAIR SLACKS ...... reg. 25.00 TOTAL VALUE 224.95 GRODINS LETS YOU SAVE 45.95 FOR A LIMITED TIME-ALL YOURS FOR ONLY Buy it the easy way- w/th Grodfns Open End . , Charge Account • 'Mix and match coats and pants to create 6 outfits lo.r every business and soc ial· occasion. 0 Your new spring suit Sport Coat with • 0 Sport , Ha.ri nony Coat slacks with • wit~ CD Sport Colt -contrast slacks Contrast ""slicks with 1utt coat harmony , gUIJ )'0111 IUlt pantl slact(:s ' ,. • MOST STORES OPEN THURSDAY NIGHT ALL STORES OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT ---Suulrl COAST PLAZA, Costa Mesa ....:.. ANAHEIM, Broadway-Anaheim Center -LAKEWOOD, Lakewoad Center ' " . . I • Executive Httddle Joe Metcalf (left), Sears store manager and outgoing president of Soulh <;oas't Plaza 111erchapts Association, talk s. over future plans with two new mem· bers of association's board of directors -Doug Phelps (center), Leed 's shoe sto re 1nanager, and Bill Thompson, manager of llickory Farms store at the North Cos ta Mesa shopping center. · CLOTHES OUTDATED? ... letour master tailors go to work on YO U1 We con r•dflign or recul 'f04J' siorments to todoy'1 look. Rernor\:obl• modetnizofion for 1Nn ond women. Our operotions indlKle rernoYing pleots from •loclu, norrowinsi kipels Of'l coots, recuttinsi fronts, &hortening end toperinsi. lf you ho.,. sioined or Jail weight - wt olKI alter w•d•, ltother ond furs. CUSTOM MADE • suns • COATS •SLACKS •SHIRTS PreJident May Company's Kees Van h1iltenburg is new president of the South Coast Plaza Merchants Associ ation. He was elected at merchant group's a nnual meeting held al the Newporter Inn. OOTAW For Visitors Shoddy Goods Prompts Sewing Boom A ,U1.tfu11ol tr1nd ht a•w· tvtrythln& J buy llffml to fall "If you pt.)' SIO you ~n't Many of those interviewed 1e.~our11lflng among oll apart lhe minute. I pt U mind. If you pay $100, you aaJd they proceed with more klndl of womtn bec:aute of home. And frankly, J can't af. Won't get thil problem. But If cauUoa when buying apparel thr alleged OTOIDth of ford it. 1 buy medium to better you pay '50, you don't e.xpect than they did some years ago. "shoddfne11'' in the reodt1· price eklthes and I upect to it '1ld you do find U," lhe "While tryl111 Items on, l ln- to-WCOT field 'WGI detected git my lllOQeY'• worth. complained. sped the seams, zippers and in· o recent 1t0'11 p1ibU1hed .. But whit dot cetT BuLlon1 Dianne Lella, 1tewardeu, button veey carelully. I've b y Women's lVfor DoilV falling off, button boles and on '20 Jo 530 dttsses and '35 urually been lucky In getlbm a at1d CWM'tnt!t1 btfnf dfatn· Pocket aeams tearing. llnlngs pantsuit.I: "No probletM." good buy for the money, 6ut buted a1 o 1alt 1 too among that stretch below fabrlca and Carol Cutlip, Wuhlngton sometimes you have to be Singer S.-wino CenttTI, in-llpperti that IO Qooey." matron and mother of two, on acnful," said CleYeland ba.nk duding the one oc South 1 $125 vest of peacock teller Roberta Cochran. Coctt Pl4ta, with the nota.· MAN y INTERVIEWED feat.hen: "Granted I bought It "Clothing is beautilully spect the seams .•. and ton» time-1 end up going home •nd making my own wardrobe." ~.~ -" -.-.. -... '. ·1-, ... ~ ... , , ., .. ~ ·: 1 •• :~:,...:;· .) '.,. ,- 1 )'! , .. · .. · 1 •h The Pl1ce To 60 For * Oriqin1I Jewelry De1l9n1 tlon tr om top ttWlnoptmrnt SA.ID the only way to play It on aa.le at leu than half price, made if you pay the price," that: safe 11 to stick to branda they but several of the feathen said Mn. Mark Moore of Cln- "Your cu1tomers con sew know Ind trust. Cilme oif every time I wear clnna". "I don't mind 110me-South Co•" '1•1• • C'-land bll J JI u lrlttol 1t th• 51n Dl•90 ~wv. thtiT •drtam 100rdrove1' n::Ve pu c re 8 ons it ... What nerve lo ask such thing for the dollars, but so Coli• M•~• 5'40·9066 ... ond Singer con provide consultant Caro1 J e n n I n I s li'~as~lrn~no~rru~·~ca~l~p~rl:ce:s~f:•:• :"':od:dy:Jm~u~c~h~l•~•o~ba~d~no~w~.il~al~w~a~)'>~~~~~~~~~~~ thtm with all the quality rated medium and better price worlonan.Wp.'1 turn things inside out and in· fabrie, notions arid pat-sportswear as "pretty good" ten1.1: , .. " and ea: pressed confidence in Here's the 1Vomt:n'i the quality of "the big brands \Vear Doily article, in its such as White Stag, Jantzen, 1ntirety: Levi Strauss and Picone." One of the disenchanted was "I'm u11ed to shoddy Los Angeles teacher Dorothy merchandise. I ,ueu J'Ye R o u 11 h : "Quality certainly hffn br1lnwasbed. I wish my isn't what it used to be. Even u lary wtrt lfOlng up 11 fast the manufactrers I always as prices. Unions call the Ultd to. trust to produce good shots In thli country. I expect merchandise can·t be counted zippers to come unstitchtd on anymore." and buttons to fall off -It's ''fl.ty complaint.s? Seams and '"" •--~-·-Way." .., ... n..<11'11'll\.:&JI buttons," said Mrs. James Speaklnc i1 a San P'ranc:ilco Brod1ky, San Fran e Is co . 1te1etaey. Kartn Malllmo, in mother Gt riYe. "I spent most the better price j u n i o r oC my lite 1ewing things back sp11we1r department ,of a together." faahioo«ltnted s p e c I a I t y lore 1N TJl8 SAME city, student 1 • Susan Roettinger held up a A WWO A u r v e Y of pair of wool pants and as ked, 1portswe1r shopper atGUnd "How do they get $2S for the country sbowi thtM ltn· these? The seams aren't fin· Umenll are typical rlJf moat of ishcd. No lining.'' today'• CClnlUmtn. WWD taJk-Parting seams haYe turned ed to lw.lulewtva, c)!rkal and a number of women to their profeuklnll women whole home se\ving machines. Mrs. shopping haunta ranse from Sheldon Meyers o f ~fin· budaet basement.a to better neapolis buys some of her departments. Brickbats out· sportswear in medium to high numbered bouquets 2·1. price departments and makes The largest target of coo-the rest herself. "Look inside aumer fire is unftnllhed and a $70 or $80 garment and imecure seam1. FalUng but· you'll often find that it's tons, hooks and eyea were a stitched with big sUtches and Clote HCOnd. Other complaints that patterns are P o o r I Y cooi. comtorl•bl• 1.-n11 1.,,1, •~• cotlOn. involved tippers, llnlnp and matched," she commented. 1n .,,1iow .,.. c0Jtf;l!·b!u1 wtt!I w1111e 1r1rn. fabrics. Another shopper contended , ~M·L. "'l d '[ lo ti A. Sllltt 111. I. Jy111,..lt su, 5 ..... 1nc complainh1, 1uch as 1 oesn seem ma er Jo"'""'-C.. Slllf1 111. THE HOUSE OF lrl1t1I SrrHf l11t1011'e ! B•'"'••n J. M19 ni11 1ntl U.S. N1t'I B•nkl Co•t• Me.-546-2066 partin& 1t1ms, we~ echoed what you pay for clothes, the o. c,.. T.," 1,..,11 '1.H from budget to bet t e r,._:q~11.1~llt~y~l;s~poo~r~an~yw;a~y~.'='=~~==================================~ de P1rtments. W om e n in· terviewed were frank with prals.e u welt as criticism, where they felt wa rranted . \Vblle complaints volume- ge-.1erally thinned ln higher prict rangts, no price range was eiempt from consumer&' ~'rath. W11shington housewife Betty Cash declared, "1 feel llke saying tc hell with socMlty and going naked.Pr act I cal ly COSTAMUA ••••••••••••••• 5404491 ro• JuNc:r10N Alaska -Americans Th e most that most statei can ICMITICNJTl\AU. ANAHllM , , , , , •••••••• , , , , n6-0l71 -IKUl.lfl&U. ... fUURTON ................ 170.4790 Cll.lPIWIAT ITATICOWH GAIDINOIOVE ............ 530.5130 UHIHUTAfa.MUJI HUNTINGTON HACH ........ 146-0911 111 .. D Af IPllHNLI ORANGE •••••••••••••••••• 531·7722 llAllllAtUYn.l WHITTlll ••••••••••••••••• 947°1915 WMTTW009 Cllnl FAST DRAW offer a v11ltor la a pleasant vacation and warm memories. Alaska boasts these btntfltl, too. of course. Dul tn addition, 49th State visitors who arrive Can Visit via this gateway city along the R lamed Alaska H i I h w a Y USS rective somethln1 else aa Siberia well : membership -Including a dlslinctive lapel pin a n d certificate -In the Order of the Alaska Walrus (OOTAW). SE ATT~E (AP) Myaterlous Slberl1, unW now best known abroad u the place of bactllhment f o r Russia'• political dropoUta, ts being opened up 1'> llUl1Ul><l' vacaUon fii&bta by Arntrlcu tourist.a. Di"'•·•·l in• Alli• dr•w th• f•1lett re111•111• ;,. th• ••11. C1ll t-42°5671 •nlll t•1f th•111 19tin1t y1ur ••n ,1,,lt. There are no dues, no mttUna:s. and no officers j,n the order. And Alaska11s emphasize that there are no honorary Oot.aws. Either you have visited Alaska and are eligible for membership or you can't join -period. The 3,000<nlle atrlll ltrvle< by Alaskan Alrllnu bttween Anchor • and Khabarovsk received final approval of the Sovitt Union Tburlday. • Now Showing-More Shoe ihe sfar of the show makes the grand entrance as the silhouette of the seoson. Dangerously different! 1he feminine Mid riff is o sure scene stealer with the "more shoe" look of the high·throoted silhouette. Red Cross Shoes* low•r M•ll, by th1 Wef1rf•ll Navy Blut Bon" ••• Black Pattnt •21 11 SOUTH COAST PLAZA ~ COSTA MISA -Ph. 54'·1a10 .. ~ lftfwt ~-.. , ............. Ma"" ._ie-... *-1 ... c... """ .... -.. • -~ .. ., " • I'" ~V4' . ., , ,. . t;, ,..._, .. ~· ---·• At Khab1rOvak the tow11tl will be taktn over by the Soviet state airline Aeroflat for trlpt to places 1uch as Bt1tsk, wtUch claims the workr1 blggt1t hydrotltctrlc plant. and Like Baikal , the world'• deepest fre1h water Jak .. Trans~rtation CM.Sultants Internationa l, a l r a Y t 1 organization, has booked 10 flights for a tot.al of 1,200 persoru;, beginning June I and ending Sept. 27. Their trtps w1ll last I to 15 days, and those on the Jonaer ont1 will go on from Siberia to Samarkand. T11hkent, Kiev and Moscow. Robert Gier1doi1. Yict pre:si· dtnt of Seatlle·ba!f:d Alaskan Airlines. said anybody else who wants to go W Siberia can book a seat in the usual -...·ay. "I think there will be some snob appeal ," he declared. The tlrli.nt has des\pd atew1rdeu COl!itumes for the new 1ervlce basfd on tht aarb worn by the coeucU of Cr:1tl1t day!. OM outflt conJl1t1 of 1 red rnlnitw'llc wtth mandarin col· Jar, black 1.11sh and mllltlcolored braid. For outalde we•r, the gtrlt will slip tnto rtd m1Xieoata. black fur hat and block, call·lNI..,. boot.I. 'Thf: airplarR menu oa llle Jona night wlll feoture such Ru11lan-oritnttd delicacies u bonch. c1vtar, crab lep, aturseon and chkken KJeY. Gltt1dorf said he hoped !ht i<>llrltt Olghta would lud to ttrul1r commetclal eervlct bttWttn Utt wtlttm Unittd States and lht Soviet Union. The only prt1ent American air Ml"Vkt to the Soviet Union 11 flown by Pan Amtrlctn, bttwttn New Y ort a n d M-. .r Sears Prices Efi'ective Bepnning Today Aok About Sun Convenienl Credit Plaru. • Vitamin SALE! A. SSTe 12? 13.98 Multiple ,.itamins Dietary supplement excellent for 365 8t1Ule adults and children over 6 years. 197 B. Save 11 ! $4.59 \'itamin1 With Iron Each tablet contains 11h timeJ the 365 Botile minimum daily iron requirements 297 plus all other vitamins needed. C. SAVE 12? 14.98 Li,·er. Iron Viti.mini Protccr against a possible iron 100 Bouli ~hortage with chis fo rmula. Con-297 ta.ins more iron than 01hers "'·e sell. D.SAVE 13116.98 V;1a Perlet T Our hig.besr·potency muJtiple viq. rn in mineral formula. Jusr one cap. 5ule daily will provide you ihe necessary daily requirl'1lents. 100 B•111le 397 E.SAVE 13117.98 Forn1ulu G \'itan1in~ Out most complete high po1ency vitamin·minerll formula desi~ncd for the .enior member$ of }our family. 100 U(l11!n 497 Sears --1• ... _ Ul"6flll Ill_. II -11 -"""' M ...... .._,, tl4 t>llll l •llT• ""'''Ir• u ... 11! tA--.-1 -•II C11 .. , .... Cl ,_, Ol,_ I -Mf Wiii -wt ... ,_, -?II ((I.I.II fl*ol'A -~ -Oii M Miil. • l 4NI ---.. h'"I --""' ._.... -., 14-lrl >OO•A'll:I .. ~1111 ....,_,...co. ---11 ....,_ .. ._, _,..,..,n.au.un ...,.,.-...... " """" .. ....,., . ..._ ........ ....., ........ ........,Nt ..... WP.a. ..... 11 ..... IP.&•F I I .......... ..., .... , • ._,.. .. 1t11 I Juneau Called Nation 's· 'Most Scenic Capital' "Tbe nathm'a most scenic stale capital," is the way Alaskans descrJbe Juneau, capital city of the 49th State and one or the most In· teresUng towns in Nort h America. fully equal to th{l;t whlch lts migh ty king and silver salmon provide for the Usherman. • • I South Cout Pl1u Supplement lo Th• Dilly Piiot, Wed., March 11, 1970 _ 71 . ' Big A.laska Boasts Tourism) Industry Allure \\1hen a construction worker the · ti.m e '" I n t e r ' s tern· several Petroleum organi:i:a-The excnmg petroleum oew.i in Alaska's Aleutian lslanda peratures in lhe far north had lion 'bad begun int~ at'-also underscores th!'. polentl1i1.' sits down to breakfast his froien tbe ground. making llvlty. Activity has grown con· ~ fellow Alaskan in Juneau, four equipment movement possible. siderablj' since then. 1See ALASKA, Pace I) ~ tlme wnes away, already is1 ---:=;:::::--------::--'-----------------~ enjoying lunch. In straight-line distance they may be as much as 2.200 miles apart and still within the same state. THE RIP TIDE .. • ' The southeastern Alaska seacoast city nestles at l h e base of two towering moun- ta ins, !\ti. Juneau and Mt. Roberts . on the shores of Gastineau Channel. Nearby, and accessible by auto, is Mendenhall Glacier, one of the most photographed rivers of i~ In the world. Also nearby ls sheltered Aulle Bay, whose island-stud- ded beauty provides a challenge for the photographer Severa1 big-game guides call Juneau and vicinity home. From the city they schedule hunts for Alaeka brown bearJ moose, mountain goat, an other big game. fl.1any visitors !ind the man-' made attractions of the area '..!. as fascinating as t h e Alaska • countryside. This category In· • eludes totem poles, the old gold mines. state and federal buildings and lhe most popular allraction of all -the State Museum. Here the Yisitor sees • • I There·s no question that Alaska Is big. The giant IRn~ covers 586,000 square miles, has 33.000 1niles of coastline, and embraces some o[ Norlh America 's largest river systems. Its share of lhe Con· tlnenlal Shelf accounts for an additional 550,000 s q u a re mlles. ~ Alaska has bet!n somewhat of a stranger to the rest of the world. But rather suddenly ii has assumed new importance. YOUNG MEN'S TROTTERS a litUe of all of Alaska, sourdough past and modem· present. YES, I WEAR CONTACT LENS! CALL AIOUT OUR CONTACT LINS Trial Wearing Plan! You'll be cl•lig hted to learn the detail1 -Cell Now! OUR SfRYIClS INCLUDI: e Co11t•ct L•"i•• e l ow Yi1io11 Aid1 e Gl•n•t Filt1d e F11t l1bor•lory S1rYic1 e Pre1cri ptio11 5u119l 1u1• Ilse Your ltlt1!f Co. Cl1t1rge from Co1t1 M111/N1wporl DR. BERNARD SIMON 540-1171 OPTOMETRIST 496-1283 MAY CO. BLDG. from l•9ut1• ZE 7-1038 South Coast Plaza -~--- • GORHAM STAINLESS Tt.. Wlwld's finest ,_rp -y '":/ .JI/ Thrte Shir.-.. · ·f in11: tKlrtlples , P:,jrc o! how ~r.ham ~f._y· ·stainless ong1n11s ' .i · I enllance your table. ,. fJ' 1. ; •• Spanish Scroll:An excit- ing design capturing the beauty of a black scroll on 1it(; _, 1he modern satin te1111re of '\;;,;111 _y· fine stainless steel Pie1ctd Baroque: A retum to 1he elegance of 1 golden a~t. Painst1k· in&IY designed w1lh the stern. look arid uall•d to make every meal a er1lld ~. oc:casion. ,.,9 I Hacieoc!I: lrtspirtd by the fascinating fili(Tee ,,, of 1 Spani1ll en lie gale. Adds s~r~Je to every- ~' thin& you serve. ~~/,'\j,~· r TM beluty of _... SUitllm doesn"t end with its desiglL Its ~1t~en luster never Mtds polisllin1. Be- ; cause they'1e made ffom hl1best qualltf ...,.. . f.; Comam ori1ina1s last a life time ••• and !oncer. ~ 60 pc, wt 1-t!VM•• 15 leUIJOO"S. I ~ plact spoom:, tott.J, ~ ., knlYel. llld. w t.cl forks, :? t111lespo01111. ' ~ .. A. SP-'N ISH 8. PIERCED (, HAC ICNO.lt. SCROLL BAROQU( $6995 $79 95 $6995 All prices include attractive storace tray . SPECIAL EXHIBITIONS OF ICEBERGS ,, KOSTA Be sure ond see our window display on Iceberg Crystal by Kosta depiding Arctic life ond Scenes. Iceberg is the most unici:ue hand-blown crysto l thot is hond crofted todoy. On dis play 10 doys only. GlflS-{HINA-UYSTAl-Sll VlR-BRIDAl . REGISTRY L-•r M11I Nelr Tht W •ttr1'111 South Coast ?lua Bristol at The San Diego Frwy., Co110 Mesa Phon11 &40-16~7 GIANT GOLD NUGGET MEASURED 86 Ounce Spe:cimtn ·valued at $22,000 Part of $100,000 Gold Exhibir On Display in Plaza Show A $100,000 Bank of America Orie of the largest gold gold C-Olleclion will be on specimens in the collection is display during the Alaska a chunk or pale gold on quarlz Trade Fair at the South Coast Plaui starting Thursday. \teighting 86 ounces. Crespi The unique exhi bit, featu r-once. used it as a door stop. ing a variety of unusual gold Th<' major pieces in the col· formations and nuggets, will lection illustrate a ,·arict~· of Extraordinary prospe<:ts for one · of the world 's richest Oil fields, localetl in Alaska 's Arctic. m<ide immediate lm· pact on the economic front in 1 inid-19611. The big Alaska newsl today Is the startling increase r in oil activities on lhe North Slope near Point Barrow. •·one or the largest pet r o I e um accumulations " known to thi! world today," ,• ... · \Vus how the July, 1968. an· 1 nouncemcnl explained it. Byi The Piece To Go For * Fine Wetchei SOUTH COAST PLAZA Lower Le•el -OpposiN Corowsel 'On display in the pla.ta mall. nu ggets. tree and leaf-like Sout~ Co11t Pl11• be under 24-hour guard while n.:=tural Corms: st ream gold or -- The collection includes 36 fo rms or quartz. a sandwich Bristol., the 5•11 Oi190 Fwv. BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY specimens from the t.fother ore specimen as big as a ham· Coit• M~·· S'4n-9otib COSTA MESA-PHONE 540.9521 Lode and Alaska, including 1_~bw-,gc~r~a~n~d ~··r~is~h~e~gg~or~c~."~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;~~;;;;;;;;~~~ such areas as Six-Bit Gulch, Chinese Camp and Bald Moun-~ ~~ lain. F-"' . The collection \Vas started in .. historic Angels Camp by Charles Crespi 36 years ago. In 1959, Bank of America puchased it. Highwa y Remains Advenr..ure Four words describe the Alaska Highway: I n t e r esling. Adventure. Gravel . Friendly. lnteresUng the road most certainly is, even in its origins. The U.S. A r m y Engineers built this 1,523- mile highway as a World War JI supply route -in· credibly in less than eight months. Basica lly the road t which Alaskans call "the Alaska Highway," never ''the Alcan") is today mostly a tourist road . It begins at ''f\file O" in Dawson Creek, British Colum- bia, Canada and ends in Fairbanks. Alaska. U.S.A. tn between. the route transits mountain vistas and -at Mile J,125 -brings the visito r "'ithin view or Ca n ad a ' s highest peak. ~1t. Logan. It skirts deep. gorgeous, fish-fill- ed lakes ; crosses uncou nted streams and rivers; and passes through Indian villages and pioneering settlements v•h ich have yel the look of the frontier upon them. And in spite of lhe road 's safely aod continually growing popularity. the A I all k a Jlighway is still an adventure road. There's ~·ild game - moose, bear, ca ribou, lynx - to be seen even occasionally from the roadside. Campsites are "basic" (meaning to flush johns) but clean and frequent on both sides of the Canadiatl- Alaskan border . f\totels and roadhouses. similarly. are fre- quent. And in most instances these days they offer "room with bath" instead of the "room wlth p.all•" so common a decade or so ago. Fishing and hunting, in season, ls rated "fair" to •·good" Immediately alongside the road. It rangei from "very good" Lo "great" for the. sportsman who flies. via easily chartered bush plaY1e, into nearby but less-frequented hunting and flshino grounds. Except for about 100 of its 1,221 mile s in Canada. the Alaskan lHghway Is moslly gravel. \\i'hlch means i n stretches it can be dusty and It can be bumpy. But northerners are qui ck to point oul that the highway enjoys a \\'ell-deserved reputathm for be ing the best gravel highway in the world. And it is main· laioed yeor-round. For fur the r information about the Alaska Highwa y (and about the Alaska ~tarine lltghway which permits a Yl!l\lor lo travel to Alaska one way by road then return via the Inside Passage i;ea route) lrnvel!!r.s should \vrlle lo Alaska Travel Di vision, Pouch E, Juneau 99801. PACIFIC COMPOUNDS INTEREST DAILY even on new high rate accounts take your choice ANNUAL YIELD ANNUAL RATE "MIN. BALANCE MIN. YEARS 179°kJ 150°/o $100,000!!!! ONE 6.18°1o 6.00,o 5,000!!!! TWO 5.92,o 5.75°/o 1,000!!!! ONE 5.39°~ 5.25°1o 500~ ~th 5.13°/o 5.00°~ 1!!!! ONE DAY Interest from date of deposit to date of withdrawal on passbook accounts ASK HOW YOU CAN RECEIVE, SERVICE CHARGE FREE 1. Safe Deposit Box 4. Tickets to Sports 2. Traveler's Checks and Theatre Attractions 3. Collection of Notes (Ticketron) 5. Many other FREE Services SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 BRISTOL STREET • COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA HOURS: 9:30 A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. • SAT.: 10 A.M. TO 6 P.M. • PHONE 540-4066 MAIN OFFICE: 54-0t WHITTIER BOULEVARD, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA • • ' I -South Co11t Pin• Supplement to The Daily Pilot, Wtd., March 11 , 1970 • ALASKA. • • From Page i of the state 's fl1 h e r les , forestry, m l n er a I, and petrochemical opportunities. Tourism continued. lo open the --slate too. An estimated 100,000 visitors saw Alaska in 1968. spending more than $30 million. Those numbers are e.1pecled to soar to 325,000 and $100 million, respectively, by 1980. Coupled with lhe growth of tourlsm and the industrial base has been a steadily grow- ing population. Although well under a half million people live there, it is second in terms of growth percentage amoog the 50 slates The people of Al<1ska art a particularly gregarious lot who leave a lastillg impression of friendliness with nearly every visitor to their state. The subway syndrome has yet to reach the 49lh St.ale. Alaska ha.!i come a long way since Gold-,Rustrdayrwhen a Northwest P.Jounted Police document reported Skagway -now a community or some 650 residents -. "had grown rro1n a concourse of Lents to a (air-sired town, with well-laid- out streets and numerous rrame buildings, stores. sa- loons, gambli ng houses. dance houses. and a population or about 20,000." The varied and unique characteristics of the great land have set the tone for the state's growth. Alaska's terrain runs the geological gamut, including deserts. great plains. swamps, forests, glaciers, ice fields. fjords. huge river systems. ac- tive volcanos, thousands of islands. broad valleys, I0\.\1er- ing mountain peaks. and tens of thousands of miles of s e a coast. Alaska's seaboard is washed by two oceans and three major sees -the Arctic and Pacific Oceans and the Bering, Chukchi and Beaufort Seas. Surprising lo many Americans is the comfort or the year-round climate in Alaska 's mosl p opulou s regions. The re latively warm J apanese current w hich follows· the Gulf of Alaska coastline contributes in large measure to a climate that is more comforlable than th:it experienced in many major cities in the Eastern and ~1idwestern Uni ted States and Canada. Perhaps the easiest way lo envision Alaska's most varied characteristics is lo break it down into six distinct regions. Tb e So uth e a s tern Panhandle, an enchanting ar~ ray of forested islands and fjord-eut mainland extending along British Co I um bi a ' s norlh,v est border. is a richl y forested, maritime · I a nd . Adjacent lo the Panhandle and stretching across the southern underbelly of Al aska is the Soulbeentral re gion. This area boasts or more than half of the State's residents, the heartland of its decade-old pertoleum industry, r i c h }armland. and the biggest city -Anchorage. Tbe Interior. Alaska 's cen- tral region. extends from the Can?td ian border almost to the Bering Sea. ltfinerals. tourist attractions. the University of Alaska , the city of Fairbanks, and some cxtremems in sum- mer-winter temperatures are means by \\'hich the area can be characterized. Nome, loo. conjures images or the gold rush. Now a com- mun ity of 2.500 residents, Nome is the largest town in the 49th S1nte's fourth major region: \Vestern Alaska . The area stretched so u t h w a r d along the Bering Sea from Nome lo the giant Alaska Peninsula. which juts out to lhe Aleutian Jslands. Soulh\\·est Alaska , 2 , O 0 O miles long, is made up of the Alaska Peninsula, the Aleutian Chain, and the Kodiak lsland group. Ki ng crab, salmon. halibut. timber. fur seals. and sea otter are among the rich natuTal resources of I h c region. One-third of Alaska lies above the Arctic Circle and makes up the State's sixth Arctic has gained worldwide importance through the ac- ~lerated oll drilling activities near Prudhoe Bay. Huge deposits of coal, copper and jade also are fouod in the region. BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS • • • Auto Tune-U p Kil ] Delude!: 11ointz1 con. Jeu~f.lr, rolf.lr. - Carburetor Ai r Filter .each EXPERT INSTALLATION AVAILAB LE Fits Most Cars YOUR CHOICE •. -· ,.-,.. .. -., ' i .}67 • }99 97 Each llr.i;. 11.99 Hydraulic Jack l ll/2 lon i 1_;rrat lif1i ng Jlo'n·er for truck!, cars, trai lers, etc. J lluilt.jn \•alve gj veli i}otti tivc lowering ronlrol • Co u,•enient :?·piece LanJle .{'"!?· '12.49 T ripod Jack t l ~:.: Ion t·apacil~ •Rugged durable 11u1111H:r jack • :-icars finC!Sl tri1mtl jac~ ·-44 ~. Sup rr Spark Pin;" ./ i.l ~EGU LA R MOTOR Oil ~. ' Sears 27g R egular Oil Can -sears ALl.STATF. l 'aSl'en~er 1'ire Gu,~runtr.c C11ar1nlr.r.1I Artin,I: All tire failutt1 f~om nor- 11uJ ro:iJ b.uarJ.s or Jctet:~ in 10;.nen..Js or "''Ork· n1~01h1p. }'or Jfow J..ong: .For the life of 1heociginal ucad, '\\'ha! :"ean Will Du: In clCha.nge for the rite, rt:• rJ;u:e it, charging for rhe proponion of cuuent )t·ll•nit 1,.·rce plus Fe-deril E:.:cne Tu tha~ J"CPrc-2 1 Month Guarantee ~cnrs tre~d useJ. Repair nail pu!Klutes It oochuse- t: 11ur~n1,.,J Again••: 'frCaJ ~;ir.01lt. F"r 1101<1· l,nng: The number of •ll!J!U lltspei:i(icJ. '\\ hKl ~11n \l'ill Uo: 1n ex.Jian~e tot the.tire. re- }' I.cc it, .harging 1he w;n:nc scllin~ pri~e p.11,1,1 FcJeral lxcise T:o: ~ followillS allm\':WCC: -' l\lunthly Gu1ranlee JUln.,.·1nce 1Sto.l4 \~ ~7 fO 39 :!tnj •lO :.:~r;; SIZE 'l'rade-1 n. F.E.T. PRI CE Tubeless Blackwall 6.50xl 3 9.95 1.78 7.35xl4 13.95 2.04 7.75xl4 15.95 2.17 8.25xl4 17.95 2.:~3 7.75x l 5 15.9!> 2.1 9 Tubeless Whitewalls 6.50xl :l l :l .95 1.78 7.35xl4 16.95 2.04 7.75xl4 18.95 2.17 8.25x14 20.95 -'· 2.33 8.55d 4 2~.95 2.53 7 .75xl5 18.95 2.19 6.50xl3 Tubeless Blackwalls Plus 1.78 F.E.T. And Old Jire • 4 actual plies of nylon for extra sl.n!nglh • f;reater resistance to impacts, moisture. flexing and heat • Patented contour safety shoulders for bet. lcr cor11ering control, f!lsl recovery from 11avemcnt drop.offs • E.xcellent hlgb'speedperformance.Safety j11 reserve when you need it I UlN,\ l'AllC , ........... •21 ... IH ll Mctnf Gt 34 t 11 LONO KAO! Ml l-0121 l'OMOM A NA t -S lt l SOllTM COAST P'lAU ~S 'O.IAMm M t·1Stl CANOGA ,AU( .MO-OM1 GUHOAl.I CM S-1004, Cl 1-4111 OITMl'IC & SOl'D AN ... .521 1 ' "'(0 WI l -4ili COlill'TON HI ... 21111 HI 2•S71l NOU.TWOOD HO ,.J .. 1 OIANDI IUY-1.100 ltuf,IOlil\ICl(A~CO. COVINA ...... 11 INOUWOOO Ol l •tJi l 'ASADl:ff,\ 1114i11, 351-4)11 JlMT,\ ANo\ 1(1 7-3,71 lltrn.t, ft Sl'lllNGI M •0 1911 1ANTA. MONICA lit ~711 UM.f.NO •U.1'21' 'ltAUJT '° a..Mt1, .....uJil VflMOMf ",_,,,. lhop N.lthb Mon. thrv Self, t 1:ia.AA t• f 1H P.M., .s..4oy 1l Nooa 10 J P.M. ••s.tlafaplon Gvcnnft•d., Y"r Mono7 lock11 1 I " ' . ' -' W ... Ml•J• Mlrdl 11, 1t11 ,_ A Eskimo Dessert· f Ai·med for Tots ~skbo ice cream is a little different than, the ice cream that most families and their children find in the nearest market. To the Eskimos ice cream is a real treat, just as it is to the youngsters during a heat wave on the Orange Coast. Eskimos, like Americans did at the turn of the century, make their own ice cream. And like most good cooks they do not measure contents by cups, tablespoons or teaspoons. Instead they take a pinch of this and a handful of that. The fQllowlng re<;ipe is included in case you would like to whip up an original dessert tonight. That is , you can make it if your area supermarket carries all the necessary ingredients. ESKIMO ICE CREAM 2 handfuls of reindeer tallow Enough fresh snow to moisten Seal oil to taste 2 cups blue berries or blackberries \Vhip the above contents with your hand in a large bowl until fluffy. Sourdough Starter Necessary for Life Sourdough, another \Vord for an Alaskan oldtimer, also means a yeasty starter for leavening hotcakes, \vaffles, muffins, bread and even cake. To those \Vho lived alone or in a small group of three or four. mining, trapping or homesteading, sourdough beca1ne the basis of th e staff of their life. Bread could not be made without it, so the "start.er" became a precious possession. Jn the early days of Alaska, bread mak· Ing at home was a necessity. Food supplies came only once or l\vice a year by ship and.... then \vere transferred to small boats, river steamers, dog sleds or backpacks to reach their destination. Ordinary yeast plants, sensitive to the extreme cold, refused to grow, while the combination of wild or adapted yeast in the sourdough starter proved as tough as its old- ti1ner namesake. Or did the oldtimer resem· hie and get his name from the indomitable sourdough starter? To make a sourdough starter. use glas.s or pottery containers and nev-er a metal spoon. A1ix \ve il 2 cups flour, 2 cups warm water. 1 package dry yeast or l yeast cake. Place in a warm place or closed cup- board overnight. In lhe morning put 1h cup or the starter in a scalded pint jar with a tight cover and store in the refrigerator for future use. Th1s is sourdough starter. The remainder can be used immediately. SOURDOUGH HOTCAKES Sel the sponge the night before rour Alaskan breakfast. Place the starter JJ1 a medium size mixing bowl. Add 2 cups warm \Valer and 2 cups fl our. Beat well and set It in a warm place, free from draft to develop overnight. ' ln the. morning the battet wi ll have gain- ed 1h again Its bulk and be covered with air bl!bbles. Set aside Y.z cup sponge in the re-- fr1 ge rator for starter. To remaining sponge add: 1 or 2 egj:!'.s -1 teaspoon soda 1 teaspoon sa 1 t l tablespoon su gar Beat with .a fork und blend Jn all ingredi· enls. Ad~ 2 tablespoons melted rat. Bake on lit hot griddle. turning once. Serves 3. Go Alaskan With Saucy Sol e Alaska is coming to Orange County! Songs, dances and crafts of the largest state In the nation wlll be in the llmelighl when Uie Alaska Trade and Travel Exposi.Uon ls staged at South Coast Plaza tomorrow; through Saturday, March 21. While the Alaskan mood is around, Why not look to the frozen north for an exciµng dinner !dea ? ' SOLE ROIL-UPS WITH SHRIMP SAUCE 1 \2 pounds sOle fille ts, fresh of frozen . \i cup thinly sliced celery 2 tablespoons sliced green onions 113 cup butter or margarine 2 cups soft bread crumbs v~ teaspoon tarragon leaves 11/, teaspoons salt ~• teasgoon white pepper I/• cup dry white wine, op- tional 2 tablespoons Oour 1 cup baU· and half or milk l egg yolk. beaten l cup cooked PaciflC pink shrimp . 1 teaspoon lemon juice Thaw frozen fiUets. Saute celery and onion in 2 tabl e- spoons butler or margarine un- til tender, not brown. Stir in bread crumbs, t a r r a g o n leaves, ~ teaspoon salt and pepper. Divide fillets into six serving portions. Sprinkle fish with :y, teaspoon salt. Cover each fillet with an equal amount or bread mixture. Roll and secure with \Vooden picks or m e t a I skewers Place roll in shallow 1 'll quart baking dish. Drizzle with wine and 2 tablespoons melted butter or margarine. Bake in moderate oven, 350 degrees, about 25 minutes. ·ro make sauce, melt re- n1aining butter or margarine in small saucepan. Blend in floor and remaining v, tea· spoon salt. Stir in half and half or milk. Cook, stirring con- stanUy, until thick and smooth. Fold a small amount or bot mixture into egg yolk; stir yolk mlxfure into re- maining sauce. Add shrimp, lemon juice and pan juices to sauce.. Blend carefully. Heal lo serving temperature. D.essert -• IS • NORTHERN DISH SUITED FOR SOUTHERN APPETITES Spectacular as State Baked Alaska : Visions of waiters deck· ed out in plumed hats. smartly marching to an orchestra 's slrains behind a silver platter held high. carrying the elegant dessert. If this ls your image of lhe magnificent baked and frozen creation, you won 't believe that you can turn a simple devil roll -latest in ice cream cake rolls - 1nto a foolproof Baked Alaska. 4 BAKED ALASKA DEVIL ROLL 4 egg whiles ~4 teaspoon cream o( tartar 1'11 lea.spoon salt IJ.i cup sugar 1'c! cup fl aked coconut 'h teaspoon grated orange rind v..i teaspoon vanilla I devil roll Hot fudge or strawberry sauce, U desired. Combine first th ree ingredients In small beater bowl. Beat until egg whites form soft peaks. Add su gar, a table· spoonful at a lime, bealing well after each addition. Continue beating until meringue standft in stiff peaks. Fold in coconut, orange rind and vanilla. Place dev il roll on board or brown paper.lined baking sheet. Spread entire outside suriace of roll wilh meringue, sealing meringue to board or paper. Heat In lower third of very hot oven,-475 degrees F. until delicately browned, 4 to 5 minutes. Return to freezer unlil serving time. BAKED ALASKA DEVILISHL Y· EASY Sliet! and serve plain or with hot fud ge or strawberry sauce, as desired. Yield: 6 servings. Survey Shows Food Processed for Customer By DOROTHY WENCK Or1n11 C1wn1w H•m• Ad~IMI• Almost all the food you eat is processed in so me way. A 1965 Household Food Consun1ption Survey showed that 95 percent of the food consum- ed passed through the marketing system and so was "processed.,. Just about the only food that isn't processed is that which you gro\v yourself for home consump- tion. Fresh meats -\vhich yo u may not tliJnk of as processed -must be slaughtered, inspected. trim- med and converted in to wholesale and retail cutli . Fresh fruits and vegetables, al though not cook- ed, n1ust be picked, washed, sorted [or size and grade and in some cases boxed or packaged. Fresh milk is pasteurized and homogenized and bottled. Fresh eggs are washed and graded for size and quality. About half of the food s we buy are these ''fre sh" processed foods. These foods usually do not have any added ingredients although vitamin D may be added to milk. And some vegetables and fruits as \Yell as eggs are coated with an edible 'vax or oil to cut down on spoila ge. The foods that "'e usually consider "processed " - the canned. frozen or dehydrated· - a.re rnore likely to contain · additives such as seasonings , pre- servatives. emu lsifiers. thickeners, etc. Because of the cyclamate scare and the investi- gation of monosodium glutamate, many people have -- Home News and Views chemicals such as salt , sugar, potassium citrate, fumaric acid, cellulose gum, artificial color, etc. etc. etc .. you can still bu y fresh fruits and vege- tables, fresh meats and other ba sic ingredients to --make you r own foods without additives. felt concern about the safety of food additives. The But mos t consumers want some help with food Food and Drug Administration is expected to con-preparation -they 'vant the processed conve-- duct mo:-e thorough in vestigations of some of the nience food s. and they want high quality and they nearly 700 additives on the GRAS (Generally Rec-\Vant foods that wi ll keep \ve il . The chemicals add· ognized as Safe ) list. ed to processed food s are necessary to achieve However. a number of nutrition experts. includ· th ese results. ing Dr. F'rederick Stare of l·larvard and Dr. \Vil- Jiam Darby of Vanderbilt University, believe thal the current alarm about the safety or these addi- tives is unwarranted. The public has been unnecessarily scared by irresP.Qnsible criticism of the use of chemicals ip foods, according to these experts. Says Dr. Darby, "Chemicals -or additives - are not necessarily bad nutritionally and may even improve nutrition. Industrialized foods are lmpos. sible without chemicals." A food manufacturer is not knowingly going to put something into his food product that is har1n- ful -he'd soon be ou t of bu sine'ss, Dr. Darby points out. So the picture thal oflen is painted by the "natural food '' fan s. of 1nanufacturers putting cbcmicals into foods strictly for their own bene- fit is not ac.curate. I1owever. consumers stlll have (reedo,m of choice. U you prefer not 1.o eat foods containing QU ESTI ON S WE AR E ASKEO, Q. I live alone and find that ·rrozen TV dinners are easy and economical because I don't waste. a Jot of food . llow are they in food val ue? A. The nutritive value of the foods included in the various froze n dinners is similar to that of the same food s prepared at borne. People with hearty appetites complain that the size of servings on, many frozen dinners is too small. but apparently' they arc right for you and your needs. Actually n1any persons living alone have a.better diet when they eat frozen dinners than-when they snack on odds a nd ends. Q. Are hard-cooked eggs more dl!!icilll to di· gest than soft-cooked eggs? . • A. No , hard--cooked eggs are digested just as well as soft-cooked eggs. They do remain in tht stornach slightl y longer -which may be an ad- vantage in delaying hunger. ' I I ~ I -- 34 DAILY PILOT WH!nesd1y, March 11, 1970 • Modern Gypsy Moves to Defend Families' 'Rambling' Ways DEAR ANN LANDERS: Here ' !I &noU>et letter thal starts, "1 never thought t v.'OUkl wind up writing to Ann LIDders" -but I just couldn't contain mysetr when I read that pelhetic lelter from the man who was offered a big pro- motion but lt ,meant movtng to another city and his v.