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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-03-16 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa17 • • • ranc1sco r1 e s Ba~e With Death .Fails; Mesa Tot Drowning Vi~ti1n DAILY PILOT . * * * 10' * * * MONDAY AFTERNOON, MAIRCH Hi, 1970 \IQL. '1.. HO. '1. I l•CTIONI, .a l'.Mll:S Bug Up a Tree Tony Cam~bell , 11, of Dimondale, Mich., has the most unique tre?"" house on his block or perhaps on any block, for that matter. Tony s father had this en1gineless auto hoi_sted. up into a large tree ~ind his house and installed a trap door lil the floor. Tony dubbed his new hideaway the "Love Bug" after!"-~ecent Walt Disney move about a small car with human characteristics. Srut Francisco's Strike Ends; Streetcars Roll SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Mayor Joseph L. Alloto hammered out an agree. Tnent with striking city employes early today to end a four-day slri.ke which _had shut down the city's transit and scnool systen1s. The all-night negotiations broke up .!lrter dawn and the city called its public transit drivers back to work. A few lilreetcars. which had been idle since Fri· day. began rolling by ntid·morning. The last o( four striking unions ordered BLAST RIPS TRADE CENTEU NEW YORK CAP) -A fire touched off an exp losion in lhe basement of the World Trade Center Monday . poli~ head· quarlers reported. A f'ire Department spokesman said materials were ablaze in an area where propane gas may have been stored. The center is under construction a t Greenwich Street near Cortland. When completetl It will be the tallest building in !he world, with twin towers risi ng 11 0 filorles above lower Manhattan. • l its members lO stop picketing about two hours after the tentative agreement WI! reached. Local 400 of the city and county employes union. the largest striking union, held a two.hour caucus before decidir1g to submit the setllement to a vote of its members. The union, which had insisted the trike was not over aft er other locals pulled their pickets, said it too would withdraw pickets until after it..s membersillp votea this afternoon. Alioto announced the settlement and said he expects city operations to return to nonnal by midday. He re.fused lo disclose terms of the agreement, saying only that it wu "r~ble and reasonable," providing a eoskJf.Uving incrtasc while holding the line against inflation. But be did say that the unions had won their cliief demand -retention of a "seniority" pay increase ol 5 percent a year granted employes during their first !9ur years with the city. The Item, which costs an estimated $2.4 million a year, had been cut by the city supervisors. The city bad offered 14,<KMI employes a $4.8 million -or 5 percent -pay hike.. The unions had demanded $9.5 million - about to percent. • • Mesa Boy, 2, Dies Despite Race for Life A desperate race against death ended tragically Saturday in Costa Mesa, as police blockaded intersections for a patrol car rushing a drowned inf ant to get emergency ho.spital treatment. Despite a 90-minute battle to fan again the spark of life, little Michael JUchardson , 2. was pronounced dead •! 'i :35 p.m. at Costa Mesa Memorial lospital. Fellow ofUcers sealed off busy in· SEE PHOTO, PA:GE 2 tersections during the 5 p.m. rush hour as Patrolman Ron Veach sped to the hospital with red lights flashi ng and siren screaming. Costa Mesa Fireman Earl Clark cradl· cd the Richardson boy in the back aeat of the patrol car 1 administering mouth·lo- moulh resuscitation. Aides at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital were waiting at the emergency room en- try to continue the fight for life that lasted nearly two hours. Officer Veach said he was sent to the ~1ichael Sanders home at 3294 California St., where he found Fireman Clark work- ing over the limp body. Michael, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Richardson. of 3274 California St., ap- parently slipped away while his mother was chatting with a Mighbor and headed for the Sanders home. He apparently tumbled into their 3'fl.. root-deep portable swimming pool set up In the rear and was found floating face clown after a 15-minute hunl. The pool is relatively shallow for the average person, but the tot was too small to stand and apparenUy unable to haul himself out. Funeral services for the boy were still pending t o d a y at Bell Broadway Mortuary, Costa Mesa. Police snid Fireman Clark was a patrolman hlmse:lf before transferring to the Fire Department !everal years ago. Police Disper~e 500 Al Cal Stale C:;1mpus Police were tilled to the Cal State Fullerton campus Saturday night to disperse a group of about 500 who milled in front of the gymnasium when they couldn't gel In to hear a rock concert by the Paul ButterfJeld Blues Band, Thirty officers in riot gear scattered the crowd after s'tveral windows and doors were broken. There were no 1r· rests. • • Stuaent Stri~ken By Unknown Bug Lies Near Death • • .. ....._, Bopd the ~1ock 75 Suspects fluizzed On Huntington M.urder 'Vorking round-the<lock, 18 Huntington Beach detectives visited dozens of Orange County bars and talked to 75 suspects In three days, trying to unravel lhe mystery surrounding the killing Thursday oC a tattooed Anaheim drug ad· diet. "We won't lei up on th.is until we have our klller," declared Detective Sargeant ~1onty McKeMOn today, the man in charge of the massive investigation. Friday morning, hours after the body of Thomas Cannine Astorlna , 25, was found near Sunset Aquatic Park, three car-loads of detectives began chetking Astorina's known hang-outs, mostly in seedy Orange County bars. DetecUves didn't stop 111 week -end as they rounded up 75 Individuals who either knew Astorina or might have seen him the day he died. Police said one SW\Set Park boat -0wner reported spoUlng two carloads -0f men in the area the same night Astorlna was killed. Detectives aren't telling most of what lhPy learned over the weekend, but fl.1clCennon said today, "our list of suspects is narrowing." Ast.orina's tstranged wife, Linda Mae. 23, of Garden Grove, was also questioned by lnveatlgators and may have supplied more names of Astorina '1 friends. fl.1yst.ery sUU shrouds the reuon for Rangers Hunt Nude 'Hippies ' JEMEZ. N.M. (UPI) -The U.S. Forest Service said Monday its rangers have started ' ' h I p p i e patrols" to cut down on nude bathing in New Mexico national forests. Fred R Swetnam, district ranger for the Santa Ft National Forest, said the idea behind the patrols was to avoid conlrontations with hippies violating fore.At regulations by bathing nude in streams. "We're not challenging the hip- pies' acUVIUei except when they in- fringe on the rights of the ma- jority,'' Swetnam said. "Then. we're tmmediately forced to defend the establishment." He $Bid rangers on the routine '"'patrols have been told not to_be_ 11urprlsecf"af fli'lding 'hippies "naked or engaged In mysllc activities" that sometimes offended tourists camping In the forests. ' Astprlna's presence near the aquatic park, though drugs seem to ha ve been the key to the killing. One theory is that Astorina was with fri ends awaiting a boal snea king in at night with a narcotics shipment, or he simply might have been taken to a lonely area by drugged friends angry over some- thing he did . "This thing is going to take a lot more door·knocking and detailed investigalion, but our list is growing smaller," Mc Ken· nun said. \Vhile investigation and paper work on the case grew. some detectives were fla shing wry smiles over the irony that 1vhile a man was being murdered in one part of town over drugs. a proposed sym- posium on drugs scheduled Saturday at Golden 'Vest College was cancelled because no one was interested. Exchange Student Has Rare Ill11ess, Gets 50-50 Chance Baffled physicians at Orange County Medical Center today are attempting to pinpoint a mysterious tropical illness which has stricken a college exchange student from the Fljl Islands. J ames Gibson, 25, a popular campu! figure at Santa Ana College, has llt erally been brought back to life three umes since becoming ill late last week. He is in a coma and lisled in extremely critical condition, with partial paralysis, internal bleeding and suspected brain damage. So far. his condition defies diagnosis and specialist give him only a 50·50 . chance to survive. Gibson's heart stopped three times while undergoing inJUal treatment at the county hospital, but he was revived. 11e reportedly has no medical insurance and students at the SAC campus, where he worked part·tlme as a gardner, have started a benefit fund drive. "We are praying for him," said Student Body Pre~ldent Hank While, of Orange. The well·liked sophomore ( r o m i1alhaha-Rotuma, Fiji, left work corn· plaining -0f illness last Thursday and fall· ed to show up or call in Friday morning. HJs room at lhc Santa Ana YMCA was checked and authorities found him un· conscious and called an ambulance to rush him to the hospital. A spokesman ror tho collcgt! said today that his relatives have been notified of the balflJng allmcnl and lhe critical odds agaln!t hi! survlva.1 .. Site Contained Sophisticated Electronic Gear WASHINGTON (AP) -North Viet. namese troops annihila ted a small American force operaUng a secret radar installation hidden in a limeslone cave atop a mountain in Laos, killing al least 12 U.S. servicemen, the Washington Post reported today. The Americans died March ll, 1968, the Post said, defending the radar, recon. naissance and rescue base. The site con· tained highly sophislicated electronic gear for directing bombing raids along the Hi Chi Minh Trail and over North Vietnam, lhe report added. In a Vientiane datelined dispatch by T. D. Allman, the story said the defeat suf· fcred at the hands of the North Viet· namese was kept a secret The Defense Department• made no comment on the report. • Over the weekend, however, White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler disclosed there were ·•some" U.S. casualties in Laos since 1962 besides U1e earlier confirmed death of Army Capt. Joseph K. Bush Jr. Ziegler declined to sta te the exact number of American military personnel who had died as a result of hostile fire, saying only that it was "less than 50." According to the Post, the base was called Phou Pha Thi and was located on a 5,860-foot peak m northeastern Laos about 15 miles from lhe North Viet- nam frontier. Radar nets dotted nearby hills and Air Force and Central lntelligcnce Agency personnel used the valley landing slrip as (Set LAOS, Page %) ,Orange Coast \\'eathe"- The Orange Coast can look for fair weather Tuesday, with tern~ eratures in lhe middle 70's. "There will be more early morning coast- al fog, however, which should clear of! belore mid·mornlng. INSIDE TODAY r1,ouglt it wos clouded up badty by heo11y fog, the South. la11d's new collegiate .sailing t1e11ter still lies a tei11dow on the boy and ii 1t wa.s dedicated Sun.- dav. f'or;e 24. IOttlnt I• C•lllenl!i I Crttc•ll1t U• r c1.,,m.,. '"" Clll'lk:I t• (""'"""' 16 Ot•tll Ntll(n t i;:11.1or;.1 '•llt ' Enlttftlnl!\li1ll U ,..,.Mt l .. H Htfflc-0 """ l.tll<M1'1 11 ·- 1 • 2 DAILY PILOT Air Strikes Into Laos Revealed SAIGON (UPI) -The United States began announcing air strikes into Laos today and reported the losses of three more U.S. planes to ground fire there . lleadquarters announced the deparlure of more Gls ror home and aaid American troop strength ln Vietnam fell to a 29- month low last week wilh withdrawal of 2,900 Americans from the war tone. In its first announcement of U.S. air atrikes into Laos, the command said: "Air Force, Navy and fl.farlne Corps aircraft yesterday (Sunday) continued in- terdiction operations against the Ho Ch1 Minh Trail in Laos. Air Foret airttaft fl e\v combat ·support missions in Laos for RoyaJ Laotian forces. In addition, B52s participated in interdiction operations along the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos." The officla1 disclosure that American p1811es are bombing Laos, along with the announcement of U.S. plane losses there, meant a further step irf taking the wrap1 off what has slnce 1964 been a secret air campaign. 1n Moscow, meanwbJle, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin told the United Statea the f.irst step towards any attempt to restore peace in Laos must be an end to American bombing raids. Until the bombing stops, Kosygin said it would be "unrealistic" for him to con- sider President Nixon's request that the Sovtet Union and Brita!n attempt to end the fighting in the Southeast Asian kingdom. Kosygin placro much of the blame for the war between government and Com- munist forces in Laos on the United States. He made no mention of North Vietnamese military support for the Communist Pathet Lao. (Nixon said recently that 67 ,000 North Vietnamese soldiers are operating in Laos.) Nixon , in a message to Kosygin, had asked Moscow and London, cochainnen of the 1962 Geneva convention th at pro- claimed Laos neutral, to use their good of fices among the teaty's signers to rest.ore peace. * LAOS ' • • • a base for American-led teams of Jl.1eo tribesmen entering North_. Vietnam on harassment missions, the Post said. Highly sophisticated electronic gear was housed ln a limestone cave and ustd to electronically release bombs and gukle planes to targets over 'North Vietnam, the report added. Helicopters also reported,ly used the base for rescuing flyers downed in North Vietnam. Two ground altacks failed to dislodge lhe troops, the Post continued. and in early 1968 four Soviet-made biplanes al· te mpted an air raid on the base. The Old AN2s, however, wert: no match for the Amerlcian hellcopters that went aloft servicemen firing M-16 rifles shot down two of the North Vietnamese Air Force planes, the report said. The North Vietnamese finally overran the air strip and fought their way up the side of the mountain. the Post continued, finally o\•errunnlng the base. One American was quoted as aaytn g the Ameri can and Meo troops "fought to the last man. They were all killed March 11 inside that grotto. An enormous amount of equipment was lost, too." 1/ARBOR HlGH'S JVA1'1'S RESIGNS Wade \Vatts today resigned as Ne"''POrt Harbor High football coach, citing lll health as !he reason for quitting the post he. held for five years. Watts' successor has not been named. See sPorts, page 21, for complete details. DAILY PILOT N•wport IMic• L91111•• hvch C°'t• Mn• H•lltl .. to• IMt• fMJfcriJ Yali.y Sa• Cl..,..t• OJANGE COAST l'VBLtSHINO COMPANY Rob•rl N. w, • .i Prnl01nt -PubH1Mr J.ek R. Curl•y \lit• Praldenl 1ria G-r•I M•MtoJtt Tho'"'' K11vil EdllO<" Tho..,11 A.. Murphi111 M•Mtllnf Edllor Rich1rd P. Nill S.OUlll Or111111 COl.rflly Edi'°' Offl ... 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C.lffonlN. 5vt1Krloflon bY (IM"ilt U.00 "'°"ll'llyl bf IYllll If.JI "*"lfllt'I 1nnlt9ry dtt!lMI ..... U.OI "*'"'"· l,.,onday, Marc.It 16, 1970 180% T11r1ia&o11t Nixon Asks End To Tonkin Order WASfrlNGTON (UPI) -The St at < Department, ...,·hlch once considered lhe Gulf of Tonkin resolulion "the functional .equlvalenl of a declaration of war," se nl two top officials to tbe Senate today to deC!are it a legal nulUly. Und ersecretary of State Elliot Richard- son and Chief Legal Officer John L. Stevenson were called to testif~ before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the issue that ruptured t h e department's relationship with the Senate and helped touch off the public con- troversy over the Vietnam war. a.~ a substitute for the policy of ap- propriale and timely congressional co~ sultation to 11·hich the adl:nini stration ls fi rn1ly con1n1itled ." ll said the Tonkin resolut ion and three n1easures passai in the last two decades during times of international crisis "have no continuing significance ln the foreign policy formulation process. and It is for Congress to determine whether they should be term inated or simply allowed to rade awa)'." Hos T ~ DAILY PILOT ,....,. bY ll!ICtl_. .CMl\llr Pl AL ATTENDANT RUSHES DROWNED TOT FROM PATROL CAR TO EMERGENCY ROOM · Frantic Race A91ln1t D•1th Falls; Youngster Oi1s After Fill Into Pool ft 1\·as one of Richardson's predecess ors. Nicholas De.B. Katzen- bach, who told lhe committee in 1966 U1e Tonkin reso lution which Co n g r e s s overwhelmingly approved in 1964 was considered by the John.son administratlon to be a legally binding de facto declara· lion of war. HU testimony Infuriated committee members who contended they had not intended it to be advance ap- proval lo send half a million troops to Southeast Asia. The controversy has not subsided. Actual repeal of the resolution still may present a problem to Congress. 'Mle ad- ministration. 1Yhile taking a hands off at- titude, said il "may well ereate the ...,,rong impression abroad about U.S. policy." Administratkln supporters want to substitute for the Tonkin resolution an ern:lorse1nenl of Nixon's Vietnam policies. But Sen. Charles Ma thias (R-Md.). who persuaded the department to change Its posilion. and Fulbright. feel their primary mission has already been ac- complished. 'Mom' Jenkins' Son, 21, Killed In A11to Crasl1 San Clemente Meet Asks Student Deferment End Recently. former President Lyndon B. Johnson -In a television memoir -said he could not unders tand how a "Rhodes scholar could not read" the terms of the resolution. He referred to Chairman J. William Fulbright of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Fulbright in turn charged the Johnson admlnlstralion had "lied" to the committee to get the resolu- tion passed. Police Protect Caplure<l Coon, Mrs. itaynard Jenkins, who became ''Mom'' to hundreds of men serving in Vietnam through her Operation Mail Call, lost one of ber own sons Saturday. William D. Jenkins, 21 , of 18461 Goodwin Lane, Huntington Beach, was fatally injured in a rollover auto accident near Brklgeport. (See relattd story. Page 21.) The victim was thrown out or the vehi· cle and died less than three hours later in Bridgeport Communily Hospital. ac- cording to authorities 1n Northern California. Concerned over neglected servicemen, Mrs. Jenkins initiated her Oper ation Mail Call campaign in 1965 and it expanded to other activities, e s p e c i a I J y at Chrl.stmastime. Fighting her own batlle--that of red tape and bureaucratic entanglements - she overcame them all in making Mail ·Call a success. Her efforts in behalf or lonely Gls and !orgollen wounded in military hospitals led to recognition by President Lyndon B. Johnson. A special Mom Jenkins Day was held in 1966, with a scroll bearjng the !'llgnature ·or LBJ and hundreds of others who nam· ed her \Voman o! the Year for her good works. . Mrs. Jenkins said she ne ver gut over the sense of personal loss when one o! he r boys in Vletnam was dropped from the addressbook as a casualty. Now, the loss is deeper and involves her very own. Th.? western halt ol President Nb:on's Youth Advisory Committee this weekend drafted proposals to end s t u d e n t deferments at a two-day conference at the Western White House complex in San Clemente. The draft advisors from Tl states and Guam elected to recommend the end of deferments for all but medical students and young men in certain phases of agriculture. Findings and suggestions of the com· mittee will be blended with recom- mendations by its eastern counterpart befor.! they are presented, by President Nl.J:on to the impending hearings by the Sen at: Armed Services Committee.. The group which met on the Orange Coast for two days purposely avoided discussion and study of the President's ideas of a volunteer army to replace the Selective Service System. Spokesmen for the co1nmittee said the ISsue was avoided because of the un· certainty over whether the Presidcnrs suggestions would be adopted. A shorter·range viewpoint was ex- amined, instead, they la.id, ·go that a more equitable system of the draft could be inaugurated to last until the volunteer armed forces idea becomes reality. The western committee sugguts that most deferments, particularly student ones, be phased out to eliminate in- equities in the Selective Service System. The advisers, au ranging in age from 18 to 26, suggest that their plan would Coast Guard l(ept Busy As Fog Catches Boats Scores or pleasure boats caught In a swift moving fog Sunday kept Coast Guard. Coast Guard Auxiliary and Harbor Department rescue boats from Laguna to Los Angeles Harbor busy -01 searches wttil a late hour Sunday. First "mayday" distress signal can from the 00.foot cabin cruiser Dino 11 c Ne,vport Arrest Nearly Erupts Into' Mob Action A rock-throwing mob of niarly 400 persons threatened to erupt into a riot Sunday afternoon as Newport Beach police attempted to arrest a young woman near 22nd Street. Q[flcer Bi:ll Ungerman suffered minor Injuries when he .... ·as hit in the back by a brick thrown from the cro...,1h which gathered while he was arresting 18·year- old Lori Marie Beebe of Norco. ~1iss Beebe who told officers she was 16, wa s taken Into custody on suspicion or lack of parental control. She later told patrolmen she was really 18, and "''as booked on suspicion of resisting arrest Ungennan said the mob ga1hered \•:hen the girl , yelling "pig" was being led to a police unit. "The crowd was led on by her )•elling." be reported, "and started lo throw pen- nies and bottle caps al the of!icers .. , Some mob members started throwing rocks and bricks as five additional of· !leers arrived on the 5cene. The crowd "'as dispersed without further incident or arre.sts, poUce said. Actor's 'Vifc Found Dead in 1-Jcr Studio LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The wtfe of actor Dant Clark was found dead In her studio 11djacent to Lbtlr \Yest Los AngeleJ home today. Clark ~aid he found lhe body on a sofa ln her studlo-f.'orksOop in their homt. ~1rs. Clark, $5, was dressed ln night clothing. of Newport at 10:5% a.m. when the owner. frank A. Costella , reported he was aground in dense fog off South Laguna. Orange County Harbor Dl!lrlct boats were dispatched to the scene along with a Coast Guard helicopter out of San Diego ·ind the Coast Guard 95-foot culler Cape J!Jggon out of Newport Beach. Before rescue vessels arrived on the scene, Costella reporU!d that he had been pulled free by a small skiff and was no longer in immediate danger. The Cape Higgon took the Dino 11 in to1v at noon and brought it to the Newport llarbor Department. Thfre was no major damage rt!ported. Marine radio channels crackled for hours as boats reported they were stranded in the dense fog with no power or sail. The last to be rescued by the Cape Hig· gon was the Bunny H out of Newport Beach after a search of more than four hours. Owner-operator Dale Sellon of Newport Beach told the Coast Guard he had left Avalon in clear weather and ...,.as caught in the dense fog about 7 p.m. After a lengthy search, the Bunny H ...,·as localed 8.6 miles from the Newport J etty and towed Into port at 11 :25 p.m. There 1Yere three penions aboard , in· eluding Sclkln. Harbor Department and lifeguard boats equipped ...,.ith radar picked up a nwnber of boats which were stranded outside the jetty between Newport and Huntington Beach. St. Patrick's Parade Slated St. Patrick's Day celebrators will parade in Santa Ana TUesday foll owing a green center line stripe 1\ong Main Slreel from 2nd Street to 15th Street. Promised are marching bands, floa ts and equestrian unita In the country's first SL Patrick'• Day parade in 19 years. Organizers P.1arty Loclmey and Ed Lynch have invited all lri11hmen, real or honorary to join In the festivities slarling 1tl noon. rour colleens "·Ill scatter shamrocks as lhe parede marehes through tbt heart ol tbti downtowo di.stzicL eliminate the draft-dodging "perpetual student" who remains in school under his deferment to avoid conscription. The group's report cites "financial and Intellectual discrimination" u n d e r the present student deferment structure. By a vote of 18 to 9, the group elected lo suggest phasing out the 11-S defennent and a freeze in granting or new ones. Students presently holding the stutlenl deferment would continue with it until they either give it up or reach the age of 21. For medical students, the committee suggested nominal federal grants for undergraduates and "substantial" funds for graduate med students. Failure to complete ~tud.ies w o u I d make a medical student immediately eligible for military service. Committee members said they based their suggestions" on thousands of h-Ours of inte rviews with draft-age youths. F'our years after Katzenbach·s heated confrOntalion with the committee, ho...,•ever, the department's Interpretation of the Tonkin resolution has changed 180 degrees under the administration of President Nixon.· After first opposing repe al of the resolution, the department advised the committee last week it neither opposes nor favors scuttling the document that gave the executive branch the authority to "take all necessary steps, including !he use of armed force" to repel ag- gression In Southeast Asia. 11ore signifi cantly, the department said it did not consider the existence of the resolution "as evidence of con· gresstonal authorization for or ac- quiescence In any new military efforts or Conipeti1i9 iii Sun Diego A pair of \l'andering raccoons en· joying a nocturnal dip in a Laguna Beach swimming pool roused neighbors and police early Sunday. Answcrlng a 4:45 a.m. report of .. an aniinal in distress ". officers Carroll Bush and Paul Rose hasten· ed to 482 ~ligh Drive ...,•here they found the source of the disturbance:, a large raccoon. with his left hind leg stuck in a fill pipe in a backyard swimming pool. A sec-0nd raccoon left the water and took off over the fence as !he officers ap- proached. Covering the trapped aquanaut with a blanket to discourage his resistance, the officers freed his leg and he set off after his companion, slightly hampered by a limp, they report. l\'lrs. Billye Bronson of Irvine (second from left) is a1no ng Southern CaUfornia finaJj sts co1npeting to- day in regional round o{ 21st Pillsbury • General Electric Bake.of! in San Diego. Contestants are seeking $25,000 grand prize in national contest. Act;ess _June Lockhart (ri,t;hl) \l'Cltomed Southern Cahforn1 a competitors today. F'i nalists include (from left) Lei~ E. Steiner of Van Nuys. Mrs. Bronson. Mrs. Ellen B. Robins of Lo s Angeles and i\1rs. Sandra J. Ban~ham of Torrance . . ' Yoll W k L " i{eeps thin gs cl eaner without or ess effort'. eliminates bath tub rings You Save Money Jtlpe1 \1"on·i Corrode t...1utdry i. Clean~r Soap and clothing last longer. Dl11iw.n :\.re CIMMr Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans FREE Estima tes! Phone Sears Today! !Sears/ ----QI. So. Coast PlaU1, 3333 Dl'istol t. Phone 540·3333 • f • • ( I I I ~I 11 I I I I ----• -• Huntington Beaeh Today's Flnal N.y. St.eeks VOL 63, NO. 63, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES T'OLl> THAT : 1l1£ KINC. Of CHA,Nz.ANlA. WAS A ~1'.0'RTING. FEl.LOW WHO TMOV<.+<T HIC.HLV Of 'THE f(lfi'-OFP:fRn> THE ?1'1.\0NE.A. /\ CH/\NCC FOR rRrn>oM ~ Mli \JA$ G.IVEN 100 ftl,AC.K &MLS AN'D lOO WHITE" •AUS AtnJ>WAS TOLt> TO VISTitl9VTf THEM INTO iHfli'E SIMILA1\ URMS IN' AHV 'WA'( }.IE Lll<Ell'. HE W.A.S ,,..EN '8UNDF0Lllrt'I .\NO TOl.O TO PP.AW A '&ALL AT 'RA.NS>Ot-4. FP.01"\ ONt OF THE URNS~ IF Ht' PREW-A "IL.ACK "IALL HE '-JOUL'D Iii' E>CECUTEP-IF HE 'DRlW A 'WHtrE ~U , HE \J UL'O HAVE HIS FREFDOM. lltE' \JRN5 \rlERf lltAARNfG.[t). ----- Math Made Fun Valley Teacher Slio ws Textbook By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI 0 1111t o.uy "''°' si.u Because he was a good thinker, lhe prisoner held captive by the King of Chanzania escaped the executioner's ax. And because children in the Fountain Valley School district are learning mathematics oriented toward reasoning and discovef'Y they will have a better chance of surviving in a technological '"'orld . Tying these toge ther is teacher-author Dale Seymour who explains his textbooks on the "new mathematics" to students and teachers who will soon be using them. "We're going to make math fun if it kills us." said Seymour. 35. who already ),as published 22 ,000 copies of the text called "Eureka" i i ha ve discovered ). He presents seventh grade children Ylilh a cartoon version of the story of Chanzania, in which the prisoner escapes decapitation because of his clear think· ing. (See accompanying cartoon). Several students and teachers initially nppeared stumped. But largely because the problem dealing essentially "ith mathematical probability -was presented in such clever fashion, they kept on thinking. 11ad it been stated in p u r e I y mathematical tenns, interest might have been lacking. Leading the children through a process of reasoning. the answer was found by placing a white ball into each of the first two ums and placing the remaining balls In the last urn . ln this fashion, the chance of 'escaping the headsman was increased to 83 per· cent. The books Founlain Valley's children will soon be UJing coniain ~ pages of puzzles, games and cartoons similar to thls one -all with the intent of teaching tnatbemaUcal concepts. "This kind or mathemalics emphasizes the discovery approach rather than rote memorization which was the old way of teaching math." said Seymour. "ll allows the children to develop their own con· clusions.'' Used in conjunclion with the book are many simple teaching ajds which are calculated to arouse student interest. They consist of geometric blocks, ancient puzzles called tangrams and devices call- ed geoboards. The latter is a 12 by 12·inch board stud- ded with 25 nails on whic h the student stretches rubber bands to compare the size and shapes of geometric patterns, Seymour said. Older children use the geoboard to help them in analysis of geo1netrica l rela· lionships, according to the Palo AHo teacher. "There are 180 branches 0 r mathematics.'' he tells children. "Some of you tum them on and some of them don't." Through his new books. however, the teacher hope s the probability that · children will be turned on will be in· creased. FULTON SCHOOL'S EVA LAZAR WORKS WITH GEOBOARO tn Fountain Valley, Motivation for iht 'Ntw Mith' EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH '16, ·1970 TEN CENTS Beach Tragedy Averted Guards Have Harrowing Time With Fog, Crowds By ALAN DIRKIN Of fflt Dllltll Pl ... Sl•tf State and city lifeguards were getting a wtll-earned rest today after dense fog and heavy beach crowds at Huntington Bea~h combin~ to ~ive them a har· r_ow1ng day of rescues 1n high surf and rip tides. No lives were Jost, but the toll of tragedy could have been high. Two boats were tossed ashore by the raging surf, but all seven oceupants survived. Three boys, abou t 12, who lost their liferafl were saved in a radar· assisted rescue in whiC'h a stale lifeguard -a Newport Beach youth -risked his life to help the boys. Beach Police Push Probe • Working round·the-clock , 18 Hu ntington Beach detectives visited dozen5 of Orange County bars and talked to 75 sus pects in three da ys, trying to unravel the mystery surrounding the killing Thursday of a tattooed Anaheim drug ad· die t. "\\'e won't let up on this until we have our killer.'' declared Detective Sergeant I\lonty Mc Kennon today, the man in charge of the massive investigation. Friday morning, hours after the body or Thomas Carmine Astorina. 25, was found near Sunset Aquatic Park. three car-loads of detectives began checking Astorina's known ha.ng-0~ts, mostjy in seedy Orange County ban, ' Detectives didn't stop all weekend as they rounded up 75 Individuals who either knew Astarlna or might have seen him the day he died . Police sald one Sunset Park boat owner reported spoUing two carloads of men in the area the same night Astorina was killed. Detectives aren't telling most of what they learned over the weekend. but To.IcKennon said today. "our list or suspects is narrowing." Astorina's estranged wife, Linda A-1ae, 23, of Garden Grove. was also questioned by investigat.ors and may have supplied more names of Astorina 's fri ends. Mystery still c;hrouds the reason for Astorina's presence near the aquatic park, though drugs seem to have. been the key to lhe killing . One theory is that Astorina was with friends awaiting a boat sneaking in at night with a narcotics shipment. or he si mply might have been taken to a lonely area by drugged friends angry over some- thing he did. "This thing is going to take a lot more fioor·knoc king and detailed invesli~ation. but our list is growing smaller." r-..1cKen· non said. While investigation and paper work on lhe case gre w, some detectives were flashing wry smiles over th e irony that \\'hile a man was being murdered in one part of town over drugs, a proposed sym· po!iium on drugs scheduled Saturday at CTolden West College was canceled because no on e was interested. "It was a real scary;" said state lifeguard supervtsor Knut Sk.}onberg, "It was clear inland 90 people flocked to the beach. We gave npeated warnings on the dang"er of the fog and rip tides, but they seemed determined to go out anyway ." - The most dramaUc rescue came op- posite the Brookhurst Street entrance lo Huntington State Beach. Lifeguard Tom Russell of Newport Beach and another guard were in a jttp \\"hen they saw a life raft wash ashore. Russell went out. found three boys -"all paniC'ky and scared'' -in trouble beyond the surf line. In the meantime, the lifeguards' boat • U.S. Radar Post JZOl a bearing on the jeep C)f)p(llite wtiere Russell waded in and spotted the swim· mers. "It was incredible that the boat found them," Skjonberg said, "Russell disap.. peared from sight as $OOn as he went in, anct the"DDise ·of1he--!Utf-was so-loud-that they didn't hear the boat unUI it was on lop of them. Russell would have had a hard time getting back to shore, or even finding it." "The boys y,•ere also lucky that the jeep 11·as right where tile rart came ashore or we would never have known they were out there," Skjonberg added. A crowd of about e,ooo hit the Hun· lington Slate Beach Sunday whllt about Reds Annihilate Secret Laos Base \VASHINGTON (AP) -North Viet- namese troops aMihilated a small American force operating a secret radar instaliation "hidden in a limestone cave atop a mountain in Laos. killing at least 12 U.S. servicemen, the Washington Post reported today. The Americans died March 11, 1968, the 'Mom' Jen\tj.ns' Son, 21, Killed 111 Auto Crash Mrs. Maynard Jenk ins, who .became '·Mom" to hundreds of men serving in Vletnam through her Operation ~1all Call, lost one of her own sons Saturday. William D. Jenkins, 21 , of 13461 Goodwin Lane, Huntington Be.ach. was fatally injured in a rollover auto accident near Bridgeport. (See related story , Page 21.J The victim was thrown out -Of the vehl· cle and died less than three hours later in Bridgeport Community Hospital , ac· cording to authorities in Northern California . C-Oncerned over neglected servicemen, ~1rs. Jenkins initiated her Operation Mall Call C'ampalgn in 1965 and il expanded to other aclivilits, e s p e c i a 11 y al Christmastime. Fighting her own battle -that of red tape and bureaucratic entanglements - she overcame them all in making ?\-tail Call a suceess. Stock Harkels NEW YORK IAP) -Stock market prices were skidding late this afternoon , with losing issues outdistancing gainers by more lhan three lo one. Trading was slack. {See quotaUoll!, Pages 18-19). Post said, defending the radar, recon· naissance and reacue base. The site con· tained highly sophisticated electronic gear for directing bombing raids along the Hi Chi Minh Trail and over North Vietnam, the report added. In a Vientiane datelined dispatch by T. D. Allman , the story said the defeat suf. fered al the hands of the North. Vlet- n ~.mcse was kept a secret. . The Defense Department made no comment on &llie report. Over the .. eekelxl, llo....,er, Wiili, ROUS< Pws Secretary Ronald L. Z1e1ler disclosed there were t'Klme" U.S. casualties jn Laos slnce. llSZ besldts lt»e earlier confirmed death of Anny Capt. Joseph K. Bush Jr. Ziegler declined to slate the exact number o( American military personnel who had dltd aa a result of hostile fire, saying only that it was "less than 50." According to the Post, the. base Wal called Phou Pha Thi and was located on a 5,SOO.foot peak In northeastern Laos about 15 milts from the North Viet· nam frontier. Radar nets dotted nearby hills incl Air Force and Central Intelligence Agency personnel used the valley landing alrip at a base for AmerK:an--led teams of Meo tribesmen entering North Vietnam on harassment missions, the Post said. Hanna Readies Election Drive Rep. Ri c hard T. Hanna (0- Westminster) today flied nomlnation papers for re-election lo his fifth term in the House of Representatives. Hanna acknowledged that he Is up against a well financed campaign by Republican William J. Teague, whom he narrowly defeated two years ago. He said the principal issues In the cam· paign would be economy, environment, education and crime and drugs. Candidates Talk Ecology Pollution Becomes Seal Beacli Campaign Issue Ecological problems of a local nature provided lalking ·points for eight of Seal Beach's 12 city council hopefuls during a candidates' night sponsored by the city's Council for Environme.nlal Concern. Speake rs at meCting a d d r e s s e d themselves to the problems of crowding, sewage, pollution and the future of the Pacitic Electric right or way. The latter is a disputed strip of land paralleling the waterfront which some c.itizens would like to see preserved while others favor the construction or buildings. Following are capsule versior.s of the so lutions offered at last Thursda y's meeting by the candidates for the Mrch 31 election: ' Stanley Ander1on, current mayor. businessma n: Stood -0n his record as a councilman, saying a plan for sewa.ge problems tias been developed without ad· ding propert1 -Or hidden ta.ies. lie would wtlcome a cltluu committee to aolve the Electric Avenue problem a.nd called for auenUon to btach erosion. narcotics and pa.rklng problems. Thomas llog1rd, aerospace engineer: Called for analysis of city building codes to prevent overcrowding. The aewage problem could be remedied either by rebuilding the sewage plant or by transferring sewage to a private com· pany or county sanitation district. He favors a temporary park on the Pacific £Jectric right of way until the citizens de velop a comprehensive plan. Rene Turner, reUred businessman : He would favor immediate city altentJon on sewers to pre ven t a health hazard and control of city bu11dlng and annexation to halt overcrowding in lhe schools. Ht is against rezoning or the Pacific Elec:trlc slrip for building purposes. ln addition he would favor five-year sentencesJ.oLff:· eond narcotics offenders and life terms without possibility of parole for third narcotics orfender1. l\1orton Baum. pharmacist: Seal Btach shoul d look at ita mMtet plan again, 5tudy zoning ordinances to see if they ap- ply and are entorce1ble. Pacific Electric'• ruture could be solved by establithing • park with canals. More programs for the city's teenagers need to be developed. Cbarlotle Crowley, hou.sttUe.: 'M'le city mu~t eliminate air polluUon from the Hs!..'les steam plant and the Edison , generatlna plaoL Sewage probltm1 call be solved by simply building 1 new plant. The futur! of the Padflc Electric strip sh-Ou ld be left up to the voters in the June election. Charles Knapp, high school teacher: f\1ore parks would eliminate crowded conditions. Favors JnvesOgatlon of a sewage hook-up with the Orange. Coonty system and evaluaUon of air pollutants from the Haines plant He wotdd not take a stand' on· the Pacific Electric Issue until all arguments -for and 1ga.lnst -have been aired before fhe plannlnr com· mission. of which h'.e Is 1 member. Mn. Martlyn MOlsteln, hou5ewife : She said she was tired or the city be.ina badgered by people. "I will not Say yes or no to any of thm!e questions," she told the audience. "lf the: tlty ~ounclt and the planning comm.JssJon c1nnot answer these qutstionl, how Clo you expect 12 people to?" Gary Sta1gel11d , fireman: "Our city government t'OUkl take 1 few ltssons In public re.laUons," aaJd Stangeland. He cited discontent amona: city employes and lhe general unfriendliness of police as example!. A pair~ on the Pacific Elec- tric property would be unfeasible because of prohlblUve cool!, t.e cl>hn1. • •• 3,000 went to the Bolsa Chica Slate Beach. There were sir other swimming rescues and one. boat rescue. "A guy had a fire aboard and was drif· ting to the surf line," Skjonberg said. "But he was very casual about lt. We -towed.him to..one of the buoys.'' Things were equally hectic on the Municipal Beach Sunday. About 2.000 people turned out and gua rds made four swimming rescues and handled three first aid cases. T\vo boats were swept ashore. One had three youngsters and two adults aboard. It ran aground just south or the pier, op- posite Huntington Avenue , but there was (See GUARDS, Page Z) * * * Huntington· C1icird Saves Three Boys Stale lifeguard Tom Russell, 22 , of Newport Beach was the hero in a nerve· wracking rescue of three boys, aged about 12, in roaring surf. rip tides and dense fog off fluntington State Beacb Sunday. Russell, 1133 Ocean Blvd .. a 31,l:-year lifeguard ''eteran, desC'ribed I.he near tragedy today. "1 was sitting in a jeep with another guard. The fog was really bad -we couldn't even see the sea from the life- guard tower . ·"I saw a rubber life raft noating In the water. This usuall y means someone's in lr®ble so I went out trying to foll ow lht direction or the raft. ' "I found one boy and he was real pani c· ky, I strapped'hlm lo the lifeguard buoy I had with me and he said there was -htt !UY wllh him. -"f ioJd him lhe f>uoy would keep him afloat and not lo Jet go. Then 1 went a_fter the other boy. I got and strapptd him to the buoy. He was pretty exhaust· ed. • "Then J saw a third boy. He was noat- lng on his back and was nearly gone. He couldn't swim and J had to cross chest him back to the buoy. . "T strapped him to the buoy and told him to hang on too. We were In a rip and past the surf line. I couldn't tell where we 'vere. I could hear the surf but couldn't see the shore. Another guard, John Neelema"n. who had been with Russell in the jetp, swam out and found the group. "He was lucky to find us. He hit us dead on. Then the boat appeared from nowhere and boy was I glad to see it. I don't know how we would have gotten back." The rescue boat, using its radar had gotten a fix on the jeep on the beach and searched the area opposite the jeep. 'The ho.at took all five aboard and dropped them off at the construC'tion pier by the Santa Ana River. Valley Still Needs Recreation Wo1·kers You can still apply for a ·summer job with the Founlaln Valley Parks and Recreation Department as a playground leader, recreation aide , lifeguard, pool cashier or locker room attendant. The deadline for applying for these job~ h~s bee.n e.xtended through Friday. Ap- plications are at Fountain Valley City Hall, 10200 Slater AVe. Salaries range from $1.59 to $1.78 per hour. Orange Coast l\'e11ther The Orange Coast can look for fair weather Tuesday, with temp- eratures in the middle 70's. There will be more early morning coast· al Cog, however, which should clear off before mid-morning. INSIDE TODA. Y Though It was clouded up badly by l1eavy fog, the South· laud'" tufw c-0lltgiate sallfttg venter itlll ha$ a window on th• ball and it it was dtdiccttd SU1V day. Page 24. kltlft9 • H C1Nttr.1• I Clltcllflt ti• 1 Cti1t1lfl.. 2J.lt c.mk• " c....-M ~ "'"~' t 1:11n.n.1 ..... ' l:ftlff11111Mtllf ff l'lnl llCI t .. U ....... .. AM l.AllMltrl lJ • I i DAil V PllOT " -· Mar<ft 16, 1110 Coast Pushes Oil Plea Air Strikes Into Laos Revealed SAIGON (UPI) -The Unlled Stat., be1an announcing air 1trike1 Into Laos today and reported the lossea of three more U.S. planes to ground fire there. Headquarters announced the departure or mare Gls for h<111e and said American troop strength in Vietnam fell to a 2'- month low last week wilh wtthdrawal of 3,900 Americans from the war zone. 1.n its first aMouncement of U.S. air strikes into Laos. ti1e command said: "Air Foret, Navy and Afarine Corps aircraft yesterday (Sunday) conUnued in- terdiction operations against the Ho Chi Minh Trail in LaoJ. Air Force aircraft flew combat support mls!ions ln Laos for Roya] LaoUan forces. In addition, BSls parUcipat.ed In interdiction operaUO"-' along the Ho Chl Minh Trail ln LaM." The olficlal disclosure that American planes are bombing Laos, al_Gng with the announcement of U.S. plane losses there, meant a further step ln taking the wraps all what has since 1984 been a secret air campaign. In Moscow, meanwhile, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin told the United States the first step towards any atlt:mpt to restore peace in Laos must be an e.nd to American bombing raids. Until the bombing stops, Kosygin said It would be "Wlreallstlc" for him to con- i;ider President Nixon's request that the Soviet Union and Britain attempt to end the fighting in the Southeast Asian kingdom. Kosygin placed much of the blame for the war between government and Com- munist forces in Laos on the United States. He made no mention of North Vietnamese military support for the Communist Pathet Lao. (Nixon said recently that 87 ,000 North Vietnamese soldiers are operating in Laos.) Nixon, In a message to Kosygin, had asked M<>scow and London, cochairmen of the 1962 Geneva convention that pro- claimed Laos neutral, to use their good offices among the-teaty's si gners to restore peace. From Page l GUARDS ••. no damage and all the occupants escaped --unhurt. Two men tn another boat, a 17-foot out- boarit runabout. were not 10 lucky. Their boat rolled over completely, Rn· ding them cruhing throulh the boat's windshield. Bleeding from face and ann cut!, they managed to make It ashofe op- . posite the Huntington Pacific apartments. Dr. Joseph Maskawlty, 711 Ocean Ave., gave emergency treatment to the men - Fernando Train of WhJttler and David Pierre of Los Angeles -on the beacil. Train was taken to Huntington Jntercommunity Hospital where stitches were taken. "They were heading for Newport and got lost," Lt. Walt Sawyer said. Sawyer said the city lifeguards had 16 me.n out Sunday and were kept busy from 11 a.m. till 8 p.m. Old-time Movies Slated in Beach Douglas Fairbank and Charlie Chaplin will pop Into life at 7:30 p.m., Friday at the HW11ington Beach Library, 525 Main St., in three old-ttme flicks . Chaplin wlll perform his antics in "Behind the Screen" (1918) and "Easy Street" (1917 ), while the swashbuckling Fairbank swings a fancy sword in "The Black Pirate" (l9'l6). Adm ission Is ,fr ee lo the Friday night movies at the public library. DAILY PILOT OAAHG• (OAIT l"USLISMIHG COMl"AM'I' ~ob•rt N. w.M ,, .. ....,,, 11'111 l"llbll•"'' J1c.ll k. C11rl•j Vin Pmllltnl I nd 0-1 ""'"'"' Tho111•1 K••vil Editor Tho11111 A. M11rphln1 M•Ml"'9 EdllOf Albtrl W. 1•1111 AnOClll1 Editor .,11" Dir~in Hll~!•~;"" llUlr.1'> (l!y ld<ID< H•••l11111M1 IMC• Offlc• 17175 l11th lo11l1w11d M1 ilfn9 Acld1111 : P.O. 101 1•0, •?641 Olitfl Otfitn Ltt\lll'ltl S6e11: 272 F•l'tt! A-C•ll M.Ut »O Wnl l1y "1 .. 1 Nt'WPfl1 IMClll n1 I Witt! Ill"" hlllt•tr9 .... 'tfll*!ftl al H"l!I 11 (l lT\lrlt llMI ' Senate ·Urged to Ban Federal Drilling • OAll.Y ,II.OT 1111! PMi. SURFERS KINGSTON , COLESON, COLLINS (FROM LEFTI POSE In Sunset Event, To Endure Is To Be • Winner Soused Surfing Fortified Wave Riders Compete The first annual Turk's Surfboard Championships were staged in SW1set Beach Sunday, with the three aclm<.wledged top contenders taking win , place and show. As for the latter, a couple wished they hadn 't. Joe King ston, 26, of Huntington Beach, won, followed by Jerry Collins. 43, of SeatUe, Wash., and Ste ve Coleson, 28, of Sunset Beach. "I V.'OUld have done better if J hadn't barfed," said Coleson. Technical difficulties blew Collins' lead when the race boat carrying Turk 's head chief Tony Lee and bartender Beaver Allen -the officials -capsized in the fog v.·hile serving as the offshore pylon. He had nothing around which to paddle. By the time the vessel v.·as righted, Kingston was back in the race. A crowd of admirers followed the three sprinting contestants to the beach as lifeguards eyed the whole congregation from headquarters nearby with some suspicion. 117 THOMAS FORTUNE Of ... .,... '*' Slltt A U.S. Senate subcommittee today has taken back to Washington, D.C., a wealth of testimony In opposition to federal oil drilling off Orange County and the rest or lhe California coast. Seven per sons represenling the Orange Coast area were among those who spoke in two days of herings Friday a.nd Satur- day in Santa Barbara. The Subcommittee on M I n ' r a 1 s , Materials and Fuels of the senate Interior and Insular Affairs Committee y,•as on a fact-finding mission and ~Ill take 00 action prior to s second hear~ng in Washington. A date for that heanng bas not yet betn set. Newport Beach Mayor Mrs. Doreen Seal Beach Stand On Alamitos Base Expected To1ught Seal Beach city councilmen are ex- pected to take a position <1n the future of the Los Alamitos Naval Air Station ton.lgh~ during a 7:30 city council session. The cities of Garden Grove, Stanton and Los Alamitos have already adopted rcsoluUon against a commercial airport and have asked the land to be developed for parks au~ recreational purposes. County Supervisors are eyeing the possibility that the huge, 1,337·acre plot can be used as a site for a general avia- tion airport onee It i.s phased out in June 1971. Meanwhile. Los Alamitos residents have begun a pet!Uon dri ve against such an eventuality. ~1ore than 1,200 petitions have already been collected according to Los Alamitos City Manager Bill Kraus. Sponsor Tom Kling and his rules com- mittee required the su rfers to gulp down a full pitcher of beer each, then sprint to their txiards in Le Mans auto-race-style and be.ad for the nearby surf. Others remained in the saloon guarding Kingston 's first place trophy, consisting of 24 individual bottles which vanished in • lhe subsequent victory celebration. SB Councilmen Pledge Children Won't Take Walk True to his vow, Collins easily beat "Lillie Joe" in the chugalug and fool race. "I only had 17 yeaN on him," ht gloated. "Next year we gotta gel thls thing organized better," said head umpire Lee, noting that ABC-TV's Wide World of Sports doesn't cover anything until il becomes a tradition. Coast Guard l(ept Busy As Fog Catches Boats Scores of pleasure boats caugh t in a s\\'ift moving fog Sunday kept Coast Guard, Coast Guard Auxiliary and Harbor Department rescue boats from Laguna to Los Angeles Harbor busy on searches until a late hour Sunday. First "mayday" distress signal came from the 50-foot cabin cruiser Dino II out of Newport 8t 10:52 a.m. when the owner, Frank A. Costella, reported he was aground in dense fog off South Laguna. Orange County Harbor District boats v"ere dispatciled to the scene along with a Coast Guard helicopter out of San Diego and the Coafit Guard 95-foot cutter Cape Higgon out of Newport Beach. Before rescue vessels arrived on the sctne, Costella reported that he had been pulled free by a smaU skiff and was no lonp:er in immediate danger. The Cape Higgon took the Dino II in tow at noon and brought it to the Newport Harbor Departme.nl There was no major damage reported. t-.farine radio chaMels crackled for hours as txials reported they were stranded in the dense fog with oo power or sail. San Clemente Meet Asks Student Deferment End Th..! western half of President Nixon's Youth Advisory CommiUee this weekend drafted proposals to end s tu d e n t deferments at a two-day conference at the Western \Vhite House complex in San Clemente. The draft advisors from 27 states and Guam elected to recommend the end of deferment.ii for all but medical students and young men in certain phases of agriculture. Findings and mggtstions of the com· mittee will be blended "'ilh rec:om· mendatiof)s by its eastern counterpart befor..? they are presented, by President Nixon to the impending bP.arings by the Sena~~ Armed Services Uimmittee. The group which met on the Orange Coast for two days purposely avoided discussion and study of the President's Ideas of a voluntttr army to replace the Selective Service System. Spokesmen for the committee said the Issue was avoided because of the un- certainty over whether the President's suggestions would be adopted. A shorter-range viewpoint was ex- amined, instead, they said, so that a. more equitable system <lf the draft could be Inaugurated ID last until the \'olunteer armed fo~s idea becomes reality. Seal Beach chikiren wiU not wa lk to Khoo! despite elimination of bus service by the financially troubltd Los Alamitos School District. Thal is the pledge of Seal Beach city councilmen in response to an an- nouncement by school officials that bus- ing cuts were necessary because of a rt.· cent tax override fail ure. The city will underwrite the bus service, councilmen said. Involved are about 850 elementary school students liv· ing on the north side of Seal Beach. Parents are currently trying to raise enough money to continue bus service for the remainder of the term, according lo councilmen. but i~ the parents are unsuc- cessful. the city will help out. Meanwhile, the school district has ex· tended busing for its t,900 students another week. Othe r cuts started Friday. however. with the e.llmination of 52 non-teaching employes . Antique Auto Battle Resumes A battle between two neighbors over an antique car will resume during the 7:30 p.m. session, Tuesday of the Fountain Valley Clty Council. John Mangano. 9605 La Granada Ave .. has asked the council to reverse planning commission permission given to his neighbor, Harold Perry. 17080 But- tonwood St., to build a second garage for storage of an old car Perry is rebuilding. The two men fougilt a verbal battle before the pl11nning commiss ion two weeks ago when Perry won commission approval for the garage. Tuesday's item is a public hearing. Marshall Laguna Beach Clly Councilman Roy Hol~ and San Clemente City At· torney Carl Kegley all presented tileir city's endo rsement or a bill to ban oil drilling in federal waters • beyond the three-mile limit wherever the state of California has created a sanctuary. This means offshore of all of Orange County south of the Santa Ana River dividing Huntington Beach from Newport Beach . Others testirying from tile county were Newport Beach resi dents Mrs. T. Dun can Stewart and George Zebal for the Coastal Area Protective League, CoWlly Board of Supervisors Chairman Alton E. Allen or Laguna Beach and A1 Nelson, assistant direc!Dr of the County Building Depart- ment who administers the county's oil code. P t , Mrs. Stewart traced the ro ect1ve League's 111volvement Jrom 1955 when the state Cunningham-Shell Act created the oil drilling sanctuary south of the Santa Ana River aod Zebal spoke about gcn!ogical problems in oil drilling. Testimony on the Santa B.arbara.sltua· tion was given by state adm1nilt rat1on of- ficials, assemblymen and counly of Santa Barbara officials. The only member of the Senate 3ub- commitlee present was its chairman Frank r-.toss CO.Utah). Members of tho subcommittee stalf and of the U.S. Department of the Interior were in at· tendance, however, and are ~xpected to offer recommendations on various Senate oil drilling bills. Beach's Burke Against Forced School Busing Assemblyman Robert H. Burke (R- Hunlington Beach) went on record today as a foe of forced busing to achieve racial balance in schools. He backed the Stale Board of Educa· lion 's ''strong and responsible stand in rescinding the busing regulations." The legislator was referring to a vole of the board in Sacramento Friday in which the board said it favored the balan- cing of schools in ways other than busing. "Th.is action of course nullifies some of the irresponsible court de cisions which had be.en based on the board's scrapped guidelines," Burke said. The lawmaker added, "The dependence and use of these guidelines as a crutch and foundation by the · courts. to require and force busing of students upon local schotl districts. is clearly being refuted ' j by the state board. "By rescinding tht guidelines, they •re saying tha t the courts had . dlstor.ted. the original intention. of the busing gu1dehne1~ by making requirements out of them, Burke cla imed. The assemblyman said the Stale will attempt to draw . up''., a set of mo~e responsible regulations at next month s meeting. Poiice Di sperse 500 Police \\'Cre called to the Ca1 State Fullerton campus Saturday night to disperse a group of abou~ 500 who milled in front of the gymnasium when they couldn 't get in to hear a rock concert by the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. ~ ~ ... " ,, . r I "' Tony's 'Tree Hotise' Tony Campbell, 11 , of Dimondale, r..1 ich., has the n1osl unique lree- house on his block, or perhaps on any block, for that matter. Tony'~ father bad this engineless auto hoisted up into a large tree beh1nd his house and installed a trap door in the floor. Tony dubbed his new hideaway the "Love Bug" after a recent \Vall Disney move about a small car with human characteristics. 500 Take Pal'k In Bike Rodeo ~tore than 500 youngsters and their bicycles were put through their paces in a bike rodeo at Spring View Elementary School. Runtingtoa Beach Saturday. The western committee suggests that n1ost deferments, particularly atudent ones, be phased out to eliminate In· equities In the Selective Service System. The advisers, all ranging In age from 18 to 26, suggest that their plan would eliminate the draft-dodging ·•perpetual student." who remains in school under his deferment to avoid conscription. The group's report cllea "financial and lntelltttual discrimination" under the present student de!ennent slruclure. You Work Less You Save Money Keeps things cleaner withou t effort, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last longer. Police Sgt. Jlm Mahan said 350 bikes were given safety checks and 2i5 bike licenses v.'ere issued. "Tl's part of a new program to en- courage bike safety -amon1 th e young!lters," Sgt. Mahan said today. "l lhlnlr. they had a good time." . About 20 parents helped the police of· ha:rs run the rodeo and obstacle course. "\\'e ho~ to take this program to, all 40 schools in •luntington Btach," Sgt. Mahan said. ··1t's the best public rein· tlof\l and saftty program we've &ot aolng ,, Tht nexl rode<i Is set for April 4 al Hope Vie~· Elementary School • I ' By a vote of 18 to '9, the group e~ted to suggest phasing out the ll.S deferment and a freeze In granting or new ones. Students presently holding the student rlefermenl \\'OUld continue with It unUI Jhey either give i\ up or reach the age of 21. For medical students, lhe committee sugge1ted nominal federal sranU for undcrgraduat~s and "substanUal" fund1 for·graduate med 1tudents. Failure to complete ttudles w o u I d makt a medlcaJ studen t immediately eliglble for military service. C<1mmlttte member• aakl they based their suggeatlons on U\Ouaands of boun of Interviews with drall-age )'outha. Ol~Ma Sp-.rkle A!k About Sears Convenient Credit Plans FREE Estimates! Phone Sears Today! I Sears I So. Coast Pla1.a, 3333 Bristol St Phone 540-3333 I I I l ,, 1: I " I I ' 1! St. Pat's Day, Indeed; Briton Files a Rebuttal Editor's Note : The DACLY PlLOT's Tom ~lcCann took his best shot for St. Patrick in hl5 Saturday LOg@ok and today Briton Tom Barley files his annu11I answer. The editor. hil¢f); son of the Emerald Isle. hereby disclaims rrsponsi bility for answering irate calls from the Irish. He sugge~ts directing complainl.5 directly to !\tr. Barley at his courthouse outpost by calling 83!-3713. "All 1 liave to say about SL Patrick's Day is thot I 'm. damned glad ive're not so bloody daft abota St. David's Day." Richard Burton By TOSI EARLEY Of 1111 D•ll'>' ,1191 Jl•tl I RA VE GRACIOUSLY consented to clean up the load oI rubbish left In this column by its previous contributor (Tom McCann'g Saturday Logbook) and you can be assured, gentle reader. that there ha sn't been a bigger .mesa since someone put cascara in the flight cre"·s' cocoa on one of those balmy days at the RAF 's Appleton Roebuck airfield . Ah, yes. Looking back. you kno\1', that v•as quite a moving experience. We were all airborne three hours later and I can tell you that by the time we reached the English Channel v.·e had the bomb doors open and - <Editor's note: You "'ere saying something. "'ere \ you not. about the previom contributor~ He at least kept 'I I to the point ). ALL RIG I IT , J..OVE, keep your green shirt on. I was just tryi11,; to depict for your readers the cascara-like ef· feet on the hun1an system of such bilge as "lhf're are only f"·o kinds of people in !he world -!host' "'ho are Irish and those v.•ho 11·i!>h they 11·ere" and •;enjoy !he day in the spirit ot St. Patrick ." t\nd we wanted to draw Lhe attention of re.:ider~ -"l·ho suffered sorely Saturday -to the doubtful qu alifications of the bright lad who'd have us all sporting Kelly green when 1ve'd be more in touch with reality by wearing Fair- haven black and /or 1taying in bed all day. Don 't go for th1t orange tie and grun shamrock routine -thal's the leprechaun-like McCaM's e.scape clause abould angry representaUves of either party come a calling. AND DON'T LET that McCann handle fool you into thinking that this.' refugee from the news room hails. via his forebearr;:. from Kerry, Cork, Con- nemar~ or jlny such point south of the Northern Ireland border. It's knov.n, incidentally, ln those parts as the line between l"Je;iven and Hell and if you want a clue lel me tell you that T always looktd on Dublin as a pretty hot !Dwn. Saturday's warmed up version of the annual idiocy ji; pr.eU.y t.ypica \ of what ha:s the brainwashed minority capering. ca vorting and drooHng on \1-hat 1-icCann calls the days of day~. GREEN BEER, leprechauns. shillelaghs. drunken choruses of ''Irish Lullaby" and ''Kathleen" -Eeeeeeyech. And aga in eeeeeeeyech. It's about time someone -and McCann desrves drafting -charter flighted this sicken- ing 5et. one way, all the way to the Emerald Isle that always wore a bright shade of battleship gray when I was on iL When you could see it through the rain. that is. And when you weren't being knocked ofl lhe s.idewalk by inebriated Paddys emerging fr om one af Dublin's 6,39f pubs. And that's a conservative estimate. There'll anly two kinds or Irish on SI. Patrick's Day -those who burble about exactly nothing for 10 d<iys before and 10 days after March 17 and those. \\'ho are sick to the teeth of hearing about it. Try St. David, St. Andrew or St. George for a change. Then you'd really have something to sing about. Fiji Student Stricken .. " -----...r-r----T ... Mo,..,., M•"" 16, 1'70 H DAIL V PILOT 3 Tranrit RoU• San Francisco Walkout at End Ha119i11' Judge Beckotis • John Luhnow, the Hangin ' Judge of San Juan Capistrano, stands ready to deal \vith all breakers of law and tradition during the city's Fiesta de las Golondrinas this week. Annual fiesta is held in honor of the return of Capistrano's famed swallows . AdmiI1i st1~ation Asl{s End To Tonlii11 Gulf Mandate SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -M_ayor Joseph L. Alioto hammertd out.an agree- ment wllh striking city employts early today to end a four-day strike whtch hid shut down the city's transit and scilool systems. The all-night negotiations broke up arter dawn and the city called its public transit drivers back to work. A few streetcars. which had bttn idle since Fri· day, began rolling by mid-morning . The last of four striking un ions ordered lt.s members to stop picketing about two hours after the tentative agreement was reached. Local fOO of tile city and county employes unlon. the largest striking union, held a twc>-hour caucus before deciding to submit the settlement to a vote of its meriibers. 'The union, which had insisted the trike was not over after ether local!i pulled their pickets, said It too would withdraw pickets until i fter Jts membershi p voted this afternoon. Alioto announctd the settlement and said he erpects city operations to return to normal by midday. He refused to disclose terms o! the agreement. saying only that it was "responsible and re.ai90nabl e," provi ding a CQst-of-living increase while holding the Court Upholds Air Pollution Suit Settlement \VASHINGTON (AP) -A unanimous Supreme Court upheld todiy aetUemenl of an antitru!t suit in which the govern- ment had charged the nation 's biggest auto makers with conspiring to delay and obstruct development of auto air·po\lutlon control devices. ln a consmt decree, upheld In October \VASl~lNGTON IUPl l -Tiw SI a 1 P J ohnson -in a television memoir -said bv Federal Judge Jesse W. Curtis of Los he could not understanrl how a "Rhode11 Angeles, the manufacturers agreed to Departmcnl v.•hich once considered ti1,. eease the alleged illegal actions without scholar could not read'' the terms of the Gulf of Tonkin resolution "lhe functional reM>lution, He referred 10 Chairman J. admitting guilt to the charges. equivalent of a declaration of war,'' sent \Villiam Fulb right of the Senate Foreign New York City had appealed to the t"'"·o lop oHiC:ials to the Sen;itr today to Relations Committee. Fulbright in turn high court to rf;(lpen the antitrust suit, declare it a lega l nullity. charged the Johnson adnlinistratlon had claiming if the allegations were true the Undersecretary of Stale Elliot Richarrl· •·Jied" to lhe committee to gel the resolu· •ulo makers had endangered the health son and Chief Legal Officer John L lion pa~sed. of millions of people. But !he blgh court Stevenson were called ta festify before declined, and withou t holding a bearlng the Senate Foreign Relations CommittPe affirmed Judge Curtis' ruling. on the !&rue that ruptured th e C ] Rid The suit had been filed by the Justice department·1 relationship with tht' Senale ye e et' Department In the closing d&)" of the and helped touch off the public con· agai nst General litotors, Ford, Chrysler, troversy over the Vietnam war. ..\merican !\1otors and the Automobile It was one af Richar d son's Dies in Wreck ManufacturesAssociatlon. line against lnflatlon. 1 But he did say that the unions had won t!1elr chief demand -retention of a "seniority" pay increase or !i percent a year granted employes dl.lf'ing their fir st four years with the city. The item, whlch costs an estimated $2.4 million a year, had been cut by the city supervisors. The city had offered 14,cm employes a $t8 million -or 5 percent -pay hike. The. unloM had demanded $9.5 million - about 10 percen t. The agreement came too late for the 400,000 Ciaily passtDgers of the Municipal Railway System . They walked, bike4_, drove and hitchhiked to work, creating: a mas.s.ive traffic Jam in lhe downtown area during the morning. The pilt'ldng problem was even worse than an Friday because police had to keep bus and slreetcar lanes clear alter the settlement was reached. John Jeffrey, head of Local 400, told newsmen he was not fully satisfied with the agreement, which was reached during an all-night negotiating 56Sion. The leaders of the big union apparently 'il.'ers concimed the settlement dld not specify the pay scales of some of the workers it represents. But the picket lines are called off until the membership decides. hfember1 of the city board ef supervisor• were called from their home& at 3 a.m . to join final stages of the talks. They must vote the agreement int.o law at their afternoon meeting. 'J"ne settlement ended the threat of San Francisco's first general strike..,.aince Longshoremen "closed the town" in 1934. About 7 ,500 city workers went on strike Friday. shutting down mass transit. severely curtailing citywide h ea 1 t h services. and forcing schools to clo!e. The wage dispute involved about 14,000 of the city's 22.000 employes and thousands of the non-strikers honored the picket lines. Suspect Sought For Shooting Santa Ana J)olice are looking for a man today who reportedly shot another man in an argumen t at Jerome Park. Officers said Joan G. Fuller. 26. of Sa"· ta Ana, was fouod shot in the left shoulder Sunday when they rerponded tn a call on an auto accident at bi and Bristol 1tree1.s. · Fuller !Did police friends were driving hUn to the hospital wbm the accident oc- curred. f'ttdece11sors. Nicholas DeB. Katz"n. Last Septembtr, Richard W. McLaren, Baffled physicians at Orange Cou11i y internal bleeding 1.nd suspected brain barh. v.·ho told the e<immlttee in 1966 th~ nresident Nixon's antitrust chief. filed the d A passenger on a motorcycle fila t went '' He underwent surgery and Is reported in sati!factory a1nditlon tills morning at Orange County Medical Center. 11-fedical Center today are attempting to arna:;e. Tonkin rer.olution 11•hlch Cong re! s proposed consent decree in Los Angeles pinpoint a mysterious lropical illn:ss So far , his condition delies diagnosi!i 01·e1"11·helminglv appro ved in 1964 was out of control in Orange Sunday was prohibiting lhe automaker and the R l . H "taJ .ind !ipecialist give him only a 50.50 considrred by the Johnson administration killed and the driver seriously injured. association fr om obstructing development Ur ODS ID ospt v.·hich has stricken a college exl'hangP chance to si1rvive. to be a legally binding dr facto declara. David l\1. Parrish. 22. of Orange, died and installation of the devlct11 . .student from the FiJ! Islands . Gibson's heart stopped three time5 tion of 11ar llis tei;llmony infur iated at Orange County Medical Center and New York City had asked the hiih HOLLYIVOOD fUPI ) -Elizabeth Jame.-; Gibson. 2~. a popular r.;:onpus while undergoing initial treatment at the committee n)embers who contended they Llewellyn Brindle. 21, of Orange, was in· court to reopen the case so it could in· Taylor and Richard Burton entered ligure at S11nla Ana College. has H1 cra11:-i county ho!pital, but he was revived. "ild not inlent1ed it lo be advance ar· jured . tervene and present an argument that the l"lollywood Preshyterian Hospital today been brought back to !Hr three tin1e~ He reportedly has no medical insurance prot·ill to sr1ll'l half a million troops lo Police said the motorcycle went out of pu blic intere st was Ignored in the set· for annual physical check-ups, a since becom ing ii\ late lasl v.·eek. Rncl student! at the SAC campus. v.·herc Southta!il Asia. The contro\'ersy has not control and hit a pole as the pair lef t tlement. Both the J uatice Department spokesman for ti1e hospital announced. fie is in a coma and listed in extremely he worked part-time as a gardner, hat·c rubs1ded. Garden Grove Freeway eastbound onto and the manufactwers assoc iation op-The couple was expected to remain in criliC'al condition. v.•it h partial paralysis, started a benefit fund drive. Recently, former President Lyndon 8. La Veta Avenue. posed New York's request. the hospital for three or four days. ~-:;;;---------------------illiiiliill----iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Celebrate the "·ear in' o' the green! Offer up a pla tter heaped high 'vi th Ireland's national favorite! T e n de r brisket' •• whole or point end. fUl E!ID ................. 98< II. Mustard ...................................... 29¢ Enjoy Grey Poupou , •. discover quality! 5 oz:. At the dtlica.fflss en. Horseradish ............................... 25' Silver Springs ••. aood 'n hot! 5 oz:. jar. Ea.rl11 in tht wttk n~riu-111.(/_kfrs from El RanGho! Ha.ii to the oon11 .•. a.nd daughters ••• of Erin! And why not join them this week ••• enjoy their favorite ••. a.t El Rancho price6l GJJUM • • . , Cll~P • • • SOLID I) /li Whole Potatoes .................. 2 1or 39¢ Del Monte ••• go 'vith corned beef! No. 303 Th< •pirit of th. hoLiLJJJv! Irish Whiskey ............................. s629 J\.lurphy's ... & grand old Irish name! Fifth Pork Loin Roast ....... ~!l!~R. ?!T ..••... • Lean and tender and flavorful as pork 5hoald be •.. because it's from El Rancho, where there is a. difference I Pork Chops ....... ~~~·~······ From finer mjd.wtatern·pcrk loin1! s1oe II. Pork Chops ........ ~~~~: ....... . With Cubbison's dressing ••• to insure satisfaction 1 '129 I~ Baked Potatoes .................... 3,,, s1 Mott's Fruit Treats .............. 3 ,,, •1 013oy , •• frozen, 12 oz •••• with cheese ar chives! Your choice of delicious variet.ie6 ! .•. 20 oi. ' Kubro Soups ............................... 49¢ Froun ••. choon your favorite, heat and serve! Premium Crackers .................... 35* Nab i"'°'' ••• JIOt• with 1oupl 16 or. pkg. Pricu in 1,ffed Mon., Tu.1.1 iVed., Mar. 16, 17, 18. No sales to dealdrt. I I ' ARCADIA: Sunsot Jnd HunlinjtOn Or. (El Rm~o C.nler) PASADENA: 320 WIS! Colondo Bl•d. SOUTH PASADENA: rremont and Hurrtinrtan Dr. HUNTINGTON BEACH: Wuntr and AIJonquln (Boordwilk Ctolir) NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Mtwp«t Blvd. and 2Sll'la1tbluff Dr. (tastblu ff Vill111 C.nltr) \ ' I 4 OAILY '!LOT • ~ W .. DalW P'll•f 1'8ff) \Vl!.Ue youllg j>eople in thi s coun· try are busy attending school and starting jobs, the youth of Israel are fighting a war. According to f\1rs. Ruth Dayan, wife of the Is- raeli defense minister, "Israeli youth have the challenge of fight- ing for their country. They are ready to give up their lives.'' • • I 1 I ~·~ Apparently, mocUrn high fashion has ~en caught up with British royalt11. Sportirig stylish foul weather gear. Princess Anne smiled at school -<hil· dren. in Christchurcb., New Zealand during a. driving rain. SM is wearing a wide-brimmed hat and plastic cape. • In one of the more typical rail· road man's commentaries, Chair· man Frank E. Barnett of Union Pacific said, "The President talks of traveli.pg to Mars when the com- muter can't even get from New York to \Vashington on time." • Space age technology does not imprea:s the firtmen of San Fran.ei!co. After a thret-month test, their futurUtic plastic and fiberg!Clls helmets with traru· parent fcu:eplates are collecting dust. The men decided ta ketp their lono·billed', leather lined helmtts which havt been in lL!t for 130 11ears. • The crew of the aircraft carrier USS Ranger, on duty off Vietnam has apparently developed a sweet tooth. They have requested resi· dents of the Lawrence, Mass., area to 1 send them malted m il k balls -in unlimited quantities - v.'ith the guarantee they will be eaten. Replies can be sent to the Ranger, RVAH-5, ASSC , Fleet Post Office, San Francisco, Calif., 96601. • The man ,\·ho stole Angelo Ptru- so's car in Rome, Italy, can relax. The bottle in the car contained brandy and not rat poison. Peru.so apparently made up the story to be broadcast on Rome radio to scare the thief. The radio with· drew the warning. • Pub owner John Burrluck of Sevenoaks, England, ts returning his slot machine for a checkup. He claims it keeps pitying out jack· pots to one customer -a retired police sergeant. "MoodlJ, Morell lb, 1170 ' Senators Open~ebate On Carswell WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senale debates the Supreme Court nominallon·of J udge G. Harrold Carswell today, with liberals conctdi.ng they don't have enough votes to stop him and a survey showing' he 'would be approved if the vote were held today. Senate Democratlc Leader J\.t l k e Mansfield Wd a week or more of debate is in store. "It will be 1 filibuster, but not a long one. Maybe filibuster is the wrong word. It'• more like extended debate ," he said. Carswell'• liberal opponent.s, who con. cede they do not have the power to block the nomination, hope to delay the vote long enough to buikl public pressure against the Florida judge and push some feace sitters Into their camp. Many senators, including Mansfield, have not said how they intend to vote. But a United Press IntemationaJ survey indicated Carswell would win con- tirmation If the vote were held today. Mansfield said he doubts the debate will change any minds and as of now, ''I'd say he bad the votes." The Senate does not . have much other busine ss at the moment and will probably be able lo devote extensive time i.o the Carswell nomination. One of the Senate's major actions of last week - a provision to give the vote to the 11 million Americam between the ages of 18 and 21 -now is in the House. Mansfield said he would Insist the voting tights bill, to which the 18-year-old pro- vision is attached, be sent back to CO!!· ference If House-Senate negotiators remove the voting age item. Remains Found In 'Bomb Plant' NEW YORK (UPI) -Pieces of human bodies and part of a bomb mechanis m were found Sunday in the rubble or a Greenwich Village townhouse demolished 10 days ago by dynamitt blast s. Assistant Fire Chief Henry Junge said the fragment! appeared lo be remains of the three victims prev iously recovered from the wreckage of _the $250,000 brownstone building. He said he did not think they were parts of a fourth body. Newsweek Magatine reported Sunday the explosives that leveled the building police have called a "bomb factory " were to have been used by rad icals to bomb Columbia University and otber bu1ldin,gs. Mayor John V. Llndsa.y and Fire Com· missioner Robert O. Lowery would not confirm !Mse reporU, but acknowledged tbe dynamite found in the sub-basement O[ the home WU purchased out of 1tate. ' . Ul'IT11t~ KILLED IN AMBU SH Cypriot Georghadjis Cypriot Police, Guard on Alert After Slaying NICOSIA (UPI) -President Ma\tarios called an emergency cabinet meeting to- day and ordered police and the national guard , on special alert following the --~a~ination of former Interior Minister Polycarpou Georghadjis on Sunday. Scheduled talks between leaders of the Greek Cypriot aod Turkish Cypriot com· m11nities were canceled. Extra guards were plae«I around the pre!idential palace, scene of an assassination attempt against Makarios himself on March 8. r ~~r~adjis had been linked with that at-. tempt.· ' The island was generally calm and no demonstrations were reported. In Athens, the Greek government and press experessed concern over the worsening of the situation in Cyprus but refralned from speculating on who was hehind the assassination of Georghadjis. Greek newspapers linked Georghadjis with the attempt on Makari05 and sald he was mixed up in an attempt against Greek Premier George Papadopoulos in 1968. ·Official sources said Georghadjis was lured out of his heavily guarded home by an anonymous telephone caller l\'ho pro- mised information on the plot to kilt Makarios. A policeman who was with him survived the roadside attack on their car eight miles out.side Nicosia. Unconfirmed reports said Georgbadjis was shot six times ln the chest by at- tackus who fired through the windshield of the car. An autopsy was planned. Vegas Lights On 94-hour Strike on Strip Ends LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -The first gambling shutdown in Las Vegas history ended alttr a 94-your strike was settled that cost 16 "Strip" hotel-casinos and 14.000 un1on members an estimated $4 million . Uade.r an agreement that went into ef· feel a minute past midnight Sunday, the Culinary and Bartenders Union was giv en a 31.5 percent pay increase. Each side said the walkout cost It $2 million. Nevada Jost half a million dollars in tax rtvenue. Jerry Lewis was the first player at the crap table at Caesar's Palace when gambling resumed early Sunday. Full resumption of service \\'as expected by Tuesday. The new agreement between the Nevada Resort Aswcialion, which represents the 16 affected casinos. and .-the union provided a 27-28 percent wage increase plus fringe benefits. The union had asked for a 45 percent incrt:ase, while the hotels offered 25 per· cent. Under the agreement, a cocktail waitress can make $55 a day. Representatives of the Wlion and the association came up with a settlement to the most costly strike in Nevada history after marathon negotiations that began Friday night. Gov. Paul Laxalt flew here Friday from the slate capital at Carson City to help try to bring the dispute to an end. The strike began Wednesd ay , and by Thursday night the 16 affected hotels had closed down their operations, leaving 10.887 rooms vacant. Three other strip hotels -Rivierlt, Bonanza and Circus Circus -and the downtown casinos continued operations. They have separate contracts wlth the union. ' Snowstorm Buries l(ansas Vnseasonable Cold Chills Midwest, Southeast Cal!foMtia Antiwar Drive · Opens Protests-Expected in More Than 100 Cities By Tbe AIJtCla&ed Pres• A week of antiwar demcxistrations - draft board sit-lns, school and college teacn~lns, petition-1lgning, mail-ins to disrupt dralt board procedurts and just plain ralUes and marches -got under wsy around the nation today. The week long protest against the Viet- nam wsr was called for by the New Moblllzatlon Committee to End the War in Vietnam, the youthful group which 1ucceeded In m0tD1Ung m a s' I v e demoostrationJS across the country last fall. Many local antiwar groups will be in- volved in the protest, OOwever, and "New Mobe" expects: more than 100 ci'ties to take part lo ad.ivtUes building up to Con· front the Draft Day oo Thursday. Groups all aver the nation have reported plan1 to slt·ln at draft boards on that day, while still other demonstrators will try to hamper the board! by mass telepboolng. - A symbolic start to t:1e week of con- frontation occurred Sunday as m.Jdnight demonstrators stood sUenUy on the Capitol steps in Washington, each holding a candle. One by one, at one-minute intervals, the candles were snuffed out each representing a death in Vietnam. _ The beginning for Sacramento occurred on the State Capitol steps, where 36 persons, many of them middle-aged veterans of World War U, solemnly ste~ ped up to a flag-draped coffin and deposited tiielr Purple Hearts and other service medals atop il. One of the World War JI wounded, Wessley Osman. explained wbY be sur~ rendered hil; Purple Heart: "To many, these; medals are a precious thing. But it Is not nearly as precious as it used to be." State Sen. Albert Rodda eXl)lained why he offered to lake the medals and give them back to federal authorities. FIRST FAMILY ~IARKS PAT'S DAY WASHINGTON (AP) -~trs: Richard M. Nixon celebrated her 58th birthday to- Oay, one day art er her family noted the event with a private family di{'ner. The family celebration wa~ held Sun· day when all members were present. Mrs. Nixon was presented a Lady Baltimore cake baked especially for her by the Whlte House chef at the weekend party. The two-layer white cake with caramel icing was Inscribed "Happy Birthday, Mother" In chocolate. "I'm politically expendable," he aald •. ''J doo't really ca,re any more." - ln C"o.lcago, members of Chicago Area Draft Resisters jumped the gy.n on "t.1obe" week. with &bout 150 persona: looking on at the Federal Building as 20 youths turned in their draft cards. to be forwarded to the Senate Anned Services Committee. Along with the draft cards will 10 several Chicagoans' 1040 income taz forms, scrawled in grease pencil: ••we won't pay. Stop the draft. Stop the war. Stop mililarism." An afternoon rally on the campus of Washington State University In Pullman today Yt'as lo hear a speeeh by Sam Brown, a founder of the original moratorium movement. But in most of the involved cities, p~ test organizers were concentrating on massive demonstrations T'hursda.Y at the draft boards, and rallies Wednesday nlght to win support. Most draft officials were philosophical about the prospect, and one In Detroit noted that intentional overloading of the boards with paper work has been going on for years. NorUl Carolina's selective service director said if enough people came in to boards asking questions it could !ilo" down their work. but "as public servants, \\.'e're obligated to answer them.'' GARDEN SALE! SAVE 2.11 ON OUR PREMIUM SPREADER! Big 60 lb. copocity 20" spreoder feof1,1res: steel body M1h reinforced edgej, 10"' wheel1 wilh nylon beor· ing1, fingert ip controls. Re9. 15.99 NOW 13.88 THRU SATURDAY ONLY! SAVE $20 ON OUR PREMIUM TILLER! S HP horizanfol &iggs & Stratton eng ine .•• 16 heavy duly, self 'horpening tinei.,. heovy dU1y geor case .•• hondle controls. Re9.$189 NOW '169 SAVE 3.11 ON OUR ROTO SPREADER ••• Foremost Premium spreader feo- tures.: % cu. ft. capacity for spreod. ing in full or semi·cirde, holldle controls, feed regulator. Re9 , 19.99 NOW 16.88 Nitti low P''W'C. M>UTHEAN (ALIFOANIA -,,.,ostly ft lt MDl'llllV .,io TlllllCltV b\11 hi• l lonl to11lh eM•• t••!v Mon01v '!Wlrnlne '"" fo!I 110111 ... uc11 Of <ootl Mondty nltl'I• '""~••Iv T~OIV mornln•. Not m11cn ltm-1!11rt <N119' c;,,..ty ncrtt.tttv wllld• "'°'"'''I"' tnd de1tn1 tnd be- low co.1111 c;1nyo"' ti 1lmu. LOS ANGeLES ANO VICINITY - Mcttll'f' ttlr Mondt\' '"" T11nd1v. PtldW flit Mondt~ nlOM 111!1 11rlV Tl>ffdl'I ,.,.,. .. 1 .. ,, (Oll!lr>Vtd WlrM dwrt. ~ Mondt\' nit~t Jil. H ltn Melndt'f' U . Gulf¥ r,orl!\lt11' Wll\01 bl- ltw ~ C•llYlllll ti llmotl, -OIMT CON(E,,TION TO Mflllt.AM ao•oe:1t -1.«111:~ t UtlY llO•lll•l'I WlftCll JO to 1J k..011 k low Cot~lal c1n'l'Oll' ~ co.11 Mond•r nltM 1~f Tllftlltr but ell'Hnfl,. """"" 11~111 ...... l1bt. w!nft 111fl'it •net ~1,..1 ~ 1M -'"-' lo wnl I to It -11e•1 111 tn...-. MO'ldl'f' •f'>d Tunct1v. F .. •'-"' teUlll COll l "'Ctffllf>t llO"thwltd 11-c:ottl ~ !'11th! ll\ll l1lr M~ .. ., ~ Tlttldt1', Lltti. lftnPfr1•11•t Cll.ittti• EXTREME IOUf~ERN Nl!VAOI - 11'1!r wllti Ylrleble ~.-. clwd1 Mefto.llv JM T\lnd1r. H/1111 NMIClly 10 to 11, LOwl ~ t1ltlll :It 16 f2 Sl""llf' aioltl' ~r. G111t>t llDf!hef!V wtllOl MDndt'f 111f!lt .,,., r ..... c.,.. COA•TAL AND INTElilMEOl•TC \'AL.Ll!YS--f'1lr Morldt'I l f'll Tl/l't011'. 11,,_ ntrt~ w~t ti ll'l'lt\ 1,•,,... cit'( fl'-'tf and fitlMifV, l~Wt "''""'' t11•tit • tt Jf, HtfM Meml')' 1~ to U. MOCINfAIN AllllAS -,,., MOf\11.I-, ~ Tund1r. l.Ktl 1l!'OM tullv Mr!'I .. -'lltltl WlflcM •I tlrnn. Ht! muU! fttl'!Mf•IWI dllflft. I / • -Co1Utnl ~Uw ""~"" llOllt'I, L"M ,,..rltb•t WI""' nilltl 1rld mffl'l!J'lt f'IOl/fl ~ '""'"" ~-I to Wiii t to 11 knot1 1~ ll!f"IOOnl ~' •rid t..,..0.,. H1911 '°"'y 60. (~Ill ttfflHft !\1"1 rMM ''°"" » 11 IS. 1 .. 11n0 IM!fltft lurf" r1"" "*"' u 10 n. Wlttr 1-•UVrt .. S1111, ~lao11. J'ldes ~eea-o~ h:o~ ~· .. ~ ,, .. F1rit llll ft fllttl lflw WCOllCI lllt~ MOMOAY ., TUISOAY )I/II 111~ l ·C' t M, Moon 'ti"* U:U t.t!I. ,:11•1'11· ).t ii; .. J,l'l'I. J.t $ M 1.m. •-' lt:Ut.rn. t.t ,.llll1.m.tl 1111 •~o• 1.111.. 14111 f~~ 1./1'1. IJ.S. Summary A 1111\ol' -•""" H'•eH lr'llrll fl'lt C"'!ttl 1111111 hi 11'1 011rl<1 too.J'f', iw!~ .... !11"1'1 Kl"M' Wl1 "Wlll'llf'f ,.. •• t lTltol wllll dtllh tf ~ to ll'!•N fftl, ......... ·-... #~""" _.. "' ~ fl' -nw11tt,... Ok ~. w utr- touf!IWtll-Ml1-•t. H111l"dollt .,..,_ i ... f1' tr·t"""J Wtr~f ... I -· Mllfd ""' wtlOnt OI .lrlttMll., Olr.lthe!M d IC•Mt'-AIM ~ _. -11...,rlft ,.. tllrMNM 11\t Gr111 l.._., ,.....,., t rld 1111 N .. l1clllt111. II w" m+r •lld --bl1' ttld I~ Nfh ef 1111 Mle<i.,I 11\d _l,,..ll- fffl 1111• wl!l'I 'W'Corf-llr .. klrtt •w1 L-IW t!'Olll "",. •ltul. If ~t11t IM -tltwlit Ml°"" t"°"'9't 11.1111""'111!1 Cltl' wttto 1111 _.,. tvrv c/1111.ot"' •• ID Mr"' 111r1111•P1o Olli $0U!Pltnl Gtllfor"lt lllf ArllOM. Albu<lutnrUt ~ Arodlortl• .. '"'•nit " a1~trtlltld • 9 11"'trtk " aolM • eo.1.,., ~ l •own1vlll1 " c111c.111e " (l""ln.,.!f ~ ..._ ff 0.. MelNol " Ot!rolt ,, ,,.,,.~ ..... " ,ertW(lt'!~ •• "''"'° " Ht!I>'• " ~u111 N l(.An111 ClfV 4 Li t 'fft•I n IAo AllttlH " Ml1111! • Ml,,_-ollJ tt N .. ., Or1t•M " Norw Y1t11; ~ Nll'lll Jlllllt " .,,. .... .. Oltl•~tli. • ...... " Ptt... 5etl"11 p f'tM ltoblu " ·-· Q ,,lllwbol'""' ~ Jlorl•'ld " ••111od <ltv " lltd llull n ·-~ $tc•tmoenlo • Jti. l.t\I t it\' • S111 o;eoo " $1" Fr•llC.IKG " s..ttlir .. ........ ~ ·-· ll wt\Plr~ · ' ~ " " M -· n " .. " ~ " " " M " 4 • " " 2 HP McLANE9 HAND PUSH REEL 2 HP McLANE9 FRONT tt " .. TRIM 'N EDGER TYPE MOWER ••• 16" THROW MOWER ... I • " tt faty ta control, with finger tip ongC. 5 cutting blodes, ball bearil\Q reel 20"' cufling width; 4 cyd• englne1 " .~ n " odiu itment ond cantrol lever; makes mcKlnt, adjustable cutting helghh, dutch, blade and throttle cantr0la " sidewalk trimming flllsyl cost iron spolce wheels. on handl1 . " ., " 74.95 " 24.99 169.9'5 • ~ " .. .. ·" • 17" PUSH MOWER 39.99 20" 3 HP MOWER 189. 95 " .. " NOW! lHESE VALUES CANOGA. PARK DOWN EV .. FUL.LEATON HUNTINGTON BEACH SHOP StjNDAY, TOO " AT ANY ONE Of " THESE PENNEY, STORES! lAKEWOOO MQNTClA.IR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA 12 to 5 P.M.! .. • .. ~ "I ~ fl I I' I \' '. JOOEAN HASTINGS, '42-4321 M11H111, M•~ll 1' .. lt,t M '°'ft U r I SPINNING HORSES -Janet Beck, .Jean \Vardell and Karen Phipp.o:; ilcf1 to right ) prepare for a Carousel of Fashion which \\'ill be sponsored by CHOC-ettes. junior auxiliary of the Little J\lermaid Gluld of Huntington Beach. The dessert buffet will bene- ' Dollar s Rain on Fountain Valley Jaycette s fit Children's l-lospital of Orange rounty. The junior group was organized four years ago and in addition to raisi ng funds for the hospital. the young \vomen also serve as in-se rvice volunteers. Chorus Debuts The good from the "good old rlays" will be recalled Yi•hen a Gay 90s Revie1v is presented for me1nbers and guests of the F'ountain Valley Arts Associ<1· lion tonight. The musical will lake place al 7:30 p.m. in !he music roo m of Fou ntai n Valley H I g h School. Donald Sauter. music chai rman for the association, \1•ill direcL the chorus, Voice of Fountain Valley, during l he fi rst p u b I I e performance. Sauter. an instruct.or in Gisler School, has directed choruses in this and other countries. He has won many ;n1•ards for his directing and also has sung professionally. All in terested area residents are invited to attend the progran1. The mixed voice choru~ meets for rehearsa l each Thursday evening at 6: IS in the high school. Anyone In· terested in joining is cordially invited lo attend l h e s e rehearsals, and additional in· ' formation may be obtained by calling Sauter. 847-2389. Styles Turn On Carousel Whirling and lwirllng in a Carousel of Fashion will be members of CHOC-ettes, junior auxiliary of the Little Mermaid Guild of Hunt· ington Beach . The young women will sponsor their annual b·enefit show at· 1 p.n1 . Saturday, March 21 , in the Fountain ValJey Civic Center. Pro- ceeds from the dessert buffet will be given to Children's 1-lospital of Orange Cou nty, major philanthropy of both the guild and Hs auxiliary. Serving as chairman of the benefit-will be Jean \Vardell , and modeling fashions from the \Vet Seal. Huntington Center. will be Lin· da Barr, Janet Beck , Julie Hoffman. Ca rolyn James, Barbara ~1oller, Adele Moody and Cathy Phipps. Tickets may be obtained by contacting Miss Phipps or Miss Moody at 592·1883. Comprising CH OC·ettes are high school and college-age daugh· ters or close friends of active. associate or sustaining members of the guild. the first of the 15 Orange County guilds to sponsor a junior group . In addition to providing vitaJly needed assistance in non-rrofes· s\onal duties for the ho spital, the auxiliary also sponsors numerous fund -raising activities th roughout the year and fosters community in· !crest in the \vork of both the hospital and th e guild. CHOC-ettes are selected to form the court for the annual Mer- maid Ball and from their group a Little Mermaid. the guild 's hall· mark, is selected to reign during the ba ll with King Neptune, an honor bestowed on a man who has made outstanding co ntributions to yout h. Bt"ttcr th an "pen nies from heaven" are the dollars heing-clonaird by husincsses, organization~ and in- dividual~ 1(1 1hC' J<ounta1n Valley Jaycettes fu nd to r urchai;c <l piano fn r the ci1y's C?mmunit y cente;. Capturing donation ~ arc lleft to right } fl.·trs. Bernie Sva1stad. f\1rs . \Viii Spell and i\·Jr s. Tom KelJey. The group will sponso r a sc1niformal midnight su pper and dance Saturday, April 4. and t ickets may no1v he obtained from Jaycees or members of the aux· iliary. Stitchery classes ror the association arc being con- ducted each Wednesday at 8 p.m. in lhc home or t.trs. Robert Ma ckie. who may be conlacted at 847-1953 for ad- diUonat information. The 11•rilers' group meets each fi rst and third Tuesday. and ~1r~, Bryan Flynn may OC reached al 847-6935 for more information. . VOICES RAISED -Recall ing the "oldies but goodies" o( another era are Kini Sellers. Bruce Ker sha\v and Tim Hans. \vho \vilJ participate in a Gay 90s revicv1 sponsored by lhc Fountain Valley A.rts Association tonight DEAR ANN L1\NDERS: My husbt1nd find t \,·ere amused by the letter from lhe n\othcr v;hnsc coHcJic son anfl()unced he ~\"~ hrlnJllni;: a girl home for the e<>kcnd . The boy snid il would be very ;llonr.~l :ind mah1rt• n( hi~ pa rents if th('y i"O'JlcJ 111\0"' him anti his glrl to octupy hi!; 'hcdtOtlm iil hOm<' ~1ncc .. we ::ire shacked ll P hert1 al i::chool " • Our ~on. Bill. a5ked us the sam<' ques· ~ion JU&I. bclorc ChnstmRi;, tlcre is how ~" hnnrll@d Ii 1\ty1\lJ(bani'f"11nd I were stunned at BUI\~ r('QU<'SI but "'c 1 ncd not lo show it. We told hl1'11 wo'd talk 11 over 11nd let him knn11 \\'r hit l'ln a plan. enlisted thP conperalif)fl nr a neighbor tauple and can. ed Bill back, J-hs father said, "Bring tilt 'A' • Parents' New Mo'rality Short Course · an • ANN LANDERS noccnce . "Why not -1!'5 the way the world is going, isn't il?" 8111 replied, "But you and ~tom are decent, respec- tahle people. 'rtu11 ~tuff Isn't for you !" girl. "°'t 'll do our best t.o adjust I~ the 'new morality.'" \Ve met Bill and his girl at the airport. She was wearing 11 loot: Sw~ter, no skirt sand;ls, beads and she was carrying tt guita r. Our son looked Just like her. \Vhf!n we ·drovt up to our place her only c.om· mt!nl was. "Some S<'tup." \Ve }lad invi ted the nl!Xt·door ne1ghbor:<1 (J'U caiJ them Ted and Alice) to dinner ~ly hui-bnnd countered wllh. "You're i1: drtf'nl person. aren·1 ynu ?" \Vhy is ii OK. , , " Bill cut in. ''I get the idea, Dad - anrl\fhe six of us got along v.•el\. After din· JonC' sleep!! at Aunt Ruth's t~nlgh1 :: . h ba d l k BUI ft~:.. d._ Id Not another "'·ord wal'I s:nd. Jane did ?,C~ my us n 00 ~e ~n U, · • ~ICf'p ar-Aunt Ruth 's. At bn'akfast the I 11 see you in lhe morning. I m going following morning Bill gave us some odd nr~I door to sl~p wllh Alict. Ted il'! looks. rm sure ht rigured th e v.·hol<' ~IC!Cp1rig here \vilh your mother." Biii thing out during the night. $Did. •·1 beg your p,ardon, will you repeat If yo_u want to print this letter you have that ~" ~tf hu!lbartl repeated the state· our permission. Sign ii -SHORT mc.nL 811 gr11bhcd him and said, "Dad. OOLI RS€ IN S•IORT l·lltLS. N.J. you don '! nienn It. Why thal'~ lrrriblr. -Dl~AR ~HORT COURSE: Tban\1 tor you can't do i;U('h a thing rlghl in our 01vn lht da y brlghteni:r. II'•• bonry. hou se .•. " 1'-ly husband asked in all Jn. DEAR ANN LANDERS: It happened again last night and T am furious. Every time I go. to a luncheon or a cocktail par· ty. some well m'eanlng female: pull& me aside. grabs 'the hem of my dress and folds ii under three or four Inches lo sho\\i me ho1v much .. belier" t would look if I 1vore my skirt shorter. I a1n nearly 60 years old and have no IJ. lusions about..tnyself. ~fy ltgs_art not my best feature. fl.fy hemline Is a couple of Inches lonser than fashion decrees. So "'hat? I like it th11I "-'&y. Perhaps If you print this lttler some or my friends wltl see i t and keep lheir hand8 orf rny hems. I mighl add, Ann., ,jf the mloilklr1ed old crows could sec the mseh'er as others set· them, they"d lo1~er their hemlines lmtead cl en· couraging others lo llrt theirs. -CLIN· TON, IOWA QEAR CLINTON: I applaud your It• depcndeact. The com in Iowa Is 1uppnsed lo be hlg~ all an r.lepltaot's eye hy lite 4111 of Jul y, bvl Ule sklr1s dofl'l bave to be op lhere! • 'Vhat is ~"rench .k.lssing? Is it wrong? \\'ho should sel lhe~c.klng limit! -tbl boy or ffie girl~-ca-n rsbotgu11-weddl nc- succeed? Read Ann Landers' bookleh "Teenage Sex -Ten Way1 to Cool IL' Send 50 cents in coin and a long, sel£·ad· dressed. stamped.envelope:. AM Landers •·ill be glad to help yoo with your problems. Send them to her in care: of the DAILY PILOT. enclosing-a. sel!