•lfe said "NO "! ANN LANDERS BUI •nd 1 have been married 23 years. We've lived in nine states at 17 different lddre&ses. It wasn 't easy, but It never oc- curred to me to say, "No -I won't inove." soon be home to me and I'd make a place for myself. -~10DERN GYPSY DEAR GYPSY: As one wbo bis doce my share of movln& I agree. !\lost people "·ho· bate lhe city they live In didn't llke I.be city Ibey came from -artd they "'on·t care for the next city either. The real problem Is themselves -and they take it with them wherever Ibey 10. I admit there were limes when I pack· ed dishes with tears streaming down my cheeks. The trouble was, I loved every ci· ty we lived in and I hated to leave. But 1 knew in my heart the next city would Our children weren't damaged by our moving. lf anything they profited. They learned to adjust to oew altuatlons and make new friends readily. Our oldest daughter now is getUna her PhD a.t Yale. So please keep telling the criers, that it 's not where you live, but how you live that counts. J know because I've been there. DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1'.1y parents Altrusa Champagne Brunch Bubbling Plans are bubbling for Newport lfarbor Altrusans' annual benefit, a champagne brunch which will take place Sunday, March 15, in Costa Mesa Country Club. Proceeds from the event support Grants-in- Aid , vocational aid . llarbor Area Girls Club and 11W Time To Gire '. There is a job for you in the l-larbor Area -a position needing no other qualification but your ti1ne and \villing hands, . \\lould you like to be in on one of your com- munity's ne ..... ·est most ambitious projects? The Girls Club of the Harbor Area welcomes you with open arms. The club has purchased a van outfitted as a mobile unit. The van enables the Girts Clu b to visit five schools. during .the . \Veek and .brings 100 young- sters a day 1nstruct1on In art, sewing, cooking, cake decorating. knitting and embroidery. If you are interested in helping you may call the Girls Club at 641>-7181. Jnformation on other jobs open in the area n1ay be obtained by calling the Volunteer Bureau at 642-0963 Monday through Friday from 9 a .m. to l p.m. daily. Ta lent Samples Seen at Show The Junior f.1embership of Orange District, Califo rnia 1''ederation of Y.'omer\'s Clubs, "'·ill d i s p I a y its art istit' talents during the annual Fine Arts Festival Saturd ay , t.larch II, Mrs. Gar)' Rat1laf t . chairman, \l'\11 open l he Garden Gro\'e \\lomen·s Ci\'ic clubhouse 111 10:30 a.m. for lhl.' \'ie\\'ing of paintings, crafts and need\e \\'<lrk. Juniors \\'ill register at 9:30 for a 10:30 a.m. judging , And IWlcheon will be served by the Garden Section of I h e Woman's Civic Cl ub ol G11rden Grove at I I :30 a.m. Salad, casserole. rolls, colfet• and dessert will be olfered for S2.2S, accordlng to Mrs. Dar· rtll Alkins, cha1nna.n. Co<halrman of the event is Mrs. Eugene l\ober18 of Yorba Linda and assisllng are the Mmes. Jnhn Harl an d Dan Shields, Gti.rdcn (;rove, and RJch1rd Meeder and JJhll lip Yorba. Brea . Special 1nvltaUon~ \\'111 be issued lo the l\lmes. James ~lcCalla , Orange Di s I r i c t presidtnl : Art Korn. Area D "ice president : Terry Thomas. Juniors d I s t r i ct president: Frank Fcdo\\'ilz Jr .. firs t \'ice presidenl and Frank Hughes. state convention chairman. Area clubs parUcipaling in· elude Cosla J\.lesa. El Camino Kea l, Huntinglon Be a c h . Lagunn Beach. N e \" p o r t Beach, San Clemente and Se1:1l Beach. On r.1onday, March 16, Junior club finali sts for !he dislrict sewing contest will ap. pear in compelilion at 9 a.m. in Bullock's, Santa Ana. Contestants -.•ill be judged 60 percent on Sf'Wlng. JO per· cent on suit.ability and 10 pe r· cent on modeling, acco rding to ~1rs. John Onbcl, district sew· 1ng chai rman. ~~lr!1 pJtiet hono rs and $1 0 will bt given in general membership. j u·n i o r n1crn. bershlp end high s ch o u I divJsioni. Youth Employment Service. Ready to pour cham· pagne is Mrs. Sandy Carlson, while Mrs. Ardis Barkley holds one of the decorations and r.Jrs. J . B. Ingram is \Vrapped up in ticket sales. Horo scop e Aries: Bid • THURSDAY MA RCH 12 By SYDNEY Or.tARR Gemini loves to gesticulate. This 11 tbe most acth·e of lhe zodiacal signs -trying to keep up wilh Gemini 11 like trying to do the lmpo1slhle. JI you fall lD love with a native of this sign, be sure lo load up on vitamins. ARIES (March 21·April 19): Aceent on idens, s h o r t jounieys, special messages connec ted \\'ilh relali\'CS. You may rece ive peat'e bid from one who recently rn a d e declaration of independence. Be a gracious winner. TAURUS (April 20·~1ay 201: Don't decei\'e yourself con· cerning budget. Br realis tic in 1non ry affairs. One you respect could displ ay streak of extravagance. ~1alntain balan· ce. Sense of humor also is im· portanl today . GE~llNI (~lay 21 ..June 20 1: Cycle high : you can take in· ilialive and expect to be rewarded for efforts. This is no day !or make-believe. It is an the way or noth ing -very intense. Older person 1nay confess past mistake. CANCE.R (June 21.J uly 22): You may find that what you thought was beginning is ob- \1iously fin ished. Healthy to face and kno"' the truth. Clandestine meeting appears lo be on agendn -exciting. LEO (Jul)' Zl·Aug. 22 1 · Good lu nar aspect loday coin· c1dcs "''ith fulfillment of some basic desires. Be \\'Ith friends. ,Express hopes and wisht's Ne\\' contal"l cou ld build 1net1n· ln1.1ful rtlations~ Ip VIRGO f Aug 23-Stpt 221 Your hunch could 11,el you im· portant asslgnmenl. There Jl' no }oklng 11bout respansiblllty. • Peace Offing You get prestige, but there al.so Is pressure. One who taught you in past CQU!d make reappearance. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22), Accent on journeys, com- munications \\'ith those at a distance. Key is expansion. See picture as a whole. Refuse to be dist'oursged by details. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You gain by attending to details. Contract, agreement rould result in prollt. Look beyond surface indications. Family tie is important, but realize you are your own person. SAGITI'ARI US (Nov, ~­ Dec. 21): You pa y for ·what you get -but you CQU[d receive a b11 rg ai n. Com· 1nunicate your needs. State wha t you wa rit. Cooperate \\'ith mnte. pnrt ner. Publlc rc11t'tion to efforts ls good. CAP RJCORN (Dec. 22.J:in. 19l · Give attention t o dependents, pets. Co r r e c t ho1ne safety hazards. Be sure of f11cts . Buil<' bridge o{ und erstanding to associates, co-worke n . You gel surprise compliment. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Spotll ght on creative endeavors, romance. Give and you. also "'UI receive. Be especially considerate toward chlldren, Strh•e lo entertain !hose who have proved loyal. PISCES (Feb. !~·March 20): E1nphasls on secu rity, hon1e, relations \1•ilh olde r fam11 v rnrmbcr. parent Stick wi1i1 t!Xperienl"e. Cooperale wilh those in authorltv. This Is no day 111 nout the rUJes. ff'' TODAY 18 YOUR HJRTlfDAV you hnve sparkl- ing sense of humor. are sensitive. 31 llme~ psychic. Curren! cycle polnls to mean· ingfu l relatlonshli). If sing le, could lead to marrlaie. have grounded me becuase my sister ski~ ped schOOI and I didn't fink on her. I am J5. Sia ls 14. I don't approve of ikippina school 111d have never done it my11eU, bul I can'l control Sis'• acUons. I don't think It is falr of my parents to punish me because I didn't rat an her. 'Ibey say I owed ii to them to tell on her because I am older. Do you agree? -MISTREATED DEAR ANN LANDERS: Why is It U1at when a person applies for a job he can be crazy as a loon but .so long as his record doesn't indicate he has had psychiatric help he is clean as a hOund 's tooth? If he has had therapy he is sometimes turned down. DEAR M.: J have, Time ud Uiae again. Bui I'm happy &o do so 111111. A.1 an employer ol II secrttarles I consider tberupy a definite plu. ll ladlcat.e1 ~ perJon recop11ed the need for be.Ip aid tl ld something abOul It. Drinking may be "in" to U1e kids you run with -but it can put you 11out" for keeps. You can cool lt and stay popular. Read "Boote and You -For Teenagers Only." Send 35 cents ln coin and a long, seJf.addressed, stamped erivelope with YOW' request. In New York, an appointment with a shrink stirs up""U much interest as a visit to tbe dentist. Jn the smaller cities , however, it's a different story. DEAit MISS: I don 't Ute to side a1atn1t a girl's parents, but ln Ollis cut, I mu1t. A slsUr, yGU.ager or older, should not be placed in the position ol the la. former. In my opl.nlon, you slllould be parolo<I. Why don't some .of these bumpkins get with it? If they didn't spend so much lime polluting our emotional environment with petty gossip, the world would be a healthier place to live in. Ann Landers will be glad to help yoo with your problems. Send them lo her in care of the DAILY PlLCYI', enclo.slng a self-addressed, stamped envelope. Speak out for us, wlll you , Ann? -?i-1 " i SIXTY CANDLES-Orange Coast Camp Fire Girls will have to put 60 candles on their birthday cake because that is ho\v many years the organization is mark.ing during the month of ~1 arch. A county- \ride celebration Saturday, March 21 , at --,_,_ Koott's Berry Farm will be supplement· ed by other birthday activities through- out the month. Placing candles on their cakes are Keri Zorger and Jody Ander- son, {lert to r ight). ' 1 " ~ Camp Fires Still Bright •' •' '· American girls have been members of Camp Fire Girls for a half a century and 10 years, learning to work, to love and to be healthy. The organization is marking its 60th birthday this month and Orange Coast Camp Fire, Blue Bird and Horizon Club members are planning special events to help celebrate the date. The Camp Fire idea w"s formulated by Dr. Luther Halsey Gulick, his wife and a few associates, all of "-'hom shared a rev- olutionary idea in youth work -happy de- velopment of the individual. Camp Fire Girls is dedicated to the spir· itual idea of tbe home and training for fami· ly living. Emphasis is placed on woman's traditional role of comforting and nurtur- ing as well as on beauty and aesthetic and s'J)iritual vaJ ues. The overall program js designed with flexibility so girls can develop their indivicl- ual talenti, interests and goals. In celebration of the birthday, Camp Fire Girls a I o n g with their families and friends will gather in Knott's Berry Farm's Covered Wagon Circle Saturday, March 21 . from ,1 to 5 p.m. lor a gala party. Displays from 16 Orange County cities lvill be set . up illustrating camping skills. special proJects, puppet shows, conserva· tion . needle\\•ork and Indian lore. Entertainment \\•ill be provided by the ~iri s on the \vagon ci rcle stage from 1 io J :45. 3 to 3:45 and 4:30 to 5 p.m. Skits. danc- es, puppet sho\vs, songs. 1nodeling and a kitchen band \Vill be included. A fire cere1nony wiU climax the after· noon's events. highli~hted by a large birth· day cake from which b a 1 ·1 o o n s will be released. Costa J\1esa Camp F ire Girls and Blue Birds are celebrating the birthday month ... Afternoon Rites Harborite Says Vows Eafly afternoon rites solem· nlzed in St. Michael and All Angels Episeopal Church , Corma del Mar linked Gall AMe ?o.funro and ~tarine U . Rohtrt Bruce McCla\ne ,fr. The bride, daughter of Mrs. Charlotte 1'.1unro of Corona dcl 1'.lnr. asked r.trs. Ted ~1cGlllis to be matron of honor and !he bridejroom, son of Mr. and f\irs. Robert B. 1'.1cC1ain of Warrtn, Ohio, \\·as att ended br. f\1yron Haag of Glen Ellyn. II . The new f\frs. AtcCl al n al· tended Newport Beach schools and received htr BA degree In English literature from UCl \\'here she al!<> did graduate work. Whlle al UCI she was a member of Conseho, senior women's honor society. She currently is a teacher al Thu rslon Jntern1ediate School, Laguna Be.sch. LI. A·JcClaln, a graduate of General tit otors Institute in Flint. l\flch, where hr was af- flllated with Alpha Tau· Iota , honorary engineering fr aterni- ty. received his A1A degree in electrical englneerlng rrorn Purdue University. He is sen·· Ing wl lh lhe l\1arine Corps in Vltlnam. with displays in the Costa J\ilesa and J\fesa Verde libraries, J\1rs. Roy Pfeiffe r coordinated the Costa J\·lesa di splay and J..·lrs. Hal Broadhead and 1\1rs. John Zorger assisted 1vith the Mesa Verde effort. Included are craft S. pictures and scrap- books, all of \Vhi ch \\'ill be shown during the entire month. The Costa 1\1 esa g r o u p s had fathe.r- daughter banquets and lhe Newport Beach g i r I s participated in a fa th er-daughter square dance with Mrs. Arthur \Vah.lstedt in charge . Many groups plan to attend church to- ge ther Sunday, March 15, in their service cos tu~es, and individual group ceremoni- a ls will. further fete the anni ve rsary date. Jlor1zon Club members \Viii offer their salute in the form of an International Din· ~1er Saturday, March 14, from 6:30 to 9 p.m. !n the Communi1y 1\1ethodi st Church, Hunt- ington Beach, sponso red by the Horizon Club Cabinet. Each Horizon Club has chosen a differ- ent country to represent and \vill bring a complete dinner fro1n that country for the b~ffet table. Guests from the va ri ous coun- tncs have been in vited as \\•ell. Countries chos en include East Africa Belgium, India. Gennany. Iceland, Ethiopia' Peru and the United States. ' Follo\\•ing dinn.er the foreign gltests, 1'.'0stly students, \VIII participate in a ques-t1on-an ~wer ~d debate session . Entertain- ment. in cluding the J~ora, a Je\vish dance, and Gern1an songs by Miss Anne Diehl, \Vlll con clude the ptoi!ram. The Horizon Club Cabinet wa s organized last fall to promote a closer understanding bet"·ee n the 10 Horizon Clubs in Orange C1ounty. It is led by Wendy Dorchester of Ne\\•port Beach. president. • JOYCE CLARK' To Marry ., Troth News Revealed l\-1r. and l\-1rs. \\l illiam '!. Clark ot Costa Mesa have an. nounctd the engagement ol their daughter, Joyce Rene Clark lo Ru3sell H. Behn, lbn of !ht Herman Behns or Santa Ana. Miss Clark. a 1raduate of Costa 1'1esa High School, 11 majoring in se c retarial science et Orange Coart College, Her fl anCfl. who ser\•ts In the Navy, is a graduate of Tustin lflgh School. They are plannin& a weddln& in March, Jt71. • r \ \ SALUTING GIRL SCOUT WEEK -.A. d:'ly-long celeb ration of Scouting di s- pl11vs crafts danci n,.., and skits \Vi ii fill Fashion Island mall next Saturday froin '11 a.rn .' until 3 ·~0 p.m. Pnrticipatin~ iii the event u·ilt be (left to right) Senior Scout Shirlrv l\1urdock. Troop 1 3~:1; Cadette K('ll ie Ne\vcomb, Troop 12'.?9 ; Junior ;\nn Jt11i;;sell, 1'ro{1 p 769. and Dro\vnie Jennifer Kud ryk, 1'roop 1 l5G . i \f\/oman Plays Man's Game Pat Sto111cl is playing a n1an's ganu• and doing <1uite ,~·ell. th:mk you. She possibly is the only woman in the business and the business is 1norc than 8 little different frotn her days as a ' fashion 1nodel. Bui I h e ~!amou r of rn0<lcHng for fashion designers on the \Vest roast yielded !o Ilic ex- citrn1ent of the investment \\•orld. ' Jn 1965 !\lrs. Stomel, \1•ho makes her ho1ne in NeY.'port Beach. began her career in lar,i:t> land sales. Now, five years later P.it is nearing the top. As investmenl l'Ounselor for Orange County and San Diecn residents for Prt>-Builder Land Corporution in Beverly Hills. she is the on- ly woman on the staff of illlY or the large land-investment t'ompanies. Still trim from her play-to- \\'in games on the tennis court. the charter 1n('n1bcr of the Ne\1·port Bench Tenni~ Club hardly looks !ike the business executive she is. Her last posi- tion was nntional s a I rs m;inager of Marco Corrora- tion·s npartn1ent house division in Nev.'port Beach. \Vhal (:xactly does th" dark- <·yed brunelle do? "\'\hat I do is determine the precise needs of the investor by talking with him or his business adv;sers. Then I con· su it v.·Hh the selection com· millec of our investment dcpurtrnent to dclerrninc jusl what invP.~hncnl best fits the client's n«!ds. "For instance,'' sht1 CQn· tlnucd, ''sorne large invc~1ors arc looking only for a tax shelter. One thing is certain - Southern California land is at· Lracting investors from all over the world ." ti.lrs. Sto111cl finds the land· investment business at least as demanding as rearing her rour children. Guy, a junior and Bob, a senior are honor ~tuclcnts at Corona del ~i;-,r High School and Tricia is at- tending Linroln lntcrn1ediatc School. Anita was graduated rron1 Cd~1 la:;1 June. ''The children must figure I knoy,· something." she laugh- ed. "They fook up to me at least a little bit sin~ I advise investors on deals involving hundreds or thousands of dollars." How to Succeed I \Vednnitf, Mlrdt 11, 1970 1 . ' FROM MODELING TO INVESTMENTS Mrs. Pa t Stomel ·. ., . "\\'ell. obviously I don'! put on sport clothes and go ou1 and talk lo farmers and ranchers on theii· tractors I guess I'm still a city girl at heart." sa~ ~ the r o r 111 e r Unil·ersity or 1\TJ1.r>na ean1pus qul'('ll Women Tell Secrets April Date Selected Succtsslul busincsswon1en v.·ill present their rormulas ror success at a dinner meeting of the Assoch1t1on for \\'orncn·s Act;,.:. Return to Education on Friday, ~1arch 13. The mt.>etrng in the ,Revere House, Tustin will describ<' hnw won1cn may establish a Ousiness with a high degree of April 2~ rites in the United feasi bility and rcl(l!ivcly s1nall ~lclhodist Church o( the Good capital. Shepherd. \\'estminsler are Spc1iking tn !he grouri "'ill be being planned by Donna Kay i'ilrs. Bealnce Crist. operator lngtehart and Gary S. \V alls. of a catering service for the pasi 25 years: J\:lrs. llurt Weir. Theic,betrothal was revealed co-O'l\'ner or Lois .. Paul dress by her parents, Mr. and l\1rs. shop \\'ho co n1bint-s 1nodcling \\I. F'. lnglehart. during a par- •rith shop m;inagemenl-. and ty for family and friends in i\1rs. \\'illian1 Evans. owner. their Westminster home. n1anager or ThrH!-1)-Lux Miss lnglchart and her Cleaners. finance both are graduates of /\ :.ocial hour will bcl:in al Wcs tininster High School and OAllY PILOT 35 NATHALIE MC:.."""'""' M~r CUSTOM BIKINIS v-_,.. .. ,.., ....... 24 ""'"' t!J!"I .. 11111111. 2640 f , COAST HIGHWAT Coro-c&.I Mar 67S·1lSO ·v;;;;i. Fashion's newest scoop / Be ready for f11shlon's new look .. Unde1wired demi·bra; wide ooen decollete neck• line. Beautiful Crepelon • nylon smoothness. Cups contoured with lamlnated fiberh!I. Wide·set straps; low scooped back ;ive yo u never seen confidence. Style 1205. fashion colors. A,B,C 32-36. 27 )7 E. Cotil Hwy. Coron• cle l M•r-Ph. t.7 1-1 950 • l•nkAm1•ic1rel e M1~t1r Ch•"~' 22 Ye1'1 in S1m1 l oc1Uo11 ' ' ' ' Troops Parade Scouting Skill Siler.I Bidding For Star Club !-itar flub of thr La gunii Beach Ordl'r {If lhe E<1sl!'..'rn Star y,•ill n1eel tonight at 7:30 in La guna Federal Savings <:nd Loan. 6:30 followed by dinner at ?:30 attend Golden \Vest College. p.in. Those interested in in-1'l1e bencdict-clect. stepson formation cnay call J\:1rs. Ray and son of P.lr. and Mrs .. W. O. i~A~l~lr~,~~or~w~,,~t~m2'~"':"~'~·~•~1':•~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tyronne, 496-5308. Dana Point; ~trs. \\lilliam Holey. 49~-9551 , served in lhe Navy. L;iguna Beach or fl.1rs. Ray MARILYN STOESSEL J une Brid e Pair Piel< June Date ~Ir. and ~1rs. Hu::iLrt F. A parade of 30 international flags will open d a y-·I on g festivities Saturday, ~1 arch 14, as Girl Seoul troops frorn Costa Mesa and Ne\\·port Beach officlall\' close Gir! Scout \\'eek y,·ith a Girl Scout Day. The parade v.·i!l begin at ! l a.in. on the m~ll at Fiishion Island antl end y,:1lh a flag raising ceremony nt 11 :30. From noon until 3 p.m,, girls \rill drn1onstrate crafts. ex- plain displays and set up a c;.unpsitc. l)u1 ing the a f I er n oon . \\1rious troops "ill present skits, folk dancing and game~ on the stage. Al 3.15 they y,111 gather in a friendship circle and flag lo1.1·ering cere1non~ . A commiltcc in charge of the event includes the r.1n1f'~, Oa\id Hoeft, Richard Shively a,1d Ray Ceccerini. Girl Seoul \Vcek has been proclaimed March 8 1hrough 14 by Mayo rs Doreen i\tarsh:i ll of Newport Bcacn and Alvi n L. Pinkley of Costa ~'lcsa. Residents are invited to heir the Scouts eelcbriile their 58!11 birlhday by attending Scout Day on Saturday. Color and Design Art Basis Explored Buard11·alk Shopping C(>'11trr. TONI FRANKOVIC Betrothal Told July Date Selected For Rites F()r111Pr "or1J1u1 dcl r.lar rr·"iJ ~n\~ .\larine Col and l\lrs B. J Frankovil-. no,1• of c;1en\'ie"'· Ill. h;l\·e announced lhr eng?.gl'1nenl of l h c i r rt au g h I er . To.ii La~ ne Fr:!11kO\ irh to l)a1·1tl flay R11ner. I Stev"ar1. 5~5-3785, Costa ~1esa. There v.'ill be a ,;1len1 auc- tion iollov.ing \hr hu:-.1nc~s mcctil1g conducted by ~!rs. Grclrhen Anderson Nuts 'n Nibbles Attending n1cetings every Friday at 10 a.m. are the woinen or Founta in Valley Nuts to Nibbles TO'PS Club. ~lembrrs ha\•e sclecled the Hecreation Center 1n Hun· tington Beach for the meeting place. Hostesses for the f'\'t''.1111g wtll be the !li\mcs. \Vilfrcd Lay,·son, Grace Scot! and Edith Lcutwyler. • \llffGl,'\'lA'S SNIP 'N ' STITCH SHOPPE lll4 E.,sf Cot.'lsf Hwy. • Corona def Mar Phone 673-8050 A Stilch ;,. T;,.,. -For E.t tler Fi .. 1rvl F•1h.i,on ;, • l11mily •fl•it. 10 choo•• 1 p1!1t rn i nd l116rit fro;>m 011• ... .,.. lptin9 t rri ¥•l1. We ptielt 0 1111~1¥•• on 1om1thi119 111it•bf• fro1'1 I lo 80 Bidhd1y1! Sotty, w• ~""'t .,elvetlii• q•••I eli1to11"l ptice•, incl••" "'" pride out 1to•• o" "'mt br•nel1 <111el 9u•t•nt1•d mtrck111eli1t, plut qiv;nq :". eliv;elu<1I pe"o"•l:1ed 1ervic1 for ov•r 11 y1111. s •• vou ~0011! VIRGINIA Sloc;;i.el of Coron.1 rlrl ~l.ir have announre1I the e11gagl'- ment of thrir d au g ht e r , :\1ar1lyn Rtoe~scl lo \\'11!1an1 Stephen \\'i!son. Culor and De:.ign. the basis of all art, will be discussed by Darrell Ebert v1hen the llun- lington Harbour Art Associa- tior. meets at l p.m. Friday, ~1arch !3. in the forme r bank l'ouillhng located in the Ebert. v.·ho teaches a t Golden West College. receive1t his BA and l\1A degrees lroni Sa n Jose State College. He has taught in Hayward n n d Berkeley, and in Greymouth andC hr istchu rc.h. New !\1iss Fra11k1nic ntlt·nddrd Use Your BonkAmericard or Moster Char9e S!cphcns College. Columbia.I~;:::::::::::~~~~~~~==~ The couple will exchant;;c vows Ju ne 13 in Stanford ~1cmorial Chu rch. J\'l iss !jlor~sel is ,, gradual e of St.!lnford L'nhcr5ity \lhl're she \\'as a mc111ber or Au.~tria Six. Her fiancc, SO'il of ~1r . and l\1r!. J Drnes \V. \\'ilson of Sun- nyvale, also is a graduale of Sl.'.lnford 1.1here he scr\ed as prt>srdent or Della Ch i and wa" a mcinber of Gcr1nany T.,.,·cn- ly-one. Oriental Art Reveals Many Cultural Sid es The rnany fa cets or .Japanese culture y,·ill bf' revealed in a fl ower arranging. and folk art demonstra!ion for members of the Laguna Beach Garden Club on F'ridny. March 13. htrs. Elda Zeldis. an ac credited teacher of the Jkeoobo School, "·Ill appear al 1:30 p.m. !n the \Voman·s Club, 'Laguna Beacll. A forme r resident of Japan. Mrs. Zeldis teaches li"ing design In Santa l\tonica. Tra cllalrman "•ill be Mrs. Barb.:ira Page assisted by the Mme.~. Guy l\lale, Ro~rt 111ci\rlhur. Paul Ne\\'Cll, B. Dc:in Clantun, Jack Giii and ~ilss Katherine Melnl)rrt: Viejo Club Hosts Meet Zealand. He has assembled an im· prcssive back g r o u n tl of a1vards in various media in· eluding a first in watercolor ;1! the California Art r:ducator 's exhibit; a (irst in stitchery al Rancho Viejo \\lomiin's Club th e Ccr.1tra Costa Ar! Associa-tion and llaY'\'ard Fcsli\'al nf l\ln. lier fiance, snn of r.1r. and r..lr~. Rayn1ond F. Rin1cr or S::in .Ju:>e. attended San J o~c Cilv College ;int! is a graduate of -the C;illfornia lligl11vay J'utrol Aradcn1y. Ile is nf- filiatcd with Liin1bda Alph.'.1 Ep:.ilon. nalional law en- forccrncnl fl'atcrnity. I 1 he\ 11 ill t'XChai1ge wedding pll'·'~:., .luly 18 in st . ,\rt~n'11 :-. J' resby le r i an Church. will host the Orange Districl Arts. and a first at the Vall"Y Council ml'cting on Friday. Fair show ;ind a secon d at thl' Se rv ice Mothe rs ilnrc:h 13. al 9 a.m. in lhe San-California State Fair i n ta Ana Elks' Club. ~culpture. lie wa~ a\varded a l:\'rT}' third Thursday U.~. first in t rafts al the Anahcin1 Air Fort'e ~'l Others, Flight 19 Regisl;'alion will o~n the A A · \' h d !ichedulc meet i n gs in .session following the theme rld .ssoch1a ion s lol '"an a se-California Federal Savinns Happiness Is Doing for Others. con 111 l e ovcr;i category. " ~1rs. David Ru k s t 3 Ii s . He 110\V is preparing for a and Loan building. Costa R h V. · 'd 1 ·n two-man sho1.1• in Golden \\'l'st ~lesa. at 8 p.m. anc 0 leJO presi C'il • \\'l College Ebert teaches c\asS<'s I•----------, \velcomc m~mbers lo a 10 r I. i·,1 sculpturing. two and thrcc l a.in. mee 1ng. d' · · 1 d d · 1mcns1on. Je\\'C ry an cs1gn Lunch will be served Ill rind color. Marv flle11~· YARN SHOP ·•\\'f; SPE('lAr.JZF. 12:15 p.m. preceding a pro· During the business n1ecl!ng gram presented by ~1rs.' Mu r-,vinncrs of the ernblcm design 1N sr,nvtcf;" FREE INSTRUCltON' 2640 (.COAST HIGHWAY Coron• dcl M.•• 611·1010 ray Granger. district second contest and ncwslcltcr nam r vice pre sident. Speeches wilt conle&I y,·il l be announced . be delivered by students from IF;;~~~~~~;;;;~~~~;;;;:::~~~;;;;;;~; La 11abra l·ligh School and Chiipn1an College. The meeting will adjourn al I c:-'J CJ /) CJ / 2:20 p.m. Jor Jal e: J ere11 i ';! Court St ella ~1embcrs or Court Stella r.1aris 1448, Ca I ho Ii c Daughters of An1erica meet <?ach seeond and fourth r.ton -1 day at 8 p.m. in St. Joacblm's parisli half. Costa ~1esa. -111 p;clur11q111 CAl!MEI. wh1•1 "pto9re1s" i1 frow11ed on. 01 PEBBLE BEACH wi1h m:te1 pf 1pec· t1cu1ar i11rl ""el world.f•l"O~I qolf co11r1es-.,ecur• wit~j" ih• 9•I•• of Qpl Mont• Fo••!L Th,, i1 the l1nd of Mo11le•1y pin11 1nel cyp•en. mil~• of wki1• 1end be•ck•t. pl•yfu1 •111-0lf•rl, •O•m inq il•1r-1nd "''Y 9racio11• peool1, 91lt1<oeo, 1mtrl 1hop1 111el 11nique 1e1!111ranh . WI:¥ w11it lo r1t<r1? E11joy '''""' li•lnq "ow. For qu1i11t coll•911 O• l•r91 11t1lei conl1cl: 842-42 12 'YOU" ~1E001Nt,. I~ A'I tM1'()1t1 ... NT OtCISION , C"'ll A f Ul~ 111.'.E PROFl't~IONAL. COLOll PHOTOGRAPHY SERVICE 7S1 t Cloy A•e., Suite l , H1111th1 to11 l.oc-~.--rh: 14081 6Z 4·15l • Carmel, Cor f. flf21 l".O. lox 4J46 ~- at CERTIFIED NOW the "Beffer Care" Store Model SVU-70 RATED #1 ! BUILT-IN DISHWASHER by Price Includes Door Panels of Available Colors See this dishwasher and many other fine appliances in our new Kitchen and Laundry Center Let us explain our "BETIER CARE WARRANTY" Certified Appliance 642-0240 540-4720 WE SE•YICE ALL MAKES 33 E. 17th St Costa Mesa Check Your Horosc~pe YOU'RE THE KIND OF WOMAN WHO GETS WHAT SHE WANTS- WHY NOT FRENCH CASCADES 14 inth•1 10 .. 9, 4 01. of l11•11riou1 hum•n h1ir, All PL ATINU M I FROSTED. Regular Cascades ~;:;s ........ $1295 malAe'J "MIRACLE WIGS " The INSTANT HAIR-DO! for holi d1y 9•d·1bouh, i11•I lou it in vour b19 ' 11~1 it •lon9 ! 8ruth11 into vour own 1tyl1 i11 • FLASH! lt'i 10 111v lo w•1h '"el style yo11r- ,,ll. 100 % K1n1~1lo11 fiber. FALLS! • • • YOU 'LL LOOK aod FEEL LOVELIER THAN EVERI II you're "w•l111.wi11" do11'! mi11 tk1>t low1r-tk1n-1¥•• pric11! We'vt reduced our ,lr11ely low, ,' low pric11, DEMI FALLS Seve 4 to 7-NOW 22.95 18 " to 20" FALLS Save "' fo 7-NOW 32.95 WIG FALLS Save 7 to 12.00- NOW ~2.95 LONG FALLS Save 8 to 17.00- NOW 52.9S DISPLAY WIG CLEARANCE! SA YE 20°/o to 50°/o Euni..-1111\dmM" _,.... Mld'lln-• "'"' ""' wm "1•11 •' •• .._n •1 n21.•1 SlrM r..rw• tt 11t.t1. """ ..-ktcl •w1r tlto, Tllffe lrl •l1play Wltl lr9m 1111" IMWCllltl tlld 11111'1•1 -"' • wi.. MIKlllll II wit .,..., "'°"" l m /}/). , WIG & BEAUTY allie j SALON lSO E. I 7th STREET DAILY TILL S:30 THURS. & FRI. TILL 1:00 COSTA MESA 548-3446 ' I 'r·:~~!l!R4@11111!'!£!"1!'!"••""s~*JZA'fl!!l!!"!l!"!!2~£!'!!-!'!!1!!" .... '!!",, .. ~,~.~-'~-~·~-';~.~--~-~'-''~>l!!OY!"l~.'"!!.f""'~~VW•."'~"""" .................... , .......... ~,~;~ ............................................ ~.~-~~~~~-·~~~~~~~·~:--- 3 DlllY PILOT s Wfdntsday, Mi rth 11, 1970 ·imagination Lights Up -P-T Unit Programs .. J Merry Models Mirrored Jane Hodges, practicing with a book , and Chrislinc lvlayo arc excited n1od· els from Po1nona ElemeIJtary School. ·rhe n1other-daughter fa sh.ion shO\V and tea. sponsored by Lhe PTA, will take place Thursday. rvtarch 19. at 17:30 p.n1 . in the multipurpose room . The student body \Viii serve as models and ho stess- es during th e RainbO\Y of Fashions. With Teenage Set Fads Establish Identity By GAY PAULEY NE\V YORK IUPTJ -Don'! look down your 1velJ-po11·dcrc1t nose on lhe teenagers' dress or today. There are · many b 11 s j c reasons for the long hair on both the girls and the boys. the beads. the fringes. the long scarv es, the unkempt look. the other fads thal mark adoles- cent dress. It was ever thus aboul ap- parel. The Jloman fathers as early as the F'ourth Cen tury A.O. y,·ere dis1naycd when young dandies began to wear barbarian ··bracco '' i Lrous- ers) despite public l;'Cnsure and inlerdict. Society really ne\'Cr has given up crilicism of manner or dress. whether an1ong teenagers or ndulls. for with predictable regularity we heur the g-0spet of what is "'rgng - and right -in dress and adornment. Why b11ve the teenagers cupturcd the spo-llii;hl cu r- rently~ It is not s1111ply bccausr their dress is "SO different from Iha! of ID yea rs ago -or JO minutes ago," says J)r ~1ary F..:llcn Roach, professor in the School of Family Resources and Co n sumer Sci<'nce~. the University of \V isconsin. In a dctuiJed study 11f "udolcs<'4!nt dress.'' Dr. Ho11eh points out that clothing u!K'd b}' all ages arc related to two kinds or su rvi\'al -"surviv al or the species and sur\'1 \'al of the u1d1v idual hun1an bring " It is for this latter reason - survival of the individual - that Dr. Roach explores. Clotl11ng ht•lps 1o estahhsh identity, i:speciaHy cruclal for teenagers. says Dr. Roach. ''A mature older person knO\\'S himself fairly well <1nd hus usually found a self-image compatible \lilh roles to be fulfllled and f'ith 11·hich he cun be comfortable." she writes. "But teenagers in their ·search for self' arc ad· venturing into and trying out new modes of beha\'ior within a society which oHers niany :iltcmatives. Nol su rprising, thcrl'fnre. is their susci;ptiblity 10 fads as they cast aboul an1ong the alternatives ... clothes. t•osmetics and groon1- ing Aids allow each to ex- periment with !he irnage he vdshcs to present" Dressing as others in his set dresses is part of this survival of the individunl. says Dr. Hoach. The teenager seeks ap· proval or his peers. ASCENDING TO FASHION l\le mbers of Our L::idy Queen of An.g~l s Gu~ld climb a stairway to the ll envenly 1-~ashion Sho\v on .l\1arch 18. Assisting \V1th plans are (le(\ to ri ght) l\lrs. Ches ler G iilord . co-c·hR1r1nan ; ~Ir~. E.rnest S~an­ lon and J\lrs. John Doyle. c·o1n1nittec n1 cn1bcrs. The event \\'Ill be 111 thC' Nc11· porter Inn. Collegiates To Russia The his1orir city ol \..t)n· \ngrad' wUl be hOml' this spring for five Univers1I)' ol California student:;, part of th<' fira:L group of A m c r i c o n undergraduates lo spend fl semester hi the Sovlct Union . They will join 2<1 other Amer:lce n studenU for a 16· week stay al L eningrad University. "'here they ll'ill ltudy Russian language and literature. Dan ce Club Square Riggers Squnr<' Dance Club "swings out · f'very Wedne.,day &I 8 p.n1. In th(! "First ~ltlthodlsL Church, C08l8· ~1es1 . Traveling for Studies The~ 11111 hve in sl11d1·nt dornlllOrlCS \\'l\h ll ll ~S I a f\ roorn-matc~ Because 111 1h1.· 1n :i n 1 language!! spoken by the 100 natlonnlitics cornpris1ng 1he Sovltt Union . th(' Soviets havr <Jc1clopct.1 t'\cCllcnl lang11a11c 1enching techniques and tei.t- books. Sit)' Dr. A 1 b r r t l\asp1n. associate professor of Hussi:ir. at th(' UC. S11nt.1 Barban~ campu s. ··1 expert our s1urtcnls to rel urn speaking like natives." hr. .!laid. The 1>rugr;'lm i1S M:hedull!<I In run for thrL'f and one·hnlf vcilrt<. wlth l\vo different i!:rrnaps nf 1\rncrlcci n 11tuden1:s ch05t'll r(lch yc:ir 10 study nl L.cnlnJtrad Uni1c nitr Fashions Heavenly Tht• <innual bcnerlt luncheon and Heavenly F ashion Show sponsored by Out Lady Queen or Angels Guild will begin al 11 30 a.n1. in the Ne1vporti:r Inn on \Vednesdav. March 18. Sp rt,1g fa!hloii.!! wlll be presented by Lido Foshlon~ 1uut n11xlelcd by g 11 l l d 1nen1bcrs and men,bcrs of the School fllothers' Auxil ln1·y ,\!rs. \Vl\Jian1 H. Rnn1\)o, chairtnan of the sho.,.,·. will be aS!isted by ~·lrs. Che!!tcr GH· ford Ser\·1ng on the co1nmlttee arr lhc ~1mes. John L. Con· nell, Charles Cood!ng. Ed'-''Brd A Thomi.s. John o or 1 e , (.;l'Orge II Kuhc , .John J\t•ho~. F.dg:1r I. C:irpentcr a n d ~rnest Scanlon. !E(ll1(1r's Nolt· • 11191 Gt'l'01MI le Co.I• ~1. l'lt"""°'' 11-.tCI!, LI'""' llt•<h tml MIHlori Vl91a pt rtnl•ltlQ\- t t C<t•nllllloM "'Ur •011e•• In th• D.o\ILY PILOT ... ~h .. ta. 1nro.m.ri.... mv.I lie •1Ktf¥H br lllt 50C~1Y llf. Nrlmen1. Dt br m1Hl111 or Otllwtl,.. tooy lo Mr$. Gtnll 5mnh, 2Ct2 C1n-111i. PIKt , Ntw-1 11 ... Cll, !IV ~ D,m, FrldlY for OtJb(i(tllon Wfllntl<lty.I Fourth District PT A Mn. E. D. \\'lllmore President C0t.11NG UP: Lun c h co n meetipg Thursday, f.1areh 19, In the San Clemente Inn. Co-hosted b y Capistrano Unified and Laguna Beach Unified councils, registra-- tio11 will begin at 9 a.m. l'\leeting ·will be called to order at 9:30. Election of of- ficers slated. Mrs. Herbert 0 . Carne wa, chairman of the noni.inatlng con1mittee. Topic of the program is lllghway Under Construction -New PrOgrams in the Schools. Guest speakers are Ed Kincaid, director of humanities, San Clemente lfigh School : Joh n Porter and "Service Gents" or tiiiagnolia High School, and J\trs. John f'Jsher, public in- formation and 'community resources, Troy High School. f' u 11 e r t o n . Reservation deadline is noon Friday. ~larch 13. In the Fourth District PT A office. Adams PTA !\lrs. Paul Ohlsen President CO~tlNG UP : Movie "Alice in \Vonderland" 1vl\I be shoy,·n al 3:15 p.m. Friday. !\larch 13. in the mu jtipurpose roo1n. Preschoolers a r (' v•elcome "·he,1 accompanied by an adult or responsible child. Popcorn available. Bay View PTA !\lrs. \\'illlam Fr6lll President COt.·IJNG UP: Old and New Fashion Show will be featured at the general rneeting Tuesday, !\1arch 17. rollowed by a dessert tasting party. Parents attending arc asked to bring their fa vorite dessert for others lo sample. REPORTS: Arbor Day pro- gram took place last Friday. ~1agnolia tree was presented l.O the schobl by the PTA. Students in third grade received a small tree frorn lhC' Newport Beach Ki\\•anis Club. Bear PFO !\lrs. Jobn Hacker President C0!\11NG UP: Board meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at school. . . General meeting with science and art fair Thursday. i\lerch 19. PFO 11·ill a"'ard ribbons. California PT A 1\lrs. Ted Brisso President C0~11 NG UP : What I-las !\lid· die School Accomplished will be the theme or the pnnel discussion at !he 7:30 p.111. unit meeting Tue s d a ~· , !\larch 17. Sixth At ad c teachers from Te \V i n k l e School \Vlll com prise th<' panel. Fl ag ceremony "'ill be presented by Bro1\•nic Troop 1232 11.1der lhe direc· lion of l\lfs. Robert L. Srni!h and !\lrs. tlenry Buther. Nomina1ing committee. "'ill present the slate of of· ficers. Serving on the com- mittee \\'ilh La rry Bers<:h arc • the ~1mes. \\'il!ian1 \\!a lker. Lowell Goar. Ralph Bourbon and Ralph Odc1111·ald. !\lt·s . Joe t.·leng is ao alternate and \\lllli t1n1 Hnnillton. principal w i 11 serve as advisor. . . ~lex· ican Fiesta is the therne of the u.1n11nl falher-5011 b:in- quet at 6:30 p.m. rrldny. !\l arch 20 . in the multipurpose room. Herb Livsey, basketball coach nr Ornnge Coast ColJE'ge 11·ill ~peak. Canyon PTA Ken \\'a&ner Prtsident t:O~ll NG UP: Annual carni11al lrom 10 a.m. to 2:30 p.111 Saturday. ~1arch 14. Spe cial att ractions "·ill be country stort!, gold fi!lh booth :ind pick pocket man. REPORTS : Cub Seoul P:ick :ms, sponsored by lhc PTA. enjoyed a Blue and Gold tlin · 11cr. College Pk . PT A ~trs. Jame& Sch:1fl'r President CO~tlNG UP : ldenllrication tag sale ~'iii conti n ue through Friday. ~1 a r ch 1 20 ... Paper drf\'e from B a.rn. to 5 p.1n. Saturdn~·. i\-larch 14 . Delivrr pnpers 10 lhe parking lot lll Costa ~frsa High School. Proceeds "'ill be donated to tilt Justin Ogata fu nd. REP ORTS· Newpnrt·J'l.1c!ia Unified School D 1 s t r I c t ntc-nce mobil unil presented the progrnn1 Jn. no\·alions In Sclenc·t> ~1t 1111• u.11 t mee!ln~ las1 ru,11h' ()(. (Koe_~ el'!ctcd lo servr 111·t• th~ ~l1T1"s. Carlton Ru:s:scl!. ... ~ -- I ' Fathers and Sons Make Trail Along the Rail F'a th ers and sons are heeding the call to "ride the rails" at lhe annual PFO school play day Saturday, r-.·larch 14, from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. at Harbor Vie1v School. Enjoy ing a hobo lunch are John Stock1v ell. Steve Cuniff and Bo b Cuniff (left to right). The day president : Dale Jeffries, .Ja1nes ~1orrow, The I Glascock and Jay ~1cKarns. vice presiClents: Ri char d Groff and James Curran, s ec r etarie s; \Varren Cavanagh. treasu rer. and \\lilliam f\1odic. historian. CdM High PTA l\lrs. Robert Ktn1blt President JlEPORTS: Spring 1\'as the Lheme chosen by fol r s . t.olic hael f.1anahan. ho.q\ess for the Founders Da y lu,1chcon. Aniong lhc 60 guests attending were ~1rs. liarlh Berg!lon, school board president: Dr. Norm an Loats, assistant suµcnn- tcnt.lent of the l'iCl\'l){)rl-~\esa Unified School District: pasL presidents: past honorary life rttipicnt s: counselors, and lcachers. Lenn ~l eeks, prineipal 11•as a"•arded th e honorary lire mC'mbcrship. Officers i\1stalled "·ere the !\ln1es. Lo\vell S n1 i I h , presiden!: David Fox . John nurkee and Hoben Ken1ble. \•ice pre si de n t s : Nat Bercovit7. and T h u r I Ravenserofl sccretnrics: Donn 1\1ichacls. histori:in. and 1\1r. and 1\lrs. Albert Kelso. treasurers CM ·High PTA ~Hrs. !\latthc\\' \\'aidelleh President co:i.11NG UP : Pape r bat' k books and other articles arc needed ror the run1magc ~al~ 1'.lrs. Allon Hooper. 1l'ays and 111e<1ns chairinan ;11 54:,.5973 mny be eunlacted for pickup or donations. Dav is PT A !\trs. Gran! Bertolrl Prc,idcnl REl'Ol\TS \\'h;il's It All About 1r11s l he topll' or Frank Lopes. pnnc1p:il of Cosla l\lcsa lligh School at lnsl 11·eek's unit meeting. Of- ficers t'lee1cd are the i\1n1cs r.ranl Berto let, president: r.cne Pa\lerson, Ourlcish Burshc111 <1nd P1n1 I !)11mi1in. 1icr pre~idl'nt'i: J. \\1. Har· rison. trt·asurcr; \\'arren 1\yers nnt.I \Va lier Greu lc. ~"-tr e t a r i c s : \Villiam Kiester, h1~toria11, a Ion g \l'i\h ~lnrtin N i c h o ! s . ~iuditor. t.lcmbcrs appointed to rC'v1se the b~·-lf11vs arc 1hr l\\1nes. \Vil!i;in1 Ballentine. Denn E. '\'ells, R i I e y G.11ynor. Donald llcndricks. Hic hard Or1 lirb and Hurshen1. Estanc;a PTA ~lrs . Rolph Bueg~l President C0:0.11'.'JC UP Asso<.'latlon rTiceting at 7 .:10 p.111. i\lon- d;iy. ~·l1trch 16 . in the loru111. Election of ofllct•rs \\'Ill !3kl' pl3Ci'. Progrn1n will rt•ntul'C a studcnt·parcnt pn.u!I heaft· ('d by Ch11r!cs .Johns1on and ~lichacJ Stark. teachers. deba!lng the 1hen1e Student Po"·er· Right an ct 1 or Hcsponsibllity St u de n I ~ frl'ln1 !\frs C L. "'off's cln~~ 11 il! dcba1e. ~:Mh1nclo'~ ll"'\\ ortl1cstrn wlll p r o ~ i d c ~1 1'@rl11 ~11l('('t l11n~. ;1n- nounced !\1r:1 Aldis .John~on. progra1n c h a i r tn a n . Befrcshments 11· i 11 bt• served. Harbor View PFO l\lrs. Charles S\\'Ord President CO:-Ol!NG . UP : .fathers <1nd :;ons will catch a fast freight lo the Hobo Ride the Rail:-. d;iy fron1 II a.n1. to 3 p n1 . Saturday, ~larch It al school. Events are being handled by the fi tessrs. and ~lines. Robert Cuniff, David Newbro. Ja1ncs Bu r lo n , \Villiam \\'right. .J oh n Stockwell, Lvle E v a n s, Theodore Beliakoff. Robert Sparks, Tom Ne sson, C. C. Rutko\\'ski and Barney Car· roll _ Parents or students in fourth grades arc invited to attend a grade level rneeting from 2 to 3 p.rn. \\lednesday, f\1:lrch 18. in \!H' Corona del f.iar home of ~·lrs. William Lyon . Ka is er PTA i\lrs. Johnny ~l ockC'y President C0~11NG UP: Kaiser Family 1\'ight at 7:30 p.m. ton1orrow for girls and parf'nl and Friday, i\1arch 13. fo r boys and parent in tile n1u!tl · purpose roorn. i\I o v i e s and open discussion "'ill be led b}r area doctors. REPORTS: Honorary Ii f e awards "'ere presented lo Larry Alford, ''ice principal and Selim Franklin. Officers circled lo ser1·e are the ~·Imes. Johnny ~'f a c k e y, pl'esidcnt. Ted Barben. Roy nina!di and Paul \Valen;, vice presidents: Tun y Lenore and Fr an k 11 n . ~ecret aries; J ohn Convey treasurer: Frank ~tu1lcr. historian sind Har ry Kohaut. p11rliamentarilln. Eu g enc Bedford \viii serve a s auditor. Monte Vista PT A 1\lrs. l\1ork ~!orris President CO.\llNG UP· Board tneet!ng 111 9 a.m. lornorro1\' in the multipurpose room ... Jus- tin Ogatn rund paper dril'r Friday. ~larch 13 Newport Hts . PTA :'tfrs. David Chavis Prcsid<>,11 CO~llNli UP: Hol:iby Sho1r and spring ;1 rt exhibit n1ay be vie11•ed a1 the general 1neeling at 7:30 p . m . Tuesday. ~1nrch 17. in the e<1 tr1 ori11m . Schrdulrd is !ht• l'lcction c1t officer:-:ind n presenla1ion b) lhc ln• ~trumental n1u~ic cla~s HEPOHTS : Serving on the commiltec lo purchase a controlled reading t•entcr ::ind tapes are lhl' ~lines. David Ch :i \' i ::; , ~l ax Hnrthcock. L<111Tr11cc Pcoisc 1111d Rnlph \\'hllfu rd. NH High PTA !\lrs. Rohf'rt ll eli.rl President CO:O.llNG UP · A n n 11 a I ~holarshl p dr1\·c t , bt• .. ,.r;, stude nts of thr ctrss of ID711 began tocln;.t. REPORTS rounder~ 11;11 luncheon 1111d bu • 1 n r ~ \ n1eeting took place 10 lhe \Vil! feature lunch. games and prizes including en· gint!er hats, comic books c:1nd round·trip tickets fro1n Sa nta ,.\na to San Juan Capist rano on lhe Santa Fe Railroad. 110111(' or r.trs. Joe Quinn. Jl onorary scrv1ce a11;1rd was presentf.'d to .lack l\inb. assistant princip:il. Paularino PT A i\1rs. /\'igel Bailey President CO:\Jli-.:<: UP i\lr~. .John Grauer. ,,_.'-l}lo ~ind 1nean~ cha1 nnan unit cs students tu the Chuck .Jones Show <il JO:l!i a.nl. S;1 lurd11y. ~l areh 14. on thr school grnunds. Tick c 1s JO e'e n!~: refreshments ll'lll IJ,. ~nltl t :nu n1ecling at 9.30 a rn. Tuesd:iy. !\larch 17. 111 the n1u!tipurpose room . Non1inating cornmillce 1~ill prese'l\t lhe ~late of nrricers: eleclion 1\111 foll ow HEPORTS i\1rs. !\I a r v c I Carlson. first grndc tr;1t.:hr r was presented the honorary life 111ernbcrship <11 !hr 1nothcr-daughtcr r a sh i 0 n sho1\•. .i\!rs. Ronald Nicols r('portcd the upconiing book <lri\'e will be in April San Cl eme nte PTA ~!rs. Al:1n Clark President C0\1\N(; UP: Our \\':!,\' JS thr then1e uf the Triton Cnper ;11 8 p.m. Frid<J )' and Satllrd,1:.-. ;\1art:h l:l and 14, in thi'.' Tea for Two cafele1'in. Rand al! l{arm on \\'ill sel !he stage. l\.1adrig11I singers, stage band and !Jrarna Club will pe rform. St. John Aux. !\lrs. Den11is \Yalz President GO.\llNG UP· The R e v . Anlh uny i\ll'Gowan will con- duCl <1 i.1>1ritual Lenten pro- gr;1n1 al 8 p.n1 general rnerting ton1orrow i n the ~chool hall. ... Am1ual run1mage sale lro1n 9 a.m. lo 4 p rn . Saturday. ~larch 21. DQnnlions may be picked 11p by conlacling ~l rs, Joseph Schulist at ~f>-41 1 4 . REPORTS · i\lrs. Klau s Gruenbeck. trading stamp chairn1an has purchased a 1 aril•ly of linens an d ap- pliances lur lhc Con1'efll \Nilso n PT A \!rs. 1• ill':,.11 Outlaw J'rc~idl'nl 1 ·u\ll~lo t.:P Paper drivr tron1 nO•)n ~lo,1day and ·1Pl'itl;11. 'ltt n.:h 16 and 17. .1 I 'lhool Scien~ Lur 11ward~ 11 111 b e pt·c~t>nt1·d a1 th0 a~~ociation 1n\•r11ng at i p.111 Thursday. \!nt\'h !II CL1pc<1 ke and ('11okit• ~u ll' Frid<ty. ~·larch 20. • usttn f·'r.rt'll n~d Lu1d n l'hrtrord 1lcft lo r1ght1 coi n· p:.1rc antique outftl'i t"nd 11c11 ' 111111nn1le 1nade it ~a~1,,., .. lor lhc U,1\' \·ic1\ ~t·hon!'!> C)l d anti Ne\Y ).';_1:;!11011 Sho\1•. 'I hi:· 1'1' \ :-pon\orcd event \l'i\I take place at 7 p.n1 . 'l'uc-s day, i\larr h Ii. • -. ' , DAILY PILOT 37 Are Shoppers · Trading ' Sa vings for ·Stamps? LOS ANGELES (AP) casblnsfeadofstampsonthul one book mny rct11il ;-1! :1h11u! 1t ·~1'".J 1'1u n1;itrs PJrh ey, they sav_ , ofrebales,somcmarkets have stand. to lhe~vlng lnst 1nct.Df shop. What's best for the shopper. $120. $3 b 1t•k "'ortn $\Iii Stort> olfu:ials !iay culling cl.It all their prices when He said studies by his com· pers. '"' Trading stamps -or a partial The stamps, howev er. A spol check or a Blut Ch111 llu l, JS !>Ullli.' mo r k e t oul sl.u np:. doesn't h u r ~ st.amp giving was ended. pany have shown that 1nost In most cases, California · cash refwid on his purcbase1? usually let you buy more at catalog shq\\cd · that a n11t1J111 rs ro1nt oul. these sav· bu~ t n es s b ec ause n f The stores also say rebates markets want to keep lradlng stores offering a choice have The stamp company of· the redemption stores than tctherbnll sel'that co•ts Llirrt• !'It-:.• 011.r \\!ll'k II \·uu i.avc Ufl cu,1urner:.' cost.(1·11hobia. -and discounted prices -stamps -and Lhose off of had only about five percent ol- Eiclal: "Trading stamps are you could buy al retail for books can lie purcha:.cd <it J, 1 ;in 1!em you \l:•nlcd to bu) St1;1171X>rs w~lcon1c the are as big a promotional lure them will eventually go back their customers purer the paper gold. Each ·book is '1.80. retail for $5.47, n1akini; c,u·h 1,1 111<: flr.•t plu~·c l'l11n\natJt•n of i.lnmps because as stamps. because cash rebates and dls-cash and only a few mo~ worth about $3 ln retail goods. The reason. Sta1np com-book worth $1.82. If )UU ~pl·ntl :.tJn1p~ for <1n lht1r cost is usually passed Donald Koeppel, Blue Chip c.'Ounts are loo much trouble. drawn to the trimmed price Stampa are good in-panies buytheircatalogitems But for Wt books you ci111 l~t·1n }o_tl\\UUltin'L spcndn1on. along in higher prices, one stamps chairm11n, disagree! He said that stamps also he said Blue Chip 5tatiJIUc velltments." wholesale. An item that costs get a spinning ,..,heel i'etJillng 1•y on·,"}'Otr'ru-nol sa ving 1non· 1nan<1ger sa id. Indeed, instead with the defecting markels' ·have an irresistible attraction showf!d. / The market owners: "Mosl'l__;___:_ _________ _::c_--'--_.::...._ ___ ~_:_--'..:..:_'-'-=-'---"--"----"-----------------"----='----.c-'-'---'----'-'--"-'--"''-'-----_. people don't like the licking apd slic king. and while stamps have bUying powe r, it's no good 'If the buyer 'uses stamps to get something he wouldn't spend money on." Some California markets, including the 62-store Ralphs Market chain. . a r e ex- perimenting with a stamp-or- refund choice. Ralphs, for instance, asks Its customers if they want Blue Chip, stamps - a minimum of IO for a $1 purchase -or a rebate of I .S percent, IS cents on a $10 purchase, One out of every eight buye rs opts for the rebate, spokesmen say. By giving the cash, the markets are returning to the consumer nearly as much as the stamps cost them. But whi le no-stamp shoppers may like thelr discounts, they are probably also robbing themselves of greater buying power ~ with one big ex- ception, arithmetic shows. A trading stamp b o o k usually holds 1,200 stamps, r e pr esenti n g $120 Jn purchases. At markets offering the rebates, you could get $1.80 in Tots' Set 7253 Classic cardigans are spring "must-haves", Knit no\v! K~t sis ter -brJ ther cardigans of knitting worsted in one piece from neck down in stockinette stitch with rib- bing. Cozy. easy. Pattern 725.1: sizes 2-12 included. FIFTY CENTS for each pat- tern -add 25 cents for each pattern for Air ~1ai l a.nd Special Handling; othe rY.'1se third<lass delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Alice Brooks Daily Pilot, Needlecraft Dept .. 105, Box 163, Old Chelsea Station. New York, N. Y. 1001 \. Print Name, Address, Zip, P a t l e r n Number. BIG 1970 Needlecraft Cat.alog -40 pages, 200 designs,·3 free patterns! Knit, crochet fa shions. Quilt, em- broider, weave. Toys. gifts'. Send 50 cent s. N,E\Y! Compltle Afghan Book -marvelous afghans, lashlons, pillows, baby gifts, more! $1. ''10 instant Gi ll s" Book , 50 Ct'nls. "16 JUfy Rug11!" to knit. crochet, wea \'e, sew, hook. 50 cents. Book of 11 Prize Afghans. 50 cents. Bargain! Quilt Book 1 has 16 beautiful patterns. 50 cents. Book 3. "Quilts for Today's Living". 15 patterns. 50 cents. Put Punch In Parties Put punch in winter parties wlt.h this favorite f r o m Fr1nce's Champagne district. Place a large block of clear, hard-frozen i~ In a large punch bowl. Pour over it 8 ounces each of apricot and maraschino Ji. queurs and orange curacao, 1 _J~ch of sherry and t cognac anil 2 lfUIU'tr--vf 'club llOda. Stir gently to blend. Float slices of fresh lrult !,n punch for garnish. Just before serving, gently stir In 4 bottles of chilled champagne. ltfakes 70 ('11 cup) servings. PRI CES GOOD MARCH 11 thru MARCH 17 LOIN END We're Going RIB END CUT f R ~S H POR K FRESH' CALI FORNIA ' ._.IC:NIC CUT·UP R·OAST FRYERS ' : c PORK NECK BONES '""h ............. lb 3S1 SMOKED HAM HOCKS ~';.":. ..... lb.6S1 "Whole Hog" O n Thi s Pork Sol e LB. PORK SP ARERIBS ,,,,,.,,M..., ..... 1b 691 PORK LINK SAUSAGE ,:~;;:; 2/69• LEG 0 PORK ::;~;:;:.:: ................ 1b. 76' ARMOUR SLICED BACON 7~.~~:'.1:.J31 Rib Pork Chops c""'"'' .. lb. 79 1 Pork St · alt "'''c'' ........... 1b 79 1 FRESH PORK LIVER .................. 1b.SS1 CORNED BEEF ~i.:X:,'.'.".'.~'. .............. 1b 1°' . Loin Pork Chops c.,, .. c, ... 1b 89 1 Pork Bult Roosi,.m; ,,,.,,, 10 761 FRESH SLAB BACON ................ lb.731 liced Side Pork "~h ...... 1b 69' f>ork Cutlefsr.·J,.•. 1. ....... 1b 98c · SPARE RIB569c JANET LEE 4ROL L PACK Tissue CANN ED PO P 10/8 PAPER TOWELS 1J~~g~;~L ...... s~ ...... s~ FACIAL n ssurs i,~~~6.... . ....... ~~. Albertson's FLOUR .......................... 4~ Albertson's DE TE G~ FIRST of th~ SEASON Ext r DELICIOUS APPLES I s f U~l 6:.it~I .... I ~ •• Reduced Specials ~roft Jet !\If MARSHMA LLOWS .. 1b.25~ Oecorot1v11 Redwood 169 BARK & MULCH ....... bo. O;;,hwcsller O!!t11rg11nt FINISH ................. ,,,._49 1 To:ll10V.i's DOG FOOD ...................... 91 Chun King Divider Poe CHINESE FOOD~~~·;,;"75 1 tS. PKG. LUNCH MEATS :'::;::.'."~'.~'.'.':o ... ,. 49 c CHIPPED BEEF·~··'--"•··········· 57< DRESSING ::~.!''.'. .................. 33< SALADS .~:.";1"·:::~".".' .....••.•••.•••• o._ 39( PARTY DIPS ;-:"~'"'~'. ........... 7/69< KR AF T CHEESE g=~";'.::::"""',,~79 < Cell>)' H°'~ •• , ••, Frozen Fo ods EA T PIES VA~~EE/r~~:.;oz. 31100 OR CHICKEN ••• FRUIT PIES ~::::::~ ......... 3/89 PUDDING ,,~.,.Cod~d 38 < C•to"'J' 17-oL lob,,,,,,,,,, CASSERO LES ::.<:,:::•C:,::-.... 3/1. POPSICLES :t:.!::!.'.'."! ......... 4/1. COUNTRY STYLE·LB, PAN READY SANDABS .................... 1b.l°' BROKEN SHRIMP ;_:-:;,~~, .................... lb.l1' FRIED HALIBUT Vood<Ko~pB~< .................. 89 1' GLAZED/SUGAR ED DONUTS 20/ 1°0 8un°s s/39~ Plain or Seeded Hard Rolls ............. ,,391 Chocolate Chip Cookies '°'""· .......... 4.o,,l .. Dutch Crunch Bread ......... Hb •~·,_ti 3/1.. "BURGIE" DRAFT BEER 6~~~~z· 139 HALF G.A.t. ALL PINK CHABLIS AMERICAN ..... 951 NEW PIELS BEER YORK6/12·0Z ....... 851 Cana di an Mist SAVE 1.00 Conodo lmpor1 QT, King George Scotch SAVf 1.00 l/2G.-.t. Albertson's Bourbon 86PROOF BOTTLED IN KENTUCKY . Smirnoff Vodka SAVE 1.16 HA.IF GAl. FRESH GREEN LEA F SPINACHb, .... . . 101 FRESH CRISP CARROTS ~;'r;,~1~~'........ . .. 2 /251 J Crest Fomi!)' !' _.. R · r .. 1hp"'.' ·: .. ·· ...... 111 ;EVE y 539 1099 3!~H 1049 DAY IS-BARGAIN. DAY: •• AT : FROST FREE ARTICHOKES Cl•ool'~h ............ 2 /291 NABISCO SPRECKELS WH ITE !<ING CHEESE: 42~ SROWNOR 17i FLINGS .5·0Z. POWDER SUCAR UI. WA1EJ' 6 "'! SOfilNE~ GT. Prell Cooe:•ntrcile 99 1 • famlly Shampoo • . . . • • • i Pr1n liqui d 1 ' Fomily Shampoo •... , .. 99 ' ' R1>yol Mo!e1ty ~ Panty Hose ............ , 99t • White King GRANUlATEO 731 SOAP-OIANf Huntington · Beach -1 5511 So. Edwo rds Laguna Beach-700 So. Coast Hwy. Fc~ntain Valloy-16042 Magn olia CAMAY &ATH 16 IVORY 4 P"SONA1 294 BARS MR. CLEAN 28·0Z. 71 4 Huntington Beach -8911 Adams Corona del Mar-3049 Coast Hwy. < ' ~ ·•· • :· .. ' .... ;~ .. • f H DAILY PILOT Wrdnt$d.1y, /llarell 11, 1970 ' • •• \ \ New Kind of Gran dmother Kitchen Star Likes New Props lly JOHNA BUNN NEW YORK -"The image ol the CT&ndmother has to be changed! ln tbe papers they uy, 'they're going l o grandma's," and you have a d'ar Jillie old lady with the hair done up in a nob on lop of her head, spectacles on the end ol her nose, wearing an apro'tl and cooking over an old fash ioned stove, "Well, th'ere's not a grandmother like thal. That's' you r grea l -great· gra ndmother! 1 ll1ish they'd CHANGE GRANDMA'S IMAGE Piggy Wood Nectar of Gods Livens Flavor get that straight • c a u s e grandmothers today are not that kind at all," exclaimed Peggy Wood, a grandmother and thespian whose career has spanned some 60 seasons. MIS!I \Vood aJso disagrees with those who belleve today's women don't have the same stuff as their grandmothers. She reminded us that "our grandmothers marched up F ifth Avenue loo -for woman's suffrage. And I think lhe young women do almost as much as their grandmothers. Even wi th c0n-_ venience foods and labor sav- ing devices more and more women are getting back into the kitchen because there has been no one to do it for them since the start o? \Vorld \Var 11." STARS IN KITCHEN Although she likes to star In the kitchen the aclress is not sentimenta l abouti-holding on to old props. Du ring her re- cent move to their "bed-sit" sized apartment {with he r husba nd, business executive Willia m Walling ) on lowe r Park Avenue , she had the herculean task of reducing thelr possessions. "I like nice new pols and pans. I don't want any old beat up things. Of course, I'd like to have back one huge iron skillet that seems Lo have disappeared, but I'm sure there are others.'' She praised the virtues of coo king in cast iron "''are, but said "It's a great n1istakc to ha v c anyUting with copper bottoms. You always ha ve to shine the bottoms.'' Some day i;he would like Lo dear. I can but I don't necessarily! "Cooking is a creative art and is very re\\·arding to everybody who does it. But nowdays good cooks are hard to come by." Beyond lhe kitchen, we ask· ed about any unfilled am· bilious the actress might have. •·J've never wal ked on a tight rope." she smiled. "I saw Charlie Chaplin 's film. 'The Circus' the other night. I don't know \\'hen I've enjoyed anything so much. I \\'SS limp I laughed so hard! I always \\'ould have liked to sing in the opera, but that \\'as not possi· ble," Peggy's secret for longevity is, "The pious llfe J lead! Being busy, I suppose. I think not being busy \\·ould 'i''ither you away. Only recently. I've seen a group of women I didn 't .know existed anymore. They play bridge or poker. have dinners or go to the horse .-races once in a while and that's all. They have lots of money and clot hes. They seem to enjoy it," she said tolerantly. "But almost every woman I know, of any age, rich or poor Is doing something: working in a hospital o r rehabilltation cente r. thrift shop or running something or helping run something, but contributing in soine way. I've never heard of lhis particular group 0 r \\'omen offering the ir services to anything." "It 's funny, too, for much busier people always seem to be able to find time to COil· tribute something. There's a famous story about Helen Hayes who 's been busy all her life. Her late husband said yea rs ago. 'You know when rhe Lord God calls Helen, I'm sure she will say, 'Well let me look at my book and I'll see \\•hat I can do!' '' compllc her cookbook. "I have ~o many lovely Norwegian rceipcs. It's a1nazi ng "'hat an education you can gel when you rub shoulders wilh a peo- ple and their country." Her tasle for Norwegian fare dales back to the time v.·hen she PEGGY._.)YOOD'S TOMATO starred in the tcleseries "I CRAB SOUP flcmember !\1ama." 2 101.-i ounce cans condensed "They are marvelou s cooks tomato soup and their pastries a re I 10~~ ounce can pea soup By TOM HOGE u~ed. the ham must be soaked delicious! There arc l h c l J0 1i ounce can chicken Jn cold \Valer for 12 hours. wonderful dishes n1adc \Vllh broth There are few meat or fish the cream you can beat up 1111· 2 71~ ounce cans crab meat dishes thal are not enhanced \Vhen a modern, cured ham ti! lhe buttl'r comes and then tor substitute froia1 crab by a few dollops from your is used, soaking is un-you take that off. Do you n1ea1 I necessary. k I' 1 t favorite wine bottle while they now, ve never seen a laL can 1va er To make the stuffing : cut Nor'"'g·an an Salt freshly ground pepper are simmering on the stove. • 1 m or \vo1na n. , out about 1h lb. ham to make They bum up their food to lo taste It isn't a question of spiking a cavity and work the ham keep "'am1 in that climate." ';cup dry sherry the food. sin« a I coho I tl1rough a food grinder, During her "leisure time" - evaporates as soon as 1l Blend thoroughly \Vi th we ivondercd when that might J>ilute tomato, pea soup lvith reaches the boiling point. pecans, 1 chopped onion. truf· be for she was about to open chicken broth in saucepan . Like thyme or any other fies, 2 bay leaves (crumbled). in an orf·Broadway production Add water (add more if a seasoning , wine is used to thyme, 1 teaspoon sage, 1 of ·'·rhe f\·Iadi\·oman 0 f th inner soup is preferred). round out the flavor. teaspoon ground c Io v es , Chaillol" _ she 's in 8 de l-leat un til bubbling, stirring. Thia does not. mean th at you cayc.nne and Madeira. preserves. jellies a·nd pickles Ad d crab meat, reheat to should buy the cheapest wine Pack into ham cavity, sew· for friends. si111mering, stirring. Season ,to available in the mistaken ing or ske11·ering il securely. "t>.fy husll;:ind is a grand ta ste 'i''ith salt, freshly ground belief that, since it is boiled, it Put these seasonings on the cook . I-le ma kes b r ead s, pepper. Add sherry just before doesn't matter. ham : J chopped onion, 2 bay crepes, magnificent things sel'ving. Spoon into soup Bear in mind the fact that a leaves. I teaspoon sage. J ii•ith chicken breasts and all plates. Serve alone as first wine that is too sweet or too teaspoon cloves. the th ings that men are sup-t luncheO'll: or supper) course sour l'or your drinking taste. Sew a cloth securely around posed to do ivell. He makes \\"ilh croutons or toasted will hardl y improve the en· ham and place it in a large soup that staggers people. One rounds f I a v or c d with tree kellle. d · d P;:1rmesan cheese. Serves 4. As. a matter ol lact, oncc -1·1 dd ay \\'e were invite to sotTI<'· Alt th ht F · h A enough water lo cuver . one's house for an informal er oug s: or a rte er cooks down, the taste of 1v1ne Add the remaining chopped dinner in the country. He said. stock. prepare homemade becomes considerably more onion, bay leaves. sa ge, '\Ve'll brhlg the soup. ?'II \\'Ork chicken stock: chicken pronounced. cloves, the whole unpared ap-all day over a hot stove!' Five carcass, V.'aler. few crushed Jn short, never pour h1to the plr and the syrup minutes before we were l.o peppe rcorns. stalk cc I e r y pot a wine you \I OUldn't pour Bring lo a boil. cover, leave, he measured out 3 cups (with leaves), small piece lnl-0 your glass. reduce heat and simmer for or V-8 juice and 1 cup chopped ca rrot, small onion. TI1e old adage of white "'ine about six hours or until Vt'rniouth. You can have il hol peeled and sliced, several ~~hi;;~~~l;;~:y a~~~~~r ;i~ le~~:~ ham to cooi in the Ji. or cold and irs gorgeous." ~~~g~a~~rs:y·ta~~~~h S~~::;:~ arc going to drink it with your quid. When cool, remove rind. GOOD COOKS RARE slo"·ly several hours. Cool to meal or cook with it. pal ham v•i th a mixture of Like many contemporary room temperature, st r a I n \Vllh the exception of fish brown sugar and crumbs, and t'OOks, she doesn't always cook ( d is card bones and which Is gene ral ly better cook· bake in a preheatrd 375 degree fron1 scratch. \Vhen as kc d vegctablcsl . Refrigerate lif· ed \1·ith white wine, both red oven until su rface is "'ell-<1bout prep aring soup from.. ting off fat layer that congeals and while, or rose !or that browned and han1 1s hot. !icra!ch she said, "No, my on the top before ush1g. matter, go equally well \\'ilh ___________________ c..._ ___ .:_ ___ ::.._ __ , chicken, veal or bee!. \\rine cookery b c c a m c popular in Ame rica during the 18th and 19th centuries \\'ilh the i:ttflux of thousands of emigres from the countries of Europe. Pi1any of the flncsl dishes were developed in the kitchens of Louisiana 's Creoles. those descendants of 1-'rench and Spanish seulers. The Creole11 t.'Ombined a Spanish love lor spice v.·ith lhe robust peasant cookery of F ra nce, plus a rew reflnemenls added by wealthy n fugees from the French revolution who I led to this 1 cout'Hry with lheir personal chefs. Who but lhe Creoles could have conceived such a delec-1 table dis h .es Ham Pontalbe with its tongue-tingling stuf· fing or onion and truffles balh· ed in Madeira wine? BAKED HAM PONT ALBA Jf..pound ham baked 4 cups shelled pecans ground 3 onions chopped fine l smaU can trullles cut Jn pieces I bay leaves 2 sprigs (\i: tea 5poo11 dncd l thyme .1 teasj>OOOI dried sage I teaepoon1 ground clo,·t~ Y. teaspoon cayenoo \i cup "Mactelr:11 wine SOUP OF'fHE MONTH Don 't let another day go by without sitting down to Pepperidge Farm• New England Clam Chowder. Succulent salt·water clams simmered in a cream-rich broth. Pearled with snowy potatoes and on ions. Heat up. It's the best eating in a month of soupdays! • • . . ... ___L.apple __ _ -- 1 cup cane syrup Brown !iugar l'lrnc dry bn!1d crumbs '*)'our butc.her to bone !ht .... II • dry. amoked ham i.~---------------------------1 - I I I • PHONE 673.0 360 FOR HOME DELWERY IN OUR DELIVERY AREA PRLCES EFFECTIVE MARCH .12, .13, .IJ • • • • • ... •' .. ...... Organ Serenade For Your Pleasure by Bernice f.ay_ ......... ..... \ • • '1 ' : ... J '• ' ....... LIDO MARKET CENTER NEWPORT BLVD. AT THE ENTRANCE TO LIDO ISLE srocu~ MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE 1 LB. MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE MAXWELL HOUSE COFFEE KNUDSEN LA BON BUTTER C & H Powc;lered or Brown Sugar, " KRAFT VELVEETA CHEESE 2 LI. l LI. LI. J LI. Planters Dry Roast PEANUTS 1.57 2.29 I LB. 2 , .. 29c 1.09 13 oz. AMERICAN BEAUTY SPAGHETTlu oz. 2, .. 29c LAWRY'S SPAGHETTI SAUCE ,,, oz.2, •• 39c Dole SLICED PINEAPPLE Juico P••k 20 ••· 3 DOLE CRUSHED PINEAPPLE Ju1c1 ••••,. oz.3 ,,. '1 DOLE CHUNK PINEAPPLE Jute•••••,. oz.3 ,., '1 Dole Pineapple-Pink Grgpefruit Drink" 3 '1 OZ. for Pillsbury Layer . Cake Mix JELL-0 GELATIN DESSERT MIX SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS Ass't fl1vors ' oz. l Lt. s ... S9c 37c 79~ 79~ 29~ SCOT TOWELS BIG ROLL 3 FOR 8, baltU\f FRUIT-FILLED VARIETY BUNS POT A TO ROLLS RAISIN BREAD BUTTERY, RICH, POUND CAKE SURPRISE SPECIAL! !THURS DAY ONLY! I BRING THE CHILDREN TO SEE, LIVE BABY LION CUBS Loa ned to "' by • J ust 4 Months O ld Lion Country Safari • IN OUR PATIO MARCH 12, 13 , 14 I 0 A.M. to 3 .P.M. 6 ,,. 41c 6 , .. 31c 45c 79c .. ' • • ' • . ; . ' "£~MARKET SiJQ HOME & GIFT SHOP • as a OPEN OAtL Y 9-7. SUN. 9·6 szsu•rs r&t'z• ru-- u Q._ -*• U&OJFU 'J•F 1 17'1 - I ., 'J -------------------...... ...-----........ --~~~--~--~-·-·· ~-------~~-----~--. .,. • , . • L ' JOIN OUR 22 ANNIVERSARY I PRIZES DAILY DRAWINGS FOR $50 CASH $25 GIFT CERTIFICATE !for Gilt Shop or Yacht Shop) 25 SAFARIS for 2 • To Or•ngt County', newest •ttrection LION COUNTRY SAFARI open in9 in June. PLUS 4 CANDLELIGHT DINNERS All the fixinq1 for • 9lor iou1 dinn er party for_., even fhe hors d'oeuvre1 end lloweri! TH IS WEEK CHATEAUBRIAND DINNER Drewil'l9 Fridey, March 13 • Drewings Da ily •t ~ RICHARD'S IS TOP OF THE GRADE U.S.D.A. CHOICE BEEF ROUND STEAKS SWISS STEAK 8r1 ise in bouillon with onions, celery, toma toes and chili 11uce BRAISE IN WINE WITH HERBS BONE-IN POT ROAST WITH A LITTLE CURRY RUMP ROAST SIRLOIN TIP ROAST Tender i nd flavorful Boneless RUMP ROAST Gre11' for •h• borbtcu• Lean Ground BEEF Try , H•mburu•r str•u•n•11 GROUND CHUCK Good for Swedish Me1tb•ll1 Ground Round STEAK ~1~.;1:~ ~~~b~~::· f•r KE,BABS Tender cubes of beef loln for your favorite Shish K1lt1b BAR·M BACON GAic{fe4/rt cl{eaU · STUFFED PORK CHOPS '"''· ;,;,, .......... ; ......... , '"'"'•· CHICKEN A LA ' KIE V le""'"" elo.lt~cn b•tfl!.ti Slufftd wltti ~"~'' & clll'"· ASTORIA COCl(T AIL SHRIMP '"'" ,,, "'''" EXOTIC SEAFOOD AND U.S D.A. PRIME BEEF. ' 98¢LB. 89~LB. 89~LB. 1.39L8. 98~LB. 49¢L8 79¢LB. 89¢LS. 1.49La. 79¢LS. 1.29 "· 1.39 "· 2.98 "· PLEASE ASI< IF YOU NEED SPECIAL CUTS or PERSONAL SERVICE , WE ARE EAGER TO HELP YO U. flower shop FRESHLY CUT CARNATIONS All Colors, Mix 'em Up Moke A Glorious Spring Bouquet 10~ !ACH LIDO YACHT SHOP O~EN DAILY. 9,b Civilized Sofori Menu Melon Bells rolled with Ham Barbecued South Alricon Lobster Ta ils French Fried Zucchini Curry Rice Germ•n Chocol1te Co ke Co ff to Dry S1millon Win• • ANTHONY'S SHOE REPAIR DAILY 9,5,30, SAT . 9.5 I 11 I I I 11 I F~OWER SHOP OPEN DA ILY 9.b D '\/l V rrLOT EXTRA CRISP, WASHINGTON STARKLING DELICIOUS APPLES 6 LBS . $1 THE BEST FOR JUICE, SWiET ARIZONA ORANGES FIRST OF THE SEASON, LARGE , TENDER, ALL-GREEN ASPARAGUS GARDEN-FRESH, LONG, GREEN CRISP Cucumbers 2 "0 R 25¢ FRESH MARSHBURN 'S YOU NG AND TENDER CARROTS i~~~ 3 FOR 2s.~ froim foob BIRDSEYE BREAKFAST Dr-INK AWAKE ·oz KE RN'S SLICED STRAWBERRIES VAN OE KAMPS MACARONI & CHEESE " OI. 3.., s1 VAN DE KAMPS HALIBUT , ••. 79c SARA LEE PECAN COFFEE CAKE 12'1' oz. 69~ BIR.OS EYE PEAS 10 Ot. 6 '" '1 BIRDSEYE CUT CORN ,. 01. 6 '" '1 BIRDSE YE PEAS AND CARROTS "OI. 6 '" '1 BIR DSEYE 4 EARS PER PACKAGE COR N ON THE COB 39c ' BIR DSEYE 10 OZ . SPINACH inbutteruuu 4 FOR $1 BIRDSEYE 9 OZ. FRENCH BEANS ,, ..... ..... 4 '" '1 belfcatessm 5WI SS KNIGHT Cheese Fondue 1• 0 z· 1.25 KRAFT CRACKER BARREL, EXTRA SHARP CHEESE STICK "oz. 79c GALLO SLICED ITALIAN Dry SALAME 6 oz. 69~ IMPORTED FROM GREAT BRITAIN, M<VITIE CHOCOLATE HOME WHEA T BISCUI TS , oz 49c M,VITIE: TART AN SHORTBREAD 1 or. SELL'S Liver Pate 4~ oz. MAI LLARD'S Petite JELLY BEANS True fruit flavori. Buy for Easter Now! Rog. 89c lb. 79~ Lt. (LEANERS DAILY g,30.b , SAT. g,30.5 49c I Lovers of fine vegetables and fruit s ... • this . week come to El Rancho's Garden Patch! ' ' I ' I , .. • ( ' I ' , . .. c . ' ' tfrge sl<1 ths ... no S<:l'a\Vn,,·, litlle thing·~. U1cse ! Bul large, to afford fht\'Ol' and teuderncs:-. ti p lo lip! ~· . 'i:xtra Large ... l\lore goodness ! ... Al penk of pcrfe<.:tion flavor ... because they're frost-kissed! • \ . Red Yams .......................... 2; 29' 5~~·eel ~ulden n1cat: Extra fancy q11alit y <it a prJLC you'd expect tu pay fur lesser ljllality! ' ---' . \Rhubarb .................................. 39~ :ll ot.house gr0,,·n.,. to give you tl1c te11d1~:ue.ss an d fla,01· you prefer .•. extra fancy quality! . . . ' . . ' Super Shopper Meat Specials! .· "" . • • 1:rt>:-h 111.1rk al ii ·l'i 1Pall. :-,,·eel IK:~l ... frn111 ~r.1111 fvd 111irl-\\'t'Stl'r11 11orl-.. Pork Loin LOIN ENO ........... l to 4 LB. !YER!GE ........ .. • WHOLE OR fork Loin Roast ....... R~~~~L! ••••••• 79fb Jidr fah11lou~ fare, St'l'\'f' a tll'lirious llOl'k ru.tst ... lcHn and tc1uler ... and \rith 1\ •.. Cha~. J\rug Chcnin Blanc ... 1.::-ifl fifth ... li~d1t, dry. \\·i nc ... or Chas. l\rug \'in [!015e .•. 1.60 fifth •.. r.ork Loin Roas t ... Conle< Cul. .. $1.09 ib. Spare Ribs ....... FARMER STYLE.. .. 69:. ~or lhc 111ost. itl l\;1,·or :111d 'Hlll(>'. Su 11111ch tnra\y goodness! Ilarbcl:\1C fa\"orite! .; ~irloin Tip Roast ............ $1.39 lb. Ground Round ..................... 89:. J learty l11•1•f •.• l".~.J ) .. -\. t:hlllCl' 11ualit.\'. Lea n and fres h as ground lllC<tl. should be: ,. ~ Mtlantic Lobster ............. $1.89 ib. t crvc il 1,, .,,1, u ... I lo I'' 11,. m·crn~c. ~.· Delicatessen Specia ls! Swordfish Steak .......... 98:. El Rancho 's Fine Liquors! ~ooked Ham .................. . ..... 59• Blue Ribbon Bock Beer .~P1c1$1.25 ~fr)(t0S ... lt·a11 i-lllf'S Ill I Ol, P1llka({t' I IL's lhal litnc or Yl';\I' ! ... Pab:.l ... I:! OG. C:\1111. ·~Heed Beef .................. . ..... 59• Wolfschmidt's Vodka .H1Lrc1L $Q.99 l;co"g ••. "lca11 l'lir·('rl" ••. ~' 1n111cc packaJ.!e. E1 uoy qu:ditr ... nncl the cl:onon1y of big ::-it.cs I ' ~ob's Salad Dressings )'our thl'>lcc ... 'l'ho\1.,11111! :11h1.nrl, F'renrh. lt.ahfln or 4"•tJ La111b\frJZer RrJ ish .•. Jf ouncf.>. butllc~. 3 for s1 ?,ioquelort ........... ,49~ Blue Clieuc .......... 39~ ' Lauder's Scotch ....... Qu1Rr ....... 55.99 ln11l0rlcd ••. authentic a11 a Scolti~h blH'r ! Holiday Times Rum ...... nnH .... $3.99 ~lukc~ a ircaL Daiqu iri I •• , quart ... 4..9~. $ lbs . Large ::;ize .. , 11c1vcl \al'Je!y ... scg1nenl s Lhal ;ire sJ.lurated \\"ilh S\v cet flaYor! Be sure to get plenty? ·rexas r.uby Qcd ... ti \\'Cel pink llleat tha.t"s SO delightfu l . , , refreshing in sa lads , •• fol' breakfast ! Pineapple ............................... 19fb lla"a1i's fi11cst ... field frr:i.h fro111 lhe eu1.,hnnl111g" i::iland.; and ru:i.heJ lo us by air freight ! Papayas ............................. 3 for $1 ·rrvpil'al ll't•at ... l\('lil:iou sl.r ..,11·cct.-tarl'. \\'untlerful breakfast fruit, or a salad delight , .. Super Shopper Grocery Specials! Softweve Tissue. ~:R~~L. ~~~K~ •• 3 for 69c Choose 11 hilt', or colors, nr both, al this prit.:c but. be sure lo ha.\"e several spare packs on hand! Jello ................................. 2 10, 35¢ Johnston's Apple Pie ..... . .. 59 ¢ l:ig 6 Ot!ll('C' pa1·kci ge:; ... all flavor ... : Big 9 in. size ... heaped high \\'ilh rruit ! 1~rozc n Cranberry Cocktail .. .. .. 49¢ Green Giant Rice ............... 3 '" $1 01.:\·an s;Jt":I,\' ... thC'Ol'i~i na\! Qu;lrt 1Jol!lt·. Frozen ... ]~ oz ... thoosc rour fa\oritc Ila\'OJ'i< ! Hunt's Snack Pack ............... 49¢ Van de Kamp's Halibut .......... 79¢ 1:rl1 its or 1 •11dili11:.:~ ... h111lh lll' :'!l~lck f,1\0l'Jl4 '.., '. Korlhcrn fi ::ih ... fried and frozen ... 8 oz. pkg. Fiddle Flakes ..................... 4 ,., $1 Enchilada Dinners . .. . . ....... 49¢ Chase & Sanborn Coffee ....... 73~ Bob's Chili and Beans ............ 59 ¢ 1::1n1011s ror quality for ~cars ! .. , 1 lh. c:an · J·'rozen .,. Si1npl,y heat nnd sc r\·c : ... 16 oz. 11kg. Lys ol Bowl Cleaner ................. 49 < Krispy Crackers ................. 33¢ IJi$illrL·cl~. <l f'odorii'.t'"· ""it cleans ! lb oz. Su nshine·~ .•. S11appy t.:risp ... 16 ounce pkg. Lysol Household Cleaner ....... 49c Dash Detergent ............ : ... $1.89 l;et. rid 1Jf ·s1ub\.Jor11 dirl .•. and gcr1ns! 1 ~ oz. Ju1nbo sized packag..: •.. Snvc ~Sc ! I r ,·irrs in r(frrl 1'h 11r~. fT1ro119'1 S11n. ,\fol', /R'. 1.:. I~. /~. ,\·n Sn/rs f,. f)c11I• r.~ ll 11• 11 du ii !I :J I 11 !J ••• :)1111!.luy n: .;o lo 7 :OO Ask the manager about our convenient Charge Account Service HUNTINGTON HARBOUR: Warn er Ave. & Algonq uin St. . NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Newpor t Blvd. • 2555 Eastbluff Dr. (Eastblufl Village Center) A/so conveniently located stores in Arcadia, Pasadena and South Pasadena Wedn~sday, Marth 11. 1970 -~~~~~~--~~-'----~~-DAILY PILOT EASTERN GRAIN FED CENTER CUT EASTERN GRAIN . FED RIB LARGE LOIN PORK CHOPS EASTERN GRAIN FED FARMER STYLE EASTERN GllAIN llED CINTEI CUT LOIN 98~·· PORK SPARERIBS Pork Chops OUlt OWN COUNTRY STYLE 49~ .. Pork Sausage IASTllN 6RAIN FID 79' LOIN IND Pork Loin Roast " 59~. USDA GRADE "A" 3-LEGGED USDA GIADI A fllYING CHICKIN 69~·· . FRYING CHICKEN Breasts I FACIAL QUALITY TOILET TISSUE . . 5. SOFT-WEVE 2 PLY Gol~ . . GOLD MEDAL 1. ;~~~~ . FLOUR 39' ~ Reg.6Jc L__JJ 5 Lb. Ba g I KERN'S Strawb erry 1 . ~~be~~rves 39c I Will. ;i,,~ coupon, "" .,.,,,,,...,.., r>11•ch~1 • ,,q.,;red. l im;I I i•• I pf'r co11 po11 -One <-OllPD" p•• ru1tD'"''· Vood •It•• Su"d1y, IULK STYLI H>OT LOHG Wieners 69~·· 89~· LIGHT l DAR K MIAT TURKEY $2.89 BREAST $3.$9 SCOTTIES FACIAL TISSUES Box•• 200 2-Ply Ti11ue1 • Cut Green Beans e Diagon•I Cut Be•n1 •·French Sliced Beans DIAMOND "A" • Wholt Kernel Corn e Cream Stylt Corn F 0 R RATH lt.ACKHAWK Bacon DUIU9UI ROYAL IUFFIT Bacon IAR M WESTERN STYLI -79' Polish Sausa9e "· Knackwurst 10 oz. J.till fl!ESH Oysters FILLfT Rock Cod FILLlT Perch Reg. 93c One Pound Ba9 ROYAL 79~ .. 79f .. .• 59~. 59~ .. TURKEY SLICES $179 BELL POTATO CHIPS YAMI YOGURT 5/$1 WITH fllUIT 1 oz. c:urs I COTT AGE CHEESE 29' ''"' NAll~CO TWIQ.S SNACK STICKS 10 oz. SODAG. CRACKERS : •. 25' HEALTH £. BEAUTY AIDS HILLS BROS. CREST VO·S SUPER LATHER U.S.N0.1 49 RUSSET ( 10 LI. CELLO IAG -APPLES CRISP a· L ,.00 EXTRA FANCY B DELICIOUS S FRESH LOCAL BROCCOLI 2;29' EXTRA FANCY PINEAPPLE · FRESH 39" LARGE " SIZE EA. · HEAT-N-EAT FiSHD STICKS 39~ [ Re9. 69c: Lb . With thi1 c.011po,., flo rnil\irnurn p11rc.h1it •111 uir1d. lirnit I lb, per coupo" -On1 coupon "'' c111to,..1 r, Void •h1r S11nd1y, M1rc.h 15. OOD OHLT AT IARGAIN IASK°f"- ;~~ JELLO CHOICE OF 3 FLAVORS •Wild Chm-y • Wild Raspberry • Wiid Strowberry STRETCH N' FIT 6 01. Pk9s. FIRST 9UALITY ENKASHEER NYLON PANTl-HOSE SPRINGFIELD FIRST 9UALITY . Grade "AA" 7ftl: BUTTER 7 ·- CARLTON ORCHARDS, , APPLE 8 F $1 .. SAUCE ~ ;tl03 CANS PRICES EFFECTIVE , THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY & SUNDAY . COFF EE 69' TOOTHPASTE Ell:Tll:A U.RG-l 51ZI TUllS RIG-. IJ, 59' SHAMPOO Jl/, oz. ,LASTIC: IOnLIS 59' Mar. 12, 13, 14, & 15 : ,RICES SUBJECT TO STOCK ON HAND WE ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD COUPONS 1 Lb. Can ~§§~! ' I KEN-L-RATION , 1 DOG OOD I Bl v• L•bcl Onl y 3~f 29' Rt g. l /39c =I Toll Can$ Will. 1~.1 CC UllO" "" .,.;,.~'"'""' (l~r clle•" •IQultt_d , l i"'i' ) Cini p•• COllPf:lll -a .. ~ COii ~"'" r t!'• CllllOl'"lff, Vtti •'''' Swnd1y, j M1 rclt-15. , ----~GOOD ONL Y AT ),t,RGAIN IASlflT COLGATE 100 ANTISEPTIC MOUTH WASH 69' • RIG. SI .It IJ 01. ,U.STIC IOTILE SWISS MISS PIES e APPLE e BERRY 4/Sl I e ind PEACH I Inch Ditmettr ......... ' .. '' ' .. SPRINGFIELD 5/Sl ORANGE JUICE 6 01. c.n1 ....... , ......... MISS BRECK HAIR SPRAY 1 J OZ. C:AH 59' AUNT JEMIMA 29¢ COUNTRY WAFFLES 9 Ot. Box ........................ , WE GIVE WE GIVf SPRINGFIELD SLICED 4/Sl BLUE CHIP BLUE CHIP STRAWBERRIES 'STAMPS STAMPS COSTA MESA 191h and Placelllla 10 01. P1ck1ge .................. PLACENTIA 710 W. Cbap1111a Family Pleaser Supper Dish's 'Souper' . . When you want w sure-lo· please flavor combinalion, &tart wlth ground beer and tomato soup -a great team for winning diahes. The flavor of one ingredient just seems to bring ourthe best and n1os1 111 the other. llere is a brand new beef combo ••. mix chopped , cook~d spinach with the ground beef be.fore shaph1g it into gel'lt!rous patties. Brown patt ies, then cook them M a navorson1e loinalo soup sauc.-e fra grant "'ilh the goodness of ripe tomatoes. If your family members, especially the young on c s . . aren't just Popeye-wild about spinach. don't tell the m about yoor secret ingredient until After they have tasted and sa vored the dish. ' tJ~{C ·~·' ., ... 