·addressed, stamped envelope. • I II!' ................................................................................................................... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~ I ' 4 D.\ILY PILOT Mond~y. Marth lb, 1970 April Date Announced During-Family Party P . Mom Shows' em eer1ng . Around ___ She Can-Do It MrL @.w1 Mrs. Ernest F. Cluon hosted a dinner party in their Hunlinpn Beach Mme to announce t h e bttrothal of their dau&hter, Donna Cluon to Roymood A. Naylor JU. Mlss Clason 11 a gr1du1\e·of HuoUngtan Beach High School and attended Or•n1e Coast College. She Is enrolled at ' California State · College at Long Beach whe~ she 11 atiJ.. dylDg for her teaching creden- tial She ii a Little Sister ol. Sigma Chi Sigma and the fraternity's sweetheart. Her fianct, son of Mrs. AMONG Unlled Air Lines employees h o no r e d for oul.standing achievem.ent in 1969 ·were G. W. Hum.phrty of Corona del Mar and Frank Wheelock of Westminster. Humphrey was cited for an exceptional sales effort a.nd Wheelock wu honored for outstanding work in handling .important groups traveling on the airline. Four semtaters and a 3.69 grade point averlge liter, Mrs. William HaUleld of Hun- til)gintl Befcli has proved to ramlly and friends th a t "Mom" indeed CJD ao back to school. · ( Molher of three, Mrs. Hat· field decided to go back to M:hool to prepare herself for a return to the work world in the field ol business ad- ministratlon. Her °'taclts were m!lnY· Hef study habits were rusty. There was more to ltam than ever, and her children viewed the whole Idea as incredulous, lunny and embarrassi ng'. ' Lois Naylor of Huntington Beach a:t1d Raymond A . Naylor of Applegate, attended HB HJgh, OCC and graduated with a bachelors degree from CSCLB. He played varsity DONNA CLASON Trophies, s c r o 11 s and monetary awards w e r e presented during a dinner in Los Angeles. But her perseverance has paid off in the form of a $300 cash award in the Bank of America Junlor C o 11 e g e Business Awards Program . football at OCC and Long Brld•fo-be Beach State and is a member of Sigma Chi Sigma. This 6Ulllmer he will enter ried April 18, in the Lutheran lhe Air Force Pilot's program. Church of the Resurrection, The couple plan to be mar· Huntington Beach. SPE<:TATOllS at th< santa Anita Handicap were ltlr. and ltfrs. Clement L. Hirsch of Newport Beach, who watchecl their entries, Snow Sporting and Flgonero, tn addltJon to ~l\iQYin1 a lavish lunch in the nower-filled clubhouse. "At first the kids didn't think I was serious. The MEETS CHALLENGE Mrs. H1tfltld younger ones we r e em·1===::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::: Campus Life Viewed By Dean of Students Nrrassed. Now I think they are pleased and a little proud. There'a nothing like achieving to gain acceptance," she said. ELECTED by Delta Delta In add!Uon to her studies, Delta as representative to the Mrs. HaUield was worked as a Associated Women Students at volunteer assistant In a school the Unive rsity of Arizona is library. assisted with church ChrisUe Smith, daughter of projects, served as a Cub Is there a weight control program that 11 really works? (~~ Education and young people a member of the Community Mr. and Mrs. Haviland Smith Scout den mother and worked will be ei:amlned when the Human Relalk>ns Board and of NeWport Beach. with women's clubs. WEIGHT @, WATCHERS, -.. LEMONS AREN 'T ONLY ON TREES -Members of the Women's Auxiliary of Mechanical Engineers are g~tbering boutique items for a March 19 Lemo n Tree Auction. Placing items on a lemon tree are (left to right) Mrs. Jack Ritchie and Mrs. Joseph C. Widmont Jr. The \Yhite elephants will be auctioned off following a smorgasbord luncheon in Anaheim. Huntington Beach Branch of YMCA and a Civil Ser\•ice She is a junior, a physical She is the mother of Bob. 19, American AssociaUon ° f consultant. He is a member oE education major and is acti ve a student It UCLA ; Tom, 15. a University Women meets al 13 organlzaU:>ns including the in the Desert MEii swim sophomore at Marina High Some t1lking, some listening i nd 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March Academy of Religion and Men· club and on the cooce com· School, and Debbie, 13, an •program that wor,ks. tM IS, In the Mercury Savlngs and tal Health and N a t i o n a l miUee of t he sociated eighth grader at Springview 3 FlE£ IROCHUR£-tAll 135.5505 Loan building. .lliiR~eh~ab~il~lla~l~lo~n~Asso~~ci~ati~-,~·~--~S~lu<:len~ts~. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~Schoo~~l.i;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ Going, Going , Gone Bidders Pick Stored Lemon Beetle Tea Adds Spice The second annual Beetle Drive and English Tea featur- ing homemade delicacies of British origin and a bouUque stall will be sponsored bf the Cavalier Chapter of I h c Speaking will be John W. Shainline, dean of students al California State Oolle1t at Long Beach. 'He will discuss problems in college that an administrator might J,:le called upon to handle, includina cam· pus confrontations. Goi ng once, going twice . i:oing three times warns auc. tioneer ?i.1rs. Arthur E. Giesler ;is she lowers the ga vel on lemons (white elephanls) for members and guests of the Woman's Auxiliary of the American Society of Mecllanical Engineers, Los Angeles Section. The color scheme also will be Daughters of the British carried out in the lemon tree Empire. 1notif. The annual event "'iii begin Dean Sh&inllne, fa ther of five children, has been a teacher of J>!YChology and has done family, child and mar· riage counseling. Drug abuse consultant, he has written numerous articles such as "The Dangers or LSD: Do We Have the Answers?'' and co- authored a book, "Drug Abuse and You," with George 0. Demos. Mrs. Roben \V. Cockrell is at I p.m. on Wednesday. chairman of the event with March 13, in the Newport t1rs. Alfred A. L i n g 0 . Riviera, Newport Beach . Assistants \\'ill include the \Vomen arc wel come a.1d f\1me s. Ellis Sharkey Jr., may call Mrs. Edgar April, Arlhur Bender, Burnie Craig, 54~559, or Mrs. Jay Gracia , Dean Shainlin e is active in the community as an officer in the Menta l Health Association, Spirited bidding will take place at the annual 1.tarch benefit smorgasbord, Lemon Trtt Auction, al noon on Thursday, March 19, ln Hansa House, Anaheim. Charles Freber&,-.Brent o D !J68..2372, for information. M L Buck, Franklin Fowler Jr., The chapter meets the first esa eague Jack Ritchit,. Joseph c. Wkl· Tuesday of each month at 8 La Lectii League meets the mont Jr. a.hd Winchell M. p.m. Those of British birth second Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Parsons. who would like information Mrs. H. 'i\'. Moore, 54~:Ml9, Proceeds wlU go toward one may call l\irs. Joseph Schulist, will answer quest Ion s or three national scholarshiPs ,-54_>-4_1_1<_. ________ ,_•g'-a-rdi!l_·_gc.l_oc_•_ti_on_. ____ 11 Mrs. Giesler, u,,isled by Mn. Clay Colley, will auction off items from a bright green and yellow deeorated table. or student loan funds for un- dergraduate and g r a du a t e students or me chanic al engineering. ESQUIRE SOCKS DOWNY TOUCH SWEEPSTAKES EVERYONE WINS FIRST PRIZE! Congratulations to everyo ne who enters 1he OownY Touch contest. You oll win first pri ze: a big, col orf ul Mort Drucker fun poster. Our apologies if you win second pr ize. All you'll get is a 62 hp MG midget sport s car. C>Jr condolences if you win third prize, o Yamoho motorcycle. Or fourth prize, Panasonic rodios. Or fifth prize, ~lumbla record albums. Hurry tci the Downy Touch display in the men's deportment. While you're there, get the most com- fortable socks on two feet. In any of 55 great color s. At only $1 . .SO. You hove only till Moy 15 to win first prize. / Second prize MG Sports Car Opon D•ily 9:30 -6:00. Friday• Till 9:00 IN COSTA MESA IT'I H~AftTMeHT STOft•=., 1116 NEWPORT BLVD. At Harbor Blvd.-tnt1rttctlon SUNSHINE FROSTINGS AND STREAKS Reg. 25.00. 15.00 Be glomour touched. Hove you r hair frosted or streoked in the most 'dozzl ing way. Frostings, Reg. 25.00, 15.00. Glamour touch streOk, I 0.00 complete with set .' EASTER PERMANENT SPECIALS Pe+;te Solon Permonent, 10.00 Moster Stylists Permanent, 15.00 Bot h complete with cut end set. We specialize in L'Oreol Tints, Duort Pe rma on'd children's haircuts. As~ lo see our new hairpieces and wigs. , Beouty Solon, bO I ..., . t.N•MltM •u "· 1"1 .. llMlll NIWl"OlltT ~, '•tlllfll ........ ..... , .. PIUMTIHGTO"' llA(M ,,,, ..... t ....... m-un " :J.01• Ga:jler Prellie:j e 9elexy of sprin9 fresh better, new fabrics, perfect for Easter dresses "PRINCESS" LENO SOLIDS dacron polyester/cotton 'In , .. EYELASM CLIP VO ILES dacron polyes tcr/colton $1" , .. BULLSEYE PIQUE com lx'd <"Ol ton solid!! $1" , .. LINEN PRINTS & SOLIDS IOO';'e imported Oa.'< $1" yd. BONDED SUITINGS rayon and silk face, acetate tricot linl ni.:- $20 , .. EMBROIDERED DOTTED SWISS polyc11 tcr 11 nd ro II on '2" yd. BONDED LACE 11olyestcr .r.. oo lton, '''ashable 42''/44'" ,,•\di! '32' , .. NEVER IRON EMBO SSED CRISKAY PRINTS WITH MATCHING SOLIDS great designs on pastel or white back9rounds 100°/o cotton 36" wide ,...,, w111Mbl1 "whispy" PRINT colorful mod and contemporary desi9ns on fortrel polye~ter and cotton sheers 44"/45" wide 9ucrr. w111hablt $119 yd. SPANKIN' NEW BONDED EASTER SUITINGS febulous sprin9 colors end weaves in plaids, novelties, and fancies, many with yarn dyed solid metehmetes turbo acrylic face acthttt trlcot back 54"/55'' widths $398 yd. IMPORTED SCREEN PRINTS ON MACHINE WASHABLE 100% POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS big, bold designs in mod spr ing colors on 1 never·iron febric compero •I $6.91 10 $7.98 yd. flnl ~uallty full bolts 45" wide $499 yd. DACRON POL VESTER DOUBLE KNITS SOLID COLORS posh coleeti~of weaves for interestin91 self color designs •· 56"/SI" widths machhtt wash tumble dry $598 yd. SOUTH COAST PLAZA -COSTA MESA HU!'!TINGTON CENTER-HUNTINGTON BEACH lllSTOL AT $AH DIEGO PlllWAT -141·1116 IDIN•ll AT llACH IOULIYAID -1,7.IOl J Open Monday thru Friday 10 'til 9 -S1turd1y 'tll 6 -Sunday 12·5 I I I ' i l ,. 11 I I j ·1l I ,\ 111, • Fo1-.ni~-~ Valley Today'il Fl•al N.Y. Steeb • VOL 63, NO. 63 , 3 SECTIONS , 32 PAGES E MINC. OF CMA.Nl.AHIA W1'S A S901:tTING-P£L(OW WHO n40Vfr+{T HIG.HLV i:>f TllE )(ING. OF,fRtl) THE 'PRl,$0NER. A C.HANC.£ FOR r1'Cfl>OM • Hi WAS G-IVEN 100 fUtC.K ~$ Ml'D 100 WHITi &AUS AtlO Wi\~ TOL1> TO 'DISTRl91/Tf °™EM INTO iH'RE'E $!MILAR U'RMS IN' ANV WA'( MF· LIKED. HE' WAS "TMEN .'8LINDFOU>fl) ANtl TOl.D TO WAW A 'BALL AT 'AA.NPOJot "-OM ONE" OF 'TltE URNS . IF HC tl'REW A ILA'K 1ALL HE "IOUl.1> er iXE'CUT£1>'. IF Hr lmtW A \o1Hrr£ 'MU, Hf 'W UL1' MAVE HIS F'REn>OM. 'Nf lltN:t WU! ltt~£1). --- -. -.........::-~--~::::.~~~~-7·~--,--~~-:--. T HE VRISONE'R WAS SMA.'RT Hc:M WOULO 'IOU HAVC (AHll LUc.KV); SO ME "'A.S t)IST'Rl'&UTE1> THf ~S IN' T E • THE "TlfRE'E URNS'? ~__, Math Made Fun Valley Teacher Sliows T extbo"Ok By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI •• • Of the O.Uy "llof Slfff Because he was a good thinker, the priSC1Der held captive by the King of Chamania 2$Caped the executioner's u . And because children in the Fountain Valley School district are learniq mathematics oriented toward reasoning and discovery they will have a better chance of surv iving in a te<:hoological world. 'tying lhese togeth~r is teacher-author Dale Seymour who explains his t.extbooks on the "new mathematics" to studenls and teachers who will soon be using them. "\Ve're going to make math fun if it kills us," said Seymour, 35. who already has published 22,000 copies of the te xt called "Eureka" (I ha ve discovered). He presents seventh grade children with a cartoon version of the story or Chanzania, in which the prisoner escapes decapitation because or his clear think· ing. (See accompanying cartoon). Several students and teachers Initiall y appeared stumped. BuL largely because-the ·problem dealing essentially with mathematical probability -was presented in such clever fashion , they kept on thinking. Had it been stated in p u r e 1 y mathematical tenns. interest might have been lacking. Leading the children through a process c{ rea~oning; the answer was found by placing a white ball into each of the first two urns and placing the rema ining balls In the last urn. In this fashion, the chanee1or escaping the headsman was increasttl to.83 per· cent. The books FolVltain Valley's children will soon be using contain,.500 ;pages of puzzles, games and cartoons similar to tbiJ ~ -all with the .intenL or leaching niathemalical ~oncePts:.' ' · "nil Ii.Pd of mathematics emphasizes the dilcovery approach rather than rote memorization which was the old 1t'ay or teaching math,'.!..said Seymour. "It allows the children to develop thetr own con- clusions." Used in conjunction with the book are many sjmple teaching a.ids which are calculated to arouse student interest. They consist of geometric blocks, ancient puules called tangrams and devices call- ed geoboards. The latter is a 12 by 12-ioch board stud· ded with 25 nails on which the ~student stretches rubber bands to. compare the size and shapes of geometric patterns, Seymour said. Older children use the geoboard to help · them in analysis ol geometrical r?la- lionships, 11,ccording to the Palo Alto teacher. "There are UIO branches of mathematics." he tells children. "Some of you turn them on and some of them don 't." Through his new books, however, the teacher hopes the probability that children will be turned on will be irl-" creased. FULTON SCHOOL'S EVA LAZAR WORKS Wlnl GE080ARO In Fountain Vall•y. Motivation for tht 'New M•th' ( ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA · MONDAY, MA'RCH '16, )970 TEN CENTS Beach Tragedy Averted Guards ·Have Harrowing Time With Fog, Crowds ',llf ALAN DIRKIN ot t1111 01llY f'illrt lll ff State and city lifeguards were gettin~ a well-earned rest today after dense fog and heavy beach crowds at Jluntington Beach combined to give them a har- rowing day of res[/Jes in high sur( and rip tides. No lives v.·ere lost, but the loll o( tragedy could have been high. Two boats were tossed ashore by the raging surf, but all seven occupants su rvived. ThreE boys, about 12, who Jost their lifera(t were saved in a radar· assisted rescue in which a state lifeguard -a Newport Beach youth -risked his life to help the boys. Beach Police Push Probe Ori Slaying \Vorking round-the-clock. 18 Huntirwton Beach detectives visited doiens of Orange County bars and talked lo 75 5Uspects in three days, trying to unravel the mystery surrounding the killing Thursday of a tattooed Anaheim drug ad· diet. ··we won't let up on this until we ha\•e our killer," declared Detective Sergeant .l\1only Mc Kennon today, the man In charge of the ma~ive investigation. Friday morning. hours after the body o( Thomas Carmine Astorina, 25, was found near Sunset Aquatic Park. three car-loads of detectives began checking Astorina's known hang-out.'i, mostly in seedy Orange County bars. Detectives didn't .stQ.pr .ill weekend • liiey rounded up 75 lndMtftals wlio'tlther ' knew Astorina or might have seen him the day he died. Police said cne Sunset Park boat owner reported spotting two carloads er men in the area the same night Astotina was kllled. Detectives aren't telling most of what they learned over the weekend , but i'\1cKennon said today, "our list of suspects is narrowing." Astorina's estranged wife. Linda Mae. 23, of Garden Gro11e, was also questioned by ln11estigators and may have supplied · more names of A!ltorina 's friends. Mystery still 1:hrouds the reason for Aslorina's presence near the aquatic park , though drugs seem to ha ve been the key to the killing. One theory is tha~ Astorina was with friends awai ting a boat sneaking in at night with a narcotics shipment, or he simply might have been taken to a lonely area by drugged friends angry over some- thing he dld . "This thing is going to take a lot more door-knocking and detailed investigation, but our li st ls growing smaller,'' ~tcKen­ non said. \Vhile investigation and paper work on the case grew, some detectives were flashing wry smiles over the irony that while a man was being murdered in one part of town over drugs, a proposed sym- posium on drugs scheduled Saturday at Gclden West College was canceled because no one was interested. "It wall a real scary,'" said stale izot a bearing on the jeep opposite ·whert lifeguard supervisor Knut Skjonbera, '!It Russell waded in and spotted the swim- "'as clear inland so people (locked to mers. • 1 the beach. We gave repeated warnin11s •~it was lnCl'edlble that the boat found on the danger of the fog and rip tide.t, them," Skjonberg Said, "Russell disap- but they seemed determined to go out peared Croro sight as soon as he went in, anyway." and the noise of the surf was so loud that The most dramatic rescue came op-( they didn't bear the boat unW it wu on posite the Brookhurst Street entrance to .. top of them. RusseU would have had a Huntington State Beach. hard lime get~ing back to shore, or even Lifeguard Tom Russell of NeWport finding it." Beach and another guard were in a jeep "The boys were also lucky that the. jeep "'hen they saw a Ute raft wash ashore. was right where tile raft came ashore er Ru ssell went out, found three boys -"all \Ve would never have known they were panicky and sca red" -in trouble beyond out there," Skjonberg added.' ihc surf line. A crowd of about 6,000 hit the Hun· In the meantime, the lifeguards' boat tington State Beach Sunday while about lJ .s. Radar Post Reds Annihilate S~cret Laos Base \VASHINGTON IAP) -North Viet. namese troops annihilated a 15mall American force operating a secret radar instalialion hidden in a limestone cave atop a mountain in Laos, killing at least 12 U.S. servicemen, the Washington Post reported today. The Americans died March 11 , 1968, the 'Mom' Jenkins' Son, 2li, Killecl In Auto Crash i'\-1rs. Maynard Jenkins. ¥.'ho became "~fom " lo hundreds of men serving in Vletnam through her OperaUon Mail Call, lost one bf her own sons S.aturday, William D. Jenkins. 21 . of 18461 Goodwin Lane, Huntington Beach, was ratally injured in a rollover auto accident near Bridgeport. (See re1ated story, Page 21 .) The victim was thrown out of the 11ehl· cle and died less than three hours later in Bridgeport Community Hospital, ac-. cording lo authoriUes in Northern California. Concerned 011er neglected servicemen. Mrs. Jenkins initiated her Operation Miii Call campaign in 1965 and it expanded to other activities, e s p e c i a J l y at Christmastime. Fighting })er ·own battle -that of red tape and bureaucraUc entanglements - she overcame them all in mak ing Mail Call a success. Stock lllarkeu NE\V YORK (AP) -Stock market prices were skidding late this afternoon. with lmilng issues outdistancing gainers by more than three to one. Trading was slac k. (See quotations, Pages l&-19). Post said, defending the radar, reoon· naissance and rescue base. The ltte con- tained highly sophisticated · electronic gear for directing bombing raids atopa the Hi Chi Minh Trail and over _Noith Vielnam, the report added. In a Vientiane datellned dispatch by T. 0. Allman, the story said the defeat suI- fered at the hands of the tlorth Viel· n~mesc was kept a secret. The Defense Department made no eumment on the report Over the weekend, however, W,hite· HOl!IO ""°" Sofretarj lloollotU. ~l!r1 diBetoa!d lben were· f4aome" 'U.s; casua!Ues in Laos since 1982 Jlesidea the earlier confirmed death or Anny Capt. Joseph _K. Bush Jr. Ziegler declined lo state the ezact number of American military personnel who had died u •· result ot hostile fire, saying only that it was "less than 50." Actording to the Post, the · base was called Phou Pha Thi and was located on a fl,860-foot peak in northeastern Laos about 15 miles from the North Viet· nam frontier. Radar nets dotted nearby hills and Air Foree and Cenlral Intelligence Agency personnel used the valley landing strip as a base for American-led teams of Meo tribesmen entering North Vietnam on harassment missions, the PO.!lt said. Hanna Readies Election Drive Rep. R ic hard T. Hanna fD- Westminster) today filed oomination papers for re-election to hta fifth term in the House of Representatives. Hanna acknowledged that he ls up against a well financed campaign by Republican William J, Teague, whom he narrowly defeated two years ago. He said the prtncipal issues in the cam. paign would be economy, environment, education and crime and drugs. Candidates Talk Ecology Pollution Becomes Seal Beach Ccimpaign Issue Ecological probfe1111 of a local nature provided talking points for eight or Seal Beach's 12 city council hopefuls during a candidates' night sponsored by the city's Council for En11ironmenta1 Concern. Speakers at meellng a d d r e s s e d themselve!l to the problems of crowding, sewage. polluUoll and the future of the Pacific Electric right of ""Y. The latter is a disputed strip or land paralleling the waterfront which 110me cltiuns would like to see preserved while others favor the construction of buildings. Following are capsule versior.s of the solutions offered at last Thursday's meeting by the. candidates for the Mrch 31 election : Stanley ADderlHt current mayor, businessman : Stood on hlJ record as a councilman, saying a plan for sewage problems has been developed without ad· 1d1ng property or hidden laxes. He would ~!come a ciUzem: COfJlmltt« to solve the Electric Avenue protilem and c:alled for att.eatlon to buch ttOllon., narcol.ICs and p-.tklnf prOblel'lll. • 'Mtomat ltopnt, 1eroapace mg Inter: Called for an1lysls of city building codci tp prevent overc:rowding. The sewage problem could be remedied either by rebuilding the sewage plant or by transferring sewage to a private com· pany or county sanitation district. He favors a temporary park on the Pacific Electric right cf way until the citizens develop a comprehensive plan. Rtne Turner, retired businessman: He \vould favor immediate city attention on sewers to prevent a health hazard and control of city building and annexation to hall overcrowding In the schools. He is against rezoning of the Pacific Eleclric l!lrlp for building purposes. In addition he would favor five-year sentences for se- cond narcotics offenders and Ille terms without possibility of parole for thlrd narcotics olfenders. l\.torton Ba•m. pharmacist: Seal Beach Should look at 11.s master plan a.gain, study zoning ordlnanceJ to see if they ap- ply and are entorceabte. Pacific Electric'• Future could be 10lved' by. establishing a . Pillrk ,with canals. More progr~s !or the , clly's tetnagers need to be developed. Charlotte·Crowle1. housewlfe : The cltr. fff\1151 climlnat.e air polluUon from lhe •fahtes .steam plant and ·the Edison .• acncratlng planJ.· Sewage problems can ( be sol11ed by simply building a new plant. TI1e future of the Pacific Electric strip should be left up to the 11oters in the June election. , Charles Knapp, high school teacher: More parks would e.Uminate crowded conditions. Favors investigation of a sewage hook-up with the Oratige County system and e11aluat1on of air pollutants from lhe Haines plant. }Je would not take a stand on the Pacific Eleclrlc Issue until all argument! -for and against -have be.en aired before the pllnning com- mission. of which he is a member. Mrt'. MarUya Millstein, housewife: She said she was Ured of the city being badgered by people. "(will not say YfS or M to any of those questions," she tokl ttie audience. "U ·the city council and the planning commls1don cannbl anrwer these questions, how do yoa expect 12. people to?" Gary Stan,1ei.nd1 fireman: "Our city government .CQUld take a few le118oris In public rtlatiOMfLsaid Stan4eland. He cited di8content among clty employes and the. general unfriendliness of police as e:xamplea. A park on lhe PacUlc Elec- tric property would be unfeasjbJe because of prolllblllve coot•,, he claim& 3,000 went lo the Balsa Chica State Beach. There were six other swimmin1 rescues• and one boat rescue . "A guy had a fire aboard and was drJf. ting to the surf line,,,, Skjonberg· said. "But he was 11ery casual about IL We tQwed him to one of the buoys." Things were equally beetle on the Municij>al Beaeh Sunday. About 2,000 pectplo turned out and guards made four S\fhnn)ing rescues and handled three first aid cases. • Two boats were swept ashore. One had three youngsters and two adults aboard. It ran aground just south of the Pier, op- posite Huntington A11enue, but there as (See GUARDS, Page%) * * * Huntington Griard Saves Three Boys ( State lifeguard Tom Russel1, tt, of Newport Be.ach was the hero in a nerve- wracktng rescue of three boys, a g e d about 12, in roaring surf. rip tides and dense fog off HunUngton State Beach Sunday. Russell, 2133 Ocean B\11d .. a 3'h-year lifeguard veteran , described the near tragedy today. "I was sitting in a jeep with another guard. The foi:: \vas really bad -we couldn't e11en see, the sea from the life- guard tower. "I saw a rubber. llie rift floating tn the water. This usually means someone's in trouble so I went out trying to follow the direciiOn or the rafl. . "l·found one boy and .he wu real·~nlc· "1. l at.apped him tq tho lifeguanM>uoy I had with me and he said there wu ~r guy with hlm. t . "I told him tho buoy would keep ~Im afloat and not to let go. Then r went after the other boy. I got and strapptd him to the buoy. He was pretty ezhaust- ed. "Then t saw a third boy. He was noat· Ing on his back and was nearly gone. He couldn't swim and I had to crOM chest him back to the buoy. ... "l strapped him to the buoy and told hun· to hang on too. We were io a· rip and past the 15urf line. J couldn't tell \Vhere we \vere. I could hear the surf but couldn't see the shore. Another guard, John Neeleman. who had been with Russell In the jet:p swam out and foond the gi-oup. ' "He was lucky to find us. He hit us . dead on. Then the boat appeared from nowhere and boy was t glad to see Jt 1 don't koow how we would have gott"en back." The rescue boat, using Its radar had gotten a fix on the jeep on the beach and searched the area opposite the jeep. The boat took all five aboard and dropped them oft at the construction pier by the Santa Ana River. Valley Still Needs Recreation Workers You can still apply f0r a summer job with the Founlaln Valley Parks and Recreation Department as a playground leader, recreation aide, lileguard, pool cashier or locker room attendant. The deadline for applying for these job~ bu been extended through Friday. Ap- plications are at Fountain Valley City Hall, 10200 Slater Ave. Salaries range from $1.59 to $2.78 per hour. Orange Coast Weather The Orange Coast can look for fair weather Tuesday, with temp- efatures in the middle 70's. Then will be more early morning coast- al fog, however, which should clear oft before mid-morning. IN$mE TODAY ThoUOll it WO! clouded up badly by heavy fog. tht South- land'• new collegiate sailing venttr 1till hara window on tht boy and it il wa.t d.edicattfJ Sun. cloy. Page 24. -.. c.11,.,..11 1 (l'lfelll't u, ' ( .. HllW 2NI c,,,.iu " ~--· .~ ~.')"; ... ' '"""'....,,,... ,. ""'-' 1 .. n -" AM '-'trt IJ •• • ·- I . I j I DAILY PILOT H Air Strikes Into Laos • Revealed SAIGON (UPI) -The United Stat.s be11n announctnc air strikes Into Laos today and reported the losses of three more U.S. planes to ground fire there. Headquarters aMOuoced the departure of more Git for home and said American troop 1trength in Vietnam fell to a 2f. month low last week with withdrawal of 3,900 Americans from the war zone. In !ls first announctment of U.S. alr Jlrikes into Laos. the command said: "Air Force, Navy ind Marine Corps aircraft yesterday (Sunday) continued in- terdleUon operations against the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos. Air Force aircraft flew combat ruppqrt missions In Laos for l\oyal Laotian forces . In addlUon, BU. puticlpaled in tnterdictJon -operations along the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos.'' The official dlsclosure that American planes tire bombing Laos, along with the announcement of U.S. plane losses there, meant a further step in taking the wraps off what baa since 1964. been a aecret air campaign. In Moscow, meanwhile, Premier AJexel N, Koiygln told the United States the firtt step towards any attempt to res\ort peace in Laos must be an e.rid to American bombing raid!. Until the bombing It.ops, Kosy1in said Jt Would be "unr~allstlc" for h1rn to con- !ider President Nixon's request that the Soviet Union and Btitaln attempt to end the fighting in the Southeast A!tan kingdom. Kosygin placed much of lhe blame for the war between govemmeot and Com- munist forces in Laos on the United States. He made no mention of North Vietnamese military support for the Communlst Pathet Lao. {Nixon aald recently that 87 ,000 North Vietnamese soldiers are operating in Laos.) Nixon, in • message to Kosygin, had asked Moscow and London, cochairmen of the J96Z Geneva convention that pro. claimed Laos neutral, to use their good offices among the teaty's signers to restore peace. ' Fram Page J GUARDS ... no damage and all the occupants escaped unhurt. Two men 1n another boat, a 17-foot out-. board runabout, were not ao lucky. 'Ibelr boat rolled over completely, xn- di!ll them crashing tluoogh Ille boll'• windshield. Bleedln1 from face and arm cuts, they managed to make it ashore op- posite the Huntington Paclfic apartments. Dr. Joseph Mas.iawity, 711 Ocean Ave., gave emergency treatment to the men - Fernando Train of Whittler and David Pierre of Los Angeles -on the bu.ell. Train was taken to ffu,ntlngton lntercommunlty Hospital where 1Utches were taken . "They were headin1 for Newport and got lost,11 Lt. Walt Sawyer 111\d. Sawyer said the city lifeguards had Jf men out Sunday and were kept busy from 11 a.m. till I p.m. Old-time Movies Slated in Beach Douglas Fairbank. and Cbarlie Chaplin will pop into Ille al 7:30 p.m., Friday at the Huntington Beach Library, "5 Main St., in three old-time flick&. Chaplin "'ill perform his antics in "'Behind the Scretn" (1 916) and "Easy Slr~l't" 11917). vi'hile the swashbuckling Fairbank Sl'4'1ngs a fancy sword in "Tht Black Pirate" ( 19'l6). Admission is free to the Friday night movies at the public library. . . DAILY PILOT O•ANG• COAIT PUlllltflN() COMPANY Reb ert N. We.d Prftlllont end Publlt,,_ J eek R. Curlev \llCt Prnlffftl I nd Ge!\1r1I MIM91t Tho,..11 K11"ll Eel lier Thom1~ A, M11rphi111 Ml.,.llnt £11,,,.. Afb1rl W, 11111 AHOCllll t:o•ror Al111 Di1~i 11 tl.,,.,•1~11""' IM<ll (Uy l!Ollflr H1111tl11tf9• Inell Offiee 17t1i l11ch l e11lt\'1rd M1lli11g Ad1h1u! P.O. 1011 790, 92~41 Otti.r Offlc" Lio-•••ell: tn '''"' .... .....,, (Of.II Mat: 3JO Wat ltY llr"I N~ I MC.II: 1211 W .. f l.i•t l 1t1,1l ... 1rf 1111 C.llff!Mllt )OJ Ntrtti ll Ct1t1ln1 It.Ml MMdl11 Marth 1 .. 1970 DAILY PILOT Sltff Pllelt SURFERS KINGSTON, COLESON, COLLINS (FROM LEFT> POSE In Sun1•t Evant, To Endure Is To Be a Wlnntr Soused Surfing Fortified Wave Riders Compete The first aMual Turk 's Surfboard Championships were staged in Sunset Beach Sunday, with the three ackn<,wledged top contenders taking win, place and show . As for the latter, a couple wished they hadn't. Joe Kingston, 28, of Huntington Bettch, won, followed by Jerry Collins, 43, (Jr SeatUe, \Vash., and Steve Coleson , 28, of Sunset Beach. "I would have done better jf I hadn't barfed," said Coleson. SpoDSQr Tom Kling and his rules com- mittee required the su rfers to gulp down a full pitcher of beer each, then .!!print to their boards in Le f\1ans auto-race-style and head for the nearby surf. True to his vow, Collins easily beat "Lltile Joe" in the chugalug and foot race. "I only had 17 years on him," he gklat.ed. Technical difficulties blew Collins' lead \\'hen the ra~ boat carrying Turk's head chief Tony Lee and bartender Beaver Allen -the officials -capsized in the fog while serving as the offshore pylon. He had nothing around which to paddle. By the time the vessel was righted, Kingston was back in the raee. A crowd of admirers followed the three sprinting contestBnts to the beach as lifeguards eyed the whole congregation from headquarters nearby with some suspicion. Others remained in Uie saloon guarding Kingston's first place trophy, consisting of 24 individual bottles which vanl!ihed in lhe subsequent victory celebration. "Next year we gotta get this thing organized better," said bead umpire Lee, noting that ABC-TV's Wide World of Sports doesn 't cover anything until it becomes a tradition. Coast Guard l\.ept Busy As Fog Catches Boats Scores of pleasure boats caught In a swift moving fog Sunday kept Coast Guard, Coast Guard Au:rillary and Harbor Department rescue boats from Laguna to Los Angeles llarbor busy on searches until a late hour Sunday. First "mayday" distress signal came from the 50-foot cabin cruiser Dino JI out of Newport al 10:52 a.m. when the owner , Frank A. Costella, reported he was aground in dense fog off Soulh Lciguna. Orange County Harbor District boau "'·ere dispatched to the scene along with a Coast Guard helicopter out of San Diego and the Coast Guard 95-foot cutte r Cape lliggon out (If Newport Beach. Before rescue vessels arrived on the scene, Costella reported that he had been pulled free by a small skiff and was no lon.R:er in immediate danger. The Cape Higgon took the Dino II In tow at noon and brought It to the Newport Harbor Department. There was no major damage reported. ~tarine radio channels crackled for hours as boats reported they were stranded in lhe dense fog with no power or sail . San Clemente Meet Asks Student Defe1·ment End Th..? \Vestern haU of President Nixon's Youth Advisory Committee this \\·eekend drafted proposals to end s t u d e n t deferments at a t\\·o-d:iy conference at the \\'estern \1lhitc llouse complex in San Clemente. The dralt advisors from 27 slates and Guam elected to reeommenri the end or de.ferment< for all but medical !iludents and young men in certai n pha ses of agriculture. Findings and auggestions or the com- mittet will be blended wit h recom- mendationis by Its eastern counterpart be!or.! they are presented, by President 500 Take Park In Bike Rodeo htore than ~ youn£sleri and their bicycles were put through their paces in 1 bike rodeo at Spring View Elementary School, Huntington Beach Saturd11v. Police Sgt. Jlm f\lahan said 35o hikes we.rt riven safety checks and 275 bike llcenm were Issued. "It's part of 1 new program to en- courage bike safety among t h t youngsters," Sgl fl,11h:in said tod1y, "f thlnk they hid a 11ood time." About 20 parents helped the potic:t of- ficers run lhe rodeo and obstacle cour1t "Wt. hope. to tske this program lo all 40 school~ ln •lunll ngton Beach," S~t. ~11than aald. "It 's the bt51 public re!a. lions and safety program \\'e\·e got 101na:· The nexl rodeo Is i;et for Ap ril 4 i t Jlope Vitw Elementary School. Nixon to the impending h11:arings by the Sena~: Armed Services Committee. The group \\'hlch met on the Orange Co~tst for two days purposely avoided discussion and study of the President's idens of a \'Olunteer army to replace the Selective Service System. Spokesmen for the committee sa>d the issue was avoided because of the. un- CC'rtalnty O\'er whether the President's .suggestions would be adopted. A shorter·range viewpoint \\'as e:<- amincd. instead, they said, so thal 1 more equitable .system of tht. draft could be inaugurated lo last unti l the volunteer armed forces Idea becomes reality. The western committee suggesL1 that 1nost <ie!cnnents, particularly student ones, be phased out to eliminate in- equities in the Selective Service System. The advisers, all ranging In age from JS to 26, suggest that their plan would eliminate tbc draft--dodglng "perpetual l'iludenl" who remains in school under hii deferment to avoid conscription. The group 's report cites "financial and intellec1ual disc rimination" under the pre.sent student defennent structure. By a vote of 18 to 9, the group el~ted to suggest phasing out the 11-S deferment and a freeze in granting of new ones. Stu<lcnt.s prescntl}l holding the student rleferment \\'OUki continue with it until they either gh·e It up or reach the age of 24 . Fo r medical stu dents. lhe committee :::ugges~ nominal federal grants for 11ndergraduates and "suba:tantlal'' flmds for iraduate mtd sludent!, failure lo ('()mplete studlrs w o u Id mtlke 11 merliC'11l student Immediately t:4~1ble fnr military service. Committee membe.r1 said they baltd theiJ sugr(estions 0'1 thou1ands of houn of lntervte•·11 with dralt·&ge youlhs. > • Coast Pushes Oil Plea Senate Urged to Ban Federal Drilling • • B1 mOMAS roRTUNE ot .. DeltJ '""' Sllft A U.S. Senate subcommittee today has taken back to Washi naton, D.C., a wealth of tesUmony l.n opposlUon to federal oil drllllng off Oran"e County and the rest of the California coast. Seven persons representing the Oranse Coa11t area were among those who spoke· 1n two ~· of hertna:s .Fri.day and Satur- day ln Santa Barbara. The Subcommittee on M i n e r a l 1 , Materials and Fuels of the Senate Interior and Insular Affairs Committee was on a fact-finding mission and will take no action prior to a second hearing in Washington. A date for that hearing has not yet been set. Newport Beach f\fayor Mrs. Doreen Seal Beach Stand On Alamitos Base Expected Tonight Seal Beach city councilmen are ex· pected to take a position on the future of the Los Alamlto!i Naval Air Station tonlgh~ during a 7:30 city council session. The cities of Garden Grove, Stanton and Los Alamitos have alread y adopted re.sol ution against a commercial airport and have asked the land to be de~eloped for parks and recreational purposes. County Supervisors are eye_ing the possibility that the huge, 1,337-acre plot can be wed as a site for a general avia- tion 1irport once It iJ phased out in June 1971. l\lean\vhile, Los Alamitos residenU have begun a petition drive against such an eventuality. More than l,200 petitions have already been collected according to 1.-0s Alamitos City Manager Bill Kraus. SB Councilme1i Pledge Children Won't Take Walk Seal Beach childttn will not walk kt school despite elimination of bus aervice by the financially troubled Los Alamitos School District. That is the pledge of Sea1 Beach city councilmen In ruponse to an an. nouncement by school offlclalJ that bus- ing cuts \\'ere necessary because of a re- cent tax override failure. The city will underwrite lhe bus service, councilmen said. Involved are. about 850 elementary school student.s liv- ing on the< north side of Seal Beach. Parents are currently trying to raise enough money to conUnue bus service for the remainder of the term, according to councilmen. but if the parenla are unsuc- cessful, the city will help out. tfeanwhile, the school diltrlct has ex- tended busing for it.s 1,900 students anothttr week. Other cuts start.eel Friday. however, with the elimination Of 52 noo-teachlng employes. Antique Auto Battle Resumes A battle between two nei11hbors over an antique car will resume during the 7:30 p.n1. session, Tul'sday of lhe folllltain Valley City Council. J ohn Mangano, 9605 La Granada A'·e .• has asked the council to reverse planning commission permission given to his ntlghbor. Harold Perry, 17080 But- tonwood St., to build a second garage for storage of an old car Perry is rebuHding . The t\\'O men fougilt a verbal battle before the planning commisston tv.·o "'eeks ago "'hen Perry won commission approval for the garage. Tuesday's item is a public hearing. Marshall, Laguna Beach City Councilman Roy Holm and San Clemente City At- torney Carl Kegley all presented t.ileir city's endorsement of a bill to ban oil drilling in federal waters beyond the three-mile limit wherever the stale of California has created a sanctuary. -This means offshore of all of Orange County south of the Santa Ana River dividing Huntington Beach from Newpcrt Beach. Others testifying from the county were Newport Beach residents Mrs. T. Duncan Stewart and George Zebal for the Coastal Area Prot.eeUve League, County Board of Supervisors Chairman Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach and Al Nelson, assistant director of the County Building Depart- ment who administers the COUl'lty's oil COdl'. Pitrs. Stewart tractd the Protective League's involvement from 1955 when the state Cunningham.Shell Act created the oil drilllng sanctuary south of the Santa Ana River and Zebal spoke about geological problems In oil drilling. Testimony on the Santa Barbara situa- tion was given by state administration of- ficials, assemblymen and county or Santa Barbara officials. The only member of the Senate mb- committee present was ill chainnan 1',rank Moss (D-Utah). Members of the subcommittee staff and of the U.S. Department of the InterJor were in at· tendance, however. and are expected to offer recommendationa on varloua Senate oil drilling bills. Beach's Burke Against Forced School Busing Assemblyman Robert H. Burke IR- Huntington Beach) went on record today as a foe of forced busing to achieve racial balance in schools. He backed the State Board of Educe· lion's ''strong and responsible stand in rescinding the busing regulations." The legislator was referring to a vote of the board in Sacramento Friday in wh.ich the board said it !avored the balan- cing of schools in ways other than busing. "This action of course nullifies some of_ the irresponsible court decisiom which had been based on the board's scrapped guidelines," Burke said. The lawmaker added, "The dependence. a.nd use of these guidelines as a crutch and foundation by the courts, to require and forct busing of students upon local school districts, is clearly being refuted by the state board. "By rescinding the guidelines, they are saying that the courts had distorted the orig-inal intention of the busing guidelines by making requirements out of them," Burke claimed. The assembl)'JTla n said the State will attempt to draw up" a set or more responsible regulations" at next month's meeting. Police Di sperHe 500 Police \\'ere called to tl\e Cal Slate Fullerton campus Saturday night to disperse a group of about 500 who milled in front of the gymnasium when they couldn't gel in to hear a rock concert by the Paul Butterfield Blues Band. tJPI T11t~l!tlt Totay's' 'Tree Bo11se' Tony Cam~bell, 11, ol Dimondale, Mich., has the most unique tree- house on his ~lock, or perhaps on ~ny block, for that matter. Tony'~ father had this englneless auto hoisted up into a large tree behJnd ~s house and installed a trap door in the fioor. Tony dubbed his new hideaway the "Love Bug" after a recent \Valt Disney move about a small car with human characteristics. You Work Less You Save Money Keeps things cleaner without ejfort, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last longer. Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans FREE Estlm~tes! Phone Sears Today! I Sears I --------So. Coast Plata. 3333 Brist.il St Phone 540·3333 . I I ' I I I I I I i I ,\ 1 1 I I I I I \' I I I J 7 ' . -... -· • • Newport Beaeh EDIIION N.Y. Stoeks VOL o}, NO. o), ) SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNrA MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1970 TEN C&NTS Coast Mal(es Oil Ban Plea Drilling Opposition Told -to Senate Committee By THQMAS FORTUNE • 01 .. DIHl' ,Utt SIMI A. U.S. Senate subcommittee today has taken back.to Washington, D.C .. a wealth ot testimony, in opposition to federal oil drilling orr Orange County and the rest or the Californ ia coast. Seven persons representing the Orange Coast area were among those wilo spoke in two days of herings Friday and Satur- day in Santa Barbara. The Subconlmitlee on ~1 i n e r a 1 s . i\1ateriats and Fuels of the Senate Interior and Insular Affairs Committee CG Busy .4s Fast Fog Traps Boats Scores or pleasure boats caught in a swift moving fog Sunday kept Coast Guard , Coast Guard Auxiliary and 1-larbor Deparlment rescue boats from Laguna to Los Angeles Harbor busy on 5earches until a late hour Sunday. First "mayday" distress signal came rrom the SO-foot cabin cruiser Di.no JI out of Newport at 10:52 a.m. when the owner, Frank A. Costella, reported he was aground in dense fog off South Laguna. Orange County Harbor District 1>9au \vere dispatciled to the scene along with a Coast Guard helicopter out of San Diego and the Coast Guard 9a-foot cutter Cape lfiggon out of Newport Beach. Before rescue vessels arrived on the scene, Costella reported that he had been pulled free by a small skiff and was no longer in immedi,_te danger. The Cape Hlggon took the Dino II in to\V at noon and brought it to the Newport Harbor Department. There was 110 majoi' damage reported. Marine radio channels crackled for hours as boats re ported they were stranded in the dense fog with no power or sail. * * -t: Busy Weekend For Lifeg uards Newport Beach lifeguards experienced thei r busiest weekend or the year so far with beach crowds of 60,000 Saturday and 55,000 Sunday and lots of people in the water, but only Jogged six rescues. The weekend served as ·a tune-up for lifeguards after the slow winter months. with next weekend marking the start of Eas ter vacation for school children. Assistant Lifeguard Director Kendall Jacobsen sa id water temperatures still were a wintery 57 degrees but there were a lot of people in the waler for the time of the year. f\fore than 160 preventative actions by lifegua rds kept the rescue count down, Jacobsen said. Saturday was sunny and clear while Sunday it was foggy most of the day. To- day it was sun ny again with v;ater tem- perature up to 59 degrees. Citizen Soundof f Set Wednesday By Area Council A special Town Hall-style meeting in ";hich citizens may sound off for three- minutes on anything from sex education lo smog is scheduled Wednesday by the Jlarbor Area Coordinating Council. The unui;ual event 'viii be at 7:30 p.m. in the 11oag J\.1emorial Hospital Confer· <'nee Center. directly across Ne"'port Avenue from lhc hospital building it- self. Council members meeting in a brain· storming session develoJ?ed a number or inte resting local issues tG which anyone mav respond, stressing that the public ii . Invited. t Among lbe.m are : water and air pol\u- lion. se:t education in the public schools, development of Upper Newport Bay, heach erosion, mental health suvlct's, narcotics 'u.st: by the young, campus dis- nn:lers, the draft versus a volunteer Army and a host of other topics. orncers for 1970 will also be eJected \Vednesday night . "'ith the nominating committee introducing nine i)rospecllve leaders. Thry include : President . hfn. Gwenda- \\"aLson : Vice President: Mrs . Joyce r~os- 1er. Recording Secretary, Airs. Gene-- vie\'C natc5; Corresponding Secrel•ry, :\!rs. Joan Peace: Treasurer. h1rs. Don> thy A. Dietlel: and dlrcctors-1...ouis J. 'Yantnrn. r-.1ni . Ken Lewis, Kim Strurt, nnd hlrs. Peg Ogden. was on a tact-finding mission and will take no action prior to a second hearing in Washington. A date for that hearing has not yet been set. Newport Beach ~fayor Mrs. Doreen htarshall, Laguna Beach City Councilman Roy Holm and San Clemente. City At· torney Carl Kegley all presented tileir city's endorsemenl of a bill to ban oil drilling in federal walers beyond the three-mile limit wherever the state of California has created a sanctuary. This means offshore of all of Orange County south of the Santa Ana River lJ.S. Radar Post dividing Huoti.ngton Beach from Newport Beach. Others tesWying from tile county were Newport Beach residents Mrs. T. Du::can Stewart and George Zebal for the Coastal Area Protective League, County Board of Supervisors Chairman Alton E. Allen o! Laguna Beach and Al Nelson, assistc.nt director of the County Building Oepart· ment "'ho administers the county's oil code. ~1rs, Stewart traced the Proteeli ve League's involvement from 1955 when the sta te CuM ingham·Silell Act created the ,Reds Annihilate Secret Laos ·Base WASH.lNGTON (AP) -North Viet- namese troops annihilated a sm all American force operating a secret radar instalialion hidden in a limestone cave atop a mountain in Laos, killing at least 12 U.S. servicemen , the Washington Post reported today. The America ns died March II, 1968, the Post said, defending the 'radar, recon- naissance and rescue base. The site con- tained highly sophisticated electronic gear for directing bombing raids along the Hi Chi Minh Trail and over North Vietnam, the report added. In a Vientiane datelined dispatch by T. D. Allman, the 1tory "1d the' defeat SW· feted at the handa of the North Vlet- n."JDeR ft.s kept a tecret. The Defense Department made no comment on the report. • Over the wetkend, however, White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler disclosed there were "some" U.S. casualties in Laos since 1962 be.!idea the earlier confirmed death of Army Capt. Joseph K. Bush Jr. Ziegler declined to state the exact number of Am crieari military personnel who had died as a result or hostile fire, saying only that it "·as "less than 50." According to the Post. the base was ca lled Phou Pha Thi and was located on a 5,ll60-foot peak in northeastern Laos about 15 miles frGm the North Viet- nam frontier. Radar nets dotted nearby hills and Air Force and Central Intelligence Agency personnel used the valley landing stri? as a base for American-led teams of Meo lribesmen entering North Vietnam on harassment missions, tbe Post 6'!id. JDi:hly soptUstlCattd electronfc gear was housed'tn a Umesthne cave and U!ed to electronically felease bombs and guide planes to targels over North Vietnam, the report added. · HelJcopters also reportedly used the base for rescuing flyers downed in Nonh Vietnam. Two ground attacks failed to dlslodge the troops, the Post continued, and in (Ste LAOS, Page !I U.S. Tells Laos Raids; Russ WantBombing Halt SAIGON (UPI) -The United Stale! began announcing air strikes into Laos today and reported the losses of three more U.S. pl~s to ground fire there. Headquarters aMounced the departure of more Gls for home and said American lroop strength in Vietnam fell to a 29- mGnth low last week with withdrawal of 3,900 Americans from the war zone. Jn Its Cirst aMouncement or U.S. air strikes into Laos, tile command said : "Air Force, Navy and Marine Corps aircraft yesterday {Sunday) continued in- terdiction operations against the Ho Chi 1'1lnh Trail in Laos. Air Force aircraft flew combat support missions in Laos for Roya l Laotian forces. In addition, B52s participated to interdjction operations along the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos." The official disclosure that American planes art bombing Laos, along with the announcement of l,1.S, plane losses there, meant a further step in taking the wraps off what has since 1964 been a secret air campaign. Jn ~1oscow, meanwhile, Premier Alexei N. Kosygin told the United Stales the first step towards any attempt to restore pcact in Laos must be an end to American bombing raids. Until the bombing stops, Kosygin said It would be "unrealistic" for him lo con- sider President Nixon's request that the Soviet Union and Britain attempt to end the righting in the Southeast Asian kingdom . Kosygin placed much Gf the blame for lhe war between government and Com~ munist forces in Laos on the United States.· He made no mention oi North Vietnamese military support for the Communist Pathet Lao. (Nixon said recently that 67,000 North Vietnamese soldiers are operating in Laos.) Nixon. In a message to Kosygin, llad asked Moscow and London, cochairmen of the 1962 Geneva convention that pro-· claimed Laos neutral, to use their good offices among the teaty's siiJ1ers to restore peace. Stock Jllarkeu NEW YORK :AP) -Stock market prices were skidding late this afternoon. with losing issues outdistancing gainers by more than three lo one. Trading was slack. (See quotations, Pages 18-19). oil drilling sanctuary south of the Santa Ana River and Zebal spoke about a:eoJO'gical problems in oil drilling. • Testimony on the Santa Barbara silua· Uon was given by state admln~tratlon or- ficials, assemblymen and county of Santa Barbara officials. The only member ot the Senate sui>- committee present was its chairman F'rank lt1oss CD-Utah). Members of the subcom mittee staff and of the U.S. Department of the Interior were in at- tendance, however, and are expected to orfer recommendations on various Senate oil drilling bills. Candidates Open Newport Campaigning • Newport Beath City Council candidates \\'ill square off for the flrst time Tuesday in two morning forums that will be cur· lain raisers for the 1969 campaign. 'T'he Corona de! Mar Chamber of Com- merce is sponsoring a breakfast .session to be followed by a mid-morning forum put on by the Woman 's Civic League of Ne\\'port Harbor. It will be a lirst opportunity for eight ('i ty council candidates to make public views they have been giving in private corfee stssions so far. 'l'wG other candidates forums are plan- ned later -11nother breakfast by New- port Harbor Chamber of Commerce April. SI and an evening program by the Le:ague or Ylomen Voters of the Orange Coast April t1 • ,. { ' Tht e'lettion ts Tuesday, April lf. Bf coinclde0et, t"·o candidates each are running th?---four City CounclJ seats to be filled this year. They are: Distri ct One -Incumbent Howard Rog- ers versus former city coW>Cilman Al For git. District Three -Attorney Roy Woolsey versus water district manager Cart Kym la. District Four -Pharmaceutical sales- man Walter "Wally" Koch versus attor- ney Milan Dostal. District Slir -Building contractor Rich- ard Croul versus student James Aynes Jr. (Thomas Stadlinger's name also will ap- pear on the ballot but lie has withdrawn from the race.) The Corona de! Mar Chamber of Com- merce breakfast .session Tuesday will be-. gin at 7:30 a.m. in the Hunter Room at Reuben's Airport Restaurant. ·Breakfast will cost $2.75 per person, but persons are welcome to come just to hea'r the can. did ates. The Woman 's Civic League forum Tues. day will be at JO a.m. in the 1nultipurpose room at Mariners Library. Mystery Blaze Destroys Files A mysterious arson case in which busi- ness records were burned at a Cost.a Mesa manufacturing plant was being probed today by fire department lnves- li@':ilortt Smoke billowing from an office trailer at the Trautwein Bros. marble slab con. struction company. 2057 Placentia Ave,, led passerby James Taggart to repcrt it Saturday . Costa Mesa Fire Department Battalii:in Chief Ron Coleman said today that his men were Inspecting the scene. but had appa rently found nothing since their Sat- urday probe. Business documents were piJed on the floo r and other~ \vere set ablaze in a file drawer by "''hoever pried the front door open to gain entry, ' Freeway ·Fight Flounders Group Lacks Leaders in Battle tQ Bfuck Route A group that supposedly Is trying to block Pacific Coast Freeway from eom· ing through Newport Beach apparently Ls without a leader. City Councilman Paul Gruber SBid he Isn't hea ding up the freeway fight: Mar- shall Dulfield probably will. Bui Duffield tod ay said he hopes he won't be head of the group. Exactly who the freeway opponents are ls hard to pin down. About 30 persons met at lhe Balboa Bay ClubJor breatfaat this-mornltta" with city ot/icia.la to learn cxactly what the adopttd freeway ali11nment would look like. Ouf· field 1ald those In attendanet! wuc. left ovtr fl"om the old Freeway Committee of 100 that wanted to move the rou te inland. The committee has some money left over, Durfietd saJd, and they plan to spend it to prepare a "plcturlzalion" or what the freeway route would do to !ht city.- "The ki nd of thing you can 't tell just from a dotted line running through the city." The mock-up will be shown lo interested people Jn the community, he said, to see JI there is senlimtnt to block"the freiway. "If it isn't golng to be a community thing II is ol no momtn~"·DulReld aald. .The: former USC footbalJ All American said he cloeaa't want to head the opposl· tion group beCause be ha1 property in the path ol llle frteWll)' (Bay~ ll'raii<r Park on land leased from tht lrvll'e Com· pany) and that m1ke1 him biased. ''Gruber has been tort of our leader and spokesm1n because of his official capa- clly with the city," Duffield said. But Gruber said. "I'm only assistln; 1 cltirens orgSnliatlon that needs Informa- tion." Information on !ht adopted route was prese nted this morning by Newport City Planning Director Laurence Wilson. Councilmen Ed Hirth. Donald J\.fr:lnnls and Roward Rogers were present with Gruber to erplain the city'• PoSltlon. T"'·o city council candldates who have said they oppase the rreeway, Al For1it and R6y Woolsey, 1lso wert present. ' To1ay's 'Tree Bouse' Tony Campbell, 11, or Dimondale, Mich., has 'the most unique tre~ hou se on his block, or perhaps on any block, for that matter. Tony s father had this engineless auto hois ted up into a large tree behind hi s house and installed a trap doo r in the floor. Tony dubbed his new hideaway the "Love Bug" after a recent \Vall Disney movie· about a small car with human cbaracteristics. . ' San Clemente Meet Asks Student Deferment End Th.i western half of President Nixon'a Youth Advisory Committee thls weekend drafted proposals to end student deferments at a two-day confere nce at the Western While House complex in San Clemente. The draft advisors from 27 states and Guam elected to recommend the end of defermenti; for all but medical students and young men in certain phases or agriculture. ' Findings and suggestiGns of the com· mlttee will be blended with recom· mendaUoos by Its eastern counterpart befor..i they are presented, by President Nixon to the impending hP.arings by the Sena': Armed Services Committee. The group which met on the Orange Coast for two days purposely avoided discussion and study of the President's Ideas of a volunteer army to replace the Selective Service System. Spokesmen for the commi ttee said the Issue was avoided because of the un· certainty ovtr whether the President 's 5uggestions would be adopted. A shoOO-range viewpoint was ex- amined, instead, they said, so that a more equitable system of the draft could be inaugurated to last until the volunteer armed forces Idea becomes reality. The western committee suggests that most defennents, particularly student Pancake Feed Slated April 18 Tht I Ith Annual Pancake Breakfast, sponsored by the Orange Coast Y!\1CA, will be held rrom 7:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. April 18 at Richard's Lido Market in Newport Beach. The Newport Harbor Y's Men's Club announced that funds received from the brea kfast will be used by the YJ\.1CA to reduce the loan balance on Y swimming poob. The hOtcakes and sausage break.fa.st will cost $1 . Richard's A-1arket Is donat- tn~ the food. Maddox to Run; To Join GOP?. · ATLANTA, Ga. (AP! -Go'. Lester Maddox announced today he will be. a candklate for lieulenant governor in lhl.s year's elections, but said he I s withholding a dttision on whether he will awttch to the Republican party. The Georgia Democra.t, aliO told a news conference his wife, Virginia, will not be a candidate for 80vernar. Maddox said his decision on whether to switc h parUts will de~on \\'helher the Repubbctns can convince him such a move would be ln the best intere5l5 of lht 1tatt. ones, be phased out to eliminate tn. equities In the Selective Service Syatem. The advisers, all ranging in age from 18 to 26, suggest tbal their plan would eliminate lhe: draft-dodg~ng "perpetual studen1" who remains in school Under hfa deferment to avoid conscription. The group•s report cites "financial and Intellectual discrimination" unde r the present student deferment slructure. By a vote of 18 to 9, the group eletted to s~ggest phasing out the 11-S deferment and a freeze In granting of new ones. Students presenUy holding the student deferment would continue with it until they either gi ve It up or reach the age or 24. For medical students. the committee suggested nominal federal grants for undergraduates and "substantial" funds for graduate med sludents. · Failure to complete studies w o u I d make a medical stude nt immeWately eligible for military service. Committee members said they based their suggestions on thousands of hours of interviews with draft-age youths. HARBOR HlGll'S WATT'S RESIGNS Wade Watts today resigned as Newport Harbor Hlg:h football coaclt, citing ill health as the reason for quitting the post he held for iive years. Watts' successor. has not been named. See sPorls, page 21, for complete details. Orange Coast lt'eather The Orange Coast can look for fair weather Tuesday, with temp- eratures In the middle ?O's. 'I'hert will be more early morning coast- al fog, hoWC\'tr, which ahould clear ofC before mid·mornlng. INSWE TODA. Y ThoMgh IC--WO.$ clolidtd "P badlg by heav11 fog , Utt South- klnd'1 ntto collegiotl S<1iling tit?nter 1till l1a1 o window on th~ bay and it it roas dtdicated Sun- dau. Page 24. ... '"'' t4 c11rft,..i. 1 (11«-lfl• U1 1 CllnlfMill t7·Jt c-in · u CtM-• H DM\11 ""Q' ' 11•1ttrl1t "''' ' °"""'"'""""' ,. !'NI-• ,,..,, ...,_.,. u AINI Ll llfffl II • \ I •• Mooday, Ml!th 16, 1970 .. ' l)AILY ,ILOT Sl~ff 'Mii Good Neiglibo1• P olicy Kevin Sorenson, 10. of 4809 Bruce Crescent, Ne'''· port Beach, \vatches fireman A. J. Wagner douse smoldering mattress at the home of Mrs. J ane Parkford , 4815 Bruce Crescent. The boy, hom e from school with a cold, reported the fire in the Lido Sands area after going to r.1rs. Parkford's house shortly before 11 this morning to borrow a plumb- er's helper. He found the home full of !make. Mrs. Parkford was not home at the time. Firemen said a sun lamp apparently started the blaze. Beach Police Push Probe On Sla)ring Working round-the-clock, 18 l-luntinglon Beach detectives vbill'd drizcn~ "[ Orange County bars :ind l:i!kcrl to 'iS suspects in thrct days, tr)ing lQ unr:J\l'l the mystery surrounding the killin:; Th ursday of a tattooed Anaheim drug a 1l- dict. "We won't let up on this until \Ve have our killer," declared Dfotcct1ve. Scrgtant Monty ~tcKennon today, the nian in charge or the massi\'c investigatioo. Friday morning, hours aflf'r the body or Thomas Carmine Asl orina, 25, \VaS found near Sunset Aq uatic 1'ark. three car.loads of detectives brgan c)1rc~1n~ Astorlna's known han g-0uts, mostly in seedy Orange County bars. Detectives didn't stop ;ill \1•eekcnrf as the y rounded up 75 inrlividual'> who either knew Astorina or n1ight ha\'e seen hin1 the day he died. Police sa id one Sunset Park boa! ov.·ncr reported spotting two ca rloads of men in the area the same night Astorina \1a ~ killed. Detectives aren't telling most of \Yhat they learned ov('r th(' v.·crkcn(i . tut f\lcKennon said loday, "011r h~I 11f suspects is narrov.'ing.'' Astorina's estranged v•ife. Ltnd;i .~lifr, 23, o( Garden Gro ve. was also quc!ltionr,t by invest igators and may h1\C ~11rpl1e1I more names of Asto rina's fricr.f:~. ~tys\ery sti ll ~hrouds the: rc·,1~ in I ·r Astorina 's presence near lhr. a11u:1lol' park. though drugs seem lo h;i·.c bcrn tllr key to the kill ing. One theory is that Astonn:i l\<I~ 1 i~h friends awaiting a boa~ ~11eak1ri:: i11 :11 n1ghl 1Yilh a narcotics ~hl)Hlll'lll, "r 1 r sunply mighl have been 1.1kcn lo a [1,11r-lv area by drugged friCnds an.:ry 01'u S'J!llC· thing he did. :DAILY PILOJ; . " 01!:.t..NGE CO.t.S T PUllL15HlrH> co·.,., .. ., Robed N. w,,d ""''ICft,.t •flO PvDli>Mr Ja(.~ rt Cvrlt v Vl(.c P"11dt"r t lld O.n•r1l /',1" ~·· 1ho..,11 l<etv I ea''°' A lho..,11 A M ~r 11I· "• l>•,.•o·n~ [a•· The"'•' Fer!u"• '"~a~rt lltlt~ c11, !'11 Ntwport l each OHi(t 111 I Weit B1!bo1 Bo~I••• .! M.ilin9 Aild r1u : P.O. Bo• 1a;• .; Othe1 Offlc"': Cct .. M,H: SJOWt11 fl•• 51"•' L11111\f Beath: 222 l'o••lt ,._.,., • Hunllflt!Ofl lltlClli 111U llr•~h no., e'• 11 San Clerntn1t. J05 Norin e C•m1110 ~••I DA ILY J'll.Ol, Wit" wfl1ct\ h a>r"lb '>fG I'• N.-Prt)'I, h aubll'""' lll•t1 "'""' 1. 1111 111 -ftt' tlCllllDnt kif Lt91•"• l•~C"· N9WMO"I &etdl. COlll M*W.-1-1-~ 8Mdl •tld ,._ .. t" 11111n. •loflt ""'" ,.,., ... bft•I t'(llfleolf. 0ranM (Mli p ~. •>..., C....,_ Pflfllltll 11!.lnll ••~ •I ?Ill 'f\ ... I •11* I J"'!(.. Ji•-' Sf'•(~ A-..! l~ W11t 111 iltMf, C'o1li 11.iD -- 1.i., ..... 17141 ••t·<il21 Cla11ltfed Adffttlsl11' 642·5671 ("¥t .... I, 1t1a,. Orlfllt Golo•I f'Ubl "1!nq c-•n•. Mo -1•111 ot>•. 111u""''(''"• Ml!fll'lll ,...,tel ff fdWr11.,>n"~'I _.,.,ft !Ml' be ,..,..IKll'CI Wol'*ll -·II " .. mi..'1olt ., ~tftl"I •• ...,., SotcvolCI (.{tu "'"" ro11o"" 1.1~-·• ~"'" .... Cftll Mol1•, CtUIDf"!llt. l.~l'i' .. ""'W.n "" urrlfor IJ,M ,._ltll'YI l)l' rMll U 6CI .,..1~1~1 m!Utarv dtlll~tf11111, tl Oii l!Wft!"!~. ' I r Newport Lifegum·d Saves 3 Boys F1·om Beach Surf State li feguard Tom Russell , 22, of Ne\\'port Beach was the hero in a nerve. 1•.racking rescue of three boys, aged about 12. in roaring surf, rip tides and dense fog off Huntington SI.ate Beach Sunday. Russell, 2133 Ocean Blvd., a 3'h:·year lifeguard veleran, described the near tragedy today. Accident Prone Street Corner Gets More Signs Stop s;grr.1 are being rei nstalled on Jr. vine Avenue at Clay Street in Newport llP ir,hts. The stop signs \\'ere removed only last Dec. J. but since that time there ha\'e been threi> right·angle collisions at the intersection. City Traff ii;: Engineer Robert Jaffe said he is not so prideful that he won't admit he made a mistake. None of the collisions h.:ive involved injury, he said, but he con· siders all acridents serious because in· juries and even fatalities could be the rl1fference or only "a fraction of a second nr an inch.,. Looking al the intersection analytically, he said, four·way stop signs are not need. Pd. But he concludes the area is so laced \1 ith four • .,..·ay stops that the residents in lhe Hi:'ights depend on them. >\II six dri vers involved in the accidenli; v.·ere local Newport Beach people, Jaffe ~aid. Rcn10\'ing the stop signs didn't cause 1lr!\ ers to speed up, he said. At mid block 11 , ~pe"rls ll'f'rt' still the same. ··People depen ded on son1eone else to ,,10p. I C"tln'l change society up lhere," he rl'm:trked. Unr uh Quits Joh As Demo Leadei· LOS ANGl!:LES (AP) -Filing his r"n1ination papers for governor, Jess ! ·nru:i announced today he is M!slgnlng as U<mocratic floor leader of the Assembly . ! ·nruh told ncv.·smen al the county rr~1.-:rar'<; office that he wouldn't ha\'e •une to renduct his campaign and con· unue in his Asse1nbly positi on. He said tn-i re~iAnation. submitted today, 11.·HI be ,.rrt•r111 e ~larch 31. Thc 47 ye ar .o ld I ngle woo d "· .t'n1bl~1nan rl!lcascd a fina nci11l slati>· 1ncnt showing his net v.·orlh lo be $15,000 , most of it in a ranch in San Oiego Coun- '.I Hi• ''·as acco111 pan1ed b.v his \\'ile. \·1ri;1n1a. observing a birthday, and a nnmber of supporlers. many or them \'0un~. lte said the suppo rters had work- 1·d 1n the Kennedy, ~lcCarthy and lh 1nphrcv cam paigns in the I as t 1 ~cs dential elccUon. .4 rt. W ork Stolen f'ror n 1l1esa Slto1 v \r:1•1 <i~nger Caligiuri, of Orange. was t 1\1i!l(}Ut a single canvas Sundriy when ~ .11r11n1> 11.ho saw them d1spla}'eri In a l ~·:i )i11~a parking lot llked her style. Tll>' r1~"' J)l\lllOngi>. v1dued..a1 $$00. wer<1 \r•!"n fr11m hl!r c;ir at 1550 Suptrior Ave. Shi" ~;url lhe llrtwork lnc.luded mosily rvi1 ra1ts of <'O~!umed ~1exlcnns and ex· «t•r orientu!S, although one wa:\ 11 Sl"C· r.· • .;ulili nude woman. • "I was sitting in a jeep ~'ith another guard. The fog was really bad -\\'e couldn't even see the sea from the life· guard tower. "I saw a rubber life raft floating in the wate r. This usually means someone's in trouble so I went out trying to follow Lhe direction of the raft. "l found one boy and he was real panic· ky. 1 strapped him to the lifeguard buoy 1 had wilh me and he said 'Ufere was another guy with him. "( told him the buoy would keep him afloa t and not to let go. Then 1 went afler the other boy. I got and strapptd him to the buoy. He was pretty exhaust· ed. "Then 1 saw a third boy. He wa.s fl oat· fog on his back and was nearly gone. He couldn 't swim and J had to cross chest him back to the buoy. "I strapped him to the buoy and told him to hang on too. We were In a rir and past the surf line. I couldn't tell "''here \l'e were. I could hear the surf but couldn't see the shore. Another guard, John Nee leman, who had been with Russell in the jetp, JSWam out and found the group. "He was lucky to find us. He hit us dead on. Then the boat appeared from nowhe re and boy was 1 glad to see it. J don't know how we would have got ten back." The rescue boat, using its radar had gotten a fi'.'I: on the jeep on the beach and searched the area opposite the jeep. The boat took all five aboard and dropptd !hem off at the construction pier by the 'Santa Ana River. Massive Busing Plan Rejected By High Court WASflI NGTON (AP) -The Supreme Court declined unanimously today to speed school desegregation in Charlotte N.C., via a massive busing plan. ' . The co urt gave no explanation a« It re- jected a request by civil rights lawyers for reinstatement of the buslng order, cnter~d Feb. S by Judge James B. i\Jei\f1/lan but stayed f\1arcil 5 by an ap. peals courL The rare setback for blacks. who have been consistently successful in pleas to the high court, probably means school in !he Charlotte.i\1eck lenburg districl will no! be subject to deeper desegregatiOn this school year. The dispute is scheduled to be argued before the U.S. Circui t Court in Rich· monct. Va .. April 9. Judge ~1c1\1il lan's b11si ng plan 1vould have added at least l~.000 student s lo lhe 23.000 children already bused to JSChool In Charlotte. From Page 1 LAOS ... early 1968 four Soviet·made biplanes at· tempted an air raid on the base. The old AN2.s, ho'vever. wert: no malch for the American helicopten that wt.nl aloft . Servicemen firing ~f·16 rlnes shot dov.'l\ two of the North Vietnamese Air f orce pl anes, the report said, The North Vietnamese finally overran the air sLrlp and fought I.heir way up the :side of the mountain, !he P0tt continued fino•ly O\·erruMlng the base. ' One American was quoted as sayina: th' American and Meo trOOps "fought to !he last tnan. -They we re all killed ~larch 11 Inside thal grnllo. An enormouJS &mowil of equipment was IO!t, too." ' j ' ' Top • • 1zens Ho or ed Seven Due Phi lco-Ford Service A 1vards Five cmployes and two Y.tl'e:. l)f cm· ployet of Pbllco-Ford Corporation';,,, ;-.., "'" Pott Beath aerospace operations v.1 11 J,,. presented community service :iwards ,11 a recognition dinner Thursd:.iv ni~ Among, them will be l\tarvii:i ElliOtl .. 1 Santa Ana father of four who hus ~1)('111 hiJ aft.er.work hours and v.acatio11 !1me the past three years in tire less ar·Lh ity to correct drug abuse and menta l r1 .. 1;1rd:1. tlon. Elliott is Ford l\1otor Co111r;1n1"·~ "1969 Cllizen of the Year·• for Or:.in ~· County. Others who will be rccognii.ed inclurle four from Cosla Mesa, Will iam Bundaruk, Reynold Pellelier, F. Artliur 1lnlcrr:.i1'1 and Mrs. Dorothy Gerner; '.\Ir~. A!ULc Peck of Fountain Valley, and ArthUr Hll~s of Hermosa Beach. Elliott, I systems supervisor with tl\r Aerospace and ~ense System;; 1opcr1:1· lions. newly crea ted and hcndqtf/\rterl!d in Newport Beach, v.·ill receive 11 to•,1 n crier's bell. · ' The 3J.year--old Elliott h;is 11'r1r~cd 1vi111 the sla te Legislature on dru~ ahli.~e a111/ i! reJSponsiblc for a slale1vide s1n·1•1•1· fl• •1' under \vay on dru~ treatrn!.!11t fr1l'ilit i1· · l' ·' has advised the Cn1nmuni1v Actinn ('c11.11. cil on drug addiction problr1n~ ;i11r! hP1·n a guest speaker throu~hout the ~··•tr nn drug abuse for t~e Red Cro~~. r o\i,_{' !!,... partments. civic and serric<' l'lub•. WILLIAM BANDARUK r~ :'!IN \'V. EL LIOTT Elliot also has -served on lh!' lid rd· ' ' directors or the Californ ia lntr.rn,., ~tental Health Council and ihr C;i' '11r<1 .. 1 Foundation for l\1ental llealth·~f<'n!-! Ii"· tardation. He is a direetor of Ih!' Jufl•(•r Chamber of Commerce nationwidr. The other service award winners: Bandaru!I:, 2448 Andover Pl11cr. \n .. 1·1 f\fe sa, was cited for aclivi1ieo:: in 1 .,. '' youth training school and otht:r "'' ,.1 v.•ork. includin,11. Exolor rr Seoul-r• I· , I his wife shared a 1965 Ci1izen r.r \lit•' ~r award.) Pelletier. 2443 Forrlh;irn Ot l\t'. r·r, 11 ~fesa. received recopn irion f•·r ' \1'ork and in projcc1s for Ario!· 1 .Junior Achievement C<llll/)<!1\Y r. I Cross. Rltterralh. 208 Vir(linL1 1'1:1··· r· Mesa. gels his av.•a rd for rh!1n i1 ;. tie~ in youth ed~cation . · Mr s. Gerner. 2992 .Ja1'a Hinol t f\1esa, was cited for errorts in rn·• u1• fund raising and you th \\'Ork Sh" 1 1 three·lime community srrv1re :i1\·,1r•I 11 in ner. t . ' • Mrs. Pec k. 17379 Ash St.. Foun13in \'11: ley, received recognition for chi \1!rrri·.; th eater and gifted children's wnrk Ross, of Hermosa Beach. gels hi . .; aw;ud for Boy Scout. church and hO!'ipilal prUJ· MRS. DOROTHY M. GE RN ER 1.rns. AR LINE D. PECK ""'· More than 90 nominations were rper11'" I for the Ford awards this year. The jut!~· ing panel consisted or five coun1v nc1,1 <;. papei' editors, DAILY PILOT J~ditnr.i_1. Chier 'n!omas Keevil. llober! r:eivct tit the Long Beach Press Tele~r;rn1, Pct Riiey or the Santa Ana Rt~islrr. T.t·on.1r1 I ~1rgeant of the Or ange Count~' E;roir•g News and Glen Youn s of the S;i:1 tli mente Sun Post. Neivporl l11 sla fl:• Trctffic M es sa "c /"" On Lightecl ~i :_r11 An illuminated traffic n1~sag1' 111·h blinker lights designed tn pre; l : r ~ end accidents Is being install1'r! ' I ,, • fie Coast Highway at the Upper '.\ -~~l""I • Bay Bridge. The sign is on the east end of ;j11• t,··111 ,. facing lra(fic heading lO"'arrl JltHl/1111-i•~•l Beach. Jt reads, "Prt.p.1re 10 St u!) The sign will be ac!1vatrd 1\ , 1 back up from the Dover Dril{' ~1.~ 't come to rest over detector<> al th• " end of the bridge. The det t•c1nr• 1• ' .~ register cars in motion, :r;a1d (l;-:i1• 11c• . traffic engineer with 1he sl:itc I'· '·I· !1 of Highways. The problem is t)lal \\'Cst\.l011nrl n1,,ro1;. ists can't see the Dover Dr11·e sr~11;1! t: the cars backed up un!il !hel' 1'f!!n1• ra 1" the crest of the bridge. Therr 1·, r" : ... 1 rear-end collisions at that locauori !111111• 1969, said NCwporl Beach ci!y T· J:f1. Enginur Robert J alle. Jaffe, therefore, requested thP "".~nuu! sign and the sta te highv;oay <lcp~~1rncn1 is now installing it. REY NOL D F. PELLETIER j,S. 1'roop 'f otal ~· \\l;QN (UPI) -U.S. troop strrngth 1'1 \'ietn:nn fell to a 29·mo nth low last 1•·ri•k 1vllh the removal or 3,900 morr \1ner1crin scr\'icemen from the v.•ar zone. lhr l'.S. cominand said today. Spokesmen sa id threre were 460.80!1 .\1ner1cans in \~ietnam as of !\larch 12, • HI ,, " \ ' " rua Work Less rouS avc Money E eeps l hi1 effort, eli m • ' ... ,., . L1u1ndry I• Cln.na I \ .\sk Abo ut ear s C011\'C11: .,, , F EE Estimates ! Phet!" ·• So. Coast 11::-.. ·-, -~-ca l'I . ' \One • '" .. I • , ' ' r.JT TE RRATH ;:a1 Dips 11.,1 ·1~·1.7(10 on ~1arch S. 1 "'1' :-ircngth figure "!'('I.: ending Oct. ti1~rr 11crc 463,000 '"1"<·01.I~ sho1ved. / 11 1• rrrnovcd nearly •l·.t11.11n 1n lhe past I ·haul 1h rings longer. I l'f'I Frl!dr ud ,,_ 1 ~d l\S -·a~I I . t. .I I I I I I\ \' I I I I \ I l • '' ' , I I De··butantes TO BOW -Awaiting their debut are (left to right) the Misses Theresa Louise -aiaJack, Valmere Lynne K'<isala, Jennifer Jean \Vittwer, ·•Renee Louise GonJd and Cynthia Loui se Donaldson. Excitement and antlclpaUon prevail ed duriJlg a luncheon last Saturday whf:n 22 young Harbor Areil women were honored with their mothers. The occasion was the·•lxlh "annual an· nouncement luncheon or E m p i r e Debutantes. Heating the gala were members of the ball committee: of the sponsoring orianization -Harbor Key of the Child Guidance Center of Orange County. Mrs. Frank Pendellon opened her Newport Beach home for the event. Greeti ng honored guests were r-.1r1. J . O'Hara Smith, president or Harbor Key; Mrs. Harry Kemp. ball chairman; fi.1rs. Jack ~1arshall, ball co-chairman, and fl.1rs. Murray Chotiner. debutante chairman. Luncheon chairmen were 1'1n. Van Parker and ~frs. Jean litiller, and other members of the ball commillee assisting were the Mmes. Norman Circle, Flave Gibbs, William Holmes, William Weaver, Allan Heims, Danny McKeever. J. Dwight Tudor, W. W. Stevenson, James C. Waydelich and John Wright. Debutantes, who will be presented lo society June 19 during the 1170 ball In the Newporter Inn, have donated efforts for the bette~nl of their community and have exemplified service, charm 11nd in· tcgrily. · Debutante s and their parents art ~1lss , Barbara Anne Bailey. fi1rs. Berton _...;.J Edv.•ard EJSon : ~1iss Bryn Bernard, r-.1r. -and ~1rs. Robert Beecher Bernard : r-.1ills -·Theresa Louise Blalack, 1\.1r. and Mrs. SERVICE RECOGNliED -Selcc'ted as 1970 Empire debutantes are (seated) Mi ss Debbie June Metzleur and (left to right) the Misses Nancy Ann New- brough. Oynthia PeUs and Nancy Sue Winfield. David Eugene Blalack; ~fiss Gail Jane Caras, Mrs. Kline Jackson: ti1iss Cbr'istine Marie Dixon, ~1r. and 1'1rs. Harold Franklin Dixon, and Miss Diane Louise Duffie, Mr. and ~lrs. Henry Charles Duffie. ~other! are Mis! Cynthia Looise Donaldson, Mrs. Timothy Peter Macres ; ~1iss Linda Marie Fox, J.1r. and fl.trs. David Williams Fox; Miss Renee Louise G<iuld, f.fr. and Mrs. Jay Harold Gould; Miss Susan fl.fary Hammer.slag, Mr. and Mrs. Julius George Hammerslag: Mi!i!! Valmere Lynne Kasala, ~fr. and ~1rs. Frank Kasala. and tifis11 Melodie Ann Keller , Mr. and Mrs. Glen fifarshall Keller . t-.1ore are !\1iss Debbie ,June Meti\eur. Mrs. Roblin filetzleur ; Miss Nancy Ann Newbrough, Mt . and Mrs. J oh n Newbrough ; fi1iss Cynthia Pclls, !\1r. and Mrs. William Franklin Pclls; Miss Shan· non Michelle Pratt, tifr. and ti1rs . Loui~ Edward Pratt: Miss Diane r-.1arie Rivera. Mrs. titichacl Rivera. and Miss Susan Joa n Shaw, !\1r. and r-.1rs. William Hollis Shaw. Concluding the list are f.fiss Mary Ther· esa Sullivan, Mr. and Mts. Lawrence James Sullivan ; ififss Cynthia Leigh Weber, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Ellsworth Weber: Miss Sue Winfield, fl.fr. and lif'r~. Charles Winfield, and Miss Jennifer Jean \Vittwer. Mr. and Mrs. Jean Richard Wittwer. STEPPING TOWARD WOMAN · HOOD -Preparing to make lhe1r deb\lt in June are (left to right) thf' Misses Diane Louise Duffie. Chris- tine Marie Dixon. Gail .Jane·Car3~. Susan Joan Shaw a nd Barbara .o\nne Bailey. BIG MOMENT AWAITS -1\ \\1hirl of parties will precede their bow to ~o­ ciety. AnlicipatinJ:! the exciting moments are (~eft to right) the Misses Mel~ die Ann Keller, Cynthia Leigh \Veber. Shannon Michelle Pra1t and ~l ary Ther- esa Sullivan. EXCl'l;EMENT PREVAILS-Awaiting the big mo- ment when they are presen ted to society during the 1970 Empire Debutan1e Ball arc (left to ri ght) the 1i'fisses Susan Mary Hammerslag, Diallf! Marie Ri· ve ra, Bryn Bernard a nd Linda Marie Fox . I ., • . Son Earns 'A' 1n Parents' New Morality Short Course '.~ • an OEAR ANN ,LANDERS f\1y husband 11nd J were amu sed by the leller lrom Ul£ mother v.·ho:5e college !<In announced hE- was bringinb 11 gi rl home for the .,·eekend. The boy s11id it would bt very hone.st and malurP rir hi s perenis if they y;ould allow him and his girl ti) occupy ht"i bedroom al home lllnce "we are shacked up here at ~chool." Our 5-0Tl. Bill, a11kPrl u11 U1r same ques- tion just ~fofe Chnstm~s. Here l/i. how V.'<'-handled It. ?i.1y hu~b.:1nd .:1n<'l T v.·crc stunned et B!ll':; reque~t bul we I rie<t not tn 11how il. \Ve lolfl him v.·r'd talk It ovtr aM lrt him kno11• \\'r hit on ;i .Plan. enlisted 1h'- <'OOper1llion Cir:\ nrl«hhpr Mlllllr :'Ind call· cd Bill back. Ills fathe r ga1d. "Bring the ANN LANDERS girl. We'll do our btst to adJUSt to tM 'new morality.'" We met Bill and hls gir1 at the airport She was wearing a long swe11ter, no skirt. 11andals, beads and she wa11 c11rrying 11 guita r. Our liOf1 looked just like her. When \\'! drove up lo our place her only com· mcnt was. "Some setup ," \Ve h.:1d inviled the nexl-door nrtghbnr~ 1 ru call them Tod and Allee) to dinner . and the siJ of WI got along weU. Alter din· ner m)' husband look Bill aside and said, ''I'll set you in the morning. t'm going next door lo sleep with Alice. Ted b1 ~leeping hert: with yoor mother." Bill ~id . "1 beg you r pardon. will )'OU repeal th'rlt ?" flf y husband repealed the state· men!. Bill grabbed him and said, "Dad. you don't mean ti. \Vhy that's terrible - you can't do such a thing right In our O\Vn house ••• " ~fy hu:;band asked In all in· ,. nocence. ''\Yhy not -lt'i; the \\'ay the world is going. isn't il?'' Bill replied. "But you and Mom are decent. reSpec· lable people. That stuff isn't for you~" r.1y husband counte_red with. "You're ;i decent person, aren 't you?'' \Vhy Is it OK . .'' Bill rul In. "f ge t lhc idei.. Dad - Jane sleeps at Aunt Ru1h"s tbnlght .. Not 11nother \\·ord was s;iid. Jiine rhd !leep At Aunt Ruth'!'. Al hreakfa~t the following morning Bill g11\'e u11 some odd looks. I'm .t urn h<t-Ugured Lhe--\\•hole thing oul during U1e nighl. If you want to print this Ir.her ynu 11~vl' our pc.rmia1lon. Sign it ---SJ.IORT COURSE-IN SHORT 1111.1,<. N .. I. DEAR SJIORT COliRSF:: Thank~ r"r Ou: d11y brl~htcner. Jt'a R hOnf'y. DEAR ANN LANDERS ' lt happ<ned aga in last night and l am rurious. Every time I go to a luncheon or a cocktail par- 1y. some we ll meaning fema le pulls me :11;ide, grabs th e hem of my dress and folds It under three or four inches tn ~how me how much "belier" I \\"OOld look if I "'ore my i;;klrt shorler. I am nearly 60 year11 Oki' AM h:ive no ii· lnsions About myse lr. ti1y legs are oot nn• be:i;l fcalurc. ~ty hemliJlf' Is a couple nf inchl?ll longer thlln fpsllion decrees. So \\·hat? 1 like H that ~·aY· Pcrha~ If you print lhi l'I tell er some of n1v-lrlr.nd11 will stt 11 Rnd ~cep thtir 110nd11 off my htn1.•. I might add. Ann. if !hf' n1in.is\.:lrled 'lid crol\'I <'ouhi ~~ lhcn1spJvei: 'II~ olhl't!' s!:e llfen1, they1rt 1011('1' lhe1r hetnl\n"I lllSICUd Of t'll · • couraging others to llrt lheh·s. -CLI* TON. 10\\'A : DEAR CLJNTON : t applaud your bf.. lfeptudeott. The corn In Iowa Is 1t1pPGCel 1.0 be high as 1111 r.lephant'1 eye by the 4la "'July, bul lhc skirts don't ha\'11 to be wp lhere! ! Whal is Fre_nch kl55in~? Is it wmn~ \Vho should sci the necking limits -th' boy or the girl? Can a shotgun "''edd.~ !Ucceed? nead Ann Landen:' book~~~ "Teef"age ~x -T<'n \Vay1 -ro Cool ll. Send SO cents In coin 11nd a long. sel(-34,~ dressed, stamp® envelope. ::. Aon Lander~ will ht gl,11d to help ynp \\Ith your probtrm.~. ~end them to !\tr lt) <'Are nf thr OAl LV PJLOT. entloslni ,._ !'t'lf·3cldrcsscd, sttunpcd cn\!elopt. • .. • • ( .......................................... 1!1!1!!!'11!11!!11!!1111!!11 .................. ,.. .. "' ................................................ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~---------~ ••• I . I I • • • • • • • D~ILY PILOT Mondl1, M1tth 16, 1970 April Date Announ ced -- During Family Party 1iir. and 1'1rs. Ernest :F. Ciuon bolted a dinner party Jn t!>tll llunUngton Beacll borne to mtnOUDCe. t h e betrothal ot Ille~, daughter, Donna Cluon to mymond A. Naylor Ill. Miss Clum lt a graduate of Huntington Buch Hlgh School and attended Orange Cont Colleae. ~be ts enrolled at Calilorola State College at Long Buch where. she is stu· dying for her teaching creden- tial. She is a Uttle Sister or Sigma Chi Sigma and the fratunity'a sweetheart. Her fiance, &on of 1.1rs . Lois Naylor of Huntington Beach and Raymond A • Naylor or Applegate, attended. HB Hlah, OCC and graduated with a bachelors degree from CSCLB. He pla:Yed varsity 'DONNA CLASON football at OCC and Long Brld•to-bt Beach state and is a member of liigma Chi Sigma. nits summer he will enter ried April 18. ln the Lutheran the Air Foree ~ot's·procram. Church of I.he Resurrection, The couple plan to be mar· Huntington Beach. Campus Life Viewed By Dean of Students Peering Around AMONG United Air Lines employees h o n o r e d for outstanding acbievem!'llt in Jll61 were G. W. Humphrey of .Corona del Mar and Frank Wheelock of Westminster •. Humphrey wu cited for an ezcepllonal sales effort and Whffiock was honortd for outstanding work in handling .. important groups traveling on lhe airline . TropliJes, s c r o 11 s and mone~ry awards we r e -presented durina a dinner in' Los Angeles. SPECTATORS at Ille Santa Anita' Handicap we.r1: Mr. and Mrs. Clement L. Hirsch of Newport Beach, who watched their entries, Snow Sporting and Figonero, In addition to "'njoying a lavish lunch in the no~·cr.filled clubhouse. Mom Shows' em She Can Do It Four sem~ters ~and a 3.&i grade point average later, ri,1ra. William Hatfield of Hun- Ungton Beach has proved to family and friends th a t "Mom" indeed can go back to school. Mother of three, Mrs. Hat· fi°fld decided to go baj.:k to school to prepare herself. for a refum to the work world in the field ol bWJiness ad- _minislraUon. Her obstaclts: wue many. Her stuQY.: habit.s were. rusty. Theri was more to learn thari ever, and her children viewed the whole Idea as lncreduJou.s, · funny and embarrassing. But her perseverance has paid ()ff in the form <J{ a $300 caah award in the. Bank of America Junior C o 11 e g e Buslneas Awards Program. "At first the kids didn't think t was serious. The MEETS CHALLENGE Mi1. Hatflold younger ones were em·1~========= barrassed. Now I think they are pleased and a little proud. There's nothing like achiev!J:ig to gain accepta nce," she saiiJ. 1':LECTED by Delta Delta ln addition to her studies, Delta as representative to the Mrs. Hatfield was worked as a Associated won1en Stu dents at volunteer assistant in a school the University of Ariz.ona is library, assisted vdth church Christie Smith. daughter of projects, served as a Cub Education and young people a member or the Community r.lr. and Mrs. Hav iland Smith Scout den mother and worked will be eumined when the Human Relations Board and of Newport Beach. with women's clubs. WEIGHT @. WATCHERS •.• 'lEMONS AREN'T ONLY ON TREES -Members of the Women's Auxiliary of Mechanical Engineers are gathering boutique items for a March 19 Lemon Tree Auction. Placing items on a lemon tree are (left to right) Mrs. ,Jack Ritchie and Mrs. Joseph C. Widmont Jr. The white elephants will be auctioned oft following a smorgasbord luncheon in Anaheim. Huntington Beach Branch or Y:0.1C.I\ and a Civil Service She is a junior, a physical She is the mother of Bob. 19, American Association ° f consultant. He is a member of education major and is active a student at UC~: Tom, 15, a University Women meets at 13 organizations including the in the Desert Mennaids swim sophomore at Marina High Some t1lkin9, soma listening ind 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, P11a rch Academy of Religion and Men-club and on the concerts com-School, and Debbie, 13, an 1 prog r•m fh1t wo~ks. TM 18, in the Mercury Savings and tal Health and N a t i o n a I mitl•e of t he Associated eighth grader at Springview fk •o HUk " L 1•5 550 Lo b '!ding l IE I,., C l'-L ,,, · 5 an w · li~R~e~h~ab~il~it~at~io~n~A>~~~ci~au~·o~n~. --~S~tu~de~n~ts~.iiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiO~School~~---------------~~~~~iii:iiii:iiiiiiiiiii~ Going, Going, Gone ·Bidders Pick Stored Lemon Beetle Tea Adds Spice The second annual Beetle Drive and English Tea featur· ing homemade delicacie1 of Brltish origin and a boutique staU will be sponsored by the Cavalier Chapter of t h e Speaking will be John W .. Shain.line, dean of students at CllUomia State College al Loog Beach. He will discuss problems in college that an administrator m]ght be called upon to handle, Including cam- pus confrontations. Going ·()net, going twice, going three times wams auc- tioneer f..1 rs. Arthu r E. Giesler <tS she lowers the gavel on lemons twhite elephants} for members and guests <lf the Woman's Auxiliary o[ the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Los Angeles Section. The color scheme also will be Daughters or the British carried out in the lemon tr« Empire. motif. The annual event will begin Dean Shainline, father of rive children, has been a teachu of psychology and has ·done family, chlld and mar- riage counseling. Drug abuse <:0nsultant, he has written numerous arUcles such as "The Dangers of LSD: Do We Have the Answers?" and co- authored a book, "Drug Abuse: and You," with Gcor1e U. P.lrs. Robert W. Cockrell \~ at 1 p.m. on Wednesday. ch airman of the event with March 18, in the Newport Demos. M All·-• A L · Riviera , Newport Beach. rs. rcu , 1ng o . Assistants will include the \Vomen are welcome a'(ld Mmes. Ellis Sharkey Jr., may ca!! Mrs. Edgar April, Arthur Bender, Burnie Craig, 545-0559, or Mrs. Jay Gracia, Dean Shainline is active in the community as an officer in the Mental Health Association, Spirited bidding will take place at the annual J.1.arch benefit smorg&lxird. IAmon Tree Auction. at noon on Thursday, J\farch 19, in Hansa House, Anaheim. Charles Freberg, Bre n Ion 968-2372, for information. M l Buck, Franklin Fowler Jr., The chapter .meets the first esa eague Jack Rltchie,-Joseph.. c .. Wid-Tuesday <lf each month at II La Lecllt U:ague meets the mont Jr. and Winchell !If. P.m. Tbose <J! British birth second Tutsday at 7:30 p.m. Parsons. who would like information Mrs. H. W. Moore, 545-4359, Proceeds \.\'ill go toward one may call J\1rs. Josep,h Schulist, will answer q u es l Ions or three national sCholar3hips._S4_,.._1_14_· ________ re_:g;_a_rd_in_:g_I_oc_a_uon_. ----II ~1rs. Giesler, assisted by Mrs. Clay Colley, will auction off items from a bright green and yellow decorated table. or student-loan funds for un- dergraduate and g r 1 du a t c studenls 'o! me c hanical engineering. ESQUIRE SOCKS DOWNY TOUCH SWEEPSTAKES. EVERYONE WINS FIRST PRIZE! Congrotulotions lo e'leryone who enters the Downy Touch contest. You all win first pri ze: o big, colorful Mort Drucker fun poster. O ur apolog ies if you win $e:COnd prize. All you'll get is a 62 hp MG midget sports car. O ur condolences if you win third prize, a Yamaha motorcycle. Or fourth prize, Panasonic radios. Or fifth prize, Columbia record albums. Hurry tci the Downy Touch d isplay in the men's depor tment. Wh ile you're there, get the most com- forlob!e socks on two feel. In any of .SS greet colors. Al only $1.50. You hove only till Moy 15 to win first prize. Sec.<lnd p!'ite MG Spo111 Cor • Open Dai ly 9:30 -6:00. Fridays Till 9:00 IN COST A MESA 11"1 D e: ~A .. TM •HT 8T0 1ll"i =., 1116 NEWPORT BLVO. At Harbor Blvd. lnttrteetlon SUNSHINE FROSTINGS AND STREAKS Reg. 2S.OO. 15.00 ' Be gla mour touched . Have your hair frosted or streaked in the most Oa zzlin~ woy. Frostings, Reg. 25.00, I 5.00. Glomoor touch strea k, 10.00 complete with set. EASTER PERMANENT SPEC IAL S Petite Solon Permanent, 10.00 Master Stylists Permanent, I 5.00 Both complete with cut and set. We specialize in L'Orecl Tints. Duort Perm e end c.hildr en's haircu ts. Ask to see our new hairpieces end wigs. Beeuty Selon, 60 I "'°'.llHllM 444 "· l ltl'tl .. •u.-111 NI W,OJlt ., , .... '" ltMJMI ~nu MUHt1HOTON •IACH 1711 l•l11ttt A••· m.un a 9alaxy of spring fresh better, new fabrics, perfect fo r Easter d resses "PRIN CESS" LENO SOLIDS dacron polyrslcrlcotton EYELASH CLIP VOILES daeron polyr~t('r/coll on BULLSEYE PIQUE contbtd col to11 Nolids LI NEN PRINTS & SOLIDS lOO':W 1mpor1rd nax BONDED SUITINGS rayon ililnd 11\k facr. 11crlt1.I "' lrlrol linins: EM BRO IDERED DOTTED SWISS polyes ter and cotton BONDED LACE polyeste1· It. cotton, '"-ashablc 42.'/:\4" v.·1de $1 Z9 y4. $1" , •. $1" yd. $1" , .. $24' , .. $298 , .. $32' , .. NEVER IRON EMBOSSED CRISKAY PRINTS WITH MATCHING SOLIDS l,;reat designs on pastel or white beekgrounds 100°/o cotton 36" wide tuar. w°""'.'ble "whispy" PRINT colorful mod an d contemporary designs on fortrel polyester and cotton sheers 44"/0 " wide tuar. woshable s119 yd. SPANKIN' NEW BONDED EASTER SUITINGS fabulous sprin g colors and weaves in plaids, novelties, and fancies, many with yern dyed solid matchmate ~ hlrbo ac.ry llc. face ocetate trlcot boc.k 54"/55" widths $398 yd. IMPORTED SCREEN PRINTS ON MACHIN E WASHABLE 100% POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS big, bo ld designs in mod spring colors on a never·ir on fabric compare at $6.98 to $7.98 yd. flnt qoollty full bofts '45" wide s499 yd. DACR ON POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS SOLID COLORS po~h colecti on of weaves fo r interestin9, self color de si gns 56''/51" widths mac.hint wash tumble dry ' -. s59a yd. ., J • ' • SOUTH COAST PLAZA -COSTA MESA HUNTI NGTO N CENTER -HUNTINGTON BEACH l llllJTOL AT SAN DllGO ,lllllWAT -145·1Sl6 / IDIHGllll AT ll!ACH IOULl!YARD -lt7.101 J Open Mond1y thru Friday 10 'til 9. -S1turd1y 'tit 6 -Sunday 12-S • I I I I ' 7 I I I [ 7 I ___ ..... __ _ • ·-. . ' ... -.... " t;osia Mesa· Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks . I . YO!!. 63, NO. 63, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 16, '1970 TEN CENTS U.S.-Base Riddled Secret Laos Radar Post Annihilated DAILY PILOT ,... ff ltlOw'f KMllltt W ASHJNGTON (AP) -North Viet- namese troop! annihilated a small -Amerkan force operating a· secret radar i(lstaliation hidden in a limestone cave atop a mountaln in Laos, killing at least 12 U.S. servicemen, the Washington Post reported today. The Americans died li1arch II, 1968, the Post said, defending the radar, recon~ nalssance and rescue base. The site con- taine<I highly sophisticated electronic gf"'r for directing bombing raids along Me sa Council Will Meet On Schedule HOSPITAL ATTENDANT RUSHES DROWNED TOT FROM PATROL CAR TO EMERGENCY ROOM Frantic Race Against Death Fails; Youngst.er Dies After Fall Into Pool Tiley have a saying in the circus world -the show must go on -and tonight's Costa Mesa City Council meeting will be ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Harbor Team To Ques tion Candidates Seven Costa Mesa City Council can. Vidales will be grilled by three in· tervlcwers \\lednesday morning on a !