'I They are sure to like the ap- pearanc~1 of I.he beef patties . {lccked v.·ith delicate green spinach !eaves and glistening \.\'ith tomato sauce. Try other beef·ton1alo soup con1llinalions. Stir t omato soup into meat loaf: add it to your fa \•oritc bee[ stew. JI.take a lnngy tornato s o u p - horseradish sauce to spoon ol'~'r han1burgers. Any time ~ou \Y<Jnt extra-good flavor ln a n1a1n dish, do ii with 1urna10! Along \1•ilh Surprise Beer Patues. serve a ye 11 o w vegetable and an apple.grape· walnut salad. End the meal \\'ilh a flourish. , .Rainbow Ice Cream Pie (fill a chocolate r·rumb pie CfUSl \Vith three fla\·ors of ice cream; freeze until fi rn1 ). ~~ ·.:. 49 c OH BOY FROZEN PIZZA • "Cl•!ll~tll""ll' ,.lll!'Ulll ~ltS tf.l'!l.J I'), • SUlll'H ISE BEEF' PAITJES 2 slices bacon 1 pound ground beef J cup cook.ed chopped spinac h, well drained ~-:: cup fine dry bread crumbs '1 tcnspoon garlic sall Dash pepper 1 1 l'Ull chopped onion J can ! lU!\4 ounces) con- densed toinato soup 1z cup 11·atcr In skillet, cook bacon until crisp; remove and crumble. Jl.teanwhile. combine bee I , spinac h, crumbs, salt and pep- per: shape into 4 ova l patties. Brown patties and cook onion h1 drippings until lender. Pour off fat. Add soup, waler and bacon. Cover : cook over \Ow heat 20 mi,nutcs. Stir no1v and then. DISNEY RECORDS MICllfY MOVSf & HI'S flltJfOS, WINNJf lHf l'OOH, tlf!OI, 11 'S A SMAll WORLD At-10 5El£CTIOMS f~ tHL WllAlrOOfOZ. SPECTATOR PANTY HOSE f A\IORITt SIZES & ca.on ~1~~ IWJ'(l!•,•t. ti!• PUREX BLEACH SURPRISE INGR.EDIENT JOINS WINNING TEAM BANQUET FROZEN KERN 'S FROZEN SLI CED MEAT PIES STRAWBERR IES 6 :~$100 4 \:~100 fRESH-PACT GRADE A FROZEN VEG ET AB L S CUT OR FREN CH CUT GREEN 8~.ANS, PE.4.S. & C.4.RKOTS OR CUT CORN DESERT GROWN WHITE GRAPEF RUI T • ~ ICE CREAM ~1,,6.VOll Of lf'[ MONlti (HERRY V"'l'ltl.'" ~ 1 (,Al!>, ONll' ~,79c GAL 4;TS SAVI 10t C TUNA PIES 5 $100 s.oz. PKGS. -.... LB. CELLO BAG [XTRA FAN CY WASHINGTON WINESAP THICIC YELLOW MEAT BANANA SQU ASH ZAHIDI DATES 1 ~~~~.49c MARSHMALLOWS 4 PKGS. $1°0 10.: Sill EASTER CANDY GILLETIE BlADES .. f!.Ull'l't111U1Tf BUFFERIN TABLET S • ' . 68 c $} 73 SWEETHEART LIQUID DETERGENT "'' 4 7 c CRI SCO SHORTENING 31:. 37 c JW'f ' l'll llft'I <;!flt CUT GREEN BEANS ; '; 39c '" ,.,~ .. ~-.,, • (MQCOl "'lf MAllSMM_.,l~OW !.UN"l1£S 0~ lll:ESE l'fANUI IU!l~" P illfO ~(;GS 3 ~25c PlUS A URGE S[LECTION Of EASTER 8UC~l1S, BA SKETS, BUNNIES. A.ND lOTS Of OTHER EAST ER FUN ~l:INOU;l .... :>!' 61 c JIF PEANUT BUTIER • NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE I'll.II !J!'ll f1 ,,,..U I ~1! GOLDEN CORN ' " PILI . ,, . ' t: - \ ,RI " 0 1 --.----------------------·---------. -· Mare> II, 1970 OAILY mOT Dumplings Turn Saucy ' Dumplings will strlke your fancy when baked In tani:erlne • sauce. Plump, ju ic y tangerines, fresh f r o m California-Arizona, not only add piquancy but color and texture. The recipe for F r e 1 h Tangerine Baked Dumplings doesn't take much of your lime. t.-1olher Nature helps you Lhcre -fresh tangerines unzip easily a·nd are practical ly seedless. "Little hands" would enjoy helping, \oo. FRESH TANGERINE I n aaucepan, 111"""""'7 BAKED DUMPLINGS combine all lfl3redlen11 fct Tangerlne SaQce Tangerine Sauce. Brine to I I cup sugar boll over medium beat. ltJt. I cup wat.er rlng CrequenUy; reduce beat n cup freshly squeezed and almmer, uncovetedi for I tangerine juice mlnuleS. Pour lnto Shallow I I tablespoon lreshly squeez.. quart caseerole or baklD& p.n. ed lemoo tulce For dwnpllnp, cream but- t tablespoon buUer or ter well in small mlnr bowl: margarine add IU(tr credually, beatlnl y, teaspoon dnnamon until Ugbt.. Sift tocetber flour, 2 cups fresh tangerine baking powder and alt: ldd segmenll, seeded (4 to S to creamed mllture alternate. medium CaUromia tanger-.Jy with milk, blending wiJ.J lnea) smooth. Dumpli•.. Drop mixture by I or I l>r11 ~ spoonful& Into auce. Bake, un- 1 tablespoons butt;er or covered, at 31S delfMI F. for margarine !Kl minutes. ~4 cup sugar Sen-e wann by IPOOClini I \I, cups silted nour dumplings t n t o indlvtdull I\\ lea•JlOO!lS baking powder dl.!bcs and topp!D( with ...... \J ieupoon salt from caDUOle. Serve wttb ~cup milk cWlopofwhippedcreamcwl~ TANGY TANGERINES FLAVOR DUMPLINGS The delicious aroma of bak- ing dumplings will surely Jure your namesakes Into the kitchen. Serve th e damplings quickJy ln individual dishes before th ey vanish 1nysteriously ... And why not cool them off with a dollop or whipped cream or Ice cream! · Whipped er.am or lee er.am, If deilnd. Semo I to cream (optlonal) a. ' HERE'S WHY! ~lifll> IS LOWER- THAN-DISCOUNT ON THE ITEMS YOU BUY MOST, WHEN YOU ADD YOUR CHOICE OF BLUE CHIP STAMPS OR 11/2°/o CASH DISCOUNT C&H GRANULATED C&H BROWN C&H POWDERED C&H GRA/fuurro ... 59' 59' MAlOLA OIL .... 17• 17• B/SllfltCK If! •SB-SB- •• ... 17' 11' CRISCOSHO!rr.,. -31• 31• .... 29' 29' "'"''#6 ... 81' 81• THESE PRICES EFFECTIVE JN All RALPHS STORES THURS. THRU SUN., MARCH 12, 13, J.( & 15, 1970 J.DD TAX TO TAXABLE ITEMS WITH'4* EXCLUSIVE ; . c FRESH HOT! BARBECUED COOKING GAUGE GROUND BEEF TURKEY WINGS NOT fROIEN\ U.$.0.A. CHOICE-F•ESH ONLY SQUARE CUT .SHOULOElt LAMB ROAST U.5.0 A. Cl+OtCE-ftfSH .SHOULDER \.AMI NfCK 49~ RIB CHOPS 59! 98~ . $1t~ large loin Or $1 l9 RIB EYE OR $149 · ROUND BONE u. SMALL LOIN u. LAMB CHOPS CEUCIOUS ANYTIME I Letdu Sfted414.I HEAT 'NEAT p'iicti i<Riit4ciiEEs s3~ · 79 c """""" $)29 II. PETRALE SOLE IL PASTRAMI BYTHE 98( PIEC! lB I • « .. s~ 1!ake4t SLIC!D HIALTH & BIAUTY AIDS :~~~~ ~~~~~G's ~f;· ~·~ 1 L~~~~~iaotEOFRF" IS MONTEREY JACt# K' \~:¥.~Jf~Jf:~fs~· 99c MORRELL 3c~N $289 LB; CANNED PICNIC ., IMITATION SOUR CREAM PINT 29c V!tA-PAKT ORANGE JUICE BLEND ;~~~. 59c EXCEDRIN CONTAC COLO CAPSULES BRECK LIQUID SHAMPOO ~ 7gc COLGATE DENTAL CREAM ~ 64C GERBER STRAINED FRUITS OR \'fOETAIL!S ·BABY FOOD~~~L QiJT+BAKIRY a"foll'!""-iiAD 3!1 ~EECAKES ~~ 49c AIEL FOOD LOAF ..... 45c CIN MUFFINS :"6 39c. OISTWD IN :ICOfU.ND lOY.•lllG<MINT .. "°"' $479 SCOTCH 'I"" iltEWID IN OlllOON CAii BEER 6~:79c $299 .. YOUR NEAREST RALPHS STORE IS LOCATED AT 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH, Store Hours 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Dally , • - • 22 L ......... • 44 OAIW PILOT Wtdnesd1y, M1reh 11. 1970 PRICES EFFECTIVE THURS. thrv SUN., MARCH 12·15, 1970 c ..... Cuts ROYAL CROWN DIET ·RITE COLA FOOD GIANT tlVER AND CHICKEN SLICED LUNCH MEATS ALPO DOG ~OOD BEll BRAND POTATO CHIPS SUNSHINE a 0 5 ¢ as e o s a= FREE! ONE 16" x 20" PRINT .... ttr "'tlfltl.t If SS .. _, uufl •11a1 fltlt~1I •r It• UMlf Ofrtf COUPON !'lit r.utll'I' Wednesday ' -'• l l, 1970 N ,.. .. "T AOVERT!SER -~ ··············-·············· • 612-oz.59c 8TlS. I ,, .. .., .. ,. 4 TALL $1 CANS •-oz.39c C•N 16-0l. 69 PILLOW C PACK I . : : : . . : . . ' Leaa lastern Pork 49c ~·fi•1<"· SHOULDER lb, ROAST 59,b. CREATE A CAKE PILLSBURY CAKE 33c MIXES RE G. All Exc•pt Ang•I F•ocl PKG. Hl·C DRINKS BLADE CUT CHUCK STEAK Lean Steer Beef U.S.D.A. 55c CHOICE """'~~~~~ lb. KRISPY CRACKERS I-LB. 37c BOX ALL 3 '1 FLAVORS 4 6 ·0 Z. CANS GREEN GIANT RICES • l ull••td • ltic• Medley • $pt>ni.., • P;lof • 11101>0!10 • V&rdi RUS-ETTE POTATOlS HASH BROWNS RIVJERA -BEEF, CHIC KEN , CHEESE RAVIOLIS •o-oz.59c C•N 3 12-0•.$1 pkg s. GREEN GIANT ' PRELL WHOLE SWEET LIBBY'S PICKLES n-oz.49c NIBLETS CORN 19c 120-. 19c WHITE AND WILD 5.5c P~g VAN do KAMP'S --~,A:-::RA~L1;::1--•/ ALL BEEF COF FEE CAKES CONCENTRATE SHAMPOO NEW HAIRDRESSING FOR MEN v,!~2!~~~ 59c FOOD GIANT BRAND MULTIPLE VITAMINS WITH IRON BOTTLE O F 100 I BOTTLE OF 36!i Reg . $1.29 : REG. $3.29 99c ! $229 ' CREME FORMU LA $16 MISS CLAIROL HAIR COLORING s SHAMPOO-IN FORMULA ISS CLAIROL SHAMPOO DEL MONTE POWDER WOOLITE 6'•01 okg 79' • ,., DOLE S~ASONED GREEN BEANS 5 ~g; s1 CANS WHOLE KERNEL VACUUM PACK PIES:-;:: 39c c0~:.:[~:~~n ;~:· 79c LIQUOR SPECIALS ROCKINGHAM BLINDID KENTUCKY WHISKEY i RASNOFF BIRDS EYE COOL WHIP Mcikes 'Em Tcistier •'·29c Cln. LARGE RIPE HAWAIIAN PLANTATION RIPEN ED-LARGE 2f0ft 1 SALE HOUSE OF KOSHU IMl'ORTID .IAPANEIE LIQUEURS VODKA Ot flNlfT'S OtlGIN ... l GIN f OAA!UlA PAPAYAS ROYAL HAWAIIAN PINEAPPLE GARDEN TENDER PiMOpple Of MttlOll 1•6·01.b11._.. ~Sl:ao YO<Jt J~69 Ready 39c 19,1,, FRESH ALL GREEN BROCCOLI Woo $5J9 ~It •~r CHOICE r ~ QUAtl s::..,. ea. FRE SH, BROWN -SERVE WIT H STEAK LA RGE MUSHROOMS PETER PAN PEANUT BUTTER, Smoolh or Crunchy, I B-oz. jor .. 63c "Beller Buying Spec,ol" ROYAL Pudding MiK. Assl'd t~vors, Incl 2c off. 6-oL soze 2 /27c IMPERIAL ROYAL GELATIN, Assorted Flovors. 3 -3-oz. pk9s .. _ .......... 29c MARGARINE l YSOL SPRAY DEODOR IZER, OISINFEClANT, 14-oL soze .... $1.49 fOLGER'S INSTANT COFFEE. 10-oz. jor ........................ $1.59 I -lb. 39c WlS~BONE DELUXE FRENCH DRESSING, B·oL slle ............ 39c pkg . . WISHBONE deluxe Russ1o n or I 000 Island Ores~ing, 8-oz ... 41 c tlARKAY Whipped Morgorine, I-lb. 'izt... . . ...... 47c WALTER KENDALL Burgerb,Ts Dog food, 10-lb. '"" .... $1 39 PRONTO PUSH-BUTTON FLOOR CARE, 19f>-o>. ,.,.,,.,,,,,,, 95c f(NDERLEAF" TEA BAGS. Incl. B' off, pkg. ol 4B ......... 61 c '>-lb.3 9 ' we welcome FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS 230 0 l lurhor Blv d. at \Vlls on St., Barltor Sho1api11g Center, Costa Mesu • • I I I I I I I I I ~ 1· I I I • LARG EGGS COUNTRY. PRIDE GRADE AA DOZ. CTN. G OD VETS' 1-LB. CAN All VAR. $ for MA YFRESH LARGE EGGS <~':.."' .. ooz . 55c m<!!Jfair Froztn Food -PATIO FROZEN Sll1ASO G EENBEANS DOI E SLICED NO. 303 (AN •... ., ....... . DINNERS KING SDZE DRIVE DETERGENT BEEF ENCHILADA. CHEESE ENCHILADA, 6. COMBINATION •.•.. MAYFRESH POTATOES Z-LD. PKG. SHOESTRING & HASH BROWN ............... . BURRIT O PATIO ROLLS 6-0Z. PKG. BEEF, BEEF & BlAN OR CHICKEN ............ .. PATIO ENCHILA DAS BEEF, CHEE5E 10-0Z. PKG ••• -......... -·-·· , SMOKE PICNI C HOFFMAN SWEET SMOKED FL AVOR SLICED&. TIED ............... 5 5 c LB. KING S1lE DE At PKG. MAXWELL HOUSE . COFFEE 1-lB CAt~ J.\~.CAN$7192t~r·q 17 .•.. ORAL ANTISEPTIC c: LISTERINE J4.QZ. BOITtE --. ARDEN ICE CREAM ~II OUAUIY HALF GALLON .. MARGARINE 1190lN l·Lfl. P~G., BREASTS WHOLE o~ seur '' 69t WHOLE LEGS CORNED BEEF LD . ROUNDS OR BRISKETS MAYFAIR BLUE RI BBO N OR U.S.D.A. CHOICE WELL TRIMMED EEFR B STEAKS ~: .• :, ... . . . ~ • LB. RE.Al M((QY ......................... , ....... .. , ............. , ... . RIB LAMB CHOPS ' I .\ I'! . '. ti· \'/ ,~' LAMB CHO PS S~All f • i:: ·'. r, · ,·, 1 ·1 1 I " •• I Ulll . ROASTING CHICKENS rl (,.,JI, .,,1!)1Wl J11 'l~'' I 1,1 98iB S 11ic. 55~8. r--LENTEN SEAFOOD-, Mm. lROUl ' " °'·"'""'"' .......... 39' fill[! OF !RU[ CO O··-· .............. '" 79" fill[[ or PERCll ...... -·· __ .,,_,, . l• 79. Fill[! or SOl[ ... __ ·"·-··-·· ' I" HAllBU I Sf EAKS '''''' r ·-· .. _,,,SB' SWORDFISH SHAKS '"" ,, ... ,. 98' r"~~~.~9)~~HOPS , s 109 ~E~F HEARTS_ , 69' ~~~~;,~,~Y~.A.~E • "79' !~!H~.~.~l,~~D B~~?..~ $)59 ~K~E.~!tER . 59' ~.?0~2~,~~u~f.~ES ··"'49' ~J~!~~'~'~A~~:i··, . 33, ~,~,1,CEO BACON "89' ,---m<!!Jlair Liquors.-....... SPECI AL '3.99 SALE VDDK•A :;~,.~; UUiR l GIN ~.. . nu•RI TEQUILA ~~,,,,',;', ,, BRAND Y•',,,• llllH {1111. BRIGADOO N SCOTCH "'"'" ...... llllH J 1 FAIRO AKS BOURBON •nr•or.1 ___ flllK ::;:: J. W. DANT WHISKEY·,.""'' llf!H ~ .. , CANADI AN WHISKEY .,•' "' .• llllH . BLENDED WHISKEY ,, 1 .. QUIRT YOUR CHOICE, EACH ('"m<f_yiair Dcf.Wo.ksscn - I LUNC H N EA TS MAii RlSH 6 az. ALL Ml! I ROIOGll! Plr.Kll IASIY OR OLl \'I IOAf PKG PlllSBURY BISCUlll lllPORl[O SllClD KAl,1 Wll!O'I CUR~IO Bllf :i r • r.Koc m p cnorn s "', CIN~I ' ON ROllS I DAI.". RAISIN ROUS''· l!l ... HCffrEISCIJITS '" ' ,, ~ 6 to1 49c ,._ .... _ . ss '/ 11 98 ss •sc .. • ~ .. H·» .. HOft•H 4;, ..... -... 1•o•2~c I \'., lffllS ... , 99• ··ltt.<;!Jt:_. INSI. corn l HllO & SHUUlOlRS 100 WU 1JIJJ {f illJJ illJJ lllU Van de Kam p's SPECI ALS fhurs Sv11. M ~r. 11 1 ~ R~1s1n ~pplp Swill 39C Coffe e Cake s '" ,, ' Shamrot ~. Cookies ,, ,,45c ' ~I P11 tnc~ '> p,~ gf fi 43c Cu p Cakes \VJ illJJ it.VJ 'OC" liY.Ji illJJ QY.11 TA JUMBO SIZE .,/ KIN NOW DELICIOUS APPLES fXlRAfANCY REOWfl.SH ~fAIE ARTICHOKES S ~s 11.f•-·E r;11·,r~"~ •1t APRICOTS 59' 1-NNT , ;:JI II CJl l'~G FROZEN BANQUET COOK ING BAGS KAL KAii BllRGlR ROUllOS 1,1< I j j .• 11) ''lo I ~ '' I l '' .l lll•vi.. 1...i -·H l~SI CUff lE, _____ --·-··-··'I" 'I" 23' ,~,;... .t.DVERTISED PRICES EFFECTIVE 7 FULL DI\ YS THURSDAY MAR. 1' tt' U \Y~"' •• •" 1 r :11!1;. a;~·><I ¥{'1 ION.UllM-(flt: F 1 f11~1"t'Or, ir !1ct.l'1 A-lA·~.:.1. ~ O!. 2gc lllBIN ~Ulf!E , 1 L! ,., ··--·-·--SS' ROYAi PllODl~C , . '· ' ... ··-.. ·--·-··-·-.......... 2-23 MA 'fFAIR MARKET ~·!~uas 175 Eost 17th Street, Cosio Mes• OH DOY POTATOES 3 ~1 1 •• DAIL V PILOT 4$ IN ES $ LBS. $ lbs. CEL ERY ~" 15' I -f I ~Ntlffl ." ........ ~!~!~.~-""" .... 59'-• • Bir I 46 DAILY PILOT ORANGE JUICE ~:: I C<>n<on- t rote ~IL .•• ... ••• • • V-8 JUICE COCKTAIL Campbell's 8 Blended Vegetable Juices. .. ,.c1i ...... 4c -. SE ' SUPER SOFT BREAD ~~i·t~i~~~ot 2 Sandwich or Regula r IHL lHI .•.. Lucerne Lorge Curd, With Chive~ or Former Style Pint Car!Oft ....... b a g • JS ; I ' .> I:;,,,, e 'SJ ; • = ~ .- I :J C?I :Ili'ij STAR-KIST TUNA Cliunk. S!yle Light Mea t Sandwich or So1od 6YJ .. L can ••••.•••••• I :J t?I :1 l·i'U . COLDBROOK MARGARINE Golden Yellow Cooking Or For Spreod l·lb. """ ..... I · ---Tne v~;Y a~., F;;, --· · -\ Your Entire Family · At Your SAFEWAY! ' "------_.,__ . THE ENCYCLOPEDIA OF WORLD KNOWLEDGE Hl(iH,6T FU1TED ot •n l nr;,elopsd••t ••1111.b!I fl'I SllCMU ..... <1111~ VOLUME 2· HOW OH SALE! EDWARDS COFFEE ~~~~:f 1 Grinds ~~: ........ . EMPRESS PURE JAM Assorted Vmietie• $ 149 Old Fash. ioned Flavor of.lb ......... . HUUY-5TIU flMf TO COMl'llff SPRING BOUQUET """w'" AT AMAZJNG MONEY'..lAVING PIJCEJJ Fruit And Dessert Dish r JtOT-AOV[l\TISt R (; • • MILD CHEESE Sofewoy Cheddar Variety In Random Weig~t5. lb ........... . • • TOMATO SAUCE c HUNT'S So Rick And Tliic.k All-Purpose 1-u. en ..... . lie ST. PATRICK'S DAY SPICIALSI ... ··-· f! ••• CORNED BEEF ~:·' a .... 9-;··, ... r; .... 99• 11. 11. ' SAFEWAY MEATS AT LOW I LOW PRICES! FRESH! Coachella Valley's Tender All Green GRA PEFRUIT '"!!!!!!~S r111es.t Quality Urge Rltly Red or Whit! law Ca lone! lb~l00 L~W C PRICE! lb. Bananas =-~~ 2 lb•. 29' Gree n Beans 11~~~i~~~" 111. 29' Art ichokes "-'11• ., ... llleh 111 lrllll. l'>tM W'<!b I~ DrMl"'f Crisp Celery .. ;;.:~~~?· PAPAYAS ""'""'''''-" 311k tlo"'l 111 ft9M lllVL •11• 7 OR ANGES ,,,.,~....... 8 ... 991 flfoe!Y1011ly Nt --ARTICHOKE Hearts .... 3 ; '1 MtrlMtld MWalo lit 1 Grapefruit Juice .~~.::~~.39' Avocados ~'iC11;i::. "" 39' Pl'neap~les 1·~ '• ··~"' ·"''49' jll*'I •. U 1•) Od Cucum ers .. ::-~-::: r;:., .. 39' Crisp Carrots ~-~ 2 .:. 294 Drfe• Prv"•' ••• Af'ples -. 2 .. A9t tmr""I 4 .. 41' II f ll> y llol·~ lotf GARDEN SHOP · FEATURES Fre1h Cut -.ow .... ,,.....,.. ··~' ............. 1 ......... , ..... .-.. ~, ·---.. ~1 ..,.., .. , .. ---··~· •~'""""'"'' __ , •Ol.,..I H ,, __ ,..,...., .. ,, ....... . __ ............... ,, .. , -... .. ~It _, ............ ,,~: ............. -""''" M ,,,..,,,.,z _,, ... .. ............ "'-......... ..... Ellftt;09 Ii\ llewa!I Sll1•HJI 1'ul., 111111Sin>,Mw.12,13. ll, 15.1919. .. ~.!!.. Bourbon l(fr.t11:i1 S1ui&M '3'' ..,roo . ~ &ir.otll: n11~ ,~ t old arook Bltnd :;,:.;,;: ,. Sl.19 ~ M•tN1ln Scotch :.;;.• ,.. Sf.99 ~~~-:-.•" St•nlon's Dry6l11 = ~ $2.91 J(1y!an1 Yodk• .. =.!"' ""' $2.91 "--' Cl Elmo Rum ~t.':'.. ..... $3.49 .---~---~-~.... --Macaroni & Cheese Lucerne Ice Cream French Fried Potatoes I 89' 2 ·lb. 39' plloo pt,. I <•l1'.il ;t:1il11111 ii t•1j'I Q il ''iii (omparo The11 lowlnry day Prlcu .•• lou'll 11 Glod lou Shopped Sofewayl Heinz Ketchup ~~::r.-r:oi; 2~.:~· 33' Pinto Beans \ ··:=-.;.~·· 2 ;~,. 35c Aaaort•• 1n \1Yo.'V l tut1 ft\111 F\l'l!n. Jell·O Gelatin Shady Lane Butter Alpo Dog Food .7~d\t ..... 21' pig, Grado A 79' l·I~. ctn. 14~ .... 27' '" V0-5 Shampoo Com pol Hud.tchl! 1m Allllrln-••r· 89, TC!lllcrl-TPt Conlpoi •I I I ALKA0 5ELTIER 01 llJ'IMIT 51riM~rh lelllt 59' f1,bl1 P11n I ~·J 70<1' el ll't Large AA Eggs r.u~unlel'll f1nn fr!sh I ·11 •I. C Cr.ti"' O'fh• c,., 54 ~ni flrfDf Perfttl Joo! • R. Metllum 111• ~! ~~· •:_i. 474 Extra Lari• ~.~ l!li:~,. ·~· 511 Donuts L: ft:;'~~ ,t,. 49' Mrs. Wright's Bread v!f.:;.,, '~";· 35' Gold Pound Cake ~~~ .... 29' Walnut Pound Coke •·• 29' Marble Pound Cake .. 29' IJ.S.D.A. Choice Beil Chuck Roast J uicy. Sofl!!!WOY Flovorful Anrl 49 ( Guoronteed to Pteose. Low 1n lb Price 1 • IJ.S.D.A: Graiid "A" Fryer Parts U.1.9-t .... tp.. 59 •DNM1tkb c • ,,., •• Thfth •Wtt.l ..... t frJtr ,,.,.,. It. 69' lb. B Beef Roast Tops Fo• A 8 I ( Sunday Pot Roost. Safeway GWJronteed Too! I~. AIHrfetl Sulpti1tt 1r Afl!Mllll G11dw Mnt MUMS 1 .::..._~_~~-~-·:..-'-~""'9-'9-' 1_::._~_·:..::t __ -_'1-" Daffodils BAND AID 'J<o::~" ";'!:II 73' Vick's Nyqvll r·,~:~;.:~: .... ·~~· 1 1 '' Vick's Yaporvb ~::·~~' •:,;-:· 47' Vick's Vaporvb ~~~;.':," ',1,~" 16' Slnex Natal Spray ·~~:· • 1 •• Vl ck'1 lnltalor t·~o1;;-, -SA' Strl·Dez ,..,.,~," h!':t r;1:r• 891 . SAVE MORE ON SAFEWAY MEATS! ....,. ,.r $)H 1tst sun aaw ''''"' 1111c11 J"!iv·~ 49c ...... __ _... ·~~ , 59' ~-··--,_'I'' I • ""'"'-,.., ...,.,..,. -,._llil''°""'.... l•I"" Hid> ... ·-, -• • 3Z·01llon I ' TRASH r \ CANS fta P'lnlll"'1tlr'f' Ollni'*"'dl llOCl $399 UP · PRIC!I , Sliced Bacon , • ~'"' • ~ lutt.t ,,. 79c "• ~:iou~:s11lel •· 59' lfl ~,..-w,1c"11 u,,, •flll:t-.Yow Ch!ilca S1u1111 '.: ... s.111111 :..~ u-~ ....... ..,,_ f"'"ll-. ru S•11••l• ~ It• tllkt ~t. ••• u .... -!\ ............ ~ .... ~ l.ICClll ~ .... ·:: 71• S1111111 .... 11• ............. '-•--r""""'' ~ Turbot Fllleis ~1. "::~ •. 59' Fl1h1tlck1 ':.:" ..';:":~ •;,~· 59' Fresh Oyster1 &:;. 1~,!'' 19c Fish Fiiiets r;~ ~',:-: •:,:~ 69' King Crab·Meat Al•aq,. f111tY PK-•219 Ir! f11ridom Wtl,tlh I~ • 1000 Bayside Dr .. Newport Beach • 24 Monarch Bay Plaza, So. Laguna • 636 N. Coast Hwy., Laguna .Beach Santa Ana Fre eway at La Paz, Mi ssion Viejo • Wilson & Fairview, Costa Mesa " I Fried Chicken .~. '1" Turkey Roast "':':.":;~ '2" Turkey Breast l:.'~=· !~13" Sliced Hom .. ':i:i, ';:,, :<';· 59' Wilno Kosh1r Meats • S~·fll~ ha~~~• Sal1111u 1,.,,. •109 C~i.bl • MrK~Y<\llsl •'t· ..... . ' .. if PJLOT·AOV£RTIS ER ,llSH lEAH ' , UOUNO HOUIL Y ~~:Fu~~53' • MOll(ll 'l'OIKiJtlll 1-ll. •I~. Ol l ·LI. THICK . SLICED 69' : BACON,. \Vtd11e~ay, t.1artli 11, 1<170 . ALL MEAT 49' BOLOGNA a.oz. ., • ·· BRAUNSCHWEICER or SANDWICH SPREAD LB. ..:l/f:="'="·=· .::"":: .. :_:· >:_::~_:19::_10:....._ __ __::DAIL'i P'LOT 41 U,$,0.A, CHOI Cf Olt ST A Tiit 1105. lllF 59 ROUND BONE ROAST . ............. c IONILISSIJl,lHOUlOilt 89( ROLLED ROAST ................ ••· inOACMOICIOllTATBIOllS.llf' 85 RUMP ROAST .............. . .... LI. ' USOACMOICIOISTATllltOS lff' S 109 STEAKS 1:~~:,'.~'...... . . .... u . IRIADID CHICltlN FltlEO HIA T" IA T 7 9 BEEF PATTIES ....... LI. c Flf5HllTIALIAN 85 GROUND. ROUND . . ..... u . ' USOAOtOltlOlSTATElllOS 1111 89( RIB STEAKS ................................. LI USOAOfOICtOISTATllllOS.lllF s 149 TOP SIRLOIN STEAK ..... u . l I \ 0 USOACHOICIOISTATllllOS.lflf s 12s T-BONI STEAKS ............. LI. U_SOACHOICIOISTATflllOS.~lf s 129 PORTERHOUSE STEAK ......... LI. UJOACMOIOOlSTATltllOS.llif 99( OSCAR MAYER 2 89' 8-0Z. CHUBS ........... LI. 95' CLUB STEAK s ·········· .............. LI. ' FRESH PAOFfC OYST!RS ... 10.oz. JAR 79c.-,.}'-t . YOUR CHOICE ............ FOR ·1~~H" RIB CHUCK ROAST ROAST PORK STEAK CORNED SLICED ALL MEAT BEEF BACON WIENERS U.S.D.A. CHOICE OR STATER U.S.D.A.CHOICEORSTATER FARMER JOHN TENDER EASTERN GRAIN FED. ROYAL BRAND CHOICE BRISKET TAILI IRAND 1 LI. PAOCAGf MORRfU'S PRIDE 12-0L PAOCAGE IROS. CERTIFIED IEEf BROS. CERTIFIED BEEF 89! 59! 49~ 79~ 45~. 69~ . • • aSSOITID FLA VORi .. PILLSBURY CAKE MIX .......... . ,ILLSIUllY ·ANGEL FOOD . CAKE MIX ...... 'REG. PKG. CAllNATION :INSTANT BREAKFAST .. 6P~~~- MEDIUM OR EXTRA WIDE ··ANTHONY l ·LB. PKG . .EGG NOODLES . DiAl PACKAGE C.IANT SIZE COLD POWER • DETERGENT ................... . ALLSWEET PILl.$BURY CAKE . MARGARINE FROSTING MIXES $ BUTTER· NUT COFFEE REG. PKGS. 1-lB. CAN PILLSBURY BEST FLOUR PILLSBURY PANCAKE MIX -2 7 FLUFFY WH1TE . DIAL C fUOGl • CAUMlL 39"' 58 s114 4ftc . •Af.~:.GI f~~N ... ~~~A :KG . ~s. c ~~s. ~~~~·. . ..,, ![.11*. ~. l':l j :I :J;I [fj fl :J !ltJ :J !II Iii :llo:li0:;1 J;W • ~ • l';'l j :I :J :!Iii fl J {II] :J Ul Iii :II :Jj l.J:J :.:• • ' DEAL PACKAGE RINSO KINGSIZE DETERGENT .............. .. DEAL PACKAGE ACTION BLEACH ........... GIANTSIZE ~. PRICES EFFECTIVE 7-FULL DAYS, MAR. 121h· 18th ANAHEIM COSTA MESA SANTAANA 3430W LINCOLN AVENUl 2564 WEST BROADWAY 2 180 NEWPORT 80ULEVAFIO 707 WEST 19TH ST REET 11./fl BAK~R STREET HL•NTINGTON REACH 6862 EDINGER AVE. 2630 EDINGER AVENUE 2603 WEST 17TH STREET WESTMINSTER GARDIN GROVE 888 CHAPMAN AVENUE 8522 WESTMINSTER BLVD. I WHITTIER..,-14212 MINIS AVE. ' I ' \"i~jj~_.,...,._..,._,,,,._.-~z.,...-.,..._uoaaao•o•a~a~a .... ~a---=--=-·~-=~-·-•=--•-•-•-•-5!-•~=·~-·~--•-o...,0~0--0~=-=-0~-·~~·7,•~·-·--~·-~:--~~ I t - • litntsday M;uc~ 11 1~70 1'1l0i -AOVERT!"fA • FBEE MILLIONS OF BONUS •'ROZEN FOOD \\'ednesday. Marc h 11, iq70 DAILY PILOT INTERNATIONAL FAMOUS ILIKAI HOTEL COMPLETE DETAILS AT ANY THRIFTIMART c.111•••011 1.tb. s11' FISH STEAKS •..... , •.•. Pk9. c,,11,t;0 ,, I-lb. 73' Mid-Wi11te1· PORK LOIN SALE COD FILLETS •.•• , ... , • Pk9. c ..... tio~ 8 -01. 43' FISH STICKS ••........ , Pk9. EASTERN GRAIN-FED Su111iy V cJlle y G1·c1df~ ·;t · C 1r111 liD11 l -lb, 99c SO!.E Fii.LETS • , •... , ... Pk9. RIB END -FIRST 6 RIBS RIB END · LA RGE FRES H c c •• n.tic" 12.c1. 49c FISH CAKES ........... P~9. St•• Ki.t 9·ct. $2.lt !.OISTE I TAILS .. , ••••• Pk'J, lt~p•ri I 2•11T, 79' FISH 'N' CHEESE STI CKS P~9. Mn. Frid•y'• 1.tb. S 1 '' GOURMET SHlllM,. .. , .. P~9. Hcn•~iud.1, Sliced •-ct. 45c TUllK &Y w/GllA YY • , ..• , Pk9. Pl~· T•K 2·1b. 59' PET IUltGEll . , , ........ Pkg. U.S.D.A. GRADE '"A"' POPPY BRAND SMALL FRESH ROAST ·cHOPS TURKEYS ~~~·i_S~~.E 5 7 C Poiil<c't.o'Ps 98b~ ~o'rii cHoPs $1~Pl sPARERIB s 79b ~l t.olTEO OU.l>NTITY JUMBO SIZE EGGS ............. . 55~ .. OVEN lb READY LEAN-TENDER-FRESH SHOU LDER 79c : FRESH SHOULD ER BONELESS M;,. Wt. J.lb•. 65c PORK STEAKS • • • 1b : BUTT ROAST • • • • • 1b ' ••'rENDER·LllE'' HORMEL'S RED LABEL or MORRELL'S YORK SHIRE SLICED BACON •• 69~ l u•r'• Ou•!dy v ... P•~ Po• 79' ~ ••hly µ,.,j~ ft ull P•r 49' SLICED IACON ........ , Lb. PORK SAUSAGE ......... l b. CORNED BEEF ROUNDS ~~c~ 89~ PAC. SPARERIBS ..... 69~ TOPS OFF YOUNG TENDER 10fb CARROTS ••••• FU LL TIPS 9fb ASPARAGUS TIGHT HEADS-GREEN 19fb BROCCOLI •••• BROWN-1/i LS . 4 9' MUSHROOMS CAL FAME 4 6·0%. TINS Clllf;<lmE FRUIT DRINKS FRUIT DRINKS 0 ' • ' • • • ' GOLDEN DELICIOUS c LB. FOR THE GOURMET 59¢ KUMQUATS ................ 1ts ST. PAT RICK'S DAY DINNER LIMERICK BRAND PRODUCT OF NORTHERN IRELAND ALFLA~v~~~:TIES 29~ \ ~~:~U~H~~:: PIE~··.~· 7 9c OC ~.l.N ~PS<AV-OU>\Rl' BOTTLE JUICE I LA.Ml STEW )loi ,,~ ea -._,_,...,, CRANBERR Y COCKTAIL ... .. 53~ l BEEF STEW "" '" ALL GRINDS MAXWELL HOUSE j PECAN RO LLS OR Pl CAll COFFEE CAKE 1·LB. TIN 75': SARA REG. 69c COFFEE : LEE 79 c ea • l ,EN1'EN S E1U 'OOU S l'EC l.\l.S SERVE FISH & CHIPS FROZEN NORTHE RN STEAKS -~-1 ~··.~, HALIBUT ~ . or BROADBILL , ·~, SWORDFISH FRES H FILLETS ~ , .. 0010· 99c $1 09. DOVER SOLE "· i Clioic" lb FRESH FILLETS ROCK COD OR 89 C OCEAN PERCH • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1b LIQUOll DEl1T . Sl•ECIALS "" s399 ···--~~ FIFTH -·-·· • • • • • LONDON BRIDGE SCOTCH LONDON BRI DGE Hill RIVER BLEN D DRY GIN WHISKEY $3 ~~H S OLD VIENNA BEER .... 6 ~Ai~ 7 9' HALF GALLON s149a J 'a1·iet11 ~/Jecials IJelicatesse14 IJe1Jt. ~/Jecicil . .,, HUNT'S-A LL VARIETIES 4-P ACK CARTON 5 7 c SNACK PACK ........ ·".. ea QUAIL-2'/, TIN 5 f s100 PORK & BE ANS . . . . ~ iUNSTANETr OE & BiMEAL. • .39~ M1iic l:i N oil o ..... 3 ~ 51°0 IMITATION-ICE MILK HALF 33' FUNFORALL ........... ~~~:. GALLON-PLASTIC-INCL. 6c OF F 49c PUREX B LEA CH......... . OSCAR MA YER 8-0Z. PKGS. :COLD CU T S WISCONSIN BLUE CHEESE . $11! ALL MEAT OR ALL BE EF BOLOGNA PICKLE an d PIMENTO , LIV ER CH EE SE MOZZA RELLA STRING CHEESE $11! c EA. YOU NGS SU PR EME SMOKED OYS TER S 3 J.oz. $1 00 TI NS PR ICES EFFEC TIV E THURS. thru SUN .. MARCH 12, 13, 14, 15 2701 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MES A e 13922 BROOKHURST, GARDEN GROVE e 1308 W. EDI NGE R, SANTt-. AN A 5858 WARNER, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO l l • w~. Maren 11, 1970 • DAILY PILOT 49 Few Twists Make Froze11 Bread Dough a Delicious Trea t DEAR NAN: I -i.i Ub to try IBY ...... at IOme ot u.e troua brud clolP ytu 1•t at irocerlea Mt 1 Uve never baked a loaf tf uy klDd In my life aH I eu't believe "°" UtUe old thl11• wocdd ever bake up iato • 1ood fet loaf. GRACIE B., U'M1..E FALU, N.Y. That frozen dough doesn't turn out as great a loaf a! from-scratch but It sure beal.I most of what you pluck off the shell and it's cheaper in the Jong run. And oh the lovely aroma of baking bread filling I.he house! Every kid wght to LETS ASK THE COOK by Nu WU., experience that. Jot of today's generation never have. If you've never had the time or lncllnaUon for _ the satis- fying fun of baking your own bread, or have been too scared to try, this is a great way to catch <lnto at least a few of the rudhnents. You'll have sorne idea of what the dough should look like when It's ready for the oven and how to judge when a loaf ls done. The package 1 had was sket.. chy in s1yin1 "let rise in a warm cozy rtace" -I knew it should be •t 80-35 -and 85 was just •lu:t it was outside my coolish house that day so I did something I have always wanted to try. I put the frozen chunk In the greased pan, wrapped it loosely in a t.o?a towel. set It In sunny corner of my wind-protected patio. 1 did put it high on an old pedesta.LI have out there, out of the way of inqllisitlve pets and the bees humming In the honeysuckle. It rcse just fine . (Of course in a t<»coot kil- chen any lime of the year the loaves of any kind of bread dough wlll rise okay if you set them on a cookie sheet over a pan or warm, nortior,water. - You can also hasten rising of the froun kind by letting It thaw in the refrigerator overnight but, if you do that. grease the inside of the sack or the dough sticks when you try to get it out next morning. The package I got for a trial run had illustrations for doing fancier forms than the plain loaves but It didn't include what my daughter someUmes does. She lets the dough rise as package directs, then flat.. tens it with a rolling pin into a rectangle, sprinkles that ~Ith nutmeg, cuts It into about 1 by 4 inch strips. Then she twlsts, each strip and deep frlet them as you would dou1hnuts. They puff way up, make an awfully good breakfast treat dunked In syrup, bite by bite. Or you can just SP'{'inkle them with a sugar and clnanmon mixture . DEAR NAN: 1 bou&hl a whole new set al TeOOD·llned pans because \hey are 1up- posed to be so mucb improved over the Ont ones. They are very pretty an d colorful but now the n0Et-1tlck part get. a sort of spotty white film on It that 1 can't get off! And food 1Ull sticks no ma tter bow muclri they claim It won't! It Isn't any more scratch· proof than my old pan1 were. They claimed It 111·oold be. flow c10 1 reliable manufacturer ~et away with thl1'? I'm mad! UTICA, N.V. Before you lilet teed off any further, go take snot.her look at the instruction book J'm sure: mus~ have come with your set. Or did you ever read It through in the first plact1 New Way For Rice An easy and savory way lo cook rice In the oven . PARSLEY RICE 1 cup extra long.grain rlce 1 can (13% fluid OUnctl ) chicken broth \~ cup (~ stick) butter Salt to Saste I/• cup minced fresh parsley Into a l "h:.quart rnund glau cawrole (71h by t ~ Inches) or similar utenail pour the rice. Tum the chicken broth into a l·pinl meuure: add enough water rd' make 2 cups ; pour into a saucepan and bring to a boll : remove from heat and stir In butter unltl meUed; pour over rlcti cover tightly. Bake ln a preheated. 375 decree oven until rlce Is lender and liquid 11 ab!Orbed -Ill minutes. ' Whlle tt ls true lhat ne~·tr pans of thls type art a lot bet- ter than the first ones, tbey still won1t stand a iot of abuse. 'nlere are certain rules for thelr care. with the non·sUck surface itself. You can get it off safc1y with a solution of equal parts waler and vinegar or letnon ju.ice In the pan. Let soak for about 10 minutes. If there Is any film on the inside of the C1>vers dip a sofl cloth in a lil· tie of the solution and rub. recondition again a s ln- structioU& tell you to do before you ever use the pan,, the rtnt time. That's a step a lot of people just don't bother with although they should pay strict remove any lingering o f manufacturing oil. Rinse with hot water and dry. Then wipe a teaipoon o! vegetable oil over the non-slick part with a paper towel. If you don't, you ean"t be sure you W<Jn't have a sticking problem. you have to recondiUon each tirpe. Since they clean so easi- ly anyway, t see no reason to put Lhem in the washer. spatul1.3 on newer hard<Oated Teflon, so long as they are the smooth kind, you are still cau- tioned not to use rotary beaters, melal mashers or knives. Never pour C1>1d water into a hot pun. The "white film " you speak of prtlbably comes from an ac- cumulation of minerala in the water. There is nothing wrong Of coorse you must theo heed. · . You are supposed to waah evecy Pot and pan thoroughly with hot soapy water to f.1ost of those pans are dishwasher·l58fe but, again, Next point. Your guarantee undoubtedly says "scratch resistant" but that's not the same thing as "scratchproof." While it is now consideJed safe to use metal spoons or Never put one . of this type pan under the broiler! Use no more than medium heat for top-of-the-range c o o k i n g . Nan WUey A!grets that 1he cannot provide p e r s o n a I answers to your cooking ques- ti on.s, but questions or general lntereat wilf be alllWered Jn her column. Address your questions to Nan Wiley in cart of the DAILY PILOT. CoD .519· 1.tOO for ioc.tioll of ...... _,... """' Cal colltct if loll ••• Vons Lenten Seafood luy1/ SWORDFISH 98c STEAKS '= lb TURior"'Fl'li'Eis 59fb Finnan Haddie I Dover Sole IA.SY TO 79• FJ:flH flllETS .$ J 2f rREPARE SKINLESS LI. POINT HALF········· CENTER cur 91< lb. CABBAGE , '"'" '3 .. Ml uRllf'I -Corned Beef to~l~!c'~~~, 98• McCoy Pastrami ~.0 'I l:. L• ks ,__ ......... 33' 1n ausage •"""''""·'-'· • Polish Sausage .:.:=. ~ 79~ Veal Parmagiana '.~~:;;:.·'I~:. • MEAT DEPT. 'J.DA Y WEEK·END VALUES! SLICED BACON former John or Ro!h 81ack Hawk .. 79c e~~~~~!!~-L~~~~~-89' lb CEDAR FARMS BACOll ,.';~'.~o. 691 T BONE CUSTOM·$)25 • TRIMMED LL Sirloin Tip · Roast Boneless Chuck Roasting Chickens BOM!l!SS ROllEO USDA CHOICE IEEF CUSTOM TRIMMED FRESH, CUDE A C.A.llFORN1A CROWN SJ~~ 89~ 59fb Choice Porterhouse l~~ 'I~ Top Sirloin Steaks "'::!~" 'I~ Chuck Steaks ''":.~"g:':.:."' 59:. Rolled Beef Roasts Boneless Rump SHOUlOEl CLOD OR ROUND lE.A.N, FUVORfUL CHOICE ROAST RANGE JUICE SUNSHINE STATE fltOlEN ty/o/M!Si),[,fiilli .I.J,8:!111+ h'"I'"' C.-lft lotJ Y,\MTIES. s.QA.., · • • "Jlt laf111111t """ ,_. 1-0l. IUl .... ' •••••••• l/J.sc ...... QJll " ..... 1"°1. ~ •............ 63< c.r-it uo a..f 2a NG. ••••••••••••• $1.n . . .. '' ,. ' GREEN GIANT RICE MIXES ' ' 35' CeftMt llleMI .... & ...,., 24'. "°'· .. $1 ·" Cofftt altli or. u .,._,,., 11a ............. 27c o.-yfl• .... sii..1J10.0t. "°-········ J:k e&W Mitt! CM C-.....:. ................... 6Sc ... W ...... It« •..• ,,,,, ........••• ,47c OH BOY BAG O' PIZZAS '"" , ,, . 89( llOTM. \111\llT $'tff DRY GIN ~· <ii ANDRI SIMON • IMPOITID FRENCH WINE l . ..,, ...... ~.@$249 •St.WU.. '"°t. • ...... 11\. • .... }elll, ''4L IT\. •••••• t J fl ~SAYE VALUABLE COUPON ) 15' , SHARP CHEDDAR VONS ... "" • .-93' REEDSPOIT :-;.. • ' PIEOOUS llAN) IOllD£N'S wrru"" .. OCflSE> I Mou1rell1 I C111111llerl or Ch-Lietltrkranz l~ ,.~;;:: .... 49-:,~"'°~-~ ... 55' Edams or Goadn S!'fCllll TIU.11 591 7.(JZ. l'KO. ...... A111ericH Cheese ---691 ............ .oi. ..... /ill~ge Inn Rice Mixes'~l 19 • Vets Dog Food o:~,:;;"'~·~ 3: 25' Evaporated Milk ·::::~~ 2 i 35 ' Peanut Butter .;-::;;:.~~ 55 ' Wyler's Dry Soups = 10 ' ONG TOMATO SPAGH1n1 IAUCI AMERICAN BIAUTY@'·OL --1 O' TENOR, NtmJTlOU5 , • • PKG. ~-- TOOTHPASTE Lclvorlt -10G.11M. u.w71c J&J l~by Shampoo JOI. rn. .. lie lay•rAtplrln 100'1 ·····"····6!c •-. ... .. ~ ... Vons Exclusive! NIW, BRIWANT coNcrPT or Extra Vafuesl STAINLESS FLATWEAR CROWN PRINCE SARDINES . ' ... . 2:39· ', . '. ' ·-F....r ~ ""'CAl'l'CIN •••••••••••• He: O.l MM!. Cahvp »et 1n. ••••••• , •••••••• ~I e ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~,:"_::-::~=~ .• ~ ... :.~-:-~".:':""":;;:: .... : .... ::-·· ~~-.. -~-~-...... -.. -.---.~-~~~ ... -... -.. ·.-· .. -.-..... ::-· .... ~~ ... :::.~ .... ==·~~:::~~=:: ... :_:._:.:: ..• ~.~ .. : ... ••· S hett"1 0°1 nner Spaghetti Souc• 'tM •o1t ,.., .. w.•""' .......................... .,.,.. ......... -.-.. ........ ~ ............... --.... 11, l).!,,_f_Jvlco __ '""·••••••••••••··•llc ,..,_,,.,. I I .. ~c..df«l-M&-.••••-•-w• .............. """ ............................. -pag n...,W'Nlo,__ ...... ut1 ................... 1Ac _. .... '-·· DriH c.....i. ... mnL ,,.,.. ··••••••· 4.k WITM -"'.OT 59$ ~n.w~ 49' lllcod P.m.M••OI.-................. ?Ge °"'"°""' s...i ..... Coollf'lia.-............ .... ~ .. -.... ····•···•· 4'< oir~ lt-OL~ '""CKWft""""'"·r.IMIL~············l2c LinlllwllColl-1•""-··•N•·--·-··Slll , .. .... ~ 0.0.... l.ciL -........... .2/:UC. 1f)t.()4 (AH.,..... .. ...... . • • Stlr in salt and panley: relum lo m d•aree oven, Un· 34081 Doheny Park Drive Capistrano Beach covered, to allow r1ce to dry -1 17950 Magnofia, Fountain Valley 21 082 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach ' m1nut•• s.r•• •1 once. 1011 Adams Ave at Brookhurst Huntington Beach Makes 8 servings. ., r • • ' 5922 Edinger Ave., at Springdale, Huntington Beach ...................................................................................... ~~~~~~~~-._._----~-' DAILY PILOT Wtdnndq, Marctl 11, 1Y10 Alpha Beta's 'Man in Blue says: '' STORE HOUllS MOM, thru FRI. 10 AM-f rM SAT. •"4 SUM. 10 AW .. 1 PM in this a.d, ·including 55 DOUBLE DISCOUNTS save you s12.53*''' . JIM STERBA STOR[ MANACiU: CllllEMONT ' "Total savi111s is computed on aJnale.unlt purchase. The flilJT• woold be much ltlgher Ir Mert & Product 1evings wert Included. IOIAL DISCOU NT S EVERY DAY . s.oz. PLASTIC !IOTTlL 1.0'!'101'1. UOUttl OR DRY EllDEll SHAMPOO SOMf AllHA lfTl Stlllf! DISCOUHT "ID:<OE 'lllCC ,at 781 li'A'il"oEonoilANT yr 881 120Z.fAR •RtGUUJIORHA.RD 11{ 101 Dep Hair Style Gel ;r PiP'Tii' BlsMoL ,ac 781 ilo'DD'z TABLETS )SC 781 cotii'ari' 1i:;i."s'ii~;~"}fc 631 6-0Ut<Ct • SK.IN CLEA.l\SDl HYPERPHAZE Y' 121 2lJ,.QUNC£ #ftM!tllNt HYGttN£ SPRAY { 119 ., VESPRE SPRAY. )-' FLORIST QUALITY flOWERS A. T lOW DISCOUNT PRICES' !OTAL DISCOU,.fS EVERY DA\' SON( A\J'llA lllA STOllCS 015COUMT CIWtGE f~ICE AlfHR IETA • PCn1 Conon • 31c Va!. 31 I LO FAT COTTAGE CHEESE QUARt CAl'ITOfl, }<e VALut .511 Wh~~~~~1"£· .... CIJl' 0 " ,m 421 ri'.fis~~~~l/ti·!'~~AINE }at 381 18-0\ll!Ct • 11EGUl.AR OR QUJCX:· ~ 3Qi nuAKER OATS ~' I ~81'A'if"1~~h11T COFFEE IJt 1 IT l·lB. CAN • REGtrlJJI, FINE, DRIP iti~"Arc~n11 ,re 821 :Z·LB, CAN • fl.[G!JLAR ~ DRIP OR ELECTRA MATJC t,..0 J~ 1 1-lS JIEG DlllP OR tu:CrJV. PERJ: MAXWEL( HOUSE ·"" 7 .. COFFEE "' u 3-UI, RtG. OR EL£C P£lti: 2.,ctl 2.U MAXwEtLH~ijs£'1~SJ~NT }MJ 41 @ ro.coutrr • ASSORT[O 1"' GILA FAMILY NAPKINS µ'c u · IEO.COUNT ASSORTED )&: 2k @ ASSORTED AND WH!Tt NORTHERN • 4-ROU. PACI .?_ 341 TOILET TISSUE )" •OX Or12' REOULIJI / 391 CDNFIDETS JIC s'i:?~tvc\.[r'~TEW. JS• 141 @ 6l/1 O'Z. CAN• XiONtv & Oi!CKEN LlV!R & CH!CJ([N • SE.AfOOD. 14' FRISKIES CIT FOOD . )IC ~141/1 OZ.• HORSEMtAT CHU/1~21 ~ THDRD'FIJJ DOG FOOD ;re " Bitter P1od11t1 at DISCOUNT PRICES! ~iii'lct."ol<Es FIELD ll lPCNED • 1.AAG[ Sll[ HAWAIIAN GROWN PINEAPPLES HAWAIIAN GROWN RUSH£0 BY AIR EXPRESS PAPAYAS STUWBERRIES c BASKET ASPARAGUS TENDER All GREEN lb. SALAD FIXIN'S •RED LEAF •SALAD • eun£1t •ENDIVE • ESCAllOl.t YOUR CHO ICE 10~. I WISE 8UYS IN ECONOMY SIZE lO·ll . IAG • lOW. lOW "11C[ NAVEL ORANGES 2tl·ll . MC • lOW, LOW l"llC[ RUSSET POTATOES ~~~~~ ~%[ 97 c ' YOUR CHOICE *I THESE PRODUCE PRICES EFFECTIVE THURSDAY lhrcugh WEDNESDAY MARCH 12.18 lltlDflM fOOO STAWI IN AHY LOS ANOELEI, ORANGE OFI RIYIERSIDf COUNTY •t1HI lfTI YOUR ALPHA BETA Neighborhood Butchor (the Man in the Red Apron) Proudly Offer> SUTCHElt'S PRIDE MEATS MfATS YOU'Ll llE PlOUD to· SEIVE •DISCOUNT l"llC(D • OIJAl.ITY l SAT1SfACTION IOUAA.l.NTElD •U.S. IOOYtRHMtNT IHSPlCTUI 1£(1 fl EE lt'TCSt!'S tll~t l£C!Pt THIS Wf£K1 GOllU1UT lOlST CHIU:lM ALPHA BETA IV!CBEl'S l!IDI BEEF 43c SHORT RIBS lb CHUCK BLADE 63c SRAK cur lb ECOHOPACK 3-l.BS.OR oru c Ute1~rs PJ.1'1 DEPE.NDABLE QUAUTY53 GROUND BEEF lb. BONELESS @ RUMP ?·~ ROAST OR BOTTOM ROUND ST ANDING ~~~ c SKINLESS Ll.llK ALPHA BETA IVICBEl'I PllDI BEEF 89 , P.•11nJ'OHH RIB ROAST · 1b SAUSAGE PACKAGE CORNED BEEF BRISKET >OUNtE 3100 @FDA .7•~ P.111nJ'OHH BACON SLICED l·LB. PACKAGE 79' DUBUQUE . l·lB. PKG .• swm 6 7 c ARMOU~ M!RACUR[ ~BACON ~~~~z. 69c TOTAL DISC OUNTS CVERY OAY SOME ALPHA BETA STOl!ES DISCOUNT CHARGE PRIC£ AlPHll lflR •&-OUNCE PACKAGE SliCEO 481 CORllED BEEF LOAF Jftuc :!·OUNCE PACKAGE:• BEEF • KAM • PA.STRAMT• t'Eo1$'s[icEDMEATS ,31• 351 l-OZ. WHITE Tt.IRO:Y OR CHICKEN ti'~ 4Sc sii'Ri'lliiicocff A1L .39'c 37' lll PtiA BEHi •CHEDDAR• ll'.! Ut VAi.. 99 ' TILLAMOOK CHEtSE ,. AlPllA BETll • 4.oz PKO • fllr: VALUE 631 IMPORTED COOKED HAM AL,llA lfTA •!