\feet the Press formal before CHART, the Citizens Harbor Area Research Team. The breakfast session will be at 7: 30 a.m. in the Costa Mesa Goll and County tlub 8.nd CHART officials stress that the pubilc is inviled. Jim Wood, president of CHART, says the panel has been observing the seven candidates for office in the April 14 elec- tion and studying questions prepared by board members. "~feet the CHARTS," as it has been designated, will feature lire company 01vner Donald Swedlund, attorney Donald Smallwood and Orange Coast College history professor Hank Panian. Wood said the purpose of the event is lo help detennine which t"·o are best qualified to serve as directors of a $6 million corporation -the city of Costa t.1esa. Thursday is anticipated lo be a long <lay for the incumbent city council can- rlidates and whatever number o r challengers participate in two sCheduled meetings. The Chamber of Commerce Legislative Committee plans a similar session Thurs- riay at 7:30 p.m. in City Council chambers. with specific questions to be announced Tuesday. Candidates to be questioned , in the order they will appear on the April 14 ballot. are incumbent councilmen Willard T. Jordan, an architect. and George A. Tucker. a bank ofUcer. The others are Theodore C. "Ted" Bologh, machinist : Jack Hammell, medical center administrator , B. Eli Kaser, 29, a sludenl. and Tom J\1anus, 24, a student, plus Davi d J . Yamal , an operating engineer. Bologh has said he will ~ycoll .the Chamber of Commerce evening session, while he can 't make the 7:30 a.m. CHART panel because he must go to \vork. Rangers Hunt Nude 'Hippies' JEft1EZ. N.M. (U PI ) -Tilt U.S. Forest Service sa id to.fonday Its rangers have started ' · h i p p i e patrols" to cul down on nude bathing in New ft1exico national forests. Fred R. Swetnam, district ranger for the Santa Fe National Forest, said the idea behind the patrols was to·P.vold confrontations with hippies viOlit!Dg fores! regulations by batltb)g nude In streams. "We're not challengihg the hip- pi@s' act1vhlcs excepl when they in- fringe on the right.s o[, th~ ma· 1orlty," Swetnam said. "Then. "·e·rc immedial'hly forced to defend the establishment.'' He sa id rangers on thc routine palrols have been told not to bt surprised at finding hippies "naJted or engagtd in mystic activities" that S<1metlme11 off.tnded tourists camping In the forests. held as scheduled, despite a formal day Death Ha~e L of mourning. -6'.:l t-Flags flew al half mast for City Clerk -·~-C. K~arlit.," Priest, who-died at. 73 Me sa Tot , 2, Droiv ns in Pool A-desperate race against death ended tragically Saturday in Costa Mesa. as police blockaded intersections for a patrol car rushing a drowned infant to get emergency hospital treatment. Despite a 90·minute battle to fan again the spark o( life. little h1ichael Richardson, 2, was proaounced dead at 6:35 p.m. at Costa Mesa li-1emorial Hospital. Fenow " officers sealed ·off busy Jn· terseclions during the 5 P..m. rush hour as Patrolman Ron Veach s~ to the ho~ltal witb"Ted lights flashing and siren screaming. Costa Mesa. Fireman Earl Clark cradl- ed Ule Richardson boy in the back seat of the patrol car, administering mouth·to- moulh resuscitation. Aides at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital were waiting at the emergency room en- try to continue the fight for life that lasted nearly two hours. Officer Veach said he was senl to the ~1ichael Sanders home at 3294 California St., where he found Fireman Clark work· ing over the limp body. J\.lichael, son · of Mr. and 1t1rs. Guy Richardson, of 3274 California St., ap- parently slipped away, while his mother was chatting with a neighbor and headed for the Sanders home. He apParenUy twnbled lnlo their llk· fool<teep portable .Will\llllhg pool •el •P in the rear and was found floating face down·after a 1.5-minut.e hunt. The pool is telatlvely shallow for the average person. but the itot was too small to stand and appartnUy unable to haul himseU out. Funeral services· ror the boy were still pending to d a y at Bell Broadway l\.1orluary, Costa Mesa. Police sa)d Fireman Clark was a patrolman himseU before transferring to lhe Fire Department several years ago. Coast Guard l{ept Busy As'Fog Catches Boats Scores or pleasure boats caught in a swift moving fog Sunday kept Coast Guard, Coast Guard Aux-iliary and Har~r Deparhnent rescue boats from Laguna to Los Angeles Harbor busy on Sfarches until a late hour Sunday. First "mayday" distress signal came from the SO-foot cabin cruiser Dino II out of Newport at 10:52 a.m. when the o"'ner. Frank A. Costella, reported he was aground in dense fog off South Laguna. Orange County Harbor District boatll \vere dispatched to the scene along with a Coast Guard helicopter out of San Diego and the Coast Guard ~foot cutter Cape Higgon out of Newport Beach. Before rescue vessels arrlved on the scene, Costella reported that he had been pulled free by a small &kif( and was no lonj(er in immediate danger.· The Cape Higgon took the Dino JI In tow at noon and brought it to the Newport Harbor Department. There was no major damage reported. Marine radio charmels crackled for hours as boats reported they were stranded in the dense fog with no power or sail. Car Clouter Cops Cop's Cuffs If Officer Oliver J. Solinsky find s !he lhief who broke into his car over the \\'eekend. he_ may clap the evidence on him. Solinsky, a trafric patrolman who lives In northeast Costa Mesa and works for another law agency, reported the car clout Saturday. Money and.other valuables were left. in the car, whlle the burglar took only his $12 palr of handcuffs. Chief-of.Police brand. last Thursday and was buried today following funeral services. Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley called attention to the unusually long agenda for tonight's session, poinUng out a number of people are comin&, from out or town for hear· in gs. Some consideration was given upon Mr. Priest's death to postponing it until Tues- day, but the decisio n to go ahead was considered best uiider the circumstances. Annual observances for youth in government had been tentatively schedul· ed (or this week, but have been delayed, plflly, dut !\>Ill< ci,a\h oq~r-~ who was instrumental in 1l. The seven-page agenda for ton\ghl's meeting cirries more than 40 separate Items Of bullneu, from major expanilon of South Coast Pl~ and Town Center to minor matters. Many of them are items handled by lhe Costa Mesa· Planning Commission a week ago, carrying recommendations for city council approval. A public hearing is also scheduled on revocation of a business license for a massage parlor operated al 132 E. 18th St., by Arthur B. Chamberlin. Old business Includes discussion of whether the city can use Its unique com· puterized Tra(fic Volume Data System to serve other agencies without ~nfalrly competing against private enterprise. My stery Blaze Destroys Files A mysterious arson case in which busi- ness records were burned at a Costa l\tesa manufacUJring plant was being probed today by fire department inves· t.igaton. . Smoke billowing from an office trailer at the Trautwein Bros. marble slab con· st.ruction company, 20~7 Placentia Ave .. led passerby James Taggart to report it Saturday. . Costa li-1esa Fire Department ~attahon Chier Ron Colen1an said today that his men were inspecting the scene, but had apparently found nothing since their Sat- urday probe. Business documents were piled on the floor and others were· se t ablaze in a ftle drawer by whoever pried the front door open to gain ~ntry. Damage wa! limited and police had been unable to contact the owner over the weekend to determine if anything "'~ taken In Ow: burglary o! the Pf'" mises.· Deferments End Sought Y outh Group Mee ts at Weste rn W hite Hou se Th.! western hal.( of Pre.sidcnl Nix-on '1 Youth Advisory qqmmittee this weekend drafted proposal~ to end s t u d, e u t deferment$ at a two-day oonference 11t the Westen• Whit.e House ~p"Uz, ln Safi Clemente. ~ • The draft advi!on fnim 27 ,,:ta tea and Guam elected to recommend the end or deferqienL11 for all hut rpedical student1 and young men In certain phases or agriculture. Findings and suggiestion.s or the com- mtttee will be blended with rec.om· mendatlons. by Its tastt.rn counterpart befON they .are presented, by President Nbon to the impending hP..trlngs by the Sena' J Armed Senrlces U>mmltte.t. The group which met on the Orange Coast for two days purposely avotded discussion And SUJdy of tile President's Ideas of a volunlttr army to replace the Selective Service System. Spokesmen for the commlltee aald the Issue was avoided because of the un· certAinty over whether the President's suggestions wou1d be adopted. · A shortu-range viewpoint was ex· amined, instead, thJY said, so lhat a more equitable system of the draft could be inaugurated tu Jail until the volunteer armed forces Idea becomes reaUty. The western committee qgesU: that most dc.fennents, partl®larly studtnt ones, be phased out tll eliminate in· equil\ea In lbe Stlectlve Service S)'ltem. .The advlsen, all ranging ln ace lrom 18 to 26. llll&tsl that thelr plan would ellmlnate the draft-dod&mg "perpetuAI !tud~nl" who remains In 1ehool undt:r his dv!t'rmcnt to avoid conscription. I I The group's report cites "financial and Intellectual discrimination" u n d e r the present student delerment structure. By a vote of 18 lo 9. the group elected to auggest phasing out the 11..S deferment and a freeze In granu·ng or new ones. Students presently holding the student deCenne.nt would , continue with It until they either glve It. up or reach the age of ~. For medical students, the committee. suggested nominal federal grants for undergraduates and "1ubstanUal" fund! for graduate. med students. FAiiure to complete studies w o u 1 d make a mtdlcal student ln1n1cdlately eligible !or mtlltory servl<t. Committee members said they based tllctr ''*tl•11t on lhous4iJds ol hours ol lntervtO)l'I irllh llraft-iae youths. ' the HI Chi Minh Trail and over North Vietnam. the report added . In a Vientiane datelined dispatch by T. D. Allman, the story said I.he def est .suf- fered at the hands of the North Viel· n."mcse was kept a secret. The Defense Department made no comment on the report. Over the weekend, however, White I-louse Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler disclosed there vie.re "some" U.S. casualties in Laos since 1962 besides the earlier confirmed death of Army Capt. Joseph K. Bush Jr. Ziegler declined to state the exact number of American military personnel who had died a.a a result of hostile fJre, saying only that lt was "less than 50." According to the Pos~ the base was called Phou Pha Thi atid was located on a· 5,800.foot peak .in ' northeastern Laos about 15 miles from the North Viet· (See LAOS, Page t) C:oU11ty Drug Rap Leary Gets Sentence, To Serve 1 to 10-Y ears By TO~t BARLEY Of !~I DallY Piiot lll lf Dr. Timothy Leary was sentenced to- day to I to 10 years in state prison for his possession of .mariju;:irw found when Laguna Beach police arrested lhe con· troversial LSD cultisls and his famil)'. Superior Court Judge Byron K. McMillan ruled that Leary, 50, must serv.e· the prison term .after he has com· Citizen Sotmdof f Set Wednesday ~y . A,:ea . CQ~µc.il . A special Town Hal!·Slyle meeting in wb1ch citizens may sound off for three- minutes on anything from se1 e<JucaUon to s.mog ii scl)eduled Wednesday by the Harbor Area b>ord.inating Council. 'lbe wiu.sual event will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Hoag Mem~rlal Hospital -Confer- ence Center. directly across Newport Avenue from the hospital building it~ self. Council members meeting In a brain· storming session developed a numbtr of interesting local Issues to which anyone may respond. stressing that the public is invited. Among them are : water and air pollu- tion, sex education In Ule public school.!l, de"elopment of Upper Newport Bay, beach erosion, menial health services, narcotics use by the young, campus dis- orders, the draft versus a volunteer Army and a host of other topics. Officers for 1970 will also be elected \Vednesday night, with the nominating committee introducing nine prospective leaders. They Include : President. Mrs. Gwenda \ValSon : Vice President ; Mrs. Joyce Fos- ter : Recording Secretary, Mrs. Gene- vieve ~ates; Corresponding Secretary, ~1rs. Joap Peace : 'Treasurer, ~1rs. Doro. thy A. Oietztl: and dire ctors-Louis J. Yantorn, Mrs. Ken Lewis, Kim StruJr. and f.1rs. Peg Ogden. Mrs. Evers Runs For House Seat LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mrs. Medgar Evers, widow of the civil right.!i leader ass.issinated in 1963 pins to run for Congress. She chlle<I a news conference for today at which she was expected to announce that she w o u Id !i eek the 14th Congressional District seat vacated by the recent death of Republican Rep. Glenard P. Lipscomb. The only Democrat so far among nine announced candidates, l\.1yrlle Evers says she's feady for a tough election battle. "I'm a scrapper," she said Jn an In· terview Sunday. "Medgar taught me. He was always a scrapper." Her husband , fi eld secretary for the National Association for the Advan-- cemenl of Colored People, was shot lo deAth in his driveway in Jackson, Miss., June 12, 1963. 1-IARBOR fm:Fl'- JV .41'1'5 RESIGNS Wade Walls today resigned as Newport llarbor High football coaeh, clUng Ill health a.s the reaJOn for quitting the poit he held for Ove years. Walls' succtMOr has not been n1tli1ed. See sports, page. 21, for oomplele det.alls. pleted any other sentence imposed on him. His order means that Leary will start his Orange County prison term after he completes the 10..year stretch in federal prison recently ordered in a Tex· as court. Judge Mcl'.1illan struck down a series or motions and arguments offered by defense attorney George Chula In a three· hour pre-sentencing hearing. Chula's plea that Judge McMiiian "should not make a martyr" of Leary drew the judge's com·' ment that the former H a r v a r d psychologist was "a pleasure-seeking, ir· responsible, Madison Avenue:oriented ad- vocate of the free use of LSD." Protesting supporters of Dr. LearJ were ejected from the c r·o w de d COUf.t~oom before and durln' today's court proceedings. One 1 o n g • n a t re d onlooker wbo Joudly announced to the court that he "as on LSD "and felt real 1ood" was hustled arr to Oran1e County Jail. _ Judge McMillan denied Chula's appeal for bail and ordered that Dr. Lesry be returned to Orange County Jail pending his removal to state prlson. He a190 denied motions for new trials for Dr. Leary's wife, Rosemary, 34. and his son J ohn Bush Leary, 20. Mrs. Leary was sentenced last week to six months in Orange County Jail and placed on three years probation for possession of marijuarra and LSD. John Leary must report Wednesday to Orangt County Jail for shipment to Chino State Prlson and the start of a 90-day pre.- sentencing diag~stlc stud)'. All three defeadants have filed appeals against the 5entences. Fishermen Worry Over Oil Slick NE\V ORLEANS (UP?) -Louisiana fishermen worried about the sa!ety of their $70 million shrimp crop field a rederal pollution suit today. "'::.ming Chevron Oil Co. for causing a huge offshore oll slick. The week-old. miles·long slick was slill miles away from the shrimp waters. but an attorney (or the shrimp fishermen said they wanted to ea:tablish liability for the. poUvUon in c.ase it does hit the Louisiana shore. Oyster flJhermen flied a simila r suit 1ast week. claiming a potential $31.S million damage. Workers closed of( another wild weli on an offshore Chevron platfonn today but appeared to be running short of time in a race with fickle coastal winds. Orange Const \\'e a lhe r The Orange Coast can look ror fair weather Tuesday. with temp- eratuf'f!s in the middle '10'1. There will be more early morning coast· al fog, however, which should clear off be!ore mid·mornlng. INS IDE TODAY Tf1ouoh it wo! c1011.d1d tip ' badly by heavy fog, the South- lo11d'1 1u!'w coUegiott 1ailing cer1ter 1tili has a 1mndow 011 the batl a.11d it it wa1 dedica ted Sun· da y. Pa ge 24. • ' ' DAllY PILDI Good Neiglibor Policy Kevin Sorenson, 10, of 4809 Bruce Crescent, New· port Beach, watches fireman A. J . \Vagner douse smoldering tnattress at the home of Mrs. Jane Parkford, 4815 Bruce Crescenl The boy, home from school with a cold, reported the fire in the Lido Sands area after going to Mrs. Parkford '~ hou se shortly i)efore 11 this morning to borrow a plumb- er's helper. He found the home full of smoke. Mrs. Parkford was not home at the time. FJremen said a sun lamp apparently started the blaze. Beach Police Pu$h Probe On Sla)'ing Working round-the-clock, 18 Huntington Beach deteclives visited dozens of Orange County bars and talked to 75 suspects in three days, trying to unravel the mystery surrounding the killing Thursday of a tattooed An&Miin drug ad· dicL "We won't let up on this until we have our killer,'' declared De~ctJve Sergeant f\.1onty McKennon today, ihe man in charge or the massive investigation. Friday morning, ~s: alter the body or Thoplas Carmine Astorina, 25, was found near Sunset Aquatic Park, three car.loads or detectives began checking Astorina'1 known hang.outs, mostly in .i;eedy Orange County bars. Detective! didn't stop all weekend as they rounded up 75 individuals who elther knew Astorina or might havf'! sf'!en him the day he died. Police said one Sunset Park boat owner reported spotting two carloads of men In the area the samf'! night Astorina was killed. Detectives aren't telling most of what they learned over the weekend, bu t ?\tcKennon said today, "our list of m;uspects is narrowing." Astorina 's estranged •..,.ife. Linda ~fae. 23, of Garden Grove. v.·as also questioned by investig<ltors and may have supplied 1nore names of Astorina's friends. ~fystery still ~hrouds the reason for Aslorina 's presence near the aquatic park . though drugs seem to have been the key to th(' killing. One theory Is that Astor ina was 9o'i!h friends awa iting a boat sneaking in at night y,•ith a narcotics ~hipment, or he simply might ha\·e been taken to a lonely area by drugged friends angry over some- lhlng he did. DAILY PILOT U.S. Oil Panel Goes Home With D1·illing Testimony By THOMAS FORTUNE Of 1111 Dtllr .. llitl J l11f A U.S. Senate subcommittee today has taken back to Washington, D.C., a weallh of testimony in opposition to federal oil drilling off Orange County and the rest or the California coast. Seven persons represe nting the Orange Coast area were among those who spoke in two day!' of heringa Fridey and Satur· day in Santa Barbara. The Subcommittee on M I n e r a I 1 , ?.tateri.a1s and Fuels of the Sen.ate Interior l1ld Insular Affairs Committee was on 1 fact-Ondina: mission and will lake no action prior to a steood hearing in Washington. A date for that hearing has not yet been set. Newport Beach Mayot Mrs. Doreen 'f.farshall, Laguna Beach Clty Councilman Roy Holm and San Clemente City Al· tomey Carl Kegley all presented lileir From Page 1 LAOS ... nam frontier. Radar nets dotted nearby hJlls and Air Force and Central Intelligence Agency personnel used the valley landing gtrip as a base for American-led teams or l\1eo tribesmen entering NAA Vietnam on harassment missions, the Post said. Highly sophisticated electronic gear was housed in a limestone cave and Uttd to electronically release bombs and guide planes to targets over North Vielnam, the reporl added. Helicopters also reportedly used the base for rescuing flyers downed in North Vietnam. Two ground attacks failea lo dislodge the troops, the Post continued, and in early 1968 four Soviet-made biplanes at· tempted an air raid on the base. city's endorsement or ' a bill to ban oil drilling in federal waters beyond the three·mile limit wherever the state of California has created a sanctuary. This means offshore of all of Orange County south of the Santa Ana River dividing Huntington Beach from Newport Beach. Others testifying from the county were Newport Beach residents Mrs. T. Duncan Stev.·art and George Zebal for the Coastal Area Protective League, County Board of Supervisors Chairman Alton E. Allen or Laguna Beach and Al Nelson, assistant director of the County Building Depart· ment who administers the county's oil code. J\1rs. Stewart traced the Protective League's involvement from 1955 when the state Cunningham.Shell Act created the oil drilling sanctuary south of the Santa Ana River and Zebal spoke about geological problems in oil drilling. Testimony on the S~nta Barbara situa- tion was given by state administration of· ficials, assemblymen and county of Santa Barbara officials. The only member of the Senate sub- committee present was Its chairman Frank J.toss (0.Utah). J\fembers of the subcommittee staff and of the U.S. Department ol the Interior were in at· tendance. however. and are expeeted to offer recommendation! on various Senate oil drilling bills. Mesa Teen Hurt In Tire Blowout A. lire blowout on winding Estancia Drive in Costa J\tesa early Sunday sent a teenager's car rolling over and down the adjacent embankmen t. J\lichaei D. \Villlam s. 19, of 923 Dogwood Drive, Costa J\1esa, suffered fa cial cuts in the. 2: 17 a.m. accident, but did not require hospitalization. Top Citizens Honored Seven Due Philco .. Ford Ser vice .A1vards Jo~ive ernployes ind two wives of em· ployea of Phllco-f'ord .Corporation's New· port Beach aerospace operations will be. presented community servkt awards at a recognition dinner \}iur&day night. Among them will be Marvin Elliott, a Santa Ana father of four who has spe:nl his after-wart hours and vacaUon Ume the past three years in tirtleas activity to correct drug abllse aod mental retarda· lion. Elliott is Ford Motor Company's "1989 Citizen of the Year" for Orange County. Others who wilt be recognized include four from C(gtJ Mesa, WIWam Bandaruk, Reynold Pelletier, Y. Arthur Ritterrath and Mrs. Dorothy Gerner: Mrs. Arlin• Peck of Fountain Valley, and Arthur Ross of Hermosa Beach. , Elliott, a systems supervisor with the Aerospace and Defense Sfstema Opera· lions. newly created and headquartered in Newport Beach, will receive a town erier's bell. The 33-year..old Elliott has worked with the state Legislature on drug abuse and is responslble for a state~·lcfe survey now und er way on drug treatment facilities. He ha.s advised the Community Action Coun- ci l on drug addiction problems and been a guest speaker throughout the state on drug abuse for the Red Cross. police de- partment!, civic and service clubs. Elliot also has served on the boards of rlirtcton: of the California lntera~ency ri.fental Health Council and the California Foundation for Mental Health-Mental Re-- lardation. He is a director of the Junior Chamber of Commerce nationwide. The other service award winners : Bandaruk, 2448 Andover Place, Costa P.iesa, was cited for activiti~s in a state youth !raining school and other youth \\'Ork. includin.e: Explorer Scou!s. fHt and 'his wife ghared a 1965 Citizen or the Year a"'a rd.) Pelletier. 2443 Fordham Drive, Cost'! P.1e~a. recei ved recogni tion for church "'ork and in projects for Aeronutronic·s Junior Achievement Company and Red Cro.o;s. Rillerra ih. 208 Virii:inia Place, Costa ~tesa. gets his award for church acti vi- ties Jn youth educa!ion. Mrs. Gerner, 2992 Java Road, Costa P.1esa, was cited for efforts In community fund raising and youth work. She is a three-time community service a\\·ard win· ner. ~irs. Peck. 17379 Ash St., Fountain Val- ley, received recognition for children'! theater and gifted children's work. Ross, of Hermosa Beach., gets his award for Boy Scout, church and hospital proj· eels. More ll)an 90 nominations were received for the Ford awards this year. The judg- ing panel consisted or five county news- paoer editors, DAlLY PILOT Editor-in- Chlef Thomas Keevil, Robert Gelvet or the Long Beach Press Telegram. Pat Riley 0£ the Santa Ana Register. Leonard Sargeant of the Orange County Evening News and Glen Young of the San Cle- mente Sun Post. 'Charlie' Priest Honored in Deatl1 By Proclamation One or the first formal proclamations that Costa lilesa City Clerk C. K. "Charlie"Prlest had no hand In writing vii i\ be Issued by the mayor tonight. The document will be in dedication to the late J\1r. Priest's devotion to Costa J\1esa since being appointed city clerk in 1962, arter joining the slaff rive years earlier. Mr. Priest. 37. of 2278 Colgate Dri\le, Costa r.tesa. died last Thursday night of a heart attack. llis funeral \vas conducted al 2 p.m. today in Community Congrega· tlonal Church, Corona del ~1ar. t.layor Alvin L. Pinkley said today some more permanent method of ho nor· ing the man who also &er\led as Newport Beach City Clerk over a 29·year career 1vill be considered . WILLIAM BANDARl.iK • REYNOLD F. PELL ETIER U.S. Troop Total MARVIN W. ELLIOTT MRS. ARLINE 0. PECK F. AR THU R RITTERRATH • Ill Vietnam Dips rompared \Yith a Iola! 46~,700 on i\1arch S. It "·a.s the lo~·esl troop strength figure For Vtetnam since the week ending Oct. 23, 1967. when there 1rere 463,000 Americans here. records showed. OR.ANGE COAST PUllL LIHtNG COMPANY ll:obtrl N. Wttd Prt11dtnt tl!G PubUl1'ttr The old AN2s, however, were no match for the American helicopters that went aloft. servicemen firing M·16 rifles shot d09.'ll two of the North Vietnamese Air Force planes, the report said. The North Vietnamese finall y overran the air strip and fought their way up the side of the mountain, the Post continued, fins•ly overrunnlng the base. Police sald the victim's car skidded across the pavement at a 45.degree angle, bounced over the curb and came to resl p3rt way down the slope. too feet south of Swan Drive. Burial for the IOngtime city official was to be in Pacific Vlew Memorial Park, • Corona del Mar. SAIGON {UPI ) -U.S. 1roop i;tre ngth in Viet nam fell to a 29·month low last y,·eek with the removal of 3,900 more American servicemen from the v.•ar zone, the U.S. command said today. Spokesmen said threre v.'ere 460 ,800 Americans in Vietnam as of J\1arch 12, The United Slates has removed nearly 83.000 men from Vietnam in the past year, spokesmen said. J1c~ Jt. C11rl1y YtCt ~nldt'tlt t nll Gt'tltrt 1 MtllfP" Tho1r111 K11vil li:dllOr lho,,,11 A. M11•phi"' Mtt>e)lnp Edl~r Atthllr I\. Vi"tt1 co ... Me•• cuy EO•IC• Cotro Mfttl Offlc• llO W11t l1y Str11t M1ili119 Aclclr111: ,,0. IOll IS60, '1626 0 th., Offlcft NtWflOl"I a..c11: nu Wat B•lbOt aou,..,trd LIOUM tuci'I: m ,_, Av•- Hunlirlt-llMCll: 11111 ••tell a0111o v••ll Sin Cltmtnlt! JOS Na.If! 1!1 C.m .... 11. .. 1 DAU.V PILOT, Wltll ""'ICll It. tomll!Mil tM N._.Prtn, II lllJl>lltl'IN dtl!y U <till """' dtY Ir! ._,,,,,, 9"11'°"' ..,... LttuM Bt«fl, N~ eltdl, COllt M-.., Mur1tl1111M Btotdt tM F-ltln YtllfY, '"""' w1111 l'ol'll rtrltMI td!t,.,,.. Otw"" C0.11 l"uli!hlllnt C'.omMny P'lroll!lt Pia"ff, lrt ti 2111 Wttl lltlllN llM., NfWllOl"I a..m. tM QI Wnl S.y "'..,_ COi.ii M1w. Titl.,tl9" (7141 642-4111 • ·c1•1W: A~sl .. 642·1671 (enfliJhl, I'll. Ol'Mte C..U Pllblltllfnt (lftlllltly. N1 -1~. lll"'trrl..,.,., tdllll'lll ""'"" ., "~~ litr91n _, " tfCllWIKt'lf Wflflo\jt ...Cit! ..... mll.1 ~ of '°""llM 0-· kuflcl c1 .. , '9"'191 Nici f l H....,.,t IMC• ,,.,, ee.11 Noea..t. Gtlittr~ll. '"ll)Cfi,illfl .., Ctttltr U.ot MOfllfl/)11 Dy 111tfl I! ... lrllMllfll'l'I mlHltr't dt1ll11tlltnl. U.Ot "'°""'"'· One American was quoted as saying the American and Meo troops "fought lo the last man . They were all killed March I 1 inside that grotto. An enonnow: amount of equipment was 1061, too." P a ncake Feed Sla ted April 18 The 11th Annual Panceke Breakfast, sponsored by the: Orange Coast YlilCA, will be held from 7:30 a.m. to 11 a.m. April 18 at Richard 's Lido ~larket in Newport Beach. The Newport. Harbor Y's Men 's Club announced that funds received from the breakf1st v.i \I be used by tht Y~1CA. lo red uce the loan balance on Y awlmming pools. The hot cakes and sausage breakfast ~·Ill cost $1. Rlch3rd's ~1arket is' donl'll· ing the food. Police Disperse 500 Pollet Wert called to the Cal Stale FuUerton campus Saturday night lo dlsperse a group of about 500 wbo milled in front of lb• amnAsium "'hen thfy coul4n'l get In to hear a rock concert by the flau l BuUerfle:ld Sluts Band. Vacant Lot Fire Smokes Up Mesa A 6,000-square·foot grass fire in a va. cant lot kept Cosla lilesa Fire Depart· ment persoonel busy and citizens smf'!ll· ing smoke over a wide area Saturday afte rnoon . The blaze at 1735 Pomona A\'e., was quickly CQntrolled and there v.•as no damage to any i;tn1ctures or monetary loss. Battalion Chief Ron Coleman said toda y. Ceusc of the 2:30 p,m. blaze was listed as children playing wilh matches. BLAST RIPS TRA DE CENTE R NE\V YORK (AP ) -A fire touched off an explosion in the basement of the \Vorld Trade Center ~londay, polict head- quarters reported. A Fire Deparlmefi t lipDkesman said materials were ablaie In an area where. propane BJ•s may have been slored. The center 11 under construction a l Greenwich Street near Cortland. Whtn completed it will be the tallest building In the world, with twin towen rising 110 stories above lower M1nhatt.an. • You Work Less YouSa veMoney Keeps things cleaner without effol't, eliminates bath tub rings Soa n a~cl clothing last longer. Dlfhf'f lpukJc .......... ... """" Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans FREE Estimates! Phone Sears Today! !Sears/ -So. Coast Plua, 3333 Bristol St. Phone 510·3333 \ I I ' .\· / I \ 1 I ' I' l .. -Saddlehaek . -. -. VOL 63, NO. 63, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUEORNIA -·.; MONDAY, MA'RCH '16, '1970 Teday'i Flul . - N.:Y. 8~1+• TE N CENTS ' I Laguna, Clemente Aides Mull Disclosure_Law By RICHARD P. NALL Of ttot V.!lr P'Uet 51911 As the deadline draws-near ilor filing or financial disclosure statements by public officials, many are still unsure what is involved and who will be required to file. Mu Berg, San Clemente cit;t clerk, said it is obvious under the existing leglsla.Uon that city councilmen and coun- cil &:ididate.s must file and that planning commis&oners must file. He s11.id it isn't clear yet whether the • law also will mean that members of the city parking. commlssion and parks and recreation commission will have to file disclosure statements with the county clerk . Berg knows that he must file-a state- ment and lhat tbe city manager and city treasurer must but· said he isn't sure · wbether the rule applies to all city .ap. pointed department heads; "We will have to look to our city at- torney for the answers.'' sa id Berg, Mystery Illness Strikes Student Baffled physicians at Orange County ldedical Center today are attempting to pinpoint a mysterious tropical illness which has stricken a college exchange 1ludenl from the Fiji Islands. James Gibson, 25, a popular campus figu re at Santa Ana Colleg~ bas literally been brought back to iife., three times aince becoming ill late last week. He is in a coma and listed in extremely critical condiUon, wiUt partial paralysis. internal bl~ing 'and suspected brain d.am•ge. So f•r, .his condition defies diagnosis and specialist gi\'e him only a 50-50 chance to survive. Gibson's heart stopped three times while undergoing initial treatment at th e county hospital, but he was revived. He reportedly has no medical insurance and students at the SAC campus, where he worked part-time as a gardner, have started a benefit fund drive. •'We are praying for him," said Student Body President Hank White, of Orange. The well-liked sophomore f r o m Malhaha-Rotuma, Fiji , left v.·ork com- plaining of illness last Thursday and fail- ed to show up or call in Friday morning. Coast Guard Kept Busy As Fog Catches Boats Scores of pleasure boats caught in a swift moving fog Sunday kept Coast Guard, Coast Guard Auxiliary and Harbor Department rescue boats-from Marines Suffer Back lnjmies While S1u·fing Two 22-year-old Marines suffered back injuries in body surfing accidents 11t Laguna Beach Sunday afternoon. Richard ffiett of El Toro Marine base. was dumped by a wave while surfing off the beach al El Morro Trailer Park at 3;45 p.m. He struck his head on the bot- tom, according to lifeguards and ap- parently suffered a back injury. lUett was laken by ambulance to South Coast Community Hospital and transferred to the base hospital at El Toro after emergency treatment. The second injury victim was Buddy Thompson of the Marine Corps Air Sla- tion, Santa Ana, who also suffered a back Injury while body surfing off the beach near the Hotel Laguna at 4:30 p.m. He :ilso was given emergency trea tment at SouUt Coast Community Hospital and transferred to the Et Toro hospital. Laguna to Los Angeles Harbor busy on searches unUI a late hour Sunday. First "mayday" distress signal came from the SO.foot cabin cruiser Dino 11 out of Newport at 10:52 a.m. when the owne:-. Frank A. Costella, reported he wt.' aground in dense tog off South Laguna. Orange County Harbor District boer were dispatciled to Ute scene along with . Coast Guard helicopter out of San Diej!:' and the Coast Guard 95-foot cutter Cap( Higgon out of Newport Beach. Before rescue vessels arrived on th• ~ne. Costella reported that he had bee· pulled free by a small skiff and was n longer in immediate danger. The Cape Higgon took th e Dino II l tow at noon and brought it to I~ Newport Harbor Department. There wr no major <iamage reported. Marine radio channels crackled ft hours as boats reported they we11 stranded in the dense fog with no powr or sail. Stock lllarkets NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices were skidding late this afternoon. wiUt losing Issues outdistancing gainers by more than three to one. Trading was slack. (See quotatiOns, Pages 18-19). The market had been retreating al- most without interruption s.1nce the be- glnuing of the session. noting that attempts are under way to modify the law ao that disclosure does not ·Ii.st actual extent of holdings but rather-only w~ther they involve more or less than $5,000. ''I agree with him that it's a mess aod. needs clarification," said James D. Wheaton, Laguna Beach city clerk ar.:i city manager. He said Laguna's city attorney has ad· vised tha( all department heads mU!t file under the Unruh law if it is still the Jaw Oil Panel Goes Home For Study By THOMAS FORTUNE 01 tM 1>an1 f'li.I Sltff A U.S. Senate snbcommitlee today has taken back to Washington, D.C., a wealth of testimony in opposition to federal oil drilling off Orange County and the re.st of the California coast. Seven~persoru representing the Orange Coast area were among those who spoke In two days of be.rings Friday and Salur· day in Santa Barbatp;r.~ 1 , .. ~ -~ ' · 'the Subcommltid'Otr"''M 1 n e ~ • f1t t Materials and Fuels of the senate Intenor and Insular Affairs Committee was on a fact.finding mission and will take no action prior to a secoad hearing in Washington. 'A date for Utat hearing has not yet been set. Newport Beach Mayor Mrs. Dore.en ~!arshall, Laguna Beach City Councilman Roy Holm and San Clemente City At.. torney Carl Kegley all presented tiieir city's endorsement or a bill to ban oil drilling in federal waters beyond the three-mile limit wherever the state or California has created a sanctuary. This means offshore of all of Orange r:ounty south of Ute Sanla Ana River dividing Huntington Beach from Newport ;each. Others testifying from tile coonty were ~ewport Beach residents Mrs. T. Duncan Ste wart and George Zebal for the Coast.al Area Protective League, County Board of Supervisors Chainnan Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach and Al Nelson, assistant director of the County Building Depart· 1nent who administers the county's oil code. Mrs. Stewart traced the Protective '.eague's involvement from 1955 when the :tate Cunningha m-She ll Act created the oil drilling sanctuary south of the Santa Ana River and Ze:bal spoke about 3eological problems in oil drilling. Testimony on the Santa Barbara situa- ti on was given by state administration of- fi cials, assemblymen and county of Santa Barbara officials. The only member of the Senate sub- con1mittee present was its chainnan Frank Moss (D-Utah). Members of the subcommittee slaff and of the U.S. Department of the Interior were In at- tendance, however, and are expected to olfer recommendatlons on various Senate oil drilling bills. in effect when dead.line arrives, April 6 for council candidates and April 15 for olhers. "They have to file . with the county clerk •• Jind J have to file With him, too. He gets all the belt up there," said.Wheaton. Ernest Tbompoon, city admlalllrator for San Juan Capistrano, saji!, he \lllder- stood efforts byihe assembly speaker to modjfy the Onnah law have Ulus.,far been defeated in the Assembly. All department beads ln San Juan Capistrano have been adviaed they ahouJd Ule financial disclosure.a, uld 'Thoml)IOn, but said the holdlnils of' those ihv.olvid y,•ould not amount to the $10,000 figw'e at any rate. He said financial holdings of planniDJ commlsslon~rs might be more subltutlal but added that the pt,.nning commiaaion nofmally resigns in council elediOn ~· a~ Wfits it<) .see ~f',re•apP9inbn'~· la forthcoming from the new cotmelL San Juan Cap!Strano has nine council •• I e 'IT ISN'T MUCH , BUT IT'S ALL WE'VE GOT' Sea k out1 C•rr (left), Hun.fer •nd L•ndbound Craft Stnlwart Sea Scouts Seek BoatFromNixon,Hugh~ By JOHN VALTERZA Of tN o.i~ f'li.t Sl1ff They may be laDdbound right now, but a stalwart bunch of San Clemente Sea Scouts lt:ad by a stubborn teenage bo'sun won't settle for being boatless sailors. And everyone {rom President Nixon, Howard Hughes · and scores of aides in between have heard about IL Trouble is, all the executives and spokesmen have come up with lhe same answer to Neyle llunter'i pleas for a gift boat-no (In the million dipJomatlc ways available In the cool business let· ter). lf the small "ship"' of acouts with the· • code number 110 are landbound , 10 i1 their only present tangible hope for ever hitting the high seas, • cabin cruiaer' of sorts composed of a not-»buutiful hull and four years of work. "We.'re going to call it the Pueblo It, I t~ink. Nevertheless, it's all ·we got". 1he San Clemente. HJgh School . stud1 relaled. • · Neyle didn't approach the blllloni1re Las Vegas recluse with an appeal for·• boat. however. It waa less subtle than that In terse, reallsUc and forwud terms, Bo'sun Hunter asked for money, .· Police Protect Cap tured Coon Deferments End Sought "After you see this following Dnfi JOU'lt probably throw this letter away,, hoWeftt I am very S'erlous ln my convictions. ."''We need financial support to obtain supplies and materials. "Could yoo help??? "\Vou ldn 'I this be a great tu write- off?" · A pair of wandering raccoons en- joying a noeturnal dip in a Laguna Beach swimming pool roused neighbors aod police early Sunday. Answering a 4:45 a.m. report of "an animal in distress'', oUicers CarroU Bush and Paul Rose hasten· ed to ta High Drive where they round the source of the dil!turbance, a large raccoon, With bis left hlnd leg stuck In a fitt ~lpe in • backyard swimming p(.)fJ • A sec<ind raccoon left the water and took off over the fence as the officers ap- proached. Covering the trapped aquanaul with a blanket to discourage his resistance. the offlcefi treed hil leg and he set ofJ after his companion, slightly hampered by o limp, they report. Y outh Group Mee ts at .W estern W hite Ho.use Th.! western hall or President Nixon's Youth Advisory Committee this weekend drafted proposals to end s t u d e n t deferments at a two-day conference at the Westem White H~ complex in San Clemente. The drafl advisors from 27 states and Guonul.<tied..to r«ommeod ll>Leod_of_ defermenta for all but med ica l atudenls and young men in certain phases of agriculture. Findlnp and suggestions of tht com- mittee will be blended with recom- mendaliona by its eastern counterpart befor ..! they are presented, by President Nixon io the impending bP.artngs by the Senat: Armed Services U>mmittee. The group which met on the Orange CoMt for &wo days purposely avoided discussion and sludy of the President'• Ideas of a volunteer army to rtplace the Selective Service Syltem. Spokesmen for the committee said t11e Issue was avoided because of tbe un- certainty over whether the President's suggestions would be adopted. A shorter-range viewpoint was ex- ~ ins~, tlley said, so that a more equtti Sy~or t.tf£ltraft-could be inaugurated to last untU the volunteer armed forces idea becomes reality. The weitt_rn commHtee suggests that most deferment.a, particularly student ones, be ph~ (l\lt lo t lim1i:'8te in- equities In tlie ~ .. ~System. 'the advisers; all ranctna In •It from ts -"' 26, •uaeol that their plan would eliminate the dnft~odglng 11per,petual 1tudenl" who ftlb&lns; In school under bis deferment to avoid conscrtpUon. • The group'• report. cites "financial and , inteUectual discrlmlnaUon" u n de. r the present student deferment structure. By a vote of 11 to'll, the group elected to suaest phasing out the 11.S defennent and ,a freeie.Jn cnnJlng of new·ones. Studen ts presently ' holding the atudent deferment woukl continue ,with It unUI lbe}'-eitbeJ &!!e tt up or rtac.h the age of 24. For medical 1t0deota, the committee suggested nominal federal grants for undergraduates and "subllanU•I" funds for graduate med student.I. ~allure to complete studlts ·wouiJd make a medlcl\l'-•tudent Immediately eligible 1for mlllUl.ry service .. CommJUee. membtr1 11id· they based 1 the.lr sugge.stlON on thouundJ or hours of Interviews wllh dralt-111" youths. Hughes didn't bite-; rn a polite lett.e.r an ·H. H. aide'" aaid Hughes only gives money through hb: foundation which is de.voted entlre.1y ·to the Hughes Medical institute. Then followed the IJme-worn closirfg paragi-aph whk:h ends on 1 luftwarm note : " ... it is impossible to tnclude: any new organization at th1a time, no mattu bow worthy lhe cause." ~nUally the same tesponlel have come from the Naval Ship Syfteml Com· mand, the SeaeLorJ of,the N,.Y;tht Of- flCe-omtre Chief of-Nava.I Operations - even lhe Secretary of Defenaie. · 'The nearest thlJll Hunl<r h11 received In form of a r!ply from Prtsktent Nb:on was rrom Auiat.ant Navy Sec:rttlrt ~oberl Fl'Olcll, who.. Wei he "wu ...,. llreilnh1r I'® will 1111!1 (hio lllffil ft91y Informative." . • Nothing more has 111ive.d alnce, • u the federal and boa v., ... ..,..,.. (Ste liCOIJ11, P ... II · · ~ ,. ( • • candidates, Lapna has five and Sao Clemente has 1 whopping 15. ·Thompson aaid those 'involved •rt holdlii, off fillhg to await cWUicatioo and, any ctiange.1 ln law Involved. Co\inlY Clerk Wllllam St Jolin saJd his office has rteeived several ~undred declaraUQ!ls •lreJidy arid · expects . many more. · "Most are . holdiJlg ha~. for. clarification," he said". '"J'he 11.W ls u· (Ste D~llE, Pip I) u Cave Held Technical . . ' Radar Gear. WASHINGTON (AP) -North Vie~ namest troops a:mihllated a small American force operating a secret tadar lnatal~UOn hidden in a limestone cavt atop a mountain in Laos, killing at least 12 U.S. aervlcemen, the Washington Post reporh!d today. The Amer1cam died March 11, 1168, the POlt \said. def.Ming the radar,, recon- nalisance and r'escut base. The site con- tained bj.gh1>' sophJsUcated eltttianlc gear for directing · bombing rakls alOng ·the }{\IQU Minh Trail and over North fletzwn, th< rtport. odiied. In 1 Vltnlione -dilpolala.llJ T. o, Albn ... the atory •Id the _ • ..,,. fond II Ille bandl o/ Ille North Vltl--,...mat w11 kept • teeret. - .!J!be Defense Department made no comment on the report. (>Yer the weeke1l4,, ho}Vever, While Houae Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler dliclosed there were "some'" U.S. casualUta in Uos since 1982 besides the earner confirmed death or Anny Capt. Joseph K. Bush Jr: •. Zleg}er declined to state the exact number of American mllitllry personnel who had died u a ~t of hostile fire, uying only that lt WU "lesa:.lhan 50." According to the Post, the bale was c,,11ec1 Phou Pha Thi and was located on • li,860-foot peak In northeastern Laos ·• (Ste LAOS, Pop 21 --- Candidates Air Views in Laguna Laguna Beach City Council candKt.tes wlll'alr their views on implementaUon of the general plan when they appear at a for um aponsored by the Laguna Beach Coordinating Council at 7:30 p.m. Tues- day in the Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Building, 280 Ocean Avenue. Scheduled to ·speak at the meeUng, which ii open to .the !l"bllo. and also to answer questions lrom the audience are incumbents ructiard Goldberg and Joseph O'Sullivan, ud Joeeph Tomechak, Pet.er Ostrander 1nd Edward Lorr. The live candldate.s also will speak at the Chamber of Commerce Wednesday momlng breakfast at 7:30 a.m. in the Hotel Laguna: 1be public · also ii invited to attend the: breakfast session. Orange Coast ll'ead1er The Orange Coat can lool: for fair weather Tuesday, with temp- eratures in the middle 70'1. There will be more e¥1Y morning coast- al fog, however, whJch should clear off before mld·morning. INSIDE 'l'ODA.1:' ThoU{lh it tDa.r ·clouded vp bodlt1 by hea~11 too. the So!o'fh.. land's new colliglate .roiling venter 1tUl has a window oft the ba1 ohd it it tDa1 dedfcoUd sun- da11. Page 24. I DAILY PILOT SC 1 -,, -16, nio ' St. Pat's Day, lndeed;-- Briton Files a Rebuttal Editor' a Note: The DAll. Y PILOT'• Tom McCarm took hJ1 but shot for St. Patrick. in his Saturday Logbook and today Brillon Tom Barley lilts his aMual answer. Tbe editor, hlmiclf a son of the Emerald Isle, hereby disclaims responsibility for answering Irate calls from the lrlsh. He suggests directing complaiotl dirttUy to Mr. Barley at his courthouse outpoit by calling IM-3713. "A.ll 1 hovt to •at1 about St. Patrick'• Doti b th:at J1m damntd olad we're not 10 blood~ d4/t about St. Dcvid'1 Doy." Richard B11rton B7 TOM BARLEY Of flll Otltr t>l9f 119ff l _HAVE GRAC OUSLY ~ted to· clean up the lo.ad of rubbish left In thll column by Ila previoua contributor (Tom Mc:CaM'1 Saturday Lo1book) and you can be as1W'fd, gentle reader, that there hun't bMn a bl11er mess a1nce IOmeone put cucara in the flight crewa' cocoa on one of those balmy days at the RAF's Appleton Roebuck airfield. Ah, yes. Looking back, you know, that was quite a moving experience. We were all airborne three hours later and I can tell you that by the time we reached the Engllsh Channel we had the bomb doors open and - (Editor's note: You were aaylng &-Omething, were you not, about the prevlOus contributor? He at least kept to the point). ALL RIGHT, LOVE,. ketp your Ileen shirt. on. I wu just trying to depict for your readers the cascara-11.ke ef- fect on the human system of such bilge as ;'the.re are only two kinds er people in the world -those who are Irish and those who wish they were" and "enjoy the day in the spirit of St. Patrick." And we-wanted to draw the altention of readers -who suffered sorely Saturday -to the doubtful quallflcatJona: ol the brlaht lad who'd have us all sportlng Kelly green when we 'd be more in toueb with rullty by wearing Falt· haven black and/er staying in bed au day. Don't go for that orange Ue and green ahamrock routine -that'• the leprecbau.n-Uke McCann'• escape clause should aqry reprtamt&Uve. of elther party come 1 calling. AND DON'T LET that McCann handle fool you Into thinking that lhll refugee from the news room halls, via hJs forebean, from Kerry, Cork, Con. nemara er any such point south of the Northern Ireland border. It's known, incidentally, In those parts u the line between Heaven and Hell and if you want a clue let me tell you that I always looked on Dubli n as a pretty hot town. Saturday's warmed up version cf the annual idiocy la pretty lyplc•T of what h11 lhe brainwuhed minority caperlng, cavorUng and drooling on whit McCann calla the days ol d.11y1. GREEN BEER, Jeprecbtu.na, 1hlllela1ht, drunken choruses cf "Irish Lullaby" and "Kathleen" -Eeeeeeyecb. And again eeeteeeyeeh. It'• about time someone -and McCann desrvea draftJnc -charter flighted thl• sicken-- Ing set, one way , all the way to the Emerald Isle thlt always wore a brtght shade of batUeshlp gray when I was on It When you could eee It through the rain, that is. And wbt:n you weren't being knocked off the sidewalk by inebriated Paddya emerging from cne of Dlblin's 8,394 pub&. And that'• a cooservatlve estimate. There'• ooly two kinds of Iriah cn St. P1trick's Day -those who burble about exactly noth1nc for 10 days before and 10 daYJ after March 17 and those who .,. sick to the tee1h al hwlntl •bout IL Try Sl Dovld, Sl Andrtw or Sl G<ort• lor 1 chin(•. Tben you'd really have somethlna to alne about. Ser.vices Planned Tuesday For Martin Martinson, 92 Strvlcea will be held at 1 p.m. Tuelday In McCormick Chaptl, Laguna Beach, for Martin B. Martinson of 334 Poplar St., who died at his home Saturday at the age of 92. The Rev. Loth.Ir Tornow of St. Paul's Lutheran Church will officiate al the rites for Mr. Martinson, who was an active member of the church. His body will lie in state at the chapel, 17\IS Laguna Can- yon Road. until 9 o'clock tonight. Survivors Include the widow, Charlotte, nf the home: a da11111;httr, Mrs. Louise Couse of Laguna Beach; a brother, Elmer M. Martinson cf Colorado Sprlnlls: 11ister Mr. Esther Lauth of Joliet, Ill.; and three grandchildren , Robert Couse of Berkeley; Mlss Barbara Couse cf LA gun a Beach ; and Mrs. Bennie Davis cf Laguna Beach. A native oa Swed en, Mr. Martinson had DAILY PILOT "-------· c ........ HMttltltM .... 11 ........, .... .., ...._ CUH<tl COUT ~UlllSHINO CC>MP'.tJt't lebert N. We,J ,., .. """' •niil l"vbllthilr J•ck R. Curl•'f Vk • l"Tttli!.nt -cl a_,,, ~n•pr Thom •• K•••il ldltv Tho"''' A. M11rphin• M•n"lnll IEdl!w Rfth•'' P. Nt U iwtti Or•,,.• c-1~ l dlltr ....... Ct>ll• M-t DD W"I 19Y l trNt Htwp0rt INc.11: 7UI Wnl l•!bOI leu1•vt,,. ltt\11141 l•Krlz m """' ,.._ M111111nttM I.en: 11111 ltetll l•11ie••"' ltn (lffnll!lfw: 305 Nllrtll Ill CtlftlM lt.llM ' lived In the Lquna area for 31 years. In lieu ol flciwen, memorial donations may be made to St. Paul's Lutheran Church. BurJal wUJ be at Melrose Abbey. Last Rites Set On Wednesday For Mrs. Seidel ' Maas will be celebrated at to a.m. Wednesday in St. Nicholas Catholic Church, Leisure World, for Mrs. Juanita Daguerre Seidel, last surviver of a famil y that held a one-third interest In the vest Moulton Ranch. • Mrs. Seidel died Saturday Jn St. Joseph Hospital , Orange, where ahe had been confined since March 7, when she slipped and rel! Into a bathtub of hot water In her home at 3150& Bluff Drive, South Laguna. Bu med over 15 percent of her body, she died of pneumonia and the effects of the burns. according lo the Orange County Coroner's O!flce. She was the last or t.ht thret Daguerre sisters whose father, Jean Daauerre, was a partner of Lewis F. Moulton Jn the historic, 22,000 acre ranch on part ct which the Laguna HJlls Lel•ure World was built. A native of Loa Angeles, Mrs. Seidel had lived in Orange County for 70 years. lier parent..s came from France in 1874. They had six children, of whom Mrs. Seidel was the last survivor. Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Tues- day in St. Nlcholas Church and burial will be In Calvary Catholic Church Ctmttery, lAs Angeles. Mrs. Blackmarr Funeral Set Services will be held at 2 p.m. Tuetday for Jmy Je111 Bl1ckmarr, 35, of U8Ql Pueo· del Campo, Laguna Niguel , who died Saturday In South Co1st Communlly Hospital after a brief Illness. ~tn. Bl•ctmarr wa1 the wtfe of Ned Blackmarr, cwner of La1una Be1ch Furnltu~. 260 Forest Ave. She also ls survived by lwo aona, Michael al)(I Chris. and by her Ptrtnts, Mr. and Mrs. c. 8. Badon or Pomona. The Rev. Or, Donald E. Inlay will of. flclate et services tn Shtfltr t.a.gun1 Beach ~1ortu1ry Ch1peJ. Burl•l \\•Ill be at El Toro Cemetery. An~ Strikes Into Laos -Revealed SAIGON (UPI) -Th• United Stat.s began announcing air strikes Into Laos today and reported the losses of three mere U.S. planes to ground fire thert. Headquarters announced the departure of more Gls for home and said American troop strength in Vietnam fell to 1 2f.. month low last week with withdrawal ol 3,900 Americans from the war zone. In its first announcement .of U.S. air strikes lnlo Laos, the command said: "Air Force, Navy and Marine Carps aircraft yesterday (Sunday) continued ln· terdlctJon operations against the Ho Cbl Minh Trell in Laos. Air Force aircraft new comb.11t supPort missions In Laos for Royal Laotian rorces. In addlt1on, B51s pjrilclpated in lnterdlctlcn optraUons along the Ho Chi Minh Trail In Laoa." Couapetitag ita San Diego The official disclosure that American planes are bombing L803, along with the announcement or U.S. plane losses there. meant a further step in taking the wraps cff \Vhat has since 1964 been a secret air campaign. Mrs. Billye Bronson of Irvine (second from left) l11 among Southern California fi nalists competing to- day in regional round of 21st Pillsbury • General Electric Bake-oil in San Diego. Contestants are seeking $25,000 grand prize in national contest. Actress June Lockhart (right) \Velcomed So uthern CaUfornia co1npetitors tod ay. Finalists include (Crom lelt) Lela E. Steiner of Van Nuys. Mrs. Bronson, r..irs . Ellen B. Rolflns of Los Angeles and Mrs. Sandra J . Bangham of Torrance. In Jl.1oscow, meanwhile, Premier Ale1ei N. Kosygin told the United States the Hrst step towards any attempt to resto re peace in Laos must be an end to American bombing ralds. f'rom Prlfle l DI SCLOS URE •. tremely vague." St John said that the stale attorney reneraJ has ruled that those Involved must give the dollar value of the ir holdings. He said many county courue ls reel this iJ not neceuary under the am· blguous law. "I am asking them to show the actual value ot these holdlnss," said St John. "Actually, It Isn't up kl rTie to say, It's up to the dJatrict attom-ey. He'll be the one actually prosecuting (in ease of conflicts of Interest)." "If you state that you own 509 share cf General Motort stock. It's silly not to give the value. The value la In the newspaper," sald the county clerk. He aald he intended to disclose the dollar value of his holdings in his own state· menl. ''Thomas Jeffer90n said when ytl\I hold public cffice, you art public property," saJd St John. Asked about who must file, he said '"nils l.sn't clear cut. We are telling everyone that tt is a personal mailer and tt they need advice they should consult their cwn attorney." 'J'tlere ls some agitation t.o change the Jaw, sald St John, ''but the biggest thing we're waltJng for now is a case before th~ State Supreme Court brought by Cannel By nie Sea." He II.id dllc.Toaurt, 111,thlnga stand, in- volves basically three areas, lncome pro- perty worth more than 110,000, govern- ment controlled business holdings valued at more than 110,000 and stock worth more than $10,000. Fro1n Page l SCOUTS ..• ment was noncommittal , so Is the Boy Scout hierarchy. The Sea Scouts' quest for a real ship. Hunter discovered, treads deeply into mountains of red tape in the seouUng \\·orld. "\Ve can't just go out and find a free boat and say we'll take it," he said. "There are forms, board approvals. submitting specifications, and all kinds of other stuff, and sometimes it gets us just plain fruslrat.ed," he said. So \vhen the-negative letters wear do1vn the determina!Jon. the boys, led by their adult advisor City Engineer Phil Peler. head down to a backyard and slap some palnt on Pueblo II. Gar Carr, another Sea Seoul and the OO'sun's friend Intimated as he gazed up at the landlocked boat, "We're supposed lo launch it any time now, but 1 really am worried that it '11 either sink or fllp over." lr the \'esscl named after the. ill-fated i'IPY shlp ever does float, it will ha\'e a temporary mooring off the San Clemente pirr until plans -still years off - become more firm for the ship's ba1e Bl Dana Harbor. ''\Ve still don 'l know how wr're going to i;:et out to the boa t once it's on the moor- ing.·• Gary lntimated. In the meanlim!-aside from amateur boatbuilding-the boys in the ship tlC· easlonally can make use of the full·flcd g· ed Sea Scout Dase in Newport Beach. 13u t lhcir landlocked rep u ta ti on precedes lhem lhert. Thu~ similar to inter·sllip rivalry In the real Navy-the San Clemente Scouts' day 1t that base can be strained At times. "\Ve don't go up there too much, because everybody knows we're a maverick ship/' Neyle 111ld. "All we want is a sound. nice.looking boat, but boy. we never thought it would be this hard to get one:• Sul'1)1us Navy craJt are generally not sult1ble, scout offlc.ial1 have told lhe local ship, because -of I.he up\eep :1nd el"· ptnses Involved in ketplng the cralt. And by policy , the Navy gives oul Its sP'!re boAt.s under an arran•emtnt with the IJ()y Scout& of Amerlca alter req uests from local councils. And there t1re many more requests than there 8re boall. So the dozen Seit Scouts In San Clemente will probably tutve to wait their turn In thitt kAmf. "But we're rtUI hoping for somtont to donate one1 11 Neyle &aid. ' Sru1 Fra11cisco's Strilie Until the bombing stops, Kosygin said It would be "unrealistic" for him to con- sider President Nixon's request that the Soviet Union and Britain attempt to end the fighting In the Southeast Asian kingdom . Ends; Streetcars · Roll Kosygin placed much or the blame fot the war between government and Com- munist forcu in Laos on the United States. He made no mention of North Vietnamese military support for the Communist Pathet Lao. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -M•yor Joseph L. Alioto hammered out an agree· ment with striking city employes early today to end a four-day strike \vhich had shut down the city's transit and seilool systems. 3rd Laguna Fire Hits Old House, Guts Apa11ment For the third time ln less than two weeks, a pre-dawn fire broke out in an old Laguna Canyon residence Sunday, destroying the interior of the second- story aparbnent at 237 Woodland Drive. Walter Anderson, occupant of the house owned by Paul Westbrook, 1234 Starlit Drive, suffered a cut on his ann as he crawled out of .11 door to escape the blaze that awakened him at 4:25 a.m. Investigators are checking the extent of damage today. It Is believed the fire may have been started when material draped on celling and walls Jn the Uvlng room fell onto a noor furna ce vent. Heat from the flames also blistered paint on a neighboring residence at 255 \Voodland Drive. t&st Sunday, March 8, al 4:45 a.m. fire totally destroyed an unoccupied house and shed on nearby Canyon Acres Drive and four days earlier a blaze at almos t the same hour gutted another c\d \Voodland Drive residence. O emente P arks To Be Studied San Clen1ente's parks and recreation commissioner• wUI study \he parks sec· lion of the city's five-year capl~ in1. provements lisl et their meeting tonight at 8. Other Items on lhe commlsslon 'a agen- da include study of the proposed eon· cession stand at North Beach and preliminary discussion on a po!Sible new park at Trafalgar and Ola Vista. The capital improvpment study vdll in· volve con1mission perusal of a n estimated 1795,000 tn parks and recrea· tlon projects which as yet have not been placed on a prlorlty list. The all-night negotiations broke up after dawn and the city called its public tran sit drivers back to work. A few streetcars, which had been Idle since Fri· day, began rolling by mid-morning. The last or four striking unions ordered Its members to stop picketing aDout tv•o hours after the tentatlve agreement was reached. L<>eal 400 of Me city and county employes union, the largest striking union, held a tw(>.hour caucus before deciding to submit the~el 'ment to a ''Ole of its members. union, which had insisted the trike w s not over alter other locals pulled their pickets, said It too would withdraw pickets until after ill: membersi'tip voted this afternoon. Alioto announced the settlement and said he expects city operations to return to normal by midday . He ~fused to disclose terms of the agreement, saying only that It wl!I "responsible and rea90nable," providing a cost-<>f-llvlng increase while holding the line against innation. But he did say that the unions had ""'On their chief demand -retenUon of a ''seniority" pay Increase cf 5 percent a year granted em)lloyes during their first four years with the city. 'fhe item, which costs an estimated $2.4 mllllon 1 year, had been cut by the city supervisors . The city had offered 14,000 employes a 14.8 million -or 5 percent -pay hike. The unloru had demanded $9.5 mJlllon - about 10 percent. The agreement came too late for the 400.000 daily passengers cf the Municipal Railway System. They walked, biked, drove and hitchhiked to work, creaUng a massive traffic jam in the downtown area during the morning. The parking problem was even worse than en Friday because police had to keep bus and streetcar lanes clear after ti'le settlement \\'as reached. John Jeffrey , head of Local 400, told newsmen ha was not fully satisfied with the agreement, which was re1iched during an all-i'light negotiating session. The leaders of Lhe big union apparently were concerned the settlement did not specify the pay scales of some of the "'orkers it represents. But \he picket lines are called ofr until the membership decides . Members of the city board of supervisors-were called from their homes at 3 a.m. to join final stage1 of the talks. They must vote the a1freement into law at their afternoon meeting. (Nixon said recently that 67,000 North Vietnamese soldiers are operatln1 ln Laos.) Nixon, In a message to Kosy&in, had asked ~1oscow and London, cochairmen of the 1962 Geneva convention that pro.- claimed Laos neutral, to use their good o!tlces among the teaty's 1lgner1 to restore peace. From Page I LAOS •.. about IS mJles from the North Viet· nam frontier. Radar nets dotted nearby hills and Air Foree and Central Intelligence Agency personnel used the valley landJn& strip u a base for American-led teams of Meo tribesmen entering North Vietnam on harassment missions, the Post said. Highly sophisticated electronic gear "'as housed In a limestone cave and used 'to electronically release bombs and guide planes to targets over North Vietnam, the report added. Helicopters also reportedly used the base for rescuing flyers downed In North Vietnam. Two ground attacks rail ed to dislodge the troops, the Post continued, and in early 1968 four Soviet-made biplanes at- tempted an air raid on the base. The old AN2s, however, we.re no match tor the American helicopters that went aloft. Servicem.en firing Jl.1-16 rines shot dO\\'n two of the North Vietnamese Air Foree planes, tbe report sakl . The North Vietnamese finally overran the air strip and fought their way up the side of the mountain, the Post continued fina•ly overrunning the base. ' One American was quoted as 1ayin( the American and Meo troop• "fought to the last man. They Ytere all kllled March 11 inside that grotto. An enormous amount ot equipment was Jost, too." Actor 's Wife Found Dead in Her Studio LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The wife of actor Dane Clark was found dead In iler studio adjacent to their West Los Angele• home today. Clark said he found the body on a 10fa ln her studio-workshop ln their home. ltirs. Clark, 55, \\'U dressed ln nia:ht clothing. You Work Less You Save Money Keeps things cleaner without effo rt, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last longer. ' -....... .......... _.._ Ask About Sears Convenie.nt Credit Plans FREE Estimates! Phone Sears Tod ay! ·[Sears! ....IC9!.G.MeOI. So. Coast PIAl'.&, 3333 Bristol St. Phone 040·3333 I. 7 , , l : I I I ~ I ' 7 ' . .. San-Clemenie Capistrano YO~. 63, NO. 63, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ' .... . • EDITION ORANGE COUNT)', °CALIFORNIA _MONDAY, MARCH 16, '1970 TEN CENTS Clemente Cloudy Over. Financial Disclo·sures By'RICBARD P. NALL Of tM O.ltt' Plllf l t•ff As the deadline draws near for filing 01 financi al disclosure statements by public orficials, many are still unsure what is involved and who will be required to file .. Max Berg, San Clemente city clerk. said it is obvious under the existing legislation that city councilmen and coun- cil candidates must file and that planning commissioners must file. He said it isn't clear yet whether the • • law also will mean that members of the city parking commission and parks and recreation commissJon will have to file disclosure statements with the county clerk. Berg k.nows that ht! mwt file a stale· ment and that the city mMager and city lrtasurer must but said he isn't sure whetbtr the rule applies to all city ap· poi.nled ·department beads. "W• will have to look to our city at- torney for the answers," said Berg, INSIDE TODAY FEATURED NEWS ALONG THE SOUTHERN ORANGE COAST e Hangin' Round Towta There'll be some hi-jinks along with other fun a·t San Juan Capistrano's Fiesta de las Golondrinas this \Veek. See Photo, Page 3. e J1111ior Higla Faces l1avasio1a More than 600 new faces are .expected at Marco For- ster Junior High School in the near future. Story, Page 3. e Another Water Round · Residents angered by recent water rate h~es in the South Coast County Water J?ia~t are l!lacina for another round of talks. Story, Page ~. ~. Coast Guard l(ept Busy As Fog Catches Boats Scores of pleasure boats caught In a swift moving fog Sunday kept Coast Guard, Coast Guard Auxiliary and Harbor Department rtscue boats from Marines Suffer Back Injuries While Sm·fing Two %2-year-old Marines suffered back injuries in body surfing; accidents al Laguna Beach Sunday afternoon. Richard Hiett of El Toro Marine base, was dumped by a wave while surfing off lhe beach al El Morro Trailer Park at 3:45 p.m. He struck his head on the bot· tom, according to lifeguards and ap- parently suffered a back injury. Hletl was taken by ambulance to South Coast Community Hospital and transferred to the ba.se hospital at El Toro after emergency treatment. Tbe second injury victim was Buddy Thompson or the fl.farine Corps Air Sta- tion, Santa Ana, who also suffered a back injury while body surfing o(f the beach near the Hotel LaJuna at 4:30 p.m. He also was given emergency treatment at South. Coast Community Hospital and transferred to the El Toro holpltal. Laguna to Los Angeles Harbor busy on searches until a late hour Sunday. First "mayday" distress signal came from the SG-foot cabin cruiser Dino II out of Newport at 10:52 a.m. when the owner. Frank A. Costella, reported he was aground in dense fog off South Laguna. Orange County Harbor District boats \\'ere dispatcned to the scene along with a Coast Guard helicopter out of San Diego and the Coast Guard 95-foot cutter Cape Higgon out of Newport Beach. Before rescue vessels .arrived on the scene, Costella reported that he had been pulled free by a small skiff·and was no longer in immediate danger. The Cape Higgon took the Dino JI in tow at noon and brought it to the Newport Harbor Department. There waii no ma)or damage reported. Marine radio channels crackled for hours as boats reported they were stranded in the dense fog with no power or sail. Stork Markeu NEW YORK (AP) -Stock marke~ prices were skidding late this afternoon, with losing issues out.dlstancing: gainers by more than three to one. Trading was slack. (See quotations, Pages 11-19). 1be market had been retreating al- mosl without intmuptlon since the be· ginning of the session. noting that attempts are under way to modify the law so that discloaure does not list actual extent 9f holdings but rather only whether lhey involve more or less than $5,000. "I agree with tum that It's a mesif and needs clarification," said James D. \Vheaton, Lagllna Beach city clerk and city manager. He said Laguna's city attorney has ai;t- vised that all department heads must file under Ule Unruh law if it is still the la"· In effect when deadline arrives, April 6 for councll candida:tes and April 15 for others. '1They ha·;,; to roe with the county clerk and I have to Ole with him. too. He gets all tbe. beat uP lhue/' said Wheaton. Ernest Tbomp:son, city administrator for San Ju'an Capjstrino, said. he under- .stood effQrts by the assembly speaker to modlfY·the Unruh law hive thus far been defealed In the Assembly. All departme nt heads In San Juan Capistrano have been advised they should file financial disclosurts, aaid Thompson, but said the holdings of · those involvtd would nol amount to the $10,000 figure at any rate. He said financial holdings of planning commlssionen migQt be ffi9re subslalltial but added lhat the ·planning cotntNUJon normally resigns in council eltd.kln year• and waits to set If rt-.appointmfn1 11 forthcoming from the new council. San Juan Capistrano has nine council ase e Oil Panel Goes Home For Study By TllO~IAS FORTUNE Of tilt Dtllr l"Ulf Sl•lf A U.S. Senate subcommittee today has' taken back to Washington, D.C .• a wealth of testimony in opposition to federal oil drilling off Orange County and the rest of the California coast. Seven persons represeriUng the Orange • Coast area were amonr tbOse Do IPOkl in two days of heringa Friday and Satur~ day in Santa Barbara. The Subcommittee on M i n e r t l 1 , A-laterlais-anOFuels of the Senate Interior and Insular Affairs Committee was on a fact-finding mission and will take no action prior to a second hearing in Washington. A date for that hearing has not yet bee n set. Newport Beach Mayor A-frs. Doreen 1.farshall, Laguna Beach City Councilman Roy Holm and San Clemente City At· torney Carl Kegley all presented titelr city's endorsement of a bill to ban oil drilling in federal waters beyond the three-mile limit wherever the state of California has created a sanctuary. This means offshore or au of Orange County south of the Santa Aoa River dividing Hunlingt.on Beach from Newport Beach. Others testifying from tne county were Newport Beach residents ~1rs. T. Duncan Stewart and George Zebal for the Coastal Area Protective League. County Board of Supervisors Chairman Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach and Al Nelson, assistant director of the County Building Depart· ment who administers the county's oil code. Mrs. Stewart traced the Protective League's involvement from 1955 when the state Cunningham-Shell Act created the oil drilling sanctuary south of the Santa Ana River and Zebal spoke about geological problems in oil drllling. Testimony on the Santa Barbara silua· lion was given by state administration of· ficials. assemblymen and county of Santa Barbara officials. • The only member of the Senate sub- committee present was ill chairman Frank Moss (0-Utah). Members of the suboommlttee staff and of the U.S. Department of the Interior were In at- tendance, however, and are expected to offer recommendation.s on various Senate oil drilling bills. GAILY Pit.OT "IT ISN'T MUCH, BUT IT'S ALL W&'VE GOT; Sea Scouts Carr (left), Hunter and L1ndbound:Cr~ft Stalwart Sea Scouts Seek BoatFromNixon,Hughes By JOHN VALTERZA Of Ir.. o.lly l"U1I Sttlf They may be land bound right now, but a stalwart bunch or San Clemente Sea ·Scouts lead by a stubborn teenage bo'sun won't settle for being boatless sailors. And everyone from President Nix.on. Howard Hughes and scores of aides in between have heard abbut It. Trouble is, all the executives and spokesmen have come up with the same answer to Neyle Hunter's pleas for a gift boa~ no (In the mllllon diplomatic ways available in the cool business let- ter). Ir the an1.11ll "ship" of acouts with the code number 110 are landbound, ID Is their only present tangible hope for ever hitting: the high seas, a cabin cruiser of sorts composed of a not-so-beautiful hull and four years of work. "We're going to ca ll it the Pueblo 11, I think. Nevertheless, it's all we got", the San Clemente High School student related. Neyle didn't approach the billionatre Las Vegas recluse with an appeal for a boat, however . It was less subUe. than that. In terse, realistic and forward terms, Bo'sun Hunter asked for money . "After you see thla following line you'll probably throw this letter a1'ay, however I am very serious in my convlctklns. ' Police Protect . ' Captured Coon Deferments End Sought "We need financial support lo obtain supplie!I and ma~ials. "Could you help??? "\Vouldn't this be a great tax wrlte- ofi?" A pair of wandering raccoons en· joying a nocturnal dip In a Laguna Beach swimmlng pool roused neighbors and police early Sunday. Answering a 4:45 a.m. report. of ~·an animal in distress", officers Carroll Bush and Paul Rose huten- ed to 482 High Drive "'here they found lhe soortt of the disturbanct, a large raccoon, with his left hind leg stuck in a fill pipe. in a backyard swimming pool. A second raccoon left the water and took off over the fence as the officers ap- proached. Covering the trapped aquanaut ~·lfh a blanket to discourage his rv;lst.llntt!, tht orOcers freed hls leg and he set off after his companion, •lightly hamp<red by a limp, they reporL Youth Group Meets at Western White House Th.! western half of President Nixon's Youlh Advisory COmmittee thia weekend drafted proposals to end s tudent defermeot.s at a two-day confertnce at the Western White HOU!e complel' In San Clemente. • ··~ 11r11ra'd\1tsorrh'om 27-states and Guam elected to recommend the end or defermen~ for all but medical students and young men in certaln phases of agriculture. Findings and suggestions of the com· mJttee will be blended with recom- mendaUons by Its eastern counterpart • be for~ they are presented, by President Nixon to the lmpendtng h1>arlngs by the Senai : Anned Services UimmiUet. The group which ' met on the Orange Coast for .two d1ys purposely avoided discussion and study of the President'• ideas or a volunteer army LO r~laoe the Selective Service Sy5le.m. Spokesmen for the committee 11id the issue was avoided because of the un- certainty over whether the President's suggestions would be. adopted. ---A -shorter-nngr-vtewpotnr was ex· amined, Instead, they said, so that a more _Jquitable system of the draft could be \~ugurated to last until the volunteer armed forces Idea becomes reality. The western committee suggests that most defennenl5, particularly sludcnr-- ones. be phased out to eliminate In- equities in the Stlecllve Service. Syatem. The advtsets, 'Ill ranalng bl age from 11 to 26. su ggest that their plan would eliminate the dr•ft-dodglng "perpetual 1tudont" who remalna to ac:hool under his dt.ftrmenl to avoid coftllCl'ipUon. ,. '. The group'• rtport. cites "financial and intellectual discrimination'' u n d e r the present student deferment structure. - By a vote of II lo t, the lf'OUP elected to suggest phasing out the ll.S determent and a freeze in grantin1 of new ones. Studcnll· P""Onlly-holding the studenL deferment would conUnue with it until they either give It up or reach th.e age or 24. For medical student., the committee suggested nominal federal grants for undergraduates and ••substantial" (unds fbr graduate mtd ti:udent.s. Failure, to complete studies w o u I d make a medical student Immediately eligible for military service. • Committee members 1:1id thty based their auggutlons on lhou1and.1 of boun of lntcrvlew1 with-dr•ft••it youths~ Jiughe s didn't bite. lo a polite letter an H. H. aide said 14ughes only gives money through his foundation which is devoted entirely to the Hughes Medical institute. . Then followed the lime-worn tcJosln1 paragraph which ends on a lukewann note: " ... It is Impossible to Include any M:W · organi.utlon at UU.s Ume, no m1ttu bow worthy the cause." -Essentially tht ... 1anM rtspontel have come from the Naval Shlp Sy1t.tni1 Com- mand, the Secretary « the N11vy,.the Of-. flee of the Chief of Nnal Operat~a - even the Secretary of De.ftnte. The ncaresl thing llunter has rectlved In forrn of a reply trom President Nl,x'on was fro1n AsslStatit Navy Secretary Robert Frosch. who 1aJd be "wu con- nrent that you will llnd (his 1taff'1) reply informative.'' . . Nothing more ha.s 1trlved aince. U the federal aod Las Ye1aa. ao11e.ro- (S.. sc;otJTS, P,lff 11 ' ,. candidates. Laruna bu five and San Clemente has a whoppinr 15. Thompson · said those involved are holding off filing to await clarification and an)': changes in law involved. County Clerk Wi!Uam St John aaid his office has receiveil several hundred declarations alr.eady and expects inany more. "MOst are holding' 'back for clarification," be said. "The laW is ex· (See DISCLOSUJIEr Pap I) • Cave Held Technical Radar Gear WASHINGTON (AP) -North Viet- namese troops annihilated a smalL American force aperalirig a secret radar in~taliation hidden In a limestone cav• atop a mountain in Laos , killini at leut 12 U.S. servicemen. the Wubington Poet reported today. The Americans died Man::h Jt, 1918. tht Post said, defending the radar, recoo- naissance and 'rescue~-ne·site con. -hllhly oopllloll'!f!Ad ·~ gear for cllrectln& bomblD& raldl alo01 the Ill Cbl llJqil Tnlll·-,_ Norlll Vietnam, tbe report a:lded."- In a Vientiane datelined dlspatch by T. D. Allman, the story Aid the dtfeal JUf· feieilatthi 'baiiilior Iii< Nortlf Vie~ n~te w11 •ept a secret. The Defense Department made no comment on the report. oVer the 'fftekend, however, White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler disclosed there were "some" U.S. casualtie1 in Laos since 1962 besides tht earlier confirmed death of Anny Capt. Joseph K. Bush Jr. Zlesler declined to state the exact number of American military peraonnel who had died u a ruult of bollUle fire, aaying only that it was "less than 50." According to the Post, the base was called Phou Pha Thi and was located on a 5,860-foot peak In northeaslmt Laos (See LAOS, Pa1e I) Candidates Ah· Views in Laguna Laguna Beach City Q:iuncll candidates will air their views on Implementation of the general plan when they appear at a forum sponsored by the Laguna Beacll Coordina ting Council at 7:30 p.m. Tues-, day in the Laguna Federal Savings and Loan"Bu.ikling:, 260 Ocean Avenue. Scheduled to speak at the meeUng, which is open to the public, and also tc» amwer questions from the: audience are incumbents Richard Galdberc and Joseph O'SulUvan, and Joseph Tomechak, ,J>eter Ostrander and .Edward Lorr. Tl'le five candidates also will speak at Uie Ch'ainber 'of Commerce Wednesday morning breakfast at 7:30 a.m. in the Hotel Laguna. The public also is invited to attend the breakfast aesslon. Orange Coast Weat•er The Orange Coast can look for fair weather Tuesday, with temp- eratures in the middle 70'1. Tl'lere wlll be more early morning coa!t- al rog, however, which should clear off before mld·mornlng, INSIDE TODAY Thouoh ft war cloMdtil vp badly bt,t heavu fog, tht: South· -1and'1 new collegiate sailing venter atilt ha& a window on tht boy n11d it it Wtll dtdicatfd Sun- dau. Page 24. I DAil v PllDI SC M°""', M.-cl 16, 1970 • St. Pat's Day, Indeed; Briton Files a Rebuttal Editor's Note : The DAILY PlLOT's Tom McCann took his best shot 'for SL PatrJCk In hla Saturday Logbook and today Brillon Tom Barley files his annual answer . The editor, himsell a son of the Emerald lsle, hereby disclaims responsibility for answering irate calls from the Irish. He suggests directing complainL! directly to Mr. Barley at his courthouse outpost by calling 834-3783. "All I have to JOY about St. Patrick's Day i& that I'm damnt:d Q!ad wt'rt not so bloody daft about St. David's Doy ," R1chard Burton By TOM BARLEY Of "'-DellY l'lltt Sid J'RA VE GRACIOVSLY coruented to clean up the load of rubbish !ell in this column by its previous contributor (Tom McCann 'a Saturday Logbook) and you can be assured, genUe reader, that there hasn't been a bigger mess since llORleOne put cascara in the fU&ht crews' cocoa on one of lhox balmy days ot the RAF'• Appleton RDebuck airfield. Ah, yes. Looking back, you know, that was quite a moving experience. We were all airborne three hours later and I can tell you that by the time we reached the English Channel we had the bomb doors open and - (Edi tor's note : You were saying something, \\'ere you not, about the previous contributor? He at least kept to the polnt). ALL RIGHT, LOVE, keep your green shirt on. I was just trying to depict for your readers the cascara-like ef· feet on the human system or such bilge as "there are only two kinds o( people in the world -those who are Jri!ih and those who wjsh they were" and "enjoy the day in the spirit of St. Patrick." And we wanted to draw the attention of readers -who suffered sort.ly Saturday -to the doubtful qualifications of the bright lad who'd0 have us all sporting Kelly green when we'd be more in. touch with rellity by wearing Fair- haven black and/or staying in bed all day. Don't go for that orange tic and green shamrock routine -that's the leprechaun-like McCann'1 escape clause should angry representaUves ()f eJtber party come a callinJ. AND DON'T LET Iha! McCann handle fool you Into thinking that thl1 re!ugee from the news room hails, via his forebears, from Kerry, Cork, ~ nemara or any such point sou th of the Northern Ireland border. It'si known, Incidentally, In those parts as the line between Heaven and Hell and If you want a clue let me tell you that I always looked on Dublin as a pretty hot town. ,1 Saturday's warmed up version of the annual idiocy Is pretty typical or what has the brainwashed minority capering, cavorting and drooling on what -Mc€ann calls the days of days. GREEN BEER. leprechauns, shillelaghs, drunken choruses of "Irish Lullaby'' and ••Kathleen" -Eeeeeeyeeh. And again eeeeeeeyech. lt'a about Ume someone -and McCaM desrves drafUng -charter flighted this sleken- ing set, one way, all the way lo the Emerald l!le that always wore 1 bright shade of. battleshJp gray when I was oo it When you could aee it through the rain, that is. And when you weren't being knocked o!f Lhe aldewalk by inebriated Paddya emerging from one or Dublin's 6,394 pubs. And lhat's a conseniative estimate .• There's only two kinds of Irish on St. Patrick's Day -those who burble about exactly nothiOI for 10 days before and 10 days after March 17 and those wbo are sick to the teeth of hearina about it. Try St. David, Sl Andrew or St. George for a change. 'lbt.ll you'd really have aomedtlng to sinl aboul • Services Planned Tuesday • For Martin Martinson, 92 Services will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday in McCormi ck Chapel, Laguna Beach, for :itartln B. Martinson ol 334 Poplar St., 14'ho died at his home Saturday al the age of 92. The Rev. Lothar Tornoy,· of St. Paul's Lutheran Church will officiate al the rites for ~tr. r.1artlnson. who was an active member of the church. llis body will lie in state at the chapel, 1795 Laguna Can- )·on Road, until 9 o'clock tonight. Sun•ivors Include the widow, Charlotte, nf the home : a daughter, 1'.trs. Louise Couse of Laguna Beach; a brother, Elmer M. Mart inson of Colorado Sprines : gis t er Mr. Esther Lauth of Jollet, Ill.; and three l{randchildren.· Robert Couse of Berkeley; Ml!s Barbara Couse -0f Laguna Beach; and Mrs. Bonnie Davis of Laguna Beach. A native os Sweden, ~Ir. Martinson had DAILY PILOT H..,,_..._. 1., ....... Co1hl Mnt1 H111tf ..... 1Hell ,.....,... v.11.., s .. c~ OltANCiE COAST l'Ull"HtNC. COMl'A.H'I' ~ob•fi N, w,,4 l'rttlci.f\1 •nd Publl1llllr J1c~ R. Curley Vk.1 PrHklt'nl Ind G-rtl Mlnlttt Thom11 K11 .. i1 l!dtto• Tho1'111 A. Murphl111 Mln•Dl"I EtllO• Ri ~h 1 r4 P. Ni ll S.011!!> O•l"fl Cour>Ty l!dltor Offlcn Cos11 Mesa : no W11t 81y 5t•rf! NIWpoM 811(~; '711 Wn1 81lboil 8e>11l1v1r1 l•gUM 8Malr m l'OAll A- H!,11'11111910!! llldlt 11'7J 8 1.,;ft 8ou"v1rt Siii CltMMtt; *Horii! 1!1 (1mlrt1 llHI Jived bl the Lquna area for 31 years. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be mlde to SL Paul's LUtheran Church. Burial will be al Melrose Abbey. Last Rites Set On Wednesday For Mrs. Seidel Mass will be celebraled at to a.m. \Vednesday In St. Nicholas Catholic Church, Leisure World, for Mrs. Juanita Daguerre Seidel, last survivor of a family that held a ()ne-third interest in the vast !i.1gulton Ranch. l!rs. SeJdel died Saturday in St. Joseph lioSl>ital. Orange, where she had been confined since ~1arch 7, when she slipped and fell into a bath tub of hot water In her home at 31506 Bluff Drive, South Laguna. Burned over 65 percent of her body, she died ol pneumonia and the effects of the burns, according to the Orange County Coroner's Office. . She was the last ol the three Daguerre SJSters y,•hose father, Jean Daguerre, was a partner of Lewis F. Moulton in the historic, 22,000 acre ranch on part of which lhe Laguna Hills Leisure World v.·a!I buill. A. naUve or Los .Angele11, Mrs. Seidel had lived In Orange County for 70 year1. Her parenls came from France in 1874. They had six children, or v.•hom !\1r1. Seidel y,·as lhe last survivor. Rosary will be recited at 8 p.m. Tues. day in St. Nicholas Church and burial wltl be in Calvary Catholic Church Cemetery, Los Angeles. Mrs. Blackmarr Funeral Set Strvlcts will be held at 2 p.rn. Tuetd1y for Jerry Jean Blackmarr, 35, of 23802 Paseo del Campo, Wgun1 Nlauel, who died Saturday In South Coast Community Hospital after 1 brief Illness. 1'.1rs. Blackman was the wife or Ned Blac:kmarr, owner ot La1una Beach Furniture, 260 f'ortst Ave. Sht also Is survived by two 10ns. Michael and Chris, and by her parents, Mr. and ~tn. c. B. Badon or Pomona. The Rev, Or. Donald E. lnlay w!ll of· ficlate at servke. ln Shffftr La.guna Beach Mortuary Chapel. Burial will be •I El Toro Cemeltly. •• f , . Air Strikes Into Laos Revealed SAIGON (UPI) -The Vnited States began announcing air strikes into Laos today and reported the losses of three niore U.S. planes to ground fire there. Headquarters aMounced U1e departure ot more Glll for home and said American tr09p strength In Vietnam fell to a zg.. month low last 1\·eek with withdray,·aJ of 3,900 Americans from the war zone. In its first announcem'"cnt of U.S. air strikes_into Laos, the command said : '"Air Force. Navy and Marine Corps aircraft yesterday (Sunday) continued in· terdlclion operations against the Ho Chi ~1inh Trail in Laos. Air Force aircraft flew combat support missions in Laos for Royal Laotian fOrces . In addition, BS2s participated in· interdiction operations along the Ho Chi Minh Trail In Laos." Cotnpeting in San Diego The official disclosure that American -planes are bombing Laos, along with the announcement of U.S. plane losses there, meant a further step in taking tile wrap! off \\•hat has since 1964 been a secret air campaign. ~1rs. Billye Bronson of Irvine (second from left) is among Southern California finalists competing to-- day in regional round o{ 21st Pillsbury • General Electric Bak~off in San Diego. Contestants a re seeking $25,000 grand prize in national contest. Actress June Lo ckhart (right) \Velcomed Southern California competitors today. Finalists include (from left) Lela E. Steiner of Van Nuys, Mrs. Bronson, Mrs. Ellen B. Robins of Los Angeles and Mrs. Sandra J. Bangham of Torrance. In Mosco1v, meanwhile, Premier Ale1.ei N. Kosygin told the Unit ed States the first step towards any attempt to restore peace in Laos must be an end to American bombing raids. Fro11a f>oge 1 DISCLOSURE • • treme\y vague ." St John said that the state attorney general has ruled that those jnvolved must give the dollar value of their holdings. He said many county counsels feel this is not necessary under the am- biguous law. "I am asking them to show the actual value of these holdlngs," said St John. "Actually, It isn 't up to me to say, It's up to the district attorney. He'll be the one actually prosecuting (in case of conflicts --ol interest)." "If you st.ate that you own 500 share or General Motors stock, it's silly not to glvl! the valu e. The value is in the newspaper," said the county clerk. He said he intended. to disclose the dollar value or his holdings in his own state- ment. "Thomas Jefferaon said when you hold pu~llc offlce, you are public property," la.Id St John. ., Asked about who must flle, he said. This lsn't clear cut. We are telling everyone that Jt Is a personal matter and If they need advice they should consult their own attorney." There Is some agltaUon to change the law, said St John, "but the biggest thing w.e're waiting for now is a case before thf: State Supreme Court brought by Cannel By The Sea." · He sald disclosure, as things stand, In- volves basically three areas, Income ~ perty worth more than $10,000, 1overn- inent controlled buslneu holdings valued at more than $10,000 and stock worth more than $10,000. From Page 1 SCOUTS ... ment was noncommittal. so is the Boy Seoul hierarchy. The Sea Scouts' quest for a real ship, Hunter discovered, treads deeply into mountains of red tape in the scouting \\-arid. "Vt'e can't Just go oul and find a free boat and say y,·e'll take ii," he said. "There are forms, board approvals, submitting spec.Ulcations, and all kinds of 01hcr stuff. and sometimes It gels us just phiin frustrated." he said. So ""'hen the negative letters wear doy,•n tl1e determinaUon. the boys, led by their ridult advisor Cily Engineer Phil Peter. he ad down to a backyard and slap some pn!nt on Pueblo II. Gar Carr, another Sea Scout and the bo'sun's friend Intimated as he gazed up at tile landlocked boat, "\Ve're supposed lo launch it any time now. but I really am worried that it'll either sink or flip over." tr the vessel named alter the ill-fated i;py ship ever does floa t, It will have a temporary mooring off the San Clemente Dier unUI plans -IJ{ill years off - bttome more finn for the ship's base at Dana Harbor. 1'\Ve still don't know how we 're going lo j:!e:l out to the boat once it's on lhe moor- ing," Gary intimated. In the meantime-aside lrom amateur boa tbuilding-the boys in the sh.Ip OC· casionally can make use of the full ·rledg· cd Sea Scout Base ln Newport Beach. But their landlocked r e p u t a t i o n precedes them lh ere. Thus-similar to lnter-ship rivalry in the real Navy-the San Clemente Scouts' day at that base can be strained at tim es. •1we don 't go up the.re too much. because everybody knows we're a maverick ship.'' Neyle aaJd. "All we want is a sound. nice-looking boat. but boy. we never thought It would be this hard to get one." Surplus N1vy craft al'f: generally not ~uit.able, scout officials have told the local ship, because of tht upkeep and Cl· pensto.s involved in keeping the craft. And by policy, the Navy glvu out It• spnre boa Cs under an arr1n~emenl with the Boy Seoul! of America after requests from local councils. And !here •rt m1ny more requests than there arc boat.s. So the doren Sta Scouts In San Cleme.rite will probably hive to wait their tum In that game. "But we'NJ ltlll ... tlo;ing for someone to donate one," Neyle Uid. San Francisco's Strike Ends; Streetcars Roll SAN FRANCISCO CUP!) -Mayor Joseph L. Aliolo hammered out an agree· mcnt with striking city en1p!oyes early today to end a four-day strike Y:hich had shu t dov.'n the city's transit and school systems. 3rd Laguna Fire Hits Old House, Guts Apartment For the third lime In less than two weeks, a pre-dawn fire h.roke out in an old Laguna Canyon residence Sunday, destroying the Interior of the second· story aparlment at 237 WQO<lland Drive . \Valtcr Anderson, occupl\t o( the house O\Vned by Paul Westbrook. 1284 Starlit Drive, suffered a cdf on his ann as he crawled out of a door lo escape the blaze that awakened him al 4:25 a.m. Investigators are checking the extent of damage today. It is believed the fire may have been started when material draped on celling and walls in the living room fell onto a noor furnace vent. Heat from the flames also blistered paint on a neighboring residell(e at 255 \Voodland Drive. Last Sunday, March 8, at 4:45 a.m. fire totally destroyed an un occupied house and shed on nearby Canyon Acres Dri ve and four days earlier a blaze at almost th e same hour gulled another old \Vood\and Drive residence. Oemente Parks To Be Studied San Clemente's parks and recreation commissioners wlll study the parks sec· lion of the city's five-year capital im· provemen1s list at their meeting tonighl at 8. Other items on the commission's agen· cla include study of the proposed con· cession stand at North Beach and preliminary discussion on a possible new park at Trafalgar and Ola Vista. The cnpltal improvement study will in· vol\'e commission perusal of a n estimated $795,000 in parks and recrea· tion project! which as yet ha ve not been placed on a priority llst. The all-night negotiations broke up after da,vn and the city called its public transit drivers back to work. A few streetcars, y,·hich had been idle since Fri· day, began rolling by mld·morning. The last of four striking unions ordered ils mem bers \9 sto p picketing about h\·o hours after the tentative agreement \\'as reached. Local 400 of tile city and county cmployes union, the largest striking union. held a t\\'<rhour caucus before deciding to submit the settlement to a \'Ole of its members. The union, whicft had insisted the trike was not over after other locals pulled their pickets, said it too would withdraw -plckets until after its membership voted this alternoon. Alioto announced the settlement and said he expects city operations to return to normal by midday. He refused to disclose terms of the agreement, saying only that it was "re spon sible and reasonable," providing a cost-of-living Increase ·while holding the line again st Inflation. But he did say that the unions had won their chief demand -retention of a "seniority" pay increase or 5 percent a year granted employes during their first four years with the city. The Item, v.·hich costs an estimated $2.4 million a year, had been cut by the city supervisors. The city had offered 14,000 employe.s a $4.8 million -or 5 percent -pay hike. The un ions had demanded-$9.S million - aDoul 10 percent. The agreement came too late for the 400.000 dally passengers of the 1'.funiclpal Railway Sy~tem . They walked. biked, drove and hitchhiked lo work, creaUng a n1assive traffic jam In the downtown area during the morning. The parking problem was even worse than on Friday because police had to keep bus and streetca r lanes clear after tile settlement was reached . John Jeffrey, head of Local 400, told newsmen he was not rully satisfied with the agreement, whJch wa9 reached during an all -night negotiating session. The leaders of the big union apparently were co ncerned lhe settlement did not specify the pay scales of some <>f the workers it represents. But the picket lines are called off until the membership decides. J\Iembers of the cily board of supervisors were called from thelr homes at 3 a.m. to join final stages of the la lks. They must vote the agreement into Jaw at their afternoon meeting . Unti l the bombing stops , Kosygin said It would be "unrealistic" for him to con- sider President Nixon's request that the Soviet Union !)nd Britain attempt to end the flghting in the Southeast Aiian kingdom . Kosygin placed much ol the blame for the war between government and Com· munist forces in Laos on the United Stales. He made no mention of North Vietnamese military support for the Communist Pathet Lao. (Nix:on said recentl y that 67,000 North Vietnamese soldiers are operating In Laos.) Nixon. in a message to Kosygin, 'had asked ~1oscow and London. cocha!rm en of the 1962 Geneva convention that pro- -claimed Laos neutral, to use their good offices among the te aly's signers lo restore peace. From. Page l LAOS ... about 15 miles from the North Viet- nam frontier . Radar nets dotted nearby hills and Air Force and Central Intelligence Agency personnel used the valley landing strip as a base for American-led teams of !\feo tribesmen entering North Vietnam on harassment mi ssions, the Post said. Highly sophisticated electronic gear \vas housed in a limestone cave and used to electronically release Dombs and guide planes to targets over North Vietnam, the repo rt added. Helicopters also reportedly used the base for rescuing flyers downed in North Vietnarn. _ Ty,•o ground attacks failect to dislodge the troops, the Post continued, and in early 1968 !our Soviet-made biplanes at· tempted an air raid on the base. The old AN2s. however, y,•ert no match for the American helicopter11 that went aloft. Servicemen firing 1'.1·16 riOes shot down t1\·o of the Nonh Vietnamese Air Force planes, the report said. The North Vietnamese finally overran t~e ai r stri p and fought their way up the side of the mountain, the Post continued fina1 ly overrunning the base. ' One Amer ican "'as quoted as saying the American and Meo troops "fought to the last man. They were all killed March 11 inside that grotto. An enormous amount of equipment was lost, too." Actor'R Wife Found Dead in Her Studio LOS ANGELES (U PI ) -The v.•lfe of actor Dane Clark was found dead in her studio adjacent to their \Vest Los Angeles home today. . Clark said.he found the body on a sofa 1n her stud10-v.·orkshop in their home. lo.1rs. Clark, SS, was dressed in nl1ht clothing . You Work Less You Save Money Ke eps things cleaner witliout effort, eliminates bath tub rings P'lr-Wtlll't Con-ode Soap and clothing last longer. Dio .... ........... Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans FREE Estimates! Phone Sears Today! I Sears I So. Cout Plaza, 3333 Briatol St. Phone 640-3333 --- I I I t l ( I Chic Wrap-around j \Vhal better way to \Vrap him around your 1ittle finger than with Norman Hartnell's crisp version of wrap-crround elegance with grosgrain trim. But the details here are special -from the !ilight stand-away neckline to the squared oil arm- holes these are just frostings on a nicely scul ptor· ed d;ess. Add the handsome contour belt and it's clear sailing through any season. Fabric suggest1ons: silk and wool , w<?ol crepe, shantung, gabardine, linen, pique, synthetic blends. 63499 is cut in Misses sizes 10~1s. Size 12 requires af proximately Z..1/2 yards of 45" fabric and 8 yards o l " grosgrai n ribbon . To order 63499; state size. include na1ne, ad- dress and zi p code . Send $2 postpaid for EACH pat- tern. Send orders for patterns to SPt\DE.