·EAR PACV.G<: fROZ!N •JS: VALUE Corn on the Cob 59 1 ALPHA l(TA •!Ji GAL ROUND PLJ.STIC CIJITOtl Gourmet Ice Cream ~... 891 @ ii'ii'.lauf ''0 ""°'' ")9~ 81 c t:Ji;;\ ICOLD KlST • ~-0\JNCt • FllOZ9',..( ~ Creamed Chicken ,,c l ·OUNCE S!fll.Oil>f iJPS )4c ~SARA lEt • rRC"lt N • l2"· OZ ~ Pecan Coffee Cake,89: CARAMO. PtCAN ROU.S K1e 431 73 1 "' TOTAL 0°ISCOUNTS £VERY OAY ' SL ICEO SOME ALPHA BETA STORES DISCOUNT CHAii GE PlllCl @ ~fa~r18H TAMALES )5C 29' ~ 2'·0UN<£ BO< ' 41 j ~ WHEATENA CEREAL lfC @ BtTTY Cl'IOCKER • 2ll/i-0Ut-:CE B::l:< PINEAPPLE 1· UPSIDE DOWN CAKE )!\ 5 I ~ SUtlSH1Nt • 1.L11. BO:( > ft .. ¢ ~ KAISPY CRACKERS }Tc ~ 15·011NC£ CAN AANCH smE BEANS )fc 181 !·C'-'"Ct CH!CK'!:N O!I !!ttr @ 71~.0tlt.:Cr. SPANISH RIC!: OR S-OU'YCt r111rn CHINt SC GOLDEN GRAIN 31 l AICE-A·AONI )t0 j JS.OZ. BOnLES NO DEPOSIT ROYAL CROWN GOLA I QUICK MEAL FAVORITES C001([0 llf Tit( e.o.c ~~ Tr~D\~-".ESS BARBECUED 1 GHIG'KEN &a:. LENTEN SEAFOOD{_' CR£ENLAN!I • ,AN REAllY .... ,=-L ... -... FILLET OF ·57~ __ , TURBOT MAS, fRIDAY'S •FAMILY fA~OR ll E &i!£A'o'E'il · sliii1M P 221 CllUCll.'5 •QUICK M(Al FAVOA1ff BEEF0 STEAKS 53¢ TOTAL DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY f ' 'I ,. . • ! . ~ 45.0Z. CAN • llED 011 GllAPt °'M 331 ~Hawaiian Punch ,,.,. • . · i:ONTAOINA , .. · · TOMATO SAUCE . </· B·DUNC[a· c BUFffi CAN '· . ' SOME STORES CKAR6E Ile ::::::::7A01!1A • 6·0Ui>C: CAN TOMATO PASTE @ 'Toi.i4'ro 'l>uitEE )s· 211 @roi.i'A'To "sAuc"f " i'~ 21 1 @ fi~~;;'d"i:~a'lo~': )5• 201 Ulltf'ACTIOfll liUAUll'TtU Ol YOUR MOlm' rovtfOCD • SAlll TU CCi..l.lCftD Oii ALL TUAll C lftM5 •wt lEUIW: TH[ l tGHT TO lCfUst SAl.11 TO COMMCNC1M. OUlDll PRICES EFFECTIVE IN ALL ALPHA BETA MA RKETS I • • Wednttday, Marth 11, 1970 - FOR TllIS ANNIVERSARY SALE WE HA VE THE LARGEST SELECTION OF "NEW CARS IN OUR JIISTORY BUY .OR LEASE TODAY -----~------...----·--------------- Wedntsday, March 11, 1q10 ~ -, . . • . . . ; OAIL Y PILOT ~j • ·' •• •• ALL CARS IN INVENTORY REDUCED FOR THIS ONCE-A-YEAR 1969 CADILLAC -5EDAN DE VILLE Full power, factory air conditioning , AM-FM radio, (ZRF 112) 1962 CADILLAC Sedan DeVil\e. Fulf power, factory air, cloth &: leather interior, etc, (GYB:76J , 1968 CADILLAC Fleet\\'ood.. Full power, factory alr, tllt- telescopic "'heel, power door locks, JXM·er trunk oprner, stereo AAf-Fl\t l\fulli·plex, etc. 1963 CADILLAC Cou~ DeVille. Vinyl top, 1eather interior, full poY.·er, factory air conditioning, AM• FAi radio, etc. (YCI'7441 1968 CADILLAC Eldorado. Flremist paint, padded top. lealh· er interior, full po"·er, factory air, till· telescopic wheel, stereo A1t1-Fhf, power door locks, power trunk opener, etc., etc. lWID735l 1967 CADILLAC Eldorado. Vinyl Ulp, leather Interior, full power, factory air, Ult-tcle wheel, &lereo AM-Fr.1, elc. (\VJC318) 1965 CADILLAC Sedan DeVill,., Full power, factory air con- ditioning, Al\I·F?.J radio, ne\v tires. (TBY· 306) 1968 CADILLAC Cou pe DeVille. Vinyl top, cloth Ir 1eath"r interior, full power, factory air, il1·FM radio, tte.r window defogger. (YIT078) ANNITHSAIY SALE PllCE ANNIVERSARY SALE 54444 PllCE ANNIVEISAIY SALE PRICE ANNIVERSARY SALE $5111 PllCE ANNIVERSARY SALE PllCE ANNIVERSARY SALE PllCE ANNIVERSARY SALi $4222 PRICE - ())En :;n 01 ' \IATY c \IHLl..\C~ . . AND OTHER FINE CARS TO ~ELl·:CT 1-'l:O'I L.\J:c1.-:.sT SELECTJO\ I\ Oli\\c.1·: (.01\T)'. SECOND ANNUAL ANNIVERSARY SALE • ALL CARS IN INVENTORY REDUCED FOR THIS ONCE·A·YEAR SALE N ~A.BERS WDIN -lYD. lliii. '"'· 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 340-9100 . SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN ANNIVERSARY SALE PRICE 1966 CADILLAC Coupe Deville. Padded top, cloth Ir: leather Interior, full power, factory air, AJo.t-Fr.t radio, illl-t.elqcopjc \\'heel, etc. {SJ1.J.33r_ 1967 CADILLAC COUP!'.! De:Ville. Full leather interior, full po"·cr, ractOry air, Ahl·Fht, tilt teleS«Jpic "'heel, etc. (V AX3151 1964 CADILLAC Padded top, cloth &: leather lntcrlor, full po1ve1·, factory air, Al\1-Fhf radio, pOwer trunk lock, t1\'illght sentinel, Jlght dim· men;. IORS839J 1966 CONTINENTAL 4 door convcrllblc. Full leather Interior, full power, factory air, Ult steering wheel, txm•er door locks. !SLU769l · 1965 CADILLAC Fleel\\'ood. Cloth &: leather Interior. full power. ra~ry air. tilt-tele v.•hecl, poy,•er door locks, cruise control, 1vonder bar ra· dlo. etc. IOSD632l 1963 CADILLAC Fleetwood. Full power, factory air condf· lloning, Ult stterlng wheel. signal seekina: radio, cloth and leather Interior. CTRJ713) 1964 THUNDERBIRD 2 door hardtop. Full power, factory air, Ull-a·"'llY "'heel, 44,000 miles, 1 o"'l1er. (OMR50'21 ANNIVERSARY SALE s2333 'PllCE ANNIVERSARY SALE PllCE ANNIVERSARY SALE PR I Cf ANNIVERSARY SALE PRICE ANNIVERSARY SALE PRICE ANNIVERSARY ~ALE $1333 PRICE NABER'S LEASING ANNIVERSARY LEASE SPECIAL 1970 Coupe deVillo $17 5 "" C.0111• ,._ ... ,,_ ptr 1nonth pl• ,_..,., elr c_,ltl.,.., AM· 24 month PM rttdl•, O.r t•etcb, wlrllt9 1h••· Open·Ertd LHM w•lf th9I 91H1 tletN tleu. ORDER YOURS· TODAY Sp1ci•l l••t• offtr t•pirtt April JO, 1910' 8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Mon. thru Fri. • 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM Sat. and Sun. ALL CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL S>.LE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY, MARCH JI, 1970 :· . . , .. -· . ·: '--··-- ' ' ' 5! DAILY PILOT WtdntsdaY. M1rcl\ ll, 1970 PILOT·AOVERTSER Ja • Eo"--HM S.-lhio4 TMt S..1 ,.,. a.. Wfl!'h LIDO WATERFRONT APARTMENTS 320 UDO NORD 6 Beautiful units. 6 Car garages & utility rooin . \\'ith 85 ft. fronting on exc ellent S\11in1· 1n1ng beach. Units are newly furnished. No\'/ S2.J0.000. Excellent terms available. SILL GRUN,DY , REALTOR (Our New Address) 833 Dover Or., Su ite 3, Newport Beech 642..4620 General 1000 Genera l 1000 SAYC REST HACIENOA AHract1\·e founily hon1t>, 4 BH. fam rm & dlnlnb rr11 - pcrlc>cl tor acU \•e household. R<'ulisticaJly p r i c: e d at S:>l.900. Pete Barrett ~ 1600 ~\~.~~~!r .. NB J 642-5200 ~ Big FHA Loan Sec this outstanding "Rancho /\tesa" home with 4 good sized bedrooms &. !amlly rm v.·!lh a large FHA loan to take over. J1ouse can be de- scribed as a trur-"1\lr. Klten" home. Ca.II for fur. ther detail1. 541·5'10 , __ _ LLEGE REALTY 1500Ada!N ...... ,tll. General IOOO IGeneral 1000 FOREST E. OLSON INC., Realtors J UNITS ON 1 LOT /$21,900 I I-louse plus 2 apts. Fantastic money mak· ers. Only 5 Blk s. from beach. Summer rents can be raised. Owner \\'ill finance "'ilh minimu1n doy,•n. This can't las t over night. $21.900. Better be first and call now. Dial-1162-5585 STARTER -BARGAIN $17,900 And ,,·hat a bargain it is! Less than rent. Own your 0\\11 home. 2 large bedrooms. 16 ft. living room. 109 ft. lot -and it'~ R·2. Seller throwing in ra nge. refrigerator. washer. dryer. Can you ask for mo re? Hur· ry~ llurry'. Dial 645-0303. AUTO FIXERSI! SECLUDED Just \Vhat you 've been looking for! No com- plaining neighbors! Co rner lot. 140' deep. 2 separate yards. Perfect access to street. Ne\\'· ly painted in and out. 3 bedroom home go es 'vith It. Lo"·. lo\v do,vn takes over existing FH . .\ loan. No qualifying. Inquire 962-5585. DELUXE FOURPLEX EARNS $6,900 3 bedroom and 2 bedroom units. 2 baths in 1 and fireplaces. Built·ins. All units on year- ly lease except ov.rners suite. 3 patios. Mu ch more! J ust 15% down and priced now at a lo w !55,95-0. To see DIAL 645-0303. EXECUTIVE CHARMER Fan taslic price for mo st desirabl e area in 1"1untington Beach. Unique. spacious tri-l evel. King sized bedrooms. Banquet dining room. 21' paneled den '''ith firepl ace. ~1 irrored Del Pisio entry. Tr u I y outstanding. Parklike la\\'OS. See to believe. Call 962-5585. 4 BEDROOM + FAM WHAT! $21 ,500 Scarce as hens teeth '. 4 large bedrooms. 2 baths. Family room. De luxe kitchen \\'ith all latest built-ins. Carpeti ng . Hard to beat at S21,500 and only 5 years youn~. Hurry to see. DIAL 645-0303 LEASE /OPTION Can vacate fa!'t. Large 4 bedroom. 2 bath, 1 story. Plush whi te shag carpets. Ne'v drapes. New yard. Cul de Sac street. Step saver kitch- ?ll . Lovely area. near beach. Very little monev moves you in \\•ith reasonable monthlv rent. Several to choose from. Call no\v. 962-5585. LEASE /OPTION AT THE BEACH \\'al k to a private beach at Bayshores. 2 bedro0n1. den. 2 baths. Lease fo r a Year then bu.v it at todav's price. Terrific oppor- tunity. Ne\\·ports finest area. only $36,500. DIAL 645-0303 FOREST E. OLSON, INC. HUNTINGTON BEACH 19 131 BrookhurJt 962-5585 COSTA MESA 2299 Harbor Blvd . 64S-OJOJ efinJa J,J/e PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN SY APPOINTMENT 16 Linda 1111 Drive Secluded Country Fixer Upper HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FDR SALE HOUSES FDR SALE 1200 G::;;•;;"°;;';;•;;l;,;;:===;;;;1000;;; G•::"::'::';;•o,I __ ~ 1000 Newport ~h • 51/4 •/0 LOAN BLUfFS -3 "'· 2 BA. 1 16 UNITS COSTA MESA'S BEST $275,800 You may assume a $225.000, Jsl TD at 6.6)11 Int. v.i lh $50,000, down. Present in· come $33,120. per yr. Call lo .see this ••top-notch" shel· tcr. l evel, co rner gre en $25~ 950 belt/vie11•. Cov. IV all ed· 4 Bdrm + F11imily rm patio, cu.s. drps & shutter. Park like yard with BBQ • -f c:dra11, \\'alk to shops, firepla.ee, entrv hall, fire· Cd~I Iii. 01rnr $32,500. ., '"""'260 place in huge family mi, 2 ;ii; .. ,iii;;....,..,..,..,_,.,I :::~~·~;e 5~% apr PANORAMIC VIEW TARBELL 2955 Harbor 2001 Bayside Dr. Beaut. shake roof 1-aty. 3 Br. <I ba. Ne\v 5 bedroom. 5 baU1 home \\1ilh upstairs vie\V of Corona del h1ar hills. 3 Fireplaces & BBQ. Luxurious carpeting & panelling. Land- scaped. With dock .............. $145,000. 45 Linda Isle Drive Nearing con1pletion. 5 BR. 4 ba home. 80 Ft. on Willer. 3 frpJcs ., atrium '''/fountain. 1 double garage+ 1 double garage= FOUlt SPACES!!! BOAT & CAMPER Newport •• Victoria 646-1111 Anytime SEASHORE DRIVE 1111terl1'0nt home, ~nt swim- OCEAN VfEW ming beach. Newly redcor. Furn. Duplex. Dbl. garage $11Kl.<OJ Sl.J:O\VN BY APPT. Immaculate! $44,950 ant G r undy, Rea ltor George W illiamson 8l1 DoVE'r Or., NB 6-12-4620 REALTOR 673-4350 673-1564 E;vu. -4BDRM-DEN .,. Dlt-ln 1·v syste1n . \Vith dock ...... $225.000 .. 80 Lind11i l1le Drive ENTHUSIASTS I QUIET CUJ...D&SAC street Lovely " spaclowl 3-bed· roon1, 1~ b8U1 home -pan-R•2 Co1t11i M1111i 1100 Upp"' 8•y·$3S,SOO 2306 Rcdlarxla. &16--4393 5 Bedroom & maid's, 5 baths with family roo m & large rumpus room. 3 Fireplaces. 4,246 Sq. Ft. Dock & boal slip ..... $159,300 90 Lind• 1111 Drive Beautiful 4 Bedroom , 4 Bath home with ex- tra large living room & master Bedroom. Carpets & drape•. Landscaped. Boat slip. Near tennis court &: club .....• now ,120,000 W•terfront Lota Lot number 4, Excellenl 51 (t. Linda Isle leasehold lot. consider trade. . ... $35,000 Lot number 41: Long '"ater vie'v \vith 76.2 ft. or frontage facing Harbor Island. Bill GRUNDY, REAL TOR 642-4620 (Our New Addr1s1) 833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, H.B. ~~~~1 ~----· GtMral 1000 G1ner11il 1000 CASA PUIRCO Bring yollT eotnC!t cleanser anct paint brush; your ,mofk'y \\ill gro\\' and your nl'igh· bort will appreciate your improven1ents. Enjoy lhis quiet, stable environn1cn1, :;heltcred by iitately E L l\1 TREES. Grammar School and !!hopping an eu y walk; convenie nt beach five-min- ute& away. Drlve-thru gar- age and boat storage; heal· lhy Child~n·s play y:ird \Vllh fresh fruit orchard. Generous banker .allowlng ANYONE TO ASS U ~1 E S20,00l VA LOAN at 71~% annual percentaae r a t e! I . Asking $23.200 Llberal tumt:. Evenings Call Mfi...4579 LAST CHANCE To 01~1n this large, executi ... -e home v.·llh lots of charm, 3 l.11rre bedrooms. :l\.i: b.11tM in the Back Bay area, across from O le.IT)' Lake. You can lease \\"ilh option to buy, or lry lO'i~ down. $.f~,{O). 546-2313 Lot Own1r1 A 3 BR. HOME FOR ONLY $10,995 Built on your land• . FEATURING I 1080 sq. n. ./ Double garare I AU lath a.nd ptuter I Pullman bath 5 Bedroom Hall of Fame Completely redecornted in- lerior. Ou tstanding ki tchen, beautiful shag carp1g lhru- oot. hardwood floon under this carpctin~. Cedar lined closets. 'Vontlerful location. $34.500 .. • co:Ts WALLACE REALTORS -546-4141- {0pen Evenings) elled formal dining or fam. ORANGE COUNTY'S W S i!·· room \\'ilh used brick LARGEST /2 EP. HOMES Immediate Passosslon FHA/VA NO DOWN. tenns available. Nlee 4 BR, 2 BA on quiet cul-de.sac, 2 bleks to park, $Chools &: shopp'g. Beaut land.scaped, all bit· inl, fireplace & dining. Out of town owner, priced to sell 126,950. Call 545-8424 South Coast Real Estate. 1ireplace & hearth. Beaut!. 2629 HARBO.R _BLVD; Corona del P.Iar. L ar1e ful Ule kitchen with brtak--546 1640 . home; 4 bedrooms, ottlce, 1 .. 1 nook. c,,,..,. .. tlo •;i;OiiPi;Eii;Nii.iEioViiEiiSi;;T .. liiliiLiolii:ii;JO• I °"· rm., pool; 2nd home 3 ma11\cured yard. NEW ONi1 Bd'a., dloin1, new cpt, It THE P.IARKET -EXCLUS-paint. On Lot &: %. $'19,&X). DOVER SHORIS Mul' "°" Manon IVEL\' OURS! $33,500. BAYFRONT ....... Colesworthy & Co. REALTOR Newport Beach Office 1028 Bafllde Drive 175-4930 Ml-rm Oirty Bargain Just completed. 4,850 Fl Bay. tront home with bop Uvlnc "'°"" Wnlly ... m w I t h Coldwell, Lnhr & Co. beamed ceilings & wet bar. 550 Newport Center Or. Formal dining room, mas-Newport Beach, Celif. $20,900 Full price sive kitchen designed to 13).(1700 644-2430 meet the needs ol the goor -J ust li.,ted large 3 BR home, met cook. 4 Huge bedrooms. I '""'""'""'."~"'"""'"'""'"'" I quiet stttet, close to sehools 2-Story entry wi!Jl spiral $27, 995 & shopping. Room for boat staircase, leads to spacJous Assume 531,•;. Loan & camper. No down pymnt mul!!r bedroom with tire-TerTlftc 5%,;, apr IOIJ1 to on VA, or low do11·n fl-IA. plate. Sl69.500. assume. -Low monthly Total payment$ incl ta.'<es MACNAB-IRVINE payments. Entry hall, huge &: insurance only $189 n10. Realty Company family room. atrium with Call 54()..1151 Heritage Real {714) 6424235 v.·aterfall, built-Ins. 540-l7:ZO Estate (open t've:s.J 001 Dover Drive, Suite 120 TARBELL 29" Har~r 17141 67s.3210 4 BR Eastslde 1080 Bayside Drive Newport Beach Assume FH.A loan on this ~ewport Beach 1200 SPECTACULAR VIEW of HARBOR & LIDO ISLE Ne wport Heights 1210 NEWPORT HEIGHTS $15,500 FIXER-UPPER 50 x l<IO R-2 lot. 1 BR Span stucco ~•/[rplc. P.oom for mort unit~. BRASHEAR REAL TY 847-8507 E\'t'S: 642-0427 Baycrest 1223 FINE Baycrest r·our BR honlt' for salt or t r a d e. .Secluded stttel, large yard. 5·lS-0773. Dover Shores 1227 REGAL * SPACIOUS COMPLETE VIEW Bay & !\11ns. 4 Br. <I ~ S, + 1no.ids. High ttllinp. JOO() sq fl built around court. 1 cal' ~ar. F.-Z n1r1int. Jrn-$22,900 - $111.00 mo. Total sharp EASTSIDE home on large corner lot. Interior completely redecorated. To- tnl pymnls $206. mo. As~lng $27.950. med occp. $178,000 Jurnlsh-3 Bedroom + exll'll romn . ed. Assume 613',<-loan. OY:n- In nceUent atta. Thi& 3"bed· PERRON 642-lnl $25,900 Harthvopd floors. Existing 0 72 9 loan C'l" ~,~.... ·I.. 7';t., 1st TD. Vaca.tit. ~,...,-'-'-'C----­BY O\\"NER, 4 BR & den, 4 231 Santa Ana Ave. (S. of Oi.tt Drive) 4 Bdrm & 3 b•th1 Beautiful family home, entry hall, dining rm, rear living Imml"dlale Possession nn .. fireplace, line quality BY OWNER BA. A lot or bit-ins & furnishings, lovely patio. S7 j,OOD.-cal l Clay 1 : a4J-.j86\-nights: 673-180:> built-i ns. 5'10-1720 6T:>-3982 TARBELL 2955 Harbor Dover Shore1 Area University Park 1237 TO SE'ITLE E1tale, must be Yoo OWn The Land NO 2nd TD l<lld. 3 BR, 1% BA, liv rm, Beautiful Pool size yrd. 3 BR Only $3,910 ca.sh do11•n Is re-. ORANGE COUNTY'S dining rm, kit., dble gar., home w/ elegant features, quired 10 ;wume the E.X lsr- LARGEST fenced. Weit \V i Ison lrg fam rm, breakfast area. ING loan or $30,590! 3 bd- ''1'·-.,"'-,\.··r .. t. I -'~\I\, •\. \, .• 546-5990 2629 HARBOR BLVD._ Su~~neVHlome. $23,SOO. formal din'g rm. 3 car mu., family room & 9ep. _ VACANT J.ZUn bert, Realtor garage. S 8 3, 50 0. BY dining room: 2,2 b.alhl: 546-8640 READY 548-0588 anytin1e O\VNER. M2-5583 frplc. & bu ilt-ins. Only .3 OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 VIEW the sunaeta from ihis e DUPL"EX e mos. old & transferred own- LINDA ISLE TO MOVE IN lovely, secludtd, 2 BR, den, NEAR OCEAN er ha.s priced it for lmmed. Rich, colorful decor in NEW Emergency Sale, in beautiful 2 bath home $39,500. Terms. 3 Bdrm. &: 2 Bdrm. aclion at $3>!,500. This one 4 Br. 2-.sty. Medltt. by finest Republic Homes. 4 bed-Owner 543-8007 Plus guest room won"\ lasl -set' ii TODAY! bldr. Huge fam. rm. w/wet rooms, 3 baths, formal din-DIAL direct 642-!i678, Charge ONLY $51,500 PETTIT REALTY CO. bar; 4 bathS +elegant pow-ing Mom & family room. your ad, then sit ba.ck and Graham Rlty. 646-2414 "The House of Hom11"· de1· 1w n1. Spacious entno . One of the nicest homes in listen to the phone ring! Near Newport Post Oflice 833-0101 $155,000 the area. reduced $2000 to "."===='===~=~=========-:...:===~~~==.J $39,500 for a quick sale. Gener•I 1000 General 1000 G.n1r1I NEWPORT DUPLEX 546-2313 646-7171 1-Tu"O bdrm. & fam. rm., 1- 0 ne bedrm. It lanai + good inc. Corner lot, 1 blot'k lo beach. $-t3,fll01 ;ii:iiii:iiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ''Out 15th Year" 1• 'o ·THEREAL '"'I.. ESTP.TERS '-.. , .. · WESLEY N. EASTSIOE SPECIAL TAYLOR CO R1•ltor1 NE\VPORT CEJ\'TER 2ll1 San Joaquin Hills: Rd. Xlnt 2 BR. 1 BA, in lip lop shape! Ne1v crpls, new paint in/out. R-2 lot. $19,950 s@~~1A-Oa£~s· The Punle with the Built-In Chuckle 0 l!t10rro11ge i.tt«1 of the four xrombl«I words b.. low to form fovr .,imple"words. 1000 · -r> THE REAL \'."', ESTAT!:RS LEASE EXECUTIVE HOME Lochenmyer Rc.11!or 644-4910 Custotnizcd 4 Bedroom 1-lomelii,..iiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiii-•I on largl' lot. Ideal Family G lfe , p radf I-tome on a quiet cul de u.c 0 r S Q 5e 1860 Nev.-port Blvd .. C!\1 •• street. Spaeious living room, Beau1. hom(' on 10th green CALL 646--3928 Eves. 644-1655 I ORPELA I 11'1'11' ~----- 1 PL .ACS I j ' I . I I' I i I B<!aut\JW ~ homt near So. Con.ti Pla7.il. 40' S1vim pool, 4 spaciou1 bedrm1. S37~ {possibly $350/, tncl pool & gardener. 1-~urni11hed if de- sired. OfferNI at $39.900 or m11.ke ··your" offer! Bkr. ~..tG-5880. -TRY 10•;. DOW~ 4 BR.-$25.~. Spotll's~! Nl'w cpts., drApes, hlti.ns. 1-ld. n 111. 2 Btllhs. Olmer lot. Priv. S""i1n club. \\'alk tu H.11 !Chools. ",,,_\..TO " Co .. lllH·MAftTIHil . 11i·llll Formal dining roon1 and of Bermuda Dunes • f.int'SI lnrge family room 1\"ilh built-desert course! Roomy 3 BR. in bar. Close lo Boy11' Club 3 Ba .. pool, furnlAhed home. Builders Attention! and pal'k, only $64.9:-iO. Incl. 2 golf caru. Club mcm- For d1t1i15 673-8550 brr.ihl p l\\·11.il. Asking $95,000 BUILD UNITS (15) 1o ·THEREAL '"'-EST.I\ TF:RS ' $28,950 4 Bdrm & Family rm. Prinie location. Entry hall, full dining room, 3 M>parate halhs. Fireplace. Almost no do\\·n G.l. Ov.'Tlfil" desperate. • Xlnt tcrn1s. Lot 100 x 297 11•ith good 3 Biii Grundy, Realtor Beilroom home. Top Joca- 833 Oovt'r Dr., NB 642-4620 Hon! $49,fllO. --~-Wells.McCardle, Rltr1. HOUSE BEAUTIFUL 1810 NeWpOrt Bll"d .. C.M. NEW . VJE\\I . Dover Short-9. 548-7729 64-1-0684 E\·es. '1 BR. 3 BA. lam rm v.•/frplc, ASSUME LARGE \\'l'I bar. Din rm, kitchl'n, 51 1 OI GI liv rn1, inaJl'.te-r bdrm on the 14 /0 \'if'\.\'. Decorator crptg. Courl This one \\"On·1 last Iona! yanl pool. J car gar. 3180 Sq Pau\-\\'hile-CamAhan Realty 540-1720 TARBELL ft. Roy J. \\'11rd Rltr, 1430 1093 BakPr. Costa l\lesa 2955 Harbor Galaxy Dr. 646-1550 546-5440 _I _S_E_E_L_A_· -1 !." • I I I' I ,, Remark about a lady hen: _ . . . Only her varicose ve/n5 .a\l'o I 0 0 y L 0 G I her from being-.·)·" .~-";.1';;<..l;....;o,1..>:...:1:..,-1 -1 O Camb p1ete the thud.I• quoted y filling In the mlnfrtg word . '!OU dewilop lrom 3tep No. 3 be!N. e m~;.~ ...... ,.,. I' I' r I' I' I' I' I' r I ~~~"F 10'I I I I I I I I I I SCRAM-LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7600 Gener1I 1000 I General lOOO IG•ne••I lOOOIOw>o••I 1000 10 ...... 1 lD!D IG•ne"I 1000 10. ..... 1 1000 1 General 1000 I Gener al 1000 ''(1£1 ! :i §4 •D1-::¥4~~1--N_o_w_1_s_T_H_E _Tl_M_E_T..,.o_a_u;...;;v_...;~~ ~ NEWPORT BEACH OFFICE 646°7711 COSTA MESA OFFICE-545-9491-545-0465 HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFJCE 2<M3 ·w1,1cliff Dr. at Irvine Open Evening• HIGH ON A HILL NO DOWN G.I. t•11.ntasllc VIE\V-fAntnstic TER!\t S! SpnrkHn~ hnmr '''1th SU~1PSTONE FIRE· J'LACE, funily room, bollt·ins. The Vlt\I/ alone is \\"Orth t he vrlcc of $27,000! NEWPORT HEIGHTS DELIGHT 11ta.~l\·t BEA.,tEO CEWNGS and cozy flHEPl.ACE ltnd ch11.rm 10 this dC'lip:ht!ul horn«-. LkM!I', 1vrll landsca ped ya1·d "·Ith drtached RDrt1Re. Easy :i.troll 10 }larbur Jilgh And \.\ie-stcllrr Pla1.a. Al S26.~. )'OU l>f'ttcr HURRY~ HARIOR HIGHLAND$ LARGE ,OOL Sr-.rklin11: beauty -.-ith Jrle11.mln1t HARD\VOOD 11.00RS. maph•r corrwr rmE- PLACE and W-liaht!ul f'OOL. ExC't'llt'nt Kc.>wl)l1rt ntltthl:in1·hoocl "·i1hln \\·a lkinq dl!ttancr to l\larh1C!r School and \Vcstclitr P 111_.. REDUCED TO $36.500. 11·ith JAl\V 00\\fN ! TAKE OVER ,OOL HOME This bcau1Uul S-~ F.11.A. IOAn v.lth 1•.vrnrnt of 5187 JIC'r rnonlh p11ys ALI. un lhl.' 4 bedroom 2 t>&tJ1 POOL homl'. l.Argt> cul'n('r lot ll ilh no ~·ork dttklng And J>&tlo a1'0und l.'l')'Si.i pool. UNBEUtVABLE. • 27fll HAHOR ILYD. Opeo b10l"91 'III t P.M. SALESMAN Of Tho MONTH GEORGE ROBERTS \Valker & Lee congratulates Geor ge Roberts f6r being 4Top Salesman' for the month of February. George joined \Valker & Lee Feb. 1st. and in 28 days did a sales volume in ex· cess of $200,000.00. George Roberts is no s tranger to Orange County, having graduated OlOROE ao111tTS from Orange Coast College and Long Beach State, receiving his A.A. degree in 196S. His architectural background has enabled him to assist many families in choosing the right home for their family functions. Once again the Costa l\~esa office of \Valker &: Lee exceeded its sales volume for the morith of February over last years record. Business Is good at Walker & Lee . WE SILL A HOMI EYIRY 31 MINUTIS 7612 ldl•ter Open Ev1nlng1 Cll•l"OSITW • MUHTl/'IOTON caNTE• CHDIT A',ROILEMl? IUY LIKE RENT!! 842-4455 540·5140 Cute dream cottage with 3 bedroom<i and 2 baths nicclv c:RrJ)('ted 11.nd draped l\lonU\ly pe.yml'nts lneludr ta;ries 11.nd in~uranc-e. :5ti0 oii this 6 ~:, aovcrnmeni loan. Only $4,500 to take over. ANYONE QUAIJFIES. UNIELllYAILE $450 DOWN ll \\qJI mo\'t' you Into lhl.s sh11rp little 3 btdroom cottagr l'loet' to sho1•1)lng. !'t'hoob and (tt'f'\\·ays. Fantastic starter hom(' for MWl)'\\·eds. $20,350 FULL PRICE. CUSTOM HOME IN CUSTOM AREA i! Ph.1~h Anklt> dN"fl !ih11 g carpc.>t runs through thl<i 2.100 sq. !l. 4 brdroom, :l hnth \\'Ith r;eporatc fan1lly r oom. \Vet bar for cntforta.lnlni.:: And rurmal dlnlni:: room sho"' luxury ti.ill'. '1° oo can i1.s.sume thb 6-" ~ ao\"l'l'nml'.nl loan 11 Ith $8000 dO\\·n. CUTE RANCHERO NEWLYWEDS DREAM !! Thlt quaint 3 bPdroom r11.n chcr fratu1·es cictrl'.\ thick \\"BJl-to-11•1111 c11rpcl1 throucrh· out. Open beam California C'('ll!ng and 2 baths. 0.\'llcr y,:111 sat:rill<K' at S22 500 Jo'UU.. PRICE and NO down to G.L . ' : D ! 0 3 R •• I. = :7 ,. •• ,_ •· h· ,,. ' ~ o. " = 17 ... ;r. xi· ~p. ., .3 l 000 \ 1 l'UT-IRTISU Wt4nHdtJ, M&rdo 11, 1•70 I AU lllNTALS University Ptri< 11't ·~ Hlllt Int Hioa• """"""""' Aptt. Fumllhed 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 LEIS!>~ Wodd --Cllt1 -· • 3100 Glnerel - lml1tl1•tt This !: n d ~nadL Low• r SPAOOOS Dtl ecrro bomts. Cbmrort•~ • well rnatn~ c.dh:. ~ c.«a. Oil! ...,. So. ou: · Plua $2S:i ed home. BecaUM of autM&o Ben !t.trrmf ,... -.a mo. !Kf..-U. ~ de an:hllk..,., <1<,...ia • .=:::::::=:=i:::ii;ii0:=:=1i•:=;:;~::..::;:::~,---IJUST FOR tton..10•ll pttoent t tuw,., L•~ llHch 11'1 ~ ,t-~-.,,"'.,Cl'Jld.,.ta. nr • \I a minor fac;:tor. 4 BR .. 2"' --·"''-"" ~ ba. Prt,,,. loc. & centnl air· llACH ll"L lllO -<£-1115' . cond. 13'1.000. CONDOMINIUM NEW I Bedroom 2 s.lh. u:v~:!~~n~:.•~,.. SPAC~a:~'\R -= = ~ !~~ t 'NGLE Call Anytime~ r&c1ng bwllllul io,... pool, LOVELY21!r,'ll<ba.Omdo. ~· PEOPLE ll!!!:::!!!~!'!'!!!!!!!'l!~!!:I Ju•t 100 yda fftlln 'prtvate Montk:elk>Townhoultl.turn btach. 1..atunt""'-*"" per-or unt. fTl...Mf The South Bay Club Apts. are an 1p1rtrnenV C•ron• d1l Mer 1250 4'1•'!. LOAN-NO PTS. Hafbbr Vie.iv Hills. L<l\le.ly ~ yr. old 4 BR. Room)' 4 \\'~II planned. Lp. corner lot. Y.'Onderlul vltw. 3 car 1ar. age. Reduced to $67.900. =~/carry 2nd. {Evts. ll!cl "" ,... round D.t..,, . rosort built ju1l for sin&!• adults. The apart· lnvestmtnt or · rental•. ww New,.rt leach ttOO men ts are alntie. one and two btdroom•. sell Q?mpletely tumlshed M' I / B Furni1hed and unfurnished. Professionally unfurnished. TY.,, story plus decorated with ai r conditioning ava1lible. ~~ -carpor~ ... ~ •• taun-3 BR )llAd.,::!~ ~.,1Y --.. Automatic fireplaces available tn silected .. .......... m. ,..,I.I<',-/ ryer. · '"'' ·--· apts. \Vet bar. f"\11ly maintained Factnr pool .......... $275 0 111\ ·' m \t"ll Ill" \11\ 1\1 f' J • gorgtous Jl'OW'dg includlnc 2 BR. 2 Bath11 ........ $225 2 pooli, teMll courts. etc. AVAILABLE NOW Close to super ma.rRt ahop. Ba,y A Stach R•alty, lne. ping, Coast Hlwty. Exctl· 901 Dover Dr. SUlte 12' NB Jeni buy, mutt see to apprec. M5-200l Evn. M&-1986 i,.te. Shown 1'.Y •PP'L Call WESTCLIFF -Larst :100D owna at '99-2152 or SJ5.079L aq. rt., 3 badroom, 3 bath, lovely yard -Mariners For S•I• By Owner L1gun1 Nlguel 1707 school dl11. $390 per mo. Ropac i: prage apt on t loL PANORAMIC Ocean yearly. 1607 J<entlane, open Each 2 br, 2 be. Rear unit View daily from 3: JO p.m.. or call cutre t incom $215 oor. lot. Pvt ~ ?aofonarch owner MZ..283S ~Ing rronte unit rr:: Bay. $2S,950. 499-13·cc, DUPLEX 3 Br. J Ba. nr. ha)' window, pine pa.nelln!::. 4$-4519 ocean. $235 flto. No pets. Va~t & ready to move in. Mission V1e "io 170I Rlch&rdr.on R.lty, 2'43 E. Price $49,500 with $16,000 -Coast Hv.'Y.. Corona del down. Call 673-5218. BY Owntr • Mii&ion Rid~ 5 Mar. 6~1 BEAMS & BRIC.K BR, 31,J ba, 3 car prqt:, F"RE'"·"SH=L~Y-pa~lnUd~-,~B-t.-21 So. o! Hwy. 2 BR. on R-2 lot, ~pl la!Wcaped. Be 11 Ba Duplex nr beh. Nu cpta. at la.st year's price! Add View lot in town. Low in-Bltn1. $1;() mo 1 e a 1 e , unit .t Jive "payment tree". terest loan assumable.! 5f0.7l13 S29,500. 837-7643 -L·1 co=u'=N"TR~Y~C~1.~b..,Uv"""'1-n.-.~,~Br Hal Plnchln & Assoc. RENTAJ.,S 2 Ba. 2 poot1, 1ardt":r11. ~ REALTORS Hou111 Fu'"l1hMI mo. Back Bay nr. S.A. 3$00 E. Cout Hwy. 675-4392 country club. Bkr. i7>&'.H4 General 2000 ===~~-..:,..~ R..-2 LOT DELUXE Townho111e 2 Br. 2 With pleasant existing house $~ 2 BR. Triplir:ic upptr Ba. trplc, pool. $ 2 5 0 . In good cond. Build a y.•/ deck, avail ' n 0 w . Bayfront apt $350. A&t. 1araa:e apt.. let the re.nt Children it pebl welcomed. 646-0732 he.Ip pay for your pn:>Jlf'rly. Bkr. ~ 1,,~VE"'rn:L1FF"==--~3~b-"~2~b-,.1 1'TORGAN REAL TY 673-6&f~ 61~S9 $150-Lovely 2 BR, fenced houae on quiet st. Avail on ~n• yard, trplc, many extru! yrly lie $350 mo. Refer req. "'""E. Coast Hwy. CdM Bk:r. 534-6980 Call 5CJ..1693, ~?PM. a>RONA Hlgblands view ======== The ,.,.,, 11 $750,000 worth ef Acrutfontl f1cilltl1s fNturln1: Nl9ht Ll9h1td T111nl1, V11l1ybtll & lllkttNll Court• Tennlt p,.. & Pro Shop Olympic Slit Swln.mlne Pool ind Hu!M Whlrlp11I Men'• & Women'• HMlth Clutt. with Saun• laths In ..... Gell Driving ~In .. Bllll•rd, C1rd, e"d Conference ltoems Perty Room With D•nce Ar•• Buffet and Wet &.r Color TV & l'lrepl1ct lounoe• Lux..,ry El1v1tor lulldlng1 With S.cutlty Ou1rd S.rvl<1 And Ample Puking Models Open Until 8 p.m. Daily R1nt1 from $14i to $!00 lmmtdlall Occupancy Month II Month Lu11t Av11labl• UNIT II • •••• NOW OPEN ... "' . F~,t, TURING ALL MODERN AMENITIES • LUXURIOUSLY FURNISHED • ALL ELECTRIC. HOTPOINT APPLIANCES • ENCLOSED GARAGES • 2 SWIMMING POOLS Bacheler, J & 2 ~rooms Adults -. No Pets 1760 Pomona, Costa Mesa (West of Newport, MtwHn 17th & 11th St.) ... ·----------. 4200 $35. WEl!K·NEW LUXURY HO'l'El. APTS. LAGUNA 49.1·7201 ~; blk lo ocean. 3 BR. 2 S.A, .$215 yrly lse. Avail April 5. Mr. Gunderson owr/bkr '1H210 2 BR turn apt. Vlew of Bay !: Brh. Sll!S. After 6P~f. 968-1793. 3 BR furn a; unturn lll0-$115. ~ tlrps, bl .... pool, s-tio. 1525 Pla.oentia. VEN DOME ho Id al f I 3 BR. 1 BA. ten«d yd. OlU me. ' or coupe Rentals to Sh1'9 2005 Havtn vie. 3 school1. ~ts, y.•/po11&ibdrmble GUest qtn:I .klnor ---------! nq'd. S33 Pirate Rd. $2%5. 2 Br, furn. Adult couples. MfACULA.n: API'S! more i.; over 00 g 2 Slnt\t": Working Girl!" wtsh mo/lH. Mfr.9549 $165. water paid. Avall lttu ADULT • FAMILY the town. SEE THIS! to share their apt &: ex·'-===;.;.;=====-1 Now !µsing In 11 I blk "AA . .,..,.,..,.IONS AVAILAB'. SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS Open Daily 2.-5 2 ,___, ·1· . . lo beach . ......-.262 Cl-• "' = 412 Mendoia Terrace. rienses. '""1ae1 from University P•rk 3217 NEWPORT ll~CH f111tN. wt util. Bacbelor OH to .,..ng, Perk Ocean. Call 61~ a.ft. .;..-'-"-'-'-'--'--= 1tO Irvine il * Spadous 3 Br's, 2 S.. Stan Smith. Rltr. 673--2010 5:30. 3 BR. 2 baths .......... S3tl (Irvine •nd 16th St.} ~f~ ~f:cen~~ilN~l $137.50. * 2 Bedrooms Orange County's MOit Btouti/ul Aµ<Jrtme11t Communit11 Featuring a club atmosphere for your com· fort and pleasure -just completed 1 or 2 Bedroom, 2 Bath. Furnished Qr Unfurnished. Alr-Cond., soundproofed, self cleaning ovens, beam ceilings, dishwasher, lush landscaping with streams & waterfalls, elevators, BBQ's, clubhouse with social activities, saunas, Ja· cuzzi & swim pools, private garage w/stor· age. From $140-$210. ,., 111joyM11 surroultCll"fl ccrterl19 te di,. ctnlot tldults. comt t1 MIUIMAC WOODS •• , Ju1t ... t 1f 2600 Har-l l•tli nr. Nehr1 CHlll•c 425 MERRIMAC WAY, COSTA MESA e 545-6300 IVll:YTHING NIW-\\OVI 1N NOW! - Ce11t• Met• * 5100 I Cotta Mo1t GRAND OPENING New and Dramatic as a Spanish ·castle EL CORDOVA Am * Think you've seen great apartments? 5100 We have all the nice features as follows: * HEATED POOL * REC HALL * DISHWASH&RS * BAR-B.QUES * SHAG CARPET'G * GARAGES MANY OTHERS: I & 2 BR's-FROM $145 For Adulh Only 2077 Chari• St. * 545-0376 • (Just 400 ft. W. ol Harbor lllvd. oU Hamilton) $150 & $170 All UtllttlH Paid 1 le 2 BR. 2 'IW;m pools Adults only, no pel!I. 307 Avocado SI., C.M. See ~fgr on premiats (Behind K·1"lart otf Harbor at corner Rutal':l'll & Avocado) Day 642..J.535, e\-e 645-0283 MARTINIQUE ------- 5200 l•lbH Peninsula llOO GIRL 22 wants to lihatt t Br 3 BR. 2 bath•·········· S340 1714} 645.0550 • SWlm Pool, PuVrre.e.n hou1e C.M. with ea.me., t BR. 2 bl.ttia •••••••· .• $31~ OCE~RONT 3 Br. yrl)'. • Frpl, tndlv/lndry fac'la chlldren ok. 6'Ml06 or 3 BR. 2 baths .......... ~ (Will lease unfurn.) 1145 An•helm Ave. Spacloua arounds w/ park· BALBOA PENINSULA I HOUie: &: Apt. F'lni1h the tt· modeling on thlli 3 br, l ba howe on Plaza Del Sur. En· joy lncomt from apt over ~-"Fixer Upper." $44,COI. Louis \V. Briggs ResJtor • 673.StlO, 67J..4037 64&-4092 e RED HILL REALTY GARDIN GROVE Agent 642-3850 OOSTA MESA &47·2824 like 1urrowxiina:s w/ pri· l 2 R SPO Univ. Park Center, Irvine 13100 Chapm•n Avenue .,,,~..,~~~!!!!!]~ vacy. Patios & pools. Nr. --------or E NSIBLE .,.p1, Call Aoydme 833-0820 Corona dtl Mer 4UO ' • RENT • •hopping. Adcdt, only. BAYl'RONT to lib.are luxury 5 BR, 2 ==-=-=====:=cl (4 blks. W. Senta Ana Fwy.) QUIET DH:LUXE API'S lllOI')' Laguna Bch view East Bluff 3242 (714) 636-3030 \VANTS To sub-leue Furn. 1 l Roomt ~urniture BACH., 1·2 & 3 BR's 2 BR, 2 BA Luxury Apt1. Mme. $60 mo. Call 494--8773 --------·I $l 9.95 & UP 1777 Santa Ana Ave, C.flt. Prlv. terrab!, elevaton, sub-Br. apt immediately. Leav· t WOMAN Will share '·-·na BLUFFS Mzr, Apt· 113 646-'~"' ttranean pk'1. All elee. -· NAHllM inz 11tate. Cont'! Bttakf.ut, 1• •• ~ M ~ Pool Ni..,•el ho"'e wlrt•pon&ible 4 BR, 2% BA, 2 11-, ....... 1, A .onu ... o-Mth fttont&ls • M>lt y.·atl':r, dockl. 3121 °'" . ., "''J ...,.... Tenni1, Pool. 6"-M19 \VID " tiu3iness perl!On. $100 mo. $l:D mo. 644-U32. Now leasing for Mlrch oc:cup1ncy · E SELECTION ORLEANS APTS. \'.. Coast Hwy, Ne wporL 4~ . 277 $. Brookhurst St. FURNISHED apa r t me. n t frlO DEPOSIT O.A.C. &12-2202 5 ,.. w. BAY AVE. YOUNG man to share 2 Bit Coron• clel Mar lUO (1 blk. So. of Llncoln) "'1th I~,,'!~; IITRC Yurnltu re 'Renlals 3 BR, 2 BA. nr t1eean . frplc, ~"& ne.w 3 bdrm. 2 ba. apt, Santa Ana area. $43.50.I.· ---------1 (714} 712-4500 ~ 5t7 W. l!*th, CM se&.3431 2 a: 3 BR avail. Adulta only. dsh..-•hr, m5 mo yrly. No Me.cliterranean style: build-Aft 4 pm, SG-4307 LEASE OR LEASE OPTION 2 BR. Marauutte. So. ot pets. 548--0897 wkdys g.s er'a home, top quality thru· Gorpous &:: charminc 311 'i'r.l~".":-----~!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!I ~~'?.;..!.2» mo. No children. Cott• Met• 5100 17U Tustin, c:inta 1"fet11. DEWXE Features, 2 hr, 2 &droo ho beamed!' ~'°""' ?otir. ?.ln. Canon, iil-4641 ba oot. Top loc. <occupiH!). Cotti Mete 2100 . m ml': -RINTALS ======== apt lor adults. EutbluU Biii Grundy, RHltor ceill.,.. thtuoot • •pukllns Heu111 Ullfurnl"'M Coll• Motl 4100 HARBOR GREENS 1--------""''· C.ll 644-4'93 133 ~---.• NB • .-"~ 1---------1 heated a: filtered pool ·' ..:..:::;:::::;~::::;::_,;::.:::;~-Lido 1t1e 4351 SP vuvu ..,, oou., .... u I BEDROO'I 1~ ho ,. e N"••u PALMS e APARTMENTS ACIOUS 3 Br 2 Ba O'pts, ". 0-... uae.. minimum upkeep Y• rd . Du•llXH u~urn. -75 ~ Fairway Vi11 Apt h1ra;e. fl':llced lot. $130 mo. ~UI': $350 mo. Calli-'-'"'=-..;;.;"'==_.;;.••= 16 2 BR. POOL ATTRACTIVELY furn. 1-Ba~helor.1·21 s BR. FUm/ I a s drpe, frplc. blt·ins, 1 blk to Lido l•I• l3S1 Phone Lt 8-6443 54WCU, South Col&t Real $12> I BR. Octan Breeze. 177 E. 22nd St. ~ Studio, Bayfront. pat 1-;,~ 11nf. Ft'cm SUO A: up. Gar· ;h<=";;h:1;215,:;.'4;:&-<;;39;1'== 3 BR: pool; )'l':arly. came.Illa Esta!@ \V/w. Child ok. $1.M Beaut. turn 2 BR "" View. ttnmed. occup. Util den p!ltiofl • Beam ceilp Ne1u· On1.ngl': Co. Airport & Ln. Al King, Jpnes. Really: SHARP 3 er. home,· unu-·-• Bkr. 5.14-'980 pando Mob. Hm. 133 E. 16th pd. Le.ue 67}-ml Frplca • Rec Rm1 • 2 Pools UCJ . AduJts only. 20m 5240 LIVE! ON LIDO P • •-s s 6 c ••• ·~ ..;========= &lunas • Nur&C!:ry School Santa Ana Ave., ~ 1---------h, ~o frpl .; din. area: buiJt.\n ltENTALS t. P 1 • M . .,,,....._., "' c-.. ~ -ram A: Adult HetiOM, Im·•--------kUchtn: nice. patio. Aph. Furnithed 1 BR tum lz unfurn, drps, Huntington lu. med. or::cup. 2100 Pe.lc™n' · VlEW. 2 BR. Carpets, dtapes. Built·lns, Pool. $165. on lrvi/11! Ave. • 673·3690 Newport le•ch 2200 Scenic Properties 675'-5126,1 --'-------1 w/w crpl!, pool, pvt bal. \Vay, C!\I Nr Hrbr &: Adams. VILLA MESA APTS. 4 BR. 2 Ba, untU June u . Gener el 4000 i'"'""~™:;:.:,.:;:'':::":..r:.:3.!:p;;m'=,_ rr:;. ~ri 8~~ ;o Q~~ 546-0370 2 BR unfurn, pri patio•, htd Bayiho~s area. Private l•lbo• lsl•nd JW11---------$120 Beaut. furn., 1 BR., ex· ea-r;-single adlts. couple. pool. 2 car encl'! ear. ChU· C11ron• dtJ Mer 5150 beach. patio, aar. $200 mo. The GORGEOUS New pando. Adult1 only. 133 E. 202 A 14th. 53&-1319, 673-1784 HARBOR dren welcome, no pets 548-8232 Avail immediately. CHARMING VAL O'ISERE 16th St, sp Cl. CM IH2--tn5 PARTLY fumlshfll 2 Br. 2 · f' ploa.se? $160 abo turn $185.1 iimiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiOiiimiiil SPACIOUS I 2'55 3 Bdrm. home. Frplc .. blt·ln Slnal9·1 br-2 br. Fum.-unr. 1 BR apt. Cea & \\Iller pd. Ba apt .. dllt'IWu:her. patk>, 719 W. WU.son 646-USl custom built famfu· home :8:.:•;;lbo:.::•~1::';;1':.."":.:....-_::.::• :: I ~rhenba}.u~va~~: = =~~~s~~B=• f~i"~-.. ~;,;;"'9.~N~~i;c~'.~~:';;ldtt;;;;n;. :;no~ I ·,;h;:";;;""~"';.w;.;"'~';,'"=81:::'";:·:::&' I J OWN HO USE 2 N:: ~;~~& ~~~~Y s::~: 3 BR. & den . Lowly Patio Mov.e·in CQlld. SS.S,000 (and • W'f! have otheirs)· Walker Riiy •• 67l-5200 ·m Via Lido, NB Open Su n. . 4 Bdrms., de.n, 3\: baths. 2 Br. littplace, turn. house. l. \'early leue $2'15 month. NvV\ p---Rd. ·L'~"-Edin~r. Ml-7062 ......,,nd.I!, Adlts,.bO .... ts. IP1 40 $76500 Avail now 'til June 13. $150 .u.acNAB IRVINE """"" .. ...,.... '""'°"'u 1 BR. new, beaut turn mo. to 2217 lfarbor near Wll11t1n •·--··-•• LIDO REAL TY INC. mo. 67J...S70!I "'" .. mo. UGO. Adults onJ)'. 2220 L•gun• hach 4105 • 2 Br l ~J ea. Stud.kl mo. 2283 .rountain \Vay E. ON TEN AatES Realty Co. C t Mt 4100 Elden. 64&-S302 eve1. Townhouse $135 <Harbor, f\lrn '''· 0 f 1 • 2 BR. Furn " Unfunl • .3377 Via Lido 6i3-T300 FURN. l\fod. 2 Br, 2 Ba. (714} 642-12)5 OI a 1• e H WilM>n). \Vllson Gardens Dock. No pell. Avail to ,...1 Dov•r Ori"• SUlto 1_ 1---------DELUXE 1 BR, spacklus, $35 W"EK•NEW • Neated pool • Adulta only Apt,, ~!lacea I prlv. paUca I 3 BR. Oe.n, 2% Ba. Co n-June 20. $300 mo. &r:>-7880 '7tl • • ..., pool. Ideal for bachelors. • • o pets • Adj lo 11hopplni;:: ~ TeMIJ. Cantnt'l Bkf!IC, tempor11ry, A re hi le ct 7"7==:c;===~;'J=.,;_N;;"""~;rt;,;;8';;•;;ch;,,=I * SUNNY * S\25. 1993 Church. 541-983.1. LUXURY~OT&L APTS. * TOWNHOUSE * 900 &la l.ane, CdM 644-Sll dtsigned &: bit. Lo int. ,:D ltX F 2975 -* -9436 * ELEGANt.:E a' 2 BR. l~J BA, trptl.. drps, !Mac.Arthur nr. O.st Hey> -----·----tranilerable 10 an . By up 11 um, Hunflftlton Inch 3400 ACRES Newpert Beech 4200 2 BR 2 BA, pvt patio, Hacienda Harbor patio. Adults. SI60. 134 E. ~ own~r. Phone • 673-28:>4 for $113-All util pd . 2 BR'•,1---------* * garage, choice loc. S18:i 1 Ir 2 BR. Sl.504t70 Melody Lan e. 642-6872 2 BR Duplex apt w/ praa:t. appL yard, i,2 blk 10 ocean, 3 BR .. 