>\, Box N. Milford, N.J. 08848. This precut, preperfora'led Spadea Designer Pattern produces a better fit or money refunded. Order normal ready·to-v.1ear size and allow one week for delivery. Film Shows Writers In Action \Vrilers and Writing will be ln focus \Y hen the book discussion group of Frlends or the Fountain Valley Library meets at IO a.m. \Vednesday, March 18, in the library. The public is invited to at· tend and see the film, ac· cording to f.1rs. J am es Schendel, program chairman. On Friday, t\-1 arch 20. Friends will travel to the Arboretum, leaving the library al 10 a.m. and returning at ap- proximately 4 p.m. Reserva- tions for the bus trip may be made by caling Mrs. Matsuro Kato, 962-1414. Cost of the trip wilJ not exceed $2, and the group will stop for lunch. New officers will be in· stalled during a luncheon met ting in May. Silver Sands The first Tuesday of ea ch month al 8 p.m. members of Silver Sands 236, N at Ive Daughters 0£ the Golden West gather for meetings. Lake Park Clubhouse in Huntington Beach is the meeting place. If your Car is Art Proves Stretcher Teacher and author Mrs. Ester Dendel will present a slide lecture on arls and crafts, one in a series or mind slretcher talks, for Affiliates or the Laguna Beach Art Gallery. The art.isl. known in the field of design. tapestry, mosaics and ceramics, will speak al 8 ~.m . on Wednesday, P.tarch 18. in Laguna Beach Art Gallery. The lecture v.•ill be. helpful to those interested in art. In ad- dition, the curreol Interaction exhibit in the gallery features v.·ork of craftsmen-designers and graphic artists. The public is invited to at- tend the lecture at a cost of $1. Library Exhibit Corona de! Mar Library will feature through Marcl1 a specia l exhibit or works from the studio of Tom Jones in Newport Beach. Sponsored by the Newport Beach City Arts Committee, the show consists of creativE photographic expressions of Jones' associates. • • • GREEN We~ll Wash it ..• FREE Tuesday, March 17th! GLENNEYAE • Laeuna Car Wash z Q C!l w .... 540 S. COAST HWY. UGUllA IEACH·494·1922 -, LAGUNA HOTEL 0 -~O. COAST HIGHWAY I A Blessed Event Society Rocks Cradle A collection of baby clothing Active and a s s o c I a le Provisionals Go Hollywood .. f~onda)', Marth 16, 1970 DAIL~ PILOT 17 Pizza Cut for Pcir.ty A plzia party wiil be en-Shakey 's, Costa Men, •l 7:~ joyed by members and their p.m. Saturday, March 21. escorts when the iluntington r~ouowing dinher the aroup Beach Della Alpha P h I will return to the home of Mr. Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi , and P.·trs. Richard Boyle for and articles u s e d in members are invited to attend gr_andmother's day for the the JE:~lin_g Mranged ID'. A1rs. bl4!Med e-vent wlll b eR.afph -Koch. Persons aTtend· presenled to Las Damas ing are asked to bring .a lay· Chapter, Auxiliary of the eUe girt for babies in foster Children 's Home Society. on homes. gathera; for a social metling at games and dancing. '-ProvislonAls wlll tra.y.d...J9.-~~-~1.me_s. Edna Bowden , ~~~~~~~~~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiii,..----Hollywood when I.be National Gordon Brock, James Clark , ii Assistance LeagUe sponson an Pearl C o u r t n e y , Dale orientation ·day Wednesday, Erickson, Darwin K a s s e I l , March 18. Robert Langner. J. 1.. Wednesday, March 18. The society presently is The program entitled The diverting more energy and Cradle will be given at 10 a.m. money into a counseling pr1>- by a member of . G~will gram for natural parents. It Industries at a meeting 10 San also is developing a program Clemente. to place children In stable Irish Day Given Nod St:"'Patrick's Day has been chosen by the Officers \Yh·es· Club of El Toro J\1arine Corps Air Station as the date for a luncheon in the Ne~1>0rter IM. Members will gather at IO a.m. to hear a lalk by Dean Jolm Flood of Saddleback College, \\'ho will spin tales about the Generation Gap in the manner of a traditional Irish storyteller. Hostesses will be wives of J\IAG·l3, headed by the Mmes. R. N. Hutchinson. R. J. Reid, R. D. Percival , J. E. Mehrle , J. L, Thatcher. R. R. Norton, .lohn Dermody and Frank Cr•Jz. homes if parents are under the jurisdiction of the court. All funds raised by Las Damas and other auxiliaries are used to carry out these programs. It's What's On the Top That Count.s "It's what's on top that counts" is how G a y I c Kirkpatrick feels a b o u t blouses. His first signature co\lection for Pilot Blouse leads off with a group of supple shapes r.1 polyester malte jersey colored "folk rock'' bright. Samples: A seamed cowboy shirt , a sofl Indian ms,iden blouse bowed twice in front and fluid overblouses. Sears Making the trip will be pro--McGinley, Patrick McGinnis, vislonal members of the Paul Pearce. Jay Pierce, Fred Assistance League of Hun· I~ose, J ane Stowe and Richard t.lngton Beach and the Si lver Updegraph, Anchor Auzlllary, who will at· Accompanying the group tend a seminar in which NAL wilt be Mrs. Floyd Jlalr, goals, policies and activities. league third vice president, and the relationship betweett and Mrs. 11arry UBard, the national organization and liaison officer to the auxillary. its member chapters will be On Thursday, P.1arch t9 . explained. Mrs. O. B. lloot will entertain Thiy will join provisionals league members and their from other chapters for lunch guests at a coffee Iii her Hun· l n t h e I e a g ue-operated tlngton Harbour home. tearoom and a lour of the' lr============,11 lounder chapter, including i~ THINK EASTER thrift ar.~ gift shop. Attendlng from the Hun· tlngton Beach chapter will be the Mmes. Edward Howard, Ken Konopasek, Albert J\1c- Connell, Artht4r Newlin, Ed- ward Sullivan and Ray Walk· er . Silver Anchor Au x i I i a r y 1nembers making the trip will • THINK TOPS Mermaids ·rops J\lerging Mermaids meet al 7:30 p.n1. every ! Thursday in \Voodland School. Costa r>.1esa. Kenmore 30-in. Gas Stove with th~Features You Want '168 •Convenient electric clock with 4·hour rim er •Porcelain-enameled non.drip cooktop, nera· tion pans, burner grates make ·c]eaning easy •Large~ 24-in. wide oven lVilh removable 5ee. thru door and r emovable cbrome·pJated oven racks and guides •Separate 11mokeless broiler with an easy-clean porcelain·enameled pan and grid Model il200 GAS STOVE . ...-!, Introducing Frog Lovers To Chopin! PAllNTSl DON'T WAIT UNTIL fOUI CHILD IS OUT Of THI FIOG LOYERS AGE IEFORI YOU GIVE THIM THE GtfT Of MUSIC -YOU WAIT. A.HD IT MAY IE TOO U.TI! Clllldre• I• th• fr•'J l•l'lllt 1tot• 14·11 or• tlle p•rfe.:t..,. for le•nd11t 111u1lc. Yo111oh•, efler •••rs of rneorcll dnl911-.I Ille Yo111•ho M11sic Clnsft mo ••W .. rolll .. - Coun. to euur• th.t ell chll• :::·~.:•:. P::::: :.~•.: ~ drfll con leer11 111ulc. ,,.,, of tllo YAMAHA MUSIC MUlloM of Yoiwol'l11 'Jtod1101 .. COUISEI ho111 ell oli'er th• world tntify YOUl llGGIST llWAlD WILL to the""'"' •f tho YAMAHA IE WHEN YOUI •to• LOYll MUSIC COURSE LOOl(S UP AT YOU AND TILLS . YOU ••• "I GAYE MY ··~ ~You do 1101 h•"• to ti11, 011 i11-A NIW NAME, lllTHOYIN." 1tr11111e111, thero ii "• h•111• NOW IN COSTA MESA •tudy -lu1t Iott of f1111 for ,owr i;klldrOft whllo they lfftll 111wtlc. DON'T DENY YOUR CHILD YAMAHA '"' cH••c• You ••Y "•" Music School MISSED IN YOUR CHILD· HOOD. Coll 642-1144 Double-Oven /;as Stove witl1 Top Front Controls Sear• Care Service protects the va.luc of your Kt:nrnorc Srove. ~s hiBhly-t rained 1en-icc lecbnicians assure fou service satis- faction with personalixcd, profession· -a.I care •.• We M"rvice whac we seU whcre't'er you live or may move in the U.S.A. Use Sears Easy l'aymeol Piao AU M-.ior Appliance• Availal•lc al Scan C.1alo1 And Appliance Score• W!N4 •4tlC l "' l-44M, $11 .. IM '\ fllOl'ftl OI 1·"11 c: ... NOG4 , ••• ~40 .. NI •1a.•U.C:ll •• ,-." .... ,, C:Ofllf'ttltf Nt t •11•1• wt l •lltl MOl.\TWOOO MO ...... 11 -sears 1r.u.,-.onua:A110co. co"'"" ...... 11 ,...._._"•·ID' lhop Hitt.ft Motl..,...,......, ht"'°A1 t 1)0 A.Ii\. t. t 1JO ,.M,, l•11do1 12 ,.._ 11 I P,M. • .. 77000 loM ~A(lt ltf & .. UI ... , .. ,ic, Ml!il '"' •·1111 OIAltOt .,,.llll _ PAMMlol• 111.a111, 1n .. 1t1 ~ee·lhru e)e•lt\rl O\ en 1loor 5 228 Double your cooking capaciry with this 'Ken. more 30-inch double-oven stove. RcmOYablc (>ven racks and guides. removable lower OTCn door. Separate broiler-with porcelain·enamelcd pan and grid. Range Hood option1I.,, extrt •O.Olllli NA 1•1111 t tto wr t .. ltt 1~!014 ....... 1-l''' ·~Piii " -llH• ..... NI I .,,..,, .. .-ca al~· tOWlt "°"' ..._ ---tOfllU.lt« ..... . "'""' ,., , .... ,, -.-.. _ ".'"'' • • • ' • ' . . I • • • • t i ) . • • l . • • ' • . ~ ' I • ' l ' , . ; • f ' • • • • ' • ' • • ' • • ' ' I I -· -........ H . OAll'f' PI LOT SC Monday, Mitrth 16, 1970 LEGAL NOTICE B11ffun1s' Compl'ete-Nelv York Stock List .. LEGAL NOTICE ,___~~~~~~~-~ •' NOTICI" TD C•l'DITOltS •' SUPl!ll!Oll COUit?: 0, TMI STATI! 01' C.l.LIFOltNI• •Oii THI COUN?Y O~ OltANGE Nt .l._,,Ult Ellllf o1 VlllGINllri M.A•IE JIUFF'"IN •tsotNIMI tt JENtHE 0.1.VIES llUFFIN Oecttlf"I HOf K E IS liEREaY GIVEN lo 1ht ,t:r-ctlhN'1 of tl>e 1tl0v1 ,..,...d llKl!lfM • ,ffl•I I ll ""''°"' hlv•M (!t lm1 191\11>! !ht , .,14 deCldtnl ''' rtQulrea lo !llf them • 'Wllh '"'" lltlCU$1rV VOUtht •• (II tn, Qfll« • :.,r th• Clti'Mi ol Int 1bovf enllllt<I cw•! 01' Chief Set LEGAL NOTICE I' 3'tU ClllTIFIC.l.TI 0 , •USINISS ,ICTITIOU5 NAME TM ul\Cl..nl,inecl co•POl'etlon ao.1 c~ll¥ '"'' 11 Ji c.....Wcll,.. , buo1nirst In lht CO<.t,.IV ol °'11 ... t S1tlf of C•llfll•,.!I ......... , i'M l1ctnloys !Ir"' "'"" ll'I IN TEltlOllt DESIGN ST\JOIO 11\C1 llwl SINI Hrm 11 CQITIDCl!otd ol Ill, tollcWlll'I Co< "°'•!lot1 -Ost ... .,..,. Jn lull .....ci pr!ncl1>11I ol•c• or bu1lnru,l1 •• 1011owo L•vrt! 1>1!1 Son< o! C1IUor~1~ l'>C 0•1~ .... t•t COfllOl"thM •&<I .1.1<..0rl 8oulf,v"" Loi lrin1t1n Ct!Jlci•n11 ""'' Tht ullcl•,.lcin-d OCI"\ t11•111f:• c••1llv lt>tl lit V•Ct Pttllffnt 1rd .l."h1•nl Sec•tl1.-. arid tnrl• 1>l1c~1 ot •tliclt"<e trr •!. lollows Vlct-P<e1lclent S~tldl>n l•Z., IJJ!O CtntltY SI , Vin NUYI, C1lll, .. ~~~·"'l1.t i,;;.ill_ l:ll ~~\~1'J: Ad Miiii-_ ,:00 Addrru 1 .,- Admlr•I Atlntlll I Ill ~r,~~:., c~ l\lr ltl!<I :IOf AJ ...... lli'ltfl' All GI} I •w:••loC ,,. A lltrtvr1 3' A ll!Alu I )II Ak:oS!lnd U :lf...i.nt': ~r A.l1ea '°1 <la Allto~~ 1 4D ~!\:':PU: T~ AIUtdC~ I ~m=111 s "!ltd Pd M Al ... Sir 1111 •111c1s..a , ... All1-Cti1rn .1.loNPC lllt Akee I Ill l\MllAC SO AMtrE• 11<1 Am Ho~~ ~· Am•li oil "'Alll'll!r I ~ 1)!1~1111 O' • to 11r-t !Mm, ... 11n ~ n•t11ury WVdltn. "' , ... UO)dt 'li9ned ,, tM oflke ef Ms Al!wlleY, D-td K1"l11 IM North """' ,,.,._,, 1101 s.atr11¥ an aw11r1in.. . S.~• 11111, CelUornl• n11a. w!lkh 11 !ht J~ of blnlt!HS crf 11\f Ynotrtl•ned Jn 111 . :-tt.n ""11111nt "' lh• ... , ... ol 111d •--~I, wlll1ln tour montm lfltr 1he : .first ...-bllutlon of thl• "°"'°' .1.u 1011nr S•c,.11•v 8 u • • en L llltr• 1364.$ E Ttrrfct" Pl~<. WMI 11•• C.ll!ornl.I PLYMOUTH SHOWS NEW EDITION OF BARRACUDA Am a1.-or "'a''"'h J 10 ""'8<'C•I 1 JO Am Ctn 11<1 AC1n to1 1t Am C•m 60 "' Chi!~ I 60 .l.mCredll 0 t .&c,vS11<1 1 111 .ACr~ pl I $11 AmCYtn 11S ""' 01&11!1 l .1.0l•iTtl \Ot Am OullV~T •Cull Pl 1•1 .t,mEIOw l.61 Am Enkt 11 -""' EJO llld Ollf'CI Ft-1:1,.,,,.rv ~ 1'1t LEVITI .I.NO SONS OF C.l.llFOltN llri INC lly Si.tldOl'I l1Z1r Vlct-Prt11clt nl AAR 'Cud• Named for Dan Gurney's All -American R1cars Team 01ttd Ftb"''"' 1r. 1'10 ltabe<I E11ttnt ltvfll11 ~IOI' o1 ttr-E\11!• of ""' tbo¥t l'llfr1H dKllOent llv 8\JrfOfl L Ltllft A11ht1nt s.trt11" STA"'I E OF CALIFO!i!Nl.l ' It& lligli Gea1• • .. e.-1nc1 01..,.. AGtntns SO AGnln oil 10 •m~ol~T 10 A Homt I.SO .A liome of 1 Am HOIP U A"'!nv51 I 10 DONALD KLllN. .. N1rtll Mal• '""'' "1 SltUl'ltY ltl\ll 9ylliill,,., S111t1 .l.111, C111hir11l1 t21't1 'ttl '""' J4$-llU • •Att.,.MY tor 11.~PI .. l'llbllalltd 0tfl\9t CNS! COUNTY OF LO$ ANGE LE~ l "' Or> Fl'b<,,.rv ~. 1'10 ~ore me in. U"""'519Md I Nollrv Public Ill ""' ,., 11ld Stol• '""'W<llllY" IOPrtr~ SM!&ti L•l•r known 10 mt !o tr 1ht VI~ Pr~kle'nt, ""d 8~r«i<> t L1Z1•e ~"°"'" !O .... TO ht'"" Al!h•IM S•<-rtllrY o! lh~ ton•or•hon the• e•ecut~d lht within ln '"vmont, k'lOwn lo l"f to IN' tho ootson• ,.no e••cuted 11'11: ""!lhln in'""'" .. "' on l>thllf ol 111• <orPo•ltKln •M,.ln n•m"<I 'Ci1da Sl1ow11 by Plymouth AmMFav to A.Met(I• l olO .AMetCI>" ol • Am Mo!orl ,\mNllGI• ? Am Photo 11 lrille!~• •• Am ~~I I M1rdl 1 t, 16, :n 1110 Dlllv "•lo! ~·· LEGAL NOTICE 1ni11 •tknowi..:t* ,ft m• th11 •uth co• ---------------· IPO••llon e~tcult<I lh• "'th•n il>o!•umtn• T JSU6 •u•w•nl to lh b~ llW\ ., 1 •e'IOIUllcn o! SUPl'ltlO• COUltT 0' THI I" bo1rcl of dt•Kto" ,, ... ,. O' CALl,OltNIA •o• w1T,;ESS mv h1nd t nd oll<t1t l },el TNl COUNTY 011' OltANGI E1rlf,nt Sl1lon Ni .l.1Sltf llollry Public C1lllor.,11 HOTtCl 01" HllAll:ING 01" Pl'TtTION Prl...:IPtl Off.co In ' • •• ''. Los Artttles COIHl1~ '0• P•O•ATI! 0 ILL D MY Commlulon £••1··~ L1n111s Tf:ITAMINTAltY Elllte of FIORITA L. LUTTER. Mlv '· 1tn D«••Hd u1n NOTIClr IS HEltEBY GIVEN Thi! l'ulll!1htd Or1nat Ct11I DlllY Pllclt Wi lle« I Cu,1•1 hit lllfd hf'1tln 1 tub-Mirth t. U. 11. JO, 1'10 '91 70 p1Ullon l&r P'fltNli. ol "'!II Ind 1111' ksYtn<• of lelfto~J Tnltm~nl•n' to tt>t , PlllllloMf, rirf1"'..ct to whlcll It M.at fflr LEGAL NOTICE tyrfl'W ,.,tlc\li.r1, tlld tnet tr.. tlm• '""l------~"°'°'c-------1 ;r.11ce e1 "••""" tn.. -1111 be•n 1t1 p mu frtr M.,•th 11 lf10, 11 I JCt 1 m , In tho ClllTl,IC.1.TI 01' 9UllNl'U .,.,.,,rtroofl'> of D•l!f•lmtnl No J of Uld ,ICflTIO US N•ME or.our!, tt nll) Clvlt C•n1•t O•l~• WHI 111 '"" """"'"lnnP11 lie rtr!ltv !hoy 1rr l~• Cl!Y of $•nlit A.n• Ctlllornl• raMuc•lM • b ••lnon •I 111'1? C/\111mon Dtlf'CI' ~•ch 6 1111'1 •v• O•tn'I!!, Collfornl• \Ind•• In• lie w E ST' JOMN lltl&•I llrm ........... m O~PUTY o•wc, (IMlnhr C~t~ l"ETS •"" tho! \llld llrm li catn"°!-t<I m • G.1.ILElt, CU.ltlC AND •EltGLUND lt)o l11llo"'l"f --· wheM "*""'' ln lull 1 ... t:I H111tU11 Stfttl Ind &l"Cl'I ol ""l<l•ntt 1•t ll lo!lo"'' "'" N11VJ, c1nlor11I• t1•1 Jlobe•I J .. Gwtn l M~-· XIS• T1r lfUI nf-1111 Mtl"t• "' C01!1 M•~~ C•l•f JU11 Att.,11tr1 f'ff PttltloMr 01te<1 "•ll<u•rv ?6. 1t7' P\1111111\fll Or1ngr CN1t Ot It P•lo! r.won l. MY•rt M•rch 1, t. u, 1tro •n ia Robert J Mvt"' Shit 111 Colllornl~ 0••,...t C~unh LEGAL NOTICE lly CA RL CARSTEl\SON 01 t~t 01!11 P1llt Sltll A special ed1t1on of !he Pl) mouth Barracuda -callrd the AAR Cuda and powered by a rte.,., enlllnr -has bet!n announced by C hr ys le r. Plymouth D1v1s1on. The 1n· Jtials AAR sland for race driver Dan G urneys All· Amer1c;m. R acers t e a m . Gurney will drive a Barracuda on the Trans-Am e1Icu1t this season The AAR 'Cuda feature~ a special version of P lymouth s 340 cubic inch engine It has three two-barrel carb uretors, special cyltnder he11ds. and a moch f1ed block and valve tra1n ror gre a ter durab1hty and performance ~M 1!hcr a lour-speed manual transm1ss1on or a TorquefhlC' automatic transmission ca11 be 01 dC'red with !he car The car 1s equipped with a l 5a axle with Sure Gnp A J 91 r atio is optional Power disc fronl brakes are stand- acd The AAR 'Cuda has a £\at black grille and a s pecial fiber glass hood .,., 1th a functional scoop T.,.,•o hood ru ns retain lhe hinged hood There is a rear spoiler on the deck lid A front spoiler 1s optional Suspension includes special rront and rear sv.•ay bars a'lld heavy d uty shocks Special heavy duty rear springs raise. the rear end or the AAR 'Cuda Am lo 60 ASm,1!190 Ill make rooin for a Trans Am .1omSoA.1r 10 Am Sid I I) pc exhausl system with stde :;;:s;~,,Fi":; outlet~ and also provide room !~T:'T 1 1':0 I , . AmNWk1 '' for exlra arge rear G60xla Awwsot 111 inch tir'es Froot tires are :'Z t i':l ~ !l E60x 15 1nc'h Road lvheels are :;;;~~nc ,0 standard . Am•toti tDt Amit< Ill The hood, cowl and fender m~ f,.! ~ 1ops are flat black Oranamen-~::~<;a;: tal includes a blac k strobe Am111 11 An•cand 1 Ill stripe which runs the length of .1.nc11 Hock i Anca•~NS• I both s ides of the car ending al .1.nc1 c\.tl'; 1 10 the rear in an • AAR 'Cuda" !~u 01 1~l decal w1tlrlhe "AAR' 1n the !:uL• ',o,;:m form or the Dan Gurney All· :~c~•at'' ni: 1'mer1can R acers crest in red, !;~~O~~ ~'.'a 11 h1te and blue ~;1~~~'!is ';~ The planned 2 800 spec1iil !;;;:~~s•.,1; ;g edition units w ill be available :;:;::"'~, 1.61Js 1n C.hrysler·Pl)mouth dealer·:~;;;~~: 112ci ships by late lt1arch A•o Co•o 'l'1 ArV•n Ind I A:illld 011 T ?O A!~Oll on •O AISd Brew TUW MOTICI' 01" 5.1.LIE O' lllE.1.L PltOl'IEltTY AT l'lllVATI IAl.I( N .. .l.1SOSJ ' In Tl'>t SUMrlor Cll\lrt Qf Int S!1te of C:11iforn l1 lo• the Counlv ol Ortnte In Int M11ter ol "" E1ltl1 of CAlt L HENltY t>IT T!ERPU!'R, DKflted On ,-tllru1n' 76, HIO Mio,• "'' • Not•,., Public In tnd fot Slid Stal• ptrllOfllltY IPl>ttrell ltabtrl J Ind G ....... L Mvt11o k110wn "II ,.... 10 be !ht oertofl, """'°'' n1me• ••• oublcrlbff to •h• within ln1l•\lmtn• i ncl t Cknciwl*lttell ,.,.~ eXKU!fd 11>1 11mt . t0Ff1Cl•L SEA.Ll Co•m•ll• It K•~!I"" N~l1rv P\lllllc C1lllo111ll Pr!Ml .. I Ollie• In 0•1Mlt Ceo111t11 'Freezing'· Interest A5MIOG 110 A,.11 Si>9 1 20 MM1Tr1n 10 "'tlCIVEI 1 J.I. AtCllYEI Pl• .All lllc.trtld ' Allllc~ pfl 1~ All Rich pl l lritlli!ch l>fl IO All11 C~•n\ 1 Not!ct ht l\ertb1 tlwn lt'ltt the un- d~'111nff wlft Hll ti Prlv1lt "''' lo lllt hl9he1I 111<1 but lllddtr •r.itllttt lo CO"• flr.mt r!O<'I of ;t11d SUHrfor Cw,.. on or 1•t~ lht 70tll dt V of Mlrch, 1•111 11 lhe nlllc• m l!Qbfrl M Po,..,., Atlo•nf:v 41 l.IW, 6JI So11t1' Ol1Yf S••ttl Sul!• OI La. My ComMIMlon E~alru Now "· 1tn 'Your Money's Worth ' at Bunks >-111' Coro .t.TO lllC ~· •11•or• p1, •• Au1om1~ Ind AVU(P 110 .Avco Pfl 20 Avetv "d 10 Avn•T In<; IQ ll.v""! on 10 "'Von P•od 1 ti.JIM OU c;, .l.~flt1, (.tlffornl1 f(l(IJJ, 111 th• •Ith! fl· 11~ tlld 1nterut of ~Ill dKtlHd •I Ille t m~ 01 <lftth i nd 111 the "qht llllt 1rid ,.~~1.1hed Or""'" C111r 0••11 "llot Mire~ 1 t II n 197'0 :\ti 1' LBGAL NOTICE Ry S)'LVIA PORTER \Vllh evidence mounting lhrit you already have seen or are 1~1~r•'' ttr11 tho 1sl1t1 of •••d <1Kt"•Sld l----------------NOT1ce. To c11 101to11t surely seeing the peaks 1n 1n· h11 t C<l\llrt'tl try oo•rtl!on 01 l1w ..- ~""'nvl11 oll\fr tllan er I" 1o.!•I""' to lhtl ol Slld deCN•~d •I lltf. !lmt ol .,...,,~ Jn 1nd lo 111 lh~ <trl~" •t•I o•& -"' t!lu1tf'd fn !ht c1tv cf Stn•" "'"" CC111n1¥ ~I Or•"Ot S!llt ol Ctlllorn\t p1rtlc\11t rlv dnetibtd ti 1Gtlcw1 ,.,.,,.11 Etc,... N1 1ll UH l f th TO Ti.t r CREOlTOltS OF FRA NCIS erl!S1 rates or IS era. 11'.(I 011:1t STATIONEltV • 01r1nf:t1hl• question::. become of urgent Tr1n1ttt11r Pursu9nl to ltc!lon1 610S '"d h 1101 of tht Uniform Coml'Mrc!•I Cod8 importance 10 you w ere can lei 11 of l tt (I 7'1, ,, otr n'llP ~peordf'd In aoot ll. P19e 11 of M1•tell.lnrout Mlr~ ol 0111191 '°""'' C1hfornl1 mer~ nim..-1, k110wn ., 1710 Wt•I ll;lch!1nct, S1nl• An•, Ct llfllrn1t you •rt'"'""'' ""ttfled •• 1111iows you earn and • freeze • the Tr1n1lt•or Is 1lllwl to m.kt 1 ,, • ..._ ,., "' 111t -•u lellM Oon c H•mltton, highest relurn~ on savings '""''"e• In bl.Ir~. 1n 01 1t>tc ""'"'i." now' And v.•hat forms of fixed· JuOPl•tJ. ""''ch111d1M or ether 1n ... ntorv •nd "'·"om'"' •nd tttdt "'""' or 1h1t income savings ranging Ttrm• Of •llt ct•h In ltwlu1 mone" of fht Unl!f'd Slt !H on crnll•mtllon of •••• Ttn oerc1nt of 1mwnt blct to lw de90sl!f'CI With b\d ctd&ln .ittlaMrv alert, •riown •• "''•" from cash In the bank lo loig· c,. Orr St&llonrn' 111 ol wMc~ I• toct l•d 11 ?an E CNJt ""'h""•v Co•11n• <1e1 term bonds -are ava1la le Mar, c111tornl1 "162S couniv of o .. 11g1. from 1vhfch you can choose the c11i•ornla 81d1 or """'' to b-1,. w•lll,... end wlll boo r""-tlvH "' lht •'o••'"•d offlc~ •I onv thnc .no, I~ 11,.1 OijllhCthtrn htrem i nd ~'"'' Gato ol •ti.! Tho a•~"' "'-or n"me5 •nd best for your own needs" 1wtln"11 •dG•etsts "' lh• tr1ntlrror 1nt1 IT IS LIKELY that we ha1 e lr1n<ttr•• ""' •• fal iow, 011«1 !h\1 !I~ ct•v •' l"I'<~ ••JD M.l.lttE IC R.&SSON Ad,...1n•s!rotrl~ T•an•f~rnr F•n11Cl! 0" Sl•llOfl,rv Seen the hlSIOrlC highs on 111 ,o, £ cc1•1 Min~"''" Co•on• d•I Mir tcre•t rate!! paid 1n 1he o~n C •lllcrn • '1t1~ 1·~ .,, t~1 .,,.,. ol 11>d O•cHlt~• •Ol l'ltT M PO•TEI! T••~,,,,,.. oo" c M•m111<i~ •1n rnfl1kets th1~ 11ould be the .it ~ on ... """' Sulit 0 1 1..H ,1.,..011'1 C1tllorn!1 tOOU Tt l nu1 •n "" r .... ". AY•nve Tert•"· Collfo<n•• I I I r h •1l5.I ogica resu 1 o t e u1· •11 ""'" b..,.1 .. •1• "•m•• •nd •11nr•.... c reas1ngly obvious slo11do\\n ""~ tr; th• T•tn•l•'f>r ..,,!hltr !hr 11'1•- Aftl•M'r ,., ,1.-mln•lt•lt<I• Y••" 1 •• , o~•t .., ,., ,, ~no"'" 10 "'' and downturn in many area~ Putltl)hl!'d 0•1"'>• Co111 011lf r lb' M1rch t 10 11 1t1D •ll 1q 11•n•1•,•r ••• f r•~ncl• O•r si•tlcn.,1 co Inc ,,, 0 our economy 11c"" "°"" 0.1,.. 11.v .. tr 1-11111 Tl 1s also piobable that 1n r•lllo•nl• '===============;, l~• ~"'~ !t•n•!•r 11 to bf •c111uml'f!t"d I: LEGAL Nonce " !.ill/. ClltT!FIClriTE 01' IUt!NESS FICTIT IOUS NlriME a... •I UNITED CALIFORNI .. 11.A,;I(, Tl'l+r<l l 1nd t1 C••nro1 U•j W lh•'d S!•tt! le• "'~~·It• C&!o!Of!•I• 'OOtl -Cotl(oh• er to• """'!'• C1lflatnl1 on er 1Hllf M••ch llCI "~ O•I~ M1rrh 1'. 1110 Oon C i.t1m1ttoo1 l•~n.·!•r•e ,. '"' Tht 11nc1,-.i.n«:1 do ctrtilv t~.Y ~ .. •.ollcllKllM • l>u!l~t-n ti 7tU S l(+hon Or. Slnft Ant, (1111 91701 under !~• "t •11111<1~ llrm fief?'• ol 1101' S PtlOlO llllLOW UP LAii tnd !~~! •lid '""' !• ,......,l>Mfd of ,... IOl!,,..1119 Of•IO<I! W~M• n.mr1 In 1\111 fnd D••ces o! rnlatnct •" 11 l'llllOWJ Ouh• •~•d n.an'' Cout O•llv M,..c~ 1~ lt7~ .,, 10 I =--=======1 1.EG1\L NOTI CE lllcb•rt M F'",.........,., l f\I l.Jn'•••••l• Dr Ht-! !•IC~ C•ll<~t"T• ltobl!rt E or..on. 13fCT Junl l!i!>kl v •V •tll5tdtl (1111 T !Jiil D1ttd F'"•ll 11 1'111 1UtF•IOI! COUltT OF 'TIU' Jtoll<'rt M. ~r•tmtn !Tl tf OF C.l.ll,011!1'11 .. FO~ II:"""" E OIW" 1?1E cou .. yy 01' Oit•NGI $1th of C1tll«"'• O""o• C1111n1v N• 111-.i,.,5 0.. F•b II \t10 ""1tr" "'' • "'"'•'Y'NOl!Cf 0 ' NE.t.lll NG O' Pl'TITl(I"' ~titinc 1 .. •nll ~ 111d SI•'~· 11••1on1llv FO. P'l!Oa•TE OF l>IOLOtl•AllMIC ._,.,i ltobftl M F""r~""'1" ~<!Ow~ !O Will tNO FOii l ITT I• S mf fl> bt tt>t oor~ """"' nomf I• TEt T.&MINTAl!Y •~ll>ed "' th• ... 1ttotn ln11•u"''"' Ind .,an.,...lf:dgtd ~t ••ecuted ttoe Mmt E1!1I• at .l.LL£N ll l{ACK A~I Arlhu• IOPFICIAL 5EAL 1 i\11•" flr1ck Oe(t1,.,i M1rv I( H•n•v NOTICE •s HEREllV GIVEN Th1! L•• Nel1rv Publlc.C•l!!ornl1 W1ti.r llkt l •• W Webe• ~·• lll~d htretn Pl1ncloel Dtr!c• In • Pl'Ttllon tor Drob81• ol """"•tt•hlt wlll C•t'°°9 (IMlll'IV """ fer lt1<11nce ol l•ll•ri TtllllM'l!ltrv Mv c.......,1 .. 1o11 £Dlr'tt lo "'' Mtll'-r rtle•""'' to Wlrldr h HtrV '' nn ""df tor IVrlhl!r o••l!cu11r1 •nd t1'11t "'' ST.I.Tl!: OF C.l.L,F'OPNIA !l""' Incl Dll Ct Of ht1r1M !ht 11mt htl COUNlY OF LOS .ANGIELfS ) u bff11 t~I far APrll l 1110 11 t )0 1 m • 111 O.. Ptbru1rv 16 1'7D bfoler• ,... th• tl'tf couriroo.... o• °"P•rlm•nt No ) Of •1nm 11tllld •• NQltty Pullllc I" ... ~ "'. 111d co~·· •I 7UO CIYI( C•nt •• Dr!Y• '~ Sift., H .--llr '""""'Pd Pol•"' E W••! ln I~• C•!Y ct S."11 Ant C1l•11'•nl1 n1 • ...., kl'IDWn to """ tn t>o tt.,. n•oton 081"" Mt"UO 1) 1•1c ...t.w "'''" II •\l~tctll)o~ lo 11'1• ""'!~ ~ W E ST JOl'IH l'UI"""'•"' i011C1 ltkl'leWIM!~...i I~., ~· r~ (ftuR!lo (I••• "<CU!ed fho Nmt ltTT WEllt A1'0 VOLCl'IOlf WITN ESS""~"'•..., •"'!! "'"''"'•••I toll) llltt1" aw ll •••• fOFl<l(l l L SEAll Yt • Nuy1, C•l>h>fn1• •1•1 ~lor•nc~ H Al•• '''' !1!JI 11.J.llll JUlflf N11l•r• Pvn1 (•C1"tormo "'rtorftfY• lor '•' u,,,., ,,dtrtl~1! 011!•• 1.. Pv~I .~..., o •• ,,o. tout Do ly "II"' lot ........ 1 •• Cn• "'V I • '" ,. It 11 197' J'lltollll'ltd O•t"e• r"''' D• , ~ •' --'~" M4•dl t. '· 1• 1• 1•10 n .• , LEGAL r\OTICF. LEGAL NOTICE I EARN lf'l'V"t by th1 20th ind 1arr. fron1 th1 I 1t on 24-rl'IOflth full p1 1d 1nv1ttment Thrift Carrt1f1c•+•t. Or SV1 "/.' ... P.-11boolc Ac cow11tt1 on •ny amount1. Yo.r w1thdrttw1l1 ~cl ~ .... J.v °" o .... d. CALIFORNIA. THRIFI'<>ZOAN 170 C \71h St COSTA MfSA r('trospccl, n1any or the 1n· tr.rest rates p111d on s avings 1n early 1970 Y.111 <land 011! as on- ce -1 n -a gc neral!on op- portun1Ucs -even though !he t:nonnous demands for funds in this decade .... 111 1vork against s harp declines [ron1 today's rate levels FINALLY. IT 1s only pru· dent f1nanc1al managemcnl to keep some of your nestegg 1n fixed-income s avings. If you can e a rn 7 percent annu:illy compounded you 'll do u b I e your 1nveslrnent in JUSI over JO years. tf you can earn R percenl you'll double 11 in nine years Of course tl1r app.11 rut gross interest you earn 1¥111 be slashed by steeply rising h1111i.: costs and 1nco1ne taxe< to a much :;mailer net St t 11 , though, many of the rates available today do represent a "hv1ng wage ', thry 11111 becon1e more so 1vhen thr rate of ups urge in j}r1Cf'S moderates 1n response to thr slowing of our economy :\nd lf you invest In lax·exrmpl n1un1c1pal obhgallon~ v o u ehm1nate the income tax b1\C'. THE FOLLOWING 1ablr comp1!ed with thr he lp or D1 Jlcnry Kaufman of Salon1on Bros & Hu1zler , sho1vs you the interesl rates you c an earn rn 1anous mediums as of early !\larch 1970 IP VOU f'Uf YOUlt MONET IN •AN Kt IN YOU 'THISl POllM" CAN E•ll N s.vlnn Bin~ oa11blloi< 5 or. com..,.rtl..i lri P111Dooll ~JI'• c.m.m 8k Clfllflc.ltr, 1 yr., UTMlrt 11 00,000 Comm a~ cr•t1rlc1t1. I '', Sloe.MIO .. 110 1 so Olt IN SHOl!T Tl!.ltM M.l.ltlC l f INITll.UMENT\ tN YOU THf$f Fo11Ms Ct.N Elri •N lJ ! ''"'' 11-111v ~111~ (min !ID 0001 Fell .&llMCV 1UU•J •1 01¥) fml" ITlfY be Jlt 00(1 UJ 11~1 lvr boll1 '"' , " , .. rl en~· ··~ ''"' mu,,lc ~•h ' " "" 011 IN INTll!Mf_OI AT( Mt .l!Klf M.A lUl!t l l[S IN 'l'OU TMESI! •OltMI CAN liA•N 'U' ••• Helps Shrink Swollen, Inflamed Hemorrhoid Tissues As It Relieves Pain And Itching Gives P rompt, Tempol'~ry Relief From Painful D islres!l In Hemorrhoid T1uuc1 and A ctuallv Help1 Reduce Swel~ng-Cauaed By 'nflamml'hon. ,..., .. York. N Y. 1.lo!'t.on ha"-e Tt.rtA by doctor• 011 hundtt<l1 fl)!Jn d a m'"d1cStlon that ip•e• or }>lotienllt thawed th11 to \,.. prompt. 1'1"1ld' fi'om tialn and t ~. 11tt> medicaUoo ul!Cd wu huT11iJIJC it.ell or pile• for hours. Prryn.f'flt;,,. 11•. ~ bO Jlr&- Tht'n It 9Ctn•ll1 ht:lp!! khnnk ~rifltfrin i1 needed, ('.flt ~p-. the nrftlllla: o! 161 i.a!l..a.JrWld. aratloft n ~I.hoot. f..U.. Oi.Dt.. w.eL tMnt er Sqpam.todBL M.l.l!ICl!t MATUIUTI(\ 01 YOU T"ESI!. ll'OltMS (A"I IAltN 11~ ... high O•td~ \ltl!o!v -· No w h•9t 9'1dt •llcl~~l1'•1l """' ri~w ~11111 ~•R• m~ni':•Oll ""'' U S E bond' ~tla S vn 10 -"i+-1 !COPY•ftM !tit ., l'll lt Inc I ' :'I ' 4 oo·. '' ou can eam higher rates on more risky. lower-grade secunhes or higher rates on saving~ you rreeze for longer per1ods 1n savings inst1tut1ons. This table will guide you to BofA Cuts Loan Points Bank of America today an· nounced an 1mmcd1a!e cut 1n le discount of 8'~ perrenl FHA and VA loans to 4 points The prc,a1hng discount nationally has been a1~ to 711 points C J ~1edberry, executne vice pres1dcnl loans. said that 1he bank ,.,.111 also 1ncrea ~c tis allocat1on of funds for rc s idcn· l1al housing 111 1970 by $100 m11J1on, whic h represents an tncreasr of about 25 percent over 1969, Both these n1oves are in· lended to help st1mulale the housing market "'b1ch has lost momentum during the recent penod of l'ery tight money . Circle Seal Bu y~ Raco Co. (1bol CD '° Ct! Fln1nl ~1tlahM 13! c:~:~ 1'f: coarew '11</1 (c!1'1 Pt< 1111 COP fr In\• r ~n•ll!d 10 (Ao ( IMc•t (~rDnm 1 00 C••tl•lr •o • , j (1roPlt T" Ctrclr St-al Corl'>Orahcrn of r··~r,~ 1 t~ (•••-·<~ ·~ Anahe1nl has completed the r .. ·!o•W ·~· r R E (8 .. JI acqu1s1t1on o a co ng1necr· c1~ ""A1 H S 'I I f~•!l•C~• •O 1ng, anta . on1ca. or an un· , .. ,.,, 1 111 1hscl!lsed anlOunt of cash ~~e ti:.~ to Ralph \V James Circle Seal ~:::~'E~~ .~ president. announced today lW°F~~ .JO R:ico produces a hne of =:;1~r.' 11 :: i;.....,.1aJty seals with 1odustr1al u1L1 014,SG 1-~ t11!11PS 1 11 and aerospace 1pplicat1ons. ::J,..Y., E11,: lJ nion Bank i'\arncs i\f csan tn! SW 1 tO <~• 1rr' " Ct1'1lt ISb Crrro 60ll G!rt !"f'<I 4fl i~~t:~ 1:" Ch•rnDS l 111 C~.,1 .. NY ' Ch..,tMn 1.IO f~K'""' "'"' '"'""'~" 111 , f~rmNY '•t George ,.~ Thompson ht1!1 c~&t11111Ao '°" (II~ V• I t0 bceq promotrd to Instalment c~ •• Ollto f I I I r U Cil••t~lcvt I oan 1n erv e" er o n1 on ~~1>.111~,.,. wi Bank's Orange C o u n I y ~~~~:' t' regional head office. ~~::; ':tNu; Thomp"'' )olned the bank In Cf'td:F111 • C!'r\JCrt :lllt 19118 :is 11 loan officer arcer c11r11 "'"' 1 C~rem1n !t r..1g:ht )'Cars or banking ex· "'"'''" to r>trience. JJe hvcs 1D Costa r:;~,. g: ~ ~ •t lnMl!l •c l• C$3, ln$wT1! l • St• NII HI• I Wit~ LtW CltM (h• I 4Q 1 ! I I !& s ! s 1 £& %&¥ ; $ s 0~4 fi ¥U -'!' • • .• r ~ . . . • .. M~, Martll 16, 1970 SC Monday's Closing Prices-Complete Nelf York Stock Exchange List l • DAILY PILOT The newest arrival at the Oakland Baby Zoo is this tiny 20-pound pygmy ·horse called "Eclipse." The d.warl animal stands 18-ihches high and will measure 21h·feet tall and weight approximately 250- pounds when full grown. Many sma11 and baby ani· mals are on display at the zoo for children to hold and pet. Barry Jr. B ea ts Dad On Conse rvative V ote )VASHINGTON !AP) Quietly and witboul fanfare, Rep. Barry M. Goldwater Jr. nears the end of his first year Iii Congress sporting a higher conservative rating than his famous father. "fie hasn'I goltcn over it yet," the youngest Republican Jn Congress said of Arizona Sen. Barry M. Goldwalt'r. "'hose \'Oice or Conservatism Jed him to the ·1964 GOP presidential nomination . The 31-year-old Californian was referring in an interview to ratings published last month by Americarui for Comtitution.aJ Act.ion. Barry Jr. rated 91 percent con- .6UVaUve on his 1969 voting record: Barry Sr. 90 percent. Does he resent comparison with his famous dad '.' "No, T'm nattered,·· said Barry Jr. But he does not Always agree with his father. For instance Barry Sr. has Introduced legislation to give IS.year-olds the right to vote. "I'm not convinced." said Barry Jr. Young Goldwater came to Congress after a special elec· tion last ~1ay, the successor to Republican Ed Reinecke who resigned lo become California'• lieulenanl governor. "I have spent my time get· ting to know the peiiple of my district and their problems," lhe Congressman said, "not crusading and waving hanners and getting up on the stump." Not that he does not have the chance. "I g_et lots of invitations to speak. in the South and h1 other parts ol the country," he said. "It's a carryover from my father. If thfy can't get him they ask me. But I tum them nearly all down. Nearly every weekend I go back to my district. .. He figures he gets more than his fair share of mail as y,•ell. some ol it encouraging him lo seek the presidency,. "I get it. but it certainly is not on my mind." he said, ad- ding "perhaps this might come. later , •· 1 have A philosophy about this. If I do a good job, the future is going to take care of itself. I'm lrying to do a good job. As loog as· it is exciting - a challenge. -I'm content. Where ii will lead me, I don"t know. t don't really think about it." Biiis Piling Up'! use our money! At Morris Plan we'd tiKe to help you with len- ower bills, bome or car repairs. tra'fet or school expenses. Thal'• -Moms Plan money is !of. Oil approWal ""' °"" bQnow from $100 lo $5,000, or inoie, nl _,.,..."'°""'the day yoo apply. Po7.-ts ocbedtlled fo Ill )'OW' lncOme. When you need """1fll1 for '1fl'/ good ""'"""' Jl!l_Monls Plan. We tiKe lo --loans. -Morris Plan 673-3700 Newport.Beach -3700 Newport Boulevard Ask About Sean Convenient Credit Plan• ' Pricet [ffttti,•t ~u nda,, :\larch }.) thru. T ur.:~rl.1y1 i\larch 17 • •1118AbtC..f• .... __ .,, ... l. c:•-· .... , ,......, . . • 1'~ BUY T HEM NOW • e. BY ·THE~P-AIR for 6.50xl3 Tuheleos Blackwall• Pino 1. 78 F.E.T. Each and 2 Old Tire• r .ri1 -,,~l~-1:::n1:1•·k"all- 1i .. i11, r ~1 ~ fur ... ll.!._ I. 7~ 7:~.-.,1 1 :.:r ... -... 11 '.!.o~ ----j_;",,11 :,;fnr"·.'~(, t .17 -----H.z-;, 11 ~fur '\..'. :!.:ti ----'l'u 1 ... 1 ..... ~ \\ hili"•all h .. ill\ 1·1 :! rnr .... :111 1.;i; ~for :)Hi :!.111 :! fnr SI.! :!.17 :.: ror lo; Iii :.:.:1·1 --· -:.' for .:;111 :.' .... .r :.! fnr -..ix :.'.J.". ti -" .. J..a••• ~tJOtAU OI 1·1004. C'I tMH • 4 actual plies or nylon for extra otrength e Greater resi5tance to impact s, 111oisturc, flexll1g and heat 1.,A, 1 ~ ! , 1, T,.,J._f. 1.-0 I'>•• o IH• !'.,rt To ra SIZE .. ,. I '"'· ' SIZE ,,,, '" _ 'l~uh_~'.:!!_Ularl..":111 ---1.-~I~ \l"l~il~w!!!_ (1.50:ir. 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For Your .. ~~ . : .. d . • SHOP SEARS SEVEN DAYS IN '70 Sunday H_o urs ... Noon to 5 P.M. . Monday thru Saturday, 9:30 A.M. lo 9:30 P .M. Convenience I ~ ' ' I 7 I I ~~211111111112 ........ "!l .... llll!l .............................. -.i!i&.,_ .... _..,_""'!"'.,......,l,.....4~>~R~i-\~~•-"'-""__,.~-;-----,""'""~-.~~· .. . lj 1 I 7 Lag~·~·• Beaeh. EDIIION Today's Final N.Y. Stoek8 VOL. 63, NO. 6J , J SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH '16, '1970 TEN CENTS Laguna, Clemente Aides Mull Disclo·sure Law By RICHARD P. NAU. Of 1M O.Uy l'I ... Steff As the deadline draws near for filing of financial <lisclosure statements by public officials, many are still unsure what is involved and who will be required to file . Max Berg, San Clemente city clerk, said it is obvious under the exJsting legislation that city councilmen and coon· cil candidates must file and that planning commissioners must file. He said it isn't clear yet whether the law also will mean that members of the city parking commiuion and parks and recreation commission will have to file disclosurt statements with the countj' clerk. Berg knows thal he must file a state- ment and that the city manager and city t.reasurtr must but said h~ isn't sure whether. the rule applies to. all city ap- pointed department heads. "We will have to look to our city at- torney for the answers," aaid Ber(, notmg that attempts are undtr way to modlry the law so that disclosure does not list actual extent Of holdings but rather only whether they involve more. or less than '5,000. "1 agree with him that it's a mess and needs clarllication," u.id James D. Wheaton, Laguna Beaeh city clerk ·and city manager. He .said La1una's city attorney has ad- vised that all d·epartftlent head! must file under the Unruh law if it is still the law In e(ffCt when dudllne anlves, April g for councU candidates and AJ)rll. 15 for Others. ''They have ta file with the county clerk and I have to file wlth him, too. He gel5 all tbt heat up there," said Wheaton. Emut Thompu'I, city administrator for San Juan Caplatrano, sald he under- stood efforts ·by the assembly speaker to modify the Unruh law have lbw fai been defeated in the Assembly. All depanment heads Jn San Juan Capistrano have been advised they lhouJd file rinancial disclosures, said Thomp!lon, but said the hol~lngs of those involved would not amount to the $10',000 figure at any rate. He said financial ·holdings of planning commiss ioners might be more aub!tantial but ·added that the planning commission normally resigns in council election years and waits to see 1.f re-appointment is forthcoming from the new councJI. San Juan Capistrano has nine council • • • aos ase I e Mystery Illness Strikes Student Baffled physicians at Orange County /11edical Center today are attempting to pinpoint a mysteriOus tropical illness which has stricken a college exchange student from the Fij! Islands. James Gibson, 25, a popular campus rigure at Santa Ana College, has literally been brought back to tlfe three times since becoaling ill late last week. He is in a coma and listed in extremely critical condition, with partial paralysis. internal bleeding and suspected brain damage. So far. his condition defies diagnnsi.! and specialist give him only a ~ chance to survive. Gibson's heart slopped three tiln~ while undergoing initial treatment at the county hospital, but he was revived. He reportedly has no medical insurance and students at the SAC campus, where he worked part-time as a gardner, have started a benefit fund drive. "We are praying for him," said Student Body President Hank White, of Orange. The wtJ.1,liked sophomore r r 0 tn Malhaha-Rotuma, Fiji, left work com- plaining of illness last Tburaday aild fail- ed to show up or call ln-fridaY morninc. Coast Guard Kept Busy As Fog Catches Boats Scores of pleasure boats caught In a swift moving fog Sunday kept Co.ast Guard, Coiist Guard Auxiliary and Harbor Department rescue boats from Marines Suffer Back Injuries While Surfing Two 22-year-old Marines suffered back Injuries in body surfing accidents at Laguna Beach Sunday afternoon. Richard Hiett of El Toro Marine base, was dumped by a wave while surfing off the beach at El Morro Trailer Park at 3:45 p.m. He struck his head on the bot- tom. according to lifeguards and ap- parently suffered a back injury. Hielt was taken by ambulance to South Coast Community Hospital and transferred to the base hospital at El Toro after emergency treatment. The second injury vicOm was Buddy Thompson of the Marine Corps Air Sta- tion, Santa Ana, who also suffered a back injury while body surfing off the beach near the Hotel Laguna at 4:30 p.m. He also was given emergency treatment at South Coast Community Hospital and transferred to the El Toro hospital Laguna to Los Angeles Harbor busy on searches until a late hour Sunday, First "mayday" distr~s signal came from the SG.foot cabin cruiser Dino U out of Newport at 10 :52 a.m. when tht owner, Frank A. Costella, reported he wa!i aground in dense fog off South Laguna. Orange County Harbor District boats were dispatched to the scene along with a Coast Guard helicopter out of San Dlego and the Coast Guard 95-foot cutter Cape Higgon out of Newport Beach. Before rescue vessels arrived on the scene, Costella reported that he had been pulled free by a small skiff and was no longer in immediate danger. The Cape Higgon took the Dino 11 in tow at noon and brought it to the Newport Harbor Department. There was no'ffiajor damage reported. Marine radia channels crackled for hours as boats reported they were stranded in the dense: fog with no power or sail. Stock /llarkeu NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices were skidding late this afternoon. with · losing Issues outd1stanclng gainers by more than three to one. Trading was slack. (See quotations, Pages l&-19). The market had been retreaUng al- most without interruption alnce the be- ginning of the ....ion. Oil Panel Goes Home For Study By THOMAS FORTUNE Of ~ Dall1 "I"' $1tff A U.S. Senate subcommittee today hu laken back to Washington, D.C .• a wealth of tesUmony in opposition to federal oil drilling ofl Orange County and the rest of th~ Callfomia coast. Seven persons representing the Orange Coast area were among those wha spoke in two dl\)'s o/ he,rinf! 'irill•Y ~ Sabir; clay in•Sallt• Bar~ ) The Subcommittee • Miner a1 s, Materials and Fuels of the Senate Interior and lnsu!ar >Affairs Complittee was on a fact-flndlng mission and will take no action prior to a second hearing in Washington. A date for that hearing has not yet been set. Newport Beach Mayor Mrs. Doreen Marshall, Laguna Beach City Councilman Roy Holm and San Clemente City At. tomey Carl Kegley all presented their · city's endorsement of a bill to ban oil drilling in federal waters beyond the three-mile limit whrnver the state or California has created a sanctuary. This means offshore of all of Orange County ~th of the Santa Ana River dividing Huntington Beach from Ne"-1>0rt Beach. Others testifying from tile county were Newport Beach residents Mrs. T. Duncan Stewart and George 1.ebal for the Coastal Area Protective League, Counly Board of Supervisors Cbalnnan Alton E. Allen of Laguna Beach and Al Nelson, assistant director of the County Building Depart- ment who administers the county's oil code. Mrs. Stewart traced the Protective League's involvement from 1955 when the state Cunnlngham-Sbell Act created the oil drilling sanctuary south of the Santa Ana River and Zebal spoke about geological problems in oil drilling. 1 Testimony on the Santa Barbara situa- tion was given by state administration of- ficials, assemblymen and county of Santa Barbara officials. The only member of the Senate sub- committee present was its chairman Frank Moss (D-Utah). Members o( the subcommittee staff and of the U.S. Department of the Interior were in at- tendanct, nowever, and are eipected to ofter recommendation~ on varlaus Senate oil drilling bills. DAILY ,,ILOT 'IMff ,._... , '1,T ,ISN'T 'MUCH, B.UT IT'S ALL WE 'VE GOT' St• SC:out1 G•rr (left)., Hunter •ncl Lahdbound Cr•ft Stalwart Sea Scouts Seek BoatFromNixon,Hughes By JOHN VALTERZA 01 ... n.11)' "ll•f ll•ff They may be lanclbaund right now, but a stalwart bunch of San Clemente Sea Scouts lead by " stubborn teenage bo'sun won't settle for being boatless sailors. And everyone from Pres.ident Nixon. Howard Hughes aod scores of aides in between have heard about It. Trouble i~. all the executives and !ipokesmen have come up with the same answer lo Neyle Hunter's pleas for a gi!t boat-no (in the million diplomatic \¥ays avallable in the cool business let- ter). lf the small "ship" of scouts with the code number 110 are landbound , so Is their only prescnl tangible hope for ever hilting the hlgh seas, a cabin cruiser of sorls composed of a not-so-beauUful bull and four years of work, "\Ve're going to call it the Pueblo II, 1 think. Nevertheless. lt's all we got", the San Clemente lligh School student related. Neyle didn 't approach the billio"naire Las Vegas recluse with an appeal for a boat, however. , , It was less subtle than thal. In terse, realistic and forward term1, Bo'sup Hunter asked for money. Police Protect Captured Coon Deferments End Sought "After you see this folJowing line you'll probably throw this Jetter away, however I am very serious In my convict,lons. ·"We need financial aupport to obtain sUppliea and materials. ·"Could you help??? "Wouldn 't this be a great lax write- off7" A pair of wandering raccoons en- joying a nocturnal dip in a Laguna Youth Group Meets at Western Wliite House Beach swimming pool roused ThJ western hair of President Nixon'11 Ideas of a volunteer army to replace the ne ighbors and police early Sunday. Youth Advisory Committee this weekend Selective Servke System. Answering a 4:45 a.m. report or drafted proposals to end .s tudent Spokesmen for the comm!Uee aald the "an animal In distress'', officers deferments at a two-day conference at Issue w11 avoided because of 1the un- Carroll Bush and Paul Rose hasten-the Western White House comple1 in San certainty over whether the President's td to 48% High Drive ~·here they Clemente. suggestions would be adopted. round the source of the disturbance. The draft advisors from 27 state s and A shorter~range vlewpOinl was ex- a large raccoon, with his left hind Guam electtd to recommend the end of amined, instead, they said, so that a leg sluck-in-a-fiU-pipe-i-~.-~llRlllllrlrl!tr'l.r .. >1.,1-t:iut-medtca~·equttabJe system uf·tbe-dnft coukl - backyard swimming pool. A second and young men i.n certain phases of be inaugurated to last until the volunteer raccoon left the water and took oCf agriculture. armed forces Idea becomes reality. over the fence as the officers ap-Findings and suggestions of the com· "l'ht western commlllff. iug1csts that proached. millet will be blended with recom· most defermenll, P81\k:Ularl1 ltudent Covering the trapped aquanaut Jnendalions bj Ila eastern counterpart ones, be phllf(J oUt b> elimlnlte In- with a blanket to discourage his befor.: they are preaenled, by Presrdent equltlt:s ln'the Selective Service System. rrsi$tancc. the ofllcer1 ft'eed his leg Nixon to the impending b~arlngs by the Jh' adviltra, 1U r1,J1glnc In age from and he set orr after his ~ompanloo. Sena. J Armed Serv1ces U>mmittee.. ti to 26, 1uggei{ lhat their-plan woukl slightly hampered by a limp, they The group which met on the Orange eliminate the draft-dodging "ptrpetual report. Coast for two day1 purpor.ely avoided 1tudent'' who remains In 1ehool under his dl!tusslon and 1tUd1 of the President'• deferment to avoid consaiptio11. • The group's rePort cites "financial and inlellectual dlscrimlnaUon" u n d r: r the present ·student deferment structure. By a vot.e of II to 9, the group elected to suggeJl phaslng out the IJ-S defennent and a ftetze In granUns or hew ones. Students prtsenlly holding the student dererment would contlnue with It Wltll they either ctve it up or rtach the age of 24. - For. ·m~lca,I atudenW, !he , <:~.rrtltteo , .suggested nominal federal grantl for undergradUata and "iubstaritfal" fu00 1 ' fnr graduate med students. Failure to. complete studies .-·o u I d make a medical atudnnt ltnmed latcly eligible for mllltary service. Committee members sa1d they based their suggeatlons on thousands of h9urs oJ Jntfrvlews wlt~ dr1ft-age youths. • J.lughes didn't bite. 'In a polite letter an H~ H. aide said Hughes only gives money through his foundation which is devoted entirely to the Hughes Medical institute. Then fol!Owed the time-worn closing paragraph which ends on a lukewarm note: '' .. .it is impossible to include any new organl7.atlon at tllls Ume, no matter how worthy the cause .. , · EssenUally the same respol'!Se.s h"'ye cqme from the Naval Shlp Sy1lems Com· mand, \he Secretary of lht Novy, tht Of. Hee of the ChW of Naval OperaUons - even ti~ Stcretary of Defeyise. The nhi;rcst Wng HI.inter ~as recl!.lved iil form' of" a reply. from Pru.klent Nixon wla · rrom .AAslstanl Navy Secretary Rbberl f'ro¢h, who ' aaid he "was con- n~cnl tJi•I you will find (his staff al i<ply lnfonnaijve." Nothing more ha1 arrived I.Ince. ti the federal and Las Vega.,, &ovcrn- , IS.. SCOU'lll, Pop JI • ' I c~ldates, Laguna has five and San Clemente has a whopping 15. Thompson said those involved .tre holding oil filing ta await clarification and any changes in law involved. C.OUnty Clerk William St John said his oCrtct has received several hundred declaratlans already and expects many more. "Most are holding back for clarll.lcation," he said. "111e law is ex- (sOe DJSCL06UllE, P1 .. I) u Cave Held Technical Radar Gear WASHINGTON (AP) -North Viel· name.se: troops annihilated • 1mall Arilerican force operating a !M!Cret radar insta.liaUon hidden in a limestone cave atop a mountain in Laas. killing at least 12 U.S. servlcemen, the Washington Post reported today. The Americans died March 11, 1968, the Post said, defending the radar, recnn· naissance and rescue base. The. site. con- tained highly sophisticated electronic ~ar 1 IOf d~ng bombing raids ~I the Ill .Chi Minh Tr:1U and over North Vietnam, the report added . In 1 VJentiaJie ciotetined dllpatdl by T. n Allmln, the story sald the defeat suf. r.nd 11 !be lw1dl of !be N<rlh Viel- 11:'1..meat_ wu kept a 1ecret. The Defense Department made no comme~t on the reporl Over the weekend, however, White f!oUJe Preu Secre(ary Ronald L. Ziegler diacloaed there were "some" U.S. casua1Ue1 in Laos since 1962 besides the earlier· confirmed death of Army Capt. JOleph K. Bu!l:i Jr. Ziegler declined to state I.he exact number of Ame.rlcan military personnel who had died as a rtsult ol hostile fire, saying only that it was "less than 50." According to the Post, the base was called Phou Pha Thi and was located an a 5,116().foot pf:ak in northeastern Laos (See LAOS, P11e I I Candidates Air Views in Laguna Laguna Beach City Council candidates will air the.ir views on implementation of the general plan when they appear at a forum sponsored by the Laguna Beach Coordinating Council at 7:30 p.m. Tues- day in the Laguna Federal Savings and Loan Building, 2&0 Ocean Avenue. Schedu1ed to speak at the meeting, which Is open to the public, and also to answer questions from the audience are lncui:nbents Richard Goldberg and Joseph O'Sullivan, and J09eph Tomechak, Peter Ostrander and Edward Lorr. 11>e five candidates also will speak at the Clamber of Commerce Wednesday morning breakfast at 7:30 a.m. in the Hotel Laguna. The public also is invited tG attend the breakfast session. Orange Coast Weafller • The Orange Coast can look for faJr weather Tuesday, with temp- eratures in the mldille ~·s. There will be more early morning coast· al fog. however. which should clear orr before mJd-momlng. INSIDE TODA\' Though it wa1 clotuled up badly bl/ /1eav11 fog, tl1t Sollth· tand'a nt\t! collegiate 1nlllt1Q venter 1tlll has a window on the ba11 end ft ft 1DC,j dedicated Sun. daJI. Page 24. • J DAILY Pll.Dl SC ll"d11, M"'h 1', 1970 St. Pat's Day, Indeed; \ Briton Files a Rebuttal Editor's Note: The DAILY PILOT's Tom ?w1eCann took his best 21hot for SL Patrick In his Saturday Logbook and today Brillon Tom Barley files his annual answer. The editor, himself a son of the Emerald Isle, hereby disclaims rt'Sponslbility for answering irate calls from the lrlsb. He suggeslll directing complaints directly to Mr. Barley at hi!i courthouse outpost by calling 834-3783. ,;All t have to 1ay abo11t St Patrick's Doy U that l'nt damntd glad we're uot 10 bloody daft about St. David's Da11." By TO!'t1 BARLEY 01 ""-D1llY "llilt Iliff Richard Burton 1 RA VE GRACIOUSLY consented to clean up tht: load of rubbish left In this column by its previous contributor (Tom McCarui'1 Saturd,ay Logbook) and you can be aS!ured, gentle reader, that there hasn't been a bigger meu stnee someone put cascara in the fUght crews' cocoa on ont of those balmy dayt at the RAF's Appleton Roebuck airfield. Ah, yes. Looking back, you know, that was quite a moving experience. We were all airborne three hours later and I can tell you that by the time we reached the English Channel "we had the bomb doors open and - (Editor's note: You were saying something, ll'ere you not, about the previous contributor? He at least kept to the point). ALL RIGIIT, LOVE, keep your green shirt on. I wa1 just trying to depict for your readers the cascara·llke er~ feet on the human system of such bilge as ''there are only two kinds of people in the world -those who are i....-,.:..-.;.;...J Irish and those who wish they were" and "enjoy the day in the splril <lf St. Patrjck." And we wanted to draw the attention of readers -who suffered sorely Saturday -to the doubtful qualifications of the bright lad who'd have us all sporting Kelly green when we'd be more in touch wllh reality by wearing Fair- haven black and/or staying in bed all day. Don't go for that orange tie and green shamrock routine -that's the leprechaun-like McCann11 escape clause should angry representatives of either party come a callin1. AND DON'T LET that McCann handle fool you Into thinking that thh refugee from the news room hails, via his forebears, from Kerry, Cork, Con- nemara or any such point south of the ~orthun Ireland border. It's known, incidentally, in those parts as the line between Heaven and Hell and lf you want a clue Jet me tell you that I alwaya looked on Dublin as a pretty hot town. Saturday's warmed up \•ersion of the annual idiocy 11 pretty typical of what has the brainwashed minority caperJng, cavorUng and drooling on what McCann calls the days of days. GREEN BEER, leprechauns, ahillelagha, drunken choruaes of "Irish Lullaby" and "Kathleen" -Eeeeeeyech. And again eeetteeyech. lt't about Ume aomeone -and McCaM dearves drafting -charter flighted this sicken. Ing set, one way, all the way to the Emerald" Isle that always wore a brt1ht Made of batUeship gray when l was on iL When you could see It through the rain, that ls. And when you weren't be.ing knocked off the sidewalk by Inebriated P1ddys emerging from one of Dublin's 6,394 pubs. And that's • conservative estimate. There's only two kinds of Irish on St. Patrick's Day -those who burble about exactly nothing for 10 days before and 10 daya after March 17 and those who are sick to the teeth Of hearing about it. Try St. David, St. Andrew or SL George fer a change. Then you'd really have something to sing about Services Planned Tuesday For Martin Martinson, 92 Serviceg wlll be held al t p.m. Tueld1y in McCormick Chapel, Laguna Beach, for ~tart.in B. ~1artinson ol 334 Poplar SL, who died at hls home Saturday at the age of 92. The Rev. Lothar Tornow of St. Paul's Lutht>ran Church will officlate at the rites for JI.Ir. Pt1artinson. who was an active member of the church. llis body "'iii Ile in state al the chapel, 179S Laguna Can- yon Road . until 9 o'clock tonight. Sur\'ivors include the widow. Charlotte, nf the home : a dau~htt'r. Mrs. l.<lulse Couse nf Laguna Beach: a brother, Elmer f\1. f\1artinson of Colorado SprlnP.s: sister Mr. Esther Lauth af Joliet, 111.: c:ind three w11nclchlldren. Robert Couse of Berkelty: Miss Barbara Couse of Laguna Be11ch; and t.1rs. Bonnie Davis of Laguna Beach. .A native os Swetien . Mr. Martinson had DAILY PILOT H.w,.rt leocli L ... ,.. 1..c• CMttl Men H•llri .... 11 lltftlt h•1tt•I• v.n., Sn Cl•"'911te OAAHGI CO.UT "USlllHING COM"AH'f' Rob•rt N. W11J ,.,.....,.,,, •!'Id l"vbllllltr J1cli R. C11rl1v Vk 1 Pra klwil .m Genv1I M1r11gw lho11111 K11¥!1 IEdl!or Tho'"ll A.. M11rphiMt M1n1tlllll l!dllOr Rich1rd P. Ntl1 So11111 Or11191 Cowit~ IEll~r ....... Co1t1 Mn1: l>O Wt1! fl•~ ,, .. ,1 H-porl llHC"l n11 WtU lll!bM So111t11trl Ut11t11 fl .. co: m ,_, A.ftf!Ut H\l!'lllo\tllfl lllldl; 1111i 111.Cll 80U"'Ylle It~ Cltmtnll: at Norl!I II Cimino I.HI ,a ...... ...;;,;i =· DA!lV "tlOT, Wtlh ""Id! Iii com&IMll ''" H ....... rfti. i. ...... lllfr!H Mll'f llOC. l lJl>o dt., M ...,.,, .. lldlllln1 tw l,.tf\N •-"- ,........, htcfl. CO.Ito """'· HwttllnftM llMdl ..,. l'wnlllfi Vttlty, •""9 wl"' 1M nsf!DMI .. l!lont. Ort• Cot1! ""•!ltl'll!of COflllMlll'( .,...,...... !'Wiit .,. et tf1 I Wftl AAl!ble •lwv H....,. 1-1'1. ...,. 2.)11 W•I ...., ....... (Mii M-. , .. .,.,., C7141 64J-4JJ1 Cl..m..i ........... 642·1671 S. a.-.. Aff OtportM11"1 , ... , •••• 4ta.....21 Clll\'flfllt. ''"" °''"" , .. ,1 ,.,,,.,llff\~ c.-ri.,, ... ,,.... ·--"""'"''*"' """'1t1 ':MflW .,. edYtt'll..........,. M,._ ~ .,. ~ •1!MI# N*llll --mlMllill et ~ _.,, &IC'Mf CllM amt .... •Ill ef HfWll>Ott 9Mdl •nf (.oil• .v.... 01"""71"" lutacull'lflil• w Qirtlt• lfM tl'!Onll'llJI tr IMll It.• "*'llflJr1 ,,,nltery •1JMI"""° t2AI flDllJlly, l Uvtd In the Laguna area tor 31 years. In Ueu Of nowers, memorial donations may be made to St. Paul's Lutheran Church. Burial will be at Melrose Abbey, Last Rites Set On W ednescla y For Mrs. Seidel ltfass will be celebrated at 10 a.in. Wednesday in St. Nleholas CAthollc Church, Leisure \Vorld, for ~lrs. Juanita Daguerre Seidel, last survi vor or a family that held a one-third interest in Ille vast Moulton Ranch. ~1rs. Seidel died Saturday in St. Joseph Hospital, Orange, where .she had been confined since t.tarch 7. when she slipped and fr.II into a bathtub of hot water in her home at 31506 Bluff Drive, South Laguna. Burned over 65 percent of her body , she died of pneumonia and the effects of the burns, according to the Orange County Coroner's Office. She was the last of the. three Daguerre sisters whose father, Jean Daguerre, was a partner of Ltwls F. ~1oulton In the historic, 21,000 acre ranch on part of "'hich the Laruna HUis Le.lsure World was buill A native of Los AnGeles, Mrs. Seidel had Jived In Orange County for 70 years. Her parents came from France tn 1874. They had six children , of whom 1'frs. Seidel was the last survivor. Rosary y,•ill be recited at 8 p.m. Tues. day in St. Nicholas Church and burla.I will be in Calvary CatholJc Church Cemettry, Les Angeles. Mrs. Blackmarr Funeral Set Services will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday for Jmy Jean Blackmarr. 33, of 2.1802 Paseo del Campo, Laguna Niguel, who died Saturday In South Coa.st Community Jtospllal after a. brief Illness. ~trs. Blackmarr WI! the Wife o( Ned Blac~arr, owner ot Laguna Beach Furniture, 260 Fort.st Ave. She 1lao Is 5urvlved by two IOnS, Mi cha@J and Chris, .end by her parents, Mr. and t.1rs. c. B. Bidon of PomonA. The Rev. Or. Donald E. Inlay will of. ficiatc at aervice. In Sheffe.r Laguna BeAch Mortu1.ry Chapd. Burial will bt at El Toro Cemetery, • Ai.I· Strikes Into Laos Revealed SAIGON (UPI ) -The United States began announcing air strikes into Laos today and reported the losses of three more U.S. planes to ground fi re there. HeadqUarters announced lbe departure of more Gls for home and said American troop s~gth in Vietnam fell lo a 29- month low last week with withdrawal of 3,900 Americans from lhe war zone. In its first announcement of U.S. air strikes into Laos, tile command said: "Air Force, Navy .and Marine Corps aircraft ye6t.erday (Sunday) continued in· terdicUon operations against the Ho Chi Minh Trail in laOI. Air Force aircraft flew combat support missions in Lao! for Royal Laotian forces. In addition, B62s participated in interdiction operations along the Ho Chi }.1inh Trail in Laos." Co11apeting ita Son Diego The official disclosure that American planes are bombing Laos, along with the announcement of U.S. plane losses there, meant a further step in taking tile wraps off "'hat has since 1964 been a secret air campaign, Mrs. Billye Bronson of Irvine (second from left) is among Southern California finalists competing to- day in region al round of 21st Pillsbury -General Electric Bake-off in San Dieso. Contestants are seeking $25,000 grand prize rn national contest. Actress June Lockhart (right) \Velcomed Southern California competitors today. Finalists include (from left) Lela E, Steiner of Van Nuys, Mrs. Bronson, Mrs. Ellen B. Robins of Los Angeles and Mrs. Sandra J. Bangham of Torrance. In Moscow, meanwhile. Premier Ale1ei N. Kosygin told the United States the first step towards any attempt to restore peace in Laos must be an end to American bombing raids. Fro1n Page l DISCLOSURE • • tremely vague ." St John said that the state attomey general has ruled that those involved mwt give the dollar Value ol their holdings. lie sajd many county counsels feel thls is not necessary under the am- biguous Jaw. "T am askJng them to show t.he actual value of these holdlng1," said St John, "Actually, It im't up to me to gay, lt's up to the district attorney. He'll be the one actually prosecuting (in case ol contllcls ol Interest)." "If you .stale that you own SOO 1hare of General Motors stock, it's silly not to glve the value. The value la In the newspaper," sald the county clerk. He said he intended to disclose the dollar \'llue or his holdlngs in his own state- ment. "Thomas Jefferson said when yoo hold pu~Jlc offlee, you are pub1lc property," aa1d St John, Asked about who must file, he gaid, ''This l!n't clear cut. We are telllng everyone thst It is a personal matter and If they need ad\ice they 1hould consul t their own attorney." There ls some agitation to change the l1w, saJd St John, "but the bfg1Ht thing we're walUng for now ts a case before th e Slate Supreme Court brought by Cannel By The Ses." He saJd disclosure, as thing• 1tand, In· volves basically three areas, tncome pro- perty worth more than tl0,000, govern- ment controtled busJness holdings valued at more than SI0,000 and stock worth more than SI0,000, From Page l SCOUTS ..• ment was noncommittal, so is the Boy Scout hierarchy. The Sea Scouts• quest for a real ship. Hunter discovered, treads deeply into mountains or red tape In the scouting \\'Orld. "\Ve can't just go out and find a free boat and say we'll take it," he said. "There are fonns. board approvals. submitting specifications, and all kinds of n!her stuff, and sometimes it gets· us just pla in frustrated," he said. So \vhen the negaU\'e letters wear do"'" the determination. the boys, led by their Adult advisor City Engineer Phil Peter. head down to a backyard and slap some paint on Pueblo 11. Gar Carr, another Sea Scout and the bo'sun'!. fritnd intimated as he gazed up at lhe landlocked boal, "We're supposed tn launch it any Ume now. but I really am worried that It'll either sink or flip over." If the vessel named after the ill-fated spy shi p ever does float, it wlll have a temporary mooring off the San Clemente nte r until plans -still years off - become more firm for the ship's base 1t Dann Harbor. "\Ve still don't know how \ve're goinG to i;iel nut to the boat once it's on the moor- ing," Gary intimated. In lhe meantime-a!lde from amateur bostbullding-the boys in the ship oc- casional\y can make use of the rull-rledg- ed Sea Scout Base. in Newport Beach. Out lheir landlocked rep u ta tj on precedes them there. Thus-similar to Inter.ship rivalry in the real Navy-the San Clemente Scouts' day at that base can be strained at times. "\Ve don't go up the.rt too much, because everybody knows we're a maverick ship," Neylc sald. "All we want Is a sound, nice-looking boal. but boy, we never thought It would be lhis hard to get one." . Surplus Navy craft art generally not ~ltnble. scout ofUclals bave told the local ~hip, because of the upkeep and. ex· pense."i involved in keeping the crlfl. And by policy, the Navy ft\'tS out Its ;opnre boals under an arrangement with lhe Boy Scouts of America after request.I from local councils. And Uiere are many mort: ttquesll: than there art. boats. Sn the doz.en Sta Scouts In San Clemente will probably have to Walt the.Ir turn In that game. "But v.•e'rt 1Un hopina: tor wmtone to donate one," NeyJe .said. , ' San Frru.1cisco's Stril{e Until the bombing stops, Kosygin said it \\'ould be "unrealistic" for him to con· ~ider President Nixon's request that the Soviet Union and Britain attempt to end the fighting in the Southeast Asian kingdom. E11ds; St1~eetcai~s Roll Kosygin placed much of th e blame for the war between government and Com- munist forces in Laos on lhe United Stales, He made no mention of North Vietnamese military support for the Commurtist Pathet Lao. SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Ma)'or Joseph L, Alioto hammered out an agree· ment with striking city employes early today to end 11 four-day strike which had shut down the city's transit and school systems. 3rcl Laguna Fire Hits Olcl House, Guts Apartment For the UUrd Ume In less than two weeks, a pre-dawn fire broke out in an old Laguna Canyon resldence Sunday, destroying the Interior of the second- story apartment at 2S7 Woodland Drive. \Valier Anderson , occupant of the house owned by Pauf \Vut.brook .-1284 Starlit Drive, .suffered a cd'f on hi.s arm as he crawled out of a door to escape the blaze that awakened him at 4:25 a.m. lnvesUgators are checking the extent of damage today. lt Is believed the fire may have been started when material draped on ceiling and waUs In the living room fell onto a floor furnace vent. Heat from the flames also blistered paint on a neighboring residence at 255 Woodland Drive. Last Sunday, March 8, at 4:45 a.m . fire totally destroyed an unoccupied house and lihed on nearby Canyon Acres Drive 11nd four days earlier a blaze at almost the same hour gutted another old \Voodland Drive residence. Clemente Pa1·ks To Be Stucliecl San Clemente 's parks and recreation commissioners will study the parks sec· tlon or the city's flve-year capital im. provements list at their meeting tonight at 8. Other Items on the commission's agen- d1t Include study of the proposed con- cession stand st North Beach and preliminary discussion on a possible ne\v park at Trafalgar and Ola Vlsta. The capital Improvement study will In- volve commlssion perus1l of a n estimated $795,000 in parks and recrea- Lion projects which as yet have not been placed on a priority list. The all·nigbt negotiations broke up after day.·n and the city called its public transit drivers back to work. A few streetcars, which had betn idle since Fri- day, began rGlling by mid-morning . The last of four striking unions ordered tts members to stop picketing about two hours after the tentatlve agreement was reached. Local 400 or the city and county employes union, the largest striking union, held a two-hour caucus before deciding to submit the settlement to a vote of its members. 'Mie union. \\·hich had insisted the trike \\'as not over after other locals pulled their pickets, said it too would withdraw pickets until after its membersillp voted this afternoon. Alioto announced the settlement and said he expects city operations to return lo normal by midday. He refused to disclose terms of the agreement, saying only that It was "re sponsible and rea!Otlable," providing a cost-of.Jiving increase "'hile holding the line against innation. But he did say that the unions had won their chief demand -retention of a "seniority" pay increase of S percent a year granted eniployes during their first four years with the .city. The item. which costs an estimated $2.4 milllon a year, had been cut by the city supervi!ors. The clty had offered 14,000 employes a $4.8 million -or $ percent -pay hike, The unions had demanded S9.5 million - about 10 percent. The agreement came too late for the 400,000 dally passengers of the T\1unicipal Railway System . They walked, biked, dro\'e and hitchhiked to work, crealing a massive traf!Jc jam In the downtown area during the morning. The parking problem was even worse than on Friday because police had l.o keep bus and streetcar lanes clear after the settlement "'as reached . John Jeffrey, head of Local 400, told newsmen he "'as not fully sat!srted 'vlth the agreement, \\'hich was reached during an all·nlght negotiating gession. The leaders of the· big union apparently were concerned the settlement did not specify the pay scales of some of the \vorkers it represents. But the picket lines are called oft until the membership decides. t.1embers of the city board of supervisors were called from their homes at 3 a.m. to join !inti stages of the talk!. They must vote the agreement into Ja1v at their aflemoon meeUng. (Nixon said recently that 67,000 North Vietnamese soldiers are operating in Laos.) Nixon, In a mess,ge to Kosygin, tiad asked ~1oscow and/London, cochairmen of the 1962 Geneva convention that pro- claimed Laos neutral, to use their good offices among the tealy'3 slgner1 to restore peace. From Page l LAOS ... about 15 miles from the North Viet- nam frontier. Radar ntts dotted nearby hills and Air Force and Central Intelligence Agency personnel used the valley landing gtrip as a base for American-led teams of Meo tribesmen entering North Vietnam on barassment missions, the Po.st said. Highly sophisticated electronic gear was housed In a limestone cave and used to electronically release bombs and guide planes to targets over North Vietnam, the report added. Helicopters also reportedly used the base for rescuing flyers downed In North Vletna1n. Tll·o ground attacks failed to dislodge the troops, lhe Post Continued, and in early 1968 four Sovlet-made biplanes at· tempted an air raid on the base. The old AN2s, however, were no match ·for the American helicopters thal went aloft. Servicemen firing t.·1·16 rifles shot down two of the North Vietnamese Air Force planes, the report said. The North Vietnamese finally overran the air st.rip and fought their way up the side or the mountain, the Post continued fina lly overrunning the base. ' One American was quoted as a:ayinf the American and Meo troops "fought to the last man. They were all killed March 11 inside that grollo. An enormous amount of equipment was Jost , too." Actor's Wife Found Deatl iu 1-Ier Studio LOS ANGELES <UPI) -The wife of actor Dane Clark \\'as round dead in her studio adjacent to their West Los Angeles home today. Clark said he round the body on a sofa in her studio-workshop in lhelr home. r..trs. Clark, ~. was dressed in nlghL clothing. You Work Less You Save Money Keeps th ings cleaner without effo1t, eliminates bath tub rings Soap and clothing last longer. Ask A~ut Sears Convenient Credit Plans FREE E.9timate~I Phone Sears Today! /Sears) --.. -So. Cout Plaza, 3333 Bristol SI. Phone 540-a333 · """~---....,..,....-~.,....,..,...------.............. .._ ___ ,,,........~-~---~--~·-----·-----· --------- I ' I I I· I I ' ·. •• L I I Continuation S·chool: Failure to Laguna Asked· to Upgrade Op eratwn IN DRIVER'S SEAT-Laguna Continuation School instructor Roy Bradshaw advises student Susan Sowul on proper procedure at start of driver edu· cation class. Although mosl students attend con- tinuation school because they are in some sort of difficulty, Susan attends because she works during regular school hours. One purpose of the special program is to allo"•' \vorking students lo con1plete U1eir education. Court Upholds )Jr Pollution Suit Settlement Aliso Beach Fisliing Pier Construction Slated Soon By BARBARA KREIBICH or ._. 0.llf ,Met Iliff ••?11e common denominator moat of tht 1)UJ)U. ihtre la faJlure. The 1..im of Con- linuaUon School la to help turn that failure Into success. ''But," aaya RJchard Holliattr, prin- ci!>"I ol the Laguna B<aeh Untfl<d School Di!trict'a Continuation School, "the at- trition rate la high. We loae about ~per­ cent of the students ~ho start with us. On the other hand, 50 percent do stick it out and a:o on to complete the.it education. which they probably would not have done without Continuatthn School.•• Hollllte.r, who doubles as head of the Cootinualioo School along with his regular asaignment as Director of Pupil Services at Laguna Beach HJgh School, recently a11kcd lhe Laguna school board to consider upgrading the operation to the extent of finding it a home and a start of its own. • In Laguna, continuation school classes are conducted at the high school campug after re111Jar school hours, from 3:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.nl. The six teachers are all members of the regular faculty. BAD SITUATION This, says Hollister. is a bad situation. ln the first place, student&, many of whom already are beset with problems, must hang 4fOW1d all day waiting for !heir classes, an unhealthy situation unless they have johJ. l\loat of the boys do work, but it's dlfficult lo find employ. mmt ror teenage girls. ¥d this year there art five 14-f'&r-olds in the school, too young for regular jobs. The instructors, though dedicated to the work for which they volunteer. also would do a better job, Hollister believes, if they dkl not have to tackle it after a full day of regular teaching. Laguna now is the only district in the county to operate Its continuation echool in this manner. The others all conduct \\"ASHINGTON (AP) -A unanimous rlasses away from the high school cam-Co:u;Lruction of a fishing pier at county-Construction of the 600·foot Ion& pier nd .,. · 1 ch Supreme Court upheld today settlement pus a Wh11 Specll tea ers. of .;in antitrust suit In which the govern· o\vned Aliso Beach in South Laguna \vilh a diamond-shaped tip should take Lasl ~ember, San Clemente rooved ment had charged the nation's biggest should get under way in about one month. about nine months, Sampson said. II-' continuation cla11ses off the high aulo maker!i with conspiring to delay and county Director or Parks, Btaches and The federal government will pay SO school campus to San Juan Capistrano obstruct development of auto air-pollution Recreation Kenneth Sampson said today . percent of the cost, the state 25 percent where a special instruct.or. James Selden, control devices. ronducts the school from one to four p.m. A bid to construct the pier for $665,000 and the county 25 percent d ·1 r bout 18 ~ .. d t · In a consent decree. upheld in October a1 y, or a ,,..., en s. by l-lealy.Tibbitts Constructio n Company following the pier construction {he by federal Judge Jesse \V. Curlis of Los AT'TEND REGULARLY A I h uf ed of Lon;:. Beach v"as approved this "'·eek beach park will be impro,·ed 1"1ith nge es. t e man acturers agre to b h Thls semtster in Laauna, 18 of the 26 cease the alleged illegal actions without Y t e Orange County Harbor Com-landscaping. paving, picnic sites and fire .,,_udent11 who have been as1igned lo Con· d ·ittn ilt t .. ch g s mission. Approval no1v must be obtained rili".s. This cannot be done concurrently . U hool lied nd • a mi g gu 0 uie ar e · from the St.ate Wildlife Con.servaUon tinua on Sc are enro a av- New York City had appealed to the Board and the county Board of because the contractors would get in each tending regularly. The average age range high court to reopen the antftrust suit. Supervisors. other's way, Sampson said. is 1~ to 18 years. Most qult as 500n as claiming if the allegations were true the Later, according to the county 's ~taster their 18th birthday draws near. Hollister .auto matters had endangered the health not!d, and they are no longer obliged by of millions or people. But the high court Plan, Aliso Park Inside Pacific Coast i.tate Jaw to attend school. declined. and without holding a hearing Suspect Sotight Highway will be developed. with 4o or 50 Continuation Education has betn in ex- affinned Judge Curtis' ruling. camping_ site&. •~• .. nee in Callfornla 11lnct 1919, but it was The 11uit had been filed by the Justice not generally offered until September of Department in the closing days of the · F 01• Shooting t065, when a new state law provided that .against General Motors, Ford, Chrysler, Co ti·an Held any .school district not offering con· American Motors and !he Automobile 1ID . tinu11tion classes would lose 10 percent of ~tanufactures Association. Santa Ana police are looking for a man i~ stale aid. At that time · no Orange t.ast September, Richard W. A!cLaren, today who reportedly shot another man in F F• • G rounty district had such a program. By • the requirements of a regular school pro- ~am. As it has developed, the worklna: .students and pregnant girls now ue very much In the mlporlty In the Laguna Beach program . The latter. In fact, are provtded with home te1chers to comply with the state education code. Thtrt are ~ few ttudent.s atten<ilng lhe classes ao they may keep ful l time jobe, but the ma· jorlty have problems of one sort or another, ranging from habitual truancy (the most common) to arresl6 on drug ~harges. which means a u t o m a 11 c suspension from regular cluses. It Is 1 different story in aome or the larger county districll. In Fullerton and Ne\vport Beach, says Hollister, con- tinuation schools have an enrollment of more than 200 and waiting lists of up to 100 students who are anxJous to go to "·ork and still complete their studies. RETURN TO SCHOOL In Laguna It i!I not pos5itle for a !tu- dent to obtain a high school diploma from continuation school. To achfeve th.is , he must return lo regular school and fulfill all requirements. Beeause continuation (')asses offlir · a maximum of 15 hours study a week, the full high school cur· riculum cannot be completed, but classes are offered in m03l required subjects, In· eluding social studies and English, along with lnMdlon In Industrial arts, photography and driver education. "The aim of the program here," Hollister U11lains. "is to get the student back to regular school as fast as pos!lble, to try to convince him to do a good job and return to regular classes at the end of the semester. I! they attend regularly and improve their altitude, they usually will go back. If they are pretty sharp, they ma y be able to catch up with thetr cla6Smates, but most have to drop back. About two-thirds of th ose who stick with continuation school go on to graduate." LESS 011' PROBLElll For the. younger students, returning to regular hlih school is less of a problem. Those who pass the age of 18 without achieving graduation u11Ually are advised to attend adult evening classes to get their diploma. Of 11 continuation school students who returned to regular cla&11es at the end of the last semester, eight are still In high school, three have been returned to con- Unuatton school. An Interesting facet o( the problem that especially concerns beach cities ia the ao- called "emancipated youth ." While state law reqiures that young people attend school up to the age of 18. the welfare code classifies a young person capable of Sl!Pporllng himself, and d.oing 110 without getting Into any trouble, aa an "eman· Cycle Rider Dies in W reek cil>"ted youlh." Technically, he 1111111 , .. quired to 'I• to IC!tool, bul In lac\, Ille lrtnd la to look the oilier way, ao lonl u he stay• out of trouble. "It's a queaUon of ·~ numben," says Holllatu, "plus the fael that the aulboritlea have their hands more than Cutfthtse days wtth young people who are in trouble. In recent years a fantutlc number of young peop1e have left home and are living on t.l'lelr own. Laguna Beach and all the beach cities have dotens of them -somehow the beach areas seem to attract unattached peo. pie." Continuation school cannot be of much help to these wandering youngsters, even if they would like to go back to school. It is available only.Jo legal resldtnls of the district who haft' a parent or other adult legal guardian responsible for them. Typical ol the conUnuaUoo school atu. dent Is the boy, going on l7, who may have superior ability and good grades but would rather 11Urf than study. Aulgned to the apeclal cla&Ses because ol habitual truancy, be will attend juat oftm enouth to keep ahead of the law and drop out a ftw weeks before his 11th birthday. TYPICAL STUDENT Also typical Is the girl, qed 15 or 18, who has "turned oU" on school and 11 tagged for truancy. Some of them can be reached through counselillg, which ii a conUnuing service of the school, but many will wander off after a few monthl of attendance. "" The teenaged boy or girl "bulttd" for drug violations normaJly Is suspended from school pending a hearing. U the ~charge is dropped, the student returna to regular closes. If lhe student ia placed on prohaUon he is referred to continua- tion school . A few of the students auigned to con- tinuation school conUnue lo get into trou· hie and wind up in Juvenile Hall. From there they may be placed In a foster home or a youth facility where four hours of class work daily is required. 'PURE GOLD' The juvenile counseling offered by tM: Laguna Beach Police Department l!i descrlbe.d by Hollister •f 14pure gold - we couldn't get near aorrie of tht5t kid& without them. Even If there lm't 1ny question of lawbreaking, the juvenile of. ficers will spend• hours talking with the kids and sometimes their parent!, too. trying lo aet the youngster' back on ·lhe track." · _ Bot counseling at the high school level often ls too late, he says. ··~ty hope would be that there could be counseling as low as the fourth. fifth and sixth grades. The problems these kidl are TUMing from usually begin long before they get to high 11cbool. They are pro- blems of lonellMss, rejection, broken homes., feelings of lnfertorlty. If these things could be spotted, and handled, at a much younger age, we 11houldn't have nearly as many teenagers l08ing their motivation and dropping OtlL" president Nixon's antitrust chief, riled the an argument at Jtrome Park. Ot• IrIDg Ull the spring or 1966, every district was of· proposed consent deer~ in Los Angeles Officers said John G. Fuller, 26. of San· fering some type of continuation educa· A passenger on Jl motorcycle tilat \li'en t prohibiting the automaker and the ta Ana, was found shot in the left La Palma police arreskd a man Sun· tion.. out of control in Orange Sunday was B • H • J association fronl obstructing development sho ulder Sunday when they responded to day 0:1 charges that he fired 15 shots into One intent of the program is to permit kJIIed and the drfver seriously injured. urlODS lD 08ptf8 and installation of the devices. a call on an auto accident at 1st and a crowded neighborhood '1ith an r.1-1 ri-.•"tudents who could not attend school dur-David M. Parrish, %2, of Orange, died New York Cily had asked the high Bristol streets. fie. ing regular hours to continue and com-al Orange County ~tedical Center and HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -E&abeth court to reopen 1he case so ii could in. Fuller told police friends were driving Officers caid he "'as :shooting at plete their education. Llev.·ellyn Brindle, 21, or Orange, waa in-Taylor and Richard Burton entered lervene and present an argument that the him to the hospital when the accident oc· another man as the resull of an argument These Included students who have to jured. Hollywood Presbyterian Hospital today public interest v:as ignored in the set-curred. during a party. work to help s4pport themselves and Police said lhe motorcycle went oul of for annual physical check.ups, a tlemenl. Both the J ustice Department He underwe:nt surgery and Is reported Jailed was Ovidio Perez, 42. He missed their families. girls who became preg. control and h.it a pole as the pair left spokesman for the hospital announced. and the manufacturers associalion op-in satisfactory condition this morning at his supposed victim and all houses In the nant and others who could not er would Garden Grove Freeway eastbound onto The couple was erpected to rema1n in posed New York's request. Orange County 1o1edical Center. neighborhood. not, tor'i variety of reasons, comply with La Veta Avenue. the hospital for three or four daya. ·~--::::;--iiiliiiliillillllliililllllii--lillllliilillllliiliiiiiilililliiiiiilililliiilliiliiiiiilillllliiiliiiliiliiiliiiliillliliiiiliiliiiiiiiiiiiim El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Celebrate the wea.rin' o' the green! Offer up a p I a. t t et heaped high \vith Jreland01! national favorite! Te n d e r brisket •• whole or Point end. FLAT END ................. 91< lb. I) Mustard ...................................... 29' Enjoy Grey Pou Pou ••. discover quality! 5 oz. ' At tM delic.atesstn. Horseradish ................................ 25' Silver Springs .•• zood 'n ho t: 5 oz. jar. Early in the 1ct.ek menu-mokc1·s fro m El Ra,11.cho! Pork Loin Roast I1ai I to the .sons .•• and daughters ••• of Erin! And why not join them this week ••• enjoy their favQrite •• , at El Rancho prices! GR!EJI ••. ClllSP ••. SOLID Whole Potatoes .................. 2 • 39' Del Monte , •• go with corned beef! No. 303 The spirit of tM holiday.r Irish Whiskey ............................. '62• Morphy'•. , • a irrand old Irish name! Fifth CENTER CUT • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Lean and tender and flavorfuJ as pork Mould be ••• becauge it'g from El Rancho, where there is a. differtnce ! P k Ch CCNIII CUTI or ops ....................... . From finer mid.we15tern pork loins! '1" lb. Baked Potatoes .................... 3 • '1 O'Boy ••• frozen, 12 oi .... with cheese or ch..ives! Ku bro Soups .............................. 49¢ Frozen ••• chooee your !avoriU, heat and !ietVe! Port Chops ........ ~~~~ ....... . •1• I~ \Vith Cubbison'a dressiJli • , , to ina:ure satisfsctfon I Mott's Fruit Treats .............. 3 "' '1 Your choice of delicious varletiea ! ... 20 oz. Premium Crackers .................... 35' Nabisco'• ••• roes with aoop I 18 oz. pka'. ' Pri.tta in effect Alon., Tua., lVtd., M4r.16, 11, lB. No 1ak1 f.() ckakra. ' ARCADIA: \ Sunat and KU11Un.'ll>n Dr. (ti Rtndio c.)ml PASADENA: 320 Wal Colmdo Blvd. SOUTH PASADENA: r11mont 8'HlwillltJ(ml Dr. HUNTINGTON BEACH: W1rn11 1nd AllO"'IUIO (Balrdw11k C.nter) NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 Nowpoit B~ ond 25Sl EJStblutt Dr. (laslhluH Villm C.nflfl J • • ' . .-4 DAILY PILDT While young people in this coun- tey .a re busy attending school and Starting J'obs, the youth of Israel are' figh ng a war. According to Mrs. Ruth Oay1 n, wif~ of the Is- raeli defense minister, ''Israeli y9uth have the challenge of fight· mg for their country. They are ready to give up their lives." • Apparently, modern high fashion ha.r even caught up totth Britbh royalty. Sporting st11tish foul weather gear,. Princess Anne smiled at school chil· dren in Christchurch, Neut Zealand during a driving rain. She U wearing a wide-brimmed hat and pl.a.stic cape. • In one of the more typical rail- road man's commentaries, Chair- man Frank E. Barnett of Union Pacific said, "The President talks of traveling to Mars when the com- muter can't even get from New York to Washington on time." • Space age technology d o e s not impress the firemen of San Franciaco. Aft.tr a three-month ttst, their futuristic plastic and fiberglass helmets with trans- parent faceplates are collecting dust. The men decided to keep their long-bitled, leather lined Mlmets which have been in use for JSO 11ears. • The crew of the aircraft carrier USS Ranger, on duty off Vietnam has apparenUy developed a sweet tooth. T hey have requested resi~ dents of the Lawrence, Mass., a rea to send them malted milk balls -in unlimited quantities - with the guarantee they will be eaten. Replies can be sent to the Ranger, RV AH·S, ASSC, Fleet Post Office, San Francisco, Calif., 96601. • The man who stole Angelo Peru. 10'1 car in Rome, Italy, can relax. The bottle in the car contained brandy and not rat poison. Peruso apparently made up the story to be broadcast on Rome radio to scare the thief. The radio with- drew the warning. • Pub owner John Bu rrluck of Sevenoaks, England, is returning his slot machine for a checkup. He claims it keeps paying out jack· pols to one customer -a retired police .sergeant. • Monday, Marth 16, 1910 Senators ...r Open Debate On Car swell WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Stnate debates the Supreme Court nomination of Judge G. Harrold Carswell today, with liberals conceding they don't have enough votes to stop him and a survey showing he would be approved jf tqe vote were held today. Senate Democratic Leader M i k e Mansfield said a week or more of debate is in stort. "It will be a filibuster, but not a long ·one. Maybe filibuster ill the wrong word. It's more like extended debate," he said. Carswell'• liberal opponents, who con- cede they do not have tht power to block the nomination, hope to delay the vote long enough to build public pressure agaimt the Florida judge and push some fence sitters into their camp. Many senators, includ ing Mansfield, have· not said how they intend to vote. But a United Press International survey indicated Carswell would win con- fiimation if the vote were held today. Mansfield said he doubts the debate wUJ change any minds and as or now, "J'd say he had the votes." The Senl\ie does not have much other business at the moment and will probably be able to devote extensive time to the Carswell nomination. . One of the Senate's major actions of last week -a provision to give the vote lo the 11 million Americans between the ages of 13 and 31 -now is in the House. Mansfield said he would insist the voting rights bill, to which the lS-year~ld pro- vis~on is attached, be sent back to con- ference if House-Senate. negoUators remove the voting age item . Remains Found In 'Bomb Plant' NEW YORK (UPI) -Ple~s of human bodies and part of a bomb mechanism were found Sunday Jn the rubble of a Greenwich Village townhouse demolished 10 days ago by dynamite blasts. Assistant Fire Chief Henry Junge 11aid the fragment.I appeaud to be remains of the three victims previously recovered from the wreckage of the $250,000 brownstone building, He said he djd not think they were parts of a fourth body. Newsweek Magazine reported Sunday the explosives that leveled the building police have called a "bomb factory " were to have been used by radicals to bomb Columbia University and other buildings. Mayor John V. Lindsay and Fire Com· missioner Robert 0. Lowery would not confirm these reports, but acknowledged the dynamite found in the sul>basement of the house was purchased out of state.. U,t Ttlt!IM"' KILLED IN AMBU SH Cypriot Georghadjis Cypriot Police; Guard on Alert After Slaying NICOSIA (UPI) -President li.fakarios called an emergency cabinet meeting to- tlay and ordered police and lhe national guard on special alert rollowing the ··.,ssination of former Interior Minister Polycarpou Georghadjis on Sunday. Scheduled talks between leaders of the Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot com- ri11.,ities were canceled. Extra guards were placed around the presidential palace, scene of an assassination attempt ag ainst Makarios himself on March 8. r ·.-.r~hadjis had been linked with that at- tempt. The island was generally calm and no demonstrations were reported. In Athens, the Greek government and press experessed concern over the worsening o( the situation in cyprus but refrained from speculating on who was b~hlnd the assassination of Georghedjis. Greek newspapers linked Georghedjis with the attempt on Makarios and said he was mixed up In an attempt against r:reek Premier George Papadopoulos in 1968. 'Official sources said Georghadjis was lured out of. his heavily guarded home. by an anonymous lelephone caller who pro- mised information on the plot to kill Makarios. A policeman who was with him survived the roadside attack on their car eight miles outside Nicosia. Unct1nfinned reports said Georghadjis was shot si,: times in the chest by at~ tacker• who fired through the windshield of the car. An autopsy was planned. -.. Vegas Lights On 94-hour Strike on Strip Ends LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI)-The fost gambling shutdown in Las Vegas history ended after a 94--your strike was settled that cost 16 "Strip" hotel.casinos and 14,000 union members an estlmated $4 million. Under an agreement that went into ef· feet a minute past midnight Sunday, the Culinary and Bartenders Union "''as given a 31.5 percent pay increase. Each side said the walkout cost It $2 million. Nevada Jost half a million dollars ln ta.i revenue. ' Jerry Lewis was the first player at the crap table at Caesar's Palace w he n gambling resumed early Sunday . Fu ll resumption of service was expe cted by Tuesday. The new agreement between the Nevada Resort Association, which represents the 16 affected casinos. and the union provided a 27·28 percent wage increase plus fringe benefH.s. The union had asked for a 45 perti!nl increase, while the hotels offered 25 per· cent. Under the agreement, a cocktail waitress can make $55 a day. Representatives af the union and the association Carne up with a setUement to the most cosUy strike in Nevada history after marathon negotiations that began Friday night. Gov. Paul Laxalt new here Friday from the state capital at Car.son City to help try to bring the dispute to an end. The strike began Wednesday, and by Thursday night the 16 affected hotels had closed down their operations, leaving 10.887 rooms vacant. Three other strip hotels -Rivier...., Bonanza and Circus Circus -and 11!1"" downtown casinos continued operanons. They have separate contracts with the union. Snowstorm Buries l(ansas Un seasonable Cold Chills Midivest, Southeast California Temperature• IOUTHEltN CAlll'OltNIA -Molt!Y !1\r Mt:>ndlY -.nd T11a01y bl.ii lot 1ior. 11C1Ulh CIMll tlr!Y _,.,,., mornlltf '"" fol 110,.. mud! 1Df COlll! Monlll't' nl9hl 1nd t•thr Tve141Y mornlne. Not mucn ttmOO!rllll•t chi~. 01111"1' <>Crl~P•IY wincl1 mo\lnt1ln1 t 'ld Or serh '"" Ill-- low co.1111 an1on1 •I llmt•. lOS ANGELI!"' 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Gu11Y -'lltflf wl~ ,,.,.,.., ftiltlf lllf Tu.MltY, COAST,4l AND JNTEltM!DIATl VALl&Y.....,.1lr MIMtf 11M11 TwlCl1Y. llrollt lllll'tMl"IY •ltlo:l1 •I tlmorl Mll'I-.. ,. nlttr! 11111 T""tdlY. LIWI ,,.,.,..,., 1111111 e "' JS. Hlfttl Mondt'!' 1J lo IJ. MOUNTAIN AltEAI -1'1tr llftO!ld,.., llld fllfl4tf. ltc:ll 1tront Hiii' ll(M'lll to -'Mitt twl• ti Omt1. Hit mlilCll ltmMr•hl ... Cftlntt. • c .. ,,,, ''"'~•!ti,.. ,_ '""" n II '1. l"l•NI llWIH,.lurn ''"" fret'!\ " "' a. w.,., ""'"''"",.. .. Sun, Moon, Tides MONO.\., .. ' ''"•m·'' ILS.1,m. 2• Tt.IEsoa,y , ..... 111111 ........... i 3'1.fl'I. '' ,.,,, lo• .. . .. . 11 )' '·"" .... ~Mel!. I At.,.,. f l liUll lt!MI 1·a1 ...... S1r1 4 Ot . "'· MIOll ..... ll:lt '""· s.11 ~.,. • .m, Al"' lhtrt -• -flwnllt ltt.ovtl'lout IN Drt4I lAn "'9~ IM !ht .... M!Kftll"'· 11 "'' Clel, 11iid U"MftOl'll~ «!O 111 Mrll of ftlt MtfwnJ •nd MylllffJl• 1111 1l1th "llft rtwt+br11k1M lowt r-i.o ftOl!I "'411'11' l lKn. 1¥ COl'ltrt1I !ht ioutrtvml lfllll'IM t~I tv""llel"llkt HY wl!h l1'le nMf• e1,1•J cllmt11n1 to tG lln'ffl ft'I_..~ 11111 lllutlltrn C1UI01"11l1 ·•lld 'l'ilOM. P1W..~ " " ,IM llobltt n .. ·-· " " Pllbbu1"911 ~ " •• '°"'*"" " • "' 1t11ld CllY " " Itta lluf'! n " ... .. " S.cr11M1110 • .. Siii Lt'• t fl\I " " St11 Gitto n n 11~ !lr1...:1~ " " '""!• " • ... 5Pok•~· ~ • ,. I "T"trmtl " .. W1U1lllfOll " u • Antiwar -Drive Opens Protests Expected in More Than 100 Ci ties By ne A1Mdaled Prep A week or anUwar de.monilrationa - draft board 1lt-ins, school and colleie teacO-ins, petlllon-1igitlng, maU·in1 to disrupt draft boar.ct procedures and jw:t plain rallies and marches -got under way around the nation t.oday. The week long protest against the Viet- nam war was . called for by the New MobJUzaUon COmmlttee to End the War tn Vietnam, the yt>Uthful £l'OUP. which succeeded ln mounUng m a 1 1 l v e demonStraUoris across the country last fall. Many local antiwar groups will be in- volved ln the protest, however, and "New Mobe" expects more than 100 cities to take part in activities building up to Con- front the Draft Day on Thursday. Groups all over the nation have reported plans to sit-In at draft boards on that day; while still other demonstrators will try to hamper the boards by. mass !elephonlng. ,1 A symbolic start to L'-1e week of con- frontation occurreil Sunday as midn.lght- demonstrators stood silently on the Capitol steps in Washington, each holding a candle. One by on,, at one-minute intervals, the candles were snuffed oat each represfnting a death in Vietnam. Tht beginning for Sacramento occurred on the State Capllol steps, where 36 pel'IOlll, many of lhem mlddle--aged veterans of World "'ar JI , solemnly 1t'~ ped up to a flag-draped coffin and deposited tileir Purple Hearts and other service medals atop It. One of the World' War II wounded, Wessley Osman, ea:plained why he sur- rendered his Purple Heart: "To many, these medals are a precious thing. But tt Is not nearly u precious • it U$ed to be." State Sen. Albert Rodda exp!Wned wby he offered tq take the medals and gjve them back to federal authorities. FIRST FAMILY MARKS PAT'S DAY WASHINGTON (AP) -Mrs. Richard M. Nixon celebrated her 58th blrthd8y to- day, one day after her famlly noted the evenl with a _priVJl:i!. family dinner. The family ctlebratlon was be.Id Sun· day when all members were present. Mrs. Nixon "'as presented a Lady Baltimore cake baked especially for her by the White }louse chef at the weekend party. The two-layer white cake with caramel lclng wu Inscribed "Happy Birthday, Mother " Jn chocolate. "I'm poliUcally expendable," he said. 0 1 don't really care any more.1' In Cale.ago, member1 of Chicago Area Draft Resisters jumped the gun on "Mobe" week, with about 150 persons looking on at the Federal Building as 21t youlhs turned In their draft cards, to be forwarded to !he Senate Armed Services Com.mlttee. Along with the draft cards will 10 .several Chicagoans' 104<1 income tar: forms, scrawled in grease pencil: ••we won'l pay. Stop the draft. Stop the war. Stop militarism." An afternoon rally on the campus of Washington State Univet'!ity In Pullman today was to hear a speech by Sam Brown, a founder of the original moratorium movement. But in most of the involved cities, pro- test organizers were concentrating on. massive demoruitrations Thursday at the draft boards, and rallies Wednesday night to win support. · '-fost draft officials were philosophical about the prospect, and one 1n Detroit noted that intenUonal overloading of the boards with paper work has been going on for years. North Carolina's selective service director said if enoogh people came in to boards asking questions it could slow ckiwn their work, bu t "as public servants, v;e're obligated to answer them." GARDEN SALE! SAVE 2.11 ON OUR PREMIUM SPREADER! Big 60 tb. capocjty 2Q-lpl'eoder leolures: tteel body wilh reinforced edges, 10" wheels with nylon becir- iog1, fingertip controls. Reg. 15.99 NOW 13.88 2 HP Mc:LANE9 TRIM 'N EDGER Emy to '°"''°'· rih ~tip"""'° od[vstmenf and control ....,; Male" ·~twotk trimming 90lyf 74.95 THRU SATURDAY ONLY! l SAVE $20 ON OUR PREMIUM TILLER! 5 HP horizontal Sriggs & Stratton engine,,. 16 heovy duty, self sharpening tinet •• , heory duty gear c:ose ••• handle control1. . Reg.$189 NOW HAND PUSH REEL TYPE MOWER ... 16" 5 "'"""' bl..i.., boll *'""' '"' mount, ocfjwtabS. Nt6ng height1, cost Iron apoke whnlL 24.99 171' PUSH MOWER 39.99 SAVE 3.11 ON OUR ROTO SPREADER ••• Foremost Premium lpl"eodef" f90o- tures: % cu. h. capacity for lpl'eod. ing WI full Of" setni<ifde, hanch controls, feed regulatoi. Reg. 19.99 NOW 16.88 2 HP Mc:LANE"' FRONT THROW MOWER ••• I 20" cvtting ..,idth; .c· cyde engine1 clutch, blade and throttle controls on handle. 169.95 20" 3 HP MOWER 189, 95 NC1N! THESE VALUES AT ANY ONE Of CANOGA PARK DOWNEY FULLERTON HUNTl"IGTON BEACH SHOP SUNDAY, TOO THESE P£NNEY· STORES! lAKEWOOD MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA 12 to 5 P.M.' J I I I 'I Down tlae Mission Trail Viejo Students Selling Candy r.1I~ION VIEJO -Students of ~11ssion Viejo High School have a sweet task through March 12·31 . They're selling candy lo raise funds for various school projects and equipment. On sale are English toffee miniatures and toffee crunch for $1 a box. Last year's $3.500 profits were used for the stadium fund. This year the !tudenl.s hope to raise $4 ,500 to purchue bleachers, replace athletic uniforms and lo ~inance such Associated Student Sooy 11~!1vlties as assemblies, the Diablo Dispatch, non admission athletics , and the speech and debate team. e KofC Seeks /ll e1nbe rs . SADDLEBACK VALLEY -The Knigl1ts of Columbus are &eeklfig members in the Sadrlleback Valley this month in honor of the anniversary of .John F. Kennedy's initiation into the organization. Neil Stratton. Grand Knight af the Stella Msris Council has announced that interested people may call rcpresen· tatives al their own parishes. t>AILY P'tLOT Stiff P'MM DANA DE SCENDANT SHOWS STATUE TO FRIENDS Tereu Cam1cho, Eddie Br•vo Admire Work • Water Rate 'Rematch' Scheduled A committee. of clllzens concerned with the recent 50 percent hike In ratts for South Coiat County Water District are tel meet again Milch 31 with two membus of the board. The meeting will be at 7:30 p.m. in the dl!trlct offices in Sooth Laguna. The decl11ion to fonn a e<1mmlttee or board and citizenry to study the dil1trlcl'!l e<:0nomy came alter an emotion charged meeting or protest this month where board members were criticized for such a sizeable hike, the lirst increase In 11 years. John "Tex" Smith, district man ager, ~llid the 'COmmftle:e Is atlempling to determine whether a lesstr increase lVOuld be feasible. He noted that the wat- er district's auditors had recommended a 100 percent increase but directors had felt that wa.s too much. Smith said cost of water lo the district has increased from $23 an acre foot in 1960 to $49 currently. lie said materials such as brass fittings and water pipe and · the cost elf labor have all risen sharply. The water district manager sald some of the homeowners believe that deprecia· tion charges should not apply again.fit the water rate but would be better covered by a tax rale increase because this could be written off on federal Jhcome taxes . Mond1y, Marth 16. 11170 ' OAILY PILOT f'1lltt h' LM '''" Rcpresentalives are \Valt Long. San Clemente, 492-5596; Jerry Garfney, San ,fuan Ccipi~trano, 493-1580; Ed Snyder, Capi!trano Beach. Dana Point, 496-1433; Ed Graney, Laguna Beach, 494-3506 and Jerry Gau, Laguna Hill&, Mission Viejo. 8.17-24~. &ard President Tom Brooks and director Robert l\falone are studying this, 15aid Smilh, but 1Wted that this might throw an Inequitable burden on owners of vacant land or large homes. Hota9itt' Judge Beckons e BPW Lender Named Richard Henry Dana Kin The board and citizens committee at the next meeting will be laking a second look at the district auditor's figure!, 53ld Smith. J ohn Luhno\v, l.he Hangin' J udge ot San Juan Capisirano, stands ready to deal with all breakers of law and tradition during the city's Fiesta de las Golondrinas this week . Annual fiesta is held in honor of the return of Capistrano's famed swallows. SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Patricia Toner has been installed president or the f.a ddlcback Valley's first Busines!l aod Professional Woman's Club. Serving wilh her will be Dorothy Pearson, fi rst vice presic\enl; Marlene Lavertu, second vice president; Gale Cunninghman, recording secretary; Vi· ,·ian !Tnsmer, corresponding secretary ; Be.Uy Green. treasurer and Ida Manioo, parliamEntarian. Awaits Harho1· Stati1e By PAAtELA HALLAN n)ost of which are still farmed by Danas. Of~ o.11J" ''"'' s111t l\iary's tat her. Orestes Ramon O an a Niguel Churchy.- Target of TliJft When the statue or Richard Henry was one r:if five chlldren of Edward A dream of Laguna Niguel residents Dana is placed in Dana Point Harbor one Gooch1,1in Dana, \Villiam's son. "The first hoping to celebrate Easter in the ne)V year from ~tay one Laguna resi dent will child born is always given the name Shepherd of the HillJ Lutheran Church Capo Junior Higl1 Braces F 01· '6th Grade Invasion' Twenty-r.inc charter members also \11ere installed in ceremonies at Omar's Restaurant in San Clemente. L1111 cf1eon Planned LAKE FOREST - A membership luncheon for Lake Forest women in· t.erested in' joining he Lake ForesL \Vomen's Club will take place Wed· nesday, March 18 ln an unuaual place. The historic Serrano Adobe, which has been completely restored, will be the location ror the 11:30 a.m. event. For information interested women are asked to contact Carolyn Harrisln at 837- 7391 or Pat Bosdet at 837-4468. be exceptionally proud. . Dan," said 1\·lary. "My daughter's first has been shattered by thieves. "\Ve al ways rerer to Richard as The name is Dana." Ancestor.'.' said f.trs. Mary Da na 1\lary is proud of her Ca lifornia -The new church, nearing the final f\1arco Forster Junior High in San Juan Tognazzini, head nurse of Medical West, heritage but she still speaks reverently stages of const ruction after enduring Capistrano is braced for an invasion by """lh c t c ·1 H ·1a1 "-·1 h ·11 1 · 1 r .. _ vandalism and damaging rai ns . has fallen """' oas ommuru y osp1 . auvu er 1 us r1ous ances or or wu\Jnl 600 new sl.Udents betw«n March 30 and Mary is the greatgranddaughter or Dana Point is named. victim to thieves who stole it! new Richard Henry's cousin Captain William She is pa11icularly please<l that sorne carpeting before it was instatled earlier April 3. Dana. William, who was bom in 1797 in day she will be able lo walk out lo the this week . And school officials hope the Invaders, Boston established the California branch marina_and see a l1Jrger than life bronze Whether the Easter services will be sixth grade youngsters, will be ac- of the Dana family when he gave up :1ail-statue of young JUchard Henry book in cancelled or celebrated on bare .floors ls companied by large numbers of parents. ing In 1825. hand smiling down al her. sUll undecided, building c o m m I t t e e "Wllliam was involved in the hides The statue _ will be done by sculptor chairman Robert Adams_said today. The event is the annuaJ .sixth grade trade between the West Coast and New John Terken of New York who wa s ''This is particularly tragic," he &aid, \'isHaUon day. Engand," said Mary. "He also made the selected by a &peelat screening com· ''because th~ work on the auditorium wait All sixth graders In the district will run between China and 1Iaw&ii aboard his mlttee. Total cost of the 10..foot high almost completed and we' had fond hopt.o; reeeive an invitation through their ~p 'Mle Waverly." atrud llr!:, which wiD be financed entirely of having Ea sler celebrations in our ()wn elementary :r;chools announcing the dates. But he suddenly stopped in 1825 and by contributions ls estimated to be building.'' Each student \viii be given a letter in· moved to Santa Barbara where three $20,000. vlting his parents. years later he married ~1aria Josepha The idea for the statue orglnaied with Orange County SherUf's investigators The programs will consist or an are working on the case and the church flock Hltltt Slated Carrillo, the governor's daughter. the San Juan Capistrano Historical Socie-&sembly, a tour of the physical plant "In 1838, he was given a land grant Ly which is now hoping to continue the has issued an appeal for help from and an opportunity to ask questions of citizens in localing the bright red carpels h 1 I The Tri-Cities Lapidary Society will which encompassed most of San Luis "history through art" concept through measuring IS.by-30 feet which were part sc oo counse ors. meet at 7:30 \\'ednesday In !he Little Obispo County," said f..lary. "He built an architectural designs of the new harbor A printed curriculum booklet, "The Ex- Theater of San Clemente to vie1v slides adobe ranch house and raised cattle, buildings. of 3 gift lo the church. plorer," wiU be given lo each litudent. It and discuss a proposed rock-hunt in vegetables and 26 chfldren." The society is pushing for relief The uninsured carpets were valued at explains the courses at the school. .r-\pril. The family home \s &till in Nipomo. sculpture, using techniques such as in· $250 and were donated by Southwest Sav· The following week, April 6 to 9, All ''rock hounds" in1erested in joining near Santa Maria which Mary says is tagllo to enhance the buildings' facades. ings and Loan of Inglewood. counselors will visit the sixth grade the club and taking part in its activilies populated mosUy by Dana descendants. They would like the intaglios lo tell the. Adams asked any citizen with useful in· student• at their home schools. are lnviled to attend the meeting. For The large rancho has been broken into story of early maritime trade or marine fonnalion to call lnve£tigator C 11 f f Each &tudent will be counseled and In· semester. Parents are encouraged to It· tend the meeting with the counselor by making an appointment through thetr child's school. Judge Bans Sale Of Bo y in Brazil RECIFE, Brazil (UPI) -A judge. has haMecl !he. main attraction at nearby Cupira's oountry fair-the sale of a 4- year-old child who had been scheduled to he auctioned with the bulls and boars Sunday. The order Friday followed an announce- ment by Lourival Jose Luna and his wife, Maria. that they would 11uction their son Lamartine to fulfill a religious pledge to St. J e>seph . Judge Anlon.io Barrios Silva said the sale violated Brazil 's anti slavery law1 and messa8ed the Cupira Police Chief, Lt. Jose Papitulino Andrade, to prevent It. further information call 492-2M!I. several small parcels through ~ years life of the Pacific. Miller at 834-3000. dividually programmed for the fall ----~iiiiiiiilllliiiliiiiililiillliliiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiliiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiliiiiliiiiiiiiiiillilliiiiliiiililiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiim • El Rancho has the hottest price in town! Celebrate the v.rearin' o' the green ! Offer up a platter heaped high '''ith Ireland'!! national favorite! Te n d e r brisket •• "'hole or point end. fl.IT END ................. lie lb. Mustard ...................................... 29¢ Enjoy Grey Poupou ••• di!cover quality! .5 oz. At the delicatessen. Horseradish ................................ 25 ¢ Silve.r Springs ..• good 'n hot ! 5 oz. jar. Early ·in the week menu-makers from El Rancho! Pork Loin . Roast Hai l lo the E.o n!l •••. and daughtefl'i , •• of Erin! And '''hy not join U1em lhie week •• , enjoy their fa"orite , , • a.l El Rancho priCf'..s ! GREEH ••• CRISP ••• SOLID I) 11.: Whole Potatoes .................. 2 "' 39¢ Del Monte ••• go ''ith corned beefl No. 303 TM spirit of the kolUJ.o..y! Irish Whiskey ............................. '62 ' Murphy'• .•• a grand old lrioh name! Fifth · CENTER CUT • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Lean and tender and flavorful a1 pork Would be ••• because it's from El Rancho, where there is a difference ! Pork ChopL. ...... '.'.~~.~ ...... From finer mid-wegtern pork loins ! '1" lb. P rk Ch STUITTll! o ops ....................... . \Vith Cubbison's dressing ••• to insure !latisfaction t '129 I~ Baked Potatoes ........... _ ....... 3 for '1 Mott's Fruit Treats .............. 3 for '1 O'Boy ••• frozen, 12 oz .••• v.'ith cheese or chfvel!i ! Your choice of delicious varieties! .•. 20 oi. Ku bro Soups ............................... 49¢ Premium Crackers .................... 35¢ Frozen ... choose your favorite, he&t &nd 1erve ! Nabioco'• ..• goes with soup! 16 0%. pq. Price1 in. effect M""'-, Tu.ta., lVed., Ma.r. 16, 17, 18. No 1ah1 to dtaJers. • I ARCADIA: Sun5'l ond Huntinilon Dr. (II Rantl1o Cenlir) PASADEMA: 32D West Colmdo Blvd. .SOUTH PASAO£NA: frtmonl ind Hunliniton Dr. • HUNTINGTON BEACH; W1rn1r 1nd Ala:on~uin (Soardw''' ,. .• ,,,) NEWPORT BEACH: 2727 N'"Port Blvd. and 2555 Eutblull Dr. (lastblufl ~1111• Cenltr) I I r • . ' ;r \( DAILY PILOT lfl TODArs NEIS -\Vhile young people in this coun- •try are busy attending sc;hool and 11;tarttng ~obs, the youth of Israel are fighting a war. According to Mrs. Ruth Dayan, wife of the ls· raell defense minister, "[sraeli youth have the challenge of fi ght- ing for their country. They are ready to give up their lives." • Apparently, modern high fa61tion has even caught up with British royalty. Sporting stulish foul weather gear, Princess Anne smiled at school chil· dren t11 ChTistchurch, New Zeala'nd during a driving rahl. She is wearin g a wide-brimmed hat and plastic cape. • In one of the more typical rail· road man's commentaries. Chair- man Frank E. Barnett of Union Pacific said, "The President talks of traveling to Mars when the com- muter can't even get from New York to \Vashington on time." 0 Space age technology does not impreu tile firemen of San li'ranci3co. After a three-month test. their futuristic p/.o.stic artd fiberglass helmets with trans· paren t faceptates are collecting dust. The men decided to keep I llieir lo ng-billed. leather Uned 1 he lmet3 wliich have been in use ! 1 for 130 years. ·-~""'"""'"",_.,., .... i::::ll G The cre'v of the aircraft carrier USS Ranger, on duty off Vietnam has apparently developed a sweet tooth. They have requested resi· dents of the Lawrence, Mass .• area to send them malted milk balls -in unlimited qu antities - 'viih the guarantee they will be eaten. Replies can be sent to the Ranger. RVAH-5, ASSC, Fleet Post Office, ·San Frantisco1 Calif., 96601. . Cl The man 'vho stole Angelo Peru- so's car ln Rome, Italy, can relax. The bottle in the car contained brandy and not rat poison. Peruso apparently made up the story to be broadcast on Rome radio to scare the thief. The radio ivith- dre\v the warning. • Pub owner John Burrluck of Sevenoaks, England, is returning .h is slot machine for a checkup. He cl aims it keeps paying out jack- pots to one customer -a retired police sergeant. Monday, Marth 16, 1970 Seriato1·s · OpenDeh~te On Carswell ' WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate debates lhe Supreme Court nomination· of Judge G. Harrold Carswell today, wJth liberals conctding they don't have enough votes to etop him and a survey &bowing he Would be approved if the vote were held today. ... r Senate DemOcratic Leader MI k e Mansfield said a week or more of debate is in store. "It will be a filibuster, but not a long one. Maybe filibuster is the wrong word., It's more like extended debate," he said. Carswell's liberal opponents, who con- cede they do not have the power to block the nomination, hope to delay the vote long ef10llgh to build public pressure against the Florida judge and push some fence 1itters Into their camp. ?.fany senators, including Mansfield, have not said how they intend to vote. But a United Press lntern'ational survey indicated Carswell woold win con· firmatlon if the vote were held today. Mansfield said be doubts the debate will change any minds and aa of now, "l'd say he had the votes." The Senate does not have much other business at the moment and will probably be able to devote extensive time to the Carswell nomination. One or the Senate's m'ajor actlon.s of last week -a provision to give the vote to the 11 million Americam between the ages of 18 and 11 -now la in the House. Mansfield said be wnuld Insist the voting rights bill, to which the l8·}'ear-0\d pro- vision is attached, be sent back to con· ference If House-Senate negotiators remove the voting age item. Remains Found In 'Bomb Plant' . ·. NEW YORK (UPI) -Pieces of human bodies and part of a bomb mechanism were found Sunday in the rubble of a Greenwich Village townhouse demolished 10 days ago by dynamite blasts. Assistant Flre-c hteMfenry Junge said the fragments appeared to be remains or the three victims previously recovered from the wreckage of the $250,000 brownstone building. He said he did not think they were parts of a fourth body. Newsweek Magazine reported Sunday the explosives that leveled the building police have called a "bomb factory" were to have been used by radicals to bomb Columbia University and other buildings. Mayor John V. Lindsay and Firt Com- missioner Robert 0. Lowery would not confirm these reports, but acknowledged the dynamite found In the sub-basement or the house was purchased out of state. a Ul"IT• ......... KILLED IN AMBUSH Cypriot Geor9hadji1 Cypriot Police, Guard on Alert After Slaying NICOSIA (UPt) -President Makarios called an emergency cabinet meeting to. nay and ordered police and the national guard on special alert following the ~-~'lssination of former Interior Minister Polycarpou Georghadjis on Sunday. Scheduled talks between leaders of the Greek Cypriot and Turkish Cypriot com· r·•..,ities were canceled. Extra guards were placed around the presidential palace. scene of an assassination attempt against Makarios himself on March 8. 1 ·rnhadjis had been linked with that at.- tempt. The island was generally calm and no de1nonstr a1ions were reported • In Athens, the Greek government and press experessed concern <lVer the worsening of the situation in Cyprus but refrained from spf:cuiating on who was behind th e assassination of Georghadjis. Greek newspapers linked Georghadjis '";'h the attempt on Makarios and said he was mixed up in an attempt against rri>ek Premier George Papad<lpoulas in 1968. Official sources said Georghadjis was lured out or his heavily guarded home by an anonymous telephone caller who pro- mised lnfonnation on the plot lo kill Makaricis. A policeman who was with him survived the roadside attack on their car eight miles outside Nicosia. Unconfirmed reports said Georghadjls w.iis shot six limes in the chest by at. tacker! who fired through the windshield t1f the car. An autopsy was planned. Vegas Lights On 94-hour Strike on Strip Ends LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -The first gambling shutdown in Las Vegas hi.story ended aft.er a 94-your strike was settled that cost 16 "Strip" hotel-casinos and 14.,000 union members an estimated $4 million. Under an agreement that went Into ef· feet a minute pa.st midnight Sunday, the Culinary and Bartenders Union was given a 31.5 percent pay increase. Each .sidt said the walkout cost it $2 million. Nevada lost half a million dollars in tax revenue . Jerry Lewis was the first player at the crap table at Caesar's Palace when gambling resumed early Sunday. Full resumption of servict was expected by Tuesday. The new agreement between the Nevada Resort Association, w h i c h represents the 16 affected casinos, and the un ion provided a 27·28 percent v;age increase plug fringe benefits. The union had asked for a 45 percent increase, while the hotel s oflered 25 per· cent. Under the agreement, a cocktail waitress can make $55 a day. Representatives of the union and the association came up with a settlement to the most costly strike in Nevada history after marathon negotiations that began Friday night. Gov. Paul Laxalt flew here Friday from the state capital at Carson City to help try to bring lhe dispute lo an end. The strike began Wednesday, and by Thursday night the 16 affected hotels had closed down their operations, leaving 10,887 rooms vacant. Three other strip hotels -Riviera, Bonania and Circus Circus -and lhe downtown casinos co ntinue d operations. They have separa te contracts with the union. Snowstorm Buries l(ansas Unseason,able Cold Chills Jlfidwest, Southeast Californl11 SOOTl1EllN Co\LIFOlfNlo\ -Molllr l1'1f MolldOJ' •nd TUl'ScltJ' bul fol t lll<ll IOUlh cv.1! ttrlY Motoc!OJ' mctr"I ... tlld 1()11 11on1 much 01 co1111 M<mc!IY "It"' and r••I• T~dt'I' "'0'"'"0· Nol mu<l'I 1''11<1(•1!""1 Ch~nlJr G~fy l'!Q•!h.,I• Wir">dl "'OUnt•+.,, ~nd llMe'11 '"" - lcw u1••t1I un1on1 '' !l"'tl. 1.0\ o\NGE1.E$ ... 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" " .n O•k!11!d .. » Oll.l•!aM Cll"f ~ " .., ""'"" " " P1,,,,S.rll'lft • .. l"•H ltottla " a -· " • Plttlbil""" " " ·" . ., ... " .. ·" ll•tol!ICllY " " ""' aNtl " " ·-.. •• M<11m11111 • " s.11 Lt•• err. " " lt~ oi..o n " .S.n Fr•11<!KO .. .. $t1ttl• " • ·" S..aita,.. ~ • "j l~trm•I .. .. W•ll!lfttOll .. ff a QS .S a 2 • Antiwar· . Drive Open~ Protests Expected in More Tha -r.!_100 Cities By TIN AJIOCl1t.ed Preti A week of antiwar tkmonstrations - draft board sU·ins, school aod colle1e teacil-ins, petlUon-slgnlng, mail·iM to disrupt draft board procedures. an~ust plain rallies and marches· -aot under wly around tbe n9ition t(>day •. The week. long!'protest a1a1nst tht Viet- nam war was called for by the New Moblllzallon 'COmmlttee lo End the. War ln Vietnam, the youthful group which succeeded in mounting mas 1 l v,e demonstrations across the country la.st fall. Many local anUwar groups will be in· volved in Utt protest, Oowever, and "New Mobe" expects: rnore than 100 cities to take part in activities building up to Con- front the Draft Day on Thursday. Groups all over the nation have reported plans to sl~ln at draft bomb on that day, whUe 1Wl other demonstrators will try to hamper the boarda: by mus telephoning. . A symbolic start to t:le .,'f:tk or con- frontation occurred Sunday as midn:lght ~onstrators stood silenUy on · the Capitol steps ln Washington, eacb holding a candle. One by one, at one-minute ln~rvals, the candles were snuffed out each representing a death in Vietnam. The begtnnlng for Sacramento occurred on the State Capitol steps, where 3' > • peraona, m•Y of thern mlddle-q:ed veterans of World War II, solemnly sfep- ped up to a. flag-draped co(Hn and deposited tnelr Purple· Heart.11 aod olher service medals atop U. One of the World War II woundtd, Westley Osman, eqlalned why he sur· rendered his Purple Hearl: .. To many, thete medals are a precious thing. But It 11 not ne.-ly u preclOUI u It used to be." • Stai. Sen. Alber! Rodda e11Plalned why he offered to take' tbe medals and give them bad< lo federal authoriUea. FIRST FAMILY MARKS PAT'S DAY WASHINGTON (AP) -Mn. Richard M. Nixon celebrated her Uth birthday to- day, one day aft.tr her farhlly noted the event wllh·a.private family dbmer. The family celebration was held Sun- day when all . members we.re present. ?.frs. Nixon was presented a Lad.y Baltimort cake baked especially for her by the White House chef at the weekend party. The. two-layer white cake with caramel icing was Inscribed "Happy Birthday, Mother" in chocolate, "I'm pollllcally expendable," ho "Id. •11 don't really care any more." Jn Chicago, members or Chicago Area Draft Re.sisters jumped the gun on "Mobe" week, with about l:KI person! looking on at the Federal Building as 20 youths turned in their draft cards, lo be forwarded to the Senate Armed Services Committee . Along with the draft cards will go several Chicagoans' HMO Income tat' forms, scrawled ln grtase pencil: "We won't pay. Stop the draft. Stop the war. stop militarism." An afternoon rally on the campus e>f Wasbington State University In Pullman today was to hear a speech by Sam Brown, a founder or the original moratorium movement. But in mos~ of the involved ciliu, pro- test organliers were concentrating on. massive demonstrations Thursday at the draft boards, and rallies Wednesday night to win support. Most draft officials were phUosophlcat about tht pro&pect, and one in Detroit noted that intentional overloading of the boards with paper work has been going on for years. North Carolina's selective service director said if enough people came ln to boards asking questions it could s:low down lhelr work, but "as public servanl.5, we 're ·obligated to answer them ." GARDEN SALE! SAVE 2.11 ON our PREMIUM SPREADER! 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THESE VALUES CANOGA P,AAK DOWN EV FUllERTON HUNTlt.jGTON BEACH SHOP SUNDAY, TOO AT ANY ONE Of THESE PENNEY STORES! l.JJ<EWOOO MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA 12to5P.M.! ( • • S j Monday, Muth 16, 1970 DAILV PILOT J I . Spy -Plane Crashes· ~Hippies'·Hijack U.S. 1 Ammo Ship ' 22 Killed J)A NANG, .Vietnam .(l!Pl) -A U.S. Navy EC1%1 'ipy plane .with Sl ~ewmen aboard faltered today during its lan- dlnc approach and crashed ill flames into a hangar. killing 22 of them. The remaining nitie crewmen and two U.S. Air ~men in lhe'bangar were ' injured. The four-propeller aircraft slammd into the building and burst Into flames. A $2.9 million 14 Phant:om flghtef.. bomber inside wu destroyed. All aboard the ECUI, jam• med with eleetronits eq\rip- ment for its aerial recon-- : na~ mission. were U.S. Navy· men. Tbe -plane, a C1>D• verted Con.steUation, carried· no bombs or weapons. M i 11 t a r y authorities at· -.,.d._9 . The Br ••. Uf'IT ........ 11 SA1TAHIP, Thailand (UPI) -The crew of the hije.cked ·merchant ahlp Columbia ·-E•J1e·told-rescuers the 10,136- ton freighter loaded with bombs for 'J'.balland was liken over by two· "pill popping and "marijuana blowlni" tiipPies, seamen aboard the rescue shlp Rappahanriock aald today, The Columb ia Eagle' was Seiz~ this weekend through • ·-ruse that c1:used 24 crewmen to abandon ship in beUef there •as 1 time bomb aboard. The 24 men 1\·ere picked up by the Rappahannock while t h e mutineers u..l led the vessel to tributed the c "r a s h to a tl 1tmechanical fail ure .. A few ol the estimated 5 millio!'l birds begin to set e ·_The c:raft broke in two on down for the . 'ght ~ Sco.tl~ Neck, N.C. The impaeL·Only Ulf wing seetion flock is causing· serious d~age and becoming a and part of the fuselage were health hazard. Local·officials are asking for federal dis,tinguishable amid the scat-_•_id_to--=g_et_r_i_d_o_l _th_e_m_. ____________ 1 tered wreckage. Debris from the plane heavi- 1;: <ta,maged a nearby hut used as a makeshift snack bat by IJl~t;:S !>a. laJer ~Jatus __ at the Oa Nang air base on South Vietnam's northern coast. It was <>ne of the worst air disasters ()f the Vietnam war Involving American troops. The heaviest toll of American lixes was r~rd~ on Jan. 25. 196tl, when a CI23 transpor:1 t>lane crashed near An Khe, 240 m.Jles northwest of Saigon, killillg •&U.S. servicemen. _'Secr~t''. V.S .. _J{eptJrt Shoivs Car Pollution WASHINGTON (UP I) - A still-secret report on goyern- ment testing er n e w automohiles shows thr'ee outo( four samples of aome models. failed to meet federal stan- dards for air pollution control. Fair All Wet While exact details were not due for release untij later, it waa learned a portion of the repoit !hows a high rate of failure among certain lower- priced autos tested by 'the government £or control of car'bop monoxide and un- burned particles in engine ex- b&Ult. -u.-s. 'Exhibit OSAKA, Japan (AP) - Close to 105,000.fairgoers pass- ed through the turnstiles of Expo '70 before noon today, armed with umbrellas and raincoats to ward. cff the we.itber that kept sightseers away Jn droves on openillg day Sunday. More than half of a 500-car D _ . _ -··M· . ----sample faiiled to mff.t-fedtral -raws ost standards !or either or both ' · cat~gorles, the report ~w.ed. Members .oJ the HOUie pub- Uonal to far out e1pres&ions or lie health and'. •el fare sub. the space age. committee, which has been Crowds waited live abreast trying for ·several weeks to in llnes 200 to 300 yards long pry the run report out of the for 30 minutes to three hours National Air. Pollution Control to get into the U.S. and Soviet AdmlnistraUon, were set to exhibitions. .~ -,· ·-·-· use the partial data for a The U.S. Pavflion, variou!ly showdown .with federal of· de.scribed u ~ng ·. Jlke _,. ftci.als over "hat they see as • Oflicialt had Pf'dict>d an OP<'ling flay ·~~oo\rt of .hall a million for ,uia'.s,(lrst.world's lalr, 1>13 ..,iy 271,124 ·brrved the rain; · · puffed up paocab or a discrepancy with p r e v I o u a basketball pl&yer'S knee pad.·. ·gpvernment testimony. . drew the Jarg'esf 'crmyd on .TWo weeks ago Dr .. Jl>tiilT. opening day. ·J\ f#aturei 'tliO'.~ 0 1of!<Kilt\<>il,''' co~....,. .. ;, of •· "· first wfllk -~ the 1llOOR-and tl:i~~atiOD, told~ *' :2. .1 'Ibere was a mare modest predjct.ion ol 1211,000 for the ae- cond day. Sefenty-seven nations are taking' part in the Six.month eIP<!Sition, located on 115 acllS ltuUdozed oUt of bamboo forest in the Senri Hills ~·10 miles northeast cf Osaka. The 112 foreJgn and Japanese pavilions reflect tastes rang- in& from the low-key tradi· other , ~~ s p.\c.e • GI , ttee. c:ba1nnan Re , . W1 achie-1, ii .w'tlf , • Paµ!• G. 'Rogers (O.Fla. , ,. traditi\mal ~ <illplaya, In-rumon of blgb flilu~ ~Its !n clu~ Bal>e Rutb-,.lll!lr..,.. .the testing program "'" n · The $le.million -pfaVUion. ti aggerated. · billed as·~·Jo'west ·itnJcture But paru of the report s1Jb.. on the fafrgroundsJ · . sequently secured by the sub- The Soviet f,avllion, the. committee cut doubt en Mid- highest building tn Expo with dleton'1 testimony. and he was a 339-foot spire, honors Lenin, recalled for questJonlng today, and his works as well 11 along with Robert H. Finch, Soviet achievement in outer stcretary or health, educ.ation .space. and welfare. · -LBJ Home At .,Ranch ( Israel Troops Strike Pylon Near Damasc us · JOHNSON C I T Y , Tei. {:anal. Today's claim broµght (UPI) -Former President , to · 93 the number , of air"cratt Lyndon B. Johnson spent Sun- JSfi!el says it has shot down day relaxing at his LBJ ?"anch since the 1967 war -76. Eay~ By United Press l!"tern,t!onal Helicopter -borne Israeli troops ~truck into Syria Sun· day night for the first time since the 1967 war and blew up a hig-h tension pylon 12.4 miles from downtown Damas· cus. Today, Israeli and Egyp- tian jet planes battled above ~-srret canal ·are·a. A military spokesman in Cairo said Egyptian MJG in· terceplors smashed into three waves o( Israeli warplanes and In a series of individval dogfights o v e r a hundred miles of clear skies sho1 down one l.!raeli jet. An Israeli spokesman in Tel Avtv said Israeli jets shot down a MIG21 and hit an- other in an air battJe·over the central sect.Of oC the Suez No Money 'Available '.At Stations f.ws ANGELES !UPI) - Mtendsnt.J at Standard 011 gas 11tiltions wbo began locking up Lbeir cash receipts this month ~er 10 p.m. say hot one sta- UDn involved has ~n robbed slbce the plan beaan on a trial bjois lut July. ~ spokesman said the plan, dbtgn~ to discourage night hbldups, was adopted tn San Otego last July and has since sdread to other Southc ci:Hfomla stJtlons. 'the. company hope Uutt the e11ct prtoe system -whueby (\litOmer.s must either UH df!dit cards, checks or the ex- act amount or cnsh -will deltr potential robbers. lion and 17 Syrian. in the Te:tas hill country. Istaeli military sources, in Johnson l.ert a ~an Antonio describing the f 0 r a y int9 Arm':/ hospital Friday where Sy ria, said it Wlll ~ied out ·he underwent treatmert for ;'In an accurate aDd elegant hardening of the arterJe1 way. which cau·sed him chellt pains. ~ ONLY -31 DAYS LEFT .-GET 'LUCKY ,ON YOUR INCOME TAX S. 11111----~-·u~••m('!'"_""' __ ..,,. W• 911111,.lltH •°'""le pftp•~ •I ~'1 lw;IJ ,.'""'· 11 -...... •"Y _,. '"" "" '" .,,,. ...,...., .,. l11i.r.t, -will ti. "-~.,~ ... ~ ... ~· ~~~~~:i-~ WEEKDAYS M SAT. & SUN. t.S Ph. 642-4940 NO Al'POINTMINT NIClllA•T ' " the ,Cambodian port o I Slhanoukville. Richard Joyce or San Il'- clsco, ' a· merchant ttaman &board the Rappahannock, talked with the M Columbia Eagle crewmen. ,.They 11ld they btlleved that tbe bljacklng wu done by a couple of bipple1 who bad •IR11ed on In the United Stat.es,'' Joyce 11ld. "They said these guys were popplnl ptUs and blowJng marijuana au the way ever and tllkbtl 'about how they were antl- Vletnam." Joyce aaid the Columbia • \_ ' Ea.al• men were piehd up lnll1I two Uftboats laturdoy after they wtrt ordt<td lo abandon lhip. !_lrnb1:I div let," II.Id Jame• · Debay of San Francisco, a aeaman from t he Rap. panannoek. -· lhlpo "' the ..... and 1llo became 1u1piciou t '!11ey .. ,. In lood condlUon. n.e aurvlvors told thtlr re1CU111 th1t an order to ablndon ship wu announced over the Colwnbia-Ea1te pubUc address l)'sle!n by the third 1111tt. Ht llld he WU IC-tJnr on orders from tht ship captain. ''But after the J4 crtwmen took . lo the ure boau and cleared the •hip, Columbia Eagle 1ot under· way. 1be ship with 1S members rtmainln& aboord cln:led around Iha Iileboat and steamed oil ap- pmnUy al full speed." b9c1u.ae the c1plalrl hlmaelt did not appear 1bove deck.I when the ship wu being aban~ dolltd. '°11)ey were under the im· preuion that the reuon they Wtte abudonin1 the lhip wu becauae a bomb had lltt:a put on board to detoftato ""11 a Debay uJd the men In the W•boat IOOll rullztd that the report of • Uve bomb beln( abolrd tht thlp •11 a rune. nty nallstd that ne radio mtllll• had' been Hnt to Teen Gets Life CHESIIUNT, £,,.land (UPI) -A tetn-ater who admitted he murdered hll empl~r in order to bec:ome eliiible te · joh1 the "Hell'• Ancels" was 1entenctd to life imprllonment Thund117. Happy Easter1 " to the little girl in the pretty Penney dress!, - ,.._,,.....__ w--... -.- p I; s ,.._._._....., .• , dflf._ ... _ _.,· ' ... ~.,...., ....... p ........... .., ......... I 1• ,......... t4. ....................... *"'~ .. llf t ... .... ................. , .................. .., .. ! ........ ..,_~t.•lwteht,,,...,,..,.m .. .-..1 , • ..,,. ·) -!Mt •s c. -_. ....,,,. ........ ,..., ----........... .,.. ...... pttf ..,. ....... -:ales 5'%ha•wP~.._.._..._ ................... 11111 ....... ........... _, ••••• ,n..n. .. -and to the boy in the Eton suit! lllllo .......... --i.,i--""" -..... -l{oit" '°"' ,.., ..• ,, .. ...., .................. w:t '"'....., .... -~ ............. -...... -~ ... ........ ..,.. _ ----1 ,.._ -,..,_, ...... -......... _....,,,. _____ ...i __ .Tod-------.111tto..,1oo1111oo . ..nn..1 '7 ' ·-Jury Arter intervie\ving leaders on both sides o[ the hoary controversy over the Orange County Harbor Dis- trict, the 1970 Orange County Grand Jury has conclud- ed that the dlstrlct should be continued as a separate agency and have its functions broaden~d to in.c~~de ~p­ eration of all county parks and recreation facilities, in- land as well as water~rlented . The jury's position coincides '"ith the one Jon g held by the Board o{ Supervisors, the• elected officials of 1nany cities -inf ari d as well as co8sfal -' the'Orange County Coast Association and ' tbe DAILY PILOT, among others. . Opponents ,vho '''ant the harbor 'district dlssolycd and its assets and functions turned over to a new county department of beaches and parks arc supporting a bill reintroduced this year by Assemblyman John Briggs (R-Fullerton). The bill calls for a publis: vote on the dissolution issue. Those who feel that consolidation \vould contribute nothing of value to either the harbors or beaches or to inland parks, but would sacrifice the financial and operational benefits now embodied in the Harbor Dis- trict's authority, are supporting a bill introduced by ~s­ semblyman Kenneth Cory (0-Garden Grove). This measure would pe1mit the Board of Supervi- sors to broaden the function of the district to include development and operation of all county parks and rec- reation facilities, inl and parks as well as beaches and harbor areas. If this bill becomes law, the supervisors have propo~ed enlarging the district's board of commis- sioners to include representation from the League of Cities. • \ '.,,. ~ " Tbe Grand Jury Is urging Uie Sta(e As;embly. Local Government Committee to a pprove the Cpry bill and rejec~ the Brig.R:s approach. The jury noted that the county \VilJ realize $1 n1iUion a year in'revenue from the new Dana Point Harbor and this motley coula be used to acquire a nd build r egional pa rks. Those LeaJ(ue of Cities members favoring dissolu- tion . or at least the Bri~gs public vote approach. have been highly vocal. But the fact js tbat they are officials Patie1at lt'ith Preside1at • & QC ·District or cilies representing less than ball the total popula· lion of the 10 cities whose officials favor setUlng the issue under the plan urged by the aupervisors and· ein~ bodied in the Cory bill. The blunt fact ls this controversy had )ls beginnings In conflicts of per6onality and ambitions between offl· cials of a couple of cities and Harbor District persOMel. ll has been nurtured and kept alive by political acU. vists ·ln the League of Cities long after the original arg- um ents advanced tor dissolution were deflated and abandoned. The dissolution idea is not constructive. It should 11e laid to rest by the Legislature and the positive pro- posal of a combined par.ks, recreation, beaches and harbors di strict adopted. Reagan Runs Again Go~. Ronald Reagan's announcement tha\ he will be a . candidate for re:-election surprised no one. But th~re were aspects of the announcement performance \\1hlch dre\v attention. One was almost.comic. Calling a press conference . a t a· hotel near the Capitol, Reagan used a 131h-minute color TV !ilm to convey hls story to newsmen. He \Vas at a loss lo explain why he made his appearance at a hotet, but an aide explained that "it was not thought proper to use a public building !or a campaign &Jr nouncement." ... That prompted a ques!ion as to~\vhy the governor's office \\•a:; used to make the .campaign film for TV. This time Reagan had an a nswer. It was so he would no l be away from hi s duties too Jong. On the serious sicte. it was disturbing to some that the governor would not commit himself to .serving out a second four~year term. He is obv.iously leaving open hi s options for higher office. · lt would seem that any aspirant to a· position .as itll- portant as the governorship of California should com· mit himself uhequivocally to a full term il elected. • Nixota Commiinists I !. 2 3 1 3 z 2 • 'Let_me make our Laos involvement perfectly clear .. .' View From Middle America Seek Power Interpreting the ~mmandmenfs NE\VTON . la. -Here In ~1\ddle America, geogrephica!Jy as well as Ideologically, patience with President Nixon has not yel worn thin. An affirmaUve nod of the head usually greets inquiries on ho"". the Pres!dent is doing. There bi no feehng of excitement about Nixon but a generally approving al· titude toward a President who is nevertheless still on trial. The Laos matter has raised a faint shadow of doubt on Nixon's credibility. \Vhy did he say no Americans had been killed in combat in Laos when actually a good many American civilians and military have been killed in operaUons related to combat? The President would have done better !O far as his silent majority constituency js concerned if he had been just as frank in his first statement on Laos as in his second after tt had been revealed that al least one American officer waa killed in a "'ar zone. ~1iddle Iowans don 't draw such fine lines as the Presidfnt's statem~l wr iters. PEOPLE ARE TOUCHY on the Viet- nRm matter and a possible repeat. even 1hose who basically think that Nixon's paced u·ithdrawal is right aod lhal we can't cu! and run. They are tou chy, too , !hey want lo know dorl't go down if Nixon lhat much to hall inflation. on inflation. why prices is doing a!I All the same. when one 1eturns to his home town after a very long absence, he finds people primarily e-0ocemed with the things that have long bothered them. The m ai n sireet of the town never seems to ge1 fixed properl y. The town is growing I from 4.000 \\'hen the returning native son I ..... ~' ~ ' I , ~ Ri(j_lu!i<J .l".ilSpn • • ·-·~ ':' . lived there to 18,000 now) but there 1s continUillJ e-0ncern on whether it Is grow- ing fast enough or in the right "'ay. New taJ:es have got to be rai~ sOme \vay , or another. The idea now Is to im- pose a tax on those people who use the facilities of the city because they work at the Maytag Co. but live in other taxing jurisdictions and thus don't help pay for street repairs, policing and other city services. EVERYONE rN THE community (with some exceptions, of course) wishes the Maytag Co. Well, for lhis is the ini:luslry . on which Newton, Jowa. depends .. 'The . Maytag planl is running two ~hilts a day now producing a new n1 ini-washer for which t~re are high hopes In the marketing department ana that makes most people in Newton feel good. Spiro Agnew . surprisingly. is a household word but not a household god. • He made his initial attack last year on the instant commfntators of radiOTTV io nearby Des !\-1oines. but Vlce-President Agnew has a way to go Yet in doing more than arousing a kind of smug and. silent approval from the silent majority. They are not yel ready to grant hlm all the at· tri butes of wisdom in all things. Youthful unrest has tentatively' crept into this P.fiddle America city 1:3.Jt its main expression seem s to be through a rather chee ky attitude in the high school paper which the authorities do not like but indulge. The high school paper, in· cidentally, is one of the things lhat has improved enormously in the last 40 years, ' NIXON CARRI ED Jasper County, of which Newton is the county seat, 7,901 to 6.556 for Hubert Humphrey with 742 for George \Vallace. That wu a big turnaround from 1964 when President Johnson beat Barry Goldwater 10,216 to 5,321. lt also was a lot better than Nixon did nationally by more than 10 percent because George \Vallace didn't draw mucll in Jasper County. Governor Wallace L! just not the type for the: P.1id- d!P. Iowa branch of the silent majority. Agnew is more along this line but still there ~ something Jacking. There is nothing to suggest that there has been .any big change in Jasper Coun- ly toward the Nixon Administration after Jti first.year in office. The question which has been raised is how long this silent consent will continue if NIJ:on cannot give an adequate accounting of his major pledge;s to stop the Vietnam War. stop inflation and restore law and order. LA\V AND ORDER is not act ually a question of major magnitude in Middle Jo11·a. but lhe idea that lhe country ought to be orderly, patriotic, devout and crime-free has a strong foundation in conscience hereabouts ." . If the majorily coalition Nixon is seek- ing is to have continuing substance it will have to be in places like Jasper County. Iowa, in the West, the Midwest and the South where Niion got his winning lift in 1968. That lilt was barely enough to give him victory. 'Vithoul being categorial about it, the returning home-town boy senses just a little sag now among the silent majority which might be of interest lo the President 's soci~political analyst.s. Doom Is Drug on Market The Prophets of Doom Society, a litUe· l:rlOwn professional organization, held its annu al COll\'enlion in Anaheim to disc uss mutual problems. The biggest problem, ;1s ii lurned out, was that th e profess ion is becoming seriously overcrowded. "It's gelling so that rvcry Tom, Dick and Harry is Jnaking a quick buck by predicting the end or !hr world." com- plajned the noted demonogra phcr, Dr, i\1 althus f.1oke. "For ;vears, I've been prophesying that e1•cry man. \\'Oman and child in the. \\'Orld ,,·ould be suff ocated in the Popul l!!ion Ex- plosion by !he yea r 2001. in my lalest \\'Ork on the subjttl -·~take \\'ar nol Lo\•e' -I advanced thr dale to 1984 and predicted that e\•eryone would be squash· ed to death instead. •·Nevertheles!. the book solll only 12 L-Opie$. ls this the way a grateful society --~-- Art .Hop pe •• • , -. re\\'ards us pioricers in our fields?" EQUALLY BIITER was r or m e r Brigadier General Custace Chijrgewel!. \\'ho has been making an eJ:cellent living on the lecture circuit Cor 20 years describing !he horrors of World \Var Ill. "~1y booldngs are down 40 percent." saill the ge nernl. 11uffing angril y on hi s large ciga r. "I remember back v.•hen l was predicting the thermonuclear end of tlle ~·orld b,v 1959. l "'as big box office. '"But now my agent tells me the public's gelling tired of the same ol.d, thing and do I ha1·e an)'lhing better? \Vhal's belier than the end ·of the world?" Troller l'an ~1erke. the tamous political ;;inalyst and rortune cookie manufn clurcr. nodded glooznily. "I've been telling au- dience.~ for years tha t our den1ocracy was about to be overthrown by either the fascists. the Communists or the hip- pie-anarchists -depending on whether the audiences were I i b e r a I s , con- servall\'es or parents. "BUT l.ATELV l haven't even been able to get a panel spot on ed ucational tet·\'ec, A lot ot Johnnie<0me-latelies next June JJ. Really! It's most un- professional to predict a cataclysm less than a year in the future." ;'THE TROUBLE is." said Dr. ~tole "that loo many amateur& h ave discove red that anyone can g r a b headlines ·with a sensational prediction - and that no one ever bolhers to mention it when it doesn't come true. "Is it any wonde.r thBl doom has become a drug on the market ?" The soci ety voted to puSh for a law proqibiling the prophesying or doom wit hout a license. A public relatiops com· 1ni tl cc was also established with in- st ructions lo "restore the nition's faith in Doomsday." The closing speaker , Professor Delphic 0 1Rackle. autbor of "Disasters We Can Look Forward To." summed u p : "Gentlemen," he said, ••unless aomething is done , we1U all be on our uppers in 18 months." • The members agreed It w1s the most di re predlctlon they'd ever heard. Dear Gloomy Gus: In P antliers ' ' ' The Communist Party is moving ag· gressively to become a power in the gun- lollng, violence.prone Black Panthers Party. The first significant de velopment in this secret plan took place in Chicago last weekend at the Malcolm X University. It was a so-ealled "national emergency con- ference to defend t be rights or t h a. Panthers." · While there was a Jot of talk ,about those "rights" and achemes and mwufts to safegu ard them, that w a s largely camouflage and window dressing, Real purpose of the tmpublicited meeting was to open the way for the Communists: to set up fronts to enable them to gain con· lrol or the Panthers and other black eJ:· tremists. Revealingly indicative of w h a t transpired is that the Chicago gathering was dominated by leading Communist functionaries, and they smoothly and adroitly put over their front slratagem.s. ArttONG THE TOP Reds present were r.lrs. Charlene Mitchell, the party's 1918 presidential candidate, WiUlam Pat. terson. Claude Lightfoot, l!hmael Flory', all black. The Communists' front plans approved by the conference call for the following: Every so often, l receive a letter fro m a reader who suggests that nlost of our troubles on earth would be solved "if only we followed the 10 Commandment!." Ho'A' easy it would be if life were that simple. These unthinking perMms have ne,·er actually submitted the I O Con1· mandments to a careful scrutiny. If they did, they Yo'otJld come to the samr con- clusWn as Paul Tillich, perhaps the finest theological mind ot our ~e. • ~.• IN·IUS LAST BOOK, "My Search .for Abaolutes," Tillich admits tbat such sacreid1 laWs u the 10 Commandments "are, on the one hand, too abstract to covet' 8:ny concrete situation and, on the other t not abstract enough to become general. principles, but depend on the ctillure that produced them." T ake the most crucia l law in the Decalo~e -"Thou shalt not kill:' Even if one translates the Hebrew word kaU1 as "murder." Tillich pointa out,. • how is murder to be defined as distinct from kilUhg in general? What about military kJllin11 ? Juridical killing? Killing In .self-defense? lf the commandment "Were take'n liter!lllY , every nation would be pacifistic. and there would be no capital punishment. EVEN ·TJlE FIRST command1nenl Is most difficult to ,interpret, much less put into practice. "Thou shall worship no god but God.,, \Vhlch God are we commanded to wors~ip? And eveo if the · two-and- ' ~Syd ney J . 1larris seventy disputing st!cts could agree upon Lhis, what about all the modem idolatries that substitute for God -such as the na- tion. the race. the class, the worship o[ rnoney and success and position and respectability? \Vhat about the commandment to honor tJne1s parents? As Tillich says, "this law presupp!>Ses something like the feta l situalion of complete dependence .. Ho\v can we apply it to our liberal democratic institutioris and to our need to free ourselves frorn th t authority of our parents?" THE DECALOGUE, indeed, is in much the s;1n1e position as the Hippocrath: Oalh for physicians -whi ch tell s doctor.-; little or nothing about a host of modern medico-social problems. such :is ton- traception and abortion, enthuanasi a, sex changes. organ transplants. and the many other perplexities of modern medical science. In turbulent limes such as ours. people: like to cling to simplistic ans1vers: buL neither the Golden Rule nor the 10 Con1- mandments can take the place of hard thinking and right feeling 1n a concrt;tc situation. Religion can prol'ide the. motivation for decent acts and attitudt~ toward others ; il cannot supply ii specillt: answer. (I) Establishment cf a national center or headquarters in New York City to in- iUate, guide and direct "community ac·, tlviUes". AJso to publish a ne'A'Sletter that will Inform and instruct black extremists in agitaUonal and other operations. Probable head of this new unit will be Angie Dickerson. militant leftist n'ho at· tended the Communist-sponsored World Assembly for Peace in East Berlill last June. Correcting the Record 12) Create a large fund !or bail purpose! for Black Panthers. (3) Organize a big demonstration in Nf:w llav.en, CoM., July 4-6, in cOMeclion with the scheduled trial tht:re of Bobby Seale, Black Panther leader indicted on charges of murder Involving the slaylng of another Black Panther. AN DTIMATED 1.000 attended the Chicago affair, about 40 p er c e n t black. Some 500 registered as ''delegates'' from more than 100 Communist aod le f· list organJzalion.s in 23 states. Black Panthers acted as guards and as leaders or so-called "Workshops'' held during the meeting. Among the sponsors or the conference, as listed on distributed literature, is the rouo ... ing slgruficant assortment 4) r name~: Reverend Ralph Abernathy, head of the Southern Christian Leadership Con· ference: Charles Garry, white San Fran- cisco attorney and zealous Black Panther defender : Herbert Aptheker, top theortti· cian of the Communist Party. 1'he national news media , Including the nearby television, radio an4 dally press. have had a field day during the recent visit to Holly Springs and l\1arshall Coun- ly of the Black Economic Unioii of Cleve- land, Ohio. They have told the world that the children here are dying from malnutrition, that this is the poorest county .in the world , and that the colored people here have such a hard time . 'Ve have spent many hours questioning the aounty health department wOrkers, mtlyor, sher:lff, 6Chool officials. county of- nci!tls. personnel ot funeral homes, \\•elfare department employes, members of the colored race, and those who took part in the meeting \\'ilh the Black Economic Union. THE RDUL TS SHOW that there is on- ly one case of death from exposure and malnutrition on record and it was • case \Vhere parents. had neglected their raml- Jy. The family was on weUare and was drawing a welfare check. The welfare check was cashed by the mother, ac- cording to local authorities, and was apent in P..temphis where she was Uving with another man. The father was also in ~temphis living with anolher woman. and THE CfDCAGO ttEETING was first the children were left with the.Jr broached in a gathering of some 25 in-grandmother during the coldest part of dlviduals in a motel In that city on Jan. the winte:r. 10 of this year. The parents were arrested, Jailed and Prominent among those present were charged with child desertion, They plead- ' Guest Editorial operators and 809 11·hite farm opera tors in Marshall Count y. ll has been said that ?ifarshal1 County has more colort'd land· c.1v111'.rs than any other cou ntv in the stale, and perhaps the United slates. lN Al.L F' AlR~ESS. the national news media should correct the erroneous pic- ture which they ha ve painted of ·Holly Springs and i\larshaJI County -al though "'e doubt they will. We are grateful to the Black Economie Union ot Cleveland. Ohio. for adopt inE: our counly and ag reeing to send Food and money lo help our people. especia'lly ''hen there are much "·orse conditions Jn the east side of ~r city. The Soulh Reporler HoUy Springs, fl1i15• B y George ---. Dear George : Down at tilt saloon we have 11 bet. I've bet the felJo,vs you hfl l'e NEVER followed yo11r own advice, not once! I win. right ? CYNIC • Monday, March 16, 1970 Tltt edfiorial page of tht Dally Pilot seeks to inform and at /111· tilate 1'toderi b~ presenting l'1 1s tlltolpOpeT'i' opinions and c01n· mentary "" topks of 1ntert st and significance, by provld1110 11 forum for t1te ezpressian of our readers' opi11 io1tS, attd b)I presenting the diverse vleto- poin t.s of• informed observers and spokev11en on topics of rite da~. are cro\\-·diag us old-ha~'"·~"---.,..._,_ "\\re need highl'.r profeu ional slan~ Dick Gregory, black nlghtcJub rn-td 'g\lilty in Circuit Court an~ were °'er Cynic. •11}1_----~----l--f,ertaine1 , P'ather J'&mes c r o·p p I, aeutenctd for Wf..c:har ... ___ ·---1-~'V•rong. One day nine years aso T Ptlllwaukee militant who hu betn .,-. ~ ~ ... ,.'11'.1 myst!lt. 'Gev1ge, why don't Robert N. w .. d. Publlsher • ·~ard!," agreed Dr. Webley Vl<'!kcri . lhc wldrly-rcspecterl protocolOglsl and pr~ . conferen<'!e holder. ''I have long been prt>. phesying lhl' \\'orld 's dem ise from elther DOT, a uew ltc agC' induced by smog or an unrriendly meteor. "lmoginr my disgu~I lhC' ulhtr day to see an un known sanilary tnglnttr get two colu.n1n,, on page one by claiming lhnt giant laboratory r&ts, drlvtn mad by cyclallUltcs, "'OUld devour civiUM1lio11 Onl! nice side e!focl or all lhi1 dally. publiclty about ·lhf; Pill ••• I hoven't forgotten to take mine alt month. -S. G. S. 1"!>it ~llflrA ..,_ ~ ¥!""-Ml M(flWtl... "'"' ti ""' -···"" S.fltl fllH' "' ,.. .. It O'"""' Oft. O•llT ,ht. rested for disorders and other WE CANNOT FIND another retord or you quit working for a llvlng ,1nd dlsturbal'ICCS on a number or occaatons: any case showing the,death by malnulri· write an advice column?" It \\·as Bobby Ruah. he11d of ·the JJUnois Black lion of anyone Jn Marshall County. and the last Ume I e:,;er folfo.ved my Panther• Party; SJnd Mrs.' Ch«rlf:M: the above mepUoned ,case was actually advice, but I'm afraid lt blow~ vour f\iltcheJI. Wl!Ua.m Patterson and tsbmael the result of parental neglect. bet. · t"lory, black Communist P'1rty 'func.. If any~ can prove otherwise. for the tiooarles. ~ • _ : period of the past nve yein:, 111r South Lorean Poindexter, veltran lef\lst 1 ·~ wlJJl gltdty glvt $100 to !ht one milllanL "'as designated ••coordinator'' , who CO'llle.!I fOllyo'ard ·wlth this: pr«lf. for the. conference, and establlshtd an of· According to records qf the counly flee ror lbal purJ>OH 1n Chlcaa:o. '\ l a1e11t. ·tbel:e lrt' l,tlS colortd farm • {Send your lnnc.rmost proh!cn1! lo George. \Yhy keep your Jiloom a S«:ret when Yot• can 5prefid It aound?) ~ More_ Funds Sought Nixon Sees Big Payoff, Small Cost · WASHINGTON (AP) -The usually economy minded Nlx · on administration is seeking a hefty increase In (unds for .some State Department prD- grams ont official says pro- \•ides a "bigger payuff here per dollar than anything else the ·United Stales does." The administration is asking son1e $40 million, an incN!ase ·of about 20 percent, for the projects, including the well- known Fulbright scholarships. . The money is looked on as low cost coverage of a gray area or diplomacy where I h e returns a.re longterm. im- measurable. but p er h a p s , someday, critical. sbfe says the broad purpose to all this is a useful in· teractlon ... of people, .stronger relationships in a world where ecooomic, political and ptllitary affairs are affected in _ihuay....a.J;Q_W}lfy 's..leadership group feels. "You begin _'lo get groops, academics,-for instance. who begin to feel a 'bond With one a n other,'' says John Rich'ardson. ass.lstant secretary for Education and CuUural Affairs. ''This is an important fact and rer!ects the feeling of the government. ''\Vithin a di scipline an understanding can result in an in1proved image, a closer coincidence of attit ude and feeling" says Richardson. \Vith this in mind the money make s it possible for historian Clinton Ross'iter to lecture at an Alrican uruversily, the chief justlre of Malaysia and Filipino la~r leaders to. come to the Unl~ Stat~ . Toward tb·e sarue end the Junior WeUs Rhythm and Blues Band tours Ea11t Asia with a team of Seattle, Wash., gymnasts not tar bdllnd. A Colombian poet ts. brought to Ne~' York. Five Americ8n students study In Turkey, 42 Turks come to the United States, Under I he lnternatiorfal Visitors program Mrs. Sumi Yamazaki of the Hokltaido ~1others and Women Teachers .Association toured IO cities, Bel Air Heart Disease Lo.w LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bel- Air, one of the most affhient residential sections of Los Angr.les, has the lowest heart disease rate . among 76 'Los Angeles County areas studied by a university r,esearcb team. Results of a University of California at Los Angeles survey, made public Thurs. day, showed residents of the district-technically part or \Vest Los Angeles -shoY.'ed the death rate for males was 219 per 100.000 and 104 per 100.0CNJ for females. The California death rate from heart disease is 332 per 100.000 population. Jr. Hi ~h ""Stay-Shapely" Knit Dresses 799 e :-unµlr li1tlc JlOlreM.er doooble k.Ut fl rt•~r.c 1l1al hng 1hc b..dy •• , 11"-d lllU~I" ,,.,j\h )OU~ • f.lin~nc f'l•i,.LicitN.1 w1ii,.I ~1,lr.. •.il.h 1in) pf'1trl butlon ~ or fllrm fill1•~ •h1r1,,., :u •I "ith ~ippcrt'fi ("'°"' nd IM'lckr1 41rl.ad •Ar"'">" rr .d1 lt"I !I) ••• m11C":hine_,..-.h .. 1blr • Sofl Uluc. Lin1e Crcen, •nCl T eTiow e Jr. Fli,.h Girl~·,ine 6J to l<l,I Satisfaction Guaranteed ----or Your l\1oney Back" 1sking questions at a Chlc110 slum bead slart project, tak"· lpg lunch In !he SllD3buey School cafeteria at Hartford, Conn., and attend.iag a com• munity pJcnic.at Sa nta Rosa, cam. SinCe 1949 · neai'lf 1001000 students, research sCl)otars, athletes, I e ct u r e'r a, ero- fessional! and 11peclaJJsts hive crisscrossed the o c 6 a n a betw~·the United States and 130 nations. The ratio Is three viSitors for every American sent overseas. While results may be dif· Hcult to· .measure in hard tenns there are nugget! of grati!lcation, such · u the French journalist who came to the Unlted States on a 11ant: "It seemed to me in· dispensable to refute at le:ast the most flagrant falsehoods. Having left for the United State.s believing it to be on the verge of collapse and civil \var ... J must say to France on returning that she has been duped." The department's upbeat view o! its programs Is not shared by Rep. John J. Rooney, (D-N.Y.), 1n ap- P r o priations subcommittee chairman who Is expected to fight the increase. Roon.ey has sourly -attacked cxchange programs In the past. He said his mail fa vors "'abolishing the whole pro- gram ..• People don't setm to like those Fulbright people." ~ • • { .,_.,. . . . . f,,ondiy, Marcfl 16, 1~70 DAIL V PIL01 Ji. PENNCREST® REFRIGERATOR FREEZER AND COMPONENT SALE Price1 effective through Saturday PENNCRES18 4 PC. STEREO IADIO/ PENNCRES18 3 PC. STEREO RADIO/ PHONO COMPONENT SYSnM . I 'tRACK COMPONENT SYSTEM TUNfi./ AM~lflEL So~ stat. c:kotsi1, 6 controb, 10 'll"Clttl p10~ power Ou1P,ut,. walnUt Mith on herdwoocl ieobin.t. lSll: MINI CHANGER: 4 speed, 7• tutntoble, wolnut finjjh on hordWood bow. ~EAICEll:S: Two waln ut enc:losUTH each with 6%• ,,,..,r, connectitlg ~ inchlded. REG. 134.95 NOW $'J14 TUNE.II:/ AMPllfJER: Solid state cMssit, 7 con1rt11s, 20 watts P"k pow. output, wo"lnut finish on hotdw'ood «1bin1t. I TRACK PLAYER! Pwhbutton chann'el •lector, lighted chann.1 indicators. SPEAKERSc Two walnut endosum eoch with r and 2¥!• tpeak•rs. c0nntretin9 COfds included. --CANOGA PARK COLLEGE GROVE CHI/CA VISTK" OOWNEY-- .FULLERTON _\l~ANADA HILLS AT YllUI ITOlll HUNTINGTON e'EACH HUNTINGTON ~ARK LAKEWOOD LONG BEACH ~OS ALTOS MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH . REG .. 189.95 NOW$169 SAVE 30.95! PENNCREST®. 16.7 CU. FT. REFRIGERATOR REG.299.95NOW $269 • l 38.6 lb. freezer .capa<ify • Wheels out for eo$y cleaning • 3 J"inc finish steel shelves • Twin porceloi11 e'n amel finish cr~pers ~ ~pletely .frost free • Whilt, copp"ertone or ovocado ••• colar,costs·no more.o1 Penneys SAVE 30.951 Penncrest• Custom 16.7 cu. It. refrigerator/freezer with ice·maker White, copperlone REG. 339.95 NOW'309 or avocado REG. 239.95 NOW f219 SAVE 20. 951 Penncrest• lmperiol 18.1 cu. ft. upright frHzer • 634 lb. fl"ffnf copocity • Completely frast frtt • Whitt-, copperlone or avocodo ••• color cosb no mor• at Penney• REG. 279.95 NOW '259 SAVE 20.951 Penncrest• Custom 15.5 cu . ft. upright freezer • $.Cl tb. capacity • 2 odjuttable dry shelvn • .. ,..., on" warning light • .srido out bulk storop hosktt • 'Miite onlt REG. 19935 NOW '179 • • COMPONOO STSTIMI AVAllQU Ar ntlSI sraus BUEW< PAAK GRANADA HILLS NORTH HOLLYWOOD NOATH HOLLYWOOD SAN FERNANDO SANTAANA TORRANCE" BURBANK HUNTINGTON BEACH SAN FERNANDO CANOGA PARK HUNrlNGTON PARK SANTA ANA CHULA VISTA INGLEWOOD TORRANCE COu.EGE GROVE LAKEWOOD VAN NVYS CULVER CITY t ONG BEAcil VENTURA VAN NUYS VENTURA WESTCHESTER COMPTON LOS ALTOS WESTCHESfER DOWNEY MONTCLAIR · WEST COVINA FULLERTON NEWPORT BEACH • • • • - .. • . , . . . . . ~ . . ·~,~~~:-::":~:-:"~~-~~'""'!' ..................................... "' ...... .. J _!I · bill V >!LOT MoNl•y, March 1&, 1970 CHECKING ·Oily Argunient T~ st&AHiN WOILI f . ' . MR.MUM Police Arrest 14 •UP• c,.anston , Drillers. Conflict · In Park Fighting Blacl\: Casl{et N an1e 0£ Soviet Perfume ~1aine ••. lJJ ETE RS. PLEASE note : Pecans arr about 70 percenl fal, almonds about 54 percent,' peanut~ about 50 perCen! ..• IT HAS BEEN OETERi\llN~ that men who smoke pipes don't i;pend mu ch time \j,'alching TV. BATllS -To avoid bicker· ing in a s:ivage. manner Y.'ith USED TO TAKE \1·.hour1 l.o your matrimonial rnate, takt> rnake good buttermilk from a hot bath befrire dinner. That, · is the recommendation of a THE EYES -Ir you have brown c.\cs. you probably can sec beuer in the dark 1h;1n blue-eyed people, That is the report or .the science boys, l!owe\'er, be not too speedy l.o rejoice. The insurance statisti- cians saf h!;"Own.f.yed people 1!0 not sei&m. lo live quite as. Ion~ as those with ~lue eyes. co~v's ~ilk. The dairies are medical fellow , The family doing tt now In half an flareup generally occurs just 11 o u r •.. SURPRISED TO• .,,,Def0r.e. Uie_ev.eriing 'j'Tltel~ ,J[e HEAR from the psychiatrist!l believes participants who take that inore men than women their case to the divorce court l I !" IT IS ALSO should be sentenced to baths cry 11 rnov e • • · . nightly during the customary A FACT I~!. t~ ... co~n~~ng .o~.:... cock1ail ..hour •. He does .not sheep is more apt tOkeep·you··· Stipulate whether such sen. awake than to put you· to · tences should be served con· i.Jeep, I'm told. : ·.seculively or concurrently . .. . WHALE'S !\1lLK -1-~ive vears ago our C h i e f Prognoslicator....predicted San Francisco . Bay and Puget Sound som~· ~'would be turn· £'d into w e dairly -larms. \Vherein -m k'lnl machines as big as fi retrucks wo~d let the mother wha1es come fresh EXPLAIN IT .-Gnats ir· ~ ritale an elephant immf;o,5el!'-· They make said animal's skin ~awl. Yet the same elephant slands still , wben the circus · k~per singes the hide clean with . a: · blow torch. Most mysletjous. relinquish fltt:·i ln g r ea t A~1 ASKED-WllICll sport :;\anchions ... .the.--size o { kets the h1ght5t paid at. barnyard gates. SQ. f a r , tendance ami.u.ally. Th rt t'·' ~ nothing has been done aboul hors.e r a c in J: .•. T ll E H. An imaginiiliv"e-man, our AVERAGE !\tODEL fo r Chief Progno~li~at.Qr, ~ut far . woll\en's clothing measures 34· l:1r ahead of_'hi~ i~~~'. .. ' .'24-34, say lhe Ga r men 1 -dh1tt'ict., ei'j>erts ••• ONE Qf CUSTOMER SERVJc.£,...;. Q; THE ,LEADING perfumes pro· «·no lobsters stay Wl the same -Uu®d:in the Soviel Unio n i~ place or do they swim aroun_d labeled "Black Casket." Is ;i Jot?" A The biggest ones sit that camp'.' tight, pre tty _mufjl. The Ji~tlesl ones drirt all over, .. Q. "010 --lOVE ANDlYAR -St;fn- YOU EVEll see the Indian lord University researchers rope tric k!" A. No, si r, and • •once looked irito that matter of I'll v.·ager you'll never find -IO\'e :it first sight. They fnund anyone else who ever saw it., • two-thirds of the love-at.first- <' i t h er ..• Q • "CIUCKENS' sight romances that came lo ARE blind-. in lhc dark. a ~e thei r attention klsted less than they not?:t A. That 'they are. .two months. That is all 1he bad \Vhich is jhy they go lo roost news for today.• al dusk, ·. Your ques(itins tnrrl_ cowk 1nents are wtHcomed a/id 11:ilt be Wil(ect,.w~enever po.s.- sible i1' ''Cheeking Up .... ~I.ease addtes.t ·,uour mall to ~ M; Boyd, i1\ care of Dally Pila(. Box 187,5. New- po'l't Beach, Calif., 92663. i\IOST,P,f' . .'I.UE.-Ctdi'J-1 iB the hul.i .skirts is 1wbve11 ·in Scltool Post SANTA BA RBARA , Calif. (IJPJ1 -Sen. Alan Cranston 1 0-Calif. l. says there is a new 011 1tlick in the Saata Barbara Channel. An oUicial of the Atlantic-Richlield Co. says he's wrong. Cr.ans.Lon 100de his jtale-. me11 l before the S:nate Sub- .commUlet:-on M i n et a I s ... !11atcrials and Fuels al the end ft fl State Board Prison lnu1jllc ... · :;iagcs ·'Revolt' · SAN QUENTIN (UPI) - Convict J ohn L. Nelson held his wife as a. bostage for three hours Sunday during a brief revolt at San-Queritin Prison. No 011e was injured in the lcnse -&hree;hour drama. .-bich unfolded ~~e the eilct-of visitdr•s lioUrs. · AuihortUes sai~ Ne~on pul. 1.ed a pie« of sJietpened~ metal from his sf\OC ancfb&Cqd Into a ,cornet-or the -root!), 'whJJe holding the object at his wife's throat. ~~~~~~~~~-1 V oti{ig Race Tri-co rliered SAN FRANCISCO (UPI} - A thrcc-cor11cred race. has l;ikrn shape for lhe non- partisan post of St a t e Superin1endcnt of P u b I i c Jn:.t ruction. "Herc "·e go .again.'' in- 1·umbcnt l\lax Rafferty said Saturdav as he announced he \\a~ a cJndida!f for re-election I•> the $25.000--a-yc.ar post • . \! his kickQH banquet. Ral- /\'rlv told .h'is b11dl:ers to rcrric1nbe r t he "n1yriads and 1nult1tudes of !11\le faces" that <ire "so eager 10 lear n. so 1rady lo be t;iughl'' and for \Vhich he .:.cr\'t'S in his present ;ob. "for tlu· tittle ones then- for 1hcir parents -lor you - J annuun1t· n1y cantlldacy lor rt-election to {h£' office of :--1atc ~uperintf'rldt'nt ol Pub nc:' Inst ru ction. ;_ind rn<1y almighty God grant !hat Ille' real \\Lnner hr the children .. Haffert}, 11 ho 11 as tir~t r!ected lo lht! po.~l in 1962. hstcd higher reading scores b~ California sclloo\ cluldren as 1 ht" No. I achle,·ement of lus ;1dm1nislration and also took a swipe at ''educational ~!::itism" including fhe busing of school children llJ gain ra.ciat ~ltlU:grallon. The two earlier announced 1 andidatcs for Rarrcrty's job are his chief deputy 1n the rJepartment ol t> d uc a Ii on, \\'1lson Rtles. and Julian Nava, a Los Ange les Board or Education member. . THINK LONDON THl_NI<' . • Mon ., Tues., Wed. Only Accent your new do with ou r "I d' s II n 1an urnrner FROSTING SPECIAL 12.88 We spociolitt in tht cort of febhMm wtp USt YOUR PINNEY CHARGE CARD- NO APPOINTMENT NEClSIAl'( JtoJr\ LnhQ .. 'UU1illtTpM ,.11,o u~•tON 'l(.A(K "'""'°"' .,,.UI ·1 Q.r"""'lt lr CIM'w .<c f1...,..1,"fl0fl Caf\!f!' '""IM ttlftlf I ,,..., •teii" In 41'J 11\f ""°'"· "f 1111 fnf "°""• f4"21lt '1f.ii'(1111 ltJij. fj.W,.r1Jf.11\11 ~-------------------- 1 • .. ' ·~· . .. HOLLYWOOD ·•AP) Police clooed Grilfilh P ar k two boun early and swept 2,000 persons out the gates aft"° a rock-and·botUe throw· Ing melee broke out between officers and youths . About 20 person.s, Including one polie&man, reeelved mJnor Injuries_ Jn the Sunday fracas and lf wert arrested, police llllld •. The lrou ble reportedly broke out at u impromptu rock con· c¢ 1!.~ olli~ arrf',Sted a _ -~~ke a cool approach to fashion with · shifts ' P~t and mini ohifts ~o ~lots of-CoNfrM ti,. in .. '.~loble ~ ~ .• ,pnlty,,t~! ~ a paiit shift ot ~ ii:pni aucmifsjytes and fabrics .. · • .irl .,,r;..t.. 111 ipes and sot.ds, misses si-P..s.M-L 0- your mini shifHrcm' arrexd!hig Ciisart- ment of fabrics in·ptellyprinls ai'solid colors._ •. in, jonlor .si~ 3-15. Select -al from Ifie.. ,_car iwlsf . :•·. .. ~6 • ) r 1 I un.rr ... CHARGE IU--- ' \ • l.. •• \ - AVAlLASl.E.AT TOUR LOCAL. PENNEY STORE fOUth aceused ot 1teallna .a jacket. Police 1aid other youths moffil ln and trltd. to tree lh,e suspect, peltin1 ol· flcers with bottles and rocks. Calling a tactical alert, more than IO offlctrs tueled with youths. One olficer wu hit in the chest with a bottle, and other peraons were blt by fly ing glus and rocks, police said. Pollet clo.std ttle park and, ' with bullhorns and motorcycle oUicus using loudspeakers, ordered everyone tQ luve. \ ' ' " • FOR THE RECORD Mee tings De a th No tl.,es llACICMAilllll J.,,., J11n lll•eltl"•rr. 2ll02 P1uo 11.i' &mlHI. L19Una Hr.u11. ,.,.,,_ 3'1 d••• of 1::!11, M1n:PI 14. ~rvlY~ lw Plu1Nnd, edt tw" Mlf!I. Ml<Mel e'utent 1nd Krh 1rltffl Pt•irnb. Mr. Ind Mn. C. II. .. doll. Pomona. 51rvk11, TUtoclilv. f !'M. Sl'ltffer lttulll ltach Ch•HI. wttl! h v. Dori 1nltv otlld1ll111. J11i.r,,,.'lf, El f<iiro Ct mtltry, Sl'lelltr LttUn1 llttdl .Mc..-llltrY, DlrKP!I,... 't IOYLI! jj.m11 T. lkivlt. ~U Prlnt1ton Or., Cc1t1 t"'· Otto of clNll!, M111:h !l. S11rvlwd wilt . Tlltrts. H. &cwltl ll!rH d•ll!l"- 1, Ptlr!clt A. Ttl>Ptll. Wtw0<0rt 81,..111 Suwn M. ll•nk1. l.-vln1 1 T11t .. 1t M. f O)'!t . Co1!1 Mtsal ,_ '°"'· Jt..w• T. • r. •"4 T"'°"''" J. l!lovlt . ball! of Ca••• • t:lal two t!1t1r1, Mro. Mtrv 11..,. 1r.d rs. M1r11r9'! Ambrose, C1tnn11:tl~uh roth<lr, Ctotrlt l lloyl1, New Yo'1c. lltM- rv. ton\1111, Mondt\', ,,15 J'M. lfteQt•11m ~'"· Tu.1ct1v, 10 AM, sr. John fht 11~ ... fl.st Ctf!!allc c .... rd1. lnll!rm•nl. "K tn1lon C@mt!etY. 81ltr Morlu1rv, Coil.t Mei.ti, Dir« ton. f:Ml!TT • £'11w1rd L. Em1!!. ••S lllov hla<ld, NtW• p,yt !INC"· ~ti of lle1t", Mtl"<h 14. Survlvtd ttv w!fe. 1(11"1•111" F. Emel!, or the '-1 san. ltobort 1... fr>1ell. lo• .._,.._ 'ltln; 11111.,. "•~l Hufton. S1nl1 Mon· lc1: flvt ortndthlld•fn. Servlct• wltl be h~ld Wtdnt MllV, 2:)11 PM, In the Gr1c• ChtlM!I ol 51. A'ldrews Pre•b>rlt rlt"' CP!urc", with Or. Clllrl•• Dl1r1nflt!d of· lltl1t!1111. I"'"""'"'· P1<lllc: View Mtmo•- 1•1 P1r-. Dfrtcltd ttr P.cllk Vlt'N Mor• .., ....... FAllMl!lt Ntlllt £. F1rrntr. 15? W. 7Cth SI .. Coil• Mfl1. D1!1 of dtalh, Mal"<h It Survlvnl ttv Min, lt1vrnond Hen1berger, S1n11 ""'' ,... . ., vrandd•lldru i; •tven ore1!·1r1nd- chlldr1n1 two or11l·ore1t-1r1fldchlldrtn. Funtr11 strv1cet Tu1sd1y, I PM, 81llt Co111 Me-. Ch1~I. JENKINS Wllll•m D. Jenkln1. 111°"1 Goodwin Line. Hunllnolon Beach. S1r~!te1, Tue1d1v, S PM. PH~ F1m11v Colonl•I Furnir1I I-form. MlloltTINSON Mtrlln B. M1rt!n1<1n. "IN tt. of 334 p...,._ lar SI .. Ll'IUft.I Be1ch. Dtl• of de1!1!, A'•rch ''· SurvlYt<I bv wife. Cherlote, ol tilt honM; d•~h!tr, Mr1. loulst Cou1e, L19un• &11cll; ttrolhtt, Elrntr M1r1r,.._ "°"' of CG!or1do S1"l"11: 1l1!er, E•lht• l1utll, Jollet, tlllnol1: lllrH 1rtlldchi!· d•'"· •~rt Coust , Berkt11v; Mn. Bon- nie D1vl1, LllUM S.1cll1 M111 B1rb1r1 Cou..,, L~M Bt1ch. Stt'llCtl. Tvt>dav, 1 PM, Mc.Corrnlcl<; LtlUf\I ltttll ChlPf.!. lntttmoml, Melrow "t>OIY. F1ml1V IU9· 9,.,11 *'O!t wllMll'J IO ..,lkt ""'"'°'ltl l!:OP1!rlbu1JOf\1, plt llt '""!rlbull! to ~t. J>1ul'1 LullMrrtfl Churcll, Lffunt 8t1Ui, McCCITTnkk Mortu1rv. Dlredori. NOWll.K JOMP~ W. Now1k. 11-" Whittler AYt., c ... r. Me••· O•I• "' ckt llt. Mtrd> 1•. Survlvtd by wilt, Ao.,.t: M vghltr. Mr .. CttOllft.I Sa..,utlt, Garden Grove; son. O.nltl I!. Now1t, Co1l1 1'i'e11. Rost<Y, 1 PM, Tl"tl•diY. R"'ultm MHI t ... M. Wedntod1v, bPll1 11 SI. Jolchlm'I Ct!f>. otlc Cllul'Ch. lntermenl, Good ShtPMrd Ctmeltt'I. lallz Mor!u1rv, C0$!1 Mltl, Dlrector1. llHOOIS Minnie J. Rhodt$. ~ N. C1•ltJ<, l llkt- WOOd. Dito ol do11h, M1rch ls. Survlvtd bv Kin, Ev1r1!1, Lakewood; two d1u.io- h rs, v"1t11 Hn1lln9, Co1t1 M1111 Ev1 Met Vtn OUM!ttl all!tr, H1tl1'1 Bt!l Goodwin, Mfnourl1 111111 11r1....ichlldr1n end 10 1ret1-1r111dchfldron. Funer1I sorv- lc11, Wtdnel<loy. 1 PM. 8111• Co1t1 M .. 1 Ch1~t. '"''"n•n!, "••kltwn Ctmtltn'. Bell. l!llltI Co1l1 Me11. DlrKIOrJ. llOY\I Edwin Rant. 19115 Oraft!le Av1 .• Cotlt Me-.. t1111 of death. M1rch l'. ~rvlved bv '""' John lt~e. C111t1 M111. Prlv1te 1ervkn wtro l!tld ot IS•lt 8'otdw1r M.,..luar'f'. ITUAllT tlot..rt H. Stwrt. lJ1 E. COf.11 Mi ii SI,, Cost1 Mell . Dllt ot dt1t1t. M1•clt lJ. Survived bv w!tt. Gr1c1; '°"'· G1rv ,,,. JtOJ d1U11Ml1". R1ndl1 1!1t1r. Mro, B1•· b.ora Klnvon. 111 ol C••• Mtw. Strvkrt. T~ld1r, l PM. Bait? Cott• Mtw CNPll. F1mlly w"nl• lhoM wlfl\1119 lo makr m-1•1 contrlbullons, pl1a1o11 contrlbutt 111 1111. A,.,,...lun C1ncrr 5ocl1Jv, TYLER ~runo $. Ty!1r. "'" J). of 111'1 Mlr1mor LIM, Huntl119!°" 8t1ch. Dile of Clltlh. March 1•. Sut'llYed lrY wife, Jun.1 1 two chlldrtn, O..nnl1 Ind Dll nt T¥1tr1 bro!h- '"' M lltonv '"" (1tmmtn1. l oJaP"I, lo-nl9h1, Mc>nd1v, Smith• Cll1~1. Reou~m ,.1.,.. TUlld'I Y. 10 ... M. s~ Simon & Judi c1111o1le Clturch. lnt1rmlflt. Gooa SMl>- ti1rd Ctmtltrv. Smiths Mort111rv. Dlrtc· tora. wooo ktrtn M. Woad. lnl1n! d1u1httr of Mr. '"d Mrt. J>1u! Wood. Gr1v1lfd1 1ervlc•1, lu,1d1v, 2 PM, Good Shlpl>trd Ctm1r1ry. Sm!lh• Mortu1ry, Dlr1ctcrs. ARBUCKLE & SON Wemlcllff Mot1111ry 427 E. 17th St., Costa Mem1 '4M813 • BALTZ MORTUARIES Coron1 del Alar OR 3-1450 Costa J\feu l\U $-UU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadway, Cotta l\teu IJl-Sm • DILDAY BRC71'11ERS Huntington Valley t\.fortuary • 17911 Bl!acb Blvd. -: JJuntfngton Beath 842-7711 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery e l\fortlll'J' Ch1pel 3500 P•clflc View Drive Newport )leach, CaWonl• -• PEEK FAMILY COl.ONJAL nJNERAL HOME 'llOI Bolu Ave.. Westminster IN-35!5 • SHEFFER MORTUARY Laguna BelC~ CH-IAS San Clemente CIUIM • SMITHS' MORTUARY I!? Mlle SL llilnlln~<m Beaclli 53MS3I Mesa Deputy Wins Honor s A t Academy SANTA ANA -Depuly Sheriff David K. Wheeler of Costa Mua won top honors recently In the Orange County Sheriff's Department Tralning Academy's lllh class. Wheeler was ciled f o r outstanding overall ability and for having the best notebook. Others honored were Santa Ana oUicer Giles Haydrych of Tustin for ou s t a n ding physical ability ; Deputy Wiley ~I. Clapp Jr. of Pomona for firearms ability, and Deputy Thomas P, Christian of Santa Ana for outstandipg academic ability. Cadets in the class of 16 received training in 30 sub- jects during the 320..hour course. New County Offices Set ANAHETht -The vacated municipal court quarters in Anaheim replaced by a new facility in Fullerton, will be remodeled to become a branch office of the Orange County Welfare DepartmEnt. .. DAILY PILOT 9 Ground Waier ltlarks , Rise 81 JACK BAO.BACK . cent lncrease over the 12 bttv.·een Oranp and Los Menus. about 2.5 milts (rom fl~ to Oranae Coonty In lht ... di.strict, 9'S acre feet •as OI .. o.llJ Het t'9ft y SANTA ANA-Tbe averqe P~•iow: monlhl. An&elts coun~t. 'Ibere they the ~an. water levels al fSo Santa Ana. River measured at -..·ater Injected undtrrroond iround wa\er ele.vaao. 1n ·tne The new w1ter level Is ln ranaed fro,n sl11htly above sea ~ from about sra level to Prado Dam : ne1r SUI Becah IO halt oran&e ColUltY Water 0'5trict shup contrast to the hbtoric level· to more lban " feet. about five feel above. The rema ininn 171,8:24 acre aeawiter i'ltrmlon. ind 110,01C •·-In oo Nov 1 ·-w., M 1 ·.i 1 ---. acre feet wu •at.er received ..,.. · • -.,. low fl'OUnd w at~ r level• be1~, bQt the)'. wrre 1bout S Durln1 the water year IHI-feet was Colorado River watrr ~~~: !~~~~-~ '= recorded on Nov. I, 1956 when feet hl&her than .the previouil 69, total non-local water sup-p u r c h 1 1 e d from lhe ::~~:~l~llii' t~~r same date one year.previour it least as perttnl ol the year. ply lo tne diltrict was S52,214 f\tetr090lltan \Valrr District. n.e ·Toupt firm recom- 1,y. buln's lfOWld wa~r was At Talbert Avenue, tour ac~ feet. This compareJ wit~ Of this 3tl percent of the mrndtd that the cilstrlet 'l'h.ls in!ormatioo is con· below sea level. mllea inland from the ocean, 178,792 acre fttl of around total, non-local water supply purchase 100,000 acre feet or tained in the annual englneer'a The lowest watl!r levels In .. ·ater levels rose lO about five water produced In the dlstr\c!. to the area, 65,SM acre feet Colorado River water for 1lnk- repor~ on around w11er coo-the district basins occurred feet above ae1 level. Jn the Of' the "Z,214 acre feet, was water sunk underground ing underrround durlnt the OJllons lit the dlstr ie·t, along the boundary li ne Santi Ana Gap near Adams 375,390 acres was natur1l In· forreplenl.shme.ntbylhecoun--1970-71 tel&llOn. prepared by 'l'oupa Engineer-:1---"-----'--------=-------'-----------=----...:....-=-c=;__;___.:_:_....:... ____ _ mi of Santi Apa., , . " bre&Mown ol areas shows the averise i:toti'ftd · wit.er elevation in 1t»ie 1 i e a soulhweiit ol the Santa Ana l'·reeway Wt Nov. l Was 11.7 ieet above sea level, a rise of 6.5 feet in the past year. The average r1~ in the Irvine: Ranch area in the same period was J.j feet to ml elevation of 20.S feel The average·rise in the intake area northeasterly of the Santa Ana F'reeway in the year since Nov. I, 1968 was 11 ttet, bring- ing the average water level to S9 feel. On Nov. 1, 1969, more than 91 percent of the district's ground waler basin wa5 above sea level. This marks a 7 per- Play SlatCd On Suicide QRANGE -A play depic- ting lbe conflicts, lrustraUons and loneliness encountfred by three su.icide victims wlll be presented at 7:30 p.m. March 17 at offices of the Orange County l\1edica1 Association here. ~-ed ·by F.amlly Service .Associ.rtion ol Orange County, the Oranae County ri.tedical Aaaoclatioo ud the Orange County Mental He<1lth A5$ociaUon, the: pJiy, "QWet Crlem," will be open to i ll local physicians, pmychia.tril1' and other public tervice personnel involved in handllng crisi:s isituations. SAVE 9.751 5 ~ Cl'ISfAL chondeliw with etched h..,itaJ e ma.i.. pollofood ..-.... .;.....i -23" ~'ST"-. dNp. •1111:'65•.;.NOW SS.25 HIGH llGHTS SALE! 15°/o OFF ALL OUR $10 AND ·UP FIXTURES Prices effective tlvu Saturday! SAYE 5;151. 5 LIGHT ETatED Cft·STAL boll ti_.i .......... ------F •• I J ••• ood spiftdlc. 21· .. -· Rog. *39.,. NOW 33.1 S SJ&VE 5;851 4 LIGtfT.WAGoN WHfEL-.~elier d ._-. o.op"""" llyle. 1r diuow ... Reg, •39, •• NOW 33.1 S Super Speller • Girl Wins County Bee SANTA ANA -Jeannine Nelson -that's J-E·A·N·N-1-. N·E. N-E-~N-is Orange County's best speller al the in- terml!diale school level. Atiss Nelson, 13, Santa Ana, won the tiUe last Thursday night in the final round of the- seventh annual Orange County Spelling Bee al Thurston Intermediate School in Laguna Beach. She won the title in com- petition against top eighlft grade .spellers from 36 other schools throughout the county and will compete April 14 in Sacramento for the state championship. Mi ss Nelson defeated Mike Tropp, of Kr a em e r Intermediate School, Placen- tia, while lhird-place con· testant was Cheri Biltmore, o( I-fare Interm~ate School, Garden Grove. The winning contestant this year is the daughter of Mr. and 'Pitrs. James Nelson and is a student at Irvin e Intermediate Sdiool in Garden Grove. Sht achieved ~r VictOry by correctly spellln& the ap;. propriate v.·ordt didactically, wtiich me1n1 to teaeti. or In- struct in a strlcUy .comet maruier. Miss Nehon will i lso com· pete in May_ against members of the Orange . County Prep Club in ill annual ipelling bee, pitting newsmen against Ult county's top eighth gia~r. · None ·of the.m·h1ve·defeated their younger con1petitlon · in seven years. The compet!Uon Thursday was hosted at T h u rst on Intermediate School beeauge 1969'& winner., Sa nd r 1 Winieski, 1ttended that cam- pua. Pr Io r winners were: 1968, Susan Lopei, Fullert0n; 1917, La:ynette BUckner, Fullerton; 1966, Ingrid Rowland, Newport Beach; 1965, Dick Derby, Hun- tington Beach ; and 1964, Kevin1 Jester, Buena Park. Cal State Professor Gets Grant for Studv ,; FULLERTON -A Cal State Anglo and ,._texican-Aml!rican Fullerton faculty m e m b e r children in rradu f o u. r whose special Interest is Afex-through eight in Orange Coun- lcan-American children, has received a $9,249 grant to ty school& • study what grade school When th't results art in next students are learning about year, Sica Slid, he plans to U.S. citizenship. wotk with~ elementar.y school Or. Mor ris G. Sica, 1n atithoriUe1 br developing pro- associate professor of educa-gratn1 of tludy that will help lion. rece ived the research disadvantaged· children t o grant from the U.S. Office of learn ~ citizenship skills re- Education. qulred for greater partic:lpa· SAVE. 4.351 5 LIGHT_ UAS~ 'Willio•Hrbut1J' .,,.._ chc111dsli11 , "19-W:h ....,..,, 17-Mch Mah ... -. ... ei 36". Reg. '29 ••• NOW 24.65 SA VE .-.351 6 LIGHT POLISHED chrOfM with ••otk .Afric:cm twinge .....i. c..,...i ......, 1111• ..,....r. 35• drop, ltaf. '29 ••• NOW 24.65 NcrM THESE VALUES AT A1f'f ONE OF l HESE PENNEY STORES! "--- CANOGA PA'RK LAKEWOOD SAYE 5:8515 UGHT WIOuGKT llON with ambe• o1--blo<l IMlfiaJ. Holds 5 60 watt Ed"llCllll ~ ......... (Not ;.d.J 21· -..... 36" IRCllC.drop. Reg. '39 ••• NOW 33.15 SAYl·UOI l'llX1-0IASS -· 11£G. :lt.91 ••• -- SAYI! LUI AMIR GAS ~ 9ft chei• ~·$.ff .•• ,, NOW' M.11 SAYI! 7.UI ._. TUUP •. · hg. U9, NOW •,, 41 ,65 LIKE IT? CHARGE IT! S~VE ~.351 '6;~ WOOD , AN!> llON chooclelloo . Dool< __,. ... -/-bloik ............. . ~ CICl'Nr&,.:J'r·eo,. 2.Y. 9 .1 Rog.•49 •• ·.NOW41.65' SAVE 1.15! 'IMPllE TIFfANT' STYU LAMP. 'An ... ' -o1ooo k 1-d ... """ --"'" ..... 1rb.onMtw. Reg.•S9 •• ;NOW S0.15 DOWNEY FULLERT ON HUNTI NGTON BEACH SHOP SUNDAY, TOO 12 to 5 P.M.! MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH VEN TURA. Sica plans to compart" the lion ln the political proceSli, citiunship learning of 1i2001 j~;;;;;===;;.::===-=...;;=;;;;;==--============================================:;;;;=;;;;;::- 560 Courses At Fullerton FULLERTON -Dr. Ger1\ard E. Ehmann, dean oL educatJonal services and sum- mer sessions at C1l State Fullerton said a record 580 courses will be: offered in the college's twp gummer ae.sslons thi.! yw. Huntington Beach Office: Located at 91 Huntington Cente; at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd., adjoining the San Dieg9 FreewJ'f, in Huntington Beach. Ill YO• NEIGHBORHOOD ••• Huntington Beach Office of Coast & Southern Federal ·Savings, where your account is IAFI • COllVlllllllT • AYAIL*BP ~IGHEST PREVAILING RA'fES S.OCJ%.f.1:1%° p-No MlnlnMll: 5.25%-4.31% n ... -c.-;No Mlnlrllo111. -· .. Dr. Ehmann uid he ex- ptfled 7,000 stOOent.. to attmt Ult sessions running from June 15 to July 24 and from July 27 to Sepi. 4. !.~ O-YwtConHlclllt;tl,OOG·--,,,_-·+---- l,OCJ%.l,11% T-Yu•Ce-;SS,CIOOMlnlnMn, Registration will be held from April 13 to June I. those who miss early registration may enroll on the first d13 of e11eh session, he-satd. Cosls for the classes wl1' be $24 per unit in addlliori to $6 t1ssociat.td 5tudent fet and an optional parkllli ree or 15. --............ ,...... ... , .. ----............... ,. LA.°""..,..,. .......... 1 .1\11 -""' ................ M4114 --, .................... --'°"' .......... ..,..,., --~ ....... Olr. .. IHGH • • ,..,.. .•. """ ... ..... ...,. ..... ~f171 ,__ an a·&.tiMt •'11.ntl • f • • r . . . .. ·' .. J 0 OAILY PILOT For the Record Dissolutio11s of /tlar1•ia9e Bli~I W1<~a· Jem•• t<1we•o l"CI Cann., M~••• r~c•rt1. 11_,1 H 1n11 r~•ol t ••t1111n•. oor11 Vlllf~'• ~...., •t!rtoo ti f./l•l••n. ii•I•~ M '"~ M•vr ·1ct I M ; • Mt-r•, M~•I~• 5.1, .~ .. ~l•Cll••I I '''~ p _,nl'lffG. Jl:•o;hor~ ~ '""(! '"" 'i••dr• A'trlrnc ~II• ,.~ ·<'••I O\l\.1-11 ''el<ll•. 11•·"• """ •~<J 1111. •I P N111 ~. Jonn l •"''" ·n~ Cl•<! lt•l•n M1111. 11.lkl•~<I ~~Yi.e ""a l~la•O ,.,., ··m f"~"lr c.n.i·.t.•~ J ·"" 1'1·''·' I" P~I~. 1~ V\ a"~!tlw >~l M·" .,..,,.,~f!I> •N' ;. •·~•d '>l"r'n~ '"" I >.n "'"•• ~~·"•• ·~. A,'•,,, p, 1 ~~l 11 .. •1'1~. Ot~•n• I"''' ,~•11 J A•!(<j/.' o((,o~" 016 ...... ~"'1 I 0•1 ~ ·~~I" ~., t LPI•• •, • d 11,,,.,. d I '""'" ~··•'I•··· r~· I LY"" ·~1 ,,. .,,. r •• l .. •r,•; '~l>f, I ''"('l l."•V il\d C.l\i• ll<>fl.•• 81<~""'1. r1~y1g" A '''° lh·r~1ra er~"""'' ""'"~Jo""''' ""d rh!lo•d J•.,,t• \•l!•rl .... 1 ••. l"" "'""· •rld J .. ,, .... , "'~" "'"'~tv, Doa""' lt"IM·• ·•-I I, . ., ~/rl J•do.•O"' ·'•~c A11n ••ltl Oc.<1tld Liff' r.ntnnlr, Sli1t•"lf Cl~·~ • o Jr"Y 1 MelKh" Lyrn IM'c t...i M••' ('.erl>••d '""" ~rnlt G •"II ll ocl>••of J"~~. P•"'•f• M •nrj N•I" '" t (he•lll~. DfT,...t ~nd (Ii""~~(•; CoieY. ~8!!Y t •"" G<-•~1~ j f_Jy A~b'I' O /"" Gt-octwyn Di WMV •l~ckrr. nn• I IC•ll~ 81ld ~•rll"t l "' • R~•b, Ano~ N tnd J~<k G. r "' •~·. r;r.,·~· W o~d f\•r••••!I• ~i W1111•<. CN~I~'"" IJ.4• •~ lt•ll D"' n L 1"11~ Lrt ••O 1/,o '!•rl I. • >"•(~tr, f•cr•il l "\(! 'J"'"·' + l•h•. 11,.,.,.~m C. •¥.I 11-~(M'•• C>,, .. Ll,.•rr, ~~ndrft tuii. ~na W1" '" Dv• "" $1r.,~le. £hJebGlh M end l ,, L~"•rd M•r!f•"· ftlollr J_ •'l<I M•nc.•O " 11.on•....,.nd. Jo•n &•·~ ~""' 1 1-lor~. O~n~ln M "''~ !.N• M11hvl<1, Jo<Cl"n l><~r'~• •'" Or• l .. I '""ftif\, 411 ~•111 I •. ,,, N ,.,,.. ~.1/1/r, ).\[UHrhr• l••J .,~ 0"~~ 1 r r ~·nn cnr••l l t<!' tnd J.,,, .. '"•'·• H•41, OorQlhV fd!\~ •nd ll~rr lh nr; j W"Ol'l••d. P~ll•1n Lro:ir~•O ,. . .J! r '"' "' l!t!t. JO"•• Al••ll illd N••"".,' t r~u• ',hlti•··· "'··~··· &Ml V.•11~•<1 ~,.~,. .. II J<1 .ll<1n •1111 Lenv r ~.ol("•f\n. (•~n,,~Hllfl •nd ~'"'" " '' y,",11,.., '~"r'• toul•a "'"" rn""'•' 'J --~ - l ·(llrl, llll~(V J 11•1! l\l!;J\Atl V sn~ ... )•"'"'" .. .,.1 w1iu•m I" I •"9<' "'<' l """ Jna l . •1. '"""'!\ 0oiu11~• ~·"Ill •"" Wlnlltte nrf~;~~~ M!f)i.el Flovd •noi M.ldH ! PtMllO "•tl•v. Aro M 111\11 (h•1~ M («<n<idY, Mlldr9d (~Hr, •nG Thom•• "" l\~,n,nMf\. l 11H • G '"" M•rv "'"" l•on1, 0••• ~ltl•••"'"'" •OCI Pt~k>Pt "'".! ~11:,:c· ~:~.1h,t,,"1i1 ~·.~ fir:~t! .,.,, P "''"'"" r """~' ~nd Ro1,.1d C. • ··••'· Fr it~• M'ld llrlnur M I r 1:" ·~lr. $Al'dt4 I,.-••Id F rf'<h!<ld A l,•.l1tt O.•n• L ~o<! O~V•ll 0 . •'·•• IU•ntv A. •nd (lofJon l. "I>. P .. 1,r ( ,,"II Pflr«1• l I•-• ~•11-•••,.•&••! ~nd P<'I"< l(~•n t '>. ("''"" Gr•~e •nO C••~ L•• t.,,.,.,., (M•rYI l •ncl ftrut<' H o .. ,~. 11: .... ~.r 11 ''"" wui.ro • \r 1•1', MiHY C A•d Oo.,,~nort t:•~"'" "·'I· Jn A!lvn• ~wt••! &nd Frank ' ,, .. ~,. r"'0 ll•Y Wl trJn" •na l'dltltl• Ellen M< ""· Jr.uo l M>d [<1rl J, 1,.,,., ft••ll~ra r. •nd R~~'' ~. II rk• l"l(!d k. •fl<I 1'lmoltw R. i: "'~11~ • 1n'1r& J. 11111 Jdln P. ~· ~m•t~rr. p1,.1;• A. •nd P1trlcl• ""''" ~·.g1~o J:~~~ "~ .~l~~H1~~1u 6,<fllM•Vr. E.t' .. 1rd •ncl ..lo Ann I•• I Al>dt•~ Etto~t '"° (°;l!Drst Gft<"~· \'f· 0 1~ I ~nd l•T•bf! 11 '·~·•Mr~, ( l>•t~ll l . eOCI M&nl~y $, lo• , r,'M<:!•I Lt• An~ llobr•I fm,,.111 ,,.,, ·N1I,,, .. , r;. ~"~ P•Tr<tl~ l . v.-. ~ •"""' M~" """ ~'"~~ CMarle"' 11 o•I!.~· 1,·1r /I. ~n!I D•V•d A.• I ~ l/r n en<! 0 1,.,,, M I r. '· .1. nv 1 01"'' '"~ 811r10ft . '"' I<· 0 Dl•.n" ~ ••od Rltna"! I(, '""f. (d"·" o,,. •nd ,:a• LWn1'1 I " H• d• r. •·lll Pnt •. i. 0 I'••~. ~o•·I 11~1' ~M 0,§1~ ~r•~I~ t'1CJ"~'" J~•" ( Ind W 110<1"' P. O•l......-d, P; It• •nd Ktllllet11 H<t115 Lo1·cnz Sr1ys: '1VOTE FOR RICHARD D. CROU L N.B. CITY COUNCIL" r,.m c~ny. Ch.,. 1901 lttw'"'•f Or .• CdM Wall-to-wall ,Carpeting Special s! Our low price includes padding and installation! 'SALEM', sturdy, long.wearing and handsome 100% c.onti nu ous filament ny lon. Save now on your choi ce of 6 decorctor colors in solid:. or tweed~ SO squore yords for compl etely inslalled over 32 oz. rvbberixed hoirand LIVING ROOM jute pad SO SQ. YDS. WILL COVER A 12x18 LIVING ROOM 11 x9 DINING ROOM 10x10 BEDROOM 6x5 HALLWAY DINING ROOM HALL For Shop at Home convenience, Ph one the store in your local area • We bring somples. ' • Fr~ consultation. • fr.• eitimates. • No obligation. CANOGA PARK (883-3660) oaNNFf (869-4541) ' ' fUUERTON (871-4343) LAKEWOOD (634-7000) HUNTINGTON BEACH MONTClAIR (892-ml) (621-38 11 or 98S.72 17j NEWPORT BEACll (633-0783) VENTURA (642-7592) • OUR OWN DELI CIOUS CURE ! CORNED TMCSl PIUC(S ff,fCT l'.'f IH •ll IAlrM5 $TOii [~ MOH., TUI$. & WID ., MAICM 16, 17 & l t, 1970 ADO TAX TO TAXAllE ITIMS 1 Cup Moyo~1,o •~~ 114 l 1p 51J9or FRESH GREEN • • • BEEF POINT CUT BRISKET c CABBA GE CRYOVAC PACK ED lB. CORNED BEEF ROUNDS CORNED BRISKET FLAT CUT LB. 89' WHOLE KERNEL LB. c LB. U.S. NO. 1 WHITE ROSE C POTATOES TOPS REMOVED-FRESH CARROTS NIBLETS CORN s 12-0Z. CANS $ f?& MINT ICED 7-INCH 1 tAYER CHOCOLATE CAKE W HOlE l8. - All MEAT FRANKS 1-lB . PKGS. All BEEF 69c CHAMPAIGN NATURAL SWISS CHEESE ..:: ' I YOUR NEAREST RALPH S STOR IS LOCATED AT 9907 ADAMS BLVD .. HUNTINGTON BEAC H Store Hou" 9 a.m. t o I 0 p.m . Da ily c c LB. -------------~------ -~------------ -·----;-.... ... ,,... ~~ -,,....---.-... ··············--.,,,.. Monday, Ma.rch 16, 1970 DAILY PILOT JI fill STtA.NC>l WOlllO .. MR.MUM Churchman Says The Pill Here to Stay li ·' s '· JI " 12 From Peace Corps Ousted Over Protests GENEVA, Switierlalld (AI!) hum an behavior, seeu from -Canon David Jenklns of the reformed Christian conctpts Chur c h of E n gla nd , t h at inc l u de modern coordinator or a Christian study on human relations, psychology and sociology. It is says the cootraceptive pill is being pul Logether at head- he're to stay and should not be qu~rters or the \Vol'ld Council, withdrawn even if It should -which groups more lhal'! 200. lead to a temporary increase P r o l e 1 t ;i o t , Angl1ca~. o( promiscuity among the Orthodox _and Old Catholic young. chur~es in more than 80 -Canon Jenkins directs the countries. . "Humanae Vilae" study being ~~on Jenkm~ .. 41. a former conducted by several lay and Br1U~ ar1ny o t1cer, believes clerical groups of the World the pill may help the young to . 1 develop a n1ore complete ~ouncil of Churche~. He a so persona llty and deepen th 1s a t he o l ogian and h. b • psychiatrist and cofounder of relations ip etween the se~­ the British Assoc-iation of es. He says th e freedom 1t Social Psychiatry. "Study of Man" is to be an e1amination of the patterns of brings to JX.'OpJe allo,~s them to experimen 1 on the. sexual level und thus rcaci1 beyond tn more profou nd spheres of hu1n an relations. He says churches musL adapl lo U1e implications of the plU or risk losing' thelr role .as moral guide of the younger genera- tion. Canon Jenkins was asked ln an intervie w, to comment on a 1nedical study by the Uni versi· ly of Uppsala. S\veden. whieh i:."Uncludes that the pill in- creases pro1niscuily. His reply: "That wOuld be .Torpedo Costs Run Way High ~nnelft AUTO C•N T•R nol n!UOn for·wlthdrawing lhe pill." Canon Jenkins said men are meant to have responsibility in the sexual sphere as wt.11 as elsewhere, and even if they err in their choices, "'well, the)' use their choices wrongly. Then we've got to go on from there.'' The basic choice , he ew- plained, is that b e t w e e n chastity and llCX, and until the emergence ot the pill much or sexual mora1lty was detennin- ed by the fear of pregnahcy. Tbe removal of the fear is lia ble to deepen sexual Jlfe, Canon Jenkins believes, Jte. Is convinced that the 011 the way of Ule that you already worked out. You are ready to change ." present generation of partnts iiiii~~~~~~!iii stlll b<>und to traditiorud ethico KEYITOJIE ·· ond pretty bewildere<I by JIO'W PAYI what is going on," may bt in 5~.! 5~! "for a very rough time" for -wit.r,._. ~.=.-:= the next decade. What modern youth must leam is that freedom , in. eluding sexual freedom, can also be a question of deciding "not to do things,'' he said. "'Then you are really freer, you haven 't got into any habits, you are not dependent WASHINGTON (UPI ) -A new Navy torpedo designed to operate like an underwater guided missile is <mting near- \VASHINGTON (AP ) chford said. "We did them a ly 10 times more than ex-pected and is already three ·r\velve volunteers have been favor by recalling them." years behind its production lh rown out oflhe Peace Corps He said more than 200 of the schedule, aecording to Rep. during the past four months 9,500 volunteers 0 ve r se a s William Moorhead, (D-Pa. I OUR BEST NYLON TIRE because of the ir public op. participated in the Nov . 15 He said the program for the Mark 48 torpedo should be position t-0 U.S. foreign policy, moratorium but ''they did ii stopped until Congress can especially the Vietnam \Var. the way they should. They take a look at it. Joseph H. Blatchford, Peace kept their dissent in-house. Moorhead said the General Corps director, says t he They went to their am· Accounting 0 ff ice has ! dise-0vered th at each torpedo vo unteer agency will continue bassadors and protested, some will cost $600,000, instead of an its policy of permitting dissent ot them leaving petitions at original estimate ot from bu t not if it is done publicly in the embassy ." $65,000 to $75.000 apiece. 'The a host nation. Blatchford wrote al letter to total 5,500-torpedo program all country directors Oct. 30 in ·11 · d "-$3 9 ''The voluntee r can express w1 win up cosu..g . which he said volunteers must b·11· h dd·• · d I his dissent," he told newsn1en 1 ion, e a =· 1nstea o be responsible for their ac-the e u t d ••M u1· \Vedncsday evening. "But he s ma e -m ton. can'L exploit his posilion.'' lions. Moorhead told UPI Tuesday Blatchford said volunteers "\Ve simply cannot have it the fi rst mark 48's we~ to be both ways; we cannot both turn~ out at \" t• b v.·hose tours of duty were Q,4 ·Tes igg ouse terminated since Oct. 30 in-claim to be apolitical and in-Corporation's Pit tsburgh plant el ude: three in Turkey, two in sert American foreign pol icy in March of 1968, but are not issues into the host country now expected until Apr1·1 E Ethiopia, two in 'l'hailand and -0 scene," he wrote. 1971 five in Ecuador. He also said a "In cases of a d v e r s e Th. to d · staff member in Turkey was e rpe o 1s designed to fired for the same reasons. political rea·ctions overseas, operate against a growing None was identified . impairment of volunteers' ef-Russian submarine threat. It to.lost of the volunteers kic k· {~ctiveness, or dam.age to host can be directed to a ta rget up country-United Stales g-::ive rn· to 25 miles from where it is ed out of the Peace Corps m e n t relations. se paration launched by means or a wire de1nonstrated durin g the Nov. may be required ." s a Id which is unreeled as it moves 15 moratorium against the Bla tchford. along. Vietnam \Var . but lhose inl;======================il 'l'hai!and were d r o p p e d because they threatene d to picket Vice President Spiro T. Agnew on his recent visit to that country. "Most of the ter1ninated were more interested l a de1nonstraling than they \Vere in doing their jobs,"' Blat- Nun1bers 1795 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD mcCormict LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY • 494-9415 • S•rvi119 Th• E11tir• South ~•tf Ar•• Game Upsets l'==========='I One Person VICTORVILLE (AP) Name, address, Social Securi-ty nu mber-you \\•ill nu in the blanks automatically on a tnyriad of forn1 s. Not Oscar Brown. Too ma ny agencies that don·t need to kno1v still de- mand a citizen's Social Securi- ty number says Brown, \\•ho's had mixed luck in \\'ithholding his. "~1ore than 153 governinen· lal agencies ... can get any in- fo rmation they v.