1~' BA., com. 2 s;ty. M I A ! BA YCLIFF MOTEL yf:ar round. ~2095 morn!! Utll included. NC Pt"f'S M8-l76S. View. Crpll, drps, dshwhr, • ----childre n &. pets. Bk r · Townhae. Patio, 2 cir 1ar.. * ote • p $ * * LO\V WEEKLY RATES * or aft ;,. Adult ltvtng In a LOVELY 2 Br, w/\V crpts, ~7~a;=· Call tves I wknds Huntington Beach 1400 534--6980 pools , tenn is. No rttB. $235 Kitchen, TV's, tnaJd IM'Vlce. l BR Apt. It cookg. beau Mediterranean Atmoaphere drp1, wood firs, I a r, ~=.:...,. ____ _ RENTALS mo. Lease. 962-1981 1 llinal So. of O.C. Heattd Pool. ocean vu , Lag Hills. Util pd. Bit.Ins, ahag crpts, drps, wuherldryer. Adults, no 2 BR. fltariuulte. So. ol FORMER MODEL Hou1u Unfurnished 3 BR. 2 BA, Crpl!I &. Drps. Falrpou1'ds 646-32SS Sn1l per $85. 494-9643 gara.g! w/stora1e, POOL pets. For appt call 616-3160. Hwy. S1!0 mo. No children : · 3 BR, 3 BA, l\1eadow Home Throughout. 1 ... ."fenced yd. Shullo & 1 letlroomt ~us1r""' marketplace. Jn 241 Avocado 6-42-2925 =2264~-'P~l'c'"'..,"~"-'·:..0:.'.P'c.".:....,_ * &42- 1898 • G I --• $12 WK & UP GAkDEN Al'"'T .. by month. P ~· BACHELOR A that atlll 1how1 llke a model, enera -SpoU ess. $235 Uase. Call • Off the Bay, pocl, lo-w:ly town. The DAILY PILOT Harbor Height• Aptl. 2 Br $140. Separate unit, at· pt., "° cook· good location, 68 :x lOS hick -** RENTALS** 846-9286 . Day. w .. k. Mowth grounds. maid t erv. K!n Class1Ued section. s. v e Roomy-Deluxl': 2 &; 3 BR. !ached p rnge , carpelll & in£. $100 ui~~;:ltncluded. wall~ lot. E.11.cellent 1flnd· $92.50 Furn 1 BR Apt. CONDO. 3 br, l',J ba, •. Kltche:ns , . TV'• incl. Niles Villa 1'1ulna. Call: mone:y, tlm• & eJlort. Look I-Tomi': atinos phere Incl garg, drapes, ga r d' n' r . No =====;,== seeping, w/spr!nklers rronl $155 FUrn 2 BR Apt. waaher, dryer, pool , clblue. • P~ne serv., httf pool 673·!1»3. Now! Ired air ht.it, bltn11. Cls to ='-"~lld,_,_.,_or=-'"'="=·:..64&-cc.:..2U8='-B JL--I d &: rear. Upgrade:d top of the $l40 U tu 2 BR Dupl Adlta $1911 mo 6r>6806 aft • Mlld U"rvice avail. S.D. frwy, !!hoPll', 11ehl, ~rk. 3 Br. 2 Ba. nu s h a: • -•l•n 5355 line crptg, drps &: applianc-$l50 Un furn 2 BR Stud~x 4·30 • 2376 NllW..OIT ILVD. Ne~,!!f't hac~ 4200 I Newpert leach 4200 {Btwn Bakr.:r & Glsler, w. of c r pt 11 Id r pa . Fn:11hly ''· Priced to sell at $33,900. $ll.l u~tu~ 1 BR Cotta~ ~ARP 3 BR. 2 BA. crpts, 541-9755 1 ~;::;;;;;;;:;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, Harbor) Rental o re, 3117 ~nted. Nr OCC. Upstrs. SPAC 2 Br. trpl, ear. crpl1, drpB, atove. $250 yrly inc uUI. 67:>-6017 ev•11 & wknd1 ' •. ~~::: •• ROOMP.fATE SERVICE drp1, bltns, trplc, fenced , PALM MESA APfS Grirtd Opening _ lmmecll•te Occup•ncy 1 Cinnamln Ave. 546-1034 '53"7"-'Ll"°'I"°"==-,,...-,= _____ • MANY CYmERS * $21~ mo. 96l-n94 Ne:oil to Santa Ana Country OAKWOOD WANTED: l nice family. 2 JUST Completed 2 BR. FrH to Landlord• 2 BDR/.l. house. Stove I: Club. ~t o~SantaAnaA~. Br, i~; BA. New ~ts A Opts. rirps, blt-irt.9. $155 Huntington Beach Blue BeaCC'n Re:nta.I Ftnders rth':la. Adult, no pets. on fl1esa. Drive, drpa. \VID hook-up. Gar. mo. 21jl Elden Ave . ON BEACH RARE OPPORTUNITY Tske over 51' loan, $147 mo pays &IL 2 Sty 3 Bit. 2~1 BA + fam nn. only $31,500. The Re•I E1t•t• M•rt 147.&531 LIOUIDATIONll U NE\V J.IOMES f.llUST BE SOLO! 3-4 l 5 Bedroom6 Lower price. to close these out! 435 IV. 19th St. CM ~Ul 1150 mo. 536-1133 8'.t:Mlor, l. 2 -The best of two worlds Allor 3 & wk ...... 96&-1212 ="=-2-3092=-~-~- DISCRI!\1lNATING Family featm'iftl all elec. Hotp:iinl NEW Dix 1 l 2 Br. Shi crpt, $150 + RC. deposit. Clun 2 needed for 4 Bedroom. 3 Fountain V•Uey >410 appl~ance1. Fumishl':d & un. your home •nd your country club dl'J>I. bltM, immed . occp. Bdnn Du.plex. Crpll/drps, e SlNCLES FROr.1 $140 Bath + Oe.n Ne. w p 0 rt fumiahed. Adults only. NO For your home, select from iintale, one •nd Sl60 -$180. 54 O. t 9 7 3 , 11\1/ref, encl patio. Infant • 2 BR 11,1 BA FROM $225 E.1ate ._ __ for 6 mooth• • BR. • BA blt-lnt din rm peta. 546-98&0. h 54>2321 OK. 2244-A State:. &U-7472, e : BR 2 BA FRO'! I-'""'"' .. • two be.lroom epertm1nt1. furnis ed or un·· ., _, or lonpr i~ exchanae. lor eowred fiaa:1tone0 pa t lO CHATIAU LA POINTE furnlihtd, 11ch 11 profe11lon•lly decoreted 2 BR. bltm, crpl!I. doted A1TRACJ'IVE 2 Br. Ctpta, • 3 BR 2 BA FROM $360 te~er loving care end wfblto.ln bbq. Neu schls. 2 BR. f\trn or Untum. end includes cerpetin9, drtptri11, ell-tlectric 1araie. r.tatu~ adufts only. drpe:, Gt ldtch.. vle.w, encl CaJ'Pt!'ia-drapea-dlahwaahl':r $!50/nwnlh wtth Gardener '&-Fountain Valley $2511 Mo Pool. Mulls, no ptls. We1tin,.hou1t eppli1nc11, •tor•""' I spat• Sl.30 mo. 548-4$73 or 5"-2884 gar, nr bu•. $1.fO. adullll. heated pooJ-sauna·lennls Included. Agent 546-2313 .. ~ .. ._.. ' · $1. 50-Jl6S all util pd. • • I., E 20Jh St ~c room-ocean vie-. .,,,... • ....,. 1pleP1ty end privet• balceny p.tio. $140 2 BR upper. Utll furn. · · pat!Oll-ample Pl"rklna:. SUPER SHARP 3 BEDROOM 3 BR. 2 BA. Bltna, crpta, 1.94! Pomona, CM. d h I Id Avllil lmmed. No kids, no DELUXE 2 BR. Westcliff 2 BATH ROltfE for re:nt al drpl, tncd. l':ncl patio. $2l5 $140 l\[0/DLX mob. hm.. Just •+•,• from your I ~·' is • ~ 0 1 wor pets. 642-337~ Loe. Pool & b u 11 t· l n s. HUSeNcurlTltyNSUG•TnlO• N $185 per month. Otiubt~ 1ar· mo. 54,._2288 wkdys, eve.a comp! furn. Hid pool. of 1Jclu1lv1 counfry c UD r•crtftton: AduHi. $200 m°"'no lease. age. fencfl yard, Its In MO-MIC Adults, no pets, 4 S.ason'a • Prof1t1l•nel 1i11 Ttnni• C1urt1 1 BR $l 30. 2 Br w/fenccd 6f2..f274 PACIFIC our-Tental book at WAi k-i\1ob Hm ..,..t .... ~ .. Nwpl • Rt1i 'tnl Toon•'• Profa11ie1nel end Shep patio $150. Crpts, drp1 & bit--'-ii~'=-=-,.-o-=-:--.-- • , --. -H·-bor Bl .. «d. 4 BR. 2 BA .. "'-le, bullJ.fns. s •o ;H.. ~ · -· • ln1 MZ..7219 tv•• & wkndo. i DEWXE 1 • 2 BR Garden 11 ~ •"" l...Cll:' "''"" 9" • • • ., ........_ • Ol~mr,lc 1i11 Swimming Pool 1 ~ru-. AVE., H.B. at Adams. Cul-de-1ac. $2111. Avail Im· • W • I I th QUIET AREA • Beaut. Ira 2 Apt1. Blt·ln1, prlv p11tlo, (714) 5.16-\48~· 4 P.fO'S YOUNG med. cau 5401837 •WINTf:R RATES 1r p•o • I heall':d pool, frplc. AduJts -~----"--- ! BR. 2 BA. frplc. PluM VACA?ll"T I< Oean, 3 Bia if tenant rf:malns thru aum· • P1dlllll1 Tennis, Volleyblll, l11••tlt1 ll ~~ .. ~l~ 63<;8: Dr., i ,;';":,:,':;"'°;;;,· ;::546-5:;,::1;::83;....,,.,,=-* URGE new 1 Br. with C!f'Pl!I. Take ovt.r Gt loan. ~room&, bltim., t rp I c ' Lag"'1• Nltutl 3717 mer--no ra\Je tn rents. l BR Courts YEAR Old E-tidl': 2 BR, 2 load~ of ~firage, drestlr\I HAFFDAL REAL TY 142-4405 SU b It ....._ .,,...,.,,, "··k 1ari:e: fe.netd yard. Ont)' ;no tum $1.SO. •tucUoe $115. 21.35 And • 20,000 i•utr• feot cluilhov11 offar1 1 BR. No children or pell. BA bl~· di c h cl room, man b• th . m """""· ...,.,,_, . .xt: mo. Aafnt 5f&...ll41 Elden, CM, SH Mgr Apt 6. , Garqe. llld pool. Czpt1, • uio. 5"w r, en Dl~h\v11her. Blt·lns, Shq Leadership· llU-44fi& ========:.IATT'RACTWE, Piffllkm ' th••• feature•: -d 2-8CM2 rar. prlv patio. 6Q..625'1 carpetln&, Pvt Patto.1 blk : M "IOO BR. 3 BA. declao, built 1n SUS CASITAS • Seper•t• Men'• end Women'• rpll. 64 2 BR -1 d rt to ohoppln" &: .,,.1, ... ,. ' F I V II 1'10 Cotti HI • -·-I -•~-Adult> H " Cl ' h S SPLIT L<"l 2 BR. Crpll. . "'" ~ rps. "'l'JIO ' • " 'll ;...:;°""=t.;;•.:.:n:..· .:..;;.'c.IY'-'"'--'-';;.;; vaeutJm, dnPf:•· catptta, r ~· Ul'\o 2UO'Nn;port ••"ti! uas wit •un•• drp1. bl!JU. No pell. 2Qj pocl. 2 kids ok. 221t Oolle1t. distance to ~ach. Adul11 ~ CLEAN' t BR. 2 BA. Crpla. sPrinklen. view. $323 mo. &.d, ~t~-9236 • lndeor1 a.ff Drivin9 R•1191, Meni!<>z.a. 56-M2J Apt 2. 646-0l27 only. 11262 Atlanta. rt.a. dl'Jlll. hlln•. , u 1 _ d ,.... ,. , . 5 Bdrms 3 Baths 31141 11~ "°"1 Dt. Call tor · .. 1ttn1nl1 R"'" 136·:1S!O ' $28 ro:i 0y Owne stl).6837 nttplace.. ~tl.,. cpta, drpa. appt. 49&-2'TU MlRit1Mlc WOODS .. Th11fr1 TV lounge, Att Studie , SP.Lrr Leve.I 3 BR. CrptJ. Meta Vtrde 5110 1 BR TownhH, p001, 1.,, ' r. OOsl': to au sehoOti. $290. F.oJl llel'lt: 3 br. bouM:. Turn Urdtt ,,,,.o, ~ 8d un. '•rty RHms drpl, bltns. No peta. 2WI----------Crpt, drpa, bl t·ln• l Santa Ani Hgt1. 1630 Ltue or le.ue w/option to crpts. df"P', blt-lns, wale. dtt da.u '100. 425 Mtrri-Models Op1n 10 A.M. To I P.M. Deily r.leDdou.. MS-M21 ·2 Btdroom. crpta. drpt. elec "'"'hrfd'tyer, patio. $140. , -buy. pl.id. $215 mo. Inquire mtc Way. 56'.100 t $ DEWXE 2 BR. 1tudki, crt>ls, bltina. Adults. 5$.J.209 or 54~1019 l 3 BR llome wfrnany extras. W1ll,.McC1rdl1, Rltrt. •'1197 or Owner (213) 2 Bedroom, 2 Mth. com· •IN S NOM 1IS.$JlO drps. pool. lmmac. 1 chlld ~ Rltr. noo:o.tY 2 At 3 br'•· Qoptd A 1 VA appratted $23,800. Vt11 mo NfW'(IOl't Blvd., C.l\I. -...o1'9 pltte.ly furnished. pri\•at• OAKWOOD ok. Ca.ll&l6-<M!l6 chiJd, Newly cleoor. 3 br .. , no dotn1, mA low down. 5'8-7T29 &M..o6M ews. patlO, rarap. pool . child LAA.Gt 2 Br. I ~' &-. atudlo Newport 8e1ch 5200 dbl ~lt•ch pr a; fr{\lc. 3 t BrlflC money I: SAVE $SU Condominium 3950 OK. $21S. Phone '75-4930 apt. No pelt. SU.0. 726 Joann --------blk1 fi'orn heh.. 5J6..171l 'FUU.l!ll REALTY !146-0814 3 BEDROOM home, hdwd !!HARP 8'.d>dOt onlt. OoH GARDEN APARTMENTS _cSt~·,;,'*-"'="10Mcr-~~~-1 HONE:YMOON ,1,w apt. NEW I BR·blk ., bo1Cb. : DON'T Jlvt tt •WlY• l't Ors, adultJ. $11$ month. I BR. 2 b8. crpt, 2 car, pr, to 0CC & UCJ. $133 pan 1700 .16th Strett, Newport leech BA6iELOR APT. Crpt.s, eltaant carpeting, 2 Bdrms. $130. Prl Pf.UO • QUmtt J1Uk'k cuh for It wtth a AVIUlbl& now. $41-2903 -pooJ . A c\bhN avilJ. 1225 all. Rcfete.1'1(91 required, Phe"'' 642.1170 drt)I, bltns. No peta. 2815 firtplact, llftlt $2SO . Ga.r, alrtile adlll, couple. ·°""'"---'--Plloc.;;;;.;.t _....,.;...;t_M __ . -._B_ro_k_.._ ______ ;..;.'"°;;;.;.· .;.!!40-6339;;;..;;:.;;· ___ ....:i? i..;.A;;,vo;;;U;,,,,;;2/l.;,/.;.11);;; • ..;-;;.;..,;;;;~-IJ·---------------•l!_;M~'~"~"""~'·~MS-!14~~21~-M3-239' 202 A ltlll S.16-1!19, 61347U - ., " ' ~ ,. l $;1 DAil Y PllOT Wtd'f'df1, I • ., l!, 1910 jl"itUltilill'i'f'IX:C:(l"l ___ lliiiillilR•lll!i••-•illmi!--1!11!'9-~l lllAL ESTATI ,1 IUSINl5S..... ANNOUNCJ~~S Aph.~rnlth!"_ Ill' * * *·· ··Yr * o .... ro1 , '1NAN~IAL •_!!~NOTICES Huntinston ....,, 540I ·1-;;;i;11ri•I ;;.·1:·..,.---. -w-'1r.;,..;.1, , -~ SPACIOUS l 8R.--QW<-.-,,, PrOjlOrly -1.1 TD L -;-,,,u,-Y_lJ_CEN_.,.,SEI>-~.- 1'\>pk,.,.; pr, ..,..., .U,., I BUILDEI! OFTE:llSNEW fl 011 bno•-ned 1t In d u SJ>lrlt· xtr. •lor. Adultl JW. IJ7T 1 ~L J\dvlce on all Gufitld. 9o.a4 "" ~~~ W· ~ce<k·~: • ~drc; 2 Lowdut lbT~-D Alvaill.bii.. mattere; LtNe, r Marr1q., -• -.. ... COurublp._HqlJh. -2 BR. l clilld under 2-)'n OK. :%'!5:5~· County ' area. Pro P• r ty n . o•n u • ..,.lncb " Sueen.,_ No No ptli. 2J6U Er11tand St. dear. Owoor v"/carry lsl !' ',..~ • $m mo. 968--3089 TD l~lrt. Pre'pd int. <1k. Terms baattd on 94f\llt)'. pt'Obltmt too l&f:::e or too 1 Bdrm, Ptl)' turn, f'tlMc, ~am, Sf8-3430 pm. !12·2171 •. JU.0611 =~ c:.~~~U~ Car. P\rt >'d, Adults, No NE'IV Sld(., µ,«WI sq ft tor .!!ervin; Harbor an:a 21 f~ .,wk: 9.A.'t..fPM .SU 'N. EJ "'''° Sl-W. S4Mm sale. or leUI For 4ctalla Settl•r Mert.f41'1! ~ c • m 111 0.,-R 1 al, s 1 n · .~-·'-·· ( ~ E 171h sfl'ftt Clemente , 4i92·9131i, 2 • 3 BR, 2 BA, pvt palio, ~ • ·-··· ta ... . healed pool. \\11.,he.r I: dr~;er Whlll4y1 Wint? Whldcly1 Gef1 '' " •tt WE l\µKE Oft BJ.I)' 493-.0016~ ' hook up . ..,_..,, SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION fOlt ~ TRUST DEEDS 5-i j',.138l .&l'\Y11.me Bia. 2 BR, l Ba. carpet•. drapes, NAT\llllAL IORN SWAl'PEkS C.mm•rcial ~60ISI.=======:= bll-iM. near beft<'h $13.i mo. $pt1cltl lite 1.;;:;:;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,IMorft•i•I, · 8f2-4()&} 5 Lines -5 tlm" -5 bucks. SHOPPING' CEl\'i'ER • Um· Trust Deeds NE\V t SR. CAR.PETS, ltUlliS -I.Cl li\UIT l!ICl IJOE o DRAPES. .._..,.i: .. tfll M~• 14' tr1N. )-w1u1 l" "Hnf Ip\ tr••· ilrd tip.ace ,vaila.bll!:,jn t,oard. ------'-----~·1ru ft 111or .. '"''" ••1Ut1t. ·~ t0N11 11 ••~vtb1n1. \\·alk center, located Wide .-......... •At T.O. on HunM ~~:on 'J'hf: Undbo!'I: Co. 536-23:!1 Ill HOIHll'IG FOR S•I I! -:1"10e• nNt ,, ............. ... <U '5 To Pl1ce Your Tradtr't fterMtM A~ be«.ut !fuJ . llu ntinrton Beach R-2 lot. $50 •month LARG E. tie.in 2 Br. apt. PHONE 642.5671 · ' lfarhour. Conts.<-1. Ro•• lncludlfll::.9~0. 3 >T due. ,U~- Adults. Closed :ara:es. , Blonlett,· 714/8~1361. discount. 49f -l100 or :ml England St. l36--120;i Hedge 11.gainst innatian . fi.mr. un11~ /.; pool JSjil Huntin,:to'n HarboUr Corp 493--1706 ~·--- .ZIPO,QATE ADULTS ONLY Yeu Knew The F•ct1 Of Li(• II ! So L••rn The Fects OfLevel ll 24 Hr. Rtcorcf .•. l:?J::l) 86:?.3319 Oran;::e Co ' (il.4 ) 1135-2220. Tl'd fo1· inc. or boat. j n.1 \\' I :S4llt loan 1!lllunta blel ~~·~l<~l~·~ll~'"""";:·;~A~•;·•~ .. ~HB:: ... 1~=~~::~~=~~ vlMv lots. Heart of Orn: 6.6 Int. 'T'nl~ ~.\I equity~ . 1Money W1ntM 6350 ALCOJ-lOLICS Anonymous Cnty. Eq. $"£\J: Be <JUltk for 4 BR. \\'.side C.'I home. lmpro,·ed C:Omm lots Bristol Phone 54'.!·'l?l'l or \\Tite to Sant• Ane 5420 VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Living Furn. &. Unfurn. on !~Is. 830-60-IO i'i1·99'.'0. A;t. 5-19-0218 a'ruotim@. SIWr area. F p(t sq ft ESTA.qLfStlED Builders P.O. Sox tm Co~ta. ?tlesa.. Trade ::.000 sq ft San re1 .. na.ndo \'allry home . .J br. l b<i + cabana: pool. 1~011.h· rid;e aJ'f'al. For &c.:ch prope11y. 84+Mtil·1 181 :? Bedfoon1 uni~. smi;JJ !lhopp'g <..~nter. hou..;-:-, du· plc.x. vacant. \r ant vii.Calli for trb· park any aJ""ea or ? Fannie Pritt PJtr, tHS.3109 lltt\e Crunct~ stereo 1..-on.· llania £~a{ft~ need $801000 ~ur~ v:/ lst sok> \1ifh 1utomatic Stel'l!O/ · :J TD. on ne11.· indwtrit.J bld,i:. tape UIO, vl!.lue. \\'6l.n! "'" 642.WSO Val. $ll'O,ooo. f rime loca· tit" motor bllje 2;0cc or b~· FOR :i1j1.le.-s:lore build\n;:. lion in Oran;:-e C n t Y .. :;:-er. (l.10-9Ti9 l 68&-6SS \V. 19th St. Selhel 82li-OSl(J, eve.,l523-'40U , , J·Iuve $l2,000 in1 'e:i1ted in V\V To,1·ers area. ~1768 A;t· PARTNER. acUve/lnatl!\'e: l:IJr. :iim part1',houlK' l: ma-_ · · · Recreation produet. Split chine :i1hopon Ne"':J!Ort, C~t. Industrial Rtntil • 60tO profiU. Tif:'833--868J Anl'Mklnc.m•nts 6;.410 ·' tAGUNA I COIN 'i!tUI • F.r..EE Neel! 4th \\1eds. of the month •t Lazuna fede.ral Saving! bide .. Start 1 pm. Visitor.s weli:ome. When You Vant it done -~,,g'lit .. -. --a-..J. -' Coll one of 'the experts listed below!! si~_!ce · ·D1~1C::T01tY I s11tv1c1 DIRIO'!'OllY Irick, Menn,.Y,, G•rc&.n.ing MIO •tc ~ ~--ANTHONY'S '44 4160 DependsbJe ~taintenanee E.xp .. Pruning • PlarltinJ: Bud.gel Landsca.pins: • Horticulturist • SERVIClE DIRECT RY Palntln9, · Paperhanging ,.,, PAINTING· "THE EA'TERIOR SPECJAL(ST'' $285.1 tlory, stucco&: trim, S coa~. labor & paint. All \\"Otk 1Ua.ta.nleed. lJ<'. ~ ins, "'on't be underbid! tlS.-3679 BRICK .le CARPENTERY \\"Ofk, plant.en, flnpl1ces, block .,.,·alla, cement patios, patio roots l: all types of repaiN. 4.91-7~ ool.lect. BUILD. ·Remodel, repair 'Brick,. block, toncrete, carpentry, no·jobitoo amall. NEW la.,.,lls, re-aeedlna:. PAJ?olllNG: F•ther &: son. I.Jc. Contr 96u9'U Complete lawn ~· Cle~n Quality \\"orlananshlp &: FRE.'E" Est Brick block ' up by job ,or montfl. Fttt Material& Guar1nte.•4 . 1 • • ~ ttY· esliffia.le:s. ·For Info calf Reliable. :?7 Yrs IAcal. ~1~~'. S.~~;~~Stale tf~i:l. ·. S9'l-~l'l or ii&-8932 Ref~r. E'lnCNOI\, 34~7 or '> · GARDENING ..._2934. ' C1lllnetmeking 6$IO 1T1.tt:!,1shiubs. ivy remOYed. ~ -New la111ls. Rolotillinr'. Free RESIOEJio'TI~L & Comm. ~t. 548-8918 Cu.?tom Cabinet I.: Furn., J~AP=AN=E~S~E~~Go-,~;,a~,~~~;-,~, Furn Re-Flnlsh1nJ:. &1~991 s e r v 1 c e . N~at · work. AVERA.CE 1 story t:xlerior $259. 2 st~ry exterior $3~. Bonus 5000 Blue Chip!. Interior prices a v a 11 . 637-6119 Di!h,\•ashtr • CC1lor coordlnaf. ed appliances • plush aha& carpet _ chOlce or 2 color schell1('1 • 2 baths • stall 1ha11"ert . mirrored "·a rd· robe door:i • indh·ect llJCht- ing in kitchen • break!a11 bar • huge private fenced patio • plu!h !"\l\IJICapitlJ: • brick Bat'-B.Q's. Jara:e heat- ed "pools le lanai. 01\·ni:r movlng-Trade $:?0.000 eq. i.n 7 centrally Joe older unit:i1. \\'hittie1·. Val. 6 Urn· ts lncom~. \\'ant: property Ne'ililX>rl area. 1.ru-tiiJ.;)Jgs Tra.<11' far mt acrt"s; 9U --:--_ , . ANNOUNCIM~NJ$ Por~che, MS.181 4 Bill ~Im' JtE:-..\T i\J-.t1 11';, iCI· ft. Sl~ incl NOTICIS . . · HAVE: 2 ei, 2~~ BA Con· ~~· lll) ·L.op.n, C lI, -. , In Mtmer)a.:n_ . '417 C1rpe.nttrl.,. ~o. 'rei;tt'llU arte. $36,000. tii :;..su6 Found (fr" Alfa) MOO ..c..c.;.""---="'---....;.-"' Clean-up Ir. yard malnl. 6590 "'""°' , • P.:lntlni-AaperhanPia: Interior-Exterior .. L'S Garotnil:i< 1: Lawn Special' Prices. on Paper· f\hfalnttnance. Commercial, 1 ,,;-·C~all-=Lam,..,.-ic-c".,,'"""c-c··_,,c:c 3101 So. Bristol St. (~;?\fl. N. o! So, C»a.·t Pln:a) S•nt• Ana PHONE : 557-1200 L1gun1 Beach 5705 Sofa 76", brand nt11't. for truck. car. color TV or ? f>!S.O&:io 6:00.7:30 nights. All day Sunday. 4 BR LIDO HOME 3 BA. Street lo &tree:t tor apt. howie on Lido. l·BR. Apl Untum. ~ MUi.500 * d0\l1ltown, Lease .... $175 t ~~,..,~=~~---2·BR Apt. unturn., ;ood lo-\\'JU.. 'l'RADE W irri:ated location . . . . . . . . . . . . • . $200 acrrs in Hemet ll'/3 renta\::; l·BR fumis.hed duplt'"x. frpl., lor Ota.nae Co. in<..'Ome prop. ocean vie"' •.....•.•. Sl50 erty. l\TISSION REALTY 494--0731 Call ITI4 ) 962.2j6"] 100 CLI FF DRIVE $110.l BR, l~ia BA. $185-2 Sr, 1 1.~ BA. Crpts, drpe. bltina. View ol ocean. \Vall."in: dis- tance to to1vn. Also fut11. Bachelor. ''t-ry large $170. 49.j...2449 or 49-f·5303. REAL ESTATE Gener ii 18' mag:h. dbl p}ank util boat, 140 hp a:ray , Fill re.•trd mint cond., val S179j. For Joi or ? ~tarin.a, Udo.Shor· ~Jt Ho~t. 617 Lido Pk Dr, NB 28' Cabin C'ruistr. all llber· ;lass. hlin v.s·s. SS radio, ba.it tank. WANT: ~tree! Dune Bug::y or ? 67.>4~ da~ ::1' 59'0 Deluxe tom lot, Dover Shor· l!~qulty Sl.5,500. '''alit ~ 1\10:. Let 6100 • ' · JN lovirir n1emory of my I CARl'EN1"RY tor honlt\ cksert home. '!''!' _ s _.. _ FOUND 3 \\-eelas aro Ia.rre l\u::1band, Vt1'1l<l.ll l\lal \\'hite AIINOR REPAJl!S. No Job My('rs 673-6156 ' Ma·CJn·1r.'1cent black tat, male. \\·ht. neck \\•ko dl!d in l<r.J Ala.mito~. TOC" SmaU. Cabinl!:t l.n ear-l:: chest, ''ht. itfeak d0"A71 Calilot'llia Ofl r..tarch IO, aa:_es Ji-Cl t h • r cablr.ell. 1969, udly missed Dy hi!s .545-8175, U no llm\·er leave '69 Pooti<lc Crand ~. Vi'ew 1toma.ch, 4 v.ht. f~t. Call ,. 1lln v ,1 \l'hl msi ·at "6-2..172. H. o. tnde SIDpO equity fo1· old· 5-1~7260 :t Pf?i~:30 or Wut, ' ~tnon • · te Anderson er car. Larie level iil~ on a lanr!· 51~9021 F,rl on!y 1 Pl\t-S:W ·L I N • .......: • ••so QUALITY~7A-ny-,7"-,-,..-,·.;,., • 546-277>". * »eaped, 91·ooded_ lot ready lo LOST On my -,, "--~,. ege •nCes ' -....,., uuu1au: or new conslr\ltlion. Res. or SAN CLE'.\IEJl>'"f.E Rt lot build.. ExclUS1ve Emerald pa;ir of prescription Wuse1 I \\'ill not be resPons.ible tor Com. By hour or conb-act. ~~102 Tn.de. equity tot la~ ~!..~m~,·w ,"'1 ~c_h_.~~ ~D bl~.c._k711•04ather case. ~3-:· any de.bts other than my I.Jc. It Bonded .. ~2 model auto, pick-up or '!''!' r--;r-·-,,;;nn ,_..,.,.......... 1 J. .... 1 own. Ruth A,. Zt?'I". Pri •~ bl 1 .....,... CEN, repair. add., cab. '-"&ti!: .,., ll.ll:lum1 e oan. !\!ALE Pupp)', \"ic. San Form.lea, panelinf, martlte. !("o ti~ limit. 492-S078 t'elipe, Fntn Valley. Short Tut.ring '4f0 · 1 -··-Anythin:! D ck, 01..........W., Isl RE TD ?11ortpaes UisuJ>. ~1r~IM"b7lk w/bf'O\\o'T\ mrk(s. FR~CH Tutorinz. D.--r. REPAIR--modell"" ··•-:abl~ local s.i"ner Ea. 1'D ~1 · • .,.. '"' .... a--...... • teacht:r. Cail &&.;-~·19. If no I:.E:I' THE SWEDE 00 IT! p~·s $2200.' Total $4l,000 NE\VPORT OCEAN .VlE\V: ~LLO\\' Par11.ket!l, Sat. am ins\rer lH+-447!1 *"* 494-7853 **, Final pmt 4171 Trd: car. Zon~ 30'Umts: Owner. Call vie. Edinzer l: Newhope. SERVICE Dl"ECTO"Y. , REPAIRS* ALTERATJOJ\'S boat? sr.,.UM7, Box 1433 f\'B • '5'M:J06 , '-=-"'"~· ,,;,,_·~'--=~~~ ft ft ,, I • . I * CABINETS An.r. 1i1.t job $20.000 +· $12.000 equity in liix300' E~side take li SKIN Divers \\'a cti. •' V.lc. l1lly1Htlnt '550 25 yrs exper. 5-lm3 Condo, JOli Dover. Need g. unitJ. SUb. Ailina: JiW,750. Paularlno Sehool. Ca I I -'''----..:...----- 11 un itl!, prefer C o t 't a Azent. 64s.3'l;i0 54~ I.: ldenllf~.· BABYSITI'JNG l\Ty ho:'l"l.t:, QUALTI'.Y .. \\/ppdcraft. • Gen- 1'\Iesa Clevldtn<..'e-l\1A' _.. BLV • hi . • ... Id •• , o• ,, .•••. In'·-·· o•·. era! CatR'nfr¥.' Sntall G_ en. . s~. 6T~ ..... ~·, P,;...i ~ Costa i\Jeioa. B\iild n · w p1aeon ,.;..,, • oo• .....,,..,. •~ ~ ~ b d v· .-d • J--' Fenced . ud, \\'a.I'm food. Comtr ... CAJI ~n &48-4~ . 40 Units, Phil Sullivan. an . ic ~~n · l"\11ne, " 31' 'B6at. Of! ahOie IWboa Ch\•ner/Rcaltor. 5-i3-6'lbi. N.B. 6~it-7j28 6~2-:5299 IHI and moorina: incl. f':o -· "BASSET HOUND, v l f.: • 1 B""AB=Y"St~l~l;l ~N'G""'-,~.,,..,7,,....,.~b'"y rerital f~. Valu :Sl0,000. Ac;ea9e. 6200 Ha rbor & Adttm.11. 5-1~ the ·ll'f!Ck, ml.ture "'·oman, Trade for 1 \\'JU ll'N.me, before~ pm." ref.,, no tram, a4MSOO:OI. Li/lance. 67J..2-431. 40 ACRES. ~i m~e frorita1e BI.ACX and \\'hiie terrier l: BABYSITTINC : Oean CARPEN:rR.Y, :F:. e pi Ir s, Remodeli111, · cabillel!. No job 100 small. CaJI 646-42241. C•ment, Concrete '600 industrial I: residential INT & Ext Painting. FUe 1t 64$-3629 • ests. Loe refs, 30 yn eXp. Jll\J'S Gardtnin: £: ma.lntenance. Res. Ir. merclal 1t 54()..4837 • JAPANESE Gardiner •. exp'd, Com pl. · )"d. sen•. P'ree ·est. Reliable. 642-4389 E.'<P. Japanese m1intenance. H.B. I: F.V. Area •. M2-S442 * Lie. & i.nsrd. Call Chuck 64.>.--0809 err J ira S4~ AVERAGE, exterior $12t50 labor only. Interior pficts avail nlso. 5"tg..1546 ' It ~318.5. ' APTS & l\10TELS P.ain~ • SlO. sverg. rm. Ca I I anytime P;il the Palnter, 507-8638 He.ulint 6730 SURBURBAN P a I n I e ! .1 I ---'-------I Decor. \\"e take the_. pain CARL'S ~Iovmi. Haul\n: l out ol pelntin;-. Expe.rt \\·ork. Cleanup. ~=Ton P.U. Reas. F'rtt e:st. 4M-3l.9CI FrH Est. 54.8-891!1 / p A I N TING-INT/Ext JACK'S . Jack can do that paintina: JlitOVING 1' HAYLJNGi )o~fast. clean ".1: very reu! Rea3. Free est. 536-1091 Est. 894-3893, S47~13a8 YARD/ Gar. Cleanup . e Interior-Erl•rior • Remove ~es •. ivy, trash. Acou~tic tellb'IJS ptd, 12 yrs Grade, backhof, ~745 expu. Stile-lie. PUt.sburrh HAULING $10 LOAD pnts. 543-1787 . &:. 1'rtt Servtce.. ~S28 PAINTING. expeor. int. & ext. Insured. Free estimat- e!. Ralph. 4.M-3950 Transfe rrln: to PitsaJl..A! ~La Br;::t SS: pe: a~ seller. Yound in ,·icinity of home. C.i\I. area. Fenttd En,lish vie"'· J>eaut, 6 rm11, Rea.I~ &i'l-!KM'4 r:c ° Cosla :O.le.!11. Park. 54~ )'d. \Vkday!;. '''lmds. ~·es. ... ous•Cl1•nlng 6715 CONCRETE 'v°"k all type!. . . Sa"'inz, brtakin1. haulinz, ,BA\' l: Be.ach Jan1tonal Skiploadin;i: Llc. SeNice L: Carpets. \\ilx1011s, floors. Quality.MZ-lOlO etc. Re~ & Commc 'J. Pl1sterin9, Rtpelr Pitch, tile entry. pa.t, bbq, d~ run, '" -, FOUND p k 1 F tai \Vettare ratU. Call 5-U-6115. 129 g:io ·le Tta · "'11/C:U 10 Acre_, near large lake. an. M OUI) rl BABYSITTING -• c ar. ';ot " : , • Valley ai?.a. O\\'T\tt ple a!e unlts/duplex/how;e. ~ l\Just ~U. SUIO dn. take Iden°'"' .. ,., 7:>.l& Adult. Evenings&: '\'eeJ.-end!. o~r S2.) per .mo. 8M-47.C3 ... ,.. _,.. . Ca.II 5.io..6654; \\'hat do )'OU hl\·e1:0.trade f .. · \\r'HrrE. Tan l black 9 mo Ll1st ii htt9 -in Ol'all&f' R·esert Jl'ropertY • ~ 6205 old cat. Vic. ~na Beach. Councy•a larJ(est read trad-. tlea collll'. Call 6'-~"0 CE.\lf.:NT \VO~K. J!O job too Small, reasonable. i'""Tee E.sUm. H. Stufllck 5-18·8615 * CON"CRETE Jooni, 641>-1401. CO'."IPLETE qualit y hou i!iecleaninf. E.xptrienced. Reasor\able, ~2354. * PATCH PLASTERTI'\G • .\II type-!. Free estimate' Call 5-\0-68'.?j -------' es. Gala.11y & J\Jarinen;, l'OUPL.E "·/t 1 year old boy Jn,000 val. Trd tor 21J.27' \\'ant to rent 3 bedroom po"·er boat. up to Slll.000 hou!e ,,t )'ard f..· Jara.ge. Both val . Consid line bal. 54S.19.~ v.orki"'. c;tiild In school. Trade 1.963 Olds :s ta.rfire, Husband id1nie )ob 7 ) ea.rs., in xl nt conq. oria. ov.·ner a~ :::9. ,\·He :!7. 1'0 mOl1! lor 14' or 16' alumi num or than SIJ.> per n10. \\"ill take cl.au ti!hln: boat 11'ilh ;tood lease option I'.'/ rt n t a I motor. 548-3100 pa)'mtnlll apply ini:: to do.,.,·n payment. Call 642-3844 eves 'I\ &: '1·kends. tni-post -1.1'1 make a deal CANYON LAKE: Vw lot b)' S:'.ltALL Fenla1e broll·n pup- ' owor. $600 dn, bal. $102 mo. . 1• . P' • YOUNG ' i\Tother 1\·anls. to bab)'Kil in my home. 1vkday1 full ti~. 673--7878 Jl&lios; ma.50hry. ·Any a: job. l\ftlll Clea.nlng Strvice Plumbing Reas. Don. &r...-8~14' aft 4. Carpttl!. windo~·s. flool')I, etc. I --- 6190 PROFESSOR I.: ramlly ol '.! children oon1fng to In•in for Sabba.tlcal lea1•e in late sum. mC'r dt:sire~ comfortably furn. house In Ne11.'Jl()rt or Laguna Beach areas late Aug. lhru June. J\lln. of 2 Br's. pool pref'd. Call 64.\-20j7 2 \\IORICTNG girl~ looking for 2 hr. apartment in 1'e"J>Ort, YEARLY. prefer furnished . l\Vill take unfurn i1J hed 11·/refri~.1. To $160 . R tii ponsib lr, have reference~. Pleast' call after 6 -540-830! E:O.fPLOYED, resp m an de1 t r~s vt r y cle1n hnmelapl. 2 BR. BA. gar yr \Sf'. S160. or lit' l BP.. Ha s local t'l'f. f'rfof \\'. r-;\.,.l'I. \\'\U share 67>74G6 S:\IALL roon1 for use as. ~ludy. Vic. of f ernlear &:. Ocean Bll·d, Cd:'.lt. !\o tu rnit11re needed. 673-1923. e LANDLORDS e rn.EE RENTAL SERVICE Broker 534-6!182 r.tlDDLE·age executive \\'/8 ·~T old son. "'l~he~ ranch t1r es11te guest house. Son1e dulies coNlde\'ed, 64&-:ITI6 \\!ANTED: Unfurn. Cd l\I home.. Retired coupll!, no pets. $130 or under, )Tly lse. 67l-4.i70 * * * '* .... .ncl 1 6,. ,,,,.., ~~"" , py, ,·1c. a.tl'\\'a)' \ace · ... I nttr ••. ;l'VOO~ f!\M 0talll'e Are .• C.l\I. 64G-3561 ---------.. ----R.E. Exchange 6230 LARGE \\tale C tr !'flan REAL ESTATE Gtne.ral Income Property · 6000 C-1 BARGAl 0N Duplex on bli C•l Bus. I~., 63 x :!70 Cl!:ntral locatton $32,000 l t-,r \ i; 541-G661, ii-17·2331. TA.\: SHELTER?' Costa Mt11 (8) 2 Bedroom units in top notch shape. Cross S14,:io<I. Price $92,000, Liberal terms. fu!ler Re.alty i>46-0814 REAL ESrATE 'G•ner1r ··' ~- Office R•n!•I -----:.-Shep·h erd· found on 4 BR, 3 ~ Licfo Home.. Pe nlMUla. Call Mg....1009 6070 Street ta .'tree! t~r apt \\'}.TCJ-1 Vic it9th (; Pla!'.'<!n-- ' hou~ on Lido. ~ fla. Call to identify. 54CJ.1530 --LA_G_U_N_.A_B_E_A_C_H_ BUSINESS· onti s>rALb block :do< La,una Air Condilloriod FINANCIAL B•ach .. ..,._ . ON FbRESI' AVENUE lusines;-· '401 O.U space av~bJe in Op,Orf~itJt1 ·iSOCI Le~ n"'·eit oH1ce billldi'nc · 11 · , ----~----- prime location ht dow ntown * FAMOUS · IRA.HD EARRING At F' • 11 h Ion Laguna Bel.cit, Air concff. ._, ... ••E * tslatfd, N.B. 'Gold !trtw on donod.· ~ ~udfu.I ~ .· ty)ie 'ili'/'reddll!h .sto,nt . entrances: f'rohtla:e on C~DY l:: SNAQ\ ROUTE c:Mrished rift troni. dtceu- f'Of'eff Ave., rear le.adi to (PART OR FULL TUttEJ : ~ husband. Call colltt:t ~lunclptJ parklnr Ioli VERY H.IGH INCO).f'E Cfl.4> 62Ul.U. lu1ints1 N:entel ·fMO per month for space. i:>Hk \Ve. ne!d • ~tribyto1'}n th)~ r.osr: .. a mo old temaJe and chairs a.VJ.ilablt for $5. area for our c&!'dY <Nestles. Sla~&e. Sealpolnt. 0 n Business houn &nS\v:rilla: Planters .. Toobne ~ol~. ¥rut u4itO. above !be Arches. ttrviee availcbl• tor $10. Duds. ete.l, No itllint in-Nune "5eel.a.". Re"·ard! ----.---20c SQUARE FT. fl00:120(l..2400 !II· fl. OU!~ or Retail stores. 211..213 61nd St., r\el'."JIOli Beach. Kty a\•ail al Tra,·el LOO.ii!: ~fo­ lcl. O\\•!'ler. 2131 24+3101 01· eves l:!lll :!46-0iOO. BALBOA ISLAND Lease stort: or nffice. 307 :\ta- rine Ave. 67:>-MSG cu· see: your broker. S~IALL shops nr. Ne11'Jl()rl Pier. Va.rioU! sizes. Jnqt1ire Bayview Properties 2309 \V, Balboa.-NB 673-7420 STORE FOR LEASE in Pamric Bid:.. next to Bcrk..-!hire.S Restaurant. In· quirl!: 673-9405 :\1rs. Franke All utilities pald .xcept v.olvf!d •. \IJe. f\u'nb:h all ae-&U-26$0 telephone. count!. You mwit ha\'e 2 to ::· ==,_._,,,,.,....,,......,...~ OAfitY PILOT 8 hn. per --A"C'e.k •pare time REWARD -'1."'ht Standard ' Z?2 F'OR~ AVE.?.'lJE· (da)'l'I or eveil). Poodle_, le.mile. vie Baker ii LI.CUNA BE:'ACl{ $1~ TOTAL CASI-I Falrvte\''· Ol. F~a Ji 494·9481;' REQUIRED 'hjin~ collar. s-4~9. -.~M-=--d~--.,Offi-' -For more Wonnatittn .,.,Tlte 67l-7Ti2 0 ern Cel "Distributor Oi\i.,ion. NO.:LL"T~rn.==t•B=..-.--.~.,..,.b~la-,~.-,.-,. $?!. al ni::le, ir1'5 2 rm 1ulte. 2'f'. P.O. Box .5$, Pomona, py \\'/coilar v'ie. Gra.nt '1 Air cond. Sect.'y senice, Cali1. ·91169 • lnclude"phone Baker. C.~t. Rew a rd . pa.rkiri:, <:entrally Jocatod. no. $-11)...3374. So. Calif ISi Nat. Bk. Bid£. Affil! 1 ,SJ=,~1AL"'"'~_,Go,...,.i<1.-.-.. "1e"h-. -p=,,,. .. Costa J\fesa &i2-l485 cANov SUPl'L y ney's FA1hlon I1land Gt 3333 • DEL.X. E.XEC. OFf'lCE ROUTE Coast · Hiway. 1'.'B. Re"·ard 1ultl!8 for Jea!\fl, X1nt location \ (No selltni IO\"Olvf!d) 673--43" ' on. Campus Dr: ac~s. from E.'<cellent . income tor te w 1(,ittq · r.l~e "\\'e1m~aner Ot ari:e Co._ Airport. Sul'!.!! hours "·eeldy \\'Ork. (0~~ lO/lic. ~· 19th l lfv\ne. &\'ail. from ;;.so sq ft, to lOJi> and Evcninp). Rdillin&:and AM ,to '"Duloi:e" Re\\vd. hq ·fl. A/C. _carp e I e d . coll8Ctln: money fl'Om coin 642-14.16 a.ft 6 draped. Call 5.i6:380l operated d lspirnsers in ~· t..e>Sr:. Small PY cat ,'i<:. 6070 OF'FICE QR SfORE ange_ O:I. and sufroundti11 £Im I Ror.al Palm. C.l-1. Rooms fer Rtnt Stt5 Offic• Rtntal 1------- SLEEPING roon1 \V/priv. ba. Pri\•. entr for rPnl. Prtl. older lady or collt';::c :iitu· dent. .l.l7-912'l O! (213) 3:?&-4.:!7;;. SHAR E beaut. home. lurn rm priv b& l: patio """/kit. pri\'. ~fc:s11 Verde area. Resp. \\"Ork\ng ""Oman (\\·/1 child OKI ;,.ro...llS7 R00:'.11 to Ren!. Student prl!f. Kitchen privU. S60 pe.r mo. 1st k 1ut mo In advanL-e. 646-7886 afl 6. $15 Per \\'l( UP \Vtkitchrn S3fl \\'K UP Apt!.. 2276 N!!\\'· port Blvd. 518-91.». Mohtlo, Trlr. Cris. 5997 WEEKLY ratc11 Sea LP.rk ~tokl, 2:W1 Nt11"))(lrt Blvd., Colla l\t~sa Guost Homos stfl ---PRJV A TE . Room for cldtrly lady In Ucenaed suest home. 61&-J391 MIK. Rentals 5"' GAr..: '''"':S, F.."'<tn Ion:. -10 x 'SO $211 nlO. Nr o.c. Ah-pot!, Pallaadts Rd. iWS-~4 JS.000 "' ft. f'tn<.'ed S!or1;e )'ant. Cal.I • 541-7027 or 6'2-1.IZl. ----------W x 3.)' or 30 x ~· are1. '1.1e ~bllilh route. 56-76'2 , HUNTINGTON BE •CH oil 11t pkinz Ii util furn !Handles name brand candyt-~~~~~~~- 'Air Cenditioned"' Ne\\"))(lrt A: 81,)' Center Of and ·anatksJ. nsz.ao eub \VH~ .• ~1!1t Thy. Poodle. ON llACH ILVD. 20a2 1'ewpor1 Blvd.646-12l2 r"f1U~ For petsOllal inter. Ai;u 'Rim . S.t vk_ '.\lesa ~k 1pa1,.~ a-.allable in 500 sq. ft. 14 11Uites) com· \iew in Orana:I!: Co. atta, Vtrde.. Rewud. $4~363 · nt\\\·est . office bulldln11: at pletcly furnished S?la per rend na.mc. · addrc-ss and BLACK.. Loni-haired cat. prime location in 1-Juntinc-n1o. ~ at 300 \V. Coast Pl\On! ililmber to ~tin.TT. VIC: Sl1ttr/Ed\\'m'd1 3-6, ton Beach. Air condlllontd, lh\;·., Suite A. N.B. or call ~""J.:ATE DlST1, !"~C., 1681 \V Re\\•anl,. 347~42& beautlf\il t'ntrance. Front-s-·' Anah . ,_,. 6-l>ll82 1-.-a'ili'ay, e.1m, ~l-CAT, Grq stripe, malt, bl\1e aae on Beath Blvd., rear t · 92802 t n4) 7"72.<;N:n leads to private parklnr CO A.ONA DEL MAR orrua 1 1 ·~· coUat, nr .. Vkltia Bch, lot .S..~ per month for tmmaculat! 2 room suite. COIN launclrie•Frlgi~lftl Lal'ln• Thun. •94--:5938 space. Desk ana cna1rs Ground noor, Prl\•ate bath ~'Orn $&,500 to $~2',S,00. RED triih Stttv •. fl!male, &Yailable for Sl. Buslneffs Sl3J ho. Util pd. Park'i""· Anaheim, Co8ta Mes~. do"'ntown. Hunt Bcb, l41-'t hours &m\\·e-rln' sel'Vlce .... Bu Park F 11 I &\"aila.blt' for $1 0. All utill· 673-6757 0\\'Tlt'r. · ena ' u tr on,· US. ~"'ard. ~2· tits paid f'!<Ceit telephone. lest Loettien in CcfM ~~i~~erGritu~itniton LOST -smlll female oat, 171fsA~~~c~L~VD. 800 to 1400 aq. f,. Deluxe ou. Beieh. Santa' Ana,. Tustin. multl-co~red. ~1n Santa HUNTINGTON llACH le<" Spaces. Ava~: Imm~. La i\Ilr&da, An.a Ht\rhti. Cll1 ~9--04-I~ 642..Utl Phone Owrier. 642·gg;j0 c.u Oiulie &23.'llSl JU:D; lrl$h, Sener, male, g t:\1;\fEDlATE Occupancy. 3 i\IARJNER's CENTER PLASTIC PHOTO f'R.A.'IE mo!. (lld. Vit. \Y. Nwpt ·fully c 1·rp e t e d , atr-.con. Ort ice or Store Bldr. Rent tit' l\tfa. Sustr'M!At. ~ew-l!ni. ar.a. ~ewvd. 641-4165 dit!oned O.fli« a.re a 1 ~ 149 Rivenidt Ave. NB. Xlnt potential VSM Ftp. , .1 av1llable no•· al 1.86S E. 64&-2414 Easll}I movC!d. ~SIG • Ptrun1 • MOJ Pac. Coast HI\')". In Con:in1 COSTA l\I~ offices, A/C, OUTSfANDlNC opportonil;V --.-,,----- de! ~tar. 4,410 'Cf~ ft-n,niinz , crpl.,, drp:1. PIJ'k\na:. 1355 for re.corded information,• *W . from llJC!J IO 11211 Ill• 11, Baker, 64&-4333 Gr 5U-.fm Dial ~· omen rmm J"J&-to-Si'ff-pn-mG. NE.AR c ., Cl 11 • Area can bt ~Mtvtded-tti . ... · 1)1 Hall. 3 m. -, _ , • -- .suit 1enan1. 644-il61 for In-OU~a. Paneled, CUP.f:lt, ln.,..t. W1ntH.-6315 STA"RT YOUR .NEW \'EAR form11ion. drape&. $Ila. Call ~ \vrnt ma: RlGKT l\1AN. Of'FICES fQt leBR--Llmitt'd 11pa('f: avtllable in beautiful Huntington Harbour. O>n· h1ct 1tM$ Bar1le11 . 714/846-1~1 . ltunllnr;ton Harbour Corp. 4141 U'arnLr A\-·e, HB 600 SQ FT Oll:C. 40 to 50 Unit$ "''anted b)' Jn. 547-"'7 $90 1olo. CJ.I. &46.2.J~ \'"1tment Crou'!" .,Ca.sh + 24 bot&t recordins: S'.\tALL Of!ioe:on bul)' cor-Pf!perdown, '42"-i-l! .. e\"c:s .. 1 SAUNA · l'il•.uaat by Starla, ne.r COllt11 ~Itst $.)j/monlh Dt 1 P't M le Carol utU\llts tnclud~d. 6-12-6,;60 OAn. Y PfLOT DI ~IE · A · ~ ~-• •d1 !!._1.._ UNES. Yt:1u cr.n ~• them ..,.. .,.,.°" e. ,, ... tments DIAL direct Ml~S. Chal"l[C ~ jUJI penn.lca ~ da,y. Dlal ~ 'v;. C.t. Hwy. Np! lk'h. you. ad. then alt b11ock a.nd ~ra OllUy noon..t9 1 am, 642.JlM 1b ten to fl\e phoM Ma! \}'e accept all credit rams. LIVE·lN or day M in my lovely c.~t. home. Mon lhnt t"ri, reasonable. ,646-5.>37 BABYSfttiNG Availabl!!: Mon thr\I Fri. Da)'s 7;Jo...Sl.OO hr. E.xper, 673-7389 DEPENDABLE BAB"\'SJTI'JNG. l\f'l HO:\olE. HOURLY, 011.Y, \\'EEKLY. REASON/lBLE· RATES. 6-12-6037, c .i f. E..'iiide BHt Mai"nteftance 6555 Enioy your I.if Complete ?-Jarine Servit-e fltkh&nJeaJ.EJeclricaJ Bottol1'9·tn dt 0¢ 'f\·ater Fiber:lus Buffing:, }"ibcrglau Refini..!hl~. Call iim. '34':1021 NOW'S THE TIME FOR • t;ONCltETE \l;'ork, Res. le Commt'I. 5..ts-4.lll P.LU~IBIXG REPAIR i..icel)sed. Patios I drw.;<S, , -, 6740 No )ob loo &mall etc. Phllllps Cement. &IS-6380 lncem1 Ta¥ e 642--3128 e . ' ' MORE concttte .pa:tto tor I , -----.--PLUr.m1NG, Repaln k Al· less money. Artistic n tttnr Smiley. Tax Service 1erations at economy prices. £:,firrlshltlJ:. g44-{&7 . . . . * 646-1286 CUSTO:\l CONCRETE e 12th YEAR LOCALLY • Patios, PQOI decks, ett. }'ree Qualified -fUasonabll!: est. ~5516 \V. A. (Billl Si\tlLE'l Child Cer .. Llc.nsecl "10 NURSERY &hoot.' c .r.r. 1 d&y1I "'k. 6;30 A..\J.9:30P;-.f. Full, p/time. •ft· schl. R.atea for 2 « more. Trarurp. tum: So Oran:e Co. 534-1292 Centridors "20 Additions ·• Remodt..!in.r Fred IL Cuv.ick, Lie. 6'il·600 . • s.t~2l'l0 Certified Public Account'! &12·2221 · anytime 6-16-9666 Central Bwines1 Servlcea eTHE'TAX ADVISORS f('.rm. office-.Rea.s Rates 338 No. l';ewport Bl\'d. Opposite Hoag Ho!pital For Appt .. Calt 64.>0400 li.K. Clark TAX SERVICE · 23 )-TS. in ~a · 54S-S285 appt. . • )"Out home or oUi~ e TAX SER VICE in your home. Fast t efficient! • ·531-<al!! • _c_•r_,pe_t _c_1•_•_n_1.,_,,__w_·s 1 ronlng A-01\ Sham·pOo Special S73J '755 nn/less for haJl1. "etc. Also comp·. bousecln'g 1127-3182 CARPET STEA.'f CLEAN· ED No IOl p, 'no bnishes. For est. M6-5911 fRONil\G in my home . SI Hr. Dressmaldnc &t altera· tlon1. 5-!S.. 7641 Drrw•ll U)i l;tt U1 ·T•lk To·Veul ;_;:_..;..;_ __ ,;__-";,,.I \Yr do the most unusual land· e DUDDY Ory.l.'all CG : Llt'd Contractor. Large (Ir Small Jobs. Ph. M7-9:>81 I REPAIR \Vind dam a 1 e d fences. F'rff. eslimak.!1. No &cape crHtions in the coun-ty: Our prioe is m'iall com· pared \\rlth qUaJit)·. • $40.9Ei01 • Prunlnz, Landscapinr &:. Planting. MAID SERVICE Remodtllng & Repair THE REMDDELERS Qualit y t:fom• lmprovtment Contractors ADD A .. Fftmily room * Rumpus niom •Bedroom Kitchen Remodelin.r Complete Remodelinr Cara1es • Carporb FREE ESTIMATES 100% FIN"NCING CALL NO\\'!!! * '42-3660 * QUICK · C.ASH 1="·=100 ='""a11=·";.=""= F1.... . . 6665 6125 GLAD-HANO ~taid Strviee.; Bonded, Lie"'nsed & E:xp., Hourly &: by spec. ar· racgement. Tra.nsp turn. 4!M-157J Roolint,_ __ _,:6t:,:50; I NE\\ Roofs, Repairs &t Coatinz of 1ll ~-pes. 8o!S .,.,"Oritll on the job. Free t stlmales. 645-1691, 645-25.Xt :?4 hr. THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT. AD 642-5678 - • . . CARPET VINYL Tn.E l'ree e!tim•le· Lie. Contr. :;.10.7162 5'&-4471 G1rdenln1 ~------~-GEN'L yd, Clean·up. tree urv." roto·till.' Sptn<li' re- palr.s; Haul.. Rea90n, 6'6-5848 JAPANESE Gardener . exp'd·. Compl. yard sf'rvice . ~e esllm.ate.. 54s..87'.» EXPER. Japanese Gardener. Complete Yd StrviCll. Free e1tlmatu, Call ~ 1332 CL~UP SPEOALISf i\!Ol!.:h\s, edgif1i, odd jobl. Reasonable. 54S-6955 JOHNSON "$ GARDENING Yard care. Clean-up!l, f'nm. !ne. plontlrtr. 9Q.OOl3 : * LANDSCAPER * 12 yn local ex~ SSG-im BUs:rtS't' marketplace ln town. The DATh Y PILOT Cl•.sMtled atttlon. s. v. money, time It •ffcrt. Looi< ~·I I! 6150 Peintlng, Papt1rh1nging ----~---PAPER l{At'\GING 20 yn exp. Free t!timate, Call K.l\l, 642·2:509 PAPERliANCING Yean of e.11.-perient.'I!. Call Fred. 548-4.003 PAPERHANGING CaJ1 l\lac RETIRED Painter: :?6 3n 1xper. Ntal k hol!f'sL Non drinktr. CUI ~t. PAINTING ·&: Repa irs . Rt•RONble.. Salldactlon Guaran!ttd. Call 547·14-tl • PAlNTL\'G. Int.Ext. ·Local ttftrencu. lmmed aervtce.. -PAINTING • £.xt.Jnt. 18 yn. f!)\.l'tt· l.n!. We. ~ e1L t.cc:oust. CeUJn(S-sq~ * PAPERHANGING ~ PAJN'J'INC, tit 968-:!425 ALL type.11 tt>Ck, ,,.ood & aaphalt shlrwles. LEAKS REPAIRED. \Vork ruar. !1>17-U36 s_._ .. _lnJ'-----""'° • Dressmaklrti: • Alterations Designed W ault :you. Ca.II Jo * 64.&.M46 --Tilt, Cerami( 6t74 + Vf'me.. The Tile J\tan + CUst. \\'Ork. Insl&JI Ii repairs. No job too SJnaD, Pl11tu patio, Leakinc tlx>••er repair. 