•ant on any citizen from the Social Securi- ty office." asserts Bro\vn, a junior college teacher. He's trying to slo\v ll-'hat he ca!ls a trend tO\\'ard placing pe rso nal inrorrnationon file as •·public rce-0rrl" U1at is too readily avail able. So he refused to tell the number \Yhen he applied for a license as a notary public. or. fi cials denied the license. "If 1 had I.he money, 1'd suC' lhe secretary of state on that one," he sa.vs. Bul \vhen he left the number off his application for his pro1>- crty taxpayers refund , he got his monev anvway. •le asked San Bei-nardi.no Coun t y .<\ssessor John lf. Bevis about i [. "I kn o\V John."' snys Bro1\•n. "lie told me. '\Ve rlon't really nrcd it .'' \Vhen BrO\vn applied for a driver's license he Ir I e d ;inother tactic. 1n the blank for the number he \\TOie "con· fidcntia l.'' He got the license. 'l'wo a~cncies th al do know hi s number are Barstow ;intf Victor Valley colleges. whi ch deduct Social Securi t y payments from his salary. CENT.ER . ST. PATRiCKS DAY IS MARCH 11TH HONORARY IRISHMAN BUTTONS Ha llmark ST. PATRICKS OAY CENTER PIECES $150 HALLMARK'S · ST. PATRICKS PARTY GOODS lASU COYtRS MP.-.ltlS, PUIES CUPS. P!!IC[D FROM 50c ST. PATR ICKS DAY CAR DS ASSORTED SHAMROCK PRICED FROM CUT OUTS PLUS A LARGE SELECTION Of ST. PATRICKS LABELS.AND STI CKERS 1oc 8 DECORATED PLASTI C PARTY GLASSES FOR ST. PATRICK·s DAY ' $1 50 ST. PATRICK'S DAY WESTERN COLONEL CUP-ON TIES $ 25 ltlMf n. ,_TtlCl'S •nu" Jtl•S !'C81SI '"Ill CENTE R HALLMARK STATI O NERS --8UENA PARK SHOP.PING CENTER 1331 ON THE MALL, BUENA PARK COSTA MESA SOUTH COAST PLAZA 3333 SO. BRISTOL, COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON CENTER, HUNTINGTON BEACH 1111 BEDINGER Al'!., HUNTINGTON BEACH OPEN SUNDAYS :~QC'\-i.~-:0-lgo~l I '' FOR BEST MILEAGE YET! ' FOREMOST MILEAGE MAKER 11 4 PLY NYLON CORD TIRE 16.95 IS.Ckw•ll tvkless S2~1J pl" 1 . .37 fM.. tox ••II .W t ire SIZE 600-1 3 65().1 3 700.13 695-1 • 735-14 775-14 825-14 Pinto 23CB~' mobile tron$- ce iver ope rate s o n all 2 3 channels. features: 'S' me ter, squelch contro l, p ub lic ad· d ress system, externa l speak- er jack, more 1 • $129 1-2-3 Lube Job More tha n likely yo ur car i\ overdue for o n o il change. Our service sp ecial include\: o il t l-ioOge (5 qt. HD Oil), a new oil filter, plus o lube job. S.8 8 PRlct 16.95 16.95 17.95 17.95 18.95 19.95 21.95 ILACICWAl.L TUULISS FED. TAX SIZE 1.60 5.0.15 1.78 560-15 1.96 685-15 ' 1.94 735-15 ' 2.04 775-15 2.17 81 5-1 5 2.33 845-15 3' MONTH GU4•AHHI WITH 12 MONTH f•f l ll'lAiCU1UHT $1oevld •~1 '"'•"'-Hi11h Vol! boll••J f.,;1 (,,..1 "'"'°'' ••· <ll••i•I wi1hi~ 12 -'"• f,_, '"• .... "' pu .. h ..... ,_,. .... , • .....,., ..... " will fl,. ·~lou-d ''" of ttio190, ... ,,., 12 ,.,.,,,11, bwt p,;.., ... '"• ••t»r-•• .... do•• of tho •-•<1ft•oo, J, (.,....,...,Co. ,.,111 ropl.,o 1M l>o!toty t-Ofl°'4 ..,1, lor t~o potiocl of .,,...,.,o,h;o, Mud .,.. lfo.e 1v.,.,.1 ptl<o -1 IM Ii..,. of tOIYtf\, pto •Oto.I ....... ""'" _,_ __ ,., .. Foremost High Volt Ba ttery for sure starts Po we r up will-I Penney's Hig l-i Vo lt! It reel-la rges quickl y o nd slores up power. In mo$t sizes. 17.9 5 PRICE 16.95 17.95 18.95 18.95 19.95 21.95 21.95 FED. TAX 1.34 1.75 1.88 2.08 2.19 2.35 2.53 FO REMOST" P'e '"; • ., Heavy Duty Shock Absorben minimize the bumps and iohi of eve~ydoy driving; rnakeyo. feel liki you're riding in o new cor. 6.99 _ ...... ,, ..... Wheel Ali gnment Here's what we do: cCM"~ rect caster, comber, to.- in; re duce exce$Sive front e nd wear; e liminat• dangerous whffl pull; prolong the life-of yow ,;,... 7.95 THESE STORES OPEN SUNDAY TOOi 12 to 5 P.M. CA l'jOGA PARK HUNTI NGTON BEACH VEN TURA CH ULA VISTA MONTCLAIR .DOWNEY FULLERTON NEWPORT BEACH BUENA PAR K (°''"'o•ll<lo10.11) (CLOSED SUNDAYS! """ '""• I • • J Z DAILY PllOT Moftdl.J, Mvtb 16, 1970 MALES CAN BE TELEPHONE OPERATORS ALSO Mu stachioed Philip Grimes Mans SF Switchboard Troubled Youths Now Ca1i Get Quick Help People of all ages in Orange ty, 5M N. Anaheim Blvd., rounty \.\'ilh problems ranging Anaheim, 956-1900. from the need to blow off SL James E pis c op.a I steam by 1alking to someone Church. 3209 Via LI do, to the desire to \'>'ithdraw from Newport Beach , weekend pro· drugs. can no1~ find help gram for members, for in- through. 42 county·\.\'ide agen-formation call 675-0210. cies. Teen Help, 9445 Heil, Foun- Ahhough a few of the lain Valley, 83&-7279, 12 to 9 centers :irr publically funded. p.m. 1he majority are s1affed and 'J'ower of llope, 12141 Lewis, supported by 1 olunteers. and Garde n Gr o v c. 534~75, alt are open to people in counseling prov id e d by lrouble. ministers. . Here·s the complete list of lntercommunity Counseling Center, sponsored by lhc agencies: American Foundation o l Family Service Association Religion and Psychology, 12141 of Orange County, 405 W. 41.h Lewis, 8th floor, Garde n St.. Tustin. 838-7377. Grove, 638-5950. ~lental Health Associauon. Rap Group, YMCA 146 N. ~Ir. Green, 2215 N. Broadway, Gr a n d, 0 ran ge, 633-9622, Santa Ana, 542·7~9. Saturday nighl.'i. Laguna Beach Community Orange County ~·1 e di ca 1 Counseli ng Service, St. Mary's Center, Crisis Center. 24. Church. 428 Park A v e . , hours. 101 S. ?\la nc hester, La gu na Beach. 497-12S5, ti1on- Orange, 633-9393, ext 60. day and Wedn~ay .. 8:30 a.m, Chll d Guidance Center of to 4:30 p.m. At olher times Orange Count)'. 171E.18th St., phone 547-0033 Costa ~1esa. 646-7733 and at St. UC Irvine Student \Velfare .l osepti·s Hospital. ~ So. Center, Gateway Commons. Batavia SI.. Orange. 633-6140, Roo1n 107. 833-512fi, Monday Tuesday and Thursday, 8 a.m. through .f'riday, 10 a.m. to 6 lo 4 p.m. p m., open to UC! students Teen Challenge, 78 Plaza and students interested io at- Square. Orange, 6 3 3 - 3 0 O 0 1 tending UCJ, religious orientation. Friendly Center,-424 1 N, Melody land Drug Prevention Cypress St., O~ 532-1819. Center. 10 Freedman Way, A1onday to Friday, 9 a.m. to S .o\naheim, 778-1000, Tuesday p.m. Friday recreation night. 11ight Fell owship, Bib I e 7 to IO p.m .. and Saturdays 9 related. :1.m. to 12 p.m. Calvary Chapel or Costa .le\''ish Family Service of ~1esa, Charles Smith. Pastor, Orange County, 11412 Stanford Greenville a nd Sunflower. Ave., Garden Grove. 534-s270, Costa f\.1esa, 642-6783 or 545-h1onday to Fr1day, 9 a.m. to S 2121. p.n1. No ques tion as to religion. Orange County ~1 e d i ca 1 Ga rden Gro\•e Counseling Center, ti·lenlal Health Unit, Service, 962l Bixby Ave .. 101 S. h1anchesler, Orange, Garden Grove. 636·1060. ap- 633-9393 . Cltl. 521. 1>0intmcnts requested. Youth Problem Cen1cr, Suite HOTLINES 18. 33.."t E. 17th SI., Costa Mesa, Crisis Center, Orange Coun· 642-0032. ty f\.tedical Center, 633-9393, North Orange Cou nty Child ext. 60. (;uidance Cente r, 211 N. Melodyland Drug Prevention Pomona. Fullerton. 871-92&1 . Center. Anaheim. 778-1000. Catholic \\'elf are Bureau, no Youth Problem Cen t e r , question as to religion, 1612 Costa Mesa. 642--0032. Spurgeon St., Santa Ana. 54i· F'ree Clinic , Anaheim , 956- 0003: 11412 Stanford St.. 1900. <:arden Grove, 530-2980 and AcLiGn Center, Santa Ana, 315 3rd St.. Suite G, l lun-5-43-2323 tington Beach, 53!Hi601. People's Place, Pl acentia, Ca I i fornia Psychological 5211-4466. Clinic. Dr. Daniel Primac, Hotline, Ga rden Grove, 636- Psychologist, 2421 E. Chap-2424. nlan, Suite D, Orange, 6~ Operation Holline, L os 5150. Ala mitos, (213) 431-6402. Youth Ch allenge. P. 0 . Box Helpli ne, Mission Viejo, 830- 107. South Laguna, 492--0717 2522, 4 to 12 p.m. and 11 7 Coronado, San fish, 642-6060. temporary Clemente. 499-1931 1 religious -etnergency welfare service, orientation . }\arbor area. House ol Miracles. 1636 1':. Dialogue, La Mirada, {213 ! 4th St , S;inta Ana. religious 944-1421. orientation. Newhope Co u n s e I i n g Don't Let Man's Voice Bother You SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - When you dial uou for operator and a man answers, don't hang up. You will be speaking to Philip Grimes, only male operator currently employed by the Pacific Telephone Co. Crimes, 22. and mustached, has been on the job two weeks at the Stiner Street central of- fice. along with 3S girls. He likes it, and the other operators like having him around, but he says some callers giggle or snort when he answers, Some ask. "Is~ a strike on or something?" Grimes said he is no pioneer or crusader. He needed a job, saw an advertisement !or operators and applied. Under the Civil Rights Act, sex discrimination ·in hiring is forbidden, so he was put lo ":ork . Grimes said it.· is "in- teresting." but he does not in- tend to make it a career. ( Ma·ke Mint . ~ ' "\. A Museum? SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - San Francisco's Old Mint, sought by San Francisco State College as a downtown cam- pus annex, should be used In- stead as a Western brancb·of Smithsonian Institution, . a special committee asserts. The group. appointed by Robert W. Finch, secretary of health, education and welfare, said Wednesday that "if regents of the Smithsonian ran to act on the Old Mint as a Western counterpart,'" the ap- plication or San Francisco State should be accepted. The recommendation added that a final decision should be withheld until Dec. 1 to allow Lime £or a Smith s oni an response. Beach Pilot Given Award A llunlington Beach pilot. Louis A. Cummaro has been presented the safe p i Io t cen ificate of the National Pilots Association. Cummaro of 6321 Florida Drive begau his pilot career in 1934 and has logged 2.692 ac- cident free hours to qualify for the NPA award. Gospel L..iflhl Club, 116 f\.1ain Ser.iice. Orange, 639-4.673. SL, Jluntington Beach . 536-•-;===================::;· 9130, rcligioos orientation. l Community Mental Health C Gns u It at ion Servitts, \Vednesday nights, Assistance League 11ouse, 526 Glenneyre St , La guna Beach, 633·9393 ext .. a93 or 521. Free Clinic of Orange Coun· Agu l(han, \Vifc Expecting Bahy LONDON (AP) -'fhe Daily Express :says the Aga Khan, 33·ycar-old leader of 20 million lsmaili Ato:slen1s, <lnd his British bride expect a baby in September. HAL AEllSCHE• HEARING AIDS (ltlltMI Alltll A111,.1flt•t-' NO fALl!:SNiliN 3409 E. COAST HWY. CORO NA DEL MAR .., "'"'°"'"""' 675-3933 Kid s ... hav e breakfa>t with th e Easter Bunny < .r1·.11 it111 ... MP<'I .ind r .il \\ 11h thr lJ~tc1 Run!l\'. l'!uo;,, hCJnr,1 -10-goodn1•,, n1.1~i1 i.in•. ~o1turdJy. M.1rc.h ~I ~I ,1nd ::!Ath. ') 1111 JUJ n1.1'lca-.('\.J ll tor1e!oc..'r\.JltOn,. il.10 ,1t thr n1,1y (;I) lt-.1100111 ''"~ O toulh t0•1l pl•1•, l•ft tlie90 fr11w•v •l b•i11ot, coi+• 111 •1•, 5~11·9l lt: ii.op ,.,o.,cl•v thr11 t•lur· cl•v 10 ,,,.,· 10 9:JO P·"'·· u1,,c1,., ~0011 "iii 5 P·"'· MAVCO \ ., TH·E co.N,-EM'PORARY ' KNIT • , . ~COSTUME ... ' \ ' longer jackets, low full plcal s, supple knil of pure polyesler by Bulle, masler kn illers The jackels fall lo fingerl ip lenglh. Flauer ing. Shaped 10 fil as only kn il ca n fit Pleals are in mo1ion. Flu id. Full. Pure polyesler knil means easy -ca re plus wrinkl~ shedding,, shape relaining beau1y. From our collection of contemporary Buues 6-16 60.00 . a.short sleeve dress wilh while piped jackel in pink or ··,lliye: · b. ~l~less navy clre-.~ \\ ilh n,~, v, topp<'r ,1nd while : · '11'1ped jacket. c..short •sleeve.navy and while. plea1ed dress with . red dqubleibreas1ed jacket with scarf • lo"' m,1y' co cosrnopolitJn Ylop 96 '· • ... • f I I • m1y co south coesl pltze, sen diego fwy. at bristol, cos lo mesa , 546-932) shop mond1y . thru 11turd1y I 0 t .m. to 9:30 p.m., sundoy noon 'Iii 5 p.m, MAY CO ~"'"'lr"'""!"""!"'!..,..:T"r"i,,-,M,..,..T-:..-..,.,-...,...,....,..,,,.._,,,,,...,,'"7,,, ,...,.,,,,....,.,..,,.,.,.,,.,,,,,..,,,r.-,·,,,..,-,-.,,..., ••.• ~ ,• : •, -.-. -.~. -.~. -~---,-.-.~,-. ~""·.-•-.-r-•-.0-·1-••-.·-.-. -,,-,.-, .. -.-·-~-·-,..--irr·,,..r--r»o::-> • ,.,. • ....... ~• .,, • ..,,,.,,..,,.,,,,.,, .. I I i • . ., .... FOUR-WAY COOPERATION -Three guilds took advantage o! ·the Festival of Arts' mailing list to diStribute ticket applications . lor summer events. Heiping stuff mailers into envelopes with the Festival's applications are (left to right) the Mmes. \V. F. Hannen· Keyed to Bargains Lyric Opera Offers Off beat Selections It looks like movin& day •.• and it will be, 1000. Only the moving will involve hundreds of items of clothing, housewares, furniture and reading material. Destination for the collection of white elephant..s and unwanted treasures is the American Legion Hall in Laguna Beach which will Merve as headquarters for an anriuaJ flea market next weekend. The rummage sale is a project of the Opera League of the Lyric Opera Association. For the past month. members have been busily collecting bundles of rummage for the sale and marking prices. Now they are ready to offer their wares on Friday and Satur· day. March 20 and 21, from 9:30 a.m. until 4 p.m. Merchandise will be displayed in 10 sections, each division headed by a member of the league. Coordinators of the event are the J\1 mes. C. Sidney Johnston Jr .. pre sident, Robert La\vson and Fred· erick Oliver . Section chairmen are the ~tmes. \Villiam H. Bruggere. women's clothing ; Zachary Malaby, ~n'1 clothing; John Atkinson, children"s clothing; \Vill iain Hinwood .1ft1gerie and sportswear; Robert Law son and Anthony Orlandella, toys and games. Also heading se<:tions are the Mmes. John Bermel, books, maga- 7.ines and records: Stanley Eichstaedt, jewelry : E. R. Tamblyn. Jin· en and material; Thomas Armstrong and George H. K. Bryant, furn- iture. and \Vales \Vallace , house wares. .. ... ' ' ' ~men IARIARA DUARTE, 494-9466 M ..... t~, ~Ml " .. 011 • ,,,. 11 Stamp of Success Guilds Use Mail Lists .A. spirit of community cooperation benefit! every· one. So it is with three Laguna Bea~h1 organizations \Vhich have teamed up \vith the FestivaJ of Arts in a project with mutual benefits. Taking advantage of the extensive mailing tist of the festival, guilds representing Laguna Beach Civic Ballet, Lyric Opera Association and Community Play~ er5 have devoted coun tless hours to th e project of send~ ing ti cket appLicalions to the Festival's ti cket mailing list which includes 30 ,000 people . The fe stival. \Vhich helps sponsor many dese rvi ng cultural organizations, provided its list and cost o! mailing to the guilds. In a recent week·long cf.fort. members of the guilds took shifts in the festi val board roo1n in order to get the job done. An average of 10 \VOmen per day vol un· leered their services and enjoyed making ne\v friends as '"ell . Lyric Opera under the direction of l\trs. T. K. Sun and Community Players \\'ith a guild headed by l\1 rs. D~nald Vanderbilt jointly \viii sponsor the production "Oliver" in July in the Laguna ~1oulton Playhouse. The ballet troupe, aided by a guild under the pres· lden cy of Mrs . \Villiam Meyer. \\'ill present Balle t Alfresco S"tarring Ed\vard Villella of the Ne'v York City Ballet in Irvine Bowl on Sept. S. Proceeds from the two-day sale will support the 1970 season nf the Lyric Opera As sociation which will stage "Oliver" in Irvine Bowl July 3 t.brough Aui. 30. A MOVING EXPERIENCE -Opera League mem-Legion Hall. The sale items. housed in a vacant shop, are being marked and sorted for the annual sale Friday and Saturday, March 20 and 21. bers (lef-tb right ) Mrs. C. Sidney Johnston Jr. and J\1rs. Robert La,vson pack rummage for a move lo , ; . Son Earns 'A' Parents.' New Morality Short Course • an 1n DEAR ANN LANDERS : h1y husb;ind and 1 were amused by the teller from the mother whosl! college son announced he wali bringing a girl home. for the 1\-eekend. The boy said It would bf: \'erj · hon~l and maturt of his partnls U they would allow him and his girl to occupy his bedroom a\ home since "we are ahac.ked "e' here at school." Ou r son. Bill. asked us the same qul!s· tlan just bclore Christmas. Here is how Y.'trhandltd it. My husband and i v.•ere slunncd 1l Bill'1 r~cst but we tried nol to sbow it. Wt totd him w~'d talk it over 11nd let htm know. \\le hit on a pl1n, tnll1ted the tooperaUon of a neighbor couple and call· ed BiU back. Hi.! father said, "Brinl the ANN LANDERS ril noce,pce. ''\Vhy not -il's the v.·ay the 11'bi"ld is going. isn"l it?" Bill replied. "But you and Mom are decent. respcc- lable people. Thal stuff isn't for you!" My husb<1nd C()Untercd \vlth. "Vou'r(' a ~· ~ • .. , .idece<lt perpi, aren't yYU ?'" \Vhy is It OK, , ... 8111 tut in:-•1t -get the idea. Dad - girl. We'll do our be.st to adjust to the 'new moraUty.' •• , , We met Bill and ·his l(lrl at the airport. She was weartna: a Iona: Keattr, no akirt, sandals, be.ids and the was clTT)'ina: 1 1Ullar. our son looked ju!t like her. When we drove up to out p.lace htr only com· ment wa1, "Somt Mt up." We had invited the neJt1!oor neighbors (I'll call them Ted and Allee) to dinner Jane sleeps at Aunt Ruth 's tonight." and the sis: of us got along well. AftC!!' din· Not another word was said . Jane d1d ner my husband took Bill aside and said, sleep al Aunt rtuth's. At breakfast the "I'll Bet. you in the mornlnt . I'm going followin g morning Bill gave us some odd next door to sleep with Alice. Ted is looks. I'm 11ur~ he figured the who le slttping here with you r mother." Bill thing out during the nigh t. said, ''I beg your 1>1rdtln, ,..;H you repeat · .1• you want to 1irlnt this leltcr you ha,·e that !" t.ty husband repeated the stale· our permission. Sign ii -SHORT men!. BIU grabbe1Hlim·11"1haidc"ll11<h • CO.UllSF. IN SHORT Jlll.,LS. N.J. you don't mean It. Why that's terrib1e -DEA R SHORT COURSE: Tbaaka for you can't do such a thing right ln our own the day brightener. It's a honey. house ... " ~t)' husband asked In all in· llEAR ANN LANDERS : It happened again last night and I am rurious. Every lime I go Lo a lu ncheon or a cocktail par· ty, some \\"ell meaning female pulls me aside. grab!! the hem of my dress and folds it under three or four inches to show me how much "better'' I would look if I \VOrt my skirt shorter. r am ne arly 60 years old and have na 11· lusions about myself. t.fy legs are OQt my best feature . M~ hemline is I couple or inches !~er than fa shion decrees. So what? I llkt It that wa y. Perhaps Jr you print this letttr :iOme of my friendJ will see It and keep their hands orf my hems. I mi;:hl add, AM, tr the minisktrted old ci'tiwS could see themselves as ot.htn stt them, they'd 101.rer their hemllnes instead ot en· C()Uraging others to lift theirs. -CLlN· TON, 10\VA DEA R CLINTOr\: I appl1H your In· dependence. Tbt cor11 in Iowa ls 1upposed to ht ltigb 11 aa elepbant'1 eye by the 40! of July, bul Uae akJr11 doo.'I Uvc IO bf: ap there! nrhat is French kissing? Is it wrong? 1Vho should set the necking limits -tht boy or the girl ? Can 1 shotgun wedding 8Ucteccl ? Read Ann Landen' booklet "Teen11g:e Sex -Ten \Vaya to Cool lt.'1 Send 50 cenls In coin and 1 long, self·ad· d~ssed. stamped envelope. Ann Landers will be glad lo help you with your problems. Send them to her in cart of the DAI.LY Pl.LOT, enclosln& J . seJ£.addressed, stamped envelope. l • • • •, , J"-'4,__D_l_IL_Y_P_ll_D_T ________ M_ .... _1~·-M_•~_h_l6~,_19_1_0 2 I . . . . . . . '. ~. April Date Announced During . 1 Fam_ily Party ' Jl,fr. and Mrs. Ernest F. Cla.son hosted a dinner party in their Huntington Beach home to announce t h e betrothal of their daughter, Donna Cll.!lon to Raymond A. Naylor JI J. J\,1iss Clason Is a graduate of Hunlington Beach Higb School and attended Orange Coast C:Oll ege. She ls enrolied at CaWornla State College at Long Beach where she is stu· dying for her teaching creden- Ual. She ls • Little Sister of Sigma Chl Sigma and t~ fratenUty's ~theart. Her fiance, IQll. of Mrs. · Lois Naylor of Huntington Beach and Raymond A • Naylor of Applegate, attended HB Hl&h, OCC and graduated wilh a bachelors degree from CSCLB. He played •arslty OONNA CLASON football at OCC and Long Brld•to-bt Beach State and is a member ·of Sigma Chi Sigma. This summer be will enter rled April 18, In the Lutheran the Air Force Pilot's program. Church of the ResurrecUon, The couple plarf to be mar· Huntington Beach, Campus Life Viewed By Dean of Students 2 2 . . . . ~- Peering Mom Shows' em ' Around She Can Do If AMONG United Air Lines employees h o nor e d for outstandiq: achlevemtnt in J969 were G. W. Humphrey of C<!rona del Mar and Frank Wheelock of Westminster. Humphrey was cited for an uceptiooal aalea effort and Wheelock ·was honored for outstanding work In handling Important groups trav•Uas oe the airline. Trophies, s c r o l l 1 and monetary awards W ere presented during • dMner in Los Angeles. Four ae.mest.era and a 3.19 grade point average later, Mrs. Wlltlam Hatfleld·of HW)- tington Beach has proved to family and friends l h a t "Mom" indeed can go back to ICbool. Mother or three, Mn. Hat· field decided to go back to school to prepare herself for a return to the work world in the field of bu.Uneu ad- minlstraUon. Her obstacles were many. Her study hablta were naty. There was more to team than ever, and her chlldren viewed the whole Idea as incredulous, funny· and embarrassing. But her perse\lerance hu paid oU in the form of a '300 • ~ • cub award in the Bank of SPECTATORS at the Santa America Junior Co 11 e I e , Anlt« tfandicap were Mr. 1n4 Business Awards Program. Mrs. Clement L. Hirsch of 11At'· flr1t the kids dldn'{ MEETS CHALLENGE Mrs . H•tfleld Newport lleach, who watched think 1 was serious. The their entries, Snow ~Sportlng, ~younger ones w t:r e em·r====:::::::::::::::::::;: and Figo_pero, in •dd!Uon to ~ bvrassed. Now t think they '!njoyini a Iavbh lunch 1n the are pleased and a little proud. flower-filled clubhouse. 111ere's nothing like achievirig to gain acceptance," she said. ELEcrED by Della Delta In addlUon to her studic!s, Is there a weight control ~)' program that ... really work1? ' · Delta as representative' to t))6 Mn. Hatfield was worked l.!I a As.soclated women Students at volunteer assistant in a school lht University of ArU.onl ii library, assisted with church ChrlsUe Smith, Uugtiter of projecU, served as • Cub EducaUon and YOU.DI people a member of the Community Mr. and Mt,. Haviland Smith Scout den mother and worked will be examined when the Human Relations Board and of Newport Beach. with womtn's clubs. WEIGHT ti WATCHERS. ,r. LEMONS AREN'T ONLY ON TREES -Members of the Women's Auxiliary of Mechanical Engineers arc gathering boutique items for a March 19 Lemon Tree Auction. P lacing items on a lemon tree are (left to right) Mrs. Jack Ritchie and Mrs. J oseph C. \.Vidmont Jr. Th e white elephants will be auctioned off following a sm orgasbord luncheon in Anaheim. Hun Ung ton Beach Branch of YMCA and a Civil Service She is a junior, a phy1lcti She is: the mother of Bob, 19, American AssociaUon ° f consultant. He .is a member of education major and Is -.ctJve a student at UCLA; Tom, 15, a University Women meets at 13 organizations including the In the Desert Mermaids 1wlm sophc)more at Marina High Some t1lking, som1 1isl1nlr1g 1ncf 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, March Academy of Religion and Men· club and on the concerts com-School, and Debbie, 13, an • program th•t wo~k•. tM 18, In the Mercury Savings and tat Health and N a t I o n a I mlttee of t he Associated eighth grader at Springview FREE IROCHURl-<All 135·5505 Loan building. lif"R~e~b~a~bl~lita~tlo~n~A~s~SOCl~·a~ti~on~.--S~t~ud~en~t..~.i;;;----r--~S~ch~oo~I.~------~~~~~~~~~~ Speaking will be John W .. Shalnline, dean of students at Going, Going, Gone Beetl~ Tea Adds Spice CaWomla State C:Ollege at ..cJ6 Long Beach. He will d1scuss 'fj.P Bidders Pick Stored Lemon · The second annual Beetle Drive and English Tea featur- ing homemade delicacies or British origin and a boutique stall will be sponsored by the Cavalier Chapter of I he problems in college that an administrator might be caned upon to handle, including cam· pus confrontations. Going ont'C, going twi«. going three times \\'arns aUC· tioneer ~1rs. Arth ur E. Giesler as she lowers the gavel on lemons (white elephants ) for members and guests of lhc \Voman's Auxiliary of tJ11• Amer i c an Sociel.y of ?i,1echanical Engineers. Los Angeles Section. The color scheme also v.•ill be Daughters of the British Dean Shainline, father of five children, has ~ a teacher of psychology nd has done family, child a mar· riage counseling. Drug abuse consultant, he has written numerous articles such as "The Dangers of LSD : Do We Have the Answers?" and co- authored a book, ''Drug Abuse and You," with George D. carried out 1n lhe lemon tree Empire. motif. The annual event will begin t.1rs. R-Oben \Y. Coc kre ll is at l p.m. on Wednesday, chairman of the event with March I&, in the Newport Otmos. Dean Shainline is acti ve in the community as an officer in the r.1ental Health Associ ation, ~1 rs. AHi·ed A. l. i n g 0 . Hivicra. Newport Bench. Assistants will include lhe IVomen are \\'elcome a.id i\1mes. Ellis Sharkey Jr., rnay call t.1rs. Edgar April, Arthur Bender. Burnie Craig, S45.{)559, or Mrs. Jay Gracia. Charles Freberg, B r e n t 0 n 968-2372, for information. M l Spirited bidding will take place at the annual March benefit smorgasbord, Lemon Tree Auction, al noon on Thu rsday, J\1arch 19, in Hansa House, Anaheim. Buck, Franklin Fowler J r., The chapter meets the first esa eague Jack RHchie, Joseph C. Wkl· Tuesda y of each mon lh at 8 L.a Leche League meets the moot Jr. and Winchell M. p.m. "fhose or Brltlah birth second Tuesday •t 7:00 p.m. Parsons. who would like lnrorm~lon Mrs. ff, W. Moore, M5-4M9, Proceeds will go toward one may call ?t1rs. Joseph Schulist, will answer q-u e s t I on s J\lrs. Giesler, assisted by "'1rs. Clay Colley, will auction off items from a bright green and yellow demrated table. of three national scholarships __ 51_s.<_i_14_. ________ ,._1_a_rd_ln_t_1oc_a_tl_on_. ____ 11 or student loan runds for un. ,- dergraduate and g r a du a t e students <1f mechanical engineering. "' ESQUIRE SOCKS DOWNY TOUCH SWEEPSTAKES EVERYONE WINS FIRST PRIZE! • Congr atulation~ lo everyone who enters t~e Downy Touch contest. · You all win first pri ze: o big, colorful Mort Druc ker fu n poster. O ur apologies if you win second prize. AH you 'll get is o 62 hp MG midget sports car. Our condolences if yoo win third prize, o Yamaha motorcycle. Or fourth prize, Panasonic radios. Or fifth prize, Columbia record albums. Hurry tO the Dawn y Touch displa y in the men's department. While you're there, get the most com· lortable socks on two feet. In any of 55 great colors. At only $1 . .50. You hove only till Moy 15 to win i 1rst prize. Second prize MG Sporti Car Open 01ily 9,30 -6:00. Fridays Tiii 9:00 IN COSTA MESA IM DC~AftTMLNT STQI\&--1116 NEWPORT BLVO, At Harbor Blvd. Intersection SUNSHINE FROSTINGS AND STREAKS Reg. 25.00. 15.00 . / Be gla mour touched. H i!!ve yo~r .. frosted o r streaked in the most Cl!!zzlinq way. Frosting s. Reg. 25.00 , I S.00. G lamour touch stre ak. 10.00 complete with set. EASTER PERMANENT SPECIALS Petite Salon Pe rmanent, I 0.00 M-o :.ter Stylis ts Permene nt, 15.00 Both complete with cut and set. We specialize in l 'Oreal Tints , Duort Perma end children's haircuts. A sk to see our ne w hai rpieces and wigs. Beou ty Solo n, bO I ~R.C>AD"V\TA.Y ANAHEIM .... "· l •lif 1n•u1 NSW-OIT " 'ttllltll .... ,,. f44.U U HLIHTUtOTOH llACH 1111 l llRf'f ATt, ,,w,u, a galaJCy of spring fresh better, new fabrics, perfect for Easter dresses dacron jl()l~r~lrr l·o11,,n "PRINCES S" LENO SOLI DS $12' yd. EYELASH CLIP VOILES d11.cron IH1lyr~trr,,·ot1,,11 '1" . yd. '1" yd. BULLSEYE PIQUE combf>d cotton ~ollds LINEN PRINTS & SOLIDS $1" yd. $20 '" BONDED SUITINGS rRyon l\nd ~tlk fAl'f'. 11.N>t~t" t rlcot llnln~ -EMBROIDERED DOTIED SWISS polyeslr1· attd 1·01 !on $291 yd. BONDED LACE /)()lycslt'I' ~ t'Olton, 1vashrihle •f./"/ 14'' \\ 1rlr $32' yd. •II wo11ho1ble -111 4S" wide lll'Ctpt lie• NEVER IRON EMBOSSED CRISKAY PRINTS WITH MATCHING SOLIDS . great designs on pastel or white 1 oo•;. cotton 36" wide 9itar. washable "whispy" PRINT backgrounds colorful mod end contemporary designs on fortrel polyester and cotton sheers 44" /45" wJde CJIHll'. washable s11' yd. SPANKIN' NEW BONDED EASTER SUITINGS fabulous spring colors end weave s in plaids, novelties, and fancies, many with ya rn dyed solid matchmates turbo acrylic face octtatt tricot Mck 54"/55" widrh s39a yd. IMPORTED SCREEN PRINTS ON MACHINE WASHABLE 100% POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS big, bold designs in mod spring 1 colors on a never-iron fabr ic compare ot $6.98 to $7.98 yd . nr11 quollry tun bolts 45" wkl• s4'' yd. DACRON POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS SOLID COLORS posh colection of weaves for interesting self color designs H" {58" wldrtis machlfte wosh tum~e dry s591 yd. SOUTH COAST PLAZA -COSTA MESA HUNTINGTON CENTER -HUNTINGTQN BEACH l kl5TOL AT SAN Dll~O P•llWAT -141°111' IDIN61l AT llACH IOULIYAllD -lt7-lllJ Open Mond1y thru Friday 10 'til 9 -Saturd•y 'tll 6 -Sunday 12·5 .. -.. _., ... ' •• ¢ ' -- Afternoon Ceremony Links Costa Mesans An afternoon service ·in the Comn1unlly Church Congrega. Ilona! or Corona del Pi-tar unlled in marriage Cayle Allee llitlner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. •1a'rry Aubrey Miner o( Costa Mesa, and John 11arper Sherrill, son of Maj . (rel.) and Atrs. Ernest Ward Sherrill, also or Costa Mesa. The single ring rilc.'i were performed by the Rev. Philip J\lurray. Attending the bride was her sister li:1iss Janis Audrey ~ J\1iner as maid or honor and J\t.iss Katherine Carol Hill, bridesmaid. The bencdlct's. bro 1 her Gregory Alan Sherrill was best man. with ushers Ed MRS. JOHN SHERRILL Miner and Philip Bunn J r, ' Two Teas Steeping DAILY P:ILDT J 5 Wives M6del Aztec Fashions An Aztec theme will prevail when the Aeronulronlc W1ve1 "Two for tea " might well be Club presents its s pr I ng the motto or lhe Valley View luncheon and fashion.. show 1n Federated Rep u b Ii can the Balboa Bay Club \\'ed· Women's Club. nesday, March 18, at ll a.m. T\¥0 membership teas are Among members mode llni; being planned for Wednesday, are the Mmes. C. If. Carl!on, March 18, according lo Mrs. o. w. Erickson, \V. A. Gan· Jack \Vallace, membership N tt F s chainnan. non, G. O. Mc u , . • All area women are invlled Masino and H. \V. Schaefgen, to attend either tile 10 a.m. af-a.JI of Costa f.i1esa, and R, \V. fair in the Seal Beach home of L.ackie of El Toro. Piifrs. Gerald Sparks. or the 8'-==T=ic=k=et=s=a=r=e=l3=·=50=.===. p.m. gathering planneJ byl·· Mrs. Clifford Bos, Cypre55. AddlUonal Information may be obtained by calling Pttrs. Wallace, 897-7488. The general area served by the organization includes West Garden Grove, CoUege P a r k East and Cypress. CM Auxiliary THINK EASTER THINK South of the Border, Down Tiiuana Way The new Mrs. Sherrill was graduated from New p 0 rt The Lhird Thursday of the Harbor fligh School a n d College. He ls stationed at month members of t h e -J u- V.iva! Lake Forest will be the theme of a ~1exican style membership potluck in the Serrano Adobe on \Vednesday , March 18. Returning from south of the border with decorations !or the 11 ; 30 a .in. luncheon sponsored by Lake Forest \.Vomen's Club a re (left to right) the Mmes. Paul Jfarrison, Ray Van Aus· EASY-CARE Uii/ortnj "JUST FOR YOU" Sm •rt fash ions , care.free fabrics fe a. turin9 8ARCO and other femou1 brand names. M11ny 1tyle1 to choose from. $8 98 Some ill low•• • Cathy's U_niforms 1767 Newpo<t llvd. IARCO Costa M..., 6-46-S311 Hurry in ... professional portraits of you or your child NowlhPRICE • any size, any finish, any quantity! HE.RE ARl:. JUST .-\ FE\V EXA~I PLES OF T llE S.\VL,GS \'OU C . .\N ~!AKE: ur. One 8110 1reytonc pcr1rait~······ .s10 Thrc1. .5x7 ereyto11t: portr•its •••.•• •24 an . 3331 Ext. 283 Photograph Studio, 1st f1oor • "'~ 15 IJZ • dal. president , E. E. Vonderahe and Thomas Bender. \Vomen interested in attending may sign up to bring a f>otluck dish in the Lake Forest Beach and Tennis Club. The membership is open to all Lake Forest women. N ~-A' o 8 American Legion Auxiliary . Orange Coast College and at· Oiwn 1r rorce a~-Cos~ t.endcd California State College Th~ cou~le plan a <lelayedlfiCAmerlcan Legion Hall, at8 Jltlln tnM "Cdd l l 5 F · Weslct1!1 Pli li N•-..JIOrltr 1~11 at Long Beach. lier Jfusband 1 __ •'_.:.:.'"..:g:..::.":::P..:0::..:.•=n:..:.:rc.:•:::n'=~::'°:::_· -".P::·m:::· ________ _:==========' u·as graduated from Hamilton Township High School in Ohio and attended Orange Coast Horoscope Leo: Compliment Ahead TUESDAY \Velcome contacts, challenges. places. MARCH 17 Create -follo\v through on SAG11TARIUS {Nov. 22_ firsl impressions. f\1eaningful Dec 21 ) s d s By' SYDNEY Ol\IARR conipliment com~ from one · : tu Y c 0 r Pi 0 meo;sage. Your thought.o; range ARIES {1\larch 21·April 19 ): who means much to you . rar and .wide. Gel some of Creative forces seek outlet. VIRGO IAug. 23-Sept. 221: Lhem on paper. You gain Don't choke ba ck need for Look behind the scenes for recognition by demoMtrating sell-expression. Give and you vital answers. Key is lo know sincerity of belifs _do so. also will receive. Drean1 vou that surface indications could CAPIUCORN (Dec. 22.Jan. ha ve can become a reality. be deceiv1ns. 19): Don't battle emotions. TAURUS (April 20.f\lay 20): LIBRA (Scpl. 23-0ct. 22): Understand drives -follow Concentrate on essentials. You Pressure exisls. but thi s through on desires. can find an swers wh ich enhan· enables you to find oul who AQUARIUS (Jan. 2().feb. ce sense of security. Don't really cares -""'ho is fair-18): Lie low: play waiting give anything awa y. Value weather friend . Success is in· . game. Be a shrewd observer. possessions; build self-est~m. dicated . Proceed kooy,·ing that Accent on partnership, mar· GE~llN I 1f\1ay 21.June. 20): oid will come from unusual riage, legal contract. Don't al- ~lations y,•il!1 brothe r s , S\lurce. tempt to be your own la\li')'er. ~tsters. others very close are SCORPIO (Oct. 2.1-Nov. 21 ): Improve public relations. accented. Study Tau r 0 5 Spotlight on career, prestige. PISCES (Feb. 19·March 211): message. You have to protect possible promotion. What you Take care of yourself -in· yourself. Some could unkTIO\V· do gains Wider-and more eludes proper diel. exercise ingly hurt you. Get proper favorable -allention. Take and positive thoughts about perspective. long-range view. You 're going family , associates. CANCER (June 21.July 22): 1r--------;;;i;;;;;;i;--;;;i;;;-------.: fl.1 oney. personal possessions -··'ti are ~poUighted. fliany today E.f' 11 scramble for a new project, fall prey lo fad s and fanCies. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)' Cy- cle high; take in ilia ti ve . Members Tell Truth Tru th '!''ill be defined by members when Gamma Alpha 1 Nu Chapter, Beta Sigma Phil meets at 8 p.m. •Wednesday, March 18, in the Fountai n Valley home of fl-lrs. Rei r.1cDonald. I The proi;ram will h e Substance for the Art of Life : 1 The True and "'ill b e 1 presen ted by ~trs. r-.1cDonald. I Plans for a boy,•ling and pizza p11rty Saturday. Marchi 21. 11·ill be discu~ed. and n1embcrs will vote on officcr~1 nominated during the last meeting. They \\'ill take up their official tasks during the l firsl me>eting in J\.1ay. • LrMITED OFFER ~-JOIN NOW SPECIAL 20 VISITS$20 LIMITED OFFER PROGRAM INCLUDES • 20 Visits • Heated Pool e Baby Slttln9 • Whir! Pool • Sun Room • Swhr.ming Lessons • s1 ..... lath • s.v .. -• Mcnsoge • Drnsln9 looths • PtnOflClllztd Covrws GARDEN SQUARE HEALTH CLUB 9S62 GARDEN GROVE BLVD. Transferees interested in visiting the mceling may con- tact f\lrs. Ross Cooper, 546-1 4129. GARDEN GROVE S37-5410 • ' ' Due to the Tremendous Response P11tterns Unlimited, Inc., Is Pleased to Announce Th1t we Will Remain In ANAHEIM for 4 More Days with the lORICINAL lUROPEAN"COLDEN RULE' METHOD OF PATTERN DRAFTING Accla imed by Millions throughout the World!!! J.n ll"•tu inu metl-.od w!\id1 so11nd1 unbeUewcible, yet eJ,..,,,.0111 yeou ol 1lvdy -j1.111 reod 111 J1Vmber ond tlrow a dot. No l'll t d lor Y"'ll•I of l.or<ung. Gi" Ml ONE HOUR 11".J .,.... "''II ,1,.g .., Jtkl ho ... d11•91'f•I lll'ld '"'Oth1~11 .. ""O"I i.o~, "t O•td o W1!1m lo lflablt )'Olil lo drcoft pone'"' wrih o"'r TWO inorow•t-"''. lrx ,..,... o•<d ony -"'~' ol yo..., lo,.uly "' O"J' •t>t! 1"ii 11111., ;, o proYtn W(<tn the "'"'kl -· olld • 1'0••!19• "' -..t to ..., ...... _ AN OPPORTUNITY YOU CAN'T AFFORD TO MISS! "SEEING IS 8EllEVING" ! ! I At/ EQulpmPnt Available at G.J.as~ °""'""d•o•io• ft• .50r OCMONSTRA'TfONS THRE£ TIMES OA!l 'f IOAM 2PM 7:lOPM Tuesday, M"rch 17th thru Frid•y, Mitch 20th HOW ARD JOHNSON'S MOTOR LODGE , 1380 S. Horbor ot Santo AM Freeway Directly across front DIM1ey1and (NO TELEPHONE CALLS-Pl~SE) ~pring Preview Special Famous "Arrowback" Chairs .'I .. L. HITCflCDO<, lliMrcocitJ'YILUM'lllll!.. Wt.IRAJ!TJD,0 This month only Regularly $39.00 Au th.entic colonial pieces of Biggar quality ••• that's Hitc hock's history·rich "Arrowbock" chairs, patiently crafted in the manner of on 1818 original ••• with hond·opplitd fl o ral stencil, and on autumn-finished seat. Come and see the rest of our selection ••• a ll from the truly great furniture makers of America. New spring selec- tion s ore now on display at oil three J. H. Biggar stores. SANTA ANA, Main at E~yenth 547-1621 Santa Ana Store Open Monday Evenings PASADENA -POMONA -SANTA ANA • • r ---· • • . -. -,.... ..... as .. .... . . . . . ' ... , .. . . a a a a 2 2 ---212• .......... ··~··· . . ... JI DAILY PILDT Mondoy, Match lb, 1910 Horry Truman's --Daughte r 'President's Job-Thankless' By PATRICIA McCORMACK NEW YORK (UPI) - Marcaret Truman D a n I e I doesn't want any ot her lhree .sona to be PresJdent of the United States. Tbe lids, now ages 3 to 12, wlll have lo lake their mother's word for what kind of a job the presidency is. "!l 's a difficult , thankless job that gell morfl and more complicated." lhe only child of former President }larry S. Truman said. fi.trs. Danlel, chB'rmlng and talka.Uve while 6he tourea a New York exhibit on The Trum11n Era, also "'as asked If she had any advice ror Julle Nlxon Eisenho"·er and Tricia Nixon. She 1ugg'ested they ·'enjoy it (the celebrity atat us}.-look at hliitory and then forget about it." ~lrs. Daniel said the one thing she "'lshed for, while an occu pant or the White House, was "a Jillie more privacy." She gets plenty of that these days. Cal> drivers recognize h,r but, in general, s.he ha~ all the privacy she '"'ants 111 New York "This city Is great for that," i;he said . ·'The only time r saw 1 people slop and stare was .dur· ing the eclipse. They were all looking at the sky." BEAUTY SAVINGS! loolc ""'" in 1 fl.t111in9 f1 1kion1bl1 1,11rin9 tlyl1I Go 1h11d -Pel'l'l~I' yountlf, bui 1tiU 1lr1t,h your budge!. • MON .• TUES., WED. SHAMPOO-SET ....... '2.45 T 11.50 HAIRCU ................................... . HI STYLE SHAMPOO-SET ......... . HAIRCUT ............... $2.?5 $2 .00 Pe-r·msS ~ 95 Famous Budget Not for ilntH or bleach1d hair. COMPLETE LATER WE!K '2.95 12.00 $3.95 all week WIG SPECIAL 1 1500 WONDER CURL PERM ."~:~,. '9.95 Crowning Glory BEAUTY SALONS A ppointment.J welcoTM but not alway5 nece.sJary OPEN EVENINGS & SUNDAY CROWNING GLORY 267 E. 17th ST., COSTA MESA PHONE 548-9919 .-~~O~PE~N~E~V~E~N~IN~G~S~~·-i CROWNING GLORY I formerly Coprice ColffurnJ SOUTH COAST PLAZA Lower L•••l-Nert to Seors PHONE .546-7186 J\1rs. Daniel indlcaled that her children "'ere shielded from their hislorjcal roots during the preschool yea rs, saying ''they didn't know about that until they went to ::;choo!." · As an only child. Mrs. Danlel was asked If she ever felt any particular handicap. ''Oh, I loved it," she said. ''Only children tend lo get very spoiled, you know. "But my mother took care of that -with a hairbrush." The exhibit al the Hallmark Gallery on FU!h Avenue will run tbrough J\1ay 14. Much or the material on view \Yas lent by the Harry S. Truman Library in Independence , Mo. In cluded are more than 250 photographs and color slides, 3~ political cartoons, a col· lection o[ important letters, telegrams and documents fro1n Truman's \Vhite House years. About that day 25 years agn y:hen Truman s ucceeded Franklin D. Roosevelt to the presidency -April 12, 1945, Mrs. Daniel recalled: ''\Vhen I heard il, I was numb.'' Bunko Party Programmed Rushees \\•ill be honored during a bunko party in the Jiunlington Beach home of J\trs. Richard Cooper al 8 p.m. \Vedncsday. l\larch 18. Sponsoring the party will be the J\lu Upsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi. Al 8 p.m. J\1onday. ,.larch 23. ~l rs. Gregory Patchen wilt host lhc group's business meetin g in her J-tuntington Beach home, and Mrs. Cooper, social chairman, will present the program, the Art of Think· ing, from the. book, "C-Onducl, Expressioh and Purpose." ALSO IN Ngture,lovers To View Film Naturt's HaU·acre will be explored in film when the HunUngton View Garden Club meets at 7:30 tonight In the ·Marina High School faculty lounge. . ?w1rs. John ?w1ahoney, pres1· dent. has issued an invitation to all lnt.erested area women to attend. THOSE WERE THE DAYS -Mrs. l\1argaret Truman Danie!, only daugh.ler ol ex-P resident J.farry Truman, looks at a political cartoo~ of h~r fathe_r winch appeared in the Kansas City Star after her father's election vtctory rn 1948. Anniversary Party _______ 11 eE FREE ..• · Lucl<y Seven Honored COME INTO OUR IGLOO OF FACIAL HA1R FOREVER. LET US SHOW YOU .HOW EASY IT IS TO REMOVE EXCESS HAIR WITH MODERN ELECTROLY51S, MEDICAL.LY APPROVED ,,. SAFC , FAST , GENT LC. CONSULT WITH OUR LICENSED TECHNICIAN BY POPULAR DEMAND! CONTINUED ONE MORE WEEK! Visll our Plt 1• -$ce t~e ,.,lask1 E~PO!llk>rl -8Md ¥i•ll our &hOp! We 1141¥t more i!uU Jor ycu• ~nl!loflll n~• !~a" Y1)u cen sM~e 'fOU' ntrdlt• ~II THE KNIT WIT Soutk Coa st Plaza LOWER MALl. Aero•• !•om woo1wort11·~ C0$1A MESA P~. S•S.:111 5UPE'R·MOl~T CRrAM JN OUR BEAUTY SALON , ROBINSON 'S NEWPORT A GIFT FOR YOU. FROM GERMAINE M.ONTEIL /\,\•\I TING YOU WITH YOUR 5.00 OR MORE GERMAINE MONTEil PUl'fCHASE ,.., A ~TRIKING TRI-COLOR TRAVEL T OTE \.V ITH: BIO -f\..1tRACLE CREAM, f OR /I YOUNGER. LOVELi ER COl\.-IF'LE:\I ON; SATINY. SUPER-ROYAL CREt..M MOISTURIZER; RO YAL JC L LY , T !-i[ N ~GH T PA M PC RER; SUPCR ~1 0 1 s r LIPSTI CK; ROYAL SECRET SPRAY CONCENTRCE F RAGRANCE . TRY ,.,IONTCIL 'S VITAM IN VITALI ZED ACT I VE-VITA CREA~t. AT 25 .QQ .40.00, SUPl:R-MOlST MOISTURIZER, 7 .50·12.00. ROYAL SECRET SPRAY CONCENT REE, 6 .QQ, f'INO T HEM ALL IN OUR COSMETICS , M CET GERMAINE MONTEIL1S SPECIA L. GUEST MAKE-UP ARTIST MISS MARCEY RUSSEL , WHO W ILL SHO\V YOU THE \VAY TO BCAUTY. IN NEWPORT: M ARCH l§-2L EACH Anaheim, Covina, Crenshaw, Downey, Glendc11le, l1kt· wood, las Vegas, Long Beack, Newport Beach, North Hollywood. Ontario., Pa5aden1, San Diego. Santa . A.na, Santa Barbarll, Sunland, larz1n1, Torr11nce, Wh1!t1er. ROBINSONS NE\.\IPORT • FASH10N ISLAND • 64 4-2800 ' • . I \ ) Chic Wrap-around ' '.:__~.-~ 1'1-(~< I ·, \Vhat better 'vay to 'vrap Him a;oun~ your lit~l c finger than with Norman l-Iartnell s c:1sp :version o[ \Vr ap-around elegance \Vith gro~gram tnm. But the de tails here are special -from the slight stand-a\vay neckline to the sq~ared off a rm· holes, these are just frostings on a nicely sculpt!-1;~ ed dress. Add the handsome· contour belt and it s clear sailing through any season. Fabric suggestions : silk and 'voo l, 'vC?ol crepe, shantung, gabardine, lin~n. pique. sy.nthet1c ble~ds. 63499 is cut in Mi sses sizes 10·18. Size 12 requires a pproxim ately 2-1/2 yards of 45" fabric and B yards of 1" grosgrain ri bbon. To ord er 63499; i.i ate size. in.elude na1ne, ad- dress and zip code. Send $2 postpai d for EACl-1 pat· tern. Send orders fo r pa tterns to SP.J\DEA. ·sox N, ?vJi lford N .. J. 08848. This precut, preperforated Spadea ' De signer P a tte rn produces a better fit .or n1oney refunded . Order normal ready-to-wea r siz e and all o\v one 'veek for deli very. Film Show s Writers In Action \Vrilers and Writing will b<! In focus v.·hen the book discussion group of Friends of the Fountain VaUey Library 1neets at 10 a.m. \Vednesday, ~larch 18, in the library. The public is invited to al· tend and see the film , ac- cording to Mrs. J a m e s Schendel, program chairman. On Friday, Mar c h 20, Friends will travel to the Arboretum, leaving the library at 10 a.m. and retu rning al ap- proximately 4 p.m. Reserva- tions for the bus lrip may be made by cali ng l\1rs. f\.1aLsuro Kato, 962-1414. Cost of the trip will not exceed $2, and the group will stop for lunch. New officers will be in· ~tailed dur ing a luncheon meeling in f\.1ay. Silver Sands The first Tuesday of each month at 8 p.m. members of Silver Sa nd s 286. Natl v e Daugh ters of the Golden West gather fo r meetings. Lake Park Clubhouse in Huntington Beach is the meeting place. If your Car is Art Proves Stretcher Teacher and author Mrs. Ester Den<lel will present a slide lecture on arls, and crafts, one in a series of mind stretcher talks, for Affiliates of the Laguna Beach Art Gallery. The artist. known in the field of design, tapestry , mosaics and ceramics, will speak: at 8 p.m. on Wednesday , Ma rch 18. in Laguna Beach Art Gallery. The lecture will be hel pful to those interested In art. Jn ad- dition, the current Interaction exhlbit in the gallery features work of craftsmen-designers and graphi c artists. The public is invited to at- tend the lecture at a c05t of II. Library Exhibit Corona de! Mar Library will feature through March ll special exhibit of works from the studki or Tom Jones In Ne\\•porl Beach. Sponso red by the Newport Beach City Art! Commlltee, the show consists of creative photographic expressions of Jones' associates. • • • GREEN We'll Wash it ... FREE Tuesday, March 17th! GLE NN EYR E Laguna Car Wash 540 S. COAST HWY. UGUHA BEACH·494·1922 LAGUNA HOTEL • 0 -~O. COAST HIGHWAY I z 0 CJ w ..J ·------~-----~--~ ... Mond.i.y, Marc1' 16, 1970 DAILY PILOT J7 A Blessed Event Society Rocks Cradle Provisionals Go Hollyw9od Pizza Cut for Party A co\lectiqn of baby clothing and artlcles u s ie d in grandmother's doy for the blessed event will b e presented to Las Damas Chapter, Auxilia ry of th e Children's liome Society, on \Vednesday, ~1arch 18. Active and as so c iate mem bers lfe lnvltMI to attend the meetln& arranged by Mr1. Ralph Koch. Persons altend- ing are as-.ed to br ing a l1y- ette gilt for babies In £oater homes. A plw purly will be en· Shakey's, Colt.a Mesa, al 7:30 joyed by members and lhtlr p.m. Saturday , titan:h Zt. l'S<.'Orts wht.on the Hunllngton Followtn1 dlnner lhe group Ucaeh Delta Alpha P hi wl\I return to the home of Mr. Chapter. Bela Sigma Phi. and fl:trs. Richard Boy1e for gathers for a social rneeling at games and dancing. Provisionals will travel to be the Mmes. Edna Bowden,~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;ii§§;;;;;;;;;;;;~ •lollywood when the National Gordon Brock, James Clark.Ii Assistance League sponsors an Pearl Courtn ey , Dale orientation day Wednesday, Erickson, Darwin Ka s s e 11 • Aiarch 18. Robert ,. Langner , J. L. The progra m entitled The Cr11dle will be given al 10 a.nt. by a member or Good will Indus tries at a meeting in San Clemente., Irish Day Given Nod SL Patrick's Day has been chosen by the Orficers Wi ves' Club of El Toro ~1arine Corps Air Station as the date for a lunch eon in lhe Nev.'J)Orler Inn. ~tembers will gather al JO a.m. to hea r a talk by Dean Joh11 Flood of Saddlebflck College, \vho will spin tales about the Generation Gap in the ma nner or a tradiUon a! Irish storyteller. Hostesses will be wives of l\fAC-.33, headed by the Mmes. R. N. Hutchinson, R. J. Reid. R. D. Perciva l, J. E. Mehrlc. J . L. Thatcher. R. R. Norton, .John Dermody and Frank Cruz. The society presently ls diverUng more energy and money into a counseling prc>- gram for natur al parents. It also is developing a program to place children In .stab le homes 1f pa rents are under the jurisdiction of the court. All funds raised by Las Damas and other auxillarles are UJed to carry out these programs. It's What's On the Top That· Counts "ll's \vhat's on top that <:ounts" is how G a y I e Kirkpatrick feels about blouses. His first signature collection for Pilol Blouse leads of£ with a group of .supple .shapes in polyester matte jersey colored "folk rock" bright. Samp les: A sean1ed cowboy shi rt. a sort Indian maiden blouse bowed twice in front and flu id overblouses. Sears A1akb1g the trip will be pr~ A1cGinley , Patrick McGinnis. v!slonat me mbers of the Paul Pearce, Jay Pierce. f'red Assistance League or Hun· !lose. Jane Stowe and llicharUI tin&~on Beach and the Silver Updegraph . Ancllor Auxiliary, who will at· Accompanying the groupJ tend a seminar in which NAt. will be Mrs. Floyd Hair , goals, policies and activities, league third vice president. and lhe relationshi p between and ~1rs. Harry LrSard. the national organlution and llaiS0\1 officer to I.he auxiUary. its member chapte rs will be on Thursday, March 19, explaMed. ti.1rs. O. S. Root will entertain They will join provisionals league members . and their rrom other chapters for lunch guests at a coffee L1 her Hun· I n th e I ea g ue-operated tington Harbour home. tearoom and a tour of the l;;:==========,11 founder chapter, including lls thrift and gift shop. Attending from the Hun- llngton Beach chapter will be the ti.1mes. EdwarC: Howard, Ken Kono pasek. Albert t.1c· Connell, Arthur Newlin, Ed- ward Sullivan •nd Ray \Valk- cr. Silver Anchor A u x i l i a r y Jnembers making the trip will TOPS Mer maids TOPS Merging t.1ermaids meet al 7:30 p.m. every Thursday ln \Voodland School, Costa t.Iesa. THINK EASTER THINK -= Kenmore. 30-in. Gas Stove with the Features Yo11 Want '168 •Convenient electr ic cloc k wi th 4-hour timer • Porce-lain.oenameled non.drip coo ktop, aera- lion pans, burner grates 1n akc cleaning easy •Large, 24-in. wide oven 'villi re1novablc .iee- t11ru door and remol'ahle chrome-plated oven racks and gu-ides •Separate smokeless broiler with an easy~lean rorc e lain·enamelell J)an and grid Model i l200 GAS STOVE lntroducin9 ' Fro9 Lc:ivers To Chopi~! PAlfNTS! DON'T WAIT UNTIL TOUk CHILD IS OUT OF THI fllOG LOVERS AGf llFOlf YOU GIYI THIM TH! GIFT OF MUSIC -YOU WAIT AND IT MAY II TOO LATI! Cltlldr111 111 tllt fro, lo•l119 l fOfJI 14-1) •r1 tltt ptrfKt ejl fir l.e1111i"' 11111slc. Y1111aha, ofttr ytol'l of rH11rch dnl911od ttlt Yo111oho M11slc Cl-... ''' 111w .. rtlll .. -wo•'t r•• ,.._.th-•••,,... Co11r10 10 cw11r1 thot oll chll• at1d let " dlow r•• tfte wflM dro11 con 1""11 11111lt . 1._ry ,f ttto Y4MAHA MUSIC MIUl011• of Yo1111ha 9rod1101~ COUllSll • tro111 orr ower the world ttttlfy YOUR llG~IST llWAlD Will to tile 111tce11 if tltt TAMAHA II WHIN YOUI fl06 LOVI R LOOKS UP AT YOU AND TILLS MUSIC COUISI. YOU ••. •·1 (;>4Yl MY fl06 Yo11 do no1 hoYt to bYy 011 ill-A NEW NAMI. lllTHOYIN." 1trwm1111, there II no h•-NOW IN COSTA MESA i!YdW -iw•t lots of f1111 for yo11r cltlldrerr whll• they leore rt1Y1lc. DON'T DENY' YOUR CHILD ll'lt: CHANCI YOU MAY HA'ft. MISSED IN TOUlt CHILD· HOOD. < ' t. ·~ ~··· YAMAHA Music School Call 64l· 1144 Do11ble-Oven /;as Stove witl1 'fop Front Co11 trols .Sears Care Service r rotcct.s the Tillue of your Kenmore S1ovc. Scan high ly-trained service rcchnicians assure you llCni icc sari.s- f action with ~rsonali2ed, profession· al care .,. We !Crv1cc what we sell wherever you Ji,·c or may mo ve in 1hc U.S./\. -rr,;-~r;e:;;ars Easy Payment Plan AU M-.,ior Appli•ncct Availabl., al Scan Catalog: And Appliance S1orc1 1Sears) ...,. ... , ..• '" ......... ,, ... ,,. (-·····~' (-HIM M l •,111, M 1•1''1 J l.\.t,lllOllUCl:AHDCO. COY! ... -.otl l A fllOliltt., ll•t t l l •w..Ll Cll •• 1 .... (t 4'4•11 -l•wH• "° •·'"' ~-Oii •••• ,, Jtle, NIPff Mt11dt7 t~lt s.f•M1 t 1;)0 A,J4, It t :J O P,M., ""'''' 1 2 H-.11 le j ,,M. - i1000 UHM llACll 11t 1 .. 1in Olf MH( A IOto '"' 1•1111 :"cc·lht·u C)t·le,·rl O\cn door 5 228 Double your · cooking capaciry wi th thisKen- more 30-l nch double-oven s ro vc. R.emovable oven racks and gu ides, re mo vablt-lo wer oven door. Separate broiler with porcelai n-enameled pa n and grid. R 11n~e l:lood option1l ••• exlr• ,0 ... 011• "'" ... ,. ~co wt ... ,,, 0-A"Ol' l tf.tl• l•l'l1 l l ll• I I 1<)>11 ....... .oMC• • ...,,, l6Vnl CO.Uf ,...._ ..... lOtllllft H1•1111 --~"'' '°° ........ ..._ YUIMOtft" •• ,.,, ""lt•Onl• fll-1111, JU•''" l l ltlf,. IH lltOI t4t•Hll "•"1lsf1t1 l111 0 \111•111114 ff l oll'!' Mo1117 leteli" • .18 DAILY PILQI LEGAL NOTICE •Al.U7f IU'lllOI COUIT 0" l Hl I TA.TI 01' CALll'OllMIA "01t TMI COUNTY 0" OllANOI ..... A'4l'9t J!IOTICll 0, Ml!AltlHG 0" l'l"TITIOH , •• l'llOtATI' 01' P'Oll!ION wn,.L AND •Oii Llnlll TISTAMI ... TAlt'r (I Ol'tD WAIVIOI fll•"' (II DOIOT"'Y \', IUIU(f , O.C••ml. NOTICE 15 1-!EllEllY GIVEN ln.i Wllttr W. Nl•lwn llM lllHI llet'I" f .,...,. t!M for •robolll o1 FMf~n Wiii 1"11 1111 ......-.. .J v"-T•••.,..eo1•1rv .. P•ll· tlonH, l .. fftfl(O Ill Wiik/i h mtd~ for tvr""" •l•tl<E&/19,.., .... "'-' Mo ·-ll>CI 11!1.:. ot ~t1•in1 111t 11m• "'i "'" ,., for M1r<ll 71, 1910, ti t .lt '·'" . '" •~• C'.ourtr-. or OH111!rnrnl No l "' •tld r;oul"!, 11 100 Clvlc Cent•• Dt!vt Wt$!. •n tfl• Cltv el S.ntt ,t.nt. Ct l1ll)ln11. Dtted Mar(ll I, 1t70 W, f , ST JOHN C1111ntv c1er-a U1;YIA, CAIU'l!Nflflt AND ••1tNtS •T •1tNllT J, $(MAO, Jlt, .o.nJ MICAr1111W lfflol~lrf '· 0 ... , HN "'tw•eri ••••II. c.~,., .. 1. T•ll HU) Ul·t !M """'""'" .., .... " ........ ,.u1>ll1Md o ... ,.., C011I D•ll• Ml'Cll 1, f, lt, lt1t • • B11ff11n1s' Chief Set 8ullun1s' has announced the election of \Y\lllarn S. llansen as president and general n1anager and hi!i appoilllment as a n1ember of the Board of Directors. lla11Sen most recently \v as the president of Garfinkel 's, \Vashington. D.C.·based quali· ty department and specialty stores. LEGAL NOTICE ...,.,n Cl'ltTIFICATE 01' IUSIMl51 FICTITIOUS NAM( ~~~~"""'."' ............ s,_. .... ...,.a•a .. ,..,....,z..,2..,..,._ ........ &._!lll•t•&•&•&•£•£•J•tl£!lllllJllllJll!lii :,,.. ; ••1.1 ...... , ............. , . . . PL YMOUTH SHOWS NEW EDITION OF BARRACUDA AAR 'Cuda Named fo r Dan Gurney's All-Ame rican Racers Team In HifJ I• .6 e a 1· 'C u(la Sl1owi1 by Ply1nouth By CARL CARSTEN"SON 01 t~t tllll1 "11•1 Sltll A ~pcci:.I edition or thr Plyn1out h Barracuda -called the AAH 'Cuda ,and powered by a new engine -has been announced by Chrysler. Plymouth Division. The in- itials AAR stand lor ra cr driver Dan Curncy·s All· American Racers I ea m . Gurney \\•ill drive a Barracuda on Lhe Trans·An1 circuit this season. 1'he AAR 'Cuda features a llpeeial version of Plymou1h·s :140 cubic inch engine . It has 1hree two-barrel carburetors. special cylinder heads, and a 1nodilled block and valve train for grea ter durability and performance. l'.:ilher a rour.speed manual transmiss ion or a Torqucrli1c automatic lrans1nission can be ordered v.•ith the car. ·rhc car is equipped with n 3.55 axle with Sure Grip. A . 1.91 ratio is optional. Power disc front brakes arc stand- ard. The AAR 'Cuda ha~ a flat black gri lle and a special fiber glass hood with a runctional scoop. Two hood pins retain the hinged hood. There iS n rear spoiler on the deck li1t. A front spoiler is optional. Suspension include s ~pec1al fro nt and rear sway bars a·nd heavy duly shock~. Special heavy duty rear spri ngs ra ise the rear end of the AAR 'Cuda Lo 1nakc room fbr a Trans-Am 1ype <'xhaust system \\'ilh side outlels, and also provide room ror extra large rear G60xl5 inch tires. Front tires are E60xl5 inch. Road wheels are standard . The hood, cowl and fender toils are flat black. Oranamen· tal includes a black strobe stripe which runs the length of both sides of tbe car ending at the rear in ·an "AAR 'Cuda" deca l wi(h the "AAR" in the fo rm of the Dan Gurney All- America n Racers crest in red. wh ite and blue. The planned 2.800 special edilion units will be available in Chrysler-Plymouth dealer· ships by late March. 'Freezing' Interest 'You r Money's Worth' al Banks By SYLV IA PORTER \Vlth evidence mounting that you already have see n or arc surely seeing the peaks in in- terest rates for this era, two questions become or urgent irnportancc to you: where can you earn and ''freeze" the highest returns on savings now? And what forms of fi xed· incnme savings -ranging from cash in the bank to long· term bonds - are aYailablc lrom "·hich you can choose the best for your own needs? IT IS LIKELY that we have seen the historic highs on in- terest rates paid in the open markell : this would be lhe logical result of th e in· creasingly obviou!I slowdown and downturn in many areas of our economy . It is also probable that in i....t by tt.. lo+h .nd ••'" fron'I 01• \it Ofl 2'4 .rnoftth full paid i11 ... est!Ml'1t lhrift C eriific;o11f•1. Or 51/J ·1; on Pet1boolc Acco.in.ft 011 a11y a1r1<Xtntl. Y otir withdrawal1 ltOfloOftd invn.diat1iy Ofl dernHd. CALIFORNIA. THlllFI'o-.LOAN 110 r, 17th St. COSTA MESA retrospect. many of the In. Ir.rest ra tes paid on savings in early 1970 \\'ill stand out as on- r e ·i n -a· generation op- portunities -even though the enormous demands for fund~ in this decade \1•ill work against sharp declines fro rn ~()day's rate levels. F'lNALLY , IT Is only µru· •dent financial management lo keep some of your ncstegg in rixed·income savings. II ~·ou can earn 7 percent annually compounded. you'll do u b I r your investment in just over 10 years: if you can earn 8 per~nt. you'll double it in nine years. Of courS<'. the apparent gross interes~ you earn will be slashed by steeply rising livinG l'OSts an d income taxes to a much smaller net. SI i 11 , though. many of the rates available today do represent ;i ''living \Yage": they will bcco1ne more so ,.,.hen thr rat r or upsuq;c. in prier s moderates in response lo the slO\\•ing of our ecollOmy. And ii you invest in tax·cxcmpl 1nui1ici pal obligations. y o u eliminate tJ1e income Lax bit e. THE fOLLOWfNG table, coinpiled with the help of Dr. Jfenry Kaufman or Salomon Bros. & Hutzler. shov.1s you !he interest rates you can earn in various mediu ms a~ or ea rly ~larch 1970. ',.., I.it·. '·~· Helps Shrink Swollen, Inflamed Hemorrhoid Tissues AB It Relieves am tc g Cive. Prompt, Temporary Re6cl From Painful Distr .. ln Hcmorrho;d T "'"es and Actoally Helpo Red""' Swdling-Cau.ed By .JnlJammotion. MAll.KlfT .MATUll.ITIES IN YOU Tlllell 1'011.MI CAN •AltN New lllllfl·O••d• utlJity tonc11 1..ss·. Ne¥J h•t!'-trfllt !nclu11Tl1I """"' 1,;s·. 11~ ... hith·tr•Cl~ mun•~ID•I bond• &,co·, U S. £ boN!" htld } yr-.;, 10 PICmlh> j,QO"o ICopyrffht 1'71 ~' ~11111 ten!e~•l1u, •~c.I You ca n earn higher rates on more risky, lo1Yer·grade securities or higher rales on savi ngs you rreeze for longer periods in saving s institutions. This table will guide you to the proper medium s for you. \Vith this much information. you art prepared to ask (or more BofA Cuts Loan Points Bank of America today an· nount·cd an ~mmedlate cut in le discounl of 8'~ percent fHA and VA loans lo 4 points. The prevailing discount nationally lu1s been 5 1 ~ to 7 1 ~ p<1ints. C. J. i\ledberry, execut i\·e \•ice president-loans. said that !he ba,1k \\'ill also increase its allocalion of funds for residen- lial housing in 19711 by SHXI million. \l'hich represents an inc rease or about 25 percent ov£"r 1969. Both lhesc moves are in· !ended 10 help stimulate the housing market ·which has lost momentum during the recent pe riod of very Ught money. Cir cle Seal Buyis Jlaco Co. Cir cle. &>al Corporation of Anaheim has completed the. acquisit ion of Raco Ehgine1!r- lng. San ta i\-fonica, for an Un· 1lisc!(lsed amount or c;ish. Halph \V. Jan1es. Circle Seal president. announced today. ltaco produces a line of i.pccialty seals with industrial and aerospace applications. Union Ba uk c~a u Gt<lrgc F Thompson has been promoted to instalment loan mtervie1Ycr of Union l111.nk's Orange Co u n I y rel{ional head cffi re. Thompson joined the bank in 100.1 a~ a Joan of[icer after r1J;:ht year\ of banking e_x. prrlence. Hi' liVC$ in Costa t.Ie~a. Finance Briefs BANGKOK !UPI) -A Belgian affiliate of Interna. lional Telephone and Telegreph Corp. has cbtained a $1.S million contract to sup- ply 24 Pentacona crossbar telephone exchanges w i t h JS,&00 tines for installation in 20 provinces of Thailand. MIDLAND, Mich. (UPI) Dow Chemical Co. announced it will build a plant al RussellvUle, Ark., to make chlorine cells. Financing will be provided out of an in· dustrial bond issue approved by Russellville voters in 1968. \VASHINGTON I UPI ) Texas Gas Transmission Co. I has asked the federal Power Commission for permission to build $13.4 million worlh of ne1v pipeline facilities in Louisiana. ~tississippi, Ten· nessee and Kentucky . NEW YORK (UP I! -Stand· 1 nrd l\1elals Corp. has taken an option on 1,000 acres near Douglas City, Ga., wh ich in· eludes the 215 acre Val Do f!Iar Lake, a small airport and an abandoned Go ld Placer mine. HOUSTON (UPI\ -1 Imperial Management Co. has ~rought 1n two producing petroleum wells in Louisiana. 0.1e in Desoto Parish tested at 1.8 million cubic feet of gas daily at 8.000 to 8,700 feet. A \\'ell in St. Landry Parish tested at 102 barrels of oil and small amounts of gas daily al 9,133 feet. CLEVELAND (UP/l North American Coal Corp. has enlarged its li-ye ar sal es agreement w t th Cleveland Electric llluminatin ~ Co. by 60 percent to an average of 2A million tons a year. Deliveries arc to start next ye a•. NE \Y YORK (UPI ) -r-.tobil j Oil Corp. announced il v.•ill launch a free "telephone motel reservation sys l·~ m for customers o( its gas <Stalions. Custo mers will call" a special number and get a reServalion by courtesy ot J.-lobU, and Na- tional Data Corp.• in ·~~nta. CHICAGO (UPI) _,_,jhicago and Eastern Illinois 'Railroad said it is slowihg l t s moderniiatioo program for lack of funds. The C ~ El Is 53 percent owned by the Missouri Pacific. The com~ny said in its an · nua l report I~ had an operating loss of $1.1 million last year plus an extraordinary loss of $4.4 million. NE\V YORK (UPll -Pr'e~t. dent \V. C. f\.1essinger of Rex Chainbelt Co. of Milwaukee told New York sec tlr.( t')' analysts Tuesday the cmnpany has obtained a $5.5 million contract to insta11 a ground express transport sysle.n1 af Seattle's airport to move pas· scngers from the parking lot to the main terminals and check their baggage in the parking lot. LONDON (UPI) Con· linental Oil Co. will drill for oil and gas in a previously Un· tapped block in tht Norlh Se2 12 miles orr the coasL, er Norfolk in partnershi p with Trinidad Can ;idian Oil Co. and Britain's National Coal Board. SAN FRANCISCO (UP I) - Pacific Telepho ne and Telegraph C.O. soon will ask the Calirornia Publlc Utilities Commission for a $195 million a year rate increase. T\10UNTAIN \'IE\\', Cali!. IUPI) -Sylvania Division of Gene ral Telephone and Elec- tronics Corp. has obtained a Sl.6 million Navy contract for shipborn electronics counter- measures. CHICAGO (UPI) -\V inter and Hirsch. Inc., a small loan company, has sued Yale Jza ks. its former chief financial of- ficer, for $30 milllon. charging !hat he prepared false and m is I e a di n g f I n a ncial stale mC"Ots. Jacob G. Licbtr .:ind Solomon B!ehvcis. public accountants. ,.,.crt: nan"K?d as co-<1erendan1s. Ne wport Finn Buys Cou1pany • Who Reails the Stars For the Stars? It's Sydney Omarr And now t his articulote writer who hos been called t he "astrologer':; a strologer" reods the stars for you. Sydney Omorr. longtime pGr$onal a strologer to mo ny of Hollywood sand the lite rory world's most fomou:; :;tor:;, i:; o DAILY PILOT column ist. Orriorr 's record for accuracy of predictions based on astrological oriolysis is amazing. Whether you read astrological forecasts for fun or as o ... Newport Pharmaceuticals, serious studen~ of star-gozing, you'll .. . .r N•w""Wl<l .... -i..~---.;;;;;;;-.;;;;i;;;;;;n==r"-"':::i:=~---1~-""lered into an agreement en1oy Y ney 11· it h \Ve s t er n S ta I es in the Properties, Inc .. of Salt Lake City. to acquire 300.000 shares of common stock of \Vestern, it was annouoced toda:, by the dlreetors of both !inns. The agreement also includes lss uanct of 80 option lo 1 Nt14'port Pharmaceuticals 101 pu rchR3C an additional 200,000 ' sharrs. DAILY PILOT 12.0· ., " I \:'f. u + + u :":"-.-r r ' . ' . .. ..... -, . . -~ • • e with your newspaper boy today ' • I '' wlll be good for both of you. It'll re111lnd you tliat not aR of toil"f'I youfh has gone to "pot" or somethin CJ worse. And It'll prove to him that you appreciate 'he fac' 'hot he bu ys, sells, delivers, kMpl NCOrds, col- lects ond tries to moke o profit on hi~ smoll busin .. _ ft• n wortd119 when ~is peers ore ploying. He's qui'e a fellow, that Y?UIMJ bnl-n who delivers your newspaper. Get ocquointed with him an~ you'I know why we're so proud of him. We hGYt 700 more llke him deliYorlng tllo J ) .. .. .. .• .. . . • I • • .. I • DAILY PILOT MoncW.)i, Man:/'! 16, 1970 The newest arrival at the Oakland Baby Zoo is this tiny 2(1.pound pygmy horse called ;'Eclipse." The du1arf animal stands IS.inches hig h and will measure 21h -feet Lall and \veight approximately 250- pounds \vhen full gron•n. Many small an d baby ani- mals are on display at the zoo for children to hold and pet. Barry Jr. Beats Dad Ori Conservative V ate WASHINGTON (AP) Quietly and without fanfare. Rep. Barry !\f. Goldv.·ater Jr. nears lhe end of his fi rst year in Congress sporting a higher conservative rating than his famous father . "He hasn'l gotten over i1 yet," the youngest Republican in Congress said of Arizona Sen. Barry ~1. Goldwater , 11,•hose voice of conservatism Jed him to the 1964 GOP presideotial nomination. The 31-year-old Californian \Vas referring in an inlerview lo ratings published last month by Americans for Constitutional Action. Barry Jr. rated 91 percent con- servative on his 1969 voting record: Barry Sr. 90 percent. Does he resent comparison with his famous dad? "No, rm flattered,·· !!laid Barry Jr. But he does nol always agree with his father . For instance Barry Sr. has lntroduced legislation to give IS.year.olds the right to vote. '"I'm nol. convinced." said Barry Jr. Young Goldwater ca me lo Congress afler a special elec- lion last May, the successor to Republlcan Ed Reinecke who re s igned lo become California01 lieutEnanl governor . "I have spent my time get- tlng to know the people of my district and their problems," lhc Congressman sa id. "nol crusading and waving banners and getting up on the stump." Not thal he does not have the chance. "I get lots of invitations to speak. in the South and b1 other parts of the country." he said. ''It's a carryover from my father. If lhey c<1n'l get him they ask me. But 1 lurn thein nearly all down. Nearly every weekend I go back lo my di strict:· He figures he gets more than his fair share of mail as v.·ell, some of it encouraging him to seek the presidency. ''I get It. but it certainly is not on my mind," he said, ad· ding "perhaps this might come later. ··1 have a philosophy about this. If I do a good job, the future is going to take care of itself. I'm trying to do a good job. As long as it is exciting - a challenge -I'm content. Where it will lead me, I don 't know. I don 't really think a_ bout it." BWs PIDac Up? use our money! At Moms Plan ,...d k'ke lo help yoa with left._ °""'bills, home or car repairs, travel or !!Choo! uPenses. That's what Morns Plan money is for. On apptawaJ )"OU can boitow tram $100 k> ss,ooo, "' more, and have your money the daJ you apply. Payrnerm acliecleled·to fit your Income. When you need money for a1!J good '"""""· see Morrll Plan. We Uke to mal<e toans. 673-3700 Newport Beach -3700 Newport Bou/evartJ . ~ • • • > • • J ' ' . . . ' • < ~ ' • y •'-'\ Sears BUY THEM NOW • • • BY THE PAIR for 6.50xl3 TuheleO. Blackwalls Pin• 1.78 F.E.'f. Each and 2 Old Tires A•k Ahont Sean Convenient Credit Plans Prices [ffecti\o"I Sttnda,, i\·larch 15 lhtu.Tue!day, ~larch 17 -'f'11l11•l•·~s flliu-h.,.all ~.o, 1 ·1~ _::: r ........ :11~~1.7_'.! ';',,.-,,11 :!fnr"t \ '..'04 -----7.7:.,11 :!f11r"!h ~.1 7 ----R.:::i,11 :.!lor::-1~ :.!."I I --·r .. 1 ... 1, .• , \\ hi1·· ... all 11. ;o, I I ' r .. r ... : .. I. ·n . ---:.:1.1, 11 :.!f,.r .·lO '..'.0 1 -::: for~I:! :::.1 i -. ::: fnr :S Hl :!.:J:' :! for ~;jll ., -' -·' ' :.!.for:Oll) . " " • 4 actual plies of nylon for extra slrenglh e Grratrr r cs is ta 11i.:e to impacl51 moi sture, fl exi11g and l1cat SIZE • ,1. r 1 r • SIZE !.!. t Ll'. T•W•I• J "" Tr...t<-1• fo• ~ ..... lu• ....... r;,.. -1.u bclt'~'!l Ulack\..:1 11 --1--.fubf'le!!~ Whh ewall ---~--6 .. ->l}'\l,l :!fur~:.!O 1.;8 ll.50x 13 ----~ :.?for $28 l.78 ---·-7.~:., 11 :! for S:.!.3 :.!.IJ l 7 .3:1x I .j, ~fJJr!34 :!.04. -------------------; . 7'.i~ 11 ::: rur ~:t! :::.17 -; • ';' .J>. 1-1 ::: rur ~:18 :!.17 ---. ------~ ~.:::.;, 14. Z for~:\11 :::.:1:1 it::::;, 11 ::: for S-1:! :::.33 -----t--,-;-:: .. -•. ),.1.1 :! forS46 :.. • .>3 . ------_-------,__ ____ I--7. 7.ix l.j :::r"r~J~ :::. Pl '. ,.,, J,, :::rorS38 ~. l 'J for <1.3(1\j I "fuftelr•~ Bla c k~·alt& l'lu& t.1.76 F.E.T. Each . .\nrl .2 Old Tire! ,,.,,.,. ""l --· • • • •uou IUIJ f l l .fO(loCI, 111..oJit .. MOHTf O• l -l••t t(' .. ~ lfl(W ... J~UI <I.HOO•, •• ~ l•e~... "'"''""(Ml 10~· "1..0111 ,., ... ,,( I fOIO ..,,, 1.n11 C0-1'1'9!'< ott 1.1111. ,i1 I,,.. MOllt"'OCll "0 O Jtl l OtlH(;I t l'·1•N ·~IOUUCll>tVtDCO. (~ -11 1'111'\IWIXll en l ·JUI ~•l•1t1t1• • .,.IU!. IJl-<11 11 ,,..,. Mith'•._ rilte ,.,, f rSO AJA.. 11 f 1lO l'.M., Su~d•r 1 2 N11~ 11) '·"'· .. J1tllfenlo~ Ch11t•1t11t .. ed ...-'row Motoer ler'(" • l)yn11 cor Ra)on Cord ~ivr~ • l'ioft, quiet ride; no har3hncU, no 1hnn1p or bu nip • 4-fu ll pliei liVI! adricd !lrenp:1h for gr<"ater 11fe1y • ra1c111,.rl intf'rloel.in;: lrrurl produce~ 1ho11s1nd~ nf biting edgf'5 for 1na\imun1 ~t artin• and 9loppin5 J10"'('1" • Palented tilf'nccr buttons anti p1tr111r1I t:on1ou.r fhoUIJer gi\.·e .1af r, poajti' r ,c:or11rri ng c(lnlrol ALLSTATE PASSENGE R TIRE GUARANTEE •·u•r•l>l-d '-'•'""' All "'" lollu'" frrym IKKll'WI rood .,.,.,,:1. 01 iktn;u '""'''""'I nr •Of~nun•h·~ I "' ft .. w \.""•· '"' <~r l•fr ol rlw: ori••n•I m•.! '; lul .!)t~•· • 111 1)<.: lnt••h•n.'f for rh r !Irr. •ep!Ne '' ,~.,.,. '"~IO• •he Of<>f'OI'''"" ()I U••rtn• ltll•n• r r><f !'IJ1 lr~"t />1 .. .-1,. rh" r>:p1r•rnn rrr -.i u\td ~'"I'"'' "•·l'rL"C!ll.l'!'I ., "'" hni;t" • .... , ... ,.,d l!••n·i: T •r•<I • r ,, . .,.,,, r,,, ft,.,, LP"•· Tht n~ml><roc rr,.,1111' '!'<'\ 1 ~I .,,. h11 :-~ ... \\'•II fko· I 11 e.~ h•11~e tnr 1nr "'', rrpl .. • " , hot•· '"' 1~c l~rr•n• 'IC'll1ng prttt plu1 Ftdutl l~_. ... l u lru rto• 1.illo•"1g•llQ•~n" 'lon!hlv 1,n""11I•~ 01"'"'""-" 11110 .i 11r . 11 "' ~ 1\-;, -1•1 '"' FO•Oli• "I• •·11 .. tllll!H COIJT ""l,t, t •t-WI fOllOKI ftJ,Ull r<<O Wf 1..011' 11on1 .... •1 ~JI" l.lonl tf -~ .U-1111 I J•l'ftl -· d •4711 ... , ... tlJ-Jtlt "IUIT l'O 14W• • ._,ttft "ll•l!!OI' .... •·l•t I .. ~·! 1·· · :·-~· = ,°' "". • .•:.;r ·ot.. ;;~.-: , ••• r. -........ _, ·\_.·. • ·, _,r ~:!_~ ' ~ For Your Convenience SHOP SEARS SEVEN·DAYS JN '70 Sunday Hours ... Noon to 5 P.M. , : · .. , .-' , -. .. · » · Monrl•y thru Saturday, !1:30 AM. to 9:30 P.M. ' •; . • .. "' . .. I • "":"...,l""---.-~~=r'-'=~"--c-· _·-·-~- ' •• ' ' I ' ' \ Ex-area Sports Star Bill In .ryIT Classic ¥µle Saves Sooner Win; Faces Maravich Next NEW YORK (AP) -The day of Pete J\1aravich, the playmaker, seems over. The Oklahoma Sooners c2n look £orward ' Tuesday night ,'to the return ol Pistol Pete, the shooter. Jt isn't that Maravich isn't the best passer in college basketball; it's just that \Vitbout hiS shooting up to his nation-- leading 46.6 point-per-game average, the Louisiana State Tigers barely. got by heavy underdog Georgetown, 8.1-82, Sun· day in the first round of the National Invitation Tournament. Oklahoma just managed Use!£ by slip· ping past Louisville, 7f.'13, in Sunday's se· concl game. Kirby Jones put the Sooners ahead, 72- 71, with a free throw .with 22 seconds to go and ex-Corona del Mar High whiz John Yule clinched it with two more free losses 15 seconds later. Yule wound up with 11 points. So it: will be the Tigers and Sooners in Tuesday's doubleheader nightcap~ after tournament favorite Marquette faces Utah in the first game. The firsi local quarter-finals begin tonight as St. John's of New York meets Georgia Tech after first-round upsetters Army and Pt1anhattan clash in the opener of a twinbill. Maravich proved a disappointment, as he only took 16 shots, managed only 20 points -only once has he SC(lred less in a college game -and lost the ball several times while dribbling. "We told Pete not to do any shooting," explains his father, Press Maravich, who also coaches the Tigers. "He was. to be the playmaker." But Pete hit only six field shots, sank only eight-of-12 free throw tries and managed only five assists. "I was pitiful , , , it was obvious to everybody that it was a bad game for me and the team," he said, "Any time another team double teams me, we should br~ak the game with our big inen underneath. ''Their whole defense \Vas geared tG slop me. This is just great -most of the lime. My passing was pitµul." Still, it was Pete's two free throws with nine seuil1d4 left that pve·the Tiaen an uncatchable 83-80 lead after bis briel Dad's Advice ' Pays Off; Lotz • Wms Monsanto PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) -Dick Lotz turned to golf because he was told to, almost quit and wouldn't want to do it all over aga in. "Our dad told us to stick to goU and stay away r r om baseba.11," the personable, 27-year-old Lotz said Sunday aft er scoring his biggest victory in the $150,000 Monsanto Open golf tournamenL Lotz, the son of a former Pacific Coast League pitcher, came on the tour along with brother John in 1964 and didn't make more than $3,000 in his next t h r e e seasons. "It was pretty miserable," he said. "If T had ~ do it over again, well, 1 don't think l!d do it.'' He won about $15,000 the next year - "just about made expenses" -vaulted to $23,000 the next season, $38,000 la.st year, including a victory in the $50,000 Alameda County Open, and then came in-- lo his own this season. spurt of nine JIOints and two hall court passes for baskets had out Uli ahead to stay,73-65. . ln Saturciay NIT games, eighth-ranked Marquette, which' turned dGwn a bld to the NCAA, beat Massachusetts 62-SS; Manhattan shocked North Carolina 95-90; Army upset Cincinnati 71-6'7, and Utah defeated Duke 71-75. ' Bonnies Lose Lanier; Br11in s Meet Aggies By UnJted Press ln&enatloaal And then there were four. Or should it be lhree and a half? That's the vista in the run for. the NCAA basketball cham· pionship and the question over the exact number is posed by St Bonaventure, which goes into Thursday night's semifinals against Jacksonville minus All-American Bob Lanier. · The 6-11, 2~pound Lanier saw his C(IJ- leg!ate career come to a sour ending Saturday when be crashed to the floor midway through the second haH of the BoMies' 97-74 victory over Villanova in the Eastern Regional finals. The fall resulted in Lanier tearing ligaments in bis right knee, an injury that required surgery and probably dashed any hcipes of St. Bonaventure winning J.ts first NCAA championship. . Like St. Bonaventure, Jacksonville, winner of the Mideast regional, and New Mexico State, champions of the Midwest regional, will be making their first semifinal appearances when the touma· ment resumes at College Park, Md. The fourth semifinalist is none other than UCLA, as the Bruins, gunning for an unprecedented fourth straight NCAA championship and their sixth in the last seven years, captured the Far West regional, "It':; a tough break for Bob and a tough break for us. We'll have to pick up as best we can," commented ~t. Bonaven- turt <OaCb l,.arry Weise .itet leaming of the aertouaneas•Of Lanier'• injury. · But replacing a player of Lanier'1 lbili· ty is lmpoo1lble and the Boonies must be considered definite underclo11 to tow.rln1 JacbclnvUle, which stunned top.ranked Kentucky, J()f-100, in the MJdeut fmals. New Mexico State earned its way to the roWld of four by trimming Drake, 87-71, and UCLA took Far Well honors by thumping Utah State, 101-'19. Greg Gary and Matt Gantt supported Lanier in the St. Bonaventure offense with 20 and 19 points , while Fran O'Hanlon was high for Villanova with 20. Jacksonville, refusing to panic under pre.ssure, withstood Kentucky'• furious second-half rally under the direction of Rex Morgan, wbG hit two key free throws in the final minute of play and finished with 28 points. Artis Gilmore, the DG!pbina' 7-2 center, tallied 24 points and pulled down 20 re- bowids but, more importantly, he played a key part in causing Kentucky All- Amertca Dan Issel to foul out. Despite picking up his fifth foul midway through the second half, Iutl led the Wildcats with 28 points as Kentucky coach Adolph Rupp was again foiled in his bid for a fifth NCAA cbampionahip. UCLA insured fts 26th victory/ in 28 outings this aeason by hitUng on 52.6 per· e<:nt of its field goal attempts in the se- cond half. PILOTS' MOVE SLATED TlTESD AY NEW YORK (AP) -Mjlwaukee, which Inherited the Braves from Bosl.oo in 1953 and Jost thP.Jn to Atlanta four years ago, it about to get another baseball team. The Associated Press haa learned.from unimpeachable sources that the finan- cially troubled SeatUe Pilots' American League franchise will be shifted to Milwaukee for the start of the 1970 season. The sources said the current owners, headed by William R. Daley of Cleveland, have the nine American League votes necessary to assure the transfer and the move will be approved at a league meeting Tutlday morning in Tampa, Fla. Watts Resigns as Keeps Lakers Near Top Jerry West, Mr. Basketball of the LA Lakers, blasted in 38 points .in a 1~101 victory over the New York Knicks Sunday to keep the Lak- ers one game out of the Western Division Lead. West got his 19,000th career point in Friday night action. Gage's Career Bright Spot Was Association Withl(ids Jules Gage stood tall He was in the middle ol the Sports Arena baskelbaU court. being paid homage with a cOaching merit award by his former peen for a sparkling cage coaching career at Newport Harbor and Costa Mesa High. Gage, 43, guided his forces to th ree varsity league championships and four lightweight loop titles before retiring from coaching following a severe heart attack in 1965. He currently serves as Newport Harbor athletic director. With those many title winning squads and subsequent playoff games, including a trip to the CIF 11emlfinals In 1962, you would expect the slender disciplinarian to -------WHITE J WASH "' -----,, -----=-= ' O\.I MM WHIT I recall several key game11 as highlights of his 20 years as a hoop boss. Yet this is not the case. Gage, a native of South Dakota, says the pinnacle of his career was the rela· tionsblp established with his players. ''Going to games together and having them over at my house was great. Many of them still come around or call," he says. Gage's association with basketball started in the mid·l930s when he played at Hollywood High. His playing career ended when Pearl Harbor was bombed and he trekked off to the U.S. Navy as a chiet pharmacist's mate. But eight years later the war was over and so was his college educa tion (UC Santa Barbara and BYU). His family had begun and so had his coaching career as he took a job at Newport as football assistant to Al Irwin. And, he tutored lightweight basketball tiJ 1953.when he succeeded Jim Miller as varsity coach. Gage had some great talent -guys like Paul Nem:nann, Ed Fitzpatrick, Ed Pape, the Wetzels -Bill and Bob. Then he accepted the challenge of a new school, taking over 11 athletic director and varsity basketball coach at Costa Mesa. Again he came up with some nifty players -guys like Bruce Chapman, Craig Falconer, Bart Carrido, Mike Lang. Mike Patrick, etc. Jn the meantime his family was highly sports oriented with basketball on top of the !isl. Son Alan was a promising young star and it appeared that someday there would be a father-son court conrronlation since Alan would go to Newport and the latter was In the same league with Costa Mesa, Alan never got to perform against one of his dad's teams -Jules retired before the boy made varsity. Daughter Julie was a songJeader at Newport the year Gage's Me~ans knock- ed the Tars out of a playoff berth in the last game of the season. It was an un· forgettable moment after the game when the girl embraced her father, tears flooding her cheeks In the mixed emo- tions she must have carried. Now she's presented him with a grandson -his second. Gage pays tremendous tribute to wife Helen. whom he refers to as the perfect roach's wife. "She has been SO · good ••• always understanding when I came home late at night and if I was in a bad mood because we lost," he says. Gage has always prese nted the image er a tough, sometimes cranky S(lrt of guy. And he admittedly was never much of an admir(!r of ne?.1spaper types. But I often wonder hOw much of that was the real Jules Gage. When he reUred from coaching he was honored at a testimonial dinner at Balboa Pavilion. Gathered were many of his old players, many of whom had traveled substantial distances to honor their old coach. other fri ends were there too. You had to be somewhat blind not to see how much the occasion softened this supposedly cal1ous man. And you had to be somewhat lacking in vision not to notice that Saturday night'!! homage at the Sports Arena didn't make a major impression on him. Newport Coach By RON EVANS that the strain of spring practice might Newport· linemen were noted for their lauded Watts' work at Newport. "He de- 0' ''"' o.11¥ •1101 SI•" jmpair healing. crushing blocking and the Tars became veloped an interest in athletics through Monday, Mar<il 16, 1970 'DAILY PILOT JJ l(illed ·sc Grid Coach McKa y Will Attend Funeral ' l!y GLENN WIUTE 01 tll• D•Hll •lift Sl•ft Bill Jenkins was the young man who could warm you with a smi.le or rattle every bone in your body with one of his patented earthquake tackles if you happened to be one of his targets on lt.e football field . ' He made an indelible mark at Huntington Beach tligh and Orange Coa~L C~I~ Jege wiµt his quiet leadership qualities, football and baseball excellence and w1lh his compeUtive spirit. . Bill Jenkins was a Huntington Beach JDgh athlt.te of the year; Pirate oC the Year •t OCC; All·Orange County in football and baseball as a prep. He made all· conference in both sports while at Orange Coast. . And he was about to realize a nearly Ii!e--long ambition -playm~ footba ll at- USC -when an automobile accident ended his short but fruitful life Saturday while visiting his parents at June Lake, Cal. . . Tuesday at 3 p.m. Bill J enkins' funeral will be held at the Peek Fa~ly ll~me in Westminster. His football mates at USC will serve as paJJbearers. TroJan coach John MeKay told the DAILY PILOT that he will attend services. The 21:year-old ath lete rose from an American Legion team bat boy to a bona fide pro baseball 'prospect. He turned down a bonus from the Angels -reportedly in the nejghborbood of $25,000 -to take a scholarship to use. He is lauded by his former coaches as a young man who led by deed rather than by tallt. And he is said to have developed himsel r into the athlete he became. Here's what those coaches say about him: KEN MOATS, RB High football coach -"This kid had a way of getUng close to you. He was like one of the family. He was so honest everyone liked and respect- ed him. "He came to us as a ninth grader, all arms and legs. But he had that intense desire JG excel. He never complained about bard work. He knew what he had to do and did it. He was so eager to make it that you had to run him off the field long after practice had ended. • "IDs gift was leadership through effort. He wasn't parttime -I never sa\\' him give Jess lhan 100 percent in anything he did . . "We really didn 't expect him to be much of an athlete but he put on weight. got coordinated and develGped his quickness. By the time he was a sophomore be was outstanding. "In his junior year he earned the nickname 'Blade' in a football gan:ie with Marina. He just seemed to keep cutting through their blockers end making the tackles. "\\'hen he went to SC they (USC C(laches) didn't think he was fast enough h> play a lot. But he ran short sprints and distances until he developed that speed. He used to run two miles home from work everyday in the summer. "I thlnk be was capable of being one of the first kids from Huntington Beach ever to make it in pro football . Since I've been associated with Huntington athletics (25 years) he ranks with any of the great athletes we've had. "He was my Legion bat boy for four years (IJ.11 ). His older brother (Butch) played for me. I've known Billy since he was fi ve. He used to live right around the corner from me. "His death leaves quite a hole in the community'. This whole family has given a tot of warmth." DON WALKER, llB lilgb baseball coach -"'Bill was the kind of kid who used all his talents to their best advantage through hard work. I think he dld as much as anyone to reach his potential. "He was exceptionally coachable and always thought or the team. •le was willing to sacrifice of himself and Was a great clutch player. I saw him .score many runS by simply running over someone, even if it meant he might get racked up. "He was just down to visil with me Wednesday. He was very close to hi! parents -they used to come out lo almost all lhe games. He'd be right at the top if I had to list outstanding kids.'' ELMER COMBS, HB..lligb basketball coach -·'Bill came out for the team a~ a senior. He didn't get to play a lot bu-.he would do anything I wanted just to be a part of the team. The other kids admired and respected him and he'd do anything to improve. He was a real leader," WENDELL PJCKENS, OCC baseball coach -"U you had a lot of guys like Bill, you 'd have a winner. He was the All-American kid -a good citizen and a good athlete. "He was above average in character and ability • , . the pro baseball people were very interested in him. He was aJways friendly and gay ." DALE WONACO'M', OCC baseball coach -"He was one oC the great ones - a great competitor. I never heard him say 'I' -il was always we or the team. tie was a coach's dream to have around. "I think he could ha ve been a pro in either football or baseball." DICK TUCKER, OCC football coach -"He was loyal and 'a line athlete, one of the all·time citizens and players in my eigh t years at Coast. tie was an inspira· tional leader -not from what he said but by his performance, which is the best kind to have. "I don 'l think he was a great natural athlete. Bul he was so completely dedi- cated that he was just a winner. He felt he C(IUJd play with anyone and that's what you 've got to believe to succeed. "1 never heard him complain and he never gave up. In his second year under me I recall at least a half dozen coaches commenting about Bill alter their team had played us. And they were all impressed that he hit so hard. I think he was a pro prospect. "I couldn't say enough good things about him . He was the kind you like lo have around." JOllN McKAY. USC football roach -"lie was a wonderful youngsler and was going to play a real lol of football for us this year as a defensive back. "His big asset was his desire. I believe he had pro potential • , . his onl y weakMss was lack of speed but he was getting faster. lie was well-liked by all o{ his teammates." ~ Burial Set Tuesday ,, '' I \'lade 'Valls, the guy Who migrated A successor has not been named. title contenders in the rough and tumble football. He helped rl!bulld the spirit and 'flf'3t f101n c0.1:chi11g powe1l10Use-eh,,.· ~-w.tts came to Newport-Bettclt-ln~1116&,r--i:;;';;;fi';;;';;:--"'-"'~="'--=-==:c..--;po0i;isifiivi;Jenitrnmaso~--t<----foo tball, today resigned as grid coach at laking over from Wayne Hughes. unset League. Newport frarbor High Sdlool tn a shock· Newport had bten known as somtthing They boasted 6-3 season J'C(Ord$ three High athletics. Ing mo~Ji ~c DA11.Y PILOT learned less than a ronnldable prep grid pGWer or the past four campaigns and last year "And he's shown that Newport can exclusivt"IJ. and prior to Watts' regime It was 1 c.'Otll-they gave champion Anaheim fits before produce a winning team despite the fact The S$.jtar-0ld teacher of rock 'em, mon joke around , the county that .surf-bowing, 28-18. Too. they downed potent many people dkin't think It could be ~ock 1cnf'loo1ball, UPPt"d hit planned ·re. ing and parties· were the big interest of \\'estmrnster two of the pan three aen-done." ttremcnt bJ a .couPte of years after suf· Sailor_ football players. sons. Watts ca lls those Wesl.mlnsi!r wins Walt& told the DAILY PlLOT: "l luve fering a ~~s eye injury earlier this However, W11:tts changed that He con-the highlight of his tour at Newport. coa~hlng with a good taste In my mouth. )'t:ar in a home accident. verted soft kids Into bard·hltting :young · His five.year ttcord at Newport was This last le.um I had at Newport w11s Following major sur.iery. Watts still mtn and within • couple of seasons bad U.19-1. as fine a bunch of kids ~ I've had ln had not regained vision and It was felt gained the respect of his peers. Newport principal Charles Godshall my ~ years of CGaching. KIL LED IN AUTO ACC IDENT Bill Jenkins, Former Huntington Beac:h, OCC Athl1.tt • • --- .. IJ DAllV PILOT Monday, Mirth 16, 1970 Sport• i11 Brie f Spikers Stand Out; Dodgers Win in 17 Len Van Hof~gen. last year's Paclnc..a 440 champ. could \Vrite a book on the art of winning races two v.:ays: by holcjlng someone off and by catching someone in the final strides. He did both Saturday for the Southern California Striders in a triangular meet with his alma mater, UCLA. and 1he Paci{jc Coast Club. In pcrfonnlng the dual feat, Van Hafwegan posted two excellent early seuon times . The sturdy quarter miler won his speciality in ~6.l seconds, coming off the fin al turn with a IG-yard lead and holding oU UCLA sophomore John Smith. Smith spurted at the head of the stretch and inched closer to .Van Hofwegen until the pair reached the tape about cne yard apart. Smith "'as timed in 46.2, a lifetime best. Then, In tbe final raCe of the day -the mile relay -UCLA opened up a JO.yard lead with only one leg of the relay left. Van Hofwegen grabbed the baton from BUI Toomey and sprinted after UCLA's Brad Lyman. Powerful USC ll~'ept by host Arizona State and Arl:tona, 95- 55-30. in a triangular meet at Tempe, and Cal hande d \1siting San Jose State its first dual meet Joss in three years, 84-70. Trojan distance runner Ole Oleson set a meet rerord of 8:50.$ iii the two-mile, bet- tering the 19&9 mark of USC's Jeff Ptlarsee by 1.6 seconds. Dave Murphy of Southern Cal also set a meet reCQrd in the shot put with a mark of 62.- 7~. 4'n: inches over the 1962 record by Trojan DaUas Long. In the mile. Chuck LaBeiu of ASU breezed to victory in 4:G4.3. Al Cal, the Colden Beer 440 relay team of Don Couser, Dave ,.tasters. Isaac Curtis and Eddie Hart WI.! clocked In an excellent 39.9. In the 100, Curtis was nosed out by Kirk Clayton of SJS although both were timed in 9.3. • POMPANO BEACH, Fla. - Bob Stinson hit two home runs over the rightfield wall jn a nine-run 17th inning to give the Los Angeles Dodgers a 14-6 exhlbition baseball victory over the Washington Senators SUnday. • Gaucho Nine Splits; Pirates Drop T wo By CRAJG SHEF" Of IM 0111, ~II" IUlf Virtually eliminated from their conference baseball races, Orange Coast and Sad· dleback colleges will take a break from circuit action this week. OOC, which dropped a doubleheader to San Diego by idenUcal scores of 6-4 ln South Coast Conference a c t ion Saturday, does not return to circuit play until April 1. The Pirates do have a pair of tournament outings In the next two weeks. The first one starts Thursday. OCC draws Grossmont in the first round of the Citrus tourney at 10 a.m. Thursday at A z u z a College. Saddleback split a pair of Desert Conference clashes Saturday, defeating ~1 i r a Costa 7·2 in the opener on the Spartans' diamon~ and drop. ping the nite<:ap, 7-2. Coach Doug Fritz' club draws a bye this week in con- ference play, but travels to Palomar Friday in a non· circuit game. Sadd!eback's conference mark is now 2-4, three games behind Ml. San Jacinto. week, Golden \Vest concludes~ the first round of play in the Southern California Con- lerence, visiting East LA. The RusUers have a 0-i mark in circuit action. Coach Fred Hoover's team wUI also compete in the Citrus tourney Thursday, drawing Chaffey In a 10 a.m. game at Azwa High. ll'lltST GAME llHitMdl 171 lon-'ktr, cl N•IOll. 2tl l'd..,1rd1, lb Clltl1tt"""" 11 BoYk'. lb BWIH, fl Smlllt. c 5!ubllS. rf l'fMln11on, 1 To111> Mir• c11t1 ll) 0 . Vt-.tY, ~ Mon!•nfl, cf s ....... c J . VH.>tY, lb MurPhY, ff Wilson, 11 Grt,nt. 11 Ben1c1<e, 2.b V11oue1, p P•••on, It Tor111 111 r II tlli S 0 1 I S ! I I s 0 l 1 J 0 , 0 J D 1 I 1 1 1 0 l 1 1 I 2 2 1 1 • ' 1 l lj 711 s lb r II rltl 5 0 0 D J 0 0 D 5 I 1 Cl 3 0 1 0 3 o a a l 0 0 0 l I 0 o 4 0 0 0 4 0 l 0 0 0 0 0 " 2 1 0 Base ball Standings ' . . Sl<ldllbM:k 0001 010 ~J 11 o Mill Co111 011 000 DOO---J 1 0 ilCONO OAMll S1ddltltlCk (II L0"'9n~tr . d 8o1l't.li, rt Bovie, IO EWJrdJ, 3b Cttrlt!tnMn, H s ... ntt. c Slubtll, 1~11 lio•!, ,1 N!'lwn, 1b SN-d, P S"lvt•. • p,ovt, p Toll II ·~," fbl • 0 1 0 I 0 f 0 ,J Cl t • • 0 0 0 4 Cl I • l ' 2 0 ! 0 1 1 l O I O l O I O I 0 I 0 2 0 0 0 o o o a :JO llt Min CMll 11) O. Vn1•y, lb M•,llMI.. 2b s~1w. c J . v...v. lb MurPFIJ, ct Burk.t, H Greent. u Lind. rl l1t>0n, p To!1il 5•dctltbtck "'"'' (0$lf ' .. 000 D!O 0-1 I 0 m 010 11.-1 , o ll'lrtl Otmt P1ul. lb C!t rk. IS Powel!, lb T. i<:1M , Cf Ort"ll CNtl (4) .. ' ' . ' ' • • ' . . ' • • • , ' .... ' . . ' , • ' • • ' ' • • ' ' • S. l<:lno, cf WM1tl1t, fl McN~1ly, :!ti Plll,11 5choe1111tt, 1> Oul18flbtrrv, p lttvy, Ph Conlin!, p • ' ' ' • • • • • • ' fgl•IS • " I•• DltH (II • • ' ' • • . " .. ' . ' ' . . '" ' . ' . • • • ' • • , • , The former Bruin came oif the final turn only three yards back and beat Lyman by three yards to clock a final quarter mile of 45.8. .The Dodgers scored all their 17th-inning runs off Mike Whitson. Stinson, the rookie catcher, led off the inning with his first homer and added .a twp-nm shot his next time at ba t. MIKE CONTRERAS-PACES SUN IMPS The Gaucho victory was Jed by pitcher Greg Pennington, who tossed a seven·hltter, struck out 12 and walked OEStaT CON,ll:lll:HC£ MO!l11t, cl Coron•do, 70 !la!l:er. 10 Ebl'ltr. ti Oda..., l b Jol>n1c.,, H B11lt1. It Tl>Omblt•. C NfWe\I, p T011l1 ' ' ' • • • ' • ' ' • ' ' , • • • • • In Saturday's other major regional track and field action, Compton '71 CIF Hoop Pick By GLENN WHITE ot !ht OllllJ' ,lltl Stilt LOS ANGELES -Compton H..igb's Tarbabes were unseated as kings of the CIF's four-A basketball p I a yo ff s when Long Beach Millikan's ~ talented Rams t hr ashed Monrovia , 68-37, Saturday night lo take the 1970 crown before 9,063 fans at the SporLs Arena. However, Compton figures tG be the team to beat for 1971 honors since the Tarbabes have six of their top seven players from this teason returning. Compton made i t to the quarter finals this year and closed the season with a 19-4 record. ln other titles decided Satur- day, Harvard scored a tip-in at the buzzer to spoil Trona's perfect season, M-52, in the Class A decider. La Puente \Vllson rallied in the last quarter to shade Ar· ro\'0 Grande, 45--41 for the d0uble·A crown. And Verbum Dei got by tough Lasuen. 77- 69, in the AAA finale . !\1illikan made the tour-A ehampionsh.lp tiff a breeze. With t h r e e all-tournament selections pacing the Rams f\fillikan stormed to a 30-1 1 halftime lead and OC\"e.t looked back. f\1 onrov1a. ·which had \\'Gn its pre\·ious four playoff en· counters by a total of nine points. didn't get its first field goal til the last 25 seconds or 1he firsl quarter and then v.·ent another fou r minutes before getting Its next perfec- to lrom the noor. Dave Frost of lifilllkan was named tourney f\iYP v.