54 7 • 1 s;;? / 846.{)"J()li TrH s.·rvlce "" TREES. HellPs. trim, eut, •!Umps, removed. hauled. ~ yn exp. f'ully bu. ~ Upholotory '"' CZVKOSKI 'S Custm. Uphol. European Craft1m~p too~• lln! 6·12·t4S4 1831 Ne 1ovport Bh· C.\t 10 R. ;x. a.kipptr, t-;11g. ltiptc1ln(,-e. N~ 1Joa1 to ..... rk ot dellVCl'. 675--0l•L'i Job Wojltocl, Womon 7U2 • AIDES # f()r convaltl«!net'. •· elderly i&ri:: or Jamily care. llomcrnfken1. 547-0681 Jobt-.Mtn, Wom. 7100 f l\(.U>Un\i;t,. ·- Vers•fiie Accounting Clerk Needed wilh JIFCOUnl1ng oUiCf' expcr- fcnce to U11is1 t•redil n1a~ a.:ar and handle a vorif'ly o( oiher dulie". Requ\1''11 the use or .w. tyric•vriter. lO k1·y adding 111achirao ant.I lhl:- U!iiual of/lee skills. Thl~ pasi- tion offer11 a goori salary "11h a!trnctive fringe tx•n1:- fils includi11i; fully paid for 1nedka l arid life lnsuran<."<' covera&:e. ~ v.-cr k:s vacalion a tret 3 )'Cill'S. Cle, Apl')ly In pcraon· til lhE": DAIL¥ P ILOT 330 \V .. Bay SL, Costa !\·lcsa, Ask ·for !\lni. Greenman or call kz..t321 for an i11tcrv1c w. ACCOUNTING Clc1i< 3 hrs pcr fliQ'. J\·Jalure \\'On1an. Call 67:l-65.12. N.B. area. A G G Jt. E'"S S l V E \Votnan \Vanted for lt'lcphont· sal06. Abo~. avi.;. t'arnings. 8-1741{3 or ;,.J&:-2-121.: r.vl'S only_, 'SA\'E ~ASH! •.. ' 6 ,4 2 • 7 :.·llES'I' 'H.11\T S! COCO'S F•l!hlon ltl•nd A U TOMOTIVE:' .Se-r"' Mechanic, tuM·iip, al~ n1ent, brakn. llf Yol .$h(U $1tiUon. 'l'op pa# lor riaht ,_ i-..o .... FEMALE HELP. over 21 - to work from ,2 P'bcf to 9:30 P?ll. Nt>al and depcrxlt.ble . Apply ill penion .... bef~ 10 A~\. AOA1'1S AV.t . DONUTS. ,9089 Adama Av~. 11W11. Beh. J. C. PENNEY C'O. FASHION ISLAND . ' .NURSltS ltelfstered -e.wA- in< • ru;ht tbllJI. Ex. beoellta. ApPbt hhOMtl Direclor, So. C.OUt Com· tmunit:, Hosp., 31112 ~t Hwy .. So. La;una. -..uu ext. 3J6 -E "· JI . . . ~\m'~--• m&". _, " ~• ..,, BUSIO"S hu f~ or .•a.rt time o~~ U.. t o r expcritncod aalcsps>ple In' the loJJo-. .. Ute positions: CdM . 61:;'-533 Dick• , ·' WllHu ms. -,--..:_ t DISHWASHERS ---(over 111) remale OCEAN VIEW--- SCHOOL DISTRICT e AvpNe has an <'JoOctlle.nt bustnen op. portunlty J,Or ' !he right pcrM111. Newity created Tt.r- ritories -cill for additional rtepresentativts. ~Act now! Neighborhood Te r r i tor y may be available. Calli quickly-' 5-!~704 I ~&.-5341 BABYSITI'ER WKnled, my hoen(', ~-IJ :JQ a.n1. Vic. ~ach Blvd. & Yo1•ktown, 11.6. fl lus1 be f"l'_hable, col· legc girl ok. Call .il6-L679 art 12: 30 BABYSITTER "'aotcd my hon1c or yuurs 5.X: an hr. 2',:: deys a. 11·eck. rri. evt'S 'ti! 9 P~11 't girls a&6. Hopeview arra. C'\11 842-1888. BABYSITTER Needed by school teacher. my 'home. lO::l0-4 P~1 . l child. fl.Jature lady. Balboa Pen1n. Refer. 67f>..23'.l9 aft 1P~I EABYSITTT::R ;) day v.'l<L 2 sc-hl childn..-n. \VesJ skk of 6"ach Rlvd, H.B. Five Pis. <U'l'a. S-17-4984 BAB'1!Sl'ITER; Days my hon1c. °"''" transp. No. C.~f. are<1 . Live-in <.'Olltitdettd. >l9-<ll06 BABYSITTER I llou_-;ckeep. cr. 2 chil dren 5 & 4. 01..,n 1ransp. Call 968-1620 after 6. BEAUTY OPERATORS \VantOO. 11•ith clicntelr. only. l·luntlnglon Beach lo Laguna area. Established business expanding. 60. 65 and 70':'~ ron1m and other OC-nefil'I. C<1U ilolsn11ger 6i3-7Jj9 for intC'1·vie1v appointment. BEAUTICIAN, The Beauty Parklur "l~h Century E1ritanc.'e" 6:ii \V. 19th, C.i\1. 612-72 11 or :YlG-9527 BEAUTY OPERA TOR GYxl J..'\laran!Cf'. 49-i-61.39 BOB'S · 1-10'.llE Of THE BIG BOY " 1 DISH MACHINE OPERATOR r.•rat, steady. rehahle. f'N'f" n'K'als & un1form11 ln!!'rvic\\'1' 2 to 4 & 7-1! daily. lj.1 !:.:. 17th. Cosla i\lesa BOOKKEEPER Srt·1y, ~work hac:k;:1'0und, <':>.ce llcnl pay. Call Loraine. \Vr!iil Cllrf P('rsonnrl Agency, 20-1:: \Vcsldifl Dr.. N.8 . 64J.2770 8001\KEEPEn . 1 ~ or full ti1nc. For constn.icHon -I.: rlf'\'r.l(l,1n1cnt Co. Exp thn1 !n1t l bal. Ph. 64.2-4210 8\1\'n. 12-3 6 OOR'KEEPING-Light Sail's. full lime \I-Oman. \Veiner! Clark Fim• Jev.•els. Ph. 6-1-1-21.ro. i\tr. !\Tanh. --80-YS 1Q • 14 ca.mer Routes Open "" I...a.--un::t. Beach, So. La::;una DAILY PILOT 642-<m BOYS 13-16. Canv11~io; 3 lo 5 Pl'-1 & Sat. to $3 hr. Need !ransri. to office. 5-11-9966 BURGER KING Restaurant "!IO!llf' or 1h(' \\'hoppcr" has r<1r1 ,i;.. rull t1m<' employ- n1rn1 opror1unitlrs at 6331 Beach Blvd, Munt i n g Ion P.ca1·h CHECK THESE :',\Ll:.:S RLP. TRAINEI'.: Acri~ kno11 led.gr l· some :<>alC'!' C'Xf'· 11·1!1 pul you on 1hl' t"d 10 ~Ul.'Cl'"S 11 /'1/\ ('O. r.:i.ro. ·, . s:noo. Call Pat O'Bl'UCIJ. n~'.LJVl·:r~Y f\f'rp 1'001 1n " hot JOb. Thi~ 1~ f0r rhr 1i:uy that isn"t 11fr31d Of hard \\'Ork. $2.2j hr CaU llclen Hayes. s ErRIITARY EXEC. Gal ". lflts of mu~y & r:oni;tr. lJk<;;:rd tor 1hi" ll'r1·1fic pos. Xlr1t t.'IJ. G1-eat location. Call Jran Brov.·n. l'-1TST .~ illTSC OPERS. II ~011 c·1111 usi:: !hcse n1achin· r•. 1111~ )Oh ilii roe· }OO! Nice proplC'! Tn S607. Call Sally lh1rt. Tf:Ll~En rA~I rxri. l'l/"AVlngs &. \oall f11•n1 h\nd~ lh111 plush Jm. 11· hc;iu11 f111 [W"Oplr . Start s:;'\:",. C11.U .Jonn i\lai·lin. COASTAL AGENCY 540-6055 Cifiteria-Counter Girl 1U A.\1-:? P~l dally. li.lon thru ,..n t:nll 8..':.1-0600. eicl ax36 hrh1n J P~I & 6 PM only. CIRCULATION TRAINEE nttt111 11 .s. f)l' JI'. College grad1n~t,, lo tnun {l.i Circula. fKin 1'-11.:t. "'llh ~ports.men's Puhlicfl.Hori..... Sc11ne typing. f'l'C<:" or n1 !11l;~l')'., ~606 li.lr. llolromb. • CLEANING "omen need- rd. fl.Ill or part l1nlC'.. Call 67:)..73,;7 CLERfC\L. El< p I! r , t:'Q1~ por11i1r bank l'CCOl'Cillatlon. a.ranp lmuranc.-t arw:t ••ncn.I rt'por1 prrp.ar"tton. 837-2020, E'il 46 (Qr appl. • APPLY IN PERSON No. T8 FASHION ISL., N.B. * CQ9KS * EXPERlENCED f\ill or part tiim.. S9JO Pacific Cout Hwy, N.e. CQUNSELDR POWER ~CHINE OPERATOR Sa.Us By Shock. 615-1823 Fiberglas Molder li.laJe or fem•le 1''ull or p/tim~. any 11hilt f'leet Products Co., Inc. 1.922 E. Pomona,.Santa Ana 835-5750 DllA,ES MENS CLOTHING GARDEN SHD, SHOES COSMETICS CAll,ETS ADMINISTRATIVE SECRETARY Salary $512 to $713 Three )'CUS !leCr'etarlaJ or clt>rical experience. Short.- APPLY IN PERSON hand 90 wpm .. typifll" 50 No. 24 Fa!hion Jaland, NB "''Pm, H.S. and., U.S. citi- Equal opportunity employer zen. Appllcatioll!I muat be litust have at leaat t yr f'Xp. In employment placcTTlt!nl fieJd . Great opty. tor ad- vanceme.nt. ** FIBERGLASS JANITORS, WAXERS, ex· filed by Pifarch 20th. Penicm. E.'Cperlenced Gel~tef'!I". App. per. Cd. pay and worklni nel Commlaslon Office, 7972 ABILITIES UNLIMITED AGENCY 488 E. 11th, SUite 2%4 in person, 1M3, Blda 8, Pl•· conditions. S4S-939S \Varner, Huntini:;tor1 Beech. cenlia, C.t.f. J C bet. 9 an1·4 pm. , . PENNg\' CO. Costa f.1f'sa 642-1470 FRY COOK -~~ or FASJ-IJON ISLAND OUiee Gnveyard shift. Apply in Rec•ptloril1t/Typi1t CONTROLLER pct90n. hRH lmmedia~ }'ront oUice appearance. OOIES RESTAURANT openints in our Opportunity for advance. Requite at least a Bacheton 1400 \V. Coast Hwy Ceffe• Shop men!. Apply in person. Degrtt & several yrs t>xper. Ne1vport Bt>aeh. for Hunllna:ton Beach in ho9pilal financial manage. ""--~ Convalescent Ho~pi1a.I ment. To aupervhle account. l''RY Cook. ~ order. 5 Ing. admlllilll:'. & busine.!!s days. Sa.l,Wt>d. Apply 102 UTILITY MAN 18'192 Dela.\\'att, H.B. oUict>s; prepatt equip. facil. t.fcFadden. N.B. (Ne a r WAITl't.ES!ES OUT Of Work? Net>d !'-tort & financiaJ hlKl£;eta, ~ pet· Newport Pier) COOK Income'!' Full or p/time. fttt internal financial i. pl'!). FRY COOK Call 962--7393 tor an appt. ceduraJ controls for thls T28 Full or part lime. Dick APPL\' TN PERSON th.al "1U fulfill your needs & bed health center. Work w/ Church's. 2b93 Ne1vport, CM. No. 2-1 Fashion Island, NB ,_m_'-"'-·~N-•=•b~l~lg~a-llo_o_. __ _ J1'tl party &: gov't agency, GALS, For production &e\\'· Equa.I opportunity en1ployer ••PAINTERS needed by EDP systems. CASH HAS tn:-. l\1u111 be exp'd. y,<Jth LA.ND.SCAPE llla.n, ~per. 10 loc-1 manufacture.r. l'\eed olhct<Xnitcontrol.melhods, patterns, fast. 1 leadcrew.Forapptca.11 man familiar "'Ith pro-- assist dept heads w/financ· w/st> .... 'Overlock exp. Bch '644-1784 days 5G-l6S8 eve! duction on eltttro-static ial matttta .l inlerprel (in· area. Box M-766 Daily Pilot Sala'"" O""n. painting, ma 1 kin I. anciaJ statmlt>nla &: 1ta.tt>/ GENERAL OFFICE ._, "" Call: ;-,.t5-1154 ft>de.i:aJ legislation alfeclini:; Sharp aaJ, i:;ood typist. Call LEGAL TRAINEE PAINT STORE CW.."'RK hospital operatloJI. Serwl te-'Lo . II' t l"I ~ I Work al_ Nello'JIOrt Cen_ter, 1\1/F, ....... lime. Cal'l . t 1 11. raine, es cu r.:r.IOl\11t" start S'125 -r mo n-·ll'es t""' sume · o ptl'SDnne o .tce, A NB ,..,.2770 . ..,. · '"""'~" WALKERPAINT642-5776 San Jo!lc JiospitaJ, 675 E. gency, · • ~ •ecretariaJ r:xp .. 1)-pe 60 --~~~==~-- Santa Clara St, San Joi;e, GIRLS -LADIES wpm, lite S/H. Attorneys PART~TIME Calil 95114. To y,·ork in do"'ntO\\'n phone Ba.rcwne I.:. }{an!' 6#-0023. Sat. and tt0me eve1. in Circu· order dt>pl S daya Wttk Sa.I a LVN-Nioht shift lation Dept. or Sportsmen's Constnx:lion · · • .. Publications. S36-8606 l\tr. BUYER-ESTIMATER ary + incentive. Call SU.J!i08 a NURSES A.IDES for appt Hours open a HOUSEKEEPER H -~•l~co-m~b_. ----t.fajor builder oHcrs xln't :::: opportunity f 0 r qua.lilied **GIRL FRIDAY Bayvit11v Convale.scf'nt, PBX 0JM"rator aae 23-4;> tor man w/heavy exper in tract Sharp. Apply; li.1a.e Gregor 2035 Thurin, CosU i\felll.. l.JlS\\'erl~ se.rvice. After-~ingle--family housing in So. Yacht Corp. 1631 Placentia, ~ noons, evening! and sonic Calit r.1ust also have heavy Costa 1\t esa. \\"ttk ·ends. Tab, ~ E. budget control exper. Field I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiio I MACHINISTS 17th, c .r.f. J\.lrs. Kelly. o r. HANDYM AN 1;,. "'" ., .. u ... exper &: acmunting back-,... i:J'OUnd desirable. 1\fusl be Full Time Employment PBX Opera.lor, exp'd prefer- capable ol Increased respon-Ex-n·,·-• In rt'd, will train. If qualllied .... '"'"""" A prozr~ssl\ e m1U1uf».c-540-2052 sibility in tulUre. all types of repair v.-ork, turin: company, v.ith es-1.,,..,,.--.,,.-...,---,.--...,- Plea::;e send regumc includ. painting Ii: cleanin&". Cellent v.·orking conditions P.E. F.quipmen1 m a n. inG salary l'eq'Uirements ?ofU!t have own tools and fringe benefits hu Knowledie of equipment, to. • · 11.nd tran!lportation. immediate openin&"!I for materials and supplies used PERSONNEL MGR. \\'e are looking for in competitivt> sports. &sie Pardff Construction .a mature individual cleaning mf'thods and the P .O. Box S40lt lntcresled in * D1y & Night Shift use &.: care of cleanlni Los Antalas, 90054 A permanent job. material! I: e q u Ip men I . tNo pho"' ··"· pl••••\ Call: r.tr. Devine Traub and I r 0 w n ., Perform htavy, ma n.u a. I ~ ...... a labor. Apply Cla1sified COUNTER Girl, e_'(per for Sharpe automatic Peraonnel offi ce, drycleaning plant. Apply I screw machine t•tup Nt1\'port-i\tesa Uni I if' d Hour ~lartiniiin;;. 2 2 0 O eper1t•r1. School Districl. 1601 16th Harbor, Unit A-2. C.l\I. St., Ne'\'JIOr1 Bt>ach. Calif. CLEANING woman. reliable, Cil41 6'15--0600 I day a 11·c!!k, o 1v n IJ·ansportation. 673-6661 Proptirty M1n•1•m•nt CREDIT &. COLLECTION Division CLERK. Pnvlo"' «per. 673•4400 rcq'd. Gd. lypil'_g. Days.1,..!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"" Personnel • Dept J{ o a&: 1-lospital. N.B. * DEMONSTRATORS f'or sinall appliancc:t, rood. bcvcrages. No experience required. Some \\"etk-erwl ,1·ork. W•stirn Girl Inc. 4667 MacArthur Blvd, Ne,vport Beach ""'"'25 DENTAL assi1tant Chairside, f'xpt'r on I y. Pftinle. Send resume lo P .O. Box 58:\f, Daily Pilot, Newport Beach. OISH\VASHER, days 8-4, ;2 hr. Apply Chf'l, Dillman's Restaurant, 8fil E. BaJboa Blvd., BalbOa DISH\\.' ASHER. Days. 12-1 :30 or 2. tlteaJ9 inc. Dick Church's, 2698 Newport. Cl DISHWASHER Experienced Full Time Apply In peI"M>n only THE RIGGER No. 16 i-'a~hion lsb1nd Ne"·po1'1 Beach DISH\VASHER, Sm. l"t'Slaurant, Cd~!. Ea 11 y l'>:Ork! 4pm-midnight, tl day!!. 673-7122 *DRIVERS* No Experience Nec.-sary! Ptfust have t:lean Calitomla drivin: record. A~ply YELLOW CAB CO. 186 E. 161.h -St. Costa ?.fesa ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN s1ro111: solid 1tate theol')I kno\\·lettgr, heavy prototype thl"U production t>xperierice. Some QA t>xper. Good pay. Apply in pen10n. TR.ANSJCOM CORP. S:,l \V. 18th St., C.l'lf, EXPERIENCED lltold "lhop HOSPITALITY HOSTESS SERVICE, has openi11Ka for mature ~"Omen lookin1: for interestina:, part tlTTlt! ,i,-ork, \\'elcomln& newcomers to your area. Sales e x p . desirable. lo1119t have car. CALL: 557-8686 * HOSTESSES * (Over 25) Appl.y in person REUBEN 'S COCO'S llll W. Adams Costa Mt•• HOTEL CashiPr/relier nij:"ht auditor. Exp'd on1y. NCR 4200. Good pay, trlnre bene· fits. Ne1vportei-IM. INDEPENDENT Order ot Foreatel'l!r ia lookina:: for 3 sales tr-.Unees. Care-er opp, generous advance. 6~1 9 am-1:~ pm JNSPECTRESS 11·anted for ~I class hotel. Experience pref'd. 644-1700 ext 575 ITT IABSCO h•• •n immecfiat• opening for an ENGINEERING -CLERK- to 1\'ork in Product Section. lofust bf! ;ood v.'ith f~e11 and dl'tail. l\fust have inter· f'S' and understand.In& of ro- tating machinery. Thiti is an "'ntry-le.vel posi- tion, leadifli Into en,zinetl'- lng. Xlnt. chance for ad· vancement. Salary comml'!n- surate 1vlth ability &: experi- ence. Liberal trin1te benefits. Equal opportunity employer 1~8.'1 O&le \Vay Co!la l\1esa. Calif. 92621 fTiol) S43-S251 A \\:ood ' shop. Arthur•--~~==~==~ r.tarine 1663 Babcock, Colla JONES TIRE SERVICE t.teP 11 t>1tpandina: and requires F/C BOOKKEEPER e Reta~~1!'1m~ED To $800 . Sharp gal: 1ronlofc, Se.l up e nn Strvtcemen - Ii: maintain books lhru p k e f'ront End vld L. Prefer son'ICOne w/con· •Brike ?.techa.nles tractina; hkkfd, famlthu· w/ SallU')' rilu.11 bonus ind d•ta .,m1111na. Co. wUI rr:-compal\Y l)lld benef\ta. imb. ~; ft!C. Opponunity fOT adv~ment Al80 fC<' j.ob3. App~: 2049 Harbor Bl\1d. a APEX Coll! ?ti ... t.:mploymvil Agtncy 1313 llarbec' m\'d. 11 . ., Nock So. ol 19Ull S.tS.3'126 DAILY Pn.DT LI f ME· A · LINES. You ca.n use u~m for just pe:Mic1 a ~. Dlal 642-!i67S Aprily a t STA -FAST, INC. 926 So. L)·on (.Enter at Chestnut le L}OnJ Santa An1 PERSONNEL ANALYlT -CITY OF - NEWPORT BEACH MAIDS. Fu.II or part tim~. al8o ~tALES 10 .assist. A~ $773. te $flt per month ply Ben Brov.-n's li.ioto r Hotel, l 1106 S. Cout H\\}', South Laauna MAIL ROOM CLERK $37;t. mo. \\/ill train. lnda,,.ndant P e rsennel Agency lnG <>ranp Ave., Suite c C.lif. 6f2..0026, SG-0979 ?ofAINTENANCE llfan, a.I.so Ma.id for lfolet Perm. 143.2670. 2100 Newport, C.1-f. MAJOR Appl.lance Se:rviet> ?!fan w/kno w leda:e of F'rigidilire ii: Hor,oint Ap-- One of thrt!c positions 1n the personnel office. The Personnel Analyst is ien· e.rali11t in nature. lt re- quires a coUei" dei:ree in public or bmlness admin- tstralion, or a closely re- lated major and one year of recent profwional per-- SON'll"I cx~nce inelud· in:-any or tll of the rol- Jo1vina:: job ana1y1ls, re-- crulbnent &. te.stini. clu- silicalion &. pay, employ4 tt rell.liona. 7pl~l~""'='~"-c~.n=_&<&-""'2'..,-,86_,,_.1Applica1lons and re au me • ~fAKE your spare. time must be ltlt>d before: 5 pm, really pay off. Learn to Frida.y, 1tfarch :!?, 1970, at become a Fuhion Sa.le11 the Personnel Office, :::300 Consultant. Call 7'tiss Poteet Newport Blvd., N e w p o r t ~:>au Bf'ach, Cali.I. CTI4) 67J.0633. M•n .. •m•nt Tr1inff -$600 Start PRODUCTION Artist !\tarried, some eollcgr. Call w/knowlt>dge of Vis u a I Ani:i. \Veslclirf P!!:l'Mlnnel Aids, p/time da ys.C a 11 Atency, 20-i3 \Vei1tdiff Dr.,1_&1_;.o__,333=·,.,..,="'=-- N.B. 645-2770. REAL ESTATE ~fANAGE7'tENT Trainee SALESPERSONS mu111 be married, 3-5 yn. Unusual opportunity to join 1~-ork exp. call A n n, 11ales force of dynamic real "'estcllff Personn~I A&t'ncy, estate comyany. If you are 2043 Westcl!U Dr.. N.B. licen!!ed & 1rould like to join 645-2'170 !ht> rapidly rro111n; stalf of ?IT AN AG E l\f ENT Op-Fam>\V Realty, call: :'l;\6-3291 portunlty. Full or Part time. For confidential intervit>w. Cat nee. 20 hn. \\it. 836-4302 R EC E PT I 0 N IS T l'~or PifECHANICAL ENGTh.'EER. General Jnrurance Agency. F'OREi\fAN & LEAD 1\fEN, Call ;1>4g,....1512 li.1 0 L D E RS & GELl'Rcs~la~.,-.-,,~----- COATERS. All 3 shifts. Top jobft. 1G3l Placentia. C.Pif. :P.fEN \\'an~ for 1.Iominr Ne1''1Pi\pcr dellveey to homes, H.B.. F .V. area. ]'.fusl live. \Ve 1 t of Brookhurst. Call 347-8919 ' ?ofODELS for luncheon fashion show!. 21 or ovtt. Call !or appt. :>-10--3460 • Day lusbay • Day Hostess • Nl9ht Caoks APPLY IN PERSON Revben E. Lee NEED mature woman 10 rlt 151 E. Coast Hii)'. w/mother, 7-4:30, breatu11 ___ N_•_Wf>OTl~-""-'-'-h __ I: lukh. No houscwotk. Restaun.nt 11.25 hr. m-m; a1t ''"' Ancient Mariner ilnewport . parsonnei ~ency ,,.,.,,,..,., Service lo< tM employer and the appUc1nt U2 Devor Or., N.I . M2-Jl71 'l49-2t4J NJTE PORTER lo clean restaurant 5 n-eninp, '' hn per week: PleaU: apply Bura:er Kina. 16331 Beach BIVd. Huntlnrton Beach no1v tflktng applicatlom tor FuU le part time. dsy !lhl11. e KITCHEN HELP e DISHWASHER Apply In peraon 2G01 \V.:. Cout I-Iv.')'. Ne.wport Beach RESTAURANT. P.1/F, ll:S0-2 P:if, day11. · l'-1ALE. over J.B.eves. Apply at Ta!ltoe Fret>1 2900 Brialo, C,P.I~ alter 2 _P~t ROY ALVARADO Ha Ir Stylist Now lnterv\t>win:;r: Ha.Ir 1ryt. OPEJµTORS • Spon.av.·ear l,U. hair drasen, beauUc- littaf. Exp'd. only. Gd. pay, lans. aasilllantl, 1hampoo •t d>' &1.W472 N' B. •• . . irirl, m1nleurlat. '1 halr m~ PLANNING lo mo\lt'l' You'll dell!. Newport Stach. ftrtd an amuinz number of ~.Anytime. homt>1 In tod1.1'• Clusl11ed Ads. Check them now. DAU.Y PILOT \VM~ ADS! . - Wtdllf'Sd17, M•teb 11. 1970 OAl'LV PILOT :;s JOIS & IM~LDYMENT JOIS & iMPLOYMENT 'MERCHANDISIC FOR- -SALE AND TRADE Jobi Men, Wom. 7100 Jobt--M.n,,Wom. 7100 -- • 8ervl\.'C Sl•llOll • $(•rvlce Dept Fumitur• 8000 s.ie Betty Brua: at 18 Needed I WF: 1lav1· 9 t11.111 Vf'nt1ll'.lh"'-m 6 · * $125 PER WEEK + 11ovc hOoi::ht ln varloua: to!· • f•or New t.1ark C. Bloome Ori, yoor cht1l<.'t' $9 cildl. 3 t.d6 X t!C C.N. Store .and Garden ?K'&J'ly 1>C1v 30" J:.W> rani;ci; Aa•ncy for C.rttr Cir18 GiO\'e-~ Anahcl u:i •lotec. in aood oondit.ion Si9 nch. 1 '10 \V , Coast Jlwy., N.8 . Chartgto llm1 &. ~hocks. oo~ 30" avocado J::fl'I range By &PPQ!1.'1t. ~ Re.fer. Will tra.Jn. Med. ben. $911. Ii \ISf'd porlitbi~ 19" ..,~~""!!'"!!!!!!!!!!!!""!!'I efli. & inlUI'. Ptnsion '-Prof black & while rv ·, 111 ex .... Shar Plan. ApPJ¥ Mark C. ttllr.nt alnd1uo11. $.19 Cld:h S.!.s S.cretary Bloome Co.. m; 1111.rbot Thi.' ractol')', 1811.i llatbo1·, Beautltul ofe. Lo!s of cu11l(). Blvd., Costa M~. :>-10-6842 mer c:ontacl. $500 to tlart. ===~------'---==~----f'eoe rei.mb. ree Jobs avail-SERVICE Slf.!19n Attendent, LIVING ROOM able tull lime, evening shlU 1 Plett <.vn1pletc. Divan A · Independent F.xp'd: Neat In appt'ara~. chair. 2 tlf'COral1\'f' himp11. Personnel Agency St>c Jim. %i90 Nev.·port C.l\I. 2 latl;r rnd tablrs larJ;r> SERVICE Slallo At ·" 1 coffee h1blr. Hegul11r f"tJ"U:~ 1716 ~e Av, Suitt> c n te .... an . C.r.t! 642-0J26. ' 545-0979 days, s~'ln&: &. grave~ard. S219.9J. Now only $169.9:"1. ""*-s""A"L'e"s'""c'A"R"'E"'e;i;-R__..,.* ~r::rr1h~• .;~,~ .. :~;: Approved Furniture EXECtrrJVE. Starting 11al· N.B. 2tj9 Harbor Blvd ary plus con1m. Firs! year I 'si=TT=E=n=.-~,7,,-,,..~,=.,~;.-~A~ll-or--Costa 1'fcsa :~is.mi t>~rntnas of S1_2,~plus pos. noon, Evr occasional. Own OP~:N 9-9 111ble 2 yr training _program trans: Call bel 9 pm I O'tt:::o:::-:-:c:i?-.::...:.,...,~· - by century old nahonal co. &12-0lll 2 Ult'd malehit~ upholst,.rer! Business or 1111le~ back-~~-,--~~-~--chairs 111 j.,'<Xid ronrJJlion. ground helpful. No travC'I / Teletype Operator boll1 lur $19. 4 u 11 rr! ll(ifnl opportunities. ).lu~t be c:-.pd. Beach area. uphulslcrf'd l'h111rs, ai;.'i(.11.fctJ TED Ai.Exl\NDER $-lj(), up. ('"Olor.i, r.\rellrnt CQnd1tio11. m-4545 Est. 297 Independent $19.95 "ach. fl.IRny n1isCf'l- An equal opportunity Personnel Agency lal"\('(lus odd rh11lrs, S2 employer r.t/F 1116 Orani:i:e A\'e, Sui•c C r.ach. Thi;-~·nclory, 188.J e SALESMEN· C.i\1. , &12-002ti, $6-0979 I ,.'>-'",,"°='·.,,"=11-$""'l~2 ~~~ e ATTENTION TEU.ER. SRvings -Loan CONTEl'-lPORARY 11 v t ng Lookinz for a job with a brt-exper. prt>lerred/Apply in-roon1 chair and mrt lchin~ ter than a.n avera:)" fulure? person. ~l/\lllNERS SAV· ol!onuin. Nc1vly rt'U J>holster· Join one of the lastei;t gro\1·. INGS AND LOAN Jj lj r<I in li.c:-hl grun l·':l'Cl"k:h in1- ing companies In Southern \Vestcllfl Dr. N.B. port l11.U1·1c. :-:Int 1"f'lnci ilh'ln Cal. $60. Eves &. 11'kl'111f11 54.>6062 tf. Wf'! are looking tor Trainee Machine Opr. quallfied salesmen. intt>re11l· Pttfcr 50nir niachinr blq;rd. t.IAPLE lli-boy chest ·S·IO. ed in lhl'ir tututf', in lhr $~33. nio, lo IUal'C 1\ll\plc b11nk or !1v1n ~d l larbor area. Over 2.l, xlnt Independent h·an1C's (no n1111rs1 11•fllld· ~record, happily ~arried, Personnel Agency lier $2j. ~~19--0;-io7 financ~· slabl;. ~les ~X· 1TI6 Orangi;-Ave .. Suite C 3 u'I('(! m11/i5iVc 22x32 antiijnC" pt>r. desll'able. \\~ 11111 train. C.!\l. 6-12-00:!{i ~j..{)9!17 white prdestal end tal:Nrs Call lor appt: 642-0811. TEACl!Er 1 · 1 · '1·ith gold lr11f lops. 325 SALES . .• r csires ov1ng f'arh. I LJ.St'd m"•i"" .,.....,,_,. , car(' /or 4 & ~. yr old i;:lrh;, ... .....,...., titan or \\oman 11 /11~1~ t>X· p/time. Refs l't'q 'd. S.l2-2Crli> antk1ur 11·hi1C' p c de" ta I per. to act as outsidr 1:on-t.'OCkW.il tabll.' wi lh gold teal tac! to ttll the design VW PARTS MAN lop, SJ5. 2 usrd l6"' 2 Kl'r~Ct. o_f a long establis~ed Need .i;:OOlt 111811 10 ii·oi•k parh> drii.wl'r t' rr d r n z a s. I quality interior decorallng <."OUnter V\V r llpcrir.nce fll'C· ilVOCado, 1 anli11uc wh\!e, fin:n-Refer. \~r1tt1 Box j9~f. fC"n'ed .. See ll~rb, S~ rach. l'tw f-~ac101y. 1885 Daily Pilot. N.B. H b v w Harbor. Z>ltHi842 SALES Ladie11 2-4:>, FUii ar our , , 8' Sofa , 11c1•f'r used, qu_iljed timc. needf'd for Tustin &.: floral, St.'Olc.b c:uan1P.<I Ji20. Costa ~fe11a . Apply AUTHORIZED lllatrh. lOl'Cscat Si:>. ~I) Beri;lltroms &by N t> w 1 ~ALES & SERVICE 776-0:xt'J Store, 650 "D" St. Till!tin. 18711 BEACH BL.. LG ~~---HUNTINGTON BEACrt I ,IJT Bclgr ~·a r p e t I T'li:, SALESGIRLS needed. full slighlly uM?1t. Arorwos, · 40 t!m" Apply ;, """'"· URGENJL Y NEEDED. yob. Xlot '""'· &l&-~2 Jackie!! Fashion Center. No. '!ODE " R.i'l Con ch, chair-~ ~nti 7j Huntincton Center. Hunt. e T • k coff tables, lamp + ZI'" Bch. ypists Tv. "''"'"'' • • SALESJ\IAN. 1-'ull ticne. • Secretaries Experienced. Ne11.1 in 11p-• AcCtlj Clerk$ peara.nce. Stt J hn, 2.l9Cl Ne11,,ort Blvd., C.i\1. • PBX Opers SALES, m or r. retail learhcr e Bkkprs shop, p/lime 10 1.n1 -2 pm. e Balboa "1. ..._."' Keypvnch Oprs SARAH COVENTRY ha. • MTST & MTSC openini:;s for full or part time ga.Jes. No investment, Jll"I deliveries. f 'or interview, e Operators Receptionists * 540-0614 • Savini,:s It. Loan BRANCH MANAGER Sa.vina:s I: Loan AMociation. located in Newport· Bt>aeh a.rca, has p(igitior. ava.il, for a \\ell qua.lifird Savinas & Loan Branch r.tanage.r. DI· eel. polentlal & fringe hen. cfit!I. Only applicants 11·ith a min ot 2 Yfl!. Savings e:<· perlence need apply. For particulars call J\ft. J·Iensley {213) B&S-0512. Work when iand wher• you want! Interim • Personnel Service ~5 E . 17th St. Coit• Me1e, Ciallf. -642·7523 l111c.rvlewlng A1on. thru ~'rl. 8 Al".f lo 5 Pr.f Equal oppor1unity employf'r Secy/R•capf \VANTED: Reliable livl•-in Plush of~. tor IOp notch M-sitter to care for I school k. cept/typ1st "'ho kno\\'I ~r l 4-yr old for 2 \\'e<!ks. \Vilh Kt"atn~iar ~ makes good ini. References. Call 675-6831 prc~IOn 1n pel'l!On .t: on .~===~-~---phone. \VAITRESS \Vanted: Coffe?t" Genl. Off/Purc:h•sing Shop, 1797 Newport Blvd. Type 50-60 accw·ately ,v/esp. Apply betlvm 6~I & .?P~i . in purchasin~ Ir. \"endor oon· _0'~''"=""=·==-----tael. Xlnt benfs. \\'AITRESS \Yanlt'd, Apply 1n. Clerk Typi1t person. l'-1ei;a Lanc11. 1103 CREDJT/ADJUSTi\tENTS Superior Avc.., C.?.1, Opty. for capablt> gal 1v/ \VA IT RES S E S , esp'd. k11<n1·Jedge or bkkpa:. to i;ho1v \\•anled S1111 & Sirloin, 3930 Khe can accept ~ponsibility Pacific Coast lh,.y, N.B. &: 11·ork v."ell '\'/custo~e1-s. * WOMEN * Require~ accurate typing-Ir. Tc!erihonc work cool hea.d. from homl' SERVICE CENTER NO SELLING Employment Agency \\'rite :iOO Ne\\1)0rl Center Dr .. NB P.O. Box ~:l Suite 200 By aprit. &14-4981 Lo!! Angeles, Calif. SECRETARY \VO:'lfAN 25-ilj, !\tarried p1.,..f. Xlntopty.Prefersales bkgnl. Litf' factory work . To $600 to 11ta.rt. Fee paid. m~hanical 1>.xp. bul 001 Fee Joi.ls al'ail. necc11i:;ary. Bul\\·in tlffg, Co. Independent 19::.2 Randolph 1\v~. C.~1. (I Per\onnal Agency blk from \Vhitefront, ofl 17\6 Oran~ Ave., Suite C Baker St.l C.~T. 642--0026 543-0997 ---------I SECRETARY TO $320 Excellent oppor1unity ABILITIES UNLl?ofITED AGENCY 483 E. 17th, Suite 224 Coa!a MeMi 642-1470 SECRETARY EXPERIENCED P~rmanent. 2J }four, 5 day \\:eek position available New· port Beach, hn. t.t pm ,. 1-J pm. Top talary. \\'rite Box P-579. Daily Pilot. SECRETAlt\'..steno. Exper nect:U, Send re11umc w/pic· 111re. Ponderosa, P. O. Box 1.1383, San!a Ana. SECRETARY Sc:hoolt-lnstructlon 7600 *AIRLINE* TRAVEL CAREERS Operation!! Agen1t Ticket Saleio; Reservatio1is Air t~rciGbt • Cargo Cornmunlcatio11~ Travel A.:enl AIRLINE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Day " Nliht C.18.ll!lt'S 54J.6.lOO '.'!' Solid Ouk Q>fkc Tahll!. S:Xt . Call !)68....l!lOJ DBL Bcdnn ~cl. con1nL Gold tl1v!S.~r. Nitrstnd. like ~1' .\tiO. :tlS-1!206 aft 4Pi\1. ' 8' GOLD 1~\'h, brnnrl n~v.·. CoUM" tbl ,ti_ ovrrstutrrrl chair, x1n l t'flrl((, .·•l8-w.Xl8: ·-DINEIT~ ~cl . 6 chalrll.'Gulrl f.. "'hilr. lor111u•;:i IOI') tahlP sm ca~h. &l!}--3826 C0~1PLETE: housC'hold furn l!ur!' & n1isc. hou scwaJ·Ps, yarrl equip!. i\lu,.;1 Sf'IJ -ntovlng. S21l Rerlh1ndll 1\\11'., NB. 6$--109'.! STOP! 2 Ftvnrh Pro v . rhairs: .1 \\•hi1r anti(jUt>rf 1a blell. Changi11i.: rurnililf'l" style. Nict', cheap. Aller 6, call liJS..:iStJ.I 1\IAPLE Bdrm .w!, bookcase. stereo. din. Sl'I , rle.sk, ;:ip. pl l 11n,'ei;;, rr1t•yclopcdia ·s. ~fisc. Call 51:).7™ QUALlTV king bed .-.,,~.~,.,.~, ma!!re5s. Cotnpll"le-unuJ>ed $120, \l'Orlh $26(). B-12-6536 CVl'!ll. LIKE new avoc<:tdo/antiqu(" gold. 11uilt~ davl.'nport. 8' long. RCA c:olor 21" consolt: TV. ;~g...3674 CVC'!I. 1 only-Used 8' Spanish 11voc1:1rlo sor11 & chair !'if'\ $3.lj. :: uSl'd sola k chair sers-aJ;ain h.v pop u 1 a r demand. S·19.9j t'tH·h set. I Only-Uio;ed SI' sof11 SL. The l'aelory, 188.:1 11 ;i r bot . :>4G-68-12 ~!.iV II' $;ll'll.I sh·lpl'd ."Ola . Sacrlrii<t• S3011. G1'f'rn $1:11 are11 1111: S75. 1:~4-l()j(} US[D Spanish J«Jla ~.~. ~Io-,-,· I 11ea!, tn exccUenl c.'flndltion. S!:l!I. USf'd Sp<1ni~h '.i pH•cc anhqUE" avot•udo Bcdroon1 ~t-rt.1n1>1st.s O[: :!·2 drawrr ni!c s!11.nds, 1 douhlr hf'ad· boo.rel. !I rlrav.•1•r dt"f'.'l.W.r S.· mlrror. $139. Ust'd lavishly rlrlailr<l !l pirC'f' Spanish pecan Bedroorn i.ct 1v/ kut:; hra11boatd. !1 •lra wc r drrSl:if'r & rnh1'0r'. ~-~ drawi•r nHr i1l"nds, kin~ 11h~r. l)cd fram<' &· king si:t<• bo' Hp ri11gs & n1atlrfls~. $289. Thr 1-'oclor y. 188.i lt.l.rhor, ~10-6842 Office Fur nitur• 8010 AEROSPACE REl~f-:ASES FOR PUBtlC SALE • .jOll i;trl'I lransfrr f'llSf'S • 272 S1cel le Vood desks • S.i. 5-0ra\\'Cr lrgnl file cabinet-; ,.. l\l1sc chairs, l<•bles &: citb. ifll~ t,!I: ~lci\lnh11n Bl'os l)t'l'k Jue. 1800 N1'1vport Blvd Co.'ila i\lesa tr &lu.i:.;Q I Girl Office, expcr. Call Ma..sMO 6lt1 •• E. 17th SI., Santa Ana ~or• Eq~ipm•nt 8012 SEAMSTRESS • ExJ><r ;n SCR·AM-LETS S'I'ORC "'''""''· Wall '"" aarrnent tndu1try on 1n-turc.<xi1ril:Xl"r 'YIX'· gon- du~trial 1eo.vln& machine. ANSWERS 1loh1s. i::la.o.a shrive:.. t:1u1of)y Phone 493-4586 or apply In w/lBcta ll1thllni:. 1'tCl!!!1<~I pe:nsoo at Cout C..bunaran. •:t'lllng 11$?hfl'I, ron-nk·11 chtck 33012 Calle Puftclo, San Pa.role -Clasp -Le11i1r. -0111 .il:tnd k. ..... 1111 fish&rta. Juan Capistrano Goodly -OOLORLESS Ntarly ticw. 641-21.\1 SECURITY GUARD in "Ren1ark about _a lady bot-e: 1--~------- Laruna. 6 or 7 hour"I! 011 Only her var1CO!ice veins 1--- :raveyard shift, o"·n equip-sav1: ~ lrom being COLOR-Gar•o• Sale 8022 ment 63J..3677 LESS. BIG-BIG Gar11.1;t.1 Sa I t , SERVICE SlaUo11 Attend"nl LEAJti'lj' To f'ly lt'R'G8 ThtJ~Sun 1()..o{). Bathroom Full tltne. pt'rm. Salary + . • :< Urt~ . ranlC li, Comm. li.fu1l be able to «"II! l.Jcensed pilots ~hccked oul dn•S:-;t'rt. $' hOH!lt! hold fllt11., Over "· Gro11•ns Shell rm . Call 8t2-.';876 .. blkr. lam~ .~ nuul)' ou1~r Cellln& $3 j(I J)l'I' hr IVf:I f~ I bed f Servk:e, 990 E. Cout Hwy., n ff; SUN NEV CR SETS on lterrui yoo woultJ IO\'" 273 riAILY PILOT \VANT ADS! P.l orite Vista ,\\'t',. C\l. N.B. . • ' I I I ' I • • • \V ' (: I • . . •• 3 LINES 2 TIMES (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~h You1·seli A Pile Of Pe11nies (Or E"Ve11 Dolla1·~) Penny Pinchers Pile Up Profits Dial Direct for Details 642-5678 North County, 540-1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS • J- ........ --'7"':-:---:; .. -.,--~.C"';T~;iir.::.--:,;r• -----,--~----------------. .. . • • .. • Furnltu,. 8000 Furl')iture PUBLIC NOT·ICE FREE TO YOU 8600 I PETS end LIVESTOCK Dogs 8115 ------------ * AUCTION * O\VNER Deceased, need new lovlnt: ho.me 1 Shellie mlic ~en1. l'ii yr old, .-1so 1 !lpa.)'e(J P"fti~poOOlc, U8ed,to FRIDAY ·, 7:30 PM 14(111.1!1 only. 5~~T"1:Z after MARCH l:fth 2· 3110 ADORABLE: Toy pooct.le pups, li wk.5, *_h o.L rs, looking CorJ' home $25. Wednesd.:ay, M11rch 11, 197(1 DAILY PILOT 1 TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANS CR P ION TRANSPORTATION -Sallboats 9010 Moblle Homes 9200 Trailer, Travel 9425 Imported Autos 9600 BOATBU IL DERS BAY HARBOR Rclooate in P.e~ Sound Mobile Homt Saltt with growing established \\'a· YEAft END tertront boat building rlrm CLEARANCE SALE needing exp'd pel"90nnel lr1 NOW ON OlSPLAY all phues of ouUlttin& larg~ 12, 16, 20;24 &·30 Wides ALPINE VAC\TION l TRAVEL CEN1JER Excel.· Golden Falcon BMW BMW'S #1 DEALER IN.. l DECORATOR GOS CANCEUA TION OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS SP111ish & Meditetnn11n Finitart AU BRAND NEW UOClllhnt'd storugt' lrom Don 1 am ''CURLY'' white ~fe.rtlt1 Moving & Storage. COCkll.flOO, l ll yrs. old, \Vho SealOO · bo:o<cs & cartont. want$ to be loved by older ~rn sets, DivQns, Sc<.'-cou1ile. H11brkn, easy to ca1•0 tionals, f\tn.ltrei'i-ses, ?..1imlni, ror. l:ill.d bccauSI! owner Dincttei, Chests, Color TV's. pas.wd away. 962--0180 3/12 S!i!t'OOll, Uptighl 1i!a.110, Ma· 1 \~ YR. Large Labrador pie desk cbest10, Comrnodei;, RC'triever mixed. Needs Big Credenta's, Hutches. Cot(et> J-lon1e, Big Yard, &: Lcits Of tables, Lamps, Plctul'c's. Ra· Lo\'e! Good w/chlldren. dlos, Relrigcruton;, Stoves, 675-1952 eves. 3/13 1'111tched sets \1•:;1.shcrs & gas .PART G<'-tmi.n Shepherd. dt')'C'l'S & l\1UCH lt10RE~ ! n1alr S IT!(ll}ths old, and 1 Wormed. Lciv~ ti om e prltue requillte. ~5-'4522 AOORABl.~ ji.erm a.n Shepherd ~~·2 '"-old, 613-4~8 ' COLLIE & Gennan Shepherd pups, 6 wks old. Nttd good hontes, S.i ea. 676-0&13 er flbel'{l:lu sailboab. Reply Up \o 6o Feet Lon& to on.Uy Pilot Bo.x P..001 wlth 142$ Baker St., Co~ta Met.& name. address & b om e ~ blQck East of Harbor Blv~ phone. A l'Otllpan,)' J~Prt!ICll· O::>sta Mesa -(7141 540.9<170 JalivC' will be b1 thi~ urea•=~=-~~~--~ this niont.h to interview 1968 .DBL wide Ctl;'llorn bit -,,.,"°.,7'"==•·-· I mobile home. A\Vntngi; both Olympia -Alplnt Apache· Wheel Camper \Vorlds lt11'gest n1Qfil con1- plete-RV vebiclo shoppfnl C\'ll!Cr CALIFORNIA AND ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 1970'• Jmmed, ~livery 25 Ne\\• & Used in Stock T&M MOTORS A decorator dr eam house on di splay -3 rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was I -sicii5FICE • • • • • . S425 --·--Hor11es PINTO MARE w/TACK 1430 12 ,,.... 1175. - TRANSPORTATION LIKE SAILING? sides, fully skii;t,~. 9x12 DISLIKE THESE? outlridP !1c1-ee1ied rin 2 0 Payments, high inteN;)st, storage sheds. Set in aduit pk dtpn.-ciation, s I i p rental, in bcll area. $10,000. CaU cleaning, insurance, etc. before .9AM, alt 6 P !'II PREFER TltESE ~ ~1 8352 Ga.rtloen Grove Blvd, GC 534-6686 8081 Cnrdeo Grovi Bl, C.C. 53•1+2284 Open Sttnday 892-55.51 Complete Mediterranean Bedroom Suite in Ook . I Reg. $349.001 ......... NOW $188.00 Gor9eous Spanish Custom Bu.ii+ Sofa with. matching l·ov• Seat-Cho;ce of beautiful fob,;.,. I Reg. $419.951 -···--···NOW ~225.00 Speni5h Oin in9 Sets -··································$75.00 Solid Oak End Tables and Coffte Tables •• $19.50 Tall Decorator Table La mps WINDY 'S AUCTION nm lll-ool" mi>od breed. nec<l ~ood horuC's. MG-720'l Boats & Yachts 9000 e l..o\11 cast, 110 WORK & -~196~2~S~K~Y-L~l~N~E~- CAREF~EE SAILIN?! I Ox SS , 2 BEDROOM Cal 2S hitlc as Sl·J, '~day A REAL BU Y AT $2995 Clo5ed Sat. Opc.n Sunday F.\NTASTJC BUY5 In -4 Star. \Ves l.\\'OY!' & f u n t Im e Can1pe1'11. Srotls, 914 N. !!arbor, S.A. COf\tE BRO\VSE AROUND 2015~~ Newport Blvd. Behind ·rony's Bldg ~lat'ts Costa 1'.lcsa * 646-8686 OPEN DAIL Y 9.to 4 I Reg. $49.911 ·····-······-·--···NOW $18.00 Spi-ni$h Han9in 9 Swag :..amps GIVING up hobby 8 tv e'!Uip· ment. osc:illost'Op<>. siS'(!al trattt'. audio gen era tor , sign a I g('nera!or, bar gcnerafot'. volt111rtcr, b•I· tery eliminatOr, picture tObc le.Ster, Vibrator tester. hllll· dreds of resistors and capacitors, several picture lubes and TV sc!s, bundi;,ed~ or tubes nc1v and used, oar r adios, odds an(\ ends. \VUJ sacrifice! 543-8117 all day Sat. and Sun. au<l after 5 weekdays. IReg. $49.951 -··-······················NOW $22.SO CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN mm FURNITURE 1844 Newport Blvd.H arbo~·1B1vd.> Costa Mesa Only Every Night 'Til 9 -Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'Til 6 GARAGE SALE AND FURNITURE SALE Beginners Organ Class ATTENTION ROCK HOUNDS! NE\V Shop Op<.>ning: Sal., l\lareh 11!h. S\6 for R \VC'cks Course 10 ;un·8 pn1. Opl'n 7 days plus materials. Registration: CO!ltE in & register for draw· 'fuesUay, March 17th at 7 ing for FREE Star Diamond p.nl. Also Secondary $.-In· poljshlng u11il complete & 6 ll'rrnC'diatC' S!UdC'nls rt'gister lb. C.Ovington gem htmbler. thrn also, Call & inquire for STONECRAJ'T details: 8101 Bolsa Ave. Hi\r.Tr-.·10ND r.1id\11ay City. 897.1970 in CORONA D.E:L r.1AR 285·1 E. Coast Hwy. 673-8930 SKIERS, .FI S H ERMEN, Open r.ton & Fri eves, HIKERS f\1obilC' honie ,i;, Sunday 124 cabin (or sale or tr11t!e in PlANOS & ORGANS Mammoth Lake. Fully furn. :1f1rr 2 3/\2 NEED Home !01· frlC'ndly CLOSEOUT pricei; now in af. husky pup. 6 1nos old, has fecL-on 27' ht a gnu m all shols, loves kids. Family OC'monstrator & display going to Europe . n1odels· 839-~ 3/12 2'7' f\11in 210 h ,p . 1 Lovable fcn1alc cockapoo 1 de1nonslra1or -list price yr old, hsbrk. loves $1'1,500. no111 $6900. children, and 3 cuddly pup-27' Sport h11in 210 h.p. -list pies 6 \.\'ks old need good price $14,500, noo.11! $9900. hornc!;. 962..()180 ~ 3/.10 27' Sedan twin 160 h.p.+list BEAUTIFUL long hillred price Sl5.500i: mw! $90CKI. P . ·1-1 111 Id ,Boat Island Inc., 2244 W. ersian em. ca , , yr o , c.oast H N 8 642-$30 01·al\ljl'/111hitc, & 2 8 month ..,,'Y·· · • old kittens need good 18' INBOARD. genuine Cen· hor11c11. 847-23-10 3/12 tury Laps!rake bay & cx.-eon LOVABLE 1'"rlend!y blonde cocker mix, lemale, 7 mos . old, long ea~. n e e d s children & fencctl yarrl. 968-3776 or 8-16-3818 3/12 LOVABLE Blonde fe1nale shaggy cocker mix 1 yr old, loves children, nds good J1om e. 847-2340 dr 002--0ISO 3/10 0\VNER Dietl. Need quaHHed honie for 3 adult, boaL Noted for sa.fety & comfort. Top condition, new paint In & out, convt. top, canvas cover, bait tank, etc. 60 hp. gray n1arin(' eng. Sacrifice $1285. &c al Bal Boat Docks next to Balboa Pavilion. 675-6953 or 673-1010 for tcsl ride. cusror..1 BUILT . l\.lini-Spo1'\ \\'haler lype. 50 lf.p, l\1erc Trailer, Ill'\\' full t.'011ers, Coast Guard equipped. You'll T~ o:;;a.~i~) ~an SANTA ANA AREA =-,,7'"==~~-~~ 545-3241 Atnerlcan 842-39J.<J 31' r.lAUBAR Junior Alden =~~-~-~~-­Sloop, dacron sails, spin· '69 Skyline. 24 x 60 '3 Br. :? naker, 25hp Graymarinc. ba, crpl, drp.s, l11und,. al'i.'a, Sle<>J)I •I. Good CQnd is.500 cooler. awnings, sJurtlng. Eves. (714) 008-1809 · · ~·amily Pk. 83S-6328 Traile rs, Utility 9450 UTILITY Tr11ilC'r, 5x8. $55, l 101 St, An<lrev.•, S.A. CaU 5-lj..(l78:l \VANTLD Lile 111ihly 1ra1Jer .-Gl2~81:l!) • Power Cr:uisers 90.20 Mini Bikes -------"-9275 -·· Trucks 9500 FAST 28' UnifiHc cruiser. Gl?-KART, good l'(\nnint; con· F'Ully equipd, E.xce l end, d1tion. $50 or best uUer. $8250. 54.7-6091 ofc. 673-1901 ::'c::73-85=·9=3======= res. =======~= Motorcycle1 9300 ~peed-Skl Boats 9030 -------- ,68 CHRYSLER 15 '66 BUL TACO 2SOCC Corsair hull. Trailer 1?k n Brand new $40 carburetor, 1 c nc1v front tire, nev.• sc:<ils, New International Pick Up Truck LIQUIDATION 3 Jn rh(lO~i: lt'Qn1 al factory i111·ua·e prict•. l{ustom Motors just ha1' n1ajor tune-up. Xlnt cond! Great Dir1 Bike! $450 SJ:J BakC'l', C.tll. ========= 90 = 3 o 2 f or best oUcr. 9;.6.3().\•I '63 ECONOLl~E Van. Nr.w * 968-1487 • :»10.591a Boat Trailers paint, in\l•rior. g Irk lapr:. r:JO y Al\1AHA Big B.)al' t•hnJllll' 11h!s. and 1uo1'\'. . . . Scrambler. Everylhi ng \VANT Boat triuler fo"t' 13 ,vorks. Great rubber. $39.'.'). =1='""=·="=1='-=26ti='·=1=· ==== \Vhalcr, large 111hecls, good !>48-4757 or 646-4833 -~~-6'12~31!!0. 1969 T:JO NORTON C'Or.1MAN. Jeeps 9510 Boat Slip Mooring 9036 00. Excellent e< lilion. call '6J \\'agoneer $1095, ':it; Jeep 516-15-IS alter iJ p.m. \111tn, V8. Sro5. '46 Dod~e sp11yed, fen1ale ca ts . 548--0813 3/10 really haV(' to ~ce it Retail \VANTED: Boal slip for '67 305 HONDA P1\'I' \\'gn S650. Pvt ply. 646-1613 . PERFE:CT EastC"r ~Ill! 9 Bunnies. 3 black & rest b1'0\\'J\. 2 1no. PlcltS<' call AFJEJl 2 pm: J.18·3917 3/16 FREE Adorable kittens to homes \11i!h childnin. Pls call after 5 pm . 962-2359 3(12 -over S2,500 new. I-lave new brand ne111 29' sa.ilboat. * \\·i l11 extras • boat and n1usl sell fast. 5·1j...2l87 S.15-3j86 543-1'1~ l ,-w-· -S-L-IP_F_o_r~R-,-,-,_-N-,.-vpo-,, 1 -~H=,-,~,,-T=,-.. =.,~.,~. =,,.=,- Beach. Call 642-52'.11 days oi· Sl:icl 548-368•1 eves. * j4/.l·6731 • ,/ '•12 JEEP. Nt-1\' transmis- sion. $72:). Allk for Olen, 548-6.123. Campers 9520 Mobile Home s 9200 l\1UST SELL! '68 Honda 350. "-c;..----1 Sll't.'et. Runs ~oodl SACRIFICE By pr i 11 a le duty Pick Up. Powel' sreer· &!6-5055 BAYSIDE MOTORS 1200 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. DATSUN NEW '70 DATSUN PICKUP W/camper, 96 hp averheid c:im, >I spd, dlr, 6 fli.y tlres, bttck up lights. You name it! Serial No. 244009. Full price S:ll99. Take small dn or trnde. Call Pbil, 494.9713 or 545-0GJ.I alter 10 am. W#(DA,_ "Lea<ler in The Le;i.rh 1.;11!t?1" ZIMMERMAN 2845 HARBOR BLVD. 540-6410 DATSUN LATE '67 1600 Roodstcr, Jf spd, dtr, Sharp, h<ltp, sun red, plush black :nt. xlnt cond. Must sacrifkt'! $1499. Take? older American car or small down. URE643. Call Ker. 494.9773 or 545-0634. '70 DATSUN SEDAN Beautiful ladies dt't'llst•s sizr- B Ul 10. Du·A·Bed Oedrooi11 suilr, v.·or!d books, plus mis· cellancous household items.~. fun1itUl't', 2 lo 6 !\Inn. thru ThurSday. 3..'1'14 Topside Lane, Harbor • View Hi lls, Lusk Honie~. C'orona rlcJ fl1ar. BOAT finished. sailing in 2 \\'b. l\1ust scll C\'l't'Y1hing v.-e can't take. PowPr tools, many marine hdwr items, jazz LP's. ~tereo, various hou!'il':bold items. Too mu~h to llst,-SO corne & see. i\lro many free i1em5i. W26 Ora nge, Costa ?·1l~s<1. NE\V & USED Sips 7, Firepl. Sacrifice e Yaniaha J>ianos Organs $4500, Days ~1-3374, Eves PRETI'\' & lovable, m11nx e Thon\as Organs 540--0617 female cat. 6 nl06. old, 12' tLEEJ custon1 built cabin cruiser. Glass hottom , enclosed head, dinett e, sleeps 4. Chrysler inboard. Lots of new paint. $450. In- quire at 119 34th St., N.B. after 5 PM. RUNABOUT 65 hp Johnson. Owner leaving town . Take aver pymnts. Contact Bill Williamson, days 642-9-110 1963 CRES'TLINER • 18', 115 HP. $1200. 8.'<cl, 25' slip avail. 642-4644 * JOMICRA INC. * * 4!14-5922 * pru·'Y 1970 GMC '>; heavy Auto Se rvice ing, automatic, V-.\l, w/ Fei!lturin9 America'!. fin· & Parts 9400 111•11• 9' c<1.b over C'a1npcr. Big 4 door 96 hp overhead cam, disc brakes, -4 spct dlr, 111sw, back up lights. Sacri. lice. Take trade, will Unanoe private party. Call Pbill, 494.9773 a.ft 10 am. NEJGl-lBORHOOD Garage Sale: Thurs, Fri. & Sa l. 13911 Lipkin, \Vestminsler. {2 blks West of Beach Blvd., 1 blk •no. of \Veslm1nstel' Blv<l.l 892-GJ.14. EARLY Bird Sale 8 A.\l -4 Pr.t MO\•ing. furn. & miscel. 2068 Ne111porl B!vd .. Costa fl1esa Appliances 8100 e Kiinball Pianos C~ARP==ET=~1~o1=t-f~N-m-c=,-,-nm~'I . needi; i;ood home. • KohlC'r .t Campbell contracts. $1.9S, $2.88, shag 847-2340 3/12 COAST MUSIC $3.99 sq yd, DrakC's Cai'JlCt OWNER died. Need qualified NE\YPORT & HARBOR 17206 Beach Biv1l. 11.B. adult home for 2 adult, Costa ttlesa * 642-2851 8<12-51.lJf. spayrd t em a I e cat!. Open 10-6 Fri 10-9 sun u..s \·=v-A~N=r~1=,=0~.~,=::x=·T=n=;;=;i=E=L=v' I 548--0SJJ 3/13 Rea.sonab!C' UsC'fl carpeting. Prefl.'r da1·krr eolor. Ple8.lic If you ;ire shopping fur a call &12-1721 alter 6 P;\f or piano or organ, ne\\' or used, \\·eekendt>. and are intt>rcsted in a 1ni1y 1,=,~o=v=iN=·c= .. ~,=,-,-5-. =11-, -5-.-1 b'Tra1 deal, please shop tM be: h'. us e N.' tng ~t \YARD'S BALD\VlN STUDIO cm IS ~p In C~llpol 1819 N~v.'JX)rt, C.M. &12-8484 Bch Tennis Club. S<!50 or O~" E N.1 bci;t ofier. 8 A r.1 .. JP l\f , GER}.·IAN ShC'phel'l'l. male 9 mo·s old. Tan ,l',i blal'k. Call &l;i.-0292 3/13 3 MALE Guinea Pigs 7 \\'ks. 1; Sian1ese killcn, 6 \vks. S.t~l361 3/14 PETS and LIVESTOCK Sailboats 90)0 est mobile estate homes I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I Interested parties t.'Ontact displayed in Orangell 499-2892, 21G2l Wesley Dr, County's newest adi.lt BEAOI Apt :;, South Laguna. parks. AUtO Supply CAMPERforRancheroorEI Cami119. Cah ovC'r, sh~eps 4. SPACES -You• c.hoiee cf \c<' box, riinrttr, \vatcr, xlnt •p•t• in •nv ol our """' Wholesale f'onrl. 3 Yrs olU. S•UXI. Rll'h's park1. SALES -Choo1t your hcmt Prices ID All Top Shop, 72·1 \V, lfith SI., from O>'lf 100 "'ISW mod1l1 ,..._ I 'I h. Sho c.~I. .... ,mp elc " nt: 1ne ... p =========== 11•dv to mov• in 01 h•~• SPEED EQUIPMENT yout1 custom built. REBU ILT ENGINES SERVICE -ful1 lime 1ervic1 d1patlmenl 1ervin9 ••th lo· 1125 Vicloria Of 548-6550 t•lion. 18361 Beach Bl~d, HB 847-o9!ll W OPEN 7 DAYS * Dune Buggies 9525 Vulks 13;[) Engine . Near Ne\11. $600. *Call G7~3132 • DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 18835 Dea1.h Blvd. tluntington Beach 842-7781 or 5'1().{)«2 ENGLISH FORD ,,. very 1 c 642-8_90 F'RIGJDAIRE eleei. <lryer, &.· Sunrlay AJ!ernoon ~='=·=·~-~---­ xlnt cond. 220V. \Vhir!pool J """'""'""'""""""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•JCARPET Layer has tarpct. \\'ll:Sher xln! cond. $45 ea. UPRIGHT antiqued a'lOCado Nylon, l<odel, Shag & 847-8115 or 54~72 Piano, xlut kine, brand new H.i-lo1vs. \Vi11 seU at rost for Dogs 1425 GREAT DANE PUPS Fawn black maslcs, Will be BlG! $1.W 772-0075. 821~857 \\'Af'.'TED: lri&h Setter, pro- v('n stud, AKC. 1969 J3ALBOA 20 \II/trailer. Si ps 4. Dinette. hrad, sink, running lites, cabin lite, anchor lite, s pe e d o , bow-pulpit & lifP. line. l m· mac. $329~. Pvt p I y. &12-!J'j()() days; &15--0962 eves & wknds lB' SLOOP 21' Overall; dacron sails, Acrylon cover, siainless rigging, co m p I ('ushions, slt'l'ps 2, folding mast. $600. Rich's Top Shbp. 724 W, 16th SL, C.r.t. Call 64&-0288 -"ANAHEIM"- 96-00 PONDEROSA MOBILE ES TATES 2300 So. l ewil 71 )-6)).8601 Imported Cars BUGGY & Jee p Parts: 1---------- Shor1enf'd V\V pati, comp. -"COSTA MESA"-\\'/cn,gine. tl'll,ns & 1ran! ax· AUSTIN AMERICA AUSTIN AMERICA 'fl-IE ENGLISH GOING THING! AT ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLUME WASHER & Eltt. J)ryC'r, ~J'._~· ask'g l3 50. labor. 52J-U88 p a i r . X J n t • r 0 n d . LOCAL Eggs \Vholesale fron1 Guaranteer!. Both only $125 Ranch to Resiaurants & IC'l'nis. 6'15-2306 Television 8205 Conva l escent Homes r.tOVING: Ho,point R1·fl·i.c:. ~CA Color Console TV. 5.IS-3758 aft 6 Pl\I Approx 5' 4"x3l " l\'ide. $75. Best offer. • SCH\VfNN Varl'ii!y 10 spU. Call &16-.1982 5.15-1644 xl.n! cond. $60. 4 p Drun1 srt + cxrra i;nare, good cond, GREENLEAF PARK le. Qfl \\'heel!, Plus 1nisc 1150 Whitti1r Ave. parts $150 for all. 4-1100 x 71 -4-642-1)50 16 i;movcd sllcks on 14'' -"HUNTINGTON wide wlu·rls. fo1· jeep $175. See a1 ~ft'sa Union, cornet• BEACH .. _ Plru1Trcnd Ne11·1)'lr! & Vairvie\\', days DOBIE male 1 yr, no papers. S I • T DRIFTWOOD BEACH CLUB or 51~72 nitrs. Good pel for lamily. $50. 0 ing em pest 21462 P .. c:ifie Co11f Hwy, &12-7312 (Keep trying). 14' PT420 Class of 15000! 71-4·5l6-751l '68 V\\' Engin(' ron1p]('lC 846-52.57 Sales, Service. Parts lmn1cdiatc Delivery · All l\todels ENGLlSl I FORD DEALER OVt:h GO NOW AT CLEARi\NCE PRICES! Theodore · j.b • 11374 $.17.'). Pv1 ply. Will l.'Onsidf.'r cu·pctloyer I·"~ Hj bo NTCE MlllC' (V!zslal clog Main, ' ' spin, etc.. "YUCAIPA·CALIM"SA" d 6l"9c-d SF.:RVEL refri.c:rrator, ~1Jtvl 8210 $75. 962-1560 S:JO. W~&linghousC' wa~hcr & Hi-Fi & Stereo dryer $;i() each. 673-28!!2 O'l<EEFE & ~1erritt Rangc- liight, timer. clock. Very i::ood l'Qndition. $35. 5'18-9461 ~ ·1 p ·1· y hi Sal ~ '010 i;;; Ira e. v-.. MJ A y s; nylons $1.99 yd, SJ1ags wanll'l avar able lcniale. ac1 IC ac cs u•~w SOUTHWEST MOBILE 645--0962 nitcs & \.\'knd~. ROBINS FORD f---e"'61Hisrbor-Blvd. :'ilAGIC O:lcf Combo Ele~· range. <f'C"irig: .. sink. Good eond. to.take. offer. 673-66::15 GE stereo w/AM-Fl\f radio, 23" GE TV. bolh perrect, can deliver. 968-:J349 '6!) l\1ai;anvox console Stereo, Ar.J-F!\t radio PC'can-mcdil style. Best ofJcr. 675-7709 from $3.50 up + my labor. • 49'1-39'";)() * 3446 Via Oporto, Newpt Sch. HOME SA LES ~ ~ kl 1 Of A K. d• 16' 9'' Dee 1065 C1li•l'll•• Blvd. '60 V\Y Eng. RC'cently ~ per yani. 8~7-1519 BASENJI "Bar ess" pups, in · P owrhauled $.175 exchange. ~~N-E\=vPO=R~T~8-,-.,-h-T-,-,-,-ls' AKC, 7 weeks. shot&. Keel Sailing Canoe. S250.1 --C;t"';;';-';;";i'r-'~';;·';;'-;"~g,;-l~Ca~ll~&l~2--0~IJOO~. ~·~l~te~r;•·== FERRARI Club Iainily 111~mbe1·ship. * 96J.·T"32 * call OR J-7395. l et us sell your mobil" AUSTIN HEALEY $450. Days 549-27.86, eves At:STRALJAN Silky Terrier CAL 25, Racing gear. Ship ro home. Trailer, Travel 9425 FERRARI 540-5844 .;\KC. J\1aJe puppy. 312 shore, Galley, 8 sails. Xlnl Absolutely no cost to you '66 i\ustin 1-lca.ley Sprite. f:x. Newport Import• Ltd. Qr. 3100 \V. Coast H\vy., N.B. Costa M!Sa 642-001 0 642.9405 540-17&4 I ~~~~~~~~~~I Authorizod MG Dealer I ; PHILCO 21" colored TV. T R d S200.. Xlnt 1.:ond. 1vorks _!I P.!__ ecor ers 8220 QUA LITY king bed • quilte<I months. Shots. $125. 635-8127 cond. Eves 646-2259 S & K MOBILE '67 CHAfl1PION Ill' SC'\front. rond , !t<1cing extras! snge County's cnly author· 0 .. ER AK c 12·· TEMPEST SI f A HOME BROKE RS Sleeps Ii, many ictras. $16.10. Sultahlc for s Io Io ms. ized dealer. great. 5-'8-S7Z7 USED A_ppl1ance & TV's, ;i ll ~uJJranteed, Dunlap's. 1815 Ne1vpqrt, C.lt1. 548-77&~ Sewing Machines 8120 lsrr-.'GEJl auto zig-zag, 6 mos. I '>ld. No altach needed for zig·z~g. button ho I es , designs c1c. Guar. $:\1 c;ish 11r small payn1cnts. 52ti-fo61fi i\4u5icaf Instruments CONTELLO ACCORDION 1125 2~ kl':y, 120 bass, '"'i U1 case, $6C'O va1.ue + "easy to tcaim" books & sheet n1us1c cas"!. PlffiFECT CONDITION! :i~':OO or Best OUer . :YIO-SJOS After 3 P.!',I T PlEX::E Yamaha drum set. new 'in 196.'l. Xlnt condition. Sacri!lc:c! $325. 714: 53$-1435 aricr 5 Pf\1. --Pianos & Organs 8130 TMOi\IAS "Band Box" & "Playmate" hoth !or S?l.lO. Ar1isan Orchestra bells $200. Add excit in g porcuS11Tln lo n11y or_gan. Nc.\vporb Organs 64:>-Jl30 HAr.tl\fOND Ste.nway, Yam· aha. New & used pianos ol mosl -makes. Best buys in So. Cilllf. "' Schmidt l\lusif: Co. 1907 N. J.f;ln, santa Ana \VURLITZER 4£00 A1nplilicd Reed ()rgtdt. x; 11('dtr.l. large. Lc.'t>lie·· itlClu clcd. All IJ $69.i. GOULD MUSIC 20~:> N. !\lain. S.A. !:t·l?.OOSI f'ltEE Piano lei.sons. S.-lO \'rs, CQll lor "'~~ivaUon:s. Gou1dS s.s1 &1 ONE Only. Nt'Y.' Ca~!c Ncl3M Spb:iet $.l9j. Coul(IJ!, 5-t'/-6681 UPRIGHT PIANO $75 ;,.~:n4!.l mattress. Complete unused ROBERTS "120" stereo tape $120, worth S<.160. 84US3li l'Cl'or<l('r, profrs~ional style. eves. .sound on ~und. sou nd over . . , sound. Xlnt cund, s195. GOOD Hearin~ aids. Z~·n11h, 54U)(;2 Bcltor1e, Audiotone $j{L 1 ninnth's bn!!cry fr e c, Sporting Goods 8S00 1~"'~'-='"'=~~~-~ NE\VPORT Bc;1ch Tennis Club Charter 1'~ am i 1 y BH.AND nr~v tent, w;c~ onr.e, ;\IC'mbersip. Sell (I r trd. 12 x 11 with pole $150. Ice G+~l'.l9. 00'< coolrr, used once, ~~~--~---­Lant{'rns, :!000 BTU Canip EUHOPE:Ai'l Human I !(Lil'. Heater, 2 Co!ema.n sto\'Cs, hand tied, light blonde \.\•i;?, spa!'C' Gas tank & canvas SJJ. Call &11..()13!) aft 6:30 Top for Jeep '''ith polo!s. PM. .{\OOC! cond. 2 t\e1y black I~========= reupholsrcr('I\ .Jcc:p scats. Misc. Wanted 8610 61~-184:1 or &1Z-31G:; BO\\'Ll.NG ball, l!l,2-!l !b $10. Ac('le!y~A~~~Dul!rl "'ilh G1l'ls ~hex; .skates $1.:iO. All or 11'ilhoi1t tanks. ~6-7219 good ctinrl111on. 612..()!76 after 5 PM .• ~urfboard 7':-i" Russell. $90. • ~;l!\-9-1 16 * Miscellaneous 8600 CASH! Furni!ure \\'anted. Need nppl~ an1iques. c!c. No jurlK! !J68.68.1J, 24 hrs. FREE TO YOU CROLIERS lnl'l. EncyClope. rlia. Book of Koowled~e.l ---------­ l\1od. &icncc-Ency., 50 vol. LOVABLE gr!'y m n 11 es e 67a-7.->8j fllnulle cat, I yr. old. fref' to ·----------1 good home. S-17-2340 J/12 50 yds usC'd 0Cf-\•1hite nylon ~ . . pilr curnetinl!. ('tOOd con-i\IONGREL I ups mnkc 1_hc di!ion! S~;o, 67fr0866 best !l(:IS, Jov~ble puppies -frt•c. Ct1ll 846-4J.11 :!/12 :i GR.E:EN barstools $2J each. . tnlJIC lnmps, pumpkin palr AD 0 RABLE bJack/whitC' $40 eiu:h: Gold $50 & S20. lon.g haired male cat, lovc11 6~ 1-!l).j(I ch1!dN!n. 847-23'10 a113 DELI C11.-.e, 4 shelve~ I\ ll'Ol11p1·rM.or. Call - • (rlfi..:J383 * S\VEET Sn1all t;i1.r bh1ck puppi1•s, 6 wks old. Ca.II tHG-350~ 3/12 SlfOPS~llTH. .xlnt early NEED _good ho1ne lor 2 pnrl 1nortcl. r.tany xrra acrc!~. Poin~er ff'maJe pup~. 8 '"kx .. $160 ro1nplete. Call 67l-li36 old. a1fi-7202 aflcr 2 3/12 SJ.:ILSJ\\\tS 77 k 367 mod..:ls. GER.\iAN ShcpMrd mixed .s:,;; ~ $60 «"u. 841-2681 v.·knds pupplrs. Ii weeks o Id. or nl!(•r :i:30 \\'kdays 494~34.1'.? 3112 LAnTE~ nf'ed a new \if! ln WELL b:t'havcd black poodl!!, life? Custon1 fil hras & tree •11 gOOd home. !l\\'lm\~1·nr, MS.2100 for 11.ppt, 536-2721i :1112 HANO Pnlnttd on porl:nlt ol 1959 Gas \\1hi.rlpool .'-":tnbo. you or your children from a Nttds !<On1c rrpalr. 5Jii-13,t6 photograph. &16-3629 or 67'".i-.2616 3fl2 (jOl)('I n1bber !ired henrl mowrr, $5. 188'1 l\lt1rrnl COUCH And chnir. 1142-2426 81ter 5 pm JIU Pillct'. C.M. 64&.5206 JONG !!iiZt' ma!tres~. Call BABY lum!ture $1 _ $1$. arter '1 pm. l\IS-700.i 3(12 D111l!tlr $13. Single bed F'Rl';E to aoofl hQm1:1 t-°l!m11.lc 11'an)P. $~. 5 16-4~31 klllrn. Call 8!!7~.,57 3/12 , B A pup1>, ·' · p. g. ux C11Jt ll7a-52IB 002-8051 SALES-SERVICE-PARTS J'("gistel't"d, fav.11 colored. 6hp. Jo.:x. cond. Xtras. Ready 12362 Bc1Jch qJvd .. G.G. 3100 w. c oa•t Hwy. ~1i011' quality. 536-2449 to sail! $3150 8J9..5il79 • 636--0921 e KENSI<ILL & Kil. Special l!lOO Austin HC'a!ey 3000. Newport Beach ENCL[SH Cocker.;, 12 \vks, LIDO 14 Sailboat. Nn. 2389, VIKING Scandia, 20;..:.60' 2 ~~~5 on l~mc;i~ll. ScotL~. X!n't <'nil'. & good body. 642+9405 540-176' AKC, Line-brl':d, Tri-color. v.i lh trailer. Call 837-7039 br, 2 ba. Awnings. xJn'tl===· ="='='=·=·=· ===--"='="=5·=C='1=1="=1=""='"='=v='='·=-=A="=th=o=n=·""=='='=mu1==De="'="=-I Show-pct qual. 833--2883 aft S Pttt AduH Pk. 548-4142 all 6. C 9520 -==-=__,.-=..,.,.--ampers 9520 I Ca mpers 9520 I Campers AFGHAN PUPS, AKC P.CAT '68 + Tra~r CUSTOMIZED 20'\V, '67. l=jiiiii~~---;;;i;;;;;iiii;;;;i;;;;aiiiiiiiiiiiiii~liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I Ready rnr Easter. (Dcposil) $2195. Stror;,: Nr.11· crpt. All xtras. Beau.II Call 81&--:;452 l\lr . Morse 613-1510 nc111 Adi! Pk. C.!\.1. &12-4195 BE1\GLf: PUPPIE~ -AKC - show bred, very rca!<lnable, 7 wki; at Easier. 494-5..'l72 28' F-Glass 6 berth 11loop 0/8, 5 .~ails. A~k $6495 Pacific ·yacht Sales 673-1570 ALUMl.NJUM carport r11\'11• ing, 10x20', like new, Priee reusonab!C', 557-6L18 Imported Autos 9600 I Import.cl Autos 9600 1 Imported Cars SPECIALS '68 AUSTIN AMER. $1399 '68 TOYOTA $1699 Sed. H., IL .. automatic Corona H.T. Cll('. R .. 1-t., very Jo\\' n11k:s & clean. . 4 11peed. Ril:h' gold fini!:h, XGG 277 bucket seats, landau tor" '61 MG8 G.T. CPE. $2199 XDK 333 R .. ll., 4 sperd, wire '61 YOLKS $699 whC"i>li;. British racing R,&H .. 4-speed. Sun root green. Vlll·I 696 Clean. OPR 101 '68 YOLKS BUG $1499 '65 TRIUMPH TR·4 $1399 n .• 1-1., 4 spr~. RQyal Blue (i11ish. Rdslr. R&J.I, 4 Sperd, VTS 765 \Vire \Vh('C'lS. extra clran. NMJ 12J '67 KARMANN $1499 '6S YOLYO P/800 $2499 CHIA. n .. 11., " speed. ere. P.-lt. Air cond., 4 Bur~undy finish. Extra 1>swcd. Real nice. Seil clean. TXV 4{»! No. 8266 '69 yOLKS $1599 '68 TRIUMPH COT6 $2499 It, H., auton1111i c trans. Cpi" R .. H., 4 speed, Bi1by blue Cinish. \Virr \V heC'ls, real low XYK 693 mlle11, extra clean. XJV 803 ·61 TOYOTA $1199 'U KARMANN $1099 Corona &d. R., 1-T .. ClilA Cpe. R., H., 4 automatic. UJB 6l4 ~· landnu lop, harp. \VAL 260 '68 TOYOTA $1599 '65 VOLVO 122 $1299 Coronn. $ed. R., l·f., • Sdn. Htr., a.u tomn lie. autom&U<:, bucki>t seatJI. Silver l(l'tY. SBS 807 Real cican. WXY 536 ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST & MOST MODERN TOYOTA & YOLYO D!ALER DEAN LEWIS . 1966 HARBOR ILVD. 646-9303 COSTA MESA , • PRE-VACATION CAMPER SPECIAL '"" ,. .. lie. CNOW IS THE TI ME ! 1970 Ford F-100 1;2 Ton Pick·up STV!.e SIOE J60 v-a, emp e"ll oil geu;•. ~!( Miii elr cl~anrr, ~tevy Guly 1pri11111, S.l)ly !lrts. !~tock No. lflll SIX·PAC FOR NEW TRUCt< + CAMPER ----,CAMPER STRUCTURE-. -- All· CARS CARRY 2 Yl!AR -24,000 MfU WARRANTY TAKE V AUl\' YllW Off RAM~ I r l I I I • • 58 DAILY• PILOT Wtd11e5d,1y, Marth 11, 1970 . vVednt:sday, Motrch 11, 1970 PILOT ·AD\IERTISER 20 T_RANSPORTATION I ~~S'PORTATION I TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION I TRANSPORTATION TRANSPO~IE_N _I TRANSPORTATION I TRAN SPORTATION N•w Can 9800 New Cars 9800 New Cars 9800 New C1r1 9800 New Cars 9800 New Can 9800 N•w Cars 9800 New Cars 9800 New Cars 9800 ,"S PECIALIZING LIN UALITY'' PRESTIGE CA RS AT A SENSIBLE PRICE! '69 JAGUAR ROADSTER 120 ACTL!AL r.1 11,E ..... ti'\ T ll b ~PFE!lt 1;\ft.."TF,f:! Cht'Olll" ludll) 11\11•1 ·1~. ,\\J.f\\ rdd1 ... lull 11r11 C'Df 111u·ran!y. J 12 1,\!"(;• '68 MERCEDES 280 SL ROADSTER (IN~ CJ\\'1\'Ef!. f11 JI h rith ... 1 1111•·• I"' i\,\l·f':\1-ShQrl "a11 rarl111. r11o-J in 1•r11•1n t \\'SZ-3'1:.' • '69 BUICK RIVIERA Ol li: SF:l~VIC~: 1\11\'l.,\fit:rr:-: !'El::'fl7\.\I. {';\];, F'11ll p<1l\1•1., a111io !r:in,.1nls'-lfln. f:'ll"'t ;..1r ro1nd1t1on111 ~. 1·;11liu. 1111,\ l '''I'· 1 in 1 • ...;if1J [(J'.!'i 1 • '66 TH UNDERBIRD 2-DOOR u:-;11:--UALl.Y Lt1\\' \llJ.E.\fif. f 11lf j.,\1'•"1 11 11lv. 1 r11n,.n11,.~1••n. !;1,·t ;11 r ··unrl1 t1n11 1n~. 1arl1•• I r:VJ-~7~>1 '68 DODGE RT 2 OR. HD. TP. COUPE {1,"IJE I j\\"~F.r:. ffl••I "'' I 1 •n•l 1I111111nL. 1!11 '" t 1·11ll~In1,.,.J(ln . 111111 • ·r ~ t f'f?I' -1 wa I«'"· 1 111.1 I l • •I'· llf'I\ filJ.rl'!:\~"''-I IP'~ $5277 $5895 $1995 $2395 Lr'" 1han r :.()(IO 11 r t11al 111111•' Bal1t11•·r 11""' rl'!r ;uarantr!'. 1\'QB-1221 '68 BUICK RIVIERA f'L1STOill J~'TE1;1or:-c1 1 1 :1 l\J I. \\'ll~:Fl !" 1'"1111 f'<l \lf'f',111pn. t n111~1n1•~io11 \, \ 1nyl 1•lp. 1111· r{lriditinnin!!. •V ll'-)1);;, $3495 DOZENS MORE TO CHOOSE FROM .............. pooLE~ 234 E. 17th St. VILL A FORD TRADE-INS CL EA N & CRISP & GUA RANTEED WHAT'S IMPORTANT TO YOU? ".\f"l 'ER 'l 'llt: SAl,t: .SER \ll CE" IT 'S IMPORTANT TO US TOO!! '69 FORD LTD 1 DOOlt HARDTOP -v.a •ir fond r ~d·o. he4••• now•• t leeri119 & br1~11. The bou" w If> c.~r DLR 80bb. '67 RAMBLE R 4 DOOlt SEDAN - '69 TORI NO ? DOOR HARDTOP -P~d '" h, .. 1~, •»l e. i.~", """'"' ~le1 11 n9, 1•r c.011d , St II like "f'"'· XJC. SbS '67 CORTIN A G T. -• •peotd ft .. n•m•n•Oll r1il10, he1tet . WWT 810. '69 MUSTA NGS ' TO CHOOSE FROM -..._11 4 ••~ 1,-le w ,.,,t ... ,,, wtlh l•c.lorv w•tr•nlv. !Ill ••t equ•pped w1th tht. tl t - ••t•bl • 1quipm1nl, RedOo, h,,.,101. 1ul o,,.~tie 1 ,~~""'"'<'" V.8, 111 c.ondilionin9 , P""'t• ''''"'ltJ. Loe. ZOP B 10 ZNU 402 '68 OPEL KAD ETT R411ye Coupe V1 ry ni ~• L;c.. )(])A 01 7 '69 FORD FAIRLAN E 500 1 DOOR HARDT OP ~OR MA L. ~wll l•e!•uv "'""""!y, l d•n•ton o•ly 6,l l b m.le1. '""I,~~"'"' b1~11•y ~"' • ••d· ... .... + ...... c.ond•l•0"'"9· f UIO"'•"' "•"I,..,'''"" pow-• 1lee••n9 L;c. )(WK 80b. $2895 $2695 $1195 :KB 891 . ZOP 791 . VILL A FORD lt'IU'rt> !it:R\o"I CE :Uni'"' ·1·111• Diff Pr<'ll<'<' 2550 N. TUSTIN AVE., ORANGE Newport Frcutway To Tht lincoht Off Ramp (7 14) 637-8222 (213) 860-5582 BRAND NEW 1970 BUIC'K 2-DOOR COUPE Automatic transmission, concedled rddio .sntenna, fibre 9lass belted t ires, padded dash, seat ~elts, back·uf) lites, dual speed electric wipers. 433270Zb00154. 5288· IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! DRASTIC DISCOUNTS ON NEW '69 JAGUARS . SIX TO CHOOSE FROM ! ANOTHER LOAD NOW HERE OPEL GT'S SEE OU R FULL SELECTION! VISIT OUR VOLUME OPEL SALES CENTER. UNBEATABLE OOL LAR-FOR ·DOLLAR VA LUES I Prices Good T_hru Friday, March 11 '65 OLDSMOBILE 4 Dr. Hcl. Tp. Pow•r it11ri119, br11r.t>, •ulo, lr1n1 .. 1it c.oncl .. r1clio. !MOY 14'1 • '65 VOLKSWAGEN Sun Roof ' apd., ••dio. !Or:tZ 9J9l '63 MERCURY MONTEREY ' dr. •••;_, •ulo. h•n1., ••dio, power sle1rin9, br•kea. !llD 6161 '67 MERCURY MONTEREY Coupe. •ulo. lt•nt .. pow1r 1le•ti119. br1k11, ,,,.Jio. 11,000 .,1u1I mil11. !VON 7041 '65 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4 Dr. Hd. Top. 1uto. h•n1., pow11 1le1rin9, br•ke1 •nd windowt, 1ir c.ond. EQV 179 1 5395 $595 AUTUOIUZED BUI CK ·Ol'Ef, •. JAGVAll .SALE.S mul .St:R \ll CE OPEN SUNDAYS 548-7765 FIAT --------"#1 • FIATS • No11· 1~70 l\lndl'l!. 1n :-il(~·k !'i11lrs • St>r111;1· • Parh. Ol•<'l"Sl'lls Df'l1Vt!r." !'pc1•mh.,ls C. Bob Autrey Mo tors I8l311 I.on;:: Beach Bl\rl. Lon;: Bc<1ch Ph1•tlf' 2J:: -:l!iJ-8721 or~:N .-il/NDA r~ HILLMAN 191ill lhlln1,111 Convl. I::t1lt10n11c;;J Opc-1·11t1ng-On1:. 011·11rr. Call fii~t:: JAGUAR JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS The only autl)(fflff'd JAGt'~R lleill<'r 1n the fnr1rr· llarbor .1\)1'\I, 1·u11111lrh SALES SERVICE PARTS BUI CK IN COSTA MES A ..':1 1 1•;_ 17th Strf'••! ;o1s.11u.1 DIAL rlirct•I &12-."h78. Char,:::c your ad. tlwn 1<1t b.1ck ;ind li~!cn lo the phone l"lng: No11•! · JAGUAR '61 XI\ 1:i0. 011 Cor.v . mint 1't'l1\dJ\1nu. T'11f' coii<'c1ors 11 .. rn. S:IO-~fli6. 4!l~H:t32 MERCEDES BENZ MG MC Sales. Scrv1t.-:, Part! lnunC<!•atc De.hvel)·, AU J\loclels J1rtuport .il111ports TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD ALL 1970's NOW IN STOCK WAGONS e SEDANS 4 SPEEOS e AUTOMATI CS ORANG' COUNlY"!t ~O~T MODERN VOLVO OE,lLl!I DEAN LEWIS 1966 H .. rbor Blvd. 646-9303 Co1tL Me11 MG 'j7 illGA. i-:n,g. &: clutch rc- bl<. Roll bar. foe lights. lap<'. l\lllj:S .~ rildi o . Siic1·11iec $j(I(), 8*-323R. OPEL 1964 OPE L STATION WAGON r.adlo -1r Healer Good ti1'l'S r·::..1"<!ll cn1 conrht1on' S49-IOS8 PEUGEOT !-------r "62 Peugror 401. 4 rir. Clc1111, ~ood cond11ion $4.":iO. Can be l'een a! 1621 S. Broach11a.). Soin!a Ana. j.19-0674 PORSCHE SPEEDSTER 'j6, i1111«I ~en si:r.o or bc~t off<'l'! :>2:>-8.)i7, OOS-51f,6 "62 ro=R~sc=1=1c=.-,--,.,-,"-"'· A.\l/F.\l', \1rch, Pf'\1C't l. :\lusl ~11·ril1IT! 6~2-1260 TOYOTA !T!O!Y(OI TIA! Ma rk 11 Wagons Hi Lux Pickups Land Cruisers Wa gons PLUS CITllJ::f!. HARD TO GET MODELS NO\V tN STOCK DEAN LEWIS 196f Hat"tior, C.ill. BILL MAXEY IT!OIY!OITIAJ 11811 BEACH BLVD. Hunt. B•ach 147-8555 I mi N. of Cout Hwy_ on Bcb '6!1 TOYOTA Cor'Ona. 2 door. ·1 .•fj(·l'{f. .'\1n1 {'Olldil1on $1;,00, .-~1.;....i17~ 01· :1-1.-1-2647 '69 Toyota Corona harr1top. l'ill!t> t1•at1.i.. rad1u k heater. 6/;)..j.}8.j VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN 67 1..-66 V\\'. Xlnt f'llnd. Sunroof. :\lusl raisfo: laxes~ 6-12--035111646-7670 J!l66 Volk81\!agen Squarcbatk. Good l'Ondi!ion. Sl29.i * ~·IS-81:15 * '66 V\\' Sunroof. Rf'd. 1\1/w ,_ X!ra Sh11 r-p car. \rell cared for. J.18-2981 11fl 6. '6-1 V\V Can11K'r. goorl t"Ot1- <lil1on. illusl iK"ll. $1200 or lwst offrr. 642-11.19 i\lUSl' sell. Clean ·5,-, V\\I. X!nt running t'lltld. .\S!l~1. 642-jJ47 '62 Volkswagen SlOO 518-2780 VOLKSWAGEN VW BUGS FRC:'ll $399 GOOD SELECTION c~~o~ ~., .. fi.19. JQJI E:xt. 66 or 67 19i0 HARBOR BLVD. ·sg V\\'. Li::::ht blue, air cond,1 ___ co,ST-;A~'1;;;E-;S,Ac ___ 1 i"dclio. Xlnl. $1•100. Ca 11 LARGE '.l.l6-"1J:'i. 1969 Volks'-'1ti;rn. 7.000 11\1. A.~kint? $1!!00. Privarr pr!y. Call &12-17!!7 SELECTION of VW CAMPERS V\\' BUG. XHn Cond. H b v w Gua1'tln!ct'.!d only 4,l.000 i\ll. ar our 1-011·ncr. S6!l."1. 833-00&1 • ' • 1 ;-66 V\\I Sunroof R&ll Lo AUTHORl7.l·:D nil's . .\lu~I sell S 0 900 oi' ~Her. Si\LJ::S &· SEr.\'JCE C111l &12-1132 18711 BEACll BL .. F.tl-1~.j.j ; . . HUNTINGTON O~:ACll 68 V\\· 9 p11 s-.. hu~. :\Int 'fi'fviv ---· t·ond I 011·n<'r. :!I.OM ml. Rug . J\ 1•·1111.1' 1·lrnn, lo $~. :,.ig.....1001 n1lg. fill'. Br1g:f . hlk inl .• -~=~~-~~--.I A.\11~~,, nnhn Sl'.1:,rJ 1r11) 1966 VIV, xln1 l'Onrl Ono:;in;~I con~i<l<'r tr;id•'-r 11 1,1y. 011nrr. 47.000 nll. SHlOO. h-12-9:,oo da,1s: li!'•-0%2 tlilC'.~ 61::;1671> S: 11knds I ------------~-- • WtdnHday, Mirth 11, 1970 TRANSPOll JON TRANSPOR'fATION Wedntsday, Mar<:h 11, 197CI DAILY PILOT .JIJ TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TR NSPOR ATI TllANSPORTA ION 9900 U1td C1rs 9900 9900 Uled Cars 9900 ·used Cari 9900 Ustd Cari 9900 U1ed Oars 9900 \hod Cars Imported Autos 9600 UMCI Cart =------9900 Used C1r1 ··.VOLVO ,. ....... FORD FORD MERCURY ~EYROLET FORD '64 VOLVO, new paint cond. $800. Call • 6-15-2939 top '64 j:L CAMINO, ~ HP, ,62 F0td S/W, Ru.ns good. 321". 4 6pd, New Ures. new 'Vill isell tor p.vis. '68 FORJ? Country Squire \Va,g, Air cond, etc., By prlv. '65 FALCON 2 dr, 6 cyl stick owner. $2700. 6t2-1123 aft 6 1!!66 Merrury Colony Park ' pass. \V~'On. Alr, tull 11wr. Pvt. MIC art 5, 644-5274 '62 VQbVO 122 S, 4 dr. N$wly painted. $500. ~ C111l 646-7301 Sf01 Cars #1 FIATS 9610 • -NoW 1970 Models in Stock Salas • Service • Parts QverW!alt'Oclivery Specialists C. Bob. Autrey Motors 1&'00 ~ Beach Blvd, ~ Long Be11ch Phone 213 • 591-87'21 OPEN SUNDAYS mags. S12SO or bst olr. • 540-2321 • sWft, R/H, has had ret.oent PM. 5-16-5129 alt SPl\t '67 CHEVELLE ~tallbu, 2-1966 fAffiLANE GTA, 390 dr, Vinyl roof, V8, Mi-FM eng .. aut.o tranP _pi s, tclnt $1550. cond. $1200. !J68...7956 a fttt S f>ng, trans y,•ork. Xlnt shape I-~==~~==~ I::::======== 1hruout $575. Pvt pt y. '60 J-"ORD RA.~CHERO * 841-1686 • pm '61 Caprict> cpe. v[n~I top Air TE~ 1910 f.'lavericlu, loaded. Cond. power Sir. & .brks. 396 l23JO eClch. _ V-Seng. Turbo-hydra . t133--a.lfll trans. 492-0076 or 492-9136 STATION Wago11, Falrlane '66 CHEV. Caprice. Fully 64. Alr cond. $500. Days equip. Conipl tune-up. Ex. &-a6-M08, eves 8·17-6145 cond. Sec to 11 ppr e c ! '68 FORD Countt"y ! Sedan 842-2646 w/radio, auto, \tir. p/s, '56 CllEVY V-8 3 speed, disc brks. D.F.R.S. ~tj 642-9500 days; 64>-0962 eves $,JOO &: \\!knds. * 846-0975 it 'Gl t~alcon Deluxe Club \\'ago11, 8 pass. Good Ores & Int. ss:il. 548-1L3 arr 5 '58 !-'ORD Good transp. cur l\·IAKE OFFER.! 5-IS-29J7 '67 f'ORD FAlRLANE con- vert. Automatic. S 15 5 O . Karen, 644-4070 MERCURY 1963 COf\lE:f Vlllager, 4 dr. Stallon \\'agon. Bri~ht red 11'/\\'00dtone paneled s!dN. Ra dio/lwA1er. Automatic transmission. New white· 1va!I tires, h1miag.. rack. $3!15, Sh11 rp! 6'12-002'2 an 5 PM. Priv. Pty, map, chrome rims, S.\Y. , C --9800- 1 Cnuge1. SJ.SO Oft BEsr OF· New '" New C1n FER. 646-9078 after S Pl\1 -~------------------ MUSTANG 'G7 ~fUSTANG Con\lf. V-8, auto trans, ain/l!n, p/s. $1500. Call 3·17-S<M7. '67 ft1ustana F.stback, vs, slick shift, xlnt condition. $1475 or be111 ()ff, 96S-6038 Tople-u Enter1ainmen1 '67 ~1USTANG COO\'. IOl\ded w/extras. Call 675-3027 aft 6. t.fUSTANG '66 l\1USfANG Dt>luxr. V-8, auto trans, \•ln. lop, p/s, 2'J,000 ml'i;;. 1 cuvner. !Jn. mac. Sl6l0. 833--0714 alter 6 PM . ~tUSTANG, '68 Futback, ~tany l'xtra.s. Tmmaeulatr. Draftl'CI. Sacrifice! 644-035J alt 6 pm OLD,SMOBILE 1967 OLDS Delta 8.i1, 4 ~Ir Holld11y hrdtp. PIS. P/B, radio. fact air. Orig. owner. $1875. 54!H)!Ni7. OLDSMOBILE OLDS '00 CuUaA, 2-dr, Spnrt Cpe. Bu{·kct Sffls, 1tet'C!O. Under IO\V book. 642-~8 '66 OLDS Starflrt. bucket &e&l.!I. All power. Fact. air. 1 owner. 6-16-S:W '63 CUTLASS F85 <I Spd lrans. 962-0200 PONTIAC '65 PONTIAC Ca1nlina, 2 dr hrrltop, 27 ,000 ach1al ml. ll&ll. p/s, plb, a l'Caly fine rar. S99i Pv1 pty, &12-9j()(} drtys; &15-0'-J62 nilea &- 11kndii. PONTIAC 1964 LE MANS COflri'V'l'. ~ auto. t'Ol\f.Olt', p/1, r&.h, h18i quoise w/blk top. xlnt ~ Cdt.1. &14-1~97 !!~' 1969 Firebird, fully ~i' air cond., perfect cond, -P'Jt' ply, $.1000. 6Th-3923. 675-1* T-BIRD SACRIFICE By pri v11.1e P¥· ty Hlliti Thunderbird Lard14, fully equip~. air-coaa.; Jlke new $2(0). lntere.ttd parties l'Olltact 49S-2fld. 21821 Wesley Dr., Apt :~. Soulh Laguna. E;: Aut0s Want~ 9700 "64 Chevclle Sta. \Va.g. Good YJE'0PAY TOP rond. New tires, auto trans. ·_. CASH r~:~~~ch. SliOO. Ptiv. pty. for ~ can & trucits just can us fpr free estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET Aik ror Sales l\lanager )82U Beac h Blvd. J-luntlngton Beach ·Kl 9-3331 WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR C,ONNELL :CHEVROLET :2828:· llarbor Blvd . Costa l\1esa 546-1200 IMPO RTS WANTED Orange Counties TOPS BlJYER BILL MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach Blvd. ff. Beach. Ph. 8'17-3555 Auto "'"'ing 9810 FORD AUTIIORIZED L~G SYSTE!'.1 AmerlCa'i lnrgest leasing systeJD: l'or finance or net JeasiOf" q:t all l.ype cars and tnlcU.:• e Im'lii~late delivery rrom ov~r ~ cars and trucks • Conf~litlve rales • New-car dealership service • F\Q\_ "trapeln" vilue for your1>resent car • All popular makes avail· &bte.~~ For bm\Plete Details Call Malcom Reid Leuing M~r Theodore ROBINS FORD 2000 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa &12-0010 ~ LEASE ~ '67 Cadillae El Dorado, lull pwr. air; black wi red leath- er int $139 per mo. '69 Font LTD, 2 dr hrdtop. vinyl roar. air. Broughan1 CHEV. '65 ln1p. SS, 327, auto. tr., p/b, pis, 1 01vner. xtra sharp. 6#-2714 eve 1964 CHEVELLE, 34,000 mi's, like new. $1000. •545-&92• TEN 1968 Chevy Impalas, priced ror quick sale $1450 each. 635-5480 1961 IMPALA, 2 door. radio, lacl air, p/s. p/b, lo mlg. Pv1 . pty. $1400. 673-6108 ·:;7 CllEVY \\'ag. 283 <'ng. Allto. Good cond. $300. Call 64:>-2422 af!ernoons only. ·:-i,s CHEV, 3 !'lpd. r/h. Xlnl running cond. $175. 673-5075 or 673-8421 CHRYSLER 1962 NEW Yorker Station \Vagon in good mechanical condition. 1 owner. Air, full power. S300. 509 De Anza, Cdi'.l. 67~500. 1961 CHRYSLER, '4 dr New Yorker, verx good condition $275. G-16-1773 CONTINENTAL -CLASSIC •6\ Continental Convert. A great clas,,ic 1965 Contin- en!nl t"Onvert1ble! Black with blAck top and hlack leather interior. Full power, Vibra- phonlc FM-Mf radio, new tires and in top conditinr, throughout. , .repeat. TOP condition. Son1e lucky. ltL~­ ury'Joving party Is going to buy this jev.·el for only $1800 from a private party! See II today at 1104 Dolphin Ter- race (Irvine Terrace) in Cor- ona del r-.tar 673--1801. 19&1 CONT., full poy.·er, clean & mech. good, Lo miles. $1200. 642-344:1 83:>-1148 CORVETTE lnt .. Mt/FM stereo, 6 way ,63 CORVE"ITE S1ingray pv.T. seal, p.,.T windows, Rdstr. 4 spd, fuel Injection, w/1/w, pwr disc brukes. an xtra sharp car St425. Pvt ~~~~A'smTo.LEASING pty, 6·12-9500 days; 646--&156 v ni !es ,i:,., wknds. 300 \V. Cst Hwy., NB 645'21821 =o======== Used Cars 9900 COUGAR BUICK '61 COUGAR Xl\7 300 GT, pis. air. stert'O. disc. Joad- 19&1 RMERJ\. air. 38,000 ed. Sacr1Jice. bi:;...r.;i66 eves ml, xi.Pt cond. Pvt pty. 11:100. 870-<;20 , , ,, : DODGE 646-0159 aUer 5 CADILLAC 1959 CADILLAC Convertihlt>. Good for ~econd car. S22j. Call 642--1198. '52 Cadillac with '62 motor. Good serond car. Lt> mtg. good lil'f'S. $J50. 546----0198 '64 2 door, runs v.'ell I"'° 5:15-8424 CA MARO '67 CA~IARO. Sell or trade equities for Chevy or fo~onl van. Prlv. ply. Call 644-0233 1968 DODGE GTS, \\"/blk. vinyl lop & stripes. 4 spd, many• .x1r(ls, xlnt cond. T.0.P. MG-0053 196!1 Dod~r Coronel Super Bee. 2 dr hrdtop, ral. susp .. 1v.o. l1rcs, vynl 1011, earh. air. 612-ll32 art 6 or "'knds 69 SUPER Bee. 4 spd, ram. air. 31!3 mag, R/\\' blk int. Rally ll'hls. T.O.P. 53&-352.0 FALCON '6-1 FALCON, 2 dr. !ilk. nu lransm., ba!lrry, brakes. $41~1618 Irvine, 642-U89. § ........ .. .._,..,,,, Johnson & Son ~~ LINCOLN-MERCURY ~~ NOW IS THE BEST TI ME IN 10 YEARS TO ~, BUY A LINCOLN-MERCURY PRODUCT AND Wt!ERE ELSE BUT AT YOUR LOCAL LINCOLN MERCURY DEALER, JOHNSON & SON, WHO GIVES YOU THE BACKING OF 18 YEARS OF QUALITY AFTER THE PURCHASE SERVICE!! GOOD SELECTION OF MERCURY MARQUIS & MONTEGO STATION WAGONS Summer is just around the corner! (Don't wait too long) "69 PONTIAC CATALINA $2895 2 Dr. Hardtop. Automatic transmission, radio. healer, power steering, flOY.'er brakes. Lie. XXA·6fi8 . "68 CADILL'C COUPE DEVILLE s4395 Beaulirul Ocean Turquoise with matching !ntrrinr, landau top. Exceptionally clean. fully luxury equippf'd Incl. factory air. One O\l'ner. Uc. UGC-170 "65 T 81RD Rich ll1idnlght BluC' mel11lllc finish \1·Jth matching interior. Full poy.·er incl. factory air. U c. OSF.-64:1 "64 T BIRD Beautiful turquoise y.•llh mnlt'hlni; Interior. sho"'S l'xccpt!onal care. Uc. IE\V·178 '69 FORD TORINO GT Convert. Attractive Cllrdln_nl Red "'lth color matched interior, ll'hlte top, auto. trans., P.S .. radio, heattor. Lie. XXR·23 1 '67 IUICK LE SABRE $1795 Conv. Full power jncluding factory air. Uc. Tl\TH-472 /.' i. ~6~~N1f.lb~d nnlsh. b'own s3995 1andau root, le thl'r interior. All l'hr h.1x:ury features incl. factory air. Lie. V1V·736 "69 CONTINENTAL Coope. Rosc'"ood meta.Ille finish with blnrk le11ther.& wh ite landau roof. Lu1f1.lry t"Juippcd, factory air, etc. Lie. XSR-SSO $5196 1970 COUGAR "The Summit of Sports Car Luxury" Equipped with power steering, power disc. br•kes, whit• side wall tirts + many other de- sirable f•atures. $ #OF91H517834 +TX & LIC. The Ultimate In Luxury In Its Cla!S BRAND NEW 1970 RETAIL •.• $5616.00 DISCOUNT 1016.00 MAROUIS BROUGHAM • Sot• Prlc.e +Tu & Lie. Mercury Marquis Brougham. Ytllow with bleck landau top, 4 door hardtop. t 19 429 CID engine, 1elect shift tr•n1mi11ion, concealed headlamp grille, twin comfort front seats, luxury rim-blow steering wheel, flo-thru ventilation system, evaporative tmhsion control, white side we ll belted t ires, power front disc brakes: t ilt steering wheel,Jower steering, air conditioner, AM redio, du•I rear seat speakers, tinted gl•ss -complete, remote left hen mirror, door edge guards. Serial No. OZ67K552219 MORE ARRIVING FROM FORD MOTOR CO. (Special Purchase) Wide Selection Of 1969 Mercury Models Cougars & Mercurys, convertibles, station wagons, 4 dr. hardtops, 2 door h•rdtops. YOUR CHOICE $2995 '69 COUGAR CONVERTIBLES With automauc transmiallon, po\Yf'r steering, poy.•rr brakes. •le. '69 MERCURY CONVERTIBLES air conditioning, powrr stc-erlng, pG\VCr brakes, etc. '69 MONTEGO SEDANS a ir conditioning, power stC<':rlnit. poy,•er bra.kes, etc. A NICE SELECTION OF WAGONS, MARQUISES ETC., AT ONLY YOUR CHOICE $3695 ALL LIKE NEW! VERY LOW MILES! '67 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL Coupe. Jo'ull po1ver including tnclory air. DeauUful Bronze \Vi lh "'hite Landau top. 41,000 actual mil~. LIC 841 53295 '64 CONTINENTAL $1395 4 door sedan. Velve t black flnl~h \Vlth blat:k leather Interior. Pully luxury equipped Including full power & factory air. Lle. OYS-525 4 Dr. Seel. Beautlful arctic while tinb;h '67 CONTINENTAL $2995 with matching leather interiol'. Landau roof, fully luxury ~ulpped and f11ctory air eonditinnlng, AM·fM radio. One-owner car. Beautifully maintained. Uc. THIC 296 "65 CONTINENTAL $1695 4 door. Midnight blue finish with blond le11ther tnterlor, landau rnor. Fully luxury equipped Including full power & factory air. Unt11ual.ly clean. Uc. TFC 969 '67 CONTINENTAL Convtttlble, Polar white ~·Ith white leather & "''hlte top. f'uU power equipped with tact. air. Uc. VGV·252 , '66 CHEVROLET IMPALA $1995 Suprr Sport. Full power Including power wlncl<1"'S I factory air. A one owner Laguna gem. 28.000 actua.I miles. Uc. TRT 313 .Johnson -.son [!,~~©@IL~ ©@!til'ii'~!til~!til'ii'&!L • ~£00~ Jilil[ • ~~ffii©l!DffiiW • ©®l!D@&OO • ,.J. • • • ' 2626 -HARIOR BOULEVARD, COSTA _ MESA NEW CAIS 540·5630 642-098~ I Ni•W• So~h of the San Dfeso Freeway 540-5635 UCED CAftS -. --. . r ! ' 1 • ! WrdnrsdaJ, Martfl 11, 1q10 -- WE'VE !C ORNERED TH MARKET ON FORDS! AT HARBOR BLVD. AND BAY ST. • OVER 600 NEW AND USED CARS • THREE ALL·NEW ONES FROM FORD! AND TRUCKS READY TO DELIVER ••• 19701/2 FALCON FORD'S NEWEST PRICE FIGHTER! BIGGER, MORE LUXURIOUS THAN EVER - YET STILL PRICED AT PERENNIAL FALCON SAVINGS. COME IN ••• LET'S DEAL ! -· -· .... ~ OPEN SUNDAYS ,:New 10112 ~. Eldoroclo Cam.t•r rully Equipped •nd u::icl '2014 RHdy for Your ••LE ,1395 Pickup or • New '70. NICI OVER 40 #11524' '619 CAMPERS IN STOCKI DISCOUNT ........... '· 1a. #lll2 READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY , THE "GRABBERS" A BRAND NEW MUSTANG · AND A BRAND NEW MAVERICK IN THE EXCITING STYLING OF THE "MUSCLE C~OWD." READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OUR FIRST CHANGE OVER OF 1970 "DEMOS" OVER 30 1970 MODEL STAFF CARS NOW AT TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS FOi FAST CLEARANCE! T ·BIRDS-TORIN OS LTD's-STATION WAGONS MUSTANGS ENGLISH FORDS TO BE SOLD ON FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED IASIS, HURRY! 6,000 MILES OR LESS ON EVERY CAR! ~ '65 ~I~~.~~~.~ ... ~ ... , ......... $2290 IPJEOl l) A THEODORE ROBINS EXCLUSIVE LOOK FOR THE DIAGNOSTIC CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHIELD! 3E '64 ~.?~.!~ ... ~.~~OR $690 IFML1l71 '66 !~~m~;., :,.~,!:, ''~~~· $1390 ISQL9271 100°/o PARTS AND LABOR · WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS CoYen ell 1MCllotticel ,.,,. 1-JIHli., fftlite, trollll!lil&i" drl•e liHo rear eH, PLUS ~ ... Htt9fy Md e1he1Kt 1pt9M. All re· OVER 150 USED CARS AND ·TRUCKS IN STOCK TRUCK AND CAMPER SPECIALS I 65 ~·~~~'.~~~;~~' $1290 '60 ~.~~!· .. ~~~·TON $690 automatic fr1n1. lfl02041 ---'O~ I 68 P,~~~~'" 1 ump .. ~390 1hall. Auto., RIH, 20,lOO 54 DIRECT FROM ENGLAND ! NEW FORD CORTINAS. 2·Dr's, 4·Dr 's, GT's, Station. Wo9ons NEW CORTINA 2 DR. SED. TOTAL $ggoo DOWN PLUS TAX PAYMENT • AND LICENSE MQNTHLY s5900 FOR 36 PAYMENT MONTHS l BA92J86"4451 I Paym1nt incl udes •II texe1 and finance char911 of $370 .61 for )6 mo11ih1, fin1nce char911 b•11d on •nnual p•rcanla91 rat• of 12.101 •. D•f•rr.d p•vm•nt pric• of $2115.411 tot•I o:.•sh pric• includ•s ta" •nd 1970 lic•nt• of $1995. Subj•ct fo b•11k •ppro~al. ' I 67 ~o~~~~~~ $490 IVTLSOJ ) , EA.., 10 q p" ,,.nrHll· 1 ,,,,n,, • >A.TURc1.; f Ar.< T•' 1, r M PARTS & SERVICE HOURS PARTS ONLY • <,.,,,1~,., •:,,~ •06 pm JAM TOll'M MONl'A· •I AM T06PM :UE)[\AYFRIDA~ SAM T06P M 5AT URDA.Y • ' • \