·hile mates Richard Plante and Dan -Peters made all.tourney. The Trona game "'"as the most thrilling of the day 's ac- ll\ ity. The little school from the desert had rallitd from a 52-48 1teficit with 1:20 to play and 11ed the count at 51-all. However, Harvard had the ball and v;orked it for one ~hot. The attempt misstd but in the ensuing scramble for the rebound John Irvine pop- ped in the ball y,•ith no time rem aining. 1'rona was the battle. 28-0 going inlo The Dodgers took the lead in the 14th on Willie Crawford's homer but the Senators tied it on Gary Ratlifrs triple, two walks and an infield out. Crawford had three hits and ba tted in four runs. • PALM SPRINGS Cleveland bunched all its scor- . ing Into a six-run third Inning Sunday to hand the California Angels a 6-3 Cactus League setback. T\\·o-run doubles by Vada Pinson and Eddie L e o n highlighted the eight-hit ex- plosion off starter Clyde \Yright and reliever Dave LaRoche. • SAVANNAH, Ga. -Richard Petty, piloting a I 9 7 O Plymouth, coasted to victory Sunday in the NASCAR Grand National Savannah 200 stock car race. The Randleman, N.C. driver completed the 100 miles at the Savannah Speedway in 1:21.20. an average speed of 82.714 m.p.h. Bobby Isaac of Catawba. N.C., finished second, a lap behind Petty. It was the I03rd victory of Petty"s career and his sixth on the Savannah track. Petty held the lead for all but 10 laps when he made a pit stop. Pitcltiug Sharp Ante aters Sweep Doubleheader Dave \Vollos and Bob Barlow combined pi t ch in g talents lo li1n1t P o m o n a College to one unearned run as lhe UC Irvine Anteaters swepl a doubleheader Saturday on the "'inners· diamond, 3-1 and 6--0. "'ollos, ne"'est ace of the mound .staff for roach Gary Adams, hurled the seven ffi.- ning opener and gave up an unearned marker in the top of lhe final frame. He posted his third victory against n o defeat s, struck out six and lowered his e.r a to l.5(1 in seven games. Barlow. a freshman from Servile High School. ::ilmost doubled his longevity total with a nine-inning complete game victory. his second in three decisions. Me now has pitched 19 2/3 innings this year. The young right hander i1truck out 12 baltt!rs, \va1ked l \~1 o and scattered seven singles over the nine innings. He lo\1·ered his e.r.a. to 2.70. The Anteaters are idle this \Yeek ''ith final examinalions but \\'ill play seve n games in si x days during Easter va ca- tion week in the Anaheim touraament. The team record on the year IS J!}3-J. Shortstop Dan lf.ansen paced the hltting in lhe opener with a p.air of singles. He also scored the first two lrvine runs. He singled and stole second in the second and fifth frames. Chuck Spanski drove him across first and Wollos did the honors with the lone Irvine ex- tra base hit a double the se. cond tinte. Mali n, II 8pei<>, " Eck 10. " FllUY GAME PomlHMI OJ wooorutf, c1 J~t. p "~· " LinO•ev. " Mc{1n, ,. Woocrrlf!Of, .. H•1><>e, " W1Ht. ~ L1r•. c Ta!11> UC lllVINll Ill •Otht~I ' • ' • ' • • • ' • • • ' ' ' • ' • • • ' 0 ' • ' • ' • • ' • • • • • • ' ' ' • ' • • • ' • ' • " ' • • I t t h t bi 5 Sea Kin gs Qu alify For CIF Swi111 Fi11als F1rt••, !I Sykora. ltt Crt lf. cf 5.of'f>Cf, " ~aslla. r! Htn~n. •• lo~tn•k•• ;;11 ,~,el!n~. < WOllU, P ' ' , ' ' ' ' • • • ' ' • • • 0 • • • ' ' ' • • ' • • • • ' ' Corona del f\1ar looks like a good bet to capture the Cl!>"" swim crown won by Buena of Ventura last year a f I e r Saturday's preliminaries at the Belmont Plaza pool in Long Beach. The finals begin Friday night (7:30) at Belmont Plaza. Cliff Hooper's Sea Kings qualiDtd five competitors on the varsity level, one in the Bees and live in the Cees to keep abreast of the other two top.heavy t e a m qualifiers. Anaheim and Long Beach Wilson. ~'ilson was runnerup to Buena in 1969. Other area schools sending Individuals into Frlday·s finals are. Marina, Newport Harbor, \'1estminster and Costa ~1esa. lo1'11f (II' lwll!I Olll lHl<t" Yln.llY XICI Mtdlev Rtr.~ -h i. C-• 11,I 1.11r l&•rotlCfl. J1ck1M, ltrn1rll, ll•c~), l ·U,l iOD l'reo -)ncl, I(, l(ru..,11>el1 !CdMI, l ·d ). 100 "'e' -io, e11ek ~CciM\, '°., 611', 8,r,iefd ({OM !, !>IJ.~ DlvlnQ -~lh, Pt n"" !WM\, 'HI "l ,llC)ln!f. OllO f r•• -'""' K i.:...,mo11011 ICllM), J "1,, 100 Back -•ti!, M•11ol~~ !{Ml ~& • •OO f r..., llfl,,v -Jrio. Co•11n~ o•I /Nit !llern~•ll 5!•n1t.hom, I( Krvmp1>e11, Bliek 1. 3 19 J '" 100 F•v -l•ll Evl"I ll'IBJ, 1•• "h, M. 0110 ICO"IJ, ~\ 0. 100 lnc11¥10ull Mf'lll'• -ltd, E¥•n1 !HIJ. 5e FtH -f l• !Gt h i, •sno l '-'1'1, n•. 100 F rt f P•i.v -~th, Cc.ii• Mt•• fMcAt•f•lf•. \'it.o.•1cll C1rPen1u . B•n· l'IO!IJ. J '°·'· '" 'ocr M.oOWv lltllv -h!. '""'o~" Ht•bor 15n¥Oor, Wall, S••U'h I'&,,,.,•.<. l •n c. Jin. M•lin• Oiov1cll. H••O>. KlnQ, N!tlstn l, 1'00 F •M •• )'IO, (i lO•!f ~(d'o\I, !·Jl ), ~lh, 8 ICrul"l>floll ICDMl, 1 5' 1, !O FrM -lrd, D Orio !Cd ... l. ?l ! 100 ,:~f -711!1. G. Loll1 !C0'-11. S1 9, •It!, Oav''' CCaM I, 17.4, Ii• ~· s·~ be!wetn 0 Ol!o ICOMI and 8, K...,m -lr !Cdl'\. S1J !O Fllf -'1h, l'Ylll INl'll ;~ l !O Brt~I! -lid, Y1,.,..ood ICY I j~ ), 51'11, Ht•O• IMI. Ji: j »J Fro• ll111v -ht. Cot'l)ll~ a•! Mtr ro~v••• D O!lo. B O.:ru"'"""1,, G, LOl!IL 1 ·~! !, Jlh, Nt"'DOr! f.lorlt!o" 1Sf1Vd91, e1!;:l!rl!(I" Smi!h, "··-•I l;J1,1, To11" n ' • Scot' I» lnnln•• " . OCQCi!Q l -1•11 010 011 •-J. J $E!COND CAMI Pomon• U I , •It • h rOo MtllO, " ' • • • V\ooc,,ng. I! ' • • • r.;ccai,, ' ' • ' • J~!t. " • ' 0 \'1000t1111, tr • ' • "'""•· " ' • • • Eckl), !O ' • ' • Wol•ftlcn. rt • • ' • L•nJ>t•, II ' • ' ' LOl)of, Or • • • • Sr~k .. " • • ' • Vllf•r, ,. ' ' • • Ov~11rttt. "" ' • • • 10111:t. " • ' • UC ltyln• !0 10, " t bl Fl"•'· "' ' ' H1M•n. » ' • Ctt1Q, " , • ~~ncr. '" , • S•s'<a. •t ' • Nlct>olKl!l, " ' (; ............ " ......... ..,.... c Bl"-· • ' • T~11i. .. sc,ort lit 1nnln11 . " f' '~~• Otlt (1(0 Ol) -It I u.:: I"'•"& lttCI 000 il• -t 6 ' ' • ' ' ' ' • • 0 • ' ' ' ' • • • • Gauchos Dom~nate Relays Saddleback College's Bob S1e:vens and PauJ Cox "·ere seletUd as the outstanding runner and field e v e: n t pe.r1ormt rt I n S1turday's Desert Conference Relays ss !he Ga uchos dominated the day's eventt at College of the Desert. ·ream scorea were not kept in the meet. Cox WOl'l two -f'vent1 and placed second Jn two othert. His ""innln& Javelin tou of 20&- 10 was 1 school '1nd meet record. It "'&S al.so Ult best mark In Southern California lo date among junior college performers. Cox al50 captured the discus \\'Ith a loss of 141}7, plaetd st· cond in the trlpJ, jump (43-IJ) and second in lhe long jump t2U1. Bill Patterson of Desert \\'OD the triple jump (43.9;41 and EddJe Johnson o( !\Ura Cmla captured the long jump 123-41. Stt\Cns w11 s on t\\'O winnin" Saddlebitck relay te.ams. He 'r8n a 4:27 4 n11lc to anchor tht Gauchos to a clock. • Ing ol 10 :~6 .2 in the distance medle y. Ed Jarrell was timed in ~1.G fo r the .f.40. Df>an Hon· nelle h<id a 2 09 880 and Joh11· Dauss clocked 3 18 2 hi !ht 1320. Ste\ens ran a J 59.S half mile in the sprint medley relay to spearhead Saddlt b&ck to a first place tin\(' of 3:39 4. l>auss had a 54 I quarter anrl ~1e1 e C::uripb<'ll and Jarrell <'locked 23 8 and 22 I In lhe 220 Jn the m1!e. relay, :i\e\"rns ran the quarter 1n 53 4 in ht·l1~ ing !he Gauchos to R second pl ace finish behind lmperi:il Valley. Imperial had n time> of 3:32 8 while Sadd leback clorl..- e<I 3033.6. In !he rnct , Jarrell le.d nrl with R 52.Z. Cox fol\OY.'t'd \V\lh a 54.4 d'nd Campbe ll clocked 53.6. The Gauchos'· U I t n n tJndt~·ood pln~d serond In the high jurnp "'I th an rrrort or ~2 The. cvenl was "'On by F.d lt Gllands of l\firtt Costa t&-5/. , Contreras Talli es 31 three. Mike Edwards had three singles in the Sad- dltback win. The Gauchos erupted for five runs in the ninth inning to break up a 2-2 lie. At Orange Coast, I he Pirates fell five games behlnd conference leader Cerrltos (6- 0) with the double loss. For Frosh Jn the first game, Dan Clark and Mike Powell each had three hits for the Pirates. OCC 'TET\-IPE. Ariz. (Special) -outhit San Diego in the opener, Closing oul season play in fine 12·9. style. A-like Contreras, former In the second game. Orange Ml. S..n J1dnto ,.,.., VlcHN' YtlltV l"'otrlol V•ll1y !I•"'""" Mitt Cos!1 S..Odltbtdc C1nvon1 Pile. V1ttllt W L ll'ct. GI • 0 1.000 l I .150 I l l .150 l l l .500 2 1 1 .500 2 I .500 7 ' .lll l l .250 l 0 • .000 • SllUnltJ'S Sco•H 5•ddltblldc 1·!, Mir• Co1t1 2·7 0.Htl t·2'· Pelo. Ve,d1 1·1 Ml. 5tn J1clnlo 1-1, 1 ... 11. Vellty 0·4 Ylclor VllltY t-1, C1nyo11$ 2·7 S11Vnl1J'I G1mt1 81rl!o... 11 P•lo1 Verde ''"'""' 11 Mir• Cosl1 ~rt 11 lm1>erl1I Valley Vici or V1lltY It Ml, Sin JIC(nto 51ddftbtc~. bv1 SOUTH C0,1.ST CONl'ERL!;NCE C1rrlto1 Full1rtM Mr Sin""'"";" Si n Olt9o Sin Ol-Mt11 SIMI ,l.1>1 Or.nr• C0ii1t W l T Pel. GI 6 001.000 4 10 .U17 320.60021.':t 1 11_j(IO 3 , l 0 .2511 • ••0 .100 •1'> 1 50.161 5 Coast he19 a 4· I lead going in· l-lunlington Beach High stand-to the ninth inning, but San out, ripped the nets for 31 Diego rallied for three runsJo points against rival Arizona, tie the score -and then push· and ended the campaign \Vith ed across two in the 10th to a 17.7 3\'erage, second highest win. l-like Paul and Tom King s1111t11av'1 scorn • , ~ icor• bJ 1n11!11t1 • Sin O!HO Or.ln9E (Oi i! . ' . :io1 ao1 coo-• ' i l(IO 100 001-•ll l SKond Glm• Gr1n1t C111t (4) P1ul, lb Cl1rli:. lb Powt ll. 311 lflYY," T 1C in9, Ir s. l<:l~g, cl wMs11er , rf Jolln1on, c c risp, P OulsenMrry, p Totel1 .. ' ' ' • • ' 0 • • ' ' • ' ' • " 0 • • • • 1111 Dl11• UI Molln1, cl JMn"9tl. H Odom • .>tt Ebtltr. rl COl'Ol'llOO, lb Daron. lb McC1s1Jn, II SllY,01, c l~ftnbu19,. e11111er. 1 TG!lll .. ' . ' ' . ' ' . ' • • . ' ' ' ' . ' . ' . " . S<lrt llY 1111111111 .... ' . ' . ' ' ' • ' ' • • • • ' ' • ' • • • • . . .. ' ' • • 0 • ' ' • • ' ' • ' ' • • ' • • • • 00 Arizona State's freshman had two hits each in the !.in Olfta u. or•""'e c 01,.1 .._, nitecap. C1ttrl!01 2-2. Ml. San ,1.nronlo l·I r h • basketball squad. ln other baseball action this ~:1•=.,'"~.!:.'1:V~"1 1·1 ~~:!~e::.1, :: : ~! ! : ~ : ~ Contreras teamed wit h1----------------'---'--"-------"-=c:.c=.._:::_:::_:.::_:..__:_: f o r m e r Sunny Hills star Br::id McNamara, in the Sun Imp backcourt. and the two provided a solid s co r i n g punch, as the latter led the club 1vith a 23.9 average. In addition. Contreras was highly effective in crashing the boards, as he averaged over seven caroms p e r ga1ne, \\'hile also being one of the team leaders in assists. More often than not. Con- treras, while not the gunner type. did possess the hot hand. ;ind on the year, shot a team lc:id iJ1g S7 pcrCt'nl from the field and pul through 80 per- cent of his free throy,·s. 'J'he Sun Imps posted a lf>..3 record. marking the second time in as many years an ASU fros h cage squad has turned in tha t mark . The ln1ps hi! over 100 points in eight games. and went past 00 on four other occasions. compi ling a 97.5 s co r i n g ;1ver:ige \1•hile holding op- -poneni s lo just less than 80 points per encounter. Compton Capttu·es J C Caoe G.·o ,vn ~ IT SEEMS most everyone .who tours our distillery C-Om pt<>n Coll•g• completed likes his picture snapped alongside Jack Daniel. an undcfeaterl season Satur. day night \\"ilh a 77-75 double '"' ---.. -.. :i;·---~ ~:~:;m~it;ic~:;;,g:'';or~~~ t.'-----,_~·'-·-i .. Of course, we're pleased to sec this. state junior college ba sketball "' champ10nship at LBCC. .,• For we're proud of Mr. Jack and his LBCC had a chance to win it 1wice. •mt blew bolh op-l whiskey and the n1edal s he \Vo n. And POl'IU!lllies. ,. With the score ti•d at ·~63. l1-:::::;;:;::1c~e\...JU we're proud to inaintain a trad1't1'o n LBCC's S. L. 01ven~ missed l llro free thro\\'S \\•i1h 10 J d d I I Tl ' f <«courls remai ning and the OVCT a lUn re years 0 C. lat S \V 1y {.!:tn1e v.·a~ then sent into th<' h 'lJ lJ if '"" overtime. we ope you pay us a ca . \Vith nine seconds left in the firs! overtime. Chuck Terry you're traveling throughTe.rtnessee. LBCC's slate pla}rr of th~ )'"· missorl • r.,, 1hrow and We have two 0uuides on hand to the gamt' v.as exltn d ed another five minut" Compton I show you Ollr distillery. And, then outsrorrd LBCC'. ~. in the SCC'Onrl overtime 'f b · I The Tart"' fin,,hed •ith a I YOU rtllg your Camera a Ong, 3.l-0 re<""ord. 'II b fl d LAcc. t h, s, u1 h "' ,1 we e attere to snap your Ca ll fornia Conferen ce c 0 ·I . , h h f cha mpion. won the third place pICturc Wit t e n1an W 10 trophy Wllh an 83-79 win over d . lJ Sou1 h Coast Co nference title-Statte lt a . ho!dcr Fullerton. -- CHARCOAL tv lEL LOWED 6 DROP /J BY DROP Cl I tin. JKI Dt"ltfOh~lt1., l.O?ll M1ll1w, Prtp~ fllC, S1tn Jo&(l:uln t aptured the ron'O!Atlnn lltle, dcJcatln~ et- ty ("ollr(.!I' of San Francisco. 88-i'fl. TC!fN"(S)(( WHISK[Y • 90 PROO F BY CHOtcr OI Srl Ll lO ANO BOTTl£0 BY JACK DA NIEL OISTlll ERY L Y N C~SU RG (PO P. 384), TENN. .. I I l I '· •• " . ' ' 1 r~I ' ' • • ' . . ' ' . , . ' ' 1 • 1 • •• • • • • . ' .... ' ' ' . 1 • , ' ' . • • •• • • ' . , . • • • • ' ' ... ' 1 • ' • • ' • • • • • ' ... • • • • ' • • • • ' •• . ' " , "' • • • ' 1 • ' • • • ' ... ' • ' ' • ' ' ' • • • ' . . ' . ' ' -,, ' I ~ '· .• . OUTSTANDING NEWPORT WRESTLER Undefe•ttcf Ch ris Horpel Blow by Blow Horpel's Fabulous WrestliI1g Record Chris Horpel. Newport Harbor 1ngh Scbool's undefea~ed 168-pound CIF wrestling champi on, wag named ouUtanding wrestler of the CIF Southern Section rtcently at the CIF fina ls at Cal State (Fullerton). Horpel. a senior, pinned all four foes in gainin~ the 14&- pound title in the finals and in doing so chalked up his 34th pin In 36 attempts . He added to the drama in the finals by pinning three of his last four foe s in the final eight seconds of competi t_ion .. Here is his 1969-70 individual season record which includes the National Prep standard for total falls in one season : Date Evenl Oppontnl. School Resull Dec. 13 Tournament al Pacifica High Dec. 19 Quadrangu lar al E!tancla High ,Tan. 3 vs Santa Ana Jan. 10 Tournament at Bol~a Grande High Jan. 15 at Anaheim Jan. 17 OCC Toumamenl at Costa ~1esa High Jan. 22 vs \\'estm inster Jan. 24 Five Counties at Fountain Valley High Jan. 30 at f\-tarlna Feb. 10 at Western Feb. 13 at Huntington Feb. 21 Sunset finals at Marina Feb. 28 Clf' Prelims at Marina ~far. 7 Clf final~ at Cal State (Fullerton) Blackman, La Quint11 Pinned :2{1 Oq uendo, Pacifica P~nned 4:42 Riveria, SA Valley Pinned :48 Parkinson, Bolsa Grande Pinned 1 :36 Journeay, El f\.iodena Pinned 1:05 Davidson, Estancia Pinnt<! :36 Blackman, La Quinta Pinned 2:58 Antos. Santa Ana Pinned 3:37 Davis, Bol!a Grandr Pinned 1:14 Curtis, \Veslern Pinned :5'1 Stewart, Sonora Pinned 4. 17 E\'ans, Pacifica Pinned 3:29 Poemoctah, Anaheim Pinned 3:37 Davis, Bolsa Grande Pinned :SS Ashley, Estancia . Pinned 2:45 campbell, Los Amigos Pinned 3:27 Jennings. Edison f:tt. 6-1 Erb, \Vestminster Pinned 1:13 Journeay. El Modena Pinned :46 Zaich, Palos Verdes Pinned :36 Hardi n, Mt. Miguel Pinned S.05 Scott, Brawley Pinned J: 10 Rilling, Marina Pinned 1 :57 Curtis, Western Pinned J :52 Long. Huntington Stach Pinned :52 Long. Huntington Beach Pinned 1: 19 Erb. Westminster Pinned 5:28 Poemoceah, Anaheim Pinned 3:Jfl Dix. Vill a Park Pinned 2:38 Walter. Troy Dec. 4-1 Parkinson. Bolsa Grande Pinned :40 Evans. Pacifica Pinned 5:21 \Villiams San Gabriel Pinntd S:S2 Lopez, La't'•ndele P!nned 4 :21l Spiro, Camarillo P~nned 5:59 Livingston, Bu rroughs Pinned S:SS (Ridgecrest) Pro Hockey, Cage .... ~-•f Al A Oll"tl t11t Dlvlllll" OM~ (llk1ge f.lp YGr~ Ol!Ptrol! Moolrltl Tororilfl W L Tl'!1.0' G.l 3J u 11 11 us ltl ,)f )<I I I• 114 1$1 l' u 11 " :rn hJ lollll1111(\jUI JJ If U 10 lll 11& 11 11 17 U ~ JIQ W"t Ohrt11t11 ~t. Leui1 " " • " l'lll1tlu'flt " " " " l'lllitdtlllllll .. " " ,.. Mlnl'leSO!I " " " • Otkl•no " " " " LOI """It~ " • ,. » lllllrftY'I 11"•11• Monlrtt l ,, SI. Lciuh ) ,._IO t, lot"'" I Cllk•llO 1. Hew Yori< ' Mif!MKll• $, l'lthbu.-.1'1 S l'llllHt"l'llt J, Lot Afl9'1fft J IVl"'llY'I lln411tt Montr .. t J. Tororita J, 1111 M!MeM!• " Nrw Yerlr. ' ~I :S. '°'"'°' S. ti• O!lt•fll .S. LOI An9ll•1 1 Otlr.ltnd 2. l'l'llltdtl .... lt I .Mol\ft,•1 Gef!ln No O'lmtt tcill'd11lt11. ,.IMMll'l"I ~""ti Liil '""~IH 11 D•tt"ol! "'!"l'tll':.Ott 11 S!. Lolli\ '" ... '" .. •N .. •• m "' "' •• "' Three Schools Set Banquets Sporll awarcb banquets will be aervtd up 11 three Orange. Coast area high school! T'lles· day night honoring winter sports. Edi~on High·s basketball , wresUing and swimming teams will be feted in the school's cafeteria at f ::i. Cornna de.I Mar'a basketb•ll and 'f!'utllng teams and Marina's bas.ketball team will bf: honored y,•llh lette.nnen award deserts. Ttle Corona del ~tar i f£alr is ochedul«I !or l :lQ_a\_tn._ t;eboOI ca feter ia while M1trina'1 basketball team will hrild lb festivities at g;3(} in the t afeterlo.. ... f:llllf" DIVhlt" w ' l'tl. O/fW YGrk " " MllW•ulctl " " &•l!lmort • " l'Ml~1Mil ~ • C.lnclnnet! " .. eosten " .. Oetrn!I " " W11t1r11 Di1tll;.11 "t!1nt1 " " ..... "'"''"' .. " (llklOI) " " PM<!M• " " ~~~1111 " " ~·" "'•e"Cl1~0 " .. $•~ Olt;,o " " 51111'''""' , ... tti '-'"''ll'O 111, 011<'011 "' ·"' -~· "" .Sil -·~ .416 ·"' '" .$JI .Ill ••• ·"' "' .JJI "lrw Yort; lit, Sin O!r90 lOJ JllMtY'I lttwlts 1!1111mo,i 11'. 8Q!.la" 111 Cltic:!n"tll II,. ~tlllt Ill C.Mc-1XI, M!lw1utet 1117 •• ' " 1''' " " ,.., _, ' ,, ' ,, ' " lJ'. ,,, . ~.., O+tM 131, l'hllt $!Ntlil nt A,!11n11 l H , l'Fl(ie"'W 111 l ~ I.I" tel~ 106, Ht.., Yer"k la! Tlllrr'I Otm" '"•e•:io ~s. (1.w;1~ .... 11 11 0m1111 ,.11lld1Y'1 Gtmto '"'"'• ii 1'1111..:1~!• Statllt ti CllklfO :51n F .. nclxo 11 P11ce<11~ eo1•0~ ,, .s." o~ J'frw Yoo-~ _, Dtlrol! ... fHttt~ O[v111tt! llldl1nt K~tuc•, (•rollN NewYt"' l'tit,tu• ... W L I'd. e l J2 17 ,,,.. - ~ U .lU It'~ 31 ,. Jee 11\'J :.s ... .m li' n ~ .»s 21·, wuttr~ 01 .. 111t11 .. _. Wt1lllf>"°" ' 011i.1 Jk .. °'1U M """""~ fl lO $11 l'l.U.Jlt 1 l/ ,, .JJ6 J ::J lJ .JOO JI 1 ,)I M ·* t '-1 ~NttlY'\ •iMfb C•f'Ollnt ,.._ lfl•flll U LOI A~Ju 1 .. 0.lli' IJ) $tflf11''1 llt1•ltt. Wftlllfiol{I,, 1U, Nt"' Ol"lt•M 1n K"'hKllY 1'6, Otft•1 1'1 °"""" lff. Mllml 111 let A""lb 111, Pllllbllf"l1' 11t 111111..,. tu, c.~ oo f ... Y't 0"""' 0111.a &I H .... Otltt ll*; ,....,,... o..,. l'in1bllrol\ VI. let A"Otlel ., frw1119, (1!11. Ntw O•lr•~ ,.., W•lfll"ftt,, t 1 !'tbnQ. c.ttrl. ~ 11 Kfl\tue•' Lions Smash Record League Baseball , Opens Loar a Tabbed • Ill ~l1111d1y, March 16 1970 Irvine DAILY PILOT Ja Hustwick Places 4th Laauna Beach High School't track aad field forces .are awaiting a dual meet .at By ROGER CARLSON cellent hltUnc power and will 4. corona del to.1ar -The experience and lack or depth f'oolhlll Thursday to open °' * o.11r '1"' s111t be a solid contender for the Sea Kings' big need Is 5Cllld 1n the pitching deparlment. Creslvlew League action after The. Jrvlne League b11seb11J league Utle. Pitching is the big pitching lo go along with their 6, Costa ~lesa _ Tht competing in the Rollint H\IJg season opens Tuesday af. q4fstlon mark -as it I~ with new found hilling power. La!lt ~lcsans. under ne'v <.'Oaching, Invitational Saturday, •-h I' ternoon with a full sl11te of • t' t di I 'I f' Westminster Hl&h »',; oo s 11mu and the Loara Saxons nearly every tesn1 in the year s con msen c n ii,:ure havt changed their intage con-The Arlilllll falled to scort distance medley relay team ,,. lavor·• lo win their ,.. circuit. with the exception of to do much on paper but found . bl Ith ood b 1 'r""'ed the Tustin Relays .. ~dera. Y w ll a ance. better than a lhlrd Individually -• cond straight 1 · • -·g e Loara. itself in the CIF playoffs at M Id •-th record Saturday afternoon to rvme ~ u The ustangs cou U'C e at the Saturday meet but still championship accordln& to the end of league play. 1 r h if lh highlight Orange Coast area • 3. Estancia -The Eagles' surpr st o t c year e had some creditable limes. lhe D.\JL Y PILOT dope oheel. teams in the 11th running of Estancia and Corona del pitchln& was a quesllon mark S. to.1agnolia -The Sentinel5 pitching holds out. Dave Hustwick, t.he Arlist.s' the relays. Mar are. given the best shots before the start of the cam· ha\'c lost nearly all or their 7. Edison_ Edison 's youor premier middle dl11tance run. Santa Ana took the the s f the I ti f 1 ' t h ner, e·~r1·mented w1'lh t•-at axons or eague · palgn, but en route to a 3-2 po~oer rom ast year s oug · h I' ped 'th ... ...,.. 11'11 sweepstakes title on the tle among Orange Coast area mark they ha ve given up only crew and 1t rigure~ to be a leain Ls an< leap "'1 no mile and placed fourth with a stren1th of first place in varsi-teams. six runs, including two rebuilding year. TI1e ha~ic returni ng lettermen and quell--4.45.8 on the wind-swept oval. ty !hand C1 "r colml pet 111 1 11hon ~~~Unn& Here'5 a capsule rundown on shutout!. "·eakness for l\1agnolia is in. cl~ohnable phi 1 c h.1i n g ·h Twhe ue·11 concenlrtte on the ISO wl ate or-rs w ,_ ch ed' ed arge~ avcn s o n in the u"""'ming Southern ea team in the pr 1ct 1 1· · I ""' Bee classUlc1Uon. order of finish : rnoug 1 1repo~·er 1n pre eague Counties Meel al Hunlincton Marina placed fourth in . B Ki k T Q f £ play to be considered a strong Beach Saturday. varaity and Mluion Vl~jo was t. Loara-Saxon pjtchi.ng ii UC c ers op 18 ey contender for the title. P.flke Sweeney was third In third in Bets to lead the area the k~ to their strength with B. f'ountain V~ley _ WHh the Bee pole vault "'Ith hi.s lift schools in order of finish. rtahtlianders· Richard Vince Oran11:e Coa.51 College's soc· outstand ing players of lhc f'ountaln Val\ry's luck. il's lime best of 12-(1 while the Cee \Vestminster's medley rtlay and Don Standley. BpUi were cer team begins fts conferenC"e gam~. Bolh are n1ember~ or hard lo piece the Barons any two-mile me.die)' relay te1m team clocked a 10:35.5 with all·league perfonners I as t sell.Son Tuesday, April 3 the Orange Coast team. higher than the cellar. The wall nfth with an 8 :~.0 clock· W11yne' Akiyama (1320),.Henry year and are bol stered by six against ch a ff e y ancr Alfredo l\faran scored lwo loss or hvo starters fo r ing . Bal111rd (440 ), Steve Lassegard other returning starters from defeating Cerritos, ft-2, Friday goals for Ille Pirates "'hilt disci plinary problems furtber ThAI quartet was composed 1880) and Don Olston (mile ) the '69 titlists. on the OCC soccer field. tlcnry ~lapakoi, Ciro Figueroa harnpers the Barons. Defense of Josh Bright. BUI Chris- composing the quartet. 2. Santa Ana Valley -The Roy Klas5en and German and Steve Johnson had one has appeared esp e c i a 11 y tiansen, Jason Holloway and Estancia had lhe best in-Falcons have displayed ex-Crespo were named as the each. sha ky. J\fike Byron . dividual pole vaulter in Craig 1_:.:::::::._::::_:_:~::;:::_:::.__::~::__:_:::__::_:_:::._:::__:_:: _ _:::_:::.. ________ _::::..C'..'-__________ _;c_ _____ _ Nomura, who-vaulted 13-0 to lead his mates to a fifth place finish while mate Dave Lotzfek tossed the discus 141·1, good for fourth place in the in· divldual competition in the discus. Huntington Be11ch finishtd third in the long jump with a 61-10 effort sparked by lht 21· 9~~ leap of Garth Wise, who had the best single leap of the day . Santa Ana took I h e s~·eepstakes title with 95 points to runnerup Tustln's 36 -dominating the meet In every phase. Next order of business for 0ran1e Coast area schools In invitational meets ls the an· nual Southern Counties classic at Huntington Beach High School Saturday TU!Jl~,;11, no •l'>uttlt hurd~ -(Hcond ,,._,) I . M1r!n1 Avt,..,. MOt11ht P1. Jur1, l'•111tvl .l&.2 '!IOJrd llttl) 1. IE1l1M!f fWfCld, Cote, u1m111, NOm11r1l. St.i jo•trt lt! M•rlne t nd E•!•ncl1 11t for or:~~i1 r111, -t1lr1t het H :J.. Mtrlnt ''"·' l..econd 11t11l w11tml.,llet 1 ~21.2. onr11!J •. Wurm1n111r s. M:1)~·111y -Olrtt lltil) I. Mir!,.. (Kll tno. Vonllml9!11. llontYI Ltcvl ll.l !~ M•!l l , Wnlm n11• 11.t. 0Q'i~~~:.1c:· =i::· -fll'll l'l•ll 1. w u tmlr11I•• IAlr.!,1m1. l •I I• r • • Len•• .. "· 011""'1 ID:JS.S (mMI rr~ordl. fo•tr1ll I, W11tm!n1ttr . uo rt11v -fl'll hc•tl I. Mttl,.. on1 • ..., v1nllml9ll1, ll:0ntv. LKYI 1:11.0. lo•tr•lll l . Mlrl11o1. Ml~ re11v -(flr11 "'•!! 1. W1itmln1t,.. J:?l.S jAnttrmtn. 1-1•,,_ n1n, Yount a1111rd). S. H11nllntlon seach J:ll.• UKOllCI ltfftl 1. Mtrln• l ,Jli,6 ~over•lll j· Mtrlnt J:".4. 1 l-l11m1 -• H11..t1"9!all 9ftdl I · 10H11h !umP -5, E1t1Ml• l!l·Ol. 51'1ot Jllj! -2. H11nllnt1°" .. tell 10. ,,, fiolt v111U -l MlrlM :is.' S. E1!1n· clf>1t~~j. tlnctlvldY•ll -'· LIW,lfel\ !E1Ttntlt) 111-1 S. ll:lm•r ((CIMl 110.tl. l e1m Score'!: 51nll "'"' JI, Ort~. 13. LOWt ll It, M -r I n 1 11\0:. WU!l""llntllr ~"" lttlell• I, Hvntlntt"" e11c11. VIII.I "''~ • ..,, TrOY 1. ~ ... 0 0 11\\11111 ""''"" I -I. M1rln1 "·'· UO rtitf -l. 1t1nc:.!t fl.I. Mtdltv r!ltV -1. MlulO<I Vl•!n 6:0f.7 (R1ltr1v. co,d•,..,., 1'1r1r. l101l '· WtJtmlr11l•r 6:0P.7 3. !sl1n:•1 6.IU. 7. UO rtllY -I. E1!1M lt 1:lS.I. • x 1120 rtltv -1. Ml"lon Ville l•.04.t. M!le ll:t1•Y -l E111ncl• 1:11.' •. WHlml111t1r 3:.0.1. J. MIUIOl'I virr~ J:~J.:i ""' -s. Huntln•I"" l11c~ 113- " l>olt v1ull -I. Cotont f1I Ml• lll:trntft4',. Wuttt. V•11tllnl ll-0 ?. Ml11lon Vit ia .u-o ldflt<'""!nect b.- ""~~~1·~, -J. EtllOfl '1·t ... I, M1tlnt t'•· Hllll mP -3. E1t...Clt 16-.1 S. (Ol'ON $1 M..-If.,. T .. m K..-f o: T1111lf! 11111 !:"" Ant l?, Mlulot! Vltloi ll't, fl tw;!t 11. low•ll 10, WHlmfMI~ footllll~ f l Maden•, v11tnci. c':! l'tl!MI" 6.. ui 1llllttl1 i.urd!ft-4. fdlton 1 :01.7. MtdltY rtlt1 -J. Eflton •c·tt.J. MG r~ltf -S. M••l!lf 1 :Jf .. ;1 i 11111 rtitY -2~H11nllM ktcll IJ:11.1 f· IOISOll U: ·',· l>•O H19h vmt -1 M•• ne • ·\~"!!! fllll -l. iw-1111t dt! M..-122-11! 11m •tor": Stnlt ""' ,,L I Modlftl 1', f ull!" tnd VIHt l'trt1 1•. Ed!tOfl I, Hun!I,,.,°" ltt<ll '\~. lut~t ~.,~ 1, Mt rl"•· J, Keck Back, Seeks 3rd Kona Title ' Lamar Keck, winner or tht.: Hl68 and 1969 West Coa.sl ~latch Game bowling elimina- tions at Kona Lanes and \\restern States t itllst both years, will return to Costa Mesa '• Kooa Lanell to try for an unprecedented t h i r d straight title beginning May 2.\, Kec k has survived a field of 120 In each of the previou s campaign5. The Re!eda resi· denl took the state cham· plonshlp despite h.ls oppontnl, Don Bell ol San Francisco. chalking up a perfect 300 game. Anothe r two-time eHmina· Lions champion will be in the potent fleld. He'a Bob Ramlrei of Anaheim, who won in lMI and 1964. Area bowler1 entered in the 10th annual event : flunlinfton Beach -Bob Probert, Bud Rowe, R a y to.fcKean, Wally Nelson, Glenn Qu lnllven. Oen1 Poinl -Clyde Lacher. Faunlaln Valley -Ken OaJelden, Jim Koe.ninp, Jan Flahbum. Costa Mesa -Nick Sti1ailo, !-'re d Beraal, Larry Schoenlelder, Al Hur1L \Ve1tmln1ter -_G In o Panzarella. Jerry BreM1n, Gene Furst, Dick Braar.ch, Wrry Keller. P'red Rlccflll. Tustin -Fred Douaberty. Sears Was '89.95 88 A!k About Sean Con.,.enjent Credit Plans • St.ru playing antomatieaily when tape cartridge i. iJJOtttt>d, f!lop! when it's re~ e ChangM channels automatieaDy or manually e Fingertip 't'olame and tone eon· tro!.. Slide tone rontrol Model621 ~ CUT $25! 4-Track Tape Player Was '49.95 88 • lnsert tape cartridge and enjoy LhrilJjng stereo music of yow- choice e Solid-state amplifier with big S. watt power output (4 'W1llUI pu- channel) •Built-in pilot light and noitt filter ~fodel 631 r. \ Regular *199.95 Auto Air Conditioner $ • TremendOM nlae~ • F1•ter eool-down time for "right-now" comforL High C.M.f . for !"'lier ofr circulation • Sleek design h8S oaf et!' padded bezel, mounm di· l'e<:tly under 'dasbboenl • Modtl 5n7 ---..... ""-._ ...... , ---·•..itt _,__, _ .......... _., ··-·-"""'""' -........... ---.., ...... , ... __ ,,_fl .. ....... "°""'-'(# ..... ..,.. --ti -... ..,.,,, .... _ ., .. ,, • .,.._, .................. ftlOUILMo9'19 ,A. ........ ltM-•tPA ......... 41'.t ,_..,_...,.._.. INSTALi.ED ---· ---___ ,_ ·-·--! --·""' ', .......... .._ __ --"" ___ ,_ _ ......... .__ __ -·- • 24 DAILY PILOT LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE T·SHJ& SUl"•lllOI COUllT 01' Tlli STAT E 01" CALIFOllNtA flOllt T"I COUNTY 01' OllAHOE NO . .1·5"77 ~T!Cllf 01'" HE•ltlHG 0' ~l'T lltON I Y AOMINISTJIATOll WITH THE Will AHN l!XEO flOll AUTHOll1TY l'O 'l!KECUTI A LE ... JE OF IEAl ,.llOl"IEllTY Etlll• ol FRANCES 0 LI \IE TT E F"LLON. Ott••M"I NOTICE ts HEllE8V GIVEN Thal •rvo Omni' l'•llon, Admlnlt.trelor wll~ 11\e Wiii Annr•fd M• !!led .....,.tin I vulllH ,..1;. tior. for In CW'Oer •1111'!11'111 ... P!'tilloM< 1u LEGAL NOTICE •A" nu su,e•to• (OUllT OF ,.iol( STATE OF CAL IFO•NIA FOii ,.NI COUM TT 0, OllANGl 11t1. A·•sm 1'10,.tCI! 0' NE"AlllNG 0' f'E",.ITtON '0• P •OIATe OP" Wrt.L AND FOlt Lin••• ,.ESTAMeNTAllY Etllte of MARY FJl.ANCE~ Cl YNE. l liO k"f*"' I~ Mlrv F. ClrM. Ottt.....,. NOTICE IS HERE!IY GIVEN Ttiet P11tld1 I.. $l1hovldi 1i.1 l11fod llf:•f•" 1 •el!llon lor 1>1111!11t .,. w!ll .,,~ '°' t»111nc1 o' L•l!tr' T~ll~"''""'~ !fl 1>•11- tlonfr, '''"""'-tD w1'1ch h MIM ·~· '"""'" 11rtlc11Uil"S. 11\d lh1t "'" 11..,_ '"" flll't ol M1rln<1 11>, ... .,,. 1'~• born "fl for 'Mrd• 11, 1•1n. 81 9·10 •.m .. J11 fl>@ courlreof!'I ol 0....r""""nl No. l D• »Id courl. ti XIO Clvk Cenl!r Cir!\<• W~I. In ""' City .,. Sani. A11•. C1tlhl•~l1. 01le<i Ml•Cl'I I. "111 W. l'. ST JOH~ <ou,,..,. Cltrlo .,OUl'IC, P•ENNElt ANO HEWS 111 Wnt TMtf str .. t S....t1 A111, Ct lll9r11l1 T1I: lnl ) 141•1H1 ... ,..,. ....... I'll" ,11111-• 'ubllaP!ld 0rt"9~ Cc1i1 ""•"'h 1. t, ,.. 1'10 LEGAL NOTICE tAondaf, Marth 16, 1q10 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOT1CK SPINNAkE RS ON BAY -Collegiate and adult sailors mix it up in Shields Class in ~ace followin g dedication ceremonies of the Intercollegiate Sailing and Rowin g Base Sunday. Spinnakers on the downwind run in Lido Channel created an occasional "Chinese !iredrill" at lhe !irst n1ark. ... Clea,. Sailing Turns Foggy for Gold Cup Big, Little Boats Sl1are Sho'v Lights Dense fog shrouded the finish of Los Angeles Yacht Club's Santa Barbara Island race Sunday with the 57 starters groping their 1\·ay home from half-way acrOS!i the Catalinit Channel. F'irst boat to finish tht 87· mile circuit in 19.3 hours v.·as the Columbia-50 Cygnus skip. Coronados Take Race A five-boat learn n r Coronado-25s Sunday defeated a like-numbered team of Ex· <'alibur-26 sloops in Voyagers Yacht Club's annual tea111 race. The Coronado-25s scored 71 1.~ points to 50 for the Ex· caliburs in the. two race se ries. Skippers of the Coronado-25 team wert Lee Armstrong. VYC ; Ray Garra. BCYC: Dick Kappes, BYC; Al Heller, BCYC. and Bob Darnell, VYC. Excalibur skippers "·ert L.E. Smith. BYC; It Pickup . VYC; John Szalay. BCYC: Bill llartge, HHYC. and JI. Butler, NHYC. ENJOY "LOCAi:" SERVICE ~ SAFE CD INSURANCE S1f1(0 will tr1111f1• your f:l1 lo oor 0Hic1 1t 110 ch1r91. No+hi119 c.f\111911 1wc 1pl the "''' 101111 1f11nl!Dn whl(h yow c1n now r1c1i~1! INSURANCE Phont 642-6500 " 546-3205 from No rth Ora",. County .474 -e, 1·7•h·-5t. COSTA MESA pered by f,rnic Chipman of Long Beach Yacht Club, but he V.'3S unable lo save his han· di cap time over Ed Lorenz Ca\·40 1\·toon Day, LAY C. who 1l'aS declared the overall han- dicap '\'inner. The race was the second in I.AYC's Whitney Series. The race started in bright sunshine on Saturday and finished in zero visibility Sunday. In the Ship .Rock race for Midget Ocean Racing Flt"et yachts (the second in the Lit- tle Whilney Series) the Cal-29 yachts swept the fleet with Dick: Deaver's S\\•lss Navy from Balboa Yacht Club win- ning overall honors. Final results: Santa Barbara Island Race OVERALL (l) 1\loon Day; (21 Cygnus: 13 ) Carina tPJ-43 ) George G ri f fi I h , LAYC: (~)Aquarius (Ericson- 35) John Holiday, LBYC. CLASS A -(I) Jubilation (Cal-48) llarry SI e w a rd , LA YC: (2 ) Concerto {Colum- bia-57) Irving Loubc. Rich- mond YC: 13) Capricious II. 1C111-48) Ben Williams, LAYC. CLASS B -(I ) Ii.loon Day: 12) Cygnus; (3) Carina. CLASS C -(1) Intrepid II (Cal-37) Barry Bcrlu1s, LBYC: 12) Amante. Don Barber, LAYC: t3l Destiny 11. (San- lana·37) John Hooten. BCYC. CLASS D -I ll Aquarius: (2) \VindS\\'lfl (Ca\ 2-30) Karl 1 unbcrg. CYC: {3) Balclutha (Cal-34) Jack Kinkaid. CBYC. ~tORF Ship Rock Race OVERAl..L (1) S\\·iss Navy (Cal·29): (2) Serena tCal·29) Phil Doane. NHYC: (3) Carro nade (Ca1·29) Barr~ & Klingensmith. LBYC; (4) llelre.at II (Ca\·29) Bob Smith, P~!YC: (5) Nimrod (Cal·29l Chambers & Anderson, HHYC. CLASS A -(I) Swiss N;n•y: (2) Serena; f3J Carronadc. Big and little sailboats and JlO"'Cr craft are sharing in· terest in H. \Verner Buck's \Ycstern National Boat Show v.·hich is attracting record cro\vds to Anaheim Convention Center. The show aintinues through next Sunday, opening 2 p.m. \Vctkdays, noon on weekends. An added attraction for the ladies at 8 p.m. Friday will be a fashion show orfering the nC'lv lrends in naulical clothing. Saturday night the U.S . Power Squadron"5 13th district honored one of its members for making the Qutstanding contribution to p I ea s u r e boating. Allen T. Ratterree of Santa i\.tonica Bay Squadron \\·as presented the H. Werner Buck Award. J{e \\'On the Buck trophy for out standing liaison '''Ork \\'ilh the U.S. Coast Guard and auxiliary ()n !he Boating Safety Cen le.r pro- gram. \Vhile big boat.s like the $300,IXXJ Chris Craft 60 footer and Columbia's beautiful $33.500. 43 fool sail yacht, arc creating great interest. many smaller boats 3rc sharing the limelighl . Somethi ng different is the li ttle Sea Champ. a se\'en fool boat '~ilh a deep cockpit and \1•atert1ght s l o r a g e con1· partmcnts on both side~. ft C'an be sa iled for fun , or used as a lifeboat. SUrvh•al gear may be stored in lhe com· partmcnls when !he Sea Champ is utilized as a lifeboat/yacht tender. Drawing lhc attention of ski n di vers is The Su•immer by Bela Boat Co. of Cy prt?ss. 1rith seats folded. ts beilcmes a flat. floaUng platform boaL LADIES ARE YOUR . • • • TIRES SAFE? FREE Tlll:I INSP'ICTION mt TOUl CAl ON OUl NIW DYNO·GUSS llLTID lrl:OM SJ2.ffl ••DIAL rLY TlJln 1••0111 $22.HJ W1 C9"'f I C"'!'let. lffle •f ~ w " tntck "f" -,.,., ,.,.... •• -"""1ft11111 .,...... e411l,.....it ,,.... Sl).00 pla F.l.T. TIM hlly ,..,.... ...... BERG'S DEL TA TIRES 141 E. 17th St.·Costa Mesa-645-201 O 81n•Am1rittt<I fOppo,rt1 l obt l lt Boyl M11!t t Ch•rt• 2001Will17HI, SANTA AN.A -141·1904 Salling Center 'W~indow on Bay' Slightly Clouded Nt"wport Harbor's "window on the bay" Sunday was partly obscured by fog as several hundred college stud ents, city and county civic leaders and the general public witnessed the dedication of Orange Coast CoUege's SaJling and Rowing Base on Coast lllgbway. Following the ceremonies in- formal shell races were held by members of the Orange Coast College Varsity, OCC Alumni, OCC Frosh over a 1,000.meter course In the Lldo Channel. Tht Shields Class sloops, donated"' for We.st Coast in- tercollegiate yachl racing by Cornelius Shields of New York, also starte.dand finished ''erk, also started and finished Ne1vjXlrt Harbor Yacht Club's Spring Gold Cup Regatta in front of the new intercollegiate base. Christening of two ne\v shells. the four.man Perry Palmer and the eight-man Re solution, was conducted by David Grant. crew coach at OCC. Dedicating the new base. the only one of its kind. \va s Dr. "Robert B. ri.1oore, presi- <lcnl of OCC. He introduced speakers Grant. Robert f\I. Allan Jr., member of the U.S. Olympic Sailing Committee and prime mover in the de\•elopment of the base, and Richard Sweet, sailing coach at UCI. Allan, who was also in- strumenlaJ in promoting in- tercollegi ate sailing on the 'Vest Coast in 1933, praised the cooperation of county and city governments, the Irvine Co., local yacht clubs, Balboa Bay Club and Lido Shipyard for their cooperation in working out details of the mooring area and ';preserving one last 'bay window' for the· public. He also reviev.·ed .the history of yacht racing as a college sport \\"hich started a t 1\fassachussetls Institute of Technology in 1930. was later laken up by Harvard and Yale. and spread to the \Yest Coast at Stanford and the VIEWS BAY WINDOW Robert M. All•n Jr. University of California In 1938. A national intercollegiate yacht racing association was formed in 1940 and now C1>n· sisls or 134 colleges wlth over 26.000 sailors parUcipaling in ()fficlel regattas. AUan pointed out that the boats that are used and most of the funds for tile main- tenance ()f their craft and team expenses are donated by such people as Shields and many local citizens . The cost of the new regional Salling and Rowing Base has been more than eqiialed by matching donations of private parties to help \\'ith the effort to buy or maintain equipment, Allan sairl. Allan also had high praise for the college students - both at OCC and UC( -win worked diligently until a few hours before the dedication to get the new base in operation. "In these days of so much negative news. it is heartenlng lo sec such cooperat i o n between the young and the old," Allan said. De11se Fog Hampers Santa Barbara Race Clear sailing on Saturday turned lo fog and light airs on Sunday for the 179 boats in 20 classes which tu med . out for Nev.·port Harbor Yacht Club's Spring Gold Cup Regatta. The Shields Class, ordinarily an outside sailing c I ass, started and firii shed from the new Orange Coast C<tllege Sailing and Crew Base which was dedicated in gal a ceremonies Sunday. The 31).. roof Shields sloops are primarily an intercollegiate sailing class. Winner in the class was Carter Ford, formerly sailing coach at USC. Final results: FLYING JUNIOR·!7 ) -(I) Greased Lightning, L. Armstrong, VYC. (2) No name, •1. Pattison, OCC: 13) lJustler, Don Ayres, NHYC. THISTLE (8) -I I) Golda R, Everett Ross. BYC: (2) Echo. F. Kempff. BYC : (3) Lively Lady, J. Brower, BCYC. INTERNATIONAL-14 (10)- \\'hile Tomado. Peter Gales. BYC : (2) Pursuit. C. Stark. PVSA ; <31 Savage. Tom P.lurison, BYC. SABOT A (JO) -No. 6400. Curt Olson , CYC: ( 2 l America. B. Ray, LJYC: (3) Blue Angel, !i.1ark Gaudio, NHYC. SABOT B (5) -(I ) No. 4420. Biii Lapworlh. N•IVC; 12) Becky III, Seymour Beek . BYC: {3) Bug, Becky Bents. NHYC. SABOT C (7) -(I) No. 5593. \Vendy Camlin. NHYC: (21 No. 3740. \V. Bents. NHYC. SNIPE (JO)-(1) Magician. Da ve Ullman. BYC: (2) Easy Rider. Jeff Lenhart, !\tBYC; (~I ned Devil, S. Birnberg. SMYC. KITE A 1101 -111 TJ. Ringo 'Vagner, NHYC : (2) Se'·en·Elrven , C. E. Williams. BCYC; (3) Toothpick, SU<? Bameson. NHYC. LID0-14A (I I -(1) Litlle Twitch. Chad Tw ichell, LIYC: (2) Frcnz.ie, Don \Vlese, BYC: (3) Upsel. Al Peru, BYC. LID0-14 B (5) (I) Serious. Don Coulter. BYC; (2) Swunocrful, Don Bartz, SSSC: (3) Swallow, llenry \Vagner, NllYC. SHIELDS (II) -(I) Alletn. Carter Ford, USC; ( 2 ) Stormy, Fred Sim on d s, NllYC : (3) Paliencc, P. Yost. NKYC. OCEAN RACING !&) -(I) Prelude, J I m Llndennan, BYC; (2) Esperance, Kelly &: 1'-fcCa!I, BYC. FINN (I) -(I) No, 408, Fred Coo k, ABYC; ( 2 ) Apteryx. Gary Carlin, CBYC;. (3 ) lie between Eeyore, S. Driscoll, Chicago YC, '1: Phoenix. Al Nelson, SSSC. PHRF 18) -(I) Dolphin. ?>.Ult Allione, LIYC; ( 2 ) Twinkle, Dave \VhHe, BYC; (3) l\1al'Hinl. Jack Bostwick, BCYC. LUDERS-16 (9) (! ) Kildee, Ben Hr om a dk a . Lahaina YC: (2) Cal.Spaw, Keith Dinsmore, BYC ; (3) Pre·Empt, Leroy Southerland, NHYC. RHODES·33 (6) (I) Honey, Jack Mallinckrodt. BYC; (2) Therapy, Gayle Post, BYC. SOLING (15) -(I ) Green Flash, B. Burns, CYC; (2) Lumahai, Robert Mc Ne i I, LAYC: C3l \Voomera, Ken Young , CYC. TEMPEST (5) -(]) El Diablo Rojo, Bob Smith. sssc. ENDEAVOR (8) (1) Cyrano. Barry l\1oss. SI BYC: <2) Aphrodite. Bill Langjahr, SSSC; {31 Calamily, Frank Jayne. SSSC. PC (7) -(I ) !>.fis\y, Ted Condon. N•IYC; 12) Patrician, Dave Pillsbury, NHYC : {3) La Siesta, Bob Blnghan1 . NHYC. P·CAT (13) -Stinky, Psnl Allen, BCYC: (2) No. 229. Ton1 Omohundrn. BCYC ; 1:1) No. 224 Alex Tschaiko~'sky, r-.t,'C. Results •'""'"" •• , Y111:11t ctw• Twn•11e11.i. Ti1ftfflltf Stirln C.-'l·20 -/11 TotdJtoct. Ge&!-1' Lou..,w-rrir. •!IYC; 111 Ge11w11r. Le• ..,.11..,.,, 11 eve, (II ,...., \11c1, Cf'11rl11 Mttrlll, AflVC. CAL40 X -(1) Hutti~!, ltrblr1 Cltubb. A!IYC1 UI Clledol\1111, ltobtrt 110-..1, •IYC 1 CJ) Fort •~11, 0 . I , ~-'""· Lll'P'C. PHllF -!\! on ... ,, 1!11 lllUl. S1 eve: OJ Olrl'P' TM•"'· "~.,,,. S<1111t111111 A!IYC1 (JI M1rM1r, R1ldo~ MllM1t1. A8TC. SMALL llOAT Alll -Ill $nlP!, e t. 81J~, A8VC: {11 Fnorl\. Doi, Sf'llr~, A8YC1 Cl! M11tu1I f 1111, Tont (_,,.,., AIYC. COllOffA.00-U -fl! Moutltd\11 CVIO. C~l"IJ t11wtt!. ABYCr Ul Nt ...,,,., Ritt C1•IK111, St flYC1 ut (l'Clofte, 8111 J-t. St I YC. Sl!(Jt lOlt ll.!IOT -Cll No ftl,,.,., ltltlr """'\klr, A!IYCi 12! llall•N•llol, 0.... Kort, A!IYCr C~) No fltmt, Go<dltft 81'11Wl!l"o A!IYC. '°'llOT I. -Cl! l1r1thtcH Too, Jrlf McO.rm.111, l.IYC1 UI Ho "~' Mtlll ll1~t1t10, LIY(. SA!IOT !I -in """''· Jtff Mtr'111, A8V(1 11) l'>lof1cJi;, Jtff l r!IWl'lt .A8XC; Ill _l.llv•ct. D1111 W1i.fltlll.r11> LeVC. HATIONllL -(!! 11111111, l•tf llltrn1111. AllYC1 111 llll:ulfer. AllNlft lltlll, AIYC. .,.. ...... -------r..~-l". ~,...,,_,...,.,.,..,,__-;.-.,.-,.-,,..,.-_,..,..,..,.,....,....,,...._~-. ..,,..---~----------~----··-r-----·----· •• -....--~ -· ---• -· • ----~-~----·--..... .,.......,--,.............. ...... .., __ ·' r I l I l I In ale '" on· "' in tho ""' 1in- md by md nal ha.• by .... :Ort !nl, dse •ho few Jto on. och Ing o n the ) , 403, 2 ) YC;. s. & bin. 2 ) YC ; lck, . I ) 'a' aw, (3) Uld, (I) odl. iyle ·een (2) i I, Ken El lSC. (I) YC; ahr, ·ank Ted ian , ' L;i 'C. 'an! 229. ") sky. ~· '" '•ce, .,.,. -I, I , 1, SI lllfllll '""'· , I t• !rln', . .,.,, ..... ~ -· ·llor, .... "' " TUMBLEWEEDS . ~· -. . . .. '~Ji .qA ILY l08 . ' MO NDA Y ~ . - MARCH 16 W l• 1111 !tie T~ (CJ (JO) ED W1t111en 111d tllt M1rt;.t ffi World P'rm (t) (&lll (ti P1n6oft1111 ~JO) ' 11:15 EE Ottlc:e 11 lhc Prnicftnt (JO) l:lO 0 ®I (I) Ken's LIKJ (C) (30) ,:00 fJ 111 N11n ('CJ (60) Jerry Ounphr. Und e Harry l"1r111 Mt tonsils ll1v1 ~ [VI "l I ~1 C B m HunU.,-lrlnlltf (C) (JO) to bt r~mowd •nd r1ac:b. lo tht nrws wi th all ttlt cour•a• ~ 1 thrtt-)'t•r·old child. fR) 0 Can Yoo Top This! (C) (30) 'Nmk hhr1111dtlt l11uh. Ptnehr.h 1r1 Diet DtWSlfl, l1 u1e nct H1r"1"eyf and Mote, ArnstPJd•m. 0 "OESI R££"-Part I * MARLON 8RANOO~olor1 0 SI• O'Clock Movir. (C) "tlt· I ·$+ree" Parl I (rom1t1tt) '54-Mlf- h:in Brtndo, J11n Simmons, Meile Oberon, Mkh1el Ren111e, Cameron, M olch~I. N1P01eon's mco11nt~r w11h lhe youn1 dtuc!lttf ol 1 M1rsie1llel $11~ m«cl'ltnt th101e1 t~e C0\11~e ot history ' Q Di~ Y11 DyU (30) m Thi rl1nblo11U (CJ (30) aJ SllJ Trtlc (CJ (60) (ft{])ABC N..s (C) (30) fE ftlWl/Slod: Mtl1r! (JO) Jim Hewm1n. O iokltn Ym11 (C} (30) '"fabu- lous JljMn.M A comp1th.naivt tout of Japan, from \1 PfflOl'llllntt o/ · lht Klb~lli 01nc1 lo 1 'l'ilil ta • '""6rtn TV 1h1cliu. 0 @()) Q) AIC Ill....., Mtwie: (C) "Alw•tR llffy" (llltSl:tml '6&- W1lll1m Holdtn. Ricl'l11d Widmtrl Jtnlct RlllL A 1tntjld. brincin1 unit from Mn!co to 1 Union Alm7 m1jor fs kidnapped by 1 Coflltdtr· tit 1111rrill1. (R) Q) Dnid '* Show (C) (90) Rt· !ortd Phw 'fort St1l1 Suprtmt Court Justict Stmutl ltlboooo111 and 1.n1er C.ralyn f1tn~hn. @ Tht 111 Ytllty (C) (60! el Pope (30) PLAIN JANE • ~· • l PERKINS '"' n . ~....,... ''°'' ... , ......... ,,., .. J fW),i.,, JUDGE PARKER \' ED Whit'• N .. ! (CJ (JO) '1ht rmperur'1 New Clothes." Finl ptrt1 9:0009(1)M1r btrrr l.F.D. (C) I ol J1• dr1mat1ied H1n1 Chri~ti~11~1 (JO) How11d It 1u1Ptctld .t 11111· Anderwn l•I~. lilm&d In Scand1· !n1trlnr tlltr tht !Od11 brollltfl n~'l'li. ~ (j) CIS ft"" {C) (30) til A111111t (JD) rl) H"" Ill UMi ROO!ld (CJ {60) 6.30 D llffBC •...me. (C) C60) 0 Stiff Allt11 Show fCI 190) ~ Guests 111 l•Yfll M1adows, W1111 Sl!eet. V1t1or Buono i nd lh1 oom ~1 1Nm ol D•c-Claor and Jenni McMahon. 6 Ttie 61111t l1111t (Cl (30) Roen·! ~1d Deacon, John £11cS011 and ll1t11;y llutp iuesf. I m MJ r1v1111t• Mtrti111 (C) (30) fl'tJ r'-J PllrTJ MISOll (60) Ei) S!Ml M11ktt SVllllMIJ: JtrlJ Quinn. (hip ln OQ • lie.Ith lwnd lor !ti.Ir memben. o @ oo m 111e Monte; llllri« fC) "Sln11 ,.,n111t'' (1d\ltnt1111) '68-Roberi T1)'1or, Ron R1ndetl, Mtrt Lawrence, T1 H1fd1n, R05ellda Montero>, r Ilic.ii Roe:. An Al1enlin1 ~rm7 ollicer in ch111r of 1 lonely O\llPOSt in 1111 11\1 lSOO's must lmd 1 w1y to kttll h11 mtn liom dewtllli lo 1 r91'1eit dt btnd. 0 fooUlt:hl flVI (C) (60) 'Tht I uth1 KiU/Selgoo Mendes Show." £D NET Joutnal \60) "Thi Brain.~ A lt clutl •rid !1nc1ful 111141 al 1111 b,.!11. @II l111ptcttn Mlllitlltl {30) @ [4) tt.IU.,..Brin'11r (C) (lO) ED I IJllCl&C I tn.thot,.... (JO) 'Mn1 Ptvlovi."' Ti'1' PlotJlm l11· rllldft 11ceJ"Ptl hvm tilt 1111 b111 .. 11n11s cl1ssic1I mies and an In formtl look at MmL Pnlova at h~ llom. In Htmpst11d, £nal1r!d. tij (I) Tiit M1111111n (JOI 9:ltl 1J ~ m Dorit DIJ CCJ f30) Doris' lifl baoomes wry compli· l~IJlll Clllld Mltn vlsltln1 Prloct Cirlas €E f'10Clti110 34 (C) (liCI) fD KMIR N"" (C) (301 7:00£) CIS Ewni11r NIWI ft) {30) Q Whlfl My Lint! ('C) (30) m I LOft Luer (30) W kit Die Dad (Cl 130) fE Com111odr1J/Mut111I f1111d (3(1) / Q")(i) MondtJ Sl'Ktw fC) (2. hrl "TIM Coss.it~'-~ ' fI) Aholt! (JO) ' '9°1a)Truth., CollteqUlfl(.IS (CJ I flllfSI C.Mrt DllO'll) hvm !ht Yl\tll counll'J al Sldoni1 nb Doris to m1rry him ind blcomt 1 pi-in· ceu. 0 """ (CJ (30) Badrr Ward. ID l lll .Joll111 ,.._, (C) (JO) iJJ ltw!U M..ic.tl (30) 10:00 o a rn c.re1 .... (t) <601 Nancy W1l5on tnd Ronnie Schtl1 i;:utit Hltf!J11llt1d is 1 revivalistic I _ ...... ~roduct1on n1HT1bt1: ~follow lht !r limb" i nd .. Brath• LCM'• Tr.tvtl· •Iii Salvation Show ·• DUI,_ IC> ltiOJ Q I "1 It) ltiOJ ID Mtjor Ad1m1 (60) ffi Fiflnl l1111 (CJ (60) "Bro.cl· <a~mR afld Ille Publoc."' Nitholts .lohnwi. oulspoken FCC m1mbtr • 1¥H£N 11/rf APPROACH llER ADDRESS, STEVE NOTES AlEX'AWO~A SUDDENLY APPEARS NfllVOiJS- a:l Cc.sir'• World {C) {30) ~nd t ulhor ol "How lo T1lk 81c• i-'l"!l!ll!B lo Your Te!ew11ion Stl," 1utsli. @Thlt 'frl (C) (30) m E1 r1dr1 '•mica (30) 7.JO ID 3 1 !J'~•111ok1 (tJ C60) 10:1orncrnth1• (JOJ "H~ckett A ven11ll,li u CO!IYICI ll arl Holl1m1n) set~s reptis;il l . 1ra•nst h1S formtr parlntl ln·C!lffif l10.4S 0 (ff) m CD Nm. {C) (M~rean Woodwud) who ti trying ~ m~eM:n ;:;i,:1;1 n~.1lcom1 tol 11:00: :!Y ';'.:: (CJ lt (C) (30) "lht 01W:nchtnRtd •• (R > C:a rtoon11t John Monroe's daui~ 1~r L1d•1. mi!led be>etuw lier la l lh'r won'! help ht1 chln1e ll1r Jefl •l 1thool. lt.tvtl llom1. O Mov1t: RTht l11tk al Ginru Coll!)"' (oomell~) '64-Ro~rt Shaw, M11y Ure m '"'Oii f'llCI m Ht Stld, 5"' S.id IC) .:1.1 OC1 9 Cil """. IC> 0 (ff] lfl m It t1-n I Thld (t}I 160) "lieyond • fre1'°111b lt Doubt " Al Mundy t1its lo 11rov1 ht hts b"" fr•med 'When •ctused or Ire~ I m Anlntuirr. .. o.sc,"11'"" of the Jon b1 M1 • .l.ltk of !ht SIA. tf"1r1 Incas:· Romtm pl1ys MichHI .loM!ph Cot I ttn guests ts M1, Jtt-i nd Ahna 11 :15 (ft!mc1111m1 SIY•nlt111 lC} .~ C'.1po •• Mire.a. ! "'Oevil11 four o·c~." Q Mi!l lo11 $ M01ir. (t) "ttl'• . •. D1n tt" (muSll:tl) ·~e11, /iul-11 :l<I 0 13 ({I Mn. &rlffi~ (C) ion. frtd As111re. Rob1r1 'f'o11n1. Aft 0 al [•) m krh c (C) '"'.tttrns h1Ms tht ltfll rction~ ,._;an' Kine 11 ~1~ :::::1 •non of htr Boston mothtr·ln·ltw lo t•ke '" ~ 0 Tiit CllNl111 .. m Trvl' • ConslqYlftc. (CJ (30! ,. m ,tn'J M150ft (60) 0 m Dick Cl~ttt (~) ID Mori1: "ll:Old to Gitt(' {dll· mt ) •J&-frtdric Mire~. llon1! Burymo11, Wuntr 81,\er. ED Ttd111k1I torw tlOl ED Frt11th CM! (JOI "Mor, Abo!lt Pull Ptslry.' w1111 Ju!\1 CholJ. ilJ Cnir d1 A111or !JO) (9 Mo.it : '1ruwr• 1r ll:wtr, Hills" cmrst~) ·s5--Zacblry Sa>«, ~· rolt ~lithtw1, • a 00 B gr;) t1u111-ln (C) (60) Weddini 12:00 O Community ttllttin l tr•r• (C) b'l!S 11na. bridWR11d. Ctror Chen n•n1 sinri 'Wtnhn( You .. In duet 1:00 O M111i1: "T'''' Strlpa !ti tht w1!h lyric sopr1no liflJ' Tom, t nd Sun~ (d11m1) '5$--Aldo RIJ Phil ·!lit lit!lt Old Min lotttn down !hf CiitY ' •· ·.1 t •slt wflh brtd1l 1ownt<1 Cl1dy1 I Ormphby. 0 0 Ntwt (CJ QMri.11 ''lllfl (C) (JO) Stlllltf (!)Aillon Th11l11: 'lht. Wo1ld .; •. ro1 ho5ts Cue5b 111 f't11t lt'll Owti Me • Llw1ne." · lord. (v1 Ardtl'I ''I Soort •lllf'I ye11 t.1111s 2:>0 0 Jlltws/fl!Yt U• l)l1 DtJ (C) TUESDAY -' _..,...,=:"":":'.=~ DAYTIME MOVI ES Mun AND JEFF SAY.' TME LITTL.E GUY WITH THE H\QH HAT ~o AND WHISKERS.' I ' GORDO ',) * J.UNE$ V MA/<1~5 Y Ml#RCOUS, TRE5f MISS PEACH ~IOLOS' PET S'l-0? T'AL\f-lf'/G PAI•• i:eer!> '•<J/I. r S:fil\.IAr..T'f • By Tom K. Ryan r NO oicE -' uGLY.ilf1~s GAt.i HAl'PeN TO IJ"'ESCORTED l AOIEi WM.KING EYf1" THAT . FNl AT MGMT/ By John Mile' By Al Smith YOU'RE TMe FUNNY L.rnu: FfL.l..A W'°'O MAKES EVERYBODY L.AUGH WITH VOU ll. Jot<ES ANO F"--~I YOlJ'i:tE T~E GUY WHO RAN INTO MY CAR LAl>T WEEK JUST 001N'FUNNY ~011, LAUGflS .. RI <3f!T?..t-.l./ • THINGS, 11.IGllT? ... -·-p:o::c::::r::ctl:lq-J ., U,ld It • •••• 'I/ *JUEVES V V!ERN~S V SAl!AOO, 51:15/ " Ii I! I' ,I DOM/A/GO, S!ETE.' YaS. :t l<ECl<Ll. ~E WAS IMJlKIJO _,., noM s POLI.AA$ T'O 11'1 GENTS! WW'/WAS~, ARTHUll:? By Gu5 Arriola w#A71S ~I/ITU CEKKIE SIR Of T/./EV LINEO TH~ C~ l~I TH A CAUNOA'5,,lEAfJ //B JlJS' ,.1.JJ,S ro IMPART SOM/! C>'.ILV MESSAOE.{ , .• 1 e:~ :~ ~··~e. By Mell ""e. WA'S 1<10\J<EP 11!<.WSI! OF A S'All<:A<TIC. tNn:tCTION. ' 4 Mondiy, March 16, 1970 DAILY PILOT 2S By Charles Barsotti ,....-------, 1.-2:; 'oiA~"': 1>.0, .,rur.: CL~::i t:;.N T 61..'('l'Ob ! (;Iv Es::; : ~ ...:U::i T 5LE.:i'/_ TELEVISION VIE\\'S Goo<l W eekcnd For Everyone By CYNTHIA LOWR Y ·NE\V YORK (.J\P) -The te le vision net\vorks lined up a busy and varied schedule or entert~in· ment specials over U1e v.•eekend, \V1 lh :somelhrng interesting for just about every \aste. There \Vas Sunday night's ... ro Confu~e the Angel." an ori ginal dran1a by Loring Mandel, on NBC . Thi s was the story of an aging fan1ily doctor \Vho had devoted his life lo his \rork and his pi.llicnts at the expense of his farnily. Il e \va s lucu1g. hut resisting retirement. LEE J . COBB played the gruff phys1c1iln \vhose experiences had turned hi1n rro1n religion to agnos· ticism . Then he started to n1ovc \O\Va rd a 1'.aith \vhen bis daughter-in-\a\v's illness '''as not , as he feared .. serious. The hour 1\·as given te xtu re by f'obb's fine performance and by scenes of .Jc\vish family life. There was a fine touch in th e relationship bet\veen the doctor and his quieU y religious nurse. who belp- -ed lead him to solve the retirement problem. Earlier on NBC, there \Vas ri fantastic l\vo-hour production of Charles Dickens' "David Copper· field.'" The greatest stars of th e Br itish sl-age per- formed. for ·the most part. in seconda ry roles. They included Dame Edith Evans. \11ho can1e close to stealing th e sho\V . Sir Laurence Oliver. Sir Ralph Richardson. \Vendy Hiller and J\1ichacl Red grave. THERE WERE so man.v slorics 10 te ll that some portions of Davy's tragic life hnd to be .sc ur- ried over qujckly -hi s dreadful childhood \lli lh his cruel stepfather for one. There \\'e re. in fact. so many stories going that some of the colorful cha r-~ aclers really didn 't ha ve ti1ne to develop full fl avo r : -~'fr. ~ficaw ber an d Uriah Jl ccp , for instance. Delbert f\olann, the director. tol d th e ~tory in flashbacks. \vhich was probably the only \Vay to tackle It. but HS a result the takeoff \\'a~ slo\11 and <l\\'kward. II was ·bitcresting. ho\vever. as an en~ tcrtainment and as a period pi ece \vhich \Vas true to the original \vork . "The Ballard of the Iron l·lorse" an Al3C, Sun- day evening \Vas an affectionate recreation of the ' great da ys of the American railroads. The narra- tion traced their vital part in developing our nauon and building the econo1ny. but stayed throughout on pretty familiar tracks. It \Vas brighlcned by film made at railroad museurns and train tvllcction.~. NBC'S 1os~·it ched·on Symphony'' Sn turdDv nig ht \Vas a ;ittempt to bl end <.incl to 1nakr a l"<!la- tionshJp bet,veen classic music and conll1n1 pora ry _ rock : between a symphony orchestra and ~01n~ of the current instrumental an~ sin ging groups. rt hardly succeeded in tyin~ the l\vo toJ?,elher but taken as a \Vhole it \Va s a stin1ulaung <ind sur: prisingly eotcrtaining program. De111i·is tire ltfe11uce • ' • MY !Wls TAKIN' A NAP, SO.WE'LL HAVE ro PLAY OUR 1lllllMS REAL QU ll>T. • • '' ----~·-------------·-~-~ 4q Q q. • • . . . • ifl DAILY PILD~ MG!lday Marth lb, 1970 '~Far Country' Lo11g Beach Offers FineF1·eudDrama Hy TO~f TITUS or .,.. 0.11, .. 11.1 s1111 A dramatic docum entary 11n lhe origins of psychiatry would appear at first glance to be questionable fare for a Com· munily theater, particularly one so heavily oriented to comedy as Is the Long Beach Communit y Playhouse. Yet. ''A Far Country" is not "A I'&• COUftTIVu "-cir~• bY H.nrv Dtt>k•r. cll•e<le~ al'd Clftltntd bY 8tttrtm T1n1we11. MUl'lcl 1rocl 1191111"" bY Kwlft M"•o!\r. _,_ l'rllwin •llCI s.1 .. rd•Y• fll...U.h Mmr'1! H al fht l-D••ch C°"""""llw Pl•YhOu~. '°21 E, Atw• Nim SI,. .__ 8t~ll T"E CAST Dr. s1,...,u...t Fr-... 11111111 aowm•~ EllzltJelh Von Rlttr ... A'lln p.,.,fre$/\ M•rfh.a F'reoxl .... , Cl•" Gr!(/\ l'Ndo<'ldl Wol'll"!Ulh .... t-11rold Jof\H Arneli. f'•-, , Dorll Ellrl~r Doll! ~r111a ., . K•lllY UOd Dr. Jolt'Pll llreu~r .. ,.., 0emOM¥ Gor-Ooutl•• . . Dtnnl~ Th<!mpS<!<\ IC•lh' • , Ooroll., Hal- Th• Nall . • 0.¥ld M1ng1,. only dramatically sound, it also is an appealing, inltigujng production, calculated t o satiate the appetites or the most demandin g p I a y go e r while retaining the interest or the casual viewer. It is, in fact. a significant s t r p forward for a theater heretofore oot noted for its achievements in the se rious vein. cinematographer. The story , with prologue and epilogue set 1n Nazi-occupied Austria or 1938, is re1niniscent of "Dr. Zhivago" in its manner of un· folding, Ralph Boy,·man portrays the :'17-year-old Freud with a studied thoughtfulness balanc- ed by a -sharp wit which com• bine to present his doctor in the most hu1nan of terms. ' Through Bov.·man's excellent l performance, Yt'e see Freud as o brilliant man. far ahead of his time. who must overcome not onl y accusations o f •·v!'itchcraft" but a deep-rooted an ti·semitism even among his ' Bea11iirig Bride own medical fraternity. Ruth Buzzi, as Gladys Ortn phby. has lhe last laugh As the paralyzed patient 'tonight as she marches down the aisle closely fol - who acts as the ca1alyst for !owed by The Little Old ~·Ian Arte Johnson. It all the b re a k t hr o ugh, Ann Ch \ 4 Parvaresh is superb. She happens on "Laugh-In" at 8 p.m. on anne . plays the guilt-haunted yo ung _·_ri_n.:.y_T_i_m_a_n_d_C_a_r_o_1 _C_h_a_n_n_in-'g~at_t_ei_1d_t_he_e_ve_n_1_. __ woman with a surface layer or chatter and banality which makes her eventual self· realization even more dramatic. Clara Grich functions ably in the role of Freud 's Y:ife. v.·ho displays a n a I u r a I jealousy over her husband's Mia 's Little Sister Follo wi1i g I-ler Steps prolonged altentions to his By VERNON SCO'M' •·2001 _ a Space Odyssey" strange and attractive case HOLLYWOOD (UPI } niore than 20 limes from the but rovers it by her unbudging The re'll always be a press Joyarty to him. very firsl row.'' agent and. seemi ngly, an Pal Dempsey as Freud 's '·She once even sneaked into unending parade of FarrO\V frie nd and ' fellow physician · b h New York's ootortious \Vhite-sisters, as evidenced y t e who fears his roc king of the following press release : hall Street Army Induction lb a I 6 Z.-• • p Movie F11nd Periled· Slo ,wdown Threatens Fil1n Ho spital By BOB TllO~tAS HOLLYWOOD !AP I -The film comn1unlty's cc n c e r n over the production slowdown extends beyond bread and but· ter matters of today. It also could affect the industry's relief fund, a unique ex· perimenl in welfare planning. ''I don't think there's any- thi ng like it in America." said \Villiam T. Kirk, e.i:ecutlve director of the Motion Picture and Television Relief Fund. He eited welfare plans (If gar- ment and mine workers, but added that none offers the same range of benefits, sup- ported by industry and labor. Since 1928, a large percen- tage of the fund has aime from payroll deductions, and that's tlle reason for concern, "So f:ir . the studio coir lributlons have held up.'' Kirk remarked. '·But ii the current sltnnp in employment continues, \Vl' may have difficulty main· taining uur program." Last \1·eek, film unemployme nt was ligured at 42.8 percent. A visil to the Motion Picture Country House and Hospital rlen1onstrates how extensive that program is. The facility is located at the far end or the San Fernando Valley in a pleasant, oak-shaded com· munit y. The grou nd s look more like a quiet college cam- pus than a place for the sick and elderly of the film in· dustry. - ~· • ~~~ l -~ r I .. ENTERTAINMENT • ~ has been reached. "'A..wi~I for the fund was the ~s~ or the late pr~ ducer Charles Feldman of BO percent of this residual estate. That mny amount to $.'J million. The Relief Fund dates lo the first World War. when the ·in· fant film indu stry organized a War Service Associatio n. The war's end brought a halt to the effort, but movie leaders again Joined in a charitable organization on Au g. 4, J.9'21. __J At first it operated as the \yest Coast branch of the New York Actor's Fund. In 1924, care," Kirk explained. the h1otion Picture Relic!\ Among ·those now in resi· Fund was established as a · dence: Edmund Lowe, Chest· California organization. er Conklin, Betty Blyth, Babe In the mid·1930s, Jean London, Carter DeHave, car· J.lershol t became president toon pioneer ~1ax Fleische r, as and expanded the activities to well · as Jess famous fihn a ll movie v.•orkers. not 1;1nly , workers -the benefits are for actors. Support came from all crafts. payroll contributions -one "\Vc're always looklng for percent of salaries over $200 ways to take care or more weekly, half that for those people." Kirk said. "One or under, as well as the radio our next plans is the con· show Screen Guild Players, struction of 850 apa rtinents for which eontributed $5.3 million re tired people. The rental from 1938 to 1951. wou ld be about $110 a month, The Country House and and they would have access to Hospiti:ll now operate on a $4.3 health c a r e and en-million annual budget. lerta inmcnt, the same as i :;;;;miiiii~~~~!i!~;~ those in the Country House." All !his takes money, and 'the fund is supported by the efforts of industry leaders. Four year s ago. a drive head· ed by Gregory Peck was started v.•ith the aim of pro- viding $40 million (or ex· pansion and future support. So i 4 4 4 ~ ····· . ..... . .... .. •··· • '°"' ""1 11 llloCM'l•Ull 11<>9. • lll:•Pllllf II.ACM • Mt"'M "' ENDS TUESDAY IOIEIT IEDFOIO IN ,,,,,. ...... ·-,. ,,,,, ,,_ ....... t,,, -.ALSO- Jonotlla11 Wint•" "VIVA MAX" STARTS WEDNESDAY "The fres hest film of /1 the year l T~ Alice A FRANKOVICH PRODUCTION fOR COLUMBIA R[LEASE ....~ This momentous episode in lhl e'arly career of Dr. Sig- mund Freud, which pioneered modern psychiatric techni- qu~. is presented wilh pain- staking insight by a fine cast under the direction of Bertram Tanswell, who handles his pro- duction almost I i k e a e st a b Ii shmentarlan boat Center just to see if il was all possesses a strong voice and "She (Tisa Farrow) wears lhe way Ario Guthrie had told be3ring, but gives a slightly hardly a trace of makeup and her.'' seems quile content will1 a erratic performance. Also. to faccfu l of freckles framed by A guy doing the same thin g a lesser degree. does Harold a lumble or loose and long al \VAC installation would be The hospital is fully equip- ped and aecommodates 180 patients. The Country House. a series of hand s ome bungalows, holds 55. Average age: 81. far a $12 1 h million.endowment ~~~~~~~~=~;;II BALBOA 673-4048 Jones as the patient's lover. brown h::iir. Al only 18 years of arrested. In an attempt at lightening age. she has all the womanly ·'You find yourself soon lhe play, Doris Ehrler touches niystery or a twice as ex-wondering and holf worrying ;ill the prqper nerves, but pcricneed number of the that one day this fu nny comes dangerously close lo species and is regal yet rustic youngster who carries her own the present day Jewish mother ., special lunch of molasses and sterf!>type. Kathy Ladd. as sonic almond nuts in a metal A new addition is the Lodge, l\'hich provides board and care for 18 outpatients. "Because of the increasing hospital costs -10 percent a year -we need to find ways to get almost-well palients out of the hospital while sµll providing Milty Due To Du.'ect This Fall Freud's younger sister, gives Thal's for openers. !Wad on: Popeye lunchbox will wake up "She is : .• bright but unaf· Completing the cast in and yet sexuaily mature (her call a star, but once you 've ~ a fine. warm performance . fected, school"irlishly simple and find herself what th ey still n.r~c•, cOASI' www•A• • m n. lesser assignment s are curve s rid!: her five-foot-silt been touched by her almost j The French pantomimist. Dorothy Halk in a well done frame in dimensions of 3s-24_ magical charm and those . • • ..,,. '-1areel Mareeau, is back in role as the Freuds' maid. J6).'' str:ingel)' familiar hypnotic Tonlte cu •:IS net t :SO the conulry for another visit Denis Thomas as the doctor's unmarried and a mother of blue <'yes, the doubts are 4'!('.1o1.,. .. .l!,.A ~l\ri·~·i..,,," 1 with his 0 n e. man en· 1938 liberator and David twin.s. know tiles<' thing s about gooe." David Hemmlncs lertainment. He will v.•ind up Mangan as a· Nazi storn1 baby. know these things abol1t Oh. no they're not' Joanna Pettet an extended lour with a three· trooper. her little sister? Nav.· gel this: v.·eek engagement at the New The setting. also b Y "'\Vith eh ii d I i k e mis· "I uSl'd to lantas1ze about York Cily Center, April 7·26. Tanswell, and the costumes. chievousness .s be ha s a being an actress,'' admits Milton Berle is due back on by Charlotte Shumann. are ex-fetish for untying shoelaces Tisa. "As 1'-1ia became more Broadv.·ay in the fall , but as a cellenl, while lbe areas or that even the most famous do lamous, it became more director. not an actor. The sound and lighting contribute not escape." frightening. I began to know comedian has been signed by heavily lo the play's success. Daughter ur r..1 a u re en that I just couldn't slip in and M.ichael Abboll to stage a new Tv.·o more weekends or ''A O'Sullivan and director John do a sma ll thing and ha ve only comedy, "Goodbye, Dear. and Far Country" remain, and the Farrow, Tisa apparently is a few people not.ice. The THE BEST HOUSE IN LONDON ·(i)-Eastmancolor· - ond "' 2:15 011!f ALL N£W! flOM SWIUEN "FANNY HILL" Ai'nen!" by Hey\\'ood Kling production is higlily recom· \Vo o d r o us. kind and minute t do something Jt's and Robert J. Hilliard , v.•ho mended for students of \\'tirmhearted. Proof: _!go~i~ng~to~be~n~ol~ic~ed~.'~' =~~·1~~;::;;::;;::;~;;::;;::;;::;~~~11 has been on Jackie Gleason·s s eriou s, thought-provoking "She is a cc on r c s s e d1· lclevision wirting team for theater. The show is being vegetarian ("How many peo-~ TH E I ~;~~ 1r.~'~ro:!.;i~1ir~'. u:!~E~~:.i:f~d~fr~~~: ~~~ii°1E~~~:~~:~.dd:i~~: Qt"' nn"'S One of the best ways lo CX· Beach. V.'eird science fiction . has been ii;i v\11 -~~~~~~~~~-'-~~~-'-~~-! perience a great part of the ST. PADDY'S DAY modern hi story of t he Cr d p 1 American theater is lo look OSSWOl' uzz e Tuesday, March 17th Our Bi99•1i Ce ltbr•lio~ through "A Pictorial History lri1h M u1i1; All D•v of the Theater Guild'' by ACROSS ,.7 Rom~n S•lu•dity's Pu1zll' So!wrd: 515 So. Main, Santa Norman Nadel ( Cr o "" n ""P"'or l Fish 49 Gr~ri: published). 4 Golf or kiter It Is a large volume pro. ll"nnis 50 us fusely illus trated with '9/Hl!:tt' tltclri· photographs of the 230 Guild 14 Man's fic.ation " 'kna-a~ffl•y • productions spanning 50 years. ... "" ~ · · 15 Engl11 i!:rOO!D A br, The Guild built its prestige by . wotkl'F 51 ·-·go sponsoring Eugene O'Neill and 16 Talk of bragh!" Bernard Shaw and went on to th' lladt SZ Smitlt 11 Allllfin9 depr,ssioi1 5 discover other playwri gh1s and 19 Boxrr's 54 k1cl ined de\ielop many slars. There is wea!KJl1 5 way scarcely anything that has oe· 20 Piece ol 58 Whalr: cu rred in the A mer i ca n woo d Preh .: 21 By way of bO Cheer theater in the past SO years 22 Pre-pcsH ioa 61 Of &b~ ~• that has not been influenced in 23 Transmil «-Z -de.._ some v.•ay by what lhe Guild 24 Does certain M Mothtt has done. '"'laltr1M: of Ntto 26 Tissut a Bearli kl" 29 Boatinv anl111 al ac.cl'ssory 17 Cnta1a 31 liloO'!il''s ye;vs 7 AdJf'!'55t'd ~bus 1vt ly I Foot controls ' Met0<tic phrast l CI Fools ll Impaired st•tt 1 l b/70 34 EQul'Slr1 ;.n JS Cht'!'Okl't aOO C1ee }7 B'sto • "~cessl~e lon dnl'SS '0 lnt ellet• lua!s 4~ Rise on !he hind leg s: MCM 1·,..,,...,,, .\11 .\1·1i...· I• .. 1 .•• i1.,. 1• ... i.101111 Peter O'Toole Petula Clark "Goodbye, Mr. Chips" . '·"""· ENDS TUESDAY antbony qulnn "adrearn ofldng•" ·~ -A11- MICHAEL DOUG-LAS Ai1, D esign Scl1ool Tells Ne\v Course rl"lative 68 Do wrll'IO 32. A,,r1 a1 b9 Ttst swot HI Orie of )) Hypnotic til e HorH statt 71 Erod' T2 Obtained lJ Ger111ar1 r1v'r 18 Hot com pit ied ?4 lorlicltd ZS Ptggy Fleming Jlld Prt1• Burka 2 words f'i Boss 48 N. v.Stale lake '~~~~~~~~~~~"MAIL HERO" )(, --red'cribte 38 Blact b\fd • 0011 • 3~ lllad' of c:opper -""' Ill U llUll 1111, .... 41 r.1..s 4 J ~t's pmdact 44 t.ha- ll<)hU)' a long 4b (verl:tStillg; Poet. A new course in •·symbol . l\lyth and Ritual" is among 13 £lasses lo be offered al the Laguna Beach School of Art and Design in the spring quarter, beginning .!\larch 30. lnstrµct or will be 0v.'ain llouser. pr o f es :so r t1f 1-1 ~,~T3-= Humanities and Philosophy at I :·,.,....1-+...; Choinard S c hool, Lo s 1, Angeles. I ~4-1-+' 1 E.1pr~ssrs ..ondt1nieol 2 lhil~ popl;u 3 FCl'l1'1- t<1\l011 4 11 e111 of foot ,.•<tr S. Tilt ,1one of ~ lrutl {, FfU!t • ' 27 Flax •produtl 28 Her baceou:. plan t JO Ntw T ~s tamr1H book 31 Steak· 2 words 53 Number 55 Coml' inla b'lng Sb Crazr 'J1 Factory S'J Ca!etrrra 11rm bl R~cess b2 Accountan< rl'g1ee: .Abbr. &J Spani sh .1rlic Ir b5 Hosl'I • 9 · 10 II " " , " Now 1n its ninth yenr. the 11 non~profit Laguna B e a c h· I ~-11-+-l-+-l-.h,.-l-+--f-~22=--l-+-l-,+-,4 school has a staff of ll artist·1 1'°--1-4--1-4-l.,-.:.i.-1-.:.i.-b-+-l~+-+~b-I 1nstruetors providing courses 2J 1• ?.i. 26 11 11 ranging from fundamentals ol l l-4--lh-~4 .... l-+-+,,.-1-+-l-hr+-+-JH art for beginners to speciaUz. 19 JO JI 11 ed advanced courses. lk<'-l,~J.,.,.+4-l-+4.,,.-l-+-1,,,,4--1-,,-+-+-I Cla'sses include ceramics. JJ 1' JS 36 lB color and design, creative 11:,.4-+--1-+--+-f.,-:-+-+.,~, +-11-+:.,;-t-t-+-I <:ompNilion. drawing. pa1n· 1k,..+--1-4-h-+-l--+;c-!-+.7"!-+-l-+-+-I ting. prinlmaking and •l .. " .. chlldren's art. lh ...!--1-_..,...!--b-+-+-t-+.:rl-t-+-+-,ii-.-.1 ' • •• "' Approved by the Califomla Department of Education, the 16,.-+-f-+-+-'"l-..+-t-fu+-t-t,,--t;;<to:-1~ ,, 5J " " " ,, i!Chool also is available for 1 -+--f.rl--"1ri-br+-t-t-+.;-t-t-+-+-t veterans under f"ederal law r "· " ' .. provitllions. ., .. " Registr,tion for the :;pring •1 quarrer, ••hlch runs through k+-1'-+-1-+-+,.--+--1-+--+-l-+.rl-+-4 A1ay 30, must be made prior to 66 • 61 ").f.1rch 30. FOr brochllrc or b.,ri-l~+-+--f-.if;;;-1-+-t-f--1--!n-t-f-l oUler Information. call 404· l,.....L...L-1-1-..L....J....J-.L...L....L-1-'-J....J....J 1520. or write the school at 6.10 70 " Laguoa Canyon Road. \i'e'rii celebralinu Sr. l'at ciclis DaJJ,Joo! cf Disneylqnd will be open Tuesd ay lrom JO am. to 7 p.111, IWU&mfl J•l<UU f OI IN•Q~ HELD OVER 9 ACADEMY NOMINATIONS INCLUDES BEST PICTURE BEST ACTRESS ~,P.•~· ~ ,73-62•0 2905 East Coast Hwy , Corona del Mar o ... •:45 '" E. ... n... ... 1-. h•lnNfa 2 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS 1 A man went looking for America And couldn't l1nditanyv1here .. r....oDC-• .. w·--_,.,11-..c1°"'•- EXCLUSIVE AREA PERFORMANCE FOR ADULTS 7 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS IEST ACTORS -D111tin Hoff"'an ·Jon Volghr IEST PICT UIE IEST SUPl"ORTING ACTRESS -Svlvio MUn BEST DIRECTOR -John Sc:hte1i119er SEST SCREENl'U.Y I EST FILM EDITING Showln'll at 7:00 and t :JO -Matinff! Sunday YOU ARE THERE AS TH[ HUNRI STAllS 1lft lllDST HIDCIOUS ANIMAi! ON U t!H TAKE YOUR PARENTS TO SEE THIS FILM Wtll CM11 51~11 .lM .MWJll Ft• S..ltl CN 11 fOle1• (Ml• Mee 14t•,111 W .... Ny1 4:•11 ... •1U S1111. 11l~1 »71M•'tll ••t. 12: ... :n 1-t1:io.11"''1u Adults $2.50 Under \\illlfll' inm·io I .\la lllltlU lllll'Ullltln l'"Jflllll I LO\\HI' -~ OOUJiG llm\TI• -.-.-...... ·~" """"""'"''""' _, ...... l lr•U• ..... LKll .._... lo IAll -IWll. P1ttitivtly End1 Tueidgyl r'lu1 M1199ie S'"ith In "THE PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODIE" STARTS WEONESDAY An earthquake of EJnler/ainment! I ' ' ll E.ACH 8LYO AT L!"L L!9 • • tUNTINGTON BliAC H • 84?•91101 3rd AND LAST WEEK Si eve McQuecn lhe Reivc r;· FIRST AREA SHOWING ..~.the ame· ,.'"911 .. ~,,elia kazan-. d~~ .t!~ ... UW14\flaY ;z HOUSES FOR SALE ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BOULEVARD 546-8640 Open Ewenin gs •Ill 8:30 VILLA BY THE SEA Tius beauutully appointed ex<'CUlive hon1c lcalu1'1:s 3 1nns!rr-sized bedrooms, •1uecn-sized tile bath~, prore~~ionally l&.nrl!«.'.aped yartl and 20-foot ealhedral f'CLilng entry way. In be!tt•r th<an llC\\' condition, llnly 14 nios. old -011'nrr says sell, asking 132,1;,o. HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE OPPORTUNITY If you are in the market for a NEW home see t.hese out- standing customized homes, built by Frank H. Ayres & Sons ; located in a prime area very close to Huntington State Beach. .. These homes are priced from $30,290 to $39,540 and vary in size from S to 6 Bedrooms, 1500 to 3000 sq. ft., 2 & 3 car gar- ages and 2 lo 4 Baths, These homes bave SHAKE or M ISSION TILE roofs, fireplace, underground utilities. concrete drives, bll-ins, and basic carpeting. Our ne\V unit will be available for occupancy in June & July. There is VA & FHA financing avail. There are 2 Homes available \Vi th occupancy by 1\·Jay due to credit rejection. Rancho la Cuesta Homes Huntington Beach (on Brookhurst at Atlanta) 968-2929, 968-1338 MoM•y, Mattfl 16, 1970 DAILY PILOT 27 HOUSES JiOR SALi • , I 100 Dover ShoNs H_o_u_s_e_s_F_o_R_S_A_L_e _,_H_o_u_s _ES_FO_R_SA_L_E_,'!OUSES FOR SAL!_ HOUSES FOR SALE 1227 Huntington Buch 14'1 Huntington Beech • 14tl 1000 Cosfa M1s1 HARDWOOD FLOOR BEAUTY Sharp 4 bdnn home ..,.,.Jib t b. o 1 e hard to find "llARDWOOD F L 0 0 RS." Exct-ll«:nt North Cist:a f.1E'AB loca• I.Jon. Close to shopping J.· .!i(•hooJs. o ... crsh:C!d lot \\Jlh plenty of roon1 for 11. pool. ~las~ive stone fkt'plaec w I t h raised hearth, loads of panel· ling & many other c!X• ll<la. &e this home 10 apprel·late, $32,500. • COATS & WALLACE REALTORS ---54'-4141- (0ptn Evenings) --------------STAR BRIGHT REGAL * SPACIOUS COMPLETE VIEW , Boy.,t Mtns. 4 Br, 41,I Sa iJ tbe word tor this EAST-+ rnAld.lt. J!lgh ceUlngs. SIDE, S ~m, 2 bath ~ *l fl built around court. FOREST E. 0 LS 0 N doll house, Schools, ch~ 4 car aar. E-Z mt.int. Im· lnc. Rfflton e1 and 1.hopplJw ate t. few mtd ocep, $178,000 fUmi&h. AUTO FIXERSll of the-extra amenities !hat ed. AAsum~ 61,i~o-Joan. Own-SECLUDED io with this homr. Prl.ccd er ~8-1249, Ju!lt \Vhl&t You've been look· at only 129,950, 1 -======== I · 1 N p1 · 1 54&-23l3 1 • 1nz or! o com a1n ng University Park 1237 neighbors! Corner k>L 140' \0 THE REAL ~ ESTATERS ---------1 deep. 2 separate yard&. Per. ' . . ' . SWEEPING VIEW On a clear day, you can see to Pal!X' Vc.rdcs &: the lights I d• al night are truly a sl&ht mme late to b<huld! 3 Bdnn's • lam· . Possession ily rm. p1u1 tormat din. nn. feet acceq to street. Newly painted in and out, 3 bed· room hon1c goes with It. Low, low down takes over existing FHA loan. No qua).. ilying, Inquire 962-$85. 962-5585 raA.IVA NO 00\VN, terms Loe. in des.Jrable TURn.E available. Nice 4 BR, 2 BA ROCK &: priced el Just on quiet cul-de-sac 2 blclc:s $38,950 INCLUDING TH.E to park. schools & 0 shopp'g. LAND! 1!)131 Brookhurst Beaut landscaped, au bit· PETTIT REAL TY CO. lluntlngton Beach .ins, fireplace & dlnlni;-. out "Tht Hous• of Hom11'' of town owner, priced to 833-0101 Prestlg• Homel 1 1eu $26,950. Call 545-84241""""""""""""""""'"1 Mova All The W•y Upl BY Owner. ! BR., 21,\ baths, l.ge, !.am. rm. w/rrpl. otn. rm. Liv. rm. w/call'ledral cell. Out1tanding l•ndacpr, $8.900 Req. to auume 6% V.A. Princ ipal& orlZl' 962-0093 GLEN MAR 2 Story, 3 Bedroom + la.r;:e lam. rm I frplc. $31.500. Owner 962-4217. 1630 3 BR home w/rnAny extru. VA appraised $21,800. Ve:ta no down. FHA low. down. Bring money A SA VE $SSS FULLER REALTY 54£.0814 Laguna Hiiis 1700 QUICK SELL: Lovely 4 br home . .2 ba, erpfJI, frplc, fenced. 2a-i22 Ericson Way, Laguna Hills. 837---0677. """!~~~~~~"""'i;So~u~t~h~CO~"~·~t~R~•~al~"'~"~t~o.:_ LOVELY NEIGHBORS Doyle & Shields bullt these' 51;. OA f H A FA~1ILY NEEDED _ home Invite you lo buy thh1 2 br beauties to last', built your Laguna Beach 4 0 • • • now vacant. Spacious 3 BR, and den home in their friend. equity and give your family 110S ANNUAL RATE 2 BA, family, sep ntaslt>r ly conimunily -may '''I!: in-PRESTIGE. Elt>gant 2 story, BLUE LAGOON WHY RENT?,' Big home wi!ll a beautiful suite. full crpts, drps. all uUI.• ICC: you P +.J"l,.wu. • 1 1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1 ·~, ? r ..,A.......,, 4 bedroom, 3 bath beauty CONDOMINIUM • Red H'll R It With separate family room, n-autiful 2 BR, 2 BA. •·at NO DOWN TO VETS loan assumption! HUGE bltins. Large dble yard I ea Y 00 oc J" 1000 G.n.r.f 1000 Gener.I 1000 rccrcatioo room \\'ith bath. model with boat door & 2 Univ. Park Center, Irvine FOR~tAL DfNING R ~'!, steps to beach. 2 llWlmming Can you sa\•e $700 .00 for General 1. N 1 t C It A tim. ...,., '""'" brlc.k flreplac:e, h'lodern built. ......... Is and rennis courts, Pric. I · 3 JI I I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, I WAiied ...._'ltio o""'ning off the pa 10s. 01v al as years a ny e ~ .,..., <' o~Jng costs in mos~ --------,.. ~ . 129 9_ V CAii ins, sprinklers front & rear, _ _. 10 -II at "'" 500 Call "'-m•-t•r ,u,·r•, dcll&l<e built·in pril.-e , .AJ. ac.anl. . ""' ..... .-, , you can, you can own t,..,. cf; ~ !t HOL y BANANAS! I ~.. custom drapes and thick, ""·--r •--'at-·~u11. ' cl kite•-and excellent la.nd· 54(}..1151. Heritage Real 1.,0 1w1"" ~ -.;o ...,... hon1e TODAY! It s a • used brick fireplace. Plus ,.,...,, Estate {open eves.) Corona del Mar "" thick car,>et throughout. A sharri 3 bcdl'oom in a tn U j e \Vhatabuy!~ Gorgcous3bcd-scaping \1'ith tall 6hade -~=-~------------STEAL AT $38.500. L NI I 1707 "l'Cllt area. J1 's in trees. ·Very desirable area $161 Mo. Pay1 All · -WE SELL A HOME _•gun_• __ g~ue ___ _ n1ove·in C{)ndition NO\V. l-far(l\vood Floors. 400 sq. It. ronveulenl lo exef'llent Assume 6% FHA Joan on EVERY 31 MINUTES • PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES room" 2 bath•. PoH•hed UNITS lnc.luded in price a1'1.' 1-· r il 'th M'h<xlls. ACTION PRICED lovely 2 br + conv. den. 2 Walker & Lee SHOWN By A.PPOINTMENT pane~· am y l'OOni v.'i W b dbl ho I "'ashe r & dry er, used brick fireplace. Plus at $33.950 and awne:r w a, gar me on quet rt'friger11lor, disITT1·osher, •· " pin.. help with down n:oymen!! street. CaU MS-7594 N PANORMtlC Ocean, View cor. lot. Pvt bcb. Monarch Bay. $26.950. 499-1344, ....,..,,, 77 Linda Isle Driv• ··=para.ti'.! ....,. room or ,... 0 LOAN COST firealarm and an oversiz-h WE SELL A HOME 3 BR HSE, lg tam rm + (2) N·ew 5 Br., 5 bath borne on lagoon. Marble \\'Orkshop, am operator or ffi lot tor only $23.800 -EVERY 31 MINUTES 63x100 lots. E. 20th st. c r-.t. 2 • 2 Bedroom units plus 7682 Edinger 842-4455 540-5140 RENTALS · entry, Wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Mstr. Br. sewing room. t 1any inore ex· t •·· bl k see UliS one. · w lk & L $37,500 Si Slavin Rltr guest apartmen. ni oc to has beam eel.Im· gs & marble frpl. "175,000 tras1 ONLY $24,500 \\•ith NO a er ee be "ul M A REAL House·s Furnished "' 00\VN G.I.s and midget 642--6222 octan on aut &fEUl?r· 3 BEDROOMS !~=========! ile. 3 Bedroom. 1~ bath plus 15 Linda Isle Drive down FHA. HURRY! HUR· 20-13 Westcliff Dr. .$111.00 PER MO. Ne\V & beauWul 4 ~droom, 5 bath home RY! 646-m.1 Mesa Verdt 1110 =u~l~I~~:~,: TREAT R1nt•l1 to Share 2005 $22•900 with large sunken living room & fam. rm., WE SELL A HOME ,..,..,.. ....... ,..,.. ... ,..;1--::-;--;---:;----·r tractive units on verydcslr· Anyon!' cl!n assume ex· wet bar. Radiant electric heat. Carpeted &. EVERY 31 MINUTES Best Buys on Lido Priced To Sell able terms. CALL us. \VE \\lhen you see this beaut1lul Meredllh Garden tlome. A 4 Bedroom, 3 Bath, cu11tom draped and carpeted, 2600 sq. fl. White Beauty. For· mal Dining Room • Break· fast Eating Area in large Kitchen • paneled Family Room • waler softcflC!r • sprinklers front &. rear. Much more to see and 1.p- pn?Ciale, $44.950 ROOMl\tATE Wanted, Girl wants to move to C.M., S.A., Tustin, or N .B. to be clole to vrork. Gas prohibitive now. Reply to Box M25, Dally Pilot. ist!ng FHA loon, annual 155 000 w lk & L I R od led H VE percentage rate x 51,~i;;, _ landscaped, Priced ......... , . , . , .. $ , · a er ee New y em e \Vould you believe 4 + fam· A MANY OTI-IER FINE Home ily room + pool? Great lo-PROPERTIES. 00 qua!Hying -n cw 80 Lindi Isle Drive ,...._R~m,·ng '-BR. -n·-rt den ,.,,.,. n -A mu•t -··•. 673-8550 carpels throughout -big dr 'd' 5 b th 'th f .1 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams ....,...., ... ., • .-. ""°"' kitchen \\'lth dream 5 Be oom &: mai S, a S WI amt Y 54~65 Open 'til 9 P~f & :! BA. Ideal for eouole or Jean Smith Realtor 2 Single Working Girls wish to shan their apt I: o:. pense1. 2 bclU5es from Ocean. Call 6Ta-6929 lft. 5:30. bu ilt-ins ~ just painted room & large rumpus room. 3 Fireplaces. bachcloi:. Only $56.000. 400 E. 17th st., C.Jl.f. 646·3255 throui;:hou t • lhis ls yaw· 4,246 Sq. Ft. Dock & boat slip ••• , , $159,300 BAYSHORES OPEN DAIL'Y 2-5 BY O\VNER: 51..{ assumable ~oTHEREAL' ~ESTATERS doll house -ISt'C i1. 90 Linda Isle Oriv• CUTIE loan 3 br, 2 ba, heated pool. 4 B h . 626 Via Lido Nord eau 54(}..1863. --;B"r"G,..,.H"o"u"s"E,__-- ,, '·. J' • '' BUSINESS Couple will Iha.re Mission Viejo View home w/older pef'90n or genons. $100 mo. 639-1525. SECLUDED COUNTRY 'FIXER UPPER Located in the back bay area ol Ne1rport Beach on l~ ol an acrr. Featuring 2 horse con-dis, enclosed lanai over l ooking heaunrut s\\·imming pool. The 2200 sq. H. 3 hedroom residrnec nerds paint and l'lho\v grt'asc, bui "'hat a :irire. Owner 'viii finance at 7 1 ~% -call today, $700 DOWN EASTSIDE 3 BEDROOM To Vpts. This home is in heautirul move-in eon· :lilion. Low, Jo,v clown lo anyone -i;ccing is bcliev- ,ng. &lier being lrnnsfer- red out nf stale. ex· lretncly anxious. Asking $23,800 -make offrr. 3 BEDROOM 2 BATH $119. PER MO. INCLUDES TAXES \Vant Cos la i\le~? J-lere it is .. spacious J bedroom ho111c 1viU1 1nassive stone lireplarr. built-in kitchen rl<"signrd for ronvc111ence, for('ed air healini::-, big backyard for children - C'lose 1n shopping and s'·hools and Catho lic school -church. Assumr rxisling 4~~';1, an nu a 1 pcrcental?C rare VA loan - Try i25,j(J() -start pack· ingo. EXPANDING FAMILY ? 3 BEDROOMS -POOL Enjoyed your eh1Jdrcn IC\1eJy? Thii; home is designed to bri11g a ramil~ closer togethl'r. Beautiful ,,·all to \\'all carf)("ling throughout, spa c Io u s hu1lr-ln, lilcd d r cam kit<:hl'n \l·ith breakfast bar, <.:OV<'red pall(I for our. door games. ls your f;imi· ty worlh $34.9::,0? See it. COSTA MESA 3 BEDROOMS $20,900 ~n fio1Vl1 l.v Vets -1n11· dO\\'n lo ;tn.)-OUC, "'ilh blork v.all fence. big, big y<1rd, lo\\'. lo\\' payn1cnts~ Yr:ut°tl better sec lh1s one -11011'~ 3 BEDROOMS -SHARP I $111.00 TOTAL MO. PMT. You, hfl\'C to sf'c U1ls to brlic\'f' it. All n r \\ ~arprhng, rtoublc i;sr11ge. fol"C('rl air heat1ni:. large \lu lll -in k itche n. Rf'i1u11tully appoin!ed - f'IJll price SZZ.900. Better huny. ..F°;3rr& • ORANG£ COUNTY'S LARGUT 2629 HARBOR BOUUYARO ' 546·8640 Beautiful Bedroom, 4 ath ome with ex· Just 11.,t--' on 9• B yr t 5 o-• •'""="==='"======I & Bed ... "" 4 a ron, o:><:Urooms, 1~ BIG VALUE tra la rge living room master room. Bayshore Drive Bath ·er &-slip l>XlOOO c II p k 1115 Carpets &: drapes. Landsca ped. Boat slip. A honeymoon cottage 5' pi · · · 0 ege ar Come take a look; Hal'bor Near tennis court &: club ..... , now $120,000 ..,,.ith 2 bedrooms, 1 bath Pete Barrett ~ 4 BR 3 BA d' 11 c 1 View ",ills; 4. BR., N2'n baths, Rancho stylin1:: REALTY . . in am. omp expans ve view. r. com· W•terfront lot5 Clean & neat rP.blt. Bet. than new. All 1st munity pool. Existing 6% r,1o Lot number 4: Excellent 51 ft. Linda Isle Look at !he prico! 1scs \Vestclitl Or., NB class. 17ocr. Ne":' cptg & lino. loan a.&Sumable. Owner will 546-2313 llf?. THE REAL ~ESTATERS .. ·. . •, Female roommate: wanted \o sbare 4 br apt .. N.B. $62.50 rno .• Call 675-6374. leasehold lot. Consider trade. . . . . $35,000 $49,300 642·5l00 ~ ~~';.~.,.,6Pvt patx> ar e a 5 • ~rate on ~500nclilg1. ou. -========~\ .,.,\r'ft,), E'•= no\v at ""'• , eves. I..ot numbe"r 41: Long water view with 76.2 Ii ========~I M8·8868> ft. of frontage facing }!arbor Island. UN_IVERSITY PARK Newport Beach 1200 "B/B" Rea lty 67S.3000 Near U.C.1. & shapplng. For For Safe By Owntr BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR $3.4~ Dn .. buy 3 B~ 2 Ba. SPECTACULAR VIEW House & garage apt on 1 Iot. (Ou.-New Address) home. Assunie 6.5 '" loan. of HARBOR Each 2 br. 2 ba. Rear unit 833 Dover O r., Suite 3, N .B. 642..C620 REALTORS Try lease/opt., Sl.IXXI opt. & LIDO ISLE CUITent income $215 mo . 645-0303 monies, $325 per month por-Charming tront unit. Frplc, G enera l 1000 General -------FOREST E. 0 LS 0 N BAYCREST BEAUTIES 1000 I iiiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOio lion 10 apply. 3 Bedroom + extra room. bay window, pine paneling. DOVER SHORES Al Fink Hanf\\'OOd OooNi. Existing Vacant & ready to move in, loan 7'7a. 1st TD. Vacant Price $49,SOO \vith $16,000 BA YFRONT down. can rn.sm. •-I 231 Sanla Ana. Ave, CORONA JUgblanda v!ew Bankn1ptcy Receiver ""s n-. stii.icied us 10 accept offers Coldwell, Banker & Co. lS. or aill Drive) J>ome. JdeaJ for couple COUNTRY LIVING Neat as a pln 3 bedroom, 2 bath beauty. Huge yard for the kids with swing get in· eluded. Home ha'.& hug e, go~us Jiving room with brick fire:place , New deep pile carpets. f.1odern elec· trlc kitchen. Great covered patio. Beautiful tree • lined street. F U L L PRICE ia $21,950, with small down, to.. !al payment of $182 includes all. CALL W01'1AN will share CdM home with respon1tble worklng W'Oman. 675-1977. YOU NG man lo share 2 BR apt, Santa Ana area. $4,1.50. Mt 4 pm, 543-Gl7 Costa Mes• 2100 3 BR: pool; yearly. Camellia Ln. Al King, Jones. Realty. Ph. 67J.6210, Eves. 6"f5.0098. 2 Bdrm gar patio Quiet tro- pical setting IN adults l Blk shops $185. 5#-0452 for lhls wonderful Norm.an 550 Ntwport Center Dr. w/possiblc i:uest qtrs. or WE SELL A HOME EVERY JI MINUTES Inc. ReaJto1·s 4 BEDROOM+ FAM. WHAT! $21,SOO Scarce as hens teeth! 4 large bedroom. 2 baths. Family room. Deluxe kitchen with all lat.est buill·ins. !ICarpct. ing. Hard to beal al $21.500 and only 5 yearg yOWJg, Hurry to see. DIAL 6-15-3003. T\\'O remaini~ "lee Ov.mer- i;-h!p'' BAYCREST HOM& SITES. Both spacious, clean 11.lld level. Only S..'>8.500 with budget rerm11 and assumable Firiancing. Plans for elegant 2800 square foot four bl!d- room home included. Other lot adjacent to D 0 V E R Sf!QRES. pticed at $32,500. C>Wrier will Finance!! h C 1.1 Immediate Pos~ion more bclrms.·, overlooking Grant built 2·story home on Newport Beac , a I • BY OWNER 60 Ct. Joi with pier & tloat. 833-0700 644--2430 the town. SEE THTS! 4 Bedrooms, large fonnal 675-3982 Open Daily 2-5 Walker & Lee Mesa Verde 2110 MESA VERDE HOME Beautiful 4 br. pool, fonna.I din. rm. $400. 546--0631 ma! d. . ER S BR. "P'rg Pen'' 412 Mendoza Terrace living room & !or Lnmc; FIXER UPP room. $167,500. • Name your terms. 10% SI.an Smith, Rltr. 673-2010 MACNAB·IRVINE Excellenl po!ential in this 3 FHA. V.A. Fam. ho1ne nr. A welJ.built 2 Bt home with Z190 Harbor Blvd. at AdallUi 5<15-0465 ()pen 'bl 9 PM 645-0303 al Harbot' Center ~ Harbor Blvd., C.r-.I. 16 UNITS COSTA MESA'S BEST $275,800 You may assume a $2'l5.000. Ist TD at 6.6% int. v.·ith $50,000. llO\\'fl, Prc~nt in- come $33.120. per yr. Call to see this "top-noll.'h" shel· te r. Newport •I Victoria 646-8811 Anytime 2007 Santiago Oriv• • HAVE 2 HOi\1ES:! r-.1ust Sell ONE!~~! 5 Bedrn1s. HUGE LIVING ROOM. POOL \V/Jaeul.7.i. Ju~ N:dC'COrated. S EE- across from $100,000 hon1ee on leasehold. Only $76,950: : ! OFFICE BUILDING Center of Costa M•1• xioo Sq. fl ., lexx> leased, 1000 avail lor leL...e. $35,000, Very befi"l of trrm.'i. Owner will cnrry 1st TD. Wells·McCardle, Rltrs. 1810 Newport Blvd .• C.M. a.is.1129 6"14-0684 Eves. Evenings Call 646-2259 Best Buy In Town $21,500 Full Price Gorgeous 3 bedroom in lo\.-e. ly country style area wilh lots of tall trees, Glistening •·H!lli:h,'OOd" Floors. Large roomy lcitchcn with lots ol windows. Corner location. Double de:1ached garag!'. Fenced yard. NO Y..10NEY 00\VN G.l.s, FHA iltin.i· n1um Do1~·n. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee Bedroom on R-2 lot that t h I h b J-• 11 Ia I •-Reulty Compa ny a I schools & s opp n g. uge r""' rep ce, o,,, or (7141 ~2.8235 could be C-1 in near future. T.L.C. \\fill cai;e your "house panelling, A little beauty, So. Big double detached garage. · h" r 13? 500 of h good 1· I 901 Dover D1 ivl', Suite 120 pine or , . wy, inane ng. (71 41 675-3210 -Aaking 122·""'· H•I Pinchin & Anoe, MORGAN REAL TY 646-7171 REALTORS 673-6642 67s.&l59 1080 Bayside Dti\•e Newport Bench 3900 E. Coast Hwy, 675-4392 3411 E. Coast llwy, Cdl\I Dover Shores Area DUPLEX; l br & 2 br. Huge Wow ! $22,500 You Own The Land yard, ocean side. 6"'1 nole Newlywed's Dream I "iiiiOii0ii0iiOii0iiOii0..,. 1 Beauliful pool size yrd. 3 BR a.o;rumable 615-5325 This qua.int 3 bedroom doll • hon1e '"' elegant · features, ATTR. 2 BR. house & garage house rea1ures extra thick Fabulous View lrg lam rm, breakfast area, apt, $360 Mo. income. Xlnt 3 CAR GARAGE 4 Bedroom, 2 Baths. with big unfinished eecond story. Heated & filtered pool. Large Jot. Great kitchen with all bltns. Formal living room w/ lireph1ce. Upgrad~ w/w carpels. FHA or VA , $31,500. Prestige neighborhood. You can not beat this, caJI now To K't'! aJl!--~--· ~-.. 1--m-, wall 10 \\·aJ J ~ha:; c:.irpel A full 29()° v1ew of Back Bay, fornial din'g rm. 3 c11r loan, $42,500 Chvner 67>0737 lhroughout. Opl'n beam unlve~ily & hills. Unique 4 garage. $83,250, BY O\VN.1---------- Ca.lifotnia ceiling and 2 + brkfst ;u-ea . Painting in ER. 642·55S3 Lido Isl• 1351 1---,,$2~0-,500=-F~u"ll-P~rl_c_e_ baths. Owner ,viii 8llctiflce pr~reu. _An Eastblulf ex· a·~w=rr=s--~,~.-,.~,-BA~.~1 •--D-E_C_O_R_A_T_O_R-'S Huntington Beach Area and sell NO 00\VN GI. clUSJvc with -l eve l corner green Sharp 4 bedroom, 2 bath WE SELL A HOME ~ 5,cg.511110 belttvl;w. Cov. walled· . HOME home, Large country style EVERY 31 MINUTES (11t11Qnemathlrtrt1 patio, c1111, drps & ahutters Beauhfully done, 5 Bdrms. kitchen with electric built Walker & Lee LLEGE REALTY -+ extras. Walle lo shops, Fam!ly rm. Xlnt su-eet 10 ins. Great play atta for the 1500 AdafnS .ttu!blr,CI& Cd?>f Hi. Owner $33,500. .!ilreel 45 11. lot. k ''"""""~"!"~~""""'"I "•A A"""' , $98,500 ids. A.'iSUme F.H.A. loan 1 · ........... £<>.> LIDO REAL TY · \vith total payments of $ll3. $25,950 BAYSIDE VILLAGE 333? via Lido :::.~ Subm;t """'down paymont Assume 5¥40/0 Loan 2 Br, 2 Ba, pool, P~· beach, 3 BR. De 21,i: Ba. Con-to Owner Must Sell Beau1 ifu1 ho111e. EntTy hall. clubhouse, boot shp 11vall. temporary'.1, Arch i I e ct WE SELL A HOME 410'1 BRISBANE Y.'AY huge family room, oversized =27only. no pets, Owner designed & bit. Lo int. EVERY 31 MINUTES Jn lovely University Parle -master bednn, dinini;-rm, . transferable I 0 an. By Wa Iker & Lee here's aboul the neatest 3 fines! built-ins, S%7D apr. H h owner. Phone ~ 67l-285t for 7(i82 Edinger 842·4'1:ii Stto-5140 BR ·!-cith<'r ram or din rm, 540-1720 Ntwport elg ts 1210 appt. 2700 Harbor Blvd. at Adam! 2190 Harbor Blvd. al Adams as It is nO\v tumlshed. Up· TARBELL 2955 H1rbor ''e"y""o"w"'N"E"R-,°'<°'B~R~&-d~,-n~. 4 545-9101 0f.l(!n 'til 9 P~1 545-9-191 Open 'tif 9 llM graded crpts. drps .t: siruat· Financing Tough? CASTLE IN SPAIN . BA. A lot of bit-ins &: .....--~-.-. ed on that beaullful "green Extra la rg!' 3 BR&: ram-rm Owner moving to Spain, will furnishings, lo~ly patio. NO -DOWN PAYMENT! *'*'*''ii' • ~JI''. home, College Paril:. nnance trade for castle or sell de· s 7 5. o 00 . -ca I I day 1 : VA tenns or minimum FHA • ~II 546·58110 as follow~ \\•ith S5000 dn u. luxe CllU Dr. 2 BR & Den. 54~1-nlghts: 6'1l-1805 down & owne r pays poin!A "11 ;, 1 & 1270 2 Baths, +Guest t'm. BAY'===='"====='! on spac. J Br. 2 Ba home in fne¥~iriema"*""' sume J n. .'I oan . pay OCE N VIEW A kl ,~ I II 0 I $23 99-LOTS of LOTS. prin1e home LLEGE REALTY per mo. P.1.T J. &$6!,000.A • 11 ng Huntington B••ch 1400 top oca on. n Y ' J. sites. Some on fairways, ,,cnr...._,t,,.~.'" p 1 Whit "-1 R 11 Pacif ic Shores Realty prll'«I $16.9.1) to S25,000. ,.,,,,,.~~-~~-~~~·,,,.-,.-,. au· e-...o.~aian , ea Y Graham Realty ~241~ UNBELIEVABLE I I 536-8894 or 847-8586 Good huys! Good bye! I' l093 Baker, C.i l. 5't6-5-HO Near Newport Post Office $750 DOWN! ~ WESTCLIFF FHA or VA NEWPORT HEIGHTS wm """ alt and "'°""""" Bii:; 4 bdrm home on fJUit>t · t this h 4 bed 2 st. Cor. locatlon assui-es 3 Br., l ~ ba., North Costa $15 500 1n o ~ arp room. maximum privacy. See OUs ?¥Tc~ .. Close to all sebooh;. FIXER:UPPER bat? rancher near freeways, TRY 10-/o DOWN exttllent home Md1ty. S50,000 DcAu1.<fv'1."'D's· ON ~R lty. fa'! x 140..R-2 lot. l. BR sp;m ~:::"-~~:~~ F~~~~~ "Our 25th Year" ea . stucco w/frple. Room for SfARTER home for newJy. .J BR.-$2S,950. Spotles."1 N~ WESLEY N. ~60 Eves. 544-183.1 more 1inll~. \vcds $23 500 FULL PRICE ')1:.-$(\ \ ~~~:· ')\ ... 11 t~1 546-5990 ri,.~ .. 2 d;,":,'i;~· ~,:~ 11~~: TAYLOR CO A Touch of Sp1nish BRASHEAR REAL TY WE SELL A HOME · Pnv. swim club. \~·!l.lk to \Valled pa!io: 3 BR. + din. 847-8507 Evru;: 642-042"1 EVERY 31 MINUTES ell schools. Rtaltorl + !11.1nily + lge. rootu over w lk & L Nf.\VPORT CENTER gorage. Redueed to_ B•ycrHt 1223 a er ee M.t.LTOJt 2W San Jooquin Hlll.s Rd. $41,950 7682 Ed Cor.arN·MAllTf"l) 644-4910 W•lker Rily. 675-5200 SHARP SHARP SHARP 8424455 "-~40 111i·lll2 -Escape: the Ordinary 33li6 Vla Lido, NB Open Sun, Adult occupied, 2 BR. 1%. Bai----=~=~--$21 500 Biiind new. Jviin \Veil• View eBEACH BARGAIN• and a gn:at kitchen, Lovely, RARE ' home, Dover Shore11. 4 BR, Only $25,!KXI • tenns, for thl11 lovely landscaped )'Ard. Be OPPORTUNITY SWIM POOL 3 BA, powder rm, 11.mily 3 BR . 2 ba. lovely home, w/ the lir11t la see. • Take over 5" loan, $147 mo Carefree Livin9 Park llke yard, 3 bdrm. 2 nn w/frplc, WRlk In \,\'Cl built-in&, carpeu le drapea. J ean Smith Realtor pays all. l Sty 3 BR. 2~ BA baths, enlry hall, dream I I k' ~ 400 E 17th St. CM 6'J6..325." HOW'S THE TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PllOT 1\w/lltM YQU ill this Imme<:. 2 har. Eat ng artll n 11 Ste~ to ocean. · • .. · ' + tam rm. only $ll,50Q, hrdr111 & ftttnily rm "f'1•ench kU~~n. popular floor plan. fonnal din rm. ~lnny eust CAYWOOD REAL TY Be•utlful The Real Estate M lrt uuun"r Condo. Rf' frl ~ . .r:~7:ELL 2955 Harbor fehturc~. Roy J. \Vant Real· 6300 \V. Coast Hwy., NB Ivan Wells 147·8531 washrr/di·ye.r Ind. 0v.'T1C!r tor, 1430 GalLXY Dr. 6·16-Li50 e 541-1290 • 3 BR. 3 BA. plu1 buge rum- TTl'ivlng out ol !ffa.t(:, make SEASHORE DRIVE-Open Dillly, $30 BOO J>US room. All s mxindlng ofter~ OCEAN VIEW 1 • beautUW heated• fllte~ $23 ,500 !'urn. Duplox. Dbl. t<>n•• $19,950 Assume SV"lo pool. s.;.5 BEDR00'1S - PERRON 642_1771 lmmoculate! S44,9j() R-2 lot. 2 BR. 1 BA, pninlerl Lo&n ttpr. Entry ball. f&mlly Jean Smith Realtor Refurbi!lhed. VAtruA Flnc. George Williamson Jn & out, new crpts, cov po.· roon1, rlu" xt1'a rccttatlon 400 E. 17th SI., C.t.t. 646-3255 HAFFDAL REAL TY Home & Duplex $17,500 REALTOR tin, l'lC!W drivtwl\)', F-Mlilldt:'.. room, 1111 lhe ~~. home cu• 141-4405 Close Out! Corona del M•r 2250 $200 i\1o., yrly. 2 BR, frplc, \\-asher/dryer. Ocean side. 410 Heliotrope.., 67~-3708 evt!~, Balboa Island 2355 F1JRN. l\Iod. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Dock. No pel!t. AvaU to June 20. $300 mo, 675--7118(1 Summer R•nt1l1 2910 2 BR Apt &: sl'pg porch on Newport Isl. Priv dock on channel. $225 wk. or $800 mo. Call 819-2061 befr 5: 30. Duplexts Furn. 2'75 $110 -Duplex for bacheJor. All ulllltles, yard. Bkr 534-6980 RENTALS Hou1e1 Unfurnished General 3000 **RENTALS** $92.50 Furn 1 BR Apt, $15.'i Fum 2 BR Apt. $140 Un!urn 2 BR Duplex $150 Unfurn 2 BR Studk> $135 Unturn 1 BR Cottage ROO~t~tATE SERVICE * MANY DniERS * Free fo Landlords Blue Beacon Rental Flnderw 435 \V. 19th St, CM 645-0W HERE'S ANOTHER 3 bedroom, 2 bath for rent. OwQer transferred says rent at s't9o per month. Double Garaa:~. Nice kitchen. Stop by at WALKER&: LEE 1100 Harbor Blvd at Adams, Costa Mesa $165-for gracloos livina: 2 BR, separate dining room, redecorated. Bkr. ~ Cost• Mesa llOO _________ , SPACIOUS De.I Cerro Home, f!C!ar So. cout Plaza. $285 mo. sh-o933, 545--0333 CUTE. 1 BR. stove, retrtr. drapes. $120, Util. paid. ...-. 548-<;680 3 BR, 2 BA + Oen. Dsh\Vhr, C('PtS, drpl, cov'd paUo, fncd yard. $200. MS--:a:>92 Newport Beech 3200 E·Ucle 3 Br, ptiv 670 loon, trd .67J..43S0 673=n64 Eves. 646-3928 E\.~: 644·165.\ tom fc.ture1, xtia baUis. DAILY PILOT DIM£. A . BUSIEST mM'kefplace In lnr cl(:A.r hse. l.l!avtytg: atta. DIAL dlrttt 642-$13. CM.rat' Lachenmyer R11!Jor MO-l720 LINES. Y~ can uM the.m town. The DA!LY {'ILOr (}\\'nt'rlbkr. &16-.J?rJO, rour ad. then ~t back and I !:~~~~~~~~"! TARBELL 2955 H•rbor Jor jwit pennln a day. DtaJ money, time /4 effort. Look Optn EweniftlJS THE: QUICKER YOU CAL~ Ji1ten to the phone rtna! ilrE SUN NEVOt SE'J'S on Your UNM'ED f1JND &U-$78 Claulfled aeclloa Sa" e . ._ ___ t_u_r _,_,J_o __ _, TllE QUICKER YOU SEU. ,_N_o_w_! -------DAILY PILOT \VANT A.OS! _N_'ttd_._Y_ou_r_Oo11 __ ._ .. ___ , __________ ,_,_-_u_1 ______ _ WAN T AD JUST Built. Harbor View lfomc. tp 2 1t,y, 4 BR .. ror. mal dWng nn • family rm. aardncr. Si50. s.6.589.L- LOVELY TWNHSE w/Vlew of pool 2 Bdnn 2 Ba frplc, Ira patio $275. A1ent 646-0732 I ...... ,, g'Mt. Y P!LOf · -Molld1J, ·\tlf'tll 16, 1970 · . . · : · ·1, iilATt,9..;;;;;A;:LJ;,;,=:,.--~R=E=N=TA~L~S,;:::::..====c;,R;;;,EN'T ALS . RENTALS . j RENTALS RENTALS REAL ESTATE t4ouM1 Ul)fuml.htd Apts. Furnbhtil' Apt s. Furnished' ~!f_'UnlUrnTs!iiif~ ·~pts. Unfurnlshtd Aets. -~nfurnl.hecf ,,_o_._n_•,•.•:cl ____ _ * * * * NeW,.;r ••cl!. ,,00 O.ner•I ~ Newport Bt•ch 4200 Costa Mitt' 5100 Coat• M111 SIOO Huntington Beach 5400 Room1 for Rent 5995 .,. '.Mulh 0..ly ; $ Bil 2 bathe: spllf level USS t u , aaiN ........ ms , AY,AJkBLE NOW Bq .i:'Beada ltt:lltY, lnc. 901 Dover Dr. Suite US NB I·-"'·"-WE8J'CWT . -W... "100 eq, n., 3 bedroom, 2 bath, lowly "Yard -Mariners 1cbool dlat. S39!I per mo. yeUV, 1607 Kentlane, open d&ll)' from 3: 30 p.m. or call nrntt M.2-2135 , J'RESHL Y palnttd l &·. 2 Ba Ou;pln-nr bch. Nu cpta. mtna. S250 . mo lease. 51().1513 Un1Yer1fty Perk 31!7 3 BR. 2 baths.,, .•..•..• 1295 ! 3 BR. 2 bsthl ; ••••••.•• S.l40 4 BR. 3 ti.th.I ••.••••••• $315 , 3 BR.: J hl,thl , •• , , •••• , S32:i ! e RED HILt. ·RtALTY ·I Univ. Pvk Ce.n~r, Jrvint ' ' CW -Al'l)'lime l33..Q820 1'be GORGEOUS New · VAL O'ISERE Slngk--1 br-2 br. rum -unr. Sauqa. Act')' Rm. Bll!Jnn ls "f't!m.PY. & 4j' pool, BB~ UK! Parton!I Rd. ~12-11610 $15-Bachelor quart c rs, utilities, ltlH!n!!', w (' r It' I y n\atd 'serVict .. Bin'~~ Coste Mei•· * * SUNNY ACRES 4100 '• * * * Motel-Apts * l aljN.l So. d o.c. FalrgroWlds Stadlo ·l 1 ledtooms m WK . & UP Doy, Wfflt, MOftth e Kitchens .. 1V'1 \J'lcl. • POOne scrv., hid pool f ?.fa.id fft'Vice avail. 2376 N~OIT ILVD. 541-9755 ·.o_ __ _ t ~type 3 BR. 2 1 -l BR apt. lutrt 4. unf. BA homf( w/ 1 1 rl um . from Sll5 up. Ne\\·ly decor., Blt-ina, crpta, drps. Immed. pool-11!Ck "11, beau. garden. ooc'up."Jfr. UCJ • al!Dt)Plna. AdU.liJ. no·peis. 1959.l\-laplt , l4M>449 or 675-4497 CJ\1. Apt, 5 ~'l"GR. ,I.,,========-DEL\.RCE,} Br.1 Spet•. (Utu. i c.,._,.. llel. lt\ar . 3250 All tlec., ftost-frtt retrlg. ( -· · ' "''IV cpt •• FuJ.i Ca.r. 'vt1tor. ~ LI:ASE OR LE.ASE OPTION Quiel, Adults onl,Y. Mo/mo I• Gorreota & charmlnr 3 Sl60. ~8 Eves .. Bedroom home a be&mtd •WJ~'TER RATES cellina:s thruolll • iparklina: 11 tenant ttrnains lhru rum· I _ ... ' .. fill<.... ponl • 1 minimum upiteep ."•rd . mer~no raise Jn rent11. BR " tum .$130, 11tudios Sll1 ·2135 ! Leue $Mil mo. Ca I l Elden, O.t:See l\1gr Apt 6. · ~ SOUth Cout Real Emtt SUS CASITAS ., V1 Of 3 b 2 Furn. 1 BR Apli, A"dulls E\V Bay. r. ba. home )Qit Jeue. Frpfe. s:nJ only, no pct5. 21JO .Newport mo. lit I lut. SM cleanlnc. BlVd; CM. &t2-92S6 Avail April 11. Call before MERRIMAC WOODS IPM ~ Furn uni.ti avail, See ad un. det. ilasa 5100. 425 J!.feiri- Huntlnf'On ~ch 3400 ,m:;:ac:::.,.Wcc•;;:>c,:.· .:.$40.6300::..::=-~ 1~ blk' 10 Gee!l.11. :r DK. 2 B·A, $71J )Tly l.se. Av~ Apnl 5. ?>I r. Gunderson o"'rfbkr 67J..Ql0 BEACO"•"'B"'A"\'.,.-. '"'M°'oo=t•r-,"'-2 ~R .. lrplc, h'i'i" a~ndeck, S'l-Oo 'lil July l!it. 613-509-1 or (21:11 TI I 5"--3~27 'f"11R fu rn i LJ n furtl Scf AWARD WINNING lZ''<JCl"l''' 111t•1·1·i111~1t• l\'l)O(IS SW0--$.17~. Cp.ls. dljls. blt.ru;. .Orange Count~·.s Mos t Beautifwl ON BEACH! e SING LES J-'RO~l ·Sl·10 e 2 HR P l BA .1-'RO,\I S2:l5 .. :I. BR :I. BA l•ROi\t S200 e S BR 2 BA FROr.1 S360 Cit rpcts-dra pe1-dl!hwasher bcatOO pool·sauna-tennls r(•r roon1-01:e11.n views. pa tloHmplt parking, ROOtlt to H.cn1. Sludcnt pn 1l. KltcMn privil. $60 iwr mo. 1st rl. Wt nK> In adYance. 6-16-7886 aft 6. Motels, Trlr. Crt•. 5997 \\'EEKL Y rate5 Sc11 L!Lrk tlfOlC'I, 2301 Newport BJvd., Costa ~tesa )"'" :i-. pool, pnllo. 1.~1 Phacen!Kl, Apo.ttme11·t Con1muntt11 2 Br. r11rn,, Adult coUJi!es. .Featuring a club atmosphere for your con1- S165. \\'it tt>r pa!d. Avail. li1ar . rort and .pleasure :_ just completed I or 2 Secu.rily guardis. FURN . also Av:1ll. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC M isc. Renlals 5999 ------SINGLE garage !or l'f'Ti t $20/mo. Avail now. r.Le!hl c/el Mar area. 6'12-44~ I. Whaddya W ant? Whnddya Ger? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FDR 17. 1 blk 10 beacll. a4<1-4262 l~edroom , ..2 Bath. Furnished or Unfurnis hed. ru~. wt utll. Bai:hcl:or .A.i.r-Cond., so undproofed, self cleaning ovens. ap1. Avail AprLI i.~t. $1l7.5Cl. .. beain cellings , dishwasher, lus h landscaping 711 OCEAN AVE .. 11.B. ENCLOSED Garage Ncw r10rl NATURA L BORN SWAPPERS Special Rats c714 • 5.36-1487 J-lghtll. Sll Pf'r month. Call S Line s -5 t im es -5 buck• 1525 PlaeentUi:. NQ with streams & waterfalls . elevators. BBQ's, .,--~"' . -~2-!!001 or 642-8006. RVtE.S -iloO MUl r 1!1ClUOt •-w""' ""' ,, • .,.. •o ., • .,. .._Whl! t'" ,..,,, h• ,,.-. ocr:ANJ<'RO~T l Br yrly. ~clubhouse -,vith social activities. saunas, Ju-* LARCl: new 1 Bi·. \I ith · --~YOVR Pf\OM tflAIOf tca1n~ •-1 hr~, O' .OY•M .. •nt. 1 I 1 loa1ls or storage, tl!'cssini;: GARAGES. Ex u·11 loni; JO ' \.-t.l0 1.(.41NG FOR \.J.ll' -1 ~it.OE3 f>Nl ~I C\\'1 l leo..~r un urn. cuzzi & swim pools, private garage w/stor... 100111• Pullman bath , 30 szo nio. Nr o.c A1rpor1 . A.cten1 Ml-S!CiO · age. From $140-$210. l.)ishwn sh<·r, Bii-ins, Shag Pal l!adl'~ Rd. 5q8-5(M~ To Place Your Trader 's Paradise Ad P HONE 642.5678 BACH. apl. 2 sll'l"f'll'i fro n1 For enjoyable SIH'roundl1195 caterin9 to d is· 1·Mpcti11j!. Pvl Pa1 10 1 blk t.wach, $85. 642·25.15 ;ill. Jl ·Cet'ftlng odults; come to MERRIMAC WOODS . , • 10 shopping &· \val king Income Property 6000 Tnult• '.'.llOll ••t !1 S:111 t-.·1·. na nllo \IJ!Jt•y h1>n11'. , lir. ;: Sal. & 11ft. & Vttekd"ayi1 Jv1t •••tot 2600 H•rhr Blvd., l\r. N•bers C•dl111c 1!11!01\C\.' lo beach. Adul!s 425 MERRIMAC WAY, COSTA MESA e S45-6300 1 ......,., •11 I! a C·l BARGAIN hu • c<il.t.llna, ponl. 1\or1h on) '""· ,., snt11., .. 0 1 C 1 d 1 L ' "· lVERYTHINO NIW.:_MOVE tN NOWI ·,36-28()0 Up <!X on tJ1g ·I Bui;. oL, ri gf' Hl't'~ r<>r ._....•rtri1 ~~~~".'!!!!:~~~~~~~~~!!:~~".'!!"::''I · · 63 x 27U CentrllJ loc1tho11 proper!). ~li.t.-Hil l Cot on• der M•r-4250 2 BR. l\larguen1t\ So. of ::: • SPACIOUS 2 BR. SJ2,:io<> I P r 111 5-11-tiCilil, l)('IU>ir l'tll'ti l·~W\o·r -.:11,.1: llwy. Salli mo, No ciMldt't'n. 0015' esew e~SO:) I Costa" Mesa 5100 Up;,t;urs ., (:arpcts, tlrv.Pf'S, 517-2:;;)1. cs. Gal:t.'\Y .s. ~l.Ul"I ','', ti42-78.'IS hltns. ~eiv Ill~ &· piunl, 2 TAX SHELTER! Co11l11 l\\esa S.35,CXXI Vtt! Tril for ~27' GRAND OPENING * kN~ds ,?K. hAIBI 1 1",1!. paid. $l50. l&l 2 B<'<lroon1 unttii in top po1rr r hoa!. up lu $11)1•111 Balboi 4300 * -· Ne\v an d Dramatic a~ a Spanish Ca stle EL CORDOVA APTS BACHELOR Apl. 2 door!> fron1 0Cfltu1. }·u111.<Ul1l incl. Sl'l.'.i n1p. yrl_y. 11·1:-tl~S ... . ~ 'fh1nk you've seen gi'eat aparllnents? Lido Ille -4351 \Ve have a ll the nice features .as follo\vs. -' . 1( HEATED POOL * REC HALL A!1'RACTTYELY f un i. ~ * DISHWASHERS -* BAR·B~OUES . .Studio, B~Jront. Pa l\o . *SHAG. CARPET'G *GARAGES View. Jn1 mcd. occu11: UtU MANY10THERS 1 ~~ !: ~~uA:CP~J: 1 & 2 &R's-FROM $1~5 For. Adults Only ait Sept . 1.1use 67~· 2077 Cherie St. * 545--0376 fJust 400 ft. \oV. of Harbor Blvd. or! Hamilton) .Salbo• Is land 4355 r. ""'-'ll:r v . & Adams ~"I I I C 11~ • . .v. . I C . 1 1 I' I 'I" l'l'l" 2110 fLORllJA 536-0091 '"' _c I s ):lpe. ro11:o1 ~ ......... ~-· -~"'~ ~-·' ,, .. ~ Price S92.000, l1hcral tenns. Tm.di• 1·~;~ Qllf'< Slnrflr« i\'F.\V I BR. CARPETS, Fulh-r R. .. a!1y :~u;-o&l \ i!I :o.lnl ·t·f;nrl 1"n", ,,1. n• 1'. ORAPES. -----. · · 'J'! L'ndbt.i C " . 2:i 9 l·BR. Apls. fi.r l•I l'lr lti 1dtu11!!111til .. r lf' 1 rg 0· .iJt>-J79 Nl•nr shops. S\0.100 1111·. :.;:ln;,s rii:h111~ 1 ...... 11 11111! •'.•~"! LARGJ::, c!ca11 2 Br. apt. SSl.000. 511,000 do ..\• n . 111Qtor. :i1s.J!!l6 Adult!. Closed g11.ragc:>. Owner. 612-8579 B!•:iuliflll l:~·-y~~11111,1 :.'60x t:n~land St. ;136-1205 c:!t'ar f•}I' snlall<'r '""' AT'TRAC. 2 Br. Jiu cpr~; Busine.ss Rental 6060 hl"luS•', sni:i !! 1u111-.. I ·i.ld· drr111. all f'>.tr;j:r;. pool. $149. ro-SQUAR-E FT ;1b!r 101s, T n , · · ,.,, '168-7510. S~T-15'.ll c · Cull ~~!09 1 --CID-1200-2400 sq. h. Ofticr or · --- 2 & 3 BR. 2 BA, pvl, patio, Retail stores. 211 ·213 62nd Brarnl ,~ ... w ~Kk<t• ru1>t,,r1·;1 I h<'aled pool. 1w1'her & dryl'r St , Nt>ll•port Beach. l\ey l'S. Tra r1f' ror 1..1.lns, i1•1•1•s nr hook up. 962-899~ avall ;it Travrl Lode" r.lcr ~ Valur Sl·~1 •'<ILh S~;o:1111 tel. 0 1\·nPr. 2131 2·14--3101 1-nlll'~·t1un . v11h.w S!,,o.J 1 .. r 5100 S•nta Ana 5620 or eves (tl J) 246-0~00 i:-uni. or " 96244.~l --'----------~-. - BALBOA tSLANU--\fa1r t•hv u1 k;t'"":" (',1rl•~ CA.RAG E Apt., 2. bdrms.,l Costa Mesa 5100 Co1ta Mesa bath. \\lit.ti bo;IJ ~p. s:'!oO. I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii BUI Gruhdy, Rcilror &.tt--1&201 1 Huntin~ton Beach 4400 NE\V 2 Br. 2 BA 11.pt . Crpts. Clrp1, \iv nn & din nn Cnrn., dghwlir, patio. Be!tth Blvd. k F:rl inaer. S193 nl o . . llt42-7002 ·HARBOR TOWNHOUSE 2217 HarOOr near \Vilson • 2 Br 11.t Ba. Studio Toll'nhou~ $135 LUXURIOUS-NEW VILLA MARSEILLES Lr ase sloN' or ol11er. !lfl'" l"M1n lnr 9 un11~ $36,WI ~·1· BRANO NE:W prnprialf' ror hr11ut) !>ll lon. 11·:1d(• s~:i1 r4u11;. l"r un·t~ $150 & $170 All Utilities P aid l &· 2 BR. 2 ~w.m pool! Aclull:s only, no peL~ Jll7 A\•ocndo St. c .r.1. See l\l ii:r on prrmisr.~ SPAC IOUS :;117 i\111nnr A\'f'. 67><).186 or Oroni_'I· v r S;,n IJ:. "" ('u. 1 & l Bdrm. Apts. ~f broker. Pc·1Ton Rt«JH)' 1;12.1;:1 Adult. Living S..'IALL 1hop! nr. Nc1\1>0rt ~ -.-ur1~n--:-3-1:;i ~t h Furn. & Unfurn. Pier. Va rious SIZC!'. Inq uire \.lf'W or ill't'a I J ~1!11• lu Dis:1"a;;hc 1·. color coorcl!nal· Bayvle\11 Propcl11r" hcai·h. \\'""' t~•<rl . ·r o:~. f·rl e.pplianre11 • plush shag 230!! \V, Balboa. NB 613-7420 or morC' un11.~. cut pct • ch.o!ce or 2 coloi --For11~1. tt~·aJ101~_1o.it-. .t~ }J.111 $1~'J"xl lll\1·-.lt<I II!\'\\' h·ll', ~•.11 j! 111·· l~lU~" ,f.. M' 1• ,·l,\n~· ~l~JJ• 11n '\1•111~"1, C ll "f1.ul1• lur 1111 ,,,·1··-. !111 l~•J 1ht· .1~.\S\l l'1ll ~\1J..•·l' \· I~!' Tl 1 ,; •r1~·· •,, u1,i1rr ,,! J, L .! ·111 I J:,, '}I) I'·'· • ~!"~! Tu1·1! ~l:!JllWI ~ 1111,r I'" 1 t i i Tr<! , •. ,r, IO!;il '' i;< •·1017 n .. , ! i:!"l }llfl ·;i· il•MI I !If •lirll"I' /~;lil!nU (·l·•'·'I t•t•"'IH•" 111•1 Nh !''lli1l I•" \'•111 ~111\ll"l 'j j ti io f, II ' ~\ Ill ;< Ulll(', 11 11!11"" Ii 1,.·~ ).;l. l·.1w11~1o \ 1• ". 1 .. •.1.,1. Ii 1·m~ . Iii" 1·rur.Y. p.•t l1h<1. rin<:: nrn, ~'_"l'l"i)1·,11 '1'1.1•.P :'\I!: r\I ,\ o If'' If.I '.Ii '(Qt 1 .,1 111. ·: 1 :r.~. '! r '• I' 11!'. l·ftlll'Y ·r1J,:1· '"r 1'<.l.1!111~11 "' ;Jl•l! I" I" l•"h :tl'f',L 1.1111.: ... n•." ·~l'"' 111 '! b••lruorn. 2 ~"'''\ Ji..,'. Jl1·;•r ,.,.1)111 1Jtl •4 ;o· ''' ', ' . -(11•r1'.••1l11·T•.1il•·S2rl.OOO l '! Ill ; I ·~1[J,1!J:, J•11· Ol1\1•r 11 i 111. 11:1r. \";11 G 1!1,1· • ' "'' . ,,. \\.HI! 111">'1[1!'1·1~ \,· ,Jl rt ,, 1. I ~·1::.r•n ,,,~ VILLA Pacific for leue. 2 Br,. J Ba Townhouf!. C&l'Rttl. d~pe-. , 9 o o I , Mun&. ldl'a&:; · 16~110 or 962-107.f. • . 1 BR, Sitting nn t.-ombo. Priv. ·ba &. "t"ntr, Kirehf'n. All u.tll pal<l. · Busine111 ~fan pret. can 548-6355 TRAILER 2.. BR. ldf'al for ,L:.:•:!gl:u;:n_.,._a=. .. :.c:.hc__· _4;_70:.:5 • lleat<!rl pool . Adults only e Nn pr1~ . Adj lo 11h0Pping (BE'h lnrt K-i\1art o(f H11 rbor at comrr Rutgcn &: Avocadol Da} 6-12-lil'.i, e\•e 645-C:U83 schrl11e!' • 'l baths • stall Office Rental 6070 llJ·:DGJ-: ·1~FL,\ll{JN shoivers • 1ni.rroted "'anf· Trd for 1r11.:. 01· t"Oal '.1 H I I \'' •. :,\l ~!1,1/"I .. till\ I -,1rn•i.. Do I"'" I~ hnn1c. IJfl\, h.11 C•·'•ir 11·~··t~ a\;l'L 1:11., 1·~ ,\ l•lol1-1 i.!trn!lor1 1•.11,.~ •11j •·'.l.\' 1.i'; :>2'17 C:ONOO. 3 br •. : 11~ ba, wuhet, dryer, pool, clbhse. Ml.ti Si'° mo. er~ 111 4!~ WALK to beach .from tJ\b dellfhttu! 3 Bedrm home. $23S 11»· Available April llL Arent ~41 college studf!nt, $100 nlo. C"11,_,, . .,.., 646'1809 J BR.-'lltluxe modern.· beam· ed cf!illn&i. J>QOL Sl.M. * 642-7508 •· f'iASSAiJ PALP.15 1 e . t ·ar2 ·'BR. POOL · ,77 "£;:~r\d ·St . : 642-366 LOWEST RENT \1J L\.ACE l NN·"'KLY, ~10. J.2 pcrsOns or sin latnlly, • 494-9-136 * 1 Bil Apt. 11 cuokg. brllU -.lli:C1U1 vu. Lai;: llil!s. UtU '1(1 • Sngl per $.i!.i. 494-!164:\ S1:11 .furn. Lovcl)' 1 b;-~ 1 BR. -Bacheler apl w/refri~ F..,nteln 'Valley l410 ·• ·J;ath.-· $60 mo, 21.IG-C oipt, nt·ar bei.l.ch. U111 paid. I".;;.;:;:.;.:;.;;;"-'""--'-'---'-, · · -· · Ln.t!'una. ll!W-4200 i..:Onnl::.:'°"'':.::A:.:'~'·~·CM='::::.·---3 BR, 2 ·BA. IUtm. erpts, CO , -• ~ f'u . c ... J I drps, fncd. 1:nd patio. S235 M:Pui:-1 ~1 .rnisn•:u Condominium 4?50 , mo. 54~2286 wkdya, f!Vd Bedroom apL 131 J-1o~·er. -----' $95. &16-1883 DELUXF: ~ Udr111. i·pts. 540--5&« drp~. ·osh11hr. Pool. Avail •::C::-':;:.°"':;:;:::ln;:l•;;m::·:....--3';.;;5::0 Niwport l•ath, 4200 April I. 962-49C8. II no. an! 61~1• NeWl"rt "IH•ch 3 BR. 2 b&. crpt, 3 ear, car, pool I:. clbhle avail. $2'la 1 mo.~. lllNTALS· 11_::Apl=s.::,.;f..:u;;.m:;clc;•h..:td __ · General -' " Single Adults = sln,U, 1·4 ' ..... ream apartmenta, fum\lh- ld and untumilhld, with oall'IJ'lete pr1Yaey· ana JMd.. r..aptd country club atmc• ..... lncl"®W .. 1150.111111 worth·llf re<:ttadon.al feciJ. 1~ dt1i(Jlel! and optrat.ed jUlt for •ln&le people. . ·'KtNl's J'ROM S1'5 to S300 NEWPORT BEACH UO mVINE AVE. J.RVlNE AND 1.6tlt m4! "5-0550 . GRAND ,QPENING IMMEDIATE 'OCCUPANCY ......... -.,....,. .... olferhtt complete privacy, beautlful' landacapin&" It unparalleled reqe:ationa.I faciUUes In & country club atmosphere. Now IMSini: in NeWf)(lrt Beach. Models open '10 am to 8 pm Rents from $13>$310 Furni!hed or unfurnished REf'\TA.LS , .. , Apt1. Unfurni~e!_ Genl-ral sooo VEN DOME Il\tMACULATE APTSI . ADULT ~FAMILY SECTIONS AVAJLABl.E .close to 1hoprJnai.. Park * Spaclowi 3 Br s, 'f Ba * 2 Bedroqma •·Swim Pool, Pul/&rffn * Frpl, Jndlv/lndcy fac·ia 1145 Aneheim Ave •. COST,\ MESA · 642·2!24 • RENT . .,• J Rooms.Fu!'niture $19.95 & UP ~nth-To.?i.tnnih lte'nCali \VIDE SP,ECTION r;O DEPOStr O,A.C. i·rrnc FumHnre R1!1Ttal~ 517 w. l91h, 01 548·3'181 $.<;(}-1 AR. ovPrlooku1g bay, lllll 1tici; p1t1d, i;10vf', refng. f'ra!or. 13kr ril 1-69fl0 STUDIO APTS. 2· 13c9room1 • 2 .&u1:: Carpets r., dra!J(?$. Garage :US "' :wl cabr1llo $'.1 7:i Pt·r· }.lon1h . of S\65 On LeaSI' w '7S-60~0 0 -·wu ra..a. MARTINIQUE S11<1c1ou11 grounrlll v.-/ park· l1kl' SUl"l'Otlndlrlgll \\'/ prl- \"jll."y. Pe.liClf! /£ pool<i. Nr. shopping. Adul ts only. Quiet. 1. 1. &. :1 BR . .f>clm.:e Apts. ALSO f'URN. BAal. 1177 Santa Ana Ave, C.~T. 'M;tr, Apt 113 646-~ 1-.:U:c;ANCF. n' Hacienda Harbar 1 & 2 BR. Sl50-Sl ~O "lJ1il in<!ludcd . NC PETS Adult living-in a f\Tedltcrr1uwan Atmosphcr~ · Bh·in.~. sh3J:: t"rpts, drp:o1, garage W/atonige, POOL 241 Avocado b42·292 5 2 Bit ·unfurn. NetA·ly dee. New crpts. & drps. Spac. ~'l'Outlds-. Adlts. no pets. $14(] 1no. 2283 fountain Way f:. Olnrbor, l\lrn \'!. o t WllMinJ . \Vilson l:ardens A pis . Harbor H eights Apts. Rcll'l111y·Deluxt' 2 & J BR. l lo1n!' ntn1osphe,.,. incl gw-g. Ired air htg. bill\$. Cls too -s.o : f't\\'Y, ·stiopg, schl, park. 181~·n Baker & t:is:Jer. \V . of ·Harbor) Rtntal Ore. Jll7 €innH1nin Avt". ~Y16-l03•1 THE NEWPORT LUXUllfOU~ 1:A"ftl)l"N AP1'S P;vt. Patlns, Heated !.a.nai llCIOI , 360' Pr111a\E' BtH/l"li .. t BNlr'm s11; .. s21:i Ir 2 Betl r 'm SJZ>.l~ilO * 2 Bedr'tn & d•·ri S60Ct !11'1 B11.y1ndC' Dr. 6T.~14 ORLEANS APTS. 2 & J CR 11,·ail. Ac/ult!; only. tobc t1oor111 • lnclircct light. LAGUNA BEACH v1c1\' lots. lit·;u« nl orn1~ 111i; In kitchen • breakfcist Air Conditioned Cn1.11 ~:q, $~·~1 o•a J':o· q 1ul'l,~ bar • huge private fenced ON FOREST AVENUE lt30·1i010, !'fr01~::1• 11aUo • plush lanuscap1ng • Desk spar" 11 valla ble Jn .l-HR~ tie! -HA-"J'o1w11'11ouv·. li1·1l·k Bat-B·Q's. la11;'C heal· newest office buildini.: al ,"J H. Pri . 1~!1 111, 111•1L 'l·~. cd pools & l11nai. prime location in down to1\·n l..1!l·h1:n s::::.Otxl '] .d . ](J.\' 3101 So. Bristol St. Laguna Bench. Air cond1· 1to11n, 1.111· 111f1dl'I 1· 11 1" !J. C~S r.tL N. ol So. Coo..'t Pl~ia) tioned, carpetf'd, beautiful ur 7? u " ""! fM!ph~ .• 1. Santa Ana t>n trances: rrunlaie on PHONE : 557-8200 Forest AvP., l't'ar lead! to f * ti.tuncipaJ p;1rk1ng lots. $.VI . . ~ ... ., .... ., """ ...... \','h;1 I 1111 ;•"I lml l' !O fr,1dc ~ l,i•t jt hr-rr -111 Orio~e tn,; 1,.,,,1 -1t1 I w.11.e a deaL * .. Cl.t:.\N 2 IJH., :1 BA Crpt$, Jrp~. hll·in stovl". d1sh11·5hr, d1!>pu~l. I Chlitl. $170 mo. C'11 ll :>1G4)399 per month for spact", Dr~k REAL E S f ATE 1 l:.U S!l\C~S L'nd and chairs avnilabl" ror S5 Business hours a nsv..·l'inr; . General j _!l~~~NCI AL ___ _ service available. for SlO. Comme rcial 6085 , Business -==========! AU utllltk!s paid except 0 1 , , 17U Twitln, Costa l\tes.1 I l B h lelephone ppor unrh es M'1'. l\frs. Oi.nion, &12-4iHl aguna eac 5705 DAiLY PILOT l n1p1~vt'<l ~orn1'.1 lots: B11,1.,! 1 100 CLIFF DRIVE 222 FORESI' AVE/'\UE Rnl.l'r arr ·1 S2 ppr Nl !1. A!i1!1111" 6300 Fairway Villa Apts Nelir Oran~e {:o. Airport ,t,, UCL Adulrs only. 20U2 s:i.nra A1111 Avf'. 54J.3S!M Sil~I BR. J ~ BA. 118~2 Br, U\GUNA BEACH l!lnnin lRFnlt11 CANDY SUPPLY 11 ~ BA. Cf'r>!s, drps, bhlns. ~4-9466 -ROUTE Vl!'1V of occ11n. \Valking dis· HUNTINGTON BEACH f•12-6,'Y~! 1 \ • !>•·!1111" 1111 .. h·r,ll h\/ll'f' to town. Also furn . A ir Conditioned Ft I!{ .-111''. ~!t)l'C~ln7 1 :,, l'il<'(ll llh'"t ... • 1 .. r r~w Bachelor, 1·rry Jnrge $170. ON l!ACH ILVD. i;~ti-Q!JS \\'. l ~lh ~I HC'Hi,·l !""'' 11 '' lit.• 11·1·d,. i Da)'~ 491·2449 or >194-5303. Dc:k space avallablo In Tn1.,,,.111 fll'l"fl . jlR-lil~~ /\:;I <111<1J\,1111· 1 l:frill1u~ .uirl ney;est office building "1 -------1 ,u1t·· .;t.<; ;r.u1w,-. 11<,11; '0111 l·BR. Ap1, UnJurn. -~~=~---~---1 rloii•nloivn 1_...,0~ $\7_ prime locaUo.n in llu~tini;· Lots 6100 "I'"' 11r·i1 di,p1·1L~r1"< in Or· DELUXE :.! BR . Bll tt!t. w/ii· " . .... '1 ton DP.Reh. Air condlt1oned. _ .. , • I'·• lit•! •U11n111.<Jin:.t t·rpts. 1>rlv p11 110, Sl.3.i 1nu. Evr.• & wknds IHG--01 t2 J RR sludlo. Frplc, l~r pnt io. pool. S;iL!/lll. S:nl. 5Hi-0370 --.B1~ ,\pL unfurn .• i,"0£11"!~ beautiful entrance. Front-NE\\"P(JP.T fX.'t·:,\L\ \'I~;\\ ;,;.~, \\. , .r:ihli~h IYl\il•' t u ion .•.............. .JLVV Rge on Beach 81\•d .• rcer Zu nl'd :~1 u1,1 1• 1 ll n·t!r f1'•1llt· hrr1n•I <':Jnrly l·BR lurn1~ht'tl dup!r\. !rpl., lends In private p11rkint; 1.11.'l'itn vieiv ............ Sl:i<l loL $50 J)f'r month for _011 11~ C.Jll :lhi-.,111,1 .111,t '''1< · 1 Slti'.!jllf! '·"h ~1!SSJON REALn· -i,111.ui:ll spac". Deiik Rna ci;ie1r!' 132'i.:300' t:-s11lf', 1;,i.,,. 11, 1''')111. t ~-.,. 1wr·1111;J 1nl1·1·. nvallable for :S5. BltSlnl'ES unu~ "ub A-1.ui~ $ll.:·,u "'I" u1 11 111 1 • ('., 1Hc1., Newport Beach 5200 REAL ESTATE hou!"!' Rnt\verlng set'V!C'C A.,1,11·1. ·!l-IG::lij() " I d 1 •1· ,,Jdrr~·~ .ir l ----·------I General nv:uh1 blc ror $10. All u\1/1-_ _:: --~ 11n 1 .. 11".1·1•1,"r ,., J\TUl.Tl- DEl UXE 2 ... ties paid except trlephonc. -----6·1·50· I :.: , .\IF liJ.;r 1• 1 ·, l6.~I \\' ~ • ,,.-, :? ba. ('Onrlo. Rentals Wa nted 5990 DAILY PILOT R anches , F'rfllr. \\'fw rrpt, rlrp~. ______ ...;__..:.;,;.; 17175 BEACH BLVD. 1 '·l'>.1 '11.·1· .\n·•hf'1•11, C~d1. bJt.i n,, Swimn\1n~ pool, COUJ'LF.: \\'/1 t year-old boy HUNTINGTON GEACH '.!fl ACRE fH 0('111fr1 rruv·h in l ' l'I '•. ' 1711 1 Ti~.:"fft;ll. pulling ll:N'l'n, I u x u r i 0 u ~ wlln t 10 rP nt l IX'droo111 642-4321 r.11l hr~!Ok, ~(11111 IJl"•~l•l\I. N O CUT BACKS HERE landsca11ini;:. pool ma1nl. b:lllS('.\V/yartl .& gan1.ge. Bo1h Modern office s 1..ncatl•d '111 II I~ h ",rn·l,1 In California Adult11 prcl. No pets. Nrrtr 1\'ork1ni;. Child 1n school. ST.i . 1 17." . \\/fllll\onunl!· \lt'I• B!.:'g P rograms Newporl BHy. $2711 i\.lonth!y Husband .same job 7 years, .1 !'tng e. 1 J,. rm ~.\Jill'. <~111t. !l'•lll(' ll;.1~ lhl•~:~ ~11.1-;-.· •11 •I . ' 1·1,1! 1•· ·u ,. l.f'a~l'. :1 1S-617fl 1-111'.l' 39, ivife 17, NO tnore A!r ~nd. Seel Y lll'.:'r. lr<.", C1Ut'"I hon11• 11111 1 •• ~·2111, l 1;,, flf --------lhan $11..J .,..r mo. \\'!II lake pnrk1ni:. t•cnt~1!ly hx·nte1I. =---.~ 1 1 . .,i1<1u1 1111r. r- :z on 2 BA 1 A re n a C.Os!n Mr 612 14~· !1· hn11..-1 Cnr ,,, prod11 !· 11 BA YFRONT lease (lpti~n v.• / 1 1 So. Ca.HI 1st Nat. Bk. BldJ.t Acreag e 6200 1 i I q·•111 r··" • xr111, 11··· 11. ·' Priv .. lori--,,1·,11;;,"", .. -, •. •,11bs~ 1ia)inrnl5 nppl~·ing lo do1vn •""'1 ,.~n · ~! 111 Ai·n·~ 11o>·11' !·11i'1· lik• !•··· "''." \1111 111.H 111·11 ~ ..... ~ v v •;o ~ payml'nl. Call 642-J.~4 C'V('S L•r. "''· EXEC', OFFlCE \I 1 II' 'SID", I I ,, REDWOOD VILLA 1f'rrtl.lll"IHI pk'I::". All ••lf't". · f I I ll~ \I' "<II !II\• ,., '""''"!~1•!'1nlii!1,,,,,,1,!. 0 I I BR P I &wkend~. S\Ult''1 or <'<1~<'.Xln!locu!1on ·1\·i••S'"•i r•rno \;:f.l Il l' "· ,1 ... 1,1,.,.,\11 f.,,, ,-,11 1 • uxe 00 , ~ft 11~1!('t, d0<·k11. 3121 ----on Campus Dr ;n•ross h'<ini 1 ' : ...!.. ' · ~ " P t , A 1 \\' C 11 N' 2 \\1u1ion" "lrl·· '""''''" lor ' ---"' 11:1.1111 ", ,.,,1.,1,111,,,,,1, a 10 p . , onst 111y, r11•porL v "., ~ "" " -Orungc Co . A1rp1Jrt. Su11r ... --~- GARDEN GROVE 13100 Oiapma.n Avt. OGkwood Garden Apartments '1700 16th Str•et 714: 642-8170 MESA MOTEL All Util Incl $135 ll-12-2"102 ndrm furnishC'd apt. In avail. ri-on1 .ilO sq II. rn Hl.'il'J R esort P roperty 620:i I , A. fl.~. INC. COita Mesa ·5100 . Og NP.\VPORT REACM o r . fl \/l' l -~~·~--f\1Lli:1',•.1 .i .'.1 °11', tnt·ol ~--,----314 le St., C.M. Df.LUXI:: 2 Bil. \\'Pstc11rr r osin tl1e"<i yrllrl y. lllave ~q. d ·c Ii !VI·. S '''f'lll'h'r , r ,\.;<JYON LAl\.E : Vw lu1 1,.1 1 1·1,,.i1,,.1\1,11 ·r1,.. \\, 1 In:· \\'/\/'\TED· 1 · nu-r ,laniily. 2 1Qfl Santa An11. So. or LDC'. f'Qfll k bu 11 r · 1 11 ~, (JUll't. clcon , 0 be ... ,.,.,~. rapr · 11 · fl. .. , llOl ownr $\iOO (I n hnl Sl Oq 1no · i' 1 ' (4 ~ \V, Santa Ana 1\vy,) (Ilf)· QG-3000 "' J" I I " " ,. . -: . · . ..-,111111.j• 1, 111 ;i~. Br. Jli BA . N!'IV ('rp1 !'1 Ii! I'.,, Ill) Ar!u rs, Sl!l~I n1u. no leaii;t•. !rained rlo~· To SlliO. ,){)(] s11 . 11. 1·1 SUllP~I L'Orll· 1nrl lll l<'r j1'1.962·..lil'.l .• 1'\I'' "\I' drp~. \\'ID hook-up Gar. D~LUXE 1 Sly. JlllUUl.l!, lgl' 2 .-":c:.".::::,<21~4_______ fl 1' -~ p n n s 1 h Ir , h a v c plctrly rurni~hcd S22:J f>!'L' ANAHEIM Altf'r :l .t. 11k-f'nd~ ~i..~·T272 Br. Qui<'t. Bl tn'-, i't'nlt-al SPACIOUS J Br. 2 e n. i·rpt~. rc rcrt'llt'\'~. Plt'l\St' call a.frrr mo. ~ Ill lOO \\'. Coa~I R.E . E xchang,.e'-~6230 Now LEASING FOR Nb:\V Dlx \ &. 2 Ur. ~hi; erpt. ti<>11t. pal io, i;:itrn."t". Rl'I. or 1!rp!ll frptr, btt-1n.~. J blk to 6 p,\I, :-,.W..SlOS H~-y., Su1tr A, N.R. or r all - t LO\V \\'EEKLY RATES t KltC'.ht!n, TV'~. maid service. tlea\ed Pool. 646-9681 ~'ANA GER O'A1NER .... -OCCIJPANCY LOWEST RENT • "' h .,,. "' 3!I 64'-2182 SELL OR TRADE """'"-" ftrri~. bhn!.. 1mn1cd. riccp. rnatun· cpl. St.to. 54S.o6.<t.'l6 ac ~ :i. ..J _1 REFINED A1ru!t Couple No O O --5 UNITS .Jn So, Jl.roc!khUnl \7ILLAGE INN.\VKL Y, ~10. IHlO -$1110. J4 U-1~1 J, Just Coinplcted 2 BR. t•hllrtrt•n or prts wLSh ro rent C R NA DEL MAR U blk, So. cl UnoolnJ 1-2 persohS or •m fnn1ily. ~:1-+2:0'2,~I-------Crpls, Urps. blt-lni. Sl5.J Newport Heights 5210 \l'nl'i.1-. 2(!r J l;ir:::r litdroom JmmaculRlt> 2 mom. Ground & 2 BR HOUSE (nC) 112""'500 Laguna. -494-7201 2 Or Sl~O. S.•p<tri;llr uni!. at-n10, :J4jl Eldt"r1 Av~. TRl-P.LF~"\" Sl60 nio. :1 RR. aril or huu.'-1' 111 Newpor1 or floor. Priva tr bli!h Sl l:. mo. 1 hu ~b1 1H7.:1• ile~'· lrj1"· .\·. .I " •11 \\ 1.,. I I 1 'I> •II I, "ll!I•'!' n, 1•, ;• I flt,.,, llJ•Jt 'I" f;,,,, )~ \!'. ~ ! If ~!•II I < •·lll•·1 1 ... South k y -CluD 2 Br furn dupll'll, clost' !o l1tC"hCd i;::iraaf'. t'tu'Jl('l5 & 617~ Cd~i on or n<'11r 1vnter. Call Ulll pd. Parkin~. 673~751 sunl;j 1' 011' in r·r. n.in '11' , S90 1.1 J d _ ...__ lrp!r. rrp:o1. rl rps. hlCns. f'llt'I "nyl•"<t' "·'.~""°I Ownrr both 1n Lon~ Bc•iu•h lu1· u1111~ A rt t ocean.,.,, 'un• Ulll' nipr~. ~RT d f'n<'r .· No I Bil II~ '" ,, • I , •• 3ro~ 0 " ,.,,....,.,.,,. c I IHlll• ~ J,,.h I• IH'I 1!1 II • n..-mtn s 1 ,_ · S · ""· r 1\ <'nceu . pa 10. gar. 1.1-~ rv1•\ -tn Nev. ""r!. ornn:• 111• '.\J.11 r-3. UJ 441h l. . chilclrrn or ""I~ f;.lt>.211S S\IALL t 8 t L t' 1-CdM.. '" t===========;..:.==========..;-==oz='"c~'===== I patto Sl:.0. Crpl~. dryJS & • roon1 or u~r 11~ as oca ion n 1 ~1"u11,1 Hrnch or (.'o.;ta "'I"~·' • ...... ,. '1 ••I (' I. ~ •1·•11. Newp:ort Beech 3200Newpelrt Beach 3200 Newport Beach ·'. ! "'TI!1'f;ires lflltlS .. I' r I' I' I' r I ' !~~~EICTlER$ I I I I I I I 3200 SCRAM·LITS ANS.WEI IN CLASSIFICATION .7 !O.D.. • bl r-1ns 6-12-7219 l'\C'!i & University Park S2l7 ~1udy. V1r. ol t'l'rnlcoi.I & SOOtol~OO sq. f .. Deluxe Off. 11 1 J:L{-l~i2 ·1.1 I• .·K 1. .. 111 11111~1 .• 1\'knds. 0 L't';on Gh•d. Cd~I No it'f" Spnccs. A\·1>1: fn1n1cd. --------c:i'1 ··1 .u,11.J ·.1.1\I Ii 1·.1) t Vll:.\V Conr!. 3 Rf.Inn 21 ,· lurniturt' 11ccdcd. 673-7923. Phonf' 0Wllf'r. &12-99."iO 4 ~ BR. :I H.\ 1.iclo 110111 ' n:111 •'.<" •·111 .. !11: 11l•1!i11: •DELUXE & 2 a n Garden ::;11'('{'\ to ~1N'f'1 1'1r up~ f\pl~. "Blt·ins, priv pa\Jo, Bath ,t. !Rill ronni. Adj !•i LOC;\l,. Cpl !!Old hsr, \\'1ll l\1AR1NER's CENTER ho use on Lido. li-12-6."iOO l'. l,i '1 J:, ', ·I 11 '" IJ.11..lv hcflied pool. frplc, Adults park. ClosC' to schl.!i. PoOl & bnby ~11 or lse 3 Sr unr npl Octice or Slore Bldg. Rc.nt '1r BUSINESS-d Sl·1.i rno. 546-5163 ~"·area. $27j mo. £1G-22SG .,,. ht!<' Pref wa ter 545-2933 · l~r 119 Riverside Ave. NB i'n WHOC ESA lE-E USINr~s 3 Brltn1 : 2 &th, l...'U1(r Corona del Mer 5250 :::1:-0.GLF. 85ulnc~:mia~' r~Hi-211111 FINANCIAL r , 11'1!""'' '' ,\ X,_ l"R I I I C'ICO~\ I ' C , ... , .. r '"·•"'''II roon\:t, • v•t e.rca. children J ~~;;;;iii;;;;i;;;iiii;i;i; I • • un urn ap or 1s1•. ,1 .~' 1 MP~a o fl c1•!1. Al . Business 1 ~ • ·~" o,k. an •11.. l\j'l\S, !WG-(1356 1·rp1s. ilrp~. Parkin~. 1.;:,:, Opportunities 6300 ' '11 <t1'!' 'I di, I 1•., • $169" :..:.7...(il :il -RUSfNESS cknt 11.'\11!" l.111:,. Baker, 6'16-48.1.'t or :t4~17ji --I 1 ., 111• I SPLIT Lt 1·1>1 1 BR. Crp111 • drp~. hlln< :--." p1·1~. 2.'l8.) \lcndoin. :.1.-.. :ri21 SPLrr I.eve! J BR. Crpt1. rlrp~. hltns. No pr1$, 2!85 ~J#ndoz.n. ~~~121. :! UR. Crpts, drp11, ca.rport, pool, 2 kl di; ok. 221~ Co\lqe, A_pl .2, 6-16--062'7 ' 2 BR $11'.i n10. Carp<'ti. & 1hi1.l'J('s. Clew! to fn>t'111:1\' .t sn. caa.~t Plan S39-::nl2. QUlf.."T AREA • Beaut. lrg 2 BR apt. 998 EJ Cani.lno Dr .. C~t. 116-0IJl. 6.17....0~~'U £-SIDE" trr l Br. (1lts. drps, bltm, patkl. ~ttr. Adoll~ nn- ty. nn ~ts. Ul!j. 6~6.i1tl2 1.X1i.GE 2 nn. c1111. ur;;;. !Wl·h1!':, t Oa1·r1~t. i\rl4il!~, nn vc-1~. $1~1. fi~G-..!209 /'\('' •l,All(;f:-:i-HT\1_: -Jt-11\udki • 11.fll /l.u pf'I~ $Lill i'.!ti J ~un -N' .£•itt-i: ... ~ l-.. .•·• ... . reb'"'v 11w1n1 h11 1h In Cdi\1, N.B. or Nt:::1\P. C .~1. C!tv Holl ~. * FAMOUS BRANO 1'" ' + 1' '+ ' 1 1 ! ...,. "\1 64 '1~1 . NAME * 1,,,,,.,,,,,•11 i;.1') ~rttl ' ' ~_. '"' Orlire:o1. Pnr.elcd. rarl)l•l!I. , " 1 1 1 1, dta pt'~. Sl!'il. Call 1;.12....n.,r)() r Al\nY .<· S'A('I-. 1lf11'TI,, [ ,1, I 1, r.i 1 ' ,!, Rooms for Rent S995 qi \HT (Jll l"l 'I.!. Tt\11·;1 1 1 ' '1 ,J '.r'1 1i1lqu,e ON TE~ ACRES 1 l l BR. }"urn &: unrurn F\rt'pl11.ee1 I priv, p1111c11 I PDoJ.a. Tennill. Contnl'I Bid~ 900 Sea Lane, Cdl\1 &44-2611 11\tacArthur nr C.0Pst H11')') l BR. i\t~rilc. So. of Hwy. S180 mo. No childrt'.n. • &ll·7SSS * Huntiiigton Beach 5400 ROO MY 2 t.· J br"1. Crpl.d & drpd, Ne .... •ly dt'<'l"ll'. J br .. dbl attach aar &: frpk·. J blkl fron1 bch. 5.'J&..l~.1 1 ---Si\tALL Off ice on bu~y 1~1r. VER,. l lll~H INCO!\ll·; .~.1 1 1~1,• ''!'CH • I I nC'l' Co!la l\l tllll $.\i/n1on~h I "' "1 n!ypr1v $601110, \~f'l\C'f\111.th,tnhu1or 1111h t \li:\ !H11l 0r•r-,:r1 ·,," l • · utilities lncl\ldtd. &42-6.'lfll ~t "" l.'tst mo·,. 1n advnl!Cf' ;u·ra tor oo r candy 1f\c~11 .... Fr'" ,. '" ~ 1 ! , J(IO. \\"ork1ni: girl (Ir studl'nt. 600 SQ FT OFC. u18n1~·11'1, 1'1A1l.~1c Hf\11,, flltl~ 1\1 ,. 'I. • :'J ~lll?-7(.47 $00 Mo. C.M. &16-2l:JO Uud11, ('II· 1 t\u 'lt•lluiit 111 1· •:l I r .. I 111. 1 toi1 ; SllAHE Wau.t. ho1nl', r11rn vol\'t'd. \\r r11nn~\1 nl1 ;i t •. ~1rt r ·1 1;1111·r. nn prl~ b:I & patJQ tA•/\d1. lndustrlel mun1~. \'nu ruu-.1 hfl\r ': '" \\ c in, .. l•r llur••I ·<1n t prl\ \le~11. VC'n:lt arrR Property 6080 ' hr"JI f'M'r 1\N'k 'J~u.,., nmr I "-S.11•T:1 ,\111, 1 1•!11, n1••p. v.urk111~ \\"tlft\&,. l\\0/\ -~ \d.11•, or r1 •·~1 l' \, ; 1·h1ld OKI :tl0.-1187 /BUILDER Otr ·r.ns !\.£\\" S:l.%0 mT,\I. ('\~! C.,fi i , rl•" t'UR.i~ISIIED room lor lid)' Pn!.1 Kltchrn pr1\•1lcgcs 1fl91l <lrAll(I", r .l\1 fi:i A ,i;-f···ur-oi~.,-..,,~-R-oo-m Al Thr 'nrarh 'ttl JUJX' lJfh 21.500 aq, ff. tk'111)U• !)Id~ Rf>:QVO;f'.'U ~--~- Lf'e!l"d, cholCf' Or 11 n J: l' f"or flll'lrr 111li•m1 ,,1011 \I.To , l nvr~ tm111n t Co11n!)' artl\. Pro P ft r I) ''l)U.lf'1h•.11or D11:1~11.i11 ·, • • Opportu ii' ' ,l•ot, ~.-r ,,,,,,r-1,., __ n 1es , v> '"' ., :l3 , l'.(I. llo\ >1$. J'111tu111.1 1"[) "'•'.-. r t""pd I~. cok • .. 1i1. !ll71.:.'I. Jn, :u1!f' 11JK .. I• .\\l}.:111 l.'.i Alli, 828-4130 pnl f111 NF:w-u1di.:1'1:0i'fl \Q '' ro1 1"ll"!\t'! Ai.1r f\r ll'RAC\ t'o1 drl 11s I.I \>;f' r, ·' ,,r UNICU • trt\'CS7t.\EN T O""i'':i\TUNJT ~1 6310 ilitnin llrnlt11 · · ,, 1' "I fl.\· . :1 111 1~})1 f71().. 11 I .......... 1, J ll~h\\,t\' 6l'.!-6:i60 ~\ \1-11,\ 'I l\lnn·h lh ;.: Ii j 1 f If • " I ,1., Onh. ' Jlt I • • .,...;1 • ' j, A )",."">. -, ' ---~----. -- ---·---- --·-,----..,.. .. • I 1 Mond•r. Mmh lb, 1970 ' DAILV PILOT u BUSINESS and FINANCIAL ~--~~~~~ JOIS & EMPLOYMENT JOIS & !MPLOYMINT 'oas & EMPLOYMENT Joas i EMPLOYMENT JOBS .. IMPLOYMIHT Job Wantad, Man 70CIO Jobo Merl, Wotn. 7100 Jello Mtn, Wom. 7100 Job-n, Wom. 7100 JOiie Man. Wom. 7100 Montv t• L01n 6320 PART-Tlmt wol'Jf, eves & BOYS 11•14 • 1st TD· loan 1.0\\'e&t Interetl Available wkrW. in t.~chance tor cam.r Roua Opeo room or a.pt. ~212S W JO YI\. £><, oldpper. Eliz, Lquno ll<""":.!!';.,.LllW>I HOUSEKEEP§R: ~··-· Lite cooldna il houMwork RUTH RYAN AGENCY for el<led> widow ~ Balboa SPECJALtZINC l$1and. Room A board + $25 IN' per. wit. Call 61)..5703 2nd TD loan ' W-hen Yov Waht it done right ••. I OFnCE PERSONNEL HOUSEKEEPER wa.nfed tor 1793 ,Newport Blvd., Cf.1 hectic, happy, bou$C.hold * BUSDRIVERS * Malnt.cna.~. Need 00.1 to D.AILY r"""'• WQl'k or deliver. 67S-.0J4) "2"321 Term11 ~based_ on ~l!Y. 642-2171 .545-0611 Serving Harlior area 2J yrs. S•ttler Mortgage Co. 336 E. l71h Street \VE !vfAKE OR BUY TRUST DEEDS -c·cflloneof - the experts listed below!! Job Wanted --women --Yo® IM•lal -, FOUNTAIN VALLEY s.ECRE'fARY ~ants morrr SCHOOL DISTRICT 1ng Y.'Ork .. Beath area S.l3-838l anytime BIO'. SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE OIRECTORY · SERVICE DIRECTORY * &-12 am _ s days .. $3.00 Full time llO month position). per hou r. Salary $.1.107 to $3.714. Re· * Backg1'0und: neglstrar .. qulremen~s: Gener~ know!· Cbouinanl Ast Inst. Faculty edge ap!1!00e, valid scMel Sec. -Claremont r.fen's Col. bus ~rt~cate, Monty W.fnfed 6350 Babysitting 6550 Floort 6665 Ironing 6755 Secretary • City of i...aguna For 1nform1;tlon, call Mn. PARTNER. aclive/inactive. Recreation product. Split profits. 714 : 83S-8683 ANNOUNCEMENTS and NOTICES Found (Free Ads) 6400 f l;:i\IALE grey/1vhite pro. die, toy, '1-earing pi nk je11·eied collar & ilea collar, J\tar. 5 1·ic. NB Blvd & Coas f H iway. Mr s . Thompson 673-2211 E.'lt ·21 BIG DOG, moslly Collie, black· & white, r ecent mother. found \VP.d. n1te, Dana Pt. 492-0257 before JO a.m. BLACK ter rier puppy. wear· ing red collar. Ensign School atta, Newport Heights. 54S.l468 Beach. \Vorkman, ~42-fi651 e.:«t 225. *Good current lo c al betwffn 2 ·& 5 PM. CARPET VINYL TILE IRONING in my home, $1 REUA BLE f.tother of 1 11·a.n1s baby i;itllng in my hon1e. Pref, infant lo 2 yrs, H.B. a1~a 842-3691 BABYSITTING , y,·anted by lhe 11·eek. n1ature 1von1an, refs. no trans. 548-o!S03: Ci\1. DAY & NITE cart>, or day care for your child in my lovely Oome. 646-5537 Free estimate Lie. Contr. Hr. Dressma king & altera· reference!!, CABlNET1 MAKERS & 5'10-Tl62 ~-'178 tions. 545-7&11 -====== 6680 MAID SERVICE * Call bttwetn ~12 .am • BOA'.1' 'CARPENTERS. Ex:· 494-3961 perience necessary. 20ll Gardening 6815 GAL FRIDAY, Ge n e ral Placentia, C.M. BABYSI'ITING, clean home. mother of 2. hof lunch. pre· school. 642-7968 Boat Maintenance 6555 NE\V lawns. r e -s eeding. Complete la\vn care. Clean up by job or n10nth. Free estimates. For info call 897-2417 or 846-0032 GARDENING Trees, shrubs, ivy removed. New la"''1s. RotoWJing. Free est. 548-8918 GLAD-HAND !\!aid Service; Bonded, Littnsed & Exp .. 1-loorly & by spec. ar· r•ngemtnl Transp furn. 494-1573 Painting, Paperhanging 6850 Insurance a~ency manage- menl experience. •673-6897• TYPING -Fast, accurate. 1'1y borne. All types. * 968-1431 * AIDES • tot''convalescence. elderly care or family catt. Homemakers, MT--6681 Jobo-Man, Wom. 7100 JAPANESE Ga r de ning PAI NTING ·"Tl{E Enjoy your Boat Ser'v ice : Neat ,vork. EXTERlOR SPECIALIST'" ------I C i · Clean-up & yard maint. $285 1 story, stucco & trim, 2 1---on1p ete ro.1a1·1nc Service !JG.S-2.303 coats, labor & paint. All AGGRESSIVE !\!AN to i\Icchanical-Electrical \1-'Drk guaranteed. Lie, bond, call by appointment Bottoms-Jn or out \1-'ater AL'S Garnenlng & Lawn ins. \Von't be underbid! only !or membenhip. Fiberglass Burling, ?lfa.inte nance. Commercla.l, IH&-3679 645--0172 or 847~73 Fiberglass RE"finishins-. industrial A: residentlaJ.. * AMBITIOUS Call Jiln, 54B-7021 * 646--3629 * HIGH Cost D[ Paintlnk Turn -=::::::::::::=::::===I 1'ou OU? College 11tudent WOMEN * ' ' Check H_ere with the Job Kings! 646-4.SM w/chttrtu.I teena&t"ra, tired 17931 Beach Blvd,, Jm mother. N.8. 645-1324 1147-0017 INDEPENDENT Ori.1tt of 104% W. 17th St., S.A. Foresters ls loo~ tor 21 547-6481 IS&les traiaets. Career opp, CLERICAL. Ex per. cor-ienerous advance. l)U..0591 porate bank reconcillallon, 9 am·1:30 pm - group lnsuranct; a~ geneial Ins. Cl•rk Tr•l"" report preparauon. 837-2020, $315. rno. Pleasant 11~ Ext 4G for appt. · ings. COJ\tPOSITION ad markup JASON BEST man want~. Exp. btlptul Employment Azeney cold typt, Apply in person 2207 So. ~tai11, Sarita Ana \Ved.. Thurs & f'l'i. Pen· 546-5410 nysaver. 15-15 Newp o rt INSP£CTR~ wanted for Blvd,, C.~t. ht cla.u hotel. Experience * COOK * pret'd. &M-1100 "' 57; (d1yl and nl9httl Broiler ~rle.ni;e preferred APPLY IN PERSON REUBEN'S COCO'S 1"5 W. Adam!, C.M. * COOKS * EXPERIENCED Full or part time. Suri & Sir· ITT IABSCO h•• •n immedl•t• OfMnlna for 1n ENGINEERING -CLERK- to \\'ork in Product Section. ?-.lust be &'l'.JOc1 with 'fipres and detail. 1A1ust have' intt:r· es' and underltandln&: of ro- ta.tine : machinery; MIN. Female poodle. approx. l yea r. Found at H.B. Shop's: Cen1er. No lD. (213) 925-9496 Brick, Masonry, -J APANESE Gardener. exp'd. ,viJI do your painting at ARE YOU PRM ENTLY Compl. yd. se1v. Free est. r•easonable price. Stev e DErr10NSTRATING 6560 Male & Female Sklllad & Unoklllod' in f 1ctory &. Offlct loin, 5930 Pacltlc Cout Hwy, This Is an eiitry.Jevet J'C)&l- N.6 . tion, leading into engineer· COUPLE. ma.n " wifr, btwn lng. XlrU. chance !or ad· 45-s.i as assistant manaitra vancement. Salary comme~ for largf' apt. complex. Liv· surate with ability & experl· Ing qUarters and utilities + ence, Libera} fringe benefits. salary. Alan mu.st be good ---------1 otc SMALL B!ack ma\<' shaggy Rcliablt>. 6~2-4389 548-4549 Toys Plastics JlilI'S Gardenlng & lawn AVERAGE 1 story exterior Real Estate Clo thin~ poodle vie. 15th & Irvine. I---------BRICK & CARPENTERY maintt'nance. Res. & com· $259. 2 slory exttrior $359. CosmetiC's fiT'o--8062 LARGE Young male Ger. Shep. between SA & CM f.1on afternoon :>46-723.l PRESCRIPI'JON Sun glasses found al l\1aln & Balboa. Call 673-5370 FOUND Little &h1vinn bike. vie: Gibralter, C.i\1. Owner please identify 54:>-1318 FOUND: Orange & lVhite Jemale cal. Lusk Hon1es, Cdrtt. 644-2058 Cabinetmaking 6580 work, planters, lireplac:es, rrn!rcial • 54M837 Bonus 5000 ruue Chips, Are you inletttttd in mor1! ' block \va.lls, cemen1 patios-, EXP. Japanese maintenance. lnlerior prices av a i I , money with no collecting-, patif> roofs & all types of li.B. & F.V. Area 637-6119 parties or deliwrles, Car repairs. 492-7928 collect. * 842-8.J42 * -* Painting.Pa...,,.i..nnning l"lf!!:!ded. SC-me experience BUILD "· ·"I · I==~~~~---,-.,.....,.....,16 preferrect 544-8550, 1'1r. , n.cm\Jl.le . repair GEN'L yd. Clean-up, tree Interior-Exterior James. Erick, block, c (J n <'r e t e , seiv. roto--till. Sprlklr re· SJ)f!c.ial Pricts on Paper carpentry, no job too small. pail'I!. l-laul . Reason. 646-5848 Call Larry 642-4~ Applicants, temporary Lie. Contr 962-6!H5 =---..,o..~---URGENTLY JAPANESE Gar dene r , INT & Ex t Painting. F"rce FREE. Est. Brick, block, exp'd, Compl. yard service. ests. Loe eels, 30 yrs exp. NEEDED: stone, planters & entry Free ei;Hmate. 548-8255 Lie_ & Jnsrd, Call Chuck * Secretary "·ays. 5;!1-1973. State Llc'd. &l:i--0809 or J im 548--0405 * Girt Friday EXPER. Japanese Gardener. * Typisl/Senior Complt>te Yd Service. Free APTS & 1\.IOTELS Painted -* TypisUClerk esthnates. Call 540-1332 SlO. averg. rn1. Ca 11 SERVICE CENTER BASSET HOUND, v i c. Harbor & Adams. St0-26.% I---------before 4 pm. RESIDENTIAL &: C.omm. Custom Cabinet & Furn. JOHNSON 'S GARDENJNG ~r: Pal the Painter, Employment Agency Yard care, Clean.ups, Pnm· 1 ==-------500 Newport Center Dr.,-NB ing, planting. 962-203.'i EXT. l story ho1ne , 2 coats Suite 200 By Appl . 644-49111 APEX Employment Agency ~nm EASY \VAY {ask us "'hYI 1873 HARBOR BLVD. ( ~~ block So. ct 19th) painter. Stlbmit resume-to Equal opportunity employer Daily Pilot Box M-26: DENTAL Assistant , chair-side.~xpandtd dut1e.s, four handed dentistry, prewnllve--practice. -Ex· perlence a must! Top salary. 9--5 flfon-Frl. Call 646-2128 aft. 6:30 p.m .. 968-5782 1-5 pm. *DRIVERS* No Experience . Necessary! &fult have dean Oillfomla -""°"'· Appl1 YELLOW CAB CO. 1485 Dale Way Costa f\-tesa, Calif. 92626 cn4J~ J. C. PEl'll'NEY CO. FASHION ISLAND ' hu Immediate CPtnlngs in (IUr Coffto Shop for ' , UTILITY MAN WAITRESSES CoQK WATCH Vic 19th & Platen· Fur n Re·Fini~hi.ng. 645--0991 tia. Call to identify. 54~1530 6401 Carpentering Lost 6590 CLEAN·UP SPECIALIST labor 6: material, $245, !1-foll•ing, edging. odd jobs. Room~. labor only $7.50. Reasonable~ Ms-6955 646-3185 or 548-1546 AUTO M OTIVE Sorv COSTA MESA Mechanic, tune-up, iJign. - IJ6 E. 16th SL Costa Mesa APPLY TN PERSON Dental Assisl•nt. N?· 24 Fashion Island, NB ------EARRING At Fa11h ion Is.land, N.B. Gold SCI"e\V on type y,•/reddish s ton e. Cherished gilt ft'om deceas· ed hushand. Call collect l7141 629-6188. BLACK & g'o!d part cocker spaniel, Vic Harbor & Adams on !\tar 4. has been hit by car, JUST HAD PUPS! Reward. 642-2515 TAN English Terrier Male, Il-tiniature. Orange collar, orange bo1v. Vic. 40th St .. N.B. Call 673-7248 SMALL. White, fluHy dog. Laguna Beach. \Vas \"Cl')' pre1::nanl. Re ward. 494-7990 Personals 6405 * FULLY LICENSED * Renowned H i n d u Spirit· ualist. Advice on all matters; Love, ?ltarr1age, Business, Courtship, Health. Happiness & Succes~. No problems too large or too small. 1 CAN HELP YOU. Readings given 7 days a \Veek. 9Al\1-9Pt.I 312 N. El Ca mino R e al , Sa n Cl e me n te . t 92-9136, 492-0076. ZIPO DATE ADULTS ONLY You Know The FactJ Of L;fo I I I So Learn Th• FactJ OfLovel tl '14 Hr. Record •• • (213) 86'2-8519 Orange Co (714) 835-2220. CARPENTRY 1'-11NOR REPAffiS. No Job Too Small. Cabinel in a:ar- Rges & oth e r cabineb . 545-817~. U no tu1SWer leave msg at 6-16--237.?. l:L 0. Anderson QUALITY Any size repairs Dr new constructiDn. Res. or Com. By hour or conlract. Lie. & Bonded. 646--3442 GEN. repair, add., ca b. Formica. paneling , marlite. Anything! Dick, 675-4459 REPAIR·remorleling-patios LET THE SWEDE DO IT! * * 49-t-7853 * * *LANDSCAPER* SURBURBANPainters/ Deeor. \\'c take the pain 12 yrs local e:-:p. 536-l22S out of painting. Expert 1vork. General Services 6682 AL"S \\'ood F'ln\sh Ren1ovini; and \\lood Bleai;htng Service. \Ve remove all types ol y,·ood !inishes from lurniture and inle rior and l:':<lcrior homes, business buildings, n1arine vessels, etc. U Paint a nd Refinish. Licenser! and in· sured. 19 years e:irperience. 714-ti89-200J. Ext 41!. CARETAKING fue est. 494-3190 ./ PA l N TING-INT/Ext. Jack can do that painting job-fast, clean & very reas! Est. 894--3895, 847-~ PAINTING. exper, int. A:. ext. Insured. Free estimat- es. Ralph. 494.3950 PAPER HANGING 2D yrs exp. Free estimate. Call K.!1-1. 642-2509 PAPERHANGING Years of experience. call Frtd, ~~903 PAPERHANGING REPAI RS * ALTERATIONS \Vhilc You Are A1vay Call t.lac * CABINETS. Any size job !Bonded) 54S.f).M9 23 yrs exper. 54&-6TI3 Reliable Care for your yard 1 ,R~E:1'=1=R=E=D~P~ai_n_«_r:~26~y-n; 548-1444 QUALITY \Vooclcraft, Gen· and home -No Job Too exper. Neal & honest. Non eral cat'P<'ntry, Small Gen. Small • Charles Chamber· drinker. Call 536-6801. "·--C ii K 0 •• •235-lain 642·8101 afte-r 5 P!\I. '-""'"-'· a en """"' P AINTING & Repa ir s. CARPENTRY, R e pa ir 11 , 6730 Re a sonahle. Satisfaction Remodeling, cabinets. No Hauling Guara.nteed. Call 547-1441 job too sm11H. Call 646-422•1. ---------·I* PAINTlNG. ln l·Ext. Local CARL'S J\1ov1ng, Hauling & ttference~. Jn1111ed se rvice. Cement, Concrete 6600 Cleanup. 1.~ Ton P .U. Reas. 646-5242 FI't'e Est. 548-8918 ---------. ~~=~~-~--PAINTING -Ex1·I11t. 18 yrs. CONCRETE \vork all types. HAU LING Cleanup, lots £le. exper. Ins. Lii:. )'Tee est. Sa\ving, breaking, hauling, Handyinan anytime Yo u Accoust. Ceiling~. 548-;)325 Skiploa.ding: Lie. Service & , ~'~''~l.~6~12_·~"-"-·~---" * PAPERHANGING Quality. 842-1010 YARD/ Gar. CI e a nu p . & PAINTING. * 961!.242j CEr.IENT \VORK. no jell) too Remove trees, ivy, trash. Small, reasonable. Free Grade, backhoe, 962·8745 Plastering, Patch, Estlm. H. Stullick 54311615 HAULING $10 LOAD Repair 6880 *CONCRETE .;Joors, k Tree Scrvict:, 646-2528 " -------- patios. masonry. Any ~z jDb. Reas. Don, &12-8514 aft 4. HouJecleening 6735 *CONC R ETE \VDrk,l--------- Licensed. Patios / drw.ys, etc. Phill!ps Cement.. 548-6..?JIO \\'ANT A Sunny & bright liome? (al\ l~e DtrrClt * PATCH PLASTERING All ty pes. Free estimates CaU 540-6825 6890 Plumbing =-----?.-!ORE concrete patio for r.tA INTENANCE J\IAN for PROBLEtl-1 Clearing House. less mone y. Arti!>tic setting your windoy,·s. floors & We specialize in finding k finishing. &14--0687 carpel cleaning, No crew. PLU~·IBING REPAIR No job loo ~mall • 642-3128 • solulions k providing nelp CUSf0~1 CONCRETE 537-1508 aft. 3. for your personal, financial.._ Patios, pool declc!i, etc. Free BAY & Beach Janitorial estate & business problr.ms. est. 6T;r53 J6 Carpets, wllldo1vs, floors, Call &16-M--15 & listen tf> our =========I etc. Res & CD mm c' l , recorded me·sage. Be surr. Child Care, 646-1401. to le ave yoUI" name & Licensed 6610 c-0-M~P-L-E~T~E~-.-"-,~,~i-ty telephone number. Your call hou,.;ecleaning. E:irperlenced. l'.·lll be returned promptly. 7 R··•~n•bl•. ""• ~". *Women START YOUR NE\V \'EAR \VITI! THE RIGHT f.IAN. 547-6667 14 hour reo:irding SHERRYL DON''t DESTROY US ALL. PLEASE JUST CALL ELLEN COLLECT Cll3l 3i"a-5193 NURSERY School. c.~t. '"" "" ... ,,,,,...."'1Ji days wk, 6:30 Ai\t·9:30PM. i\tesa Clenning Service Full. p/time, art scht. Carpets, \vindo\\1!, !IClOr.l, ete. Rates Jor 2 or more. Res. & Commc'I. 548-4111 'I'ransp. turn. So Orange Co. 6<$.3706 or 534-12'J2. Income Tax 6740 Contractors 6620 -------Smiley Tax Service Addition!. * RemodeJin;: Fred H. Gerwlck, Lie. 673·6041 * 549-ZliO e .12th YEAR LOCALLY e Quaified • Reasonable PLUtlIBING, Repairs & Al· terations at economy price&. * 64&-1286 Roofing 6950 ------NE\\" Roof~. Repain & Coaling of all Types. Boss works on the job. Free eslimates. 645-1691, 64S:2S50 24 hr. ALL types rock, wood & a3pha11 shingles. LEAKS R.EPAlRED. Work zuar. 847-ll36 Sewing 6960 e Dressmaking -Alterations Designed lo suit yoo. Ca ll Jo * 646-644& ment, brakes. Hi vf>I Shell Station. TDp pay for right mari. 2801 E. Cst Hwy. Cd~I. 675-0533 Dick Willia ms. Asst. Bkkpr. TralnH $1.90 +. future oppty. JASON BEST Employment Agt!ncy 9264 \V. Katella, Anaheim 548·3426 CHECK THESE Cb •-·d E .Onl ._E_qu=-al=op;;'°~""="~ity-=•~m.,:po.lo,,:><_,,;.' al!;:il e, xper. y. I " * Ca.II Ms.8844 * JONES 1TlR.E, ·SERVICE DlSH\VASHER. day& 8-4, $2 ls ex=~:i~i;:-O:~irf:g hr. Apply Che!, Dillman's •Retail Salesmen Restaurant, 801 !:. Balboa e'rttt Servlce?Mn Blvd., Balboa a Front End and Experienced Welder •Brake Mechanics -~~="='~·l220~~~:o--I SECRETARY.Put on your BABYSI'I'rER -Days Mon. cute little mini skirt& a:als thru Fri. 2 bys 3 & 2. & go after this int~ating Reliable nlature woman. pos. Young co., xlnt work· Call 536-7957 aft 5:30. lng conds, many b!nfs. BABYSIITER / Housekee~ $425. Fee neiO. "' Call Je&n Brown. ShHt Metil Worker f1brlc1tion Forem1n Salary .plus bonus and company paJd bene!ll!I. Opportunity for advancement Apply: 2049 Harbor Blvd. · Costa Mesa Salary open on these jobs. LADY over 40, re!lned with lndeptncftnt personality, no smokina. Ptrtonntl Agency Knowledge 'of bookkeeping 1716 Orange Ave, Sulle C & typing. Steady position er, 2 childttn 5 &: 4, own lransp. C.all 968·1620 after 6. Barlking T~llers Applicatl ns are no1v hf:.. ing take fDr Te.llers, for our new Irvine Complex Branch • locatt>d nea.r the Oral)ge County Airport. Teller experience p1-e- ferred, but ,,;u train qualified applicants. Please apply in person to our Newport C e n le r Branch, 550 Newport Cen- ter Drive, N e wpor t Beach. Security Pacific Bank Equal opportunity e mployer BKKPR/OFFICE MGR To $750 , Orange Co. Airport Area. ABILITI ES UNLIMITED AGENCY 488 E. 17th, Suite 224 Costa Mesa 642-1470 BOATBUILDERS Relocate in Puget Sound with growing establls:htd wa· terlront boat building lirm needing exp'd pent0 •. 1neJ in all phases of outfitting larr· er llberglas satlhoaf!. Reply to Dally Pilot Box P·92"1 with name, address & h o me phone. A con1pany represen. la tive 1vlll be in this area this month to lnteiview. J\fTST & J\ITSC OPEn. Here is a lelTific: oply. for someone withes!! skill s lo 11--ork for an :>tint boss. To $601. Call Jean Brown, C.J\.f. 642--0026, MS.0979 ·with one or the finest decorator studios in N.B. Good salary :1z future. Give ref!;. \Vrite Daily Pilot Bo:rt EXPERIENCED J\.fold shop It Wood shop. Arthur fl.farine 11)65 Babcock, Ctista Mesa J\l·92Z TYPJSJ'. 10 busy fing:en lo typt &: run 10 key adder can land you this nifty pos. Well estb'I co. Xlnt ben!s. ;368. Call Jean Brown. RECEPTIONIST. Good looks, good typing sklllll, a:ood personality-great company! Terrific fringe bents. $>100. Call Joan F_•_m_al_e _______ Lady Companion to elderly POWER MACHINE lady. Live in, Salary. Li~ OPE RA TOR hse~"Ork & cook 64f>.:4972 Sails By' Shock. 675-182.1 Fibergl .. s Molder . !\Tale or female Full or p/time, any &hitt fleet Products Co .. Inc • 1922 E. Pon10na, Santa Ana 835-5750 Jl.1arlin. FRY COOK F/C BOOKKEEPER Full o~ part time. Dicke LYN-Night shUt Swinging mod, mod beac:h Church s, 2698 Newport, CM. a NURSES AIDES lirm needs 11<illed mature FRY COOK -Swing or Bayview Convalescent, gal to make sense of their Graveyard shift. Apply ln 2055 Thurln, C.osta Mesa. books. Very flexible short person.. &12-3~ hl'll, $400. Fee paid. • Call ODIES RESTAURANT Joan /..farlln. 1400 w. Coast Hwy *!'-.IAKE your spare time N Be h really pay oH. Learn to MAINTENANCE PORTER. I ,,.,.,.,:--,';;""°~"==",,',,·-·:-: become a Fashion Sa.lei If you are nosey & want GALS, For pt'O<luctlon sew· C.oniultant. Call Mille Poteet to work odd hours for a ing. ~fu1t be exp'd. with M0-5511 specialized co .. all Helen patterns. fa1t. 1,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,_ •1aye1. $2.37 hr. w/&ewoverlock exp. Bch area. Box M·7~ Dally Piiot m 6 SALESMEN. Energetic, • !elf starters, 1et on boa.rd * GIRL FRIDAY * t,d,,1 XeC w/ a growing conc:tm & Sharp ral to be the or\e &: a:o up, up. up & away. only !or a very pleasant boss. Agency . lor $6600. Call Hele,n Hayes. Sec:. duties & bk-kn. Xlnt Good " •· st·"" Coreer Girls ~ PA-s MG •1 T l<>e. co. ~n..... ... ' ~· • 1 " • $525. Fee patd. l;lurry!? Call TRATNEE SPECIAL. A Jean Brown. M6-6055. Other leg1l ·S•crtf1ry lepre c haun told me free&: fee jobs avaU. Syn€al\f. law.Top&kill1, yest erday, green'& lhe col· COASTAL AGENCY corporate exp. to Sr. or to pave the way. So all .... C partner. you belleven c'mon over&: 2790 Harbor Blvu,, .M. belor1! you know II you'll be I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'! ExK. Stcret1ry In clover, Start $5700. Fee **GIRL FRIDAY Self starter. WU!lna: to pa.id. • CaJI Pat O'Brien. Sharp. Apply: Mac Gte(:Or travel. Good sldU1. Sharp! Yt.ebl Corp. 1631 Placentia, SALLS REP. TRAINEE. Cosla Me&a Jr. Stcr•t1ry Acclg knowledge &: some GU R Good 1kill1'. Will also act sales exp. w/that Bus. Ad. A D u recpt. Xlnt potential. deiree will earn y ou s.-~i OU' fill • override + vcps, + $9100. C1.1r1t es u:er to posr Exec. sMrtt1ry Call Pat O'Br1tn. titln locally, tlu1t be bond· To V.P. &: dlrtctor ot 1.ble, able to pass physical mkfg. e~ret work. Good ALCOHOLTCS Anonymous Phone 542.m 1 or 'Yl'Ue to P.O. Bo:< 1223 Costa l\Jesa. Carpet Cleaning 6625 \IJ. A. IBilll S:'lllLEY Certified Public Aceounl't 642-2221 anylin1c &1&9666 T _11~•,_C•._n_mi_c _6_974 NOW'S THE PROFESSIONAL Carpel & Central Bui;iness &rvicr:i -- COASTAL AGENCY 540-6055 agility test &: clearance as -· 11 reqUtttd. SaJary to $350 mo. skills. se &tarter. to start depending on exper. For further Info. &: intervie:w call 642-7069. , Escrow Officer r.tust have tract tJp. Good typist. y,·indow clellJling. Any liv. eTHE TAX ADVISORS * Verne, The Tiie !\Ian * rm-hal l $ll. \Yirldo1,1•s JlO. Perm. of!ice·Reas Rates CUst. "'Ork. Inst.a ll &: rtpalrs. TIME FOR ' Announcements 641 O o..,_31s2 No job too small. Plaster HA VE a fun Job In YO\lt ,~-"'' 328 No. Newport Blvd. I k' how r-- LAGUNA CARPET STE:Ai\I CLEAN· Opposite Hoag 11ospital pat 0· i..e;pa~ ' er c SH Clerk/Typist timt. Good eat'tlln&s &: COIN CLUB ED No soa p, no brushes. For Appt. 00 645-0-.IOO 3-1J.19.')?IS4i-OZOG QUICK A Diversified J?OS· tor accurale bfr::~." N!ub:e.= :t'or ~st. &16-5971 typist who likes firureL Op. FREE H.K. Clark TAX SERVICE ty. tO a~pt napongibUily will train. For interview J\~~~~ve:~~be S:V~~~ Drywall 6631 ~~na:_a. Trn Service 6980 THROU"H A &:'work Independently. / appt. call MT~· bl.tN. Sin.rt T pm. Via:llors l---------a yourhomeorortloe e TREES. l-Jedgc1 •• trlm. cut. U S.crtt1ry ** H._lrdreaaet1, Xlnt OP' "'~me. a DUDDY Drywa.n Co stumps, removed. haul~. 30 . I a:lrl ore. Good SH 4-typfne portunity, new 1alon. ~~7'=,,.-oo-;;;;;:;,-,;:;d Lic'tl Contractor. Large 0~ TAX SER.VICE . In , Your yrs exp. l'"'ully tns . 642-4030 DAILY. PILOT skills. A take-charge poi. •81=2-,,llli==u=k=l=or~C-•~I~. __ FREE U cturt on HO\V TO Smll ll Jobs. Ph. 847--9.,;81 home. Fast & tffleten1 . \ Gentrll Office HOUSEKEEPER, E:rtp e r . ~OP SA-10RJNG. permsn· • 531--0m * Upholsttry 6'90 lnttrutlng challenp: form•· cnly Jor t.lderly 'ientJeman, ently. \v/011t weight gain. TH E SVN NEVER SETS on WANT AD tu1'tperl0n..,./fl,.nceorW:nt-0wn· room & ha.th. Mu1I &-14·2466 DIAL direct &U.s678, Charge CZYl\OSKJ'S Custm. UpOOL td b"-'. Accurate tnirc & have own car. Good cook. ~~--~~-..,--I ClaMlfied's o1_etion po"·er. ..,..., r-.....1•~ bl "''" Stcretary Special )'Olli ad, t~n sit back a.nd ,..uropta.n '-'11-''°msns P l a good head for flgurts, 'R,(1. Salary open. Write Boie • Also fret & ree Joba avail. Ole. Mtr./C•ohlor I r\r1 ofc, Lile in&. exp. ;ood. Good typist. Lite SH. Jr. Accnt9. Clolk Typing. l yr ge·n'l olc. in- cludlna acenti. A/P Clork Alto A I R, voucberlns. • fiJUtt.' typll\J. Wondtrtul 1taff. Plea ~ant Slll'- roundlnp. 4(il W. Coot! .Hwy. NoWport Balich '46-mt '61 V\V $500. Bay I: NErWport For an ad to aell around tht listen to the phone rlnti! 100% fin! 6{Z..J45C 642 5678 SERVICE CENTER J\tm, DaJly Pilot f\.fARA'rnON clock, dial &n.:irn. 1&11 Newport Blv, CM • Employment ~ncy 1'N !kach house time. Bit• Group Encountf.r SOO Ntwporc Ctntt r Dr., f\11 Jttl 11electton evcrt See thel.!'!~!'!"!!!!'!11!!!!!'!!!!!!"~ Call Eves., 673-7555 SI.lite !l, Qy tppt. MM981 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! J>ial M2-S6'{! fer RESULJ'S 0 ' I ' OFPICI TIMPORAltY Proud to be an Am . m er1can •• " Glad yau're a GIRL??? Join up wlth ·uolll AMERICAN GIRL A.L~ NEW Rtd, Whit1 & Blue temporary service Marchi"' alont with TOP RATES MAJOR ASSIGNMENTS TOP BRASS COMPANIES We're recruiting NOW for: N1wport Buch Offln A all Oranp.County • B11ch Cltl11. "Master" Stenos "Firtt Cl1ss" Typists 11Priv1te11 Sectys. 11R1nk & File" c1.m Exp. lnturanct Clerb Legal Stcys. Credit Checkers Medical S.cys. (Frnt & bk Ole) Dental Ants. Kaypunch Opert. NCR Opar1ton F/C Bookkttptra Asst. Bookkttpera Acctg. Clorb PBX Operators Statistical Typists Ropr~./Typists Recopt./Typists M1nuscript Typir.ts Ass1mblers AMERICAN GIRL , n~s YOU Call for Appl. tr lnform•tron. 833-3232 REGISTER NOW! 2172 Dupont, SuH1 12 Newport Baell (Nr.OraftlOc-, Airport) • • • 5$ I 5 J 5 &Sib SLJCJ ,_i)_t 2 6 ' $ a a s . a JJ)JJEPJ!JlS!L -. 38 IWl.Y PILOT Mond11, Mmh 16, 1970 ' .JOiS i EMPLOYMINT Joas l EMPLOYMENT JOllS & EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISI FOR MERCHANDISI PO!t I;;;;=-"-'=-'--'--"-'-·!~~--=--::-:: SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE $ALE AND TRADE 1.J111111~ •• ~M"''"''""' Wom. 7100-Jobe Men, Wom. 7100 Johs ~n. Wom. 71001 -';;..;;;.;;...;..;;.;;;,. ____ _.. ______ ,__; Dogs 1125 Power Cruiur1 . l'ITS and LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 902.0 Motorcycles '* -c· I l.'RK -TYPIST -Furniture 8000 ,urnltura aooo Ml1c•ll1MOV1 l600 AOORAB.LE---T~--p-.-o-d-1 e FAST 28' Unilllte cn11.wr. w; \iiiiii~~~!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~iiii1 \---------I -~ Jl'ully tqulpd. Excel end. '66 ''amMa 2'lJ Bl.a Star MACCO CORP t'I pupg. It wka, •hota, -.... s,.i7 u.n1 ale. ""'"-'""l Scrambler. E v e.rylhlnc "ni • * AUCTION * worm<d. LoWi< homo -~· "'" ~ •~rlc>. G"AI ru-. ~ M•na11ment TralnH REAL ESTATE 1100 .tart. M.m.d. ...,,. SALESPERSONS ~. CaD Ann, WntcUft Unusual opportunity lo join Ptl'bOl'lnd Alt.ncy. 2)U Welt. salet torct er d;ynam1c rtal lend developers, loc•· U YoU wUl MD w b1,1y prime requl!ite. 545-4522 rt1. 54i-4"ral or 646-483l fed In Newport 811ch, ""• Wln¢y • try TERRitJC E ... ter Gln; ?alin. .. FAIRLlNER t1y Brldgt ~T~R~l7U~M7P~H~ .. ~.sooc==-c c11U Dr .. N.8. 6U.JT10. estate comi.aey. Jf )'OU are lfANAGEMENT COUPLE licensed I: v.'OUld llke to join 11 I o o k I n g for • Auetioni F'l1day 7:30 p.m.-Poodles. 7 wkl, blacks & Sport sedan. S6900. Call -CLERK TYPIST WI d 673-.fi728 TlOD, Make oftrr. <194-7368 ' n y's Auction Barn champ-..ne• s~. Champion · Bend.able with relttthef':•. the rap.Idly rrowtna: staff or 2316 Newport Bl\'(!, Costa Fanow Rell.ty, ct.U: 54&-3291. Wo require 9ood lyp-DECORATOR GETS CANCELl:ATION 20'!5\0 Nowport. CM 64._ bkgrnd. Call "'.ml aft 3. 16' mu,., boat, motor & 1969 ""'NORTON CCMMAN· ing & lit• 1horth1nd. OF 11 LUXURY APARTMENTS ~hlnd Tony's Bid&. Mat'l. QOBIE male 1 yr, no paptl"I. e~u. Lois of extr-:s3-:Jj )3 DO. Exce.llt'nt cc·.:UUon. ean Must be sharp, youth-f'ANTASTIC SAVINCS Good ptt tot family. $50. """ ~1548 after U p.m. ful & •ttrectlv• for Spnish & Mtdfterrantan funitwe a new deslrner "lothea, 642-7312 cKeer t.ryln.rl. '67 Honda Spart 90 extru 1'1eu. fer conttdentw lnterview, --.M°'k"t'",-. •s.c=r=-11"1=r:-:y--1 Restaurant 1116. mo. , .. N .... V<n•· Ancient Mariner tile po•lllon. -now ta.king applications for front offfc•. All BRAND NEW regularly $60, ,to m. IW AFGHAN PUPS, AKC Speed-Ski B_oets 9030 $2'15. r-.'ltnt cond. '70 lie. Contact MRS. LIND-A decorator dream house on display -3 less than % price. Sizes 9 Ready for Easter. (Depoalt) L'i1isi' oorsf't , 50 hp. Rr(.'t'nt tune-up new batttry JASON BEST Full & par! time, doY sbllc Employm<nt '"'""' e KITCHEN HELP 2'07 So. Main, Santa Ano e DISHWASHER SAY. C • I I (714) rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (\v as thru 16. Thurs thru sun.10-4 can 846-54.U . Evlntude, big \\'heel trailc1" i="=l=·"=n======= 642"'4910, •xt. 219 or rea. $1295. PM. catJ 6.lG-0921 SILKY Tertler Pups. Cham· M ly equip. $600. 673-5043. I • $425 -~-92&1 \Y. Kale.Ila, Anaheim Apply in penon St&-M.10 or 821·1220 """'7 w '··-J ff wr te: SACRIFICE 0 0 0 0 0 0 CARPET left from Comrt1 '1. pion stock. $250. each. A Perts MOO MACCO CORP oontrocts. $1.98, $2.88, '''" •646-3>11* Boot Tr•llors 9032 1 _______ _ MECHANlCAL ENGINEER, FOREMAN k LEAD MEN, l.10l,.D ERS Ir GEL WATERS. All 3 nlfts. Top jobs. 1631 Placentia, C.flt. """' • \..olJll.D wy. Newport Beach Employment M1nager P .O. Bo• 2175, Newport Beach Calif. 92663 Complata Mediterranaan Btdroom Suitt il'l $3.99 11'1 yd. Drakes CUpet YORKSHIRE \VANT Boat trailer" for 13' BUGGY & Jttp P art1: O•k. IR•9· $3'49.00 ) .......... NOW $181.00 ~~tltBeach Bl.Yd, H.B. 'TERRIER \Vhaler. large wheels,'zood Shortened V\Y pan, comp. RE ST AURANT. 1\1/F, 11: 3G-2 Pl\f, dll)'S. 1'1ALE, over ~\'es. Apply at Taatee f'reez: 2966 Bristol C.M. after 2 PM. Gor9•ous Spanish Custom Built Sof• with · pupg. II wk! AKC. 673-7/;ii cond. Call 642-3400, y,•/engine, trans &. trans ax· m•tchln9 Lova Saat--Choica of baautiful ST. PATRICKS Day f\Iarldng EASTER PUPPY? ---· le. on '"'httlr. Plus mltc I b • IR ••19 951 NOW •225 00 Room Cleara.noe. Ticktocktt $37.~. 4 months, AKC. Boat Slip Mooring 9036 parts $130 for all. 4-llDO x \VA ITRESS, Experienced, • rics. •9· ~ • ----· • • Thrift Shop, 120 E. 19th st. 6~Z--032S, 675--244'S 16 g1wved alicks on l~" Mexlc&n food, over 21. Sp•nish Oinin9 Sets --------·----$75.00 c '' M ch 17th ,,. .. ~. \YANT Mooring Balboa Isl. wide 14•heel1, for jeep $175. nawport . personnel agency SALES GIRL Exper. Sales girl for ladies sportswear, Call -2462 * 64~'4 * Solid O•k End Tablas and Coffee Tablas..$lf.50 2:~pM ar ' wn.iu· PUREBRED Min. Poodle Prefer Southside at East Set'! al Meu. Union, comer .~==~-=-=.,.,......,~~• Tal/Oecor1tor T1bl• Lamps · [ Pup!!. 1 wks. male or , _ _._.,..,..SalJ.""'""" .. 'e\'es N••-&: Fairview. day• \lfANTED: Rtl!able live-in WANTED EXTREMELY J llti4"987 '~" "'~ IR.~ •.. 9,9•1 --NOW $11.00 •· b ' d fema e. $10. Ca v-6 -""" -nlte.1. isilltr to are for l school I: or "" ""'uona le use carpetincr WANT slip or tie al Ne"M')Xlrt "' ,..."'""""'"' 14-yr old lor 2 Wttks. \Y ith Spanis Han9in9 Swtg i...emps Prefer darker color. Pie;:'~ sr. Bernard pups, AKC. Sl.50 tor ai· sail boat, Phone co1-•-TR~IU~,~JP=H~~T=R~-3'.--.-.-o-d 833 Dover Drive. Newport ~ch s.i .. NEED }.!ONEY? Cb o o & e. Your own time. Service. customers in your area. CaU before Noon ~2218. References. Call 61~1 .I Rtg. $'49.95 I -·--·--.. ··----···NOW $22.50 eall &42-l724 alt.tr 6 PM or ~:5-s~w potentiaJ. Shots. lec:t 496-4858. engine. Trans &: ram.tor Wer•housamen CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN weekends. 40. SLIP For Rent. Newpor! gnne. $45. Z2!11 C&nyon Dr .. 642·38'i0 The foJlowilti is A pe.rtlal list of our preaent job op. portunttles. to '2.J74Aboso"'N"·B!"EnSITbtnls. m m RJRNIT. URE . MOVING: Must Sell. Single Horse;--8130 Beach. Call &f2-j22J days or C.i\1. fflembtrship in Nrwport 54S-3684 eves. Employment A~ncy Sch Tennls Club, S3~ or·l---;P'°'l°"N"T"O.-,M'°A"'R"E,---Trailor, Travel ~!r woman w/saies ex· ~:·:::Ila~~~~ 1844 Newport Blvd.Har~r•'elvd.J :!~!er. SA ~t-SP~f . u ~1iI~~~&4ro5 :~~n!ri~:~e50;i;ot c:~:: '425 C M 0 I CARPET Layer has carpet.l--;H=or'""•.,-,·i...,--,d,.-,A.,,-,b'J-School atarts ~larch 17: per. to act &I outside con-* WOMEN * t Nylon, Kodtl, Shag &: a n.cg Slere ra an Mkt9. Secretary tact lo at:ll the design OS a esa n y Mare ln Foal. Instrument Ground Sch.ool Telephone ..,,'Ork Hi-lov.'I. Will sell at cost for *C•ll G4'll'"* istarts ~larch 18. Call f.1artin To t.uvi. servict of a long established I bo ·~1188 -~ -a1· · ~ d · from home. Every Night "Tll 9 -WM., Sat. & Sun. 'Tll 6 a r. =-Aviation MS-4300 for details Sharp girl w/sood exp. in qu ity intt1 1or tcorat1n1 NO SELLING LOCAL Egp \Vholesale Imm TRANSPORTATION gales mklg. Good aec.retary finn. Refer. \Vrite Box 5ellol, Writ --- sldlls. "M'ell .......,.med &: Daily Pilot, N.B. e St E • 8012 Pl & 0 llfl" Ranch to Restaurants & Boi1t1 & Yi1chts 9000 ··-l~~!!!':'!!"~!!!!"l'~""!~ P.O. Box 5565 ore qu1pment •no• rgan1 o1V con v a J ts cen t Homtsl"---'--personable. Work for Vice-SALESHELP ---•·• full Loi Angeles, Calif. 5-18-3758 &ft 6 P~f 18' INBOARD, •tnuine ~n-PrtsidentoJ mkta. & dlrec-·~. 1=========110 Key Addin& Machine. B • tor ot adv, time. Must have exp In la· di b ti & 111 eg1nnen Carpet )Ayer has Hi Lo tury Lapatrake bay I: ocean dies -~..i .. _~wear. Ap~1 .. in School•lnsttuctlon 7600 reel :su trac 00 ro ng 0 Cl nylons 11.99 yd. Sb"""' boat. Noted for safety & ·-~ / :==:::::·::::==::====i~'~"·~m~· ~··~c.n~~·n-~1111~·~· ;--;;:: r9an ass --Recept/Stet. Typist puson, Jackies Fasbion Cen. from $3.50 up + my labor, comfort. Top condlt.ion, nev.• I N 1S H · * AIRLINE ·* Sl'ORE r-n.h-s: W-" .,__ $16 Jor 8 \Vetb Course .,.,,·nt · & t con 1 to To CUM\ er, o. untington een. r ........... ....... IJA roe per v<>rd. 847-1519 ·-In OU • v . p, -1 tr' h plus materials. Registration : J-b 11 •··k t Requlre1 exp. ~fer CPA ter. Hunt. Bch. TRAVEL CAREERS ureM>U igger ~~. gon-NEW , 1 canvas cover, a ....... , . t c. bk~. H--''e -" --pl"n SALES ' •• ,.,, ~'° Full dolaa, glai;s shelves. canopy Tueaday, P.farch 17th at 7 10 speed Cir Ii Schwinn 60 hp, i!'aY marine tna:. 6'" ....,. llll ........ "' ....... ...,.,.,. 11 1 r htin __ .. p.m. Also Stcondary &: Jn-Bicycle. COat $100.00. Make Sacrlr· I'""'~ ~-1 ... 1 &r. clients /or exceptional time, needed for Tustin .. o--tions Anentt w ac • Jg g, ttces~ _..•er. 6.,... .,,~~ tee UOJ. """' a °"' bog ""' .--"6 celling 11.ghta, lormlca check tennt'dlale students rei\lltr -=""==~·~====== Boat Docks next lo Balboa s. Costa ~tesa. Apply Ticket Sales out stand & wan tixtures. thenaJso.cail &:lnqu.ire for -Pavilion. 67 5-6953 or !BM D t C t I Cl k .fWrntrom~ Baby News JJ.eseryaUons Ne--'··-new. ~7353 details: Mite. Wanted 1610 673-4070 tor •nist ride. • e on ro er Store, 650 "D" ,St, Tu!tln. Air F'ft.:liht • Cari:o ""'JJ HAJ\.fMONO "" $500 c-•nA•~ CCVENTR Communications BARBER Shop Equip, in CORONA DEL ?o1AR WANTEDll t11STOr..1 BUILT Mini-Sport Mite.rial control &. karde:t ~ Y has Comp!. 3 Modern Paldar whaler n....,, 50 h.p. ].1erc 0-~t-•;.r !ulJ or O\ftPI Travel Agent 2854 E. "Aut H-. 67"'""""' Ace.tel--tol't'h, used with <.Jr-bkcrd 11. must. Knowledge 1''"-'6" w ,.... • chr1, 4 chr back ban, mir· ......, '"J ..........,., J"~ Trailer, new Juli covers, of purchuing, JBr..1 equip. time isa.les. ,No investment. rors 2 walls. naugahyde Open Mon & Fri eves, or without tank!!. 546.7219 Coast Guard eqUlpped. Yoo 'll ment &: production control no deliveries. For interview, _AIRLINE reclining \\•ailing ch r s. Sunday 1:2-4 alter 5 PM. really have to see it. Retail helpful. Salary could be. * 5'10-0614 * · SCHOOLS $1000. Balboa Island. Ph. PIANOS & ORGANS WANTED: l Good Used 10" -over $2,500 new. I-lave new hiJ:her for bea.V)I exp. SEAi'IISfRESS • with indua-PA. CIFIC 673-9620 Aft 6 ~1 NE\Y &: USED Delta Uni saw -Cal! boat and must sell fa.st. tria.J sewing machine exper-•Yamaha Pianos Organs ,,8~A~•~•~~~'""'°30~P~M_,~64-2-818ccc~-',...., $1675. 548-1455 Bookkffping ience. Phone 493-4~ or ap. Day It Nla:ht Clusts Garage Sale 1022 •Thomas Organs WANTED To buy canopy for 1.4 Jt Lone Star aluniinurn To $500 ply in person at Coast Cata-543-5596 • Kimball Pia1lOI long, wide bed pickup. PH: boat with lile trailer & 10 Prefer bkkpt. thru trial maran. 33ou Calle Per:feclo, 610 E. 17th St., $anta Ana "f.1 O Vt NG, Mu1l ~ell! • Kohler &. Campbell 673-7569 hrs motor. $500. 540-3803 bal. Will consider heavy 58.n Juan Ca._piatrano. F't.J rniturt:, howe.Mld items. COAST MUSIC CASH! Furrulllre Wanted. aft 4:30 Pt.l. acctnz exp. to trial bal. Secy-L-al Traino• ANSWERS 2112 Highland Dr, N.B. NEWPORT & HARBOR N d pl. . I """'"'==~=;-=..,,, Lovely Ofe5. & aasoc::5. T·0• 5500 54g...s.;36 C.OSta Mesa * 642·2851 ee N tt..P l~~:nt241~es, 1963 CRESTLINER -18'. 115 ;;;;--;:':':;:--:::::;:::--::=:;:-I Open 10-6 F'rl 10-9 Sun U.5 etc. o JUnk! ........_, rs. HP. $1200. Exel. 2S' shp Salus Secretary Rare oppty. to start In very SCRAM LEJS PU truck, sewing mach., avail. 642-4644 To $475 pleasant laiv ofc. Congenial ' • srove. n!frig, wuhtr, dryer. FREE TO YOU '1' CABIN Cruiser. Head. 2 -··-~-To L.--•-,.._,, color 1V, misc. household. SH 80, h"vy typl""· Girl .... ..,.....,.,....,.,., P uo::•u.a • ........, JI ho · f ----------1 b"n'-. 1,·•·-J•••·•. Good .... 1'.liM EJ' "-th Ab. il .... Napkin -Apron -Impel -530-4;;74 )'OU are I pp1n, or-. u """ ut: • .., -=n! Friday tor Wea mgr. iza...., · 1P .,.. Exhale _ PEOPLE '-="="=========== piano or orga,i. 11t'w or uled, LOVABLE gry s ! r Ip e d cond. $ZI50. 548-795:?. "D ...... interesting: job. bot Personnel A~ncy. 230 1· and --In•• 1 d · -·J feml.Jr cats, is p •ye d. ,.,, ,·,•·rform '·b·•n Cru•••r u=q \\' '\'arner sw·te 211, "'--•· Habit of a boozer: He en-Applo'•ncos 8100 ..... '+res e in a ..... Y h b k d I ·• b ...., uc .._. _. ' · ' ....,, ... joys cocktail partieg "M'he.re·''-.:..!.-""-'.;..:._____ great del.1, please shop s r n, ec ay.·.,., u_t still de th finder + othcl' s1rns. Secretary Ana. '1 \\'ARD'S BALDWIN STUOIO cilmb trees. Lvs children, p To $450 --...,=====~--drinks mix PEOPLE. WASTE'KING dishwasher.bit-"Zip-r" & "Cookie," 2 .,...,_ A Complete Boat. 842--3028 Good uJ II" SECRETARY PIANO LESSONS 'in i\'fodeI .950-200, i;ta~nlt~s 1819 Newport, C.A1. 642-8484 ,.... J•R vocab ary, wpe 1ng. \\'ork for lop man! Ge.I tab-! I Brand (JI Open Every Nltt old, f ree carrying ca~. S 'Ibo 9010 SH k typing tor bu11y exec. I Btginl1t'rs, lntennedia!ea · 11 tt · . 11t'W, s 1 in c-.. 00 Al SPCA '·-o·Bch. 3116 _•_• --•-"------In land d •-r 1 u oos hen~. w/this rapidly Ali ''''· THEORY • 1,1_ ctn. Retail $342 Se.lJ sm.1 ~~&~~~""!.,~!!!!!lo~r~ooo~n~. -_ eve.., ..... o c, expending firm. A start to PROVJZATION, Reasonable. 830-3841 FREE Puppies, 7 \\'ks old, 1969 BALBOA 20 w/trailer. Acctnf. Clerk S550. in this fee paid job is Call aJtrr 5 p.m. 5-l&-l54S 1 ,~R=IG~ID=A~l~R~Ec-:,~1,=,~c-,dry>=o=r, WALNUT Baby Gra nd part Poodle, Collie, Cocker Sips 4. Dinette, head, sink, To $450 just a beginnlng. Many olher 220V Whl !pool Phtno, Bn.umbach, 5'6", Spaniel. It interested pl ease running lites, cabin lilt, k ~ & fee Jobs ava il. Call LEARN To Fly IFR'68 xlnt cond, · ~ contemporary sf YI Ing, call 837-7109 eves or wknds. anchor tile, speed o , Min. '2 yrs exp. llta\o'Y des Audrey Stuart. 547-0541 Ce.Mina, $8.50 per hr. \\'f't. \\-'&sher xlnt cond. $4a eL beautiful cone!. Sacrifice, ?olission Viejo 3/17 bow-pulpit & life line. Im-for builder. 847-8115 or 546-8672 K.. f <>t ·~ SHS INTERNATIONAL Llctnsed pllots checked out m ..... e o fer. -'!.,.,,,, or TO Qua!ified home, lovable mac .• $329.l. ~l p ty . K•ypunch AGENCY OF SANt A ANA fi'ee. Call 842-3876. USED Appliance & TV's, all 837-2970 femal e Collie, 3 yean, all 642-9500 days: 645-0962 eves To $450 SECRETARY Executive, MERCHANDISE FOR guannteed, Dunlap's, 1815 FREE Piano ltssons, 3-JO shots, lows chi!dren. needs & wknds Mobile Homes 9200 BAY HARBOR Mobile Hom• Sales YEAR END CLEARANCE SALE NO\V ON DISPLAY 12. 16, J:>, Z4 &: 30 \Vidts Up To 60 Fett Long 1425 Baker St ., Costa l\le~a 1li bloc k East ot Harbor Blvd. Costa l\Iesa (7141 540-9470 NEW 20x56 2 BR, 2 BA, den, carpeting thru-out, 22' raiJieel porch, carix>rt &. patio il."'nings. iltnny extra.s, $11.600. On the b tac h at DRlFT\VOOD BEACH CLUB. H.B. Green- !Ntf i\fobile Hom~ Sales, 7l<i- 536-75tl, jomicr11 inc. OWNER TRANSFERRED !\lust sacrifice 10s55 Skirts. a"'lllltgs, coolers Pet ok. Adult park S & K f.1obile Hom~ Brokers 12362 Beach Blvd., G.C. • 636-0921 • LEAVING For Engla n d . r..Just sell quic kly 2!r.r:43 Lancer. Furnished bargain. S & K i\1oh1le ~ Home Brokers, 12362 Beach Blvd., G.G. 6.16--0921 FAl\ULY Park, 1968, 2Qx57, 2 BR, 2 Ba, skirts, a .... -nings. Chvner must sell, S & K Mobile Home Broket'li, 12362 Beach Blvd .. G.G. 636--0921 1962 SKYLINE I o,ss, 2 BED ROOM A RE AL BUY AT $2995 SANTA ANA AREA ALPINE VACATION -TRAVEL CENTER Excel.. Golden Falcon Olymp{a -Alpln• Apache • Wheel Camper Wodds l&Ji'est mO!lit com- plete RV vehicle shoppina; cente? 8351 Garde~ Gl'O\'t Blvd, GG 534-6686 Oo~ Sat. Open SUnday FANTASTIC Buys in 4 Star. \\'esf\,•ays & Fu n t l m e Campers. Scotts, 914 N. Harbor, S.A. KENSKILL k Kit. Special prlcts on lot rnodels. Scotti:, !114 N. Harbor. S.A. Trucks 9500 '67 Super Van Fore!. Big 210 six, auto, dlr. 8 rly tires. Xlnl. cond. in and out. Tak~ lorelgn car or small dn. No. V44062. Call Ken aft 10 am '49.f.9773 er 545-0634. New International Pick Up Truck LIQUIDATION 3 to choose from at factory in1'()ict price. Kustom Matars 84:) Baker, C.i\I. 540-5915 ·~ Ford •,; T. P . U. 6 cyl. A!king $650. i\Jlnney's Nwpt, 518-4192. S.18-5039 e.vea. '52 Chev. P. U. Good 6 ply tires. .. 499-2750 * "69 C!-lEVY pick up, b l i bocty. $1500. 1&.000 ml. Xlnt cond. 545-019.J days. 1.lin. 1 yr exp. keypuJlt'h k Top sa.Jary 9-5 Mon-Fr!, I S~A~L~E:.JA~N~D~T~RA~~D~E:.__11 iNfcof,wpoij~"~·(C';;.~M~. ;;5'1'0-;;;<77B8o:"<ir I yn. Call for n!setval!ons. I a r g e f e n c e d ya r d . 18~. ~SLO~~O~P-~,~r-~o-.. -,-,~11. 80l'ler. Xlnt potential. bookkeeping, sales, business NORGE Coppertone 2 d.r Gould~ 5'17--0G81 639-5273 3/17 dacron sails, Acrylon cover, management kknowledge &: Furnitur• 8000 refrig. Sl25. Whirl pool=========== GERMAN Sborthair aJtered stainless r igging, comrl Customar Service e ."\"per i e nc e a must! _B_E_D_R-0-0-M--S-P_E_C_IA-L "M·asher--dcyer combo $35. Hi-Fi & Stereo 8210 male "M'atch do&. likes cushionis. sleep!I ~. folding 545-8241 American 842-393!1 -==;-;-=c-=c--I Jeeps NEW 24x60 9510 $346.67 Career-minded Y.ith a knack &16-200Z l't1UNTZ 4 track sttreo taPe chlldren, frisky, needs room mast. $600. Rich's Top Shop. S day wk. incl. Saturda.vs. for public relations. Call 9 !'lece Com_plete Bedroom J-IOTPOll\'T Electric double deck ,..,12 1,, ispea kerg, Ex· to run. At Laguna SPCA or 724 W. 16!h SL, C.!i-1. Call Prefer married girl. Mu6l 64&-2728 all 6:30 pm , with box sp.nng &: m~ttre~-ovrn &: range top with hood eel. cond. $65 complete. call 4.94-5309 3/17 64&-0ZSS be dependable, well groom-~782 l-5pm Rtgulmr pnce S~99·95· This Sl20. ~8-9509 646---0836 alter 6pm 0 r OOEsN·r '"··••r·, Gorman 3~17• ~,~J7AL~IB~AR=-J~un=•.o=r-A-;;-;Jd"°.'" e{l &. able to work W/the week only $129.9J. '"'"" SI d I publlc. r· Secretary Approved Furn1·1ure G.E. auto "M'abser & elrctr'ic 548-1249 tlays. Shr pherd, malr. Good oop, a.cron SaJ s. spin- SII, typing. USO. Beach Aru. dryer $40 ea .• xlnt cond.. '69 l'tfapnvox con&0le Stereo, watchdog z.. loves ~hildren. naker. 25hp Graymann~. Fot your convenience. Independent 847-8115 or 54&-8672 A?ti-F?.f radio Pecan-medit 6-1~7 3/17 Sleeps 4. Good cone!. S8500. Please call Jor appt. Personnal Agency 2159 Harbor Blvd. 1968 HOTPO!NT re.Jri g. AvD< 11tylr. Best offer. 57:;...7709 Eves. (714) 968-1809 Cos: 1 KITIEN: Black & white. ----;c,==::;----1n6 Orange Ave, Suite C ta 1' tu 548-9660 cado green. 17 cu. Jt F'rolt beaut. marked, 3 mo. old PlasTrend NEED Live. Jn Babygitter. C.M. 642-0'J'26, 545-0979 OPEN 9·9 free Call 642-3056 Cameras & ftmate, had shots. h~. Soling • Tempest No salary. J usl room &. SECRETARY . Receptionist \YALNtrr dine.tit ~Ox6_0. r.tAGTC Chef Combo Elec. Equipment 1300 broken. 673--0249 3116 1'1' PT4M Class of l5000! board z.. all you can eat. C.oristruc:Hon background Leaf. pads, 6 chAJrs, $SO. range, relrig .. sink. Good KONrKA Auto "ftefirx T 2 ADULT spayed !emalt l'tlain, jib, tipin, etc. SL17•1 \YUi consider mother "''/l helpful, shorthand, typing &. :ci,. a 11 e r 6 & cond. Makt offtr. 673-6635 camera y.•/cast 57mm l .4 ".ats, need qualified adult Pacific Yacht Sales 673-1570 child, boy approx. 6 yrs. clictarihone. $4.50. The Bue-Htxanon 1.11000 s timer home , 0 \\' n er d led . 3446 Via Oporto, NeY.'PI Bch. Company tor our fiOn. Our cola Co ., 54G-8833 r.tr. Davis 8' Sofa, never used. quilted Antiques 1110 $170. Eltclronlc nasb & 5-lS--0813 3/17 23. 'TEf'.1PEST Sip. Fg. Aux child iis in school most ol Service Station. Service Dept floral, scotch guarded $l20.j---'-------~~ ch·'•·-•· 'lono , . ., $10 Call •10VJNG 1· d ho 'h Ex ·• Xtr R d the day, Very little night (8 Needed) f.latch. love1ea1 $7j, (]) ORIENTAL RUGS · ""' '" · !• ! r.1ust in me! "P· · corru. as. ra Y 77" n""" L'•rman• 1~. . 1"-14. 9xl2 __ ,..._,_~_u_. _______ 1 \Vht Shephtrd pup, 6 mo. to sail! $.1150 839-5479 care. If any. Cloise Cf\UU'le~ * $135 PER WEEK + l1""\IJ;I" " "~~ v,.., H b k T good ho & 8 10 675-1977 r 673-S822 Mt·scell•n-us 8600 ouse ro en, 0 ml'.' LIDO l~ S..'\ilbo;i t. No. 238!1, in small hou3e. 1-lus-t OC con· For Nev,. f.tark c. Bloome LICHT Beige c arp e Ii n .s:. · x · · 0 · -only. 673-6060, 12-6 Pt.I 3/18 with tt"ailer. Call S37-7039 genial. 642--3844 Eves. & C.f.t. Stott Rnd Garden ,,lightly used. Approx. 40 weekends. Grove &: Anaheim slorcs. )Tels. Xlnl cond. 646-2962 Sowing M1chin1s 1120 SACRIFICE PERFECT Easter gi1l! 9 aft 6 Pt.I 2 BR. 2 BA. de.n. carpeting lh1u .ou1, pallo & carport a1\n1ngs 28' l'aiscd porch. 1'1any l"'flrru:! In GREEN- LE1\F PARK in C.l\f., only. Sl5,;.M. jomlrra inc. • 642.1350 • '69 Skyline. 24 x 60 ·3 Br. 2 ba, crpt. drps, laund. area. cooler. a\1nings. skirting. Family Pk. 839-4i328 CUSTOi\IIZED W'\\'. '67. Ne1v crp!. All xfras. Beau. ne\v Arllt Pk. C.f.·1. &12-6495 '68-24'x60', 2 BR, 2 BA, comp!. adlt pk, Pl'ts OK 531-i8S7 VIKING Scandia. 20:.6'.l'. 2 hr .. 2 ha . A1\·r11ngs. Xln t /lrlult Pk. :>48-4142 flfr fi . Exec. moving into Hunting-Bunnie.a. 3 black & rest -~p~.c=A7T~.=68~+""'r~,.,-il<c-,-· 1 Mini S ikes 9275 Nursing Chllngt-tire& & shocks. DESK: Drexel. drop-lea! top, SINGER auto rig-zag, 6 mos. ton Harbour must ~u clue brown. 2 mo. Please ca ll $:M95_ Sharp! ---------- PRIVATE DUTY RtJer. \\'ill train. f.'led. ben-4 slde dl'll.\\"efl, pd $140, now olri. No attach needed for 10 new home ha\'lng bit-ins. A.f"J'ER 2 pm : 548-3.<l17 3/16 r..lr. r.·lorse 673-1570 CO-KART, good running ev~ type nurse. efits & Insur. Pension & Prof $50. 642-9626 zig.zag, button hol es. Slovp _ O'Kcefr &. J\lf:'rritt condili0n. $50 or be.st offer. ALL SHIM'S Shar Plan. Applv Mark C. l\10VJNG TO HA\\'All designs etc. Guar. $37 cash 36" de.Ix. w/every feature., FREE WOOD. "f.t~el glass 13' f.letcalf, Hlway trailer. 2 6iJ-8.593 Lescoulle Nunes Registry, Bloome Co.. 3005 Harbor Thomasville 5 piece brdroom or small paym~nts. 526-6616 Co., 1644 Superior, C.)J. selE of sails. $400. 35 H II I Rd N B Bl fl "·-ta '! appro:o; I yr old $150. Rtlri&:· 64&-3231 .... _,,_n14 * 1 Olp a ·· · · v " ....,., '' esa. ~et. king-size S500. Plano, er1led lllr condltiOIW'r • Ad-~ 0 ',,.. &U-99$ Open 11 AM-4 Pi\1. SERVICE S!at1on Atlendant, Sto~ &. Clark Console. $400. Musical mlral ImperiAJ 100, +. hp, FREE Bassets, AKC Reg ., 1 12' Tikt c r. t, fiberglas ~fon/F'ri. full time. e\'!llln; shift 9 Jt. Fr. Blue vel"et couch Instruments 112.5 xln t ronct $125, 3.y,·hite bar-m&le, l femalr, :? Yr !!;_ \\'/engi ne & trailer. $3j(). ~1.JRSES Heglstered -even-Ex:p'd. Neat in appearan{'(', S350. 9 rt. beige tufted couch stools $10 ea, 2 lgt \\'hi & 495-516:> 3117 Call M.>-Ul ~. In&' &:. night shifts . Ex. See J im, 25!kl Ne\\'J>(ITI C )I. $3JO. Othrr !urn. fi7'3.-4097 CONTRLO gold 11t'w table lamps $75 ea, s CUTE Crazy mi..-xed up ==============- bene.flts. Apply Per.ionnel SERY1CE Station Attendant, SELLING beautilul Spanish ACCORDl~N brass flrtpl11.ce acreen & puppies, i;mall b re t d . Powar Cruisers 9020 Dlrtttor. So. Coast Com· days, swing & graveyard. furniture almost new, r..Just Z4 kty, l~ bass. ~th case, gn.te $20. misc. otlice deik 5-18-1626. 3116, munity H05p., 31872 COlllt Apply in person, cor . sell. 6r>i065 $600 v111 .ue + t111y ~o 11.cceMOries. 846-1852 BEAUT ear t L 15' SKtJACK + tT11.iler. Motorcycles 9)00 Tune ups & '1epa1r.; C)·cle -V\\"'$ Rea.sona1'1le P.el111h!r :JIS-258.; Honda Trsiil 00. 1967 S!.50 .. 54%731 • JEEP '46. Civilian-283 £ngine. posl-rear end, Gates tires. 11 inch brakes, roll bar. 2 1op.~. ~pare rack and cans, hack .seat, etc. $1500. 54j..208J ·;:,9 Pov.-er 'Vag. 1 Of a Kind! Shortened chassis, bn.nd new eng, clutc h etc. Huie 24 ply airplane tires. Vehicle \\'Ill go absolutely anywhere. Asking $900. \Viii consider trRdc up + ~ash on ,Jeep 11111 ...... ag. Call 962-4981 '6.~ \\'agoneer $1095. '56 Jeep y,·iz n, V8. $!l9j, "46 [))dge pwr \\'gn $650. Pvt ply. 64fi...-.1&13 Campers 9520 SACf.JFICE By private p.:i r1y 1!170 G~IC ~.,; heavy <!uty Pick Up. Po\l·rr steer· int:. 11ulomallc, V-S, 1v/ ne1.., :r cab over camper. Tntt're5!ed parties contact 499-2892. 21621 \Vesley Dr, Apt 3. South Laguna. ('Ai\JPER for Rnncl'lero er El Cami no. Cah over, gle1?p.11 ~. ire ho'I:, tllnc!tr, "'<tier. xlnt r'Ond. 3 Yr! old . 5400. Rich'i; To11 Shop, rn \Y. 16th St.. c ~I. 8 IT CA!\fPER H So '·--· 1~llll J•n-" ...___,_ ......... ,, m""'' · .1co em, ca xlnl cond. Cost owr $1700, wy.. • ....., ... -.. Jor 1"IacArthur &: Cam,_,,. Dr., ... ,. l.IUUM ,. """" -.1 NE\VPO V ff I oto F-I ext. 356 N.B. ..-NE\V 8' $500 1tr'iped soJa. cue. ,.. RT Beach Tennis ery a t!C ion ,.,e o must ~Ii $1050. &l>-Olll fOR !We: K;i14•asald 175cc SlOO or Best oUer! Sacrifice $300. Green $150 ND o Club family membel'!!hlp. gd.. hm. LI S.2910 3-16 Op ER.ATOft.S.E" ....... 'd. Gar-""==,-,==""'=~ PERFECT CO m N! SUPPORT your United f uid .....,.,.. SERVICE Station Salesman area rug $"ti. 644-1650 .. .....,. or Best Ofier $4~. Daya 549-2286, eves SJ\.tALL bro\vn femalr puppy, ment mf&r. Pc. work. up to Fullt' · ""'"" ~•n51« e:ii:P'r. ime. 0 '-ertime QUALITY Furn: Sofa-bed, 540-8308 Alter 3 Pl\f ,,..,.,.. '" 2 mos old. Loves children, Sl.00 hr. Steady. 642-34.72 + C.Omm!ssion. Shell, 191.h lOO c QUALITY kl bed 11 d t good ho 646-3567 3116 NB. Pl . C f.1 ~en naug. S . offee lb!, FENDER l\lustang Guitar na: • qu te o me. 81 actnlia, · · 1'led1t. $75. ~fa 9', green 5120. Fender Stratocasler mattress. Complete unused 4 PUPP1ES. 6 "'k! old, part OUTSIDE VERIFIER SEWING Machine Operator. tont~ on Belgian linen SJOO, Sl7S. Both x.lnl. Joe MS-460S Sl2Cl, \\'Orth $..?60. 8-12--6536 cocker, real cute! 2 male, 2 Call by appointment. No ex-~i ngle net>dle expe.r, 825 W. Heckman coffee tbl & lamp ===========o I eves. frmale, 546-il310 J-16 per. nee. 1'-fust have depend. 18th SL, c .r..1. tbl, gla~~ top _S200. Table Pianos & Organs 1130 N'"'rn'°'•PO°"'R~T,-~s.~.~,~h,-~T~<n=n:;:~ able car. Good starting stt.J. Siller tor boys 6 & 9 lamp. oil pa inlln;. etc. Club Chari~ ram 11 y ' f d 6#-59&3 I ary & opportun ty or a • 2:3i>-5, later !\1onday, r.·lembertlp. St I or trd. Call 642-1508 E\o·es 673-8386 r.tAPLE Bdrm 11et, bookcase. HAM?iotOND Steinwa,y, Yam· ft.l •j...()139. *tPAlNTERS nttdfd by STEADY JOB &le.rec. clln. set, de&k, ap. aha. Ne• & used p!Mo-e ot E"-URO='°P'°E"AN"'°"'H"""m"'•=n:-;H;:ao::lr. 1oc&l manutactuftt. Need Liirge Oi'aflte County ton· pl l ances. encyclopedl1'1. most makes. Best buys in hand tied. liJhl blonde: wi1. · wl f.l isc. Call s.i.>:n68 So. callf. •' Schmidt Alusl c .. ~~ ,.._11 1 .. 1, ••• 6 ~ man famihar th I'~ cern has opening for fJ\-e. -N>J. ....... 6 ......., ~ ... 1 : ..., I ~-tat! QU L •·• ll Ca 1907 N. Mr ln, Santa Ana PM duct1on on e. cc .. ,,,.. c young, agre.11.'!i\'e me n. A !TY kin:. ut!\I • qu ted , . p&inl.lnl. ma&k i na, J'llU!t have a car 111.nd he mattress. Con1plrtt· unustd r'ii~~~~-...~-;;;;~·lzt•°'N~mt"'"Prtb"'°~J;-:,~..,..==-=n=-d Call: 54~TI.M able to mrt \l"Ork immedl· S120, ""'Orth $260. ~l\vuR.LJTZER 4600 Ampli fied pho1n. f\ill·slre, pool rt>J. • PART Timt Model · M•krr. •lel.Y. !\'o ~tT'ICt neces-e\o-e.s. Reed Qri:an. 23 pedal, lartt P'f.1llfe1. hair dryer. lots of akil{ed, to palnt &: HRmble MJ')'. We. Q.'\U tnitn. $512. per LrKE new avocado/1ntiqUe Leslie included. As ls $695. other roodle1. SU-1587 plutlc yacht model 1. mo. aJ per written •re· flOld. fT\lllted davrnport, .8' GOULD MUSIC \\'ANTED: Lar&e Oriental "Sa.Dor prtf~rttd." Hours ment. Call 9 to 5 p.m .. Mon. lt'Jna;. RCA color 21" CONOie ~ a.lao...lhrow ZUS•· Pvt. flWtff.-wril• Box &ll1. LI~ -TV. 5"48-3574 ~. =o45 N. fttatn;-S-..A:-~~ pty. 494-9Ml. <194-5382 PaJly Pllo~ N.B. 53'-7521 '7.::"'=:'=:::==:::::1 'll~~~'i:i'i':~~'.:" I 'Office Furnitur e 1010 ELECTRONI C Ora;an. HAND Palntedoilporttllitol PBX ~ 11• 23-4.5 tor TELEPHONE RectpUOtUitt F'af'flsa., Combo Compact. you or your cl'IUdren fn>m a ~ •rvk:i. Afte.r. for Servtet: Co. in C.i\t. AtROSPACE RELEASES Best Offtr. Call !>48-421! photograph. 646-36'l9 nool'l3. evenlngs and llOrM: area. A.gt 2$-35. Apply ln POO' Tohlo. 4• x • • ---..L. ..,_ E -1 ,~ N E lid FOR PUBLIC SALE ONE ""1 .. , New Cable " '4fft'k. t•-1-.u, o>.X< • person ~ .c.1 • I.IC , e ~ 1 ,_ f e "''Y .,_,.,. . ...iAk ~. I M v .. 11 .. Of A heim -.,, •ttt .. .,n,.er ea&4!1 Nellon Splntt l59a ~~ ..... 11,; • ......, li'lh, C.l\ · rs, ·~· • ="'"°=""°''°"=,.-;:.,,...,,.-1i'l Steel .1: 1'ood drslu e 85, Gouldl 541-o6s1 .54941~9 .',,""='='"';-,' 61J-".::'.:<l.ltA:-;;:. ::-=::;;-i TR.AINEE l>r \\'et Suit CUt· ~Dra'll·er lei;al file cebinets ;;c.,..;;--c;;:;:;::;;;-.:;::::::;:-BEAUTY 5110P P/TIME. Snadt QIOp work. llng. F'ull llme &: Perm. Ex-~ ltllac chain, tables 11 cab. PJANO, Bald1'-Jn. Acroa:>nlc. m.aturt -ioman. Sat A Sun. per. Prtf8l'Ted. lnttrview l'ffls antique white I: gold, A·l f'QUir Incl 1 ~rs &:. chair1 MJ..201.t IAM·12PM. &U-1912. 32$ \V. lttc..\la.han Btoll De~k Inc. cond. $MO. 646-U21 Sl2-1115 1u:k foi C..I y'".,..-~UN=n=m='""roM>"";;---1 18th SL. C.til. 1800 Newport Blvd THI'~ QUICh'ER YOU CALL. 2 gl.t::l ditplay ,., •• N'eech Tour DrJDan: DAILY PILOT WAf\i ADS! Cosl• ~Je1a .-6'12~!1.1 'r'Hl: QtnCKER )t0U SELL1 ____ 64_:._ml ___ _ j 3 t.1ale kittens, to good home. 8 \\'kz old. 962-4937 :\/16 EARLY An1erican Couch, he1vy ~mt. 847-7017. 3/16 T\VO End tables, need J11tinlshina. 548-4138 3/16 F'REE Turtle To Go 548-9488 3/17 BEAGLE k poodle puppies, 3 months old. 6(2....62()6 l/17 FREE RATS. SJl-.2009 l/17 PITS •nd LIVESTOCK Dogs 1125 SCHNAUZER. rruruatutt, female. AKC. JO wtekll. Top Weatern blOOd-llne. 646-63$5 l\tlNI doxies. long &: amoc1h tt1ats. f.tust rtduee stack. $3$.$73. 1'!1-84a4, 531-4072 RARE lo"i" coat Ch\hUllhu•~­ r.tu~l reduce stock. $50. • $1.S . .$31-&m er 5.'ll-tm2 "r..lod". :Xh1·1 cond. ~25 540-3803 aft 4:30Pl\l firm. 6~6-58.JO aft .}, 'r.~.,~V~E~N~ow=--~u7.~it~.,,,,F~""c-:'- a ' • Monday, M"cn 16. 1970 OAILY PU.OT $! TRANSPORTATION 1~SPORTATION 1~SPORTATION I TRANS POR TATIO'!_ I TRANSPORTATION I !!!_A!!_SPORTATION I TRANSPORTATloN I TRAHSPORWIOH I tlWdPOlTATION New c,,. 9800 Now Caro 9'00 Now c,,. 9800 Now c.,. 9800 Now c,,. 9800 Now ca,. 9800 Now Caro • 9'00 Now Can MOO Now C.rs - •• OUR NG IS ANXIOUS TO MEET YES, VILLA FORD IS ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST, MOST FRIENQLY NEW . vo·U-R-GANG FORD AGENCY: IF IT'S A • FAMILY PLACE TO IUY A N I! W F 0 RD, VILLA FORD IS THE PLACE TO BE • . OUR USEC CAR LOT IS AS VACANT AS THIS , , • IF YOU WANT TO BUY A NEW CAR OR TRUCK, DRIVE IN FOR THE HIGHEST TRADE· IN YOU WILL FIND .• ; , NO FOOL'N • • • WE JUST OPENED & ARE VERY ANXIOUS TO SELL YOU A 1970 FORD CAR OR TRUCK. After-the-sale service is our best assurance o ·,Iastingvalue. El Villa Ford tales great pride in its reputation for depeni:lable after·the-sale service. When ~ou tre'de up for l 1970 new Ford, you know that our entire organ i1ation stands behind that purchase. • villa iord 2550 N .. TUSTIN AVE., ORANGE (714) 637-8222 WHAT'S IMPORTANT TO YOU? "APTER THE SALE SERVICE" ITS IMPORTANT TO US TOOi! (213) 860-5582 ===""--Dune Bugglts 9525 Imported Auto1 9600 Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 MERCEDES BENZ ML'rALfl.AKE vw nun-DATSUN buggy. New wide tires, -------- brakes, rebuilt carb, NEW '70 chromo acoosso•los, etc. DATSUN PICKUP Registered. Best o If e r over $750. 234 Albert Pl., W/camper, 96 hp overhead Cosla Mesa cam, 4 spd, dlr, 6 ply tires, Imported Autos 9600 AUSTIN AMERICA AUSTIN AMERICA Sales, Serv:lce, Para Immediate Delivery All Modw J1rtuport 51111port s 3l00 W. Cea.st Hwy., N.B. back up llghta. You name it! Serial No. 244009. Full price $2099. Take small dn or trade. Call Phil, 494-9773 or 545-003.f after 10 am. -$- "Leader In 'Die t.ear.b Cities" ZIMMERMAN 2845 HARBOR BLVD. 54M410 DATSUN LATE '67 1600 Roadster, t apd, dlr, JAGUAR JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS The only authorized JAGUAR dealer in the entire Harbor Area. Complete SALES SERVICE PARTS Pool e BUICK IN COSTA MESA 234 E. 17th Street 548-776.5 JAGUAR 1964 3.8 Sedan. O/D, \\'ire \vhl~. comp! re· bit, family needs "''agon. 549-2•1:l5 MG MG Sales, Servic.J, Part. Immediate Dellvecy, All h.todelJ J1rtuport 31111por1s 642-9405 540-1764 Authorized MG Dealer Sharp, hdtp, sun red, plush I ---------, wy &12-9405 ~Q.17&4 BMW black tnt. xlnt cond. Must sacrifice! ~499, Take older American car or small down. URE643. Call Ker: 494-9773 or 545-0634. BMW'S #1 DEALER IN DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY CALifORNIA AND AND ORANGE COUNTY'S ~u~?~~~...i. LARGEST Huntington !leach l970's Immed. Delivery SlZ-7781 or 5-10-0442 25 New & US('d In Stoclc '66 Datsun 1600 T&M MOTORS Roadster. Xln't con<!. 8081 Garden Grow Bl. G.G. -===*=~=='=6=*== 534-2284 Open Sunday 892-5551 v -BAYSIDE MOTORS 1200 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. CORTINA TAKE over pBymt.nts 1968 Cortina GT. Balance $1377. Monthly $65.60. Immac! ?ifu~t ha\'!' veriU~l good credit. St:.e at 1963 Newport Blvd .. C~f. &1.,S-3717 ' DATSON '70 DATSUN SEDAN Big 4. door 96 hp OVtrhcad ca.m, diSe b~ 4 11pd. dlr, WSW, back Up U~hts. Sa.cri- fitt. Take trade, will finance private party. call Pbill, 494-9773 II.ft 10 am. DAILY PILUT WANT ADS! FERRARI FERRARI Ne"«'(>Ot't ImporU Ltd. Or- ange Cowlt)''• c:.tly author- ized dealer. SA.LES·SERVICE-PARTS 3100 W. Cout Hwy. Newport lkach W-94UI 54().1764 Authorized Ferrari Dealer ENGLISH FORD THE ENGLISH GOING THING! AT ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLU1'1E ENGLISH FORD DEALER OVEk 60 NOW AT CLEARANCE PRICES! Theodor• ROBINS FORD 2001 1-larbor Blvd. Costa Atesa 642-0010 "'lrl~ t"lephanbl Dlme-&·line TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT AuL1lorlzed MG Dealer 1953 MG-TD, good condll!on, new lop, rebuilt engine. \Viii trade. 642-3826. DAILY PILOT DIME· A· WANT AD I LINES. You can u.se them DIAL direct 642-5678. Charge Import.ct Autos 9600 Imported Autos 1968 MERCEDES 280 SL Thia •b101uta!y ;111m•cul1t1 Merc1cl11 81"1 Ra1cld1 r mu1t b1 '''"' to r1al!v b1 appr1ci1t1d. rt ;, f~u., lo1d•d wifll 1quipm1nt In• cludin9 <I tpe1d ir•n1mh· tion, thorlw•Y• AM . FM reclio, h11t1r, pow•f Ii••" in9, retl!nin9 butk•I 11~h plv1 mvch mor•. A loe~I on• own • r 1utomobil• ,h~"'' tll1 fl,.,111 of e•••· R1ducfcl to only Sllt5, POOLE BUICK IN COSTA MESA 9600 234 E, 17th Street 548-7765 Imported Cars 9600 lmport.t Autos MGB MUST SEU. $2-400 or ofJer. '68 J\IGB coupe, perfect. 54~5942 5106 Neptune NB SPRITE TOYOTA ------~---~------------· 9600 linporr.d Autoo 9600 Imported Autoo HOO VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN ' VOLVO Sport C1r1 • #1 FIATS 9610 • WE PAY TOP CASH for UJed cars le trucks Jalt call ua for free estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET Auto Leising n10 FORD AUTiiORIZED LEASING SYSTEM America's taraert Jeutnc ay1tem for tlnance or net Jeutnc ol Ill fyp< can ..., tn>cka. • I~iate delivery tram over 300 can and trueb • Competitive rates • New car dealership senrict • Full "trade1n" value tar your present ear • All popular '""""' ·-able For Complete Detailt caD Malcom Reid Leasing Manager Thoodo ... ROBINS FORD 2080 -Blvd. Qma Mesa 64U010 " . I la •v PILOT lloldlf, Mm 16, 1970 ma 01TAt1011 tRlNsP6RtAT10N tR4NsPo~TAT10N TllANSPORTAT10N UMCI C•r• TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTITION TRANSPORTATION ·' C.. noo Used Cars. noo Used Cart noo . ------ftOO Used Cars 9900 CHEVROLET Used Cars ttOO UMcl Clrs 9900 Used Cars 9900 Uled-C:US -;;oa IUICI( CADILLAC CADILLAC --BIJJQC Wild"'! I Dr. REPOSSESSED 4/C. '7D, p/a. ·)/'#, ndio. 'fi'l Coupe DeVille Gold Conv. JC:lnt COlld. Prtv. prl,y. moo. Loaded! Will :.., sold for ba.J. "4-mu ance outstanding. sm . ..o. iio;;;-;;l!Wck~:--;:RMera.=--A,-,,,-.1 Call 609360 or 546-0417. ii!B-P/S. Elec window&. '67 El Dorado. F)illy equip! l3500. "Rosu" at 557-7033, 46,IDI ml. $4250. Take car or 146-ao:s truck In trade &a6-Jl02 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROl,IGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 1959 CADDkAC Convt>ttible. Good Jor second car. $225. c..11 64'-1198. BUSIESr mlll1tttplace fn town. The DAILY PILOT 0.usl!ied section. S a v e money, tlme ~ eUart. Look Now! '68 CAD Cpe de Ville, like new, alr cond., AM/FM, tun p\\T, dbc: BCC'e:U, Ute ~n. Landau top, whlte llhr int. Sacrlficel Private party 5@.Gll3 or 962-93.n '67 Ce.dillac Sedaii de VWt, pwr/alr, stereo, leather, 32.000 ml. Pitrfect cond. $3295. 4944390 or 837-29'10 CHEVROLET '67 CHEVELLE Malibu , 2-dr. Vinyl roof, V 8 , AM-FM $1550* M7-t686 * CHEVROLET '6T Chevy Impala Station e '62 Chevy n Nova e wagon, 9-paasenger, alr Good mechanical cond. cond. Best otter over J1475. $275 S4.S-8IM 646-6669 '65 MALIBU SS, auto trans~ CH!YROLET 1061 Chevy Impala. 4-dr. P·•·· p.b., 50,£0) actual miles, orig, owner. Im- maculate. sec. 673-0508 '56 CHEVY V-1 3 spttd, clean , new pairlL f795, Call ======== """" cluome """'· S.W. 615-;1285. Gauge1. $350 OR BEST OF· OIEV. 'GS lmp. SS, 327, FER. 848-9076 after 5 PM a uto. tr., p/b, p/s, 1 owner. '63 mPAl.A, pb, pa, &: air. xtra sharp. 644-mot eve Real good $695. 968-5920 alter TEN 1968 Chevy Impalas, 6 pm priced for quick sale $1450 CONTINENTAL 1961 CONT., full power, clean & mech. good. Lo n1iles. $1200. &l.Z-3443 or &3>1148 , l each. 6J&..5480 ' CO 6.1 Chevy Sta. wag. Ar, 1 ~~~-~~~~=1 63 NT. fulJ po'11er. Smart R.H., VS, auto $499 (JQJ406) '55 Chevy, rebuilt '64 283 I o o k l n g, lime green CAii Sid aft ll AM Sff>-0634 \\'ilh 4 speed $1i5. Sacrifice! $600. 830-1574 842-1051 YOU get more than you give 'ffiE QUICKER YOU CALL, -United F\tnd DAILY PILOT WANT ADS! T!iE QUICKER YOU SELL 9100 New C1rs & Son • WE SELL OUR EXECUTIVE CARS 3 TIMES 'A YEAR. WE HAVE A G 0 0 D SELECTION OF 1970 MERCURYS, COUGARS, MONHGOS, & LINCOLNS. SOME WITH AS LITTLE AS 4000 MILES. ALL CARRY NEW CAR WARRANTIES. SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS! DURING JOHNSON & SON'S DEMO SALE! MORE ' ARRIVING FROM F'ORD MOTOR CO. (Special Purchase I Wide Selection Of Near New 1969 Mercury Models Cou90rs & Mercurys, convertibles, station wagons, 4 door hardtops, 2 door hardtops. 169 PONTIAC CATALINA 2 Dr. Hardtop, Automatic trani;mission, md!o, heater, po'''el' steering, power brakes. Lie. XXA-668 '68 CADILLAC COUPE DEVILLE Beautiful Ocean Turquoise with matching lnt.erlor, landau top. Exceptionally clean. Fully luxury equipped Inc. factory air. One owner. Lie. UC.C-170 • '65 T BIRD Rich t1ldnight Blue metallic finish with matching interior. Full power incl. factory aJr. Lie. OSE-645 '64 T BIRD Beautiful turquoise with matching Interior, shows exceptional care. Lie. IEW·li8 '69 FORD TORINO GT Convert. Attractive Gardlnal Red with color matched Interior, white t op, auto. trans .. P .S., radio, heater. Llc. XXR 231 '67 BUICI( LE SABRE Conv. Full power including factory air. Llc. TMH-472 '68 CONTiNENTAL s4395 s1395 ~ .J95 YOUR CHOICE $2995 4 Dr. Sed. Aegean gold futish, bro\vn landau roof, leather Interior. All the luxury features inc:!. factory air. Uc. VTP·736 s3995 +Tu• Uc. '69 COUGAR CONVERTIBLES With automatic transmission, power steering, power bra~es, etc. '69 MERCURY CONVERTIBLES With •ir conditioning, power steering. power bre~es, etc. '69 MONTEGO SEDANS W ith •ir conditioning, power steering, power brakes, etc. A NICE SELECTION OF WAGONS, MARQUISES,.ETC., AT ONLY '69 CONTINENTAL Coupe. Rosewood metallic finish with black leather &X white landau roof. Luxury equipped, factory air, etc. Lie. XSR-580 '67 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL Coupe. Full power including factor y air. Beautiful Btonze with white Landau top. 41 ,000 actual miles. LJC-841 ~64 CONTINENTAL 4 door sedan. Velvet black Unish with black leather Interior, Fully luxury equipped lncludlni; full power & factory alr. Lie. OYS·525 $3295 :!~C_!u~!!~~w~t!~~ -<th matching ''"lli" '""""'· $2995 Landau roof, fully luxury equipped and factory a lr condlµonlng: AM-FM radio. One-owner car. Beautifully m_&intained. Lie. TRK-296 '65 .CONTINENTAL YOUR CHOICE $3695 4 door. ?-11dnlght blut' finish 1v\th blond leather interior. landau roof. Fully luxury equipped including full power & factory air. Unusually clean. Uc. TFC-969 '67 CONTINENTAL Convertible Polar white with \\'hite leather & white top. Full JXl'''er ~ulpped with factory air. Uc. VGV-252 ALL LIKE NEW! VERY LOW MILES! I +Tu• Lie. '66 CHEVROLET IMPALA Super Sport. Full power Including power windo"''~ & factory &Ir, A one owner Laguna gem. 28,000 actual m ilt's. Lie. THT-313 ~ohnson-son ll.O~©@ll.~ ©®lro'ii'Olro~lro'ii'&ll. I ~£00fil ]]I[ I ~~!ffi©l!DOOW. ©®l!D@~[ffi I 2626 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA I ~~ NEW CARS 1 Mile South of the San Diego Freeway 540-5635 USED CAltS 540-5630 642·098' } I DODGE 9800 FORD 2240 S. Main SANTA ANA 54~·7076 '68 TOYll.J A C11ston1 Ci'O\Vtt \Va~n. ·l lllll'(!d, radio, heat~. \VTI 504 '$1343 '66 MERCURY J\lonti::l11lr 4 DI·. H&ii- '65 FALCON 2 dr, 6 cyl slick top. V-8. uuto. lran:s., shlJt, R/l·I, has had recent racrory air condiLloning, ,, eng, trans v.'ork. Xlnl shape J)ll\YCr stct'ring, llO\\'er -'thruoul S575. Pvt pt y. b1·11krs. radio, heater. 6·12-9500 days; 645--0962 eves Lit.-cruw tRPG 102). &wkrub. S1289 '64 Calru<I• SOil. F"lly ''"'" '67 MUSTANG-ped, new tires; new buttery. Reeond. engine & trans, N b k 9-Convertibl<'. V-8. auto. ew ra C!I. Only $6 J. trans., fac tory air con- ;.;"i;l--'.2';i'28:;c:•:;:",.;7,;P,;'.c1 =c-:c=ll (lltionini.:. JJO\\·er stcer- 63% Gala.xie 500. nc\V tin'~, in,e. 1"adio, heater. U - xln't cond. Stereo radio. c.:cnsc IUF'K 02Q) $450. &l2-7055 "' c~m< to 983 Sl 388 Arbor, C.:\1. aft 6. I 1965 1''AIRW\NE GTA, 390 '65 MUSTANG- .,... '"'' '""' p/" ''"' t"Ond. $1200. 96.S-7956 after 5 Con11r. ti cyl., auto. pm trans., radio, heater. tHE:E 02~1 '60 Ford Sin \Vgn.ti cyl, r/h, Sl 193 auto trans, good !ires, rLlilS good. $22.i &12--0326 '62 F aloo" ""'""' Cl"b 69 MUSTANG \\'agon, 8 pass. Good tires & Grnnd<' '2 Door. V-8, =-j°'"',.,· -,.$650=. ~"'~'--'-"~'~•'-'~5--,--,-11 auto. trnn.'3., factory air TEN 1970 l\Iavcricks, loaded. condi tioniru:;, po \Ye r $2350 each. slcerlni::, po\\·cr tdiscJ 63.5-5480 brakC'ti, radio, heater, \1·hitt>\1·a1[ lin~s. vinyl 196J .f ORD Fairlane. Gd. roo r, tinh·d i:lass, \\'heel cond. Air cone!. $500. Call ~1vrrs, stcrro -lo\v 645-U96 afl 6 Pi\1. 1nilcngr • a beauty. tZDU 8:':91. LINCOLN S2973 CONTINENTAL 4 dr. '68 CHEVROLET SI9:-l(I, Full p\vr, stereo tape deck. 846-9621. Impala toupr, V-8, au-=========11 to. t1·sns., factory air con<lilionini,:, po 1v er slrcring-, radin, heater, ---------11 linlcd ~lass. l\Vlli 656} MERCURY 1963 ~OMET Villager. 4 dr. S1659 Stalion \\"agon. Bright '""rl "\\"/\1'00Cltonc pallC'\ed siriC's. Radio/heater. Aulon1aticj '67 L JD tr ansmission. Nl'1Y • • • \vhi le\\•all tirt>.;, l u~agc l 2 Door llai·dtop. V-8, rack. ;;::9j, Shup! 64Q--OOZ2 auto. Iran:;., 11 owe r f 5 p ~t p p slc{'l'i ng, po11·C'r I disc) a 1 ·•. · riv. ly. brat.rs, r adii), hPatcr, 167 Montclair vinyl ronr, 11n1cd i::;Jass. {VIA 09;i 1. 2 o,. ll.T. "'" '''· P""I S181 8 steering, JlL'. Landau lop, honey gold ext. ~lush crcanl --~ '"c ivoso'" c.11 ,., a11 ,6-5,~F=oR=D~- 10 am M5-0634 or 494-!1'?73. '67 ?t1ERCURY V 111 FAicon. 6 cy~, stick a ge r $hirt. radio, fi e ater. \\'ag. All pM, r/h, 289. Xln'I ll'\'"BE l 38I cond.. $l580. 5-1&-~. S719 l9G6 ~fcrcury Colony Park 9 pass. \Vagon. Air. full p\vr, Pvt. ,.,, '" s. '''-""' '64 FORD '64 i\laHbu. Gd. ,t"Ood. TakC! Gnlaxlc 4 dr. Sedan. ove1· pymts. Pvt. party. PO\l'('I' s teering, auto-- b75-283!1 mnlic t1·nn~n1lssion. ra- dio, hl'lltrr. Lit:. OLT 278 MUSTANG S789 "' MUSTANG """'" V-8. '66 PLYMOUTH auto !runs, \'in. lop, p/s, 29,000 mi's. 1 01,1·ner. Im-Fury 1 \Va.i:::on. V-8, au· mac. $1650. 83:::-071,I after 6 to. trans .. po"'·er steer- P~f. ini::. r11diu, h ea t e r. ~IUSfANG, '68 Fastback, lVllC 3591 i\lany extras, Imn1aculatc. $1083 Drafted. Sacrifi~? 64~--0353 aftlipn1 - "67 .... lbaok. "'"' w/bloe '65 PLYMOUTH inlet'. Xht"I cond. SI.WO. CaU Valiilnt 2 Door. 6 ryl., :>-Ui·ti~jl or &16-9::28 auto. 11·a11<1., radio, hcat-.=i='='"='=="=='====ll r1" \\h1tl'\1all t ir e s. CNCA 961 J OLDSMOBILE "66 Olds ~-12, 4 spd. pis. f';c\I' , I poly tlrt's, M{lnroc shocks, valve job. 548-2716 _.I -PLYMOUTH '(i:} ROAD Runner. <! spd, H.am air. 3!1:t. ''in~·I lop, lrg 11·hls. c11•. $239:1. 67l-4141. PQNTIAC I 'fi.l Ca!alinn, 2 dr h\'d!op, 27.000 actual mi. R&.ll pis, I f!1b. a rcaly fine car. $~-•. II \Vi l! co nsider trade. Pvt ply. 611·9;i00 days; Ma.-0962 nHes & wl.:nds. 1969 t"lrcbird. fully {'qp'tl air cond .. pt>rfcct conn. P1·t ply. $3000. 675-3923, 675-1800 RAMBLER $769 '67 T-BIRD Landau 2 Doo1· Hardtop. V·X, Hl1lo. trans., fac- lo1·y fl 11· runrll lioning, full Jl(•11r·1" 1nd10. heat- r1·, 11hl 1r11B.JJ 1u·es, vinyl roof. l11ltf'd i.:Ja.~s. \Vhc·cl cnv1•rJ:, 1 011'tlcr low n1ileagc 'UOP 2<12) S2645 '67 BUICK Rivll'rR Tlardlop. V-8, a11tn. tran<1., factory air rondilionJn::\ po1ve r :.lf'l'rin·~. 1~111rr \\'in- dr1\\"li, flO\\' r ~rats, ra· rlin, h('al<'I", \I llit<'\\'Bll lire«, linlC'd i:la -:-. \\'heel L'Ollt't"S. (TQ\V X 18) S2 33 ·52 RA>1BLER a,,,,, '""· '69 OLDSMOBILE fully eqp'd, nuto IJ'8J1S. -Ir, l)folla 4 Door JTardtop. strreo l::iPI'. 1 011·nc>r. Xlnt A1Jtn. lr11ns., factory air ronrl. $19j_ 5-18-1 326. <'onditloninii:. pow f' r '63 Rambler Ainericun .Sta. Sl('rrinr,, radio, he11ter. \\'hi le1\ll!I tlrl's, vinvl \Vgn 220. $350. Olli after 5, ron(, lintl"d {:la.~!!. \vhe"cl "640-::="'""'57====== 'I CO\ ers. ( t t> 6.'l 11) 53139 T·BIRD SACRIFICE By private par-1 ty 1966 Thundt'rbirrl L.andn11 , fully rqulppctl. 11.1r-corn'!., lil.:e nc\Y S20CXJ. I r1trn:-~tf'rl rmrtlcs rontllC'I 01!)9...28'2 21621 W<'slr.y Dr., 1\pt 3. Sou1h La,i:n1n11. '** MUST SE LL ** '66. T-Bird, Gold & Bc1p ·. fo"ull fll\"I'. flh'. rrull:r eon- rrot, lo mi'~. Sl750 nr olf•'1', Ovmcr 64·~1600 or ~."'J-017:\. THl.iNDFIIBIRD J!ir.;s 4~1r, au power $25.i;o. IXO +di· Comct si;·:; Call a!fcr -1 Pi\!, 6[i--OJ1:; '68 CHEVROLET Crir\"1ur :! Ooor. 6 C'yt.. slici... ,,hirt, hcatl'.'r. 1Vc..;Y: !'i 1•11 S919 DU TON fO D 2240 S. Main SANTA AN A 546-7076 IT"S Br;11 h house titllt'. Big· gt>~I llt'!ccUou ev<"r! See the UAn.v PILOT \VM"T' ADS! ·-------l, I ' -